Hardware news: News Archive | June 2023

News Archive | June 2023

June 2023

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73 articles

  • June 7
    • Seeed Announces 10-inch reTerminal DM Raspberry Pi All-in-One

    • Pick up the Intel Core I5-13600KF at Its Lowest Price: Real Deals

    • Raspberry Pi Storybook Writes Stories On Demand Using ChatGPT

  • June 6
    • GPU Prices 2023: June Update

    • Intel Releases Professional Single-Slot A60 GPU

    • TSMC Adds Advanced Packaging Capacity to Meet Nvidia Demands: Report

    • Intel Terminates 11th Gen Tiger Lake CPUs, 500-Series Mobile Chipsets

    • Intel Details PowerVia Backside Power Delivery Technology

    • LG StanbyME Go 27LX5 Portable Monitor Targets Picnickers

    • Nvidia Is Giving Away a GeForce RTX 4080 With a Diablo IV Backplate

    • ‘TSMC Village’ Arizona Repeatedly Targeted by Hoodlums

    • WD Releases Xbox Series X and S Expansion Cards: First Non-Seagate Options

    • Get a 4TB M. 2 SSD So You Don’t Have to Swap Out Your Games: Real Deals

    • Pentium III Computer Rocks Teddy Bear Case

    • With Its Silicon Transition Complete, Apple Seems to Have New Confidence in its Macs

    • Apple’s Vision Pro Is Pricey, but It Has a Chance

  • June 5
    • AMD Extends Jedi CPU Bundle, Launches New Resident Evil 4 GPU Deal, $50 off 7900X3D

    • AMD RX 7600 Has Better Cache Latency Than the RX 7900 XTX

    • Nvidia Driver Boosts GPU Decompression By 17 Percent On PCIe 5.0 SSDs

    • Apple Shows Off $3,499 Vision Pro XR Headset at WWDC

    • Apple Announces macOS Sonoma with Game Mode, Upgraded Widgets and More

    • Mac Pro with Apple Silicon Finally Here to Complete Transition Away From Intel

    • Apple’s 24-Core M2 Ultra Combines Two M2 Max Dies, Powers New Mac Pro, Mac Studio

    • Hands-On: Apple’s 15-inch MacBook Air Sure Feels Familiar

    • TSMC Has Plans for Price Hikes up to 6% Next Year, Says Report

    • Grab a Great Deal on This Ryzen CPU for Only $81: Real Deals

    • TeamGroup Says Its PS5 M. 2 Heatsink Reduces Temps By 25C

    • TSMC Is Sprinting to 2nm to Satisfy Demand From Nvidia, Apple

    • Newly Revealed RISC-V Vector Unit Could Be Used for AI, HPC, GPU Applications

    • AMD Confirms Ryzen 8000 AM5 Processors With Zen 5 CPU and Navi 3.5 Graphics

    • Raspberry Pi Powers Digitally Analog Polaroid Camera

    • Maker Creates Universal Remote From Scratch using TinyPICO Board

  • June 4
    • SilverStone Sugo SFF Case Supports Quad-Slot GPUs

    • eBlaztr Showcases Upgradable All-in-One PC Case and Systems for Gamers

    • Raspberry Pi Brings Big Mouth Billy Bass to Life With ChatGPT

    • AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D CPU Drops to Just $406

    • Giant Raspberry Pi Nose Sniffs Objects, Sneezes Out a Printed Report

  • June 3
    • Raspberry Pi Camera Uses Sound to Create Photos with AI

    • WD Black 1TB SN850X Drops to Just $77 at Amazon

    • How To Crop and Zoom in OBS

    • Raspberry Pi Powers Beer Pong Winning Robot

    • AMD’s EPYC Rome Chips Crash After 1,044 Days of Uptime

  • June 2
    • Diablo IV PC Performance: 36 GPUs Benchmarked

    • ASRock Goes Ampere: Up to 128 Arm Cores in Deep MicroATX

    • RAM Benchmark Hierarchy: DDR5, DDR4 for AMD, Intel CPUs

    • AMD Talks Hybrid Ryzen CPU Concepts, Avoiding Intel’s AVX-512 Problem

    • Asus Reveals New Mini-PC Packing an Intel Meteor Lake CPU

    • Computex 2023 Day 4 Wrap-Up: Intel Ponte Vecchio, 4. 5-Slot RTX 4090 Blowers and More

    • US Military Drone AI Simulation Reportedly Turned on Its Human Operator

    • Pick Up a Radeon RX 6600 XT At Its Lowest-Ever Price: Real Deals

    • Intel’s Ponte Vecchio is Finally in The Wild

    • Raspberry Pi Keeps Re-enactment Photography Authentic

    • PNY Flaunts 4.5-Slot RTX 4090, RTX 4070 Blower GPUs

    • FSP’s 2500W Power Supply Has Enough Juice To Feed Four RTX 4090

  • June 1
    • Coolest Case Mods of Computex 2023: Alien Facehuggers, Motorcycles and More

    • Gigabyte Shrinks Cooler, Relocates 16-Pin Connector on Revised RTX 4090

    • Gigabyte Rolls Out Firmware Update to Mend Firmware Backdoor

    • Elf, Orc, Titan: Sparkle Reveals a Torrent of Intel Arc Cards

    • New Orange Pi 800 Juices Storage to 128GB

    • RTX 3070 16GB Oddity Appears at Computex With 8 Mini-DisplayPorts

    • Raspberry Pi CEO: ‘Million-Unit Months’ Are Ahead

    • Computex 2023 Day 3 Wrap-Up: MSI’s Meteor Lake Laptop, Liquid-Cooled SSDs Arrive and More

    • Xigmatek Shows off Glowing White PC Test Bed and Several High-End Cases

    • Save $300 Off The Latest RTX 4080-Powered Alienware M16 Gaming Laptop: Real Deals

    • ASRock’s DeskSlim and DeskMeet Compact PCs Get Ryzen 7000 and PCIe Gen5 SSDs

    • Best of Computex 2023: It’s Good to Be Back

    • TinyTendo Fits NES Hardware Inside Game Boy-Sized Shell

    • Streacom ZS800 Rethinks PSUs for SFF Builds

    • TeamGroup Unveils 120mm AIO Liquid Cooler For PCIe 5. 0 SSDs

    • MSI Shows Meteor Lake-Powered Laptop At Computex 2023

    • G.Skill Pyramid PC Has Core i9-13900K Running at 7 GHz, RAM at 10,000 MT/s

    • Adata’s 1600W PSU Powers Four GeForce RTX 4090 Graphics Cards

    • Adata Demos Next-Gen Memory: CAMM, CXL, and MR-DIMM Modules

Best Graphics Card Deals for Prime Day October

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(Image credit: Tom’s Hardware)

It’s a better time to buy a graphics card right now thanks to crypto mining crashing and new cards from Nvidia and AMD coming out, there are great deals to be had on RTX 30-series and Radeon 6000-series cards.

We’re seeing a lot better value on AMD cards than on Nvidia-powered offerings, but you can still find some savings on RTX cards.  We’re highlighting all of the best graphics card deals below. 

Also, check out our list of best graphics cards and our GPU benchmark hierarchy to see evergreen performance data regardless of sales.   

Why you can trust Tom’s Hardware
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  • Amazon: RTX 4070 from $599
  • Newegg: RTX 3060 from $309
  • Amazon: RTX 3050 from $259
  • Newegg: Radeon RX 6950 XT from $599
  • Newegg: Radeon RX 6800 from $449
  • Amazon: Radeon RX 6650 XT from $259
  • Newegg: Radeon RX 6750 XT from $309
  • Newegg: Radeon RX 6500 XT from $159
  • Newegg: Intel Arc A750 from $249

Lowest Graphics Card Prices by GPU 

We’ve highlighted our favorite deals below, but if you’re trying to find the lowest price on a particular GPU right now, we’ve got tables below for all the major Nvidia and AMD cards. Each card’s performance is listed, using the combined (geometric mean) of the 1080p and 1440p fps from our GPU benchmarks hierarchy.

Swipe to scroll horizontally

Best Nvidia Graphics Card Prices
GPU Performance Best Price Get Latest Prices
GeForce RTX 4090 167.5 $1,589 (Zotac RTX 4090 Trinity OC) Amazon | Newegg
GeForce RTX 4080 144.8 $1,210 (Gigabyte RTX 4080 Gaming OC 16G) Amazon | Newegg
GeForce RTX 4070 Ti 122.0 $799 (PNY RTX 4070 Ti 12GB XLR8 Gaming) Amazon | Newegg
GeForce RTX 4070 105.8 $678 (MSI RTX 4070 Ventux 3X) Amazon | Newegg
GeForce RTX 3060 Ti 73. 2 $344 (PNY RTX 3060 Ti Verto Dual) Amazon | Newegg
GeForce RTX 3060 55.0 $264 (Zotac RTX 3060 Twin Edge) Amazon | Newegg
GeForce RTX 3050 39.7 $268 (PNY RTX 3050 Verto Dual) Amazon | Newegg

Nvidia’s graphics cards — both the new RTX 4090/4080 and the previous generation RTX 30-series — often tend to be overpriced. We’ve axed most of the 30-series, as those cards have been displaced by the newer, better, and often cheaper 40-series parts. The RTX 4070 for instance trades blows with the RTX 3080 10GB, costs at least $100 less, and uses 30% less power; it also supports DLSS 3 Frame Generation and some other new features. Similar arguments can be made for the RTX 4070 Ti against the RTX 3090, or the RTX 4080 and 4090 against any previous generation part.

The RTX 3060 and 3050 are really the only Nvidia cards from the Ampere generation that are still worth a look, and even then we have to exercise caution. We’ll probably get the RTX 4060 in the next month or two, and if the previously established patterns hold, it will beat the RTX 3060 Ti in performance, power, and potentially price.

Swipe to scroll horizontally

Best AMD Graphics Card Prices
GPU Performance Best Price Get Latest Prices
Radeon RX 7900 XTX 128.4 $959 (ASRock RX 7900 XTX Phantom Gaming OC) Amazon | Newegg
Radeon RX 7900 XT 118.7 $959 (MSI RX 7900 XT Gaming Trio) Amazon | Newegg
Radeon RX 6950 XT 102. 8 $629 (ASRock RX 6950 XT Phantom Gaming OC) Amazon | Newegg
Radeon RX 6900 XT 99.3 $619 (XFX Radeon RX6900 XT Speedster MERC319 Black 16GB GDDR6 Graphics Card) Amazon | Newegg
Radeon RX 6800 XT 91.3 $499 (ASRock RX 6800 XT Phantom Gaming OC) Amazon | Newegg
Radeon RX 6800 81.4 $449 (MSI RX 6800 Gaming Z Trio) Amazon | Newegg
Radeon RX 6750 XT 69.5 $379 (MSI RX 6750 XT Mech 2X) Amazon | Newegg
Radeon RX 6700 XT 66.1 $329 (ASRock RX 6700 XT Challenger D) Amazon | Newegg
Radeon RX 6700 10GB 57. 7 $344 (Sapphire RX 6700 10GB Pulse) Amazon | Newegg
Radeon RX 6650 XT 51.5 $249 (ASRock RX 6650 XT Challenger D) Amazon | Newegg
Radeon RX 6600 XT 49.8 $249 (ASRock RX 6600 XT Phantom Gaming D) Amazon | Newegg
Radeon RX 6600 42.8 $179 (ASRock RX 6600 Challenger D) Amazon | Newegg
Radeon RX 6500 XT 25.1 $159 (ASRock RX 6500 XT Challenger ITX) Amazon | Newegg
Radeon RX 6400 15.8 $112 (PowerColor RX 6400 ITX) Amazon | Newegg

AMD often offers more value for your money, and it has some excellent deals in the budget to midrange bracket. The RX 6600 dipped as low as $189 on Black Friday, and the cheapest we’re seeing is now $199. The RX 6650 XT at $259 is a good value as well if you can spend more.

All of AMD’s GPUs are selling below their original MSRPs these days, which they should be considering some of the GPUs are two years old. Of course, some of those MSRPs were inflated thanks to the GPU shortages of the past two years.

There’s also the Radeon RX 7900-series to contend with, priced at $899 and $999 and potentially delivering up to 50% more performance than the RX 6950 XT. That’s pushing prices down on the older GPUs, which is what we’d expect, whereas Nvidia prices have shot up to «leave room» for the 30-series.

Swipe to scroll horizontally

Best Intel Graphics Card Prices
GPU Performance Best Price Get Latest Prices
Intel Arc A770 16GB 55. 3 $349 (Intel Arc A770 Limited Edition) Amazon | Newegg
Intel Arc A770 8GB 54.0 $329 (ASRock Arc A770 8GB Phantom Gaming) Amazon | Newegg
Intel Arc A750 51.5 $249 (Intel Arc A750 Limited Edition) Amazon | Newegg
Intel Arc A380 21.3 $139 (ASRock Arc A380 Challenger) Amazon | Newegg

Like Nvidia, there aren’t really many official «deals» as such on Intel’s Arc GPUs. At least the Arc A770, A750, and A380 are all available for purchase, including the ASRock A770 8GB. MSRPs also dropped on some of those (the A750 and A770 8GB) to make the parts more competitive.

Performance from Arc GPUs continues to improve, with the A750 and A770 generally beating Nvidia’s RTX 3060. They cost less than the Nvidia card as well, and (usually) deliver superior ray tracing performance compared to AMD’s GPUs. But with rasterization performance roughly matching the RX 6650 XT, the Arc 700-series at best looks like a tie with its AMD competition.

Best Graphics Card Deals

ASRock Challenger D Radeon RX 6650 XT: now $229 at Newegg with promo code (was $329)
This mid-range gaming card has 8GB of GDDR6 RAM and a boost clock of 2,669 MHz.  
Use code VGAEXCAA735 for a $20 discount.        

ASRock Radeon RX 6950 XT: now $629 at Newegg (was $1099)  
The least expensive RX 6950 XT card around features 16GB of GDDR6 RAM and a 2,495 MHz boost clock. 

ASRock RX 6800 XT Phantom Gaming OC: now $499 at Newegg with promo code (was $579)
This card has 16GB of GDDR6 RAM and it comes with a free game bundle.  It’s 90% of the performance of the 6950 XT at 87% of the cost.  
Use code VGAEXCAA687 for a $40 discount.   

What to Look for in a Graphics Card Deal

When shopping for a graphics card, consider the following. 

🔎 What resolution, settings do you want to play at? A low-end budget graphics card can play games at 1080p in medium settings, but if you want to play at ultra settings, you’ll need to get at least a mid-range card. As you move up the stack of cards, you can play at 2K resolution and higher settings or, with the priciest cards, 4K.

🔎 How many fps do you consider smooth? Most people consider 30 fps the bare minimum for playability and 60 fps decent. However, if you want less lag for eSports gaming, you’ll want to be able to go to over 100 fps at reasonable settings. See our GPU benchmark hierarchy to find out how each GPU fares.

🔎 Do you have enough power? Make sure that you have enough capacity from your power supply to support the card. If you’re not sure, use a tool such as Newegg’s power supply calculator to see how much you need. If your power supply can’t handle the card, either get a new PSU or a different card.

🔎 Will it fit in your case? If you’ve got a small PC case, make sure you check the length of the card against the case’s clearance numbers.

Join the experts who read Tom’s Hardware for the inside track on enthusiast PC tech news — and have for over 25 years. We’ll send breaking news and in-depth reviews of CPUs, GPUs, AI, maker hardware and more straight to your inbox.

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Avram Piltch is Tom’s Hardware’s editor-in-chief. When he’s not playing with the latest gadgets at work or putting on VR helmets at trade shows, you’ll find him rooting his phone, taking apart his PC or coding plugins. With his technical knowledge and passion for testing, Avram developed many real-world benchmarks, including our laptop battery test.

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Russian enterprises turned out to be dependent on foreign equipment — Gazeta.Ru

Russian enterprises turned out to be dependent on foreign equipment — Gazeta.Ru | News

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By the beginning of 2023, the dependence of Russian enterprises on foreign equipment is 65%. About this writes RBC, referring to the results of a survey of production managers by the Center for Business Research of the National Research University Higher School of Economics.

18% of respondents stated that the need for supplies of foreign equipment was extremely high, and 47% of respondents noted a strong dependence. At the same time, the situation is worst in the field of coal mining, where 57% reported high dependence, and 36% — very high dependence. Next comes the production of paper with indicators of 66% and 26%, respectively. The woodworking sector closes the top three (42% and 35%).

The publication noted that 32% of companies reported low dependence on foreign equipment, with the best situation with equipment in oil and natural gas production.

Market experts considered that the survey results were quite positive. Moreover, such a positive result from the oil and gas industry is generally inexplicable, since this particular sector is in great need of foreign equipment. However, it is likely that high purchases of equipment last year could also have influenced the results of the survey.

On June 2, the Kommersant newspaper, citing sources , wrote that the Ministry of Industry and Trade (Minpromtorg), together with Russian manufacturers of computer equipment, is considering the possibility of restricting parallel imports to Russia of products of more than 20 foreign brands.

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Large manufacturer of equipment for metallurgy leaves Russia

https://ria. ru/20230502/danieli-1869148927.html

Large manufacturer of equipment for metallurgy leaves Russia

Large manufacturer of equipment for metallurgy leaves Russia — RIA Novosti, 05/02/2023

A major manufacturer of equipment for metallurgy leaves Russia

The Italian manufacturer of metallurgical equipment Danieli Group will leave the Russian market and intends to study the issue of selling assets in the Russian Federation, RIA Novosti said, 02.05.2023

2023-05-02T13:45

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ROME, May 2 – RIA Novosti. The Italian manufacturer of metallurgical equipment Danieli Group will leave the Russian market and intends to study the issue of selling assets in the Russian Federation, a representative of the company’s management told RIA Novosti. «Danieli’s departure from the Russian market is connected with the inability to sell equipment in Russia due to the sanctions regime established by the European community,» the agency’s interlocutor said. According to him, Danieli cannot supply equipment to Russia due to severe customs restrictions. The company’s products, he added, require transportation by heavy trucks and ships, after which the metallurgical equipment is assembled on site. «The rules have become so strict that deliveries are not possible,» a spokesman for Danieli said. He added that Danieli Volga’s representative office in Russia is also facing difficulties. «We want to see if we can find a buyer for this Russian asset. We are in the process of exploring ways to put this company up for sale. I think it will take about six months to find out anything. By the end of the year, I think we will have a position on what the best buyers should be,» he said. The Italian manufacturer of metallurgical equipment Danieli Group is one of the largest suppliers of equipment and installations for the metalworking industry.

https://ria.ru/20230502/tinder-1869137884.html

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Economy, Russia, Italy

RIM , May 2 — RIA Novosti . The Italian manufacturer of metallurgical equipment Danieli Group will leave the Russian market and intends to study the issue of selling assets in the Russian Federation, a representative of the company’s management told RIA Novosti.

«Danieli’s departure from the Russian market is due to the inability to sell equipment in Russia due to the sanctions regime established by the European community,» the source said.

According to him, Danieli cannot supply equipment to Russia due to severe customs restrictions. The company’s products, he added, require transportation by heavy trucks and ships, after which the metallurgical equipment is assembled on site.

«Regulations have become so strict that deliveries are impossible,» a spokesman for Danieli said.