Tech News

  • Gigabyte ships 5.2 million motherboards in 3Q10

    Published: Wednesday, September 29, 2010 | By: Dennis

    Whoa, now this is interesting.

    Gigabyte Technology has revealed that its shipments of motherboards increase substantially in September which will bring total motherboard shipments for the third quarter of 2010 to at least 5.2 million units.

    Order visibility for the fourth quarter is not yet clear with motherboard shipments likely to drop slightly from the third, but the company will be able to reach its target of shipping 19-20 million motherboards in 2010, according to vice president Richard Ma.

    Of course these boards don't all go to consumers; the majority go to OEMs and to fulfill custom orders.

  • AMD to delay the launch of Radeon HD 6000

    Published: Wednesday, September 29, 2010 | By: Dennis

    In an interesting turn of events it would seem AMD/ATI is pulling an Intel on NVidia and is going to delay the 6000 series, but only a month.

    AMD has recently postponed the launch schedule of its next-generation Radeon HD 6000 series GPUs (Southern Islands) from the original October 12 to November, according to sources from graphics card makers.

    Seeing its chance, Nvidia aims to launch its new entry-level GPUs as well as cut its existing GPU prices in October to boost the market share, the sources noted.

    Both AMD and Nvidia declined to comment on their products' launch schedule.

    Not a huge deal, and gives enthusiasts 30 more days of interest from the money they saved. happy smile

  • Padding Oracle Attack Affects Every ASP.NET Web Apps - Patch Now

    Published: Wednesday, September 29, 2010 | By: Dennis

    There is a patch being issued this week that is supposed to fix an "Out of Band" issue with ASP.Net encryption.  The flaw has been known for several years, however back then it was used as fuel to make programmers and website architects more responsible in how they designed websites. 

    However, despite how good (or bad) an ASP.Net programmer is they cannot escape this particular flaw considering the information used to exploit and root the web application is key to how ASP.Net applications run.  Namely the encrypted session keys and cookies.

    Crypto isn't really my thing; however this article (and the ones it links to) is pretty good explaining the issue at hand.

    "We knew ASP.NET was vulnerable to our attack several months ago, but we didn't know how serious it is until a couple of weeks ago. It turns out that the vulnerability in ASP.NET is the most critical amongst other frameworks. In short, it totally destroys ASP.NET security," said Thai Duong, who along with Juliano Rizzo, developed the attack against ASP.NET.

    The pair have developed a tool specifically for use in this attack, called the Padding Oracle Exploit Tool. Their attack is an application of a technique that's been known since at least 2002, when Serge Vaudenay presented a paper on the topic at Eurocrypt. 

    Funny thing is, I heard about this issue back in 2002 but it was considered a minor flaw since most examples showed that with proper use of error messages and proper application fallover you could protect yourself from the attack.

    The reality is far worse

    In addition, an attacker could execute this technique without waiting for the error messages by using information gained through side-channel leakages.

    "It's worth noting that the attack is 100% reliable, i.e. one can be sure that once they run the attack, they can exploit the target. It's just a matter of time. If the attacker is lucky, then he can own any ASP.NET website in seconds. The average time for the attack to complete is 30 minutes. The longest time it ever takes is less than 50 minutes," Duong said. 

    Needless to say, I'll be patching my systems sooner rather than later.

  • NL: Review Block - Sliced Bread Edition - Video Mobo LiLo

    Published: Wednesday, September 29, 2010 | By: Dennis

    Motherboards
    - ASRock 890GX Extreme4 Motherboard Review @ KitGuru
    - GIGABYTE X58A-UD9 (Intel X58 Express) Motherboard @ TweakTown
    - ASRock 890FX Deluxe4 @ PureOverclock

    Cooling
    - Cooler Master V6GT @ techPowerUp
    - 8 triple radiator comparison @ Hardwareoverclock

    Video
    - ECS GeForce GTX 460 1GB Black Video Card Review @ Legit Reviews
    - Gigabyte GTS 450 1Gb @ LanOC Reviews
    - Axle GeForce GTX 460 ACE review Guru3D
    - Palit GTS 450 Sonic Platinum @ Bjorn3D
    - InnoVISION GeForce GTS 450 iChill Video Card Review @ Madshrimps
    - PNY GeForce GTS 450 1GB @ PureOverclock
    - Zotac GTX 460 AMP! Edition Review @ Technic3D
    - PNY GeForce GTS 450 1GB XLR8 Review @ Hardware Canucks

    Storage
    - Thermaltake BlacX 5G HDD Docking Station @ Techgage
    - OCZ Vertex 2E 120GB SSD review @ Hexus

    Memory
    - Mushkin Blackline PC3-12800 Review  @ XSReviews
    - Geil Ultra 2000MHZ Review  @ XSReviews

    Big list of reviews this time.  Be sure to check out our reviews as well, there is a Cooler Master V6 GT review and several video cards.

  • The New-Age Nickel & Diming @ Techgage

    Published: Monday, September 27, 2010 | By: Dennis

    There is an interesting editorial over at Techgage that tackles the issue of modern day "nickel and dime(ing)"  For those of you that don't know "Nickel and Dime" is an old saying that described how some products end up costing you more than the original price with various add-ons or fees along the way. 

    A good example is buying a new car.  Say the sticker price is $20,000, when you go in to buy the car the salesman says, "With this car you should also get our special fabric spray for $300, and a set of floor mats for $50, and the upgraded spare tire for $150".  By themselves these sound like a deal, and a great way to protect your investment, but also raises the price of the car up to $20,500.

    Over the course of the past couple of years, there's been a growing trend that's both frustrating and expensive to consumers. It also shows no sign of slowing down, and ironically, many of us contribute to it. As the title of this editorial suggests, this trend amounts to what I like to call new-age nickel and diming.

    The Editorial covers downloadable game content, playability of games, micropayments and the hardware unlocks offered on Intel processors. I can't say I agree with everything in the editorial, especially since the current trends are a direct result of a thrifty public.  These are the same people that not only has extremely short attention spans, but is unwilling (or unable) to pay the asking price for anything.  These people often turn to piracy (for games and movies) or wait until the price comes down to what they understand to be a reasonable level, basically forcing publishers and manufactures to become creative in their pricing structure.

    Micropayments and downloadable content (for games) is one way for game developers to re-coop their costs.  Think about it, which sounds better? Spending $60 on something, or $10 on something?  $10 is usually accepted, so they lower the base price by $10 and offer an upgrade later.

  • NL: Review Block: A Little Bit of Everything

    Published: Thursday, September 23, 2010 | By: Dennis

    Just cleaning out the news box, here are some of the notable reviews from the past few days.

    Cases
    - Thermaltake Armor A60 Mid Tower Case Review @ Legit Reviews
    - NZXT Phantom Full Tower Case Review @ Bigbruin
    - Thermaltake Armor A60 Computer Chassis review @ APH  Networks
    - Corsair Graphite 600T Mid Tower Case Video Review @ Hardware Canucks

    Storage
    - GSkill Phoenix Pro 120GB Solid State Drive Review @ Real World Labs
    - Corsair Force 40GB Solid State Drive Review @ Hardware Canucks

    Cooling
    - Swiftech H20-X20 Edge Liquid Cooling Kit Review @ OCIA

    Video
    - Palit GeForce GTS 450 Sonic Platinum 1GB  @ PureOverclock
    - HIS HD 5570 Low Profile VideoCard Review @ Tweaknews
    - Gigabyte GeForce GTX 470 Super Overclock Review @ Hardware Canucks

    Mobos
    - Asus Rampage III Gene Motherboard Review @ ITShootOut

  • MSI's Master Overclocking Arena Grand Final @ TechReport

    Published: Thursday, September 23, 2010 | By: Dennis

    Overclocking competitions are a great way for hardware manufactures to put famous names behind their products.  It also highlights what these famous overclockers can do given full access to hardware and all the LN2 they can handle.

    The Tech Report has a short 2 page report from the MOA show floor, however it seems he was more into the dancing storm troopers than the overclocking competition.

  • Thermaltake Toughpower Grand 750W Power Supply Review @ JonnyGURU

    Published: Thursday, September 23, 2010 | By: Dennis

    Here is the new face in PSU designs, rounded corners for that go fast visual appeal. cool smile

    For as long as I can remember, power  supplies have been coming to my load tester in the same old rectangular boxes. Once in a while the size of the box will change, but never the form factor itself. Thermaltake has dropped their latest and greatest into my lap today, and to my surprise they've actually tried to do something different. The Toughpower Grand series doesn't just come in a regular metal box, it comes in a box with fancy rounded corners.

    Now this is a PSU I could actually get excited about, tasteful lighting design, ornate shell design, mesh grill.  Give it a nice paintjob and show it off. 

  • Gigabyte GTX 470 Super Overclock@Bjorn3D

    Published: Wednesday, September 22, 2010 | By: Dennis

    Video cards are one of the few pieces of computer hardware that can actually be sold as an overclocked unit.  In fact factory overclocked video cards are big business, and if done correctly can offer considerably more to the end user than the reference design ever could.

    The Gigabyte SuperOverclock 470 is one of those cards.  It comes with a custom designed PCB, increased voltage control and delivery, higher clockspeed for performance, and several additional enthusiast friendly features.  

    Bjorn3D has posted a review of this card, and here is one of the best lines in a review, ever!

    It is interesting to note that there are 12 LED's on the back of the card. We have not seen LED's on the back of a graphics card since the Sapphire 4870. Users who do not like LED's in their case may want to stay away from this card.

    Who doesn't like LEDs?, and of those people (who don't like them) how many of them have windows in their case? big grin smile

    We reviewed the Gigabyte SuperOverclock GTX 470 not to long ago, be sure to check it out.

  • A quick primer on Sandy Bridge @ Tech Report

    Published: Tuesday, September 21, 2010 | By: Dennis

    IDF just finished up a few days ago and while the gathering is designed to help educate developers the media is often invited to report on the event, and in some cases dr00l over much of the new hardware.

    Sandy Bridge is the code name for the next great processor platform designed to replace/enhance the Lynnfield/Clarkdale 1156pin processors.  Pricing, and naming schemes are still under NDA but the basic architecture has been released along with some basic performance metrics.

    The first things to know about Sandy Bridge are that it's a chip built using Intel's high-speed 32-nm chip fabrication process, with initial variants expected to have four traditional CPU cores, an integrated graphics processor, cache, and a memory controller located together on the same piece of silicon. Intel essentially skipped building a quad-core processor at 32-nm, opting to accelerate the schedule for Sandy Bridge instead.

    Always a good read over there at TR.  Also keep in mind that along with the release of Sandy Bridge we'll be getting a new chipset called the P67 and an entirely new cycle of motherboard designs. happy smile