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3:43 PM
AMD A10-6800K Processor Review
Written By Andrea on Monday, June 10, 2013 | 3:43 PM
The AMD-6800K is one of the first processor in AMD’s 2013 APU range to be released. Nicknamed Richland, the new APUs improve upon the outgoing Trinity processors, although not in a radical fashion. The new processors still use Socket FM2, for instance, and are compatible with existing motherboards and the A55, a75 and A85X chipsets. This means you can buy and install an A10-6800K today.
One difference is that the A10-6800K has a built-in Radeon HD 8670D graphics processor rather than the A10-5800K’s Radeon HD 7660D graphics processor, but the difference in performance isn’t phenomenal. The A10-5800K delivered an average frame rate of 45.5fps in Dirt Showdown at a resolution of 1,280x720 with 4x anti-aliasing and graphics quality set to High, while the A10-6800K delivered an average frame rate of 48.9fps under the same conditions. Raising the clock speed of our memory to 1866MHz increased the A10-6800K’s performance a little further, with our system delivering 50.3fps under the same test conditions. Although not a huge increase on the graphics performance of the A10-5800K, we’re not too concerned, as the high-end A-series chips have always delivered fantastic graphics performance. Indeed the top-of-the-range Intel Core i7-4770K only scored 32.4fps in the same task.
The A10-6800K is the successor to the A10-5800K, and it has the same TDP of 100W, same amount of level 2 cache memory and is a 32nm process. However, the A10-6800K runs at a higher clock speed of 4.1GHz and has a higher boost speed of 4.4GHz. It performed better than the A10-5800K in our benchmark tests, scoring a very impressive 83 in the image editing segment, 69 in video editing, 68 in the multitasking segment and 71 overall. This compares well with the A10-5800K, which scored 67 in the image-editing segment, 61 in video, 66 in the multitasking segment and 65 overall.
We can see that the biggest increases were seen in the image- and video-editing segments, with the A10-6800K having nearly the same multitasking score. Overall, the A10-6800K is around 9.2 per cent faster than the A10-5800K in our benchmark tests. This is a healthy and welcome increase, but it isn’t astounding considering the rise in clock speed and the fifteen per cent rise in price.
When overclocked to 4.4GHz, the A10-6800K scored 88 in image-editing, 72 in video editing and 71 in the multitasking segment, giving it a score of 74 overall. That’s a performance increase of 15 per cent over the A10-5800K at default clock settings and an increase of around four per cent over the A10-6800K at its default clock settings.
Intel’s closest rival processor is the Core-i3-3220, as we’ve still to see 4th-generation Haswell Core i3 processors. The Core i3-3220 is cheaper, but it’s also a dual-core CPU that can’t be overclocked. The A10-6800K consistently beat the Core i3-3220 in all segments of our benchmark suite, with the Core i3-3220 scoring 60 overall. It also trounced the Core i3-3220 in our Dirt Showdown laptop test, scoring a very smooth 48.9fps. The Core i3-3220 failed the same test. The Core i3-3220 is a good processor if you need a low TDP Intel-based system, but we think the A10-6800K is a better general-purpose processor, especially if you tend to play more games or watch videos.
Combined with a good SSD, the AMD A10-6800K is ideal for a budget PC build. It provides excellent on-chip graphics processing, good performance and decent overclocking potential at a great price. It doesn’t provide a massive increase in performance over the A10-5800K, but it’s enough for the A10-6800K to earn a Best Buy award.
Basic Specifications | |
---|---|
Part Code | A10-6800K |
Processor core | Richland |
Processor clock speed | 4.1GHz |
Processor socket | FM2 |
Processor process | 32nm |
Processor number of cores | 4 |
Processor supported instructions | MMX, SSE 1, 2, 3, 3S, 4.1, 4.2, 4A, X86-64, AMD-V, AES, AVX, XOP |
Processor multiplier | x41 |
Processor external bus | 100MHz |
Level 1 cache | 2x 64KB |
Level 2 cache | 2x 2,048KB |
Processor level 3 cache | n/a |
Supported memory type | DDR3 |
Processor power rating (TDP) | 100W |
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1:47 PM
Xbox One coming in November for $499
Xbox One will drop in 21 countries this November, with a price of $499.99 in the U.S., £429 in the U.K., and €499 in Europe.
Gamers can reserve their Xbox One Day One edition for those prices at major retailers—the list should be at www.xbox.com/en-US/reserve, although that page wasn't yet live as we went to press.
The commemorative Day One package includes a console with 500GB hard drive and Blu-ray player, wrapped in special Day One black packaging. You also get a new Kinect, one limited edition Xbox One Day One wireless controller, and a 14-day trial of Xbox Live Gold. Microsoft will even throw in a "unique commemorative Day One Achievement," so all your Xbox Live friends will know you are a total ninja at buying things.
Microsoft showed off the Xbox One and a lineup of major games this morning at E3 in Los Angeles. Stick with us all week as we bring you more news and videos from the show.
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1:26 PM
Ads Coming Soon to Your Outlook.com Inbox
IT WAS GOING to happen sooner or later: The clean, minimalist Outlook com will soon start displaying advertisements alongside your inbox and email messages.
Microsoft announced users in the United States and Brazil will be the first to see the new-format ads, christened versaTiles. Australia. Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, Spain, and the United Kingdom are set to follow suit soon.
The New versaTiles
Microsoft's versaTiles are basically display ads based on flexible-size tile strips that appear along the right-hand side of the screen, next to your main inbox view. They also appear when you are inside an email.
At first glance, the ads appear similar to the text ads Gmail users get in their inbox, but when you hover over the Outlook ads, they reveal images, videos, or more info. The Outlook ads are targeted at online retailers, which can pick from three templates for slideshows, videos, images, or catalog-style advertisements.
Four to five ad tiles are located on the right side of Outlook.com; advertisers can buy an entire lot and customize each tile to show different content or messages.
Ads Inevitable?
Since Outlook com is a free service, used by 60 million people at last count, ads in its interface were bound to arrive sooner or later.
At least you won't see the standard type of banners cluttering up the site. Instead, you'll see more carefully prepared campaigns.
But since Microsoft doesn’t scan your email to serve ads based on topics - as Google does with Gmail - the chances of the Outlook.com ads being as carefully targeted as Gmail's are not that good. So Outlook.com's ads may not be as relevant to you as Google's ads.
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12:25 PM
We won't know for sure for some time. One thing is certain, however: PC makers, finally, are thinking outside the ho-hum black box.
Design lnnovation: The PCs Salvation?
AS LAPTOP AND DESKTOP sales plummet, some PC manufacturers are wading out of their comfort zones in hopes of breathing life back into the market.
Two recent examples:
Toshiba, a manufacturer perhaps best known for midrange PCs at competitive prices, took a swing at the ultrapremium market with the Kirabook, a thin and light laptop with an ultrahigh resolution display on a par with Apple's Retina-packing MacBook Pros And HP placed a big bet on futuristic motion controls, announcing that it will bundle Leap Motion controllers with select PCs. embedding the technology directly into future devices.
Other PC makers are trying their own experiments. Acer has teased about a “unique notebook" that may be able to convert into a desktop with a raised touchscreen. Meanwhile. Asus has launched a desktop that transmogrifies into a gigantic detachable Android tablet, and Lenovo is preparing a tabletop touch screen PC designed with digital board games in mind.
These are early signs of a sea change among PC makers, companies that for years subsisted on selling unremarkable products - spec lists and price tags, with no major distinguishing features. That strategy no longer works in the age of tablets.
PC makers are being forced to experiment because the traditional laptop and desktop markets are drying up. Unit sales are in decline, and so are revenues. HP saw its PC revenues fall by 8 percent last quarter, and Toshiba endured a 16 percent decline in PC sales during its 2012 fiscal year due to falling demand in the United States.
But don't blame Windows 8 alone for the PC industry's woes. PC sales were on the decline before Microsoft's operating system went on sale, largely because tablets have altered people's purchasing decisions.
As Gartner analyst Mikako Kitagawa notes, most households no longer feel the need to have a laptop or desktop for each person. Instead, people are buying tablets for content consumption, and hanging onto one or two household PCs for productivity. Computers have become like household appliances: Users replace them only when necessary.
The PC's not going to be an everyday device for most consumers, "Kitagawa says, looking ahead. Tablets will probably take that position."
So PC makers are turning more attention to producing premium PCs, designed to attract shoppers who want a product built to last.
Toshiba's Kirabook and Acer's upcoming laptopdesktop crossover are examples of that trend, Kitagawa says. But selling these new premium brands won’t be easy. Acer, for example, cemented its reputation for dirt-cheap laptops in the netbook era. That may explain why the company is using a Star Trek tie-in to promote its next premium PC.
All of this is not to say that PC makers are ignoring the low end of the market Later this year, consumers can expect touch-enabled Windows 8 notebooks running on Intel's Bay Trail processors. at prices as low as $200, along with touch-enabled Ultrabooks selling in the S500-to-$600 range.
Still, whether such budget Windows 8 devices can compete with Apple's iPads and cheap tablets like Amazon’s Kindle Fire is unknown.
Meanwhile, PC makers will try to sell relatively expensive machines - which is why we'll see more interesting products aimed at grabbing shoppers'attention.
To sell, a high-end PC needs to stand out.
Difficult Times, Desperate Measures
Granted. PC makers have always included expensive products in their lines; but in the past, the price differences have typically reflected variations in component speeds. The higher the price, the heftier the hardware inside: It was as sim pie as that. But PC makers are focusing now on unique features, rather than on raw performance, to justify higher prices.
Patrick Moorhead, president and principal analyst at Moor Insights and Strategy, sees PC makers’ interest in experimentation as an offshoot of what began last year with Windows 8 hybrids and convertibles. HP's Leap Motion devices and Acer’s convertible notebook are part of a "second wave" intended to make the PC cool again.
Over the next year or so, Moorhead expects PC makers to refine those hybrid designs. while also introducing new technologies, such as eye-tracking, voice commands, and wireless connectivity. to larger displays.
Tablets can’t compete with the power or profit margins of high-end laptops, making pricier products a possible safe haven for PC makers. But first, manufacturers must convince consumers that dropping the extra bucks in these cash-strapped times is a worthwhile investment.
Will such gambles pay off?
We won't know for sure for some time. One thing is certain, however: PC makers, finally, are thinking outside the ho-hum black box.