Archive for March, 2010

Apple’s IPad Fuels Interest in Rival Devices in China

March 31st, 2010

The coming launch of Apple’s iPad has helped ignite interest in tablet computers in China, where a growing number of companies are planning similar devices.

Some Chinese companies are already selling the touchscreen, slate-style devices and more are likely to reveal plans for them in coming months.

One Chinese company that could boost the spread of tablet computers is Fuzhou Rockchip Electronics, a chip design company based in China’s coastal Fujian province. One of the company’s products, a package of hardware and software on top of which clients can design portable devices with Google’s Android operating system, drew added interest after Apple announced the iPad, said Miao Lifeng, a marketing employee at Rockchip.

The company has about 10 customers in China and over 30 worldwide using its package, which includes a microprocessor with an Arm core, to develop Android devices such as tablets, media players and digital picture frames, Miao said. Dozens of other potential customers have approached Rockchip about the Android package, he said. Rockchip advertises the package on its Web site as being usable for mobile Internet devices including “tablet computers like the iPad.”

The retail price of an Android device based on the Rockchip package could fall well under US$199 if it does not include 3G connectivity, Miao said.

A tablet computer at that price would cost less than half as much as an iPad, which starts at $499.

“I am most bullish about the Android system, because Arm [chips] are inexpensive,” said an official at Chinese device maker Teso, whose surname is Wu, in a recent interview. Many Android devices use processors with Arm cores, though vendors in both China and the West are also making tablet PCs that use Windows and an x86 processor, such as Intel’s Atom processor.

Wu’s company this month showed off two upcoming tablet computers at a trade show, including one running Android and another made to look like a big-screen iPhone.

Few Chinese tablets are already on sale. Chinese electronics bazaars are full of devices with screens between 4 inches and 10 inches, but most of them are simpler gadgets such as GPS units. At one bazaar in Shenzhen, vendors were selling only two tablet computers, each of which was controlled with a stylus, looked nearly an inch thick and had an asking price of over 2,200 yuan (US$320). One was labeled with the brand eSuper, while the other was labeled FSL. One appeared to be running a pirated version of Windows XP.

Chinese companies that have announced tablet computers include Hanvon Technology, which also makes e-readers, and Huawei Technologies, which is best known for its networking gear. One company that already sells a tablet computer, Shenzhen Great Loong Brother Industrial, has said it wouldn’t rule out suing Apple over the similar outer design of the iPad, even though the Chinese company previously billed its own tablet as an imitation Apple product.

Shenzhen KRT Technology, another device maker, shows several tablet computers on its Web site, including one that it bills as the country’s first with multitouch, or the ability to control the screen with two fingers at once.

A report in the Shenzhen Economic Daily quoted officials at three companies developing iPad-like devices, including one Android tablet. The companies, all based in the electronics manufacturing base of Shenzhen, could not be reached to confirm the report.

Apple will start selling the iPad this Saturday. It has not said if it will offer the device in China, but network operator China Mobile has said it is interested in offering the iPad.

Source:http://www.pcworld.com/article/192991/apples_ipad_fuels_interest_in_rival_devices_in_china.html

Intel Throttles Up Next-Gen Nehalem EX Chips

March 31st, 2010

Intel (NSDQ:INTC) lifted the curtain on its Nehalem EX server processors Monday, pledging that its new Xeon 7500 series chips would bring mission-critical hardware capabilities “into the mainstream.”

The new lineup of quad-core, six-core and eight-core Xeon processors represent “the most significant leap in performance, scalability and reliability ever seen from Intel,” said Kirk Skaugen, vice president of the Intel architecture group and general manager of its data center group, in a statement Monday.

Formerly code-named Beckton, the Xeon 7500 series and 6500 series are also known colloquially as Nehalem EX — a reference to the current Nehalem-class chip design Intel uses for its x86 processors and the “expandable,” multi-socket server segment the new chips target. Skaugen said Xeon 7500 series chips were being used in designs ranging from two-socket server platforms up to a 256-node system built by one of more than a dozen computer makers on hand for Intel’s San Francisco launch event.

Source:http://www.dabcc.com/article.aspx?id=14100

Why Palm’s headed for a buyout

March 31st, 2010

Palm was king of the handheld screen when it launched its popular Palm Pilot handheld device back in the 1990s. But it’s since been almost forgotten in a flurry of competitors vying for a slice of the smartphone market. And when it recently tried to launch a phone and underlying operating system that rivaled Apple’s iPhone in elegance and ambition, the phones failed to sell. Given its recent earnings and desperate cash position, it’s clear the company is heading for a spectacular failure.

Can Palm turn itself around by raising more cash and tweaking its strategy? I say no. The only promise for Palm’s future is a buyout. And the only buyer that makes sense is BlackBerry maker Research In Motion (I’ll tell you why in a minute).

Many attribute Palm’s failure to bad decisions. There was the WebOS operating system that was open to only a limited number of developers initially. There was the wrong choice of first carrier in Sprint. And there was the bad launch timing of the Palm Pre Plus with Verizon Wireless right after the launch of the Google-powered Droid as well as some manufacturing and design issues.

Whatever the reasons for its failure, it’s chances of catching up again without an acquisition are slim.

First off, despite its slick design and a promising operating system, Palm does not stand out in any single category. BlackBerry is known as an email and enterprise device, Android is liked for its openness and innovation, and iPhone excels in user experience and abundance of apps. That leaves Palm more closed than Android, not as cool as iPhone, and not nearly as enterprise-focused as BlackBerry.

Second, developers already have their hands full with Android, iPhone OS, BlackBerry, and the upcoming Windows Phone: They don’t want yet another operating system! Without many apps developed for Palm, users are less likely to buy it over competing products, and without a significant user base, developers are less likely to develop for WebOS.

Why is RIM the only logical buyer for Palm? Let’s walk through the others often named by Wall Street as potential acquirers and see why they’re not a fit.

Source:http://venturebeat.com/2010/03/30/why-palms-headed-for-a-buyout-by-rim/

Hard times claim old hardware store

March 31st, 2010

The M.B.A. degree Samia Gohara earned while working in Erie, Pa., gave her a load of confidence and an edge in the business world.

Or so she thought.

That master’s degree in business administration didn’t help her much at Seville Hardware when a plumber came looking to have a pipe threaded or an electrician wanted the proper wire for a project.

”The hardware store taught me more than I learned in school,” she said. ”I made a lot of mistakes when I was first in business. I learned from the plumbers and the electricians.

”I learned to be humble, too.”

Seville Hardware will close by the end of April — a victim of the economy, the refusal by banks to extend lines of credit to new businesses and the big-box hardware stores found in Medina and Wadsworth.

The store had served Seville for about 70 years, Gohara said.

Betty Beshire of Chippewa Lake stopped in recently to buy a sponge for her O-Cedar mop.

”This is the only place you can buy one,” she said.

When Seville Hardware closes, Beshire said, her mop is headed for the trash can. She’ll buy a new one with mop heads she can purchase in another store.

Customers tell Gohara, of Barberton, all the time they don’t know where they will go to buy the things her store offers.

Dave Myers of Lafayette Township said he once worked in the plumbing department of a DIY store and frequently couldn’t answer customer questions. He sent them to Seville Hardware and Medina Hardware stores to talk to old-timers with answers and one-of-a-kind parts stored in basements or on back-room shelves.

Gohara said those big stores took their toll on small hardware retailers like hers.

”Every big store takes a little bit out of you,” she said. ”We became like a convenience store.”

Samia and Wadie Gohara came to the United States in 1970 from Egypt — she with a degree in mechanical engineering and he with a degree in chemical engineering.

She worked at the American Sterilizer Co. in Erie for 10 years, while he worked for Babcock & Wilcox. They tired of the long-distance marriage, and their sons, Mark and David, were becoming a handful for mom, Samia said. She moved to Barberton and bought Seville Hardware in 1989.

When the Goharas decided to retire in 2007, they financed the sale of the business to a couple. However, when the new owners couldn’t make a go of it, the Goharas found themselves back in the hardware business a year later. But Samia Gohara, 66, said she had gotten used to her afternoon naps and quiet time.

Source:http://www.ohio.com/news/89579192.html

Millipore announces ion chromatography seminar

March 31st, 2010

The seminar will demonstrate how to obtain reproducibility and consistency with an always-ready cap ion chromatograph.
Topics include how to automate sample preparation; capabilities of on-line IC and its applications; and tips and tricks.

Venues and dates are: Utrecht, 12 April (in Dutch); Mechelen, 27 April (in Dutch); and Louvain La Neuve, 30 April (in French).
Ion chromatography (IC) is a technique with applications ranging from simple anions and cations in water to more complex analysis of carbohydrates, amino acids and nucleic acids.

For any application to be successful, the IC system and its components must be working at optimal performance.
This seminar session will unveil tips and tricks to maintain the IC system at its peak performance level and discuss hardware, column, detector and suppressor issues along with troubleshooting tips to get the most out of an IC system.

Various contaminants in the water can have an effect on the ion chromatography systems and on the results of the analyses (ions, organics, particulates, bacteria).

These effects are reviewed, together with specifications for the quality parameters to consider for high-purity water

Source:http://www.laboratorytalk.com/news/mll/mll347.html

Boston Micromachines develops DoD-funded free-space communications retro-reflector

March 31st, 2010

Boston Micromachines Corporation, a provider of microelectromechanical systems (MEMS)-based optical products for wavefront control systems, developed a modulating retro-reflector (MRR) for asymmetric free-space covert communication and remote sensor integration. Developed in conjunction with Boston University’s (Boston, MA) (www.bu.edu) College of Engineering, the compact, portable, ultralow-power, and lightweight MRR was developed for the United States Army. See also “NASA chooses Boston Micromachines for two Phase I space-imaging projects”.

The MRR allows for long range ground and air-based communication and can be used in a variety of military and non-military applications including battlefield communications, naval situations such as ship-to-ship, and satellite-to-ground station data transfer.

“Optical communication has emerged as a critical need for military operations in situations where conventional radio frequency (RF) channels could be disrupted or unavailable for use,” said Paul Bierden, president and CEO of Boston Micromachines. “Our MRR technology is ideal for situations where conventional free-space optical communication hardware cannot be supported due to its size and power consumption. Using extremely low power, our MRRs could be deployed in remote locations, where it would be difficult, if not impossible, to position a traditional optical communications node. Also, weighing only 9 oz., our MRRs could be positioned on a person, soldier or elsewhere, allowing for covert, secure communication.”

Boston Micromachines’ MRR employs its MEMS modulator mounted in a hollow corner cube retro-reflector for passively reflecting and modulating an interrogating laser source. The modulator mirror is controlled using new resonant, power scavenging high-voltage drive electronics that are capable of 24-hour continuous operation at 180 kHz data rates on a single 9 V battery.

Development for the MRR was funded by an award from the Department of Defense (DoD) through the Small Business Technology Transfer Program (STTR).

Source:http://www.optoiq.com/index/photonics-technologies-applications/lfw-display/lfw-article-display/articles/optoiq2/photonics-technologies/news/technology-products/optical-components/optical-mems/2009/12/Boston-Micromachines-develops-DoD-funded-free-space-communications-retro-reflector.html

Oracle(R) Database 11g Delivers World Record Result for a Two-Tier Configuration on SAP(R) Business Intelligence-Data Mart Standard Application Benchmark

March 31st, 2010

Oracle® Database 11g set a world-record result for a two-tier configuration on the SAP® Business Intelligence-Data Mart (BI-D) standard application benchmark(1).

On a system comprised of one Fujitsu PRIMERGY RX600 S5 server, equipped with the new Intel® Xeon® X7560 2.26 GHZ processor, Oracle® Database 11g Release 2 on Linux delivered a world-record result of 854,649 query navigation steps per hour on the two-tier SAP BI-D standard application benchmark.

Supporting Quotes

“With this benchmark result, Oracle Database 11g Release 2 demonstrates performance leadership on two-tier SAP BI-D standard application benchmark and provides a solid proof-point for customers seeking the best foundation for their business intelligence applications,” said Juan Loaiza, senior vice president, Systems Technology, Oracle.

Source:http://redhat.sys-con.com/node/1338800

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