Tuesday, April 09, 2013

These Tiny Chiplets Could Coat Nearly Anything in Digital Intelligence

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5994129/these-tiny-chiplets-could-coat-nearly-anything-in-digital-intelligence

These Tiny Chiplets Could Coat Nearly Anything in Digital IntelligenceImagine if silicon chips were smaller than a grain of sand and could be made using a laser printer: everything under the sun could be made unobtrusively smart. But that's not science fiction, and you don't have to imagine too hard—because researchers at Xerox's Palo Alto Research Center have already done it.

The New York Times reports on a new breed of tiny pieces of silicon called chiplets. From the Times:

With financing from the National Science Foundation and from Darpa, the Pentagon's Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, [PARC researchers] have designed a laser-printer-like machine that will precisely place tens or even hundreds of thousands of chiplets, each no larger than a grain of sand, on a surface in exactly the right location and in the right orientation.

The chiplets can be both microprocessors and computer memory as well as the other circuits needed to create complete computers. They can also be analog devices known as microelectromechanical systems, or MEMS, that perform tasks like sensing heat, pressure or motion.

Which all sounds great, but what exactly will they be used for? Well, brace yourself, because the researchers envisage being able to deposit the tiny chips within objects that are 3D-printed: essentially, they want to create everyday objects that have computing punch embedded in them from the get-go. The possibilities that offers up are so insanely wide and varied that it almost defies belief, but perhaps most excitingly it opens up the possibility of smearing technology—say, memory or storage—across the whole of a physical object, as opposed to in one small concentrated lump.

But let's not get carried away: the researchers openly admit that they're years away from simultaneously placing these kinds of chips consistently and accurately, so a world of smart 3D printed objects is still some way off. But at least we know it's possible. [New York Times]

Image by Amy Sullivan/PARC

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Samsung Is The Largest Smartphone Manufacturer In Europe

Source: https://intelligence.businessinsider.com/welcome

Samsung catapulted to the top of the European smartphone market last year, capitalizing on the tumbles of faltering rival Nokia, according to data from comScore.

Samsung accounted for 32 percent of all smartphones used in France, Germany, Italy, Spain, and the UK — up from its 18 percent share at year-end 2011. These five markets combined for 136 million active smartphones at the end of 2012, up from approximately 105 million a year prior.

Note that comScore tracks installed base market share, indicating that Samsung's share of shipments was likely much larger.

It appears that Samsung is eating up market share from onetime stalwart Nokia, which is in the middle of a rocky transition from its proprietary Symbian platform to Microsoft's Windows Phone. Nokia's share of the European smartphone market plummeted from 28 percent in December 2011 to 16 percent at the end of last year. The release of Windows Phone 8 in late October does not appear to have arrested its fall.    

Click here to view a larger version of this chart.

euro smartphone market share

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Intel looking to turbocharge its NUC with Core i5 and i7 CPUs, according to leak

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/04/09/intel-next-unit-of-computing-roadmap-leak-i7-i5/

Intel looking to turbocharge its NUC with Core i5 and i7 CPUs, according to leak

It looks like Intel's planning on bringing its Next Unit of Computing (NUC) mini-computer upmarket, if a leaked roadmap from ComputerBase.de is to be believed. The documents look highly tentative, but if they come to fruition then Intel will start offering new NUCs (code-named "Skull Canyon" and "Horse Canyon") with Intel Core i7-3537U and Core i5-3427U processors along with its current Core i3 model during the first half of the year. New motherboards would be used that alter the slot configurations substantially: the Thunderbolt connector would be dropped in favor of USB 3.0 -- three on the i7 model, one on the i5 -- with DisplayPort 1.1a added to each along with HDMI 1.4a connectors. There's no pricing yet, but we found that you'd need to nearly double the price of the original NUC to create a working computer, so bear that in mind when you're looking at the leaked slides after the break.

[Image credit: ComputerBase.de]

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Via: FanlessTech

Source: ComputerBase.de

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AU Optronics says it'll bring a 5-inch, 1080P OLED display to market soon

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/04/09/au-optronics-5-inch-FHD-OLED/

AU Optronics says it'll bring a 5inch 1080P OLED display to market soon

AU Optronics says it'll soon join Samsung at a table for two making 5-inch, full-HD OLED smartphone displays. It'll show off the technology at the China Optoelectronics Display expo starting tomorrow, promising 443 ppi, lower power consumption, fast response times and wide viewing angles. While others build 1,080 x 1,920 LCD screens for models like HTC's One, currently Samsung has a monopoly on OLEDs of that size and resolution. However, it likely wants to set those aside for its soon-to-ship 5-inch, 1080p Galaxy S 4 -- so, AU's announcement is likely good news for other handset makers seeking something punchier than LCD for that form factor.

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Via: Android Beat

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Eyes-on with Sony's brilliant 4K OLED monitor prototypes (video)

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/04/08/sony-4k-oled-prototypes/

DNP  Eyeson with Sony's 4K OLED monitor prototypes video

The 30- and 56-inch 4K OLED monitor prototypes that Sony introduced yesterday are sitting prominently in the company's booth here at NAB, and they're really quite something. These sets offer wider viewing angles and reduced color shift compared to previous-gen monitors, and Sony is emphasizing the technology's color accuracy. We got a taste of the 56-inch, 3,840 x 2,160 model back at CES, but it looks like we can extinguish all hopes of this monitor making it to the consumer market anytime soon. Instead, it will be available to professionals working with 4K content. Even though the prototype won't make it to our living room, we couldn't help but marvel at the image quality: to say that the footage of Carnivale popped off the screen would be an understatement -- colors were just that vibrant and details were incredibly lifelike.

Meanwhile, the 30-inch, 4,096 x 2,160 model is destined to hit the market sometime in 2014, and it's plenty striking itself. Like its larger sibling, the relatively petite model looked fantastic, with very sharp details and bright, vibrant colors. Sony wouldn't share pricing information -- heck, booth attendants wouldn't even let us get close enough to get a good shot of the monitor itself -- but we did manage to snag a clip of both panels in action. Granted, it's impossible to judge the quality from our compressed eyes-on video, but if you can't make it out to NAB, you'll just have to take us on our word that these really are quite stunning.< div>

Gallery: Sony prototype 4K OLED monitors eyes-on

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