Bowser released from federal prison but has to pay Nintendo for the rest of his working life-

Canadian Gary Bowser was indicted in 2020 before being jailed last year for his involvement with a Nintendo hacking group called Team-Xecuter. The charges related to his role as a salesperson and promoter of Team-Xecuter’s hardware and hacking tools, and Bowser pleaded guilty to his involvement. The US government requested a sentence of five years but, in probably the only bit of leniency Bowser received, he was jailed for 40 months in February 2022, and has now been granted early release 12 months later. He is currently in a US processing centre, and should be returned to Toronto in the next week.

But things are not going to end there. A large part of the case against Team-Xecutor was the financial damage it caused Nintendo, and the court slapped Bowser with an astronomical restitution amount totalling $14.5 million. 

Bowser recently granted a video interview to journalist Nick Moses (thanks Torrentfreak), though unfortunately the fact he’s sti…

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โคโม่ มีสัญญาณที่ดีจากเกมที่แล้วที่เกือบได้ชัยชนะเหนือ โบโลญญ่า แต่มาโดนคู่แข่งตามตีเสมอในช่วงทดเวลาบาดเจ็บ อย่างไรก็ตาม ทีมของ ฟาเบรกาส กลับมาได้สามคะแนนเต็มที่ไม่น่าเชื่อจากแบร์กาโม่ เกมเซเรียอาที่เลื่อนจากวันจันทร์มาเล่นกันในวันอังคาร

ช่วงเวลาเพียง 12 นาทีหลังจากกลับมาเล่นครึ่งหลัง โคโม่ มาพลิกเกมได้สามประตูติดๆ กันจาก กาเบรียล สเตรเฟ�…

League of Legends MMO producer leaves Riot- ‘It’s the right time to hand over the reigns’-

Riot Games vice president Greg Street, the executive producer of the studio’s in-development League of Legends MMO, is leaving the company. Street said that he wants to spend more time with his family, and that after nine years with Riot, “it’s time for something new.”

Street said in December 2022 that he was stepping away from Twitter following the death of his brother and expected loss of his father. Yesterday he returned, expressing gratitude for the support he’s been shown during his absence and announced that he is stepping down from his position at Riot.

“A combo of personal and professional considerations led me down this path,” Street tweeted. “We experienced some devastating personal losses last year and I want to be closer to my surviving family.

“But while I was on break I got to think a lot about my career. Grief has a way of really bringing into focus what matters the most to you (still don’t recommend it overall though). And after nine years at …

Micron expects GDDR7 will improve ray tracing and rasterization performance by more than 30%, compared to previous gen VRAM-

RAM chip manufacturer Micron has recently been making some interesting claims about its next generation of ultra-fast memory for graphics cards, GDDR7. Compared to what’s currently being used (GDDR6X and GDDR6), Micron says its forthcoming tech is “expected to achieve greater than 30% improvement in frames per second for ray tracing and rasterization workloads.”

That’s a remarkable performance boost, no matter how you look at it, and it’s normally the preserve of the significant architectural changes a new GPU design brings in. However, while it’s certainly true that the data transfer rate and bandwidth of GDDR7 will be at least 30% greater than the fastest GDDR6/6X on offer right now, it’s a different story altogether when it comes to actual games and applications.

Micron supplies all the GDDR6X chips used in Nvidia’s graphics cards and the fastest it offers is rated to 24 GT/s (24 billion transfers per second). It also sells 18 GT/s GDDR6, though Samsung has 20 GT/s GD…

Is PC hardware ‘leak’ culture out of control–

PC hardware leak culture is out of control. So say no lesser luminaries of the PC hardware scene than Gordon Mah Ung of PC World and Steve Burke of Gamer’s Nexus.

“Internet, we need to talk about your addiction to the leak culture,” Gordon begins in a recent Youtube video. And he’s got a point. The pace and frequency of stories, videos and other coverage of rumours concerning upcoming hardware, mainly CPUs and GPUs, from Intel, AMD and Nvidia is surely greater now than ever before.

Ung and Burke cover the impact that leaks can have on these companies, the biggest problem being inaccurate leaks leading to unrealistic expectations. That can mean an actually decent new product can receive a frosty reception simply because it’s not as good as unrealistic and incorrect details in “leaks” leading up to the launch.

One example here is AMD’s Ryzen 3000 not hitting the rumoured 5GHz. That disappointed some enthusiasts, despite the fact that it was a very competitive CPU by …