Windows Technical Preview  

1031 members have voted

  1. 1. On a scale of 1-5, 1 being worst, 5 being best. What do you think of Windows 10 from the leaks so far?

    • 5.Great, best OS ever
      156
    • 4. Pretty Good, needs a lot of minor tweaks
      409
    • 3. OK, Needs a few major improvements, some minor ones
      168
    • 2. Fine, Needs a lot of major improvements
      79
    • 1.Poor, Needs too many improvements, all hope is lost, never going to use it
      41
  2. 2. Based on the recent leaks by Neowin and Winfuture.de, my next OS upgrade will be?

    • Windows 10
      720
    • Windows 8
      20
    • Windows 7
      48
    • Sticking with XP
      3
    • OSX Yosemite
      35
    • Linux
      24
    • Sticking with OSX Mavericks
      3
  3. 3. Should Microsoft give away Windows 10 for free?

    • Yes for Windows 8.1 Users
      305
    • Yes for Windows 7 and above users
      227
    • Yes for Vista and above users
      31
    • Yes for XP and above users
      27
    • Yes for all Windows users
      192
    • No
      71


Recommended Posts

I didn't design this. It's a screenshot of WfW 3.11. Don't you recognize it?

 

So all you guys think an OS from 25 years ago has a dated UI? LOL MS must be listening to you, because they have designed probably the most ugly and boring UI in history.

 

I know what it is, and it has no relevance, it doesn't look remotely like Windows 8, 8.1 or 10. and it doesn't match anything of what I said in my posts, so your reply and comparison was irrelevant. and as meaningful as the stupid Windows 1 and AOL comparisons. 

 

And yes the OS from 25 years ago looks dated and windows 8-10 doesn't look remotely like it, what was your point again ? 

I've installed Polish 9926 build in Virtualbox 4.3.10 on Xubuntu - because Oracle doesn't allow to run Windows guests in recent builds when uxtheme.dll is patched (machine is immediately stopped with error), for some weird reason.

It's full of English strings which makes really unpleasant feeling when build is claimed to be Polish  - I know 10 is still in development stage but I consider to install it and use with English language pack for the first time when it will be ready.

Dot, Do you like the icons?

 

Also Cortana loading needs to be sped up. The time from click to opening is slow and even on WP it is slightly sluggish. Yes its a beta, but there have been little to no updates. With siri on the iPad, the microphone activates instantly. I would love to say Cortana take a picture, or Cortana snap a screenshot, or Cortana translate this, or Cortana speech to text, but for little things Cortana is too slow to activate (from cold boot).

TBH... No. I find them too "bright" more than I dislike the design. If it was up to me though, I'd love an icon set that matches the icon set in Office 2013.

Maybe you should go back to this then:

 

fcp5j5.jpg

In all honesty, if Windows had a theme like this, I would use it. This, to me, is great UI design. It gets out of the way, it's not distracting. No frills or decorations, it just provides something simple, clean, functional.

 

It would be better without the 3D-bevels on the buttons and scroll boxes, though.

In all honesty, if Windows had a theme like this, I would use it. This, to me, is great UI design. It gets out of the way, it's not distracting. No frills or decorations, it just provides something simple, clean, functional.

 

It would be better without the 3D-bevels on the buttons and scroll boxes, though.

 

install BB4W :p

Blackbox for windows. granted it does a bit more than windows themeing ;)  but it's themeing pretty much consist of one colors for title and eventual borders and another for the title text. of course you also get the BB shell so not start menu but a right clock launcher instead so....

2/16/2015? .... is there somewhere in the world that is 10 days ahead on the rest of us?

Yep. It's called Mock-up Land.

 

Either way, I think the current icons are simply placeholders (or most of them). They all seem to be made by different groups. Usualy, it's one company that designs all icons (Icon Factory for Windows XP, Vista, 7 and 8 if I'm not wrong). These seem to be mixes from different branches that just needed some new high-res icons to experimentate with. I highly doubt this will be the finsihed product. Perhaps they are just testing how they can replace old icons with these new icons to get all of this done, then replace the graphics when the full icon set is ready. We'll see.

  • Like 1

I know what it is, and it has no relevance, it doesn't look remotely like Windows 8, 8.1 or 10. and it doesn't match anything of what I said in my posts, so your reply and comparison was irrelevant. and as meaningful as the stupid Windows 1 and AOL comparisons. 

 

And yes the OS from 25 years ago looks dated and windows 8-10 doesn't look remotely like it, what was your point again ?

Well the relevance is that I think MS is going backwards with their UI design to almost Windows 3.1 graphics. Probably an extreme example, but I'm passionate about it.

In all honesty, if Windows had a theme like this, I would use it. This, to me, is great UI design. It gets out of the way, it's not distracting. No frills or decorations, it just provides something simple, clean, functional.

 

It would be better without the 3D-bevels on the buttons and scroll boxes, though.

Omg, I give up.

Well the relevance is that I think MS is going backwards with their UI design to almost Windows 3.1 graphics. Probably an extreme example, but I'm passionate about it.

Passionate maybe. Incorrect totally.

First of all there is no such thing as forward or backwards when it comes to design tends - just cyclical. Flat design is the in thing at the moment, not driven buy the same constraints as it was the first time round (which was a complete lack of power to do anything more).

Modern day flat design is driven by a number of factors. These are: plain boredom with skeumorphism (so no glass please), and the requirement for scalability to a number of form factors. Flat design satisfies both of these requirements.

  • Like 3

Well the relevance is that I think MS is going backwards with their UI design to almost Windows 3.1 graphics. Probably an extreme example, but I'm passionate about it.

Omg, I give up.

Why are you giving up? It's just a differing of opinion. I like simple UI, you prefer something different. That's completely fine, and the real issue here is that Windows 10 should provide multiple themes to do their best to satisfy everyone's preferences.

  • Like 1

Passionate maybe. Incorrect totally.

First of all there is no such thing as forward or backwards when it comes to design tends - just cyclical. Flat design is the in thing at the moment, not driven buy the same constraints as it was the first time round (which was a complete lack of power to do anything more).

Modern day flat design is driven by a number of factors. These are: plain boredom with skeumorphism (so no glass please), and the requirement for scalability to a number of form factors. Flat design satisfies both of these requirements.

Also, a flat design is not as power-intensive as a 3D (even fake-3D) UI design - which is why portable  PCs (even "traditional" laptops and notebooks) benefit, due to that age-old bugbear of anything portable - battery life.

That is one thing I discovered with my own "legacy notebook" that is in the testing pool - it actually originally shipped with Vista.  The Windows 10 Pro technical Preview - for reasons of a flatter UI, among others - has better battery life than the SAME notebook running any other flavor of Windows.  (Remember, if anything, 10 will be on more styles merely of portable hardware than any previous version of Windows - and that is without including phones.)

 

That is, in fact, why I wonder if any of the critics of the flat UI (not just in Windows) even own ANY portable hardware, let alone 10-capable legacy hardware.

  • Like 2

Either they embrace the Apple Way (if they want to stay) or leave - with OS X, there is no choice at all.  (The difference with iOS, surprisingly, is that there is MORE choice than there is with OS X.)

Speaking of old Things Apple Going Away, have the MacOS/OS X users among us forgotten about "haxies"?  The haxy is the MacOS/OSX version of uxtheme patching - it predates OS X (it goes back all the way to OS 8, in fact), and was used strictly as a dress-up mechanism (the same way uxtheme patching works in Windows).  However, it started getting harder to use haxies with Snow Leopard, and became impossible with Lion.  (I think the developer had a clue - he sold the company behind the haxy to Smith Micro Software before Mountain Lion's launch.)  If anything, OS X developers - those that have stayed - have become as conformist as any dictatorship.  It may be elegant and consistent, but the price paid is conformity and control - both are ceded to Apple.

 

With Windows, on the other hand, there has ALWAYS been installer choice - one of the oldest installers for Windows, in fact, is NOT a Microsoft product; have we forgotten about InstallShield?  InstallShield was, in fact, the default installer for a LOT of desktop software - including the first Win32 versions of Office.  (A copy of it was typically included with Visual Studio - and other IDEs as well, including Borland's, Intel's, and even Symantec's development tools.  Yes - I DID say "Symantec" - while Symantec may be BEST known for security tools, they have a surprisingly LONG history in terms of developer tools - they and Microsoft are the original JOINT stakeholder of the Windows Foundation Classes.)  All the OTHER installers (including Microsoft's own MSI) were designed to provide options to InstallShield - primarily due to cost/price; a full license for InstallShield is quite pricey, and even Microsoft resented getting continually stung.  Lots of choice - Microsoft's guideline are, in fact, just that.  That is, of course, also the reason for the lack of UI (or UX) consistency - some developers (Adobe, for example) use their UI/UX as branding.  In other words, the developers can (and should) share some of the responsibility for the inconsistency of the UI in Windows.

 

The point I have been trying to make is that despite (or even possibly BECAUSE) of the UI/UX inconsistency within Windows, Windows has become known as an operating system for independent thinkers because it is NOT conformist, or even all that elegant.  In other words, Windows actually reflects the country in which it was born - the United States.  It's not Mercedes, or Audi - and it's definitely not Porsche.  It's Chevrolet - and it is as proud of that independent non-conformist attitude as Chevy fanatics are of the "bowtie" logo that Chevrolet has had nearly from the beginning.

 

1) Haxies are completely unrelated to developers and their ability to customise the look and feel of their application. Adobe for years has had their own custom UI out of need to be able to cater for both platforms that they support. I have nothing wrong with a custom look and feel but there are HIG that give plenty of room for 'personality' without completely butchering the interface to the point that is out of step with the rest of the operating system. It has nothing to do with dictatorship and conformity but everything to do with a consistent implementation of the GUI guidelines so that the basic Mac UI skills you acquire over time can be applied to almost any application running on said operating system - learn the fundamentals of navigating a UI and be able to adapt to new applications as they come along.

 

2) Regarding the custom installers, from what I understand even with the introduction of MSI the tools were pretty inflexible and things have only started to improve with recent releases. To be honest I was hoping that Microsoft would replace msi with APPX for both win32 and WinRT applications and have that integrated in with the desktop management software used to deploy updates, upgrades and new software. Microsoft has the talent but the question is whether Microsoft is willing to set the agenda themselves by making sure all their own software is deployed using that in much the same way that Apple will dogfood their own API's and guidelines to set an example to third parties on how things should be done.

 

3) To justify bad UI design as "I'm a free spirit" didn't wash with Linux and GNOME or KDE so it won't wash when it comes to Windows either - there is a fine line between making an application that has a unique look and feel yet still conforms to the basic UI fundamentals that Microsoft lays down. Most of my venting isn't about third parties but the lack of consistency by Microsoft in their own product - Windows. You cannot force third parties to conform to a set of guidelines but one would at least expect that Microsoft would ensure that all the bundled applications and the UI of their operating system was consistent rather than the messy mish-mash of different common control and dialogue due to a failure by them to move their code base forward when they move their foundations forward.

 

Edit: Even with the eccentric nature of their Windows UI I'm still open to moving to Windows 10 if WWDC 2015 turns into a giant lemon of visual tweaks over much needed substance under the hood. Given the come back of Dell as a viable option for me to purchase a laptop and desktop off the need for Apple to lift it's game is higher than ever if they want to win me over as a customer - I've been using Mac's for 10 years but it doesn't mean that I have some sort of loyalty that stops me from considering alternatives. Right now if things keep going the way they do then it'll be an XPS 8700 + XPS 13.3" + HTC One M9 in the future if more fluff comes out like UI tweaks rather than updating the OpenGL, OpenCL, a new file system and fixing the issues under the hood they've been neglecting for years.

  • Like 2

The icons are still in flux, they're trying out new things to see what works, I doubt anything on the desktop is final except for the new icons in the settings app.  I expect more icons to end up like those actually.

Yep. It's called Mock-up Land.

 

Either way, I think the current icons are simply placeholders (or most of them). They all seem to be made by different groups. Usualy, it's one company that designs all icons (Icon Factory for Windows XP, Vista, 7 and 8 if I'm not wrong). These seem to be mixes from different branches that just needed some new high-res icons to experimentate with. I highly doubt this will be the finsihed product. Perhaps they are just testing how they can replace old icons with these new icons to get all of this done, then replace the graphics when the full icon set is ready. We'll see.

 

 

The icons are still in flux, they're trying out new things to see what works, I doubt anything on the desktop is final except for the new icons in the settings app.  I expect more icons to end up like those actually.

 

 

The funniest things will be, when they will not do anything with those icons on the desktop... :D

Yep. It's called Mock-up Land.

 

Either way, I think the current icons are simply placeholders (or most of them). They all seem to be made by different groups. Usualy, it's one company that designs all icons (Icon Factory for Windows XP, Vista, 7 and 8 if I'm not wrong). These seem to be mixes from different branches that just needed some new high-res icons to experimentate with. I highly doubt this will be the finsihed product. Perhaps they are just testing how they can replace old icons with these new icons to get all of this done, then replace the graphics when the full icon set is ready. We'll see.

 

You'd think that by now they would have moved to vector based icons but alas both Windows and OS X insist on using bitmap icons because apparently vector look too 'cartoony'. The icons they had in BeOS were nice and if updated I think would make a great icon set:

 

http://www.guidebookgallery.org/screenshots/beos5

 

It'll be interesting to see what happens because there is still a lot of water left to go under the bridge before the release it to the world.

Are the majority of users on here running this daily on their main system as their main os?

I try to. My setup is on a secondary system, though, so when things don't work, I move back to my desktop running Win8.1

Well, one of the problems they will have with icons is compatibility... even if MS moved to vector icons (which would be a good thing), they would need to also support bitmap icons and run support for the two types simultaneously.

Well, one of the problems they will have with icons is compatibility... even if MS moved to vector icons (which would be a good thing), they would need to also support bitmap icons and run support for the two types simultaneously.

Another complete misconception. At very small sizes you need a different icon. You can't just simply use vector icons.

That sentence contradicts itself.

Which bit?

1) Haxies are completely unrelated to developers and their ability to customise the look and feel of their application. Adobe for years has had their own custom UI out of need to be able to cater for both platforms that they support. I have nothing wrong with a custom look and feel but there are HIG that give plenty of room for 'personality' without completely butchering the interface to the point that is out of step with the rest of the operating system. It has nothing to do with dictatorship and conformity but everything to do with a consistent implementation of the GUI guidelines so that the basic Mac UI skills you acquire over time can be applied to almost any application running on said operating system - learn the fundamentals of navigating a UI and be able to adapt to new applications as they come along.

 

2) Regarding the custom installers, from what I understand even with the introduction of MSI the tools were pretty inflexible and things have only started to improve with recent releases. To be honest I was hoping that Microsoft would replace msi with APPX for both win32 and WinRT applications and have that integrated in with the desktop management software used to deploy updates, upgrades and new software. Microsoft has the talent but the question is whether Microsoft is willing to set the agenda themselves by making sure all their own software is deployed using that in much the same way that Apple will dogfood their own API's and guidelines to set an example to third parties on how things should be done.

 

3) To justify bad UI design as "I'm a free spirit" didn't wash with Linux and GNOME or KDE so it won't wash when it comes to Windows either - there is a fine line between making an application that has a unique look and feel yet still conforms to the basic UI fundamentals that Microsoft lays down. Most of my venting isn't about third parties but the lack of consistency by Microsoft in their own product - Windows. You cannot force third parties to conform to a set of guidelines but one would at least expect that Microsoft would ensure that all the bundled applications and the UI of their operating system was consistent rather than the messy mish-mash of different common control and dialogue due to a failure by them to move their code base forward when they move their foundations forward.

 

Edit: Even with the eccentric nature of their Windows UI I'm still open to moving to Windows 10 if WWDC 2015 turns into a giant lemon of visual tweaks over much needed substance under the hood. Given the come back of Dell as a viable option for me to purchase a laptop and desktop off the need for Apple to lift it's game is higher than ever if they want to win me over as a customer - I've been using Mac's for 10 years but it doesn't mean that I have some sort of loyalty that stops me from considering alternatives. Right now if things keep going the way they do then it'll be an XPS 8700 + XPS 13.3" + HTC One M9 in the future if more fluff comes out like UI tweaks rather than updating the OpenGL, OpenCL, a new file system and fixing the issues under the hood they've been neglecting for years.

1.  I never said that "haxies" were for developers - they aren't.  Haxies are, like patched uxthemes, aimed squarely at users.

2.  The primary reason for the newer installers was, in fact, cost/price - as I pointed out, full licenses of InstallShield were pricey.  There were also differences - some quite deliberate - from InstallShield - that was done primarily to avoid being sued out of existence.

3.  I'm NOT justifying bad UI design - from anybody.  I'm simply refusing to blame Microsoft alone - as they aren't the only "guilty party" in the bad-UI department (especially when it comes to applications).  Blaming ONLY Microsoft is a cop-out at best, and disingenuous at worst.  There's plenty of blame to go around.

4.  Lastly, part of the mishmash is due to us as users - have you been following the screaming if there are ANY changes to ANY software from anyone?  Whether it's applications, utilities, or even Windows itself, ANY change - and especially a UI change - brings out the ravenous beast in some users.   (Even the absolutely nitpickish changes in Windows for Workgroups 3.11 were howled at - despite said changes being limited mostly to File Manager - and that was AFTER the review that pointed out the rather obvious in retrospect performance advantages "Windows for Warehouses" offered over Windows 3.1 - on the same hardware.  Some developers - or application development teams at even Microsoft itself - take the safe option and change nothing - if only to keep their eardrums from blowing up.)

5.  GNOME and KDE are self-contained desktop environments - that much IS true.  However, they can also be adopted "piecemeal" - you don't necessarily HAVE to use ONLY applications from the same core as your DE in Linux, or even BSD.  (The only case where you have no choice is OpenSolaris and the forks thereof - as there is no version of KDE there yet.)  While I prefer KDE, I have been known to actually install GNOME-based suite-pieces in it due to reasons of personal preference.  A typical personalized-by-me KDE install looks like the infamous "one-piece-at-a-time" car - stuff from different desktop environments (where they fit my usage) can be found all over - a conformist KDE it isn't.  (The same was true is my GNOME installs - the only exaction - naturally - being GNOME on Solaris/OpenSolaris.)

6.  Backward compatibility is both a blessing AND a curse; the curse part affects everybody - no matter what hardware or operating system you use. An example of the "curse" is the one set of games that doesn't work in the Windows 10 Previews, but DOES work in older versions - including 8.1; the Daybreak/SOE Launchpad.  The issue is in the connectivity to the game servers - it won't link up.  (Not even the Compatibility Wizard has a fix for that.)  The issue isn't even unique to Windows, nor has it ever been.  The problem for developers is how do you fix something in terms of compatibility with a new OS/platform, without causing breakage in existing platforms.  In fact, Android developers, along with Google, are getting TWO earfuls from early adopters of Lollipop with backward-compatibility issues - on both software AND hardware-related issues.

  • Like 1

You'd think that by now they would have moved to vector based icons but alas both Windows and OS X insist on using bitmap icons because apparently vector look too 'cartoony'. The icons they had in BeOS were nice and if updated I think would make a great icon set:

 

http://www.guidebookgallery.org/screenshots/beos5

 

It'll be interesting to see what happens because there is still a lot of water left to go under the bridge before the release it to the world.

 

vectors are infinitely zoomable, BUT they don't scale well, you can't use the same icon for 32x32 and 256x256 size icons.

 

you have a good icon at the designed size, but make it smaller and it becomes a blurry mess trying to gave to much detail, make it bigger and it's cartoon land.

 

vectors are not a magic bullet for ui and icons.

 

if the GUI is a fixed size me and to be the same physical size or relative size(relative to screen size) at different while being resolution independent, then yes vectors make sense. however that's not what people want or need. that is scalable GUI's. pro users want it small , old people want large stuff.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Posts

    • AMD RX 9070 GRE AI, Blender benchmarks vs 9070 XT, 7800XT, Nvidia RTX 5070, 4070 by Sayan Sen Earlier this week, we shared the first part of our review of AMD's new RX 9070 GRE. It was about the gaming performance of the GPU, and we gave it an 8 out of 10. As a follow-up, similar to how we did with the 9070 XT and non-XT, we are doing a dedicated productivity review for the RX 9070 GRE as well, where we compare it against the 9070 XT, 9070, 7800 XT, as well as Nvidia's 5070 and 4070. This will include AI, rendering, compute, and more benchmarks. AI performance, especially, is a very important metric in today's world, and AMD also promised big improvements thanks to its underlying architectural improvements. We will be pitching it against the data we already have for the RX 9070, and RX 9070 XT, but also the Nvidia 5070 FE, MSI GeForce RTX 4070 VENTUS 2X 12G, and Gigabyte Radeon RX 7800 XT GAMING OC 16G as they are in a similar price class, but also because we do not have a comparable 5060 Ti card lying around here that we can compare it against. Before we get underway, this is a collaboration between Sayan Sen and Steven Parker, who lent me his test bed. Also, there was no editorial input from AMD. First up, the specs of the RX 9070, 9070 XT, and 9070 GRE, which were given to us by AMD: Radeon RX 9070 GRE Radeon RX 9070 Radeon RX 9070 XT Boost Clock: Game Clock: up to 2.79GHz up to 2.20GHz up to 2.52GHz up to 2.07GHz up to 2.97GHz up to 2.40GHz Stream Processors 3,072 (48 CU) 3,584 (56 CU) 4,096 (64 CU) Ray Accelerator 48 56 64 AI Accelerator 96 112 128 ROPs 96 128 Texture Mapping Units 192 224 256 Memory 12 GB GDDR6, 18Gbps Clock, 192-bit Bus 432 GB/s 16 GB GDDR6, 20Gbps Clock, 256-bit Bus Effective Memory Bandwidth: 640 GB/s Infinity Cache 48 MB (3rd Gen) 64 MB (3rd Gen) Card Bus PCI-E 5.0 X16 Output 2x HDMI 2.1b 2x DisplayPort 2.1a Power consumption 220W 304W Recommended PSU 650W 750W Slot width 2x 3x Price (SEP) $549 $599 As you can see from the specs above, it is less than the standard RX 9070 in every way that counts, except for slightly higher Boost and Game clock speed. Design Moving on, the RX 9070 GRE we were given is an XFX Swift triple-fan, dual-slot design with two 8-pin connectors. At 30cm (self-measured), it will fit in most systems easily. There is no RGB either. The AMD Radeon RX 9070 GRE by XFX from all angles. Test system Our test system consists of the following: Lian Li O11 Dynamic Mini V2 Flow (Amazon|Newegg) ASUS Z890 ProArt Creator WiFi (Amazon|Newegg) Intel Core Ultra 7 270K Plus (Amazon|Newegg) Thermal Grizzly KryoSheet - 44x37 (Amazon|Newegg) 2x 16GB G.Skill Trident Z5 RGB (7200 MT/s in XMP) (Amazon|Newegg) Sabrent Rocket4 Plus 2TB SSD (Amazon) Windows 11 25H2 (Build 26200.8246) AMD shared a press driver based on the recently released Adrenaline 26.5.2 that we were required to use. We now move on to our benchmarks. First up, we have Geekbench AI running on ONNX. For some reason, the 9070 GRE does exceptionally well here in both half-precision (FP16) and single-precision (FP32). It manages to beat the RTX 5070 and RX 9070 non-XT, and is only behind the 9070 XT. Since Geekbench runs in short bursts instead of continuously hammering the graphics card, it seems the GRE's faster boost clocks are helping here. Next up, we move to the UL Procyon AI test suite, starting with the image generation benchmark. We chose the Stable Diffusion XL FP16 test since it is the most intense workload available on Procyon. The Nvidia cards do very well here, as even the 4070 out-muscles AMD's best fairy easily. The positive thing about the GRE is that it gets quite close to the 9070 non-XT in this test; this indicates that the VRAM does not play a very big role here, as SD XL relies on float16 (FP16). So this is something to keep in mind again. If you wish to work with float32 AI workloads, graphics cards with larger than 12 GB buffers would likely emerge as victors. Regardless, the gains are still massive on AMD's 9000 series compared to the 7000 series. Following image generation, we move to the text generation benchmark. This is one test where the 9070 GRE struggled, quite a lot. It seems that the 12 GB VRAM and lower memory bandwidth of the new Radeon 9070 GRE are hurting it quite a bit; the split is massive, especially in a test like Llama2, which packs 13 billion parameters. As such, in all the tests, the 9070 GRE is the slowest of the lot. Next, we tried Blender, and here the AMD GPUs were beaten by Nvidia. Rendering is something the Green team has always had a lead over the Red side, and it has not changed so far. On the positive side, though, the 9070 GRE shows significantly better results than the 7800 XT, which means AMD is on the right path. Catching up to Nvidia, though, will require a lot more effort. And we hope HIP and ROCm can keep improving. Wrapping up AI testing, we measured OpenCL throughput in the Geekbench compute benchmark. The RX 9070 GRE alongside the 9070 did not fare well here at all, even falling behind the 7800 XT. Interestingly, even the RTX 5070 could not beat the 4070 on OpenCL, so perhaps this suggests that OpenCL optimization may not have been a priority for either AMD or Nvidia in the modern era. Conclusion We reached the end of our productivity performance review of the 9070 GRE, and we have to say it's a mixed bag. Unlike the 9070 and 9070 XT, the GRE excels in some areas while losing ground fairly easily in others. Similar to how it happened in gaming, any time the card's memory subsystem gets hammered, it tends to fall behind the others. This was the case with text generation, wherein we saw the VRAM sometimes hit its maximum available 12 GB of usage with larger model sizes. So what do we make of the RX 9070 as a productivity hardware? It can certainly be used, but you have to know it has its limitations. For those looking for a GPU that can deal with more, AMD recently unveiled the Radeon AI PRO R9700, which is essentially a 32 GB refresh of the 9070 XT with some additional workstation-based optimizations. On a similar note, the new Ryzen AI Halo platform is something you can consider if you want to set up a local AI processing station. Considering everything, we rate AMD's Radeon RX 9070 GRE a 7.5 out of 10 for its productivity performance. Price is less of a factor for those looking at productivity cases compared to those considering the GPU for gaming, and as such, we felt it did quite decently on many occasions and can be handy if you need a 12 GB GPU and, for some reason, don't want to get Nvidia. Purchase links: RX 9070 / XT / GRE (Amazon US) As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases.
    • Does anyone here know if these updates are integrated into the UUP dump isos?
    • Motrix Next 3.9.4 by Razvan Serea Motrix Next is a modern, open-source cross-platform download manager built as the official next-generation successor to the original Motrix project. It has been completely rewritten using Tauri 2, Vue 3, TypeScript, and Rust, while still relying on the powerful Aria2 download engine for high-speed multi-protocol transfers. The app supports HTTP, HTTPS, FTP, BitTorrent, ED2K and magnet links, offering advanced features like multi-connection acceleration, task scheduling, bandwidth control, and batch download management. With a significantly reduced install size (around 20MB), it focuses on being lightweight, fast, and resource-efficient compared to traditional Electron-based download tools. Designed for Windows, macOS, and Linux, Motrix Next delivers a clean, modern UI inspired by Material Design 3 principles, with smooth animations and a minimal workflow. It improves usability through better download organization, system tray integration, and enhanced torrent handling including selective file downloads and tracker management. Motrix Next features: Multi-protocol downloads — HTTP, FTP, BitTorrent, Magnet, .torrent, ED2K, and Metalink tasks BitTorrent — Selective file download, DHT, peer exchange, encryption controls, metadata caching, GeoIP peer flags, and tracker probing Browser extension integration — Embedded Extension API with independent authentication, download confirmation, smart auto-submit, filename hints, referer/cookie forwarding, and real-time controls (Chrome Web Store · Edge Add-ons) Safe filename handling — Content-Disposition, RFC 2047, non-UTF-8, percent-encoded, and extensionless URL resolution with path traversal sanitization Download organization — Favorite and recent folders, optional file-type categorization, stale-record cleanup, and completed history backed by SQLite Concurrent downloads — Independent controls for active tasks, HTTP connections per server, segments per file, and BT peer limits Speed control — Global and per-task upload/download limits with day-of-week and time-of-day scheduling System integration — Tray operation, optional tray speed display, macOS Dock badge/progress, protocol handlers for magnet://, thunder://, and motrixnext:// Lightweight mode — Destroys the WebView on minimize-to-tray while Rust keeps the engine, task monitor, notifications, history, and extension routing alive Notifications and power options — Native task start/complete/failure notifications, keep-awake during downloads, and optional shutdown after completion Network controls — Scoped proxy support for downloads, app updates, and tracker updates, plus system proxy detection Auto-update channels — Stable, Beta, and Latest Across Channels policies with separate download and install phases Diagnostics — Structured logs, exportable diagnostic ZIPs, database integrity checks, automatic DB rebuild, and Linux GPU rendering fallback Personalization — Light/dark/system theme, 10 color schemes, 26 languages, and first-launch system language detection Motrix Next 3.9.4 changelog: Motrix Next 3.9.4 promotes the 3.9.4 beta cycle to stable. This release refreshes bundled engine binaries, improves task detail readability and copy actions, expands link handling for magnet and ED2K workflows, polishes responsive navigation and text wrapping, updates browser extension documentation, and refines network preference controls. New Features Task Detail copy actions — Added copyable values for task metadata and reusable render functions for long text fields. Magnet and ED2K lifecycle support — Added task lifecycle handling for magnet and ED2K links. History cleanup for deleted tasks — Deleted tasks can now remove matching history records. User-Agent management — Added user-agent management and improved related network preference controls. Browser extension documentation — Added the Firefox Add-ons link for the Motrix Next extension. Improvements Engine binaries — Updated bundled binaries for supported architectures. Task Detail readability — Long task names, URLs, tracker values, and copyable metadata now render more clearly. Deletion messaging — Refined localized task deletion text for clarity and consistency. Text wrapping — Improved URI input wrapping and task name multiline display. Navigation layout — Improved sub-navigation responsiveness. Disk allocation default — Changed the default file allocation method to trunc. Proxy controls — Improved proxy button styling in network preferences. Download: Motrix Next 64-bit | ARM64 | macOS ~20.0 MB (Open Source) Links: Website | macOS / Linux | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • NVIDIA officially supports Ubuntu, as linked above with the GeForce NOW Hands on I did in collaboration with Paul Hill.
    • TO be clear I am not running linux today, however I keep thinking about it. And I want to make sure there are minimal obstacles if I decide to make that switch in the coming months.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Proficient
      Eric Biran went up a rank
      Proficient
    • Dedicated
      Conjor earned a badge
      Dedicated
    • Week One Done
      Windows Guy earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Dedicated
      Mark Spruce earned a badge
      Dedicated
    • Collaborator
      conkir earned a badge
      Collaborator
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      479
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      248
    3. 3
      Steven P.
      72
    4. 4
      +Edouard
      69
    5. 5
      FloatingFatMan
      67
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!