Showing posts with label Regularly. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Regularly. Show all posts

Microscopic Marvels

Intel claims this new family of processors will consume half the power at the same switching speed but will be 37 per cent faster at the same voltage, particularly the lower voltages required for mobile computing devices. They will be 18 per cent faster on high-end consumer machines and servers.
What does this mean? Well, it shows Intel continues to follow Moore's law - after Gordon Moore, one of Intel's founders, who famously stated way back in 1965 that the number of transistors on a processor would double every two years. But the increasing number of transistors have made computers faster, while the per-unit cost of processing power has gone down dramatically.
The new 3D microprocessor will allow the processors on handheld and portable devices to become even faster. A smartphone today has the processing power of a standard desktop computer of half a decade back. The new Samsung Galaxy S2 and the upcoming iPhone 4S have dualcore processors.
Whether this new technology will help Intel make a mark in the portable devices space remains to be seen, but the technology major is expected to introduce an Atom-class lowcost processor using this technology in 2012. What it means is that technology will become even faster and more pervasive than it is today.
Vinod Dham was the brain behind the Pentium processor. Again, the person behind Intel's drive to make processors ever smaller is another Indian. Kaizad Mistry is an alumnus of the 1984 batch of the Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay. And what about the technology that allows Intel to make the silicon cuts on microprocessers smaller and smaller? There is an Indian behind that as well: Kanti Jain, an alumnus of IIT-Kharagpur, who developed a technology in 1982 that allowed lasers to make smaller and smaller etches on silicon wafers.

Twitter 'To Look Cool, Not To Communicate'

The social-networking obsessed Australian youngsters have admitted that they use tools such as Facebook, Twitter and Smartphone apps to appear 'cool' rather than communicate.
A new research has shown that image-obsessed mobile phone wielders were prepared to embellish or lie about their activities to boost their credibility among friends, reports the News.com.au. ccording to the Telstra survey, almost half of 18- to 30-year-olds admitted using the Facebook Places 'check-in' feature - which allows mobile users at a location such as a bar of cafe to let others know where they are - to make themselves look good.
One in 10 regularly fake where they are in a bid to improve their social status.
A third of Gen Ys confessed to downloading quirky iPhone apps designed to be seen by others rather than be actually used.
The same number admitted to claiming Facebook or Twitter posts passed on to friends as their own in an effort to appear clever.
Almost 70 percent of those surveyed believed their friends use Facebook Places and status updates to appear cooler than they really were.
Telstra consumer executive director Rebekah O'Flaherty said tech-savvy young people were using social networking on their mobiles to help shape their real-life identity.
"Australia's love affair with social networking continues to strengthen, with one in four of our customers regularly using their mobiles to access Facebook," she said.