Subscribe

Newsletter Our Feeds

Receive weekly updates on new articles, news and contests in your mail!

Email address:

Top Technology News

AMD's value skyrockets after spin-off announcement

by Justin Mann on October 8, 2008, 3:53 AM

AMD's announcement yesterday about spinning off their manufacturing put a whole new perspective on the company, or so investors thought.

After it was revealed that the manufacturing business was bringing in a substantial loss for AMD in trying to compete with Intel, selling part of that unit has sent a clear message to investors. Shortly after the announcement, the company's value skyrocketed, increasing almost 19% in value in just a few hours. Later on the stock would take a step back to close at a more conservative 8.5% gain.

This is coming at a time when most tech companies have seen fairly significant losses in recent days and weeks. Even with the added confidence, AMD has a long road ahead of them.

Mozilla's Geode brings location awareness to Firefox

by Jose Vilches on October 7, 2008, 5:22 PM

Mozilla Labs has announced the availability of Geode, an experimental Firefox extension that brings location awareness to the popular open source browser. The purpose of Geode is to let websites figure out a person’s approximate geographic location – as long as you grant the software permission to access the information – and use it to provide personalized, localized content.

The location detection technology in the Geode extension is built on top of Skyhook's Loki platform, which attempts to determine the user’s location by comparing nearby Wi-Fi access points against a global reference database. Mozilla says that the new feature will be built directly into Firefox 3.1 when it's released.

Although this technology doesn't seem particularly interesting on the desktop, it could prove useful for mobile users as location aware web applications become more commonplace. You can download Geode from Mozilla, and test it with a demo web application called Food Finder.

Toshiba's first commercial fuel cell product coming in a few months

by Jose Vilches on October 7, 2008, 4:41 PM

With the growing demand for mobile computing devices, factors such as longer battery life and fast charging are becoming increasingly important. We often hear about “breakthroughs” in battery technologies, but the promised deployments have always been ambiguous or just plainly out of reach. Yesterday, however, Toshiba went a step further by promising that its first fuel cell powered device will launch in just a few short months.

The company hasn't specified what the product will be, though a mobile phone seems most likely given that Toshiba showed a cell phone based on a fuel cell last week at the Ceatec show in Japan. The upcoming products are based on direct methanol fuel cell technology, which besides offering improved battery life and faster charging, is also seen as a greener source of energy than traditional batteries.

T-Mobile sees greater than it expected demand for G1

by Jose Vilches on October 7, 2008, 2:33 PM

The first Android phone has yet to hit the market, but a surge in consumer demand for T-Mobile’s G1 has reportedly prompted the company to nearly triple the number of phones available for delivery On October 22. Despite significantly bumping up production, though, the wireless carrier says it has already sold out of its pre-sale inventory and won't promise to ship any more phones in time for the launch.

No actual numbers have been provided aside from the “tripled” quote, so this could be nothing more than a boring attempt to hype up the upcoming phone. That said, recent reports suggest that T-Mobile could sell between 400,000 and 500,000 units by the end of the year – not bad considering it costs $179 and requires a two-year voice and data contract.

Proposed EU directive could force iPhone, iPod redesign

by Jose Vilches on October 7, 2008, 1:49 PM

The European Union is readying a new set of directives that could have an impact on Apple and other manufacturer’s future products. Specifically, a new draft batteries directive, which mandates that power cells inside electronic devices must be readily removable for replacement and safe disposal. The iPhone, iPod and even the MacBook Air don't fit that mold.

Apple requires owners to send back their iPhones and iPods to the company for a battery replacement. If approved, however, the new directive could force the company to redesign its products to meet the criteria in Europe. Interestingly, it could also mean that products globally would see the same features since it would make no sense to build and market products with two different designs.

Then again, as AppleInsider notes, the idea behind the directive is to keep gadgets from being sent to landfills or recycled with the battery inside, so the EU might let Apple off the hook if the company proves that its battery replacement program prevents that from happening.

Nintendo denies Wii HD rumors

by Jose Vilches on October 7, 2008, 12:53 PM

Nintendo of America boss Reggie Fils-Aime has denied recent rumors that the company is planning to release a Wii successor in 2011. In an interview with VentureBeat, Fils-Aime described the Wii HD console as “pure rumor and speculation” and equally dismissed claims that a prototype was already being shown to developers and publishers for pre-production feedback.

Nintendo has been under relatively little pressure to update its hardware since the introductions of the Wii in 2006, but of course that’s not to say a high-definition console isn’t on the drawing board somewhere – and it wouldn’t be a bad thing for them to recapture the market for core gamers. Nintendo doesn’t deny an eventual update to the console but merely debunks the notion that the company would weigh first reactions to an update by showing a prototype to developers.

News from around the web (10/07/08)

by Erik Orejuela on October 7, 2008, 12:30 PM

Steve Wozniak interview: The future for Apple @ Telegraph.co.uk
Google Has Changed Political Debate Forever @ ReadWriteWeb
The top five reasons why Windows Vista failed @ ZDNet
OpenOffice.org Breaks Records Everywhere @ ComputerWorld
See more articles and reviews.

Five years ago in TechSpot:
Sharp builds high-resolution LCD for mobile

Asustek sees significant growth due to Eee PC

by Justin Mann on October 7, 2008, 12:08 PM

The massive amount of Eee PC sales we heard about earlier this week has helped Asustek rake in a lot of cash. Contrary to an overall global trend of hardware companies struggling, or at least seeing losses, Asustek is expected to grow significantly in the near future, as they are already doing now. The reasoning, cited by an Asustek CEO, is the Eee PC.

They claim the low cost of the hardware is what is making them so attractive, and able to sell so well – an easy correlation to make, as everybody loves to get good hardware on the cheap. That probably won't last, though, with their latest Eee hardware models consistently stepping outside the realm of “cheap.” If they want to keep up their current growth, they will have to keep a profile of cheap hardware available.

Sony to offer DRM-free music at 66 cents per track

by Justin Mann on October 7, 2008, 12:04 PM

Sony is attempting to one-up Apple with a new supply of music, offering tracks for their iTunes-competing Dada.net service at a price below what Apple offers. Sony will be offering songs at roughly 66 cents apiece, and sweetening the offer in the eyes of the consumer by providing the tracks without any DRM.

Dada claims that all music they sell will be offered as DRM-free in their entirety, making it simple to transfer them to any type of media player you choose. You wouldn't expect Sony to be a company that endorses or pushes DRM-absent media, regardless of the cost, but clearly something has changed in how big companies are seeing the market.

There are a few fine details that don't make the service quite the iTunes-killer they'd like people to think it is, such as the fact that the discounted price for music only applies to the first 15 songs acquired per month – beyond that, the costs rise. Still, the DRM advantage could be key.

RIM to launch BlackBerry Application Center

by Jose Vilches on October 7, 2008, 11:43 AM

Research In Motion is making yet another move to level the playing field against Apple in the consumer space. Taking a page from the iTunes App Store and Android Market book, the company is reportedly set to launch an on-device application distribution hub tentatively called the BlackBerry Application Center.

Details remain sketchy, though it appears that the store will (at least initially) be crafted specifically for users of the upcoming touch-screen BlackBerry Storm, which will run the 4.7 version of the BlackBerry OS. The BlackBerry Application Center will be a carrier-supported feature, meaning wireless service providers will be responsible for hosting all applications and ensuring they are up to date – this is a big departure from the iTunes App Store model, where Apple maintains all the control over what's approved and what isn't.

But while RIM attempts to cash into the nascent application craze with an official store, another company has already launched its competing BerryStore standalone client, which will cater to both old and new BlackBerry handsets (not just the upcoming Storm) and works across carriers.

AMD spins off its manufacturing business

by Jose Vilches on October 7, 2008, 10:27 AM

AMD finally detailed its “asset smart” strategy today, which, as expected, involves spinning off its fabrication business into a separate company temporarily known as “The Foundry Company.” As part of the move, Advanced Technology Investment Company (ATIC) of Abu Dhabi will take a 55.6% stake in the new manufacturing entity and contribute a few billion dollars over the coming years, whereas AMD will take a 44.4% stake but get equal voting rights with ATIC.

After spinning off its foundry business, AMD executives said they’ll be able to focus entirely on the design of new microprocessors and graphics chips, rather than continue funding manufacturing operations at a loss in order to keep up with rival Intel. The transaction should close “at the beginning of 2009,” at which point The Foundry Company will reveal its permanent corporate name. Check out AMD’s New Global Foundry page to learn more.

Dish to pay TiVo $104 million

by Justin Mann on October 6, 2008, 6:49 PM

The long-standing rivalry between Dish Network and TiVo may have come to a close. After dealing with numerous court battles that ended up in a nasty injunction, it seems Dish has finally agreed to shell out a sizable $104 million in damages over to TiVo.

The issue, which started with a patent infringement claim TiVo made about a DVR system that Dish pushed out, worried many customers that owned EchoStar-built DVRs. The concern was that Dish Network would recall them, which would be bad news all around. For the customers’ sake, Dish found a workaround and was able to implement it in time.

Firefox Mobile alpha coming "in a few weeks"

by Jose Vilches on October 6, 2008, 6:46 PM

Earlier this year, the folks over at Mozilla took some time to show off a video with the latest developments in the mobile version of the popular Firefox browser. While a final version won’t be ready for handsets worldwide perhaps until sometime in 2009, an alpha testing build may come much sooner.

In fact, speaking to the San Jose Mercury News, Mozilla CEO John Lilly was quoted saying that we'll see the first Firefox Mobile alpha releases “in a few weeks.” Sadly, no specific details were offered but I’m certainly looking forward to an alternative for Opera Mobile and the iPhone’s superb mobile Safari browser. Check out the complete interview here, where Lilly also discusses other topics including how an open source company such as Mozilla works and Google’s new Chrome browser.

Play Crysis Wars for free

by Jose Vilches on October 6, 2008, 6:07 PM

Crysis Warhead has been out for little over a couple of weeks now, and those of you who’ve picked it up also got the chance to play its multiplayer component. For the rest of you interested in getting some free Crysis Wars multiplayer action, EA and Crytek are offering the full standalone multiplayer client as a free download at the MyCrysis.com site.

Users will be able to play the game over LAN connections starting today, without any time limitation, and play online for free during the entire weekend starting October 10. Crysis Wars includes three multiplayer modes – Instant Action, Team Instant Action and Power Struggle – as well as 21 maps of varying sizes and access to all the weapons and vehicles in the Crysis Universe.

This is certainly great news and might be enough to convince many to try the game – just be sure to check the official minimum system requirements after the jump.

Interview with Nvidia about CUDA and the future

by Justin Mann on October 6, 2008, 4:53 PM

AMD's recent success with the Radeon series has been largely at Nvidia’s expense. After both financial and technological setbacks, many have wondered what Nvidia’s plan going forward is to recover. A recent interview has revealed much about what they are up to, in which Jen Hsun Huang spoke about the company’s future, CUDA, GPUs and chipsets.

It's pretty short, but to the point. Nvidia still sees the standard processor as something that is giving diminishing returns, and will wane faced with specialty processors like current GPUs using CUDA technology. They also don't see their chipset business as suffering – quite the opposite, they see themselves as “years” ahead of AMD. It's a short but interesting read on what Nvidia feels is really going on today.