Essence_of_War
Platinum Member
- Feb 21, 2013
- 2,650
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- 81
I'm quite surprised that there wasn't a haswell-e update for the mac pro.
That seemed like an obvious bump.
That seemed like an obvious bump.
In something like FCP it makes sense, because you can have 4k 1:1 in preview and have plenty of screen real-estate for UI. Well, maybe not 1:1 depending on what your timeline looks like, but its better to get as close as you can get your Preview to its export res with the UI for editing.
I wonder if the yields on the 5K panels were somewhat low preventing an announcement for a 5K thunderbolt display.
Sorry Apple, not sticking to a standard 4K resolution on the iMac just seems dumb to me. Plus, whatever GPU you put in there probably can't handle it well.
Exactly, I was saying this a few months ago. 4K desktop is useless for editing 4k video unless you scale the video, but at that point you may as well just use some other lower resolution. Apple did it perfectly with this. Since the iMac is adopting 5k, maybe we will see 5k Korean monitors soon![]()
When ChipWorks looks at the chips under a microscope?I wonder when we'll be able to find out about the 2 GB.
yeah, that's literally disgusting. It's a 2011 SoC being sold soon in 2015.
Worse.. They'll continue making new iPad mini (original). Now selling for $249.
512 MB :|
That's because it is the same exact device as the iPad Air 2 except smaller.
I'm wondering, does the GPU in the Mac Pro even support 5k without multiple cords?
So it looks like the iPad mini 3 will have...
1. same form factor
2. gold color option
3. same processor
That's it, huh? Not even a camera upgrade?
So did they lower the price on previous ipad minis? I was looking to get one for my handicapped niece but was waiting for this event to pass to see if the older ipad minis would drop.
In something like FCP it makes sense, because you can have 4k 1:1 in preview and have plenty of screen real-estate for UI. Well, maybe not 1:1 depending on what your timeline looks like, but its better to get as close as you can get your Preview to its export res with the UI for editing.
I think the driving decision behind that choice is the desire to keep "pixel doubling" as the best-choice scaling, while at the minimum matching what the previous 27" iMac offered for resolution.
1440p doubled is 2880p. (5120x2880 vs 2560x1440)
The system won't run in 5k resolution, not by default. It's possible, but something tells me it is unlikely. Their native scaling solution is 4 pixels driving every pixel. It will likely require a work-around to enable the native resolution of the display.
I assume, at least, they'll be utilizing the same approach as scaling for MBPr models.
If they went 4K and wanted to preserve the idea of scaling, they'd have to make a new approach as all their Retina-scaling-compatible apps are designed with pixel-doubling in mind. If they said we'll go 4K and kept pixel-doubling, they would have to offer a "preferred" apparent resolution that is less than that of the current 27" iMac, so there would be less screen real estate. Sure, you can increase the apparent resolution, but it actually costs more in resources to use any resolution (higher or lower, iirc) than the native pixel-doubled, and the appearance may not be the most ideal when comparing the relative size of different UI elements.
iPad 4: 652 g
iPad Air 2: 437 g
The iPad 4 is almost 50% heavier than the iPad Air 2. The Air 2 is actually over an ounce lighter than the original Air.
No more rotation lock switch though.
![]()
iPad 4: 652 g
iPad Air 2: 437 g
The iPad 4 is almost 50% heavier than the iPad Air 2. The Air 2 is actually over an ounce lighter than the original Air.
No more rotation lock switch though.
![]()
Did anyone fully understand what technology in the new Retina iMac that Phil Schiller was talking about? "It didn't exist, so Apple had to invent" some special controller chip for smoother Retina display.
And: is that anything similar to nVidia's G-Sync technology
http://www.pcper.com/reviews/Graphics-Cards/NVIDIA-G-Sync-Tech-Preview-and-First-Impressions
that was introduced about a year ago, where a special electronics module was added to certain flat panel monitors, that supposedly made for smoother game play, anti-ghosting, or something like that.
The timing controller, or “TCON,” is the brains of the display — it tells each pixel what to do and when to do it. Because iMac with Retina 5K display has four times as many pixels as the standard 27-inch iMac display, the TCON had to be able to handle more information than ever. But even the most powerful timing controllers available couldn’t manage this number of pixels, so we had to create a new one with four times the bandwidth of the previous-generation 27-inch iMac — up to 40 Gbps. Now a single supercharged chip beautifully orchestrates the symphony of all 14.7 million pixels.