Intel to support USB 3.0 alongside Thunderbolt, coming with Ivy Bridge in 2012

We were just pondering this very thing yesterday — would Intel dedicate itself to Thunderbolt and give USB 3.0 the cold shoulder — and now we have our answer from the Santa Clara crew, albeit delivered from Beijing. The Chinese capital is the site of Intel’s currently ongoing developer conference, which is where Kirk Skaugen, VP of the company’s Architecture Group, assured the world that the promise for native USB 3.0 support in Intel chipsets will be fulfilled. Not this year, mind you, but it’ll be with us in 2012 as part of the Ivy Bridge CPU refresh. That matches AMD’s plans to support USB 3.0 in Fusion APUs, and was augmented with a strong word of endorsement from Skaugen about the connector’s future. He urged developers to embrace USB 3.0 on an equal footing with Intel’s proprietary Thunderbolt interconnect, describing the two technologies as “complementary.” If you say so, captain.

Intel to support USB 3.0 alongside Thunderbolt, coming with Ivy Bridge in 2012 originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 14 Apr 2011 04:07:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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AMD beats Intel to the punch, confirms USB 3.0 support in future chipsets

When a leaked document strongly suggests that Intel’s upcoming Panther Point chipset will support USB 3.0, AMD’s not going to take that cheery news lying down. Not even a day later, the underdog chip maker has confirmed that its A75 and A70M Fusion chipsets will support the standard protocol, which claims speeds ten times faster than USB 2.0. No word on when that’ll happen, or whether AMD will beat Chipzilla to market — but if nothing else it can brag about being first out of the gate with an official plan. Huzzah!

AMD beats Intel to the punch, confirms USB 3.0 support in future chipsets originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 13 Apr 2011 16:30:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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The Collector concept turns unused microSD cards into a refillable thumb drive

The Collector

Digging through our drawers here at Engadget there is one thing we’re clearly not in desperate need of: USB flash drives. We also happen to have a plethora of microSD cards in 1GB an 2GB sizes, left over from the days when picking a smartphone meant Windows Mobile or BlackBerry. This concept USB drive, dubbed The Collector, could potentially solve our conundrum by allowing us to toss all those thumb drives and find a use for our now homeless microSD chips. The Collector wouldn’t have any storage of its own, instead you’d slip up to three microSD cards into it and, when full, simply swap them out for more. It would also combine your smaller chunks of storage into a single block, so those three 2GB scraps would become a slightly less useless 6GB drive. Of course, keeping that pile of microSD cards (now bound by common data) organized might actually be a bigger headache than rifling through your drawers looking for that OFWGKTA mixtape you downloaded so many months ago.

The Collector concept turns unused microSD cards into a refillable thumb drive originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 12 Apr 2011 13:19:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Rock Your Next Block Party with these Eight Great Grilling Gadgets [Home Mod]

Spring is here! And that means one thing: The return of backyard parties. To throw a slammin’ backyard barbecue, all you really need are great grilled foods, and free-flowing cold drinks. Where to begin? With seven cool gadgets (and one robot) that will make your shindig a success. More »

The Awesome button is…

Ever struggled to find the perfect adjective to articulate your admiration for a given article of awesomeness? Matt Richardson over at Make felt exactly the same way, so he perfected himself an Awesome button, designed specifically to spit out synonyms for his favorite descriptive word. To accomplish the task, he had to gut a Staples “easy” button and arrange a Teensy USB microcontroller inside it, before making the resulting mini-thesaurus compatible with his computer. Don’t worry, full instructions are contained in the video above. Just mash the play button.

The Awesome button is… originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 08 Apr 2011 09:14:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Tobii PCEye brings hands-free control to any PC, can’t see eye-to-eye with Macs (update)

Tobii PCEye brings eye control to any PC, can't see eye-to-eye with Macs

We were kind of shocked at just how well the Lenovo prototype laptop with Tobii eye tracking worked at CEBIT this year. It was, frankly, really good, and we’re happy to say you no longer have to break into Lenovo HQ to try it for yourself. Tobii has released its PCEye, a USB device that uses a VESA mount to hang below LCDs sized between 15- to 20-inches. After a little calibration, it enables full eye control — on Windows. Mac users will have to keep buying batteries for their Magic Mice because there’s sadly no compatibility there. The main idea here is to help those who, due to stroke or other impairment, have lost some or all motor control, enabling them to compute just as well as anybody. However, we who are lucky enough to still have full control over all appendages can’t wait to get one of these and play through every level in World of Goo without reaching for the mouse once. We will, however, have to reach for our wallets — Tobii doesn’t quote a price for the PCEye, which is rarely a good sign.

Update: We just heard back from the company, and the price of the PCEye itself is $6,900, “with packages available for software and monitors.”

Gallery: Tobii PCEye

Continue reading Tobii PCEye brings hands-free control to any PC, can’t see eye-to-eye with Macs (update)

Tobii PCEye brings hands-free control to any PC, can’t see eye-to-eye with Macs (update) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 07 Apr 2011 08:36:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Ask Engadget: best USB headset for Skype calls and on-the-go podcasting?

We know you’ve got questions, and if you’re brave enough to ask the world for answers, here’s the outlet to do so. This week’s Ask Engadget question is coming to us from yours truly, who managed to destroy his Freetalk Everyman during a rough battle within a piece of carry-on luggage. If you’re looking to send in an inquiry of your own, drop us a line at ask [at] engadget [dawt] com.

“I previously owned a Freetalk Everyman, also known as a low-end, $30 USB headset that was ultra handy for making Skype calls and even podcasting in a quiet room. It traveled well, but not well enough. Recently, one of the ear cups were demolished during a turbulent flight back from NYC, and now I need a replacement. I’m too rough on these things to spend more than $40 or $50, so outside of replacing it in kind, what are my options for a USB headset that travels easily? You’ll be hearing a lot of me in the months to come, so don’t lead me astray. My life, as it were, is in your ever-so-capable hands.”

Ain’t much more to say when the question’s not coming from a third-party, so… have fun in comments!

Ask Engadget: best USB headset for Skype calls and on-the-go podcasting? originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 31 Mar 2011 22:39:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Intels of Intel’s X79 chipset exposed: 14 USB 2.0 ports but not a one with 3.0?

Intels of Intel's X79 chipset exposed: 14 USB 2.0 ports but not a one with 3.0

Finally all’s well in the Sandy Bridge camp, Intel exorcizing the demons and getting its current generation of hardware flowing smoothly. You know what that means: it’s time for the next, a revision called X79 that will supersede the current X58 chipset sometime toward the beginning of 2012. According to the leaked slide above, X79 motherboards will feature 2011-pin LGA sockets for E-series CPUs, where ‘E’ stands for “Enthusiast” not “Elephant.” 14 SATA connections are available, 10 of which will manage 6Gb/s, and another 14 USB 2.0 ports means you can have just about every USB-powered member of the Crapgadget Hall of Fame connected simultaneously. That said, there’s no mention of a single USB 3.0 port, something of a bummer for those hoping that standard would be, well, standard by 2012. Of course Intel’s thrown its weight behind Light Peak Thunderbolt, but curiously there’s no integrated support for that, either.

Intels of Intel’s X79 chipset exposed: 14 USB 2.0 ports but not a one with 3.0? originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 31 Mar 2011 12:07:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Continuance AA Battery Packs USB Port

‘Continuance’ tries to combine AA and USB into one

Continuance is a battery that can power pretty much anything. It’s a rechargeable, AA-sized cell with a USB port in the side. The concept — designed by Haimo Bao, Hailong Piao, Yuancheng Liu and Xiameng Hu — is meant to make it easy to power any device, whether it takes batteries or has its own USB port.

But can USB and AA exist side-by-side? Leaving out the fact that the extra circuitry takes up precious power-storing space inside the cylinder, can a 1.5 volt cell provide the 5 volts needed to ive up to USB spec?

I don’t know. I guess you could certainly transform the output by upping the voltage and lowering the current — V=IR, after all. But then, P=IV, which may leave us struggling to get the 5 watts of power needed for many USB devices to function.

But what do I know? I’m no electrical engineer — I use my “soddering” iron to brand grill-marks into my microwaved chicken dinners, for God’s sake. Maybe this is a fantastic invention.

The Power Play Continues [Yanko]

See Also:


This year’s hottest pocket mirror is also a USB 3.0 multi-format card reader

We always knew that the worlds of technology and popular culture were on a collision course of epic proportions, and if this isn’t proof… well, you might say that proof simply doesn’t exist. Brando‘s newest gizmo has an identity crisis that Charlie Sheen would simply salivate over, but if we had to guess, we’d surmise that a USB 3.0 SuperSpeed card reader — complete with support for CompactFlash, SDXC and M2 cards — does a lot more #winning with a mirror slapped onto the side. Pre-order yours today for the tidy sum of $25, or alternatively, a vial of #tigerblood.

This year’s hottest pocket mirror is also a USB 3.0 multi-format card reader originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 30 Mar 2011 16:55:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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