Archive for March, 2011

PC Hardware Buyer’s Guide March 2011

March 11th, 2011

PC Hardware Buyers Guide March 2011

Well it’s been an interesting month in the tech world since our last buyer’s guide. The Intel P67 and H67 chipset debacle has rumbled on, with motherboard manufacturers continually releasing press statements stating that they’ve either received stock of the new chipset or have started shipping fixed boards.

Thankfully, these boards with the fixed silicon are now slowly starting to filter through to retailers, although we can’t be 100 per cent sure that this new, revised chipset will perform in the same way as the old stepping silicon. As a result, we’d still suggest holding off on any LGA1155 purchase you may have planned until we’ve had chance to fully test and report back on the new boards that are available.

As we haven’t reviewed any new LGA1155 motherboards or processors during the last month, all our recommendations in that area have stayed the same (albeit with caveats). What this does signify, though, is that we’ve had loads of time to look into other bits and pieces such as graphics cards, cases and peripherals.

Both the graphics card releases this month have been from the red camp, with the AMD Radeon HD 6950 1GB and the HD 6990 4GB making waves, but both for very different reasons. The HD 6950 1GB was notable for its sheer rarity at launch with very few units available to buy.

It’s now in stock at the majority of retailers, though, and competes very closely in terms of both price and performance with our current favourite mid-range card – the GeForce GTX 560 Ti 1GB. Meanwhile, AMD’s dual-GPU monster, the Radeon HD 6990 4GB, is by far and away the fastest graphics card available today. Unsurprisingly, it’s also the most expensive card available, and at over £500 you’ll need to have some seriously deep pockets to afford one.

We’ve also seen a trio of cases pass through our labs, ranging from the gorgeous Silverstone FT03 to the forgettable Xigmatek Pantheon. We praised the FT03 for its innovative internal layout and uncompromising attention to design – it’s probably the nearest approximation of computer case art that we’ve seen since Armari’s amazing Dream PC entry of 2008, but it’s also a micro-ATX case, so its appeal is slightly limited.

If you’re on the lookout for a more conventional ATX case, then we’ve also looked at the Antec One Hundred, which costs just a shade over £40. It might lack the bells and whistles of more expensive cases, but it does the job in terms of cooling and protecting your PC components quietly, and without fuss.

We’ve also had something of a rodent infestation here at the bit-tech offices over the last month, as we’ve tested and rated five mice over the last few weeks. They’ve ranged radically in terms of size and shape, with everything from the large and button-studded likes of the SteelSeries WoW: Cataclysm mouse to the squat, claw grip shaped CM Storm Spawn. Our favourite of the lot, however, was the relatively unpretentious Gigabyte M9680, which offers a good range of features for around £30.

How Does Our Buyer’s Guide Work?
We show an average price that you should be looking to pay for the products we’ve recommended, and then an overall budget for each of the PCs we’ve designed. This is in response to the fact that prices fluctuate over the month, and products go in and out of stock, not to mention the included cost of delivery for all the parts that we need to take into account – and everyone has their favourite retailers and e-tailers too.

As usual, a run-down of our systems is as follows:

* The Affordable All-Rounder is highly budget-conscious, but still offers plenty of gaming potential and an upgrade path.
* The Enthusiast Overclocker system is for those who want to squeeze out the most performance, although not necessarily the most MHz, for their money. It has tonnes of gaming grunt for the best use of little cash.
* The Gaming Workhorse offers supreme performance for the heavy multi-tasker and gamer, while staying firmly under the grand mark.
* Finally, our Premium Player package is for those who want the latest, highest-performing kit with excellent cooling that won’t sound like a hive of angry hornets, and without going way into the thousands.

As always, we write the buyer’s guide not as a definitive must-buy list, but as a monthly update of systems and parts we know will work well together within a particular budget. Take what you want from each build – from affordable, capable PCs to gaming behemoths – whether you want just a few bits of hardware for an upgrade or the whole system. We sift through the mass of hardware and recommendations, choose the best from what we’ve tested and what we know to be good, and then set up the above PCs to fit several budgets.

Source:http://www.bit-tech.net/hardware/buyers-guide/2011/03/10/pc-hardware-buyer-s-guide-march-2011/1

Relatively low ev/sales ratio in the computer hardware industry detected in shares of concurrent computer (ccur, dell, ncr, smci, cray)

March 11th, 2011

Below are the five companies in the Computer Hardware industry with the lowest Enterprise Value (EV) to Sales ratios. EV/Sales gives investors an idea of how much it costs to buy the company’s sales and the lower the ratio, the more undervalued the company is believed to be.

Concurrent Computer (NASDAQ:CCUR) has the lowest with EV/Sales of 0.32x; Dell (NASDAQ:DELL) is next with EV/Sales of 0.35x; and NCR (NYSE:NCR) has the next lowest with EV/Sales of 0.53x.

Super Micro Computer (NASDAQ:SMCI) follows with EV/Sales of 0.61x and Cray (NASDAQ:CRAY) rounds out the group with EV/Sales of 0.62x.

SmarTrend currently has shares of Super Micro Computer in an Uptrend and issued the Uptrend alert on October 01, 2010 at $10.98. The stock has risen 40.6% since the Uptrend alert was issued.

Source:http://www.zacks.com/research/get_news.php?id=069l2025

Seagate Introduces Barracuda XT 3 TB Hard Drive in India

March 8th, 2011

Seagate India has began shipments of its most elegant, easy-to-install 3 TB desktop drive, the Barracuda XT hard drive, a product that eliminates the need to purchase extra hardware or software to overcome the 2 TB barrier.

The 3.5-inch, 7200 RPM Barracuda XT hard drive delivers the highest available capacity for home servers and workstations, high-definition video editing and production systems, high-performance PC gaming systems and desktop PCs.

Legacy PC BIOS designs and device drivers and older operating systems such as Windows XP are incapable of using hard drive capacities beyond 2.1 TB. The upshot is that existing desktop drives with more than 2.1 TB of storage capacity must be deployed with additional software or hardware and may also require extra device drivers to overcome this limitation.

The Barracuda XT hard drive with free Seagate DiscWizard software is a complete, easy-to-deploy solution. DiscWizard software makes it simple to configure the computer operating system and device drivers to access the full 3 TB of capacity on legacy systems using Windows XP and PC BIOS and on PCs equipped with newer versions of Windows or the new UEFI BIOS.

“Seagate is squarely focused on delivering the storage performance, capacity and innovation to ensure that technology transitions remain seamless for our customers,” said BanSeng Teh, senior vice president and managing director of Seagate Asia Pacific and Japan. “The Barracuda XT hard drive epitomizes our commitment to providing end-user customers and PC manufacturers with the world’s most advanced storage solutions.”

The Barracuda XT hard drive combines a 64 MB cache that optimizes burst performance in cache-intensive applications such as PC gaming and nonlinear video editing with SATA 6 Gbps, an interface that delivers the highest system throughput, to enable the highest performance available in a desktop hard drive. The drive’s 3 TB of storage capacity gives desktop PC users the most space ever available for videos, games, photos and files.

The Barracuda XT 3 TB hard drive launch comes only months after Seagate introduced the Barracuda Green hard drive, another Seagate desktop drive that streamlines technology transitions to simplify drive installations for PC makers and consumers. The eco-friendly Barracuda Green hard drive features Seagate’s SmartAlign technology to enable all the benefits of the new 4K sector standard while simplifying drive installation. SmartAlign technology works by eliminating the need for utilities often required to ensure optimum drive performance.

The Seagate Barracuda XT 3 TB hard drive is available for Rs. 14,900/- (excluding taxes).

Source:http://www.itnewsonline.com/news/Seagate-Introduces-Barracuda-XT-3-TB-Hard-Drive-in-India/23011/3/1

Mozilla urges users to update graphics drivers for Firefox 4

March 8th, 2011

Mozilla has urged users to update their graphics cards’ drivers if they want to take advantage of Firefox 4’s hardware acceleration.

Last Friday, Benoit Jacob, who works on Mozilla’s platform engineering team, spelled out why users should verify that their computers, especially PCs powered by Windows, have the latest graphics drivers.

“When we turned these features on by default in nightly builds around September last year, and then in [Firefox 4] Beta 7, crash statistics and bug reports quickly showed that bugs in graphics drivers were often making these features misbehave,” Jacob said in a blog post. “We reacted by selectively disabling these new features on buggy drivers, based on the large amounts of information collected by beta testers.”

To prevent crashes, Mozilla created a list of graphics drivers that Firefox 4 reads; if a driver is on the “blocklist,” the browser disables hardware acceleration.

Last year, Mozilla added hardware acceleration to Firefox 4. The technology shifts browser page rendering and composition chores from the computer’s CPU to its graphics processor.

Mozilla followed in Microsoft’s acceleration footsteps in August when it rolled out Firefox 4 Beta 4, the first preview which included the technology.

When Microsoft announced its Internet Explorer 9 (IE9) in November 2009, it kick-started the push for hardware acceleration by promising that the new browser would boost page content rendering and composition speeds on Windows Vista and Windows XP.

Unlike IE9, Firefox 4 supports partial hardware acceleration on Windows XP, still the most popular version of Windows. It does that by calling on the Direct3D API, which the old operating system supports, rather than Windows Direct2D and Direct3D APIs, which are available only in Vista and Windows 7.

Jacob said that Windows users must have a “very recent driver” if their machine sports an Intel graphics card; version 257.21 or newer for Nvidia cards; and version 10.6 or newer for AMD’s ATI-branded cards.

“Unfortunately, certain computer manufacturers do not allow end users to upgrade drivers on their own,” said Jacob on Friday. “Hopefully these manufacturers will eventually give their users these much needed graphics driver updates.”

Mozilla has published a more detailed list of the Intel graphics cards and associated drivers supported by Firefox 4’s hardware acceleration.

Firefox 4 on Mac OS X relies on OpenGL to accelerate some aspects of page construction and rendering. Mac users must have Mac OS X 10.6.3 or later to support all Firefox 4’s acceleration.

Some graphics cards and chipsets used in older Macs, including the ATI Radeon X1000 and older, Nvidia GeForce FX and older, and Intel GMA 950 and older, don’t support OpenGL and so won’t be able to use the technology. Among the Macs with unsupported graphics are the Mac Mini from mid-2007 (which uses the Intel GMA 950).

Mozilla has ended the Firefox 4 beta cycle, and plans to ship the first “release candidate,” or RC build, of the browser to the public shortly, possibly this week.

“Unless serious issues are found during in-house testing or its cycle of beta testing, this will be what we ship to users,” Mozilla stated on its Web site. “Historically, we have not shipped the first release candidate.”

A final version of Firefox 4 should appear this month.

Source:http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9213648/Mozilla_urges_users_to_update_graphics_drivers_for_Firefox_4?taxonomyId=64

The 5 companies in the computer hardware industry with the highest forward earnings yield (hpq, dell, ncr, smci, aapl)

March 8th, 2011

Below are the highest five companies in the Computer Hardware industry based on estimated Forward Earnings Yields.

Using projected earnings for the current fiscal year, the forward earnings yield is useful to compare a stock’s return vs. owning a similar stock or other yield assets (e.g. bonds). Generally, the higher the earnings yield, the more undervalued the stock.

Hewlett-Packard (HPQ) has the highest Forward Earnings Yield of 12.3%; Dell (DELL) is next with a Forward Earnings Yield of 10.7%; and NCR (NCR) has the next highest with a Forward Earnings Yield of 9.1%.

Super Micro Computer (SMCI) follows with a Forward Earnings Yield of 7.0% and Apple (AAPL) rounds out the group with a Forward Earnings Yield of 6.3%.

SmarTrend currently has shares of Super Micro Computer in an Uptrend and issued the Uptrend alert on October 01, 2010 at $10.98. The stock has risen 43% since the Uptrend alert was issued.

Source:http://www.investors.com/NewsAndAnalysis/Newsfeed/Article/127802382/201103070636/The-5-Companies-in-the-Computer-Hardware-Industry-With-the-Highest.aspx

True Value Hardware Expands in the Boise Idaho Area

March 7th, 2011

Mountain Realty’s Commercial Division recently assisted True Value Hardware stores in acquiring approximately 12,600 s.f. of retail space in Nampa Idaho. Randall Filbert with Mountain Realty Commercial consulted with True Value and assisted them in leasing the space at the Owyhee Center Retail Plaza at 517 12th Ave. Rd. Nampa, Idaho.

Mountain Realty’s Commercial Division is a Boutique Commercial Real Estate Company specializing in personal, knowledgeable, and professional advice concerning the Boise Commercial Real Estate Market. Mountain Realty has been a leading Residential Real Estate firm in the Boise Idaho area for the last six years and currently has over 60 residential agents. They provide commercial leasing, sales, and purchases of Retail, Office, Warehouse, Industrial, Medical, and Investment Properties.

Source:http://www.pr.com/press-release/302356

Zebra Technologies Launches Global Partner Program

March 7th, 2011

Zebra Technologies Corporation today announced the launch of its Independent Software Vendor (ISV) Partner Program, designed to foster stronger and more innovative partnerships between Zebra and the ISV partner community.

As an element of Zebra’s channel development strategy, the ISV program highlights the importance Zebra places on the ISV’s role in developing new technology solutions.

Andrew Tay, President of Zebra Technologies, Asia Pacific, explains, “The ISV Partner Program marks Zebra’s dedication in building truly holistic business solutions. Traditionally, enterprise solutions are developed separately “ some vendors specialize in software, some in hardware. Businesses buy into one or the other, and spend some time calibrating them into a system. With the ISV Partner Program, Zebra will invest in our ISV partners to collaboratively develop holistic technology solutions seamlessly integrate into existing IT infrastructure speeding time to market.

The program builds a robust ISV infrastructure that facilitates peer-to-peer collaboration over shared resources, such as product testing/integration and co-branded marketing, to create new business opportunities. It offers great resources for ISVs looking to start, grow or enhance the performance of a channel.

ISV partners will have access to dedicated technical resources who understand the complexities of application development, an ISV developer portal with Software Development Kits, Sample Source Code, and interactive forums.

Through the new program, ISVs can also leverage Zebra’s reseller channel and global sales resources, as well as global alliance partnerships that include Motorola, IBM, Oracle and SAP.

We have 40 years of working with partners behind us, and have developed marketing resources, a skilled sales force, deep technical knowledge and people on the ground that ISVs can leverage to develop innovative business solutions powered by our Zebra printers,” said Dan Mouhot, Global ISV Program Director of Zebra Technologies.

ISVs in India are key influencers within the end-user segments they address. Sharing our resources with ISVs will enable us to reach out to companies scattered over the vast geographical and cultural dimensions in India. We are very excited by the opportunities this program brings and welcome ISV partners who want to embark on this journey with us.

Source:http://www.efytimes.com/e1/fullnews.asp?edid=59704&magid=11

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