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    Hello all and welcome to NITN. Hovo and I are new to the blog scene and have lots to offer. I think its safe to say this site is still in ‘beta’ for the time being. However make sure you keep checking back because you never know what will pop up here. Most of my articles will likely revolve around PC, Wii, and XBOX360 related content. I guess I’ll throw some PS3 STUFF in there, but I’m not gonna lie…Not the biggest fan. I don’t condone piracy or anything like that, but I’ll also hook you up with links so you can all “test” the games out first. I’ll say no more on that topic…just check back for new content!! Same of course goes for Movies. I’ll put up some reviews, release dates, trailers, magic links ; )…the works. Anything interesting that comes my way will definately make it onto this blog at one point or another. Just keep an eye open and keep checking back!

Archive for the ‘Computers/ Internet’ Category

An Asus Eee PC that was launched at Computex Taipei, the world's second largest computer exhibition, in June.

The personal computer industry is poised to sell tens of millions of small, energy-efficient Internet-centric devices. Curiously, some of the biggest companies in the business consider this bad news.

In a tale of sales success breeding resentment, computer companies are wary of the new breed of computers because they sell for a low price that could threaten the PC makers’ already thin profit margins.

The new devices, often called netbooks, have scant built-in memory and are intended largely for surfing Web sites and checking e-mail accounts. The companies that pioneered the category, like Asus and Everex, both of Taiwan, are small, and so is the price. Some sell for as little as $300.

Despite their wariness of these slim machines, Dell and Acer, two of the biggest PC manufacturers, are not about to let the upstarts have this market to themselves. Hewlett-Packard, the world’s biggest PC maker, recently sidled into the market with a hybrid of a notebook and netbook that it calls the Mini-Note.

Several makers are taking the low-powered PCs one step further. In the coming months, they are expected to introduce “net-tops,” low-cost versions of desktop computers intended for Internet access. A Silicon Valley start-up called CherryPal says it will challenge the idea that high-powered machines are required to allow basic computing functions in the Internet age. It is bringing out a $300 desktop PC that is the size of a paperback and uses 2 watts of power, compared with the 100 watts of some desktops.

It wants to take advantage of “cloud computing,” in which data is managed and stored in distant servers, not on the actual machine.

Industry analysts say that the emergence of this new class of low-cost, cloud-centric machines could threaten titans like Microsoft, Intel, HP and Dell, because they have built their companies on the notion that consumers want more power and functions built into their next computer.

Some of the big computer companies put a positive spin on the low-cost machines, saying they welcome new categories. But they would just as soon this niche did not take off, given the relatively low profit margins.

“When I talk to PC vendors, the No. 1 question I get is, how do I compete with these netbooks when what we really want to do is sell PCs that cost a lot more money,” said J.P. Gownder, an analyst with Forrester Research.

Even as some PC vendors are jumping into the fray, others say they are resisting. Fujitsu, one of the world’s top 10 personal computer makers, said that it believes the low-cost netbook trend is a dangerous one for the bottom line.

“We’re sitting on the sidelines because even if this category takes off, and we get our piece of the pie, it doesn’t add up,” said Paul Moore, senior director of mobile product management for Fujitsu. “It’s a product that essentially has no margin.”

Stan Glasgow, chief executive of Sony Electronics, said, “We are not looking at competing with Asus.” But he said the company was investigating what consumers wanted in a second PC.

It is a market that caught the major computer companies - both hardware and software - by surprise after Asus brought out the $300 Eee PC. The company thought it would be used primarily in education, or as a starter laptop for adolescents, but the interest has turned out to be broader.

With an emphasis on Internet-based applications like Google Docs, the Linux-based Eee PC sold out its 350,000 global inventory. It has been in short supply ever since, said Jackie Hsu, president of the American division of Asus. Everex has sold around 20,000 of its CloudBook, which sells for about $350.

The sales are a veritable drop in the bucket compared with the 271 million desktop and laptop PCs shipped globally last year.

But IDC, a research firm, predicts that the category could grow from fewer than 500,000 in 2007 to nine million in 2012 as the market for second computers expands in developed economies.

Intel, meanwhile, is projecting that by 2011, the market for the netbooks will be 40 million units a year, which is why it is jumping in with low-powered chips for netbooks and  net-tops.

Intel’s new Atom chip is competing against upstarts including Via, a Taiwanese company that has a chip called the C7. The C7 is showing up in netbooks and is being used in the Everex models and in HP’s $500 Mini-Note.

William Calder, an Intel spokesman, said that the cost of the Atom for PC makers was around $44, compared with $100 for a state-of-the-art chip. Intel executives think the market for low-cost PCs is too big to pass up, he said, though it raised a potential threat to more powerful and more profitable computing lines.

source: International Herald Tribune

On July 23 Livescribe Inc. announced its national retail rollout for the Pulse™ smartpen, with availability at Target, Target.com, Amazon.com, and major college and university bookstores supported by The Douglas Stewart Company.

“Our partnerships with Target, Amazon, and Douglas Stewart will greatly expand the availability of Pulse smartpens and accessories to consumers across the country,” said Byron Connell, chief marketing officer at Livescribe. “At Target stores, consumers will be able to see the Pulse smartpen first hand and learn more about its capabilities through an interactive video demonstration.”

Pulse SmartPen

the SmartPen will be available July 1st and will sell for 1 gb/$149 US and 2 gb/$199 US.

If you want to buy the Pulse SmartPen please click here.
If you want to check the videos please visit http://www.livescribe.com/smartpen/videos.html

Pulse SmartPen Technical Specs:

Product Design Sleek ergonomic design with anodized aluminum housingCharcoal blue with silver band & black accents
Processor Samsung ARM 9 (32-bit, 150 MHz)
Screen 96×18 OLED Display
Camera High speed infrared camera (over 70 images/sec)
Storage 1GB NAND (over 100 hours recording time)*2GB NAND (over 200 hours recording time)**Actual recording time varies by audio quality setting.
Battery 300 mAH rechargeable lithium (non-removable)
Audio - Record Dual (embedded) smartpen
microphones - mono recording3-D Recording Headset - binaural or stereo recording
Audio - Playback Embedded speakerAudio jack (2.5mm) for 3-D Recording Headset
Computer Connectivity USB mobile charging cradle
Size & Weight Length: 155mm (6.1 in.)Width: 14mm or 0.55 in. (bottom) to 16mm or 0.63 in. (top)Weight: 36 Grams (1.3 oz.)

Intel's second generation Classmate PCIntel unveiled a new design of the Intel-powered classmate PC at the Intel Developer Forum in Shanghai. The second-generation Intel-powered classmate PCs have wireless capability, longer battery life, water resistant keyboards and are more shock resistant if dropped. Intel is calling this category of PCs “netbooks.”

source: DigiTimes

Google TiSP (BETA) is a fully functional, end-to-end system that provides in-home wireless access by connecting your commode-based TiSP wireless router to one of thousands of TiSP Access Nodes via fiber-optic cable strung through your local municipal sewage lines.

Google TiSP

source: Google 

Asustek Splendid HD1 video enhance cardAsustek Computer has announced its Splendid HD1 video enhancement card, which is able to increase picture quality for HD content to deliver sharper, more vividly colored visual outputs. It can also enhance lower-resolution inputs by recovering image clarity when viewing legacy content for viewing on LCD TV or monitors as well as provide true HDMI with audio and HDCP.

The Splendid HD1 is able to automatically select the best possible display modes to deliver exceptional quality visuals in photos, video and games, according to Asustek.

source: DigiTimes

Google gave U.S. regulators a proposal Monday seeking permission to use the airwaves between television broadcast channels for mobile broadband services.In comments filed with the Federal Communications Commission, Google said it would propose an enhanced system to prevent wireless devices operating in the so-called “white space” between channels from interfering with adjacent channels and wireless microphones.

Google said the enhancements “will eliminate any remaining legitimate concerns about the merits of using the white space for unlicensed personal/portable devices.”

The FCC is currently testing equipment to see if it can make use of the spectrum between channels without interfering with television broadcasts.

The filing came less than two weeks after Bill Gates, the co-founder of Microsoft, urged the commission to free up the spectrum so it could be used to expand access to wireless broadband services using Wi-Fi technology.

Google and Microsoft are part of a coalition of technology companies that has been lobbying the commission to allow unlicensed use of the airwaves between television channels. The group, called the White Space Coalition, also includes Dell, Intel, Hewlett-Packard and the North American unit of Philips Electronics.

Together, the companies want access to a new group of users, which would expand their market.

But U.S. broadcasters and makers of wireless microphones oppose the idea, fearing that devices would cause interference if used on adjacent airwaves.

A proposal being studied by the FCC would create two classes of users for the airwaves: one for low-power, portable devices for personal use, and a second for commercial operations.

The proposal would require that the devices include technology to identify unused frequencies and avoid interference.

“Google is a strong believer in the potential of this spectrum to bring Internet access to more Americans,” Rick Whitt, counsel for the company, said Monday.

source: Herald Tribune

Although Google has been talking about video advertising since May of last year, it has only now decided to introduce the service to its AdSense program.

After a long review period, Google has decided to use the solution the company is already using for advertising on YouTube called InVideo. With InVideo, ads are shown taking up a position on the lower edge of the video that is playing. The ads shown are either animated with images or just text overlay advertisements. Clicking on an ad will either take you to another webpage or open up a new advertisement video as an overlay on the video you are watching.

The service will be known as AdSense for video and is currently in beta. Website owners can choose to include the advertising on videos they already have or sign up to have videos supplied to their site that include advertising. Google sees this as a way of adding extra content to your site as well as earning you revenue from advertising.

So far, Google has signed up 20 major customers for the service, including the advertising agency YuMe Networks and Brightcove, which counts Time Warner on its customer list.

Read more at Reuters .

Nvidia APX 2500 applications processor (720 p HD)Nvidia has introduced the APX 2500 applications processor which enables Windows Mobile phones with 3D user interfaces and high-definition video. The APX 2500 delivers 10 hours of 720p HD playback, as well as HD camcorder and ultra-high-resolution photo imaging capabilities, the company highlighted.

Nvidia claims the APX 2500 boasts the industry’s first HD (720p) playback and capture capability for handheld devices enabling over 10 hours of high-definition video playback and up to 100 hours of audio.

source: DigiTimes

Yahoo!

Yahoo on Monday rejected a $44.6 billion takeover offer from Microsoft as too low, setting up a potential showdown with the software maker.After a 10-day review, the board decided the $31-per-share offer “substantially undervalues” Yahoo, the Sunnyvale, California-based company said in a statement.

The Yahoo chief executive, Jerry Yang, will seek to persuade shareholders that he can win a higher bid or craft a plan to reignite growth in online advertising sales. The market may double by 2011, but Yahoo has lost out to Google and social networking sites like MySpace and Facebook.

“Yahoo thinks they’re worth more because of the plans they’ve implemented that have yet to come to fruition,” said Daniel Taylor, an analyst at the Boston-based research firm Yankee Group. “The board is saying, ‘We think we can keep the company together and do far better with it than Microsoft ever will.’ ”

The rejection leaves Microsoft weighing whether to raise the price, give up, or take the offer straight to shareholders.

Yahoo shares have climbed above the value of the cash-and-stock bid, showing shareholders expect a higher price. Microsoft plans to let investors choose cash or stock, at a ratio that will end up being about 50-50.

Microsoft’s offer was originally worth $31 a share. Microsoft shares have declined since the bid, lowering the value of the stock portion and pushing the total value of the deal to about $29.08 a share as of last week.

A UBS analyst, Heather Bellini, the top-ranked software analyst by Institutional Investor, said last week that Microsoft may have to bid $34 to $37 a share.

Yang has resisted letting go of the company he co-founded in 1995 as a graduate student at Stanford University. He replaced Terry Semel as chief executive in June and planned to craft a strategy to revitalize Yahoo. An upgraded search engine, new mobile phone software and plans to win sales in social networking have yet to gain investor confidence.

Yahoo posted eight straight quarters of profit declines and spent years trying to catch up with Google in Web queries and the lucrative market for ads linked to search results.

Microsoft may not be ready to give up. Together, Microsoft and Yahoo would control more than a quarter of the market for animated ads and colorful display banners at the top of Web pages. Google has not made much progress there, giving the combined company a way to challenge Google and start going after emerging markets such as mobile-phone ads.

To fend off Microsoft, Yahoo might seek help from rivals, soliciting other bids or seeking partnerships with News Corp., owner of MySpace, or Google, according to analysts including Clayton Moran of Stanford Group.

source: Herald Tribune

Dell Latitude D830This configuration of the Dell Latitude D830 is a 6-pound, general-purpose notebook computer. Compared to other mainstream consumer notebooks on the market, it is very inexpensive at around $940. Has Wi-Fi (wireless connectivity) built-in.

specs:

  • Platform Technology: Intel Centrino Duo
  • Built-in Devices: Stereo speakers, Wireless LAN antenna
  • Embedded Security: Trusted Platform Module (TPM 1.2) Security Chip , Fingerprint reader
  • Width: 14.2 in Depth: 10.4 in Height: 1.4 in Weight: 6 lbs
  • Screen type: Wide-screen Wireless capabilities: 802.11a, 802.11b, 802.11g
  • Processor: Intel Core 2 Duo T7250 / 2.00 GHz Data bus speed: 800 MHz
  • Chipset type: Mobile Intel GM965 Express
  • Cache Memory: Type L2 cache Cache size: 2 MB
  • RAM: Installed Size 512 MB / 4 GB (max) Technology: DDR2 SDRAM - 667 MHz
  • Storage controller type: Serial ATA/IDE Hard Drive: 80 GB - Serial ATA-150 - 7200
  • Optical Storage: CD-RW/DVD - Plug-in module | CD / DVD read speed | 24X CD / DVD write speed | 24x (CD) / 8x (DVD±R) | CD / DVD rewrite speed | 10x (CD) / 6x (DVD-RW) / 8x (DVD+RW)
  • Display Type: 15.4 TFT active matrix Max Resolution: 1920 x 1200 ( WUXGA )
  • Graphics Processor / Vendor: Intel Graphics Media Accelerator X3100
  • Video Memory: Dynamic Video Memory Technology 4.0 Max Allocated RAM Size: 256 MB
    High Definition Audio | Multimedia Functionality
  • Input Devices: Input device type | Keyboard, Touchpad | Keyboard localization and layout | Modem | Fax / modem
  • Wireless NIC: Intel PRO/Wireless 3945ABG
  • Data link protocol: Ethernet, IEEE 802.11a, IEEE 802.11b, IEEE 802.11g, Fast Ethernet, Gigabit Ethernet
  • Networking standards: IEEE 802.11a, IEEE 802.11b, IEEE 802.11g

Expansion Slots Total (Free) | 2 ( 0 ) x Memory, 1 ( 1 ) x PC Card - Type I/II, 1 ( 1 ) x ExpressCard/54

  • Interfaces: 1 x Display / video - S-video output, 1 x Display / video - VGA - 15 pin HD D-Sub (HD-15), 1 x Audio - Line-out/headphones - Mini-phone stereo 3.5 mm, 4 x Hi-Speed USB - 4 pin USB Type A, 1 x Serial - RS-232 - 9 pin D-Sub (DB-9), 1 x IEEE 1394 (FireWire), 1 x Modem - Phone line - RJ-11, 1 x Network - Ethernet 10Base-T/100Base-TX/1000Base-T - RJ-45, 1 x Docking / port replicator
  • Battery: 6-cell Lithium ion Battery capacity: 53 Wh
  • OS Provided: Microsoft Windows XP Home Edition, SP2, with media
  • Software: Cyberlink PowerDVD, Drivers & Utilities, McAfee SecurityCenter (15 months subscription)

Just like rogue employees in the 1990s forced instant messaging into corporations, the new Google Apps Team Edition being launched on Thursday offers a way for workers to slip a hosted apps service into the enterprise.

This could help Google in its efforts to lure more people off desktop applications sold by Microsoft and onto the mostly free Web-based apps Google offers.

Google Apps Team Edition is a free service that lets people within the same e-mail domain collaborate easily with Google Apps, a package that includes Docs, Calendar, Talk, and Start Page.

Unlike IM applications, which open communication to anyone on the Web using a compatible IM app, Google Apps Team Edition lets you share with people only in your same organization.

Google’s stand-alone hosted apps for consumers haven’t really made a splash in the corporate world, largely because of the security threats posed by how easy they make it to share sensitive work data with people outside the company.

So Google created Google Apps, a free Standard Edition and a Premier Edition that has a fee. These editions give an administrator control over how the apps are used, allowing for services to be disabled, new services like Gmail to be added, and integration with apps for things like single sign-on. Google offers security and government regulation compliance services for those editions 9789901 through its Postini acquisition.

“People are already using the consumer (hosted Google) apps in the workplace, like they did IM a decade ago,” said Jeremy Milo, senior marketing manager for Google Apps. “We’re trying to bring more security by introducing the notion of domain awareness.”

google aps

The Team Edition offers a compromise for workers who want to use the apps in a company that isn’t already using Google Apps or if the company lacks an IT administrator. An administrator can always step in and switch from Team Edition to Standard or Premier if they want. And a new domain can be acquired through the Standard Edition for $10 for those who need a uniform e-mail domain.

With Team Edition anyone can open an account and start using the apps with anyone within the organization. For instance, a group working on a team project could use Google Apps Team Edition and be able to access the shared documents from any computer over the Internet.

“Google Apps Team Edition is another on ramp” to Web-hosted apps, Milo said. “They are one more way for businesses to get comfortable with computing in the cloud and anywhere, any time access to critical information.”

source: CNet

Microsoft wants to buy yahoo SAN FRANCISCO - Microsoft Corp. has pounced on slumping Internet icon Yahoo Inc. with an unsolicited takeover offer of $44.6 billion in its boldest bid yet to challenge Google Inc.’s dominance of the lucrative online search and advertising markets. The Justice Department says it is interested in reviewing antitrust issues associated with it.

The surprise offer of $31 per share, made late Thursday and announced Friday, seizes on Yahoo’s weakness while Microsoft tries to muscle up in a high-stakes battle with Google likely to define the technology landscape for years to come.

In a statement Friday, Yahoo said it will “carefully and promptly” study Microsoft’s bid.

With its profits steadily sliding, Yahoo’s stock slipped to a four-year low earlier this week and a new management team has been trying to steer a turnaround but sees more turbulence through 2008.

The announcement lifted Yahoo’s share price by almost 50 percent in morning trading, while Google fell almost 8 percent, dragged down by a fourth-quarter earnings report that missed Wall Street expectations.

In conference call Friday morning, Microsoft Chief Executive Steve Ballmer indicated he won’t take no for an answer after Yahoo rebuffed takeover overtures a year ago.

“This is a decision we have — and I have — thought long and hard about,” Ballmer said. “We are confident it’s the right path for Microsoft and Yahoo.”

To underscore its resolve, Microsoft is offering a 62 percent premium to Yahoo’s closing stock price Thursday. If the deal is consummated, it would be by far the largest acquisition in Microsoft’s history, eclipsing last year’s $6 billion purchase of online ad service aQuantive.

Since reaching a 52-week high of $34.08 in October, Yahoo shares have fallen 46 percent. Yahoo climbed $9.41 a share, or 49 percent, to $28.59 in morning trading. Microsoft shares fell $1.43, or 4.4 percent, to $31.17.

Microsoft publicly disclosed its cash-and-stock offer in hopes of rallying support from Yahoo’s shareholders, making it more difficult for Yahoo’s board to turn down the bid.

In a letter released Friday, Ballmer pointedly noted Yahoo’s financial performance has deteriorated since Microsoft was spurned a year ago. At that time, Ballmer said he was told Yahoo believed it was better off on its own.

“A year has gone by, and the competitive situation has not improved,” Ballmer wrote in his letter.

Microsoft’s previous offer was rebuffed by Terry Semel, who stepped aside last year as chief executive under shareholder pressure.

Microsoft sent its latest takeover offer to Yahoo late Thursday, shortly after Semel resigned as the company’s chairman. The letter is addressed to Semel’s successors, new Chairman Roy Bostock and the current CEO, co-founder Jerry Yang, who is one of Yahoo’s largest shareholders.

In a prepared statement, Yahoo said its board “will evaluate this proposal carefully and promptly in the context of Yahoo’s strategic plans and pursue the best course of action to maximize long-term value for shareholders.”

Microsoft views Yahoo as its best chance to thwart Google, which has leveraged its leadership in Internet search and advertising to emerge as an increasingly serious threat to the world’s largest software maker’s persuasive influence on how people interact with computers.

Google already controls nearly 60 percent of the U.S. search market, and has been widening its lead, despite concerted efforts by both second-place Yahoo and third-place Microsoft. By combining, Microsoft and Yahoo would have a 33 percent share of the U.S. search market, according to the latest data from comScore Media Metrix.

By joining forces, Microsoft and Yahoo also would widen their narrowing advantage over Google in providing free e-mail accounts — a service that helps foster more loyalty with users and create more advertising opportunities.

Advertisers around the world are expected to double their spending on the Internet during the next three years as more people get their news and entertainment on the Web instead of television, radio, newspapers and magazine. The trend is expected to create an $80 billion online ad market in 2010, up from an estimated $40 billion last year.

Despite an aggressive push in recent years, Microsoft’s online advertising expansion hasn’t paid off. Last week, the Redmond, Wash.-based company reported a 79 percent jump in its overall profit, but its online division’s loss widened to $245 million.

And Yahoo has been struggling to attract more advertising even though its Web site attracts one of the biggest audiences. The Sunnyvale-based company’s profit has declined for five consecutive quarters, prompting plans to cut 1,000 jobs later this month, a 7 percent reduction of its 14,300-employee work force.

Besides helping to boost its online ad revenue, Microsoft believes it could mine more profit from Yahoo by jettisoning workers and eliminating overlapping operations.

Microsoft said it sees at least $1 billion in cost savings if it buys Yahoo. Microsoft executives deflected questions about how many jobs might be lost, but the company emphasized retention packages will be offered to Yahoo engineers and other key employees, including some executives.

The fate of Yahoo’s brand also is unclear if Microsoft takes over. Both Ballmer and Kevin Johnson, president of Microsoft’s platforms and services division, hailed Yahoo’s strong brand value but didn’t commit to keeping the name alive.

___

AP Business Writer Jennifer Malloy in New York and AP Business Writer Jessica Mintz in Seattle contributed to this story.

source: Yahoo! News

For years, scientists have been trying to teach computers how to see like humans, and recent research has seemed to show computers making progress in recognizing visual objects. A new MIT study, however, cautions that this apparent success may be misleading because the tests being used are inadvertently stacked in favor of computers.

Computer vision is important for applications ranging from “intelligent” cars to visual prosthetics for the blind. Recent computational models show apparently impressive progress, boasting 60-percent success rates in classifying natural photographic image sets. These include the widely used Caltech101 database, intended to test computer vision algorithms against the variety of images seen in the real world.

However, James DiCarlo, a neuroscientist in the McGovern Institute for Brain Research at MIT, graduate student Nicolas Pinto and David Cox of the Rowland Harvard Institute argue that these image sets have design flaws that enable computers to succeed where they would fail with more authentically varied images. For example, photographers tend to center objects in a frame and to prefer certain views and contexts. The visual system, by contrast, encounters objects in a much broader range of conditions.

The human brain easily recognizes that these cars are all the same object, but the variations in the car’s size, orientation and position are a challenge for computer-vision algorithms. (Credit: Nicolas Pinto)

“The ease with which we recognize visual objects belies the computational difficulty of this feat,” explains DiCarlo, senior author of the study in the online Jan. 25 PLoS Computational Biology. “The core challenge is image variation. Any given object can cast innumerable images onto the retina depending on its position, distance, orientation, lighting and background.”

The team exposed the flaws in current tests of computer object recognition by using a simple “toy” computer model inspired by the earliest steps in the brain’s visual pathway. Artificial neurons with properties resembling those in the brain’s primary visual cortex analyze each point in the image and capture low-level information about the position and orientation of line boundaries. The model lacks the more sophisticated analysis that happens in later stages of visual processing to extract information about higher-level features of the visual scene such as shapes, surfaces or spaces between objects.

The researchers intended this model as a straw man, expecting it to fail as a way to establish a baseline. When they tested it on the Caltech101 images, however, the model did surprisingly well, with performance similar or better than five state-of-the-art object-recognition systems.

How could that be” “We suspected that the supposedly natural images in current computer vision tests do not really engage the central problem of variability, and that our intuitions about what makes objects hard or easy to recognize are incorrect,” Pinto explains.

To test this idea, the authors designed a more carefully controlled test. Using just two categories-planes and cars-they introduced variations in position, size and orientation that better reflect the range of variation in the real world.

“With only two types of objects to distinguish, this test should have been easier for the ‘toy’ computer model, but it proved harder,” Cox says. The team’s conclusion: “Our model did well on the Caltech101 image set not because it is a good model but because the ‘natural’ images fail to adequately capture real-world variability.”

As a result, the researchers argue for revamping the current standards and images used by the computer-vision community to compare models and measure progress. Before computers can approach the performance of the human brain, they say, scientists must better understand why the task of object recognition is so difficult and the brain’s abilities are so impressive.

This study was supported by the National Eye Institute, The Pew Charitable Trust and The McKnight Foundation.

Adapted from materials provided by Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

source: Science Daily

The Microsoft operating system is improved by the soon-to-arrive service pack, but Windows Vista still is missing some features we’d like to see.

With dissatisfaction over the Vista operating system persistent, can Microsoft right the OS’s wrongs with its upcoming Vista service pack?Microsoft made the latest beta of Vista SP1 available to the public earlier this month, and after informally testing it for a couple of days, I find my PC is working more reliably–and some tasks especially file copying, take less time. But I was hoping for more out of SP1, such as bigger system performance gains and fixes for Vista annoyances including the oft-criticized User Account Control feature.And if you are waiting for major improvements to switch to Vista, you’d better hope that Microsoft’s SP1 development team goes into overdrive before the service pack’s official release and gives you more compelling reasons to make the jump to the OS. Vista undergoes no major overhaul with the SP1 release I looked at.By the way, Microsoft has said SP1 will ship sometime in the first quarter; sources recently said SP1 would appear in the next few weeks.Key features in Vista Service Pack 1 Release Candidate Refresh (the downloadable beta’s official name) include improved reliability, security, and performance. In its description of SP1, Microsoft notes many tweaks are buried deep in the shell of the OS and include hard-to-quantify improvements–for example, support for a couple of emerging standards–Extensible Firmware Interface (EFI) and Extended File Allocation Table (exFAT)–and better compatibility with third-party software and PC peripherals.

SP1 Boosts Reliability, Security, and Performance

Vista Service Pack 1On the reliability front, Microsoft says SP1 reduces the time it takes to boot and power down a Vista PC as well as the time it takes a PC to wake from hibernation mode, or to snap back after a photo screen saver has been running. Also fixed is the occasional 10-second delay between pressing CTRL-ALT-DEL at boot up and the appearance of the password prompt.

Other fixes address the mysterious problem of how browsing network files eats up more network bandwidth than expected, compared to earlier version of Windows.

And lastly, Microsoft says it has devoted considerable effort to improving file and folder management. SP1 claims to cut the time it takes to extract files to and from a compressed (zipped) folder - but won’t say by how much.

However Microsoft does make some specific claims about performance gains. It says the service pack reduces by 45 percent the time it takes to copy files from a remote non-Windows Vista system to a SP1 system. A 50 percent gain is seen, Microsoft says, when copying files from a remote SP1 system over a LAN to a local SP1 system.

Microsoft’s TechNet has a full list of notable changes in Windows Vista SP1.

source: PC World

Samsung's 5-megapixel camera phone, the G808Samsung Electronics aims to ship 50 million handsets with a unit price tag of above US$200 in 2008, accounting for 25% of the company’s shipment goal of 200 million handsets for the year, the Chinese-language Commercial Times quoted South Korean media as indicating.

Meanwhile, LG Electronics also targets to ship 40 million handsets with an ASP (average unit price) of US$200 this year, accounting for 40% of the company’s total shipments projected for 2008, the paper noted.

In other news, Samsung expects unit sales of 3G handsets in Taiwan will grow 60% on year to reach three million units in 2008, raising the ratio of 3G models in Taiwan’s handset market to 40% in 2008 compared to 25% in 2007, according to Scott Huang, vice president of the mobile communication unit at Samsung Taiwan.

Huang made the remarks during Samsung’s launch of its 5-megapixel camera phone, the Samsung G808, in Taiwan on January 21. Market sources indicated that the G808 carries a suggested retail price of NT$19,600 (US$607).

source: DigiTimes