Streaming radio app Slacker Radio breaks into Palm’s App Catalog for WebOS, creating rivalry for Pandora Radio. pOriginally posted at a href=”http://download.cnet.com/8301-2007_4-10447799-12.html” class=”origPostedBlog”The Download Blog/a/p
Germanium Laser Breakthrough Brings Optical Computing Closer
Posted in: mit, R&D and Inventions, Today's ChiliResearchers at MIT have demonstrated the first laser that uses the element germanium.
The laser, which operates at room temperature, could prove to be an important step toward computer chips that move data using light instead of electricity, say the researchers.
“This is a very important breakthrough, one I would say that has the highest possible significance in the field,” says Eli Yablonovitch, a professor in the electrical engineering and computer science department of the University of California, Berkeley who was not involved in the research told Wired.com. “It will greatly reduce the cost of communications and make for faster chips.”
Even as processors become more powerful, they’re running into a communications barrier: Just moving data between different parts of the chip takes too long. Also, higher bandwidth connections are needed to send data to memory. Traditional copper connections are becoming impractical because they consume too much power to transport data at the increasingly higher rates needed by next-generation chips. Copper also generates excessive heat, and that imposes other design limits because engineers need to find ways of dissipating the heat.
Transmitting data with lasers, which can concentrate light into a narrow, powerful beam, could be a cheaper and more power efficient alternative. The idea, known as photonic computing, has become one of the hottest areas of computer research.
“The laser is just totally new physics,” says Lionel Kimerling, an MIT professor whose Electronic Materials Research Group developed the germanium laser.
While lasers are attractive, the materials that are used in lasers currently — such as gallium arsenide — can be difficult to integrate into fabs.
That’s given birth to “external lasers,” says Yablonovitch. Lasers have to be constructed separately and grafted on to the chips, instead of directly building them on the same silicon that holds the chips’ circuits. This reduces the efficiency and increases the cost.
A germanium laser solves that problem, because it could in principle be built alongside the rest of the chip, using similar processes and in the same factory.
“It’s going to take a few years to learn how to integrate this type of laser into a standard silicon process,” says Yablonovitch. “But once we know that, we can have silicon communication chips that have internal lasers.”
Eventually, MIT researchers believe germanium lasers could be used not just for communications, but for the logic elements of the chips too — helping to build computers that perform calculations using light instead of electricity.
But University of California, Berkeley’s Yablonovitch says it is unlikely that light will replace electricity entirely. “I think we will be using light in conjunction with electronic logic circuits,” he says. “Light allows internal communications much more efficiently, but the logic elements themselves are likely to remain driven by electricity.”
Graphic:Christine Daniloff/MIT
NBC’s Jeff Zucker talks about Boxee with congress, Boxee talks about The Facts with Jeff Zucker
Posted in: boxee, hulu, Today's ChiliSo, Jeff Zucker of NBC was hanging out his new best friend Brian Roberts from Comcast today, talking up the proposed acquisition in front of Congress. A certain Rep. Rick Boucher asked “what about Boxee?” and things got a little interesting. Jeff says that Boxee was “illegally taking the content that was on Hulu,” as opposed to the “many distributors of the Hulu content that we have legal distribution deals with.” We’re not exactly sure which deals Zucker is referring to, but Boxee’s Avner Ronen takes issue with the first point:
I’d like to set the record straight regarding Boxee’s access to Hulu. Boxee uses a web browser to access Hulu’s content – just like Firefox or Internet Explorer. Boxee users click on a link to Hulu’s website and the video within that page plays. We don’t “take” the video. We don’t copy it. We don’t put ads on top of it. The video and the ads play like they do on other browsers or on Hulu Desktop. And it certainly is legal to do so.
He also takes issue with some of Zucker’s other points, pointing out that Hulu dropped Boxee based on a request from NBC, while Zucker calls it a decision by “Hulu management,” and he also points out that Boxee hasn’t found NBC as open to negotiations as Zucker claims to be, but will be giving it another shot — perhaps with some of that subscription fee cash mixed in somewhere to sweeten the deal? It’s worth watching the short clip on C-Span and reading the entire Boxee rebuttal, even if it won’t make you any less angry.
NBC’s Jeff Zucker talks about Boxee with congress, Boxee talks about The Facts with Jeff Zucker originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 04 Feb 2010 18:40:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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AT&T and Sling Media have reached an agreement under which AT&T’s 3G network will support the SlingPlayer mobile app.
Sling released its iPhone app in January 2009. In May, AT&T blocked it from its 3G network, citing bandwidth constraints, but allowed it on its Wi-Fi network. The two sides have now come to an agreement on the 3G front.
“Just as we’ve worked with Sling Media in this instance, we look forward to collaborating with other developers so that mobile customers can access a wider, more bandwidth-sensitive, and powerful range of applications in the future,” Ralph de la Vega, president and CEO of AT&T Mobility and Consumer Markets, said in a statement. “Collaboration with developers like Sling Media ensures that all apps are optimized for our 3G network to conserve wireless spectrum and reduce the risk that an app will cause such extreme levels of congestion that they disrupt the experience of other wireless customers.”
AT&T said it had been testing Sling’s 3G app since mid-December and recently notified Sling and Apple that its optimized app can run on the 3G network.
LG X20 netbook clears the FCC
Posted in: LG, netbook, Today's ChiliLG X20 netbook clears the FCC originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 04 Feb 2010 18:02:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Sneaky intelligent machines have convinced industry players to put on a National Robotics Week in April. The purpose is to show that robots can “make life easier.”
Verizon Wireless wins top marks in a J.D. Power and Associates wireless customer care performance study. pOriginally posted at a href=”http://www.cnet.com/8301-17918_1-10447802-85.html” class=”origPostedBlog”Dialed In/a/p
Samsung E61 e-book reader outed, brings physical QWERTY keyboard to lineup
Posted in: e reader, e-book, e-book reader, E-bookReader, qwerty, samsung, Today's ChiliThe pair of Samsung-borne e-book readers we espied at CES just became a trio. E6 and E101, please give a round of applause your new on-screen brother, the E61 (pictured next to Kindle). What sets this guy apart from the rest is a physical QWERTY keyboard, but otherwise boasts a 6-inch, 600 x 800 resolution screen and all other amenities found in the E6, including a removable battery should you find yourself thousands of pages into a book and no charger in sight. PC Professionale was on hand to get hands on with the device, and we also spotted a touchscreen keyboard on the E101 — nothing to write about, but it’s good seeing just how we’ll be navigating the dictionary when needed. No word on its release date, so for now we’re gonna assume it falls under the same “early 2010” timeframe we heard with the other two.
Samsung E61 e-book reader outed, brings physical QWERTY keyboard to lineup originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 04 Feb 2010 17:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
So what’s it like to be one of 200 people in the world to own the $12,950 Leica M7 Hermes? Quite good, as it turns out. Vlad Dusil (that’s his name, so you know where to direct your envy) of Purse Blog is among the chosen few, but he has blessed us with a quick photoshoot and a cursory impressions piece of the hardware itself. He isn’t gonna use it, mind you, as it’s an investment piece — in his words, “This camera will remain in its cozy silk-lined box until I get a worthy cabinet to display it in for a while, then it will go back to rest in its dark box.” Can’t be sure we wouldn’t do the same thing, though, if we had the kind of disposable income that’d afford a $13,000 device. Hit up the source link for pics.
Leica M7 Hermes unboxed, photographed, then promptly re-boxed originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 04 Feb 2010 17:04:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
What makes the snappily named PTZ so excellent is its nifty features. It isn’t the cheapest security camera we’ve seen, but it is one of the most flexible.