Cisco’s second tablet runs Linux, manages home energy use

Looks like the Android-toting Cius wasn’t the only tablet out of Cisco this week — the company’s also announced a countertop unit for home energy management with a 7-inch, 800 x 480 capacitive touch screen. Running Ubuntu Linux for MID on a 1.1GHz Intel Atom chip, the Home Energy Controller connects to smart thermostats and appliances over 802.11n WiFi or gigabit ethernet using protocols including ZigBee. It then lets you keep tabs on your electricity usage, and suggests ways you could improve — assuming you’re using the tablet for its intended purpose instead of watching hardware-accelerated videos on Mediafly, browsing the included app store, or (potentially) using it as a phone of some sort. Forbes reports the device will run $900 per installation, though it’s more likely it’ll arrive subsidized by a monthly power bill. See it in action right after the break, and hit up that PDF at the more coverage link for a full spec sheet.

Continue reading Cisco’s second tablet runs Linux, manages home energy use

Cisco’s second tablet runs Linux, manages home energy use originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 29 Jun 2010 22:48:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Quirky Unveils the Pivot Power Adjustable Power Strip

Pivot Power - BannerQuirky, a gadget and peripheral maker that crowd-sources its ideas for its next products, unveiled the Pivot Power today, an adjustable power strip that will bend and flex around objects and into corners to take up as little space as possible. Also, since all Quirky products are made from ideas out of the Quirky community, purchasing a Pivot Power also goes to support the people in the community that had the most to do with making the product come to life.

The Pivot Power adjustable strip comes with six individual outlet pods. Each two pods have a hinge between them so the entire strip can flex at each joint. It can be adjusted into a zigzag pattern, curled up into a circle, left straight, or even angled around a piece of furniture or a wall. It’s designed to help you save space and never waste a plug because it’s obstructed by the charger or device plugged into the port next to it. The Pivot Power is available for $23, and Quirky is taking pre-sales now. 

Kinetic Energy Generator Powers Gadgets with Magic

The nPower PEG is exactly the kind of thing that would have airport security asking you some rather awkward questions, and perhaps also earn you some childish snickers. The rather utilitarian phallus is in fact a kinetic energy generator which charges gadgets as it moves.

The PEG (personal energy generator) makes electricity as you move, harvesting your expended energy like the Matrix harvests your battery-like human meat-bag. It is made from titanium, and outputs standard USB power, which can be piped through a variety of different cables into iOS devices, BlackBerries and other cellphones. And that is all we know. The FAQ, the spec page and even the compatibility pages are almost willfully free of real information.

For instance, do you wonder how it works? I did, so I followed the treasure-trail of links to the penultimate teaser:

The science behind our technology is based on the Faraday principle and Einstein’s Special Theory of Relativity. Our technology is scientifically unique enough to receive a patent, yet very simple to use. Read.

Excited, I clicked the read link and found:

An average human walking up a set of stairs will expend around 200 Watts of power. When you recharge your cell phone (including iPhones) the most amount of power it will accept is 2.5 Watts. The nPower® PEG can harvest your walking power and deliver it to your phone to recharge the battery without you knowing that it is working.

Where’s the science? There is no mention of Einstein to be found. Now, I did some science in school, so I can guess that the PEG probably just has a magnet inside, bouncing up and down in a copper coil and generating a current which is then smoothed out to safely enter a UBS-powered device. But if you’re going to drop $150, the price of the PEG, on a mysterious metal tube, it would be nice to know what it has inside. Especially if you are taking it through airport security.

How the nPower PEG “works” [nPower PEG. Thanks, Steve!]

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Yissum develops potato-powered batteries for the developing world

Researchers in Jerusalem have just announced they’ve developed super simple, sustainable, organic electric batteries which are powered by treated potatoes. Their findings have just been published in the Journal of Renewable and Sustainable Energy, and detail uses of the batteries in the developing world where infrastructure is lacking. The apparently highly efficient battery is made from zinc and copper electrodes and a potato slice which has been boiled. The act of boiling the potato increased the electric power around 10 fold in comparison to an untreated potato, giving it power for days, and sometimes weeks depending on the conditions. The potato batteries are also, of course, way cheaper than regular commercial cells. The technology has officially been made available free of charge to the developing world. We knew there was a reason we loved potatoes so much. The full press release is below.

Continue reading Yissum develops potato-powered batteries for the developing world

Yissum develops potato-powered batteries for the developing world originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 20 Jun 2010 09:32:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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JumpStart Dual USB charger sports an integrated rechargeable battery

It’s a sad fact of life, really. Regardless of where you go, you’ll end up needing to recharge something in your carry-on. Just the mere thought of locating an AC adapter in that airport you’re headed to is enough to give even the most hardened traveler a reason to think twice, and tracking down one of those inverters for your road trip is just about the last thing you’d like to be doing. DigiPower has just pushed out the solution to all of your problems, with the JumpStart Dual 2-in-1 battery / AC adapter offering the ability to juice up a pair of USB devices via the internal 1,700mAh rechargeable battery. Each port is capable of rejuvenating 5V devices, and there’s a status indicator, emergency flashlight and folding plugs for “easy transport.” The company claims that this can be recharged over 500 times, after which you’ll need to contact Sir Odor Blocker after the break for a pinch of P-P-P-P-P-P-Power.

Continue reading JumpStart Dual USB charger sports an integrated rechargeable battery

JumpStart Dual USB charger sports an integrated rechargeable battery originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 18 Jun 2010 09:24:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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New Xbox 360 gets a proper teardown analysis: power and noise reductions confirmed

Anyone can take a hammer and rib-spreader to a new piece of hardware. But it takes someone like Anand Shimpi, the man behind Anandtech who has personally suffered through four out-of-warranty Xbox 360 failures, to bring sage analysis to a teardown of the new Xbox 360. His reluctant sixth Xbox 360 is the new slimster (codename Valhalla) which, for the first time, combines the CPU, GPU, and eDRAM onto a single chip — previous Xbox 360 motherboards featured two discrete packages that split the CPU from the ATI designed Xenos GPU and eDRAM. The design allows for a single heatsink to be cooled by a single, larger fan making the new Xbox “noticeably quieter,” measured at 45dB when idle or 51dB with the 1.5Gbps SATA Hitachi HTS545025B9SA00 with 8MB buffer spinning at 5400RPM — that’s down from 50dB and 54dB, respectively, as measured on late 2008 through 2010 Jasper-class 360s. Regarding power consumption, Anand measured a 50% reduction from the original 2005 Xbox 360 (25% less than Jasper-class rigs at idle, or 20% to 17% less under load) and pulled just 0.6W when “totally off” compared to the 2W of vampire power pulled by older 360s. Anand speculates that Microsoft might finally be using cheaper 40nm components. However, we shouldn’t expect to see a price cut anytime soon as it will take Microsoft awhile to ramp up the material and manufacturing cost savings. Regardless, with Kinect and several new game titles on the horizon, Anand concludes that there’s still plenty of life left in the old Xbox 360 platform for those looking to make the jump.

New Xbox 360 gets a proper teardown analysis: power and noise reductions confirmed originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 18 Jun 2010 05:10:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Startup Builds Power-Efficient Servers With Netbook Chips

Atom chips are the underpowered CPUs inside most netbooks. But one company has found a way to stitch 512 of them together to create a single powerful server.

SeaMicro has used 1.6-GHz Intel Atom processors to create a system that consumes just a fourth of the power and space as a traditional server, while aiming to deliver comparable computing performance.

The concept eschews the use of specialized, high-performance server chips in favor of the Atom processor, which was been designed for netbooks and other mobile devices. Atom is a low-power chip that is designed for tasks such as surfing webpages and checking e-mail among other things.

“We are trying to to build a single big server out of a lot of little chips,” says Andrew Feldman, CEO of SeaMicro. “”We can have 2,048 Atom-based processors on a rack delivering the highest density of CPUs in the market.” SeaMicro’s Atom-based server will be available starting July.

Traditionally most servers use Intel’s Xeon or Itanium processors, or AMD’s Opteron chips. These processors deliver high computing strength but also suck power, making utility bills one of the most expensive costs for a data center. Based on its measurements, an Atom chip can deliver half the performance of a Xeon processor for a sixth of the power, says SeaMicro.

“For a server of this nature, this is the first time we have seen Atom chips used,” says Cal Braunstein, chief research officer for research firm Robert Frances Group.

SeaMicro’s server module uses just three components: Intel’s Atom chip, memory and an ASIC designed by the company.

The Atom-based servers target a few specific tasks performed by data centers. In the past, servers were largely used to solve a small number of complex data-based problems, says Feldman. But the internet changed this. In the internet-focused data center, the challenge is to handle millions of small tasks such as searching, mapping and viewing pages quickly, and to do this in a way that can handle unpredictable bursts of traffic.

SeaMicro is going after this market, says Braunstein.

“They are going after boxes in the data center that are really not doing a lot of high-performance computing or database computing,” he says. “By addressing that niche and tightly packaging everything, they can offer a low power processor for a very specific use.”

SeaMicro says it has shrunk the server unit — which it defines as a processor plus memory unit — to the size of a credit card and removed 90 percent of the components that lie on a traditional server. Eight of these credit card-sized servers rest on a 5 inch by 11 inch board. Sixty four of these boards go into a SeaMicro system that’s about 17.5 inches tall and 30 inches deep — approximately 10 rack units in a data center.

Just changing the CPU to a low-power chip, though, isn’t enough says SeaMicro. The trick lies in creating a new architecture that can pull all the chips together and manage their power requirements.

“If you just replace the chips in a traditional server with Atom processors, the power consumption actually goes up,” says Feldman.

Integrating features such as storage, networking and server management into a single ASIC (application specific integrated circuit) helps manage power better, says the company. It has also virtualized the CPU input-output so those modules that would have otherwise occupied space on a board and consumed power don’t anymore.

Though SeaMicro has used Atom processors for its chipset, the company says it has designed its architecture to be flexible and support any CPU. So any low-power chip included that from ARM, which runs on most smartphones today, can become a part of SeaMicro’s system.

But Atom remains the best choice for now, says Feldman. ARM processors used in cellphones consume much lower power than an Atom chip but they also cannot deliver the same kind of computing performance, he claims.

SeaMicro’s Atom servers, though, are not for everyone. They are geared for a very specific kind of server operation — one that involves throwing out a lot of web content, says Braunstein.

That should be good enough for internet giants like Google, Facebook and Yahoo to replace some of their servers in their gigantic data center, hopes SeaMicro.

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Photo: SeaMicro Atom server/SeaMicro


MiLi Gives You Power to Go

MiLi.jpg

It’s a problem for our times: running out of juice for your portable devices while you’re away from home. Planning ahead is the only option. Grab yourself a MiLi Power Miracle or Power Crystal external power pack. They’re slender and lightweight, so you can toss one in a bag and forget about it. They’re also available in multiple colors.

The Power Crystal has an extended carabineer loop built into its casing, making it a key chain accessory. Both include a 2,000mAh lithium ion battery, good for doubling the battery life of most devices. Each comes with a multi-lead USB cord and six attachment tips. You can purchase either one for $44.95 from MiLi.

FastMac U-Socket delayed due to safety redesign, now going for $20

And here you were thinking this thing had vanished into the never-ending Lairs of Vaporwareville. Lucky for you, the gents and gals over at FastMac have been hard at work caving to the also never-ending list of demands from the UL and various other safety agencies. That means that the utterly brilliant U-Socket is indeed still on track for mass production, but it’ll be slightly redesigned and stacked with a few bonus features by the time it hits the market. According to an update sent out to loyal pre-orderers (which can be seen in full after the break), the USB sockets have been relocated as a compliance measure, but now, they’re of the SuperSpeed variety. Each one is also capable of 10W power (read: iPad-friendly) and it also smokes the EPA’s Energy Star requirements. The modifications have pushed the expected ship date back to October, and the original $9.95 price has been bumped up to $19.95 — though the company is quick to point out that each one is made in the US of A, and those who got in early will have their orders honored. An extra Hamilton for USB 3.0 and 10W charging? We’re still as sold as ever.

[Thanks, Brian]

Continue reading FastMac U-Socket delayed due to safety redesign, now going for $20

FastMac U-Socket delayed due to safety redesign, now going for $20 originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 22 May 2010 10:49:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HP data center fueled by hopes, dreams and… cow dung

We’ve seen data centers use excess heat for greener purposes, but how’s about injecting a little green into the other side of that equation? HP Labs is on that very wavelength, going so far as to publish details on how these centers could be partially powered by none other than cow manure. Yeah, cowpies. The essential thought process went a little something like this: “Data centers need a lot of energy. Dairy farms create a lot of methane. Let’s make it happen.” Purportedly, 10,000 dairy cows could “fulfill the power requirements of a 1-megawatt data center — the equivalent of a medium-sized data center — with power left over to support other needs on the farm,” and heat generated by the data center could “be used to increase the efficiency of the anaerobic digestion of animal waste.” The stomach-twisting details can be found beyond the break, but we can’t be held responsible for any images you conjure up. Remember — once your third eye sees it, you can’t un-see it.

[Thanks, Bob]

Continue reading HP data center fueled by hopes, dreams and… cow dung

HP data center fueled by hopes, dreams and… cow dung originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 19 May 2010 14:07:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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