For instance, Audi made a huge noise at this year's CES in Las Vegas about using Nvidia's new super fast Tegra 30 processor, but unless you're wowed by 3D graphics, I'm not sure you'll notice
much improvement over last year's infotainment system.
Not exact matches
Diego Rubio's numbers from
last year are
much better, at just
over 0.40 xG / 90 but still have room for
improvement.
Constant
improvements to all versions of the game have made it
much better to play
over the
last year or so, and release of the console versions coincide with several bugfixes, including fixes for crashing issues (of the game, that is - your own crashing issues are probably driver error...), improved wheel and controller support, and subtle tweaks to the gameplay, including backfiring noises in certain cars.
Maybe they'll become a bit slimmer and lighter and have longer -
lasting batteries, but there won't be
much time for big
improvements, because within a few
years, general - purpose tablets such as the iPad and Samsung Galaxy Tab will have taken
over this niche.
To say that this
year's Ron Davis paintings are an
improvement over last year's is not saying
much.
A globally warm medieval period could be a simple forced response to increased solar, in which case it doesn't imply any larger intrinsic variability than already assumed, and since solar has been pretty
much constant
over the
last 50
years,
improvements to our understanding of solar forced climate changes are irrelevant for the
last few decades.
It's a marked
improvement over last year's Galaxy Gear, with a better design and useful new features, but it doesn't radically change the premise of the Gear or make it that
much more attractive as a smartwatch.
While the basic look and design of the system are pretty
much the same, the new Yoga 12 is a pretty significant
improvement over last year's model, thanks to small design refinements and updated hardware.
This
year's Galaxy Note makes only incremental
improvements over last year's runaway Note 3, and if you don't use the S - Pen heavily, the Note «phablet» costs too
much compared to competing large - screen phones like the LG G3.
The ZenPad Z8 is not
much of an
improvement over its predecessor, the ZenPad S 8.0, which was launched
last year.
That Super AMOLED display is certainly an
improvement over last year's, but that's not saying
much: like practically every Motorola flagship phone released since the Moto X in 2013, the panel is nowhere near the top of the heap in terms of color reproduction, brightness and viewing angles.