A scientist’s offhanded comments on why the zodiac chart is inaccurate sparks an Internet frenzy among people who fear their sign has changed.
Intel CEO Paul Otellini addresses Microsoft’s ARM move in the wake of record earnings announcement
Posted in: arm, intel, Microsoft, tablets, Today's Chili, Windows, windows phone, windows phone 7, WindowsPhone, WindowsPhone7We’re kind of getting used to Intel setting records with its earnings this year, and it capped off its 2010 with another killer quarter. With $11.5 billion in revenue, and a total of $43.6 billion for the year (up 24 percent from last year), Intel is naturally riding high. There’s danger lurking on the horizon, however, with Microsoft announcing at CES that the next version of Windows will also run on ARM chips, potentially ending a decades-long x86 dominance in the desktop OS space. Naturally, the topic came up in the earnings call, and here’s Intel CEO Paul Otellini’s level-headed statement on the topic:
The plus for Intel is that as they unify their operating systems we now have the ability for the first time, one, to have a designed-from-scratch, touch-enabled operating system for tablets that runs on Intel that we don’t have today; and, secondly, we have the ability to put our lowest-power Intel processors, running Windows 8 or the next generation of Windows, into phones, because it’s the same OS stack. And I look at that as an upside opportunity for us.On the downside, there’s the potential, given that Office runs on these products, for some creep-up coming into the PC space. I am skeptical of that for two reasons: one, that space has a different set of power and performance requirements where Intel is exceptionally good; and secondly, users of those machines expect legacy support for software and peripherals that has to all be enabled from scratch for those devices.
After careful analysis of Paul’s voice, we couldn’t detect any hints of panic or fear in it, and we buy about 50+ percent of what he’s putting down — a lot better than we expected, to be honest. It’s very interesting that he sees the new version of Windows being a “designed-from-scratch, touch-enabled operating system for tablets,” and the idea of Windows Phone running on regular Windows is also news to us — though it certainly makes plenty of sense in the long run (and perhaps Ballmer has been hinting at it). Still, Intel has just as much of a disadvantage making a phone processor as ARM guys have a disadvantage at making high-powered PC processors, and when it comes to legacy support, they’ll at least be on pretty equal footing when it comes to a “designed-from-scratch” tablet OS. No matter what, Intel certainly has a great roadmap and a ton of cash right now, so we look forward to a fair CPU fight on all sides of the form factor coin.
Intel CEO Paul Otellini addresses Microsoft’s ARM move in the wake of record earnings announcement originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 13 Jan 2011 20:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Permalink | Intel earnings conference call, Intel earnings | Email this | Comments
Apple’s Next iOS Improves Interface, Adds New Gestures
Posted in: Apple, developers, ios, ipad, iPhone, Phones, Tablets and E-Readers, Today's Chili
Apple this week released a beta version of its next mobile operating system, iOS 4.3, for app developers. We got an early look at the OS, which has not been released to the public yet.
Among a pile of minor interface modifications, there are a few major new features under the hood.
Some new multitouch-gesture controls on the iPad are the biggest goodie. In the developer release we saw, at least, the feature is hidden until you use a Mac app to enable it. This new feature is awesome, and it’s definitely something to look forward to when iOS 4.3 officially ships. (Apple has not disclosed a release date, but we’re guessing soon).
The rest of the changes we found were interface-related — modifications to the iPad keyboard and the iOS multitasking tray, a new notebook font and more.
Here’s a rundown of what’s new in iOS 4.3 beta.
All photos: Jon Snyder/Wired.com
See Also:
- Screenshots Hint All iPhones Could Become Wireless Hotspots
- Future iPad OS Update Revives Screen-Lock Switch
- Rumors: iOS 4.3 Will Offer App Subscriptions as Early as December
- Apple iOS 4.2 Arrives, Makes Find My iPhone Free
- Apple Rolls Out iOS 4.1 Update for iPhone, iPod Touch
- Apple Launches iOS 4 for iPhone, iPod Touch
Fujitsu launches 11.6-inch Lifebook PH50/C, complete with AMD Fusion APU
Posted in: 4G, AMD, laptop, notebook, radeon, sandy bridge, SandyBridge, Today's Chili, ultraportable, WiMAXNow that AMD’s Fusion is finally real, we’re all sorts of excited to see what kind of numbers the E-350 Zacate APU puts up in honest-to-goodness machines like Fujitsu’s latest. The minty fresh Lifebook PH50/C is just one of the many new lappies unveiled this week by the company, but this particular 11.6-incher has managed to grab our heartstrings and not let go. Boasting a cute, albeit familiar design, the PH50/C is equipped with a 1.6GHz E-350 APU, Radeon HD 6310 graphics, 2GB of memory, a 500GB hard drive, Ethernet, 802.11b/g/n WiFi, Windows 7 Home Premium (64-bit) and a 5,800mAh battery good for up to seven hours of life in ideal conditions. For those more interested in Intel’s Sandy Bridge, the like-minded PH74/C gets powered by a Core i3-2310M, and given that it’s a Japanese machine designed for Japanese owners, an in-built WiMAX module is thrown in for good measure. We’re also getting the impression that both of these can be ordered up with Intel’s Wireless Display technology, and considering that Buffalo just introduced a new WiDi adapter for this very market, we’d say things have lined up quite nicely. Pricing remains up in the air, but they should be out in Q1 for under $800 or so.
Fujitsu launches 11.6-inch Lifebook PH50/C, complete with AMD Fusion APU originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 13 Jan 2011 19:41:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Get schooled by CNET editor Jasmine France. This week she gives tips on how to enjoy video on-the-go in order to survive the tedium and annoyances of holiday travel.
Originally posted at MP3 Insider
As expected, the developers version of iOS 4.3 will bring the hot-spot feature currently found on the Verizon iPhone 4 to AT&T handsets.
Originally posted at iPhone Atlas
Gaming’s first-person history lesson: 1958 to 2008 edition (video)
Posted in: console, nintendo, nintendo wii, NintendoWii, playstation, playstation 3, Playstation3, ps3, sony, Today's Chili, video, wii, xbox, xbox 360, Xbox360There’s just so much to love about this video, described by co-creator Florian Smolka as a university video-project from Munich. In a little over four minutes, we’re given a first-person tour of console gaming from 1958’s Tennis for Two (played on an oscilloscope) through late 2008’s Rock Band for Xbox 360 (using a Guitar Hero drum set, but hey, nobody’s perfect). Not every console gets a mention — apologies to Atari Jaguar and 3DO apologists — and it unfortunately stops before new hotness Move and Kinect get a nod, but that should in no way deter you from setting aside a handful of minutes to watch. Be sure to note the passage of TVs, too, and remember fondly the CRTs of your youth. Unless you grew up with LCD flatscreens, you lawn-lounging whippersnapper, you. Video after the break.
Continue reading Gaming’s first-person history lesson: 1958 to 2008 edition (video)
Gaming’s first-person history lesson: 1958 to 2008 edition (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 13 Jan 2011 19:11:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Permalink Kotaku |
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There’s no love lost between between AOL’s tech blogs. There’s a war of words being waged between Engadget and the recently purchased TechCrunch–actually, from the looks of it, it’s primarily TC-founder Michael Arrington taking potshots against the former in some very public forums.
Things started when Arrington derailed a post about Google Ads to talk smack about the blog, writing,
So we’re sad to see our sister blog Engadget doing just that-buying ads to pump up their Comscore rankings. We’ve seen a ridiculous number of ads on Google over the last month or two saying things like “Keep Up With What’s Going On In The Tech World With News From Engadget.”
Oh, and, “Engadget’s editors seem to be spending more time trolling TechCrunch comments than doing any actual work.”
Oh yeah, and also, “I miss the days when Ryan Block ran that site. Almost immediately after he left the sellout began, and Engadget’s rough but smart edginess vaporized into a plasticized caricature of a real blog.”
It was a pretty solid barrage in the space of a meager four paragraphs.
When Business Insider wrote up the odd attack, Arrington took to the site’s comment section to respond (and add fuel to his own bonfire), saying things like “I’m throwing punches at the engadget team and their bullsh*t” and “they’re immensely unethical.”
Engadget editor-inc-chief Joshua Toplosky quickly responded in the aforementioned comment section, writing,
You need to explain this comment and the source of your hatred for our brand and people. You need to tell me how we have been “trolling you.” Explain what we’ve done to you. Explain anything that you’ve said beyond a personal vendetta. I haven’t heard a shred of substance behind your attacks — only the vitriol of a man-child who can’t control himself. “Immensely unethical”? Explain it.
He concluded by telling Arrington to, “grow up.”
And then the comment section kind of breaks down from there.
So, what’s going on? Is AOL gunning for more hits, or is Arrington just setting himself up for the most awkward Christmas party, ever?
Samsung responds to reports that it is delaying pushing out the Android 2.2 update to Vibrant owners in order to push the Vibrant 4G.
Originally posted at Android Atlas
In case you missed our special live Digital City show from the CNET stage at CES 2011, now you can catch it here. Dan is joined by G4TV’s “Attack of the Show” co-host Kevin Pereira , plus CNET’s Jeff Bakalar and Rich Brown, for a discussion ranging from post-apocalyptic cell phone reception to high-tech digital name tags.
Bonus: You can download the show’s theme song as a free MP3 here for a limited time!
Related links:
>>
CES: Computers and hardware wrap-up
>>
CES: The coolest laptops of the show
>>
Catch up with our special guest, Kevin Pereira, on G4TV’s “Attack of the Show”
>> Watch the Digital City live every Monday at 3 p.m. ET on CNET Live!
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Originally posted at Digital City Podcast