Dell’s new high-end Alienware Area 51 laptops sport a color-shifting teal exterior with lots of RGB, and a glass window on the bottom. A new Area 51 desktop also supports top-end specs, more standard components, and an aim at simplifying future upgrades.
As was widely anticipated, NVIDIA kicked off this year’s Consumer Electronics Show (CES) with a new range of GPUs, having now introduced its GeForce RTX 50 series in both desktop and mobile form. That also means a flurry of related announcements from various hardware partners. Count Acer among them, which among other things, has unveiled some
You can pretty much count on Alienware to drop new products en masse at almost every Consumer Electronics Show (CES) each year. For 2025’s showcase, the gaming hardware company announced its new Area-51 and Aurora PCs with Intel Core Ultra 9 CPUs and RTX 5090 graphics, Area-51 laptops rocking a new design language and 280W (combined) to cater
NVIDIA has a history of making some small, power-efficient development hardware for AI developers, data scientists, and students. But get ready for something much bigger than past efforts. At CES 2025 during tonight’s keynote, NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang announced a huge expansion to the company’s previous DIGITS DevBox efforts. Dubbed Project
To say that NVIDIA is quite an AI powerhouse is a gargantuan understatement. Most enthusiasts know the company for its GeForce graphics cards, but machine learning has driven NVIDIA’s profits for many consecutive quarters at this point. The company’s Tensor cores and GPU architecture drives all kinds of artificial intelligence initiatives.
It was back in September of 2022 that NVIDIA first revealed the GeForce RTX 4000 series. The GeForce RTX 4090 has been the reigning GPU performance champ, essentially unchallenged, ever since then. It just abdicated the throne to its successor, though: the GeForce RTX 5090 is here, bringing with it the consumer version of the Blackwell GPU