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Archive for the 'Hardware' Category

Jan 13 2009

Giant plasma TVs face ban in battle to green Britain

Published by praetoriangr under Hardware Edit This

plasma_getty_111643a.jpg

New rules will phase out energy-guzzling flatscreen televisions as the EU brings its climate campaign to the living room

Energy-guzzling flatscreen plasma televisions will soon be banned as part of the battle against climate change, ministers have told The Independent on Sunday.

“Minimum energy performance standards” for televisions are expected to be agreed across Europe this spring, they say, and this should lead to “phasing out the most inefficient TVs”. At the same time, a compulsory labelling system will be drawn up to identify the best and worst devices.

The moves, which follow last week’s withdrawal of the 100W incandescent lightbulb, are part of a drive to slow the rapid growth of electricity consumption in homes by phasing out wasteful devices and introducing more efficient ones. Giant plasma televisions – dubbed “the 4×4s of the living room” – can consume four times as much energy as traditional TVs that used cathode ray tubes (CRTs).

Over the past 30 years, the number of electric appliances and gadgets in a typical home has almost trebled – from 17 to 47 – as a host of devices from scanners to security systems, cappuccino makers to computer game consoles have joined the more traditional kettles, irons, vacuum cleaners and cookers. And the number of televisions in homes has also grown rapidly; there are now 60 million of them, one for every person in the country.

The amount of power needed to run this electronic explosion has more than doubled in the same period, and the official Energy Savings Trust estimates that it will grow by another 12 per cent over the next four years.

The boom in flatscreen TVs, partly spurred by the digital changeover, is helping to fuel the increase, as is the growing size of the screens. The Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) said last week: “In the past five years we have seen the main television in a household change from typically being a 24in to 32in CRT television to being a much larger flatscreen television, with screen sizes of between 32 and 42 inches becoming more and more common. Not surprisingly, this has seen the energy used by the main television in the house increase.”

Different makes and models of television vary in their use of power, but a 42in plasma television may use some 822 kilowatt hours a year, compared to 350kWh by an LCD flat screen of the same size. A 32in CRT, the biggest available, would use 322kWh.

Power consumption goes up as the screens increase in size, so the trust says that a big plasma model could use four times as much electricity and be responsible for the emission of four times as much carbon dioxide as the biggest CRT; they now account for twice as much as a fridge-freezer.

Now European governments are finalising a mandatory EU regulation to set minimum standards for televisions. The worst performers will be phased out, and the rest will have to be labelled with energy ratings which, says Defra, “will make it easier for consumers to identify the most and least energy-efficient televisions available”. The scheme is modelled on an existing one for fridges and other white goods which has greatly increased their efficiency over the past decade.

The EU has already agreed minimum standards for the electricity consumed in standby mode. Defra says this should cause a fourfold drop by early next year in the energy used by a TV when it has been switched off by remote control instead of the main switch. Similar steps are being taken in Australia and the United States; in the US, 275 million televisions gobble up as much electricity as is produced by 10 coal-fired power stations.

Manufacturers are responding by making their products greener. The best new plasma televisions now use one-third less energy than the average, and new LED televisions, which are more efficient, are being developed.

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Jan 07 2009

AMD Releases Netbook Processor

Published by praetoriangr under Hardware Edit This

With Intel’s tiny, low powered Atom turning out to be a smash hit in bargain-priced, small-sized netbooks, and even upstart Via getting in on the netbook/low power with the Nano, it was a matter of when, not if, chip maker AMD would release its own competing part. And low-and-behold, the struggling processor manufacturer chose CES to unveil the Athlon Neo, a low power, low cost part aimed at cheap, but thin notebooks.

AMD is quick to argue that it is not targeting the netbook market cornered by Intel, but instead is looking to bridge the gap between small and thin notebooks, like the MacBook Air and Thinkpad X300, and the lower cost, mainstream systems. As evidence of this, AMD was showing off the HP dv2 an ultra portable “notebook,” with a 12.1 inch wide-screen, discrete graphics processor (albeit an aging one), and an external Blu-ray player. The first machine to use AMD’s 1.6GHz Neo MV-40 is priced above the netbook range at $899, but comes with many more features than your Eee.

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Jan 07 2009

Asus unveils Eee T91: netbook with touchscreen

Published by praetoriangr under Hardware Edit This

asus

Asustek Computer on Tuesday unveiled its latest Eee PC netbook, with an 8.9-inch touchscreen that swivels and can even fold down to convert the device into a tablet PC. The new touchscreen Eee PC, the T91, is similar to a netbook Giga-byte Technology launched earlier this year, the M912, which also boasts an 8.9-inch touchscreen that swivels. The two devices run Microsoft’s Windows XP OS, have Intel Atom microprocessors inside, and have the same size swivel touchscreens. The M912 differs slightly in using a more powerful 1.6GHz Intel Atom microprocessor, while the Eee PC T91 carries a 1.33GHz Atom that has slightly better power savings and includes support for a few technologies such as Intel Virtualization. In the T91, Asus goes a step further on the software side to make touch navigation a little easier.The company developed its own touch mode software at research and development centers in Taiwan and China, said Jonney Shih, chairman of Asustek, at a news conference in Las Vegas ahead of the International Consumer Electronics Show, which opens Thursday. The T91 also comes with a TV tuner so people can watch their favorite shows on the road, and GPS (global positioning system) technology to transform the netbook into a navigation device. Shih said the Eee PC T91 will be on the market within the next three to six months. Pricing information was not immediately available.

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Jan 06 2009

Third-generation Netbook: HP Mini 2140 - Has the highest spec yet for a netbook device

Published by praetoriangr under Hardware Edit This

Killzone 2

Processor Intel® Atom™ N270 Processor (1.6 GHz, 512 KB L2 cache, 533 MHz FSB)
Chipset Mobile Intel 945GSE Express Chipset
Memory DDR2 SDRAM, 800 MHz,10 one SODIMM memory slot, supports up to 2GB
Internal Storage 160 GB 5400 rpm SATA, 160 GB 7200 rpm SATA; with HP 3D DriveGuard (supported on Windows models only); 80 GB Solid State Drive
Display 10.1-inch diagonal HP Illumi-Lite LED SD (1024 x 576); 10.1-inch diagonal Illumi-Lite LED HD (1366 x 768)
Graphics6 Mobile Intel GMA 950
Audio/Visual High Definition Audio, stereo speakers, integrated stereo microphones, stereo headphone/line out, stereo microphone in; integrated VGA webcam
Wireless support3 Broadcom 802.11a/b/g/n, b/g, optional Bluetooth™ 2.0, HP Wireless Assistant
Communications5 Marvell Ethernet Integrated Controller (10/100/1000)
Expansion slots (1) ExpressCard/54 slot, Secure Digital (SD) slot
Ports and connectors (2) USB 2.0 ports, VGA, power connector, RJ-45/Ethernet, stereo headphone/line out, stereo microphone in
Input device 92% full-size keyboard, touchpad with scroll zone
Software HP Recovery Manager (Windows Vista only), Roxio Creator 9, Microsoft® Office Ready
Security Kensington lock
Dimensions (h x w x d) 1.05 (at front) x 10.3 x 6.54 in / 26.7 (at front) x 261.4 x 166.2 mm
Weight starting at 2.6 lb / 1.19 kg (with 3-cell battery and Hard Drive, weight will vary by configuration)
Power 3-cell (28 WHr) or 6-cell (55 WHr)8 Lithium-Ion battery, 65W HP Smart AC Adapter, HP Fast Charge

http://www.gottabemobile.com/2009/01/06/hp-mini-note-2140-announced/

After the initial 7-inch Celeron versions and the second wave of 9- and 10-inch Intel Atom-powered systems, we’re finally seeing the third wave of Netbook laptops–machines that take the basic concept of low-cost, low-power computing and start to add in useful extras and features largely missing from the until-now rather Spartan design philosophy of most Netbooks

more …

http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2337856,00.asp

http://www.laptopmag.com/review/laptops/hp-mini-2140.aspx

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