Tuesday, September 30, 2008

LG to launch 10-inch MOMO netbook with 3G

LG is promising its customers a 10-inch netbook that includes built-in access to HSPA-based 3G data networks, calling it the X110 MOMO (for More Mobile) and listing it on its website. A variant of the regular X110 and its Korean equivalent the Xnote Mini, the MOMO includes the same 1.6GHz Atom chip, 512MB of memory upgradeable to 1GB, a 1.3-megapixel webcam and optional Bluetooth module. Hard drive capacity is more customizable and will include an 80GB, 120GB or 160GB hard disk drive. A 4-in-1 memory card reader will be built into the netbook, and Windows Vista Home Basic will be preloaded rather than XP or Linux. An Ethernet jack and 802.11b/g Wi-Fi will act as connections to the Internet and networks. The X110 MOMO will be available in white, black or pink and LG claims that with the standard 3-cell battery (a 6-cell battery is optional), it will tip the scales at 2.6lbs. The keyboard of the X110 MOMO is allegedly large enough for comfortable typing and touts a full-sized Shift key.

No other information has been released by LG, including which network carrier, if any, the hardware manufacturer will team up with to offer the subscription to 3G data networks. Pricing is expected to range between $500 and $600.

AMD intros budget Radeon HD 4550, 4350

AMD early Tuesday took its Radeon HD 4000-series chipsets into ultra budget territory with two video cards that promise better performance than their prices would suggest. The Radeon HD 4550 and Radeon HD 4350 have just 80 stream (effects) processors versus as much as 800 for the Radeon 4800 series but are still capable of full DirectX 10.1 and current OpenGL 2.x effects, rendering them some of the least expensive cards capable of their more advanced visuals. The new chipsets are also some of the only ones of their type to have 7.1-channel audio pass-through over HDMI and the option of DisplayPort.

Power consumption and noise are also treated as staple features of the new hardware and turn them into low-cost options for home theater PCs looking for full Blu-ray hardware decoding. Either consumes less than 20 watts even under strain and optionally use passive cooling that renders them completely silent.

Both the 4550 and 4350 should be available in October and will primarily come from third-party card makers such as ASUS, GigaByte and Sapphire. AMD plans to undercut much of NVIDIA's present-day lineup and will sell the 4350 for as little as $39 for a 256MB version. The 4550 costs only slightly more at $55 and doubles the onboard video memory to 512MB.

Thursday, September 25, 2008

The Guardian toasts your hard drive in 30 Seconds

Chicago (IL) - You got a hot tip the Feds will be knocking your door in a few hours with warrants to bust your illegal data operation. You've got a lot of hard drives to demolish and little time to do it. What do you turn to? One option (though not advertised as the end solution for the previously mentioned scenario) is to turn to the the Guardian Hard Drive Destroyer.
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The Guardian Hard Drive Destroyer is said to pulverize your hard drives in under 30 seconds flat. It delivers 12,000 pounds of force to that drive, only requiring a standard 120v AC adapter. It destroys the read and write abilities of the drive, making the remains effectively useless. As the demo video on the product's Web site states, it makes the drive "clearly unusable." The Guardian is said to be portable enough, weighing just 140 pounds, that you can take it and put it about anywhere.

There's no specific price posted for this beast of a machine, but if you are trying to save your you-know-what from the Feds is there anything not worth the cost?

PDC 2008 sheds light on Windows 7 features, promises pre-beta software

Redmond (WA) – Microsoft is beginning to build up interest in its next-generation operating system. The company confirmed that it will be handing out a pre-beta software at the PDC 2008 event next month and if the conference scheduled is any indication, Windows 7 will focus on five key areas: Graphics, communications, energy-efficient applications, multi-touch and a first step into Web 3.0.
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It appears that Microsoft is well on track with the development of Windows 7. Barely 10 months after the company handed out its first “Milestone 1” version of the software to its closest partners, the company is now ready to share what it has been working on with a much larger developer crowd. In a post published on the website of the Professional Developers Conference 2008 (PDC 2008), Microsoft said that “keynote attendees will be among the first to receive the pre-beta build of Windows 7.”

Microsoft is referring to the keynote of Steven Sinofsky, senior vice president of the Windows and Windows Live Engineering Group. Sinofsky has led most of Microsoft’s public outreach relating to Windows 7. Following a rather lukewarm reception of the demonstration of Windows multi-touch features by Bill Gates and Steve Ballmer at this year’s All Things Digital conference, Sinofsky squashed all rumors that Windows 7 would be an entirely different operating system in May of this year. According to the executive, Windows 7 will be based on the kernel of Windows Server 2008 kernel, which is an evolution of the Windows Vista kernel. The executive highlighted driver compatibility, saying that Windows 7 will not come with a new driver model. “We're very clear that drivers and software that work on Windows Vista are going to work really well on Windows 7,” he said.

Since then, Windows 7 has largely been expected to become a Windows Vista on steroids, or, if you will, a Vista SE that will bridge the gap between Vista and completely new operating system that may be released in the late 2011 or 2012 timeframe. And the PDC 2008 scheduled appears to support these expectations – there will be some new features, but no surprises. Microsoft has dedicated a substantial portion of the conference to the new operating system: 22 out of 155 sessions will directly new features in Windows 7 – which makes the software the second-most covered topic (behind cloud services with 26 sessions) during the event.

The lion’s share of all Windows 7 sessions is dedicated to graphics - the appearance of Windows 7 and applications. Four tracks will provide information on the Windows 7 graphics architecture, new API’s to find, organize and visualize, new text and graphic API’s and Windows 7 taskbar integration. There is lots of content that will deal with Direct3D and how developers can take greater advantage of GPUs, but we know that these sessions will be restricted to graphics and that Windows 7 will not support the use of GPGPUs.

Two sessions focus exclusively on performance (of background processes) and energy efficiency of applications under Windows 7, and other major tracks will zero in on communications applications, native web services and how developers can develop applications that will take advantage on Windows 7’s multi-touch support. A look at new Shell user experience APIs also looks to be an interesting briefing.

If there is a surprise, then it surely is a touch of Web 3.0 in Windows 3: Software development engineer Dan Polivy will lead a session entitled “Windows 7: New APIs for Building Context-Aware Applications” targeted at experienced Windows developers. There is no information on this session available at this time, but if Microsoft is putting a greater focus on context-aware applications, Windows 7 may have a secret killer feature in store for us.

Dell, HP look to slash R&D costs for 2009

Worldwide economic crises are beginning to have serious impact within PC builders Dell and HP, claims DigiTimes. The publication cites sources inside Taiwanese channel distributors, who say that both companies are looking to cut back on research and development for notebooks, which usually entails testing the performance and endurance of new parts. Because this is also done by the actual manufacturers (ODMs), sources say, Dell and HP believe they can scale back without hurting future products. Details such as any possible job losses are unclear, but it is thought that ODMs will begin buying many of the parts needed on their own, choosing which suppliers to use. The number of ODM purchases could jump from 10 percent now to 20 percent in 2009, the sources suggest.

The situation contrasts starkly with Apple, whose Mac sales have been brisk, pointing to continually expanding profits. Apple is also known to pick virtually every component in a computer itself, down to processors and optical drives.

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Samsung intros 14.1-inch X460 slim notebook

Samsung on Tuesday introduced a new notebook computer, the X460, which combines a 14.1-inch, 1280x800 LCD screen with a weight that is just under 4.2lbs. Other key specs of the X460 include a 45nm Intel Centrino 2 CPU of various processing speeds and support for up to 4GB of RAM memory. The smallest hard drive is sized at 120GB, while the largest optional HDD is 320GB in capacity. Samsung is trying to position the X460 as a stylish offering users would want to be seen with, and to this end, included a magnesium alloy casing offset with a brushed aluminum panel on the lid that is available in a choice of colors. The laptop also include NVIDIA‘s GeForce 9200M GS graphics chipset with DirectX 10 support. A slim Light Scribe optical drive is standard fare, as are five USB ports for expandability. Bluetooth 2.0+EDR or the integrated multi-card reader allow users to quickly transfer files to and from the notebook, while connecting to the Internet is done via an Ethernet jack or the built-in Wi-Fi connection.

Samsung also deemed it fit to include a fingerprint scanner for security, along with a 1.3-megapixel webcam for video conferencing. An antibacterial keyboard is meant to minimize the build-up of bacteria and thus decrease the likelihood of users getting sick. Other connections the notebook sports include eSATA, DVI, SIO and an HDMI port. The removable 6-cell battery promises to deliver five hours of life when fully charged.

The X460 will launch in October in certain European and Asian countries, with no word on a US release. No pricing information has been released.

Monday, September 22, 2008

Sony prepping VAIO TT ultraportable for Monday?

Sony is gearing up to launch a likely Centrino 2-based update to its VAIO TZ ultraportable notebooks, according to evidence from an FCC filing and a string of forum posts. Called the VAIO TT, the computer would be one of the last remaining systems to launch with Sony's design update and is known to be too powerful to represent Sony's upcoming netbook; most specifications are unavailable, but the notebook will have 802.11n Wi-Fi, Bluetooth and optional 3G access over EVDO. A listing at online retailer B&H for a privacy filter which supports both the TZ and TT also pushes the system into the ultraportable class with an 11.1-inch display.

While yet to be confirmed, claims have been made that the new VAIO would be introduced on Monday, lining up roughly with wider availability of ultra-low voltage Core 2 Duo processors that will be necessary for the update. Exact configurations are unknown but will likely include carry-over options from the TZ, such as solid-state drives.

Saturday, September 20, 2008

Firefox mobile web browser scheduled for 2010

Chicago (IL) – Mitchell Baker, chairperson of the Mozilla Foundation, recently outlined the goals for Mozilla for the next two years. This list includes a somewhat surprising but long overdue product: Firefox for mobile devices code-named Fennec.
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The post divides the proposals for Mozilla’s 2010 goals into four main areas – deepen Mozilla’s role on the Internet, assume “leadership” in helping people control their data and making anonymous, aggregate “usage data” more of a public resource, increase Firefox market share and focus on mobile devices.

By 2010, Baker said, there should be an “effective [Firefox] product in the mobile market”, which should “demonstrate that ‘mobile’ is part of one, unified, open web.”

Following Baker’s post, Mozilla explained on its developer blog that it has begun working on getting its upcoming TraceMonkey engine to run on ARM processors. First results of this work have been published on Vladimir Vukicevic’s blog. Users will be able to get a first-hand look at TraceMonkey for ARM in the next alpha release of Fennec, which is the code-name of Firefox Mobile.

There was no information when Fennec will become available for download.

Pentax leaks info on new DSLR, lenses

Camera builder Pentax has accidentally leaked information on a new camera, according to reports. Thought to be called the K-m (not pictured), the camera would allegedly be an entry-level DSLR, similar to Nikon's D60 or Canon's Rebel XS. Specifications pulled from Amazon UK point to a 10-megapixel CCD sensor with sensor-shift stabilization, and ISO sensitivity up to 3200. It is expected to shoot in PEF or DNG RAW formats at up to 3.5fps, and come equipped with a 2.7-inch LCD. Unlike most DSLRs, it is also believed to be powered by four AA batteries, not a proprietary lithium-ion design.

Pentax is further said to be preparing two new L-series lenses, with plastic mounts and weight reductions made with the K-m in mind. A kit with a single bundled lens would cost €500, while one with two lenses would be priced at €600. A November release date is anticipated.

Other Pentax gear rumored to be in development include DA 15 f/4, 60-250, and "super-telephoto" lenses, as well as an SDM 1.4x converter, and a ring flash dubbed the AF160 FC.

BenQ intros slimmest 10MP camera with 3-inch LCD

BenQ on Friday unveiled the thinnest digital camera, at less than 0.7 inches (16.8mm) thick at its slimmest point, to have a 3-inch LCD screen, the 10-megapixel E1050. The E1050 has 32 distinct still image or video shooting modes as well as a red eye remover feature. The 3x optical zoom lens and the E1050’s software allows 16:9 aspect ratio, 848x480 videos to be captured for a proper fit on today’s HDTVs. Another setting sizes videos for direct YouTube uploads. A maximum ISO rating of 3200 is available only with 3MP images or smaller and otherwise, at full 10MP resolution, tops out at 1600. The BenQ E1050 comes with 10MB of usable built-in memory with expansion coming courtesy of an SD card slot, expanding it by as much as 16GB. The camera’s self-time can be set to 2- or 10-second delays, or into a burst and double modes.

The BenQ E1050 will be available in metallic grey only, although prices or release dates have not been announced.

NVIDIA announces worldwide job cuts

NVIDIA on Thursday announced that it would cut 360 jobs across its worldwide operations, which accounts for nearly 6.5 percent of its entire workforce. The company officially announced the cuts are being made to let it invest in key areas of growth, though they are likely related to the company’s recent financial trouble stemming from faulty graphics chips, the resulting lawsuit, and increased competition from the Radeon HD 4000-series graphics card. The job cuts are expected to take effect by October 26, with employees receiving severance packages, counseling and job placement services. Despite the cutbacks, NVIDIA representatives said the company would continue to pour resources into its CUDA parallel computing technology and Tegra mobile single-chip computer. As a direct result of the job cuts, NVIDIA is expected to take a charge of between $7 and $10 million in the third quarter of the 2009 fiscal year. The pre-tax amount will be charged against the company’s operating expenses.

The graphics chipmaker wrote down a near $121 million dollar loss in the second quarter of 2008, the first one in five years, due to graphics cards that would overheat in users’ systems.

Thursday, September 18, 2008

Canon signals DSLR smackdown with 21.1-megapixel EOS 5D

Chicago (IL) - Think the Canon EOS 50D DSLR announced a few weeks ago was a big deal? Canon pulled out a even bigger rabbit today with the announcement of the EOS 5D Mark II Digital SLR camera. This 21.1-megapixel monster, out by the end of November, will set you back around $2700 for body only or around $3500 with an accompanying EF 24-105mm f/4L IS USM zoom lens.

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The highlight of top level features from Canon of the new EOS 5D include "the ability to capture full HD video clips at 1920 x 1080 resolution ... a 21.1-megapixel full frame 24 x 36mm CMOS sensor, DIGIC 4 imaging processor and significantly lower noise, with an expanded sensitivity range from ISO 50 to ISO 25,600." Need some fast, continuous shooting? Try this on for size - "continuous shooting at 3.9 frames per second (fps) for an unlimited number of full-resolution JPEGs to the capacity of the memory card or up to 14 RAW images in a single burst when using a UDMA CF card."

What else do we have? Canon says the EOS 5D includes "a 15-point Autofocus (AF) sensor with nine selectable AF points plus six additional Assist AF points (three center AF points sensitive to f/2.8 lenses) with enhanced light source detection and AF microadjustment." This is on top of a high-magnification optical viewfinder providing 98 percent coverage, 150,000-cycle shutter durability, three Live View AF modes and "peripheral illumination correction when shooting JPEG images." This latter feature is said to even "brightness across the image field, making an image of a blue sky even toned throughout and reducing light fall-off at image edges."

There's a lot more obviously to this camera, but you get the idea it is really loaded. The proof is in the pudding, of course, but I think the EOS 5D Mark II might be enough to get Canon lovers to at long last put down their 2005 EOS 5Ds.

Update: FBI investigates Palin email hack

Chicago (IL) - Rick Davis, lobbyist in chief for John McCain, described the hacking of Sarah Palin’s Yahoo email account as “shocking invasion” in the Governor’s privacy. The FBI confirmed that it is looking into the matter, while Palin cannot prevent the events from turning into a huge mess as it appears that the Governor of Alaska conducted state business using her private email account.

"This is a shocking invasion of the Governor's privacy and a violation of law," Davis said in a statement and noted that "the matter has been turned over to the appropriate authorities and we hope that anyone in possession of these e-mails will destroy them. We will have no further comment."

Yesterday, a hacker group named Anonymous took credit for hacking into the email account and publicizing screenshots, picturesd and other data from Palin’s Yahoo account. An index of the e-mails contained in Sarah Palin’s inbox include the sender, the subject line, and the date and time the e-mail was sent also indicates that Palin was in fact receiving e-mail from her aides and some of them indicated that she in fact used the account for certain messages relating to official business.

FBI spokesman Brian Hale today said that "the FBI is aware of the alleged hacking incident involving Alaska Governor Sarah Palin and is coordinating with the United States Secret Service on the matter."

Among the emails were an e-mail from her press secretary Meghan Stapleton, with the subject line “Motor Fuel Tax Suspension”. Additionally, an e-mail from Randall Ruaro, Palin’s deputy chief of staff was titled “Draft letter to Governor Schwarzenegger”; another from Ruaro also said “Please approve” and a third had the subject line “Court of Appeals Nominations”.

There were e-mails in her inbox that are believed to be about different budget and employee issues with the Alaska Department of Public Safety.

There were e-mails from Janice Mason, Palin’s schedule coordinator that indicated they were in regards to Palin’s schedule during the week of August 10th.

Michael Nizich, Palin’s chief of staff sent her e-mails on August 22, using the subject “Using Royalty Oil to Lower the Cost of Fuel for Alaskans”, and on another date sent her an e-mail titled “Confidential Ethics Matter”.

The fact that Governor Plain used her private email account to discuss state matters, will obviously raise eyebrows and questions whether there was the need to hide any information from the public. Whether this was or was not the case, it is somewhat obvious that the hackers may not remain the only ones being investigated. It is already a PR disaster and somehow we believe that this mess cannot be cleaned up anytime soon.

Canon SX1 IS adds CMOS sensor, 1080p video

As a counterpart to its SX10 IS, Canon has announced the SX1 IS, a version with some performance enhancements. While both cameras have DIGIC 4 processors, 20x image-stabilization lenses and a 10-megapixel ceiling resolution, the SX1 uses a CMOS sensor instead of CCD, something which Canon claims will let it shoot at up to 4fps in full resolution. The camera also uses a slightly larger LCD, measuring 2.8 inches instead of 2.5. Also included is 30fps, 1080p video recording, a feature borrowed from the EOS 5D Mk. II. An HDMI output is provided for displaying images on TVs. Pricing and release dates have not been announced, but it is believed that the camera is unlikely to appear in North America.

MSI prepping U91, U120 Wind netbooks

MSI has plans to expand its Wind netbook range past the U100, according to an interview. Beyond the current system, the company says it is developing the U91, a new 8.9-inch computer whose other specifications are as yet unknown. Also in development is the U120, a system with a 10-inch screen and built-in HSDPA reception.

The company says it eventually intends to adopt dual-core Atom processors into its netbooks, but due to the extra power consumption, this will not happen in the near future. MSI is similarly hesitant to switch from Windows XP to Vista, primarily because it is thought to consume too much RAM for a netbook.

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Casio FH20 brings low-cost 40FPS shooting [U]

Casio on Tuesday unveiled the Exilim EX-FH20, a lower-end alternative for the Pro EX-F1. It offers users a higher-resolution 9.1 Megapixel, 1/2.3-inch CMOS sensor focused through a 20x lens but also makes a slight degradation in continuous frame rate, dropping from 60 frames per second for the F1 to 40 (at seven megapixels) in the FH20. The ultra-quick burst movie mode has likewise dropped from 1200 frames per second to 1000. The EX-FH20 nonetheless keeps sensor-shift image stabilization and a pre-shot buffering ability to capture the moment just before the shutter press. The change in design also has the upside of shrinking the camera and rendering it more portable overall. Size has dropped by 27 percent from the F1 while weight has dropped almost proportionately, by 28 percent.

Casio has announced US shipping details and puts the FH20 well below the price of the flagship Exilim Pro EX model, with a $600 price tag accompanying the camera when it ships to stores in October.

Saturday, September 13, 2008

100 Tesla magnet being constructed, biggest reusable magnet in the world

Tallahassee (FL) - Researchers working at the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory (MHMFL) in Florida are putting the final touches on what will be the largest reusable magnet ever constructed. It's a nearly six foot diameter outer case with an 8" center core. Capable of producing magnetic fields roughly 100 times more powerful than an MRI or two million times more powerful than a refrigerator magnet, each $20,000 core will withstand around 100 1200-megajoule pulses, with the $8 million outter case withstanding around 10,000. Previous "big magnet" research efforts like this have lead to the creation of neodymium magnets which enable our cell phones and cordless hand tools.
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The world's most powerful magnets ever constructed have been approximately 2x to 10x more powerful than this magnet. However, those were called "one use magnets" as they destroyed themselves while in use. In fact, this magnet will also destroy itself during testing, although it's being designed to withstand as many tests (pulses) as possible. The pressures exerted on a 90-100 Tesla field strength magnet are enormous, roughly 30x greater than those experienced at the bottom of the ocean, or the equivalent of 200 sticks of dynamite going off simultaneously.

The wires used in the center core are comprised of copper and silver, a chemical mix design to act like concrete. While the copper is very strong it cracks easily, just like concrete. The silver acts as reinforcement to keep the copper intact for a longer time, but even with the reinforcing, it's only a matter of time until the magnet core explodes. In fact, the explosion will be so massive that the whole buidling has to be evacuated when the magnet is in use to protect nearby researchers from teh expected deafening sound.

The magnet's reusable design consists of two parts, an outer section, or outsert cylinder, that is nearly six feet wide and five feet tall, and an 8" diameter insert comprised of nine separate coils. Together, they weigh nearly 18,000 lbs. The wires used within the coils are as small as 100 atoms in diameter. The entire device will be supercooled to "high-temperature superconductor" levels when in use, drawing 7% of Tallahassee's available power supply.

It is believed the research will ultimately enable the creation of some unexpected products, such as high-tension power lines that do not generate heat using materials achieving high-temperature superconductivity, as well as more obvious products like higher definition MRI scans and better cellphones.

In truth, the concept of having a reusable magnet of this strength is very exciting to the researchers. The ability to have a controlled, scientific approach to reproducible experiments in this field at these levels is unprecedented.


Notes

One Tesla is a very large gauge of magnetic strength, named after physicist Nikola Tesla . A typical MRI would only use around 1 Tesla. The Earth's magnetic field is about 0.00005 Teslas (though it is slowly decreasing over time for reasons not yet known). Another perhaps more well known gauge of magnetic strength is Gauss, named after the German mathematician Karl Friedrich Gauss (1777–1855). The 100 Tesla magnet would represent about 1,000,000 Gauss. Typical handheld bar magnets are about 100 Gauss. Cordless drills are around 25 Gauss. Very strong laboratory magnets are 100,000 Gauss. And just to show that mankind does not outdo nature, the surfaces of Neutron stars are believed to be 100 million Teslas.

The MHMFL builds on a history of previous high density magnets. In 1994, for example, the operation of a 27 Tesla magnet was first achieved on their site. It was built atop a DC facility with a 1 meter thick concrete base. After that, the lab achieved additional records over time of 30, 33, 35, then hybrid magnets of 45 and pulsed magnets of 60 for long-pulse; 77.8 tesla short pulse and ultimately the 85 Tesla multi-shot magnet. Construction of this magnet is not yet completed, though it is currently in operation at around 90 Teslas.

UC Irvine given $100,000 to study WoW players

Irvine (CA) – The National Science Foundation has given $100,000 to the University of California at Irvine for a study on World of Warcraft players. Bonnie Nardi, a UCI informatics professor, will examine the differences in play habits and culture between WoW players in the United States and China. She already has some interesting observations.
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Nardi observed Chinese WoW players mainly in Internet gaming cafes while visiting China. She told the Orange County Register that the Chinese tend to play a “more challenging” version of the game and also use less modifications and add-ons to the WoW interface. According to Nardi, 95% of the Chinese play on this version of Wow versus 50% in the United States.

While we don’t know exactly what Nardi meant by a more challenging version of Wow, she’s probably referring to Player versus Player or PvP servers which allow players to kill each other without warning. PvE or Player versus Environment servers lets players battle each other only upon agreement.

Nardi also says the Chinese WoW players are basically regular people and are unjustly stereotyped by the media. “The vast majority of Chinese players are not gold farmers,” she told the OC Register.

There are approximately five million Chinese WoW players compared to 2.5 million players in the United States. Blizzard manages the game servers in the USA and contracts out to a Chinese company for the servers in China. Chinese players pay mostly on a per hour basis, while Americans either subscribe monthly or pay with store-bought game cards.

Windows 7 Beta delayed until mid-December

A blog entry by Mary-Jo Foley posted on Thursday suggests Microsoft will not make the Beta version of its Windows 7 operating system available to testers at either its October Professional Developers Conference or November’s Windows Hardware Engineering Conference, as expected by many in the industry. While the software giant is likely to unveil new information about the new operating system that is to be Vista’s successor, the actual Beta 1 versions aren’t likely to be released until the middle of December, Foley claims, citing industry sources familiar with the schedule who do not want to be named.

Foley goes on to say small groups of testers who are sworn to secrecy got M-designated (for Milestone) builds and interim updates, and the Windows team is working on an M3 build as well. There are no indications of a pre-beta version, such as a Community Technology Preview build, and instead Foley's sources suggest a wider distribution of Windows 7 bits aren’t likely until the OS is nearly complete with features.

What the delay means is that Microsoft will have less than one year if its promises of a late 2009 release for the final Windows 7 release are accurate, which may be too short a time to get all the bugs worked out, but are not unprecedented in the history of the Office team, Foley suggests.

Back in September, Microsoft promised to release the Windows 7 beta via its usual method, via the Connect site.

The delay suggests a small amount of initial trouble for Microsoft's replacement for Windows Vista, which itself was delayed by three years after security worries pushed the company to effectively restart development of the OS from scratch in 2004. Microsoft officially doesn't expect to launch Windows 7 until sometime in 2010.

More specs on Canon 5D Mark II revealed

A French Canon DSLR news site claims to have the newest updates on the specifications of the upcoming Canon 5D Mark II. The new report has the camera using a 24MP, 24x36mm CMOS sensor and a new grip making up the magnesium alloy case. Like the recently unveiled D90 from competitor Nikon, the 5D Mark II allegedly offers a similar movie recording mode, previously reported as being capable of recording HD content. The same DIGIC IV sensor that debuted on the 50D, which was unveiled in late August, will also be used on the 5D MkII.

Other tidbits include a maximum light sensitivity ISO setting of 25,600 and a new battery that recognizes the automatic operation of the camera. The Live View functionality that allows users to compose a shot via the LCD and is standard fare on other new Canon DSLR is also present, as is an integrated cleaning system. Lenses from Canon’s EF-series and Speedlite EX will bolt up to the new body.

Finally, the report confirmed the camera will debut on September 17, which would have it out about one week before the start of the Photokina 2008 show, where plenty of demos of the new shooter are expected.

Earlier reports also said the new DSLR will be fully sealed against the weather and sport a 3.2-inch high-resolution LCD. An HDMI output is also likely to be accounted for.

3 new colors coming for Blackberry Pearl 8120

RIM will be introducing three new color options for its Blackberry Pearl 8120 device, according to TmoNews. Customers will be able to choose from Black Emerald, Indigo, or Frost. With the bridging capabilities of the 8120, T-Mobile users can drift between cell networks and Wi-Fi connections (T-Mobile HotSpots or HotSpot@Home) without dropping the call. The trio of new colors is scheduled to launch on October 15.

Toshiba intros Satellite NB105 as its first netbook

Toshiba has jumped onto the netbook bandwagon with its surprise entry, the 8.9-inch Satellite NB105, according to a Friday report. Thus far, the netbook is only linked to Toshiba Mexico, and features Intel’s 1.6GHz Atom CPU that is widely used in competing products. Backed by 1GB of RAM, the netbook will eschew costly flash drives in favor of a traditional HDD with a 120GB capacity. Other cost-cutting measures include the limited spec, giving users the basics such as Wi-Fi connectivity and an Ethernet LAN controller, but no Bluetooth or 3G connection options. What is included is an SD card slot and three USB 2.0 ports. A webcam will allow for video chats, while Windows XP Home will be the sole interface on the 1024x600 resolution screen. While official prices or release dates have not been announced, the netbook is expected to ship in Mexico at the start of November.

Friday, September 12, 2008

6-core Intel ‘Dunnington’ could be released next week

Santa Clara (CA) – Intel’s six-core ‘Dunnington’ processor could be released next week’s at the VMWorld conference in Las Vegas. The chip, officially known as the Xeon 7400, is manufactured on the 45 nm process and will be the last chip in the Penryn line. The six cores share 16 MB of L3 cache and each pair of cores will share 3 MB of L2 cache (9 MB total). Intel promises that chip will have a TDP rating of approximately 130 watts.
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Like current generation Intel processors, the Dunnington will still require an external memory controller, but Intel hopes the large cache sizes in Dunnington will more than make up for any memory bottlenecks. The upcoming Nehalem processors, which should be available in the fourth quarter, will solve this problem with an integrated memory controller.

The Dunnington, like other future Intel processors, will have all the cores in a single piece of silicon. This is in contrast to the current generation of processors which are multiple cores fashioned into one package. While some detractors say this technology is less elegant than AMD’s monolithic processors, it has allowed Intel to get to market faster. In the end most consumers probably don’t care how the chip is made; they just want something that works.

It makes sense that Intel would release Dunnington at VMWare’s VMWorld conference as the chip is aimed at the blade/server market. Virtualization of operating systems, the running of an OS inside of another OS, is a big thing these days and the system admins attending the show would most likely wet themselves over this new processor.

AMD upgrades workstation graphics portfolio

Markham (ON) – AMD’s GPG unit today introduced two new workstation graphics cards – one high-end version based on the 4800-series with 800 stream processors and one entry-level card based on the 4600-series with 320 processors.
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AMD’s new flagship workstation graphics card, called the FirePro V8700, is promised to about 40% faster than the company’s previously fastest card. The new model runs all 800 stream processors, comes with 1 GB of GDDR5 memory and a total bandwidth of 108.8 GB/s, two Displayport and one dual link DVI interface and support for DirectX 10.1. MSRP is set at $1499.

The FirePro V3750 runs only 320 stream processors and integrates only 256 MB of GDDR3 for a bandwidth of 22.4 GB/s, but can be yours for substantially less money - $199.

AMD said both the V8700 and V3750 will begin shipping in the fourth quarter.

Why the SSD will kill the HDD

Opinion – The days of the hard drive are numbered. I recently chatted with Samsung on their opinion of the state solid state disk drive (SSD) market and while Samsung seems to be very careful comparing their SSDs and their ability to replace traditional hard drives, it is now clear to me that there is no way out for the hard drive. Over the next few years, the hard drive may keep the edge in capacity and price, but it inevitably will be driven into shrinking niches. While the advantages of the technology are visibly melting away, it is obvious that the hard drive may not just die because of its inferior performance or higher power consumption – but simply because of its form factor.
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When you read about SSDs today, or if you are considering the purchase of an SSD or a new computer that simply comes with a SSD pre-installed, you are every likely to be among the most educated users and you may have read the same messages about SSDs again. When comparing them to either performance hard drives in desktop PCs or to power saving hard drives in mobile computers, you are currently confronted with a difficult balancing act that depends on your priorities.

On the one hand, an SSD is likely to provide you with more data transfer bandwidth, less power consumption (=more battery time) and less heat. On the other, an SSD is likely to cost you 10 times as much as a hard drive with a similar capacity and you can get much more capacity with hard drives than with SSDs in 1.8” (up to 240 GB) and 2.5” (up to 500 GB) anyway (yes, there are 512 GB SSDs, but these can hardly be considered consumer products.) So, do you buy the faster SSD and take the price hit or do you go with a hard drive with more capacity, which – depending on the model you choose – could be plenty fast (WD Velociraptor) or power efficient (many 1.8” drives consume less than 2 watts today)?

Most consumers are choosing the hard drive path today and even Samsung admits that the SSD market is still in its infancy: By far the most important SSD market today is the low-cost notebook segment, which gobbles up most 4, 8 and 16 GB SSDs. The traditional PC market as we know it is separated into the configure-to-order (CTO) and pre-configured markets. Both markets are in their very early stages, according to Samsung. While there are more and more SSD pre-configured models, such as Lenovo’s Thinkpad X300, growth takes time. On the CTO side, educated consumers are leading the way for the SSD.

Broad market acceptance is usually tied to a phase when a technology enters the mainstream. Depending on the company you talk to, you may get a different answer what mainstream may mean for the SSD and when the mainstream PC market will be affected by the SSD. Intel, for example, thinks its recently announced $595 80 GB SSD is in the mainstream – which is a statement I would disagree with. Samsung says that mainstream SSDs will be enabled with multi-level cell (MLC) flash technology (also used by Intel’s SSDs), which should bring prices down dramatically. Prior to writing this article, I found 32 GB SSDs for less than $100 and 64 GB versions for less than $200. More 128 GB (MLC) models will become more available in Q4 and we should be seeing 256 GB versions (1.8”, 2.5”) in H1 2009 for prices of less than $1000.

No question, that is not mainstream yet. But SSDs are getting closer and are doubling their capacity every 12 months, while traditional hard drives currently show a capacity growth of about 50% per year. Conceivably, there will be a time when consumers will perceive SSDs as large enough for their needs in their primary computing devices. At least for now, market researchers say that the hard drive market is driven by an insatiable demand for storage – in Q1 of this year, 137 million hard drives were shipped, up 21% from the year ago-quarter, according to iSuppli. But that trend may start to reverse as SSDs are closing in on HDDs over time, similar to how flash memory has driven hard drives almost completely out of MP3 players.

But the fate of the hard drive may eventually be sealed by a factor many of us do not see yet. The hard drive is certainly a moving market in price and capacity, but there is a critical disadvantage that will seal the hard drive’s fate: Flash memory devices can be manufactured in any shape you a customer needs – squares, rectangles, L-shapes, or triangles. Thick or thin. Small or large. The size of the hard drive is set at 1.8”, 2.5” and 3.5” (and if you look really hard 1” and 0.85”). While product designers have to design their product around a hard drive, future flash memory devices will be able to be designed around a product’s requirements.

Imagine what a company like Apple can do with such freedom (well, they already do it with the iPod) – imagine future handheld devices that don’t have to accommodate a standard 1.8” or 2.5” drives, but can house drives that may be custom-designed for a specific device. Of course, economies of scale play into such a scenario, but Samsung says that custom flash memory products will make a whole lot of sense for products with a certain volume. Put into the equation a mainstream price point and “enough” storage space and you have to wonder why you would use a hard drive in any mobile product. In an increasingly mobile world, the hard drive suddenly like a really old and may be pushed back into niches and application areas with archiving purposes.

Clearly, the hard drive won’t disappear tomorrow. And it is very likely that the hard drive is likely to outlive flash, which is reportedly reaching is scaling limits at around 22 nm. IBM recently said that it will remove the hard drive from its products around 2018, which would mean that it may be pretty difficult to purchase any computing device with a hard drive by 2020. I am convinced that the SSD may bring the most dramatic shifts in mainstream computing we aren’t aware of yet.

Computer geeks get reality television show on MTV

New York (NY) - MTV practically pioneered reality television, by bringing together the first group of young adults to reside together in a series titled “The Real World”. With the help of a major technology company MTV has joined together 16 young, creative, tech geeks to live together in a loft in Brooklyn. These kids will compete in a contest that can be watched either online or on television.

On Monday, MTV and the mtvU channel, that is geared towards university and college aged individuals will work closely with Hewlett-Packard and present to the world “Engine Room”. The series will document the lives of 16 contestants split up into four different teams. The teams will be responsible for designing and producing digital artwork using products that were manufactured and sold by Hewlett-Packard.

Engine Room will not be a long winded drama like the Real World; instead, episodes will be quick five to seven minute clips that will last over a period of seven weeks. At the end of the competition, one of the teams will walk away with a prize package that includes $400,000 and an opportunity to program the giant MTV screen that is located in Times Square for an entire night.

Previously, Hewlett Packard and Broadband Enterprises sponsored a video series with MTV called “Meet or Delete”, and also “Dorm Storm”. These series showed that video campaigns are great marketing strategies that really catch the attention of younger consumers who are subscribing to and watching video clips from their cell phones, computers and other mobile devices.

“We don’t want it to be advertising; we want it to be real,” said David Roman, vice president for worldwide marketing communications at the personal systems group of HP, in a prepared statement.

“We’re learning as we go not to do so much talking about what we do but rather let people do things with the product,” Mr. Roman said. “That’s where the ‘wow factor’ comes from.”

The spending by HP for the “Engine Room” has been estimated by David Roman as being in “the tens of millions of dollars” - and spending began months ago as recruiting for started utilizing a Web site mtvengineroom.com.

The site received a tremendous response with over 2000 individuals residing in 122 countries submitting over 20,000 original pieces of artwork with the hopes of being able to participate in the contest.

The four individual teams of contestants have been divided based on the regions that they come from. Among the regions are Asia-Pacific, Europe, Latin America and North America. Throughout the competition the contestants will be visited by guests such as movie director Kevin Smith, musician Moby, and even the British pop singers the Ting Tings.

ASUS intros heat-efficient, screwless PC case

ASUS recently introduced the VENTO TA-M1 chassis designed with thermal efficiency and ease of use in mind. The PC case can accommodate a front-mounted fan, another one on the rear and two more on the sides, all up to 4.7 inches (120mm) in diameter. Additionally, the side-mounted fans attach to a movable plate, which can then be slid to adjust their output where it is necessary, with an emphasis on the CPU and graphics cards. The front, top and side panels are made with an all-mesh design for maximum ventilation while venting holes in the HDD rack free up more space for air to move around in.

The case can accommodate a larger high-end PCI-E VGA up to 15 inches (380mm) in size or an SLI/Crossfire card up to 11 inches (280mm). Adding flexibility is the inclusion of a 5.25-inch rack that can be converted into a 3.5-inch version in order to hold card readers and floppy disc drives. Otherwise, the case has space for four external 5.25-inch optical drive bays and four 3.5-inch floppy disk drive bays, all attaching via a screwless design. The front panel sports two USB 2.0 ports along with a pair of audio outputs. There are also seven PCI card expansion slots.

ASUS has not announced a price or release date for the VENTO TA-M1.





Nokia Comes With Music may demand $150 premium

A recent report hazards some educated guesses at the price of Nokia’s recently announced Comes with Music audio track download service. While a direct conversion has the 5310 and N95 8GB phones bundled with the Comes with Music service cost $120 and $150 more than the handsets themselves, the actual price difference in North America is likely to be closer to $100, as Nokia devices traditionally sell for less stateside. The numbers come from UK smartphone retailer Expansys, which has published pre-order pricing for the Nokia handsets.

The Comes with Music service does not carry a monthly subscription rate, but the cost is instead built into the purchase price of a handset. Users can then download unlimited audio tracks from Nokia for one year and keep them once that year is up. While the prices are not official and may change closer to the October 2 release date in the UK, they are competitive with similar services from other providers and in line with earlier suggestions that pegged the cost of the music service at about £100 ($175).

Expansys is offering the Nokia N95 8GB for nearly £395 (about $693) while the handset with the music service is priced at about £480 ($842). The 5310 ranges from £133 to £145 ($233 and $254), while Comes with Music option and the phone are listed at £215 ($377). Nokia first announced Comes with Music and the Nokia World show last December.

Apple patent would lock Nike+iPod, add GPS

Apple is investigating putting more stringent controls on the Nike+iPod system used for the iPod nano and now the iPod touch, according to a new US patent filing. Expressing concern that customers might buy the Nike+iPod kit but use it with non-Nike shoes or in different locations, the patent describes using RFID tags and similar sensors built into shoes or other clothing to pair the transmitter with its intended destination. The device would refuse to work unless close to authorized clothes.

The company partly defends the patent by claiming that it would provide added security, preventing the transmitter from collecting or sending data if the device is stolen independently of the shoes. RFID devices could also store a small amount of information and create backups in case the Nike+iPod device is ever lost; this would be helped along by a means of generating a small amount of energy to power an active tag that would restore the necessary data.

Also proposed in the system is the addition of more tracking data in the sensor and in shoes themselves. While the current Nike+iPod kit is essentially a pedometer, a GPS receiver could add extra information about a runner's movement and also trigger certain conditions, such as outlining runs specific to a given location or popping up places of interest that appear near the run, such as restaurants.

The in-shoe invention would include multiple force sensors that could detect the pressure at each point of the foot and determine a runner's style either from run to run or with a new pair of shoes to compare the new footwear's effect on performance; voice feedback from the iPod could advise the user to change their stride or their foot placement to run faster or avoid undue stress.

Apple is under no obligation to use all of the patent's inventions and would likely introduce controversy by requiring that customers use Nike shoes or clothes for its exercise system to work, as a number of companies have developed cases and other enclosures that fit the sensor to third-party shoes.
However, the filing unusually credits the invention to Apple's Senior Director of Product Marketing for the iPhone line, Bob Borchers, as well as company patent attorney Brett Alten; the connection points to research into incorporating such changes in the iPhone or iPod touch.

The second-generation iPod touch introduced this week is the first from Borchers' division that supports Nike+iPod, but so far has no new features aside from its new interface and a built-in receiver.



Panasonic intros 1st Micro Four Thirds camera

Panasonic chose Friday to break new ground with the launch of the Lumix G1, the first known production camera based on the Micro Four Thirds pseudo-SLR system. The absence of the traditional mirror and a smaller lens mount produce a 12.1-megapixel camera which is both the smallest and lightest to carry swappable lenses but which still has the sensor size and focusing abilities of a more typical DSLR. The lenses themselves are often half the size and weight of a regular SLR parallel.

A live electronic viewfinder makes up for the lack of an optical preview with a more than 1.4-megapixel, 0.7X equivalent look at the camera's target. For more casual or off-angle, the camera maker supplies a three-inch swiveling LCD.

The new imaging system and the G1's focus also give Panasonic free reign to implement software features to accommodate those graduating from strict point-and-shoot cameras as well as more experienced photographers. The camera takes control out of the issue with autofocus tracking, auto scene selection, face detection and a new contrast-based autofocus mode; all of the above can be combined into a full Intelligent Auto mode for absolute novices. Experienced users have a 23-point autofocus system with manual focus points and an adjustable focus point size.

Panasonic's camera further touts optical image stabilization, a dust removal system and HDMI video out for previews. The home user focus becomes evident with the new Lumix arriving in both a professional black as well as blue and red colors; the company hasn't announced pricing but says so far that it will first ship the G1 only as a kit camera, with a 14-45mm, f/3.5-5.6 lens bundled in the box to get users started on Micro Four Thirds. More details should be available in October and will include pricing for a 45-200mm, f/4.0-5.6 optional lens for distance shots.





Thursday, September 11, 2008

LG Lotus, Moto i576 land at Sprint

Wrapping up its phone introductions, Sprint today launched one LG and one Motorola phone for different audiences. The LG Lotus appears targeted at the Verizon Blitz and has a short, squat design built for messaging. In place of the Blitz's slider, the Lotus uses a flip phone layout. LG's device is also pitched as a designer model with an ornate textured pattern and comes with more advanced features than the budget Verizon model, including a two-megapixel camera, full 3G data and stereo Bluetooth audio. External music controls are also part of the design. The Lotus is further one of Sprint's first phones to have its in-house, simplified interface for access to common features that include the company's music and video services. The carrier launches the new LG cellphone sometime in October and will ship it in black and purple versions for $150 when joined to a two-year contract.

Leading off what's promised as a series of new phones for the iDEN push-to-talk network, the Motorola i576 is designed to be equal parts stylized and rugged with a manhole cover-like faceplate and RAZR influences but US military-grade dust- and shock-proofing for hikers and field workers. A camera is absent but is replaced with both Bluetooth and real GPS mapping. It has a specific October 19th debut and will cost $70 with two years of service.

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

Get Ready For F.E.A.R. 2: Project Origin

Chicago (IL) - We first took a very brief look at the chilling video game F.E.A.R. For the Xbox 360 back at E3 in 2006. The popular title's sequel, now in development, has just spawned a name from developer Monolith Productions – it will be called F.E.A.R. 2: Project Origin.

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F.E.A.R. 2 is being developed for the Xbox 360, Windows PC and PlayStation 3. It is set to be published by Warner Bros. Interactive on Feb. 10 of next year in North America and February 3 in Europe. The game is said to "continue the legacy of the original F.E.A.R. game with story and combat while adding new twists, gameplay and graphics to expand the players’ experience."

Monolith says the sequel begins shortly before the ending of the original title. The plot line is roughly described as follows: "A Special Forces squad is on a routine mission when the city of Auburn is rocked by a supernatural explosion. Alma, a girl with immense power and a thirst for revenge, has unleashed her wrath upon the city and thrown it into chaos. The squad must combat enemy forces and the supernatural as they struggle to find a way to stop Alma and uncover the mysterious forces arrayed against them before it’s too late."

Sony launches full-frame Alpha DSLR

Sony today at last branched into full-frame digital SLRs with the Alpha A900. The camera aims to outsize both Canon and Nikon with a 24.6-megapixel full-frame sensor, the company's first, that Sony claims is also extra-flat and has on-chip DACs that minimize noise as early as possible in the shot. The electronics maker also outfits the A900 with a 100 percent optical viewfinder and dual BIONZ imaging processors that keep the frame rate up during shooting: it can manage up to five frames per second at full resolution. A new mirror box design for the SLR mechanism makes sure these features don't swell the camera's size.

The camera doesn't support live previews but finds a unique method of previewing shots before committing to the final photo: the camera can sample the scene in RAW and lets users choose the depth of field, dynamic range, white balance and other settings based on the reference image on the three-inch LCD.

Sony promises image stabilization built into the camera body, nine focusing sensors with 11 assist points and +/- 2EV bracketing to get proper exposure even in dark scenes. HDMI provides previews of images and lets users adjust the image output independently for the TV itself.

Sony starts taking preorders for the A900 on Wednesday and ships it in November at the same $3,000 price as the Nikon D700 and similar-class cameras. It will be followed in January by a Vario Sonnar 16-35mm, f/2.8 lens at $1,800 whose focus and fixed aperture suit it to wide angle and low-light shots; a second, 70-400mm f/4-5.6 lens at $1,500 is suited more to telephoto-style shooting for nature and sports.

Lexar intros 16GB ultra-fast UDMA 300x CF card

Portable storage device maker Lexar on Tuesday announced it has doubled the storage capacity of its current 8GB UDMA CF card with the upcoming release of a higher capacity Compact Flash memory card, the 16GB Professional UDMA 300x. The 300x speed rating translates to sustained write speeds of 45MBps, which is quick enough to keep up with most modern digital SLR cameras’ burst shooting modes. Meant for professional photographers, the Ultra Direct Memory Access (UDMA) interface allows time savings in post-production time when used in conjunction with another UDMA-enabled device. No prices have yet been announced, but with the 8GB UDMA 300x CF card listed at nearly $270 on Lexar’s webstore, a price north of $300 is likely. The card will be available later this month.

Dell slams MacBook Air with E4200 video

Dell on Tuesday broadsided Apple's famous manila envelope commercial with its own tongue-in-cheek version, removing the Latitude E4200 from the sleeve and comparing it to the MacBook Air. A shiny Dell logo crosses the screen as the notebook is removed from the envelope, set down, and opened in the same manner as the Air in Apple's commercial. Dell highlights the E4200's thinner width and length, but negates to compare the notebook's height, which is known to be taller than the MacBook Air.

The end of the video boasts that the E4200 offers "more substance" and "less air" than its Apple counterpart.

AMD puts out budget Radeon HD 4600

AMD started off Wednesday by setting a new relative ground floor for performance and hoping to beat NVIDIA's GeForce 9500 cards. The Radeon HD 4600 series is claimed to outperform both the 9500 GT and AMD's own earlier Radeon HD 3650 by including all the hardware optimizations of the 4800 series and still keeping 320 stream (visual effects) processors. It's also one of the least expensive graphics chipsets to support DirectX 10.1 and newer OpenGL 2.x visual effects, such as more precise lighting.

All of the chipsets in the launch lineup are made on a 55nm manufacturing process and so consume relatively little power, according to AMD: neither needs a secondary power connection, and the fastest edition consumes no more than 60 watts of power. The improvement is both more environmentally friendly and also convenient for very thin or small cases.

They also support full hardware HD video decoding and 7.1-channel audio pass-through on cards that have HDMI output.

A basic Radeon HD 4650 is estimated to cost as little as $69 and does so by using 512MB of GDDR2 memory; a Radeon HD 4670 is only slightly more expensive at $79 and switches to faster GDDR3. Both ship now, while the company also plans to enable a 4670 version with 1GB of memory for card makers later this month. In addition to supplying the new Radeons to PC builders that need custom cards, AMD also expects third-party boards from ASUS, Diamond, MSI and several other manufacturers.

Tuesday, September 9, 2008

HP one-ups Dell, others with 24h battery

HP today heated up competition against Dell by announcing a special trim level of the EliteBook 6930p that it believes sets a new record in battery life. Through new firmware and graphics drivers, an Ultra Capacity battery pack, an LED-backlit display and Intel's just-launched 80GB SSD, the 14-inch notebook can last for as much as 24 hours on one charge. The figure if accurate would beat Dell's claimed 19-hour record and would be enough to last an entire Newark-to-Singapore flight with extra power left.

The SSD in particular is said to also add a level of shock-proofing that wasn't present in earlier models and also speeds it up in very disk-intensive tasks, in some cases by as much as 57 percent versus an EliteBook with a rotating hard drive.

HP doesn't price this special configuration of the 6930p but says it should be available soon. Dell also hasn't responded to the claims, which would give HP's battery life about seven hours more power than the best performance of HP's previous best portable and multiple times the battery performance of most normally configured notebooks.

Dual-core Atom set to launch in T7-HSG home server?

The dual-core Atom CPU from Intel will make its debut in a special edition of system builder Tranquil PC's T7 Home Server, the T7-HSG, easily identifiable by its blue body. Another product from the company, a media center PC, will also use the 1.6GHz Z330 chip, though detailed specs, prices and release information on this system was not revealed. The 64-bit CPU will be paired with a Gigabit LAN port in both the T7-HSG and the media center PC. Other details on the T7-HSG are scarce, though it will come with a 500GB drive as standard equipment. It is fan-less and should thus be quiet, and will be available with wall mounts for out-of-the-way installations. Four USB 2.0 ports will allow for hooking up USB devices and expansion via external hard disk drives.

All that is known about the media center PC is that it will have dual DVB-T tuners with at least one HDTV output along with an S-video out. Multi-channel (5.1) HD Audio will be supported thanks to Realtek's ALC662 codec, while the GbE LAN connection will come courtesy of Realtek's RTL8111C controller. The PC’s Maximum capacity will be 2TB.

The 500GB T7-HSG will start shipping on September 30, priced at an equivalent of about $520. Options will include larger-capacity drives, including a 1TB version for about $148, two 250GB 2.5-inch drives for $113 and two 320GB 2.5-inch drives for $173. No such information is available for the unnamed and unseen media center PC.

Vimpelcom: unlocked iPhones due to Russian law

Although pricing information was not mentioned, Russia-based Vimpelcom on Monday announced it would offer the iPhone with no subsidy, since Russian law dictates that locked phone are illegal. Reuters reveals that Vimpelcom CEO Alexander Izosimov confirmed the move at the Reuters Russia Investment Summit, continuing upon an official launch confirmation in late August. An estimated half-million unlocked iPhone handsets already see use by Russians. "The earlier we start working with it, the better we will be prepared. It is not technologies that will change, but the business model," said Izosimov. "Our research shows that when the iPhone falls into the hands of a customer, the use of data services increases by four to five times." Izosimov made the observation, echoing hopes in the telecommunications industry that have computing technology merging with the rapidly-growing field.

A specific release date was also not mentioned, with the company mentioning an official unveiling "later this year."

Monday, September 8, 2008

New Zunes to get Wi-Fi store, FM tagging

Microsoft's third-generation Zune players will be the first to support true wireless updating and purchasing, retailer Fry's has unintentionally revealed in an online store listing for a blue 8GB Zune. In addition to confirming both blue and silver as new colors for the flash player, the entry exposes a "Device to Cloud" feature that will let users update their song mix from most Wi-Fi hotspots, including purchasing tracks directly from the Zune Marketplace. The remote access feature will also improve a pair of additional features. The FM radio now supports tagging songs identified by the player that can later be purchased, either directly from the Zune or when it returns to its host PC. Microsoft's Zune Marketplace also has hand-picked playlists dubbed Channels that are updated over time and can be refreshed on the player over the wireless link.

Two important features include Microsoft's promised Zune games, two of which (Texas Hold'em and a port of Hexic) are preloaded on the player and have Xbox 360-like support for custom soundtracks, as well as the ability to share audio podcasts and Channels over the Zune's trademark Zune-to-Zune feature.

As with a recent Amazon leak, Fry's lists the device as in stock, hinting that Microsoft plans to launch the new Zunes the same week as Apple introduces new iPods and two months earlier than Microsoft's usual November updates. Pricing is $150 and should be matched by a 16GB model likely priced at $200.

The upgrades help Microsoft regain some parity with Apple. Although no Zunes are so far expected to support web browsing or third-party apps outside of games, Zunes will now have similar over-the-air purchasing and may have an edge in the ability to update at least some of the player's collection in similar fashion. Apple is known to be readying its iPhone and iPod touch 2.1 firmware for this month and should reveal any potential hidden features at its "Let's Rock" special event on Tuesday.

Intel boosts quad-core Xeons to 3.4GHz

Intel today set a pair of new speed records for its Xeon 5000 processors ahead of the introduction of their eventual Core i7 successors. The update pushes the quad-core Xeon 5400 series from its previous 3.2GHz limit up to 3.4GHz with the new Xeon X5492; the new flagship also climbs up to the maximum 1.6GHz front side system bus speed. Intel characterizes the processor as intended for performance-driven, full size workstations and servers with a peak 150W of power.

Other introductions trade speed for power savings. A next step down, the X5470, drops to 3.33GHz and a slower 1.33GHz bus while using a more modest 120W of power; a single low-power L5430 entry is aimed at very small-profile desktops and servers and consumes just 50W at its 2.66GHz clock speed, or just a fraction of what a 2.66GHz Xeon processor consumed two years ago. One dual-core Xeon 5200 update has also been added and sees the X5270 set a new high of 3.5GHz with a 1.33GHz bus and 80W of power.

All of the quad-core processors are shipping now and will be available in systems through several large PC makers, including Dell and HP, and range in large-batch prices from $562 for the 2.66GHz part to $1,493 for the 3.4GHz Xeon. The dual-core 3.5GHz chip sells for $1,172 but will be available later this fall.

Sunday, September 7, 2008

Intel claims SSD superiority, tries to dispel myths

San Francisco (CA) – Our love/hate relationship with hard drives may be coming to an end … that is if Intel has its way. For more than a year, Intel has been touting their upcoming solid state drives and at the recent Intel Developer Forum in San Francisco, Intel basically trumpeted the end of the spinning magnetic platter era. Lower power consumption, faster speeds and longer life were the reasons people would be buying SSDs in the coming months and Intel engineers gave plenty of numbers to back up their claims. The engineers also claimed that not all solid state drives are created equal and, you guessed it, Intel SSDs were at the top of the dog pile.
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At IDF we sat in on an interesting talk given about SSDs in extreme gaming applications. Chris Saleski, an Initiatives Manger at Intel’s Storage Technologies Group, and Jack Weast, Architect with Intel’s Consumer PC Group, showed slide after slide of performance numbers of the upcoming X18 and X25 mainstream SSDs. These drives will come in 1.8-inch and 2.5-inch form factors (as the model numbers imply) and will start with 80 GB capacities that will scale up to 160 GB in the fourth quarter.

Compared to what Intel called “competitor A” and “competitor B”, the X18/25 drives were four to five times faster in some benchmarks. Saleski and Weast touted the drive’s transfer rate which was up to 250 megabytes a second for sequential reads and 75 MB/sec for writes of 4KB and above. All drives aren’t created equal and Weast added, “the manufacturer of the SSD makes a huge difference.”

At another talk give by Intel Fellow Al Fazio, Intel touted SSDs longevity and tried to dispel the myth that SSDs wear out quickly. Fazio’s slides showed that the X-18/25 SSDs have a mean time before failure (MTBF) rating of 1.2 million hours, which is on par with modern server hard drives. In addition, he claimed that the drives can withstand a workload of 100 GB worth of writes a day for five years.

But is this enough? Intel’s spokesperson for the storage group, Deb Paquin, told us that most people only write a few gigabytes worth of data each day, so hitting 100 GB/day would be difficult. “During onsite tests with our own employees, we found that most people used about 2GB to 3 GB a day, and the highest power user we had was much less than 20GB,” Paquin said.

So if you extrapolate Intel’s data, then at 2-3 GB a day an SSD should outlast our frail human bodies, but what if the drive was under heavy load, like that of a server or perhaps even a rogue or poorly written program?

Intel’s claim of 100 GB/day for five years totals approximately 182500 GB worth of writes or 182.5 terabytes. Let’s make a big assumption that we can max out the 70 MB/sec max transfer rate until the SSD dies, this gives us 19 minutes to write the entire 80 GB disk and 30 days to hit 182.5 terabytes. Now I don’t know about you, but that doesn’t look too shabby considering most people would notice something bad was happening after an hour or two, let alone 30 days.

Paquin tells us that engineers in the Intel labs have actually completely worn out an SSD, but unlike regular hard drives that fail catastrophically (gotta love that thunk or high-pitched whine of a head crash), you probably won’t know if your SSD is actually failing. Flash memory has a limited number of write and erase cycles, but modern SSDs perform wear leveling which spreads out the writes throughout the disk. Essentially the drive wears uniformly and without the user knowing any better. If some blocks are getting close to being worn out, the drive controller rewrites the data to spare blocks and then remaps the logical address to the new location, so basically your operating system doesn’t know any better. In fact, modern SSDs contain extra capacity just for this purpose.

Paquin adds that a drive that has completely worn out (meaning no more spare blocks) will become read-only, so you shouldn’t lose any data. But she cautioned that SSDs really shouldn’t be used for long-term storage. “No flash SSD should be thought of as an archival storage, but it is important that the drive remain reliable over the serviceable life, which our SATA drive does by the means just described,” she said.

But ok, so if SSDs are so much better than hard drives, why aren’t our computers full of them by now? Cost is definitely one factor as a decent 64 GB SSD will set you back several hundred dollars these days, but beyond cost the slow adoption of SSDs can be summed up in one word ‘fear’.

Most computer users have lived with hard drives for decades and I personally remember my wonderfully huge Commodore 64 hard drive that I bought in my high school days. And while we know a hard drive can crash at any moment, we’re comfortable in the fact that we’ll definitely know that something is wrong and we’re ok with that compared to the “silent” death of an SSD.

But on the enterprise level, Paquin argues that SSD drive death doesn’t have to be silent and that SMART technology (Self-Monitoring Analysis and Reporting Technology) will test for and diagnose drive problems before they become a problem. SMART actively monitors drive blocks and warns the user of faulty sectors, read/write errors and temperature variations. Proponents of the technology say this could help operating systems predict when an SSD is about to fail, but according to some people the technology doesn’t always work as advertised.

John Christopher, a Senior Data Recovery Engineer at DriveSavers - company that has made a name for itself in recovering hard drive data – told us that DriveSavers has been performing an increasing number of data recoveries on flash devices with most of the problems being data corruption and accidental deletion and formatting. Christopher said SMART didn’t work as advertised in the hard drive arena and we can infer that it might not do such a great job in SSDs as well.

“S.M.A.R.T. technology showed a lot of promise when it was introduced but hasn't really panned out as a method of providing an early warning system to identify potential hard drive failure,” said Christopher.

Christopher agrees that some type of early warning system should be implemented for SSDs and indeed all types of storage media. “Carmakers build systems into vehicles they manufacture that monitor oil levels, brake wear and so forth, so it would make sense to have something similar to future storage devices that we rely on daily to hold critical data,” he told us, but he adds that so far it’s “probably too early to predict how reliable these devices will be in the long term.”

And that pretty much sums it up… it’s still too early and most people are taking a wait and see approach to SSDs. Logically we know they’re probably better, but emotionally the story is different.

Concept art for Intel’s Larrabee launch title released

Exclusive – In February of this year, Intel acquired game developer Offset Software and its game engine technology with the obvious goal to deliver a game that can show off the capabilities of its upcoming discrete graphics card, code-named Larrabee. Late Friday we got our hands on new concept art, revealing some of the work that has been done over the past six months and received word that Offset will also be launching a new community to collect feedback from gamers on Monday.
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It is a bit early to get excited about Intel’s Larrabee graphics chip and even if you are a PC enthusiast, you may want to be thinking about purchasing another “regular” graphics card, before you can get a better idea of at what Intel’s “many-x86 core” graphics card may be capable of. But Intel is aiming high and we don’t expect Intel to throw out anything that can’t compete with the best there is once Larrabee will be available in 2009 and 2010.

To demonstrate its horsepower, Intel will have to have at least one compelling launch title – and to make sure that it will exploit everything Larrabee has to offer, the company purchased Offset Software in early 2008. There have been a few screens available so far and today we received two more that showcase the direction Offset is thinking. Still images can’t tell the whole story and we are careful voicing any opinion how capable Project Offset will be. Instead, click into our gallery below and see for yourself.

The other piece of news Offset and Intel will announce on Monday is the relaunch of Offset’s community forum at 10 AM PST. We hear the Offset team is “excited” to be back online and touch base with users again. That is, of course, because Offset hopes to get user feedback on the game title it is developing.

Project Offset, developed as a first person shooter based on the Offset engine, has been a little known effort until a video leaked to the web in July 2007. The visuals received praise, but the company almost disappeared from the surface of the earth when Intel announced that it had acquired the studio. No further information about Project Offset has been provided since then and as far as the game engine is concerned, we only know that it has been licensed by Red5 Studios. Project Offset was rumored to be a PC only game before the Intel acquisition and now we are certain that this in fact will be the case. Intel would not pour money into a game that may look better on a game console than on a PC.

That said, keep in mind that video gaming is Intel’s strategy to drive mass-market adoption of Larrabee. The technology is foremost a many-core x86 product that is being built to do much more than render games, but is spearheading Intel’s visual computing strategy, which will also include floating point acceleration. If Intel’s strategy works out and it can sell enough Larrabee products to convince software developers not to write highly threaded code for Nvidia and AMD graphics cards, it may be able to keep programmers on the x86 track and may decide the many-core technology race for the CPU and against the GPU.

MS readying cross-device Zune service?

Microsoft is finally hoping to unify its Zune Marketplace and services with other devices, the company reveals in a recent job posting for a Software Development Engineer. The firm hopes to develop a new, "unified entertainment service" that would work on not just the company's music player and PCs but also on Windows Mobile devices and the Xbox console lineup as well. At present, Microsoft's storefronts are balkanized and don't allow Xbox Video Marketplace content to be transferred outside of the game system, while protected Zune Marketplace content refuses to play on the Xbox even when the player is directly connected.

The listing makes it clear that the project is just starting and thus that Microsoft doesn't expect to have a unified service for a significant amount of time, suggesting that the company is aiming for an iTunes level of integration between different device types but is significantly delayed versus Apple's services, which rely on a common OS X operating system core for most devices to ensure that they can all recognize the same music and videos.