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Friday, 29 January 2010

Nokia, Apple Win as Phone Sales Bounce Back

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Nokia and Apple were the big winners as the sale of mobile phones rebounded during the fourth quarter. Consumers, meanwhile, stand to get more choice and better value for money as competition heats up, especially in the smartphone segment.

A total of about 325.3 million units were shipped by vendors in the fourth quarter, compared to approximately 292.4 million units during the last three months of 2008, according to IDC.

Both Nokia and Apple expanded unit sales by about 17 percent, compared to the previous quarter. Apple said it sold 8.7 million iPhones, which is a new record.
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Apple's iPad and the Flash Clash

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Apple's iPad has been surrounded by debate since its debut this week. Now, the heavily hyped tablet is at the center of a controversy that's reaching the federal government.

This latest iPad beef isn't about the device's frequently mocked name or any surrounding trademark concerns; rather, it's about the iPad's apparent lack of Flash support. Product demos and statements from Adobe suggest the device is not Flash-friendly -- but Apple's promotional materials paint a very different picture.
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CPUs in 2010: Desktop and Mobile PC Forecast

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No one should be surprised that the big action in the CPU market this year will be in the mobile and low-power processor segments. Rapid growth in the power-saving all-in-one and small-form-factor desktop PC markets, continued strong demand for portable computers, and new usage models (digital photo and video editing, casual gaming, watching high-definition movies and so on) will all ignite demand for powerful new processors that consume less energy than previous generations did.
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Canon CanoScan LiDE200

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Canon's CanoScan LiDE 200 scanner from is a compact, USB bus-powered flatbed scanner. About the size, shape and color of a 15-inch MacBook Pro, the silver and black LiDE features rounded edges and measures just under 10 inches wide, 14.4 inches deep and 1.6-inches thick.

Offering 4800 dpi optical resolution and 48-bit color scans, the LiDE 200 can handle originals up 8.5 by 11.7 inches. It offers no transparency scanning capabilities.
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Apple's iPod Court Victory Upheld

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A federal appeals court on Wednesday upheld a lower court ruling that said Apple's iPod music players do not pose an unacceptable risk to users' hearing.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth District affirmed a 2008 decision by a California district court to dismiss a long-running lawsuit that claimed iPods endangered users' hearing. iPods, said the original 2006 lawsuit -- which eventually boasted three plaintiffs and sought class-action status -- were defective because they could play music at unsafe volumes above 115 decibels (dB).

The district court disagreed, saying that any dangers of hearing loss from playing music too loud were "obvious" and "unavoidable." The plaintiffs then appealed.
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Apple's iPad Event Broke the Internet

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We knew today's Apple tablet announcement was a big deal. We didn't know, however, that it was big enough to bring the Internet to a near-standstill.

While Steve Jobs was discussing the highly anticipated iPad, IT workers across the country were discussing how to get their servers back up and running. And this time, it wasn't just Twitter taking the nosedive.


Apple's iPad and the Internet
The virtual tremors began at the start of the iPad's world-changing debut, shortly after 10 a.m. PST. Twitter was already at a crawl by that point, with users complaining of missing and long-delayed tweets. Thus far, Twitter has only acknowledged the existence of the problem and said it is "investigating the source."

Next came Cover It Live. The software, used by numerous sites to power live-blogging of major events, melted down for about 20 minutes. PCWorld and Technologizer were among the sites relying on the platform for live coverage of the Apple gala.

"It's been a tough day for us and our customers," Cover It Live President Keith McSpurren tells me. "We've got smart people who generally try very hard to make this thing work, but we didn't even see the breadth and depth of today's coverage."


All Eyes on iPad
McSpurren estimates his service was slammed with nearly twice the traffic it's experienced on past events, including previous Apple announcements. That same surge may have been to blame for other more localized outages: Several sites using Cover It Live were themselves down during the iPad's revelation, McSpurren says -- some of them sites with recognizable names.

Both Engadget and Gizmodo, two of the Web's biggest tech blogs, were inaccessible during parts of the Apple event, according to user reports on Twitter and other places. Web broadcaster Leo Laporte's live audio stream of the event is also said to have crashed during the iPad's introduction.


And it wasn't just tech sites suffering: Some Internet service providers, such as the UK's Level1 Internet Services, told customers all the iPad attention was putting pretty much the entire Internet in a chokehold.

"Apple iPad launch still slowing down the Internet. Popular web sites are slow to load, and e-mails still taking longer to deliver," the company said in a support advisory.

iPad, iMad
The iPad-inspired user-written tweets may be the most telling of all. Some were sent in good humor; others seem to show an underlying resentment of Jobs and the "Apple fanboy" frenzy.

"I think the Internet is about to go down...going so slow. Thanks, Apple," wrote Twitter user nickbell79.

"Every site I look for latest news on the Apple event is running really slow," agreed user dbslone. "Waiting on the whole Internet to crash."

"S. Jobs and fanboys breaking the Internet...great!" OrantesM quipped.

So all in all, we got an iPad -- even if it damn near caused an iPocalypse. iDon't know about you, but iAm glad the day's almost over.

JR Raphael is a PCWorld contributing editor and the co-founder of eSarcasm. He has his own theories as to how the iPad will change the world.

Source PCWorld
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Tuesday, 22 December 2009

Broadcom's Crystal HD tech to liven up HD capabilities of N450-based netbooks

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NVIDIA's Ion technology may be hogging the limelight when it comes to netbook graphics, but Broadcom's no stranger to the space. After giving Acer's Aspire One HD playback capabilities that it could only dream of just months prior, the company's newly announced Crystal HD platform could provide Intel's Atom N450 with the multimedia boost it badly needs.
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