Archive for October, 2010

MacBook Air countdown: new models one generation from mainstream

October 31st, 2010

Congratulations, MacBook Air, you’re almost there. After a major second-generation round of upgrades and slim-downs, you’re a powerful, svelte machine. Your hardware specs are in the same ballpark as thicker MacBook models. You can be used for real computing, so long as the user isn’t looking to do a bunch of Photoshop rendering on your low-Ghz processor or store a bunch of multimedia files on your low-capacity solid-state drive.

Hmm, MacBook Air. It sounds like you’re only ready for prime time in some area codes. Sure, you can be just about anyone’s second computer. Anyone who isn’t planning to use their MacBook Air as their main computer anyway is going to do just fine on the road with it, unless they need to have all their data with them or tend to run highly processor intensive software tools from the road. But still, MacBook Air, your front and center appearance in Apple’s latest ads makes it clear that you want to be the star of the show. You want to be the main and only computer for plenty of mainstream folks. And thank to the magic of miniaturization, MacBook Air, you can get there. Solid state storage will get cheaper increase in capacity without getting physically larger. Mobile processors will get faster without negatively impacting battery life.

But that won’t happen until 2011 or 2012. And that’s the point at which Apple may get rid of the current “MacBook” altogether and allow the MacBook Air to officially become the MacBook. That’s when we’ll know that the MacBook Air has formally arrived.

Source:-http://www.beatweek.com/news/7309-macbook-air-countdown-new-models-one-generation-from-mainstream/

Microsoft: Needs to Go beyond PC

October 30th, 2010

Roy Ozzie, the one who took over Bill Gates’ position as the Chief Software Architect recently announced his plans of leaving his post. In line with his announcement of resignation, Ozzie also left a deep message to Microsoft. He tells Microsoft that they need to “go beyond the PC”.

Mr. Ozzie described his stint with the PC giant has been “breathtaking” and he expects the future to be the same with Microsoft. On the other hand, he also mentioned in his memo entitled “Dawn of a New Day” that the strengths that Microsoft has could also be its weakness for the years to come.

In the first part of his memo, he empahasized on a world of seamless computing and mentioned Microsoft’s attempt to work with different kinds of devices. In the second part of the memo, he praised Microsoft but he also acknowledges the things that their rivals were able to do. He pointed out that the main reason as to why Microsoft has never done what their rivals did is because of the company being intimately tied with the PC. This statement was clearly shown in this paragraph from his memo saying:

For the most part, we’ve grown to perceive of “computing” as being equated with specific familiar “artifacts” such as the “computer”, the “program” that’s installed on a computer, and the “files” that are stored on that computer’s “desktop”….the early adopters among us have decidedly begun to move away from mentally associating our computing activities with the hardware/software artifacts of our past such as PC’s, CD-installed programs, desktops, folders & files.”

Roy Ozzie then emphasized on the importance of connections as opposed to computers as most people would prefer instant usage, interchangeability and replaceable devices.

Source:http://topnewsbuzz.com/microsoft-needs-to-go-beyond-pc/92190/

WinAudit, one-click audits of a computer’s hardware, software

October 30th, 2010

One of the first things that I like to do when I work on a computer that I have never worked on before is to audit the system’s hardware and software.It can save you lots of time if you know what’s inside, so to speak.

WinAudit appears to be the perfect tool for the job. The portable freeware program for Windows can audit a computer’s hardware and software with one click once the application has been launched.

The hardware and software scan may take some time, depending on the computer’s speed, but it is well worth the wait.

The first page displays a system overview with the most important hardware parameters, from the cpu to the memory, operating system, total hard drive space, motherboard and BIOS. Everything hardware wise is there on first glance.

The left sidebar lists all the categories that WinAudit has analyzed during the scan. They act as direct jumps to those categories. It is however possible to simply scroll down in the main window to see all information that have been gathered during the system scan.

The categories can loosely be divided into software, hardware and system categories.

WinAudit Categories

Software: Includes the installed software on the computer system, information about the operating system, startup programs, running programs and Internet software.

Hardware: The largest category. It lists everything there is to know about the computer’s hardware, from pyhsical discs to communication and open ports, processors and installed printers to display and network TCP/IP related information. It is all there and as extensive as it can get.

System: Lists system related information. This includes services, regional settings, environment variables, error logs, uptime statistics and groups and users.

Existing categories can be unselected in the program’s options. Here it is furthermore possible to activate six new categories that are not enabled by default, including system files, loaded modules, non-Windows executables, software metering and user logon statistics.

WinAudit can also be operated from the command line, detailed information about that usage is available at the developer’s website under documentation. One of the more interesting options of the command line is the ability to search for specific file types and include them in the report.

Reports can be saved in various formats including html, pdf and xml formats. Additional options exist to send the audit to an email address or a printer.

WinAudit is an excellent program for users who want to do a fast system audit. The audit can be customized to only include the information needed by the user requesting it. The portable software program was tested on a Windows 7 Pro 64-bit system. It should be compatible with other Windows operating systems as well.

Source:http://www.ghacks.net/2010/10/30/winaudit-one-click-audits-of-a-computers-hardware-software/

Newest MacBook Air best yet

October 30th, 2010

After all the hype about the new MacBook Air releases last week, all the oohing and aahing over the engineering that slipped a significant amount of power and capability into such a tiny package, I was ready to be somewhat disappointed by the new 13.3-inch MacBook Air that arrived on my doorstep earlier this week. I’ve used every MacBook Air since it was originally released, and I still use an 18-month-old Air for hours and hours every day. What could impress me about the new one? As it turns out, plenty. (Also see “MacBook Air Teardown: 5 Findings.”)

My last Air was top-of-the-line, with a dual-core 2.13GHz CPU, 2GB of RAM, and the 128GB SSD, purchased in June 2009. I purchased a top-of-the-line model this time as well, bearing the same dual-core 2.13GHz CPU, but now with 4GB of RAM and 256GB of flash storage ($1,799 from the Apple Store). The difference in performance between the two is significant — and that’s saying something. The older model — my daily workhorse — is no slouch, at least until you run into heavy swap due to the 2GB of RAM. After all, the old model has the same CPU is the new one.

[ Also on InfoWorld: Microsoft Office for Mac 2011 is a huge step forward from Office 2008. See "InfoWorld review: Microsoft Office for Mac 2011 gains ground." | Stay abreast of key Apple technologies in our Technology: Apple newsletter. ]

Still, applications like Mail, Safari, Microsoft Word, and others launch almost instantly on the new Air, and that’s with Spotlight hammering the disk and CPU performing the indexing functions. The load average on the new Air is 1.85 with the Spotlight mds and mdworker processes claiming 150 percent of the CPU resources, and it’s still easily beating the older Air in responsiveness. I should probably note here that I’ve had to disable the indexing services on many Windows 7 systems because indexing absolutely destroyed performance. I should also note that Spotlight was indexing around 100GB of data (transferred from my old machine) on the new Air (more on that transfer later).

New MacBook Air vs. old MacBook Air: Hardware improvements A casual glance at the old and new Airs doesn’t tell much of a tale. They closely resemble each other in size and shape, although the hinges on the new version appear to be much sturdier than those on the previous Air.

A closer look shows that much has changed. Gone are the underbelly curves in favor of the straight sides, and thankfully the new Air vents out the rear, not at a 45-degree angle toward the bottom.

There are now two USB 2.0 ports (one on either side), a SD card slot, a Mini DisplayPort, and a flat MagSafe power connector on the left-hand side. The additions of the second USB port and the SD card slot are certainly welcome, and the fact that you can finally use any Apple MagSafe power adapter with the Air laying flat on a table is long overdue. It was one of my biggest pet peeves of the older version.

The keyboard is no longer backlit, and the coloring of the keys is a little peculiar, seemingly more gray-on-charcoal than black-on-white. Frankly, I didn’t expect that the lack of backlighting would bother me, but I’ve found that I miss it. The trackpad is the much larger button-free glass pad found in MacBook Pros (definitely a welcome addition), and the Air finally has stereo speakers, albeit tiny and tinny ones. Still, they’re an improvement over the mono speaker in the previous model.

Then there’s the screen. At 1,440 by 900 pixels, the 13.3-inch Air’s screen has the same resolution as the 15-inch MacBook Pro, and it’s fantastic. I’ve always thought that Apple wimped out on providing higher-resolution displays on its laptops (and I always bought the HD versions of the MacBook Pros), but this resolution on this screen is just right.

Atop the screen is the newly dubbed FaceTime camera, but gone are the ambient light sensor and the microphone that adorned either side of the camera on the previous version. The microphone has moved to the left-hand side of the Air, next to the headphone jack, and the light sensor has apparently been hidden elsewhere on the case, though I couldn’t immediately find it.

New MacBook Air vs. old MacBook Air: SSD speed test That’s all good, but it’s the quickness of this new Air that is really impressive, and it’s very much related to the new flash storage subsystem. Rather than wrap flash storage into an SSD and pass it through a standard disk I/O subsystem, Apple has directly integrated the storage with the mainboard, much like the iPhone and the iPad. The result is an extremely responsive computing experience: faster boot times, faster shutdown times, and faster everything in between.

There are few things more annoying to me than waiting for a computer to do something — it should wait for me, dammit. The new Air is easily the most responsive GUI computing experience I’ve ever had; most applications are up and running before their icon completes a single bounce in the dock. We aren’t talking just Apple apps, but also Google Chrome, Microsoft Word and Excel, and so forth. Even notoriously chunky iTunes takes only a second or two to launch.

Perhaps most telling is when you invoke the Dashboard after a clean boot. I happen to have 10 dashboard widgets installed, and they all need to start simultaneously after a fresh boot. On the previous Air (and other MacBook Pros), this takes several seconds at the very least. On the new Air, it takes less than one second.

The new Air boots from off to a login prompt in about eight seconds, and shuts down in four to five seconds. It sleeps and wakes from what appears to be a new, deeper sleep mode instantly. It’s very, very quick.

I ran some sequential streaming read/write tests and consistently saw read speeds of over 160MBps and write speeds of over 145MBps while working with 1GB files. In comparison, the previous SSD-based Air clocked in at 35MBps writes and 97MBps reads on the same tests, though it should be noted that the SSD in the Air has seen plenty of action over the past year, which may have influenced those numbers.

But make no mistake: The storage juice in this Air makes everything faster, even versus the same CPUs as the last generation. If the 4GB of 1,067MHz DDR3 RAM is eclipsed and the system goes into swap, the speed and responsiveness of the flash storage makes swap far less noticeable than on any form of disk-based storage.

Speaking of RAM, the new option of 4GB of RAM in the Air is long, long overdue. It was my single greatest complaint about the previous versions — 2GB simply is not enough RAM for this day and age. I’d have really liked to see an 8GB option, but 4GB is the max, and as with the previous models, it’s not upgradable.

The new Air also has no power light at all, unlike all the other MacBooks in existence. I suppose this is because Apple doesn’t want you thinking about the concept of on versus off, since the batteries last so long in standby mode. The iPad and iPhone don’t have power lights, and the Air is clearly borrowing from those devices.

As far as battery life goes, with full brightness, Wi-Fi enabled, and general usage (that is, no extremely heavy CPU- or storage-intensive tasks), the claimed 7 hours is more or less accurate. With normal use — Web browsing, watching some Flash video, writing, a pile of X terminal sessions, some RDP clients, mail, IM, and whatnot — I got 6.5 hours of battery life. Dropping the screen brightness naturally increases runtime. I obviously haven’t had the opportunity to test the claims of 30-day standby time. I did note that the new Air charges from flat to full in well under 2 hours, and even 5 minutes of charging added about 20 minutes of runtime, which is good news for the traveler.

Migration Assistant: From old Air to new Air with no sweat  I always feel that it’s important to note how Apple makes system migrations so simple. Those who haven’t experienced upgrading from one Mac to another are generally shocked at how smooth and easy the process is. In the case of my Air-to-Air migration, I simply connected them with the $29 USB Ethernet adapters and a length of Cat5e cable, booted the new Air for the first time, and started the Migration Assistant on the old one.

It took about 2 hours to migrate 100GB of data from one to the other over the 100Mbps Ethernet dongles. Following that, I was immediately able to log into a session on the new Air that was completely identical to the old Air, with all my preferences, applications, documents, and settings already there and waiting for me. Needless to say, it would take far, far longer than 2 hours — and cause significant frustration and stress — to replicate all of those settings, reinstall all of those applications, and copy all of those files manually.

New MacBook Air: Caveats and concerns As impressed as I might be with the new Air, there are a few issues, but they’re exceedingly minor in the face of the stellar performance. First is the aforementioned lack of a power light. Call me old-fashioned, but I like to know if my laptop is on or off.

Another minor quibble: Even though the power port is now horizontal and flush with the left side, the power adapter is still angled at 45 degrees. In one position, it blocks the USB port on that side. Flipping it over is easy enough, but it can be a pain in some situations where the cable needs to bend back toward you.

Inexplicably, there’s no remote IR receiver anywhere on the new version, so if you want to use your Air for presentations, you’ll need to purchase a Bluetooth presentation control accessory or use an iOS device connected via network — bummer.

Finally, the reliabilty of the flash-based storage subsystem remains to be seen. Given Apple’s track record with flash-based devices like the iPad, iPod, and iPhone, I have to believe the company gave plenty of thought to the dependability and longevity of the SSD, but the usage models for those devices are far different than for a Mac OS X-based laptop.

Mac OS X does not implement TRIM, which handles wear-leveling and garbage collection to prevent SSDs from slowing down over time. It’s unclear whether that or a similar technology will be necessary for maintaining the new flash-based storage in the Air, but time will tell.

Given the spectacular responsiveness of the new MacBook Air, it’s a good bet that the next run of MacBook Pros will sport the same flash-based storage with beefier CPUs, greater RAM support, and larger screens. But they’ll also be bigger and heavier — and that’s where the Air stands apart. It has the oomph to handle just about every general-purpose task you can throw at it while weighing in at less than three pounds. I’m not going to use my Air for heavy video editing with Final Cut Pro or to mix down 32 audio tracks in Pro Tools, but I’ll reach for it when it comes to all of my other daily tasks, wherever I happen to be.

One thing’s for sure: This Air is easily the best one yet.

Source:http://www.pcworld.com/article/209177/newest_macbook_air_best_yet.html

Apple Unveils The iPhone 3G S

October 30th, 2010

After a successful stint with the iPhone 3G, Apple is now ready to ship the third generation Apple iPhone 3G S in markets from June 19. Apple unveiled the iPhone 3G S on Monday, 8 June 2009 at the World wide Developers Conference in San Francisco. Apple is proudly claiming that the third generation iPhone will two times faster than its predecessor in any application that you will use on the iPhone 3G S.

Interestingly ‘S’ in iPhone 3G S stands for speed and claim that it will be two times faster justifies the name well. At the conference Apple preferred to be secretive about the tech specs of the new iPhone. The official carrier of the iPhone 3G S in Netherlands, T- mobile accidently unveiled the tech specs on Wednesday. It posted a product page and with it the specs of the third generation Iphone.

Source:-http://www.technosamrat.com/apple-iphone/apple-unveils-the-iphone-3g-s/

iTunes Genius sidebar re-appears out of nowhere, without update

October 30th, 2010

Usually there’s a software update available when Apple wants to add functionality or patch a bug in an application, but it seems like the lines are being blurred these days. Apple managed to sneak an update into iTunes without an update.
It’s got me wondering just how that happened. Genius recommendations have been re-added to the iTunes side, but this time it’s available alongside the Ping functionality. It’s much appreciated that Apple returned the Genius sidebar to iTunes. I don’t use Genius playlists very often, but the music recommendations have been handy over the years. While Ping may be the future of music recommendations in iTunes, it’s just not cutting it yet. Not very many of my close friends have joined the service yet.

Source:-http://www.macgasm.net/2010/10/30/itunes-genius-sidebar-reappears-update/

Villages to be Connected via Broadband Net by 2012

October 30th, 2010

A Rediff Business article reports that Minister of State for IT and Communications Sachin Pilot expressed his views on getting rural India on the broadband Internet bandwagon. “The commitment of the government of India has been that by 2012, we will connect every single panchayat with high-speed broadband access,” Pilot said at the Bangalore IT.Biz conference. There were talks about the challenge of low broadband connectivity and high broadband costs in the rural interiors of the country. Their motive is to connect the panchayats (local government body in a village) with Internet for better interfacing between the citizens and the State government and transparent delivery of services.

Come to think of it, we’ve come to a stage where wired Broadband Internet is common fair, at least in metros and many towns in India. Government-owned BSNL’s cost for a 2 Mbps connection starts at a low Rs. 125 albeit for a paltry 150MB. While, in Mumbai and Delhi you’ve got MTNL that’s even cheaper at just Rs. 50 for 200MB of usage. Despite 3G being awfully delayed in this country, thanks to the 3rd generation CDMA technology (EV-DO), big privates like Tata and Reliance are able to offer theoretical 3.1 Mbps wireless broadband services.

As the world’s Internet keeps getting faster and faster, the key for providers is to consistently give users increments in speeds, while keeping the costs the same. Another major thing to work on is the reliability of their service. That, along with Internet penetration in rural areas, will truly put India prominently on the world’s Internet map.

Source:-http://www.techtree.com/India/News/Villages_to_be_Connected_via_Broadband_Net_by_2012/551-113306-643.html

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