Digital Storm Announces The Aura 34” All-in-One Featuring A 10-Core i7-6950X and GTX 1080 GPU
by Brett Howse on May 31, 2016 6:00 AM EST- Posted in
- Desktop
- DigitalStorm
- all-in-one
- GTX 1080
- Broadwell-E
Without missing a beat with the launch of the latest Broadwell-E processors from Intel, and the highest performing graphics card ever with the NVIDIA GTX 1080, Digital Storm has shoehorned both into their 34-inch all-in-one display.
There were several manufacturers showing off the 34-inch all-in-one gaming system at CES, and the curved display makes for a commanding view. The widescreen display features a 3440x1440 21:9 panel with a slight radius to it. As mentioned, this is a common design from several manufacturers, with Digital Storm being the first to market (or at least the first to my inbox) with the latest and greatest Broadwell-E and GTX 1080 cards.
If you don’t want to go quite that crazy, Digital Storm offers a lot of customization on the device with processors from the Core i5-6500 through Core i7-6700K Skylake parts, or if you need more cores, substitute in some E Series for up to 10 cores plus HyperThreading. On the graphics side, you can opt to just use integrated graphics, or anything from a GTX 950 to the GTX 1080. The all-in-one can be configured with up to 32 GB of DDR4, and there are plenty of storage options including spinning disk and M.2 PCI-E storage.
Since the parts are standard, the end device is able to be upgraded down the line by the owner, which isn’t always the case in all-in-one systems.
Cooling is always going to be an issue with you pack this much power into a small space, so Aura features liquid cooling for the CPU, and the graphics card blower exhausts hot air out of the display bezel, which should be ideal for expelling the waste heat from the GPU.
The Aura is available now starting at $1999.
Source: Digital Storm
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close - Tuesday, May 31, 2016 - link
Do you mean ultra wide (21:9)?barleyguy - Tuesday, May 31, 2016 - link
Why is that Digital Storm's issue? Wouldn't that be Blizzard's issue?Ted Turbo - Wednesday, June 1, 2016 - link
Noticed the same thing on the second picture; I was pretty pissed off when I tried the Beta just to find out ugly black side barsorangefr2 - Tuesday, May 31, 2016 - link
"Cooling is always going to be an issue with you pack this much power into a small space, so Aura features liquid cooling for the CPU.."I love how the picture has the stock Intel cooler. I wonder where they plan to fit the radiator in this beast.
creed3020 - Tuesday, May 31, 2016 - link
Yeah I had the exact same thought and was laughing how picture != text...BrokenCrayons - Tuesday, May 31, 2016 - link
Color me unimpressed. The claim of liquid cooling and disposing of heat out the top of the monitor doesn't align with the stock Intel cooler and the orientation of the GPU.Gigaplex - Tuesday, May 31, 2016 - link
That's right, let's put the noisiest components right in front of my face where I can't hear them...Eden-K121D - Tuesday, May 31, 2016 - link
6950X is overkill for gaming. 5930K for 400 bucks with 1080 SLI or Raedon Pro Duo will Kick Ass at 4K 60FPSbritjh22 - Tuesday, May 31, 2016 - link
Yeah, exhaust the GPU right down on your hands, do they include a sweat proof keyboard??maj429 - Tuesday, May 31, 2016 - link
I love how the screen has overwatch as the example have. OVERWATCH/BLIZZARD EXPRESSLY FORBID 21:9 SCREEN RESOLUTIONS. It will run, but only in a windowed, or with black bars mode, as a 16:9 aspect ratio game. Blizzard thinks anything wider is cheating as you have more view than the average player, so you cannot make it run in those resolutions. Digital storm marketing group should have done their research.