AMD’s new RDNA 3 GPUs will compete with Nvidia for mid-range gaming laptops

AMD (sort of weirdly) says the laptop GPUs can beat a desktop RTX 3060.

AMD is announcing at CES several RDNA 3-based GPUs for laptops.

Enlarge / AMD is announcing at CES several RDNA 3-based GPUs for laptops. (credit: AMD)

AMD announced at CES this week several new laptop GPU models to go along with updates to the company's desktop and laptop CPU lineups. Although not as wide-ranging as Nvidia's laptop GPU announcements earlier in the week, all of these graphics chips target low-end-to-mid-range gaming laptops and mobile workstations, which data suggests is what most people are buying when they shop for those kinds of PCs.

AMD announced seven GPUs, four of which are new RDNA 3-based models in the mid-range 7600 and 7700 series (the other three are spec tweaks for existing low-end RDNA 2 laptop GPUs). The 7600 and 7700 series support the same core features of other RDNA 3 GPUs, including improved ray-tracing performance and hardware-accelerated encoding and decoding of the AV1 video codec. All four GPUs will be available in laptops beginning in February.

There are two new GPUs here, available in four configurations. One GPU has 32 of AMD's compute units (CUs), 2,048 shaders, and an 18Gbps memory speed. The second GPU drops to 28 CUs, 1,792 shaders, and a 16Gbps memory speed. Both GPUs share an 8GB pool of GDDR6 memory, a 128-bit memory interface, and 32MB of AMD's Infinity Cache.

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After $414M fine, Meta tries to avoid seeking user consent for personalized ads

Privacy activists explain why asking for consent may be Meta’s only option.

After $414M fine, Meta tries to avoid seeking user consent for personalized ads

Enlarge (credit: FRANCESCO ZERILLI/ZERILLIMEDIA/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY | Science Photo Library)

For four years, Meta has been battling European Union regulators over how its apps, Facebook and Instagram, collect user data to personalize ads. The key question for regulators was whether Meta's so-called contract legal basis—which lumps the user consent agreement into its apps’ terms of services—forced its users to choose between consenting to data collection or losing all access to the social platforms.

Yesterday, the EU’s lead privacy watchdog, the Irish Data Protection Commission (DPC), finally reached two decisions, deciding that Meta had illegally forced consent from both Facebook and Instagram users. Now, Meta must pay a $414 million fine and update its apps over the next three months to come into compliance with the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).

Ars could not immediately reach DPC for comment.

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Lenovo’s Yoga Book 9i is an unprecedented laptop for people who hate foldables

A laptop made of displays is a cheaper, weird alternative to foldable PCs.

Lenovo Yoga Book 9i with wireless keyboard

Enlarge / Lenovo's Yoga Book 9i 2-in-1 laptop on its included kickstand. (credit: Scharon Harding)

Like it or not, companies are set on making foldable PCs a thing. Asus' Zenbook 17 Fold OLED turned out to be one of 2022's most adventurous laptops, and Lenovo is planning its second foldable, the 16-inch ThinkPad X1 Fold for this spring. Assuming an operating system and apps that play well with the form factor, foldables excite multitaskers, workers, and creatives who can benefit from larger, yet still portable, display options, especially those who don't need a keyboard and touchpad at all times.

But foldable PCs are very new and have their faults, from durability and compatibility concerns to the crease that can visibly run down the display's middle. Lenovo's Yoga Book 9i announced today at CES in Las Vegas aims to boost pixel count in a way that feels both more and less obvious: replacing the keyboard and touchpad with another laptop-size screen.

It's the dual-screen PC for people who want all the pixels but none of the fold.

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Lenovo ThinkCentre neo 50q Gen 4 is a mini PC with up to a 45-watt Raptor Lake-H processor

The Lenovo ThinkCentre neo 50q Gen 4 is a small desktop computer that measures 7.2″ x 7″ x 1.4″ and has an internal volume of about 1 liter. But it packs a lot of horsepower into that compact package. Lenovo says the new neo 50q mini…

The Lenovo ThinkCentre neo 50q Gen 4 is a small desktop computer that measures 7.2″ x 7″ x 1.4″ and has an internal volume of about 1 liter. But it packs a lot of horsepower into that compact package. Lenovo says the new neo 50q mini PC will be available with up to a 45-watt, 13th-gen Intel […]

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How humans got a new gene that makes our brains larger

Somewhere between chimps and us, an RNA started producing a useful protein.

Image of an animated brain with legs and arms, lifting weights.

Enlarge / Building a bigger brain requires new genes, not a workout. (credit: OsakaWayne Studios)

On the DNA level, there's not a whole lot to distinguish us humans from our closest relatives, chimpanzees and bonobos. At stretches of DNA that line up, human and chimp sequences are well over 90 percent identical. And, for the most part, the DNA does line up at genes; there are very few genes that are either human- or chimp-specific.

That has meant most of the focus on understanding human evolution has been on small changes that can alter the timing or level of gene activity, and thus have an effect that's not proportionate to the number of bases changed.

But that's not to say that newly evolved genes are irrelevant to human evolution. A paper released this week looks into how a class of new genes evolved since our split with our simian relatives. After gaining some insight into how this class evolved, the team behind the work looked at one of these newly evolved genes and found that it plays a key role in building bigger brains.

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MPA & RIAA Deployed 60+ Lobbyists in 2022, Piracy Top of The Agenda

When ensuring the profitability of multi-billion dollar industries, engaging governments at the highest level is the way to get things done. The MPA and RIAA spent almost $8 million on lobbying in 2022, with copyright and piracy at the top of the agenda. Most of the 60+ lobbyists deployed are products of the government/private sector ‘revolving door’.

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

agreementA quote attributed to former UK Prime Minister Winston Churchill suggests that democracy is actually the worst form of government – except for all the others.

It’s a depressing take on the political gold standard, but the full quote adds more nuance. Churchill said that when the people elect ministers and express their needs to them, those in power are shaped, guided, and controlled as servants of the people – not their masters.

People in the multi-billion dollar lobbying industry couldn’t agree more.

Down the Lobbying Rabbit Hole

At this very moment, a GoFundMe campaign launched by the Concept Art Association has the primary goal of raising $270,000. The campaign hopes to pay a lobbyist $187,500 to “educate government officials and policymakers” on a new threat to the creative industries – AI-generated artwork.

At the time of writing, the campaign has raised $203,300, enough to retain a lobbyist for a whole year. The Concept Art Association says that some of the money will go to the Copyright Alliance, which already lobbies the government on behalf of its own members. Some recently expressed concerns that AI-generated works collide with copyright law.

RIAA Lobbying – AI, DMCA, Piracy and Beyond

Other members of the Copyright Alliance include the RIAA, which recently reported several AI-music mixing platforms to the United States Trade Representative, hoping to have them listed as upcoming threats in the USTR’s ‘Notorious Markets’ report.

According to a 2022 lobbying disclosure report, RIAA lobbyists raised AI as an issue with the government. Other issues included the Notorious Markets report, intellectual property ‘theft’ in general, enforcement of IP law, issues related to the DMCA, and proposals related to technical measures, aka content filtering.

riaa-lobbying1

According to OpenSecrets data covering the period January 2022 to end September 2022, the RIAA appeared in 15 government lobbying reports with a total declared lobbying expenditure (covered by its associates) of almost $5.4 million.

The last time the RIAA spent more was back in 2018, and before that, 2011.

riaa-lobbying2

Pfizer (17), Intel (18), and Comcast (18) appeared in more copyright, patent and trademark-related lobbying reports than the RIAA. None could match the 24 reports that pushed PhRMA, the Pharmaceutical Research & Manufacturers of America, to the top of the lobbying list, but in third place overall, the MPA wasn’t too far away.

MPA Lobbying – From Copyright to Z

According to reports compiled by Open Secrets, the MPA lobbied on 22 separate issues between January and the end of September 2022.

Copyright, Patent and Trademark reports featured the MPA ten times, Trade seven times, with Defense, Disaster and Emergency Planning, and Immigration chalking up two each.

Specific lobbying issues included illicit streaming devices, technological protection measures, right to repair, voluntary initiatives regarding content protection, and others related to the internet – domain names, ICANN accountability, WHOIS, and domain abuse.

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The MPA sent lobbyists to the Executive Office of the President, the State Department, Department of Justice, Homeland Security, the House of Representatives, the National Security Council, and the Senate.

The Department of Commerce also makes an appearance in connection with the MPA’s efforts to weave piracy issues into the cybersecurity order.

The Office of the United States Trade Representative appears in several reports, at least in part linked to the MPA’s Special 301 and Notorious Markets submissions. In fact, no other entity in the United States appeared in more USTR-related lobbying reports than the MPA.

mpa-ustr-lobbying

Overall, lobbying expenditure of $2.57m was attributed to members of the MPA, roughly half of the RIAA’s $5.4 million. Both deployed 32 lobbyists each and, as always, the ‘revolving door’ was in full effect.

The Revolving Door

When government regulators, Congressional staff, or individual members of Congress take on new jobs with lobbying firms or private sector organizations (in some cases, those they used to oversee), Open Secrets lists those people as ‘revolvers’. The term also covers ‘reverse revolvers’ – people who leave the private sector to work in government.

Of the 32 lobbyists deployed by the MPA, 71.88% (23) are listed as revolvers. Out of 32 lobbyists deployed by the RIAA, 78.13% (25) received the same label.

RIAA Chairman and CEO Mitch Glazier previously served as Chief Counsel for Intellectual Property to the Judiciary Committee in the U.S. House of Representatives and according to his bio, has “worked on every major copyright bill considered in the past three decades.”

RIAA COO Michele Ballantyne previously worked as Special Assistant to President Bill Clinton while Chief Content Protection Officer Brad Buckles was head of the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF).

MPA Chairman and CEO Charles Rivkin served as Assistant Secretary of State for Economic and Business Affairs. Patrick Kilcur, Executive Vice President of U.S. Government Affairs, served in the United States Senate and was named by The Hill as a “Top Lobbyist” in 2018 and 2019.

Revenues and Tax

The RIAA reported revenues of $28,132,459 in 2020, less than half of the MPA’s $62,895,695. Since 1953 and 1950 respectively, both the RIAA and MPA have enjoyed tax-exempt status.

The MPA still lobbied the government on tax issues in 2022 because, quite frankly, it would be madness not to, especially given overseas competition these days.

It’s a bit of a complex system for ordinary people to grasp but when the movie industry pays less tax, in part thanks to schemes like these, not only do more films get made, but ordinary taxpayers get an opportunity to help fund films, pay to watch them when they come out, and pay sales tax on top.

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

Investors settle Cyberpunk 2077 lawsuit with developer for $1.85 million

CD Projekt Red shareholders will split a fraction of what they claimed to lose.

Cyberpunk 2077 boxes for Xbox One and PS4

Enlarge / Cyberpunk 2077's bug-laden arrival on Xbox One and PlayStation 4 consoles caused headaches for players and losses for shareholders. (credit: Alexander Sayganov/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)

Cyberpunk 2077 developer CD Projekt Red has put a lot of effort into making things right with fans while trying to move past the game's disastrous launch. Now it can likely wipe away another blemish: a class-action lawsuit from its investors.

A federal judge in California's Central District signed off (PDF) on a $1.85 million settlement between CD Projekt Red (CDPR) and a class-action suit led by plaintiff Andrew Trampe and headed by two law firms. Everybody who acquired publicly traded CDPR securities throughout most of 2020 is eligible for settlement funds, roughly $0.49 per eligible share. A consultant for the plaintiffs had previously estimated the maximum potential damages at $11 million.

The original complaint, filed in December 2020, alleged that the Polish developer misled investors and customers about Cyberpunk 2077's readiness on then-current-generation consoles PlayStation 4 and Xbox One. CDPR made "materially false and misleading" statements during the year leading up to release, the complaint alleged, because the company should have known the game "was virtually unplayable on the current-generation Xbox or PlayStation system due to an enormous number of bugs."

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Lenovo Tab Extreme takes on the iPad Pro, complete with Magic Keyboard clone

It’s a laptop-sized tablet with a laptop-sized price tag.

For a few years now, Lenovo has been a reliable builder of high-end Android tablets. Its latest is the "Lenovo Tab Extreme," an extra-large tablet whose 14.5-inch display lands right in the normal laptop range. It also has a laptop-sized price: $1,199. The tablet is meant to compete directly with the iPad Pro, and there's even a floaty "magic keyboard" clone.

The display is a 14.5-inch 3000×1876, 120 Hz OLED with an ambient color sensor. That's big, and the tablet without any accessories weighs 740 g (1.63 lbs). There's pen input via the included "Lenovo Precision Pen 3," a magnetically attachable Bluetooth pen with 4,096 levels of pressure, tilt sensitivity, and all the usual detection.

The big new addition is the new "Lenovo Tab Extreme Keyboard," which attaches to the tablet via magnets and pogo pins, allowing it to be powered by the tablet battery. The whole thing cribs Apple's "Magic Keyboard" design, with the tablet floating above the keyboard. The hinge works a lot like a laptop, allowing you to tilt the screen to a comfortable position or just close the whole thing like a traditional laptop. The keyboard is full-size and has backlit keys and a tiny trackpad at the bottom.

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Over a million could die as China’s COVID wave crashes into huge holiday

With mass Lunar New Year travel later this month, COVID may devastate rural areas.

An elderly female patient with COVID-19 is treated at No. 2 People's Hospital of Fuyang City in China.

Enlarge / An elderly female patient with COVID-19 is treated at No. 2 People's Hospital of Fuyang City in China. (credit: Getty | Sheldon Cooper/SOPA Images/LightRocke)

With China's zero-COVID policy abruptly scrapped last month, the pandemic virus is now ripping through the country's population, and health experts are bracing for a wave of devastation as peak transmission shifts from urban centers to more vulnerable rural communities. The dire situation is expected to be "dramatically enhanced" by mass travel later this month for celebrations of the Lunar New Year on January 22.

Multiple modeling studies have suggested that China could see around 1 million deaths in the coming weeks as the country reopens amid a raging outbreak. Last month, modeling by The Economist estimated that 96 percent of China's 1.4 billion people could catch the virus within the next three months, resulting in 1.5 million deaths. Of those deaths, 90 percent would be among people aged 60 and over.  Another modeling study, partly funded by China's Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, also estimated that 957,600 would die in the coming weeks if the country doesn't swiftly roll out fourth-dose COVID-19 vaccines.

Because China was previously able to keep COVID-19 waves at bay with its zero-tolerance policies, most of the country's immune protection derives from vaccination rather than prior infection or hybrid protection. Around 90 percent of China's population has had two shots of COVID-19 vaccines, but fewer than 60 percent have received a third shot as a booster dose. And even for those who have gotten a third dose, many of those doses were taken months ago, and peak protection has passed. Vaccination coverage among the elderly is particularly worrying. About 30 percent of people aged 60 and over have not gotten a third dose, and for people aged 80 and over, a startling 60 percent have not gotten a third dose.

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Razer Edge handheld game consoles launch Jan 26 for $399 and up

The Razer Edge is a handheld gaming device that consists of an Android tablet with a 6.8 inch display and a detachable controller that fits onto the sides when you need it, but which can be removed when you don’t. First announced last fall, the …

The Razer Edge is a handheld gaming device that consists of an Android tablet with a 6.8 inch display and a detachable controller that fits onto the sides when you need it, but which can be removed when you don’t. First announced last fall, the Razer Edge will go on sale later this month. A […]

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