Apple may be preparing to launch revolutionary new entertainment device

News@com | Thursday July 30 2009 12:13 | Comments (0)

Apple

Apple

Apple is poised to once again revolutionize the entertainment industry — this time with an “iTablet” portable device that lets users download and read digital books, watch movies and play games while also sparking new consumer interest in music albums packed with material such as video clips and liner notes, according to a new report.

The touch-screen Internet-connected gadget, which the Cupertino could launch before the holidays, aims to do what Microsoft failed to accomplish and would instantly compete with Amazon’s Kindle, Sony’s Reader and a soon-to-launch device from Barnes & Noble, the Financial Times reported Monday. The iPod touch-like device is expected to have a 10-inch screen.

Analysts and bloggers have talked at length about an Apple tablet device, with many pointing to an early 2010 launch. (continuare…)

Quanta and Inventec to produce HP netbooks

News@com | Thursday July 30 2009 12:11 | Comments (0)

Quanta Computer will begin ODM production of a new 11.6-inch netbook in August and a new 10.1-inch model at the end of 2009 for Hewlett-Packard (HP), while Inventec will begin producing a revision of HP’s 10.1-inch netbook at the end of September, according to industry sources in Taiwan.
Quanta has also landed HP’s new 15.6- and 17.3-inch notebook orders and will start shipments in August.
Compal Electronics will also start shipping HP’s 13.3- and 14-inch enterprise notebooks in August.
Wistron will maintain its notebook shipments to HP from the first half of 2009.

Pegatron starts ODM notebook shipments to Toshiba

News@com | Thursday July 30 2009 11:57 | Comments (0)

Pegatron Technology reportedly began ODM production on a notebook for Toshiba starting in June of 2009, at a volume of about 50,000 units, according to industry sources.

In addition to orders from Asustek Computer and Toshiba, Pegatron also manufactures notebooks for ASRock and several local brands in China, as well as desktops for Hewlett-Packard (HP).
However, Toshiba may transfer its current notebook orders away from Pegatron in 2010, the sources pointed out.

Can ARM Come Between Microsoft and Intel?

News@com | Thursday July 30 2009 11:51 | Comments (0)

When someone asks who the giants of the semiconductor industry are, the names of Intel’s founders, Gordon Moore and Robert Noyce, float to the top of my mind. And of course, there is the colorful and controversial William Shockly, who founded Shockly Semiconductor Labs, the first major semiconductor lab in Silicon Valley. And then there is Jack Kilby of Texas Instruments, who along with Robert Noyce is credited with inventing the integrated circuit.

But there is another giant in this area that most of the folks in the U.S. haven’t heard of, but who in some ways has had an even bigger impact on the current tech market.

That person is Dr. Robin Saxby; or to be more specific, Sir Robin Saxby, the founder of Advanced RISC Machines LTD (ARM) of Cambridge, England, and creator of the almost ubiquitous ARM processor. I say almost ubiquitous because the ARM processor in some form or another is at the core of almost every cell or smartphone sold today, as well as being used in billions of embedded devices around the world. (continuare…)

Apple, labels work on plan to boost album sales: report

News@com | Thursday July 30 2009 11:49 | Comments (0)

Apple Inc and four record labels are working on a plan to increase digital sales of albums, while the computer maker is also separately developing a tablet-sized device, the Financial Times reported on Sunday.

Apple is working with EMI, Sony Music, Warner Music and Vivendi’s Universal Music Group on the project, “Cocktail,” with the sides hoping for a launch in September, the paper reported, citing unnamed sources.

The project with the record companies aims to offer interactive features with music downloads, the paper said.

Apple also hopes to offer the tablet-sized computer in time for Christmas shopping, the FT reported.

The computer will connect to the Internet like Apple’s iPod Touch and its screen may be up to 10 inches diagonally, the paper reported.

The paper said book publishers have also been in talks with the computer maker about offering their services on the new device, which could compete with Amazon’s Kindle.

Apple and the music companies were not immediately available for comment.

AMD ups the ante in battle with Intel

News@com | Thursday July 30 2009 11:45 | Comments (0)

Advanced Micro Devices Inc. took another step toward improving its standing against market leader Intel Corp. with last week’s disclosure that PC makers plan to use its Athlon Neo chips in low-power desktop products soon.

The Neo chip was designed run lower-end products, like ultrathin laptops that promise full functionality at lower prices than more traditional PCs.

Such systems remain the primary target for the processors. But Bob Grim, AMD’s director of client marketing, said that some PC makers are putting the processors in nettops, which are the size of hardcover books, and all-in-one PCs, which incorporate a central processor, a motherboard and a monitor in one box with a mouse and keyboard attached.

Many of those systems today run Intel’s popular Atom processor.

“We’ve known all along that this type of technology would really work well in multiple platforms and multiple types of form factors,” Grim said. The first Neo-based nettop and all-in-one PC products could ship later this year, he added. (continuare…)

Microsoft, Intel Design Windows 7 to Be Speedy

News@com | Thursday July 30 2009 11:41 | Comments (0)

Collaboration with Microsoft could allow the software giant’s upcoming Windows 7 OS to take advantage of multithreaded and multicore Intel chips for faster application performance, according to an Intel official.

Microsoft and Intel are working together to give Windows 7 the ability to better identify resources available and break up application processing over multiple chip cores and threads.

A feature called SMT parking allows Windows 7 to take advantage of Intel hyperthreading technology for “better performance on hyperthreaded, multicore Intel processors,” wrote Joakim Lialias, an Intel alliance manager, in a blog entry on Microsoft’s Web site that was posted late Wednesday.

This feature will help users break up tasks like video encoding and image filtering over multiple task-execution threads, said George Alfs, an Intel spokesman. “The more cores you have, the better,” Alfs said. Intel chips based on its new Nehalem architecture are capable of running two threads per core, and ultimately all of Intel’s laptop and desktop chips will be based on Nehalem, Alfs said. (continuare…)