Panasonic: Blu-ray will win by New Year's Day
Exec predicts PS3's hi-def format will defeat Microsoft-backed HD DVD in next-gen disc format war.
Exec predicts PS3's hi-def format will defeat Microsoft-backed HD DVD in next-gen disc format war.
Electronics giant's CEO drops the gloves in this CES chat; calls coverage of PS3 shipping shortfall "thoughtful, elegant, unkind."
Reggie tells Reuters that 1 million Wiis will be in the US by early December and expects an additional million in the country by the second week of January.
One chip that works with both standards could cut the cost of building a player that accommodates Blu-ray and HD-DVD discs.
IBM-Georgia Tech project gets silicon-based computer chip to run at an astonishing 500GHz; scientist theorizes 1 terahertz chips are possibility.
A number of high-tech companies looking to make displays with depth show their wares at a San Francisco conference.
Intel rival invited into the computer giant's lair; exclusivity with chipmaker will end before year is out. Servers today, XPS game machines tomorrow?
The PS3 and the Xbox 360 may both look shiny on the outside, but it's the guts of each machine that determine their retail price tags.
Departure from Pentium 4 means shorter pipelines and lower power consumption.
Dual-core Opteron processors shipping now; dual-core Athlon 64 X2 desktop chips coming in June.
New processor positioned to make up ground lost to Intel.
Chipsets bound for Intel-based computers are to be shown tomorrow.
New "Toledo" processor to be shown off Wednesday, start appearing in PCs in the second half of 2005.
However, company officials say the new Nocona processor won't be in desktops anytime soon.
There's a multibillion dollar company moving into the chip business: Microsoft.
Sony and Toshiba license technology from Rambus for the PlayStation 3 hardware.
PC makers will unfurl systems containing Intel's 3GHz Pentium 4 on November 14, a few days before the Comdex trade show in Las Vegas.
Intel is working on a major overhaul of the Pentium 4 chip, which sources say will debut in the first half of 2005.
AMD announces two faster desktop chips--the Athlon 2700+ and 2800+--but customers won't see them until November because of AMD's lingering problems in getting its high-end chips to market.
Advanced Micro Devices has pushed back the release of its highly anticipated 64-bit Hammer CPU for desktop PCs by almost a quarter and plans to delay the release of another ...
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