Archive for September, 2011

Kingston Expands Secure USB Drive Line With DataTraveler 6000 Series

September 29th, 2011

Kingston Digital, Inc. (an affiliate of Kingston Technology Company, Inc.) is not messing around with its ultra-secure USB flash drives. Today, the company announced that the DataTraveler 6000 series is now available, joining Kingston Digital’s already robust crop of secure USB flash drive products.

The 6000 series features a slew of security features, including Federal Information Processing Standard (FIPS) 140-2 Level 3 Validation, 256-bit AES encryption enabled by Spyrus using XTS block cipher mode, and military-grade elliptic curve cryptography (ECC).

Additionally, the drives feature secure channel communication, firmware updates that are digitally signed with Suite B SHA-384 and ECDSA P-384, tamper-free AutoRun enforcement, and the ability to run with AutoRun disabled.

Users must set their own password, and Kingston designed the drives to force users to actually use strong ones; there are no pathetically weak “admin”, “password”, or “123456” passwords allowed. In fact, the passwords have to have at least three of the following: lowercase, uppercase, characters, and numbers. Once that password is set, users had better remember it, because after 10 intrusion attempts, the drives lock down and kill the encryption key.

Even the casing is designed to be impervious to tampering. It’s also waterproof up to four feet, has a titanium-coated stainless steel casing, and comes with a five-year warranty.

Despite all the powerful features built into these drives, the DataTraveler 6000 series don’t support USB 3.0. Kingston claims read/write speeds of 11MBps and 5MBps, respectively.

The DataTraveler 6000 series flash drives are compatible with Windows XP/Vista/7 and Mac OS X 10.5 through 10.6 and come in 2GB, 4GB, 8GB, and 16GB capacities.

How much will all this secure goodness run you? The 2GB version is $100, and you’ll pay $116 (4GB), $147 (8GB), or $208 (16GB) for the larger-capacity versions.

For as useful as USB flash drives are, they cause their fair share of problems for enterprises and government agencies. Unsurprisingly due to their diminutive size, flash drives are frequently misplaced, whether they’re left plugged into a computer in lab, fall off of a keychain, or slide out of a pants pocket in a taxi, leaving their contents exposed to whomever stumbles across the little device next. Flash drives also tend to be vulnerable to user-inflicted destruction; if you’ve never accidentally dropped a flash drive or sent one through the laundry cycle, you’re in a very small minority.

When you consider how sensitive the information on a flash drive can be, especially in financial companies and government agencies, the preceding two paragraphs are deeply unsettling. However, the Kingston DataTraveler 6000 series of USB flash drives protect users (and by proxy, organizations) from much of the aforementioned maladies. In that light, $100 for a 2GB drive may be well worth the cost.

Source:http://hothardware.com/News/Kingston-Expands-Secure-USB-Drive-Line-With-DataTraveler-6000-Series/

Advantech MIO-5270

September 29th, 2011

There are numerous board formats for embedded computer systems, each optimizing certain hardware standards and technologies. The advantage of such boards is that they enable inexpensive, scalable, obsolescence-proof solutions and enable system integrators to protect their expertise in specialized products. The disadvantage is that standards-based boards do not always support all interface requirements for a project, and despite the large number of board standards, there simply may not be one that fit special project needs.

To address this problem, Advantech created the MI/O Extension Single Board Computer. Conceptually, MI/O is between standard single board computers and configurable modules. It’s in essence a single board computer with flexible multiple I/O support (hence the name MI/O).

What does the MI/O Extension standard mean for developers and system integrators? It means there is now a SBC standard that provides substantial additional versatility via MI/O extension modules that connect to the main board through standardized “MIO Unified Connector” high speed sockets.

This way, customers have flexible I/O choices to meet the needs of their vertical applications. Compatible with PCIe, USB 3.0, SATA and DisplayPort, MIOe facilitates a completely customized approach to meet any customer interface requirements. The image to the right shows a MI/O SBC and an expansion module.

Specifically, the MIOe unified extended interface connector common to all MI/O SBCs incorporates:

* DisplayPort
* 4 PCIe x1
* LPC
* SMBus
* 2 x USB 2.0
* USB 3.0
* HD audio line-out
* Power

MI/O boards come with the MIOe unified connector extended interface that connects in stacks, either to modules available from Advantech or to modules developed by clients using the Advantech’s design guide. A white paper entitled “Innovative MI/O Extension Single Board Computer” is available here.

Two MI/O form factors

The compact MI/O Extension Single Board Computers come in two form factors, the Compact Series with a 146 x 102 mm form factor (a bit larger than COM-Express), and the Ultra Series with a 100 x 72 mm board size (same as Pico-ITX). There are, however, differences other than just board size between the two form factors.

The Compact Series is designed for mid to high-end performance platforms with processor core thermal design powers (TDPs) in the 9 to 40 watt range. They may therefore include boards with up to standard voltage mobile Intel Core i3/i5/i7 processors and similar designs. The Compact Series also supports extended temperature design and comes with Advantech iManager chip that provides a standardized API for standard platform functions, and a self-management agent with software control functions (see iManager page and iManager white paper).

The Ultra Series is for low-power applications where a small form factor and low pricing matter most. There is no onboard mini-PCIe expansion, space for a 2.5-inch hard disk, or DIP/SMT type I/O zone. This MIO class is for cores with thermal design powers of under 8 watts, which includes all current Intel Atom processors as well as many competing core designs.

Advantech’s initial MI/O products are the MIO-5xxx Compact series and the MIO-2xxx Ultra series.

The picture to the right shows a Compact Series board inside a special MI/O platform demonstration case that explains and highlights the standard, and includes a MIO-5270 board, a carrier board, a power supply, and sample I/O expansion ports. Note that this is neither a computer nor a board, but simply a handy package assembled by Advantech to demonstrate the MIO platform.

Advantech MIO-5270

The Advantech MI/O demonstration case gave RuggedPCReview.com an opportunity to get a first look at the platform. The board included is Advantech’s first product in the MIO-5xxx series, the MIO-5270. This is an SBC based on AMD’s embedded G-Series of processors that include single core and dual core versions as well as DDR3 support up to 4GB. Our test board came with the top-of-the-line dual-core 1.65GHz AMD T56N CPU with a power draw of 8 (typical) to 16 watts (max).

Below you can see the top (left) and bottom (right) of the MIO-5270 board with its AMD T56N processor and A50M FCH chipset. Note that the top picture shows the active cooling sink that’s part of the T56N configuration.

The picture below shows the MIO-5270’s edge connector face with dual gigabit RJ45 LAN ports, four USB 2.0 ports, VGA, and HDMI. Visible on the underside of the board is the CF/CFast card slot.

Performance

Testing a CPU module or SBC is usually a bit trickier than testing a full mobile product (you just turn it on) or even a conventional motherboard (you connect a display, disk and keyboard). Having the MIO-5270 all set up with power and connected to a MOC-DB9000 carrier board made everything easy. All we had to do is connected a USB keyboard and mouse, and a flatscreen monitor for testing.

While this article is first and foremost an introduction of the MI/O standard, it’s always interesting to see where products fit in performancewise, and so we installed Passmark Software’s PerformanceTest 6.1 that runs about 30 tests covering CPU, 2D graphics, 3D graphics, memory, and disk and then computes scores for each category and an overall PassMark score. We also ran our second benchmark suite, CrystalMark, and listed the results together with the same benchmarks for four other (and very different) Advantech products with very different processors. The results are below.

The above give you an idea where a high-end AMD G-Series MIO SBC fits in in terms of performance. It also gives an overall impression of relative performance of this AMD platform compares to Intel Atom and Intel Core based solutions. Overall, the MIO-5270 sits somewhere between Intel Atom and Intel Core 2 Duo. For sheer processor performance, the AMD T56N seems at about the Intel Atom D510 level. However, the AMD system is greatly aided by its potent ATI graphics subsystem that produced strong 3D and superior OGL graphics benchmarks.

We’re still very early in the life of the MI/O Extension Single Board Computer standard (which Advantech makes available to others as well). MI/O is in many respects similar to the PC104 standard with its stackable architecture, and has many of the same advantages. Add to that MI/O’s special attention to optimal thermal design, minimal cabling, compact mechanicals and value-added integrated software services, and this new platform looks like a modern and promising solution in the integration-ready SBC space.

Source:http://ruggedpcreview.com/3_components_advantech_mio5270.html

Yahoo launches Flickr for Android

September 29th, 2011

At a press event detailing the company’s mobile strategy, Yahoo unveiled the first official Android Flickr application.

While there are many third party Flickr applications for the Android platform, this new app is the company’s first official release for the Android platform, and follows on the previously released Flickr for iOS.

The app features a custom camera experience interface that lets user’s select custom viewfinder aspect ratios for different photographic applications. Also present is the ability to name photos as they are taken, as well as add metadata to the image. Geolocation data is added automatically by the application.

There is also an instant upload feature, which allows users to share photos automatically.

Yahoo also unveiled Photo Session, a feature that generates a unique URL that Flickr users can share with up to 10 people. They can then browse through the photo album at the same time as each other, almost like watching the same live streaming video.

Source:http://mybroadband.co.za/news/quick-news/34936-yahoo-launches-flickr-for-android.html

Gaming Laptop Guide Rolls Out Updated Rankings

September 29th, 2011

Computer hardware in general and mobile hardware in particular is in a constant state of development. New mobile computer processors (CPUs) and graphics processing units (GPUs) are regularly rolled out, with enhanced technology such as smaller production processes, improved power efficiency and greater overall performance.

FullText Media anticipates that the audience has a varying–but in this case generally high–technical knowledge on the subject, and that it is imperative that the editors are equally well versed in bleeding-edge technology. This is what FullText Media has been focusing on and achieved with BestGamingLaptop.Net–both thanks to a team of dedicated, tech-savvy editors and helpful user feedback.

With console gaming being right between two hardware generations, PC gaming is moving forward fast and laptop gaming even more so. The manufacturers that form the base in terms of advanced PC hardware–Intel, AMD and NVIDIA–have all made major leaps forward in miniaturization, improving laptop performance and facilitating lower prices on gaming laptops, prompting a surge of new gaming-capable machines to the market. AMD and NVIDIA are neck and neck in mobile gaming graphics, which AMD also competes on another front with Intel in complete platforms for gaming and general computing, with the latest trend being on-die integrated graphics with major improvements in general performance.

Consequently, gamers are faced with more choices than ever. Although they are still very popular for good reasons, established gaming laptop brands such as Alienware and ASUS’ Republic of Gamers have received competition from unlikely sources in the last couple of years. Compared to the bulky portable machines that have been the expected standard in high-end performance laptops for almost a decade, smaller and average-sized mainstream laptops are also more commonly equipped with graphics processing units that can handle the latest games.

As a result, it is difficult and takes time to navigate the vast amount of gaming-capable products locate the laptops that are more suitable for gaming than others, and this is where BestGamingLaptop.Net aims to help its readers; partly by building and maintaining a list of the (in the editors’ opinions) best gaming laptops at any given moment, but also by keeping track of new arrivals in the U.S. market and worldwide.

The website also welcomes user reviews and participation in an on-going commitment to offer unbiased advice to readers. BestGamingLaptop.Net is more than just a buying guide–the site engages with users to offer specific advice based on its readers’ requirements.

BestGamingLaptop.Net strives to be constantly up-to-date with the developments in the world of PC gaming and will continue to expand with more high-quality gaming notebook reviews and analysis. The target is to achieve and retain its position as the ultimate guide to gaming laptops.

Source:http://www.prweb.com/releases/2011/9/prweb8766957.htm

Thunderbolt Display packs almost enough hardware to be an iMac

September 29th, 2011

The gadget fixer-uppers at iFixit took delivery of a Thunderbolt Display—supplies are so constrained that Apple’s flagship Chicago location doesn’t even have one on display yet—and promptly took it apart in the name of science. What they found inside is basically a 27″ iMac sans Intel processor and internal storage.

“Both sides of the logic board are packed with enough chips that it’s hard to believe there’s no computer inside this display,” iFixit’s Miro Djuric told Ars. Among the hardware on the logic board is a Light Ridge Thunderbolt controller, Broadcom Gigabit Ethernet controller, several USB 2.0 controller and hub chips, and an LSI open host controller interface. Like the 27″ Cinema Display, it also features a 49W class D audio amplifier that drives 2 full range stereo speakers and a tiny embedded subwoofer. The included FaceTime camera is capable of full 720p HD resolution, an upgrade from the camera in previous displays.

Perhaps the oddest design is the internal connection for the Thunderbolt cable. Instead of soldering the cabling directly to the logic board, Apple included an internal Thunderbolt port. The cable is secured with a plastic locking clamp that screws into place.

The 27″ 2560×1440 pixel IPS panel is an LG LM270WQ1, the same panel in Apple’s 27″ iMac, 27″ Cinema Display, and Dell’s 27″ UltraSharp U2711. Nothing new here, but—I was looking at one yesterday—it’s bright, sharp, color accurate, and has a beautifully wide viewing angle. To support the huge display panel, LED backlight, and power to the array of Thunderbolt, FireWire, and USB ports, the Thunderbolt Display’s power supply can output 250W of maximum continuous power.

Nothing inside could offer any explanation for the Thunderbolt Display’s odd incompatibilities with DisplayPort devices. At least it scores an 8/10 for reparability, thanks to minimal use of adhesives and just two sizes of Torx screws. Be sure to head over to iFixit to get a closer look at all the internals.

Source:http://arstechnica.com/apple/news/2011/09/thunderbolt-display-packs-almost-enough-hardware-to-be-an-imac.ars?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=rss

Spare Backup Begins Hardware Upgrade to Scalable Storage Platform Capable of Supporting Millions of Spare Backup and Spare Mobile Users

September 29th, 2011

Spare Backup, Inc. (“Spare Backup”) SPBU +2.21% , a provider of data backup and security software for smartphones, tablets and PCs, which is carrier and manufacturer agnostic, today announced that management has begun the upgrade of its hardware to a scalable storage platform capable of supporting millions of Spare Backup and Spare Mobile users. Through a unique cloud like structure, this new platform can be infinitely scaled as usage increases by the combined use of additional network storage and virtual machine arrays (VMWARE). The upgrade will help to support multiple launches scheduled to take place in the coming quarters through Spare Backup’s current distribution agreements in Europe and North America.

“The upgrade of our storage capabilities to a scalable platform capable of supporting millions of users is a significant step forward for Spare Backup as we begin numerous product launches with our distribution partners, particularly in the mobile space,” said Tim Page, Vice President of Application Development of Spare Backup. “The ability to seamlessly scale our storage capabilities as usage increases will enable us to rapidly build Spare Backup’s subscriber base while providing 24/7 availability of our cloud based services. With this storage solution, we are confident in our ability to rapidly grow with our partners and insure their valuable customer data and devices are safe, secure and easily restored.”

Management anticipates the new storage platform will be operational in the next 30 days with full deployment taking place by the end of 2011. Upon completion all user backup data will be stored on state of the art NetAPP SAN storage. User account information and transactional information will be stored in a secure SQL-Server redundant distributed database utilizing special high-speed RAID drives. In addition, Spare Backup’s IIS web servers each can support thousands of simultaneous users. Combining this with Spare’s new scalable Virtual Machine array allows the system to be used by millions of users.

Commenting on the new storage platform, Cery Perle, CEO of Spare Backup stated, “As our distribution pipeline fills, it was imperative that we also make the appropriate capital investments into our backend, to enable us to keep up with demand in a seamless and cost efficient way. The new hardware coupled with our new uniquely designed backend, will now meet our objective to support millions of users throughout our system across all devices and operating systems for years to come. This architecture can also be replicated in additional datacenters affording us the opportunity to license software to future partners who have expressed the desire to have proprietary control of customer data.”

Source:http://www.marketwatch.com/story/spare-backup-begins-hardware-upgrade-to-scalable-storage-platform-capable-of-supporting-millions-of-spare-backup-and-spare-mobile-users-2011-09-28

Open-source hardware group puts out vid system-on-a-chip

September 29th, 2011

A radical tech coalition has produced an open-sourced music visualiser that modifies input video rather than generating patterns – and interestingly the box includes a system-on-a-chip that could one day compete with ARM. If just 80 units sell, the “Milkymist” will have already paid its way.

Backer Qi is the company representing the chaps behind the Ben NanoNote: the open-sourced PDA which needed to sell 3,000 units to be viable. Just 1,200 sales later, the group has moved on to create its own system on a chip based around the (open source) LatticeMico32 processor, and fitted that into a video-creating box which only needs to sell 80 to be viable – though each one will cost $500.

Milkymist takes an audio feed and creates the kind of visuals familiar to those who listen to music on a computer, but also adds a video input. The box will merge the pictures with the audio to create a combined rendering, in real time (the company claim <60ms latency).

What's remarkable is that a loose coalition of 10 or so people has managed to design a system on a chip and get that integrated into a production board to create a sellable product, all under the open-source banner. We were impressed when the NanoNote could be viable with a production run of 3,000, but to create any product with a viable production run of 80 is an impressive step towards entirely bespoke hardware.

The idea behind Milkymist is to make use of all those video projectors hanging off the ceilings of pubs and clubs, with a low-power, stand-alone, system which can be plugged in and then remotely controlled.

One might argue that a cheap laptop could do much the same thing, and we took that issue up with leading developer Wolfgang Spraul. He pointed out that just buying the software to create audio-responsive video in real time was expensive, and wouldn't have the same low latency or frugal power requirements, not to mention the cost of configuring and setting up aforementioned laptop.

Which is probably the most important aspect of the Milkymist box: it is a product designed for people to plug in and use, in contrast to the NanoNote which was really a $99 toy to fill the evenings of the technically-literate underemployed.

Open source, or "copyleft" hardware has a patchy history at best, but it's worth remembering that a dedicated group of idealists hacked away at Linux and its ilk for decades before companies came to understand that open source isn't, necessarily, profitless. Open-source hardware has a similar mountain to climb, but at least the company is only relying on shifting 80 of the Milkymist boxes, rather than the 3,000 NanoNotes Qi committed to manufacturing.

Wolfgang did ask us to mention that he still has 800 boxed and ready to sell, and that it will run mplayer these days, in case there are any technically literate people left with time on their hands, but the move towards creating a real product is an important step on the foothills of acceptability.

Source:http://www.theregister.co.uk/2011/09/28/milkymist/

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