A blind test with over 1,000 gamers and six different titles shows that the majority preferred DLSS 4.5's image quality over FSR or even native rendering.
The Dell Ultrasharp 52 Thunderbolt Hub Monitor is a uniquely gigantic display aimed at multitaskers who work across multiple ...
HDMI ports do more than connect cables. From audio routing to wireless displays, lesser-known HDMI gadgets can quietly expand ...
Microsoft is nearing the rollout of a network speed test that's built right into Windows. You'll be able to see if your ...
Windows 11 is adding a built-in speed test you can launch from the taskbar area, letting you quickly check Ethernet, Wi-Fi, or cellular performance and troubleshoot slow connections without installing ...
XDA Developers on MSN
Lenovo's $3,500 AI mini PC wasn't built for gaming, but it runs Cyberpunk 2077 at 1440p
I didn't really know how well it would perform, but it went surprisingly well.
PCMag UK on MSN
With Nvidia's GB10 Superchip, I’m Running Serious AI Models in My Living Room. You Can, Too
I’m a traditional software engineer. Join me for the first in a series of articles chronicling my hands-on journey into AI ...
I've already checked out the hardware of the CHUWI CoreBook Air Plus 16 laptop in the first part of the review, so today, ...
DLSS 4.5 won every single game against AMD's FSR 4, capturing 48% of votes versus just 15%. Even beat native rendering in most cases across 6,747 participant votes.
Whether it'll all make Win 11 feel less klunky is another matter!
A new blind PC gaming test shows 48% of gamers prefer Nvidia DLSS 4.5 over AMD FSR and native rendering — a major win for AI upscaling.
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