Wednesday, July 3, 2013

Razer Blade 2013: Now This Is How You Make a Damn Windows Laptop

Razer Blade 2013: Now This Is How You Make a Damn Windows Laptop

Everyone?s first impression of the 14-inch Razer Blade, even more than its 17-inch older brother, is Ha, they made a MacBook. But then, Oh?wait. They made a MacBook. And actually, it's even better than that.

What Is It

A 14-inch gaming laptop that's small and light enough to be your everyday machine.

Why Does It Matter

For years now, laptops have been getting smaller, thinner, and overall just better. But only a certain, extreme kind of thin has gotten any design consideration to speak of. Anyone who wanted more power from their laptop was basically stuck with a clunky box if they wanted something that could play games (or crunch numbers) well and run Windows.

The 17-inch Blades from last year were wholly impressive from the standpoint of bringing the contents (more or less) of a massive gaming laptop into something much smaller than we had ever really considered. But 17 inches is still too big for most of our bags, and for most of us in general, really. Fourteen inches, though, is an almost perfect size for anyone who doesn?t need the tiniest of laptops. If the 17-inch Blade was a Humvee, the 14-inch is a tricked out Mustang.

Razer Blade 2013: Now This Is How You Make a Damn Windows Laptop

But the real reason that this machine and others like it are important is what it means for the next few generations of laptops. We're not done yet. Integrated graphics are improving rapidly?Haswell is really impressive in a lot of ways?but only in the context of the way we game and use computers now. For the next level stuff, things like the Oculus Rift, or stuff we haven?t even thought of yet, we need more power. We?ll have to draw the same graphics twice, for each eye, or appease some other crazy contortion. The Ock lags on even solid hardware, like last year?s 17-inch Blade (now Pro) refresh. We want smaller, more beautiful laptops. But we?ll also need raw power. And this is the best shot at combining the two.

Design

All black; so beautiful. The Blade is anodized black aluminum that?s gorgeous to look at, although it attracts fingerprints and other smudges like a black hole. It?s as slim as a MacBook Pro Retina 13, and has similar hard lines, as opposed to the old 17-inch?s more rounded form. It?s also ditched the Switchblade hotkeys and instead has a single trackpad in the center of the body. Instead of being a single piece of glass, like most premium laptops, it?s got two buttons at the bottom of the trackpad. There are two speaker grills along the sides of the keyboard. The keys are backlit in green and actually look pretty awesome whether lit or unlit; the lid has Razer?s garish logo illuminated in green as well.

Using It

When you first sit down with the Blade, you don?t really want to change a thing. It feels impossibly thin for something you expect to squeeze good game graphics out of, and as solid as anything that?s ever come out of Apple. The most impressive part, maybe, is all the little things it gets right that old school laptop makers consistently get so wrong. The hinge on the lid is perfect?no wobble, but not too stiff to move. The body itself is clean, clear of any excess ornamentation (beyond that hideous logo). The speakers are a bit of an eyesore, but Razer?s been over-conscious about sound since a few reviewers killed them about the first Blade?s anemic speakers. (The left speaker on our model did have one edge that wasn?t flush with the chassis, which was a bit distracting and the only manufacturing imperfection we saw). Even the keyboard and trackpad are wonderful. The keyboard is properly spaced for typing, with good travel distance to type full speed on, but also with enough distance to WASD with precision.

The biggest issue with using it day to day is the idiotic buttons at the bottom of the trackpad. They?re flimsy, too small, and given how well the rest of the trackpad responds, totally unnecessary. Yes, they?re included to save on cost (mechanical parts) and space in the body. But that?s not a good compromise to make; get the trackpad right, it?s one of three things on a laptop that really affects your senses (along with screen and keyboard). Of course, while gaming, the downside minimized. But for a ?gaming? laptop with so much potential to just be the single best Windows laptop (and it probably still is for the weight class above ultrabooks), it?s borderline unacceptable.

Razer Blade 2013: Now This Is How You Make a Damn Windows Laptop

Gaming is what you?d expect given the hardware. The Nvidia GeForce GTX 765M is a fairly decent card, and you?ll be able to run most modern games on High settings and get extremely playable framerates. BioShock Infinite was well over 60 FPS at High. Skyrim was in the high 40s; Dishonored in the 50s (with a few dips); and congested areas of WoW 25-35. All of which is to say, this is an extremely capable setup, though certainly not top end.

Battery life isn't what you?ve been seeing from other Haswell computers. It?s not the 12+ hour MacBook Air, or even the 8-10-hour Vaio. But it?s not all that bad. We got 2 hours and 45 minutes of battery with mixed usage (1 hour Skyrim, 1 hour assorted web browsing, 45 minutes BioShock infinite; 60 percent brightness, backlit keys off), and over 2 hours of Team Fortress 2 at the same settings. The original Blade ran TF2 for 49 minutes before crapping out. For everyday work, the 14-inch was generally just under five hours (plug in in the early afternoon). So this is progress.

Back in late 2011, after it had announced the first Blade, Razer told us that the reason it went with 17 inches was that that?s the smallest possible screen that you can use and still easily immerse a viewer into the environment. Any smaller and you?re not getting a full experience. The 14-inch version more or less confirms this. It?s perfectly okay for games, but you?re going to want to hook it up to a larger monitor if you?re at a desk?for the extra real estate/immersion, but also for the hunched-over factor of gaming on a 14-inch laptop.

The screen itself is one of the few weak points here. It looks fine?in games more than when browsing the web or using other apps?but the 1600 x 900 resolution just doesn?t feel in line with the rest of the machine. 1080p would have been ideal, especially with Windows 8.1 handling the higher density displays a little better now, but richer colors with more contrast would have been an improvement too. The matte finish is nice, but with the rest of the laptop collecting every fingerprint it comes in contact with, the message feels a little skewed. The Blade draws to 1080p displays just fine, so it?s not like the Razer Edge, which was forced into its 1366x768 display because of horsepower.

Razer Blade 2013: Now This Is How You Make a Damn Windows Laptop

Razer Blade 2013: Now This Is How You Make a Damn Windows Laptop

Like

This is very close to a perfect body for a gaming laptop. The Blade is gorgeous and well built. There is zero flex anywhere. It runs current games on high graphics settings at good-to-acceptable framerates. The trackpad is more responsive than the majority of Windows laptops', and the keyboard is just about perfect. While the body gets hot during gaming, the fans do a good job of not letting it affect performance without sounding like a wind tunnel.

No Like

The mostly awesome trackpad is almost completely submarined by its idiotic buttons. Battery life is hugely improved from your standard gaming rig, but you're getting nowhere near the six hours claimed by Razer. The screen is sub-optimal, on color performance and viewing angles (a problem for a matte display), and at 1600x900, feels like by far the weakest link and the piece that will age the poorest.

Test Notes

  • As you?d expect, it gets HOT. But within reason. The Blade actually does a really nice job of controlling its temperature (without a ton of fan noise) when you?re not gaming; doing everyday tasks, it was rarely above room temperature. Once you start gaming, however, the heat cranks up. It gets hot enough to physically burn you if you do something dumb like rest it on your chest, and the dual exhaust fans on the bottom line up almost exactly with where you?d rest it on your thighs/knees (sigh). Still, the heat stays closer to the bezel of the screen for the most part, and the palm rests and keyboard area were never worse than warm. Extended sessions also didn?t cause any slowdown to framerates in-game, which is nice for anyone who?s ever had to prop up their laptop and point a fan at it to keep a game running for more than 30 minutes.

Razer Blade 2013: Now This Is How You Make a Damn Windows Laptop

  • Razer does a pretty good job of shipping without any bloatware. You have some Razer component stuff, but you?ll want those for keeping drivers up to date anyway. Otherwise, it?s just a few Intel and Nvidia shortcuts.
  • You will miss the screen not having touch if you've gotten used to using a Windows 8 device that has it. It's another cost- and space-saving move, but you'll feel this more in the years coming up, too.
  • As you?d guess, the drivers aren?t perfect with Windows 8.1 yet. For the final day or two testing, I stuck 8.1 on the Blade and the 14-inch screen is very improved by the new Snap.
  • I can?t stress enough how many fingerprints this thing collects. Wiping it down with a microfiber is enough to get rid of them, but it can be distracting.
  • The speakers are loud and clear, but also quite tinny. The bass is almost non-existent. But you?ll be able to make out voices and sound cues in games, and it?s more or less acceptable for movies and TV.
  • At startup, the Blade would occasionally make a noise like a circada was being spun through a bicycle tire?s spokes, which was likely coming from the fan, but really I have no idea.

Razer Blade 2013: Now This Is How You Make a Damn Windows Laptop

Should You Buy This?

Yes. The standard line for Razer hardware has usually been, ?Hahaha, NO. Unless you lactate liquid gold.? Here, though, the price is still steep, but not insanely steeper than its peers. Toshiba?s KiraBook starts at $1700; the Blade at $1800, and the comparison isn?t even close. A 15-inch MacBook Pro non-retina with an inferior graphics card and less RAM costs the same $1800.

The Blade isn?t perfect?it?s really hard to forget how awful those trackpad buttons are, and that screen is going to be regrettable in a year or to, if it isn't already?but it?s a freaking awesome computer that is somehow also a decent value. Get it if you?re looking at getting a nice laptop to game on that you can use for just about anything else, too, without breaking your back or your bank account.

For a more gaming-focused review of the 14-inch Razer Blade, check out our friends at Kotaku.

Razer Blade Specs as tested:

Processor: Intel Core i7 2.2GHz Haswell

Graphics: Nvidia GeForce GTX 765M (2GB GDDR5 VRAM; Optimus); Intel HD 4600

Memory: 8GB RAM

Display: 14-inch 1600x900 matte LED backlit

Storage: 256GB SSD

Ports: 3 USB 3.0, HDMI Out, 3.5mm audio

Dimensions: 13.6 x 9.3 x 0.66 inches

Weight: 4.1 pounds

Price: $2000

Source: http://gizmodo.com/razer-blade-2013-now-this-is-how-you-make-a-damn-windo-647053117

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Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Three UK launches new, lower PAYG rates

Three UK

3 pence per minute, 2 pence per SMS, 1 pence per MB of data

UK mobile network Three has overhauled its Pay As You Go pricing, introducing new, lower rates for prepaid customers who don't sign up to one of its monthly "add-on" packages. From today, customers with PAYG credit who aren't using an add-on will pay 3 pence per minute for calls, 2 pence per SMS message and 1 pence per megabyte of data.

read more

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/pPS5azv_Wyc/story01.htm

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South Africa's Mandela still 'critical but stable'

JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - Ailing anti-apartheid leader and former South African President Nelson Mandela remained in hospital on Monday in a "critical but stable" condition, the government said.

Mandela has been in a Pretoria hospital for more than three weeks receiving treatment for a recurring lung infection, his fourth hospitalization in six months.

The faltering health of the 94-year-old, a figure admired globally as a symbol of struggle against injustice and racism, has reinforced a realization that the father of the post-apartheid South Africa will not be around forever.

While he lies in hospital, many South Africans are looking ahead to his 95th birthday on July 18.

"We must all be able to do something good for humanity on this day in tribute to our former President," President Jacob Zuma said in a statement.

Mandela's health also dominated a two-day visit to South Africa by U.S. President Barack Obama over the weekend.

Obama met the Mandela family on Saturday, offering words of comfort and praising the retired statesman as one of history's greatest figures.

(Reporting by Olivia Kumwenda; Editing by Ed Cropley)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/south-africas-mandela-still-critical-stable-053231257.html

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Monday, July 1, 2013

Shervin Pishevar And Scott Stanford's New Startup Studio Sherpa Is Raising $150 Million For New Fund

19149v5-max-250x250As reported earlier this year, Menlo Ventures partner Shervin Pishevar and Goldman Sachs managing director Scott Stanford left their day jobs to build a new, company building venture and VC fund called Sherpa. According to an SEC filing released today, Sherpa is raising around $150 million in funding. Of course, this is not a final number, and this could fluctuate as the funding closes.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/AYGoCWD6w_k/

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Too much of a good thing? Too many 'healing' cells delay wound healing

July 1, 2013 ? Like most other things, you can have too much of a good thing when it comes to wound healing, and new research proves it. According to an article published in the July 2013 issue of the Journal of Leukocyte Biology, wound healing can be delayed because the body produces too many mast cells, which normally promote healing. An overabundance of these cells, however, also causes harm by leading to the overproduction of IL-10, which prevents certain white blood cells from reaching the wounded area. The work was conducted in mice with lymphedematous skin, and may one day provide better treatments for elderly individuals with skin ulcers in the lower extremities, for women with upper-extremity wounds following breast cancer surgery, and skin wounds of any type that are not healing as they should.

"Improvement of lymphedema is important for treatment of skin ulcers," said Makoto Sugaya, M.D., Ph.D., a researcher involved in the work from the Department of Dermatology at the University of Tokyo in Tokyo, Japan. "It is not just fluid retention, but inflammatory cells and cytokines that cause delayed wound healing."

To make this discovery, scientists used two groups of mice. The first group showed severe lymphatic dysfunction. The second group was normal. Researchers administered skin wounds and found that the mice with lymphatic dysfunction showed delayed would healing as compared to the normal mice. Analysis showed that the delayed would healing in the lymphedematous skin is the result of too many mast cells and elevated IL-10 expression, both of which can now be therapeutic targets for future drug development.

"Wound healing is something most people take for granted until there's a problem," said John Wherry, Ph.D., Deputy Editor of the Journal of Leukocyte Biology. "However, wound healing is a complex process involving immune as well as non-immune cells and problems that arise can be very serious, even if it started as a minor wound. This report provides an immunological explanation for why some wound healing is delayed, and it ultimately may help set a course for therapies that accelerate wound healing."

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. T. Kimura, M. Sugaya, A. Blauvelt, H. Okochi, S. Sato. Delayed wound healing due to increased interleukin-10 expression in mice with lymphatic dysfunction. Journal of Leukocyte Biology, 2013; 94 (1): 137 DOI: 10.1189/jlb.0812408

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/29PjNeJQVNE/130701100807.htm

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Analysis: After selloff, some dip toes back in emerging markets

By Gertrude Chavez-Dreyfuss

NEW YORK (Reuters) - The threat of less central bank stimulus and higher interest rates has crushed emerging markets more than most assets in the past two months, in some cases slashing the value of stocks and bonds in developing countries to levels not seen since the last financial crisis.

The slump after U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke signaled in May that the Fed expects to curb and then end its bond-buying program in the next year if the economy improves has pushed prices to levels that would have looked very appealing only a few weeks ago. And some emerging market investors are buying, even with the understanding that there is a big risk markets have further to drop.

"We're starting to selectively increase our exposure to emerging markets," said Andres Calderon, portfolio manager and vice president for research at Hansberger Global Investors in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. "But the key word is selective. We're not rushing in."

There is every reason to be cautious: Many fund managers expect lower growth in emerging markets. Some markets have suffered recently from steep capital outflows, and the slowdown in China has affected other emerging economies, particularly commodity producers. Still, emerging markets are expected to continue to grow faster than developed countries.

Northern Trust Asset Management, for one, has remained overweight in emerging market stocks through the slide. The Chicago-based firm manages $810 billion in assets.

"If you're worried about performance in the next one or two quarters, then it's hard to make a case about a visible catalyst for emerging markets," said Jim McDonald, Northern Trust's chief investment strategist. "But if you have a 12- to 18-month outlook, then this group will work."

He said emerging market stocks are trading at around 10 times this year's earnings, or a 32 percent discount relative to the Standard & Poor's 500-stock index. The asset class's historic low is about eight times earnings.

Emerging markets have typically traded at a 20 percent discount to the S&P 500 since 2005.

The price-to-book ratio of emerging market stocks on the MSCI stock index is also showing sharp undervaluation at 1.45, not far from the low of 1.36 hit during the depths of the financial crisis, according to Morgan Stanley data. That is still far higher than the 0.93 reached during the Asian crisis of 1997-98. The price-to-book multiple measures the company's value if it goes bankrupt.

"I wouldn't be surprised, though, if EM stocks come down further because there would still be continued outflows from the sector," said Calderon of Hansberger, which is a long-term investor in emerging market equities, with assets of around $6.2 billion.

There is plenty of wreckage to survey for possible bargains.

The benchmark MSCI emerging market stock index <.mscief> is down about 11.3 percent this year, with much of the decline coming in the past six weeks. By contrast, the MSCI's all-country world equity index <.miwd00000pus> is still up 4.8 percent this year, while the S&P 500 <.spx> sports a sizable 12.8 percent gain for 2013.

In the debt market, the emerging market bond yield spread on dollar-denominated bonds, a gauge of perceived risk over safe-haven U.S. Treasuries, was at 342 basis points on Thursday on the benchmark JP Morgan Emerging Markets USD Bond Index (EMBI+) <.jpmembiplus> . On Tuesday, the spread was its widest in more than a year.

This index has fallen about 6 percent in June and is down more than 10.7 percent this year, after gains of more than 18 percent in 2012.

SLOWER EMERGING MARKET GROWTH

Emerging markets are experiencing a slowdown in demand for exports because of the weakness of the world's major economies. China's downturn has had a severe impact on many developing economies.

"China is likely to be far less effective as an engine for global recovery than in previous episodes such as 2009," said Bhanu Baweja, an investment strategist at UBS in London.

J.P. Morgan, in its June 28 research note, has reduced its growth forecast for emerging markets as a group in 2013 to 4.6 percent from its previous estimate in March of 5.1 percent. The U.S. investment bank has also lowered emerging market growth in 2014 to 5.1 percent from its initial forecast of 5.4 percent.

Still. those growth numbers are way above estimates in developed markets, which are forecast to grow just 1 percent this year and 1.8 percent in 2014, J.P. Morgan data show.

VALUE IN BONDS

Brazilian government bond yields maturing in 2021 have risen by 245 basis points since May, while Mexican bond yields have increased by 144 basis points, according to Morgan Stanley. The firm's latest emerging market bond models suggest those markets are now undervalued.

"The selloff in Mexico is not justified," said Nicolas Jaquier, emerging market debt economist at Standard Life Investments in London, which manages assets of $272.6 billion.

"Growth in Mexico has come down a little bit and it's going through a soft patch, but that is good for bond investors because that means the central bank could cut rates again this year if growth continues to soften."

Standish Asset Management, a $170 billion fixed-income investment firm in Boston, has bought local Mexican and Brazilian bonds as yields have fallen since the May selloff. The average yield on emerging market local bonds is about 6.2 percent, Standish said, or about 100 basis points higher before the selloff in May.

"Many investors are comfortable with the currency volatility attached to these local bonds, and the expectation is that in the medium term, emerging market currencies will appreciate," said Alexander Kozhemiakin, managing director and emerging markets debt team leader at Standish.

Near-term risks in emerging market currencies have declined, since many of the aggressive bets in favor of these assets have been reduced. For instance, net longs - bets a currency will rise - in the Mexican peso, the most liquid emerging market currency, tumbled to around $812 million, the latest data from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission show. That is down sharply from roughly $6 billion in April.

Long positions in the Brazilian real and Chilean peso have also substantially fallen, according to Morgan Stanley data.

There is still a risk of further outflows from the local currency debt sector, fund managers say. Morgan Stanley data shows emerging market institutional investors are still overweight on local debt relative to their benchmark, suggesting more room to pare positions should markets remain scary.

"When you see that exposure indicator going down, that's a sign that the market is starting to clear their positions and therefore there would be a sense of calm," said Rashique Rahman, global head of emerging market strategy at Morgan Stanley in New York.

Analysts at Bank of America/Merrill Lynch said in a Thursday note that institutions they surveyed are raising cash in expectation of outflows, as investors respond to the volatility. Once that is alleviated, the case for long-term bets becomes clearer, fund managers said.

(Editing by David Gaffen, Martin Howell and Douglas Royalty)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/analysis-selloff-dip-toes-back-emerging-markets-193933467.html

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Expert Patients Programme Community Interest Company: Fundraiser

?25,000 to ?30,000, pro rata

London, based Waterloo, nationwide responsibility and travel

15 hours a week

?

This is your opportunity to maximise the generation of funds as you support the development and implementation of our fundraising strategy. This will involve building and managing relationships with existing sources while researching, identifying and developing new sources.

We revolutionise the lives of people with long-term health conditions through self-management education that provides the tools, techniques and confidence for them to manage their condition better day-to-day.

?

You responsibilities will include preparing grant-funding bids and tenders; enhancing core generic trust proposals; reviewing and reporting on strengths and weaknesses; and ensuring compliance. Also, you will be raising our profile as well as recruiting, inducting and managing volunteers.

?

With the experience to plan, develop and action effective fundraising strategies, you must be a team-player with a confident, diligent, flexible and positive approach. Able to write concise and persuasive prose, you?ll be adept with a computer, thorough at record-keeping and able to travel widely.

For more background information, please visit www.expertpatients.co.uk

To apply, please email CV and covering letter to

careers.hr@eppcic.co.uk

(We thank all applicants but, as our work must be focused as much as possible on community work, we will only respond to people called for interview.)

Source: http://jobs.thirdsector.co.uk/job/356779/fundraiser/?TrackID=2

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