Friday, 11 May 2012

Gigabyte P2532N


Pros: Impressive audio quality; Bright and sharp full HD display; Stylish understated design; Pretty good gaming performance for price
Cons: Awkward touchpad placement; Observable flex on the deck; No Blu-ray drive
The Verdict: A 15-inch entertainment notebook, the Gigabyte P2532N boasts a 1080p display, robust graphics, and 5.1 audio for a reasonable price. 


3DMark Vantage

Tests graphics capabilities on high-end systems by stressing the graphics card and CPU.

Score (Higher is Better)
next test
Gigabyte P2532
Asus G53SW-A1
Dell XPS 15 (Sandy Bridge)
Category Average
4879
8846
4384
4461
 0
 1700
 3400
 5100
 6800
 8500
 10200

Performance

With a 2-GHz quad-core Intel Core i7-2630QM processor and 8GB of RAM, the Gigabyte P2532N powered through PCMark Vantage, a benchmark that measures overall performance, to post a score of 8,780. That's an impressive 2,947 points above the current category average of 5,833. The P2532N also bested the ASUS G53SW-A1 (8,470) and the Dell XPS 15 L502X (8,548), both of which have a 2.6-GHz quad-core Intel Core i7-2630QM CPU. During real-world use, we simultaneously opened 11 tabs on Google Chrome, streamed a movie on Netflix, and chatted on Skype, and the Gigabyte P2532N never faltered or showed any signs of lag.
The 750GB hard drive (spinning at 7,200 rpm) booted Windows 7 Home Premium in exactly 1 minute, four seconds faster than average. This beats out the ASUS G53SW-A1, which took 1 minute and 8 seconds, but the notebook underperforms slightly compared to the Dell XPS 15 L502X's 53-second boot time.
On our file transfer tests, the P2532N duplicated 5GB of mixed-media files in 2 minutes and 33 seconds for a rate of 33.3 MBps. This is fairly decent considering the category average of 3:12 (data 
rate of 26.7 MBps), and it's exactly the same file transfer rate as posted by the Dell XPS 15. However, the ASUS G53SW managed the task in 2:10.
Finally, we set the Gigabyte P2532N to perform a complex VLOOKUP operation on 20,000 rows on the OpenOffice software; it accomplished this in a fairly quick amount of time (5 minutes and 14 seconds), compared to the category average of 7:14.

Ivy Bridge

Intel@22nm Technology

Sillicon Innov Ftr1 22nm Frm Site 3:1

INTRODUCING THE WORLD'S FIRST 3-D TRANSISTOR READY FOR HIGH-VOLUME MANUFACTURING

3-D, 22nm: New Technology Delivers An Unprecedented Combination of Performance and Power Efficiency

Intel introduces a fundamentally different technology for future microprocessor families: 3-D transistors manufactured at 22nm. These new transistors enable Intel to continue to relentlessly pursue Moore's Law and to ensure that the pace of technology advancement consumers expect can continue for years to come.
Until now, transistors, the core of microprocessors, were 2-D (planar) devices. Intel's 3-D Tri-Gate transistor, and the ability to manufacture it in high volume, mark a dramatic change in the fundamental structure of the computer chip. Learn more about the history of transistors.
This also means Intel can continue to lead in powering products, from the world's fastest supercomputers to very small mobile handhelds.
Intel HD 4000 is the only awesome feature.....
Note:- Ivy Bridge is less on speed as compare to sandy bridge.....
More Info....
On GOOGLE :D