Tuesday, April 13, 2010

HTC Incredible's Specs Leak, Show Snapdragon Android Phone With 8MP Camera [Android]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5515922/htc-incredibles-specs-leak-show-snapdragon-android-phone-with-8mp-camera

HTC Incredible's Specs Leak, Show Snapdragon Android Phone With 8MP CameraIt's one of the leakiest phones of the year, but it looks like BGR has the official specs, courtesy of a well-placed source at Verizon—rumored to be the exclusive carrier for this Android phone.

A 3.7-inch WVGA OLED capacitive screen, 1GHz Snapdragon QSG8650 processor and 8MP camera with autofocus and flash place it above both the Nexus One and HTC Desire, and by the looks of things, it'll come with Android 2.1 pre-loaded, slicked with HTC Sense over the top. GPS, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth—it's all there. I'm seriously excited about this handset. If you thought the Desire sounded good after reading my review, the Incredible could blow it out of the water.

But then...it's no Sprint Evo 4G, is it? [BGR]

Image Credit: AndroidAndMe

HTC Incredible's Specs Leak, Show Snapdragon Android Phone With 8MP Camera

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GE's LED light bulbs look cool, last forever, cost a lot

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2010/04/13/ges-led-light-bulbs-look-cool-last-forever-cost-a-lot/

GE's LED light bulbs look cool, last forever, cost a lot
Citizens of the Earth, you're looking at the lightbulb of the future. In the coming years and decades our lives won't be illuminated by simple spheres or coils of white. Oh no; future bulbs will have cool fins and flares that make them look almost worth the $40 to $50 we'll pay for the things. That's what GE plans to ask for its Energy Smart LED bulb when it ships sometime in the next 12 months, and while that is a lot compared to the exiting options, look at the benefits: GE's bulbs will last a whopping 17 years when used four hours a day, and they give off light in all directions -- not focused in one spot like previous designs. But, most importantly, they're very efficient, using nine watts to give off the equivalent amount of light of a 40 watt incandescent bulb. That's 10 percent less than a 40 watt equivalent CFL, and there's no mercury or other toxic goop involved here either. It's the future, folks. Start saving.

GE's LED light bulbs look cool, last forever, cost a lot originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 13 Apr 2010 09:27:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceGE Consumer Products  | Email this | Comments

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Intel adds Android to Moorestown compatibility list, wants to Atomize your smartphone

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2010/04/13/intel-adds-android-to-moorestown-compatibility-list-wants-to/

Alright, so this isn't the first time we've seen Android running on the x86 CPU architecture, but it's notable that Intel has ported the OS to run on its Atom CPUs with the specific aim of offering Android plus Atom smartphone combos. Such is the news that has emerged today at the Intel Developer Forum in Beijing, which means Intel loyalists will have a second option in the smartphone sphere, beyond the already known Moorestown-powered MeeGo handsets. It would seem that Chipzilla is taking the ARM threat to its home markets seriously, and is launching a counter-offensive in the mobile space. As to when that will happen, Intel's bigwigs are saying they're still "on track for introduction during the first half of this year," meaning we'll be seeing (or at least hearing about) the vanguard of its attack by the end of June.

Intel adds Android to Moorestown compatibility list, wants to Atomize your smartphone originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 13 Apr 2010 05:41:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Android Police  |  sourcePC World  | Email this | Comments

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Monday, April 12, 2010

Virus Helps Researchers Split Water into Hydrogen and Oxygen

Source: http://www.popsci.com/science/article/2010-04/virus-helps-researchers-split-water-hydrogen-and-oxygen

Viruses generally get a bad rap, but they can also be very helpful little machines. For instance, bacteriophages have been engineered to clear up infections that seemed otherwise untreatable, and genetic material from viruses has been used to ease biofuel production. Now a team at MIT is using a modified virus to assemble the biological nano-scaffolding necessary to split water into its constituent hydrogen and oxygen atoms.

Of course, other means to split water into hydrogen and oxygen exist, but none of them are as efficient or simple as the method plants use to oxidize water through photosynthesis, requiring energy from outside the system to carry the process to fruition. Meanwhile, efforts to extract the photosynthesizing components from plants for use in harnessing solar power have been largely unsuccessful.

So the MIT team decided to engineer a virus to imitate plants' oxidizing machinery by artificial means. Using a zinc porphyrin pigment and iridium oxide catalyst, the team was already able to mimic nature's own photosynthesizers, which are very efficient at flipping solar power into fuel for water-splitting reactions within plants. But for efficient water-splitting, those catalysts and pigments must be arranged in a very particular way.

Therein lies the team's innovation: an engineered bacterial virus known as M13 that serves as a sort of self-assembling biological scaffold, spacing the porphyrins and iridium such that oxygen production increases fourfold. The pigments capture sunlight and transfer that energy down the length of the virus the way a wire transfers electricity from one end to the other. That energy in turn powers the iridium reaction that splits the oxygen from the water.

The process still lacks a critical step: once the splitting is complete, the oxygen has been siphoned from the water but the hydrogen is left split into its component electrons and protons. The team is currently exploring other biomimicking systems that might reassemble those building blocks into usable, storable hydrogen atoms. An actual commercial process that produces hydrogen from water as efficiently as plants do is likely years away, but the MIT team hopes to have a working, self-sustaining device that can perform the entire water-splitting process in the lab within two years.

[MIT News]

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Site Speed Now a Factor in Google Rankings [Search]

Source: http://lifehacker.com/5514997/site-speed-now-a-factor-in-google-rankings

Site Speed Now a Factor in Google RankingsGoogle announced in an official blog post that, a few weeks back, they began considering site response speed in a web page's ranking in search results. Google has been all about speed for some time, but this subtle introduction could eventually mean big things for sites that put a priority on swift loading—and for those that don't seem to care at all. Right now, the speed ranking only effects fewer than one percent of search queries, Google reports, and only those in English through the Google.com page. [Official Google Blog via Search Engine Watch]

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