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 Nightly Tech Reading - tech
(hx) 03:12 AM CEST - Aug,29 2003
  • From Doom to Zoom - J. Carmack Chases After Space Race Prize - The competition to build and fly a rocket ship into space and back is heating up as the Jan. 1, 2005, deadline approaches for the X Prize. Sure, it may seem like a long way off, but in the world of rocket science 16 months is a blip in time. More than 20 teams from around the world are vying for the $10 million prize. Among them is Armadillo Aerospace, a research and development team out to prove you don't have to have big bucks for a big launch. The man at Armadillo's helm is no rocket scientist. He's a computer programmer. John Carmack, co-founder and owner of id Software, started Armadillo Aerospace more than two years ago. Once a side project, it's grown into a big chunk of his life, Carmack says.
  • Next gen consoles spark concern - The next generation of consoles could shake up the games industry, with a game costing tens of millions of dollars to develop, say experts. Making a title for the successors to the PlayStation 2, Xbox and GameCube could run into $20 or $30 million, game developers meeting in London were told.  But the price of a game in the shops is likely to stay the same.  It could mean many smaller software firms going bust or joining forces with other small companies.
  • Computer game boosts children's' language skills  - A simple computer program that teaches children to distinguish between sounds can dramatically boost their listening skills. It can allow them to progress by the equivalent of two years in just a few weeks, the game's creator claims. The game, called Phonomena, was devised by David Moore of the University of Oxford, UK, as an aid for children with language problems, but he says his latest trials also show that it can help any child. Other experts, however, are reserving judgement until independent tests are carried out.
  • Solar-powered Big Brother is watching you - A solar-powered wireless surveillance system that beams video images from remote cameras back to a central server using Wi-Fi hit the market yesterday. The system, dubbed SolaCam, has been jointly developed by wireless firms Proxim and Hutton Communications. It combines Proxim's Tsunami MP.11 802.11-based point-to-multipoint wireless kit with IP video cameras, and receives all its power requirements through solar panels.
  • Addonics Ships Serial ATA Converter - Addonics Technologies is now shipping a conversion kit intended to give you an even broader selection of hard-drive technology: It offers a way to convert a 2.5-inch internal parallel ATA drive into an external Serial ATA drive. The resulting drive is capable of connecting either to a PCI Serial ATA adapter with an external port (priced at $37) or to a CardBus Serial ATA adapter ($55), according to Addonics. The drive model must be of 9mm height, and the kit can be powered from either a USB port or an AC/DC power adapter (data and power cables are included). The Addonics Mini ExDrive carries a list price of $55.
  • Super fast Linux supercomputer goes online - The Department of Energy (DoE) powered up the US's fastest unclassified supercomputer this week, a 11.8 teraflops behemoth to be used in scientific research. Powered by 2,000 Intel Itanium2 processors HP Integrity servers running Linux, the monster system will be used for applications in the fields of environmental and molecular sciences, including chemistry, biology, climate and subsurface chemistry. The supercomputer find its home at the DoE's Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL).
  • Gateway Takes a Shot at Cameras - Gateway has introduced its first digital cameras, unveiling four models as part of its ongoing strategy to boost its stake in the consumer electronics market. The new cameras consist of two M-series models for first-time digital camera users and two T-series units for experienced users, says Matt Milne, Gateway's general manager of digital solutions. Prices range from $130 to $400.
  • Philips chips to flip TV displays - Philips will unveil new chips at the Internationale Funkausstellung in Berlin on Thursday that it hopes will make it easier and faster for its manufacturing customers to begin producing televisions with LCDs instead of CRTs. The electronics giant will demonstrate the chips during the show, which runs Aug. 29 through Sept. 3.
  • Samsung launches photo phones - Samsung this week announced three new mobile phones, two of them with built-in camers. One of the models, the SGH-X600, has a 640 x 480 camera with a tilting range of 180 degrees forward and back, and is mounted on top of the phone, with an LED mini-flash located around the lens. Weighting only 80g, the GPRS phone offers a 1.6in, 16-bit colour screen with 16-bit doubling as a viewfinder. It also includes Java games.
  • How Anti-Piracy Technologies are Transforming Digital Media  - When the smoke cleared, DVDs had been crammed with more layers of copy protection than any other consumer format, and probably more acronyms too. Each of these is described in more detail later in this article.
  • Gigabyte in talks to acquire Elsa - Gigabyte Technology is negotiating to acquire Germany-based graphics card maker Elsa, according to sources. Talks have been underway, and initial agreements have reportedly been set, sources added. The acquisition could be finalized as early as late September, according to sources.
  • Asustek to launch own-brand graphics cards using ATI solutions in 3Q - Asustek Computer, a key customer for Nvidia's graphics chipsets in Asia, expects to launch own-brand graphics cards featuring ATI solutions by the end of this quarter. The two sides expect to officially announce the news in late September, according to sources.
  • Product: Canon PowerShot G5 review - The new 5-megapixel Canon PowerShot G5 cuts to the front of the line in Canon's lineup of point-and-shoot digital cameras. At $800, this isn't the camera to get your mom started in digital photography. But the G5 will appeal to hobbyist shutterbugs who can't afford the $1,500 price that digital SLRs command.
  • Neuros Audio Computer Rethinks MP3 review - A new company on the scene, Neuros Audio, took a long hard look at this market space and is now shipping what the company has dubbed an 'audio computer'. It features an FM tuner and transmitter (transceiver), support for the open source encoder Ogg Vorbis, and a Linux music management app. It can not only record FM radio, but can sample and save music playing on an FM station and find similar material via the Web when the player is connected to your PC.
  • Asus PC-DL with 875P Chipset for Intel's Xeon review - With its 1-MB L3 cache, Intel's Xeon was poised to take the workstation market by storm. Unfortunately, the Intel E7505 chipset isn't the greatest match for the CPU, as it only supports dual DDR266. Asus decided it needed to tackle this problem. And tackle it did: it developed a board that aims to enhance performance with an 875P desktop chipset and dual DDR333.
  • Kingston HyperX 512MB DDR PC3500 - On the heatspreaders, is a sticker indicating the ram type. We can see that the ram is rated for PC3500 operation, which is 434MHz. The timings are rated at 2-4-4-8-1 (CAS Latency 2), which is pretty good, though not great. Not to worry though, as the ram can do better, but those are the SPD settings detected in the BIOS, so we'll be fixing that when we get into testing.
  • Seagate Barracuda 160 Gigabytes HDD Review - If you're in the market for additional storage, or have the opportunity to select which drive comes in that new PC you're looking at buying, we can assure you that this drive - in a RAID configuration or stand-alone - is a great investment that should reward you with years of great storage performance.
  • IOGear COMBO 3.5" ION Drive (60GB)  - The ION Combo External 3.5" Hard drive (60GB) is stylish and supports both Firewire and USB. It operates at 7200 RPM and has a seek time of only 8.5 milliseconds. It is made for people who cannot install internal hard drives or do not have IDE ports left available. It arrives with the Samsung SP0612N HDD or something very similar, which has countless features.
  • The Teac DV-W50D DVD+R/RW Drive Review -  It seems that Teac's goal of an affordable drive that has everything you want, while trimming the features you may not miss has its pluses, but along with those pluses are a few minuses. Overall, the Teac DV-W50D DVD+R/RW CD-R/RW Dual Format Drive performed fairly well in all of our benchmark tests, but there is still room for improvement.
  • Contemporary Integrated Sound Solutions - As for sound quality, many add-on sound cards are still better than integrated audio solutions. The reason is simple: mainboard makers try to reduce the cost at any rate. They choose cheap codecs, and don't care about proper screening of audio components. That's why a user may consider purchasing a sound card to be a better decision than using the integrated audio.
  • Hitachi CML152 15 LCD Monitor Review - Techwarelabs has posted a review of Hitachi CML152 15" LCD Monitor.
  • Zalman 80C-HP Heatpipe VGA Cooler w/ optional fan (Video Review) - The Zalman 80C-HP Heatpipe VGA Cooler w/ optional fan makes one fantastic VGA cooling product. It fits just about every Video Card & is relatively easy to install. With the massive heatsink on the front & back coupled with the heatpipe & 80mm fan it will definitely keep even the fastest Video Cards cool.
  • Zalman 400W Power Supply Review - You call yourself a modder? You have nice blue LED fans, a blue motherboard, blue video card, blue UV reactive cables, a sweet window cutout . and a big ugly silver power supply. Not a lot of people mod their power supply, maybe a UV reactive acrylic cover, but who really anodizes it to match their case? Anodizing is quite pricy, and spray paint just doesn't look all that great. Don't forget all the power you need to run all those little gadgets! Today we'll be looking at a ZM400A, a black 400W power supply from Zalman. They say its silent, very silent, but also deadly.
  • Altec Lansing 5100 Speaker Review  - In the end if you are looking to replace those old speakers, the Altec Lansing 5100s is a good setup for those looking for a system that's price, performance, and style are all evenly mixed.
  • Logitech Cordless Click Plus Review  - If you can settle for a symmetrical, ambidextrous oval shape and no Forward and Back buttons (just the two main buttons, clickable scroll wheel, and Quick Switch), the Cordless Click offers the same RF technology for $40.
  • The Definitive ATI Bios, Softmod and Tweak Guide - check it out!
  • OVERCLOCKING THE NFORCE2 A BASIC GUIDE - There are essentially two types of overclocking - front side bus and multiplier. Motherboards have a clock chip that generates a signal. This signal controls how fast the board's circuits run. This speed is measured in millions of cycles per second, or Megahertz. Today's current crop of motherboards run at stock speeds anywhere from 100Mhz to 166Mhz. Additionally, there is circuitry that enables the computer's processor, or CPU, to run at a multiple of the board speed, hence the term multiplier.
  • DVD2SVCD 1.2.1 Build 1 - Freeware DVD2SVCD is a completely automated frontend for converting DVD, PVA and AVI files to SVCD.
  • WinDVD Platinum 5.1.5.5 (costs money) - WinDVD Platinum 5 (download) is the ultimate DVD software player, providing you with the finest quality video and audio playback. Watch movies with a theater experience right on your computer or laptop.
  • RegSeeker 1.30 - RegSeeker includes a powerful registry cleaner and can display various informations like your startup entries, several histories (even index.dat files), installed applications and much more ! With RegSeeker you can search for any item inside your registry, export/delete the results, open them in the registry.

Comments from magaposted - 05:56 AM CEST - Aug,29 2003
lol, that "costs mony" was funny, hx

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