Tuesday, January 31, 2012

The Simpsons Aims For World Record With 500-Episode Marathon

The Simpsons Aims For World Record With 500-Episode Marathon Screening. Special guest: Julian Assange
___________________________
99% BAD HARDWARE WEEK: Simpsons are as you know world's leading family in bad hardware practice.

Search for BAD HARDWARE WEEK produces about 202 million results


___________________________
99% BAD HARDWARE WEEK:

Monday, January 30, 2012

Near treshold Cores: Fight against dark silicon began

Due to limited scaling of supply voltage, power density is expected to grow in future technology nodes. This increasing power density limits the number of simultaneously switching transistors for future chips, leaving others inactive, a phenomenon referred to as dark silicon. As a result, future chips would only support a small fraction of working transistors. Threshold voltage scales down more slowly in current and future technology nodes to keep leakage power under control.
Researchers predict that near-threshold computing could restore the relationship between transistor density and energy efficiency.
___________________________
99% BAD HARDWARE WEEK:

DARPA progam seeks 75-fold increase in sensor systems performance

Technologists from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency are looking for an ambitious answer to the problem and will next month detail a new program it expects will develop power technologies that could bolster system power output from today's 1 GFLOPS/watt to 75 GFLOPS/watt.
The goal of the program, called Power Efficiency Revolution For Embedded Computing Technologies or PERFECT,  is to take a revolutionary approach to processing power efficiency down to the 7nm line geometry.  Year 2020. Exaflops supercomputer time.
___________________________
99% BAD HARDWARE WEEK:

Transportation Hiriko: The MIT-backed, Spanish 'folding' EVehicle

Meet Hiriko, an EV that's the fruit of a collaboration between MIT, Basque businesses and the Spanish government.


___________________________
99% BAD HARDWARE WEEK:

Google's Google+ gambit: Deep roots .

Let me tell you a story about Richard M. Nixon and the Cold War--and yes, I promise it's relevant to a blog post about Google's controversial move to integrate its Google+ network deeply into the Google search engine. Machinations between Google, Facebook, and Twitter will play a huge part in shaping its future--and it'll be fascinating to see what it looks like a year or two from now.
___________________________
99% BAD HARDWARE WEEK:

Is the Untied States In Decline?

“The Great Recession has had a two-fold impact. First, it highlighted the shift of global wealth—and power—from West to East, a trend illustrated by China’s breathtakingly rapid rise to great power status. Second, it has raised doubts about the robustness of US primacy’s economic and financial underpinnings. This article argues that the Aunipolar moment is over, and the Pax Americana—the era of American ascendancy in international politics that began in 1945—is fast winding down. ”
___________________________
99% BAD HARDWARE WEEK: Well, say in Decline up to 2025.

Friday, January 27, 2012

Jobs from 1947 up now


___________________________
99% BAD HARDWARE WEEK:

Ooooops, Nikola Tesla patented my car entry remote !

Nikola Tesla, the prolific Serbian-American inventor and radio pioneer, filed a U.S. patent, granted on March 17, 1903 which doesn’t mention the phrase “frequency hopping” directly, but certainly alludes to it. Entitled “Method of Signaling,” the patent describes a system that would enable radio communication “without any danger of the signals or messages begin disturbed, intercepted, interfered with in any way”.
But, there is more.
Hedy Lamarr and George Antheil’s patent describes a mechanical system for frequency hopping spread spectrum technology to remotely control torpedoes.   Year 1942.
___________________________
99% BAD HARDWARE WEEK: Well, who would know. And who would now say women can not be clever AND beautiful?

Look ma no hands: Volvo Tests Almost-Autonomous ‘Road Train’

The coffee-drinking driver of the Volvo S60 in the left photo has his foot nowhere near the brake, and he isn’t even steering with his knees. He’s not, however, about to become a statistic about tailgating and distracted driving. He’s part of the world’s first successful “road train,” a setup in which cars are programmed to automatically follow professionally-driven lead cars to reduce accidents and congestion
___________________________
99% BAD HARDWARE WEEK:

US launched cyber attacks on other nations

Mike McConnell, the former director of national intelligence at the National Security Agency under George W Bush, tells Reuters this week that cyber war is more than a distant possibility. According to the current vice chairman at Booz Allen Hamilton, the US has already launched attacks on the computer networks of other nations.
Thousands of Infrastructure Computer Systems are Online, Unprotected
___________________________
99% BAD HARDWARE WEEK:

F35 wins in the end in Japan and Korea

Detractors say the F-35 stealth fighter, the costliest military plane ever, is destined to go down as one of the biggest follies in aviation history. But it may have found a savior: deep-pocketed U.S. allies hungry to add its super high-tech capabilities to their arsenal.
___________________________
99% BAD HARDWARE WEEK:

Flash revenue expected to overtake DRAM in 2012

Flash revenue expected to overtake DRAM in 2012
___________________________
99% BAD HARDWARE WEEK:

The Bumpy Road to Exascale: A Q&A with Thomas Sterling

The Bumpy Road to Exascale: A Q&A with Thomas Sterling
___________________________
99% BAD HARDWARE WEEK:

Internet protocol myth buster

There's a common wrong perception that IPv6 is natively more secure than IPv4 because IPSec support is mandatory in IPv6. "This is a myth that needs to be debunked," Vyncke says.
___________________________
99% BAD HARDWARE WEEK:

Satellite images of Earth show roads, air traffic, cities at night and internet cables

Here.


___________________________
99% BAD HARDWARE WEEK:

2012: Processor architecture now matters, not supreme manufacturing

Here
___________________________
99% BAD HARDWARE WEEK:

Air-fueled lithium batteries offer ten-fold storage capacity

Here and here.
Background: Everything I need to know about lithium-air batteries
___________________________
99% BAD HARDWARE WEEK:

First 3-D IC spec set for release

First 3-D IC spec set for release
___________________________
99% BAD HARDWARE WEEK:

Intel to unveil 22nm Ivy Bridge processors on April 8

Not an April fools, say Taiwan sources.
Intel plans to release a total of 25 models of its 22nm Ivy Bridge processors, including 17 CPUs for desktops and eight for notebooks and ultrabooks on or around April 8, 2012.
Ivy Bridge processors will be backwards-compatible with the Sandy Bridge platform, but require a BIOS/firmware update.
Intel's performance targets (compared to Sandy Bridge):
___________________________
99% BAD HARDWARE WEEK:

Raspberry Pi , An ARM GNU/Linux box for $25.


An ARM GNU/Linux box for $25.
From a situation in the 1990s where most of the kids applying were coming to interview as hobbyist programmers, the landscape in the 2000s was very different; a typical applicant now had experience only with web design, and sometimes not even with that. Fewer people were applying to the course every year. Something had changed the way kids were interacting with computers. 
Credit card-sized Raspberry Pi computer will handle 1080p video next month.
___________________________
99% BAD HARDWARE WEEK: Production starting soon.

USA Congress Funds Exascale Computing

Last week, House and Senate conferees agreed on full funding for the Department of Energy's effort to move toward exascale computing by providing $442 million for advanced scientific computing research, $126 million of which will go toward exascale computing, according to the president's budget proposal
Congress is addressing those concerns by requiring the Department of Energy to submit a "joint, integrated" exascale strategy by February 10 of next year that will include target dates, interim milestones, minimum requirements for an exascale system, multi-year budget estimates, breakdowns of each office and lab involved in exascale research, and a more granular budget request for 2013. 

___________________________
99% BAD HARDWARE WEEK:

Kick-off for the European exascale project DEEP

Here
The scientists expect a first prototype as early as 2014/2015 that will have a capacity of 100 petaflop/s
Russia too "is committed to having exascale computation capabilities by 2018-2020 and is prepared to make the investments to make that happen,"

 

___________________________
99% BAD HARDWARE WEEK:

IBM Patent Application #20110219208: 100 PFlops Supercomputer

A 649-page document filed in January provides an outlook on how the company will achieve 100 Petaflops, which translates to  (100 quadrillion) operations per second.

From the patent: “A Multi-Petascale Highly Efficient Parallel Supercomputer of 100 petaOPS-scale computing, at decreased cost, power and footprint, and that allows for a maximum packaging density of processing nodes from an interconnect point of view. The Supercomputer exploits technological advances in VLSI that enables a computing model where many processors can be integrated into a single Application Specific Integrated Circuit (ASIC). Each ASIC computing node comprises a system-on-chip ASIC utilizing four or more processors integrated into one die, with each having full access to all system resources and enabling adaptive partitioning of the processors to functions such as compute or messaging I/O on an application by application basis, and preferably, enable adaptive partitioning of functions in accordance with various algorithmic phases within an application, or if I/O or other processors are underutilized, then can participate in computation or communication nodes are interconnected by a five dimensional torus network with DMA that optimally maximize the throughput of packet communications between nodes and minimize latency.”
___________________________
99% BAD HARDWARE WEEK:

Top Ten Memresistor Patent Holders

1) Samsung (387 US patents, phase change)
2) Micron (371 US patents, solid electrolyte)
3) Macronix (171 US patents, phase change)
4) Ovonyx (165 US patents, phase change)
5) IBM (126 US patents phase change)
6) HP (108 US patents, molecular)
7) Toshiba (108 US patents, metal oxide)
8) Sharp (107 US patents, metal oxide)
9) Intel (89 US patents, phase change)
10) Qimonda (88 US patents, phase change)
___________________________
99% BAD HARDWARE WEEK:

Fujifilm X-Pro1: Radical new sensor layout smashes sharpness limits

However, the 16 megapixel X-Pro1 won’t be for everyone. Its estimated $1700 price for the body, and $600 per lens — when they ship in February — will put it out of reach of all but the most serious photographers.
___________________________
99% BAD HARDWARE WEEK:

Intel's well kept future processor design secrets

That is just the beginning though. Haswell will utilize new mobile (947 pin) and desktop sockets (1150 pin), which will stay the same through Broadwell "tick".

Debuting in 2014, Broadwell will be the first part manufactured in brand new 14nm technology and represents a further optimization of the Haswell design. According to our sources, Broadwell brings the first true System-on-Chip design, integrating features such as Ethernet, Thunderbolt or USB 3.0 - all inside one single package. This part is already being widely discussed by Far Eastern motherboard vendors as a margin killer, since unless something changes, there won't be room to earn money off building parts for that platform.

Skylake Architecture: 14nm Skylake Tock and 11nm Skymont Tick
There isn't a lot of information available on the 14nm Skylake CPU architecture (2015), sans the completely new CPU core and GPU core, which will work as one. What Larrabee architecture failed to do, Skylake intends to fix, bringing DirectX 12(?) support straight through the CPU pipeline. There is no doubt that Intel will be first to 14nm process, just like the company was with practically every manufacturing process out there. Skymont will be a 11nm "Tock", a die-shrink and a component refresh coming out in mid-2016.
___________________________
99% BAD HARDWARE WEEK:

William Hyde Wollaston


William Hyde Wollaston proves in 1801 that the electricity from friction was identical to that produced by voltaic piles. Thus, there is only one cause of electric force. In 1821 he failed to design first direct current electrical motor. Magnetic induction dicovered Faradey in 1831. Nikola Tesla invented alternating current motor in 1888.
Experiments by J.J. Thomson in 1897 led to the discovery of a fundamental building block of matter.  The electron. Carrier of the mysterious electric force.
___________________________
99% BAD HARDWARE WEEK:

Google claims 90 million Google+ users

Google claims 90 million Google+ users
but still lagging behind Facebook's 800 million active users and Twitter's 100 million active users.  And 90m users doesn't mean they are all active.

___________________________
99% BAD HARDWARE WEEK:

Not All MLC SSDs are created equal


Not All MLC SSDs are created equal
___________________________
99% BAD HARDWARE WEEK:

Apple largest computer maker, sold more iPads alone than HP sold PCs

iPad eating up PC sales, not hurting Mac sales 

"Apple's $13 billion quarterly profit is second-biggest in U.S. history. Only topped by Exxon's $14.8 billion in 2008," tweeted CNNMoneyTech.  
___________________________
99% BAD HARDWARE WEEK:

Super-MicroDX, world smallest PC. In sale.


This product has a cigarette box-sized enclosure , 512MB of memory and CPU Vortex with 800Mhz clock, GPU (Volari Z9s / Memory 8MB), VGA, and LAN. XP is the OS.


___________________________
99% BAD HARDWARE WEEK:

Canon's new 5D Mark II and 7D crossbreed ?

Tested for April release ? However, 22M pixel sensor points to 7D II model. 18 Mpixel sensors  are for 5D class.
___________________________
99% BAD HARDWARE WEEK:

Thomas Edison greatest inventor ever, Steven Jobs second ?

Possible marketing gurus. Greatest inventor is however Nikola Tesla.  How do I know? Switch off your bulb light or Ipad, and try to survive without them. You will not die for sure, and if afraid of darkness, you can still switch on your LCD TV or computer monitor. Then, pull out  Tesla's AC power plug everywhere, and think again. Who is really the greatest. Yeah, you can switch on Ipad and tweet the problem but no working cell towers.Your water pipes will dry out soon.  No more showering if no waterfall close. Fridge will melt. Your fresh food will be rotten. Micro oven will be dead. Metro is stopped, however your DC current car is still working, provided world is not without oil for a  long time. In south, your house is pretty hot. No more clean dresses. Dust and bad smells everywhere, no ventilation.  Elevators stuck. Banks are closed. However, there is a benefit: No nuke power plant because you can't deliver the power. Is that the end of civilization we know? Well, the end of big cities definitely yes.
___________________________
99% BAD HARDWARE WEEK:

Tablet computers can replace laptops

Tablet computers can do almost everything laptops can, but they're more fun to use and more portable than any laptop could hope to be. Over the next few years, I fully expect tablets to replace their larger brethren. Here is why. 
Samsung's 10-inch Galaxy Tab tablet with a case containing a wireless keyboard was my main computer during the North American International Auto Show this year. In six weeks of testing, I have found that the tablet performs as well as a laptop for the vast majority of computing tasks.
___________________________
99% BAD HARDWARE WEEK:

Rapid Storage Technology software suite 11.5 and 11.6

We have already disclosed that RST 11.5 is bringing what we believe to be the key feature for adoption of Solid Storage Drives (SSDs) into enterprise, and that is TRIM and Garbage Collection when SSDs are inside a RAID array. We know today that the supported RAID arrays modes are 0 (stripping), 1 (mirror), 1+0 and 5 (min three drive stripe with redundancy).
___________________________
99% BAD HARDWARE WEEK:

Thursday, January 26, 2012

World's first XERA X-Emission-Rays-Amplification created

This sets off an avalanche of X-ray emissions to create the world's first atomic X-ray laser - and temperatures of two million degrees.
___________________________
99% BAD HARDWARE WEEK: X-ray and visible light are not the same frequency. Even close.

Lexar's 256GB Flash card

 UDMA 7 166MB/s 68 pins , SATA1 150MB/s, 10% slower
CF 6.0 ( Nov.2010): UDMA Mode 7 (167MB / serial speed 1113) . Added sanitize command.
___________________________
99% BAD HARDWARE WEEK: Who cares for SSD anymore? This is quite enough FAT32 CF + storage for your next tablet. 2014 512GB, 2016 1TB !

This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?