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Philips brings in its gigantic Momentum 559M1RY with a 144 Hz refresh rate

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The gaming community is brimming with new and latest entries into the market, which will most certainly bring water to any gamer’s mouth. Recently, Philips, which is known for its excellent innovative technologies, has now unveiled a new gaming monitor, which is pretty huge. I mean literally.

Last year, the company released its Momentum 558M1RY, but though the monitor was an excellent piece of art, it still lacked some features. But the newly launched, Momentum 559M1RY builds upon its predecessor and brings the features which the previous monitor lacked.

The two monitors look identical from the design perspective, with a 55-inch monitor positioned above a Bowers & Wilkins 2.1 DTS soundbar. The 55-inch panel sounds a little too big, but hey, you can never have a bigger monitor for gaming. The panel is 4K, with an 80 PPI pixel density, VESA DisplayHDR 1000 certification, and a 4,000:1 contrast ratio.

The Momentum 558M1RY sported a 120 Hz refresh rate, but this year the company has brought the 144 Hz refresh rate with its Momentum 559M1RY. Peak brightness remains at 1,200 nits.

The Momentum 559M1RYV comes with three HDMI 2.1 ports, which is a highly appreciated feature for the owners of Microsoft and Sony’s next-generation consoles. It will also include a DisplayPort 1.4 connection and four USB 3.2 Type-A ports. This time the monitor also comes with a USB Type-C port capable of charging the devices up to 65 W.

The monitor also brings in a lot of features and it seems like Philips has invested a lot of time in making this machine. The Momentum 559M1RYV utilizes AMD FreeSync and NVIDIA G-Sync, so it should play nicely with AMD and NVIDIA’s latest graphics cards.

The cost of the Momentum 559M1RYV is still unknown neither the availability date is known. However, the Momentum 558M1RY launched for £1,200 in the UK and €1,399 in the EU, so the Momentum 559M1RYV will probably at least match that.

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Tiger Woods awake and responsive after car crash

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Golfing legend Tiger Woods was involved in a car accident on Tuesday in Los Angeles. The 45-year-old has been dealing with his share of injuries as of late that have forced him out of playing golf regularly. 

He has undergone a lengthy surgery on his lower right leg and ankle, and has been described as “awake and responsive” by the doctors looking at him. 

Sep 23, 2018; Atlanta, GA, USA; Tiger Woods reacts to win the Tour Championship golf tournament at East Lake Golf Club. Mandatory Credit: Christopher Hanewinckel-USA TODAY Sports

“I think golf has accommodated the fact that Tiger is no longer going to be active in attending events on a regular basis,” Neal Pilson, the head of Pilson Communications and former president of CBS Sports, told Reuters. “I think he has lifetime exemptions at every major event but I suspect we are probably not going to see Tiger in a competitive golf event going forward.

“In his prime, it was clearly established if Tiger was playing on Sunday, numbers for Sunday coverage were usually up 25 to 30%,” Pilson said. “If he doesn’t play again, he will be missed for sure.”

There was speculation as to whether Tiger Woods was under the influence when his car met with the accident. However, the golfer has been cleared by Los Angeles County Sheriff Alex Villanueva of any assumptions that linked the player to being intoxicated while driving. 

A statement released by Woods’ official Twitter account thanked the fans for all their thoughts and prayers and detailed the situation surrounding his diagnosis and his current condition. We can only hope that this unfortunate event isn’t the end of the legend’s playing days and that there is still more to come. 

OPPO showcases its latest breakthrough in wireless charging technology

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With the advancement in technology, the demand for high-performing devices is increasing in the market. Users are not only looking for efficiency but also speed and accuracy. Currently, the field of wireless charging technology is seeing some interesting innovations.

Wireless charging, also known as remote or over-the-air charging uses millimetre-wave energy to a receiver on the mobile, to charge the battery. it is the charging technique of the future.

Earlier we saw the Chinese tech giant, Xiaomi, who claimed to demonstrate its prototype remote-charging system, called Mi Air Charge. Soon after Motorola announced the showing of its competing One Hyper standard.

It seems that some big tech giants are running after the said technology, and now, OPPO has also jumped on this bandwagon with one of its own. The smartphone manufacturer and innovator, has shared its own clip of what is depicted as a phone using a form of wireless charging that kept working even when the (completely unconnected) device in question was lifted off a surface.

The video was only released as a teaser for OPPO’s MWC Shanghai 2021 showcase. It, however, does not mention any specs for the breakthrough in wireless technology. According to sources, the OEM also intends to bring its fastest 125W wired charging system to the show, as well as its 5G CPE product and the Reno5 smartphone series.  

OPPO has also released its new concept of the X 2021, its new slidable phone. And according to the manufacturer, the new wireless technology comes built-in into its new concept phone model.

For now, there are no new details about the tremendous breakthrough from OPPO, but still, the company is indeed stepping high in the wireless technology market. We just have to wait until MWC Shanghai progresses over the next few days.

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USB Connectivity Issue Occurs in AMD Ryzen Laptops and PCs, Team Red is Working Out The Problem

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AMD has now confirmed the issues of USB connectivity, the Ryzen-powered PC and laptop users are facing the problem. In recent weeks, a few numbers of AMD Ryzen users have taken to Reddit regarding the USB connectivity problems on their devices.

Few are saying that the issue led to keyboard connection drops, problems with VR headsets such as HTC Vive and Oculus Rift, and some connection problems with external storage devices and USB-connected coolers.

It seems that the issue is seen only in the Ryzen 3000 and 5000 series CPUs in 500-series motherboards, like the AMD x570 and B550. Most likely, the problem is occurring in the systems which have NVIDIA RTX GPUs.

Though the exact reason for the problem is not clear to anyone, AMD has accepted the USB connectivity issue via a statement posted to Reddit.

“AMD is aware of reports that a small number of users are experiencing intermittent USB connectivity issues reported on 500 Series chipsets,” the company said. 

“We have been analyzing the root cause and at this time, we would like to request the community’s assistance with a small selection of additional hardware configurations. Over the next few days, some users may be contacted directly by an AMD representative via Reddit’s PM system with a request for more information.”

The post continues, “We will provide an update when we have more details to share. Customers facing issues are always encouraged to raise an Online Service Request with AMD customer support; this enables us to find correlations and compare notes across support claims.”

Until AMD comes up with a solution, a handful of Redditors have come forward with some workarounds. One possible quick-fix you can try – change the motherboard’s settings from PCIe 4.0 to PCIe 3.0. By doing this, some users found this useful.

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Intel boldly claims that Core i9-11900K will offer 11% faster storage performance than Ryzen 9 5950X

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Instead of raw compute performance, Intel has taken a new approach of comparison against its biggest rival AMD. Ryan Shrout has recently shared some storage performance results that show Core i9-11900K’s PCIe Gen 4 storage performance is up to 11% faster than Ryzen 9 5950X on PCMark 10 Quick System Drive Benchmark.

The performance slide teased by Intel’s Ryan Shrout shows the Samsung 980 PRO 1 TB PCI-Express 4.0 x4 M.2 NVMe SSD performance when powered by a Core i9-11900K processor, compared to the AMD Ryzen 9 5950X.

As TechPowerUP says, the PCMark 10 Quick System Drive Benchmark is used to evaluate storage performance on both machines. As there was a separate drive for boot, the Samsung 980 PRO is used as a dedicated test drive.

When asked whether the Samsung 980 PRO was installed on the CPU-attached M.2 slot on the AMD machine or not, Shrout clarified the drives were tested on CPU-attached M.2 slots on both platforms.

The test is said to be done via the x16 slot with a riser card to make sure it was CPU attached on both platforms. The tweet shows Intel is promising to provide good PCIe Gen 4 storage performance over AMD and it will be interesting to see if those claims are correct for everyone or not.

Intel test system:

11th Gen Intel® Core™ i9-11900K: Processor: 11th Gen Intel® Core™ i9-11900K processor (RKL-S) PL1=125W TDP, 8C16T, Motherboard: ASUS Z590 ROG Maximus XIII Hero, Bios Version: 0402, Memory: 32GB (4x8GB) DDR4-3200, Storage OS Drive: 512GB Intel SSD 760p, Storage Test Drive: 1TB Gen 4 Samsung 980 Pro, Storage Driver: Microsoft Inbox, Display Resolution: 1920×1080, OS: Microsoft Windows 10 20H2 – 19042.746, Graphics Card: NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3090 Founders Edition, Graphics Driver: 461.09

AMD test system:

AMD Ryzen 9 5950X: Processor: AMD Ryzen™ 9 5950X processor PL1=105W TDP, 16C32T, Motherboard: ASUS X570 ROG Rampage VIII Hero, Bios Version: 3202, Memory: 32GB (4x8GB) DDR4-3200, Storage OS Drive: 512GB Intel SSD 760p, Storage Test Drive: 1TB Gen 4 Samsung 980 Pro, Storage Driver: Microsoft Inbox, Display Resolution: 1920×1080, OS: Microsoft Windows 10 20H2 – 19042.746, Graphics Card: NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3090 Founders Edition, Graphics Driver: 461.09

via Videocardz

Horizon Forbidden West coming in late 2021 – Jim Ryan, No Words About God of War Ragnarok

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After Sony’s announcements and interview with PlayStation boss Jim Ryan, it seems that the 2021 PlayStation first-party lineup coming into focus. Gran Turismo 7 has officially delayed to 2022, and Jim Ryan had mentioned the three games game multiple times when he was asked about Sony’s 2021 PS5 lineup – Horizon Forbidden West, Ratchet & Clank: Rift Apart, and Returnal. Ryan told in a Japanese Famitsu interview that Horizon Forbidden West is a late-2021 game.

God of War Ragnarok is the game that is not mentioned in any of today’s PR. The mysterious God of War sequel was released in 2021, but Jim Ryan didn’t open his mouth regarding the game in any of these latest interviews. This was not skipped, and the well-known insider Jason Schreier shared a response to the speculation…

Though any delay regarding God of War has not been confirmed by Sony yet, so take this with a pinch of salt. Now it is said that delaying the game would make sense. Many people might have some doubts about the 2021 release, as the last God of War only came out in 2018. Yes, one AAA game can be developed in three years, but Sony’s internal studios don’t seem to work that fast.

Horizon Forbidden West will hit PS4 and PS5 in late 2021. God of War Ragnarok has been announced for the PlayStation 5 in 2021; let’s see it’s going to happen or not. Stay tuned with us for more news and updates.

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M1 Mac consumers detect excessive SSD usage on their PCs

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Apple came into the field of desktop processors last year. The M1 chips are incredible to handle heavyweight computing without sweating a drop. To date, the M1 powered Macs spread across the globe, and the user count reached a respectable figure.

As time went on, some of the users reported their M1-powered Mac overuse its SSD while reading and writing data. They all are mainly advanced users and almost all of them suspect, this issue may affect the lifespan of the SSD.

SSDs are based on chips, not on mechanical parts like hard drives. That’s why it has a predetermined lifespan considering a particular data read and write. How must an SSD be used, the lifespan also reduces parallelly.

In case the SSD of the Macs starts behaving abnormally, the entire product needs to be replaced as it is soldered to the logic board.

In general, the SSDs take around 10 years with regular use to go wrong. Expectation says the present behavior of the M1 Macs will reduce the time by up to two years. One of the complainants says his M1 MacBook Pro, having TB storage and 16GB of RAM, has already raised 3% total usage of the SSD after the use of only two months.

The exact problem couldn’t be identified yet and there is no comment from the Apple side. All are hoping this problem will be fixed with the next macOS update.

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Top 10 highest goalscorers in the UEFA Champions League history

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Champions League is the highest level of club football. All the best clubs from across Europe compete in the Champions League. Spanish giants Real Madrid have won the competition the highest number of times, 13.

Defending champions of the 2019-20 season, Bayern Munich striker Robert Lewandowski scored a goal against Lazio in the 1st leg of the round of 16 to take his tally to 72 goals in the Champions League. This makes him the third-highest goalscorer in the Champions League, overtaking Real Madrid legend Raul.

So here we take a look at the top 10 highest goalscorers in the UEFA Champions League history:

10. Thomas Müller *

Nationality: Germany
Club: Bayern München
Goals: 47

9. Andriy Shevchenko

Nationality: Ukraine
Clubs: Dynamo Kyiv, AC Milan, Chelsea
Goals: 48

Zlatan Ibrahimovic contract update; Calhanoglu and Donnarumma in talks too

8. Zlatan Ibrahimović*

Nationality: Sweden
Clubs: Ajax, Juventus, Internazionale Milano, Barcelona, AC Milan, Paris Saint-Germain, Manchester United
Goals: 48

LONDON – FEBRUARY 10: Thierry Henry of Arsenal celebrates scoring his 100th Premiership goal and Arsenal’s first goal during the FA Barclaycard Premiership match between Arsenal and Southampton at Highbury on February 10, 2004 in London. (Photo by Clive Mason/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Thierry Henry

7. Thierry Henry

Nationality: France
Clubs: Monaco, Arsenal, Barcelona
Goals: 50

6. Ruud van Nistelrooy

Nationality: Netherlands
Clubs: PSV Eindhoven, Manchester United, Real Madrid
Goals: 56

5. Karim Benzema*

Nationality: France
Clubs: Lyon, Real Madrid
Goals: 69

4. Raúl González

Nationality: Spain
Clubs: Real Madrid, Schalke
Goals: 71

3. Robert Lewandowski*

Nationality: Poland
Clubs: Borussia Dortmund, Bayern München
Goals: 72

2. Lionel Messi*

Nationality: Argentina
Club: Barcelona
Goals: 119

1. Cristiano Ronaldo*

Nationality: Portugal
Clubs: Manchester United, Real Madrid, Juventus
Goals: 134

  • * – Active players
  • The list doesn’t take into account the goals scored in qualifying rounds
  • The data is correct as of 24th February 2021

Upcoming Intel Core i9-11900K scores a record 716 points in CPU-Z single-thread benchmark

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Intel is all set launch its upcoming Rocket Lake-S desktop CPUs in the coming days and we have seen a number of benchmarks of these processors. The flagship 8-core Core i9-11900K has been spotted many a times, however, the new CPU-Z benchmarks proves its single-core dominance, we saw in Geekbench as well.

The new Intel CPU based on Cypress Cove architecture has managed to put some interesting scores on CPU-Z. The 8 core, 16 threaded CPU has a max all-core boost of 4.8GHz and 3.5GHz base clock speeds whereas the single-core boost goes up to a whopping 5.3GHz. 

Upcoming Intel Core i9-11900K scores a record 716 points in CPU-Z single-thread benchmark

Tested on the ASUS ROG Maximus XII Extreme motherboard with 32GB of DDR4 memory clocked at 3200 MHz, the upcoming Intel processor manages to score 716 points in a single-threaded benchmark while 6539 points in the multi-threaded test.

Upcoming Intel Core i9-11900K scores a record 716 points in CPU-Z single-thread benchmark

The 8-core Intel Core i9-11900K will go head-to-head with the AMD Ryzen 7 5800X, which in our review (at stock) scored 661 points in single-core and 6578 in multi-core. This means, as predicted, even though Intel will snatch back its single-core prowess but fail to beat in multi-core.

via Videocardz

5G in the US is Not the Real Deal right now, but it will be soon

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At CES 2019 as well as CES 2021, Verizon CEO Hans Vestberg delivered his keynote speech related to 5G technology, a topic he speaks about quite enthusiastically. He covered the eight “currencies” of 5G and highlighted how 5G will transform the drone industry. Verizon along with AT&T and T-Mobile have been talking up their 5G networks for years. Now, it’s time for the hype to prove its worth, with major flagship phones and a lot more budget devices supporting the technology, 2021 will show a critical mass of phone buyers what all this talk is about.

Here’s the bad news: they’re going to be disappointed if they’ve been swayed away by the hype. A fourth industrial revolution with advanced things like remote surgery and driverless cars has been promised. Instead, in our hands now is a widespread 5G that’s more or less the same speed as (or even slower than) 4G and in some parts of some major cities, super-fast mmWave 5G with minimal range. So is the 5G future that we’ve been promised real? The truth is that it’s coming along, but it will materialize more slowly and in less obvious ways than what the hype has made us believe.

SPECTRUM WARS

The complicated 5G situation in the US right now relates to low-, mid-, and high-band frequencies that carriers can use. Low-band is slower in speed but offers widespread coverage. High-band, often called mmWave, is extremely fast but has a very limited range. Mid-band, as you must’ve guessed, sits in a sweet spot between the two, with good range and better-than-LTE speeds.

A bunch of mid-band spectrum would be your ideal go-to if you were building a 5G network from scratch, right? The trouble is, the spectrum is a limited resource. Sascha Segan, a lead mobile analyst at PCMag and a wealth of 5G knowledge, talks about the spectrum problem.

“Our government did not make the right channels available to the carriers,” he says. “Verizon and AT&T have basically just been using leftover odds and ends of their 4G spectrum… putting the 5G encoding on these leftover bits and bobs so they can pop a 5G icon on the screen. And the performance is meaningless.”

TCL 10 5G UW
The first focus of 5G has been to boost mobile data speeds for consumers.
Image: Cameron Faulkner / The Verge

Dynamic Spectrum Sharing (DSS) is the technology Verizon and AT&T are using to get nationwide 5G coverage, it allows 4G and 5G to coexist on the same spectrum. That helps carriers switch from 4G to 5G, but it comes at a cost. Michael Thelander, president and founder of wireless industry research firm Signals Research Group, sums it up this way: “It’s kind of like having that super fast sports car and you’re stuck on the Santa Monica freeway. You can’t experience the full capabilities.”

T-Mobile, on the other hand, thanks to its acquisition of Sprint and its mid-band spectrum, doesn’t need to rely on spectrum sharing as much as the other two. Thus far, that has given it an edge in its 5G offerings.

By early 2022, though, we are predicting that it is likely Verizon and AT&T will start catching up. A swath of mid-band spectrum known as C-band went up for auction in late 2020, we haven’t been informed about which companies won which blocks of spectrum, but we are certain that those two carriers, in particular, spent big; bidding topped out at over $80 billion.

WHAT HAPPENS NEXT?

More and more mobile devices are ready for the 5G tech. In fact, by the end of the year, a non-5G phone would be harder to find than one that supports it. Apple and Samsung’s flagship phones support 5G across their lineups and it is now also available in more midrange and budget devices, thanks to the Qualcomm Snapdragon 480, a new 5G-ready low-end processor.

The iPhone 12.
The iPhone 12 series includes 5G connectivity across the lineup.
Image: Vjeran Pavic / The Verge

More people than ever will buy a 5G phone this year as whichever phone they buy might have support for it. The good news is that there really isn’t a downside to buying a 5G phone as the “5G tax” that, over the past couple of years, increased the price of 5G phones seems to be disappearing, and we haven’t noticed any other drawbacks like excessive battery drain in our testing.

So what’s the reaction like so far from, say, someone who bought an iPhone 12 — not for 5G, but because it’s the new iPhone? “They’re frustrated and angry,” says Segan. “With both Verizon and AT&T, because of what I’ll call technical difficulties, their nationwide 5G is often slower than their 4G. So people are getting these iPhones and they’re finding that frequently they have worse performance than they had before 5G.” The “technical difficulties” he refers to include DSS in Verizon’s case and for AT&T, the limitations of the narrow 5MHz band that it often uses for its 5G.

The difference-makers in the coming years? First, around the end of the year, that C-band spectrum will start coming online. And when that happens, if you’re one of the frustrated owners of an iPhone 12 or Galaxy S21, there’s good news: you should see speed improvements as your phone is already approved to use C-band.

However, not all 5G phones support C-band, and those that don’t will need a software update to use it, and there’s no guarantee that your phone’s manufacturer will offer one. Even if the inexpensive 5G models have the hardware to support it, they may not see a C-band update. Phone makers need to apply for Federal Communications Commission (FCC) approval to enable it and that would increase costs.

The other factor is large gatherings, and it will likely happen sooner than C-band becoming available. That’s when Segan thinks Verizon’s Ultra Wideband could really shine. “When we’re all vaccinated, I think people are going to be desperate… for all of these dense, crowded, communal experiences that we will have been missing for a year and a half. And so Verizon should be working on applications and experiences right now like the thing they did at the Super Bowl, or what they’ve talked about doing at Disney World, that you can only do on Ultra-Wideband.”

Again, that will depend on your 5G phone supporting mmWave. The aforementioned iPhone and Samsung flagships do, and other Verizon models that support are denoted as “UW.”

Verizon makes its fast 5G Ultra-Wideband available for prepaid customers_TechnoSports.co.in
by – The Verge

WHERE ARE OUR JETPACKS?

And what about the stuff of CES keynotes like remote surgery and self-driving cars? That will take even longer. Thelander explains: “The first focus of 5G was really a feature called ‘enhanced mobile broadband’ and that’s just getting fast data speeds to the consumer on their smartphone. Things like factory automation and the functionality behind that, that was really developed afterwards, so it lags, from a standardization perspective.”

Getting the tech part of it sorted out is only half of the equation. “Once you’ve got a certain feature or functionality defined in a standard, now a vendor has to go out and build that functionality, then you have to test it, and then you have to have the industry adopt it,” Thelander says. “The technology may be there, the standard may be there, it may work fine, but it has to be implemented and rolled out. And you have to have the business case for it. How do you make money off of it? All those types of things… it just takes time.”

Despite networks constantly waving their “5G Mission Accomplished” banners in TV commercials over the past year, 5G is very much still a WIP. It’s going to get better, but the timeline depends on a lot of factors: which phone you have and what bands it supports, which network you’re on, where you are, and what you’re doing. It seems clear now that there never really was a “Race to 5G” — just slow, confusing, and uneven technological progress towards the ultimate goal as usual. That’s a little harsh reality to include in a keynote or a commercial.

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