October 7th, 2008 by
Filed under: Laptops
Sure, we’ve seen projects like SplashTop boot a stripped Linux build quickly, but Intel engineers at the recent Linux Plumbers Conference took things a little father last Thursday, starting up modified versions of Fedora and Intel’s own Moblin Linux on an SSD-equipped Eee PC in just five seconds. That’s all the way to an idle CPU and disk, not cheating and starting a window manager while background services thrash in the background, mind you — and it’s fast enough that the splash screen was removed from both distros. The changes are being sent back to the Moblin and Fedora trunks, but if you’re curious, a detailed overview of the changes awaits at the read link.
[Via SlashGear]
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Posted in Intel, eee, eee pc, EeePc, linux, fedora, atom, netbook, moblin, linux boot, LinuxBoot | No Comments »
October 3rd, 2008 by
Filed under: Storage

Kingston has announced it’s teaming up with Intel — new to the SSD market itself — to market flash memory-based drives for laptops and servers. This is a bold move for Kingston, which is usually known to stick to mature markets; clearly, the company sees the technology’s potential. The effort “almost flies in the face of the usual Kingston model,” said spokesman Dave Leong. “We are large and in charge!” (OK, so we made that last part up.) This is all set to pop off in Q4 2008 — Samsung, you’ve been warned.
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Posted in Intel, flash memory, FlashMemory, ssd, sandisk, kingston, ssddrive | No Comments »
September 24th, 2008 by
Filed under: Wireless
Back in June, we heard that Sprint would be going live with its XOHM WiMAX service in Baltimore, um, this month. As of today, it’s pretty clear that the service won’t be rolled out fully before October dawns, but at least some progress is being made. Based on a survey sent out to select (read: lucky) Baltimore-area residents, it seems that Intel and Sprint are willing to give away free laptops in order to trial the XOHM service in the city. Unfortunately, the lappies won’t even be given out until late October, and the trial itself is set to last 30 days, so frankly, we’ll be lucky to see XOHM hit the general populace before Santa takes to the friendly skies. Though, why are we not surprised?
[Thanks, Anonymous]
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Posted in Intel, test, wimax, sprint, xohm, beta, 4g, trial, centrino 2, Centrino2, baltimore, maryland | No Comments »
September 23rd, 2008 by
Filed under: Home Entertainment, Transportation

While the world waits to see the first Android cellphone revealed in New York later today, others are hard at work extending the reach of the open-source OS beyond just handsets. John Bruggeman, chief marketing officer at Wind River Systems says, “We’re starting to see Android get designed in on devices that extend way beyond the phone–things that might go in the automobile or things that might go in the home.” Bruggeman then collects his wits and adds, “I don’t want to pre-announce any design wins, I think you’ll see them in 2009. I would be shocked if you didn’t.” Indeed. After all, Intel and Wind River (both Android Open Handset Alliance members) have been working on an open, Linux-based car-computing platform since at least May of this year — so a switch to Android would be an over-simplified snap. It certainly makes sense for the hardware independent — thanks to Java-based Dalvik virtual machine — OS, middleware, and apps to spread throughout a consumer electronics industry lacking a common develoment platform. Whether this occurs by Google’s design or just a happy by-product of Android’s momentum remains to be seen.
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Posted in Intel, android, speculation, oha, wind river, wind river systems, WindRiver, WindRiverSystems | No Comments »
September 20th, 2008 by
Filed under: Desktops, Laptops
Wait, what’s this? Intel’s shipping the dual-core Atom 330? Despite reports that the 1.6GHz chip wouldn’t actually leave the dock until Q4, Intel itself has stepped up to ensure everyone that it’s getting ‘em out in Q3. The brief points out the obvious — you know, that the 330 was designed with nettops in mind — while also confirming that it boasts 1MB of L2 cache, an 8-watt TDP and support for DDR2 667. So yeah, let’s get these in some systems, shall we?
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Posted in Intel, Processor, cpu, dual-core, shipping, ships, ship, now shipping, NowShipping, atom, nettop, netbook, atom 330, Atom330 | No Comments »
September 19th, 2008 by
Filed under: Desktops, Laptops
Intel’s Atom processor and the netbook are the silicon equivalent of Lindsay Lohan and Samantha Ronson; they’re inseparable. Naturally we can’t wait for the dual-core Atom 330 to cozy up to the next generation of economical portables, but have to wait a bit as it’s being soldered exclusively into tiny desktops at the moment, like the one tech site The Guru of 3D just ran through a series of benchmarks. The posted results could have been interesting had they compared its performance to the single-core Atom 230 rather than AMD’s (relatively) heavy-hitting Athlon 4850 X2 and Phenom 9850 — not exactly apples to apples. We’ll just have to assume it’s roughly twice as fast on the right apps, all that for only twice the power consumption. That’s still only a measly 8-watts!
[Via The Inquirer]
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Posted in Intel, cpu, atom 330, Atom330, intel atom, IntelAtom, energy consumption, EnergyConsumption, 330 | No Comments »
September 17th, 2008 by
Filed under: Desktops
While some companies are already out there promising Core i7-based gear, we haven’t yet heard many official specifics about the actual processors that’ll be at the heart of them (at least not since their earlier Nehelem days). That’s now changed in a pretty big way, however, with some supposedly authentic leaked materials revealing the complete spec list and some pricing details. Apparently, you can expect Core i7 920, 940 and 965 models to roll out in November, with ‘em clocking in at 2.66GHz, 2.93GHz, and 3.2GHz, respectively. Each, as expected, are quad-core, 45nm processors, and each boast the same 8MB of shared L3 cache, 256kb of L2 cache per core, and TDP rating of 130W. No word on individual unit pricing just yet, but it looks like the Core i7 920 will run $284 in quantities of 1,000, with Core i7 940 upping things considerably to $562, and the “extreme” Core i7 965 demanding a hefty $999.
[Thanks, kris120890]
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Posted in Intel, Processor, core i7, CoreI7, nehelem | No Comments »
September 16th, 2008 by
Filed under: Desktops
C’mon, who here doesn’t want their very own supercomputer to do, um, whatever they want with? In an effort to make sure every man, woman and child has an absurdly powerful number cruncher in their home (let’s go with OSPP, or One Supercomputer Per Person), Microsoft has tag-teamed with the fabled Cray in order to “drive high productivity computing into the mainstream.” The Cray CX1 Supercomputer comes loaded with Windows HPC Server 2008 and incorporates up to 8 nodes and 16 Intel Xeon CPUs (dual- or quad-core); additionally, it boasts up to 4TB of internal storage, 64GB of memory per node and interoperates nicely with Linux. The CX1 is said to be the most affordable supercomputer offered by Cray (not to mention the “world’s highest-performing computer that uses standard office power”), but it’ll still run you anywhere between $25,000 to well over $60,000. Chump change, right?
[Via NetworkWorld]
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Posted in Microsoft, Intel, supercomputer, server, DARPA, xeon, cluster, cray, Windows HPC, WindowsHpc, Cray CX1, CrayCx1, CX1 | No Comments »
September 16th, 2008 by
Filed under: Desktops
Thanks to Google’s Chrome and Microsoft’s IE8, discrete processes are the new hotness, and more apps running simultaneously on your desktop is a great excuse to buy a CPU with more cores! On cue, Intel has officially launched its new Xeon 7400 processor, hitting 2.6 GHz on six cores and boasting an advertised 43 percent jump in performance over the lowly quad-core 7300, which had only half the 7400’s 16MB of L3 cache. Impressive stuff, especially considering a bonus 10 percent drop in power consumption, but at $2729 for the top of the line model it’s not exactly consumer-oriented. Perhaps Intel could interest you in a nice Core i7?
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Posted in Intel, Processor, cpu, dunnington, xen, xeon 7400, Xeon7400 | No Comments »
September 15th, 2008 by
Filed under: Desktops

Italian Engadget readers, take note: Abaco Computers of Milan just announced the production of Europe’s ‘first’ Intel Atom dual-core PC. Measuring up to a mere 27 x 20 x 10 cm (just under 11 x 8 x 4 inches) in the classic and classy “box” configuration, what appears to be a Betamax VCR at first glance is actually a reasonably stacked PC. The machine boasts a 1.6 GHz Atom CPU and up to 2GB RAM; oddly, the site says it sports a “generous” six USB ports, while the pictures clearly show only four and a single firewire jack (which they failed to mention altogether). The Abaco comes loaded with Ubuntu 8.04. Available in Desktop, Thin Client and Solid State flavors, according to your needs. Price varies by configuration, and needless to say, this isn’t available Stateside.
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Posted in Intel, europe, thin client, ThinClient, ubuntu, atom, solid state, SolidState, intel atom, IntelAtom, ubuntu-8.04, abaco, abaco computers, AbacoComputers | No Comments »
September 13th, 2008 by
Filed under: Home Entertainment, Portable Audio, Portable Video

We’ve heard this about this dream so many times before, DRM that will make digital media as easy to use and as consumer friendly as a physcial medium like DVD. We’d normally be quick to disregard this as yet another DRM “ecosystem” for digital media, but the list of players backing the Digital Entertainment Content Ecosystem (or DECE) has us taking notice. As impossible as this seems, if anyone could make it happen, it’d be a group composed of: Best Buy, Cisco, Comcast, Fox, HP, Intel, Lions Gate, Microsoft, NBC Universal, Paramount Pictures, Philips, Sony, Toshiba, VeriSign, and Warner Bros — yes, we also find it hard to believe that all these companies are working together. We’ll have to wait until January at CES for the ins and outs of how this would actually work, but we do know it’ll be based around a “rights locker” which will amount to a website where digital purchases will be stored — we assume this is where VeriSign fits in. Oh, and Apple is noticeably absent from the list
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Posted in Microsoft, Intel, NBC, Fox, sony, toshiba, drm, hp, best buy, BestBuy, philips, comcast, nbc universal, NbcUniversal, warner bros, WarnerBros, paramount, cisco, DECE, Digital Entertainment Content Ecosystem, DigitalEntertainmentContentEcosystem, Lions Gate, LionsGate, VeriSign | No Comments »
September 12th, 2008 by
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets
Another day, another disgruntled ex-employee trying to schelp stolen trade secrets. This time it’s a former Intel engineer named Biswahoman Pani, who nabbed 13 files containing over 100 pages of internal Intel design documents drawings on his way to a new gig at AMD. The FBI got involved when another Intel employee noticed some funny business on system access logs, but so far Biswahoman has denied everything — although his passport’s been confiscated and he never got to take that AMD job. Crime don’t pay, kids.
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Posted in Intel, amd, trade secrets, TradeSecrets, Biswahoman Pani, BiswahomanPani, industrial espionage, IndustrialEspionage | No Comments »
September 8th, 2008 by
Filed under: Storage
If you’ll notice, HP isn’t using just any SSD drive to hit 24 hours of insanity with the EliteBook 6930p — it’s all about that Intel 80GB SSD, which has new optimizations to boost speed and apparently energy usage over current flash drives. Well, Intel also picked today to get all official about the drive itself, and it’s clear those improvements and Intel’s brand name come at a price: the 2.5-inch 80GB “X25-M” drive will retail for $595 when it hits this week. There’s also a 3.5-inch version, the X18-M, but we’re less clear on infos there. PC Per put the 2.5-incher through its paces, albeit with a slightly dated firmware version, and came away impressed, calling it the “top performing storage solution” period. We want.
Read - Intel releases pricing, details on solid-state drives
Read - PC Per’s Intel X25-M 80GB SSD review
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Posted in Intel, flash drive, FlashDrive, ssd, 80GB, x25-m, -x18-m | No Comments »
September 6th, 2008 by
Filed under: Gaming
Quite honestly, there’s absolutely zero proof that Intel and Microsoft are yapping it up in regard to Larrabee, but considering just how logical it sounds, we couldn’t help but pass along the latest whispers surrounding the two. According to those fabled “industry insiders,” The Inquirer has it that Intel is currently on bended knee asking Microsoft to integrate Larrabee into the next-generation Xbox. If it were to land such a deal, developers would — in essence — be forced to develop for Larrabee given the need for console titles, which could then make things all the easier for Intel on the PC side. Like we said, this is all speculatory for now, but so long as the dots continue to connect, we’ll at least give this one a fighting chance at materializing.
[Via Joystiq]
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Posted in Microsoft, Intel, xbox 360, Xbox360, rumor, cpu, xbox, graphics, GPU, Graphics card, GraphicsCard, console, deal, chipset, larrabee | No Comments »
September 5th, 2008 by
Filed under: Handhelds, Laptops
Just as you were getting your head wrapped around Atom-branded Diamondville-class processors based on a Silverthorne architecture, along comes the next generation. Expected to arrive in Q3 of 2009, the new 45-nm Pineview processors will come in hyperthreaded single- and dual-core versions like the current generation Atom 2xx- and 3xx-series. However, the procs will be based on a new Lincroft micro-architecture boasting an integrated graphics core and memory manager that connects to memory via DMI, not a FSB. Unfortunately, the all important TDP power-draw off your tiny netbook’s battery in currently undefined. Hit the read link for the full roadmap and processor timeline if that’s the kind of thing that twirls your propellor.
[Via RegHardware]
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Posted in Intel, roadmap, diamondville, silverthorne, atom, netbook, dmi, fsb533, lincroft, pineview | No Comments »
September 4th, 2008 by
Filed under: Desktops
Intel is keeping a rightly low-key approach with this announcement, but if you’re somehow not satisfied with any of its current processor offerings, you may find something more to your liking among the three it slipped out over the Labor Day weekend. Those include the 45nm Core 2 Quad 8200, which clocks in at 2.33GHz with 4MB of L2 cache and a 1333MHz FSB, and gets a somewhat more budget-friendly $230 price tag at the expense of support for things like Intel’s Virtualization Technology and Trusted Execution Technology. If that’s a bit much, you can also now snag the dual-core, 2.5GHz E5200, which packs 2MB of L2 cache and 800MHz FSB for $84, or the single-core 65nm Celeron 450, which rolls in at a respectable 2.2GHz and includes 512K of L2 and an 800MHz FSB for a mere $53. Hit up the read link below for the complete breakdown.
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Posted in Intel, Processor, cpu, celeron, core 2 quad, Core2Quad, 8200, celeron 450, Celeron450, e5200 | No Comments »
September 2nd, 2008 by
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets
We’ve managed to somewhat wrap our brains around shape-shifting robots and printable circuits, but we’re still working on fully understanding the latest Intel spill. As IDF came to a close, Justin Rattner, Intel’s chief technology officer, presented a keynote speech in which he explained just how close the outfit was to realizing “programmable matter.” Granted, he did confess that end products were still years away, but researchers have been looking at ways to “make an object of any imaginable shape,” where users could simply hit a print button and watch the matter “take that shape.” He also explained that the idea of programmable matter “revolves around tiny glass spheres with processing power and photovoltaic for generating electricity to run the tiny circuitry.” For those now sitting with a blank stare on their face (read: that’s pretty much all of you, no?), hit up the read link for even more mind-boggling “explanations.”
[Via MAKE]
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Posted in Intel, photovoltaic, idf, programmable, IDF 2008, Idf2008, shape-shifting | No Comments »
September 1st, 2008 by
Filed under: Laptops
Ready to inhale some serious Intel technobabble? Here goes. As it stands, MIDs and UMPCs that utilize Windows operating systems are pretty much restricted to using Vista due to their incongruence with the “low-cost” requirement for still using XP. On top of that, Intel’s chipset used in these critters (you know, with those Silverthorne Atom CPUs) only supports 1GB of RAM. We don’t need to explain how underwhelming performance can be when mixing Vista with just 1GB of RAM. Now, however, a new PDF from Intel details updated System Controller Hub (SCH) specifications that include support for up to 2GB of RAM. What isn’t clear is whether current systems can be updated via a BIOS update, but we’ll be keeping an ear to the ground in hopes of hearing “yes.”
[Thanks, Itto]
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Posted in Intel, vista, windows, asus, eee, umpc, ram, bios, netbook, restriction | No Comments »
September 1st, 2008 by
Filed under: Laptops
Ready to inhale some serious Intel technobabble? Here goes. As it stands, MIDs and UMPCs that utilize Windows operating systems are pretty much restricted to using Vista due to their incongruence with the “low-cost” requirement for still using XP. On top of that, Intel’s chipset used in these critters (you know, with those Silverthorne Atom CPUs) only supports 1GB of RAM. We don’t need to explain how underwhelming performance can be when mixing Vista with just 1GB of RAM. Now, however, a new PDF from Intel details updated System Controller Hub (SCH) specifications that include support for up to 2GB of RAM. What isn’t clear is whether current systems can be updated via a BIOS update, but we’ll be keeping an ear to the ground in hopes of hearing “yes.”
[Thanks, Itto]
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Posted in Intel, vista, windows, asus, eee, umpc, ram, bios, netbook, restriction | No Comments »
August 29th, 2008 by
Filed under: Household
The age of the house call is long gone, and until we manage to replace all our bodily organs with cybernetic proxies, medical gadgets are our only hope to minimize those pesky office visits. The Health PHS5000 (aka Dr. Touch) from LG and Intel isn’t the first of its kind, but it is the latest such device, and it’s been recently introduced exclusively in Japan to begin medical trials. The little white box with a friendly UI (smileys mean you’re not dead yet, we presume) can track things like blood pressure and sugar levels, and will even send reports to your doctor’s office — meaning your terminal laziness can reach astronomical new heights… er, lows. It’s perfect for the disabled or merely reclusive, and with any luck will be hacked soon to allow Wii Fit integration.
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Posted in Intel, lg, healthcare, doctor, dr touch, DrTouch, health care, hmo, Intel Health PHS5000, IntelHealthPhs5000 | No Comments »
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