Monday, June 18, 2012

FIRST PHOTOS: Here's Microsoft's New Tablet 'Surface' (MSFT)

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/microsoft-surface-tablet-photos-2012-6

microsoft surface tablet

Microsoft just unveiled its first tablet called Surface.

Surface will run Windows 8 and Windows RT. (Windows RT is the tablet-only version if Windows 8 designed to compete with the iPad.)

No word on pricing or release date yet, but we're expecting to learn more this fall.

In the meantime, check out the photos below.

The keyboard cover flips out. It has a multitouch track pad too.



The kickstand is built in



Side view. The keyboard cover is very thin.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

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Intel christens its 'Many Integrated Core' products Xeon Phi, eyes exascale milestone

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/06/18/intel-christens-its-MIC-products-xeon-phi/

Intel christens its 'Many Integrated Core' products Xeon Phi, eyes exascale milestone

Been wondering when the next big leap in high performance computing would hit? Well, Intel would like you to believe the time is now and the name of that revolution is the Xeon Phi. Formerly codenamed Knights Corner, the Many Integrated Core product is pushing the field of supercomputers into the era of the exaflop by squeezing a teraflop of performance into a package small enough to plug into a PCIe slot. The Phi brand will, at first at least, be applied to specialized coprocessors designed for highly parallel tasks. The chips are built using Intel's 22nm manufacturing process and 3-D TriGate transistors, piling in more that 50 cores in an effort to combat the inroads made by GPU companies like NVIDIA in the supercomputing space. For more info check out the presentation (PDF) and blog post at the source links.

Intel christens its 'Many Integrated Core' products Xeon Phi, eyes exascale milestone originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 18 Jun 2012 15:18:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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The IKEA TV Reviewed: Worse Than Assembling 100 Bookshelves at Once [TV]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5919216/the-ikea-tv-worse-than-assembling-100-bookshelves-at-once

The IKEA TV Reviewed: Worse Than Assembling 100 Bookshelves at OnceUppleva, Ikea's magical TV-cum-entertainment center meatball, won't be arriving in America until next year. Fortunately, we've got an early review from friends in Sweden. The bad news: it's really bad.

We had high hopes for the all-in-one Uppleva—after all, if there's a company that can produce a single unit with a TV, Blu-ray player, 2.1 sound system, all wrapped into a piece of furniture, it's IKEA, right? IKEA has managed to build structures the size of aircraft carriers filled with delicious food, childrens' ball pits, and cheap chic furniture across the world. Why not build decent TVs? O, what folly.

The IKEA TV Reviewed: Worse Than Assembling 100 Bookshelves at Once

The Uppleva is fine as furniture—an LCD TV with typically minimalist drawers and a stand—but a piece of junk as everything else, say the Swedish tech gurus at M3. Although they cite the actual construction of the thing as "smooth," (as relatively simple to screw together as any other IKEA TV stand) and were charmed by the trim options to match other furniture in your pad, the actual electronics part of the TV—not unimportant!—is as appealing as a wad of lingonberry jam left out in the sun. The TV's picture quality is crap: poor black levels, muddy colors, and a noisy image. This is not what you want with a $1000 TV system. The "smart" aspects of the Uppleva are brain dead, too, with a paraplegic-slow, godawful interface, and broken features. Sometimes button presses don't even register. M3 notes that a software update could fix some of this, but ugh—why bother? This is a wreck on the scale of crawling across your bedroom floor looking for that last tiny screw you need to finish your bed frame.

The IKEA TV Reviewed: Worse Than Assembling 100 Bookshelves at Once

M3 editor Andreas Ivarsson put the whole thing thusly:

This is a really funny concept. An affordable solution for a complete home cinema system where everything is included. You get a TV that can handle internet services (though poorly) and is equipped with a media player.

The picture quality is quite mediocre and the sound system very good. The furniture looks stylish and fits well into our Swedish Ikea homes. With some nice interior this piece can be something you don't have to be ashamed of in your living room. The only thing you have to be ashamed of is if your friends will try the TV's more advanced functions. But as long as they wanna plug in a USB stick with music or watch ordinary TV it is okay. It is a big difference in how we experience the furniture and sound system compared to the TV. The TV is not affordable and to be honest really bad when you can get a better 42-inch for the same amount. I think
that the whole concept will be better with another TV, but the nice integration with the sound system in the furniture really appeals to us.

Overall, Ivarrson gives the whole kit and kaböödle a "5 out of 10." Which is pretty awful, in any language.

The IKEA TV Reviewed: Worse Than Assembling 100 Bookshelves at Once

And there you have it—the IKEA Uppleva, a $1000 home theater system that appeals mostly for the cheap wood it's packaged in. You can get a damn decent set, a Roku, and some OK speakers for that money. And if you really want the Swedish modernity bliss experience, put the thing on a $10 IKEA coffee table, another $5 on meatballs, lie on your EKTORP sofa, and call it a day.

The IKEA TV Reviewed: Worse Than Assembling 100 Bookshelves at Once

For M3's full (Swedish) coverage of the IKEA Uppleva, including more photos and video, head here. [M3]

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A Chinese Company Plans To Build The World's Tallest Building In Just 90 Days

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/a-chinese-company-plans-to-build-the-worlds-tallest-building-in-just-90-days-2012-6

sky city china

The Burj Khalifa, currently the world's tallest building, took five years to construct.

But Broad Sustainable Building, a Chinese construction company, says it will build the world's new tallest buildingthe so-called Sky City in Changsha, the provincial capital of Hunan Provincein just 90 days.

If all goes as planned, the building will stand 838 meters, 10 meters higher than the Burj.

If anyone can do it, it's BSB. The company was behind a three-story building that went up in nine days and a 30-story hotel constructed in just 15 days.

According to CNNGo, the 220-story Sky City will cost around $628 million to construct; in comparison the Burj cost an estimated $1.5 billion.

The building, which is slated for completion in January 2013, will be mixed use, with luxury apartments, low income housing, space for businesses and retail, according to the company. It will be earthquake-resistant and have 31 high-speed elevators to take visitors to the upper-level observation decks, the company said.

BSB plans to do the work at light-speed by using a proprietary prefabrication technique. It estimates that fabrication will take about four months at its factory, and installation will take about two months onsite.

The company reportedly received approval from the local government last week, but is still waiting for a green light from the central government, according to Inhabitat. But if and when that's all squared away, expect Sky City to rise in almost no time at all.

Now see how BSB built a 3-story building in just 9 days >

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Inhabitat's Week in Green: solar supertrees, pee-powered plasma and a bug-eyed mantis shrimp with a serious right hook

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/06/18/solar-trees-pee-plasma-boxing-mantis-shrimp/

Each week our friends at Inhabitat recap the week's most interesting green developments and clean tech news for us -- it's the Week in Green.

DNP Inhabitat's Week in Green tktktk

It's been a big week for energy-efficient breakthroughs in the scientific community. Scientists at MIT developed a new type of textured nano surface that could reduce the thickness of silicon used in solar panels by more than 90 percent, bringing down the cost of photovoltaic technology. Meanwhile, in the land down under, researchers at the Australian National University are working on a pee-powered plasma thruster that could make deep space missions more feasible. Also this week, a team of engineers from MIT developed a new glucose fuel cell that runs on the same sugar that powers the human body and could be used for brain implants.

Continue reading Inhabitat's Week in Green: solar supertrees, pee-powered plasma and a bug-eyed mantis shrimp with a serious right hook

Inhabitat's Week ! in Green : solar supertrees, pee-powered plasma and a bug-eyed mantis shrimp with a serious right hook originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 18 Jun 2012 07:45:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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