As expected the American League announced that Tigers right-hander Max Scherzer will start the All-Star game tomorrow night, matching up against Mets right-hander Matt Harvey.
Scherzer?s winning streak came to an end in his final first-half start, but he?s 13-1 with a 3.19 ERA and 152/31 K/BB ratio in 130 innings. If not for the impressive win total (and Jim Leyland doing the choosing) it?s possible that Scherzer would not have gotten the assignment, as he ranks ninth in the AL in ERA. Of course, regardless of how you feel about evaluating pitchers on win-loss records he?s been really, really good for the Tigers.
This is Scherzer?s first All-Star game and dating back to mid-June of last season he?s 24-4 with a 2.88 ERA and 295 strikeouts in 247 innings spread over 38 starts.
OK, quick, whose quotes are whose? Democratic Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel or Republican antitax champion Grover Norquist.
"There's nothing like the dedication of a child of an immigrant. They know in their DNA that they are here, they are lucky, and this better not get screwed up because their parents are going to kill you."
?
"I get a kick out of people asking whether we should be pro-immigrant: That's like asking the United States if McDonald's should sell hamburgers."
This could be the one issue where you would not be able to pull apart the position of Emanuel from Norquist (whose quotes are in that order): There's an easy answer to whether to take up immigration reform, according to both polar-opposite power players. And it's yes.
There were some shots, subtly, at one another at a forum hosted byThe Atlantic?at its Watergate office (incidentally, as a sister publication, National Journal is located there, too). Norquist was quick to remind the crowds that, historically, opposition to immigration has come from organized labor. He also said things like: "In Canada, that's the one in the north," directed at Emanuel.
"If you wouldn't tell anyone we were here together," Emanuel said toward the end, "it would not work back home for me, and it won't work for him in Washington. "
The Atlantic's Steve Clemons moderates a discussion between Grover Norquist and Rahm Emanuel. (Brian Resnick)
But their tone and dissatisfaction with the House Republican holdup of immigration reform both rang similar, with Norquist, actually, invoking the harsher criticism. He described the anti-immigration reform position as being "anti-people."
"The economics of this is so clear," Norquist said. "If you have more people moving into an area of economic growth, you actually get more growth. People are an asset. The argument that immigration depresses wages is the same argument against children" because children are people who can eventually enter the job market to compete with their parents. "They [Republicans against reform] tag immigrants with something else that they are focused on," he later said?like welfare. Those opposed to immigration reform say it will inflate the entitlement state. Norquist argues that the welfare system is indeed broken, but that's a separate issue from immigration. "Most of the people whose lives are damaged by welfare were born here," Norquist argued. But that's what makes changing minds difficult in this case. You have to reconcile each individual's pet fears.
Chicago is a sanctuary city for undocumented immigrants, and a sizable portion of the city's economy comes from its diverse ethnic neighborhoods. And just on Monday, the city announced a program to set up path to citizenship information centers at local libraries. But, according to the mayor, you can't pretend like stories of success in Chicago will resonate with middle America, and deep-red states like Kansas.
"You can't give them a national story, there are anecdotes and examples in Kansas's own history that you have to weave in a very local way," he said. "And I would not treat it disrespectfully. There's a story and narrative in Kansas that you have to go find."
According to Norquist, the House Republicans are staving off a vote because they fear a change in the tides. "Voices that are shrill, arguing for let's not have a vote are doing so because every day the Republican caucus is moving toward yes," he said, later adding, "it doesn't show up in the votes the way it shows up in the tongue wagging you can get in talk radio."
Emanuel followed: "The party has allowed itself to have a few voices to describe and define its position on immigration."
Main Category: Cancer / Oncology Also Included In: Heart Disease Article Date: 14 Jul 2013 - 0:00 PDT
Current ratings for: Researchers Discover A Role For A Protein That Has Implications For Treatment Of Cancer And Heart Disease
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St. Jude Children's Research Hospital scientists have discovered that a protein used by cancer cells to evade death also plays a vital role in heart health. This dual role complicates efforts to develop cancer drugs that target the protein, but may lead to new therapies for heart muscle damage. The research appeared in a recent edition of the scientific journal Genes & Development.
The protein, MCL1, is currently the focus of widespread cancer drug development efforts. MCL1 is best known as an inhibitor of death via the cell's suicide pathway in a process called apoptosis. The protein is elevated in a variety of cancers, and a number of MCL1 inhibitors are in the cancer drug development pipeline worldwide. The protein has also been linked to drug resistance in cancer patients. Until now, however, MCL1's role in heart muscle cells was unclear.
"Our study shows that MCL1 is required for normal cardiac function and that the protein may be critical in protecting the heart from apoptosis," said Joseph Opferman, Ph.D., an associate member of the St. Jude Department of Biochemistry and the paper's corresponding author. Unlike skin or blood cells, heart muscle cells cannot be replaced, so even a small loss through apoptosis can be devastating. In this study, knocking out MCL1 in mice led to death from cardiomyopathy within weeks.
"These findings suggest that cancer-related drug development efforts should focus on reducing MCL1 expression in target cells rather than eliminating the protein's function completely," Opferman said.
The results also have implications for treating heart muscle damage following heart attacks or other insults. While limiting MCL1 in cancer cells might aid in destroying them, providing higher levels of the protein in heart muscle cells might benefit a patient recovering from a heart attack or other heart damage. "These findings have broad implications for human health," Opferman said.
MCL1 belongs to a protein family involved in regulating apoptosis. The body uses apoptosis to rid itself of damaged, dangerous or unneeded cells. MCL1 prevents apoptosis by blocking the activity of other members of the same protein family that promote the process.
This research builds on previous work from Opferman's laboratory that identified a second form of MCL1. That form works inside rather than outside the mitochondria and helps to produce the chemical energy that fuels cells. Mitochondria are specialized structures inside cells that serve as their power plants.
The latest results suggest both forms of MCL1 are necessary for normal heart function, said the paper's first author Xi Wang, a University of Tennessee Health Science Center graduate student working in Opferman's laboratory.
When investigators knocked out the mouse version of the human MCL1 gene in the heart and skeletal muscle of both embryonic and adult mice, the animals rapidly developed lethal cardiomyopathy. Without MCL1, researchers found that muscle fiber in heart muscle cells was replaced by fibrous tissue, and the pumping ability of the animals' hearts diminished. Loss of MCL1 was also associated with a rise in apoptosis sufficient to cause fatal heart muscle weakness.
To better understand MCL1's role in normal heart function, researchers blocked apoptosis by deleting genes for the proteins Bak and Bax as well as MCL1. Bak and Bax promote apoptosis. Knocking out all three genes restored normal heart function in the mice. The animals lived longer, but mitochondria in the heart muscle did not look or function normally. These results suggest that normal heart function requires both forms of MCL1. "The question is whether, with time, you would see deleterious effects from the loss of MCL1 separate from apoptosis," Opferman said.
Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release. Click 'references' tab above for source. Visit our cancer / oncology section for the latest news on this subject.
The other authors are Madhavi Bathina, John Lynch, Brian Koss, Christopher Calabrese, Sharon Frase, John Schuetz and Jerold Rehg, all of St. Jude.
The research was funded in part by a grant (HL102175) from the National Institutes of Health (NIH), a grant (CA021765) from the National Cancer Institute (NCI) at the NIH, the National Cancer Society and ALSAC.
St. Jude Children's Research Hospital
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A woman in China is reported to have been killed by an electric shock discharged from her iPhone 5 whilst the device was charging.
Ma Ailun, a 23-year-old woman from Xinjiang, northwestern China, was killed by an electric shock over the weekend. Her older sister took to Chinese social networking site Sina Weibo, purporting that the fatal charge was delivered when Ma answered her phone as the device was charging.
According to her sister, the device had been purchased in December and was under warranty. The device has since been handed over to the authorities as part of the investigation into her death.
In a statement following the news, Apple said:
We are deeply saddened to learn of this tragic incident and offer our condolences to the Ma family? We will fully investigate and cooperate with authorities in this matter.
Whilst incidents such as this are incredibly rare, experts have noted that there is a risk to using electrical devices whilst being charged. The news pushed the hashtag ?iPhone 5? into Twitter?s top ten worldwide trends.
AAA??Jul. 13, 2013?5:32 PM ET At court, groups gather to await Zimmerman verdict By TAMARA LUSHBy TAMARA LUSH, Associated Press??
George Zimmerman arrives in the courtroom for his trial at the Seminole County Criminal Justice Center, in Sanford, Fla., Friday, July 12, 2013. Zimmerman is charged in the 2012 shooting death of unarmed teenager Trayvon Martin. (AP Photo/Orlando Sentinel, Joe Burbank, Pool)
George Zimmerman arrives in the courtroom for his trial at the Seminole County Criminal Justice Center, in Sanford, Fla., Friday, July 12, 2013. Zimmerman is charged in the 2012 shooting death of unarmed teenager Trayvon Martin. (AP Photo/Orlando Sentinel, Joe Burbank, Pool)
George Zimmerman wipes his face after arriving in the courtroom during his trial at the Seminole County Criminal Justice Center, in Sanford, Fla., Friday, July 12, 2013. Zimmerman is charged in the 2012 shooting death of unarmed teenager Trayvon Martin. (AP Photo/Orlando Sentinel, Joe Burbank, Pool)
FILE - This undated file family photo shows Trayvon Martin. Trayvon, 17, was slain in a 2012 shooting in Sanford, Fla., by neighborhood crime-watch captain George Zimmerman. Zimmerman's defense attorney began his final arguments Friday, July 12, 2013, trying to convince six jurors that the neighborhood watch volunteer acted in self-defense when he fatally shot 17-year-old Trayvon Martin. (AP Photo/Martin Family, File)
George Zimmerman wipes his face after arriving in the courtroom for his trial at the Seminole County Criminal Justice Center, in Sanford, Fla., Friday, July 12, 2013. Zimmerman is charged in the 2012 shooting death of unarmed teenager Trayvon Martin. (AP Photo/Orlando Sentinel, Joe Burbank, Pool)
Assistant state attorney Bernie de la Rionda shows George Zimmerman's gun to the jury while presenting the state's closing arguments against Zimmerman during his trial in Seminole circuit court in Sanford, Fla. Thursday, July 11, 2013. Zimmerman has been charged with second-degree murder for the 2012 shooting death of Trayvon Martin. (AP Photo/Orlando Sentinel, Gary W. Green, Pool)
SANFORD, Fla. (AP) ? Sheriff's deputies separated some supporters of George Zimmerman from advocates of Trayvon Martin outside the Seminole County Courthouse following a heated exchange.
No physical contact was made Saturday afternoon between the supporters as they waited for a verdict in George Zimmerman's trial for second-degree murder.
Zimmerman is pleading not guilty, claiming he shot the 17-year-old Martin in self-defense.
About 100 supporters have gathered outside the courthouse as they await the jury of six women to reach a verdict.
Despite its shortcomings, Vine is a hit. In case you're not familiar with it, this free social video app from Twitter curtails your iPhone videos to a mere 6 seconds?a sort of video-only Instagram. Though still in its infancy, the video-sharing app has undergone a fairly substantial, feature-adding update in the new Vine 1.3 version. While the update brings real improvements, the app is still lacking compared with Viddy and Instagram, which recently added video shooting and sharing with more editing capabilities than Vine.
First off, here's a list of the major new attractions that have made their way in the app:
? Channels?Browse or submit your posts to 15 new channels?from Comedy, Art & Experimental, to Cats, and more. ? On The Rise?Discover new and interesting Viners right from your Explore screen. ? Revining?Share your favorite posts with all your followers on Vine in one tap. ? New Capture Tools?Shoot with style using the new focus, grid, and ghost tools. ? Protected Accounts?Allow only people you approve to follow you and view your posts.
I'll discuss these new features in the relevant review sections below. But first off, let's be clear: Vine isn't a case of "video finally comes to Twitter." You've long been able to embed a DailyMotion, YouTube or Vimeo video into a Twitter post, so this isn't the first time anyone's been able to add video to tweets. Vine is more of an attempt to co-opt the craze for animated GIFs, most prominently evidenced on image-heavy mini-blogging site Tumblr, as well as to become the Instagram of video. ?
Vine movies, which play to today's short attention spans, may be limited in length, but like animated GIFs, they loop infinitely, which actually does the opposite of increasing their impact. Let's see how it stacks up against other social video apps, such as Lightt, ?Yahoo's new Qwiki, Socialcam, Viddy, ?and Instagram itself.
Signup and Setup The app store entry for Vine says you must be over 17 to install it, and that it contains "Frequent/Intense Sexual Content or Nudity." That actually was a problem at its original launch, when a porn Vine made it to the app's Editor's Picks section (which no longer exists). The app requires an iPhone 3GS or later running iOS 5.0 or later. It's optimized for iPhone 5, but not for iPad, where you'll either have to view it in a small window or zoomed to 2x. Like a good many of the latest crop of iPhone apps, Vine asks whether it can interrupt you with notifications and wants access to your location.
As you'd expect with an app just acquired by Twitter, you can sign in with your Twitter account, or create a new Vine account using an email address. The typical social app would also let you sign up via Facebook, but that's not an option for obvious reasons. Conveniently, you don't need to actually provide your Twitter credentials, the app can take them from your iPhone's Settings. But even though Vine is owned by Twitter, you'll still have to create a new Vine account even if you sign up via Twitter.
The new private option is similar to Twitter's?it's all or nothing. You can't designate some videos as private and others as public, as you can in Viddy. To go private, on your Settings page, scroll down to "Your content" and you'll see to slider options: Posts are protected and Sensitive posts (for aspiring pornographers). Both choices apply to all your posts.
Interface After setup, my view was of an Instagram-like newsfeed of GIF-like videos from contacts I didn't know I had. Apparently, these were preselected Vine/Twitter employees' accounts. The well-designed and simple interface has but two buttons in the top corners above the feed?on the left Home, and on the right a movie camera. Pressing the home button offered three more options in addition to the home view I was already viewing: Explore, Activity, and Profile. These first two were encouraging, reminding me of the addictive similar pages of Flickr.
A banner across the top of the home screen encouraged me to get my own new Vine follows. I could find these by scanning my phone's local address book, Twitter (of course). Facebook has been removed as a source of new contacts. Tit-for-tat for when Twitter blocked the Facebook-owned Instagram. This means war! I could also simply search for Vine user names, or invite friends to the service using email or SMS.
As in every self-respecting social network, each user gets a profile page, and Vine's resembles Twitter's, except it offers separate tabs for Posts and Likes. On top is the user's photo, a text area for inspirational self-description and a big Follow button. If something or someone offends you, you can report or block a profile for inappropriate posting.
The redesigned Explore page is an even bigger treat than it was originally. You still get Popular Now, but this is joined by On the Rise, which makes discovering amusing Vines even easier. Colorful Windows 8-like tiles now offer YouTube-like sections, rather than hashtags; the latter now appear below the colorful tiles, and are now trending hastags, rather than just the preset ones like #sports, #travel, and so on.
Once you do discover a video you love, you can Like (thanks to a smiley face button), comment, and now "Revine" it. The last is just like retweeting in Twitter; it even uses the same button icon. It really is instantaneous, with no options required before taking hold. As with the Like button, the Revine button turns dark green, and you can tap it again to un-favorite it.
If someone shares a Vine link, you can watch it on a bare-bones Vine-hosted Web page, but there's no website where you can view all your own and contacts' Vines or do any of the social connecting and browsing. You can watch the videos inside Twitter apps or in your Twitter feed. Vine videos also can play on Facebook.
The government and automotive industry are investing ?500 million each to double the number of jobs created or secured in the automotive supply chain by creating an Advanced Propulsion Centre.
The commitment is backed by 27 companies in the sector, including supply chain companies, and is expected to secure at least 30,000 jobs.
This is part of a strategy for the UK to secure the long term future of the industry over the next 20 to 30 years by growing the UK share of the value chain. The money will be spent on the APC over the next ten years to research, develop and commercialise the technologies for the vehicles of the future.
Supply chain is a key theme, and government and industry are focussing on working together to grow the UK supply chain and win more overseas business.
Mike Baunton, SMMT Interim Chief Executive said: ?In partnership with government, we have now developed a roadmap to secure further long-term growth that is detailed in the strategy document launched today. ?Our goals are to grow vehicle production and component supply with more investment, jobs and advanced technology developed in the UK.?
Richard Hill, Head of Automotive Sector at RBS and member of the Automotive Council, said: ?To support the growth of this vital sector RBS has invested in building a dedicated auto team with excellent understanding of the industry and which is developing bespoke funding facilities to meet the needs of each car manufacturer?s supply chain structure.?
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Don Vito Corleone
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Videocard: AMD | NVIDIA
Processor: Core i7 2600K
Mainboard: P67
Memory: 8GB
Soundcard: X-Fi - GigaWorks 7.1
PSU: 1200 Watt
All DRM stuff aside there seems to be more drama inbound for the XBOX One. The Xbox One's hardware isn't all too impressive when compared to its main competitor, the PS4 ...
Microsoft might be revising the Xbox One hardware before it even releases
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Master Guru
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Videocard: 2 x nVidia 670 sli
Processor: Intel 3770k
Mainboard: Asus P8z77-v pro
Memory: DDR3 32GB Corsair
Soundcard: Creative Labs Recon 3D
PSU: Corsair 1.05kw
ugh.
What a mess of confusion and identity this box has, I'd hate to work on the marketing/PR for it.
Is it a games console or not? Pick a lane.
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Member Guru
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Videocard: Gigabyte GTX670 Windforce
Processor: i5 3570K @ 4.2
Mainboard: Asus P8Z77-I DELUXE
Memory: Corsair Vengeance 8gb LP
Soundcard: Creative Soundblaster Pro
PSU: Corsair 650HX
Let me get this right, they will "upgrade" their hardware in order to be competitive with the PS4, but the Xbox will still cost 100$ more?
This is stupid.
If i have to choose i'd still buy the PS4 if they have the same specs.
And with the 100 bucks i'd get me a 2nd controller and a game maybe.
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Master Guru
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Videocard: 3x EVGA GTX 780's Tri-SLI
Processor: Core i7 3970X 4.0ghz
Mainboard: Gigabyte GA-X79-UP4
Memory: 32GB DDR3 Corsair 1600mhz
Soundcard: Creative SB Titanium HD
PSU: CM Silent Pro Gold 1200w
Putting more DDR3 RAM into the GPU won't help much. It needs to be GDDR5. Either way, i'm not buying an Xbone. F*** M$
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Ancient Guru
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Videocard: GTX 780
Processor: Core i7 920 3.7GHz HT
Mainboard: Asus P6T Deluxe V1
Memory: 6GB DDR3
Soundcard: On board
PSU: Corsair TX750 V1
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Master Guru
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Videocard: 2 x nVidia 670 sli
Processor: Intel 3770k
Mainboard: Asus P8z77-v pro
Memory: DDR3 32GB Corsair
Soundcard: Creative Labs Recon 3D
PSU: Corsair 1.05kw
Quote:
Let me get this right, they will "upgrade" their hardware in order to be competitive with the PS4, but the Xbox will still cost 100$ more?
This is stupid.
If i have to choose i'd still buy the PS4 if they have the same specs.
And with the 100 bucks i'd get me a 2nd controller and a game maybe.
yup.
I'm not buying a new games console until some games come out that I'd want to play.
Already got great games on the console I got for when friends head over, I got no need(s) to get me a new console yet.
Give it a year or two and I'll bet that'll change, maybe sooner, maybe not.
IF GTA 5 was a launch title...man that'll be a strong persuader for me.
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Newbie
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Videocard: Gigabyte GTX770 OC 4GB
Processor: Intel i5 3570K @ 4.4Ghz
Mainboard: ASRock Z77 EXTREME4
Memory: 16GB G.Skill DDR3-1600
Soundcard: X-Fi XtremeGamer
PSU: CORSAIR AX760
If I wasn't a dedicated and thoroughly satisfied PC gamer, I'd not even consider the XBox One but would automatically go for the PS4, and not because of the CPU speed, or the quantity of RAM, but because of the price. $100 is nothing to laugh at!
And on a side note, what's with the "Meanwhile in Taiwan ... " caption for the picture? Sony is a Japanese company, unless it's some sort of inside joke.
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Master Guru
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Videocard: GTX 780 SLI 3GB
Processor: Intel i7 3930K 4.3Ghz
Mainboard: Intel X79
Memory: 16GB DDR 1600 @ 1866
Soundcard: Logitech Z-2300
PSU: Delta 875W
Quote:
And on a side note, what's with the "Meanwhile in Taiwan ... " caption for the picture? Sony is a Japanese company, unless it's some sort of inside joke.
Dunno. All the stuff is made is Taiwan is it not?
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Don Pinguccino
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Videocard: XFX Radeon HD 6870
Processor: Intel Core i5 3570K @4.5
Mainboard: GIGABYTE GA-Z77X-UD5H
Memory: Patriot 4 x 4GB DDR3-1600
Soundcard: Auzentech X-Raider 7.1
PSU: OCZ ModXStream Pro 500W
First of all, how is Titanfall already hitting 5 GB of RAM? Does that mean it'll need that much for PCs too when it launches on PCs? (Do note that 5 GB includes graphics data since the XBOX One and the PS4 have unified memory pools, so likely 4 GB system + 1 GB graphics or something like that).
Secondly, Sony is from Japan, not Taiwan. The chips are likely fabricated in Taiwan through TSMC though. However, most components are likely made and assembled in China.
Thirdly, even if you increase the RAM size, it doesn't account for the potential bottleneck of DDR3, the ESRAM at 32 MB is still pretty small. Sure, it acts as a buffer, but not sure if developers can fully realize the SRAM. I heard from other sources that Microsoft has been tweaking the ESRAM to match and in some cases exceed the bandwidth provided by GDDR5.
Some people have also pointed out about latency issues with GDDR5, the XBOX 360 uses GDDR3 exclusively, developers don't seem to have latency issues with the XBOX 360. The clock speed basically negates the latency problem. DDR3 has a higher latency than DDR2, yet it's still faster even with the added latency...
deltatux
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Ancient Guru
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Videocard: GTX660SC
Processor: Core i7 2600K
Mainboard: ASRock Z77 Extreme4
Memory: 16gb G.Skill DDR3-1866
Soundcard: Creative Recon3D PCIe
PSU: SeaSonic M12II 620 Bronze
Games only have access to 5GB of the 8GB total system memory.....which doesn't make much sense to me. Do the OS and any other, non-gaming tasks, actually need 3GB? If so, that would make the Xbox OS more resource heavy than any version of Windows.
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Master Guru
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Videocard: 6870 900/1050
Processor: AMD FX 8350 4.4ghz
Mainboard: ASUS M5A97 AM3+
Memory: 16gb ddr3 1866
Soundcard:
PSU: corsair tx650
Quote:
Games only have access to 5GB of the 8GB total system memory.....which doesn't make much sense to me. Do the OS and any other, non-gaming tasks, actually need 3GB? If so, that would make the Xbox OS more resource heavy than any version of Windows.
i believe the xbox 1 has 3 operating systems on it from what the reveal said so i would guess they reserved 1gb to each one.
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Don Pinguccino
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Videocard: XFX Radeon HD 6870
Processor: Intel Core i5 3570K @4.5
Mainboard: GIGABYTE GA-Z77X-UD5H
Memory: Patriot 4 x 4GB DDR3-1600
Soundcard: Auzentech X-Raider 7.1
PSU: OCZ ModXStream Pro 500W
Quote:
Games only have access to 5GB of the 8GB total system memory.....which doesn't make much sense to me. Do the OS and any other, non-gaming tasks, actually need 3GB? If so, that would make the Xbox OS more resource heavy than any version of Windows.
It's unfair for Microsoft to say that there's 3 OSes, there's really 2 sitting on top of a hypervisor. Likely the hypervisor takes up some memory and then the "XBOX OS" and "Windows 8-based OS" takes up memory too (since both are booted upon start-up).
deltatux
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Master Guru
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Videocard: MSI 660ti PE SLI
Processor: i5 3570K@4.1GHz
Mainboard: Asrock Extreme 4
Memory: 16GB G-Skill
Soundcard:
PSU: Corsair AX 750w
Why do people care about the latency difference between ddr3 and gddr5.... The mhz more than makes up for it hence why sony are using it. They wouldnt use it if it was worse than ddr3 as ddr3 is cheaper anyway...
and 32mb of ESRAM , dont care what you tell me 32mb in this day and age aside from Lx cache on processors is not enough to do a god damn thing. It creates another section the data will go through therefore making it more annoying to code than the ps4... NSAbox, no thankyou.
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Maha Guru
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Videocard: EVGA 660gtx sig2
Processor: i7 920 CNPS10X Quiet
Mainboard: Evga x58 SLI LE
Memory: 3x2gb Dominator@1600 6Gb
Soundcard: Realtek HD Audio
PSU: Antec Truepower 750
if they upgrade ram to be more i bet sony will do mad rush to do the same maybe even for the gpu ram speed.
ATM MS is in brain storm mode to try and fix what the made mess of which they do alot of as of late
Quote:
Why do people care about the latency difference between ddr3 and gddr5.... The mhz more than makes up for it hence why sony are using it. They wouldnt use it if it was worse than ddr3 as ddr3 is cheaper anyway...
and 32mb of ESRAM , dont care what you tell me 32mb in this day and age aside from Lx cache on processors is not enough to do a god damn thing. It creates another section the data will go through therefore making it more annoying to code than the ps4... NSAbox, no thankyou.
GDDR5 is faster speeds, higher latency but more suited for smaller chucks of memory DDR3 is lower latency, lower speeds, but more suited for larger chunks of memory, Or so people that compare the 2 keep saying the normal user isnt gona see difference.
Hence DDR3 is used as PC main ram cause it deals with Large chunks of data and GDDR5 is used in GPU as they mainly use smaller chunks of data.
Last edited by tsunami231; Today at 18:14.
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Master Guru
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Videocard: MSI 660ti PE SLI
Processor: i5 3570K@4.1GHz
Mainboard: Asrock Extreme 4
Memory: 16GB G-Skill
Soundcard:
PSU: Corsair AX 750w
Nah sony dont have to do a thing. Their OS only uses 1GB leaving 7 and also they are beating the xbox by roughly .6-7 Tflops. They have won no matter what xbox one do.
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Maha Guru
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Videocard: EVGA 660gtx sig2
Processor: i7 920 CNPS10X Quiet
Mainboard: Evga x58 SLI LE
Memory: 3x2gb Dominator@1600 6Gb
Soundcard: Realtek HD Audio
PSU: Antec Truepower 750
Quote:
Nah sony dont have to do a thing. Their OS only uses 1GB leaving 7 and also they are beating the xbox by roughly .6-7 Tflops. They have won no matter what xbox one do.
They dont but they could which would put MS in bigger hole btw .6~.7 Tflops isnt a whole lot
Anyway I think the most the can do is increase ram speed change ram amount this late would make then have to dump what ever they started to produce and if they didnt start producing them by now there will mass shortages.
But then I could care less about what MS does I wont buy the console I dont care for this Camera/Motion crap MS is pushing down peoples throats and charging extra as a result. That and after the 360 and 4 RROD on system I played way less then my PS3 was enough for me to say never again any MS console, and I was already boycotting MS hardware.
Last edited by tsunami231; Today at 18:25.
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Master Guru
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Videocard: MSI 660ti PE SLI
Processor: i5 3570K@4.1GHz
Mainboard: Asrock Extreme 4
Memory: 16GB G-Skill
Soundcard:
PSU: Corsair AX 750w
uh .6-7 Tflops is quiet a bit... im talking 1.3ish for xbone and 1.84 if i recall for the ps4. Nothing that RAM can fix. Slight CPU overlock would increase it minimally.
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Newbie
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Videocard: AMD Radeon HD7950
Processor: Intel Core i7 2600K
Mainboard: MSI Z68a GD80 B3
Memory:
Soundcard: Asus Xonar DG+Logitech
PSU: Corsair TX650W V2
This article is a copy/paste from the one on the Examiner.
Hilbert, is the source yours? Or are you just reporting the rumor?
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Maha Guru
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Videocard: EVGA 660gtx sig2
Processor: i7 920 CNPS10X Quiet
Mainboard: Evga x58 SLI LE
Memory: 3x2gb Dominator@1600 6Gb
Soundcard: Realtek HD Audio
PSU: Antec Truepower 750
in my eyes it is not not for console anyway seeing there already highly optimized for just that system and not 100's of different configs. PC might benfit more but that my opinion Changing ram speed and or add more would make just as little change too.
? ?
Maha Guru
?
Videocard: EVGA 660gtx sig2
Processor: i7 920 CNPS10X Quiet
Mainboard: Evga x58 SLI LE
Memory: 3x2gb Dominator@1600 6Gb
Soundcard: Realtek HD Audio
PSU: Antec Truepower 750
If gamespot or one of those other site like gamebomb etc report this would find it slightly more believe able
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