Hello!!!
HeroCraft HiTech Co.Ltd. announces today that it has released “Arcade for Adults” for PDAs and Smartphones in cooperation with HeroCraft! “Arcade for Adults” is a 3 in 1 game pack with legendary arcade games and lots of beautiful women!!! It includes the following games: Bikini Balls, Erotic Galaxy, Sweet Invaders.
Read more...
press release:
http://hitech.herocraft.com/arcadesforadults_pressrelease.htm
game description:
http://hitech.herocraft.com/arcadesforadults.htm
Now this is information that I think we've all been waiting for. Crazy!
http://www.androidcentral.com/nvidia-quad-core-mobile-processor-demo
We're all still wrapping our heads around dual-core processors. So it only makes sense that Nvidia decided to drop the next next generation mobile processor on us at Mobile World Congress. Codenamed Kal-El (yeah, like Super Man), we're now ushering in the era (on the technical side, anyway) of quad-core mobile processors.
What you'll see in the demo after the break is not Tegra 3 -- it's a hot-off-the-press processor that's more powerful than anything you've held in your hand and that Nvidia says gets a 5x performance boost over Tegra 2. On top of that, it's got a 12-core graphics processor built in, with support for stereo 3D.
And on top of that is the capability to output video at a mind-blowing 2560x1600 resolution -- basically hotter than the sun, or something like that.
Effect on battery life -- it's really better to call it "power consumption" at this early stage -- well, Nvidia constantly stresses it's one of its main concerns. And, again, you have to remember that multiple cores doesn't mean an exponential increase in power consumption. And besides, we'll worry about that once it's in consumer facing devices.
So when will we see these quad-core chips in something we can buy? Nvidia tells us tablets around August, and phones by the end of the year. Yes, that soon.
http://androidandme.com/2011/02/new...-quad-core-cpus-in-android-devices-by-summer/
Everyone in the industry was aware that NVIDIA was working on a quad-core processor, but I doubt that any expected them to demo their next-generation Tegra at Mobile World Congress. Tonight in front of a small audience of bloggers, NVIDIA showed off the world´s first mobile quad-core CPU and revealed it would arrive in Android devices this August.
Before we dive into the details of the this chip, I wanted to point out how NVIDIA chose to reveal this information to the world. Instead of paper-launching their next-generation CPU and saying it would arrive in 2012 (like Qualcomm and Texas Instruments did just days ago), NVIDIA skipped the press release entirely and delivered a working tablet along with several jaw-dropping software demos.
The presentation started with NVIDIA announcing their Tegra roadmap through 2014. Sticking with earlier statements, NVIDIA will maintain their yearly cadence by release a new Tegra every year.
The Tegra 2 has often been referred to as a super-chip, so NVIDIA went with super-hero names for their upcoming mobile chips. Project Kal-El (assumed to become Tegra 3) will arrive in 2011 and deliver 5x the performance of Tegra 2, followed by Wayne in 2012, Logan in 2013, and Stark in 2014.
As ridiculous as this sounds, Project Stark (Tegra 6?) is expected to deliver 100x the performance of Tegra 2 in just three years from now.
To demonstrate the power of their quad-core CPU, NVIDIA started with an Android tablet decoding 1440p video to an extreme HD monitor (2560 × 1600 panel). It looked simply amazing. We were later told the source video was shot with a Red digital camera and then downscaled to 1440p for the demonstration.
Next we saw a series of game demos that compared the current Tegra 2 with the upcoming Project Kal-El. We were asked not to reveal the details of several games, but we did witness about a 3x performance increase in graphics performance. Advanced games that could barely crack 20 frames per second on Tegra 2 were running at a silky smooth 60 fps on Kal-El.
One game demo we can talk about is History Channel Great Battles: Medieval from War Drums Studios. This game was released for PC, Xbox 360, and PS3 last year and it was currently being ported to Honeycomb tablets. Thomas Williamson, lead developer and CEO, had less than 24 hours to get the demo running on the quad-core Kal-El, but he was able to pull it off since NVIDIA´s new platform uses a similar GeForce GPU architecture.
Next we saw some benchmarks like CoreMark, which showed Kal-El (score of 11,354) out performing Intel´s 2 GHz Core2Duo T7200 (score of 10,136). NVIDIA said this silicon was only 12 days old, so we can only expect that performance will continue to improve as they optimize the platform.
Highlights of Project Kal-El include:
World´s first mobile quad-core CPU
New 12-core NVIDIA GPU, with support for 3D stereo
Extreme HD – 2560 x 1600
5x Tegra 2
This is mind boggling awesome sauce! The arrival of these chips will coincide perfectly with my scheduled upgrade.
Rod3 said:
This is mind boggling awesome sauce! The arrival of these chips will coincide perfectly with my scheduled upgrade.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Me too, I'm guessing we both got our N1s at the same time. Should be pretty cool.
Sadly I've been out of contract since OCt I got the G1 when it first came out. Then I bought my N1 off of C-list. It sounds like this tech will be worth the wait!
Lythandra said:
Me too, I'm guessing we both got our N1s at the same time. Should be pretty cool.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Close. I took advantage of the buy one get one free deal that was going on back when the HD2's were out of stock everywhere. I paid cash for my N1 from the proceeds of selling my HD2 on craigslist for $450.
Man... I was already chomping at the bit for an upgrade, fighting to wait for a dual core phone... now they announce quad core phones?!! Where do you draw the line and buy something?! lol
I say you draw the line at quad cores especially this nvidia its such a jump in tech that its worth the wait and you should be good for two years w/ a phone that has it in there
Who really needs a quad-core in their mobile phones anyways? And seriously I wish battery performance could evolve this quickly.
Deekayy said:
Who really needs a quad-core in their mobile phones anyways? And seriously I wish battery performance could evolve this quickly.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The quad-core will help you with that. Reduces battery life.
I think you mean reduces battery drain, not life? xD
Sent from my Nexus One using XDA App
I agree with battery technology I dont see how we haven't come up with a battery that can do better. Well I'm sure some one has and they were quickly bought out and shut down.
Transformer and Kal-El
Yes I know the title sounds like a mixed up comic. But does anyone know if Asustek is one of the ones that will bring out a tablet, Transformer, with the Kal-El, Tegra 3, chip set??
zenpir8 said:
Yes I know the title sounds like a mixed up comic. But does anyone know if Asustek is one of the ones that will bring out a tablet, Transformer, with the Kal-El, Tegra 3, chip set??
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
transformer 2 is rumored to have the Kal-El tegra SoC
I voice search the score on f the Rangers v. Yankees game and the Google card shows a score from the 4th inning when I know the game is over. Same applies to Cubs game. Is this something I did?
I'd like to see if the Motorola X can outperform the Samsung Galaxy S4, using nbench.
Could someone with a Moto X run the nbench benchmark and post the results, here http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1270596 preferably.
Nbench market link: http://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.drolez.nbench
Thanks.
Nate2 said:
I'd like to see if the Motorola X can outperform the Samsung Galaxy S4, using nbench.
Could someone with a Moto X run the nbench benchmark and post the results, here http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1270596 preferably.
Nbench market link: http://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.drolez.nbench
Thanks.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Running it. Will report back in 10 minutes.
Seriously , more benchmark talk.
I can tell you the new Maxx runs (real life) like a champ.
Sent from my Nexus 7 using Tapatalk 2
Nate2 said:
I'd like to see if the Motorola X can outperform the Samsung Galaxy S4, using nbench.
Could someone with a Moto X run the nbench benchmark and post the results, here http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1270596 preferably.
Nbench market link: http://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.drolez.nbench
Thanks.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
==========================ORIGINAL BYTEMARK RESULTS==========================
INTEGER INDEX : 44.242
FLOATING-POINT INDEX: 30.979
Baseline (MSDOS*) : Pentium* 90, 256 KB L2-cache, Watcom* compiler 10.0
==============================LINUX DATA BELOW===============================
CPU : Dual ARMv7 Processor rev 0 (v7l) 1728MHz
L2 Cache : 0
OS : Linux version 3.4.42-xline-gfd1a699-00157-gfb2f8fc ([email protected]) (gcc version 4.6.x-google 20120106 (prerelease) (GCC) ) #1 SMP PREEMPT Thu Jul 18 20:25:42 CDT 2013
C compiler : gcc 4.6.0 (-march=armv7-a)
MEMORY INDEX : 10.593
INTEGER INDEX : 11.388
FLOATING-POINT INDEX: 17.182
Baseline (LINUX) : AMD K6/233*, 512 KB L2-cache, gcc 2.7.2.3, libc-5.4.38
Use real life benchmarks like video, surf or real software.
Skickat från min C5503 via Tapatalk 2
See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NBench for a description of the benchmark used.
The 3 overall numbers for the Motorola X running on the stock ROM are (10.5,11.3,17.1) for memory, integer and floating-point indexes.
That would indicate each core/processor in the Moto X is 10.5,11.3,17.1 times faster than the baseline AMD K6/233 (pretty old) processor for memory, integer and floating-point operations.
My 2012 Nexus 7 is (5.1,7.7,8.1) so the Moto X is much faster in all 3 areas. But, it appears just a little slower than a Samsung Galaxy S4 I9500 (12.5,11.7,19).
Intel Core i7 (Desktop PC processor) have numbers as high as (49,40,133) for each of their 8 cores (just to show you their awesome computing power).
These tests are just for comparing computing power across the various processors out there, not video, applications, etc. that people generally use.
See http://www.tux.org/~mayer/linux/results2.html for more results.
Galaxy Note 5 release date
United States- August 21
*T-Mobile tweeted
We’re opening up Note 5 starting Tuesday 08//18/2015 6am PT – no pre-order needed. AND we’re going to start shipping ASAP!
The United Kingdom has no official release date for the Note 5; Samsung has said due to “marketing reasons”. They will have to make do with the Galaxy S6 Edge+ instead, which features similar specs as the Note 5.
Here’s a rundown of the specs:
Display: 5.7-inch Quad HD Super AMOLED screen with 2560 x 1440 pixel resolution.
Cameras: 16-megapixel camera on the back
5-megapixel front-facing camera.
Operating System: Android 5.1 Lollipop runs on the Note 5.
Processor: Exynos 7420 64-bit processor, with 4GB of RAM
Storage: Samsung offers both 32GB and 64GB variants of the Note 5. (128 GB rumored )
Charging: The Note 5 packs a 3,000mAh battery that works with fast wireless charging technology. unfortunately like the galaxy S6 battery can not simply be removed.
Note 5 Bench marks compared to note 4
Sunspider 0.9.1
- Note 4 - 1302.2
- Note 5 - 671.0
Sunspider 1.0.2
- Note 4 - 1321.0
- Note 5 - 719.0
SunSpider, a JavaScript benchmark. This benchmark tests the core JavaScript language only. It is designed to compare different versions of the same browser, and different browsers to each other
Browsermark 2.1
- Note 4 - 1460
- Note 5 - 1895
Browsermark 2.1 world-famous browser benchmark that test the following
How well browser will re-size screen
How fast browser loads pages and send requests
Does browser support modern web site development techniques
Google Octane 2.0
- Note 4 - 5375
- Note 5 - 7902
JavaScript benchmark that evolves with the Web. Octane 2.0 is a modern benchmark that measures a JavaScript engine's performance by running a suite of tests representative of today's complex and demanding web applications
Geekbench 3 (SC / MC)
- Note 4 - 1090 / 3398
- Note 5 - 1486 / 4660
Geekbench 3 is Primate Labs' cross-platform processor benchmark, with a new scoring system that separates single-core and multi-core performance, and new workloads that simulate real-world scenarios. Geekbench 3 makes it easier than ever to find out if your computer is up to speed.
GFX Bench 3.0 - (C24Z16 T-Rex Off / On)
- Note 4 - 2197f 39fps / 1502f 27fps
- Note 5 - 3007f 54fps / 2025f 36fps
is the first comprehensive cross-platform OpenGL ES 3 benchmark designed for measuring graphics performance, render quality and power consumption in a single, easy-to-use application.
AnTuTu HTML 5
- Note 4 - 18,910
- Note 5 - 25,112
AnTuTu Video Test
- Note 4 - 1012
- Note 5 - 1001
is one of the most popular benchmark apps for Android devices. It tests many parts of your device and assigns an overall score.
Super Pi 4M digits
- Note 4 - 78.063 secs
- Note 5 - 49.264 secs
Super PI is a single threaded benchmark that calculates pi to a specific number of digits.
Cost
Verizon
$29 per month for 24 months 32 GB = $696
$33 per month for 24 months 64GB = $792
T-Mobile
$32.50 per month for 24 months = $780
One free year of Netflix: If you preregister for the phone on T-Mobile’s site before 11:59 p.m. PST on August 20, you’ll get an entire year of Netflix for free. Those who already have Netflix will get a $107.88 credit ($8.99 x 12 months) on their existing account.
Sprint
Will sell the phone four different ways;
With its Lease program
$25 per month for the 32GB model
$30 per month for the 64GB option
Easy Pay Option
$0 down and either $30 or $34 monthly for the 32GB & 64GB
With a new two-year service agreement, the 32GB model is $249.99 and the 64GB is $349.99.
Without contract
$720 (32GB)
$816 (64GB)
AT&T
32 GB Galaxy Note 5
$24.67 per month for 30 months = $740.10
$30.84 for 24 months = $740.16
$37 for 20 months = $740
64-GB option
$28 per month for 30 months =$840
$35 per month for 24 months =$840
$42 per month for 20 months =$840
( I don't understand why they have so many different options that are virtually the same)