Posts Tagged ‘PCs’

Are Macs Greener than PCs?

February 6th, 2012

Computers aren’t very environmentally-friendly. They require a great deal of energy to manufacture and to operate in your home. They’re also made with hardware and chemicals that can be toxic and harmful to the environment and atmosphere. There is nothing especially green about a computer, and this is disconcerting to everyone who wants to lower their carbon footprint and make more eco-friendly choices. But most people aren’t willing to go without a computer entirely, so they have to make as eco-friendly a choice as possible. If you want to be more eco-conscious with your home computing, should you choose a Mac or a PC? Are Macs greener than PCs?

Macs
Mac computers are manufactured by Apple, and Apple is a company that has been making strides in the eco-friendliness of its products. Currently, every Mac computer meets the strict energy guidelines in order to earn ENERGY STAR certification. They also have the highest rating of EPEAT Gold. These designations are nothing to take lightly, and they definitely signify that Macs are as green as it gets in the world of computers. Apple uses energy efficient power supplies and hardware components in its computers, and its working to eliminate all toxic substances. Macs are already arsenic, mercury, PVC, and BFR free. They’re also created using as many recyclable materials as possible, including aluminum, glass, and polycarbonate. In addition, Apple tries to reduce its carbon footprint in every way possible, from manufacturing to packaging to all their facilities.

PCs
PC computers are manufactured by many different companies, including Dell, HP, and Gateway to name just a few. As a result, the eco-friendly nature of PCs will vary wildly according to which company is in question. However, most PC manufacturers do have significant programs in place that support and utilize green practices. For example, Dell has attempted to remove as many toxic chemicals from their products as possible, especially in their packaging. Dell uses bamboo packaging and recyclable materials. It also has computers that are arsenic, mercury, PVC, and BFR free. Many PCs are also ENERGY STAR certified, though not all. If you want to purchase a PC, you should make an effort to purchase an ENERGY STAR certified computer from a manufacturer whose environmental policies and practices you respect.

Your Choice
In general, it is possible to say that Macs are greener than PCs because of the large and continuing commitment Apple has made to improving the eco-friendliness of all its products and practices. However, many PC manufacturers also have made big strides in being eco-conscious and producing products that are greener. But no matter which computer you choose, many of your own habits will contribute to the environmental impact of it. For example, even if you have an ENERGY STAR certified computer, you are contributing to the waste of resources if you leave it on all the time, especially when you’re not using it. Be sure to power down your computer if it’s not in use, or at least put it on standby mode. And when you’re upgrading to a new computer, never throw your old one out. Make sure you recycle it.

Source:http://www.business2community.com/tech-gadgets/are-macs-greener-than-pcs-0129090

Shuttle Unveils New Small Form Factor PCs and Business Solutions at CES 2012

January 18th, 2012

Shuttle Computer, an industry-leading designer and manufacturer of high-performance small form factor (SFF) PC solutions and creator of the XPC, today unveiled at CES 2012 its new and upcoming line of small form factor models for gaming and media, plus cost-efficient business solution designs for digital signage, point-of-sale (POS), kiosk and cloud computing, among other applications.

Gaming and Media

Shuttle’s new full-fledged XPC product line for gamers and enthusiasts takes high-performance to another level with six-core extreme performance in a pint-sized form factor. From value gaming to mainstream and high-end gaming, Shuttle XPC SA76R4, SZ68R5 and SX79R5 delivers performance and stability in the smallest footprint. For media, the 3-liter Shuttle XH61 is ideal as a media HTPC in an ultra small footprint.

Digital Signage

Shuttle’s slim and all-in-one series provides a powerful, flexible digital signage solution, well-suited as a media player or content creator. Current and upcoming Shuttle slim series PC models, XS35GT V2 and its new powerful and ultra-slim addition, XS35GTA V2 and XS36, will be presented as a media player at the show. The current Shuttle X50 V2 Plus will be showcased as an interactive content creator.

POS and Kiosk

Energy-saving Shuttle solutions based on the latest Intel® Atom™ processor and a fanless design ensures a quiet and reliable POS and kiosk hardware solution for small and medium businesses. The new version of Shuttle’s 15.6-inch all-in-one PC, X50 V3, and the new 18.5-inch all-in-one PC, X70, will be shown as a basic and performance POS solution, as well as a basic kiosk solution.

Private Cloud

Cloud computing is the new stage in the industry’s evolution. With strong R&D experience and proven manufacturing excellence, Shuttle now delivers solutions for private cloud computing solutions for the home and business sectors. Shuttle’s new line of cloud computing solutions will be unveiled for the first time at the show.

Source:http://www.tweaktown.com/pressrelease/6724/shuttle_unveils_new_small_form_factor_pcs_and_business_solutions_at_ces_2012/index.html

Intel Thunderbolt Coming to Windows PCs in April

December 28th, 2011

Digitimes reports that Thunderbolt-supported motherboards, notebooks and desktop PCs are on their way and are being prepared for an early Q2 launch.

Initially, Thunderbolt carried a cost of more than $20 per device and is prohibitively expensive for most computer systems. The cost may drop in the second half of the year as the technology is adapted on a much broader range, but Intel will have to actively support and drive the technology into the market to make it a success.

Digitimes said that Sony will pick up Thunderbolt and Asustek Computer will, at least, put the technology into its high-end systems. Gigabyte will be launching a Thunderbolt motherboard in April. Intel confirmed in September that Acer and Asustek Computer will introduce Thunderbolt computers in 2012 to begin the breakaway of the interface as an Apple-exclusive technology.

Source:http://www.tomshardware.com/news/intel-lightpeak-thunderbolt-acer-asus,14370.html

PCI Express 4.0 to speed up tablets and PCs

November 30th, 2011

PCI-Express 4.0 (PCIe 4.0), a speedy successor to PCI data transfer protocols used in PCs and interconnects like Intel’s Thunderbolt, is being designed with tablets in mind – a standards-setting organisation announced yesterday.

The PCI-Express 4.0 bus will also go into PCs, servers and embedded devices and provide more bandwidth for high-speed data transfers than its predecessors, which could boost overall tablet and PC performance, said Al Yanes, president and chairman of the PCI Special Interest Group, which develops the PCI standard. The organisation wrapped up a feasibility study yesterday that sets the stage for the final specification to be released by 2014 or 2015.

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The PCI-Express protocol is used in PCs to shuttle data at high speeds between internal components. A version of the PCI-Express is also supported on Thunderbolt, an interconnect technology co-developed by Intel and Apple.

New PCI security standard ignores mobile payments

The protocol, also called PCIe 4.0, will transfer data at up to 16 gigatransfers per second over copper wire. That is twice the speed of PCIe 3.0, which was finalised in late 2010 and is just reaching products. Intel is bringing on-chip support for PCIe 3.0 with its upcoming Ivy Bridge desktop and laptop processors, which will be released in the first half next year.
HPC

“The PCIe 4.0 specification will address the many applications pushing for increased bandwidth at a low cost including server, workstation, desktop PC, notebook PC, tablets, embedded systems, peripheral devices, high-performance computing markets and more,” Yanes said.

There are implementations of the older PCI buses in tablets, but they do not run demanding workloads, said Dean McCarron, principal analyst at Mercury Research. But the tablet market is evolving fast, and there will be a bigger need for a faster bus like PCI-Express 4.0 to play high-definition games and video, he said.

“Performance requirements always increase. This is not for a product for tomorrow, but for a product down the road,” McCarron said. “Look at phones, they started with LCDs or LEDs, but now they are pushing high-definition.”

PCI-SIG is trying to cut down on power consumption by chopping the number of data-transfer lanes and reducing on-board hardware, McCarron said. That also helps reduce the cost of making a tablet.

Thin interconnect

Beyond an internal bus, PCI-SIG is also mulling plans to create a thin interconnect to link mobile devices such as smartphones and tablets to external peripherals, though plans have not yet been fully detailed. The peripheral would rival existing interconnects like USB, Thunderbolt and FireWire.

PCIe 4.0 is more about performance than power savings, and addresses the need to bring faster communication interfaces to take advantage of technologies such as 100-gigabit Ethernet and solid-state drives (SSDs), said Nathan Brookwood, principal analyst of Insight 64.

The first products with PCIe 4.0 will be on computers where performance is never enough, such as servers and gaming desktops and laptops, Brookwood said. Putting PCIe 4.0 into tablets could be a long-term plan, and could relate to a time when tablets start blending in with low-end notebooks.

The final PCIe 4.0 specifications are expected to be released in the 2014 to 2015 time-frame, Yanes said. He said that PCI technologies are typically implemented in products within a year after a specification release, but that actual product release dates depended on device makers. The PCI-SIG currently has more than 800 members.

Source:http://www.computerworlduk.com/news/infrastructure/3321915/pci-express-40-speed-up-tablets-pcs/

PCs, laptops disappearing, poll indicates

January 12th, 2011

We gather together this week to celebrate the life of the desktop PC, born in 1975 with MITS and murdered in 2010 by mobile computing and the iPad. Desktop PC, we enjoyed you while we had you.

My first desktop, if you can call it that, was a Commodore 64. It gave me years of fun before I moved up to an Intel 386, then a 486 and a series of Pentiums. Sure, laptops were around. When I was a full-time reporter, I proudly carried a Radio Shack TRS-80 Model 100, which boasted, I think, 24K of RAM and acoustic couplers for the 300-baud modem. It displayed six whole lines of text. I have had a parade of desktops, many of which I remember fondly. I took one Zeos apart so many times I still remember every configuration of its motherboard.

But all things must come to an end. Now, almost no one wants to have a big, clunky desktop in the house, dorm room or office. Even a laptop is too big for many computer users, who are moving to tablet computers and cellular phones for their mobile needs.

In its latest annual consumer electronics survey, the global management firm Accenture polled more than 8,000 people in the United States and seven other countries (Brazil, China, France, Germany, India, Japan and Russia). Only 17 percent of respondents said they planned to buy a desktop or laptop computer in 2011 — a 39 percent drop from the previous year.

Who is this good news for? Apple, of course, which is hitting it out of the park with the iPad. It could be good news for any of the 50 other tablets displayed at this month’s Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas — if any of them take off now that Google is releasing a new version of the Android operating system designed for tablets.

It is profoundly bad news for Microsoft, which has staked its claim on the PC and so far has made no impact on the tablet market. It seems to have missed the boat.

Now, there are a few places where desktops will survive. Gamers will need something because they will require serious video power. Some business users still will need them for computer-aided design and drafting. Some cool, all-in-one units like the Apple iMac will survive as kitchen units. And a few desktops will still float around. But overall, stick a fork in them.

As for laptops, they are the transitional technology as tablets get faster, better and cheaper. Give them another decade before we tire of typing and refine our voice-recognition software. Meanwhile, laptops will get smaller and smaller, and netbooks will account for more and more laptop sales. In other words, get used to typing on a tiny keyboard when you get your next laptop.

But for the overwhelming majority of us, our next computer will be flat.

Source:-http://www.scrippsnews.com/node/58970

Microsoft’s Ozzie Predicts Future Without PCs

October 26th, 2010

Ray Ozzie, Microsoft Corp’s (NASDAQ:MSFT) departing software chief, has asked the company to move on from its roots as a computer-oriented company to imagine a ‘post-PC world’ that relies on wireless devices and the Internet to function.

The call from Ozzie, who announced his retirement from Microsoft last week, is meant to galvanize the company, which has fallen behind Apple Inc (NASDAQ:AAPL) and Google Inc (NASDAQ:GOOG) in the rapidly growing phone and tablet computer sector that many now see as key to the future.

“Close our eyes and form a realistic picture of what a post-PC world might actually look like, if it were to ever truly occur,” wrote Ozzie in a memo posted on his personal blog on Monday. “Those who can envision a plausible future that’s brighter than today will earn the opportunity to lead.”

The message comes almost exactly five years after Ozzie made his initial mark on Microsoft with his ‘Internet Services Disruption’ memo, which is regarded as Microsoft’s manifesto for moving toward “cloud computing,” where data and software are supplied over the Internet rather than installed on machines.

In Monday’s blog, Ozzie said some of the goals he envisioned five years ago “remain elusive and are yet to be realized.”

He goes on to praise competitors for “seamless fusion of hardware and software and services,” which appears to be a nod to Apple’s iPhone and Google’s Android phone system, which are proving more popular with consumers than Microsoft’s own offerings.

“Their execution has surpassed our own in mobile experiences.

Source:http://www.channelinsider.com/c/a/Microsoft/Microsofts-Ozzie-Predicts-Future-Without-PCs-283396/

HCL Info to offer PCs to para military forces

October 1st, 2010

India’s hardware, services and ICT system integration company has announced an initiative to provide HCL desktops and laptops at special discounted prices exclusively for the paramilitary forces of India.

This is a project undertaken by HCL Infosystems to salute the hardship and solidarity of the para military soldiers, said a press release.

Commenting on the occasion, J V Ramamurthy, president & COO, HCL Infosystems said, “HCL Infosystems is always committed towards nation building initiatives and we will sustain our effort in enhancing access for every Indian. Today, computers have become one of the most essential requirements for every individual and we are proud to be associated with the largest para military force of the world.”

Under this scheme HCL Infosystems is offering computers at special prices with easy installment facility. Moreover, the company would also provide 24×7 helpline and product lifetime service support and doorstep delivery of the product at any locations in the country.

State Bank of India (SBI) will be supporting the project by providing easy finance options and hassle-free documentation on purchase of HCL personal computers through express credit loans, said the release.

Source:-http://www.ciol.com/News/News/News-Reports/HCL-Info-to-offer-PCs-to-para-military-forces/141810/0/

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