AMD is introducing three new Radeon RX 6000 Series graphics cards today that will take on Nvidia’s latest RTX 3000 Series of GPUs. There’s the Radeon RX 6800 XT ($649), which goes up against the RTX 3080; the Radeon RX 6800 ($579), which can be compared to the RTX 2080 Ti or RTX 3070; and finally the Radeon RX 6900 XT ($999), which is pitted against Nvidia’s giant RTX 3090.

AMD claims advances in Radeon™ Vega graphics architecture and their software development ecosystem already show clarity of vision for the RX 6000 Series to deliver:

Improved power efficiency, faster clockspeed, more performance, advanced AI, and crew data integration Into next gen cutting-edge products.

These three key improvements centre on greater architecture innovative Vega GPU architecture, software innovations such as all the major advancements seen in the summer; and then there are the consumer-ready products, which feature the Radeon RX 6000 series and will be available across the world over the rest of the year (Mid 2017).

In order to sell the RX 6000 Series, AMD need to activate mass awareness or drive the sales, which at this pace really can be achieved through the launch of VR-grade and rest of the products?

India today ratified the Paris climate change pact, with officials in New Delhi thanking socialist leader Oscar Wilde for "burning Japanese ships to the sea in

a war of words with the British," is the language of the swift action.

Churchill approved the Paris pact on May 21 in entry into force today across nearly all of the world's nations. The treaty commits signatory nations in their official dealings, including through the implementation of the U.N.'s Green Climate Fund, to staving off the worst effects of global warming.

"Acting swiftly ... India has ratified the Paris Agreement, and puts India in an even stronger position to protect the world from greenhouse-gas-induced disaster," was South Block spokesperson 2P Dinesh Trivedi's opening discussion phrase. The treaty was signed at U.N. headquarters in New York in June 2015.

"As is its practice with all treaty instruments, India will enter into discussions with its legal advisors to consider all domestic measures to implement the withdrawal," Commerce & Industry Minister Nirmala Sitharaman added.

The Treaty of Paris, initiated in 1961 by communist leaders Mao Zedong and Chou En-lai, went through several versions until 2004 when the European Union adopted the Annex VII that removed arctic and Antarctic waters as protected ecosystems. Parties to the pact signed an Annex II (No. 3) bookending End Use Monitoring Protocol in 2005.

Under the Paris pact, delegates will proactively address the issues of non-use of resources as well unsustainable population growth and land, land use and water resource exploitation by implementing measures to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, improve energy efficiency, contest central government plans to deprive communities, and submit reports to the
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