Computers

Can you hang on for just a few more months?
Can you hang on for just a few more months?
8 minutes ago
Amid security concerns over the cross-border takeover of Sprint Nextel by Softbank, the Tokyo-based company has agreed to give the U.S. federal government the right to approve a director it will nominate to Sprint’s board. Accordin...
Amid security concerns over the cross-border takeover of Sprint Nextel by Softbank, the Tokyo-based company has agreed to give the U.S. federal government the right to approve a director it will nominate to Sprint’s board. According to a report by the Wall Street Journal (spotted first by The Verge), the director, who will be one of 10 on the board, will be in charge of overseeing national security issues. He will ensure that Sprint complies with the agreement on network security that it is negotiating with federal agencies. On top of that, the U.S. government is also said to be seeking more concessions – including the right to oversee some of Sprint’s equipment purchases and a request to remove Chinese equipment from a Sprint affiliate’s network. The US government harbours concerns that a takeover by a foreign company could open the door to security issues via intrusion into its telecommunications networks, and is especially worried that Chinese companies such as Huawei and ZTE could provide telecom equipment that may threaten its safety. Softbank CEO Masayoshi Son had earlier told US House Intelligence Committee Chairman Mike Rogers that he would remove Huawei equipment in use by the affiliate, Clearwire Corp, the publication said. The step will reportedly cost up to $1 billion. Sprint is being courted by both Softbank and American satellite-TV provider DISH. Sprint last month said it had received a waiver from Softbank to start preliminary talks with DISH regarding it’s $25.5 billion bid. Image Credit: Yoshikazu Tsuno via AFP/Getty Images
18 minutes ago
Amazon has just announced that its Kindle Fire HD tablet – both the 7” and 8.9” HD display-sporting versions – are now available to customers in over 170 countries and regions around the world for pre-order through its flagsh...
Amazon has just announced that its Kindle Fire HD tablet – both the 7” and 8.9” HD display-sporting versions – are now available to customers in over 170 countries and regions around the world for pre-order through its flagship website. The devices will start shipping June 13, the company says. More specifically, the Kindle Fire HD 8.9” is available for preorder starting today for $284. The Kindle Fire HD 7” is also available for preorder, and retails for $214. Kindle Fire HD is available with 16 GB or 32 GB of on-device storage. Dave Limp, VP of Amazon Kindle, says in a statement: “Kindle Fire HD is the #1 best-selling item in the world for Amazon since its launch, and we’re thrilled to make it available to even more customers around the globe today. Not only does Kindle Fire feature advanced hardware, it’s also a service. When combined with our content ecosystem, great email and browsing and top-rated customer service, we hope people around the world will agree that Kindle Fire HD is the best tablet for an incredible price.” The content he speaks of encompasses millions of apps, games, magazines and e-books, including more than 300,000 books that are exclusive to Amazon’s Kindle Store. Image credit: Joe Klamar for AFP / Getty Images
19 minutes ago
Red hot payments startup Square is invading Asia after it announced that its service has launched in Japan, which becomes its third market worldwide in addition to the US and Canada. The company will be supported by Sumitomo Mitsui Card ...
Red hot payments startup Square is invading Asia after it announced that its service has launched in Japan, which becomes its third market worldwide in addition to the US and Canada. The company will be supported by Sumitomo Mitsui Card Corporation, the same firm that co-launched Visa in the country. Square has long been linked with a launch in Japan — TNW has heard whispers of an early-stage recruitment drive since December 2012 — and the expansion makes a lot of sense given the relative maturity of mobile payments among consumers in the country. It is by no means the he first overseas firm to launch a payment solution in Japan. Arch rival PayPal partnered with SoftBank back in 2011, creating a joint venture to manage its PayPal Here service. Jack Dorsey, Square CEO and co-founder, has had much success in Japan with Twitter, and he’s optimistic on continuing that with his other startup: I am honored to introduce Square to a country with a rich history of design, innovation and tradition. Square shares the same values and attention to detail in our products. Our tools are made to enable business owners to create a delightful, seamless experience for their customers. I look forward to Square assisting in Japan’s continued economic growth and entrepreneurship opportunities. The timing of the news is particularly interesting since it comes off the back of the departure of Vice President of Partnerships Alex Petrov and Vice President of International Alyssa Cutright who both left the company yesterday in a cloud of uncertainty. Cutright, actually departed in March, and had been responsible for the company’s first international expansion into Canada. The dismissal of Petrov was more bewildering since he was hired from PayPal at the beginning of May, and has left without actually starting at Square. Those departures hinted that Square may reign in any expansion plans it was considering, so today’s launch comes somewhat a surprise. Ever the advocate of his companies’ services, Dorsey — who earlier teased a significant news announcement via Twitter — posted a Vine to mark the occasion. More to follow
28 minutes ago
AMD is getting ready to take the low-power, mobile platform fight to Intel, pulling the wraps off of three major APU (AMD's term for a CPU) lines for devices ranging in size from small tablets to po...
AMD is getting ready to take the low-power, mobile platform fight to Intel, pulling the wraps off of three major APU (AMD's term for a CPU) lines for devices ranging in size from small tablets to po...
about 1 hour ago
Somehow or another, we missed covering the Richland APU launch. With AMD launching Kabini and Temash today and reiterating the features and parts in the Richland APU lineup, we felt it was a good time to quickly go over what Richland off...
Somehow or another, we missed covering the Richland APU launch. With AMD launching Kabini and Temash today and reiterating the features and parts in the Richland APU lineup, we felt it was a good time to quickly go over what Richland offers. Note that AMD is not yet announcing the desktop Richland parts, so we’re looking at the mobile offerings for now. Here’s the list of the Richland APU models, with three standard voltage parts and four LV/ULV offerings: Fundamentally, Richland is a tweaked version of last year’s Trinity APU, with slightly higher CPU and GPU clocks. There’s reportedly some tuning to help Richland reach higher Turbo Core speeds more often, but we have not yet tested a Richland APU so we’re not sure how much of an improvement we’ll see in the real world; we’ve heard 5-25%, depending on the specific application. The top performing A10-5757M model improves on performance offered by the A10-4600M, with the CPU core clocked at 2.5-3.5GHz and the GPU clocked at 600-720MHz. That gives the GPU a base clock that’s 103MHz higher than its Trinity predecessor, with a maximum clock that’s 34MHz higher. Meanwhile, the CPU cores have a base clock that’s 200MHz higher and a maximum Turbo clock that’s 300MHz higher. Depending on the task and the actual clock speeds of Trinity and Richland, the minimum performance increase should be at least 5% while maximum performance could increase by as much as 25%—all within the same 35W TDP. The next step down is the A8-5557M, taking over for the outgoing A8-4500M. As with Trinity, the A8 model gets cut to 256 Radeon cores, but the GPU clocks remain roughly the same as the above A10 (720MHz maximum, but a lower 554MHz base clock). On the CPU side, the A8-5557M is also clocked 200MHz higher on the base clock with a maximum Turbo Core 3.0 clock that’s 300MHz higher (2.1-3.1GHz). Again, depending on the task, the Richland A8 APU should be anywhere from 5% to perhaps as much as 25% faster than the Trinity A8 APU. The two low-voltage A8/A10 APUs feature a fully enabled GPU with 384 cores, and performance should be noticeably improved over the LV Trinity parts. The A10-5745M could be up to 50% faster than the previous A10-4655M (base GPU clock of 533 compared to 360), and maximum GPU clock is likewise a healthy 25% higher. The A8-5545M also has a base GPU clock increase of 40% compared to the A8-4555M with a maximum Turbo that’s 30% higher. The above pattern of moderately improved CPU clocks with larger improvements in GPU clocks continues with the remaining A6 and A4 offerings. Unlike the A8 and A10 models, the A4 and A6 models feature two CPU cores and 192 or 128 Radeon cores. All three models look to improve performance relative to Trinity by the same 5-25%, depending on what you’re doing. While the above improvements are generally impressive, at least on paper, it’s worth mention that Trinity in general had plenty of headroom, particularly on the GPU. Using MSI Afterburner for instance, I’ve been able to clock my Trinity prototype laptop at 750MHz on the GPU core and still run reliably. The limiting factor is often the cooling of the laptop rather than the silicon—not surprising considering the desktop APUs are basically the same chips at higher TDPs and significantly higher clocks. But regardless of headroom on Trinity, Richland brings better performance to all of the associated APUs. Several laptops with Richland APUs have already been announced, and we hope to have hardware for testing in the next month. As before, the associated slides from AMD’s presentation are available in the gallery below. Gallery: 2013 AMD Elite Performance APU Platform (Mobile Richland)
about 1 hour ago
Finding a taxi via a smartphone app may be highly convenient, but authorities in the Chinese city of Shenzhen are cracking down on such services, which it accuses of lacking standards and breaching regulations. According to a report on S...
Finding a taxi via a smartphone app may be highly convenient, but authorities in the Chinese city of Shenzhen are cracking down on such services, which it accuses of lacking standards and breaching regulations. According to a report on Sina Tech (via Tech in Asia), an internal memo issued by the Transport Commission of Shenzhen Municipality demands taxi companies to “immediately investigate their fleet of taxi drivers and warn those with taxi-finding apps on their mobile phones to stop using them. Those found to continue using the apps will be recorded for a practice of dishonesty and sent for evaluation.” The internal memo was dated April 28, the Sina Tech report says. The publication spoke to taxi drivers, who said that their companies have issued orders earlier this month to stop using the taxi-finding apps, if not risk punishment. The transport department has since responded to Sina Tech, saying that it is taking steps to regulate standards governing taxi-finding smartphone apps, and putting a stop now isn’t meant to discourage the use of  such services. If developers can refine their apps to meet the requirements of the transport department, it would “welcome the promotion and use of such software.” The internal memo had noted that the use of such apps could create instability in the taxi industry by allowing drivers to reject or choose their customers. Last month, it was reported that authorities in Beijing could be considering a foray into the taxi mobile app space for a unified platform that would work with private companies. The move by Shenzhen’s transport department is, however, currently posing a headache for app developers. One of them, based in Beijing with more than 4,000 users in Shenzhen, is said to have received a notice requesting that it stop promoting its service there. Image Credit: Mark Ralston via AFP/Getty Images
about 2 hours ago
Transcend is releasing a tiny mSATA SSD.
Transcend is releasing a tiny mSATA SSD.
about 2 hours ago
As the global PC market continues to spiral downwards, Lenovo, the world’s second-largest PC maker after HP, has reported solid earnings for its fourth fiscal quarter and full-year ended March 31, 2013. The Chinese multinational is...
As the global PC market continues to spiral downwards, Lenovo, the world’s second-largest PC maker after HP, has reported solid earnings for its fourth fiscal quarter and full-year ended March 31, 2013. The Chinese multinational is in fact boasting that, “despite a challenging macro-economic environment and ongoing PC industry transformation”, it has reached a record 15.5 percent PC market share for the full year. All in all, it has shipped 52.4 million PCs during the year. That has translated in record annual sales of $34 billion for the fiscal year, and $635 million in income after taxes (up 34 percent year-over-year). It also reported an estimate-beating 90 percent rise in quarterly profit. Notably, the company says in a statement that it will “enhance the profitability” of its core PC business but look to smart devices (tablets and smartphones) and enterprise hardware for future growth. Yang Yuanqing, Lenovo Chairman and CEO, notes: “Not only were we the fastest growing among all major PC players, with record market share, revenue and profitability, more importantly, our smartphone and tablet businesses saw dramatic growth. In fact, smartphone shipments were 3.7 times greater than last year globally and we are now number two in the China smartphone market. This has laid a solid foundation for the successful transformation of Lenovo into a PC Plus leader.” Also read: As expected, Dell reports miserable $0.21 per share profit on revenue of $14.1B in Q1 Hewlett-Packard misses street on low PC sales with Q2 revenue of $27.6B and $0.87 EPS Image credit: DIBYANGSHU SARKAR for AFP / Getty Images
about 2 hours ago
AMD has a bunch of APUs launching today, and while the only hardware we have on hand for testing right now consists of a Kabini laptop, we wanted to at least briefly discuss the two other APUs. Temash is essentially the same APU as Kabin...
AMD has a bunch of APUs launching today, and while the only hardware we have on hand for testing right now consists of a Kabini laptop, we wanted to at least briefly discuss the two other APUs. Temash is essentially the same APU as Kabini, only with a lower TDP target, which also means reduced clock speeds. Where Kabini is destined for ultraportable laptops and hybrid devices, or perhaps a larger tablet, Temash is very much targeted at “true” tablets. The Temash family currently consists of three APUs with three different TDPs: At the top of the product stack is the A6-1450, a true quad-core APU with a 1.4GHz maximum Turbo Core clock and a base 1.0GHz clock. It has an 8W TDP, and like all of the currently announced Kabini/Temash parts it features a GCN-based GPU with 128 Radeon cores. Clock speeds on both the CPU and GPU are lower than the A4-5000M Kabini we looked at today, but in the world of tablets the A6-1450 should prove quite formidable. What’s interesting (or perhaps “odd” is a better word) is that the A6-1450 has a lower TDP than the next APU, the A4-1250. The A4-1250 drops to a dual-core CPU and skips out on Turbo Core. With those two changes, one would expect it to consume less power than the A6 model, but it ends up with a 9W TDP. That could mean the A4-1250 is either die-harvested or, more likely, it’s from a part of the wafer that wasn’t able to reach the TDP/clock speed requirements to be in a lower power part. I’d guess that the 9W TDP also means it won’t have any issues with throttling, and some of the chips may never actually consume 9W. Whatever the case, performance is lower than the A6-1450 but TDP is up slightly. The final chip is the same configuration as the A4-1250, but the A4-1200 has a reduced GPU clock and it has a 3.9W TDP. This is the chip that will go up against the current fastest ARM SoCs like Apple’s A6 in the 4th generation iPad 4 and Qualcomm’s Krait. Based on what we’ve seen from Kabini, at 225MHz the A4-1200 should be roughly comparable to the A6 GPU, though Apple has of course been shipping for a while now whereas we’ve yet to see a Temash tablet. AMD provided the usual collection of marketing material, which we’ve included in the gallery below. Gallery: AMD’s 2013 Elite Mobility Platform, aka Temash
about 2 hours ago