Rumor: Apple to Ship Multitouch Mice With New iMacs Soon

mouse

Apple may soon introduce a mouse featuring multitouch technology, like that seen in its iPhones, iPods and MacBook trackpads.

Sporting a touch-sensitive housing, the new mouse will do away with the roller ball on the current Mighty Mouse (pictured above), sources told AppleInsider. The rumored multitouch mouse might apply the inertia feedback seen in iPods and iPhones, whereas scrolling speed accelerates or decelerates in response to how the user touches the surface.

Presumably an Apple multitouch mouse would function similarly to the unibody MacBook trackpads, which detect multitouch gestures. On new MacBooks, tapping the trackpad with two fingers triggers a right-click function, for example; this rumored multitouch mouse might copy this behavior. Also, for a mouse, we would expect a multitouch gesture to replace scrolling in different directions, and perhaps there will be special gestures that trigger Exposé commands as well.

Apple’s new mouse may be released with new iMacs, AppleInsider’s sources said. The popular iMac desktops were last refreshed in March, and Apple typically upgrades them every seven months. That would suggest new iMacs — perhaps packaged with multitouch mice — will hit stores very soon.

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Photo: stopthegears/Flickr


Intel Plans Even Tinier Circuits in 2011

otellini_22nm

SAN FRANCISCO — Moore’s Law coming to an end? Not if you ask Intel, which announced Tuesday that it plans to offer chips based on a 22 nanometer process technology in the second half of 2011.

The 22nm chip packs in more than 2.9 billion transistors into an area the size of a fingernail. That’s double the density of the 32nm chips that are currently the cutting edge; most of Intel’s CPUs today are still based on a 45nm process.

Generally, the smaller the circuits in a computer chip, the more complex features the chipmaker can integrate into that chip. Small circuits also have the potential to increase the computing speed, but the tradeoff is increased power consumption, heat production, and — with very small circuits — increasingly large challenges in keeping the circuits electrically isolated from one another.

At the company’s developer conference here Tuesday, Intel President and CEO Paul Otellini (above) showed a silicon wafer containing the first working chips built on the technology. The 22nm test circuits include both SRAM memory as well as logic circuits that will be used in future Intel microprocessors.

intel_22nm_sram_testchip“We are moving ahead with development of our 22nm manufacturing technology and have built working chips that will pave the way for production of still more powerful and more capable processors,” said Otellini.

Moore’s Law, first introduced by Intel co-founder Gordon Moore in 1965,  postulates that the number of transistors on a cost-effective integrated circuit will double every two years. One way to describe how well transistors are packed is the smallest geometric feature that can be produced on a chip, usually designated in nanometers (billionths of a meter).

In late 2007, Intel started mass production of chips based on the 45nm technology. The company has said it plans to introduce 32nm processors early next year.  By comparison, the Intel 4004 microprocessor introduced in 1971 was based on 10,000nm process. A human hair is approximately 100,000 nanometers.

The 22nm wafer is made up of individual die containing 364 million bits of SRAM memory. SRAMs are used as test vehicles to demonstrate technology performance, yield and chip reliability. Once the technology works on SRAMs, Intel will move to utilize it in CPU production.

At 0.092 square microns, the 22nm process based chips contain the smallest SRAM cell used in working circuits ever reported, said Intel.

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Photo: CEO Paul Otellini holds a silicon wafer containing the world’s first working chips built on 22nm manufacturing technology (top). Lower photo: Closeup of a 22nm SRAM die. Both photos courtesy Intel.


A Quick Guide to Intel’s Chips, From Arrandale to Yorkfield

nehalem-wafer-shot-1

Intel’s processor for desktops and laptops can be a jumble of codenames — Lynnfield, Nehalem or Clarkdale anyone? Add to that a rebranding initiative, unveiled three months ago, that split the same codenames across different chip families, and it can get downright confusing.

With Intel’s developer conference, aka IDF, set to kick off Tuesday, we have created a guide to understanding Intel’s different consumer processors.

Intel currently has three main chip families: Core i7, Core i5 and Core 2. All are based on the 45nm technology that Intel started moving to in late 2007 and are available to consumers now. Eventually the company hopes to phase out the Core 2 line of products and introduce a new entry-level processor, Core i3.

Read on for a more detailed explanation of each family.

Core i7: Codenamed Bloomfield and Lynnfield, Core i7 includes the latest desktop processors from Intel. The CPUs are billed as Intel’s fastest and most advanced processors.

The 45-nanometer processors are based on Intel’s Nehalem micro-architecture. They include features such as hyperthreading technology that gives the chips the ability to execute eight threads simultaneously on four processing cores, better power management and an integrated memory controller. (Read more about Nehalem and its key features.)

The Core i7 desktop family comes in two broad flavors: regular and extreme. Once carrying the Lynnfield moniker, Core i7’s regular edition processors have clock speeds from 2.66 GHz up to 3.06 GHz.

The extreme edition, formerly codenamed Bloomfield, offers two processors with clock speeds of 3.20 GHz and 3.33 GHz. These are CPUs billed for hardened Call of Duty and Crysis gamers and graphics creators. The chips help deliver more realistic game environments for players and are popular among graphics and multimedia creators, says Intel.

Intel also has a Core i7 CPU for laptops in the works, with the codename Clarksfield. The company is expected to announce specification and details of availability for these processors “very soon.”

Core i5: The Core i5 family comprises mid-range processors that have four cores and are available with clock speeds from 2.66 GHz to 3.20 GHz. They were also formerly bunched under the Lynnfield codename. The chips are based on the 45nm lithography process but lack the advanced features of the Core i7 chips, such as hyperthreading. These CPUs are targeted at mainstream PCs that do a bit of gaming and multimedia but not enough to require the blow-out-the-sockets kind of horsepower that comes from the Core i7 chips.

Intel plans to release 32nm versions of the Core i5 chips, codenamed Clarkdale, early next year.

Core i3: There’s not much known about the Core i3 family beyond that it is expected to be Intel’s entry-level processor. The company’s newest chips are always introduced for high-end PCs and then trickle down to more basic computers.

Intel has said that Core i3 chips could be out in early 2010, although the company now promises to have it ready for release at the end of the year. Speculation about Core i3 has so far been focused on the Arrandale and Clarkdale chips. Arrandale is expected to be a 32nm CPU for laptops, while Clarkdale will be the version for desktops.

These chips won’t have some of the advanced features, such as Turbo Boost, but they are expected to offer a step forward from the earlier generation of processors in terms of speed.

Core 2: The Core 2 line of chips come in dual-core and quad-core versions, known as Core 2 Duo and Core 2 Quad, respectively.

The Core 2 Duo, formerly called Penryn, has two processing cores and is available in clock speeds ranging from 2.13 GHz to 3.16 GHz. It is mostly also based on the 45nm process technology, though Intel does still offer a Core 2 Duo chip based on the 65nm process.

The Core 2 Quad processors, codenamed Yorkfield, have four processing cores and offer clock speeds ranging from 2.33 GHz to 2.83 GHz.

Intel offers a version of the Core 2 processors called Core 2 Extreme for laptops. The 45nm Core 2 Extreme processor comes in two-core and quad-core versions with clock speeds ranging from 2.53 GHz to 3.06 GHz.

The chart below explains Intel’s consumer processor families.

intel-chips-guide

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Photo: Nehalem wafer/ Intel


Gene Roddenberry’s Macintosh 128 to be Auctioned

computer-system

A piece of computer and science fiction history will go on auction next month: An early Macintosh computer, which belonged to Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry.

The computer, with the serial number F4200NUM0001, was a gift to Roddenberry from Apple.

serial-numberThough the computer was earlier believed to be an Macintosh Plus,  it is an is an early production Macintosh 128 (#776).

Despite the 0001 serial number, the computer is not the first one manufactured by Apple, says Profiles in History,  an auctioneer of Hollywood memorabilia, which will be taking bids for the computer.

The computer for auction has a 9-inch display, 3.5-inch floppy drive and includes the short keyboard, external floppy drive, mouse and padded carrying case with Apple logo.

“Gene Roddenberry’s vision inspired countless people to pursue careers in science and aerospace.  This milestone computer, given to Gene by Apple’s innovators, is a symbol of this synergy,” said Joe Maddalena, president of Profiles in History.

The Mac is expected to fetch between $800 to $1,200.

Photos: Profiles in History

The story has been updated to correct the information initially released by the auction house that the computer was the first Macintosh Plus manufactured by Apple.


Haiku Alpha 1 available now: BeOS lovers of the world rejoice

A mere eight years in the making, the Haiku Project has announced the release of Haiku R1/Alpha 1, the first official development release of the low footprint open source OS formerly known as OpenBeOS. Since it’s an alpha release, you’ll be expected to do your part identifying bugs and reporting glitches and the like — but here’s hoping that they at least got Firefox to run in relative stability this time ’round. We know you’re too damned giddy at the prospect of installing this thing on your netbook for any more of our prattle, so why don’t you just hit the read link and get started, then?

[Thanks, Hawkje]

Continue reading Haiku Alpha 1 available now: BeOS lovers of the world rejoice

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Haiku Alpha 1 available now: BeOS lovers of the world rejoice originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 16 Sep 2009 13:24:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Wind Top Brings Power Boost to Kitchen Counters

new windtop

Take an old, 20” Apple Cinema display (the original plastic one), a netbook and a touch screen and mix them all together. Stand back, tap with a magic wand and shazam! You have the MSI Wind Top AE2010.

That’s not quite fair description of MSI’s new counter-top all-in-one, but it gives a good idea of the capabilities. The computer part is actually a lot beefier than you’d find in the Wind netbook, with a AMD Athlon Dual Core processor, a 320GB hard drive, a superdrive, gigabit ethernet, a chunky 4GB RAM and an ATI Radeon HD 3200 for graphics. There’s also the mandatory webcam and mic, an SD card reader, and six USB ports.

Clearly this is aimed as a low-cost alternative to the iMac, and at $650 you could almost buy two of them for the $1200 Apple wants for the entry-level iMac. But it’s the touch-screen that sells this as a kitchen computer, and the all-in-one design is perfect for giving to parents who might otherwise tangle themselves up in headsets on every Skype call (I’m looking at you, mother). Is it an iMac? No. Is it a PC pretty enough and good enough for the living room or kitchen? Sure, and it’s cheap, too.

Product page [MSI. Thanks, Greg!]


A Luxury PC That Costs as Much as a Used Cadillac

gaiser-pc

How do you turn a $1000 PC into a $30,000 machine without changing its innards? It a trick that calls for a good alchemist. So say hello to German company, Gaiser High End PCs. Gaiser offers bespoke PCs dipped in 24-carat gold for the bling-bling crowd.

The company’s Tricolor Gold PC, for instance, offer a choice of processors ranging from Intel Atom to Core 2 Duo, solid state drives and Blu-ray player but those are pedestrian details. The real value is in the use of white and yellow gold plating and crystals to create designs that push the price of the PC to a whopping €21,500 or $30,552.

Gaiser does have cheaper models but still prices start around $7,800. The gold-leaf and crystal motifs on its PCs are beautiful but you have to wonder, with the current economic environment, aren’t even the ultra-rich hurting?

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[via Born Rich]


Snow Leopard’s 35 New Desktop Pictures Feature Nature, Fine Art and… Graffiti?

Here are the 35 new desktop images Snow Leopard is shipping with next month, as found by CreativeBits. There are the expected plants and nature images, but there’s also new fine art and graffiti shots. Graffiti?

There’s definitely some new/different stuff here, such as the photos of an actual Snow Leopard, high-res scans of famous fine art and then those graffiti shots. How street of you, Apple! And as for that grey camo shot, well, I don’t even know what to say about that. To each his/her own, I guess.

They’re definitely not as balls-out nuts as the Windows 7 desktops. Is that a good or a bad thing? [CreativeBits via Purnell]

Gold, diamond-leafed Gaiser PCs might just bring Marie Antoinette back from the grave

Don’t get us wrong — we’re all in favor of purposeless, ostentatious, and classless displays of wealth — but we prefer it to be a little less… tacky? German manufacturer High End PCs have the high end part down pat — they’ll dip your desktop in all manners of gold (up to 24 karat!), cubic zirconia and of course, diamonds. Now, we don’t have any specs on these puppies — though we suspect performance is beside the point. Our only real qualm with the product is that it looks like a Kleenex box from Don Johnson’s bathroom in 1986. But, if you have a stack of money hanging around and you just can’t be bothered to think of really awesome things to do with it, Gaiser’s PCs start from about $8,000 and run up to around $33,000.

[Via Oh! Gizmo]

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Gold, diamond-leafed Gaiser PCs might just bring Marie Antoinette back from the grave originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 07 Aug 2009 13:06:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Personal Supercomputers Promise Teraflops on Your Desk

js-personal-supercomputer

About a year ago John Stone, a senior research programmer at the University of Illinois, and his colleagues found a way to bypass the long waits for computer time at the National Center for Supercomputing Applications.

Stone’s team got “personal supercomputers,” compact machines with a stack of graphics processors that together pack quite a punch and can be used to run complex simulations.

“Now instead of taking a couple of days and waiting in a queue, we can do the calculations locally,” says Stone. “We can do more and better science.”

Personal supercomputers are available in many flavors, both as clusters of CPU and graphics processing units (GPUs). But it is GPU computing that is gaining in popularity for its ability to offer researchers easy and quick access to raw computing power. That’s opening up a new market for makers of GPUs, such as Nvidia and AMD, which have traditionally focused on high-end video cards for gamers and graphics pros.

True supercomputers, the rock stars of computing, are capable of millions of calculations per second. But they can be extremely expensive — the fastest supercomputer of 2008, IBM’s RoadRunner, costs $120 million — and access to them is limited. That’s why smaller versions, no bigger than a typical desktop PC, are becoming a hit among researchers who want access to massive processing power along with the convenience of having a machine at their own desk.

“Personal supercomputers that can run off a 110 volt wall circuit allow for a significant amount of performance at a very reasonable price,” says John Fruehe, director of business development for serve and workstation at AMD. Companies such as Nvidia and AMD make the graphics chips that personal supercomputer resellers assemble into personalized configurations for customers like Stone.

Demand for these personal supercomputers grew at an average of 20 percent every year between 2003 and 2008, says research firm IDC. Since Nvidia introduced its Tesla personal supercomputer less than a year ago, the company has sold more than 5,000 machines.

“Earlier when people talked about supercomputers, they meant giant Crays and IBMs,” says Jie Wu, research manager for technical computing at IDC. “Now it is more about having smaller clusters.”

Today, most U.S. researchers at universities who need access to a supercomputer have to submit a proposal to the National Science Foundation, which funds a number of supercomputer centers. If the proposal is approved, the researcher gets access to an account for a certain number of CPU hours at one of the major supercomputing centers at the universities of San Diego, Illinois or Pittsburgh, among others.

“Its like waiting in line at the post office to send a message,” says Stone. “Now you would rather send a text message from your computer rather than wait in line at the post office to do it. That way it is much more time efficient.”

Personal supercomputers may not be as powerful as the mighty mainframes, but they are still leagues above their desktop cousins. For instance, a four-GPU Tesla personal supercomputer from Nvidia can offer 4 teraflops of parallel supercomputing performance with 960 cores and two Intel Xeon 5500 Series Nehalem processors. That’s just a fraction of the IBM RoadRunner’s 1 petaflop speed, but it’s enough for most researchers to get the job done.

For researchers, this means the ability to run calculations faster than they can with a traditional desktop PC. “Sometimes researchers have to wait for six to eight hours before they can have the results from their tests,” says Sumit Gupta, senior product manager at Nvidia. “Now the wait time for some has come down to about 20 minutes.”

It also means that research projects that typically would have never get off the ground because they are deemed too costly and too resource and time intensive now get the green light. “The cost of making a mistake is much lower and a lot less intimidating,” says Stone.

The shift away from large supercomputers to smaller versions has also made research more cost effective for organizations. Stone, who works in a group that develops software used by scientists to simulate and visualize biomolecular structures, says his lab has 19 personal supercomputers shared by 30 researchers. “If we had what we wanted, we would run everything locally because it is better,” says Stone. “But the science we do is more powerful than what we can afford.”

The personal supercomputing idea has also gained momentum thanks to the emergence of programming languages designed especially for GPU-based machines. Nvidia has been trying to educate programmers and build support for CUDA, the C language programming environment created specifically for parallel programming the company’s GPUs. Meanwhile, AMD has declared its support for OpenCL (open computing language) this year. OpenCL is an industry standard programming language. Nvidia says it also works with developers to support OpenCL.

Stone says the rise of programming environments for high performance machines have certainly made them more popular. And while portable powerhouses can do a lot, there is still place for the large mainframe supercomputers. “There are still the big tasks for which we need access to the larger supercomputers,” says Stone. “But it doesn’t have to be for every thing.”

Photo: John Stone sits next to a personal supercomputer- a quad-core Linux PC with 8GB of memory and 3 GPUs (one NVIDIA Quadro FX 5800, and two NVIDIA Tesla C1060) each with 4GB of GPU memory/ Kirby Vandivort