Tag Archive for 'Intel'

IT News - January 1-6, 2008

Updates on: Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, Wikia Search release, Lenovo computers enter US markets, Intel leaves One Laptop Per Child project, Netflix and LG team up on Internet-connected TV, Creative Commons dual-license option, the fight between HD DVD and Blu-ray format, San Francisco’s free wi-fi

More than 20,000 new gadgets and technologies from more than 2,700 companies will be on display at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) January 7-10 in Las Vegas. The round-up so far: robot toys by Wowwee; radio for the deaf project by National Public Radio, technology firm Harris Corporation and Towson University; wireless High-Definition Television (HDTV); and technology allowing users to control their homes remotely. — BBC News

Wikia Search, an open source search engine promising to offer transparency, will go public in rough form next week. Co-founder Jimmy Though Wales has expressed a fondness for Google but has also criticized the search engine and said he wants to encourage Web communities to produce something better. He believes search should be open, transparent, participatory, and democratic. — Information Week

441430573_80cae3d7ae_m.jpgChina’s Lenovo Group Ltd introduced its first consumer computers in the United States, expanding in a region it entered in 2005 with the purchase of IBM’s PC business. The unveiling of three new notebook computers with advanced features is part of a broader expansion by Lenovo into the global consumer PC market. The company also plans to sell the new consumer computers in France, Russia, South Africa, India, Australia, Singapore and Malaysia, among other markets. — Reuters

Citing “philosophical” differences, Intel has withdrawn its funding and technical help from the One Laptop Per Child (OLPC) project. Intel joined the OLPC in July 2007 and was widely expected to work on a version of the project’s laptop that used an Intel chip. Many expected this machine to be unveiled at the CES technology fair which opens in Las Vegas on January 5. The first versions of the OLPC or XO laptop were powered by a chip made by Intel’s arch-rival AMD. — BBC News

DVD-by-mail service Netflix Inc. will begin delivering movies and other programming directly to televisions later this year through a set-top box, made by LG Electronics, that will stream entertainment over a high-speed Internet connection. — CNN

The Creative Commons foundation recently released the CC+ protocol, which allows authors and other content makers to release their work for free (under the Creative Commons noncommercial license) and charge a fee for commercial use at the same time. CC+, an extension that may be applied to the existing Creative Commons license, is an option for those who wish to dual-license their work. — Campus Technology

Toshiba Corp has insisted that its HD DVD high-definition video format is far from dead despite being dealt a major setback by Warner Bros studio’s decision to exclusively back Sony Corp’s rival Blu-ray technology. Toshiba’s defiant remarks were the latest salvo in a long-running battle over which format will dominate the next generation of technology for delivering high-definition movies to consumers. The rivalry has been compared to the video-cassette-recorder format war of the late 1970s and early 1980s which ultimately Sony’s Betamax lost and JVC’s VHS won. — Reuters

san franciscoMeraki Networks‘ plan to cover San Francisco with free Wi-Fi, with residents’ help, could be a way around the political and business barriers some municipal wireless projects have run into. The startup, partly funded by Google, believes it will succeed where EarthLink and Google did not: Building Wi-Fi access throughout San Francisco at no cost to the city. It expects to finish by year’s end, filling the whole city with 1M bps (bit per second) coverage. — PC World

Games in the News - November 15, 2007

Update’s on: HP’s gaming unit, and EA’sĀ SimCity Societies

Hewlett-Packard ’s gaming unit is holding off on launching systems based on Intel ’s new Penryn processor, saying that while the 45 nm chip is reliable on Intel chipsets more work needed to be done for the CPU to work with Nvidia’s SLI. — ChannelWeb

Electronic Arts Inc. has shipped SimCity Societies, the newest edition of the top selling PC franchise, SimCity, to stores across North America, Asia, Australia and Europe today. A version of the game is also available for mobile platforms. In SimCity Societies, players construct not only the cities they desire, but mold their cultures, societal tendencies and environments as well. — Ad-hoc News

IT News - November 2, 2007

Updates on: Intel, iPhone, COBOL

Intel celebrates expanding opportunities for 1 million Chinese teachers, 100 million students. Intel expects that 10 million teachers worldwide will complete the training program by 2011. — News Wire

The introduction of such educational applications, coupled with the iPhone’s original design and the surge in the use of handheld computers and iPods in classrooms, has led some educators to explore whether iPhones can be effective classroom tools. — eSchool News

In higher education, COBOL–one of the oldest programming languages and second only to FORTRAN in comedic value–still has a future. According to a survey of CIOs by technology provider Micro Focus, more than 75 percent said they intend to recruit COBOL programmers over the next five years, but 73 percent said they’re having a hard time finding such programmers. — Campus Technology

IT News - November 1, 2007

Updates on: Ethernet Alliance, Intel, Microsoft, Oracle, Amazon, e-books and distance learning

Nine universities have joined the Ethernet Alliance, a group advocating the adoption of and research into Ethernet technologies, through the Ethernet Alliance University Program (EAUP). The Ethernet Alliance has also launched its first-annual White Paper Challenge Program through the EAUP. — Campus Technology

Intel Corp and Microsoft Corp are supplying Libya’s government with 150,000 rugged laptop computers that cost $200 to build and are designed to meet the needs of children in developing countries. Libya’s education ministry ordered the equipment in August and shipments began last month. — OLPC News

Intel is to provide 3,000 Classmate subnotebooks to Nigeria’s Federal Ministry of Education, building on the 250 already sent in a pilot project started a year ago. Announced by Intel Chairman Craig Barrett, the gift is part of a “digital inclusion project” that will also see Intel paying to train 150,000 new teachers in the populous African nation. — Wired News

Oracle announced the global availability of its new Oracle PartnerNetwork Competency Center tool. The Competency Center, found within the Oracle PartnerNetwork Portal and available free to Oracle PartnerNetwork members, is designed to help partners train more efficiently on Oracle products by generating a custom-designed curriculum based on partners’ performance and personal attributes. — CNN

Amazon had promised delivery of its keyboard-equipped electronic book reader, Kindle, during the second week of October. Now, those same people say that the company has pushed back that date and is aiming for a launch by the end of this year. — BITS Blog

Recent articles in the New York Times, Chicago Tribune, and now the Wall Street Journal have discussed e-books and printed books. Librarian Jeff Scott takes a thorough look at the history and attitudes related to e-books and hardcopy books, pointing out interesting points made in recent literature. — Gather No Dust Blog

The 95th anniversary of Dr. Herman DeVry’s portable movie projector, a technology that pioneered the concept of “visual distance learning,” highlights a timely paradigm shift in the use of technology to facilitate education. High school and college students today take for granted that much of what they learn in class is supplemented with educational tools found on the World Wide Web via the Internet. — ah hoc news

Conferences in the News – October 29, 2007

Updates on: Malaysia Higher Education Exhibition and Seminar , Global Education and Training Exhibition (GETEX) in Bahrain, and Intel World Ahead Program - Education Workshop

The Malaysia Higher Education Exhibition and Seminar which opened here Sunday hopes to enhance awareness on the educational opportunities in Malaysia among students in the Middle East, said Prof Datuk Dr Hassan Said, the director-general of Higher Education Department in the Ministry of Higher Education. He said that Malaysia has established a solid reputation as a premier destination catering to a diverse international student community. — Bernama

GETEX, the education and training exhibition launched in Bahrain, is committed to return in November next year on popular demand. More than 500 people turned up for a session on the opening day of Global Education and Training Exhibition, to check out opportunities at the three-day event, which has been marketing higher education at its shows in the UAE for 19 years.– Gulf Daily News

Educators, students and pedagogues today attended the Intel World Ahead Program - Education Workshop designed to promote the innovative and effective use of ICT in education. The workshop, held at the Dead Sea Marriott Resort & Spa on October 27th, presented a framework for analyzing policies in ICT, pedagogy, curriculum, assessment, teacher training, and school organization. — Newswire