Silicon chips get speed boost with a lead start

Posted by staff | Posted in 2010, AMP, Carbon, Free, GE, Gadgets, IR, Lead, Light, MIT, OU, Origin, Review, SILICON, SiliconChip, Technology, Travel, ad, ads, ally, app, atom, book, broken, car, chip, chips, circuit, content, court, ds, ea, ec, eco, email, engadget, ev, gi, graph, graphene, gsm, hspa, icon, ie, ig, im, ion, ips, korea, l, ma, media, men, move, online, os, performance, port, processor, processors, production, ps, reader, s, science, silicon chip, sound, speed, thin, time, track, ui, un, university, us, via, web, wp | Posted on 20-07-2010-05-2008

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In tennis, the materials of the tennis court affect the performance of the ball. Such is the case, on a much, much smaller scale, for electron movement across circuitry. Silicon chips give resistance that lowers the speed limit, while atom-thick sheets of carbon (a.k.a. graphene) have a special property whereby free electrons are almost weightless and can travel up to 0.003 times the speed of light — sounds great, but it’s hard to produce in bulk. Cut to Han Woong Yeom and Pohang University of Science and Technology in South Korea. His team has added a thin layer lead on a silicon chip, lowering the electron mass (and thus proportionally raising its speed) to 1/20th compared to standard silicon. Still a ways to go for graphene speeds — by a factor of three, according to Yeom — but it’s also more likely to mass production. Silicon chips get speed boost with a lead start originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 20 Jul 2010 08:46:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

Samsung’s Android-powered S-Pad tablet with 7-inch Super AMOLED in August?

Posted by staff | Posted in 2010, 3d, 3g, AMP, Computers, Data, Dock, GE, Gadgets, IR, ISP, KyoboBook, KyoboBooks, Live, MIT, OU, Origin, PLA, Power, SamsungApps, Smart, SuperAmoled, ad, ads, ally, amoled, android, app, apple, application, apps, ati, att, book, books, display, droid, ds, e-reader, ea, ec, email, engadget, ev, gi, google, gsm, hspa, ie, ig, im, ion, ipad, joojoo, kin, korea, kyobo, kyobo book, kyobo books, l, launch, led, ma, media, men, oled, os, pad, pc, phone, play, pre, price, project, ps, pub, push, que, ram, reader, rom, s, s-pad, s-project, samsung, samsung apps, sk telecom, slate, smartphone, smartphone os, sne-60k, store, sun, super amoled, table, tablet, umpc, us, usb, via, web, wifi, work, wp, xl | Posted on 04-05-2010-05-2008

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Know what’s hot like 2001? Tablet computers. Just like that a product category has been reborn and proven viable as a money making machine. Now the scramble is on to fill the void by companies big and small . Samsung, a big name in the UMPC debacle (that’s the Q1 to the right) with its own confirmed tablet ambitions , looks prepped to deliver product this summer if Korean pub Etnews is to be believed. First up, the OS: Android. Samsung’s so-called “S-Pad” (the tentative name spawned under its S-Project initiative) will display Google’s smartphone OS on a supposed 7-inch Super AMOLED display with WiFi and 3G data connectivity — the latter supplied by SK Telecom who will supposedly help distribute the device. It’ll also bring an iPad-esque USB dock and content from Kyobo books (Korea’s largest bookstore) and Samsung’s own Samsung Apps application store. If true, we should expect to see Samsung’s S-Pad launch in August. While no price has been given you can expect the cost to be exorbitant thanks to that extra large Super AMOLED display unless SK Telecom can push it down through ample subsidies. [Thanks, JH Yee] Samsung’s Android-powered S-Pad tablet with 7-inch Super AMOLED in August? originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 04 May 2010 01:53:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

LG Display set to triple OLED production capacity with $226m facility expansion

Posted by staff | Posted in 2010, 5-inch, Europe, GE, Gadgets, IR, ISP, LgDisplay, LgOled, Luxury, MIT, Mobile, OU, Origin, PLA, Screen, UltraThin, Video, activation, ad, ads, amoled, app, ati, book, capacity, display, displays, dre, ds, e-paper, ea, ec, eff, email, engadget, eu, ev, event, expansion, facilities, fusion, gi, gsm, hspa, ie, im, investment, ion, kin, korea, l, lcd, led, lg, lg display, lg oled, ma, manufacturing, map, maps, media, men, oled, os, ovi, play, pre, production, ps, reader, rom, s, samsung, solar, solar cell, solar cells, stream, sun, television, thin, tv, ui, us, via, web, wp, xpand | Posted on 22-04-2010-05-2008

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As usual with OLED displays , we’re taking one step forward only to find there are hundreds more to go. LG has today officially announced a new $226 million investment in its OLED production facilities, which will markedly expand its ability to churn out ultrathin canvases of wonder. The not so good news, however, is that this production line is still being built — with a planned activation in the third quarter of 2010 — and the effects of the new cash infusion will not be felt until the second half of next year. Should you have the patience to endure such protracted roadmaps, you should be seeing a lot more from LG in the mobile display space — where Samsung currently holds the technological lead with its Super AMOLED screens — as well as the luxury TV market that already counts the 15-inch 15EL9500 among its numbers. The Korean manufacturer describes OLED screens as one of its “new growth engines,” alongside e-paper and solar cells, so even if we may consider development slow, it’s looking increasingly likely that OLED TVs will eventually make their way into the mainstream. LG Display set to triple OLED production capacity with $226m facility expansion originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 22 Apr 2010 05:07:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

iriver introduces D1000 ‘e-dictionary’ for Korea

Posted by staff | Posted in 2010, ElectronicDictionary, GE, Gadgets, IR, IriverD1000, Live, MIT, OU, Screen, Storage, Touch, Tuner, Video, age, app, book, d1000, ds, e-dictionary, ec, electronic dictionary, engadget, ev, feature, features, gi, hd, ie, ion, iriver d1000, korea, l, led, ma, media, men, mod, os, pen, play, pre, reader, s, table, time, tv, us, wifi | Posted on 05-03-2010-05-2008

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So-called “e-dictionaries” don’t often make the trip over here, but iriver broke that trend with its D5 clamshell device, which suggests that it just might also do the same with its new D1000 follow-up. Of course, like its predecessor, this device is quite a bit more than just a dictionary, with it packing a 4.3-inch 480 x 272 touch screen, 8GB or 16GB of storage, built-in WiFi, a DMB TV tuner, 720p video output, and a full range of media player features. Happen to live in Korea or planning a trip sometime soon? Then you can pick this one up right now for between 349,000 and 409,000 Korean won depending on the model and capacity, or roughly between $300 and $360. iriver introduces D1000 ‘e-dictionary’ for Korea originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 05 Mar 2010 17:27:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

HP’s Singapore Lab to Develop Cloud Services Platform

Posted by staff | Posted in GE, Memory, OU, Shopping, Software, Storage, Test, amazon, application, ati, automation, car, create, enterprise, ev, feature, featured, flow, gi, hp, ion, korea, l, led, lens, ma, media, mid, os, pen, pin, pre, research, rom, s, security, ship, stb, telecommunications, university, us, verizon, worldwide | Posted on 24-02-2010-05-2008

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welcome to s.ourced.com Hewlett-Packard has opened a research lab in Singapore, where it will work on a software platform for delivering cloud-based computing services to enterprises, the company said Wednesday. The platform, called Cirious, will provide a way for service providers such as Vodafone and Verizon Business to offer hosted computing services that are secure and scalable enough for large corporate customers, said Prith Banerjee, HP senior vice president for research and the director of HP Labs worldwide. Cirious will include the ability for customers to move workloads outside their corporate firewalls and into a service provider’s data center when the customer needs additional computing capacity, he said. Therefore, one focus of the research will be security. “By design, you’re requiring enterprises to go from within the enterprise to outside the firewall. The particular issue of providing security within this mixed hybrid environment is very complex, and that’s what this research is about,” Banerjee told reporters during a briefing last week. Like other cloud platforms, Cirious will use virtualization extensively so that applications are untied from physical hardware and can be moved between servers — and between data centers — more freely. It is an architecture that is also being advanced by VMware and other vendors. In a follow-up e-mail, HP declined to say whether Cirious will be based on an existing hypervisor or use new virtualization technologies. Banerjee said it will use “virtual cells” that extend to all parts of the infrastructure. “We create a virtual abstraction layer, essentially running computations on processor cells, memory cells, networking cells and storage cells. And we provide that encapsulation in such a secure manner that you, as the end-user, don’t have to worry about the security. That is the key secret sauce,” he said. Cirious will allow service providers to offer infrastructure services, akin to Amazon.com’s EC2, and on-demand applications, like those from Salesforce.com. They could be general-purpose or tailored for industries such as health care, entertainment and telecommunications, Banerjee said. Service providers will be able to “develop, host and manage their services to deliver value from the cloud and to integrate with an ecosystem of services from other providers,” he said. Several questions remain, such as when Cirious will be ready for market, and to what extent it will use existing management and virtualization software from HP and other vendors. Cirious may compete with products from VMware, which has been pitching its new vSphere software as a way to link public and private data centers, and which says it has already signed up more than 1,000 service providers, including AT&T and Verizon Business, to offer cloud services based on its software. The Xen.org project announced a similar service-provider initiative last August, and HP was listed as one of its supporters. Industry analyst Dan Olds of Gabriel Consulting Group said Cirious might not be tied to one virtualization platform. “I would expect them to support whatever it is the service provider wants to use,” he said. HP’s focus on security is important, he said. “That, to my mind, is probably the biggest hurdle to cloud adoption in the enterprise today,” Olds said. Cirious will be developed in conjunction with HP’s Service Automation and Integration Lab in Palo Alto, California, and the Automated Infrastructure Lab in Bristol, England. Testing will be done via a network of data centers known as Open Cirrus, which was set up last year by HP, Intel and Yahoo to test cloud technologies. There are 10 data centers in the network (Carnegie Mellon University joined last week), each of which has as many as 4,000 x86 processor cores available for testing. They are as far apart as Russia, South Korea and the U.S. HP’s Singapore lab will be located in the high-rise Fusionopolis research complex. Banerjee wouldn’t say how much HP is investing there, but said it will be similar in scale to other HP labs. HP has appointed a director who is adding staff this year, he said. HP will also use the lab to test data center technologies being developed in Palo Alto. Singapore has one of the highest concentrations of data centers outside the U.S. It is hot and humid, land is expensive and natural resources are scarce — making it the least ideal place to run an efficient data center. “We think if we can make a services data center efficient here, then we can do it anywhere,” Banerjee said. The lab will test technologies for allocating work to a particular group of servers and then directing cool air to those servers only, he said. Cooling systems are one of the costliest parts of a data center, so effective airflow management can save a lot of money. “It’s a very ambitious project whose goal is to reduce total cost of ownership by 75 percent and carbon emissions by about 50 percent,” Banerjee said. Five Filters featured article: Chilcot Inquiry . Available tools: PDF Newspaper , Full Text RSS , Term Extraction .

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LG debuts T280 ultralight, X140, X200 netbooks

Posted by staff | Posted in 3d, 3g, Cebit2010, FCC, GE, Gadgets, Gaming, ISP, IUM, LgT280, LgX140, LgX200, Netbook, OU, ThinAndLight, atom, atom n450, att, cebit, cebit 2010, core 2 duo, culv, display, ev, gi, hard drive, hd, korea, laptop, laptops, lg, lg t280, lg x140, lg x200, ma, media, mod, msi, os, pen, play, price, reader, rom, t280, thin and light, ultralight, ultraportable, ulv, us, wind, x140, x200 | Posted on 24-02-2010-05-2008

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Well, it looks like MSI isn’t the only company churning out new systems in advance of CeBIT — LG has now also let out word of three new laptops and netbooks ahead of the big show. Leading the pack is the stylish, CULV-based T280 ultralight pictured above, which packs an 11.6-inch display, a choice of a 1.3GHz Pentium dual-core or Core 2 Duo processor, 2GB of RAM, a 320GB or 500GB hard drive, and a price ranging from $990 to $1,094. Joining it are the X140 and X200 netbooks, the latter of which actually looks to be identical to the X20 model we spotted at in the FCC’s hands earlier this month. Both of those will pack 1.66GHz Atom N450 processors, along with some other seemingly similar specs, but fairly different designs. Dive into the links below for a closer look. LG debuts T280 ultralight, X140, X200 netbooks originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 23 Feb 2010 19:16:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink    |  Electronista , Wayerless  |  Email this  |  Comments

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James Cameron sees Avatar on Blu-ray 3D in November, HDTV manufacturers mark their calendars

Posted by admin | Posted in 3d, 3dTv, AprilFools, Avatar, Blu-ray 3D, Blu-ray3d, Electronics, JamesCameron, Panasonic, Uncategorized, Video, blu ray, dvd, feature, ford, james cameron, korea, media | Posted on 19-02-2010-05-2008

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Fox has been slow to show its hand concerning the Avatar home video release schedule, but that didn’t stop director James Cameron from spilling assorted dates and SKUs in a Wall Street Journal interview. He’s pegged a standard DVD & Blu-ray release for April 22, with a special edition DVD and Blu-ray 3D version arriving in November. Considering how much electronics companies have invested in bringing 3D to market this year and specifically Panasonic’s push to make Avatar a box office smash the timing seems right on target. Whether you love the Na’Vi just a little or far, far too much , budgeting for a 3D related Black Friday upgrade to go along with blue body paint for Halloween is seeming like a more sensible option every day. James Cameron sees Avatar on Blu-ray 3D in November, HDTV manufacturers mark their calendars originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 18 Feb 2010 21:34:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink    |  Wall Street Journal  |  Email this  |  Comments

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Samsung’s sliding, handwriting-recognizing SNE-60K e-reader hits South Korea

Posted by admin | Posted in E-bookReader, EbookReader, HandwritingRecognition, SamsungSne-60k, Screen, Touch, Uncategorized, e-book, e-book reader, e-reader, ebook, ebook reader, ereader, handwriting recognition, korea, kyobo, samsung, samsung sne-60k, sne-60k, touchscreen | Posted on 17-02-2010-05-2008

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Well, here’s one e-reader that won’t have too much trouble standing out from the pack — not only does Samsung’s SNE-60K boast a 6-inch touchscreen with support for handwriting recognition, but it has a fairly unique slider design that hides some of the additional controls (no QWERTY keypad on this one, though). Otherwise, you can expect built-in WiFi and Bluetooth, MP3 support (no word on storage) and, judging from the icons on the screen, at least a few other basic applications. Still no indication of a release over here, but this one is now available at Kyobo Bookstores in South Korea for 429,000 won (or about $375). Samsung’s sliding, handwriting-recognizing SNE-60K e-reader hits South Korea originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 17 Feb 2010 18:49:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink    |  eReader-info  |  Email this  |  Comments

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Cyworld

Posted by admin | Posted in cyworld, korea, social networking | Posted on 10-11-2009-05-2008

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Cyworld (Hangul: 싸이월드) is a social networking website launched on Sep 1, 1999. Cyworld is a South Korean web community site operated by SK Communications (Hangul: SK커뮤니케이션즈), a subsidiary of SK Telecom (Hangul: SK텔레콤). Literally translated, “Cy” could mean “cyber”, but is also a play on the Korean word for relationship (Hangul: 사이 ‘between’), so it could also mean “relationship.” Cyworld, much like a virtual space in the internet, which users can decorate their “home” and invite friends.
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Members cultivate on- and off-line relationships by forming Ilchon (Hangul: 일촌, Hanja: 一寸) buddy relationships with each other through a service called “minihompy” (mini-homepage), which encompasses a photo gallery, video, message board, guestbook, friend list, and personal bulletin board. A user can link his/her minihompy to another user’s minihompy to form a buddy relationship. It is similar to U.S. based Facebook and MySpace websites. Reports show that as much as 90 percent of South Koreans in their 20s [1] and 25 percent of the total population of South Korea are registered users of Cyworld [2] , and as of September 2005, monthly unique visitors are about 20 million [3].

Korean Celebrities are also known to have their own Cyworld.

Today, cyworld has extended its operation to the United States, China, Japan, Taiwan, and Vietnam.

In 2007 Cyworld launched an international social & photosharing youth community called thephotodiary –

The Swedish version of the site called bilddagboken.se has already gained nearly six million users.

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