iSoftNews Technical News

Using Kinect With Your PS3

Filed under: Technology — webmaster March 20, 2011 @ 3:03 pm

baxpace writes “A tutorial posted on Shantanugoel tech blog indicates how you can use your Microsoft Kinect sensor with a PS3. As the posts suggest, the software is at a pre-alpha quality state, meaning that some libraries need to be improved in order to boost performance and features, but it’s a start nonetheless.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


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Eurocom Racer: Why the Radeon HD 6970M Rocks

Filed under: Hardware — webmaster @ 3:03 pm

When Eurocom offered to send us their latest Racer notebook, we were mildly intrigued. Then they upped the ante by giving us the chance to put AMD’s latest and greatest HD 6970M to the test and we jumped at the opportunity. The Racer is the “little brother” of the Clevo P170HM we reviewed a few weeks ago, sporting many similarities all wrapped up in a smaller package. This puppy doesn’t come cheap, but with a matte 1080p LCD sporting a good contrast ratio, awesome performance, and a better build quality than the previous Clevo models we’re quite happy with the result.

So, just what does an HD 6790M do for performance, and how much will it set you back? What else might Eurocom have to offer to sweeten the deal? Eurocom also likes to label their notebooks as mobile workstations, and while the system we have doesn’t necessarily cater to that audience, we’ll have some thoughts on that segment as well. Read on for our full analysis.

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New Website Crowdsources Japan Radiation Data (Mashable)

Filed under: Technology — webmaster @ 3:03 pm

Mashable – Still in the throes of a nuclear disaster, Japanese residents need reliable information about radiation levels throughout the country. Now a website was just started to crowdsource radiation data collected by private citizens.

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Customized, stealthy malware growing pervasive

Filed under: Networking — webmaster @ 3:03 pm

The rising popularity of custom malware and the inability of anti-virus software to keep pace poses potent challenges for enterprises trying to keep their systems secure.

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Why UK Banks Don’t Tweet

Filed under: Technology — webmaster @ 2:03 pm

An anonymous reader writes “Banks in Great Britain are running scared of using social media services like Facebook and Twitter — owing to case law that dates from 1924.” That case law “means financial services companies can’t publicly identify an individual who has an account with them,” so responding to customer inquiries in other than the traditional ways (like post and in-person) could get banks in trouble.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


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OCZ Grows Up, Signs Definitive Agreement to Acquire Indilinx

Filed under: Hardware — webmaster @ 2:03 pm

We first met Indilinx in early 2009, with its Barefoot controller at the heart of OCZ's Vertex SSD. Until SandForce showed up in 2010 with the SF-1200/1500 series of controllers, the Indilinx Barefoot was the cheaper alternative to Intel. If it wasn't for Indilinx I'm not sure Intel would've had any real competition until last year. 

The OCZ/Indilinx relationship was always a close one, but it's about to get a lot closer. Today OCZ announced that it has signed a definitive agreement to acquire Indilinx Co., Ltd for ~$32M in OCZ shares. The deal is expected to close within 30 days.

Why would OCZ acquire Indilinx? To be honest, it's the only way to ensure growth in the future. While OCZ is currently the retail/channel face of SandForce, SF also happens to sell to all of OCZ's competitors. OCZ may get early access to SandForce hardware, but so could anyone else who shows up with a big enough check. Ultimately to stick around in this business OCZ needs to be able to build its own controller and that's what the Indilinx acquisition is designed to allow.

Indilinx was working on its first 6Gbps controller codenamed Jet Stream, however the design never surfaced. Delays do happen in chip design and I'm guessing Indilinx just couldn't make it happen with Jet Stream. 

What does this mean for SSDs today? Probably very little. OCZ will continue to ship SandForce based drives, however at some point I'm expecting to see an exclusive OCZ branded controller. While this move will likely guarantee OCZ's ability to differentiate amongst its smaller competitors, I'm not entirely convinced  it will be enough to compete with the likes of SandForce. We've even seen Intel struggle with that battle. 

Anything can happen though. Two years ago I didn't expect anyone other than Intel to dominate SSDs. A year ago it was SandForce. By this time next year anything could happen.

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Facebook to acquire mobile app platform Snaptu (Digital Trends)

Filed under: Technology — webmaster @ 2:03 pm

Digital Trends – Facebook has gone on a little bit of a spending spree this year, with mobile ad firm Rel8tion and group messaging service Beluga both joining being acquired starting in January. Now there’s another new corporate logo being added to the social network’s growing number of business assets, the developer of the mobile app platform Snaptu.

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AT&T to buy T-Mobile USA (Reuters)

Filed under: Technology — webmaster @ 2:03 pm

The at&t logo is seen at their store in Times Sqaure in New York April 21, 2010. REUTERS/Shannon StapletonReuters – AT&T Inc struck a $39 billion deal to buy Deutsche Telekom AG’s T-Mobile USA, to create a new U.S. mobile market leader and bolster its constrained network against a near insatiable appetite for videos and data from Apple iPhone and iPad users.


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Chinese Phone Maker ZTE Turns Down WP7

Filed under: Technology — webmaster @ 2:03 pm

An anonymous reader writes “Chinese smartphone maker ZTE, fifth largest in the world, has publicly criticized Microsoft for the lackluster market reaction to its Windows Phone 7 operating system and said that ZTE has no plans to develop a WP7-powered phone. That’s bad news for Microsoft for its well-regarded but not well-received mobile OS.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


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2011 MacBook Pros Confirmed To Crash Under Load

Filed under: Technology — webmaster @ 2:03 pm

sammcj writes “2011 MacBook crashing under heavy load?… you are not alone. While trying to figure out what was wrong with my fancy new MacBook I soon realized that the issue is very widespread.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


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AT&T to buy T-Mobile USA for $39 billion (AFP)

Filed under: Technology — webmaster @ 2:03 pm

AT&T agreed to buy T-Mobile USA from Germany's Deutsche Telekom for $39 billion in a blockbuster deal in the wireless telecom sector, the two companies announced Sunday.(AFP/File/Carl Court)AFP – AT&T staked a claim to become the United States’ biggest cellphone provider Sunday, announcing a $39 billion deal to buy rival T-Mobile USA.


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A Handy Radiation Dose Chart From XKCD

Filed under: Technology — webmaster @ 2:03 pm

An anonymous reader points out Randall Munroe’s latest contribution to public health awareness, a “chart of how much ionizing radiation a person can absorb from various sources, compared visually. 1 Sievert will make you sick, many more will kill you, however, even small doses cumulatively increase cancer risk.” It’s a good way to think about the difference between Chernobyl and Fukushima.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


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Wall Street Beat: Quake rocks tech stocks

Filed under: Networking — webmaster @ 2:03 pm

The devastating earthquake and tsunami that hit Japan on March 11 took a tragic toll on human life but also rocked markets this week, sending shares of businesses, including technology vendors, on a rollercoaster ride.

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More of AMD’s Brazos E-350 with the MSI X370 and Sony VAIO YB

Filed under: Hardware — webmaster @ 2:03 pm

It may have taken some time for AMD’s Fusion to finally arrive, but now it’s here and we’re starting to see a decent number of Brazos laptops. We’ve already reviewed HP’s dm1z, which set the bar that other manufacturers will have to match or exceed. Today, we add two more E-350 laptops to the mix of reviews, one an 11.6”-screen and the other a 13.3”-screen chassis.

In the black corner, we have MSI’s ultra-slim X-series laptop, the X370; in the silver corner is a smaller competitor in Sony’s VAIO YB. How do these two compare with the HP dm1z and with each other? What are the benefits and detriments involved with moving to a larger chassis?  And is the Brazos platform right for you? That’s what we’re going to discuss in this head-to-head matchup.

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Access Japan’s public news network with NHK World TV Live app (Appolicious)

Filed under: Technology — webmaster @ 2:03 pm

Appolicious – With all eyes on Japan since the March 11 earthquake and tsunami, many Apple users turned to their iDevices to get comprehensive news coverage of the disaster. NHK World TV Live — the app for iPhone, iPod Touch and iPad — links users directly to streaming English coverage from the Japanese public broadcaster, and it’s a must-download for users interested in keeping up with Japan’s current situation.

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Toshiba Satellite L645D: Mobile AMD at 3GHz

Filed under: Hardware — webmaster @ 2:03 pm

While the drought of Sandy Bridge notebook hardware is thankfully approaching its sweet, merciful end, there are still a healthy amount of AMD-based notebooks on the market at good prices awaiting happy homes. Toshiba was kind enough to send us their L645D, a 14" notebook sporting a mobile Phenom II dual-core processor running at a speedy 3GHz, Radeon HD 4250 integrated graphics, and a Blu-ray drive: all yours for a potentially exciting value proposition of just $619. Is it worth it?

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RMS On Header Files and Derivative Works

Filed under: Technology — webmaster @ 2:03 pm

tomhudson writes “In this email from 2003, Richard Stallman says ‘I’ve talked with our lawyer about one specific issue that you raised: that of
using simple material from header files. Someone recently made the claim that including a header file always
makes a derivative work. That’s not the FSF’s view. Our view is that just using structure
definitions, typedefs, enumeration constants, macros with simple
bodies, etc., is NOT enough to make a derivative work. It would take
a substantial amount of code (coming from inline functions or macros
with substantial bodies) to do that.’ This should help end the recent FUD about the Android ‘clean headers.’”

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AT&T To Acquire T-Mobile From Deutsche Telekom

Filed under: Technology — webmaster @ 2:03 pm

teh31337one writes “AT&T and Deutsche Telekom have entered into a definitive agreement for the sale of T-Mobile USA for $39 billion in cash and stocks. Press release here.” Gripes one anonymous reader: “Americans will have even less choice now when it comes to cell phone carriers. Say good-bye to the one that had the best customer service and was most friendly towards Android and rooting.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


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Rush for wireless airwaves may drive risky deals (Reuters)

Filed under: Technology — webmaster @ 2:03 pm

Reuters – In the telecommunication industry’s land grab for wireless airwaves, investors better brace for U.S. deals that are bewildering — or worse.

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TViX Slim S1 : Bidding Adieu to the Realtek RTD1283

Filed under: Hardware — webmaster @ 2:03 pm

In the competitive media streamer market, we have been covering products with a huge US presence. Today, we will look at an offering from DViCO in the TViX series. DViCO is a Korean company with a big presence in the Asia-Pacific and European multimedia markets. DViCO's media streamers / tuners / PVRs are available under the TViX label.

We have had the TViX Slim S1 in our labs for more than 6 months now. Based on the Realtek RTD1283, it was introduced in July 2010. The initial firmware versions were not upto the mark, and the unit went into the review backburner. With streamers based on the next-gen Realtek chipsets starting to make an appearance, it was time to dust off the old review unit. Our friends over at MPCClub rank the TViX Slim S1 as one amongst the top five media players right now. Is it really that good? Read on to find out about our experience with the TViX Slim S1.

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Japan Reluctant To Disclose Drone Footage of Fukushima Plant

Filed under: Technology — webmaster @ 1:03 pm

garymortimer writes with word that “footage taken from an RQ-4 Global Hawk drone was passed on to the Japanese government with permission for public release from the US Air Force. US military sources said that the decision to release the footage — or not — was up to the Japanese government.” The Japanese government, though, has thus far chosen not to release the high-resolution footage of the tsunami-damaged Fukushima nuclear plant.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


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Criminals steal money from ATMs by gluing down keys

Filed under: Networking — webmaster @ 1:03 pm

Criminals in the US have come up with a new way to steal money from cashpoint machines (ATMs) by gluing down keys in a way that stops customers completing a transaction.

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Mirah Tries To Make Java Fun With Ruby Syntax

Filed under: Technology — webmaster @ 1:03 pm

An anonymous reader writes “Java is performant, widely adopted and eminently portable, however, its syntax is largely inherited from C++ along with some of its esoteric unfriendliness. Mirah aims to place a friendly face on Java through the implementation of a syntax whose primary concern is developer friendliness (think Ruby/Python/Groovy), and route of least surprise. The result is a truly cogent alternative syntax delivering readability, expressiveness and some compelling new language features.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


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New York Times to charge online again (AFP)

Filed under: Technology — webmaster @ 1:03 pm

Four years after pulling the plug on an attempt to charge readers on the Web, The New York Times is going to try again.(AFP/Getty Images/File/Mario Tama)AFP – Four years after pulling the plug on an attempt to charge readers on the Web, The New York Times is going to try again.


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The Gadget Hound bids farewell (Ben Patterson)

Filed under: Technology — webmaster @ 1:03 pm

Ben Patterson – Four years, 3,000+ posts, and more gadgets than you could shake a stick at—it’s been a great run. And just think: when I first started blogging as Yahoo!’s resident Gadget Hound back in March of 2007, there were no Kindles, …

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Archos reveals upcoming Gen 9 tablets for summer 2011 release (Digital Trends)

Filed under: Technology — webmaster @ 1:03 pm

Digital Trends – Archos has been in the portable media player game for just about the same amount of time as Apple, boasting touchscreen interfaces and tablet-like features in its devices well before the iPhone was even announced. The French company has already gotten in on the ongoing tablet tablet race that is presently unfolding, with the release last year of a line of Android-powered tablets.

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The MacBook Pro Review (13 & 15-inch): 2011 Brings Sandy Bridge

Filed under: Hardware — webmaster @ 1:03 pm

Last year at the iPad introduction Steve Jobs announced that Apple is a mobile device company. Just last week Steve returned to introduce the iPad 2 and point out that the majority of Apple's revenue now comes from products that run iOS. The breakdown is as follows:

AAPL Revenue Sources—Q1 2011
  iPad iPhone iPod Mac iTunes Store Software/Services Peripherals
Percentage 17.2% 39.1% 12.8% 20.3% 5.4% 2.9% 2.2%

Just looking at iPad and iPhone, that's 56% of Apple's sales. All Macs put together? Only 20%. Granted 20% of $26.7 billion in sales is still $5.3 billion, but the iOS crew gets most of the attention these days.

It shouldn't come as a surprise that when Apple launched its 2011 MacBook Pro lineup last week that it did so with little fanfare. There was no special press event and no video of an unusually charismatic man on a white background describing the latest features of the systems. All we got two weeks ago were a few pages describing the high level features of the lineup, a short outage on the Mac Store and five new configurations available for sale.

We've been working non-stop since the launch on our review of the new 13-inch and 15-inch MacBook Pros. Despite the lack of fanfare, this is a pretty serious upgrade. Read on for our in-depth analysis!

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Learning from Microsoft’s six biggest blunders (Digital Trends)

Filed under: Technology — webmaster @ 1:03 pm

Digital Trends – I’ve been following Microsoft for over two decades, have cataloged a number of major mistakes and ranked them over time. Against most of them, I have names of people who mostly are no longer with the company. One of my major aggravations in the 1990s was that many of Microsoft’s mistakes were first made by IBM, and last decade it was Microsoft mistakes that were made by Google. For an analyst, this kind of gets old – like watching a bad movie multiple times. In contrast, Intel this week demonstrated they actually could avoid a Microsoft mistake, and I think that too is worth talking about.

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States push harder for online sales tax collection (AP)

Filed under: Technology — webmaster @ 1:03 pm

AP – Tax-free shopping is under threat for many online shoppers as states facing widening budget gaps increasingly pressure Amazon.com Inc. and other Internet retailers to start collecting sales taxes from their residents.

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ICANN approves .xxx top-level domain

Filed under: Networking — webmaster @ 1:03 pm

The adult entertainment industry now has a home on the Internet: It’s called .xxx.

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Judge orders Hurd letter unsealed

Filed under: Networking — webmaster @ 1:03 pm

A judge in Delaware on Thursday ordered the unsealing of a letter containing allegations of sexual harassment by former Hewlett-Packard CEO Mark Hurd, which ultimately led to his departure from the company.

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75% of new phones aren’t smart at all

Filed under: Networking — webmaster @ 1:03 pm

In 2010 not “very smart” feature phones – handsets that are dumber than smartphones – comprised over 75 percent of the mobile market.

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Intel Plans on Bringing Atom to Servers in 2012, 20W SNB Xeons in 2011

Filed under: Hardware — webmaster @ 1:03 pm

The transition to smaller form factors hasn't been exclusively a client trend over the past several years, we've seen a similar move in servers. The motiviation is very different however. In the client space it's about portability, in the datacenter it's about density. While faster multi-core CPUs have allowed the two-socket 1U server to really take off, they have also paved the way for a new category of density optimized servers: the micro server.

The argument for micro servers is similar to that for ultra low power clients. Only a certain portion of workloads really require high-end multi-socket servers, the rest spend much of their time idle and thus are better addressed by lower power, higher density servers. Johan typically argues that rather than tackling the problem with micro servers it's a better idea to simply increase your consolidation ratio into fewer, larger servers. There are obviously proponents on both sides of the fence but Intel estimates that the total market for micro servers will reach about 10% of its total shipments over the next 4 – 5 years. It's a small enough market for Intel not to be super concerned about but large enough that it needs to be properly addressed.

Today Intel believes that it addresses this market relatively well with the existing Xeon lineup. Below is a table of Sandy Bridge Xeons including a 45W and 20W part, these two being directed primarily at the micro server market:

Intel SNB Xeon Lineup
Intel Xeon Processor Number Cores / Threads Clock Speed Single Core Max Turbo L3 Cache Memory Support (Channels / DIMMs / Max Capacity) Power (TDP)
E3-1280 4 / 8 3.50GHz 3.90GHz 8MB 2 / 4 / 32GB 95W
E3-1270 4 / 8 3.40GHz 3.80GHz 8MB 2 / 4 / 32GB 80W
E3-1260L 4 / 8 2.40GHz 3.30GHz 8MB 2 / 4 / 32GB 45W
E3-1240 4 / 8 3.30GHz 3.70GHz 8MB 2 / 4 / 32GB 80W
E3-1230 4 / 8 3.20GHz 3.60GHz 8MB 2 / 4 / 32GB 80W
E3-1220L 2 / 4 2.20GHz 3.40GHz 3MB 2 / 4 / 32GB 20W
E3-1220 4 / 4 3.10GHz 3.40GHz 8MB 2 / 4 / 32GB 80W

Drop clock speed (and voltage) low enough and you can hit the lower TDPs necessary to fit into a micro server. Thermal constraints are present since you're often cramming a dozen of these servers into a very small area.

Long term there is a bigger strategy issue that has to be addressed. ARM has been talking about moving up the pyramid and eventually tackling the low end/low power server market with its architectures. While Xeon can scale down, it can't scale down to the single digit TDPs without serious performance consequences. Remember the old rule of thumb: a single microprocessor architecture can only address an order of magnitude of TDPs. Sandy Bridge can handle the 15 – 150W space, but get too much below 15W and it becomes a suboptimal choice for power/performance.

The solution? Introduce a server CPU based on Intel's Atom architecture. And this is the bigger part of the announcement today. Starting in 2012 Intel will have an Atom based low power server CPU with sub-10W TDPs designed for this market. Make no mistake, this move is designed to combat what ARM is planning. And unlike the ultra mobile space, Intel has an ISA advantage in the enterprise market. It'll be tougher for ARM to move up than it will be for Intel to move down.

Intel's slide above seems to imply that we'll have ECC support with this server version of Atom in 2012, which is something current Atom based servers lack.

The only real question that remains is what Atom architecture will be used? We'll see an updated 32nm Atom by the end of 2011 but that's still fundamentally using the same Bonnell core that was introduced back in 2008. Intel originally committed to keeping with its in-order architecture for 5 years back in 2008, that would mean that 2012 is ripe for the introduction of an out-of-order Atom. Whether or not that updated core will make it in time for use in Atom servers is still up for debate.

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Apple iPad 2 Preview

Filed under: Hardware — webmaster @ 1:03 pm

The second generation iPad went on sale earlier today, to much fanfare and long, long lines. We're hard at work on our full review of Apple's second generation tablet but there were a few things we wanted to chime in on before too much time passed.

Read on for our in-depth preview of the new iPad 2 including analysis of the new A5 SoC, display quality, camera performance and more.

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him (Mashable)

Filed under: Technology — webmaster @ 1:03 pm

Mashable – AT&T just announced a definitive agreement with Deutsche Telekom to buy T-Mobile USA for $39 billion in cash and stock. In a press release, AT&T said the agreement has been approved by both companies’ boards of directors.

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Michio Kaku’s Dark Prediction For the End of Moore’s Law

Filed under: Technology — webmaster @ 1:03 pm

nightcats writes “An excerpt from Michio Kaku’s new book appears at salon.com, in which he sees a dark economic future within the next 20 years as Moore’s law is brought to an end when single-atom transistors give way to quantum states. Kaku predicts: ‘Since chips are placed in a wide variety of products, this could have disastrous effects on the entire economy. As entire industries grind to a halt, millions could lose their jobs, and the economy could be thrown into turmoil.’” Exactly the way the collapse of the vacuum tube industry killed the economy, I hope.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


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Microsoft Recruiting For Next-Gen Console Development

Filed under: Technology — webmaster March 8, 2011 @ 2:03 am

An anonymous reader writes with this excerpt from Eurogamer:
“Microsoft is ramping up development of its next generation Xbox console according to job positions being advertised on business networking site LinkedIn, brought to light on the Beyond 3D Forum. The first position advertised is for a Graphics Hardware Architect, working with the team that is ‘responsible for defining and delivering next-generation console architectures from conception through implementation.’ ‘The responsibilities include architecture analysis, key technology selection, architecture specification, communication and collaboration with extended Microsoft teams and partner companies,’ according to the advert. … the most intriguing element of the story is just how early on in production we appear to be — far earlier than many had suspected. Unless Microsoft is actually planning pre-production of the next next-gen console, the evidence seems to suggest that the system is so early in development that the graphics hardware at the very least hasn’t been locked down.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


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Balancing Power, Price, and Performance in the Server CPU World

Filed under: Hardware — webmaster @ 2:03 am

Our last comprehensive server and server CPU review focused on some of the best and fastest x86 servers on the market. This time, we focus on more humble servers. Performance is not necessarily priority one for many businesses; chances are that low power and budget are higher on the list. So we did our best to get the most interesting power sipping and inexpensive CPUs in the lab.

We selected three AMD Opterons and two Intel Xeons. On the Intel platform we test with the older but very cheap Xeon E5506 and the newer but more expensive low power Xeon L5630. AMD sent us three different Opterons: the low power Opteron 4162 EE, the performance/watt balancing Opteron 4170 HE, and the ultra cheap Opteron 4122. Read on to find out which of the five CPUs make sense in which situation. As always we use very realistisic benchmarking and power measurments to find out.

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China Pledges To Step Up Internet Administration

Filed under: Technology — webmaster @ 2:03 am

angry tapir writes “China says it will step up administration of the Internet this year while continuing to build out the country’s fiber-optic backbone and expand broadband access for consumers. Internet administration was mentioned in a keynote report on the work of the government to China’s parliamentary session. It underlined the importance of culture and noted the need to ‘strengthen the development of civic morality’ and ‘speed up the establishment of moral and behavioral norms that carry forward traditional Chinese virtues.’ The pledge comes amid revelations that DDoS attacks against WordPress last week allegedly originated from China.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


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UK Schools Consider Searching Pupils’ Smartphones

Filed under: Technology — webmaster @ 2:03 am

An anonymous reader writes “What right to privacy do school pupils have on their mobile phones? UK education officials are considering ways to clamp down on cyber-bullying and classroom disruption by allowing teachers to search and delete content from student handsets if it is deemed unsuitable. However, questions remain whether such a move would give teachers too much power and infringe on student rights.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


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