Archive for April, 2011

Sony unveils two tablet computers in iPad challenge

April 26th, 2011

Japanese electronics and entertainment giant Sony Corp. unveiled its first tablet computers, codenamed S1 and S2, in a direct but belated challenge to Apple’s iPad.

The “Sony Tablet” S1 has a single screen and is for home use while the portable S2 has two screens, Sony told a news conference.

The tablet devices will have access to online content to buy and download videos, music and other entertainment and be compatible with existing PlayStation games, Sony official Kunimasa Suzuki said.

Digital books can also be downloaded and read on the multimedia computers which are Wi-Fi and 3G/4G compatible for email and Internet access.

The S1 has a 9.4 inch (24 centimetre) screen, and front and rear cameras while the folding clamshell S2 has dual 5.5 inch colour touchscreens and fits into a pocket.

“This design is particularly relevant for reading digital books whose content is displayed on screen as two pages side-by side,” Suzuki said.

Both screens can be used together as a single large screen or for playing games on one and displaying control buttons on the other.

The S1 can also work as a universal remote to control audio-visual equipment or send content to television screens or music to wireless speakers, Sony said.

The two devices use the Google Android 3.0 operating system, known as Honeycomb, which is optimised for devices with larger screen sizes.

“I’m excited about ‘Sony Tablet’ as it will further spur the development of applications and network offerings which users are looking for,” said Andy Rubin, senior vice president of Google’s mobile division.

The announcement comes as Sony looks to focus more on pushing its content such as games and music through hardware platforms including game consoles, smartphones and tablet computers.

Sony said earlier this year it planned to be the number-two tablet maker by 2012 but until Tuesday had given little indication of how it intended to compete in a market already dominated by Apple’s iPad.

The iPad, which was released in April of last year, accounted for 83.9 percent of the total 17.6 million tablets sold in 2010, according to technology research company Gartner.

New entrants have flooded into the tablet computer market, but Sony’s devices are not due to go on sale around the world until the northern hemisphere autumn, well behind its rivals.

The company did not give any indication of pricing.

Sony also announced a new line of “hybrid” notebook computers which feature a slide screen covering a keyboard.

Source:http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5hDIoq59Z06M6WtyWDeBmeJ9AQchg?docId=CNG.df644d6a87eeee8b05d94b200438fdcc.621

ASUS N53SV Notebook Review

April 26th, 2011

Today we have the ASUS N53SV notebook on our test bench. This multimedia/moderate gaming notebook has a lot of style to go with some nice specification under the hood. This machine looks really good with a brushed aluminum lid and wrist rest and a lot more. This notebook has a 15.6-inch 1366 x 768 resolution screen, Intel Core i7 2630QM CPU, NVIDIA GeForce GT 540M graphics processor, 750 GB of storage, 4 GB of RAM, and a lot more. Come along as we see what this notebook is made of!

Good looks aside, the notebook has the power under the hood to handle your media duties and moderate gaming. Don’t confuse this machine with a dedicated gaming notebook, but if you are the type that wants one machine that can play your favorite video games and handle multimedia and general computer work with ease, the ASUS N53SV is a great machine. This notebook does make some compromises that you may or may not want to live with depending on what you want.

As with most notebooks that make concession to be an all around performer, it’s not a clear stand out in any one area. The discrete graphics processor is nice and the machine has integrated graphics as well and can change between the two graphics processors depending on if power or battery life is the goal. You can get more powerful graphics processors the notebook does OK with multimedia but you can get better performance on the market today there as well. What you can’t always get though is a nice mix of capabilities and this is where the ASUS N53SV shines.

This beastie has a 15.6-inch screen with a resolution of 1366 x 768. You can get the same notebook with an optional, full HD 1080p screen as well. Other available options include Bluetooth and WiFi is standard on the notebook. The big feature that shoppers want to know about is the processor, the ASUS N53SV uses an Intel Core i7 2630QM running at 2 GHz. The processor is a quad core and once you take into account the Hyper-Threading it supports the computer sees eight cores in Device Manger. The price for the ASUS N53SV hovers around USD $1,050 online making this a more expensive notebook. It comes with 64-bit Windows 7 Home Premium for the OS.

Source:http://www.hardwaresecrets.com/article/ASUS-N53SV-Notebook-Review/1245

Toshiba Satellite M645-S4118X

April 26th, 2011

The good: An excellent package of Blu-ray, Nvidia graphics, a fast processor, and great speakers help the M645-S4118X rise above the pack.

The bad: The thick plastic chassis and a bad battery life could ruin the equation for some.

The bottom line: The Toshiba Satellite M645-S4118X has a killer combination of Blu-ray, high-end graphics, and a fast processor at a price slightly north of $1,000, but poor battery life is the Achilles’ heel on what would otherwise be an ideal 14-inch laptop.
Review:

There might be nothing more disappointing as a product that approaches perfection, only to be undone by one key failure. The Toshiba Satellite M645-S4118X isn’t a perfect laptop per se, but its features certainly fit the bill: a second-generation Core i5 processor, high-powered Nvidia GeForce GT 525 graphics with Optimus, a Blu-ray drive, fantastic speakers, a 500GB hard drive, and 6GB of RAM, all packed into a 14-inch laptop’s frame, for $1,099. Did we mention it also has a backlit keyboard? That it does.

So what could possibly be wrong with such a computer? The battery life. … Expand full review

There might be nothing more disappointing as a product that approaches perfection, only to be undone by one key failure. The Toshiba Satellite M645-S4118X isn’t a perfect laptop per se, but its features certainly fit the bill: a second-generation Core i5 processor, high-powered Nvidia GeForce GT 525 graphics with Optimus, a Blu-ray drive, fantastic speakers, a 500GB hard drive, and 6GB of RAM, all packed into a 14-inch laptop’s frame, for $1,099. Did we mention it also has a backlit keyboard? That it does.

So what could possibly be wrong with such a computer? The battery life. The M645 didn’t even last three hours. That’s a small step up from the abysmal battery life on last year’s M645 we reviewed, but how can this be? The slimmer Toshiba Portege R835, also packing a standard-voltage Core i-series processor, lasted over 7 hours. Fix the battery, and you have a four-star laptop. As it currently stands, however, that battery life’s a serious hindrance for any serious traveler.

We’ve grumbled about the somewhat ugly design aesthetic going on in Toshiba Satellite laptops many times before, and nothing’s changed in this year’s model. It’s externally identical to last year’s Satellite M-series redesign, which added a raised island-style keyboard, finger-resistant raised textured patterns on the interior and back lid, and plenty of small, bright LED light indicators above and around the keyboard.

The M645’s more compact footprint is less intrusive than its more boat-like 15.6-inch cousins, such as the A665, but it’s a good deal thicker than a MacBook Pro or Toshiba’s own Portege. The Charcoal Fusion patterned plastic texture that covers the M645 looks a little garish, but it does stave off smudges.

The keyboard feels better than previous Satellite laptops, but the keys have a shiny gloss to them, and are a bit smaller than they are on the A665. Some might feel cramped, which is a shame, as there’s plenty of extra room on the sides of this laptop; the keyboard could have been expanded edge-to-edge for extra finger room. The keyboard is backlit, however, which is a plus.

The touch pad beneath has a light matte finish and is responsive, but the pad is also not that big, and the large plastic discrete buttons below feel cheap.

Above the keyboard, an LED-backlit set of touch controls operates volume, an Eco battery-saving utility, Wi-Fi on/off, and backlighting. An annoying beep kicks in when raising or lowering volume–you’ll need to dig deep into system settings to deactivate, and trust us, you’ll want to.

The 1,366×768-pixel glossy inset display does the job for video playback and looks reasonably crisp, but the screen brightness and vividness don’t pop like we’ve seen on laptops such as the Dell XPS 15-L502X and Samsung Series 9. As a result, Blu-ray playback suffers. Movies we watched were enjoyable, but we wouldn’t call the experience excellent. On the plus side, Toshiba’s DVD-playing software includes upscaling of DVD content, and it does help make old discs look a little better.

What makes media really shine on the Satellite M645 are the stereo Harman/Kardon speakers. We’ve raved about Toshiba’s laptop speaker quality before; well, here we go again. The clarity of audio playback does help improve movie-watching, although we’ve heard even better audio out of the Dell XPS.

As for the Webcam–an often-neglected feature on many laptops–well, the M645’s 640×480 camera isn’t really worth talking about. It’s the same one we saw on a recently reviewed Satellite A665. It’s not HD, and its middling picture quality and light sensitivity don’t make it stand out.

The Satellite M645-S4118 comes with all the ports and connections you’d be looking for in 2011: USB 3.0, a sleep-and-charge USB port, HDMI, Bluetooth, and a Blu-ray optical drive. The included RAM and hard drive are also above-average for today’s midrange laptops: a generous 6GB of RAM and a 640GB hard drive. Then again, this laptop costs more than the average laptop.

We certainly can’t complain about the performance of the Satellite M645-S4118’s processors. A second-generation 2.3 GHz Intel Core i5-2410M CPU is the same one we’ve already seen in the Editors’ Choice-winning Toshiba Portege R835-P56X. Not surprisingly, the M645 had nearly identical performance benchmarks in both single and multitasking tests. It’s plenty of computer for nearly anyone, and honestly, it’s capable of doing whatever the average person will throw at it. Video editing, multiple windows of video–you should have no problems here.

The M645’s graphics are also well above average: the Nvidia GeForce GT525M GPU and its 1GB of video memory gave us some of the best recent gaming benchmarks outside of the 15-inch 2011 Apple MacBook Pro and–not surprisingly–the new Dell Alienware M14x. Unreal Tournament III played at a smoking 140.9 frames per second in native 1,366×768-pixel resolution, with graphics settings at medium. Other games, such as Activision’s Blur, played great with graphics settings amped up and speakers blaring. We achieved better graphics performance than we did on the Dell XPS L502X. In short, this is a laptop that’ll do fine duty for gamers on nearly all fronts.

Source:http://reviews.cnet.com/laptops/toshiba-satellite-m645-s4118x/4505-3121_7-34629438.html?subj=fdba&part=rss&tag=rb_content%3Brb_mtx_Search+Results#reviewPage1

Kingston HyperX 8GB 1866MHz PnP Memory Kit For Notebooks

April 26th, 2011

Kingston today announced the new HyperX Plug and Play (PnP) notebook memory module series. This series is aimed at high-performance computing enthusiasts that are looking to get the most from their second generation Intel Core i5 and i7 ‘Sandy Bridge’ mobile processor. You see, when Intel came out with the Huron River platform (Intel HM65 Express Chipsets) the only certified JEDEC settings were 1066Mhz and 1333MHz. So, when most of these notebooks came out in Q1 2011 they were all fitted with 1333MHz memory kits. Well, the JEDEC board recently released JEDEC-compliant settings allowing for 1600MHz and 1866MHz frequency support on these platforms. The Intel ‘Sandy Bridge’ mobile processor family can easily support these faster memory speeds, so it was only a matter of time until memory companies came out with 1600MHz and 1866MHz modules that had the proper SPD settings to Plug and Play with these new notebooks. The first company that we know of to do this is Kingston with their famed HyperX memory series.

Kingston is releasing not one or two, but six new memory kits in this series today! Two of the HyperX Plug and Play kits are aimed for desktop users and are full sizes 204-pin DDR3 modules. These modules have a D in the part number and are ideal for desktop users that don’t want to mess with BIOS settings. The other four modules have an S in the part number and that stands for SO-DIMM. These parts are obviously aimed at notebook users and Kingston offers kits in 4GB and 8GB capacities at either 1600 MHz or 1866 MHz clock frequencies.

The kit that Legit Reviews is going to be looking at today is theKHX1866C11S3P1K2/8G and that is the flagship memory kit in the Kingston HyperX Plug and Play memory series. This 8GB DDR3 kit runs at 1866MHz with 11-11-11-32 timings with a command rate of 2T at 1.5V. This kit has a suggested retail price of $163, which isn’t that bad compared to how expensive memory has been in the past. We remember a couple years ago when a 4GB DDR3 1600MHz SO-DIMM was nearly a thousand dollars since it was brand new.

The Kingston HyperX Plug and Play 8GB DDR3 1866MHz memory kit features silver colored heat spreaders that have ‘vent’ holes located along the top edge for an aggressive appearance. Looking at a 204-pin DDR3 SO-DIMM laptop memory kit is only so much fun, so let’s install the kit and see how it performs!

Installing the memory modules into the ASUS K53E notebook was very simple as we just needed to remove two Philips head screws, take out the two old modules and insert the two new Kingston HyperX SO-DIMM modules. We were a little shocked to find our ASUS K53E notebook that came with 6GB of DDR3 memory shipped in a 2GB + 4GB configuration and both modules were made by different brands and were different colored. Not the prettiest of memory installations, but it’s hidden by the plastic back cover and no one will see it.

We were also a little shocked to see totally different memory IC’s on them as the Hynix 2GB module featured Hynix ICs and the Samsung 4GB module featured Samsung ICs. Nothing like running mixed and matched memory modules on a brand new notebook! The Kingston HyperX Plug and Play modules are identical in every sense and each module is 4GB in density and clad with nice looking silver aluminum heat spreaders. With dual channel memory you’d think having two identical parts running in unison would be the best option.

Installing the new Kingston HyperX SO-DIMM modules back into the ASUS K53E was simple as all you need to do is line up the modules properly in the socket and push them down in order for the clip to hold them in place. When doing this we did notice that the fit was tighter with the HyperX modules due to the extra thickness of the four metal heat spreaders. In fact the brackets weren’t fully able to clip the modules, but they had enough of a grasp on them to prevent them from popping out of place. We did a few shake and drop tests (onto a couch from a couple feet in the air) and they were secure.

Source:http://www.legitreviews.com/article/1599/1/

Dell V715w All-in-One Wireless Printer

April 26th, 2011

The good: The Dell V715w All-in-One Wireless Printer helps you reduce your environmental footprint with an integrated Eco Mode button that dims the 2.4-inch LCD display and enables double-sided printing with the 50-sheet autodocument feeder.

The bad: Lackluster image quality and ink-guzzling cartridges hold back a printer already outgunned by its faster, more full-featured competition.

The bottom line: The Dell V715w is the company’s flagship printer, but its mechanical missteps and quickly depleting cartridges keep us from recommending this device over more capable machines like the Lexmark Prevail Pro705.
Review:

The Dell V715w All-in-One Wireless Printer offers the standard array of print, fax, scan, and copy features with a useful 50-sheet autodocument feeder and an Eco Mode button that encourages you to cut down on consumables. Out of the box, the V715w shows physical flaws and a bulky design with frustrations that include frequent paper jams, unreliable wireless connectivity, and expensive ink cartridges. Placed next to the full-featured Lexmark Prevail Pro705, which flaunts a much easier installation process, top-tier image output quality, and a five-year warranty, we see little reason to recommend the Dell V715w.

Design and features
At 19. … Expand full review

The Dell V715w All-in-One Wireless Printer offers the standard array of print, fax, scan, and copy features with a useful 50-sheet autodocument feeder and an Eco Mode button that encourages you to cut down on consumables. Out of the box, the V715w shows physical flaws and a bulky design with frustrations that include frequent paper jams, unreliable wireless connectivity, and expensive ink cartridges. Placed next to the full-featured Lexmark Prevail Pro705, which flaunts a much easier installation process, top-tier image output quality, and a five-year warranty, we see little reason to recommend the Dell V715w.

Design and features
At 19.2 inches wide, 16.1 inches deep, and 9.9 inches tall, the Dell V715w will take command of your work space, so make sure you have room for the device before running out to make a purchase. You likely won’t move the V715w once you situate it in your work area. The hefty printer weighs 21 pounds, just 1 pound less than the Epson WorkForce 840, a $300 printer that can hold up to 500 sheets of paper in its dual paper input trays. The V715w tops out at 200 sheets total: 150 in the standard input tray and another 50 sheets in the ADF.

The V715w doesn’t feature a typical tiny two-line LCD display. Instead, you get a 2.4-inch color LCD that lets you preview imported photos from the accompanying computer, and you can also access files through the media card reader and PictBridge USB port on the lower right side of the machine. A shortcut feature buttons surround the display on three sides, and there’s also the standard array of buttons including a directional pad for scrolling through menus and a number pad for dialing numbers on the fax side.

The first problem we have with the V715w’s design is the control panel that sticks out of the middle of the unit. Prior to installing the driver, Dell instructed us to position a clear strip of plastic on top of the panel that adds text labels to the Copy, Scan, Fax, and Photo buttons. We’re unsure why those labels weren’t already printed there as on the rest of the buttons, but the extra layer and the cheap plastic finish take away from the otherwise streamlined design.

The flatbed scanner lives just underneath the V715w’s autodocument feeder and can handle up to 1,200×2,400-dpi resolution, another feature we normally see on multifunction devices. However, Dell deserves recognition for including a copy of ABBYY FineReader Sprint on the included driver installation disc that provides basic optical character recognition (OCR) and will do its best to “read” and import the text of a scanned document into a word processor of your choosing, typically Microsoft Word. In our testing the software was fairly accurate, although we definitely suggest you check for inaccuracies after the scan completes. Additionally, be sure to hold onto the driver installation disc, as ABBYY FineReader Sprint isn’t available for download on Dell.com.

We also like that Dell includes an Eco Mode button marked with a green leaf on the right side of the control panel that triggers two-sided printing, copying, and faxing using the duplexer on the back. The button dims the LCD if you leave the printer dormant for an extended period, and the printer has an Energy Star certification. We welcome those green-minded touches, but Lexmark goes a step further and in addition to these features saves you money by bundling XL-capacity black and color cartridges in the box. To our knowledge, Lexmark is the only printer vendor to do this, and we hope Dell and others will consider adding this incentive in the future.

The V715w uses four individual ink cartridges for black, magenta, cyan, and yellow colors. Dell also sells high-capacity ink cartridges on the company’s Web site, but the page yield numbers are no longer listed on the site so we can’t accurately calculate the cost per page. We can tell you that the standard cartridge didn’t even last long enough for us to finish our quality and speed test, and the customer complaints on our own CNET user reviews as well as the Amazon purchase page echo our experience.

Like many modern all-in-one printers, the Dell includes an 802.11b/g wireless card that’s supposed to help you cut the cord and free up USB ports you might otherwise use for connecting to the host computer. The wireless installation disc that comes in the bundle does an adequate job of walking you through the Wi-Fi Protected Setup (WPS) using your wireless router’s SSID and WPA password, but our connection kept giving us an error message that said “Cannot Print over a Wireless Network” despite the green notification light that supposedly indicates a solid connection.
Performance

The Dell V715w registered average scores in our speed tests, in which we compared it with four other printers. That’s not to say it isn’t fast enough to keep up with the output of a small to midsize office. In fact, it did fine in the text speed and presentation speed tests, just edging out the Canon Pixma MG6120 for second place behind the quick-printing HP Photosmart Premium e-All-in-One C310a.

Source:http://reviews.cnet.com/multifunction-devices/dell-v715w-all-in/4505-3181_7-33810350.html?subj=fdba&part=rss&tag=rb_content%3Brb_mtx_Search+Results#reviewPage1

Toshiba Satellite L655-S5161

April 26th, 2011

The good: The 15-inch Toshiba Satellite L655-S5161 is a good entry point for midsize laptops with Intel’s second-gen Core i-series processors, and we’ve always liked the company’s sleep-and-charge USB ports.

The bad: The design is strictly no-frills, and there are no high-speed data ports, such as USB 3.0 or eSATA. Plus, we hate the shortened spacebar on the keyboard.

The bottom line: Though not particularly inspiring, the basic 15-inch Toshiba Satellite L655 has a current-gen CPU and can be found for around $600, making it a worthwhile budget choice.
Review:

With numerous laptops spread across its L, C, A, M, T, E, W, and R series, Toshiba may not run out of new product lines until it runs out of letters. We’re pretty sure the midprice L series is above the entry-level C series, and below the premium A series, but that’s as far into Toshiba’s numerology (letterology?) as we’re willing to delve.

That said, these L-series laptops (which carry the Satellite name) have always been workhorse machines, closest perhaps to Dell’s Insprions; they typically include decent mainstream parts for $500 to $650. The latest … Expand full review

With numerous laptops spread across its L, C, A, M, T, E, W, and R series, Toshiba may not run out of new product lines until it runs out of letters. We’re pretty sure the midprice L series is above the entry-level C series, and below the premium A series, but that’s as far into Toshiba’s numerology (letterology?) as we’re willing to delve.

That said, these L-series laptops (which carry the Satellite name) have always been workhorse machines, closest perhaps to Dell’s Insprions; they typically include decent mainstream parts for $500 to $650. The latest version, called the Satellite L655-S5161, has Intel’s second-gen Core i3 processor, basic integrated graphics, 4GB of RAM, and a 500GB hard drive–about as generic a loadout as a budget-minded laptop can get.

For less than $650 (we’ve seen it for as little as $619), it’s not a door-busting bargain, and we were able to configure a comparable Dell for the same $619. But extra features, such as the sleep-and-charge USB ports (which can power phones and other devices even when the laptop is off) give it a leg up on the similarly priced competition.

Toshiba covers the L655, as most of its recent Satellites, with a dark silvery gray pattern, under one of the glossiest finishes we’ve ever seen. It could probably pick up fingerprints from someone just looking at it. Inside, the same pattern follows through to the keyboard tray and wrist rest, but the keyboard itself is jet black.

The body feels sturdy, but the trade-off is a thick, chunky laptop that isn’t going to win any modeling contracts. It’s also about a pound heavier than a 14-inch Satellite L-series laptop we looked at last year, so we wouldn’t suggest lugging it around on your daily commute (a couple of days per week is probably fine).

Flat-topped, island-style keyboards are the norm now, and Toshiba has had nearly the same one on its last several generations of Satellite laptops. The 15-inch version includes a separate number pad, with very generous number keys, as well as large Shift, Tab, and other useful keys. However, Toshiba has not yet fixed its main keyboard flaw: an aggravatingly shortened spacebar, which can be murder for touch typists.

The matte multitouch touch pad lies flush with the rest of the keyboard deck and can get a little lost under your fingers, but it’s well-complemented by a pair of large mouse buttons, which have a shiny surface and a convex shape for no discernible reason.

Toshiba continues to include the genuinely useful sleep-and-charge feature, which lets you use a USB port to power or recharge devices such as a mobile phone or media player, even if the laptop is asleep or off, via either the battery or AC power.

Also included are a couple of proprietary media/productivity apps. Book Place is an e-book reader/store, powered by a company called Blio (’cause it’s really hard to find places to buy e-books online). And we’ve seen Toshiba’s ReelTime before; it’s essentially a system history browser, displaying recent documents and Web pages in thumbnail form along the bottom of the screen.

The 15.6-inch display features a 1,366×768-pixel native resolution, which is standard for the size. Movies and 720p HD video look fine, although the glossy screen coating can pick up glare from nearby lights. A pair of narrow speaker grills sits right above the keyboard, but they didn’t push out much volume.

The Toshiba Satellite L655’s connection options are on the bare bones side, as it doesn’t have Bluetooth, USB 3.0, or eSATA. You can’t expect too much for around $600, but we think a high-speed data port of some kind is essential these days for many users.

While this year’s Intel processors (still called the Core-i series, but the second generation of them) have shown distinct performance and battery life improvements over last year’s versions, the difference is more pronounced in the more mainstream Core i5 chips. With a lower-end 2.1GHz Intel Core i3-2310M, you’ll get a perfectly fine system for general laptop use, from multitasking to HD video playback, but other recent laptops, including Toshiba’s 13-inch Portege R835, performed better. But, unless you’re doing a lot of high-end video editing, it’s unlikely to slow down or stutter under even a heavy multitasking workload.

Intel’s new integrated graphics are better than last year’s, but still not a substitute for a dedicated GPU. In Street Fighter IV, running at 1,366×768 pixels, we got 16.1 frames per second, while our older Unreal Tournament III test, at the same resolution, ran at 58.6 frames per second. That means basic gaming is possible, if you dial down settings and resolutions (and games such as World of Warcraft should play fine), but this isn’t going to be a heavy-duty gaming rig.

Source:http://reviews.cnet.com/laptops/toshiba-satellite-l655-s5161/4505-3121_7-34502405.html?subj=fdba&part=rss&tag=rb_content%3Brb_mtx_Search+Results#reviewPage1

The Mother Board Intel’s Z68 comes on May 11th

April 26th, 2011

The “new LGA 1155 chipset”
Although it has already been rumoured for a May launch, we managed to confirm that Intel’s Z68 LGA 1155 chipset with Sandy Bridge support will launch on May 11.

As noted, the Intel Z68 Express chipset supports Intel’s Sandy Bridge processors and will be marketed as a “performance overclocking chipset” that has support for CPU, memory, as well as processor graphics overclocking support. The Z68 can easily be considered as the tweaked P67 as it brings display outputs and RST SSD caching, while the rest of the specs are pretty much on par with the P67.

Other thing that also seperates the Z68 from the P67 is LucidLogix’s Virtu graphics switching software that will be supported by some, if not all, MB manufacturers, but honestly don’t get you hopes up as Lucid’s solutions had history of falling short when it comes to support, and there were some rumors that this one is no exception either, but we’ll hold on with info until we manage to get more details regarding it in the next few days.

The current schedule puts the launch of the Z68 on May 11th which makes more sense than the previously rumoured May 8th (Sunday) launch date. The good thing about Z68 is that it price shouldn’t be that much higher when compared to the P67.

More info regarding the Z68 should appear as we draw closer to the launch day.

Source:http://www.motherboards.org/forums/viewtopic.php?p=744524#744524

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