Computer Talk

crobato

Colonel
VIP Professional
Re: Computer Talk!!

Is that some netbook? I hear a lot of talk about Android based netbooks. We are seeing a reversal in trends here that will hurt Intel and Microsoft down the line. Instead of more powerful processors and more bloated software, due to netbooks, we are trending back to minimalism---low cost, low power consumption processors with minimalist, low or no cost operating systems.

China Mobile is set to introduce Lenovo's Android based oPhone next month. The Android's UI is modified with a custom face called OMS that resembles a lot more like an iPhone and has widgets made to access China Mobile's various services.
 

crobato

Colonel
VIP Professional
Re: Computer Talk!!

You know what is happening to the industry when telecom makers are now making netbooks: convergence.

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ZTE Launches WCDMA Netbooks

Updated:2009/4/17 11:28

Tags:3G | WCDMA | CDMA | CDMA2000 | WLAN

Global telecoms equipment provider ZTE Corporation launched a type of 3G netbooks coded V60 in Beijing on April 10, 2008, citing a report.

The netbooks are produced by OEMs, whose names were not disclosed. Adopting the Intel Atom processor platform, the terminals are compatible with the WCDMA network under China Unicom (Hong Kong) Limited (SEHK: 0762 and NYSE: CHU), which is said to start 3G services on May 17, 2009, the World Telecom day.

Later, ZTE will launch netbooks available to the TD-CDMA and CDMA2000, the other two 3G standards which are licensed in China. And it will mainly cooperate with telecoms operators in the distribution of its 3G netbooks, instead of marketing them itself.

After May 17, the company will put up WCDMA WLAN cards, which facilitate maximum uploading and downloading speeds of 7.2 megabytes and 5.76 megabytes, respectively. In addition, ZTE announced that it would offer nine kinds of 3G terminals with 40 types in the future, such as mobile phones.
 

crobato

Colonel
VIP Professional
Re: Computer Talk!!

First China Android netbook. Its a first in the world actually.

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Guangzhou Skytone Transmission Technologies Company, which we will absolutely never call by its full name again, has just dropped a juicy nugget about its forthcoming netbook. If you'll recall, we recently caught wind of the ARM-based, Android-powered rig (the Alpha 680), which is expected to be a stripped down portable useful for web surfing and light duty Office use. Nixon Wu, Skytone's co-founder, recently confessed that it's aiming to sell the machine for around $250, and if all goes well, it should have prototypes ready by June and final products ready for consumption a month or two after that.

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First Android netbook to cost about $250
by Eric Lai


April 26, 2009, 07:12 PM — Computerworld —

The first netbook computer running the Google Inc.-backed Android mobile operating system on a low-cost ARM chip could become available to customers within three months, the maker's co-founder said this week.

The Alpha 680, designed by Guangzhou Skytone Transmission Technologies Co. Ltd., is going through final testing now, Nixon Wu, Skytone's co-founder, told Computerworld exclusively.

The 50-employee company, located in the southern Chinese city in its name, is aiming to have final prototypes ready by June, with manufacturers likely to introduce models to the market 1 to 2 months after that, he said.

The Alpha 680 caused a flurry of excitement after it was spotted online earlier this week by Computerworld blogger Seth Weintraub.

Prototypes actually made their public debut at an electronics trade show in Hong Kong the week before.

"We've gotten 300 inquiries from different countries," Wu said.

The excitement surrounding a no-frills computer made by an unknown Chinese manufacturer is mostly due to the potential of the technology underlying it.

Used in billions of cellphones today, ARM processors are less expensive and more energy-efficient than even Intel Corp.'s power-sipping Atom CPU.

Android, meanwhile, is fast-emerging as a popular flavor of Linux for smartphones such as Google's G1, attracting interest from software developers as quickly as Apple Inc.'s iPhone did.

Market experts predict that the combination of ARM and Android could help usher in an era of sub-$200 netbooks with 12-hour battery life and creative designs highly-tailored for different consumers.

It could also allow ARM/Android netbooks to wrest the netbook market from Intel's Atom chips and Microsoft's Windows XP operating system, which could weaken or break Microsoft and Intel's grip on the PC market.

Great expectations

Ian Drew, an executive at ARM Holdings PLC, told Computerworld earlier this month that he expects to see "six to 10 ARM-based netbooks this year, starting in Q3."

As the first in this coming wave, the Alpha 680 may enthrall some netbook watchers, and disappointothers.

The Alpha 680 will break new ground in portability. Prototypes weigh about 1.5 pounds and measure 8.5 inches long, 6 inches wide and 1.2 inches thick, says Wu -- petite enough to fit inside a small purse or shoulder bag.

"It's definitely smaller than the Eee," Drew said. (The original Eee 701 weighs 922 grams and measures 9 x 6.5 x 1.4 inches).

The Alpha 680 is using an ARM11 CPU running at 533 MHz. First introduced in 2002, the ARM11 chip, including later, more powerful versions, have been used in many different smartphones, including Apple Inc.'s iPhone and iPhone Touch devices.

Android performs fairly well on the chip, said Wu. YouTube's Flash-encoded videos, for instance, can play fine, he said.

The Alpha 680 will have a 7-inch LCD screen at 800 x 480 pixels, 128 MB of DDR2 RAM (expandable to 256 MB, a 1 GB solid-state disk drive (expandable to 4 GB), though users can also
 

bd popeye

The Last Jedi
VIP Professional
Re: Computer Talk!!

Remember to update your browser often, or even better keep it on auto-update.

======================================

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Thanks for that info. I use Firefox and the wife uses the latest version of IE. She said IE has solved the problem of page freezes..
 

crobato

Colonel
VIP Professional
Re: Computer Talk!!

A new weapon against the enemies of Freedom.


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Apple’s New Weapon

To help soldiers make sense of data from drones, satellites and ground sensors, the U.S. military now issues the iPod Touch.

Quote:

"The iPod also fulfills the U.S. military's need to equip soldiers with a single device that can perform many different tasks. Apple's online App Store offers more than 25,000 (and counting) applications for the iPhone and iPod Touch, which shares the iPhone's touchscreen. As the elegantly simple iPods—often controlled with a single thumb—acquire more functionality, soldiers can shed other gadgets. An iPod "may be all that they need," says Lt. Col. Jim Ross, director of the Army's intelligence, electronic warfare and sensors operations in Fort Monmouth, New Jersey.

The iPod isn't the only multifunction handheld on the market, but among soldiers it's the most popular. Since most recruits have used one—and many already own one—it's that much easier to train them to prepare and upload new content. Users can add phrases to language software, annotate maps and link text or voice recordings to photos ("Have you seen this man?"). Apple devices make it easy to shoot, store and play video. Consider the impact of showing villagers a video message of a relaxed and respected local leader encouraging them to help root out insurgents.

Since sharing data is particularly important in counterinsurgency operations, the Pentagon is funding technology that makes it easier for the soldier on the ground to acquire information and quickly add it to databases. Next Wave Systems in Indiana, is expected to release iPhone software that would enable a soldier to snap a picture of a street sign and, in a few moments, receive intelligence uploaded by other soldiers (the information would be linked by the words on the street sign). This could include information about local water quality or the name and photograph of a local insurgent sympathizer. The U.S. Marine Corps is funding an application for Apple devices that would allow soldiers to upload photographs of detained suspects, along with written reports, into a biometric database. The software could match faces, making it easier to track suspects after they're released.

Apple gadgets are proving to be surprisingly versatile. Software developers and the U.S. Department of Defense are developing military software for iPods that enables soldiers to display aerial video from drones and have teleconferences with intelligence agents halfway across the globe. Snipers in Iraq and Afghanistan now use a "ballistics calculator" called BulletFlight, made by the Florida firm Knight's Armament for the iPod Touch and iPhone. Army researchers are developing applications to turn an iPod into a remote control for a bomb-disposal robot (tilting the iPod steers the robot). In Sudan, American military observers are using iPods to learn the appropriate etiquette for interacting with tribal leaders."
 
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