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Minggu, 05 April 2009

Intel's Atom microprocessor

The success of Intel's Atom microprocessor, used mainly in netbooks, helped the chip maker gain market share in every quarter of 2008 and could carry the company this year as well.

Intel's share of the microprocessor market grew every quarter last year, market researcher iSuppli said Wednesday.

[ Intel's Atom is also beginning to show up in systems that some vendors consider full-featured PCs. | Stay ahead of advances in hardware technology with InfoWorld's Ahead of the Curve blog and newsletter. ]

The chip maker ended the fourth quarter of 2008 with an 81.8 percent share of global microprocessor revenue, up from 78.4 percent the same time a year earlier.

"Intel's low-priced Atom has become increasingly popular as the netbook market has gained steam," said Matthew Wilkins, principal analyst at iSuppli, in a statement. He added that Intel's strength in microprocessors overall and its strong marketing were the main factors behind its strong revenue performance last year.

Intel's biggest rival, Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), lost market share last year.

AMD's share of microprocessor revenue shrank to 10.6 percent in the fourth quarter of 2008, down from 14.1 percent a year earlier.

Netbooks could continue to boost Intel this year.

Although the company will see more competition from other chip makers entering the netbook microprocessor market, the overall market for netbooks is expected to continue to grow at breakneck speed.

DisplaySearch predicts netbook shipments will grow 66 percent this year to over 27 million units, in part due to the global recession.

"With the economic crisis on everyone's mind, many buyers are adjusting their discretionary spending and purchasing mini-notes (netbooks) as lower-priced alternatives to notebook PCs," the market researcher said in a report on Wednesday.

Aside from the downturn, the popularity of the devices took off because they're thin, light and more affordable than laptops.

"With the lone exception of Apple, all of the top 15 PC brands have entered the [netbook] market, initially as a response to competitive threats posed by Acer and Asus, but also to satisfy demand for low-priced, entry-level PCs," said John Jacobs, director of notebook market research at DisplaySearch, in the report.

Asustek Computer (Asus) pioneered the commercial launch of netbook devices in late 2007 with its Eee PC. The company was soon followed by Hewlett-Packard and Acer, which led the netbook market last year with its Aspire One

IBM and Sun Microsystems

April 5, 2009 (IDG News Service) IBM and Sun Microsystems have been unable to reach agreement on the terms of an acquisition, with the talks nearing collapse on Sunday, according to news reports.

Sun's board rejected a formal acquisition offer from IBM on Saturday, considering the offer price too low, The Wall Street Journal said. Sun was also concerned that the offer gave IBM too much leeway to walk away from the deal, according to the newspaper, which cited unnamed sources familiar with the situation.

The two companies are reported to have been in merger talks since at least March 18. The acquisition, valued at about $7 billion, would extend IBM's lead at the top of the server market and give it control of Sun's Solaris, Java and other technologies.

But the companies had reportedly been haggling over a price, and on Saturday Sun rejected IBM's offer of $9.40 per share, according to The New York Times, which also said the talks have fallen apart.

Sun had been seeking assurances that IBM would not walk away from the deal even if it faced tough regulatory hurdles, the Times said, and IBM considered the requirement too onerous.

Sun has sent a notice to IBM terminating its right to exclusive negotiations, and IBM in return has withdrawn its offer to buy Sun, the Journal said.

Such brinkmanship isn't uncommon during late-stage negotiations, the paper noted, and the companies may yet resume talks. But for now, the stance between them was described as "confrontational."

IBM and Sun were first reported to be in merger talks two and a half weeks ago. Neither company has confirmed or denied that any discussions are under way.

IBM has conducted its due diligence of Sun and found nothing that would prevent it from buying the company, the Journal said.

If the companies fail to make a deal, it is unclear whether another large vendor will step in and bid for Sun. After IBM first expressed its interest in an acquisition, Sun's investment bankers shopped the company around to most large IT vendors over the winter to see if any others were interested, the Journal said, but none were.

That puts Sun in a tough position, said Dan Olds, principal analyst at Gabriel Consulting Group. With no other suitor likely to step forward, Sun will probably have to accept an offer from IBM eventually, even if it means swallowing less favorable terms, he said.

The uncertainty around Sun's future will make companies wary of making big investments in Sun's products, he said, adding to the pressure to make a deal.

"Enterprise customers prize vendor stability; they do not buy big ticket items from vendors who are in turmoil," Olds said.

IE 8


Setelah melalui tahap uji coba dengan diluncurkannya versi Release Candidate dari Internet Explorer 8 beberapa waktu yang lalu, akhirnya Microsoft menyelesaikan versi final dari browser andalannya tersebut. Internet Explorer 8 final version secara resmi oleh Microsoft pada hari Kamis (18/03) yang lalu telah diluncurkan ke publik.

Peluncuran Internet Explorer 8 ini sebenarnya telah lama dinantikan publik, mengingat hingga saat ini Internet Explorer (IE) masih mendominasi market browser Internet di seluruh dunia. Dengan kata lain, browser terbaru besutan Microsoft ini tetap akan mempunyai captive market-nya sendiri yang menjamin kecepatannya dalam penerimaan konsumen. Microsoft sendiri mengklaim browser terbarunya, Internet Explorer 8 (IE8) ini sebagai browser tercepat paling aman yang pernah mereka buat.

Microsoft sendiri tidak main-main dengan pernyataan tersebut, mengingat selain menambahkan aspek kecepatan, Microsoft juga menambahkan feature ‘Domain Highlighting’ yang secara otomatis akan menyorot nama top level domain halaman situs yang kita akses. Selain itu SmartScreen Filter juga akan mendukung keamanan user dengan cara memberikan peringatan otomatis pada saat user mengakses halaman-halaman situs yang dianggap berbahaya oleh Microsoft.

Dari versi Release Candidate yang ditawarkan Microsoft dalam Internet Explorer ini, setidaknya kita bisa mengetahui ada 3 feature unggulan yang ditawarkan dalam browser ini, yaitu Webslices, Accelerator, dan Visual Search.

Webslice sebagai salah satu feature unggulan dalam Internet Explorer akan memberikan kemudahan bagi user dalam hal akses informasi website. Tidak dapat dipungkiri, dalam aktivitas browsing yang kita lakukan setiap hari, sebenarnya kita hanya membutuhkan beberapa bagian informasi saja dari setiap situs yang kita kunjungi. Kecenderungan inilah yang difasilitasi oleh Microsoft dalam Internet Explorer 8 ini. Kita dapat mengumpulkan dan mengikuti bagian dari informasi-informasi penting yang ingin kita ikuti perkembangannya dari berbagai situs yang sering kita kunjungi, hanya dengan cara click tombol ‘Webslices’. Setelah menerapkan ‘Webslices’ pada bagian tersebut, maka browser secara otomatis akan menampilkannya pada ‘Favourite Bar’. Namun feature ini mungkin belum sepenuhnya dapat kita terapkan untuk website-website dalam negeri, karena untuk dapat memakai feature ini, dari sisi teknologi web development situs yang bersangkutan harus sudah dipastikan kompatibilitasnya terlebih dahulu.

Selain webslice, dua feature penting lainnya adalah Accelerator dan Visual Search. Accelerator berguna untuk mendapatkan informasi cepat dari setiap kata yang kita pilih (highlited) pada saat kita membaca sebuah artikel tanpa kita harus berpindah halaman browser. Tentunya proses ini akan mempercepat proses pembacaan kita terhadap sebuah artikel atau berita, tanpa kita harus mencari kembali secara manual kata-kata yang ingin kita pahami artinya dalam sebuah pemberitaan, dengan cara meng-copy dan mencari artinya melalui halaman lain dari browser. Dengan Accelerator ini, user akan dapat dengan mudah menemukan berbagai opsi definisi mengenai sebuah kata. Ada beberapa opsi keterangan yang dapat kita pilih dalam Accelerator ini, antara lain ‘Blog with Windows Live’, ‘Email with Windows Live’, ‘Map with Live Search’, ‘Search with Google’ hingga ‘Translate with Live Search’.

Sedangkan Visual Search merupakan feature pencarian bergambar, yang diharapkan akan lebih memperkaya hasil pencarian yang diberikan sehingga dapat lebih memuaskan user dari sisi content maupun visual. Konsep Visual Search ini sendiri sebenarnya berangkat dari kenyataan bahwa aspek visual manusia memegang peranan penting dalam pemahamannya akan suatu hal. Dengan menampilkan tidak hanya content, namun juga gambar-gambar yang mendeskripsikannya, diharapkan akan semakin meningkatkan kepuasan user dalam mendapatkan hasil dari pencarian yang dilakukannya.(dna)

Intel's Nehalem simply sizzles

ntel's new Nehalem Xeon CPUs, which are being introduced in countless one- and two-socket servers and workstations today, have already generated a lot of heat. While introducing the new processors to technical journalists in February, Nick Knupffer, Intel's global communications manager, boasted that "Nehalem represents the biggest performance jump we've made since the introduction of the Pentium Pro."

This claim was met with outright skepticism by nearly everyone in the room, and certainly by me. But after running a two-socket, eight-core Nehalem system in my lab for the past few weeks, it would appear that Knupffer is right. Intel has built a better mousetrap. And it used part of AMD's blueprints to do it.

[ Intel or AMD? See "Where does Nehalem get its juice?," "Intel engineers stage CPU coup," "AMD's six-shooter is loaded and ready," and "AMD spins Moore's Law in IT's favor." ]

Back when AMD's Opteron was ruling the performance roost, Intel was busy gluing two separate cores onto a single die and calling it a dual-core CPU. Memory bandwidth lagged due to the central off-die memory controller, and while the overall performance of the processor was acceptable, it lacked the NUMA (Non-Uniform Memory Access) punch that was the Opteron's claim to fame. Nehalem is based on a NUMA architecture, much like the Opteron, and its performance is miles ahead of anything else Intel has released to date. Color me impressed.

Inside Nehalem
The Nehalem chips (Xeon 3500 series for single socket and Xeon 5500 series for two-socket systems) feature a quad-core layout with 731 million transistors, 256KB of L2 cache per core, 8MB of L3 cache, deeper and faster caching, and better branch prediction. Essentially, Nehalem is a blend of the strengths of Intel's legacy Xeon processors with a fundamental architecture change in the incorporation of NUMA.

Tags: Intel, Nehalem, Xeon

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Minggu, 04 Januari 2009

NEW Axioo pico Series


Processor : Intel® Atom™ processor N270 (1.6GHz, 512Kb L2 Cache, FSB 533MHz)
Chipset : Intel 945GSE (MCH)+ ICH7-M (ICH)
Memory : (included) Onboard 1GB (DDR2 667 MHz, PC5300)
(additional) 1x 200 Pin SO-DIMM Sockets DDR2, Supporting DDR2-533/667 MHz (Known As PC4200/PC5300)
Total supporting up to 2GB (512/ 1024 DDR2 Module)
Graphics Controller : • Intel GMA 950 Integrated
• Support Dynamic Video Memory Technology up to 128 Mb
• Support Microsoft DirectX 9.0
Display : 10.2" TFT 1024 x 600 resolution (WXGA)
Storage / Drivers : • 1x 2.5" HDD S-ATA 160 GB
• 1x Nand Flash Card

Keyboard : • Winkey Keyboard
• Built-in Touch Pad
Sound System : High Definition Audio
Direct Sound 3D Compatible
Built-in Microphone & Two Speaker

I/O Ports : • 3x USB 2.0 Ports (USB 1.1 Compatible)
• 1x External CRT
• 1x Headphone Jack
• 1x Microphone Jack
• 1x Internal Microphone
• 1x RJ-11 Jack for Modem
• 1x RJ-45 Jack for LAN
• 1x DC-In Jack

Slots : 3 in 1 Card Reader Support (MMC/SD/MS)
Communication : • 10/100 Mb Base-T Ethernet
• Wireless 802.11 b/g
• 56k Modem

Camera : • 1.3 MP Video Camera Module
Power: : • Full Range 40Watt AC Adapter
• 3 Cells Smart Battery Li-on 11.1V/2.2Ah (Removable)/ 6 Cells Smart Battery Li-on 11.1V/5.2Ah (Removable)
• Standby Time : 180 mnt & Work Time : 120 mnt
Security: : Kensington® Lock
Support O.S : Linux, Windows XP and Windows Vista
Dimension: : 258mm(w) x 189mm(d) x 28mm(h)
1,275 Kg with 3 cell battery.

On the Gaza border

We're sitting on a hill over looking Gaza, waiting to do live shots. It's strangely peaceful here. The sky is clear. The sun is bright. You can see past the security fence, past the green fields, into the homes of Beit Hanoun and the towers of Gaza City beyond them. Just a sliver of the Mediterranean is visible.

It's quiet. Except for the monotonous buzz of an Israeli drone overhead. Most times, we can't see it. But now and then, you can catch it's white triangular body against the blue sky, waiting and watching. It never seems to change speed.

Our producer calls to tell us of an Israeli air strike in Gaza City. It missed it's target and hit a family travelling in a car. 3 people were killed. I wonder if the drone above us had anything to do with it.

Occasionally, we hear a different noise. A distant boom and then a plume of smoke climbs the sky. Another rocket attack. That makes 26 today. I'm sure there are more.

Our cameraman calls us. He's out getting gas and sandwiches for lunch. The rocket landed less than 200 meters from the station, he says. But don't worry, he says, no injuries and lunch is on the way.

Earlier, an Israeli army unit dropped by. They told us not to linger here too long. There are snipers, says one soldier. He is wearing a battered flak jacket and points to Gaza.

Thanks, we say, we'll be careful. He shrugs his shoulders. Up to you, he says, and they drive off.

Now, we can hear the call to prayer. It drifts over the border from the village of Beit Hanoun in Gaza. We notice another column of smoke rising on the Israeli side. Qassam rocket, maybe? A little later a much louder boom, that shakes the ground. But still far away. Israeli missile strike in Gaza perhaps?

Our cameraman drives up, grinning and unscathed, clutching a bag of sandwiches and diet sodas. So, we sit down for a picnic on the border, basking in the sunshine and listening to the distant sounds of war.

IT Prediction 2009

On Tuesday I participated in a panel session to discuss the future of IT and, in particular, what the hot topics will be for 2009. You know the deal: a bunch of "experts" sit in front of an audience and make grandiose statements about what technology will look like in 5 or 10 years, and you just know that in retrospect the predictions will either look obvious (if they came true) or naive (if they didn't).

This particular session was pretty interesting though because it maintained focus on the present and the near future, not some indeterminate point over the horizon that nobody can really see. It was about the issues facing businesses and consumers right now, and the issues they are likely to face in just a few months or a year.

Being part of these sorts of events can be a bit odd at times though. Because so much of my time these days is spent looking at the latest trends and investigating emerging technologies (or even creating them in the first place) I tend to live so far ahead of the bleeding edge that the knife blade is behind me somewhere trying to catch up, and I sometimes feel embarrassed raising issues that I feel are quite passe and so "last week" and then I'm surprised when other people think they're new and exciting. That's not to try to make myself sound good: it's just to highlight the huge variation across society in the uptake of technology. As William Gibson once said, "the future is already here, it's just not widely distributed yet".

Some of the things people are doing with technology right now may seem like science fiction, but it's not fantasy: it's reality, just a reality that isn't widely distributed yet. For example, my letterbox has a network connection and an IP address so my home automation system can be notified when the postman drops by, and my car is connected wirelessly to the internet so my mechanic can use their web browser to interrogate my engine management system and run diagnostics in real time - while the car is hundreds of kilometers away driving down the road. And I have an RFID microchip implanted in my arm so I can unlock my front door just by waving my arm near it and don't have to carry keys. Right now I'm working on a device that will detect when I leave the loungeroom so it can pause the TV automatically, then if I walk into another room with a TV it will transfer the program across to it and continue playing from the paused position without me doing a thing. The TV show (or music, or movie, or video phone call, or weather data feed, or news headlines) can just follow me around the house.