Windows 7’s virtual XP has intangible system requirements

Windows 7's virtual XP has intangible system requirements

Microsoft tickled our meta-OS fancies last week by talking up the virtualized version of Windows XP included with Windows 7 Professional and Ultimate Edition. However, the company has now revealed that ponying up for one of the top tiers of the OS will not be the only requirement. 2GB of RAM will be needed, which isn’t such a big deal, but more troubling is the requirement of a CPU that sports chip-level virtualization support. Both AMD and Intel have been quick to add features to support enterprises turning to virtualized hosting environments, but rather annoyingly neither of those companies make it particularly easy to tell which of their chips provide such support. On the AMD side it looks like the tech was introduced with the Athlon 64 and has continued in most newer chips, while Intel’s waters are a little muddier, with all Core i7 processors being suitably endowed, but only some of its Pentium, Core 2, and Atom chips made the grade. How to know if you’re included? We’d expect an upgrade advisor from Microsoft to hit the internets any time now.

Update: Christopher commented to let us know of a little app that’ll tell you right now whether you’re in our out of the faux-OS party. That’s great, because we hate hasty last-minute upgrades.

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Windows 7’s virtual XP has intangible system requirements originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 29 Apr 2009 08:11:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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NVIDIA: 40 Atom-based ION platforms by end of 2009

After being let down by the Atom 230 processor in our review of the Ion-based AspireRevo, we’re comforted by NVIDIA’s promise of more Atom / Ion configurations on the horizon. Forty of ’em by the end of the year including some based on the beefier dual-core Atom 330 processor just like this ASUS reference design that NVIDIA was showing off earlier today. Of course, the Computex show in Taipei (kicking off June 2nd) would be the obvious venue for such a full scale assault against Intel’s GMA lethargy. Fortunately, Engadget Chinese will be on point to witness the carnage.

[Via Tweaktown]

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NVIDIA: 40 Atom-based ION platforms by end of 2009 originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 29 Apr 2009 07:38:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Intel further slashes SSD prices, ups production of 1.8-inch drives

Intel just cut a big chunk out of the MSRP on some of its SSDs a few months back, but it looks like it’s already back for another go ’round, and it’s also taking the opportunity to up the production on some of the models intended for netbooks and ultraportable laptops. The price cuts come to Intel’s recently-fixed X25-M series of drives, with the 160GB drive dropping $100 (bringing its retail price down to $630), while the 80GB model dips a further $50 to $320, or close to half of what it originally cost when it launched back in December. What’s more, while they aren’t getting any cheaper just yet, Intel will reportedly be making more of its 80GB and 160GB 1.8-inch drives, which have apparently been in short supply since launching last year.

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Intel further slashes SSD prices, ups production of 1.8-inch drives originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 28 Apr 2009 17:56:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Demand for Intel’s Atom CPUs finally beginning to cool?

It was inevitable, really — but the incessant demand for Intel’s woefully underpowered Atom processors sure did last a lot longer than we anticipated. Originally made famous by those so-called “netbooks,” the Atom is currently facing two hurdles in remaining wildly popular: 1) slumping demand for new PCs and 2) bona fide competition. For months on end, the Atom really was the only game in town when it came to powering netbooks and nettops, but with the unveiling on NVIDIA’s Ion, the promise of a GPGPU (or cGPU) and Intel’s own CULV platform, Atom’s necessity in the market is becoming less intense. The interesting part here is that Intel is purportedly hawking its inventory to “second-tier and China-based vendors” as it looks to minimize warehouse clutter, which certainly makes us hope for lower-cost low-cost lappies to show up in the near future.

Read – Atom demand slowing
Read – Intel: PC sales hit rock bottom

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Demand for Intel’s Atom CPUs finally beginning to cool? originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 28 Apr 2009 09:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Toshiba’s 10-inch Dynabook UX netbook gets hands-on treatment

Toshiba’s Dynabook UX (or NB200, if you prefer) just popped on our radar last week, and already we’re seeing netbook craving individuals in Japan get their paws on ’em. The 10-inch machine ain’t too different than the other alternatives out there — save for the N280 processor, which will never show its true potential without a GN40 chipset riding shotgun. At any rate, early impressions of the machine have been rather positive, with onlookers digging the design and the chiclet-style keyboard. Personally, we’re a bit bored from afar, but hit the read link to have a look and make a judgment of your own.

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Toshiba’s 10-inch Dynabook UX netbook gets hands-on treatment originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 26 Apr 2009 08:36:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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CSIRO’s patent lawsuits conclude with the final 13 companies settling

Looks like CSIRO‘s legal days are over — for the moment, at least. Having already reached an agreement with HP, the Australian government-funded research firm announced this week that it’s settled with the remaining 13 companies it sued for patent infringement, claiming it owned the rights to 802.11a/g. For those who haven’t been keeping track at home, that includes Dell, Intel, Microsoft, Nintendo, Fujitsu, Toshiba, Netgear, Buffalo, D-Link, Belkin, SMC, Accton, and 3Com. The details of any of the settlements are undisclosed, but as iTnews reports, it’s expected CSIRO ended up with some substantial monies now that the dust has settled. Chief Executive Dr. Megan Clark noted that it’ll continue to “defend its intellectual property,” so if you’re a high profile tech company who creates WiFi-equipped gadgets and hasn’t been served a lawsuit yet, we don’t blame you for being a little nervous right now.

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CSIRO’s patent lawsuits conclude with the final 13 companies settling originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 22 Apr 2009 00:53:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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MSI’s CULV-packin’ X-Slim X340 ships this month in US

MSI already told us that its ultraslim, super-sexy, WiMAX-ready X-Slim X340 would be starting at right around $1,000, and now we’re being told that the planet’s first laptop to be based on Intel’s CULV (consumer ultra low voltage) platform will be shipping in April. As in, this month. For the forgetful souls in the crowd, this here ultraportable will ship with an SU3500 CULV processor that consumes just 5.5 watts of power and a 4-cell battery. Now, to find a retailer ’round these parts willing to let you pre-order one…

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MSI’s CULV-packin’ X-Slim X340 ships this month in US originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 21 Apr 2009 13:09:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Shuttle intros Atom 330, SUSE Linux-packin’ X270V nettop

Go ‘head, Shuttle — break on out of that shell! The company notorious for pumping out the same barebone rectangle with a different model name and a few extra ports has finally seen fit to do something a touch different, and what we’re dealt is the X270V. This so-called Mini-PC relies on Intel’s 1.6GHz Atom 330 to push the computations, while up to 2GB of DDR2 RAM keeps things in order. There’s also gigabit Ethernet, 6-channel audio, a PS/2 connector for the retro folks, six USB sockets and VGA / DVI outputs. Shuttle also claims this bugger is energy efficient, though it doesn’t go into great detail about just how much it’ll save you each month. Oh, and it also comes loaded with openSUSE 11 (a Linux flavor, for those unaware). Interested? Move to Europe and plop down at least €299 ($390).

[Via Slashgear]

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Shuttle intros Atom 330, SUSE Linux-packin’ X270V nettop originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 17 Apr 2009 18:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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IBM, Samsung, Globalfoundries, and more looking to beat Intel to 28nm market

Sure, Intel’s one-upping AMD in the 32nm department, but IBM and its merry band of Technology Alliance members — including Samsung, STMicroelectronics, and AMD chipmakers Globalfoundries — are looking to ramp up the competition and develop even smaller, low power 28nm processors before Intel gets a chance to size down. The group additionally promises migration plans for companies who’ve got 32nm on their roadmap and want to maybe shrink a few of the later, already planned models. Early risk production for the 28nm chips are planned for second half 2010, which means it’s very unlikely we’ll be seeing them in consumer gadgets until at least 2011.

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IBM, Samsung, Globalfoundries, and more looking to beat Intel to 28nm market originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 17 Apr 2009 05:42:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Symbian ports its platform to Atom, just for the heck of it

Companies and enterprising individuals have been dabbling with the tantalizing concept of slapping Android on a cheap netbook for months now, and seeing how Android and Symbian could end up locked in a heated battle for the hearts and minds of the open-source mobile platform world, it stands to reason that the boys and girls at the Foundation would want to counter the OHA’s every move. Some good people in the S60 On Symbian Customer Operations group (try fitting that on a business card) have managed to compile and run an S60-skinned Symbian build on one of Intel’s Atom reference boards, showing a stock S60 screen and an OpenGL demo — which, as you might imagine, runs circles around the performance of a garden-variety S60 handset. To quote the Foundation’s boss, “I was most impressed with the responsiveness of the UI and upper application layers” — the only question left to be answered is whether there’s a place in the world for a Symbian-powered netbook.

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Symbian ports its platform to Atom, just for the heck of it originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 16 Apr 2009 13:08:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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