[Video] AMD Previews “Sexy” Notebooks In Fall Lineup

July 21, 2010

AMD's Notebook Line Up for the Back to School season looks sexyer than ever!

In a private event in San Francisco, Calif., yesterday, AMD showcased the Fall fashion lineup of notebooks and desktops based on its VISION technology; mostly dual-core machines with an integrated ATI graphics chips.

AMD designed the VISION programme to simplify the PC buying experience by making it easier for consumers to choose the right computer for them based on what they want to do with the product.

“It wasn’t so long ago that if you wanted to find notebook computer with an AMD processor they were all uniformally very plain – I would hesitate to say ugly but they were plain. But now, the system OEMs (like HP, Dell, Sony, Toshiba, Acer…) have put much effort into designing really pretty boxes that have AMD processors as much as they have moved to have attractive designs around the Intel-based processors… It’s clear now that AMD is now equipped to compete non only the basis of their technology but also on the base of their OEMs design,” explains Nathan Brookwood, principal analyst at Insight64.

AMD’s Vision strategy found useful in retail PC shopping

“I think it [Vision] has worked. It’s made it easier for people to go into a store and figure out what kind of computer they want. And to calibrate their own needs with the system capabilities,” adds Brookwood who finds AMD Vision most successful in retail. “The salespeople don’t get a lot of training… and the Vision programme guides people into making smart choices and not under buying or over buying… and from that standpoint I think it [Vision] had simplified the purchasing process and taken some of the mystery about multi-core and discrete GPU out of the equation. And that’s basically good.”


PLATO Creator Reflects Back At Invention (video)

June 2, 2010

How PLATO Sparked The Social Network Revolution… 50 Years Ago! (video)

June 2, 2010

Perhaps the greatest untold story in the history of computing is the development of the PLATO system at the University of Illinois and later also at Control Data Corporation.

Largely unknown today to the general public, PLATO’s list of innovations and seminal influences is considerable.

For the first time ever, the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, Calif. assembled many of the key people involved with the creation of the PLATO phenomenon for its PLATO@50 event.

Below is Brian Dear overview of the PLATO history. Dear is the author of the upcoming book The Friendly Orange Glow, scheduled for release in late 2010; the first book ever to tell the story of the PLATO system, its creators and users, and its seminal online community that emerged in the early 1970s.

The book is the result of more than 20 years of research, including conducting over 400 interviews and amassing a large archive of clippings, reports, books, articles, recordings, and other documents. In addition to the book, Dear runs a website about PLATO at http://platohistory.org. The serial entrepreneur became a user of the PLATO system in 1979 at the University of Delaware, through which he also met his wife!

Brian Dear PLATO overview, part I

Brian Dear PLATO overview, part II


Apple iPad Outsells iPhone In First Day; But Disappoints Wall Street!

April 5, 2010
A really skinny Steve Jobs check out the iPad launch at the Apple Store in Palo Alto on Saturday

A really skinny Steve Jobs checking customer reactions after the iPad launch at the Apple Store in Palo Alto on Saturday

Go figure!

Apple announced today that it sold over 300,000 iPads in the US as of midnight Saturday, April 3. These sales included deliveries of pre-ordered iPads to customers, deliveries to channel partners and sales at Apple Retail Stores.

Although these numbers are higher than the 270,000 iPhones Apple sold in the first 30 hours of sales when it launched three years ago, analysts were disappointed. On average they had expected first-day iPad sales of 400,000 to 500,000 units. While Piper Jaffray analyst Gene Munster, had sales projections of 600,000 to 700,000 units!

Apple also announced that iPad users downloaded over one million apps from the iTunes App Store and over 250,000 ebooks from its iBookstore during the first day. Before the iPad’s release, there were about 2,500 iPad apps in the App Store, according to ad-exchange network Mobclix Inc.


[Video] Intel “convertible” Classmate PC 2.0: A Netbook For Kids

March 3, 2010

The next-generation of Intel's convertible Classmate PC is more powerful, larger, more rugged and more expensive

This week, Intel unveiled the second generation of its convertible netbook – which can be used as a traditional laptop in clamshell mode or folded into a tablet – for kids, the Classmate PC.

The new Classmate PC is a full-featured netbook with an Intel Atom chip, a hard drive or SSD storage, built-in wireless connectivity (Wi-Fi, WiMAX, 3G and GPS), audio/microphone/speakers and a rotational video camera; which could be used as an eReader with the bundled eBook application

Intel estimates the market for the classmate PC to be of a billion kids

In an exclusive interview with TechPulse 360, we asked Kapil Wadhera, the director of platform marketing at Intel for the Classmate PC to talk about the latest device, which will be available in a couple months and range from about $300-$500, depending on its configuration (wireless, storage, battery, screen resolution).

“The interest in this [the classmate PC] is worldwide because, if you look at the overall, there are about a billion kids in K-12 but the number of students that have access to technology or using technology as a tool one-on-one is very very small,” explains Wadhera.

The price for the current “clamshell” Classmate PC ranges from $200 to $400, while the “convertible” version commands a $30 to $50 premium, according to Intel representatives.

Follows is a video excerpt of our conversation with Wadhera.

We also had a chance to handle the Classmate PC and was impressed by its ruggedness with the rubberised coating, the larger waterproof keyboard and screen (10.1″ vs 8.9″).

However, the Classmate feels heavy – once you add the larger battery pack that is needed to achieve the 8.5 hours of battery life – and its touchscreen is not very responsive, which could be caused by the software that is still in beta, said Intel. More on the device in this video below.


[Video] Dell Message To The Public Sector: We Are Here To Serve!

February 16, 2010

Karen Quintos, VP Marketing for Dell's Public Sector business

At a press event in San Francisco this morning, Dell focused the conversation on its public sector activities, trying hard to detach itself from the image of  “just a hardware” company.

And the Texas-based company did show some compelling arguments.

First, Dell’s public sector business which focuses on 3 verticals (Education, Government and Healthcare) is huge: $15 billion a year or 1/4 of the company’s $60 billion total revenues, by delivering hardware (of course!), but most likely bundled as solutions.

The Mobile Clinical Computing for hospitals or the Mobile Computing Station which stores netbooks (Dell Latitude 2100) used in classrooms are some examples of Dell’s newly solution focus.

Also, simply by its sheer size -  helped by the Perot Systems’ acquisition – Dell vows to be a catalyst of change for governments worldwide, hospitals, schools, etc.

Public sector more open to sharing than private businesses

In her presentation, marketing vice-president Karen Quintos highlighted how Dell is helping the public sector community interacting with one another through event sponsoring, advisory councils, best practices.

“The public sector community is a much more open and collaborative than the private sector. They don’t have the barrier to share best practices with one another,” adds Quintos.

Follows a video excerpt of Quintos introduction to Dell’s public sector business:


Analyst: Imagination Technologies Powers Apple A4 Graphics Engine, Tops Nvidia Tegra

January 29, 2010

The A4 is Apple's custom chip powering the iPad tablet

[Update] Analyst Jon Peddie just blogged more details about iPad’s internals.

Inside Apple’s upcoming iPad tablet lies a mysterious chip: the A4, with the “A” presumably referring to Apple and the number “4″ perhaps to 4-cores!

First, here’s what we know for sure about the A4, either from common sense and public comments by Apple:

  1. It’s a system-on-a-chip (SoC) which combines a low-power ARM-based CPU (supposedly the latest Cortex A9), a graphics processor (or GPU), and other circuitries like audio and video codecs.
  2. Runs at 1GHz;
  3. Fabricated by Samsung.

In many aspects, Apple’s custom silicon is comparable to next-generation ARM-based SoC mobile processors from Freescale (i.MX series), Marvell (Armada), Qualcomm (SnapDragon) and Nvidia (Tegra); all showed at CES a number of tablets and netbooks prototypes using their respective chips.

Intel has also entered the SoC market with its Moorestown chip, a shrink of the current Atom processor used in netbooks, which now integrates a CPU and GPU on the same die.

If there’s not much mystery left on the origin of the A4 CPU – aside from the number of cores – little is still known however of the internal design of the chip and its graphics capabilities.

In a blog post that was widely reprinted all over the Net, Brightside suggested that Apple used ARM’s Mali 50 design for its core GPU. However, graphics expert Jon Peddie, of Jon Peddie Research, disagrees.

“The Ipad is not using Mali,” told Peddie to TechPulse 360. “The graphics engine in iPad certainly do, spec-wise, rival Tegra, Snapdragon, or Armada. On a polygons/second, or a pixel fill-rate basis it is as good as any out there, maybe better. And if game play is the criteria, then the graphics engine has all the power needed to deliver a very satisfying, if not impressive experience.”

But for Peddie, the real question should be: how does the A4 chip compares on a polygons/second/watt basis?

“And here is where you (and competitors) will be surprised – it will be top of the class. We won’t have measured data probably until late summer when all the tablets, including HP’s Slate and MSI’s Tegra-based unit are out and available for testing. But based on what we know about the engines involved, the A4 should be the best of breed,” added Peddie who is coming out next week with a full report on the A4 chip.

Peddie just blogged more details on the A4′s graphics engine: it’s an Imagination Technologies [PowerVR] SGX 535 core that is already used in iPhones and iPod touches.

Earlier this month at CES, Imagination unveiled a successor to the 535 core – the 545 – with even more impressive graphics capabilities. No doubt that it will find its way in next-generation iPhones, iPods and iPads.

Apple and Intel are key stockholders in Imagination Technologies. According to the UK publicly-listed company, they respectively own 9.5% and 16% (according to the Guardian) of its shares.


Video: Consumers Driving PC Market Growth, Intel says

December 17, 2009

Despite the recession, sales of consumer PCs grew in 2009. A trend expected to continue, at a double digit rate, through 2013

Intel has the consumer to thank for 2009 not being such a bad year after all.

“What we saw was a downdraft, especially on the commercial [PC] sector in 2009. But we actually saw unit volume growth for the consumer [PC] segment. That goes back to our point that PCs are really essential to the way we work and live and that the driver for the business in 2009 has been the consumer segment,” explains Intel vice-president Stephen Smith at a media briefing this morning in San Francisco.

Intel is now shipping in volume 32-nm chips of its Nehalem architecture (Core i3, i5 and i7) to OEMs; from 2 factories and plans to add 2 more next year. The Santa Clara, Calif.-based company will show off desktops and laptops using its new Core i3 and i5 chips, as well as netbooks at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) next month.

“Looking forward, we see both the commercial and the consumer [segments] growing, with the consumer segment growing at a slightly faster rate in 2010… Again, if you step back 6 months ago, the idea that will would be talking about growth in the [consumer] segment in 2009 – and this is a double digit CAGR going forward – is a mindset people were questioning,” adds Smith.

Follows is a video excerpt of Smith’s pre-CES presentation.

Read the rest of this entry »


Video: Nvidia Laughs At Intel’s Next Generation Netbook Platform “Pine Trail”

December 16, 2009

Nvidia's claims that Intel's next-generation netbook platform dubbed Pine Trail can't play Flash HD content or Blue-ray movies and mainstream games

At a meeting in San Francisco today, I sat down with Nvidia’s director of marketing David Ragones for an update on the company’s netbook solution, ION, unveiled a year ago.

Although ION is about a year old, Nvidia claims that last year’s ION is still 5 to 10 times faster than Intel’s next-generation netbook platform, dubbed Pine Trail and available in next year’s netbooks.

“Intel hasn’t closed the gap. So they’re now coming out with their next-generation but the media performance is still relatively poor”, says Ragones.

And we’ll have more on Pine Trail tomorrow after a media briefing Intel is hosting, also in downtown San Francisco (yes that’s the week!), where the chipmaker will probably show some Pine Trail equipped netbooks and hopefully some performance numbers.

Until then, we’ll have to take Nvidia’s words for it.

Despite positioning ION at the premium segment of the netbook market ($399 and above), Nvidia claims that as much as 100 netbook models equipped with its graphics chip.

“ION energises the Intel Atom processor. It’s perfect if what you want to do is view HD content, play mainstream games and do simple image and video editing tasks”, adds Ragones that used the Sims video game to prove his point. “Sims 3 is the number 1 top selling game in the world, and this is a game you can only run on an ION netbook.”

Follows a video excerpts of my conversation with Ragones.


Google Chrome OS: Call Us Dumb Businessmen, Sergey Brin Says (video)

November 19, 2009

Google will not try to make money out of the Chrome OS operating system, its co-founder said

Is Google becoming more and more altruistic?

At the Google Chrome OS launch this morning, the search engine co-founder tried to convince the press corps attending the small gathering (just under 50 journalists and bloggers!) that Google is not trying to make money out of its upcoming operating system.

“Call us dumb businessmen. We really focus on user needs rather to strategies relative to other companies and things like that. And I think there is a real user need to be able to use computers easily. These netbooks are now $300-400… You can buy 5 to put around your house. But if you do it today there’s no way you can manage them. The overhead to manage the software will be way too high. We believe that the Web platform is a much simpler way, where the machines are essentially stateless or cache-like and still be performant. And still more easier for users to use,” explains Sergey Brin.

Chrome OS promises to be faster, more secure and easier to use than traditional operating systems like Linux (which the software is based on), Windows and even Mac OS!

However, the Google software which is readily available for download on the Chromium OS site, will not host any other “native” applications than Google’s own Chrome Web browser.

So for those, like me, with heavy photos and videos needs, Chrome OS will simply not fit the bill.

Google co-founder Sergey Brin explains it all in this video excerpt:


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