Comcast Rolling out Gigabit Internet via Cable

Comcast announced this week the rollout of gigabit Internet connections for a handful of cities across the nation. The new service will hit residences and businesses in Atlanta and Nashville in early 2016, followed by Chicago, Detroit, and Miami in the second half of this year. Comcast hasn’t yet provided pricing information. What makes this…

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New Lian Li Case Has Lots of Drive Mounts

Got a lot of hard drives you need to pack into a single mini-tower chassis? You’re in luck, as Lian Li just introduced the PC-M25, a small form factor case that provides space for up to seven 3.5-inch hard drives. There’s even a hot swap HDD cage that supports up to five 3.5-inch drives, and…

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Malwarebytes Scrambles to Plug Security Holes Pointed Out by Google Researcher

Time’s up Google’s Project Zero team doesn’t mess around when it comes to security vulnerabilities—if it finds one that’s noteworthy, it gives companies 90 days to fix the issue before going public. Surprisingly, one of the latest disclosures involved Malwarebytes, a popular anti-malware program. No anti-malware program is perfect, though in our experience, Malwarebytes does…

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Logitech Has Its Own VR Plans

In a recent interview with The Australian Financial Times, Logitech CEO Bracken Darrell revealed the company’s plans for entering the virtual reality market. However, don’t expect to see products from the company any time soon. Darrell indicated that Logitech intends to enter the VR market late rather than bust in “early and awkwardly.” “Just like…

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Fallout 4 Graphics Revisited – Patch 1.3

War, War Never Changes… … the hardware and software you’re using, on the other hand, can change in rapid fashion, often rendering older results meaningless. This is the case with Fallout 4, which we initially benchmarked right after launch. Two and a half months later, we’ve just received the latest official 1.3 patch, which was…

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Nintendo Eyeing Re-Entry into VR Industry

Nintendo first entered the virtual reality industry back in 1995 with the launch of Virtual Boy. The product tanked in Japan and North America, which led the company to refrain from selling the device in other regions. Complaints about the device included headaches caused by the monochrome screen, the high retail price, and its failure…

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