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Posts Tagged ‘hardware’

Figuring out etiquette for Google Glass

May 20th, 2013 No comments

(CNN) — In recent weeks, Google Glass has been distributed to its first group of beta testers outside Google and in the real world. As the pool of new smart-glass wearers grows, they are feeling out the etiquette of using the new technology.

In more jaded settings, people wearing Glass are casually ignored; their recent life choice to wear a piece of computing hardware wrapped around the front of their faces doesn’t register as unusual. The reactions increase, though, the farther away they go from the safety zones of the Google campus, Silicon Valley and, last week, the Moscone Center in downtown San Francisco, where the Google I/O Developers conference was being held.

The first reaction from strangers is usually excitement. When the doors opened on a crowded hotel elevator, Google I/O attendee Juan Pablo Risso heard a cry of “He has Google Glass! Come in! Come in!” Risso declined and took the next lift down, only to find the excited guests waiting for him in the lobby, ready with questions.

Google Maps to get big, personal redesign


Don’t bring Google Glass to Vegas


Test-driving Google Glass

Because it is still so new and somewhat rare, Google Glass is an excellent conversation starter. When not being accosted by curious strangers, wearers can use the eyewear to break the ice. A friend of Risso’s had luck wearing his to a bar and meeting new people.

After the regular barrage of questions (How does it work? Are you using it now?) many strangers ask to try on the $1,500 piece of hardware. The answer is typically no, and some owners will cite Google’s terms prohibiting the lending of Google Glass as an excuse.

Sometimes, the conversations are behind the wearer’s back, and they’re not always “Oohs” and “Ahhs.” Glass owners reported hearing people whisper after they passed by. But snickers and sneering are common with any new, really expensive technology.

The cost of the devices makes them an easy target; wearing them is still interpreted as a geeky status symbol.

“I think there’s definitely a Glass and Glass-not thing, especially in San Francisco. There’s a cachet to it,” said Greg Roberts, founder ofdsky9.com/” target=”_blank” dSky9, a company developing a Google Glass app for remembering people and places.

Google says you’ll know when Glass is sketchy

After the initial shock of seeing Glass in the wild wears off, there are the new and awkward aspects of conversation with someone wearing the tiny screen. When having a casual chat with someone wearing Glass, it can take effort to not stare directly at the shiny gadget instead of into the person’s eyes.

The finger gesture that people use to dismiss the notifications can be distracting, as can the flash of light on the Glass itself.

“There’s definitely an interesting occurrence when the screen lights up with a notification,” Roberts said. “I’ve asked people, ‘did you just take a picture?’ “

It’s difficult for the other person to actually see what’s on the screen, but the first question has, in fact, become one of paranoia.

Google+: One Google tool to bind them all

Risso dismisses privacy worries, pointing out that his battery would die after just three minutes of video recording anyway. Roberts says people should be a more concerned about government surveillance cameras, which he considers less obvious than a person standing in front of you saying, “OK, Glass, take a picture.”

Just to be polite, some Glass wearers have started pushing the devices up onto their heads like sunglasses when having conversations.

After the shock and paranoia subside, there is the annoyance. Can a person really be engaged in a conversation if there are e-mails in the corner of their eye?

Advocates for the technology argue that having a screen within eye’s reach could actually improve manners in the digital age. People are already habitually checking smartphones that beep and flash regularly with notifications. Instead of reaching for a phone, which can absorb a person’s full attention, Glass brings the notifications directly into the line of sight.

The camera feature could help fix the problem of people experiencing big moments, such as concerts or a child’s birthday party, through their smartphone screens. Instead of taking out a phone, they can keep their eyes on the scene and take a picture at the same time.

“You’re just living your life; you’re not living through a viewfinder,” Risso said.


Article source: http://edition.cnn.com/2013/05/20/tech/mobile/google-glass-world/index.html?eref=edition

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Corsair Obsidian 350D Review

May 20th, 2013 No comments

Corsair Obsidian 350D Review

Manufacturer: Corsair
UK price (as reviewed): £94.99 (inc VAT)
US price (as reviewed): $104.99 (ex Tax)
Preferred Partner Price: £95.22 (inc VAT)

We’ve been waxing lyrical about small form factor hardware for a few years now and for very good reasons. Motherboards such as Asus’ Maximus V Gene proved some time ago that micro-ATX motherboards offer just as many features and and are just as overclocking-friendly as full-size motherboards. While it and other mATX boards may lack a couple of PCI-Express slots, you can still use a discrete sound card and even splash out on a dual-graphics system.

Following this trend, we’ve seen a few micro-ATX cases recently, and in fact there’s a move towards even smaller hardware, with mini-ITX now a viable option, with both some cracking motherboards and cases.

Corsair is usually one to be quick off the mark with new products such as all-in-one liquid coolers, but the latest addition to its Obsidian case range, and the first Obsidian micro-ATX case, is only Corsair’s second in this dinky form factor. There’s also the glaring omission of mini-ITX too – a hole that pretty much every other case manufacturer has covered. We digress, but thankfully Corsair is looking to cement its place in the micro-ATX category, just as it did recently in the super-high end arena with its flagship water-cooling case, the Obsidian 900D.

Corsair Obsidian 350D Review Corsair Obsidian 350D Review
The Obsidian 350D isn’t exactly small. It’s taller and wider than the Fractal Design Core 3000, which supports full-size ATX motherboards, and NZXT’s micro-ATX Vulcan is significantly smaller all round.

Perhaps the reason for this is the design choice – it looks like a mini Obsidian 900D, with a near-identical front panel and chunky frame. There are two external 5.25in bays, with the third cover providing access to a large removable dust filter. The power button is located just below the front lip of the case, between the usual mini jacks and two USB 3 ports, which sit above the top 5.25in bay.

Corsair Obsidian 350D Review Corsair Obsidian 350D Review
Two models were available at launch – one with a side window and one without, although the cost difference is negligible. As some of you picked up in the Obsidian 900D review, Corsair is perhaps being a little overzealous with the size of the side panel, with the Obsidian 350D again showing a couple of drive cages through the window, though it’s a little less glaring than the Obsidian 900D. However covering these areas up would mean the window would end up being little more tham a vertical slit as it’s not a deep case, plus as bit of judicial modding can easily cover the exposed drive bays with something more attractive.

Specifications

  • Dimensions (mm) 210 x 450 x 440 (W x D x H)
  • Material Steel, aluminium
  • Available colours Black (reviewed)
  • Weight 6kg
  • Front panel Power, reset, 2 x USB 3, stereo, microphone
  • Drive bays 2 x external 5.25in, 2 x internal 3.5in, 3 x internal 2.5in
  • Form factor(s) Micro-ATX, Micro ATX
  • Cooling 2 x front 120/140mm fan mounts (1 x fan included), 2 x top 120/140mm fan mounts (fans not included), 1 x 120mm rear fan mount (fan included)
  • CPU cooler clearance 180mm
  • Maximum graphics card length 350mm
  • Maximum PSU length 200mm
  • Extras Removable dust filters

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Former Valve staffers unveil CastAR

May 20th, 2013 No comments

Former Valve staffers unveil CastAR

The Technical Illusions CastAR system combines projectors, a camera, shutter glasses and more to create an immersive augmented reality system.


A pair of former Valve employees have announced the formation of a new company dedicated to one thing: bringing to market the augmented reality technology they were hoping to develop for Valve’s hardware arm.

Hackers Jeri Ellsworth and Rick Johnson, formerly employed by Valve prior to the layoffs in February that saw 25 employees leave the company, have launched the company Technical Illusions with a view to releasing a system of augmented reality gaming devices called CastAR.

Unveiled at the Maker Faire in San Mateo this weekend, and written up by Make, the project uses LCD-shutter glasses with two tiny projectors mounted on them to produce a virtual reality environment that is projected wherever the wearer is looking.

The system works by having the viewer peer through the glasses at a specially-constructed retro-reflective panel edged with infra-red LEDs. The projectors, one mounted over each lens, send out the augmented reality images while the shutter glasses work to ensure that each eye only receives images from its own projector – creating the illusion of depth. Finally, the webcam – mounted on the nose-bridge of the glasses – tracks the LEDs to allow the system to adjust the projected images according to the motion of the user’s head, in a similar manner to the famous 3D demos created by Johnny Chung Lee using Nintendo Wiimotes.

The result: the reflective surface becomes a window into a virtual 3D world, with users able to move around a virtual objects, peering round its corners to view areas that would otherwise be invisible. The head-tracking system can also be used to directly control a game, with visitors to the Technical Illusions tent at the event being treated to a flying game. Accessories are also in development, with an LED mounted on the end of a chopstick creating a ‘magic wand’ that allows the user to play a Jenga-like title and RFID-enabled playing cards already in the prototype stage. The system even allows for multiplayer gaming on a single surface, ensuring that users only see their own perspective.

These demos are the start and the glasses are early prototypes,‘ the pair have announced. ‘Each system not only lets you play, but also includes a complete development kit. You can get up and running quickly using our simple scripting language, or go as deep as you want by connecting our API to your game. And don’t worry, this is an open platform. If you make something, you can give it away or sell it anywhere you want.

As with most such projects, CastAR combines a series of existing products into a single, innovative creation: a pair of liquid-crystal shutter glasses, familiar to anyone with an active 3D monitor or TV, is combined with two pico-projectors, a reflective surface, a small webcam and a shedload of infra-red LEDs to create a highly complex new creation.

It is this complexity that is likely to be the major barrier to the technology taking off. In particular, the requirement for a retro-reflective surface (one that aims the reflection straight back at you) makes this technology unusable in a normal living room, for instance. However, it could be used in a “holo-deck” type environment where the walls and ceiling are covered in reflective material and the user – indeed multiple users – are able to navigate a virtual world.

Thus fair, Technical Illusions has not provided a release date or pricing for the hardware.

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Arduino Yún and Robot Kit announced

May 20th, 2013 No comments

Arduino Yún and Robot Kit announced

The Arduino Robot Kit is joined by the Arduino Yún, the group’s answer to the flexibility of the Raspberry Pi for electronics enthusiasts.


Arduino, the open-source rapid electronic prototyping project, announced a pair of new products at the Maker Faire San Mateo this weekend – including its answer to the popular Raspberry Pi single-board computer.

Designed to make microcontrollers – tiny computers capable of real-time input-output operations often used to drive robots or read sensor data – accessible to non-programmers, Arduino was founded in 2005 by Massimo Banzi and David Cuartielles. Originally designed to help teach electronics and programming to students, the project has turned into an open-hardware success story with hundreds of thousands of official Arduino projects having shipped to date – joined by many more unofficial compatible devices, based on the schematics and source code released by the Arduino team as part of its commitment to open development.

As successful as the Arduino project has been, there is a greater success story that has crowded it out of the headlines: the Raspberry Pi. Having sold over a million units in its first year, the Pi has dwarfed the Arduino. Despite being aimed at very different markets – the Arduino is a powerful microcontroller with excellent general-purpose input-output (GPIO) capabilities, while the Pi is a more flexible microcomputer that lacks the GPIO chops of the Arduino – the two projects are frequently compared, and the additional computational power provided by the Pi finds the Arduino wanting.

Thus we find the first of Arduino’s two major product announcements: the Arduino Yún. Based loosely on the existing Arduino Leonardo, the Yún is designed to bridge the gap between the capabilities of the Leonardo and the Raspberry Pi. Rather than being a pure microcontroller, like previous Arduino designs, the Yún packs an ATmega 32U4 microcontroller alongside an Atheros AR9331 MIPS-based system-on-chip microcomputer. The result: an Arduino that arrives running a variant of OpenWRT Linux.

That extra chip gives the Yún significant extra power: in addition to doing everything an Arduino Leonardo can do, the Yún includes integrated Wi-Fi connectivity – something that previous Arduinos have lacked, requiring expensive add-on boards known as ‘shields’ to obtain – for both programming and direct control. When powered up, the Yún – Chinese for ‘cloud’ – turns into a Wi-Fi access point. This provides access to a configuration screen for connecting the Yún to your own wireless network, and once connected the true power of the Yún is unveiled: code written on the Atmel microcontroller can communicate across the network in both directions, while the underlying Linux base can serve webpages for sensor readings or control of connected devices.

The computational power of the Yún is certainly nothing near that of the Pi or its rival ARM-based single-board computers: OpenWRT was originally designed as a replacement OS for selected broadband routers and gateways, and the AR9331 chip can’t match the Pi’s Broadcom BCM2835 for performance. For hardware hackers, however, the benefits of low-level access to a microcontroller combined with the flexibility of a Wi-Fi connected Linux microcomputer should prove a powerful draw when the device launches next month for $69 (around £45 excluding taxes.)

The second Arduino announcement at the Maker Faire was the Arduino Robot Kit, which provides a platform for Arduino-compatible robotics experimentation. Based around two boards, the Motor Board and Control Board, both of which contain their own ATmega 32U4 microcontroller, the system includes two motors connected to wheels, a speaker, on-board liquid-crystal display panel, an analogue potentiometer, five-button control pad, infra-red sensors, an SD card reader and a digital compass – plus prototyping areas for adding your own components to the mix.

All that functionality does come at a cost, however: pricing for the kit at the Maker Faire itself was set at $275 (around £181 excluding taxes) – although that price does include everything needed to get started, with no requirement to have a separate Arduino board.

Both devices are expected to reach the UK in the coming weeks.

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EKWaterBlocks responds to Aquatuning licence claims

May 20th, 2013 No comments

EKWaterBlocks responds to Aquatuning licence claims

The EK Supreme waterblock is at the centre of the dispute with its jet-microfins also appearing on competitors products


EKWaterBlocks has released a statement in response to Aquatuning’s recent claims that is hasn’t paid licence fees for various products.

The water-cooling hardware manufacturer claims much of the technology that was under licence was already in use by other companies that weren’t paying royalties but were still allowed to sell through Aquatuning’s webshops.

It also cites that it has invested its own time and money in development of newer models, while regretting Aquatuning’s decision to stop selling its products and apologising to customers, and promises new and exciting products in the future.

We’re keen to stay on the sidelines for obvious reasons but the press release reads as follows:

Yesterday on the 17th of May 2013, Aquatuning went public with a press release regarding EKWB. EKWB feels obliged to share more information on that subject to put things into the right perspective.

Regarding development of many products:

EKWB has a know-how agreement with Aquatuning with annexes for three products on it (EK Supreme, EK Supreme LT, EK-BAY Spin Reservoir). One is still effective and EKWB is paying fees. Procedures regarding products were as follows:

1. EK Supreme: The know-how that EKWB got for EK Supreme was a simple drawing done while meeting with Aquatuning. The drawing included basic principle of »jet-microfins«. All research and development to make the EK-Supreme the number one CPU waterblock on the market at that time was done by EKWB in the following eight months. As we realized only after signing the agreement, similar products were already on the market, so the principle was nothing new. Please see product 1 from year 2005, and product 2, product 3 and product 4 from even more recent time frames. EKWB had been paying fees as agreed upon for more than 3 years.

2. EK Supreme LT: In the meantime, EKWB developed further EK Supreme models with their own resources. Supreme LT, which is quite a side step from original EK-Supreme, was developed entirely in EKWB RD. The concept of simple micro-fins was also around before this time. As EKWB went with the name Supreme LT, EKWB took its own initiative and signed annex to the agreement.

3. EK-BAY Spin Reservoir: Annex for EK-BAY Spin Reservoir was also signed after a drawing with the basic principles. It is still currently effective.

Regarding critical events in cooperation:

Aquatuning started to sell products from competitors which were using the same cooling engine »jet-microfins«, that EKWB was paying know-how fees to Aquatuning. There were numerous attempts from management team of EKWB to somehow resolve discrepancy with no avail. Furthermore, Aquatuning went on and copied the EK Reservoir: EK-MULTIOPTION RES Rev 2. – Aquatuning Phobya Balancer. EKWB sent inquiries regarding know-how fees on this product to Aquatuning, but the answer from Aquatuning was that there are many reservoirs that look nearly the same.

After EKWB finished the contract, Aquatuning began to sell their own UC-1 CPU Water Block made on the principles of »jet-microfins«. After that, Aquatuning pressed EKWB for royalties. As of December 2012, Aquatuning almost totally stopped with orders. Contradictory to this, Aquatuning continued putting new EKWB products on their site with delivery dates, even though there were no orders for those items. Aquatuning also put delivery dates of EKWB products that were out of stock, and not re-ordered from EKWB. As this situation was becoming a bit strange with no orders and goods and dates on Aquatuning site, EKWB asked Aquatuning to start ordering again or stop ordering at all.

Today’s press release is a conclusion to this matter. EKWB’s intention was never to terminate the contract. EKWB just wanted both parties to stick to the same principals. We regretfully have accepted the decision of Aquatuning. We apologize that our users and fans have been bothered with this event, this is EKWB’s first and last press release on this subject. We are looking forward to sharing exciting and new products coming in the near future from EKWB.

What do you make of the story? Let us know in the forum.

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EKWaterBlocks repsonds to Aquatuning licence claims

May 19th, 2013 No comments

EKWaterBlocks repsonds to Aquatuning licence claims

The EK Supreme waterblock is at the centre of the dispute with its jet-microfins also appearing on competitors products


EKWaterBlocks has released a statement in response to Aquatuning’s recent claims that is hasn’t paid licence fees for various products.

The water-cooling hardware manufacturer claims much of the technology that was under licence was already in use by other companies that weren’t paying royalties but were still allowed to sell through Aquatuning’s webshops.

It also cites that it has invested its own time and money in development of newer models, while regretting Aquatuning’s decision to stop selling its products and apologising to customers, and promises new and exciting products in the future.

We’re keen to stay on the sidelines for obvious reasons but the press release reads as follows:

Yesterday on the 17th of May 2013, Aquatuning went public with a press release regarding EKWB. EKWB feels obliged to share more information on that subject to put things into the right perspective.

Regarding development of many products:

EKWB has a know-how agreement with Aquatuning with annexes for three products on it (EK Supreme, EK Supreme LT, EK-BAY Spin Reservoir). One is still effective and EKWB is paying fees. Procedures regarding products were as follows:

1. EK Supreme: The know-how that EKWB got for EK Supreme was a simple drawing done while meeting with Aquatuning. The drawing included basic principle of »jet-microfins«. All research and development to make the EK-Supreme the number one CPU waterblock on the market at that time was done by EKWB in the following eight months. As we realized only after signing the agreement, similar products were already on the market, so the principle was nothing new. Please see product 1 from year 2005, and product 2, product 3 and product 4 from even more recent time frames. EKWB had been paying fees as agreed upon for more than 3 years.

2. EK Supreme LT: In the meantime, EKWB developed further EK Supreme models with their own resources. Supreme LT, which is quite a side step from original EK-Supreme, was developed entirely in EKWB RD. The concept of simple micro-fins was also around before this time. As EKWB went with the name Supreme LT, EKWB took its own initiative and signed annex to the agreement.

3. EK-BAY Spin Reservoir: Annex for EK-BAY Spin Reservoir was also signed after a drawing with the basic principles. It is still currently effective.

Regarding critical events in cooperation:

Aquatuning started to sell products from competitors which were using the same cooling engine »jet-microfins«, that EKWB was paying know-how fees to Aquatuning. There were numerous attempts from management team of EKWB to somehow resolve discrepancy with no avail. Furthermore, Aquatuning went on and copied the EK Reservoir: EK-MULTIOPTION RES Rev 2. – Aquatuning Phobya Balancer. EKWB sent inquiries regarding know-how fees on this product to Aquatuning, but the answer from Aquatuning was that there are many reservoirs that look nearly the same.

After EKWB finished the contract, Aquatuning began to sell their own UC-1 CPU Water Block made on the principles of »jet-microfins«. After that, Aquatuning pressed EKWB for royalties. As of December 2012, Aquatuning almost totally stopped with orders. Contradictory to this, Aquatuning continued putting new EKWB products on their site with delivery dates, even though there were no orders for those items. Aquatuning also put delivery dates of EKWB products that were out of stock, and not re-ordered from EKWB. As this situation was becoming a bit strange with no orders and goods and dates on Aquatuning site, EKWB asked Aquatuning to start ordering again or stop ordering at all.

Today’s press release is a conclusion to this matter. EKWB’s intention was never to terminate the contract. EKWB just wanted both parties to stick to the same principals. We regretfully have accepted the decision of Aquatuning. We apologize that our users and fans have been bothered with this event, this is EKWB’s first and last press release on this subject. We are looking forward to sharing exciting and new products coming in the near future from EKWB.

What do you make of the story? Let us know in the forum.

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Death of PC?

May 18th, 2013 No comments


A woman operates one of the early desktop IBM computers in this photo from 1955. Today, desktop and laptop computers are on the decline as consumers flock toward tablet devices. Dell's first quarter profit plunged 79% because of slower PC sales.

Hong Kong (CNN) — Dell, the world’s number three PC maker, reported Thursday a 79% profit plunge for the first quarter of the year — to just $130 million — owing to a slump in desktop and laptop sales, so-called “end-user computing” products. Quarterly operating income for the division fell 65% year on year.

“In the PC industry, everyone is struggling — not just Dell — and especially in the mobile PC market,” says Craig Stice, Senior Principal Analyst at U.S.-based Compute Platforms. “When I look at those (Dell) revenues split between mobility and desktop, they’re really not too far out of line with where the industry is at. The entire PC market struggled in Q1.”

Technology research firm Gartner estimated 79 million PC shipments occurred in the first quarter of 2013 — a fall of more than 11% year on year. HP saw a 24% drop in PC shipments, Dell fell 11% while Taiwan-based Acer Group fell nearly 30%.

The fall in global PC shipments contrasted with a rise in tablet volumes, according to IDC, an IT market research firm. From January to March this year, Apple shipped nearly 20 million units to be the world’s number one tablet maker; Samsung shipped nearly 9 million units for second place. The world’s top five tablet computer companies shipped more than 49 million units to record 142% growth year on year.


2012: Last rites for PCs?


Who will win control of Dell?


Dell’s humble beginnings

Dell has been trying to counter losses in its PC division by shifting to enterprise solutions, which includes hardware like computer servers, software for business applications and technical support to service clients.

Dell’s quarterly operating income for the enterprise division soared 71% to $79 million but contributed just 8% of the company’s total income.

“Enterprise solutions are significant growth opportunities,” says Stice. “The margins are certainly better than the PC area — high single digits to the low teens — versus the enterprise space which is considerably higher.”

In terms of hardware units sold for enterprise solutions, HP has traditionally been number one, with Dell and IBM rounding out the top three, adds Stice.

Still, the future seems anything but bright for the PC industry despite a flurry of attempted innovations, from super-thin and light ultrabooks to convertible PCs that can morph into tablet forms.

“Dell was a bit slow to the Ultrabook game and lost to players like (Taiwan’s) Asus and Acer,” says Richard Lai, Editor-in-Chief of Engadget Chinese. In addition, Dell’s dive into convertible laptops “was rather half-hearted: poor screen, too bulky.”

“You can kind of say the PC industry is throwing darts at the board to see what sticks,” says Stice. “If they can find that combination of a whole computing performance PC, with mobility and a low price point to compete with some of those $200 media tablets, then I think there’s opportunity. There’s still an opportunity for a PC refresh cycle. That can happen.”


Article source: http://edition.cnn.com/2013/05/17/business/dell-profit-plunge-desktop-laptop-futures/index.html?eref=edition

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Are we watching death of PC?

May 18th, 2013 No comments


A woman operates one of the early desktop IBM computers in this photo from 1955. Today, desktop and laptop computers are on the decline as consumers flock toward tablet devices. Dell's first quarter profit plunged 79% because of slower PC sales.

Hong Kong (CNN) — Dell, the world’s number three PC maker, reported Thursday a 79% profit plunge for the first quarter of the year — to just $130 million — owing to a slump in desktop and laptop sales, so-called “end-user computing” products. Quarterly operating income for the division fell 65% year on year.

“In the PC industry, everyone is struggling — not just Dell — and especially in the mobile PC market,” says Craig Stice, Senior Principal Analyst at U.S.-based Compute Platforms. “When I look at those (Dell) revenues split between mobility and desktop, they’re really not too far out of line with where the industry is at. The entire PC market struggled in Q1.”

Technology research firm Gartner estimated 79 million PC shipments occurred in the first quarter of 2013 — a fall of more than 11% year on year. HP saw a 24% drop in PC shipments, Dell fell 11% while Taiwan-based Acer Group fell nearly 30%.

The fall in global PC shipments contrasted with a rise in tablet volumes, according to IDC, an IT market research firm. From January to March this year, Apple shipped nearly 20 million units to be the world’s number one tablet maker; Samsung shipped nearly 9 million units for second place. The world’s top five tablet computer companies shipped more than 49 million units to record 142% growth year on year.


2012: Last rites for PCs?


class=”expCaption”Who will win control of Dell?


Dell’s humble beginnings

Dell has been trying to counter losses in its PC division by shifting to enterprise solutions, which includes hardware like computer servers, software for business applications and technical support to service clients.

Dell’s quarterly operating income for the enterprise division soared 71% to $79 million but contributed just 8% of the company’s total income.

“Enterprise solutions are significant growth opportunities,” says Stice. “The margins are certainly better than the PC area — high single digits to the low teens — versus the enterprise space which is considerably higher.”

In terms of hardware units sold for enterprise solutions, HP has traditionally been number one, with Dell and IBM rounding out the top three, adds Stice.

Still, the future seems anything but bright for the PC industry despite a flurry of attempted innovations, from super-thin and light ultrabooks to convertible PCs that can morph into tablet forms.

“Dell was a bit slow to the Ultrabook game and lost to players like (Taiwan’s) Asus and Acer,” says Richard Lai, Editor-in-Chief of Engadget Chinese. In addition, Dell’s dive into convertible laptops “was rather half-hearted: poor screen, too bulky.”

“You can kind of say the PC industry is throwing darts at the board to see what sticks,” says Stice. “If they can find that combination of a whole computing performance PC, with mobility and a low price point to compete with some of those $200 media tablets, then I think there’s opportunity. There’s still an opportunity for a PC refresh cycle. That can happen.”


Article source: http://edition.cnn.com/2013/05/17/business/dell-profit-plunge-desktop-laptop-futures/index.html?eref=edition

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Aquatuning drops EKWaterBlocks products from webshop

May 17th, 2013 No comments

Aquatuning drops EKWaterBlocks products from webshop

The Supreme waterblock was just one product that was developed under licence for EKWaterBlocks by Aquatuning


It seems all is not well in the world of water cooling as Aquatuning – probably the worlds biggest online retailer of water-cooling hardware, has announced it is to stop selling hardware manufactured by EKWaterblocks.

The move will affect all of Aquatuning’s on-line webshops, which cover a vast array of countries including the UK and USA.

The stock has been removed with immediate effect, and it raises questions about just how big a dent in profits it will make for both companies, but particularly for Slovenia-based EkWaterBlocks, whose CPU and GPU waterblocks are very popular.

For Aquatuning, it means losing a popular key partner, although it has plenty of others to choose from such as XSPC, Watercool, Alphacool and Phobya.

A statement released by Aquatuning today reads:

With effect from 17.05.2013, the management of Aquatuning has decided to drop all EKWB products from the webshop. In 2007 and following years Aquatuning developed many products for EK Water Blocks under license and technology agreements among other products the EK Supreme CPU block, which immediately became the new No. 1 CPU water block. After many years of successful collaboration, EK Water Blocks surprisingly decided to stop the payment of the licenses to Aquatuning.

Due to the ultimatum from EK Water Blocks to either accept the breach of contract or stop buying products from EK Water Blocks, the Aquatuning management saw no other way then to inform the public about the background of the unprecedented incident never seen before in the 10-year history of Aquatuning.

We regret the end of the collaboration with EK Water Blocks very much, especially because in recent years many good and successful products have emerged from it. The products we licensed to EK Water Block will now be given to other manufacturers so that we can continue to bring revolutionary cooling products to market.

What do you make of this development? Let us know in the forum.

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The downside to cheap storage

May 17th, 2013 No comments

Casting my mind back 20 years or so, I remember when hard disks were barely breaching the 1GB barrier. Even though programs at the time generally took up a lot less space than they do today, space was very much a premium. I was mainly into flight simulators at the time, and these took up far more space than your average fps did before the millennium. So much so that I would have to uninstall all other games just to run my favourite sims, and even then I’d be running the hard disk with less than 10 per cent space free.

This, of course, meant it was pretty slow, even by standards back then. Thankfully, at the turn of the century, hard disks started to increase in size almost exponentially. By 2002, 40GB was common but you still had to keep an eye on your disk space. At the time I was getting pretty interested in performance too, and generally lived by the rule of having at least 30 per cent space remaining so not to have my hard disk grind to a halt as it chugged through all the data.

Fast-forward another five years and the average hard disk had increased ten-fold again with 500GB drives now relatively affordable. By this stage of course, a vast majority of people had more space than they could ever hope to fill. With 3TB hard disks now available for less than £90 and 1TB models for around £50, for those of us that don’t have gargantuan video collections, running out of storage space is practically impossible. In fact for less than the price of a tank of petrol (in the UK anyway), you can quite easily acquire enough storage to probably last half a decade.

The downside to cheap storage *The down side to cheap storage
However, it’s this tipping point, and the fact that SSDs are still relatively limited in size, that got me thinking. Is having an abundance of storage entirely a good thing? I’ve used an SSD as my main boot drive for a couple of years now, and having seen the benefits both in terms of noise reduction and of course speed, I’m keen to make my main PC a hard disk-free zone.

The hard disk is actually the nosiest component too as the CPU, GPU and motherboard are all water-cooled. However, without spending shed loads of cash on 500GB SSDs, I’ve been looking at buying a new 256GB model for my main boot drive, using some of the slower, older ones for storage.

With my combined photo, video and program collection stretching to a couple of hundred gigabytes, my ageing Crucial C300 256GB and comparatively ancient Indillinx-based 128GB Patriot Torqx should manage, and I’ve found 256GB to be enough space for Windows 7 plus numerous programs and games without clearing out the crap every other day, as I usually did with a 128GB SSD.

The downside to cheap storage *The down side to cheap storage

The result of trying to squeeze my essential data, be it programs or photos, into a smaller amount of space than I’m used to, having dealt with 2TB hard disks for the last couple of years, is that I’ve methodically sifted through my storage to weed out stuff I didn’t really need. I converted many RAW photo files I just wanted to store into JPGs, and reduced the resolution of many too. I ran a duplicate file searcher as well and this saved even more space, picking out photos, videos and other stuff I’d managed to leave in two places as I worked on the files and dumped them into storage.

The total size of all my data was now less than 200GB – 40% smaller than what it was, and it’s now a lot more organised too, just to be able to squeeze everything onto a couple of SSDs. Would I have done this if I was still planning on using my 2TB hard disk for the foreseeable future? Almost certainly not.

I’m strangely grateful to the current limited storage SSD’s offer – I actually shudder to think the state my data would be in terms of organisation and wasted space, a couple of years down the line. In short, I think an excess like this makes us lazy, or at least it certainly did me. I was amazed at how much I could trim off my storage needs.

Is your PC a hard disk-free zone? If you haven’t made the move to SSD’s yet, is it storage limits that have put you off? If so could a bit of organising sort things out? Let us know in the forum.

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