Archive for February, 2012

New, faster Apple iPad expected next week

February 29th, 2012

Apple Inc is hosting a media event next Wednesday, where it is expected to unveil a faster, better-equipped version of its popular iPad tablet to thwart increasing competition from deep-pocketed rivals such as Amazon.com Inc.

The invitation-only event will be held at 1 pm EST (1800 GMT) on March 7 at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco, where it also introduced the last two generations of iPads.

Apple, which sent the invitation to reporters by email on Tuesday, did not divulge details of the event beyond saying: “We have something you really have to see. And touch.”

The invitation featured a partial picture of the touchscreen of a device resembling an iPad.

Apple launches are some of the hottest events on the tech calendar, scrutinized by fans, investors, the media and industry insiders alike.

The iPad has dominated the nascent tablet computer market, but Amazon’s Kindle Fire, which sells at half the cost, has chipped away at the lower end of the market.

The third iteration of a device that has helped put pressure on demand for traditional laptops and computers is expected to boast a faster, quad-core processor, and a higher-definition screen.

Some analysts and industry experts expect 4G wireless capability, ensuring that the iPad remains current as cutting-edge broadband technology from Verizon Wireless and other carriers gains momentum. Verizon Wireless is a venture of Verizon Communications Inc and Vodafone Group Plc .

“The picture is zoomed in on an icon and I don’t see any pixels in that icon,” Avi Greengart, analyst at Current Analysis, said, underscoring how industry experts pick apart even Apple’s communiques for hints of what to expect.

“You don’t need exceptional foresight to guess that Apple is likely looking at a higher resolution display.”

TAKING ON PCS

The company’s market value has climbed steadily in past weeks, buoyed by anticipation over its latest gadget as well as by hopes that Apple will finally accede to shareholders’ demands that it return some of its $98 billion war chest of cash and securities.

On Tuesday, Apple shares racked up a record high of $534.62 in heavy trading on the Nasdaq market before easing slightly to $532.70, up 1.3 per cent on the day.

Apple iPad tablet sales doubled in the December quarter to 15.43 million units. The company has sold about 55 million iPads since it introduced the device in 2010.

It may be looking to “make further inroads into the general computing market” with the newest iPad, Greengart said.

Chief Executive Tim Cook has often said that he expects tablets to outsell personal computers eventually. Cook, who took the company’s helm after visionary Steve Jobs died in October, will likely lead the event, with ample help from marketing chief Phil Schiller and other executives.

With the iPad 2 starting at $499, investors will also be watching to see if Apple plans to discount it, creeping farther down the price chain and closer to the Fire, to broaden the iPad’s appeal.

Source:http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/tech/hardware/new-faster-apple-ipad-expected-next-week/articleshow/12075632.cms

Computer Size Of USB Stick Now Available For Pre Order

February 29th, 2012

FXI’s Cotton Candy is a computer no larger than a packet of gum. According to The Verge, it features a 1.2GHz dual core processor, 1GB of RAM and a Quad-Core ARM Mali-400MP GPU. There’s WiFi and up to 64GB of expandable memory via a micro SD card on board too.

On one end is a MicroUSB port which feeds power to the device, while the other end features an HDMI-out port, essentially converting any modern display/TV into a capable monitor.

Users register online and download their desired operating system, a choice between Ubantu and Android 4.0. If they nominate Android, users will also have access to the Android’s marketplace.

FXI is currently taking pre orders of the device at US$199, with the company’s website claiming it will be available from March 2012.

Source:http://www.channelnews.com.au/Hardware/Industry/B2B9R2A4

Advancing Device Performance for Quantum Computing

February 29th, 2012

Scientists at IBM Research report that they have achieved major advances in quantum computing device performance that may accelerate the realization of a practical, full-scale quantum computer. For specific applications, quantum computing, which exploits the underlying quantum mechanical behavior of matter, has the potential to deliver computational power that is unrivaled by any supercomputer today.

Using a variety of techniques in the IBM labs, scientists have established three new records for reducing errors in elementary computations and retaining the integrity of quantum mechanical properties in quantum bits (qubits) — the basic units that carry information within quantum computing. IBM has chosen to employ superconducting qubits, which use established microfabrication techniques developed for silicon technology, providing the potential to one day scale up to and manufacture thousands or millions of qubits.

IBM researchers presented their latest results on February 28, 2012, at the annual American Physical Society meeting in Boston, MA.

The possibilities of quantum computing
The special properties of qubits will allow quantum computers to work on millions of computations at once, while desktop PCs can typically handle minimal simultaneous computations. For example, a single 250-qubit state contains more bits of information than there are atoms in the universe.

These properties will have wide-spread implications foremost for the field of data encryption, where quantum computers could factor very large numbers like those used to decode and encode sensitive information.

“The quantum computing work we are doing shows it is no longer just a brute force physics experiment. It’s time to start creating systems based on this science that will take computing to a new frontier,” says IBM scientist Matthias Steffen, manager of the IBM Research team that’s focused on developing quantum computing systems to a point where it can be applied to real-world problems.

Other potential applications for quantum computing may include searching databases of unstructured information, performing a range of optimization tasks and solving previously unsolvable mathematical problems.

How quantum computing works
The most basic piece of information that a typical computer understands is a bit. Much like a light that can be switched on or off, a bit can have only one of two values: “1″ or “0″. For qubits, they can hold a value of “1″ or “0″, as well as both values at the same time. Described as superposition, this is what allows quantum computers to perform millions of calculations at once.

One of the great challenges for scientists seeking to harness the power of quantum computing is controlling or removing quantum decoherence — the creation of errors in calculations caused by interference from factors such as heat, electromagnetic radiation and materials defects. To deal with this problem, scientists have been experimenting for years to discover ways of reducing the number of errors and of lengthening the time periods over which the qubits retain their quantum mechanical properties. When this time is sufficiently long, error correction schemes become effective, making it possible to perform long and complex calculations.

There are many viable systems that can potentially lead to a functional quantum computer. IBM is focusing on using superconducting qubits that will allow a more facile transition to scale up and manufacturing.

IBM has recently been experimenting with a unique “three dimensional” superconducting qubit (3-D qubit), an approach that was initiated at Yale University. Among the results, the IBM team has used a 3-D qubit to extend the amount of time that the qubits retain their quantum states up to 100 microseconds — an improvement of two to four times upon previously reported records. This value reaches just past the minimum threshold to enable effective error correction schemes and suggests that scientists can begin to focus on broader engineering aspects for scalability.

In separate experiments, the group at IBM also demonstrated a more traditional “two-dimensional” qubit (2-D qubit) device and implemented a two-qubit logic operation — a controlled-NOT (CNOT) operation, which is a fundamental building block of a larger quantum computing system. Their operation showed a 95 percent success rate, enabled in part due to the long coherence time of nearly 10 microseconds. These numbers are on the cusp of effective error correction schemes and greatly facilitate future multi-qubit experiments.

The implementation of a practical quantum computer poses tremendous scientific and technological challenges, but all results taken together paint an optimistic picture of rapid progress in that direction.

Core device technology and performance metrics at IBM have undergone a series of advancements by a factor of 100 to 1,000 times since the middle of 2009, culminating in the recent results that are very close to the minimum requirements for a full-scale quantum computing system, as determined by the world-wide research community. In these advances, IBM stresses the importance and value of the ongoing exchange of information and learning with the quantum computing research community, as well as direct university and industrial collaborations.

“The superconducting qubit research led by the IBM team has been progressing in a very focused way on the road to a reliable, scalable quantum computer. The device performance that they have now reported brings them nearly to the tipping point; we can now see the building blocks that will be used to prove that error correction can be effective, and that reliable logical qubits can be realized,” observes David DiVincenzo, professor at the Institute of Quantum Information, Aachen University and Forschungszentrum Juelich.

Based on this progress, optimism about superconducting qubits and the possibilities for a future quantum computer are rapidly growing. While most of the work in the field to date has focused on improvements in device performance, efforts in the community now must include systems integration aspects, such as assessing the classical information processing demands for error correction, I/O issues, feasibility and costs with scaling.

IBM envisions a practical quantum computing system as including a classical system intimately connected to the quantum computing hardware. Expertise in communications and packaging technology will be essential at and beyond the level presently practiced in the development of today’s most sophisticated digital computers.

Source:http://www.scientificcomputing.com/news-HPC-Advancing-Device-Performance-for-Quantum-Computing-022812.aspx

Linux micro-computer is nine shades of cool

February 29th, 2012

FXI is preparing to launch the Cotton Candy, a tiny computer that is so small it looks like a USB thumb drive.

It runs either Ubuntu or Android 4.0, has a dual-core 1.2GHz ARM Cortex-A9 CPU, 1GB of RAM, and a Mali 400MP GPU stuffed under the bonnet. The configuration allows it to decode high-definition video which makes it useful as an entertainment machine.

It has a USB plug on one side, which is used to power the system, and an HDMI plug on the other which allows it to be plugged into a display. Other connections can be made using a built-in WiFi and Bluetooth system.

According to the company, it can be booted as a standalone and operate as a complete computer when plugged into a display. If you plug into a conventional computer it is possible to boot from as if it were a regular USB mass storage device.

The gadget is up for preorder and it is expected to ship in March. The standard retail price is $199 plus tax and shipping, which is a bit more expensive than entertainment hubs but it appears that it can do a lot more.

Source:http://news.techeye.net/hardware/linux-micro-computer-is-nine-shades-of-cool

Microsoft plays around with Cut The Rope on IE 9

February 29th, 2012

Fans of mobile game Cut the Rope will probably already have tried the addictive browser version, assuming their browser is HTML5 compatible.

However, they may not know that the browser version is particularly friendly with Internet Explorer 9, even featuring unique levels that can’t be accessed through any other browser.

Microsoft is currently running a stunt in Auckland to spread the word, painting a mural in the middle of Aotea Square and attracting plenty of attention from passersby, despite the on-and-off showers.

Dean Edwards, Windows Client business group manager for Microsoft New Zealand, says the one-day project is a fun way to promote the browser.

“Cut the Rope is particularly good on IE 9,” Edwards says.

“The hardware acceleration takes advantage of the computer’s graphics card so you’d think it was a native app – you’d never know you were playing over the web.”

Here are a couple more pics, if you’re in Auckland City head down and check it out for yourself!

Source:http://www.techday.co.nz/gameconsole/news/microsoft-plays-around-with-cut-the-rope-on-i/22112/2/

Dell is ‘no longer a PC company’

February 29th, 2012

Computer maker Dell is “long longer a PC company” but an “IT solutions company”, Brad Anderson, the president of its enterprise solution group said at the launch of its enterprise solutions in London on Monday, Craig Wilson reports.

Anderson says the company has made 18 acquisitions since 2008, continues to invest in new data centres to match the increasing demand for cloud-based services, and has recently formed a software group.

Dell has realised it needs to play in more than just the hardware space if it hopes to compensate for the declining margins on physical products.

Once one of the biggest suppliers of PC hardware to large corporate organisations, partly due to its offering customers the ability to customise PC specifications and excellent after-sales services, the US company has suffered a decline in its fortunes in the face of a greater number of competitors and the consumerisation of technology where individuals increasingly want to use their own devices — particularly tablet computers — for work purposes.

Anderson says enterprise solutions and services now account for 30% of Dell’s business and it expects to buy about eight new companies a year for the foreseeable future.

He says Dell wants to offer “complete solutions around virtual desktop solutions” and realises the “speed of innovation isn’t the same globally”, so it will tailor what it rolls out, and when, to each region in which it is active.

The speed of innovation is accelerating every year, and Anderson says this creates market conditions that are excellent for companies that can move fast, but “unforgiving” of businesses that are late to market.

At the same time, computing power continues to increase at unprecedented rates. “In 1993, with the processing power available at the time, it was estimated it would take 10 years to map the human genome. With today’s computers, this can be done in 15 minutes.”

Anderson says the result is new business opportunities, like the ability to make designer or “custom” drugs for individuals that best match their individual genetic needs.

Dell on Monday also demonstrated some of its newest offerings for enterprises, some of which will only be made public next month. The most exciting of these is the fact that it will now be offering native support for 10Gbit/s Ethernet across its server, storage and networking portfolios.

Dell also announced two desktop virtualisation solutions. The first, Desktop Virtualization Solution Simplified is a small-scale virtualised desktop solution intended for small organisations. It integrates into existing systems and comes preconfigured. Desktop Virtualization Solution Enterprise, meanwhile, is a solution intended to scale to thousands of virtual desktop users.

Dell isn’t the first hardware manufacturer to try to expand its repertoire beyond the realm of hardware. Rival Hewlett-Packard acquired IT outsourcing company EDS in 2008, while IBM bought the consulting arm of auditing firm PricewaterhouseCoopers in 2002. Arguably, IBM has been the most adept at transforming its business and is reflected in its market value, which is US$232bn compared to HP’s $52bn and Dell’s $31bn. In the past decade, IBM’s share price has added 117% while HP’s has fallen by 32%. Dell is down by 26% over the same period.

Though it may appear that Dell is coming to the software and services game late, Adrian O’Connel, research director at analyst firm Gartner, says many of the company’s acquisitions in recent years have appeared to be hardware driven but have in reality been about the underlying software.

O’Connell says the first major deal in this vein was the purchase of data storage firm EqualLogic in 2007. “Lots of the functionality and value-add Dell gained was from the software components of that system.” He says the same holds true of the Compellent Fluid Data Systems acquisition that followed in 2010.

“Look at Perot, Scallent, and then Boomi on the cloud-integration front,” says O’Connell. “Those were all about the software functionality.” He says these all allow Dell to offer its various ‘as-a-service’ products.

According to O’Connell, there is distinct shift in the way IT is consumed and consequently there is a shift in the sorts of systems companies invest in, even those that aren’t overly eager to move everything to the cloud. He says the moves Dell has made in recent years point to its understanding that its “important from a vendor perspective to adjust to this”.

O’Connell says Dell has the advantage of “moving upstream without cannibalising its own business”. He adds that the company is being quite clear “about not having everything mapped out” but is “steadily making progress”.

When Dell acquired EqualLogic, the move “looked like a blip”, says O’Connell. He says Dell was “an organic company” that grew its PC business “rather than being acquisitive”. This, he says, was the starting point of the “transition to new Dell”.

He says the greatest challenge facing Dell is how to sell these new offerings. “The big challenges for Dell are coverage of the market. For all its good capabilities — like Perot on the services side — much of it is concentrated around the US.

“Dell needs to expand on that coverage more uniformly and focus on how its sales force interacts with customers. It was good at selling certain products to certain customers, but now it needs a whole different way to engage with customers. That’s the part that often gets overlooked.” — Craig Wilson, TechCentral

Source:http://www.techcentral.co.za/dell-is-no-longer-a-pc-company/29823/

Computer PC Laptop Components Company Offers a Window of Printing Opportunity with a New Scalable End-to-End Managed Print Solution

February 29th, 2012

With more than 15 years providing Computer PC Laptop and desktop hardware and network support for business, Double Bee has discovered how much extra cost is associated with business printing needs. Since most companies do not know what is being spent on their printing environment, Double Bee has found research suggesting that print production and management can be as much as 3% of total revenues.

In other words, indiscriminate spending on printers can negatively affect budgets by consuming valuable resources used to manage multiple vendors, purchase multiple products, manage service delivery, and utilize Help Desk support and IT support.

From a company with years of experience supporting printer fleets and computer hardware systems, Double Bee knows that when printers are down, employee productivity is down because information is not in the correct place at the right time. Resources are then spent on printer support instead of being used to grow the business.
Double Bee knows that businesses are always on the lookout for cost-cutting measures and when looking at managing a fleet of laser printers and printing solutions, PRINTSolv, is clearly a winner. Effective printing solutions like PRINTSolv can save 23% of the business printing costs on an average, which is a significant savings.
Ralf Braukmann, owner of Double Bee, read a recent case study on business printing costs. Ralf offers, “As business owners, we are always looking to trim excess spending. When we first discovered PRINTSolv, I could not believe how much savings could be realized.” Ralf goes on to say, “Our motto at Double Bee is ‘Offering the highest quality and innovative products.’ With PRINTSolv, we adhere to that motto by offering both innovation, quality as well as real-world savings to our clients.”
Case Study Sample

The case study looked at the average cost of hardcopy fleet for a firm with 750 employees is over $700,000 per year.

This fleet will require over 3,700 hours of IT support.

The fleet will use over 33,000 kWh of electricity

Will generate over 189,000 pounds of carbon emissions according to International Data Consultants.

Cost-Per-Page Tracking:

Because PRINTSolv manages the entire print environment from usage to supplies, it’s easy to track printing costs and accurately bill each department in the company. PRINTSolv’s easy-to-read reporting features enables managers to see which printers are utilized the most, so a business printer fleet can be optimized by deploying them where needed.

Businesses can enjoy features like:
Fleet Efficiency—Getting the most out of the entire print environment
Low Predictable Payment with No Capital Investment
Auto Supplies Fulfillment—Never worry about running out of toner again
The Latest Technology at an Affordable Cost—Upgrade when needed
North America Service Coverage
Detailed Usage and Added Control for All Print Devices
Clear/Consolidated Billing
Financing and Leasing Options
Single Per-Page Rate
Laptop Computers and Computer Components.

Double Bee Enterprises is a one-stop-shop in the Greater Toronto Area for all electronics components. Double Bee offers “Award-winning product quality” in terms their laptops, high-end computer systems, peripherals and accessories.

Source:http://www.prweb.com/releases/2012/2/prweb8935747.htm

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