The country music singer has been married to her spouse since 2017. Find out more about him here.
The country music singer has been married to her spouse since 2017. Find out more about him here.
The country music singer has been married to her spouse since 2017. Find out more about him here.
The country music singer has been married to her spouse since 2017. Find out more about him here.
The ‘Girls Like Me’ hitmaker found her prince charming when she got married in 2022. Learn all about Meghan’s hubby ahead of her ‘Christmas at the Opry’ performance, here.
The ‘Girls Like Me’ hitmaker found her prince charming when she got married in 2022. Learn all about Meghan’s hubby ahead of her ‘Christmas at the Opry’ performance, here.
Chris Janson, on the show’s red carpet Nov. 14 and got the EXCLUSIVE scoop about how his kids inspired his latest hit, ‘Drunk Girl.’
Chris Janson, on the show’s red carpet Nov. 14 and got the EXCLUSIVE scoop about how his kids inspired his latest hit, ‘Drunk Girl.’
The ‘I’m Glad’ songstress opened up about her relationship with her husband during an appearance on the red carpet on December 5.
The ‘I’m Glad’ songstress opened up about her relationship with her husband during an appearance on the red carpet on December 5.
The actress also admitted she and her ‘Maude v Maude’ co-star got off to a ‘rocky start’ before connecting, in a new interview.
The actress also admitted she and her ‘Maude v Maude’ co-star got off to a ‘rocky start’ before connecting, in a new interview.
Overwatch 2’s eighth season went live on Tuesday and things aren’t exactly going smoothly for everyone. Some are complaining about performance issues, particularly concerning frame rates on PlayStation 5. On Blizzard’s own forums and Reddit, players are suggesting that even the menus are lagging on the console.
“I play on PS5 with 120 Hz monitor and settings for that output, but randomly either in [fights] or walking back from spawn, even on menus, I am dropping down to what seems like single digit to low double digit frames per second,” a player who goes by Sartell wrote. Others claim that Overwatch 2 is “unplayable” on PS5 at the minute, with some claiming that frame rates are dropping to below 20 fps. The problem doesn’t seem to be as prevalent on other platforms.
I encountered the same issues in a brief test on PS5. It took a few seconds for my character to complete a full rotation, which can practically be a kiss of death in such a fast-paced shooter. It was almost like playing GoldenEye 007 at 12 fps all over again.
In the current list of known issues, which was last updated on Tuesday, Blizzard notes that “We are investigating reports of performance issues for some platforms.” Engadget has asked Blizzard when a fix might be ready.
The performance issues are a pity in general, but even more so given that new tank character Mauga is a blast to play. As such, PS5 players may need wait for a hotfix before they can properly check out the latest hero, unless they’re content with enjoying the action as though it were a colorful slideshow. Otherwise, downloading the PS4 version of the game could work in a pinch.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/overwatch-2-players-say-that-frame-rate-drops-are-making-the-game-unplayable-on-ps5-210043798.html?src=rss
The ‘This Is Us’ alum has had quite a few high-profile relationships. Before she performs at the ‘Christmas at the Opry’ special, get to know more about her past romances.
The ‘This Is Us’ alum has had quite a few high-profile relationships. Before she performs at the ‘Christmas at the Opry’ special, get to know more about her past romances.
‘Good Morning America’ anchor Amy Robach was married to Andrew Shue for over 10 years before they divorced.
‘Good Morning America’ anchor Amy Robach was married to Andrew Shue for over 10 years before they divorced.
Acer just announced a new gaming laptop, the Nitro V 16. This computer has some serious bells and whistles, with the key takeaway being the inclusion of the just-announced AMD Ryzen 8040 Series processor. The processor has plenty of oomph for modern gaming applications, with the addition of AI technology to enable enhanced ray-traced visuals.
You can spec out the laptop how you see fit, with GPU options up to the respectable NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4060. This GPU features DLSS 3.5 tech and its own AI-powered ray-tracing, called Ray Reconstruction. You have your pick of two display options, with availability of WQXGA or WUXGA screens. Both options boast 165 Hz refresh rates and 3ms response times. Acer promises that the displays offer “fluid visuals with minimal ghosting and screen tearing.”
As for other specs, you can beef up the laptop with up to 32GB of DRR55600 RAM and 2TB of PCIe Gen 4 SSD storage. Acer also touts a new cooling system that features a pair of high-powered fans that make it “well-equipped to take on heavy gameplay.” To that end, you can monitor performance and temperature via the company’s proprietary NitroSense utility app.
There are three microphones outfitted with AI-enhanced noise reduction tech, for online tomfoolery, and the speakers incorporate DTS:X Ultra sound optimization algorithms for immersive audio. Finally, you get a USB-4 Type C port, two USB 3 ports, an HDMI port, a microSD card reader and WiFi 6E compatibility.
If the name of the processor seems a bit confusing, that’s because AMD recently changed up its naming conventions. Here’s a simple breakdown. The “8” relates to 2024 and the second number refers to the product line or relevant market segment, so that doesn’t mean much to consumers. The third number, however, is all about performance. The “4” indicates that the chip uses the advanced Zen 4 architecture. Finally, the fourth number illustrates what type of Zen 3 architecture the chip uses. The “0” denotes a lower-tier Zen 3 experience when compared to Zen 3+, which would be marked as “5”.
The Windows 11 gaming laptop will be available in March, with a starting price of $1,000 for the base model. It also comes with one month of Xbox Game Pass, so you can run it through its paces.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/acers-nitro-v16-gaming-laptop-is-powered-by-new-amd-ryzen-8040-processors-200031118.html?src=rss
Last January, AMD beat out Intel by launching its Ryzen 7040 chips, the first x86 processors to integrate a neural processing unit (NPU) for AI workloads. Intel’s long-delayed Core Ultra “Meteor Lake” chips, its first to integrate an NPU, are set to arrive on December 14th. But it seems AMD can’t help but remind Intel it’s lagging behind: Today, AMD is announcing the Ryzen 8040 series chips, its next batch of AI-equipped laptop hardware, and it’s also giving us a peak into its future AI roadmap.
The Ryzen 8040 chips, spearheaded by the 8-core Ryzen 9 8945HS, are up to 1.4 times faster than its predecessors when its comes to Llama 2 and AI vision model performance, according to AMD. They’re also reportedly up to 1.8 times faster than Intel’s high-end 13900H chip when it comes to gaming, and 1.4 times faster for content creation. Of course, the real test will be comparing them to Intel’s new Core Ultra chips, which weren’t available for AMD to benchmark.
AMD’s NPU will be available on all of the Ryzen 8040 chips except for the two low-end models, the six-core Ryzen 5 8540U and the quad-core Ryzen 3 8440U. The company says the Ryzen 7040’s NPU, AMD XDNA, is capable of reaching 10 TOPS (tera operations per second), while the 8040’s NPU can hit 16 TOPS. Looking further into 2024, AMD also teased its next NPU architecture, codenamed “Strix Point,” which will offer “more than 3x generative AI NPU performance.” Basically, don’t expect AMD to slow down its AI ambitions anytime soon.
It’s worth remembering that both AMD and Intel are lagging behind Qualcomm when it comes to bringing NPUs to Windows PCs. Its SQ3 powered the ill-fated Surface Pro 9 5G. That was just a minor win for the Snapdragon maker, though: the Windows-on-Arm experience is still a mess, especially when it comes to running older apps that require x86 emulation.
The far more compelling competitor for Intel and AMD is Apple, which has been integrating Neural Engines in its hardware since the A11 Bionic debuted in 2017, and has made them a core component in the Apple Silicon chips for Macs. Apple’s Neural Engine speeds up AI tasks, just like AMD and Intel’s NPUs, and it helps tackle things like Face ID and photo processing. On PCs, NPUs enable features like Windows 11’s Studio Effects in video chats, which can blur your background or help maintain eye contact.
Just like Intel, AMD is also pushing developers to build NPU features into their apps. Today, it’s also unveiling the Ryzen AI Software platform, which will allow developers to take pre-trained AI models and optimize them to run on Ryzen AI hardware. AMD’s platform will also help those models run on Intel’s NPUs, similar to how Intel’s AI development tools will ultimately help Ryzen systems. We’re still in the early days of seeing how devs will take advantage of NPUs, but hopefully AMD and Intel’s competitive streak will help deliver genuinely helpful AI-powered apps soon.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/amds-ryzen-8040-chips-remind-intel-its-falling-behind-in-ai-pcs-200043544.html?src=rss