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Samsung unveiled the first prototype of this monitor at CeBIT 2006. This year the technology and the monitor have progressed. CCFL tubes are now replaced by LED matrixes. The manufacturer, however, told us that the principle was identical: Samsung recreates the artificial screening of CRT to reduced visual afterglow and afterglow in games.
The principle will probably ring a bell to those who read our article about the BenQ 24" monitor:
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This is only a prototype. Samsung shows this monitor to have the opinion of consumers and professionals too. The product is a LCD monitor with two panels to have a 3D effect.
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The monitor news at CeBIT this year only focuses on Samsung. Two reasons for that: other monitors manufacturers do not have exhibition stands this year and the Korean manufacturer shows very interesting products. After the LED, wide gamut, they start a new price war! Apparently, being the market leader isn't enough for Samsung and the manufacturer also wants to annihilate the competition.
This monitor is the SyncMaster 245B, a 24" announced at 600€.
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Despite the lack of recent innovations for motherboards, Intel has authorized the release of new G33 and P35 chipsets supporting DDR3 memory. If these chipsets will officially be released in June at Computex, we expect the first samples end of May. These chipsets were present on the ASUSTeK, Gigabyte and MSI exhibition stands.
  If MSI and ASUSTeK only showed a couple of motherboards, Gigabyte had four models based on the P35: GA-P35-DS4, GA-P35-DQ6, GA-P35-DS3 et GA-P35T-DS3. Only the last one supported DDR3. The higher end versions such as the DS4 with the heatpipe cooling system or the DQ6 with the bigger CPU block are restricted to DDR2.  
   If we haven't seen motherboards supporting both DDR2/DDR3, manufacturers told us that they were working on such solutions (like they did with DDR2). Two slots will be available, each for one norm to facilitate the evolution. The sticker provided by Intel showed the compatibility of these chipsets with the future Intel processors using 45nm fabrication process. Does this mean that current chipsets will be incompatible with these processors? For now, motherboard manufacturers can't say if it will be the case or not because of the lack of sample. We aren't really optimistic because of past experiences, but we hope that we will have a good surprise when these processors will be released at the end of the year! |
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Sapphire introduced at CeBit a solution based on 2 bi X1950 Pro and equivalent to a Quad-CrossFire solution. If this type of solution is a bit pointless because of the imminent and massive release of DirectX 10, this will give an idea of the level of performance of CrossFire with more than 2 GPUs. We remind you that Nvidia's solution, the Quad SLI, was never really functional except for a couple of benchmarks.
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