WINRAR 3.51 Free Sunday July 30th 2006
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By Ivan Jenic · Posted
If you can't afford an NVIDIA GPU, try getting one of its new trading cards by Ivan Jenic Image: NVIDIA The hardware market is going wild; users are furious because they can’t afford components, and NVIDIA is releasing… trading cards. The company just announced GeForce Trading Cards Series 1, a free collection of 14 possible card designs celebrating different eras of GeForce history. The set spans nearly three decades of GeForce hardware and culture. Given the set is labelled as "Series 1," NVIDIA probably has more cards in store for the future. Here are some of the most notable designs: NV1: The blueprint GeForce 256: The world's first GPU GeForce 3: The first GPU with Programmable Shaders GeForce 7800 GTX: Full-Throttle Graphics GeForce 10 Series: 10: Gaming Perfected Bubble, Chameleon and Medusa: Classic real-time demos The Way It's Meant To Be Played: A GeForce gaming signature GeForce RTX 2080 Ti Cyberpunk 2077 Edition: Night City goes #RTXON Checklist card: A nod to collector culture NVIDIA will hand these out for free through special events and giveaways. Which still means you can’t just go online and buy a set. One such giveaway is NVIDIA’s upcoming Summer of RTX event. You can find more info about it here. The cards will also be handed out in person, during events such as Bilibili World, QuakeCon, and gamescom. Initial reactions to the release of these cards are mixed. While the cards will certainly find their audience amongst the hardcore gamers and fans of the company, a lot of people are criticizing NVIDIA for giving them merch instead of fixing some of the underlying issues, like bug-ridden drivers and pushing AI further into its products. Make no mistake, as the world’s most valuable company, NVIDIA’s resources are nearly unlimited, so releasing these trading cards has about zero effect on the company’s ability to tackle driver issues or other problems users are complaining about. This is merely a marketing campaign. What would be ironic is if NVIDIA’s trading cards turn out to be popular and develop a market of their own. Even if the cards are handed out for free, not everyone has access to them, which introduces somewhat of an exclusivity element. So, don’t be surprised if the cards start selling online at a certain price in a few years. Imagine if the price of a single card reaches the levels of an actual GPU, just to complete the irony. Source: NVIDIA -
By TsarNikky · Posted
Of course its going to cost the local population--despite any verbiage by the company to the contrary. Is the company going to pay for additional infrastructure needed, as in electrical power and water? (Hardly) What is the company going to do with the constant loud fan noise and/or hum that emanates from data centers? (Probably nothing, neighbors will just have to get used to it.) What is the company going to with the multiple acres of land to be gobbled up by the structure and its associated parking lot? (Get over it, the probably arable land wasn't really needed anyway.) -
By _neutrino · Posted
yeah i would go with this and see if it resolves the issue. -
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By pradeepviswav · Posted
OpenAI launches ChatGPT Work and unveils unified desktop app with Codex built in by Pradeep Viswanathan Image: OpenAI Alongside the new GPT-5.6 series model family, OpenAI today announced ChatGPT Work, a new agentic experience in ChatGPT designed to handle work across apps, files, and workflows. ChatGPT Work can gather data from different sources and create artifacts, such as spreadsheets, slide decks, documents, and web apps. ChatGPT Work is powered by OpenAI’s latest GPT-5.6 model, allowing it to reason through multi-step tasks and create outputs that follow requested templates and reference files. It is important to note that Anthropic, Microsoft, and Google already offer a ChatGPT Work-like AI experience for business and enterprise customers. ChatGPT Work can connect to popular enterprise tools such as Slack, Microsoft Teams, Google Drive, SharePoint, email, calendars, CRMs, and project trackers through plugins. Users can also mention a specific app in a prompt using “@” to direct ChatGPT to pull context from that source. OpenAI also announced the public beta of Sites, through which users can turn any information into interactive sites or web apps, including dashboards, project trackers, launch calendars, internal portals, and reports. ChatGPT can keep these sites fresh as the underlying data changes. ChatGPT Work is now rolling out to ChatGPT Pro, Enterprise, and Edu plan users on mobile and web. It will be coming to ChatGPT Plus and Business users over the next few days. As expected, OpenAI today announced that it is merging the Codex app into the ChatGPT desktop app. Through the power of the Codex harness, the ChatGPT desktop app can now use local files and apps to get things done. For web-based work, there is a new built-in browser. On desktop, ChatGPT is getting a built-in browser and Computer Use capabilities, allowing it to work across local files, apps, tools, and websites. OpenAI is also merging the Codex app into the new ChatGPT desktop app. Codex will continue to exist as a coding agent, but it will now sit inside the broader ChatGPT desktop experience. Just like in the Codex app, the new Scheduled Tasks feature will enable ChatGPT to perform an action once, repeat it on a schedule or when an event occurs, or monitor for changes over time. For example, a user can set a task to send a summary of customer feedback emails to relevant teams. OpenAI is also releasing an updated Chrome extension that will allow users to use ChatGPT directly in Chrome’s sidebar. With this, OpenAI is also discontinuing the standalone Atlas browser. The unified ChatGPT desktop app is now available globally today for Mac and Windows for all ChatGPT users for free. The existing Codex app installations will be updated to become the new ChatGPT desktop app. Developers who prefer the Codex experience can make Codex the default view when they open the desktop app and choose the Codex logo as the app icon. The existing version of the ChatGPT desktop app will be renamed ChatGPT Classic.
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