OWC ThunderBlade X8: Fastest External SSDs Money Can Buy – Videoguys

OWC ThunderBlade X8: Fastest External SSDs Money Can Buy – Videoguys

Explore the latest ThunderBlade X8 by Other World Computing (OWC) – a powerhouse external SSD designed for video editors and photographers. With read speeds of up to 2949MB/s and write speeds of 2826 MB/s, it outpaces its predecessor, offering increased capacity and efficiency. Discover the sleek design, fanless operation, and capacities ranging from 8TB to 32TB. OWC sets a new standard for external drive capabilities, empowering creative professionals with rock-solid data protection. Learn about pricing and availability for this cutting-edge storage solution.

Blog Summary: Other World Computing (OWC) has unveiled the ThunderBlade X8, a lightning-fast Thunderbolt shuttle and edit RAID SSD designed for professionals seeking high-speed data transfer. Boasting read speeds of up to 2949MB/s and write speeds of 2826 MB/s, it surpasses its predecessor, providing over 16% higher performance in RAID 4 and 5 configurations with Apple Silicon computers.

Equipped with dual Thunderbolt 3 ports, the ThunderBlade X8 allows easy daisy-chaining of up to five additional Thunderbolt devices. Its sleek, rugged design features a durable aluminum enclosure, and its fanless, heat-dissipating design ensures quiet operation. The integrated fin-designed cooling system makes it suitable for on-the-go use, complemented by a ballistic hard-shell case for transportation.

Available in 8TB, 16TB, and 32TB capacities, the top model accommodates up to eight 4TB 2242 NVMe M.2 drives. While the 32TB capacity is sufficient for most users, professionals dealing with massive data may find it limiting. OWC Founder and CEO Larry O’Connor states that the ThunderBlade X8 builds upon its predecessor’s legacy, offering enhanced performance, total usable storage, and ruggedness.

Read the full article by Wayne Williams for TechRadar HERE


Weekly News for Designers № 727 – Fixing CLS Problems, CSS One-Line Upgrades, Future Roles for Designers

Happy Birthday, Macintosh
Forty years ago, Apple introduced the world to the Macintosh computer.
Weekly News for Designers № 727 – Fixing CLS Problems, CSS One-Line Upgrades, Future Roles for Designers

Free Instagram Story Templates
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12 Modern CSS One-Line Upgrades
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The Diagram that Shows the Value of Great UX
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Fading Content Using Transparent Gradients in CSS
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Five Future Roles for Designers
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CSS Blurry Shimmer Effect
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The CSS Snippets Every Developer Should Know
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School of Engineering fourth quarter 2024 awards

School of Engineering fourth quarter 2024 awards

Faculty and researchers across MIT’s School of Engineering receive many awards in recognition of their scholarship, service, and overall excellence. The School of Engineering periodically recognizes their achievements by highlighting the honors, prizes, and medals won by faculty and research scientists working in our academic departments, labs, and centers.

Susan Solomon wins VinFuture Award for Female Innovators

Susan Solomon wins VinFuture Award for Female Innovators

Lee and Geraldine Martin Professor of Environmental Studies Susan Solomon has been awarded the 2023 VinFuture Award for Female Innovators. Solomon was picked out of almost 1,400 international nominations across four categories for “The discovery of the ozone depletion mechanism in Antarctica, contributing to the establishment of the Montreal Protocol.” The award, which comes with a $500,000 prize, highlights outstanding female researchers and innovators that can serve as role models for aspiring scientists.

“I’m tremendously humbled by that, and I’ll do my best to live up to it,” says Solomon, who attended the ceremony in Hanoi, Vietnam, on Dec. 20.

The VinFuture Awards are given annually to “honor scientific research and breakthrough technological innovations that can make a significant difference” according to their site. In addition to Female Innovators, the award has two other special categories, Innovators from Developing Countries and Innovators with Outstanding Achievements in Emerging Fields, as well as their overall grand prize. The awards have been given out by the Vietnam-based VinFuture Foundation since 2021.

“Countries all around the world are part of scientific progress and innovation, and that a developing country is honoring that is really very lovely,” says Solomon, whose career as an atmospheric chemist has brought her onto the international stage and has shown her firsthand how important developing countries are in crafting global policy.

In 1986 Solomon led an expedition of 16 scientists to Antarctica to measure the degradation of the ozone layer; she was the only woman on the team. She and her collaborators were able to figure out the atmospheric chemistry of chlorofluorocarbons and other similar chemicals that are now known as ozone-depleting substances. This work became foundational to the creation of the Montreal Protocol, an international agreement that banned damaging chemicals and has allowed the ozone to recover.

Solomon joined the MIT faculty in 2012 and holds joint appointments in the departments of Chemistry and Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences. The success of the Montreal Protocol demonstrates the ability for international cooperation to enact effective environmental agreements; Solomon sees it as a blueprint for crafting further policy when it comes to addressing global climate change.

“Women can do anything, even help save the ozone layer and solve other environmental problems,” she says. “Today’s problem of climate change is for all of us to be involved in solving.”

OpenAI releases new models and lowers API pricing

OpenAI has announced several updates that will benefit developers using its AI services, including new embedding models, a lower price for GPT-3.5 Turbo, an updated GPT-4 Turbo preview, and more robust content moderation capabilities. The San Francisco-based AI lab said its new text-embedding-3-small and text-embedding-3-large models…

Blizzard’s Survival Game Reportedly Canceled Over Engine Issues After 6 Years Of Development

Blizzard’s Survival Game Reportedly Canceled Over Engine Issues After 6 Years Of Development

Blizzard Entertainment’s survival game, which it informally announced in 2022, was reportedly canceled over engine issues during its six years of development, according to a new Bloomberg report. This report follows yesterday’s news that Microsoft is laying off 1,900 employees across its Xbox, Activision Blizzard, and ZeniMax divisions. Alongside this news, Blizzard president Mike Ybarra also announced he was departing from the company, and we learned the aforementioned survival game had been canceled. 

However, Blizzard didn’t really touch on why the game it had just announced exactly two years prior was canceled. Bloomberg’s new report details development struggles around the game’s engine, which was prototyped using Epic Games’ Unreal Engine before “Blizzard executives decided to switch, in part, because it wouldn’t support their ambitions for vast maps supporting up to 100 players at once.”

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The team behind this game, which Bloomberg says was called Odyssey, switched to Synapse, an in-house engine Blizzard originally developed for mobile games and “envisioned as something that would be shared across many of its projects.” 

This reportedly led to significant problems in Odyssey’s development. When Microsoft acquired Activision Blizzard last year for a colossal $69 billion, the team had apparently hoped their new owners would allow it to switch back to Unreal Engine. However, that switch didn’t happen. 

Bloomberg notes that despite engine struggles, the game’s development made progress, with people who played early versions of it enjoying it, remarking on its potential in a landscape where survival games are as popular as they are. Just this week, Early Access ‘Pokémon With Guns” survival game Palworld crossed 8 million copies sold on Steam in just six days, and those numbers don’t include players playing through Xbox and PC Game Pass. 

Blizzard was reportedly looking to expand the Odyssey team in an effort to target a 2026 release year for the survival game, but Bloomberg reports “even that seemed overly optimistic to some developers.” And now, as we officially know, development has concluded and the once exciting Blizzard game canceled. 

Be sure to read the full Bloomberg report for even more details. 

For more, read about Microsoft’s heartbreaking layoffs from yesterday, which have left 1,900 people jobless. At just 26 days into 2024, there have been more than 5,500 layoffs, which is more than half of the total layoffs of 2023. 

[Source: Bloomberg]


How do you feel about Blizzard canceling this survival game? Let us know in the comments below!