Posts Tagged ‘video card’

HP Mini 210

The versatile HP Mini 210 adds best-of features from other HP laptops, but the HD video card requires a still-in-beta Flash update for streaming Flash video. See original here: HP Mini 210  Read More →

HP Mini 210 HD

The versatile HP Mini 210 adds best-of features from other HP laptops, but the HD video card requires a still-in-beta Flash update for streaming Flash video. Original post: HP Mini 210 HD  Read More →

HP Mini 210 (Intel Atom N450, 1GB RAM, 250GB HDD)

The versatile HP Mini 210 adds best-of features from other HP laptops, but the HD video card requires a still-in-beta Flash update for streaming Flash video. More: HP Mini 210 (Intel Atom N450, 1GB RAM, 250GB HDD)  Read More →

NVIDIA Fermi pushed to March?

NVIDIA’s delay for Fermi will put it in March, video card makers said Monday. The company had acknowledged a push back to the first quarter of the year, but tips to DigiTimes now have the launch of cards based on the new chipsets moved to the very end of that period. More here: NVIDIA Fermi pushed to March?  Read More →

NVIDIA outs Fermi-based Tesla cards

NVIDIA today provided details of the first official hardware to use its upcoming Fermi architecture. The Tesla 20 series is even more optimized for general-purpose computing standards like OpenCL or NVIDIA’s own CUDA and handles complex math that previously hasn’t been as practical, such as ISO standard double-precision math and C++ code processing. Unlike past models, though, the card model also has a video output and works as a video card rather than just as a companion device… Read the rest here: NVIDIA outs Fermi-based Tesla cards  Read More →

Apple posts iMac, RAID firmware updates

Apple has posted two new firmware updates, addressing separate pieces of hardware. The iMac Graphics FW Update 1.0.2 fixes stability problems on iMacs running an ATI Radeon HD 2600 Pro video card, or else the Radeon HD 2400 XT See the original post: Apple posts iMac, RAID firmware updates  Read More →

How To Copy VHS Tapes To CD or DVD

In the eighties and nineties VHS tapes and VCRs were found in nearly every home across America. There was no Netflix and video tape rental stores were new and booming. If you wanted to watch a movie from home, VHS tapes were the only viable option. Many of us have collected large movie libraries in VHS format. You may have also taped your favorite TV shows that are no longer on the air. Others have family videos or high school football games on VHS tape. The problem today is, no one uses VHS players and they are becoming a thing of the past as DVD is now the preferred video format, with CDs... 

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