Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Uncovered Bluetooth Keyboard Case Will Turn iPads into Netbooks [Ipad Accessories]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5620381/uncovered-bluetooth-keyboard-case-will-turn-ipads-into-netbooks

Uncovered Bluetooth Keyboard Case Will Turn iPads into NetbooksSure, the official Apple keyboard peripheral and iPad case are cute, but wouldn't they be nicer if they were combined? A Chinese company aims to beat Apple to it, with this Bluetooth keyboard case showing up on FCC.

Shenzhen Paoluy Silicone Technology Co's BL-BKB76 case appeared on FCC due to the Bluetooth connectivity it would use to link up to an iPad, minimizing cables and excess accessories—though unfortunately it doesn't dock and charge the iPad like Apple's keyboard does.

Apparently the keyboard gives 90 hours' use, or 100 days of standby time—which seems like more than enough, when you look at the iPad's roughly 10hr battery life when watching video or browsing the internet.

The only other case we've seen for the iPad which has an inbuilt keyboard is ClamCase's forthcoming one, which turns the iPad into something resembling more a laptop than anything else. Really, I'm surprised we haven't seen anything before today's Chinese case. [Wireless Goodness via SlashGear]

Read More...

AMD Announces 8-Core Bulldozer CPU [Guts]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5620423/amd-announces-8+core-bulldozer-cpu

AMD Announces 8-Core Bulldozer CPUYou can't say that AMD is ever boring. The company says its next-generation Bulldozer CPU core will take a unique approach to computing that goes beyond Hyper-Threading, which some believe could offer phenomenal performance.

Bulldozer makes a fairly big break from how today's multicores are constructed. Today's dual-, quad-, and hexa-cores are based on single-cores strung together. They can share L2 or L3 cache, but generally are partitioned off from each other. With Bulldozer, the basic building block of a multi-core chip changes from a walled off single core to more of a duplex. Two cores are tightly intertwined and share fetch, decode, floating-point scheduler, and dual 128-bit fused-multiply-accumulate units, or FPUs. AMD says each module includes dedicated integer schedulers, pipelines, and L1 cache.

AMD Announces 8-Core Bulldozer CPU
This, AMD says, is far superior to Intel's Hyper-Threading, which can bog down when the same resources are under load.

Hyper-Theading was introduced by Intel in 2002 and takes a single-core and shares its resources by creating a virtual core. In the Pentium 4 days, HT added a 10 to 15 percent performance increase, and in Core i7 chips, performance can be boosted 20 to 25 percent depending on the application.

Just adding dedicated, partitioned cores is a "brute force" approach that wastes resources, AMD says. With its shared resources, Bulldozer can reduce power consumption and shrink the die size, which in turn lowers the cost to produce the chip. AMD says the server version of its Bulldozer chip should deliver 33 percent more cores and a 50 percent increase in "throughput" in the same power envelope as a 12-core Magny-Cours Opteron chip.

"One of the important things here is that Bulldozer is one of the first all-new designs from AMD in a decade," says analyst Nathan Brookwood of Insight 64. Brookwood says one of the more exciting design changes in Bulldozer is its ability to dynamically reallocate resources on single-threaded tasks. On a traditional dual-core, the resources for each walled off core cannot be combined. In Bulldozer, all of the resources of the module can be thrown at it a thread.

AMD Announces 8-Core Bulldozer CPU
"The single-core performance on some floating-point applications is going to be mind-boggling," Brookewood says.

AMD officials say Bulldozer is being targeted at servers and performance desktop machines. The good news is that Bulldozer will be drop-in compatible with most current high-end servers. The bad news is that it won't be compatible with existing AM3 boards. Instead, AMD says it will introduce a new AM3+ socket. These sockets will be backward compatible with older chips so you could drop a Phenom II X6 in it. According to AMD, Bulldozer will be built on a new 32nm process at Global Foundries.

AMD Announces 8-Core Bulldozer CPUMaximum PC brings you the latest in PC news, reviews, and how-tos.

Read More...

Open source Qbo bot makes the jump to ROS, the open source robot OS

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2010/08/23/open-source-qbo-bot-makes-the-jump-to-ros-the-open-source-robot/

While the Willow Garage-initiated ROS is designed to consolidate and accelerate robotics innovation for the long term, it's still a long ways from powering your robotic butler / life coach / best friend, so it's exciting to see it put to use in the here and now. The folks at Thecorpora, responsible for the Qbo open source robot project, have been busy converting Qbo's original Java API into ROS, and just announced they're at 99.9 percent completion of that task. That means the Qbo gets instant access to some of the fun development going on in ROS, like stacking all its cameras and ultrasonic sensors into a system for machine vision, or controlling the bot with a Wiimote or a PS3 controller. (There's a video after the break of the Wiimote in action). Don't think Qbo will be powerful enough for you? Willow Garage just announced that it's about to put its own ROS-powered PR2 bot on sale soon, after a few months of its (highly successful) PR2 Beta Program.

Continue reading Open source Qbo bot makes the jump to ROS, the open source robot OS

Open source Qbo bot makes the jump to ROS, the open source robot OS originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 23 Aug 2010 22:45:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink ROS.org  |  sourceWillow Garage, Qbo blog  | Email this | Comments

Read More...

AMD's Bobcat and Bulldozer, 2011 flagship CPU cores, detailed today

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2010/08/24/amds-bobcat-and-bulldozer-2011-flagship-cpu-cores-detailed-to/

One of these days AMD is gonna have to stop talking about its Atom-killing Bobcat and Xeon-ending Bulldozer cores and finally release them. But, until that happy moment arrives in 2011 (fingers crossed), we'll have to content ourselves with more presentation slides. First up, the Bobcat core is AMD's long overdue play for the netbook/ultrathin market. Pitched as having 90 percent of the performance of current-gen, K8-based mainstream chips, AMD's new mobility core will require "less than half the area and a fraction of the power" of its predecessors. That sounds like just the recipe to make the company relevant in laptop purchasing decisions again, while a touted ability for the core to run on less than one watt of power (by lowering operating frequencies and voltages, and therefore performance) could see it appear in even smaller form factors, such as MIDs. The Bobcat's now all set to become the centerpiece of the Ontario APU -- AMD's first Fusion chip, ahead of Llano -- which will be ramping up production late this year, in time for an early 2011 arrival.

The Bulldozer also has a future in the Fusion line, but it's earliest role will be as a standalone CPU product for servers and high-end consumer markets. The crafty thing about its architecture is that every one Bulldozer module will be counted as two cores. This is because AMD has split its internal processing pipelines into two (while sharing as many internal components as possible), resulting in a sort of multicore-within-the-core arrangement. The way the company puts it, it's multithreading done right. Interlagos is the codename of the first Opteron chips to sport this new core, showing up at some point next year in a 16-core arrangement (that's 8 Bulldozers, if you're keeping score at home) and promising 50 percent better performance than the current Magny-Cours flagship. Big words, AMD. Now let's see you stick to a schedule for once.

Continue reading AMD's Bobcat and Bulldozer, 2011 flagship CPU cores, detailed today

AMD's Bobcat and Bulldozer, 2011 flagship CPU cores, detailed today originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 24 Aug 2010 00:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Read More...

Nokia and Intel build a joint research lab, plan to create the mobile 3D future

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2010/08/24/nokia-and-intel-build-a-joint-research-lab-plan-to-create-the-m/

Thought Nokia and Intel's partnership was just some fleeting MeeGo fling? Just a carefree hookup in their times of mobile panic? Not quite. The companies are certainly in this thing for the long haul and today's announcement of their new research lab in Oulu, Finland is all the evidence you'll need. The Intel and Nokia Joint Innovation Center -- as it's been dubbed -- is part of the University of Oulu and will now be home to about two-dozen researchers. What exactly will the white coats be working on? Well, the 3D mobile internet, of course, technology that Nokia's been dabling with for awhile. The focus of the initial work will be on three-dimensional virtual reality platforms as well as on mapping. Sounds pretty neat and futuristic, but for some reason all we can keep thinking about is the immediate future of getting our hands on Nokia's MeeGo-running N9. Hit the break for the full press release and a few more details on the lab itself.

Continue reading Nokia and Intel build a joint research lab, plan to create the mobile 3D future

Nokia and Intel build a joint research lab, plan to create the mobile 3D future originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 24 Aug 2010 02:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Read More...