SemiAccurate

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
SemiAccurate
Type of site
Blog
Available inEnglish
Owner, Inc.
Created by
RevenueUnknown
URLSemiAccurate.com
CommercialYes
RegistrationYes
Launched2009
Current statusActive

SemiAccurate (S|A in short) is a U.S.-based technology-news and -opinion web site, founded in 2009 by after his departure from The Inquirer. The site lists as its contributors: Charlie Demerjian (the site's founder), Thomas Ryan and Leo Yim.[citation needed]

As of 2017 the site operates under a partial paywall model, making the majority of its content publicly available at no cost to readers - but subscribers to the "Student-" and "Professional-"level tiers receive access to special analysis articles and reports on industry trends similar to white papers.

Notable Stories[]

In February 2010, SemiAccurate ran a story on the yet to be released, “Fermi”, microprocessor from Nvidia, which called the chip, “Hot, Slow, Late and Unmanufacturable.”[1]

In August 2010, a tip off from a reader helped SemiAccurate to cover Sony admitting to defective graphics chips in some of its laptops.[2] News organization IDG credited SemiAccurate for first reporting the story.[3]

In May 2011, SemiAccurate published a story on Apple dropping Intel from its laptop line within a few years.[4] This story was covered by a large number of U.S.-based as well as international news organizations. ZDNet and Barron's both weighed in on the validity of the story.[5][6]

In June 2011, SemiAccurate published a story detailing the scandal that led AMD, Nvidia, and VIA to leave Intel as the lone semiconductor design company in the BAPCo consortium.[7] In response, Nigel Dessau, Chief Marketing Officer of AMD, published a blog titled "Voting for Openness" shortly after this story went up, and explained AMD's side of the story.[8]

In August 2011, SemiAccurate published two stories, one covering the specifications of Nvidia’s unreleased mobile graphics line up,[9] and another covering the specifications of AMD's (one of Nvidia's direct competitors) unreleased mobile graphics line up.[10] Softpedia,[11] ,[12] ,[13] and the Tom's Hardware Forum all credited SemiAccurate for leaking these specifications.[14]

Reader Supported[]

On December 4, 2012 SemiAccurate moved from an ad revenue supported business model to a paywall business model.[15] This paywall model had three tiers, Curious (free), Member ($200 per year), and Professional ($1000 per year).

On May 5, 2013 SemiAccurate amended this model to reduce the number of subscription tiers from three, down to two.[16] Under the revised pay wall model the Curious and Member levels were replaced by the Student level membership ($100 per year), while the Professional level membership remained at the same.

References[]

External links[]

Retrieved from ""