Miscellaneous Reviews
Interview: Bigfoot's Killer NIC, Exposed
Since its release, the Killer NIC has garnered a reputation for being an extravagant and largely unnecessary add-on for the do-it-yourselfer. Seeking additional insight, we approached the card's designer. Read More
News
Forum
- System Advice
- which DVD needed to make standard DVD movies?
- Changing Motherboard, Windows reinstall needed?
- dvd files onto CDr to play in dvd player?
- 9600xt blocks
- DVD ripper that allows portions of a DVD to be ripped rath..
- capture from sony trv27 using usb cable
- What video card to get?
- 9600 reviews are out;
Miscellaneous Previous news
- ATI to launch RD600 in October
- Dual-core Celeron M to arrive in Q1 2007
- The hidden potential in your graphics card: A supercomputer?
- A solar boat to cross the Atlantic
- Web flaws race ahead in 2006
- New version of Adobe Acrobat headed for November
- Intel takes final hurdle on way to mass-produced silicon laser chips
- Warner warms up to YouTube with media sharing agreement
- Intel to announce "lightspeed" chip
- Nvidia beats ATI to 80 nm
Warner engineers file for triple-format DVD patent
4:23 PM - September 19, 2006 by
From the Web
Source: Tom's Hardware US – Category : Miscellaneous 0 comment
Source: Tom's Hardware US – Category : Miscellaneous 0 comment
The electronics industry is in a fine mess, with two blue-laser disc standards (Blu-ray and HD-DVD) competing to succeed ordinary red-laser DVDs.
On 26 September, Warner will be the first studio to release a movie, Lake House, on all three disc standards simultaneously.
Meanwhile, however, two top Warner engineers, Alan Bell and Lewis Ostrover, have been working on a cheaper and more elegant solution.
Read the complete story here. (New Scientist)
-
Previous News Article
GDDR4 set to rock the graphics world -
Next News Article
Strong second half shaping up for...
React! Return to news index
Latest News: