Leftover Chinese Edition <div><br /> </div> <h2>Top Story</h2> <div> <ul> <li>[url=https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/cpus/amd-brings-back-ryzen-7-5800x3d-launches-ryzen-7-7700x3d-to-combat-rising-component-prices-eight-core-x3d-cpus-arrive-under-usd350-for-am4-or-am5-ddr4-or-ddr5]AMD has announced two new old CPUs that are on the one hand somewhat overpriced and underwhelming and on the other hand eagerly awaited by hobbyists.[/url]&nbsp; (Tom's Hardware)<br /> <br /> The first is the Ryzen 5800X3D priced at $349.&nbsp; This first appeared in 2022 priced at $449, but was taken off the market in 2024 because it competed a little too well with the newer 7800X3D.<br /> <br /> The second is the Ryzen 7700X3D, priced at $329.&nbsp; This is a 7800X3D, just 10% slower.<br /> <br /> If you happen to have an unused AM4 motherboard and 64GB of DDR4 RAM sitting idle, the 5800X3D may be just what you need.&nbsp; Otherwise you're probably be better off with the newer, faster 7700X3D.<br /> <br /> <br /> </li> <li>[url=https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/cpus/amd-confirms-am5-support-through-2029-zen-4-and-5-platform-will-likely-see-two-more-generations-at-least]AMD has also updated its roadmap to confirm that the AM5 platform (the current generation) will remain current through at least 2029.[/url]&nbsp; (Tom's Hardware)<br /> <br /> The previous AM4 platform - home to the once and future 5800X3D - was introduced in 2016, and is still viable today.</li> </ul> <div><br /> </div></div> <div><br /> </div> <h2>Tech News</h2> <div> <ul> <li>[url=https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/gpus/amds-formerly-china-exclusive-radeon-rx-9070-gre-goes-global-for-usd549-on-june-2-rdna-4-gpu-will-bridge-the-gap-between-rx-9060-xt-and-rx-9070]AMD also announced global availability of its 9070 GRE, previously a China-only edition.[/url]&nbsp; (Tom's Hardware)<br /> <br /> This is essentially 75% of the company's flagship graphics card, the 9070 XT, trimmed from 64 cores and 16GB of RAM to 48 cores and 12GB of RAM.<br /> <br /> The only problem is the MSRP was reduced from $599 to $549, which makes it rather the opposite of a good deal.<br /> <br /> <br /> </li> <li>[url=https://www.tomshardware.com/laptops/nvidia-unveils-rtx-spark-superchip-at-computex-2026-new-platform-promises-to-turn-windows-into-an-agentic-ai-os-with-arm-cpu-blackwell-gpu-and-128gb-unified-memory]Nvidia is announcing - oh, wait, it just went official - its RTX Spark laptop chip.[/url]&nbsp; (Tom's Hardware)<br /> <br /> This offers up to 20 Arm CPU cores, coupled with up to 128GB of RAM and an up to RTX 5070-class integrated GPU.<br /> <br /> This is the same chip used in Nvidia's DGX Spark AI desktop, which retails for $4699, so don't expect the laptop version to be cheap.<br /> <br /> <br /> </li> <li>[url=https://liliputing.com/the-new-xps-13-is-dells-answer-to-the-macbook-air-with-a-699-starting-price/]Speaking of cheap laptops, Dell's new XPS 13 starts at $699 ($599 for students).[/url]&nbsp; (Liliputing)<br /> <br /> It uses Intel's low-end Wildcat Lake CPU, but one of the better ones with actually quite acceptable performance.&nbsp; And unlike many competing models it has a screen on par with Apple's MacBook Neo, a 2560x1600 IPS panel covering 100% of DCI-P3 colour and a variable refresh rate from 30 to 120Hz, at a healthy 500 nits brightness.<br /> <br /> Basic model has 8GB of RAM (soldered) and 512GB of SSD.&nbsp; I/O consists of two USB-C ports and...&nbsp; That's it, really.&nbsp; Doesn't have the Four Essential Keys either.<br /> <br /> <br /> </li> <li>[url=https://www.notebookcheck.net/Lenovo-releases-new-14-inch-ThinkPad-internationally-with-64-GB-RAM-120-Hz-VRR-OLED-and-AMD-processors.1311688.0.html]What does have the Four Essential Keys is Lenovo's new Thinkpad T14 Gen 7.[/url]&nbsp; (Notebook Check)<br /> <br /> It comes with a 6 or 8 core Ryzen processor with Radeon 840M or 860M graphics respectively - good if not great - the aforementioned keys which while not in my preferred layout are all present and unshared, and expandable memory and storage.<br /> <br /> And a 2880x1800 OLED display...&nbsp; With 500 nits brightness and a variable refresh rate from 30 to 120Hz.<br /> <br /> (A word of caution with these OLED panels: They look amazing but burn-in is real.)<br /> <br /> <br /> </li> <li>[url=https://virtualosmuseum.org/]Download <span style="font-style: italic;">all </span>the computers.[/url]&nbsp; (Virtual OS Museum)<br /> <br /> Ever wanted to see what the old days of computing were like - as early as 1948?<br /> <br /> Want to play with that Apple II or BBC Micro your parents couldn't afford?<br /> <br /> Or just want to play with a Lisp or Smalltalk workstation?<br /> <br /> It's all here. 179GB of it.<br /> <br /> <br /> </li> <li>[url=https://www.theregister.com/software/2026/05/30/wikipedia-editors-plot-strike-and-banner-sabotage-after-wikimedia-layoffs/5248491]Wikipedia editors are threatening a global strike where they'll stop airbrushing history.[/url]&nbsp; (The Register)<br /> <br /> Oh no.</li> </ul> <div><br /> </div></div> <div><br /> </div> <h2>Tech News</h2> <div>[ytlite=C9DISbQKTTM]<br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <span style="font-style: italic;">Disclaimer: Not to worry, I have central heating.</span></div>