NVIDIA’s GeForce GTX 1070 Ti battles AMD’s latest video cards

NVIDIA has largely been sitting pretty since the GeForce 10-series arrived and gave it a comfortable performance lead in the graphics realm, but things have changed: AMD’s Vega cards are at least fast enough that you might consider them instead. Needless to say, NVIDIA isn’t about to let that situation stand. It’s launching the GeForce GTX 1070 Ti, a $449 upper mid-range card that could outperform the $399 Vega 56 and undercut the $499 Vega 64 on price. For all intents and purposes, it’s very nearly as powerful as a GTX 1080: you have the same core clock speed as the pricier board, and only slight hits to the CUDA core count (2, 432 vs. 2, 560), texture units (152 vs. 160) and boost clock (1, 683MHz vs. 1, 733MHz). About the only major difference is that you’re still limited to ‘just’ GDDR5 memory instead of the speedier GDDR5X on the 1080. Pre-orders are starting today ahead of the November 2nd release, and it’s notable that both the Founders Edition card and the official suggested retail price are the same. You’re not necessarily paying extra to go with the first-party design this time around. The real dilemma is whether or not it’s worth springing for the 1070 Ti, at least those models that cling to the stock specifications. It’s entirely possible to score an overclocked GTX 1070 for less than $400 if you play your cards right, and the Vega 56 (if you can find it; it’s not as common) still packs quite a punch. The 1070 Ti is mostly alluring if you prefer NVIDIA hardware and want near-1080 speed without paying the well over $500 it typically costs to get a full-fledged 1080. With that said, keep an eye out for overclocked third-party boards that don’t carry a significant premium — those may hit the sweet spot and give you a reason to jump to the 1070 Ti instead of sticking to the regular 1070 or AMD’s offerings. Via: Ars Technica Source: NVIDIA (1) , (2)

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NVIDIA’s GeForce GTX 1070 Ti battles AMD’s latest video cards

Netflix could spend $8 billion on content next year

Once again, Netflix’s quarterly earnings report ( PDF ) shows it’s added even more customers (5 million in the US alone), and now boasts more than 115 million subscribers worldwide. The company is now five years into its “original content strategy” that first drew attention with House of Cards , which turned into a string of series including hits like Stranger Things and Orange is the New Black . Of course, with more competition turning up (Amazon, Hulu, CBS All Access and, eventually, Disney), things are getting more expensive, as the company says it will spend “$7-8 billion on content” next year — even if it’s off the hook for 30 Rock . That’s potentially a billion dollars more than what Ted Sarandos predicted in August, and up to two billion more than it spent this year. Those differences also explain why prices are going up on some of its plans , as it continues a push to become more profitable. The company is predicting it will add slightly fewer new customers next quarter than it did last year, although it’s unclear if that’s due to the price changes or simply running out of people who want Netflix but don’t have it yet. The company will broadcast the video from its quarterly earnings call on YouTube at 6 PM ET, if there are any interesting anecdotes, we’ll update this post. Source: Netflix Q3 2017 earnings report (PDF)

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Netflix could spend $8 billion on content next year

The CIA Just Dumped 12 Million Declassified Documents Online

After years of fighting with FOIA requesters, the CIA has finally uploaded over 12 million documents to its website . While many of the documents have been declassified for some time, the pages were intentionally hard to access, and only available on a few computers sitting at the National Archives. But now, anyone can… Read more…

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The CIA Just Dumped 12 Million Declassified Documents Online

United Airlines Will Start Charging for Use of Overhead Bins

Remember your last flight when you told yourself that at least flying couldn’t get any worse? Well, it’s about to get worse. United Airlines will soon start charging some customers for the privilege to use the overhead bins . Read more…

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United Airlines Will Start Charging for Use of Overhead Bins

Hayao Miyazaki is Stepping Out of Retirement for One Final Film

You can’t keep Hayao Miyazaki away from what he loves. The celebrated anime director announced during a television special that he wants to come out of retirement to turn his 20-year pet project into a full-length animated feature. Read more…

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Hayao Miyazaki is Stepping Out of Retirement for One Final Film

Major Netflix outage interrupts your weekend viewing plans

We hope you weren’t dead-set on watching all of Luke Cage this weekend. As we write this, Netflix is recovering from a serious worldwide outage that knocked out its service from around 3PM Eastern to shortly after 5PM. While the streaming video company is no stranger to technical problems lasting for a few hours, the sheer scale and severity is noteworthy — you couldn’t even visit Netflix’s website. We’ve asked Netflix for more details and will let you know if it can explain how and why its service went down. It’s tempting to pin the failure on crushing demand for Luke Cage (which premiered just the day before), but there’s no guarantee that this is the case. Netflix has previously coped with launch day demand for shows like House of Cards and Daredevil , so it’s not as if Reed Hastings and crew are unfamiliar with traffic spikes. Whatever happened, it’s a sore spot in what was supposed to be a banner weekend for Netflix. Hi all – we are aware of streaming issues and we are working quickly to solve them. We will update you when they are resolved. — Netflix CS (@Netflixhelps) October 1, 2016 And we’re back! The streaming issues we reported are now resolved. — Netflix CS (@Netflixhelps) October 1, 2016 Source: Netflix (Twitter 1) , (2)

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Major Netflix outage interrupts your weekend viewing plans

NVIDIA’s new top-end graphics card is the $1,200 Titan X

If you recently bought a $599 NVIDIA GTX 1080 in order to have the fastest rig around, I have bad news. NVIDIA has revealed the latest Titan X , a graphics card with 12GB of GDDR5X memory and 3, 584 cores running at 1.53 GHZ, yielding an absurd 11 teraflops of performance. That easily bests the 8.9 teraflops of the GTX 1080, which itself put the last-gen Titan X to shame . You probably won’t feel too bad, however, when we tell you that the new card has a price tag of $1, 200, double that of its now-second-best sibling. The Titan X has 12 billion transistors and runs at 250W, meaning it burns around 40 percent more power than the GTX 1080. It carries DisplayPort 1.4, HDMI 2.0b and DL-DVI ports, though the company hasn’t yet detailed the configuration. NVIDIA has now unveiled four cards (the GTX 1060 , 1070 , 1080 and Titan X) in just over two months, which is a pretty frenetic launch rate. To hammer home the point about brute horsepower, NDIVIDA CEO Jen-Hsun Huang did a surprise unveil of the Titan X at a meetup of artificial intelligence experts at Stanford University. That’s fitting, because it’s starting to blur the line between its gaming cards and Tesla GPU accelerators used for deep learning in servers and supercomputers. The card will go on sale August 2nd in North America and Europe for $1, 200, but only on NVIDIA’s site and via “select system builders.” Source: NVIDIA

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NVIDIA’s new top-end graphics card is the $1,200 Titan X

Gwent: The collectible card game that’s more than just a Witcher spin-off

Didn’t you hear? Collectible card games are all the rage these days, what with Blizzard’s Hearthstone sporting over 20 million players, Magic: The Gathering going through some kind of renaissance, and publishers like Bethesda  definitely not trying to cash in on the whole thing with games like The Elder Scrolls: Legends . And so at this year’s E3 we have yet another entry in the genre from developers CD Projekt Red, a  Witcher 3 spin-off called  Gwent . The difference is, Gwent is far more than just a collectible card game. This one has an honest-to-god proper storyline. There’s even an open-world map to explore. For the uninitiated, Gwent was originally a collectible card game embedded into the vast world of The Witcher 3 . Only, as player data began to trickle in, CD Projekt Red discovered that many players were spending hours roaming inns during quests just to play Gwent . Some even ignored the main game entirely. This was more than enough incentive for the developer to spin Gwent off into its own free-to-play game across PC, Xbox One, and PlayStation 4. And in true CD Projekt Red fashion, it’s gone a little overboard in the process. Instead of just pitching players against each another in one-on-one card battles, Gwent features several single-player campaigns, each of of which has its own unique storyline and lead character, is fully voice acted, and is brought to life via some highly stylised 2D drawings that gently slide across the screen. There’s even an overworld map where, in the demo I was shown at least, you control a cute 2D Geralt to explore and find hidden snippets of story, or extra cards to add to your deck. Each campaign is said to last a whopping 10 hours or so too. Read 9 remaining paragraphs | Comments

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Gwent: The collectible card game that’s more than just a Witcher spin-off

​NVIDIA’s GeForce GTX 1080 is a PC gamer’s dream

It’s never been a better time to be a PC gamer. Hardware is getting both cheaper and more powerful, most big-budget console games are making it to PCs (where they also look better), and the rise of virtual reality offers a tempting upgrade target. NVIDIA, one of the pioneering graphics card designers, is taking full advantage of this revitalized PC gaming market with the GeForce GTX 1080 , its latest powerhouse GPU. It’s the first consumer card built on the company’s Pascal architecture, and most intriguingly, NVIDIA claims the $599 video card ($699 for the special “Founder’s Edition”) is faster than the Titan X , which goes for upwards of $1, 000. After testing it out over the past week, I can say the 1080 is clearly something special. Hardware I had the privilege of testing the Founder’s Edition of the card, which is something unique for NVIDIA. Previously, the company released fairly plain reference editions of its cards, which would inevitably be one-upped by partners with more elaborate cooling designs. But NVIDIA is positioning the GTX 1080 Founder’s Edition as a premium offering. The company claims the materials used to build the card, including the aluminum vapor chamber cooler (a step up from plain old air cooling) and more efficient power components, justify its $100 premium. But that’s a bit hard to stomach when its reference cards had similar cooler designs in the past. NVIDIA went for a bit more flair this time around. The sharp angles around the 1080’s cooler feel more reminiscent of a Ferrari than the company’s past designed. That’s a fitting way to represent just how fast it is: It’s capable of pumping out nine teraflops of computing power. The 1080 runs at 1, 607MHz (up to 1, 733MHz in boost mode) and packs in 8GB of Micron’s new DDR5X RAM. In comparison, last year’s 980 Ti card clocked in at 1, 000MHz with 6GB of standard DDR5 memory. Unlike CPUs, video cards haven’t seen massive megahertz bumps over the past few years, so the 1080’s numbers are seriously impressive. You can chalk up much of the GTX 1080’s upgrades to NVIDIA’s new Pascal architecture. It first appeared on the P100 card for data crunchers, but this is the first time we’ve seen what it looks like in consumer hardware. The big benefit with Pascal is its new 16nm FinFET architecture (a type of 3D transistor technology). It allows NVIDIA to reach higher clock speeds, as well as make the card much more power efficient. In terms of connectivity, the 1080 Founder’s Edition features 3 DisplayPort connections, one HDMI port and a single DVI socket. It would have been nice to see another HDMI port, but I’m sure there are plenty of professionals out there who are still running fancy monitors over DVI. Setup Getting the GTX 1080 up and running isn’t any different than you typical video card. It’s a big piece of kit, so you’ll want to make sure there’s enough room in your case for it to fit, but otherwise it snaps right into a PCI-X slot. Unlike the Radeon R9 Fury X, which required me to move some case fans around to make room for its water cooler radiator, the GTX 1080 was a cinch to install. After grabbing some fresh drivers from NVIDIA (and making sure any traces of old drivers were gone for good), I was off to the benchmarking races. Performance NVIDIA wasn’t lying: The GTX 1080 is a beast. I only had the R9 Fury X to compare it to on my gaming rig (which consists of a 4GHz Core i7-4790K CPU, 16GB of 2400Mz DDR3 RAM and a 512GB Crucial MX100 SSD on a ASUS Z97-A motherboard), but that’s a powerhouse GPU that easily keeps pace with the GTX 980 and Titan X. And for every major benchmark, the 1080 was significantly faster. 3DMark 3DMark 11 NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1080 Standard 15, 859/ Extreme 9, 316/ Ultra 5, 021 X9, 423 AMD R9 Fury X Standard 13, 337/ Extreme 7, 249/ Ultra 3, 899 X, 6457 In 3DMark online comparisons with similar systems, the 1080 was typically ranked better than 92 to 95 percent of results. It was only bested by scores from machines running multiple 980 and 980 Ti cards in SLI mode (which would also cost a lot more than the 1080 to put together). Witcher 3 Hitman Fallout 4 NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1080 43 48 54 AMD R9 Fury X 35 38 42 Average FPS performance in 4K with all graphics set to maximum. Still, benchmarks are one thing: I was more interested in how the GTX 1080 performs in actual games. And once again, it didn’t disappoint. Compared to the R9 Fury X, it reached around 43 frames per second in the Witcher 3 while running in 4K with all of the settings set to Ultra. That made the game much more playable in such a high resolution — the Fury X averaged around 35 fps, and it would sometimes dip below 30, which makes things unbearably jerky. For Hitman , the 1080 reached a smooth 48 fps on average, whereas the Fury X hovered around 38. I was particularly impressed with the card’s performance in Fallout 4 (after turning off that game’s frame limiter). It was playable on the Fury X, reaching around 42 fps, but on the GTX 1080 it more often hovered between 50 and 55 fps in most environments. Sometimes it would shoot upwards of 60fps indoors, and in wide open areas it would dip to 40 fps. That wouldn’t make for the smoothest experience, but it’s certainly a lot more playable in 4K. Thanks to the elaborate heatsink design, the GTX 1080 Founder’s Edition was also cooler than I expected. It idled at a mere 33c, and under full load it reached between 65c and 70c. I also had no trouble overclocking the GPU by 250MHz (reaching around 1.95 GHz under load), and the memory by 200MHz, without any significant temperature changes. NVIDIA reps managed to push the card past 2.1GHz during a stage demo without any additional cooling. If you’re into overclocking, this card was basically made for you. Last year I wasn’t sold on the viability of 4K gaming — if a $600 card like the R9 Fury X couldn’t always handle it, why even bother? — but the GTX 1080 actually makes it viable with a single card. But while it’s nice to see significant progress in high-res gaming, I still prefer bumping down to a lower resolution like 2, 560 x 1, 440 to ensure a silky 60fps experience. Most people wouldn’t notice the marginal difference in rendering resolution, but they’d certainly pick out when frames start to stutter in 4K. Even if you’re not chasing 4K, a powerful card like the 1080 could be used to “supersample” games, which involves rendering them at a higher resolution than what’s being shown on the screen to remove unsightly jagged lines. It’s a technique that’s fallen out of fashion in the PC gaming world, but now that cards have computing power to spare, it could be a smart way to make games look even better. With Hitman, I was able to get around 60 fps when running it at 2, 560 x 1, 440 with a 1.2X supersample. I couldn’t see a huge difference without enabling the feature, but this is the sort of thing that some PC gamers might eat up. When it comes to VR, the GTX 1080 doesn’t feel significantly better than the R9 Fury X. That’s partially because the Oculus Rift and HTC Vive run at a relatively low 1, 200-by-1, 080-pixel resolution for each eye display, which is significantly less sharp than the 1080p HD screens we’ve grown used to. You need to reach at least 90 fps in VR to make games look smooth, but that’s not a tough target for the 1080 to reach at such a low resolution. NVIDIA has also included some new technology, dubbed Simultaneous Multi-Projection, which makes the 1080 more efficient at displaying VR scenes than other cards. For example, it only needs to render a scene once to show it in VR, whereas other video cards have to do that work twice (once for each eye). The card is also much smarter about processing the pixels you actually need to see in a scene. These new innovations won’t make a big impact on existing VR games, which don’t need to be displayed in high resolutions, but they could be a big deal with next-generation headsets. The competition As great as the GTX 1080 is, most gamers will likely opt for its cheaper sibling, the $379 GTX 1070 ($449 for the Founders Edition). It’s only slightly slower — pumping out 6.5 teraflops instead of the 1080’s nine terfalops — but NVIDIA says it’s also “roughly” the same performance as the $1, 000 Titan X. That’s an insane cost/performance ratio, and it also leaves room for snapping up another (inevitably cheaper) 1070 in a year or so to bump your speeds up. As is usually the case, there will also be plenty of competing GTX 1080 designs to choose from in the next few months. Those cards will likely come in closer to the $599 retail price NVIDIA is advertising, rather than the $699 premium for the Founders Edition. Normally, I’d also urge you to look at previous-generation hardware as new gear comes in. But the 1070 and 1080 are such huge architectural leaps that it doesn’t make sense for most people to consider a 970 or 980. If you’re really trying to save money, a 970 for around $200 could be a decent deal in the future (they’re still going for around $300). But you’d also regret that choice if you want to dabble in VR within the next year. AMD has also shown off its next-generation graphics technology, Polaris , which promises to be just as power efficient as NVIDIA’s Pascal. We still don’t know what Polaris consumer cards will look like yet, so it might pay off to wait a few months before you decide on a new GPU. Wrap-up If you have the cash, and need the most powerful video card on the market, you can’t go wrong with the GTX 1080. It’s built precisely for the things gamers are focused on today: 4K and VR. It’s not just an incremental upgrade for NVIDIA: It’s a dramatic leap forward.

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​NVIDIA’s GeForce GTX 1080 is a PC gamer’s dream