Cooler Master has announced the introduction of its Black Label Limited Edition, made available worldwide in 500 individually numbered sets. The company's collection is a luxurious lineup of award-winning computing chassis, cooler and power supply, which feature a sophisticated black appearance in addition to several enhancements, including Cosmos Black Label, Hyper Z600 Black Label and a powerful PSU unit. The suggested price tag for the series is 599USD or 499EUR. Cooler Master's team of designers has put all efforts into ensuring that no detail of the series is left aside. The pure black advertised by the company means that bot... [read more >>] This is probably the third news related to the supercomputer design I've come across in the latest 24 hours. Now don't get me wrong, I'm a sucker for really big systems but this is too much. Because only a day after IBM announced its Blue Gene/P design capable to scale up to 3 petaflops, Sun also issued a press release related to the launch of its newest supercomputer.Called "Constellation", the newest CPU mayhem is a direct result of the collaboration between Sun and the Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC) at the University of Texas in Austin. Tech-wise, the Constellation is made up out of 6,576 quad-core AMD Opterons pro... [read more >>] Yep, you've heard it right. Water fever comes back again with one of the biggest bangs. And I'm not just talking about a temporary thing. Water cooling has been around for a while but the first time it appeared, it was designed to run solely as a CPU cooling method.Actually if you take a minute and look back in time you will realize that water cooling is almost as old as the first K8 cores. And the reason behind the appearance of water cooling was indeed the fact that the first 180nm parts were very hot even at default speeds.And then the first hot GPUs came and water coolers came back in form of smaller water pumps and waterblock... [read more >>] Ever wanted to shrink your huge PC case and make your entire system silent so you can enjoy all that multimedia content without annoying cooling noise and unnecessary heat problems? Trident makes your wish come true and even more so, it turns your PC into an invisible device. Cool, but how will we be able to find our PC after all?Well now, Trident doesn't really turn your PC into something invisible. In fact, the company designs 1-inch-thick cases and then they hide them well enough that it practically becomes "invisible." So, where do they hide that case? As you can see from the provided image, the case is installed at the back of a... [read more >>] |