Archive for March, 2010

HTC touch HD2 the King of Hardware!!

March 31st, 2010

HTC HD2 holds a conventional PPC standard shape. The large screen of 4.3-inch WVGA allows the users to surf the internet facilities or watch any kind of videos with a good visual sense.

The keyboard design of HTC HD2 is rounded of the predecessor of effective keys, the users are benefited by the increase of the practical physical buttons to five.

HTC Touch GD2 machine has grown in the field of entertaining with the rich resource of third party, the extension of powerful capabilities and the windows mobile 6.5 OS.

Overall speed of the machine is assured by the hardware with 1 GHz frequency processor Qualcomm Snapdragon with 512MB ROM memory and 448MB RAM. A camera of 5 million pixels with the auto focus facility is build by the handset.

Source:http://www.shuttervoice.com/3057/htc-touch-hd2-the-king-of-hardware.html

Server Hardware Market In China 2008-2012

March 31st, 2010

Server Hardware includes various types of servers and associated hardware. Examples of server hardware include blades, fault-tolerant servers, mainframes, x86S-Standard servers, parallel processors, supercomputers, RISC baser servers, messaging servers, etc.

Presently, the primary concern across the industries is hardware obsolescence that is leading to downtime and making productivity a paramount issue. In addition, running older hardware is also proving to be expensive for the companies; thereby increasing the need for energy efficient hardware. With the evolution of new technologies, server efficiency has improved by multifold, and is constantly evolving as per business needs.

The recession, intense competition in the market, and increasing interest in virtualization & server consolidation has affected the Chinese server hardware industry, resulting in a slow growth rate. However, driven by the demand of energy efficient servers (x86 server and low priced servers), the market is slowly recovering. In addition, the need to replace or upgrade systems, rapid growth of SMBs, and adoption of servers by the established industries (such as telecom, finance, manufacturing) and the vast deployment of servers by the governmental organizations will play an important role in the development of the Chinese server hardware market. Further, the increased recognition of domestic servers and vendors will drive the demand for middle-and low-end products.

The report forecasts the size of the Server Hardware market in China over the period 2008-2012. Further, it discusses the key market trends, drivers and challenges of the Server Hardware market in China, and profiles some of the key vendors of this industry.

Source:http://www.officialwire.com/main.php?action=posted_news&rid=112548

Sony Ericsson Xperia X10

March 31st, 2010

After encountering some bugs in the X10, we contacted Sony Ericsson. The company said that the review unit we had received was running preproduction software that will be updated before the X10 goes on sale. We’ll update the review and give the X10 a rating once we get a unit equipped the final version of the operating system.

By now, most Android fans have seen the videos of the Sony Ericsson Xperia X10 and its silky user interface. Likewise its exciting specs (which include a 4-inch display, a Snapdragon processor, and an 8.1-megapixel camera) are widely known. But does it live up to the resulting high expectations? After spending some time with the Xperia X10, I have mixed feelings. Though I loved the phone’s hardware, the software was buggy and slow at times. And faced with shortcomings such as the absence of multitouch and the omission of an Android 2.0 (Éclair) upgrade, I can’t recommend the X10 over other high-end Android phones, like the Motorola Droid and the Google Nexus One.

Elegant Design

The X10’s design unmistakably marks the smartphone as a Sony: Like its sibling, the Windows Mobile-based Xperia X1, this handset has an eye-catching sleek profile, an elegant curved body, and a minimalist black-and-chrome color scheme. Measuring 4.7 by 2.5 by 0.5 inches, the X10 is slightly larger than most smartphones (the Nexus One, for instance, measures 4.5 by 2.4 by 0.5 inches) and feels slightly awkward to hold. It weighs a manageable 4.8 ounces.

Three hardware buttons–for Menu, Home/Multitask Manager, and Back–reside beneath the display. Though the skinny chrome buttons are easy to press, they aren’t touch-sensitive. Occupying the top of the X10 are a 3.5-mm headphone jack, a mini-USB port, and the Power/Lock button. The camera shutter key and the digital zoom control/volume rocker are located on the right spine.

The reason the X10 is larger than average is to accommodate its 4-inch, 480-by-854-pixel WVGA display, which is bigger than the displays on the Nexus One (3.7 inches), the Droid (3.7 inches), and the iPhone 3GS (3.5 inches). Despite its gorgeousness, the display wasn’t always as responsive as I would have liked. For example, to unlock the phone, you drag the “lock” upward; but frustratingly, I sometimes had to swipe a couple of times to get it to unlock.

I can live without multitouch, but its omission from such a powerful, large-screened phone is certainly disappointing. Single-touch input is a pain–especially when you have to deal with the native Android software keyboard, which feels tightly packed and slow. And though I like the slim profile of the X10, having a hardware keyboard instead of struggling to type on-screen would have been worth the extra size.

Sony Ericsson’s Twist on Android

Like Motorola and HTC, Sony Ericsson developed its own proprietary user interface (which it calls UX, for User eXperience–also code-named “Rachael”) to run over Android. Sony Ericsson announced before Mobile World Congress that both the X10 and its younger sibling, the X10 Mini, will initially ship with Android OS version 1.6, but the operating system will eventually be upgradable. You can read the company’s full explanation at the Sony Ericsson Product Blog.

Fortunately, UX delivers some useful enhancements to Android 1.6. Similar to Motorola’s Happenings widget on MotoBlur, the UX’s Timescape application manages communication with contacts across e-mail accounts and social networks. But instead of presenting your contact history in a boring list, Timescape displays your update history in something called “Splines”–essentially a 3D stack of cards featuring your friends’ updates. Visually, I liked Timescape, but I felt as though it tried to do too much at once. Not only did it take a while to load (see the “Performance” section below), but I felt a bit overwhelmed with information.

To manage your music and videos, UX offers a smart feature called Mediascape, a welcome change from Android’s boring out-of-the-box media player. When you first open it up, Mediascape shows you your most recently played tracks and your favorite tracks. It also integrates Sony’s PlayNow store for purchasing tracks. I couldn’t test the store, though, because as yet there’s no U.S. support for it. Mediascape nicely displays album art, and it offers various browsing and playback modes.

UX also supports Face Recognition technology. This feature is pretty cool in theory: You snap a picture of your friend, tag it, and let UX store it. The next time you snap a picture of that same friend, UX will recognize the person’s face and automatically tag it for you. The feature also lets you call someone by tapping on their face when viewing a picture. Unfortunately, I couldn’t get Face Recognition to work. I tried it on a couple of different people–including myself–but UX never remembered who was who.

When I informed Sony Ericsson reps that the feature wasn’t working, they assured me that it should be functioning. I don’t know whether the issue was unique to my test unit or whether the technology simply isn’t as “smart” as I want it to be. I intend to keep playing with Face Recognition, but at this point I haven’t had any luck with it.

Superb 8-Megapixel Camera

The Face Recognition bugs aside, the X10’s 8.1-megapixel camera with LED flash is a winner. The intuitive interface comes with a handful of useful features such as touch-to-focus and smile detection. Recent photos appear at the bottom of the screen so you can easily review and delete them.

I was particularly impressed at how well my indoor shots turned out: The flash provided just enough light, without blowing out the image. Outdoor shots looked great, too, with vivid colors and sharp detail. Like other Android phones, the X10 lets you upload your photos to Facebook, Picasa, and Flickr directly (and easily) from the phone.

I also liked the device’s video-recording capabilities. The X10 captures WVGA video at 30 frames per second. Video quality was superior to that of any other Android phone I’ve tested: Motion appeared smooth, with little to no pixelation or image noise.

Hit-or-Miss Performance

The X10 truly shines at Web browsing, thanks to its speedy 1GHz Snapdragon processor. Media-rich Web pages loaded quickly over AT&T’s 3G network. Smooth scrolling and the 4-inch display combine to put the X10 on a par with the iPhone 3GS and the Nexus One for surfing the Web. But here again, I must lament the lack of multitouch: While double-tapping to zoom worked fine, pinching-to-zoom on a display of this size would have been even better.

Performance, unfortunately, wasn’t consistently speedy. Despite its beefy processor, the X10 stuttered through a few menus. Scrolling through Timescape, for example, was sometimes excruciatingly slow. In addition, launching certain applications took a bit more time than I expected.

Call quality over AT&T’s 3G network was good in San Francisco, but it got noticeably worse when I traveled over the San Francisco Bay Bridge to Oakland. Whereas my contacts’ voices were loud and clear in San Francisco, they sounded faint in Oakland–and I experienced one dropped call. I suspect that these issues are the fault of the network and not of the phone, however.

In the absence of an announced price or a final version of the included software, I’m hesitant to give the X10 a bottom-line assessment or to predict how it will fare against other high-end Android devices, like the Google Nexus One. At the very least, I hope that Sony Ericsson fixes the phone’s sluggishness and its nonfunctioning Face Recognition feature by the time the company launches the new model. And though an update to Android 2.0 seems impossible before the X10 goes on sale, Sony Ericsson should give customers a confirmed upgrade date.

Last, Sony Ericsson should price the X10 competitively with the unlocked Nexus One. The Xperia X10 has a lot of features I like, but I can’t recommend it until Sony Ericsson addresses the issues I’ve identified.

Source:http://www.networkworld.com/reviews/2010/033110-sony-ericsson-xperia.html?hpg1=bn

Contactless smart cards offer a number of advantages. But the data remain guaranteed

March 31st, 2010

The contactless smart card technology is due to their positive characteristics such as cost efficiency and functionality in Today more and more areas as the identification medium is used. This includes aspects such as more comfortable and often use high security requirements in focus, such as cashless payment, access control systems at airports, or company.

Measures for the “Best Practice” of these systems help to overcome the risks of the security technology per se is concealed in, be minimized. More recently, Smart was the risk of security systems through evasion of the hacks of the Mifare Classic systems and LEGIC prime card through the Chaos Computer Club Berlin in the public front of your eyes repeatedly.

To as low as possible to keep this risk, is the first step, the creation of a security concept based on the present security requirements. This facilitates the preparation of the technical and organizational measures, such that: The more action is taken, the greater the resulting system’s security. The establishment of processes for organizational security is important, for example in respect to the process of issuing and redemption of smart cards or the installation and replacement of readers.

For high security requirements should be also an optimization of all components involved: In addition to protective measures, the reader hardware (such as a tamper-proof housing) and the host system through a secure server and set up a firewall, type plays to choose a card with enhanced security or, if the migration to a new generation of smart cards a big role.

New generations of RFID cards as the Mifare Plus, the EV1 or the Mifare DESFire LEGIC advant promise a high level of protection against tampering and identity theft. The combination of several procedures are applications with high security requirements have become indispensable for in particular. As individual as those needs in terms of security, the advice on the most appropriate systems and applications are also accepted: YouCard card systems this is your ideal partner.

Source:http://www.live-pr.com/kontaktlose-chipkarten-bieten-eine-reihe-r1048436982.htm

Life hacking with 3D printing and DIY DNA kits

March 31st, 2010

Those starting to hack biology want to do for it what the web and easy to use tools such as the Arduino programmable controller have done for hardware hacking. That is make it easy to understand and fun to play around with.

“You can get kids interested in electricity and physics because there are lots of kits that they can play with, but that’s not true for biology,” said Cathal Garvey, one of a growing breed of makers calling themselves synthetic biologists.

For his colleague Brian Degger, a biotechnologist turned educator, getting people to play around with biology will help demystify DNA and stop it being seen as a something scary.

“We’re interested in science but not for its own sake,” he said. “This is about citizen science.”

The pair have drawn up a series of biology experiments that demand little more than common household ingredients.
Using only strong spirits and washing up liquid it is possible to separate DNA from pulped kiwi fruit. The detergent breaks down the fat layers holding cells together leaving the DNA to form a clumpy layer under the added spirits.

“It’s garage biotech,” said Mr Degger.
Other experiments include producing a home-made medium for petri dishes and cultivating the bioluminescent bacteria found in squid skin on that jelly.

The ambitions of makers such as Cathal Garvey and Brian Degger mesh well with those who are researching synthetic biology.
“We have now moved to the second wave of biotech which is the ability to order custom DNA, buy it online and get it delivered to you,” said James Brown, a PhD student studying synthetic biology.

“We’re at the point of asking can we develop a language and set of fundamental engineering tools that we can apply to biology in the same way we do in mechanical or electrical engineering?”

In the same way that standardised screw threads helped engineering bloom, so the push to create standard biological parts that can be bolted together could kickstart a revolution in biology.

“What defines synthetic biology is not just identifying genes and switches and other elements but piecing them together into devices,” said Mr Brown. “It’s about how we might think about putting them in a cell and almost programming behaviour.”
Also, he said, being able to create plants that produce seeds so medicines can be grown rather than made could completely change the economics of drug production.

For Cathal Garvey, it is likely that makers and hackers will be part of this movement and help to drive down the cost of biohacking.

After all, one thing hackers love to tinker with is complicated kits and the tools to manipulate them.
Home biologists may produce kits to test for allergens at home or take on the projects that pharmaceutical companies would not because there is so little profit to be made from them.

Being able to separate out DNA in a kitchen is not an entirely frivolous exercise. Part of the thrust of the DIY bio movement involves taking experiments typically done on expensive equipment in expensive labs and making them much more accessible.
For instance, Mr Garvey has produced a centrifuge that works with a Dremel – the power tool gadget that the serious maker or hacker is never without. The design for the wheel that holds the samples being spun was drawn up on a computer and prototypes were fabricated with a 3D printer.

The design for that wheel is now available via the website of 3D printer company Shapeways, which holds libraries of all the objects that people have designed and can be fabricated with its printers.

Many in the maker movement predict that home fabrication plants will become ubiquitous – the device people turn to instead of heading to the shops when they need household objects.

Source:http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/8595734.stm

Most users happy with Windows 7

March 31st, 2010

A report from Forrester Research said that most of the great unwashed know the product is there if they want it. Writing in its blog Forrester said a “strong majority” of US consumers knew about Windows 7 by the end of 2009. Microsoft released the operating system in October to favourable reviews and while punters still love Windows XP, Forrester said, particularly for their notebooks.

However what Forrester has noticed is that people have been buying the Operating system without splashing out on new PC. Forty-three percent of Windows 7 early adopters bought an upgrade, according to Forrester. Another 45 percent got it on a new computer. It was the first time that upgrade purchasing matched replacement-cycle purchasing among OS owners, the firm said.

This is because Windows 7 was a thinner client program than was Windows Vista, meaning that it works well on older hardware configurations.
In the past, OSes were designed with Moore’s Law as an underlying assumption – that is, that newer PC hardware would be significantly faster and more powerful than the previous generation’s hardware.

Source:http://www.fudzilla.com/content/view/18304/1/

GSE Receives Awards for Over $8 Million of New Contracts in the Nuclear Sector

March 31st, 2010

GSE Systems, Inc. (GSE) (NYSE Amex:GVP), a leading global provider of real-time simulation and training solutions to the power, process, manufacturing and Government sectors, announced the recent award of multiple contracts totaling over $8 million for nuclear simulation upgrade work in the U.S. and Europe. In the U.S., GSE will provide its updated simulation environment and modeling software for nine simulators and its electrical system models for seven simulators owned by one of the country’s largest nuclear utilities. GSE’s modeling tools are the standard for this Utility’s fleet of simulators and will be used for future simulator upgrades.

In Europe, the Company will modify five existing simulators that will allow them to run more modern computer operating systems and employ the company’s latest simulation tools. Under a separate award, the Company will deliver its RELAP5-HD™ model and latest simulation tools for the Kozloduy Simulator in Bulgaria. This brings the number of RELAP5-HD™ projects to eight and continues the trend of customers improving the realism of their simulators by using GSE’s RELAP5-HD™ technology for the reactor thermal hydraulic systems.

John V. Moran, GSE’s Chief Executive Officer said, “Servicing, modifying and upgrading the world’s fleet of existing nuclear plant simulators continues to be a major revenue stream for GSE. This work is driven by the global movement to extend the life of existing nuclear plants, uprating plant power generation levels and making modifications to older simulators to allow the latest generation of simulation technology to be deployed. Three of the contracts announced today are from existing GSE customers, two of whom own multiple GSE simulators and look to standardize their simulation technology as much as possible. The remainder of the contracts are with new customers who are looking for industry leading service and simulation solutions. GSE’s electrical system modeling capability has set the standard for the domestic market and our state of the art RELAP5-HD™ solution continues to gain market share both domestically and abroad.”

GSE Systems, Inc. provides training simulators and educational solutions. The Company has over three decades of experience, over 362 installations, and 100 customers in more than 40 countries. Our software, hardware and integrated training solutions leverage proven technologies to deliver real-world business advantages to the energy, process, manufacturing and government sectors worldwide. GSE Systems is headquartered in Sykesville, Maryland located in the western suburbs of Baltimore, Maryland. Our global locations include offices in St. Marys and Augusta, Georgia; Tarrytown, New York; Nyköping, Sweden and Beijing, China. Information about GSE Systems is available via the Internet at http://www.gses.com.

We make statements in this press release that are considered forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. These statements reflect our current expectations concerning future events and results. We use words such as “expect,” “intend,” “believe,” “may,” “will,” “should,” “could,” “anticipates,” and similar expressions to identify forward-looking statements, but their absence does not mean a statement is not forward-looking. These statements are not guarantees of our future performance and are subject to risks, uncertainties, and other important factors that could cause our actual performance or achievements to be materially different from those we project. For a full discussion of these risks, uncertainties, and factors, we encourage you to read our documents on file with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including those set forth in our periodic reports under the forward-looking statements and risk factors sections. We do not intend to update or revise any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events, or otherwise.

Source:http://www.yournuclearnews.com/gse+receives+awards+for+over+$8+million+of+new+contracts+in+the+nuclear+sector_47392.html

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