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Showing posts with label hardware. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hardware. Show all posts

Sunday, July 7, 2013

Kryder's law & storage capacity : Cloud storage defies it

Kryder's law states that "The density of hard drives increases by a factor of 1,000 every 10.5 years that is doubling occurs every 13 months". The phenomenon is very much applicable for the previous two decades. The standard storage capacity when I first came across the desktop computer was 1Gigabyte(GB) ten years ago and now the 1Terabyte has become the standard.
Cloud storage : A challenge 
The next decades might not obey these laws strictly. The cloud storage might challenge this advancement in technology of drive capacity. As the internet becomes more affordable, the cloud storage is gaining momentum which is all set to become more pervasive. This will be a dis-incentive for any innovation in hard disc capacity enhancement. The movement of 1 Terabyte to 1 Petabyte might well be a much longer journey than usual.   

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Solution : The green tinge in iPad screen !!!

Green/red tinge of iPad screen
The tinge of this kind could be the result of a fall or a blow to iPad. And what is the solution? Going to the nearest service center? There is a quickfix to this problem but with some harsh risks.
Bang your iPad
Bang!!! Ya I spelled it right, bang it a bit harsh on the back of the screen. Try all the corners. Someone posted bottom right corner but which bang and which edge will ensure return to normalcy is a bit hard guess. Do not bang it hard enough so that it goes to a irreparable stage.
Bang - Display 
So how does a bang help in this case? Simple. Because these tinges are due to loose connections of display cables. And you know what a bang can do to these loose ones? 
iPad is like a baby : bang it ???
If iPad is your baby, then the tinges are just an irrational behavior and a bang on your baby is just enough to set it.

Monday, February 11, 2013

The disk and the disc and the dilemna

Ever wondered whether there is any difference between disc and disk. And when to use disc or disk. Here is a review of these terms and their usage.

Disk
A removable, flexible disk used for storage of electronic resources in magnetic form, read and written to by electron-magnetic impulse. Examples : Magnetic disk formats are: floppy disks and hard disks.

Optical disc
A removable, non-flexible disc, used for storage of electronic resources in optical form, read and written to by laser technology.
Examples : CD-I (Compact-Disc Interactive), CD-ROM (Compact Disc Read-Only Memory), Photo CD (Photo Compact Disc).

And the final verdict is
  • Use electronic disk for magnetically encoded electronic disks.
  • Use electronic optical disc for optically encoded electronic discs.

Thursday, November 29, 2012

Samsung launches windows 8 based convertibles ATIV series : will it vita in the competition?

Samsung launched windows 8 based convertibles in India with ATIV smart PC and ATIV smart PC Pro rices at Rs. 53,990 & Rs. 75, 490. The pricing seems to be on a higher side. ATIV which is the reverse of VITA which means life. Only the time will tell whether these convertibles will have life in the market or just a lost product in the emerging convertibles market.

Samsung ATIV Smart PC key specs

Display Size: 11.6" (PLS type) with 1366 x 768p resolution
31Wh battery
304.0 x 189.4 x 9.9mm(without keyboard) | 304.0 x 189.4 x 19.9mm(with keyboard)
Weight: 750g(without keyboard) / 1.48kg(with keyboard)
Operating System: Windows 8
Processor: Next generation Intel Atom Processor
System Memory: LPDDR 2GB
Integrated Camera: Front 2M, Rear 8M(w/ flash)
Storage Hard Disk Drive: 128GB eMMC
Wi-Fi, 4G/LTE, 3G, Bluetooth 4.0
USB2.0x1, USB2.0x2(KBD), mHDMI, microSD
Samsung ATIV Smart PC Pro key specs

Display Size: 11.6" (PLS type) with 1920 x 1080p resolution
47Wh battery
304.0 x 189.4 x 11.89mm(without keyboard) | 304.0 x 189.4 x 21.89mm(with keyboard)
Weight: 884g(without keyboard) / 1.6kg(with keyboard)
Operating System: Windows 8
Processor: Intel Core i5
System Memory: DDR 4GB
Integrated Camera: Front 2M, Rear 5M
Storage Hard Disk Drive: Up to 256GB SSD
Wi-Fi, 4G/LTE, 3G, Bluetooth 4.0
USB3.0x1, USB2.0x2(KBD), mHDMI, microSD

Friday, October 28, 2011

Gorilla Arm : holding up touch screen notebooks

Ipads have caught the imagination of all the geeks and non-geeks and also has become hit among all. Millions of units are sold by now. This touchscreen revolution is not expanding beyond the ipads. The phenomenon of Gorilla arm affecting the people using touchscreen laptops has loomed large over manufacturers. So, what exactly is this Gorilla arm? It is the excessive fatigue and the crippling that a human experience when he uses his hands exactly in front of his face. But! pads are also touchscreen devices. But they are designed for reading, browsing, music, gaming etc. But for working the ipads might also give a gorilla arm.
Uhh I am getting a little pain in ma shoulders before I could finish off scribbling this article on my touchSmart.

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

8 core AMD FX deskstop processor breaks the guiness world record - Video

8 core AMD FX deskstop processor breaks the Guinness world record by posting a speed of 8.429 GHz. Here is a quick look into the video.

Monday, March 7, 2011

Difference between accelerometer and gravity sensor

Accelerometer and the gravity censor basically does the same thing but the intensity and precision changes....
Accelerometer is actually the thing which aids us to play games having a virtual experience and has a relatively high precision in detecting our motion(acceleration)....
Gravity sensor just recognises the way your phone, usually a smartphone, is oriented in the plane. Just when u flip flop a phone the screen also flip flops.....

Sunday, October 25, 2009

Megabytes, Gigabytes, Terabytes…....

These terms are usually used in the world of computing to describe disk space, or data storage space, and system memory. For instance, just a few years ago we were describing hard drive space using the term Megabytes. Today, Gigabytes is the most common term being used to describe the size of a hard drive. In the not so distant future, Terabyte will be a common term. But what are they? This is where it gets quite confusing because there are at least three accepted definitions of each term.
According to the IBM Dictionary of computing, when used to describe disk storage capacity, a megabyte is 1,000,000 bytes in decimal notation. But when the term megabyte is used for real and virtual storage, and channel volume, 2 to the 20th power or 1,048,576 bytes is the appropriate notation. According to the Microsoft Press Computer Dictionary, a megabyte means either 1,000,000 bytes or 1,048,576 bytes. According to Eric S. Raymond in The New Hacker's Dictionary, a megabyte is always 1,048,576 bytes on the argument
that bytes should naturally be computed in powers of two. So which definition do most people conform to?
When referring to a megabyte for disk storage, the hard drive manufacturers use the standard that a megabyte is 1,000,000 bytes. This means that when you buy an 80 Gigabyte Hard drive you will get a total of 80,000,000,000 bytes of available storage. This is where it gets confusing because Windows uses the 1,048,576 byte rule so when you look at the Windows drive properties an 80 Gigabyte drive will report a capacity of 74.56 Gigabytes and a 250 Gigabyte drive will only yield 232 Gigabytes of available storage space. Anybody confused yet? With three accepted definitions, there will always be some confusion so I will try to simplify the definitions a little.
The 1000 can be replaced with 1024 and still be correct using the other acceptable standards. Both of these standards are correct depending on what type of storage you are referring.

The bytes goes on and on like this
· 1 Bit = Binary Digit
· 8 Bits = 1 Byte
· 1024 Bytes = 1 Kilobyte
· 1024 Kilobytes = 1 Megabyte
· 1024 Megabytes = 1 Gigabyte
· 1024 Gigabytes = 1 Terabyte
· 1024 Terabytes = 1 Petabyte
· 1024 Petabytes = 1 Exabyte
· 1024 Exabytes = 1 Zettabyte
· 1024 Zettabytes = 1 Yottabyte
· 1024 Yottabytes = 1 Brontobyte
· 1024 Brontobytes = 1 Geopbyte

Bit: A Bit is the smallest unit of data that a computer uses. It can be used to represent two states of information, such as Yes or No.
Byte: A Byte is equal to 8 Bits. A Byte can represent 256 states of information, for example, numbers or a combination of numbers and letters. 1 Byte could be equal to one character. 10 Bytes could be equal to a word. 100 Bytes would equal an average sentence.
Kilobyte: A Kilobyte is approximately 1,000 Bytes, actually 1,024 Bytes depending on which definition is used. 1 Kilobyte would be equal to this paragraph you are reading, whereas 100 Kilobytes would equal an entire page.
Megabyte: A Megabyte is approximately 1,000 Kilobytes. In the early days of computing, a Megabyte was considered to be a large amount of data. These days with a 500 Gigabyte hard drive on a computer being common, a Megabyte doesn't seem like much anymore. One of those old 3-1/2 inch floppy disks can hold 1.44 Megabytes or the equivalent of a small book. 100 Megabytes might hold a couple volumes of Encyclopedias. 600 Megabytes is about the amount of data that will fit on a CD-ROM disk.
Gigabyte: A Gigabyte is approximately 1,000 Megabytes. A Gigabyte is a very common term used these days when referring to disk space or drive storage. 1 Gigabyte of data is almost twice the amount of data that a CD-ROM can hold. But it's about one thousand times the capacity of a 3-1/2 floppy disk. 1 Gigabyte could hold the contents of about 10 yards of books on a shelf. 100 Gigabytes could hold the entire library floor of academic journals.
Terabyte: A Terabyte is approximately one trillion bytes, or 1,000 Gigabytes. Now we are getting up there to a size that is so large that it is not a common term yet. To put it in some perspective, a Terabyte could hold about 3.6 million 300 Kilobyte images or maybe about 300 hours of good quality video. A Terabyte could hold 1,000 copies of the Encyclopedia Britannica. Ten Terabytes could hold the printed collection of the Library of Congress. That's a lot of data.
Petabyte: A Petabyte is approximately 1,000 Terabytes or one million Gigabytes. It's hard to visualize what a Petabyte could hold. 1 Petabyte could hold approximately 20 million 4-door filing cabinets full of text. It could hold 500 billion pages of standard printed text. It would take about 500 million floppy disks to store the same amount of data.
Exabyte: An Exabyte is approximately 1,000 Petabytes. Another way to look at it is that a Petabyte is approximately one quintillion bytes or one billion Gigabytes. There is not much to compare an Exabyte to. It has been said that 5 Exabytes would be equal to all of the words ever spoken by mankind.
Zettabyte: A Zettabyte is approximately 1,000 Exabytes. There is nothing to compare a Zettabyte to but to say that it would take a whole lot of ones and zeroes to fill it up.
Yottabyte: A Yottabyte is approximately 1,000 Zettabytes. It would take approximately 11 trillion years to download a yottabyte file from the Internet using high-power broadband. You can compare it to the World Wide Web as the entire Internet almost takes up a Yottabyte.
Brontobyte: A Brontobyte is (you guessed it) approximately 1,000 Yottabytes. The only thing there is to say about a Brontobyte is that it is a 1 followed by 27 zeroes!
Geopbyte: A Geopbyte is about 1000 Brontobytes! Not sure why this term was created. I'm doubting that anyone alive today will ever see a Geopbyte hard drive. One way of looking at a geopbyte is 15267 6504600 2283229 4012496 7031205 376 bytes!
Source : IBM Dictionary of computing method.

Sunday, August 30, 2009

Modem

A modem is a device that converts data from binary code; which is used by computer to interpret to analogue signals that can be transmitted over the telephone network.



There are two types of modems:

  • Consumer voice-grade modems Most off-the-shelf modems are designed to allow PC users to communicate over the voice phone system. The modems employ compatible communication techniques that comply with several standards, most notably the ITU V series standards (previously called the CCITT standards).
  • Broadband modems These are modems for nontelephone system connections. A company may set up its own dedicated lines or microwave towers and use broadband modems to achieve very high data rates between those sites.

Saturday, November 8, 2008

"POST CARD FROM BEJING" MOST IMPORTANT-DANGEROUS VIRUS IN CIRCULATION

Is this hoax or real ? Who knows but these type of messages have become frequent in this internet era. Here is the detailed message which came to my inbox.

MOST IMPORTANT

DANGEROUS VIRUS IN CIRCULATION, PLEASE READ AND FORWARD TO ALL YOUR FRIENDS :

You should be alert during the next few days. Do not open any message with an attachment entitled " POST CARD FROM BEJING", REGARDLESS OF WHO SENT IT TO YOU. IT IS A VIRUS WHICH OPENS A POSTCARD IMAGE, which 'burns' the whole hard disc of your computer. This virus will be received from someone who has your e-mail address in his/her contact list. This is the reason why you need to send this e-mail to all your contacts. It is better to receive this message 25 times than to receive the virus and open it.

If you receive a mail called " POSTCARD FROM BEJING" even though sent to you by a known person do not open it. straight away delete the mail.

This is the worlds worst virus announced by CNN. It has been classified by Microsoft as the most destructive virus ever. This virus was discovered by McAfee recently, and there is no repair yet for this kind of virus. This virus simply destroys the Zero sector of the Hard disc, where vital information is kept.

Intel Core i7

Intel Core i7 is a family of three Intel Desktop x86-64 processors. Core i7 is the first Intel family to be released using the Intel Nehalem microarchitecture and is the successor to the Intel Core 2 family. All three models are quad-core processors. The Core i7 identifier applies to the initial family of processors codenamed Bloomfield.The moniker Core i7 does not have a deeper meaning, but continues the use of the successful Core brand. Intel has to upgrade its processors so that at somepoint vista becomes a superfast OS.

Intel announced that the family is due to be launched on November 17, 2008

Features

Nehalem represents the largest architectural change in the Intel x86 family since the Pentium Pro in 1995. The Nehalem architecture has many new features. The ones that represent significant changes from the Core 2 include:

* FSB is replaced by QuickPath interface. Motherboards must use a chipset that supports QuickPath. As of November 2008[update], only the Intel X58 does this.
* On-processor memory controller: the memory is directly connected to the processor.
* Three channel memory: each channel can support one or two DDR3 DIMMs. Motherboards for Core i7 have four (3+1) or six DIMM slots instead of two or four, and DIMMs should be installed in sets of three, not two.
* Support for DDR3 only.
* "Turbo Boost" technology allows the cores to intelligently "over clock" themselves to 133Mhz or 266Mhz over the design clock speed so long as the CPU's thermal requirements are still met.
* Single-die device: all four cores, the memory controller, and all cache are on a single die.
* Re-implemented Hyper-threading. Each of the four cores can process two threads simultaneously, so the processor appears to the OS as eight CPUs. This feature was present in the older Netburst architecture but was dropped in Core.
* On-die, shared, inclusive 8MB L3 cache.
* Only one QuickPath interface: not intended for multi-processor motherboards.
* 45nm process technology.
* 731M transistors.
* Sophisticated power management can place unused core in a zero-power mode.

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