90°

A developer kit isn’t a console

Michael Cromwell of PCGMedia Writes " Let me get this out of the way first: I’m not a technician, and I’m not a computer expert. There are those far better equipped than I to delve into the numbers and names of complicated chips, but I have my doubts over the way developer kits have been portrayed (somewhat) accidentally as “the components of the next generation of consoles.” Kotaku got hands of a 90 page document from renowned leaky tap ‘SuperDae’, from which they listed the “specifications” for a PS4 developer kit."

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pcgmedia.com
DeadlyFire4107d ago (Edited 4107d ago )

I disagree. 26nm has never existed. Kaveri is at 28nm process.

As for the roadmap. AMD has more than one roadmap. APU roadmap is all this article showcases. AMD Server and AMD desktop roadmaps are also possible. Power series was often a server CPU. If Sony and Microsoft are aiming for high compute range CPU it might be based off a server CPU chip.

While the main point is valid a Development kit is not a console. Its meant to be a programmable scaled up version of the console hardware. Cores likely will match up core to core. RAM will not. Even in the final development kit. Type of cores will be the same from the final kit to the console likely depending on the power. Still the Dev. kit will have more than a typical retail unit.

One thing many people overlook is that Context switching patent Sony filled. They have no plans for 2013 release of their console if true. AMD's products implement that in 2014 with CPU to GPU context switching. This rumor roadmap road could be longer than some expect. :P
http://www.anandtech.com/sh...

Riderz13374108d ago

No, it's a developer kit. Hence it's name "Developer Kit".

hazardman4108d ago

Exactly, but its also a preview of what will be in or comparable to, in the retail unit.

Ju4108d ago

Yes, but, e.g. a HDD means squad because a final console can as well sell without HDD at all. A devkit will require some sort of re-writeable media or do people believe devs burn DVDs to test their games? Or load the OS? Or patch/flash the dev kit every other second? And yet, people argue about HDD size in the dev kits...

nukeitall4108d ago

Actually it is not necessarily comparable at all. The hardware is intended to "mimic" the retail unit, which even the manufacturer don't know what it will look like for sure.

That means the system will likely have off the shelf parts that are likely more powerful than the retail unit. A good example of this is in two instances:

a) the RAM is twice the retail unit (well supposedly), because some of it is being used for Windows

b) some of this custom technology isn't available, so they emulate it by for instance having a full blown CPU with no regard to the power draw that the console would have

So the straight answer is, there is too much variation in the final build from dev kit and it isn't just the hardware that makes up the build, but also the software that puts limits in place to mimic the actual hardware.

So you need to know both software and hardware, to really know!

It is still fun to speculate! :D

BitbyDeath4108d ago

OMG, you just turned my world upside-down

Gillonz4108d ago

It's sad that an article has to be made about this.

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50°

The 5 best video game adaptations of popular board games

Discover our top video game adaptations of popular board games, from Bloodbowl to Wingspan & get your board game friends into video games!

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spawningpoint.com
100°

EKWB reportedly plagued with financial disarray many gaming pc's left without parts

EK Cooling allegedly has slipped itself into a hot soup of seemingly endless financial woes, where it has not paid its staff, suppliers, and contractors for many months as the company is facing liquidity problems and a surplus of inventory left unsold, stuck in the warehouse for a more extended period. Gamers Nexus investigated these claims made by former and current personnel, where he found trails of unpaid bills lasting as long as three to four months and unpaid raises that accumulated for almost a year.

EK Water Blocks has two entities—a Slovenian-based headquarters and a US-based subsidiary, EK Cooling Solutions. Steve narrated the series of events in detail, stating that the company was reportedly irresponsible and negligent regarding payment. Consequently, partners and employees are forced to share the burden of alleged mismanagement. It all begins with its extensive range of products, leading to a surplus of goods. EK has over 230 water blocks, 40 liquid cooling kits, 85 reservoirs, 40 pumps, 73 radiators, and 212 miscellaneous accessories.

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tomshardware.com
just_looken3d ago (Edited 3d ago )

Yes this is not about video games directly but indirectly this will impact the pc gaming/workstation space hard.

This company is massive one of two in the water cool space so if it goes poof then thousands out there have no spare parts or half built computers.

SO yeah i know not about a video game but think of it as amd leaving the pc space but this is ekwb that could be leaving water cooling in the pc space

Jayz2cents a supporter of there products also has issues
https://www.youtube.com/wat...

Giblet_Head23h ago(Edited 22h ago)

As someone that has built a watercooling rig. EK is big, but there's so many numerous watercooling part companies out there. EK's stuff isn't exactly amazing quality for the price compared to others either, it's just ok. Much like Corsair. The impact would be negligible long term. For perspective the majority of my parts are XSPC, at most I use EK for my gpu waterblocks and fittings. Both easily replaceable.

60°

Indie hit Dredge is getting its own movie adaptation

Rob Webb of KnowTechie writes: We're still waiting on the details, but this video game adaptation promises to be seriously creepy.

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knowtechie.com