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The most popular BitTorrent client, uTorrent has moved onto version 2.0, albeit in beta form for the time being, and promises tons of updates and changes.
– 2009-08-04: Version 2.0 Beta (build 16081)
- Change: disable toolbar offers for Wine installs
- Feature: New Setup guide & Speedtest.
- Change: uninstaller is added to all user profiles
- Fix: crash when assigning new label to torrents from RSS
- Change: Incomplete downloads sort after completed downloads if sorting by “Completed On”
- Feature: Add Moldova to peer flags
- Change: Added upnp host cache to speed up upnp nat resolution on misbehaving routers
- Fix: maintain category list selection on update for some edge cases
- Change: if selected, install start menu and desktop shortcuts to all users instead of only current user
- Feature: Grayscale disabled toolbar buttons
[More]>>


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OCZ has announced the launch of their Colossus solid-state drive (SSD), which will offer an impressive 1TB of storage space.
The drive will be aimed at consumers needing an external drive and will be specifically marketed to gamers, due to its extremely fast speed and high capacity.
ComputerWorld says the drive will use a Indilinx controller and will “come with two or four controllers depending on the capacity, and can be configured for internal RAID 0 for increased performance.”
Each controller is a virtual drive, running off a seperate RAID controller.
The drive has “a maximum sequential read rate of 261MB/sec and a maximum sequential write rate of the same rate.”
“The initial results we have tested show that the Colossus really excels in the small file random reads/writes,” an OCZ spokeswoman said, via CW.
Now however, comes the only catch, the extreme price tag. A standard 1TB 3.5″ HDD costs between $70-120 depending on model and make. The Colossus will run you $2200 USD. Maybe a thing to consider before throwing it in that new rig you have been making.


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According to a new Siliconera report, Sony has patented a new method that would allow the Cell processor of the PlayStation 3 to fully emulate the Emotion Engine, bringing full backwards compatibility for PSX and PS2 games.
The patent was filed in December of last year, and Spencer Yip adds: “Figure 2 from the patent is a schematic drawing of how the system works. Figure 3A is a drawing of the PlayStation 2’s chipset. Figure 3B is the emotion engine. Figure 4 is where the whole story gets interesting!”It’s ‘an example of a host system based on a cell processor that may be configured to emulate the target system.’ The target is figure 3B, the Emotion Engine.” (Source and pictures at the end of the article)
Although the patent may end up being nothing, but it could also possibly mean that a new hardware model may include the backwards compatibility, possibly even the oft rumored PS3 Slim.
We will certainly keep you updated.
Siliconera report with original pics: