Apr 13 2009

Intel Responds To X25-M Fragmentation Issue

Vigile writes “In mid-February, news broke about a potential issue with Intel’s X25-M mainstream solid state drives involving fragmentation and performance slow-downs. At that time, after having the news picked up by everyone from CNet to the Wall Street Journal, Intel stated that it had not seen any of these issues but was working with the source to replicate the problem and find a fix if at all possible. Today Intel has essentially admitted to the problem by releasing a new firmware for the X25-M line that not only fixes the flaws found in the drive initially, but also increases write performance across the board.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Share

Apr 11 2009

Goldman Sachs Tries To Shut Down Dissident Blogger

The Narrative Fallacy sends along a piece from the Telegraph on efforts by Goldman Sachs to silence a blogger who is posting commentary critical of the bank. “Goldman Sachs has instructed Wall Street law firm Chadbourne & Parke to pursue blogger Mike Morgan, warning him in a recent cease-and-desist letter that he may face legal action if he does not close down his website goldmansachs666.com. According to the C&D letter, dated April 8, the bank is rattled because the site ‘violates several of Goldman Sachs’ intellectual property rights’ and also ‘implies a relationship’ with the bank itself. Morgan claims he has followed all legal requirements to own and operate the website and that the header of the site clearly states that the content has not been approved by the bank. In a post entitled Goldman Sachs vs Mike Morgan, the blogger predicts that the fight will probably end up in court. He went through a similar battle with US home builder Lennar a few years ago after he set up a website to collect information on what he alleged was shoddy workmanship in its homes. ‘Since I went through this with Lennar, I’ve had advice from some of the best intellectual property lawyers, and I know exactly what I can and can’t do. We’re not going to back down from this.'”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Share

Apr 10 2009

Leaked Pics of CrunchPad Elicit Progress Update

TechCrunch has released a few more technical details, pictures, and general comments about their CrunchPad project as a recent accidental leak saw a new round of images posted to the web. It seems that the tablet has continued to grow and evolve with the help of an Intel Atom chip (as opposed to the Via chip previously used), new software from Fusion Garage, and a bottom-up Linux install. “I wanted something I couldn’t buy, and found people who said it could be built for a lot less than I imagined. The goal — a very thin and light touch screen computer, sans physical keyboard, that has no hard drive and boots directly to a browser to surf the web. The operating system exists solely to handle the hardware drivers and run the browser and associated applications. That’s it.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Share

Apr 9 2009

Intel Begins Applying ‘Stars’ Ratings to Microprocessors

Will you choose a PC’s processor like you choose a hotel? Intel has already bet that you will.Years after microprocessor vendors launched “model numbers” to try and provide buyers with a simpler way of evaluating microprocessor performance, on April 1 Intel began placing point-of-sale…

Share

Apr 8 2009

Elan sues Apple for multitouch patent infringement

Remember all the fun everyone had watching Palm and Apple’s legal wordplay regarding multitouch patents? If you missed it, Apple delivered a very thinly veiled threat to Palm, flouting how it had touch-sensitive intellectual rights up the wazoo to protect itself from the competition.

Share

Apr 8 2009

First NVIDIA Ion Win Announced, Acer AspireRevo

NVIDIA and Acer collectively took the wraps off the very first NVIDIA Ion-based design win, with a sleek new SFF PC (Small Form Factor PC) called the AspireRevo. Built on the NVIDIA Ion platform, the AspireRevo consists of NVIDIA’s GeForce 9400 chipset with integrated graphics in support of Intel’s Atom processor.

Share

Apr 6 2009

Review: Nehalem-based Mac Pro ‘fastest Mac ever

The Mac Pro takes a significant step forward by moving to Intel’s new Nehalem processor, leaving behind the previous model’s Harpertown and Penryn chips.

Share

Apr 5 2009

ARM: Heretic in the church of Intel, Moore’s Law

For 30 years, the PC industry has treated Moore’s Law with religious reverence. Its immutable commandment — thou shalt double the transistors on circuits every 18 months — created an enviable business model with consumers spurred to buy new, more powerful PCs every few years.

Share

Apr 5 2009

Linux Foundation To Host Intel’s Moblin Project

gustavopuy writes with news that Intel will be transferring control of Moblin, its Linux-based OS for mobile devices, to the Linux Foundation. Quoting Ars Technica: “We spoke with Linux Foundation executive director Jim Zemlin, who told us that the Linux Foundation offers a vendor-neutral setting for advancing the Moblin project. He believes that such an environment will help stimulate third-party involvement in the process of building the platform and could also encourage broader adoption. … Zemlin explained that the Linux Foundation’s stewardship of the project will empower third-party contributors to expand the platform beyond its Intel-specific roots. He assures me that Intel sees value in making Moblin open to everyone — including companies that are leveraging Linux on competing processors, such as those based on the ARM architecture.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Share

Apr 4 2009

ARM — Heretic In the Church of Intel, Moore’s Law

ericatcw writes “For 30+ years, the PC industry has been as obsessed with under-the-hood performance: MIPs, MHz, transistors per chip. Blame Moore’s Law, which effectively laid down the Gospel of marketing PCs like sports cars. But with mobile PCs and green computing coming to the fore, enter ARM, which is challenging the Gospel according to Moore with chips that are low-powered in both senses of the word. Some of its most popular CPUs have 100,000 transistors, fewer than a 12 MHz Intel 286 CPU from 1982 (download PDF). But they also consume as little as a quarter of a watt, which is why netbook makers are embracing them. It’s “megahertz per milli-watt,”that counts, according to ARM exec Ian Drew, who predicts that 6-10 ARM-based netbooks running Linux and costing just around 0 should arrive this year starting in July.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Share