Thursday, December 10, 2009
Intel Demos Single Chip with 48 Cores
Intel announced that company researchers demonstrated an experimental, 48-core processor--dubbed the "single-chip cloud computer"--that will supposedly pave the way for future generations of processors. According to the company, the "concept chip" is aimed at scaling on-chip performance, communication, and power consumption. The new prototype also offers 10 to 20 times the processing engines found in today's Intel Core processors.
Despite its many cores, Intel says that the futuristic prototype chip will consume the same amount of energy as two standard household light bulbs thanks to newly invented power management techniques. Even more, Intel claims that the processor could eventually become sophisticated enough to let PCs use "vision" to interact with people.
"Imagine, for example, someday interacting with a computer for a virtual dance lesson or on-line shopping that uses a future laptop's 3-D camera and display to show you a "mirror" of yourself wearing the clothes you are interested in," the company said. "Twirl and turn and watch how the fabric drapes and how the color complements your skin tone. This kind of interaction could eliminate the need of keyboards, remote controls or joysticks for gaming. Some researchers believe computers may even be able to read brain waves, so simply thinking about a command, such as dictating words, would happen without speaking."
Intel also said that it deemed the prototype as the "single-chip cloud computer" because of its similarities with data centers organized in a group to create a "cloud" of computing. The prototype's 48 cores seemingly mimics the configuration of a cloud server system, however casts aside the physical distance and is reduced down to a piece of 45nm, high-k metal-gate silicon "about the size of a postage stamp."
To learn more about the prototype processor, see the following links:
http://www.tomshardware.com/news/Int...-CPU,9193.html
Monday, August 31, 2009
NanoSSD Plugs Directly Into SATA Slot

This seemed like utter coolness: an SSD that can plug directly into a SATA motherboard slot. Announced earlier today in Japan, Elecom's two new nanoSSDs--the ESD-IDSAA series--measures 25 x 39 x 6.5 mm, and could serve as a startup drive on a main system, or could even serve as a primary drive on a compact Mini-ITX system.
However, with the small size comes an even smaller storage capacity: 8 GB and 16 GB. Still, the drives offer decent read/write speeds, with read rates of up to 75 MB/sec. and write rates of up to 30 MB/sec. Unlike HDDs, the nanoSSDs feature minimal cooling requirements and are virtually quiet as a mouse.
The drives won't hit Japanese store shelves for another few weeks, and Elecom hasn't revealed pricing, however pre-orders are already underway. Akihabara News said that GeekStuff4U.com is scheduled to start selling the drives online in a couple of days.
Source : http://www.tomshardware.com/news/nan...SATA,8538.html
ISRO loses contact with Chandrayaan, aborts; Nair hails it as a success

Contact was lost with the probe two days ago and scientists at the ISRO were unable to restore communications, state-run broadcaster Doordarshan reported. The craft began orbiting the moon last November.
A malfunction in computers on board the spacecraft led to the failure in communications, which will be probed by a committee of scientists.
ISRO tried to send the commands but the space vehicle was not able to respond. “The power signals which go to the computer systems failed. We tried to recover the communications for the entire day yesterday.”
The mission was abandoned early on Saturday shortly after radio contact with the craft was abruptly lost at 0130 HRS.
“We don’t have contact with the spacecraft and we had to terminate the mission,” said a visibly disappointed ISRO chief G Madhavan Nair.
A NATIONAL TRIUMPH
Nair was still optimistic in his outlook and assessment of the whole mission, saying: “The mission was a great success. We survived for 315 days, which is a good record. Many such experiments have burnt within a month in the past.”
The scientist reported that 95 per cent of the Chandrayaan-I project’s objectives had been completed.
“We have found that all the instruments on the spacecraft worked satisfactorily and entire scientific instruments have performed that is how we could collect large volume of data,” Nair said.
The team was disappointed with the development, but the ISRO chief said the focus should be on the fact that they managed critical objectives, including sending the lunar probe, capturing 70,000 images of the moon and collaborating with US satellites.
The satellite is now likely to crash onto the moon’s surface. Meanwhile, ISRO is getting ready for their next project, Chandrayaan-II, scheduled to be launched in 2012.
[Hands-on Preview] Need for Speed: Shift
The Need For Speed series gets trifurcated from this year into arcade, simulation and free-online-play titles. And the first out of the new series to zoom out of the garage is the sim-based Shift, set to hit the PS3, Xbox 360, PC and PSP on 17th September 2009.
The good for simulation racing fans is that NFS: Shift has been developed by Slightly Mad Studios, who were responsible for games such as GT Legends and GTR 2.
I got my hands on the PS3 version of the game at the EA India showcase, and the first change from the last NFS title (Underground) that I noticed was that new down-to-earth sim takes the races off the streets and onto circuits for a more realistic experience.
While I appreciate the effort, the gameplay does not quite live up to expectations. While the controls have stayed the game, the handling of cars has gotten kind of tricky. Turning at high speeds, especially, does tend to make you lose control of the car and cause you to naturally drift and bang right into the turn itself.
The graphics are top-notch, with real-time damage showing an effect on the car. While racing in perspective view, be careful about banging into someone as the glass will crack immediately!
Overall, the game is good, graphics are great, racing is more challenging and intense; but there are downsides to all this.
First, the storyline is non-existant, and admit it, we have all come to love (and expect) the deceit, betrayal, increasing street rep, taking over territories and other such elements in our racers.
And well, do you really want to slam the brakes while driving in an NFS game? I think I’ll wait for the arcade title, Nitro, to be released in November.
- Kumar Jhuremalan
Thursday, July 30, 2009
World's first 256GB USB flash drive


Tuesday, July 21, 2009
Browser Speed Tests: Latest Firefox Is Faster, but Not as Fast as Google Chrome
As per PC-world tests, here is the ranking as per average time taken to load certain pages:





Anyways, Chrome still keeps its nose ahead in the race...
AMD Six-core Opteron processor!!!!

Introducing the Six-Core AMD Opteron™ HE and SE Processors
Top-line performance that's bottom-line efficient
Six-core AMD Opteron™ processors power servers with performance efficiency to handle real world workloads. Unlike competitive products focused on raw performance, AMD technology-based servers deliver one platform to support the top-line demands of your business with a total cost advantage you can take right to the bottom-line.
Six-core performance in a quad-core footprint lets you run more and scale higher, while helping save energy. AMD Opteron processors offer the right balance of performance, power efficiency, and cost-delivering value at every price point.