PC and laptop displays are working toward 480 Hz

AUO and LG had already been linked to 480 Hz, FHD-resolution PC screens.

PC and laptop displays are working toward 480 Hz

Enlarge (credit: Getty)

If you've ever looked at a 360 Hz monitor and thought, "This isn't fast enough," here's something to look forward to. While we've seen monitor prototypes surpass 360 Hz, the highest native refresh rate you'll find on a PC display these days, it seems that AU Optronics (AUO) is working on panels that'll be available with an even snappier 480 Hz refresh rate.

Of course, not many would look at a screen updating with new information 360 times every second as lagging. But for very fast-paced action—like in a competitive game where words and items whizz by in an instant or where a few milliseconds of a delay could be the difference between a win or a loss—more speed may be imperative.

As spotted by TFT Central this week, AUO announced via a YouTube video that it's working on a 24-inch PC monitor panel with a 480 Hz refresh rate and response time that's under 1 ms (the brand didn't get any more specific there). And it's aimed at gamers.

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Report: Apple is testing USB-C iPhone models for 2023

European Union regulation could force Apple to make the switch.

2021's iPhone 13 still uses Apple's proprietary Lightning port.

Enlarge / 2021's iPhone 13 still uses Apple's proprietary Lightning port. (credit: Samuel Axon)

Apple is testing iPhones that use the industry-standard USB-C port, according to a report in Bloomberg citing people with knowledge of the situation.

Since 2012, Apple's smartphones have used the company's proprietary Lightning connector. But more recently, the slightly larger USB-C port has come to dominate consumer electronics, including most of Apple's other products. Consumers, reviewers, and even government regulators have called for Apple to drop Lightning in favor of USB-C in recent years.

This has led Apple to a tough spot, with three possible paths forward, each with some significant downsides.

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AMD’s FSR 2.0 debut, while limited, has upscaled our GPU hopes

Nvidia’s DLSS still wins, but older cards can start doing new tricks.

AMD's artistic interpretation of how FSR works. It's a bit more complicated than this four-box rendering implies—especially when we consider how much better FSR 2.0 is.

Enlarge / AMD's artistic interpretation of how FSR works. It's a bit more complicated than this four-box rendering implies—especially when we consider how much better FSR 2.0 is.

Out of all the battles between graphics card manufacturers, the fight over image upsampling and reconstruction is the most interesting to follow, mostly because more gamers can actually take advantage of the results. This week, that battle has become even hotter, thanks to AMD finally landing a considerable blow.

Despite only working on one game as of press time, AMD's new FidelityFX Super Resolution (FSR) feature finally passes the sniff test that its "1.0" version flunked last year. This week's updated "2.0" version works on a larger number of GPUs in the wild than Nvidia's comparable option, and it lets players get closer to good-enough pixel counts when running on 1440p or 4K panels. But the caveats in play leave us viewing the results as good news for older or mid-range GPUs rather than the solution to the supply issues everyone is facing.

A brief explainer on Nvidia DLSS and AMD FSR

Image upsampling, as delivered by the likes of Nvidia and AMD, can take a game with a smaller pixel resolution and intelligently blow it up to fill popular screen resolutions like 1080p, 1440p, and 4K. If these systems work as advertised, they'll produce something comparable to raw pixels—or sometimes look sharper since they also include an anti-aliasing pass to remove "jaggies" and other visual defects.

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Daily Deals (5-13-2022)

The HP Chromebook x2 11 is a tablet with an 11 inch display, a Qualcomm Snapdragon 7c processor, 8GB of RAM, at least 64GB of storage, a detachable keyboard, and a pressure-sensitive pen included in the box. When the tablet first launched last summer it sold for $599 and up. But today you can pick […]

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The HP Chromebook x2 11 is a tablet with an 11 inch display, a Qualcomm Snapdragon 7c processor, 8GB of RAM, at least 64GB of storage, a detachable keyboard, and a pressure-sensitive pen included in the box.

When the tablet first launched last summer it sold for $599 and up. But today you can pick one up less than half that price: Best Buy is selling the Chromebook x2 11 for $249, which is the lowest price I can recall seeing for a Chrome OS tablet with 8GB of RAM.

Here are some of the day’s best deals.

Chromebooks & Chrome OS tablets

Refurbished Chromebooks

Windows laptops

Downloads & Streaming

Other

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AYN Odin software updates bring support for custom ROMs, phone calls to the handheld game console

The AYN Odin line of Android handheld game consoles made a splash when it launched last year through an Indiegogo crowdfunding campaign thanks to a mix of strong design, decent hardware, and affordable pricing: an entry-level Odin Lite sells for less than $200. Now the makers of the Odin have announced that over 10 thousand […]

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The AYN Odin line of Android handheld game consoles made a splash when it launched last year through an Indiegogo crowdfunding campaign thanks to a mix of strong design, decent hardware, and affordable pricing: an entry-level Odin Lite sells for less than $200.

Now the makers of the Odin have announced that over 10 thousand orders have been placed, although not all units have shipped yet. And the company continues to crank out software updates that bring bug fixes and new features.

For example, the latest software update for the AYN Odin Lite (the entry-level model with a MediaTek Dimensity D900 processor and Android 11 software) bring support for making phone calls over a 4G LTE network, as well as a few other tweaks.

And the AYN Odin Pro (with a Qualcomm Snapdragon 845 processor and Android 10 software) is getting an update within the next week that will make it possible to load custom ROMs on the handheld for a dual-boot experience.

Once the update is installed, users will be able to press the volume up and power buttons at startup to enter a custom recovery that allows you to load another operating system including alternate versions of Android, Linux-based operating systems like Emulec or Batocera, or even Windows.

Those ROMs will be installed on a new user data partition without overwriting the Android software that ships with the AYN Odin Pro.

As a handheld game machine that ships with Android software and the kind of specs you’d find in a 2018 flagship phone, the AYN Odin is a niche device. But it’s received a number of positive reviews since it began shipping earlier this year.

The ability to dual boot an alternate operating system could make it an even more interesting device.

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