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Top 9 tom's hardware News Today

#1
Retro gaming outfit unveils PC controller with built-in heart rate monitor — also features IPS screen, 1,000Hz polling, and six-axis gyroscope
#1 out of 91.7K est. views

Retro gaming outfit unveils PC controller with built-in heart rate monitor — also features IPS screen, 1,000Hz polling, and six-axis gyroscope

  • Anbernic unveils the RG G01, a tri‑mode controller with broad platform compatibility and a built‑in heart rate monitor.
  • The RG G01 includes a heart rate sensor and a smart screen that can display heart rate data and history.
  • Key specs include 1,000 Hz polling, six‑axis gyroscope, and calibrated triggers for precise control.
  • The RG G01 supports wired, Bluetooth, and 2.4G wireless connections for versatile play.
  • Anbernic plans to offer the RG G01 in multiple colors and sell it via its U.S. store when stock arrives.
  • The device’s display is described as a 2.5D curved IPS screen that is fully laminated.
  • The RG G01 is highlighted for potential modding into a self-contained retro gaming system.
  • The article notes the RG G01’s retro‑modern blend and potential for immersive gameplay.
  • No availability date or pricing was disclosed at the time of the report.
  • The report situates the RG G01 amid other dual‑mode and feature‑rich gaming peripherals under review.
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#2
Can't afford new RAM, storage, or a GPU? A new PC case can make your existing system feel fresh, and you can carry it over to a future build
#2 out of 91.1K est. views

Can't afford new RAM, storage, or a GPU? A new PC case can make your existing system feel fresh, and you can carry it over to a future build

  • A new PC case can refresh an existing system by improving airflow and cooling without new components.
  • The article cites Fractal Design North and NZXT H7 Flow as strong, visually distinct options.
  • Better airflow can lead to quieter operation and potential clock boosts, benefiting current hardware.
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#3
SAMA L70 Review: Competitive performance that punches above its price tag
#3 out of 95.6K est. views
technology23h ago

SAMA L70 Review: Competitive performance that punches above its price tag

  • Tom's Hardware tests Sama L70 360mm AIO, noting strong cooling for its $69.99 price.
  • The reviewer highlights pre-installed fans and a quick-connect system to reduce assembly time.
  • Sama L70 is praised for RAM compatibility and a copper cold plate in the CPU block.
  • The article notes the cooler includes a 28mm fans and a PWM/ARGB quick-connect setup.
  • Real-world testing on AMD AM5 showed detailed setup and configuration.
  • The piece compares L70’s price to competitors from ID-Cooling and Thermalright.
  • Sama’s L70 is described as a value option with a strong price-to-performance ratio.
  • The review mentions potential noise at higher loads.
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#4
SSD price tracking 2026: Lowest price on every M.2 SSD from Samsung, Western Digital, Crucial, and more — here are the best deals during the AI-driven pricing crisis
#4 out of 9
technology23h ago

SSD price tracking 2026: Lowest price on every M.2 SSD from Samsung, Western Digital, Crucial, and more — here are the best deals during the AI-driven pricing crisis

  • Tom's Hardware now offers a daily-updated RAM price index for DDR5 and DDR4 across capacities, supplementing its SSD price tracking during the AI-driven pricing crisis.
  • The new reference confirms memory prices remain highly volatile due to the global DRAM shortage, reinforcing the caution against overpaying for DDR5 and DDR4 kits.
  • The RAM index tracks both DDR5 and DDR4 across widely varying capacities, helping buyers compare value as stock tightens and prices shift.
  • The reference highlights stock shortages for high-capacity DDR5 kits, with price premiums and limited availability as a key market dynamic.
  • DDR5 prices have spiked, with typical 32GB kits jumping from roughly $100–$200 to around $350, driven by supply constraints and demand.
  • DDR4 remains a fallback option, but its prices have still risen, making DDR5 more attractive only in specific budgets and upgrade paths.
  • The RAM index advises buyers to be vigilant for limited stock and fast-moving deals, as exceptional RAM discounts often disappear quickly.
  • Tom's Hardware cross-references RAM trends with its SSD price tracking, situating memory costs within the broader AI-driven pricing landscape.
  • The RAM index presents a comprehensive, daily-updated view of both budget and premium memory options to empower informed purchases.
  • The new RAM focus aligns with the SSD price index by illustrating how AI-driven pricing pressures are reshaping multiple core PC components.
  • Overall, buyers should plan for ongoing volatility across RAM and storage costs, comparing daily-updated indexes to find fair deals during the AI era.
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#5
SAMA L70 Review: Competitive performance that punches above its price tag
#5 out of 9
technology23h ago

SAMA L70 Review: Competitive performance that punches above its price tag

  • Tom's Hardware benchmarks Sama's L70 as a strong 360mm cooler that punches above its price.
  • At full fan speed, the L70 reaches 47.2 dBA, among the louder options.
  • The review notes the L70 is not the quietest cooler, but noise can be reduced by lowering fan speeds.
  • In 150W and 200W tests, the L70 performs well, staying close to top 360mm coolers.
  • With a GPU added, the L70 maintains strong cooling and remains competitive.
  • The L70 sells for around $60–$70, offering strong value against pricier models.
  • Tom's Hardware rates the L70 as a budget-friendly option with robust cooling.
  • The review compares the L70 favorably with more expensive 360mm coolers.
  • The article confirms credible performance even under PBO-enabled workloads.
  • Tom's Hardware highlights the L70’s appeal for budget builders.
  • The review includes a price-performance takeaway, emphasizing value.
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#6
RAM prices show signs of levelling out, albeit at inflated levels — some modules stabilizing in price, increases on higher-end kits tapering off
#6 out of 9
technology21h ago

RAM prices show signs of levelling out, albeit at inflated levels — some modules stabilizing in price, increases on higher-end kits tapering off

  • RAM prices appear to plateau after months of hikes, with some modules stabilizing at higher levels.
  • Certain memory speeds have stabilized, including DDR4-3200, DDR4-3600, and DDR5-4800/5200.
  • High-end DDR5-5600/6000 prices still rise, but at a slower pace.
  • A Corsair 32GB DDR5-6000 kit stabilized around $339–$344 before rising to $439 in January.
  • Demand from AI infrastructure and data centers contributed to sustained pricing pressure.
  • Chip prices showed stabilization but at a new, inflated baseline.
  • Analysts forecast a plateau but warn prices may stay elevated for some time.
  • Memory pricing guidance urged buyers not to delay upgrades.
  • Retailers in Japan and Germany rationed memory components during peak shortages.
  • Industry hints at long-lasting elevated prices due to supply constraints.
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#7
Nvidia DGX Spark review: the GB10 Superchip powers a fast and fun AI toolbox that beats out AMD’s Ryzen AI Max+ 395
#7 out of 9562.0 est. views
technology21h ago

Nvidia DGX Spark review: the GB10 Superchip powers a fast and fun AI toolbox that beats out AMD’s Ryzen AI Max+ 395

  • The Spark's higher raw compute horsepower makes it much faster for prompt processing than Strix Halo, but memory bandwidth is a bottleneck.
  • 128GB of RAM makes it easy to run most local AI models plus Proven CUDA ecosystem.
  • We saw typical power usage of about 160 W at the wall under a primarily GPU-driven load, which may reduce overall system performance.
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#8
Newly-listed Chinese chipmaker targets beating Nvidia Rubin platform in just two years — Shanghai Iluvatar CoreX unveils multi-year GPU architecture roadmap with 2027 deadline
#8 out of 9
technology19h ago

Newly-listed Chinese chipmaker targets beating Nvidia Rubin platform in just two years — Shanghai Iluvatar CoreX unveils multi-year GPU architecture roadmap with 2027 deadline

  • Iluvatar CoreX unveils a four-generation GPU roadmap aiming to surpass Nvidia's Rubin by 2027.
  • Tianshu reportedly delivers about 20% higher average performance than Nvidia's Hopper in internal testing.
  • Tongyang (TY) edge GPUs include TY1000, which allegedly beats Nvidia's Jetson AGX Orin in tests.
  • CoreX aims to reduce memory bottlenecks with dynamic workload allocation to boost compute efficiency.
  • The company is listed in Hong Kong and has a market value around HK$46.3 billion.
  • First-half 2025 revenue reached 324 million yuan with over 52,000 GPUs shipped.
  • China’s push aims to build domestically produced AI training and inference hardware amid regulatory pressures.
  • The roadmap includes edge-oriented components under the Tongyang series.
  • The roadmap aligns with Nvidia’s Rubin as the main competition in AI training and inference hardware.
  • Tom's Hardware cites South China Morning Post reporting on CoreX's roadmap details.
  • Analysts and observers will monitor whether Rubin-era ambitions materialize as planned.
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#9
Nvidia updates FrameView performance measurement tool — version 1.7 promises accurate results even at 800+ FPS
#9 out of 9100.00%

Nvidia updates FrameView performance measurement tool — version 1.7 promises accurate results even at 800+ FPS

  • Nvidia FrameView 1.7 adds better accuracy for measurements at 800+ FPS and expands the overlay options.
  • The update lets users tailor the overlay to show FPS, 1% low, latency, and clocks for GPU/CPU.
  • Nvidia notes FrameView 1.7 fixes a memory leak and improves long-benchmark stability.
  • FrameView 1.7 improves data saving when the game closes or crashes during use.
  • Nvidia has updated FrameView amid a broader move to frame generation and higher-performance benchmarks.
  • PresentMon 2.2 is the likely foundation for FrameView data, with 2.4.1 in the ecosystem for newer telemetry.
  • FrameView 1.7 has potential gains for creators and testers tracking multi-frame generation.
  • The article notes Nvidia’s FrameView remains part of a competitive benchmarking landscape with CapFrameX.
  • Nvidia FrameView 1.7 supports stability with several games including The Finals and Starfield.
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