Friday, August 15, 2008

Intel's "mainstream" 80GB and 160GB SSDs ready to launch with mainstream price?

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/365489730/

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Looks like Intel, the bid bad daddy of silicon, is about to unleash its first consumer oriented SSDs into the market. While Intel's 1.8- and 2.5-inch 80GB and 160GB SSD plans were pretty thoroughly detailed in those May leaks, Expreview has slapped up an honest-to-goodness slide which looks like it came straight from the Intel deck. Assuming it's authentic, then we now know that Intel's 2.5-inch X25-M and 1.8-inch X18-M SSDs top out with a 240MBps sustained read and 70MBps write. That's just a bit slower than the blazing Micron RealSSD C20 but still seriously quick and hopefully priced for the mainstream audience they are targeting. Dell, for example, sells a 128GB Samsung SSD for $450 -- surely Intel can beat that cost per Byte... right Intel? We're guessing that the enterprise-class 32GB and 64GB X25-E SSDs will feature some of that Micron co-developed "world's fastest" SLC NAND in order to achieve that ridiculous 240MBps / 170MBps read / write speed at what's expected to be an equally ridiculous price. The 80GB X25-M and X18-M are expected to launch in Q3 (so any day now) while the 160GB solid state slab should break free for consumers in Q1 (not Q4 2008) of 2009. Expect to hear more on these next week as Intel kicks off another International Developers Forum.

[Via TG Daily]
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Scientists Demo New Nanoprinting Tech with Microscopic Golden Olympic Logos [Teeny Tiny]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/365565379/scientists-demo-new-nanoprinting-tech-with-microscopic-golden-olympic-logos

Scientists at Norwestern University have demonstrated their new nano-printing technology by mass-producing the Beijing Olympics emblem 15,000 times, each logo so small the whole print run fits inside one square centimeter. 2,500 of the images, made of thousands of 90 nanometers dots, would fit on a grain of rice. The polymer pen lithography uses an array of millions of tiny flexible polymer "pens" that can be used to scribe marks on various different nano-scales, and in this case deposit "ink" made of 16-mercaptohexadecanoic acid onto a gold substrate (what else would do, in Olympic season?) The team thinks that the technique, which can print out tiny dot-matrix imagery, will find uses in computational tools, medical diagnostics and the pharmaceutical industry. The study is published today in Science Express. [Physorg]


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First Android Phone Coming September 17, Sources [Htc G1]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/365565378/first-android-phone-coming-september-17-sources

September 17. That's the date when the first Android phone will reach the market at an initial $150. According to the NYT and the the unofficial T-Mobile blog, HTC and T-Mobile will release what they hope will be the bringer of the iPhonecalypse, and they are calling it G1, as in Galactus One or G-Spot One or Google One, all of them sound good to me. Looking at the alleged specs and leaked video, it seems that it could be a real challenge to the Apple cellphone:

• 3G connectivity.
• 3 megapixel camera.
• 5 x 3 inches wide touchscreen.
• Sliding QWERTY keyboard.

Basically, everything needed to one-up the iPhone, at least in theory and according to some people's tastes (although with a QWERTY keyboard it may end being thicker than the iBrick).

The price strategy is strange, however. TmoNews says that it will be available for $150 on the first week, going up to $250 and $400 after that, depending on the size. [NYT and TmoNews via Wired]


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Thursday, August 14, 2008

Intel Centrino Atom becomes Atom, Atom still Atom, you're confused

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/364697530/

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Oh good, another marketing-speak change-up tossed our way from Intel. Apparently, the Centrino Atom naming convention is no more, leaving the in-house branded Menlow chipset used in MIDs and UMPCs essentially nameless. Atom, as you may recall, is the name of the Silverthorn and Diamondville-class CPUs. Got it? Of course you don't. No worries, that's why you've got us. You just focus on trying to understand the difference between MIDs and UMPCs and netbooks and ultra-portables and we'll take care of the rest.
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Funai (Sylvania, Symphonic and Emerson) Will Sell HDTVs With Blu-rays In 'Em [HDTV]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/364150348/funai-sylvania-symphonic-and-emerson-will-sell-hdtvs-with-blu+rays-in-em

Funai, whose subsidiaries are more familiar to us as Sylvania, Symphonic and Emerson, is planning on selling LCD HDTVs with Blu-rays on-board starting summer 2009. The company's previous successes in recent years with combo units (TVs with VCRs and TVs with DVDs) totaled up 40% and 20% of their sales in the US respectively. So how much will this low-end brand charge you for the all-in-one experience? CrunchGear says the target price for a 42-inch will be between $1100 and $1300. Keep in mind that's a price for something launching a year from now. [CrunchGear]

Update: Funai also took over the Phlips TV brand in the US, which means you might be seeing this under their name as well.


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