ASUS Transformer Book T100 Now Shipping with HDD Keyboard Dock
| ASUS today announced that the Transformer |
NVDIA GeForce GTX 750 Ti Review and Benchmarks is here on Tech of Tomorrow today. The NVIDIA GeForce GTX 750Ti makes its debut on February 18th 2014, that’s right my friends another day brings us yet another competitor for the mid –range king card and NVIDIA seems to have come up with a pretty damn good solution. Better power management, better utilization of their cores and low power consumption are all things that push NVIDIA’s latest chipset into new territory and with competitive pricing this will be an interesting market to watch.
Maxwell brings some very interesting things to the table, things that will help NVDIA move forward with not only a new chipset, but we will also see an entire card refresh as the year unfolds, which is great news for enthusiasts. The first card featuring Maxwell is the all-new GeForce GTX 750 Ti that will be hitting the shelves with a price point of $149.99 for the 2GB version and $139.99 for the 1GB version. There is also a standard GTX 750 launching as well, but our review sample is the 2GB version of the GeForce GTX 750 Ti and we will cover the GTX 750 a bit later.
Geared for 1080p gaming with the setting at their normal to high parameters was NVIDIA’s goal here as they are trying to find the right blend of performance and still maintain a sweet price point with the GTX 750Ti. Boost 2.0 technology ships with the 750 Ti and this is where your overclocking is achieved. Boost tech kicks in and speeds up your cards clocks when it see that your card has the available power to do so as well as push the card if the temperatures are maintained low enough to allow it to function. ShadowPlay allows NVIDIA users to seamlessly capture their gaming moments when using a supported NVIDIA video card, and I am sure we will see a lot of that action on the web after this launch, but let’s talk more about Maxwell and the GTX 750 Ti.