You are talking about the LG G2, which launches tomorrow on Verizon and then the rest of the major carriers by the end of the month. Officially there are 2 Snapdragon 800 phones, the G2 and the Xperia Z Ultra.
I would go with Willie Keller as the best singles hitter in baseball, more hits per game (1.38 vs. 1.34) and a lower ISO (0.073 vs. 0.096), if you want to go with any era.
Tried that and tried uninstalling and reinstalling different browsers, with ICS twitch streams that played fine at 720p/1080p are now having problems going above 10fps at 480p or lower and some just bug out. Don't know if it is specifically ICS or the updated Flash player for ICS, also have had...
That isn't testing the Llano GPU, closest you could probably get using Anandtech results (didn't look hard so something else might be there) would be the Starcraft II results from the Llano review.
http://www.anandtech.com/show/4476/amd-a83850-review/5
A8-3850 = 68.1 fps, HD3000 = 36 and...
Looks like the 7900s can do 4096x2160 via DP and 4096x3112 via HDMI while the other cards at stock can't reach that resolution per Nvidia and AMD websites (580/590/6970/6990 = 2560x1600).
No, you said people stress their CPUs and would get an Ultrabook. When asked how many specifically:
75% of people is insane and 50% is probably more than those who use computers at work. To me letting a workforce that needs CPU power get Ultrabooks is irresponsible.
Again I think you are...
I'll tell you if you can come up with the logic behind how you think 75% of people stress their CPU's and yet would get Ultrabooks instead of something more capable.
Again, that is exactly the opposite of what I am talking about. I originally replied to a guy who was using benches to say Ivy was much better then Trinity, and I said that for an Ultrabook it wasn't a big deal because people aren't buying an Ultrabook for it's performance.
You do realize I...
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I said very few people need a high end CPU, not that there aren't people that do. Or was it that people who do need extra CPU power wouldn't use an Ultrabook as a primary and insinuating that people would just get a thin and light instead if they wanted something portable.
Which was the point I was trying to make. At this point very few people need high end CPUs and the ones who do won't be getting an Ultrabook as their main computer so big gains on the CPU for these machines aren't that big of a deal.
And how many of those people have to use software that...
And how many of them are doing heavy lifting on an Ultrabook? Or use an Ultrabook as their main computer?
Which helps my point that CPU boost between Ivy and Trinity is not that important.
If you are using it in a manner that the CPU difference is noticeable then you are stressing it and...
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