Tag Archives: integrated

Asus Intros GeForce RTX 4060 Ti Video Card With Integrated M.2 SSD Slot – AnandTech

  1. Asus Intros GeForce RTX 4060 Ti Video Card With Integrated M.2 SSD Slot AnandTech
  2. Asus finally announces RTX 4060 Ti with SSD slot because why not Dexerto
  3. Asus adds an SSD slot to its RTX 4060 Ti graphics card, delivering up to 12GB/s of SSD performance via the GPU, and the M.2 port even allows using an RTX 4090 as an eGPU Tom’s Hardware
  4. ASUS makes unexpected GPU fusion: RTX 4090 as eGPU through RTX 4060 Ti’s M.2 slot VideoCardz.com
  5. This is the silliest PC upgrade ever – Nvidia RTX 4060 Ti GPU gets powered up by plugging an RTX 4090 into it TechRadar
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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In-ear integrated sensor array for the continuous monitoring of brain activity and of lactate in sweat – Nature.com

  1. In-ear integrated sensor array for the continuous monitoring of brain activity and of lactate in sweat Nature.com
  2. Researchers developed 3D-printed sensors that can record brain activity on earbuds Engadget
  3. Pair of standard earbuds ‘can be turned into device able to record brain activity and exercise levels’ Conway Daily Sun
  4. These Screen-printed, Flexible Sensors Allow Earbuds to Record Brain Activity and Exercise Levels University of California San Diego
  5. Screen-printed, flexible sensors allow earbuds to record brain activity and exercise levels Medical Xpress
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Even if a Leading Theory of Consciousness Known as Integrated Information Theory is Wrong, That Doesn’t Mean it’s Pseudoscience, Argues Anil Seth. – Nautilus Magazine

  1. Even if a Leading Theory of Consciousness Known as Integrated Information Theory is Wrong, That Doesn’t Mean it’s Pseudoscience, Argues Anil Seth. Nautilus Magazine
  2. Nobody knows how consciousness works – but top researchers are fighting over which theories are really science Deccan Herald
  3. Attack on Top Consciousness Theory Springs From Abortion Politics Walter Bradley Center for Natural and Artificial Intelligence
  4. Nobody knows how consciousness works — but top researchers are fighting over which theories are really science Down To Earth Magazine
  5. Is Consciousness Part of the Fabric of the Universe? Scientific American
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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They integrated Little Rock’s schools — now they’re slamming restrictions on AP African American Studies – NBC News

  1. They integrated Little Rock’s schools — now they’re slamming restrictions on AP African American Studies NBC News
  2. Arkansas schools will teach AP African American Studies despite state’s objections USA TODAY
  3. Little Rock schools will allow African American class to count for graduation, in break from Arkansas state officials CNN
  4. Little Rock Nine criticize Arkansas’s AP African American Studies course restrictions The Hill
  5. Six Arkansas schools to offer African American AP course despite restrictions The Guardian US
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Chinese-Made Zhaoxin KX-6000G CPU With GT10C0 Integrated GPU Features The Same Performance As NVIDIA’s GT 630

Chinese domestic chipmaker, Zhaoxin, is entering the realm of APUs with their first product, the KX-6000G CPU, offering up to 1.5 TFLOPs of GPU horsepower.

Chinese Domestic Chipmaker, Zhaoxin, Preps KX-6000G CPU With A 1.5 TFLOPs Integrated GPU That’s As Fast As NVIDIA’s Decade-Old GT 630

To elaborate things, Zhaoxin is a Chinese chip manufacturer that offers both CPU and GPU IPs based on its own architectures. The manufacturer’s next-generation KX-6000 CPU lineup will be replacing their KX-5000 and ZX-200 CPUs which have been on the market from 2017-2018. The latest chips are expected to feature 4 cores, 8 threads, up to 3.0 GHz clock speeds, DDR4 DRAM support, PCIe 3.0 I/O, and a homegrown 16nm architecture.

Last month, we talked about how the KH-4000 series CPUs from Zhaoxin managed to deliver single-core performance close to AMD’s 1st Gen Ryzen CPUs based on the Zen architecture. Compared to the KX lineup which is primarily aimed at the domestic consumer segment, the KH series is aimed primarily at the server segment and offers up to 16 cores, and 16 threads. It is also based on a 16nm process node though the architecture is not as updated as the KX-6000G CPUs.

So coming back to the Zhaoxin KX-6000G CPUs which we may as well refer to as APUs since they utilize the same Zhaoxin-made ZX C1080 GPU that is featured on the Glenfly Arise-GT-10C0 dGPU that was launched in the Chinese domestic market just a few days ago. Now the same discrete chip has been packaged within the Zhaoxin’s KX-6000G CPUs. The naming scheme and the design of the chip sounds a lot like AMD’s Ryzen Desktop APUs which also utilize a discrete GPU architecture and have the “G” label attached to them.

According to Zhaoxin, the CPU packs 8 cores and 16 threads which is made possible through fusing two dies on the same package. The standard version of the KX-6000 CPUs only comes with the C-960 integrated GPU that offers VGA, HDMI, DP support at up to 4K resolutions. The new integrated GPU not only offers increased performance but also better graphics capabilities.

Zhaoxin’s KX-6000G CPU with GT10C0 Integrated GPU has been tested in 3DMark 11. (Image Credits: MyDrivers)

For starters, in 3DMark 11, the Zhaoxin integrated GPU scores around 1000 points which is an over 3x increase compared to the older GPU. It comes with a brand new graphics and image processing engine that is compatible with Galaxy Kirin KOS, Tongxin Software UOS, Windows, & various other Chinese mainstream operating systems. The chip also offers full compliance with DirectX 11, Open GL 4.5, and OpenGL 1.2 APIs while outputting a native 4K display. While it is a huge improvement over its predecessor, the integrated chip is still only on par with an NVIDIA GT 630 graphics card in the 3DMark 11 (Performance) benchmark which scores similar points. (Score from Vmodtech’s GT 630 review):

The Zhaoxin KX-6000G CPU was also tested in GLMark 2 where it scored 3116 points, An NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1650 scored 10,516 points in the same benchmark. As for the CPU, the Zhaxoin chip scores over 15,000 MIPS in multi-threading decompression which puts it faster than the AMD Ryzen 3 1300X and close to Intel’s Core i5-7500. We used the following scores from TechSpot’s review to make a comparative chart:

0

4000

8000

12000

16000

20000

24000

With that said, Chinese GPU makers are trying their best to reach parity with AMD & NVIDIA GPUs since 2016. Recently, Jing Jiawei and Innosilicon teased their plans to offer GTX 1080 and Vega class performance in the coming years.  Zhaoxin is also working on a range of x86 processors that may rival AMD’s first-generation Ryzen CPUs while Loongson is targetting Zen 3 performance with its upcoming CPUs by 2023.

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Gmail’s new integrated layout will take over inboxes soon

Google has announced that Gmail’s new layout, which changes how Google Chat, Meet, and Spaces are integrated, will be available to try starting in February; become default by April; and become the only option by the end of Q2 2022. The view makes it so Google’s other messaging tools, which are part of (but not necessarily limited to) its business-focused Workspace suite, are no longer just little windows floating alongside your emails, but get their own screens in Gmail that are accessible with large buttons on the left-hand side.

Google calls this the integrated view, and it’ll soon be familiar if you (or your employer) are a Workspace customer. Starting February 8th, Google says you’ll be able to start testing the layout for yourself. By April, anyone who hasn’t opted in (Google shows that there’ll be a prompt at some point, encouraging you to do so), will be switched over to the new layout, but will be able to switch back in settings. That option will go away by the end of the second quarter, according to Google, when the new layout becomes the “standard experience for Gmail.”

Google’s blog includes an image of the current, old Gmail interface with a pop-up asking if you want to try the new view.
Image: Google

The new view could be polarizing — while managing chats and meetings can be a bit confusing in the current Gmail layout, it all happens on one screen, which is pleasing if you love data density. But for those looking to focus on one thing at a time, the new interface looks like it’ll give you easy access to other tools without having them always on the screen, based on what Google’s shown off so far.

The company says that there will also be notification bubbles to let you know if other tools need your attention, which could be less distracting than, say, having a list of all your Chats living to the left or right of your emails.

An idea of what Google Spaces within Gmail might look like, which Google showed last summer. Note that Mail has a notification bubble.
Image: Google

Google has shown that it wants to deeply integrate all its work-related products together, and this layout gives us a taste of what that could look like, with tools like Spaces letting you jump into a spreadsheet without leaving Gmail. While it does seem like you’re mostly already able to, as Google puts it when describing the new view, “easily switch between your inbox, important conversations, and join meetings without having to switch between tabs or open a new window,” it’s probably fair to argue that it all feels a little tacked-on. Google’s screenshots of the new layout do make it seem like the new interface will be more put-together.

The services will also be more integrated — Gmail’s search, for instance, will also turn up Chat messages in the coming months, according to the company (similar to how Hangouts messages also used to be searchable from within Gmail).

Google says the integrated view will be coming to people with a Google Workspace Business Starter, Business Standard, Business Plus, Enterprise Essentials, Enterprise Standard, Enterprise Plus, Education Fundamentals, Education Plus, Frontline, Nonprofit, G Suite Basic, or Business account. At the moment, it won’t be available to Workspace Essentials customers. When asked if this layout would be coming to regular, non-paying Gmail customers, a Google spokesperson said it would be “only available” to the account types listed above.

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8 Enhanced 6nm Zen 3 Cores, 20 MB Cache, 4.6 GHz Boost & Radeon 680M ‘RDNA 2’ Integrated Graphics

Today we have an interesting leak for those who are waiting for next-gen AMD laptops powered by the Rembrandt Ryzen 6000 APU such as the Ryzen 9 6900HX.

AMD High-Performance Laptops With Ryzen 9 6900HX ‘Rembrandt’ APU To Pack 8 Enhanced Zen 3 Cores on 6nm Process & Radeon 680M ‘RDNA 2’ iGPU

Our sources have told us quite a few details regarding the AMD Rembrandt APUs, especially the Ryzen 9 6900HX, which is going to be one of the fastest Ryzen 6000 chips in the pack. AMD’s new APU lineup will be replacing the Ryzen 5000 ‘Cezanne’ series and feature an update to both CPU and GPU IPs.

AMD Navi 24 ‘RDNA 2’ To Be The First 6nm GPU, Will Power Entry-Level Radeon RX 6500 XT & RX 6400 Graphics Cards

On the CPU side, AMD’s Ryzen 9 6900HX APU is going to offer 8 cores and 16 threads. These cores are based on the new Zen 3+ architecture which is an enhanced version of the Zen 3 core but with the latest TSMC 6nm alternation. The new process node would allow AMD to squeeze more juice out of its laptop chips while running efficiently. As for cache, the chip will come with 16 MB of L3 & 4 MB of L2 cache. For those expecting 3D V-Cache technology on laptops, that isn’t happening till a few more generations.

Coming to the clock speeds, the max boost clock for the chip is going to be rated at 4.6 GHz which is the same as the current Ryzen 9 5900HX but we can expect the Ryzen 9 6900HX to draw lesser power. The CPU will allow for DDR5-4800 memory support on laptops which will deliver a massive increase in bandwidth over DDR4 memory.

The GPU side for the AMD Rembrandt Ryzen 9 6900HX is going to see a major upgrade. AMD will be utilizing its RDNA 2 core architecture and while we weren’t told how many RDNA 2 CUs we will be getting on the new chips, we are told that team red has decided to change the nomenclature of its integrated RDNA graphics. Starting with Rembrandt, AMD will use the Radeon 6**M branding. The particular iGPU variant for the Ryzen 9 6900HX will be called Radeon 680M. The DDR5 addition plays a crucial role for the integrated graphics as RDNA 2 loves raw bandwidth and the extra juice from the new memory standard is definitely going to help here.

But since the AMD Ryzen 9 6900HX is going to be targeted at high-performance notebooks, we are told that most designs that this APU will be featured inside will be fitted with NVIDIA’s top GeForce GPUs such as the RTX 3070 Ti (8 GB) and RTX 3080 Ti (16 GB). We have already seen some designs from ASUS leak out earlier including their ROG Zephyrus and ROG STRIX. Expect more information from AMD at the CES 2022 virtual keynote.

AMD Ryzen 9 6900HX ‘Rembrandt’ APU Specs

APU Name AMD Ryzen 9 6900HX AMD Ryzen 9 5900HX AMD Ryzen 9 4900H
Core Architecture Zen 3+ Zen 3 Zen 2
Process Node 6nm 7nm 7nm
Cores / Threads 8 / 16 8 / 16 8 / 16
Max Clocks 4.6 GHz 4.6 GHz 4.4 GHz
Cache (L3+L2) 20 MB 20 MB 12 MB
Memory Support DDR5-4800
LPDDR5X?
DDR4-3200
LPDDR4-4266
DDR4-3200
LPDDR4-4266
Graphics Architecture RDNA 2 Vega++ Vega+
Graphics Codename Radeon 680M Radeon Vega 8 Radeon Vega 8
Graphics Compute Units TBC 8 8
TDP 35-54W? 35-54W 35-54W
Launch Q1 2022 Q1 2021 Q1 2020



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Bold Updates the Linkin Integrated Shock Trail Bike

Details:

Frame Material: HMX Carbon
Intended Use: Trail riding
Wheelszie: 29″ front and rear
Travel: 135mm or 150mm (internal suspension)
Head tube angle: 64.2° (adjustable)
Seat tube angle: 77.4°
Weight: 3499 grams (frame with shock and Day Saver tool kit)
Price: Frameset €4,999, builds from €5,999
More info: boldcycles.com

Construction

As you might expect, Bold is continuing to use the internal shock design, however there are some big differences to its application on the new bike. Rather than standing vertically in the seat tube, the shock now lies horizontally above the bottom bracket. This gives Bold a low center of gravity that other brands could only dream of achieving and, it claims, also boosts the stiffness of the overall construction. As before, the shock is protected from the elements but is now accessed from a removable panel in the bottom of the downtube, rather than below the bottom bracket as before. A magnet-equipped travel indicator on the outside means you don’t have to break open the bike to check the sag or know if you’re bottoming out or not. Re-orienting the shock also means the seat tube is clear of any obstructions and a 200mm dropper post can be fitted.

There’s more than a re-alignment going on here though. The previous bike used a tried and tested four-bar system, but a quick look at the swing arm will tell you something different is going on this time around. The Linkin now uses the IST VP, a virtual pivot system constructed inside the frame. The linkage is directly attached to the shock and mounted to an axle inside the frame, which has allowed Bold to create what it believes to be the shortest link of any suspension platform. What does that mean on the trail? Well, Bold claims it improves the suspension feel, gives supple small bump sensitivity support in the mid-stroke and a controlled deep stroke.

A closer look at the new shock orientation and the pair of short links.

That’s not where the suspension changes end. The bike either comes equipped with either a RockShox Deluxe or a Fox Nude shock. The Nude is Scott’s proprietary shock that is used to implement its TwinLoc system or, as it’s called on the Bold, Tracloc. This offers the bike three modes that can be selected using bar-mounted levers – a fully open mode, a full lockout and an intermediate Traction mode, that sits between the two for efficient but still cushioned pedalling.
Geometry

The geometry for the Bold Linkin is pretty much identical whether you go for the 135mm or the 150mm model of the bike. This means you either have a fairly progressive trail bike or a generally on-trend enduro bike depending on your choice. The geometry is adjustable thanks to a flip-chip in the seat stay, which offers 6.3mm of BB height adjustment, and cups in the headstube that offer 1° of steepening or slackening.

Builds and Price

Linkin 135 Ultimate

Linkin 150 Ultimate

Linkin 135 Pro

Linkin 150 Pro

The new Linkin comes in 4 different versions and 2 framesets. All of the options come with the Save the Day kit that includes a spare tube, mini pump, tire levers and a spot for chain quick links stored under the downtube cover and a Syncros Matchbox SL-CT Multi-Tool just in front of the bottom bracket. The rear axle also houses a tool that features a T25, T30 and a 6 allen key all in one to adjust all pivot hardware and nearly everything else on the bicycle.

The builds are priced as follows: Linkin 135 Ultimate (8.499 €), Linkin 150 Ultimate (10.999 €), Linkin 135 Pro (5.999 €), Linkin 150 Pro (6.999 €), Linkin frameset in black or white (4.999 €). The 2022 Linkin will be available in 39 international markets by the beginning of 2022. More info, here.

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The first commercially scalable integrated laser and microcomb on a single chip

Artist’s concept illustration of electrically controlled optical frequency combs at wafer scale. Credit: Brian Long

Fifteen years ago, UC Santa Barbara electrical and materials professor John Bowers pioneered a method for integrating a laser onto a silicon wafer. The technology has since been widely deployed in combination with other silicon photonics devices to replace the copper-wire interconnects that formerly linked servers at data centers, dramatically increasing energy efficiency—an important endeavor at a time when data traffic is growing by roughly 25% per year.

For several years, the Bowers group has collaborated with the group of Tobias J. Kippenberg at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (EPFL), within the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) Direct On-Chip Digital Optical Synthesizer (DODOS) program. The Kippenberg group discovered “microcombs,” a series of parallel, low-noise, highly stable laser lines. Each of the many lines of the laser comb can carry information, extensively multiplying the amount of data that can be sent by a single laser.

Recently, several teams demonstrated very compact combs by placing a semiconductor laser chip and a separate silicon nitride ring-resonator chip very close together. However, the laser and the resonator were still separate devices, made independently and then placed in close proximity to each other perfectly aligned, a costly and time-consuming process that is not scalable.

The Bowers lab has worked with the Kippenberg lab to develop an integrated on-chip semiconductor laser and resonator capable of producing a laser microcomb. A paper titled “Laser soliton microcombs heterogeneously integrated on silicon,” published in the new issue of the journal Science, describes the labs’ success in becoming the first to achieve that goal.

Soliton microcombs are optical frequency combs that emit mutually coherent laser lines—that is, lines that are in constant, unchanging phase relative to each other. The technology is applied in the areas of optical timing, metrology and sensing. Recent field demonstrations include multi-terabit-per-second optical communications, ultrafast light detection and ranging (LiDAR), neuromorphic computing, and astrophysical spectrometer calibration for planet searching, to name several. It is a powerful tool that normally requires exceptionally high power and expensive lasers and sophisticated optical coupling to function.

The working principle of a laser microcomb, explained lead author Chao Xiang, a postdoctoral researcher and newly minted Ph.D. in Bowers’s lab, is that a distributed feedback (DFB) laser produces one laser line. That line then passes through an optical phase controller and enters the micro-ring resonator, causing the power intensity to increase as the light travels around the ring. If the intensity reaches a certain threshold, non-linear optical effects occur, causing the one laser line to create two additional, identical lines on either side. Each of those two “side lines” creates others, leading to a cascade of laser-line generation. “You end up with a series of mutually coherent frequency combs,” Xiang said—and a vastly expanded ability to transmit data.

This research enables semiconductor lasers to be seamlessly integrated with low-loss nonlinear optical micro-resonators—”low-loss” because the light can travel in the waveguide without losing a significant amount of its intensity over distance. No optical coupling is required, and the device is entirely electrically controlled. Importantly, the new technology lends itself to commercial-scale production, because thousands of devices can be made from a single wafer using industry standard complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS)-compatible techniques. “Our approach paves the way for large-volume, low-cost manufacturing of chip-based frequency combs for next-generation high-capacity transceivers, datacenters, space and mobile platforms,” the researchers stated.

The key challenge in making the device was that the semiconductor laser and the resonator, which generates the comb, had to be built on different material platforms. The lasers can be made only with materials from the III and V groups on the Periodic Table, such as indium phosphide, and the best combs can be made only from silicon nitride. “So, we had to find a way to put them together on a single wafer,” Xiang explained.

Working sequentially on the same wafer, the researchers leveraged UCSB’s heterogeneous integration process for making high-performance lasers on silicon substrate and the ability of their EPFL collaborators to make record ultra-low-loss high-Q silicon nitride micro-resonators using the “photonic damascene process” they developed. The wafer-scale process—in contrast to making individual devices and then combining them one by one—enables thousands of devices to be made from a single 100-mm-diameter wafer, a production level that can be scaled up further from the industry standard 200-mm- or 300-mm-diameter substrate.

For the device to function properly, the laser, the resonator and the optical phase between them must be controlled to create a coupled system based on the “self-injection locking” phenomenon. Xiang explained that the laser output is partially back-reflected by the micro-resonator. When a certain phase condition is achieved between the light from the laser and the back-reflected light from the resonator, the laser is said to be locked to the resonator.

Normally, back-reflected light harms laser performance, but here it is crucial for generating the microcomb. The locked laser light triggers soliton formation in the resonator and reduces the laser light noise, or frequency instability, at the same time. Thus, something harmful is transformed into a benefit. As a result, the team was able to create not only the first laser soliton microcomb integrated on a single chip, but also the first narrow-linewidth laser sources with multiple available channels on one chip.

“The field of optical comb generation is very exciting and moving very fast. It is finding applications in optical clocks, high-capacity optical networks and many spectroscopic applications,” said Bowers, the Fred Kavli Chair in Nanotechnology and the director of the College of Engineering’s Institute for Energy Efficiency. “The missing element has been a self-contained chip that includes both the pump laser and the optical resonator. We demonstrated that key element, which should open up rapid adoption of this technology.”

“I think this work is going to become very big,” said Xiang. The potential of this new technology, he added, reminds him of the way putting lasers on silicon 15 years ago advanced both research and industrial commercialization of silicon photonics. “That transformative technology has been commercialized, and Intel ships millions of transceiver products per year,” he said. “Future silicon photonics using co-packaged optics will likely be a strong driver for higher-capacity transceivers using a large number of optical channels.”

Xiang explained that the current comb produces about twenty to thirty usable comb lines and that the goal going forward will be to increase that number, “hopefully to get one hundred combined lines from each laser-resonator, with low power consumption.”

Based on the soliton microcombs’ low energy use and their ability to provide a large number of high-purity optical comb lines for data communications, said Xiang, “We believe that our achievement could become the backbone of efforts to apply optical frequency comb technologies in many areas, including efforts to keep up with fast-growing data traffic and, hopefully, slow the growth of energy consumption in mega-scale datacenters.”


Photonic microwave generation using on-chip optical frequency combs


More information:
“Laser soliton microcombs heterogeneously integrated on silicon” Science (2021). science.sciencemag.org/lookup/ … 1126/science.abh2076
Provided by
University of California – Santa Barbara

Citation:
The first commercially scalable integrated laser and microcomb on a single chip (2021, July 1)
retrieved 2 July 2021
from https://phys.org/news/2021-07-commercially-scalable-laser-microcomb-chip.html

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