Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Intel hosts Windows 8 tablet event next week: Dell, HP, Samsung and more in attendance

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/09/19/intel-windows-8-tablet-event/

Intel hosts Windows 8 tablet event next week Dell, HP, Samsung and more in attendance

Ahead of Microsoft's big reveal next month, Intel's hosting an event on September 27th, bringing together Windows 8 tablets from ASUS, Acer, Dell, HP, Lenovo, Samsung and even ZTE -- a manufacturer that hasn't yet officially revealed any plans for Windows 8. The chipmaker also promises to offer up more details on its next-generation Atom processors. We'll be there, reporting live from the event next week.

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Intel hosts Windows 8 tablet event next week: Dell, HP, Samsung and more in attendance originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 19 Sep 2012 03:57:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Casio's Exilim EX-H50 superzooms its way to Photokina, we go hands-on (video)

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/09/19/casios-exilim-ex-h50-superzooms-its-way-to-photokina-we-go-ha/

Looking for a superzoom camera without the bulk of a DSLR? Casio's Exilim EX-H50 is a pretty slick proposition. The camera's got a reasonably slim profile that's a bit more like an oversized point-and-shoot, slight bulk that's presently largely because of the extended soft grip and big three-inch TFT display on the rear -- and then, of course, there's that 25 mm wide-angle lens with 24x optical zoom that certainly adds a good deal to the camera's footprint when extended. The flash adds a bit too, but that'll lay dormant until you pop it out via the devoted switch just to the left of the bump, on top of the camera.

The zoom is quite smooth -- it certainly did the trick snapping photos of strangers socializing in the halls of the Cologne Convention Center. That three-inch screen is big, if not particularly bright, but does the trick for the camera's fairly simple menu system, which also includes a number of filters like Fisheye, Sepia (move over Instagram) and Monochrome -- the processing on each occurs after the photos are snapped. Inside, you've got a 16.1-megapixel sensor.

The superzoom will run €250 when it hits Europe next month.

Continue reading Casio's Exilim EX-H50 superzooms its way to Photokina, we go hands-on (video)

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Casio's Exilim EX-H50 superzooms its way to Photokina, we go hands-on (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 19 Sep 2012 04:54:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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ZTE to launch Mozilla-based smartphones early next year

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/09/19/zte-mozilla-firefox-os/

ZTE to launch Mozillabased smartphones early next year

ZTE just can't get enough mobile OS's. The manufacturer is all over Android, it's got Windows Phone 8 coming out of leaky pores, and now it's revealed plans to launch phones based on the Firefox OS (formerly "Boot to Gecko") as early as the the first quarter of next year. That's not so surprising, perhaps, given that Mozilla already told us it was working with ZTE to bring its HTML-5 powered platform to life, but it further emphasizes the fact that Chinese smartphone giants are casting about for a viable alternative to Google.

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ZTE to launch Mozilla-based smartphones early next year originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 19 Sep 2012 05:47:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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How the iPhone 5 got its 'insanely great' A6 processor

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/09/19/how-the-iphone-5-got-its-a6-processor/

How the iPhone 5 got its 'insanely great' A6 processor It's hard not to be impressed by the A6 engine in the new iPhone 5, since it's now proven to deliver a double-shot of great performance and class-leading battery life. But silicon stories like that don't happen over night or even over the course of a year -- in fact, analyst Linley Gwennap has traced the origins of the A6 all the way back to 2008, when Steve Jobs purchased processor design company P.A. Semi and set one of its teams to work on creating something "insanely great" for mobile devices.

Although Apple is steadfastly secretive about its components, Gwennap's history of the A6 (linked below) is both plausible and a straight-up good read for anyone interested in the more fundamental aspects of their gadgets. Whereas the A5 processor stuck closely to ARM's Cortex-A9 design, Gwennap is convinced -- just like Anandtech is --that the A6 treads a very different path: it's still based on ARM's architecture and it's likely fabricated by Samsung using a cutting-edge 32nm process, but it's an in-house vision of what a mobile chip should be. It's the culmination of four years of hard work and perhaps half a billion dollars of investment.

That's not to say it's the most powerful chip out there, or even the chip most tailored to it! s host d evice -- after all, Samsung also designs great chips for some of its own smartphones. Indeed, Gwennap says that the A6 is probably a dual-core processor that is no more complex than Qualcomm's Snapdragon S4 (let alone the S4 Pro) or the forthcoming generation of Cortex-A15 chips, while its clock speed could be as low as 1.2GHz -- versus a 1.6GHz quad-core Exynos in the Note II and even a 2GHz Intel chip in Motorola's new RAZR i. However, Gwennap predicted that even if the A6 falls short of its rivals "in raw CPU performance," it'd make up for it in terms of low power consumption -- which is precisely what we've confirmed in our review.

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How the iPhone 5 got its 'insanely great' A6 processor originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 19 Sep 2012 06:03:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Tuesday, September 18, 2012

How 4K TV Works [Giz Explains]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5944270/how-4k-tv-works

How 4K TV WorksImagine 80-inch screens with quadruple the image quality of Full HD, plus passive 3D content that you'd consider actually watchable. That's 4K TV technology. It could deliver a stunning home theater experience—just as soon as 4K-enabled TV's like Sony's latest begin to cost less than a Kia.

But what exactly is 4K, and why should you care? Here's a brief history of the future of television.

What's all this talk about 4KTV?

First of all, there's 4K TV and then there's 8K TV. They make up the lower and upper halves of the Ultra-High Definition (UHD) standard, a digital video format proposed by NHK Science & Technology Research Laboratories in 2007. Both are capapble of playing footage at 24, 25, 50, 60, and even 120 frames per second (you can almost hear Peter Jackson squealing with delight).

At 2160p, 4K UHDTV is double the resolution of the current 1080p Full HD standard. So at 3840 x 2160, it's twice as wide, twice as tall—with an 8.3MP image that's quadruple the 2.1MP image found on current HD. Interestingly, the term "4K" actually refers to the horizontal pixel count, even though the industry standard counts along the vertical axis.

With 8K, at twice the resolution of 4K, the display shows a staggering 7680 × 4320 resolution. You'd have to stack current HDTVs in two rows of four to match the bit count of a single 8K set. What's more, 8K features a truly massive 33.2MP image—equivalent to the quality produced by top-shelf pro cameras like the Nikon D800.

However, like all brand new technologies, the UHDTV standard, especially the higher 8K range, still has a few kinks to work out. Like the fact that current network infrastructure struggles to transmit such large amounts of data. Oh, and the fact that 8K UHDTV cameras cost about a million friggin' bucks.

NHK's 3rd-generation 8K prototype camera, for example, is limited to one hour of filming. That's how fast its dual banks of 16 × 64 GB P2 cards fill to their terabyte capacity. The camera's 1.5-inch CMOS sensor captures 33.2MP footage shot at 120fps—that's roughly 4 billion pixels per second of data, moving at a rate of 51.2 GB per second, sychronously transmitted on 96 channels. The resolution is so high that focus isn't even controlled by the cameraman. Viewfinders currently don't have a resolution greater than 1K, so the cameraman can't know if the shot is actually in focus, so the job is handled by a remote CCU operator.

Today's 4K cameras aren't nearly expensive—though dropping $25,000 on a 4K Red One makes "expensive" a relative term. As for the difficulty of actually broadcasting so much information, Sony recently demonstrated that, utilizing the h.264 compression scheme, it could successfully transmit 4K video at a rate of 50Mbps without a discernible loss of image quality. This opens the door for UHD content creators to broadcast their work somewhere other than YouTube.

What has 4KTV done for me lately?

You probably haven't ever seen 4KTV on a consumer television—unless, of course, you had an extra 25 grand laying around last month to get the new 84-inch Sony Bravia. But you will see it.

The beauty of 4K is that it packs so much visual data onto the screen, that the pixels can be absolutely minisucle while still displaying 10 bits of data at a time. Think of an Apple Retina display, but at a higher resolution, and on an 80-inch screen—that's UHD. To even be able to notice the individual pixels, you'd have to smash your face right up against the display.

An increased pixel count will also benefit 3DTV. Passive 3D cuts the horizontal resolution in half to create a 3D effect—so if you're watching a 1080p movie (1920 x 1080) in 3D using passive glasses, you're really watching a 1920 x 540 picture. By doubling the resolution of the whole image, 4K effectively overcomes 1080p's limitations, producing an HD-quality 3D image. You're in for crisper, clearer 3D movies. And research is already under way to see if a 4K image, combined with sufficiently high refresh rates, can deliver 3D images sans glasses.

As more and more companies jump on the 4K bandwagon—LG has a 3D UHD set, Sharp has Super Hi-vision, and Sony launched the 4K Home Projector—prices are expected to drop as precipitously as they did with early HDTVs. The future looks fantastic.

[YouTube - Nikkei - Wikipedia 1, 2 - About - What HiFi - Life Goes Strong - DVX User]

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