Nvidia promises to completely eliminate input lag from the HDR gaming with its G-SYNC HDR technology which allows for synchronized refresh rates between the monitor and the graphics card, in turn, eliminating screen tearing and stuttering.
The actual information regarding the DCI-P3 color gamut is unknown, although it is definitely going to cover over 90% of the color space.
The quantum-dot technology of the Acer Predator XB272-HDR will provide its users with the wider color gamut and enhanced color palette.
One of such games is the Mass Effect: Andromeda which will support the HDR10 and should be released sometime before the Acer Predator XB272-HDR. Moreover, we’ll also have to wait for more HDR ready video games to be released as well. The Acer Predator XB272-HDR will feature the 4K resolution on a 27-inch screen which will along the HDR10 compatibility make video games overflow with rich details resulting in a flawless picture quality.Įven the most powerful graphics cards today, such as the Nvidia GTX 1080 Ti, are only strong enough to push the 4K resolution just a bit over 60Hz, so in order to actually see this monitor in 144Hz action, we’ll have to wait for new graphics cards to be released. Until then, we’ll share the jaw-dropping specifications we know so far. Both of these 144Hz 4K gaming monitors will be released sometime in the third quarter of 2018. Nvidia teamed up with AU Optronics in order to create the very first 144Hz monitors with 4K resolution.įurthermore, both the Acer XB272-HDR and the ASUS PG27UQ will feature the Nvidia G-SYNC technology which will work with HDR (High Dynamic Range).
In February, Pratilipi raised Series A funding of $4.3 million led by Omidyar Network.Update: The Acer Predator XB272-HDR and the rest of the 4K 144Hz gaming monitors should be released by the end of April, according to NVIDIA.ĭefinitely, the most exciting gaming monitors announced at the CES 2017 were the Acer Predator XB272-HDR and the ASUS ROG Swift PG27UQ.
Its Android app has been downloaded more than one million times. Pratilipi claims it has 1.2 million readers and 26,000+ writers on its platform, and more than 9.5 million content pieces are read every month on mobile and desktop.
On the Pratilipi platform, users can read, write, and download free stories, books, poems, articles, magazines, and ebooks across eight Indian languages - Hindi, Bengali, Malayalam, Tamil, Telugu, Kannada, Marathi, and Gujarati. Pratilipiīengaluru-based self-publishing startup Pratilipi is giving voice to “Bhasha literature” or India’s non-English writing. Unlike other apps, Juggernaut fosters reader-writer interactions, and mandates all contracted authors to spend time responding to reader queries on its platform. Besides Juggernaut’s own catalogue, the app also stocks titles from HarperCollins India and Duckbill. Juggernaut hopes to bring about a “cell phone novel” culture - that has reportedly taken over Japan - in India, which boasts over 300 million smartphone users. The Delhi-based startup, funded by UIDAI Chairman Nandan Nilekani among others, has popularised serialised fiction and the pay-per-story format among Indian readers. In two years, it has notched up over a million downloads on Play Store. Juggernaut has a unique proposition: it is a mobile-first publishing platform besides being a reading app.