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  • Eizo Announces 8 Megapixel Monitor For Surgery Rooms

    Japanese Eizo Nanao Corporation announced the new RadiForce LS560W 56-inch LCD monitor with 3,840 x 2,160 pixels resolution to be released July 1, 2009. It is intended for use in surgery rooms for showing medical images.

    LS560W features 450cd/m2 brightness, 1200:1 contrast ratio and 176-degree viewing angle and includes the Digital Uniformity Equalizer for adjusting brightness automatically.

    The RadiForce LX560W is a digital video distribution system which bundles the RadiForce LS560W with EIZO’s new LMM 56800, a “Large Monitor Manager.”

    The LMM 56800 collects input signals from up to 27 different video sources, arranges this information according to customer demands, and then transmits this new combined picture to the 8 MP monitor.

    The workflow of surgeons is optimizes by the flexibility in arranging and changing the size of the windows. Important pictures can be scaled to the desired size and less important information can be moved out from visible area. Different workflow scenarios can be predefined and recalled on demand.

    There is no suggested retail price.

    Nanao regards the medical market as an important market in its "Third Midterm Business Plan."

  • Amazon Elastic MapReduce Public Beta Launched


    Amazon Web Services has announced the public beta launch of Amazon Elastic MapReduce, a web service that enables businesses, researchers, data analysts, and developers to easily and cost-effectively process vast amounts of data.

    Amazon Web Services are a collection of remote web services offered by Amazon.com. It is using the Apache Hadoop distributed computing technology (open-source, Java software framework) to make it easier for users to access large amounts of computing power to run data-intensive tasks. This time Amazon used Hadoop, which is already being used by such companies as Yahoo and Facebook, for new cloud computing initiative.

    Amazon Elastic MapReduce utilizes a hosted Hadoop framework running on the web-scale infrastructure of Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2) and Amazon Simple Storage Service (Amazon S3).
    Using Amazon Elastic MapReduce, users can instantly provision as much or as little capacity as they like to perform data-intensive tasks for applications such as web indexing, data mining, log file analysis, machine learning, financial analysis, scientific simulation, and bioinformatics research. It’s important advantage is that users pay only for what they use, with no up-front expenses or long-term commitments.

    How does it work ?
    Amazon Elastic MapReduce automatically spins up a Hadoop implementation of the MapReduce framework on Amazon EC2 instances, sub-dividing the data in a job flow into smaller chunks so that they can be processed (the “map” function) in parallel, and eventually recombining the processed data into the final solution (the “reduce” function). Amazon S3 serves as the source for the data being analyzed, and as the output destination for the end results.

  • CTIA 2009: First Full Office Suite for the iPhone

    Quickoffice for iPhone enables robust editing of Microsoft Word and Excel documents, cut and paste and file transfer.

    Quickoffice, Inc., provider of mobile office productivity software, announced at CTIA WIRELESS 2009 in Las Vegas, it will unveil the first complete Office suite to provide native Microsoft Word and Excel editing for the iPhone.

     

    Quickoffice is the first iPhone application to include robust document and spreadsheet editors, along with file access and content management functionalities. Quickword enables quick editing on-the-go, font formatting, content selection, bullets and cut, copy and paste within Word documents and modifying documents in landscape mode to leverage a wider keyboard. With Quicksheet Excel users can revise inputs and recalculate, insert and resize rows and columns within the application as well as use extensive mathematical and statistical functions, including advanced Excel formulas for spreadsheet processing.

    Quickoffice also includes file-sharing capabilities to transfer files to and from a desktop using Wi-Fi and remotely access their MobileMe iDisk account. In addition to Word and Excel editing, users can view iWorks, PDF and other common media files. The app also supports ‘Auto-Save’ and ‘Auto-Restore’.
    “We are dedicated to bringing the most robust, full-featured application to this platform and will continue to add capabilities and services” said Gregg Fiddes, vice president of sales and strategic partnerships at Quickoffice.

    Quickoffice for iPhone will be available in early April for $19.99 for a full package. Separate applications – Quickword Word and Quicksheet Excel – will cost $12.99 each. Quickoffice Files, that allows file transfer, will be available for $3.99.

    QuickOffice Website

  • WD Enters Solid-State Drive Market With Acquisition Of SiliconSystems


    Western Digital has completed a USD $65 million cash acquisition of leading solid-state drives supplier, SiliconSystems.

    SiliconSystems’ product portfolio includes solid-state drives with SATA, EIDE, PC Card, USB and CF interfaces in 2.5-inch, 1.8-inch, CF and other form factors.

    Since its inception in 2002, SiliconSystems has sold millions of SiliconDrive products to the network-communications, industrial, embedded-computing, medical, military and aerospace markets.

    These markets accounted for approximately one third of worldwide solid-state drive revenues in 2008.

    John Coyne, president and CEO of WD, said its worldwide infrastructure and technical and financial resources will enable further growth in SiliconSystems’ existing markets and customer relationships.

    He said SiliconSystems’ intellectual property and technical expertise will provide additional building blocks for future products to address emerging opportunities in WD’s existing markets.

    "The combination will be modestly accretive to revenue and margins as a result of SiliconSystems’ existing position as a trusted supplier to the well-established USD $400 million market for embedded solid-state drives," he said.

    "SiliconSystems’ intellectual property and technical expertise will significantly accelerate WD’s solid-state drive development programs for the netbook, client and enterprise markets, providing greater choice for our customers to satisfy all their storage requirements."

    Integration into WD begins immediately, with SiliconSystems now becoming known as the WD Solid-State Storage business unit, complementing WD’s existing Branded Products, Client Storage, Consumer Storage and Enterprise Storage business units.

  • Optimizing Virtualization On Single Architecture: Dell Announces ISCSI SAN Storage Arrays


    Dell has announced that as part of its data center strategy it will focus on combining servers, storage and services optimized for virtualization in a single architecture.

    As a step in this direction Dell has come out with a new series of EqualLogic iSCSI SAN with fast processors, more cache, additional Ethernet ports and support for solid state disc drives, writes Samantha Sai for storage.biz-news.

    The series of storage arrays is named PS6000 and will be available in five models – PS6000E, PS6500E, PS6000X, PS6000XV and PS6000S.
    This product is distinguished by its speed.

    The redesigned controllers, faster processors and a fourth Gigabit Ethernet port for connectivity is expected to be 9.1 per cent faster than its predecessors for sequential write workloads and 29 per cent faster for sequential read workloads.

    The arrays can be scaled up to 16 TB.

    Dedicated controllers for SSD drives for PS6000S have been added to scale the performance linearly.

    The SSD is 50 GB and is available in 400GB and 800 GB dual controller configurations. The array is designed for low latency, high IOPS applications.

    The expanded management software suite that has been unveiled along with this hardware complements the PS6000 launch.

    This software supports RAID6, Microsoft Hyper-V Smart Copysnapshots and enhanced integration for Microsoft Exchange, SQL Server, VMware and Citrix XenCenter.

    The technology aims to use storage resources efficiently in a networked environment.

    It effectively exploits hypervisor resources in virtual machines.

    The SAN headquaters is a centralized dashboard that helps administrators monitor performance and events of dozens of PS Series groups.

    This technology is available free of cost and under warranty or service agreement.

    The arrays are priced at USD $17000, while the SSDs are priced at USD $25000.

    The series is available from Dell and its PartnerDirect, Channel partner.

    An IDC report says that Dell EqualLogic holds 31% of the iSCSI San Market as on date.

  • FLASH SSD: More Viable in Enterprise Storage Market


    Until recently, the idea of using solid-state disk (SSD) flash drives in an enterprise storage subsystem would have been deemed ludicrous.

    Ray Lucchesi, president of Silverton Consulting, however, says that recent trends in NAND technology have made SSDs more viable in the enterprise storage market.

    In 2009 the flash SSD storage market will see even faster products appearing on the shelves, writes Samantha Sai for storage.biz-news.

    That prediction is based on the additive factors that are at work in the storage market—architecture and semiconductor process technology.

    Historically manufacturers did not see any point in integrating very fast architectural features in to flash SSDs as they were expensive and the market for the product was small.

    The improvement in architectural technologies for speeding up performance and IOPS has since been developed by OEMs for specific marketable products and their potential is clearly exploitable in the Flash SSD design.

    The SSD market has also reached a critical mass.

    Lucchesi said the technology has now become economical enough to favorably compare to traditional disk drives — at least in a price-performance context.

    In addition, he said many seemingly insurmountable shortcomings have been resolved.

    The architectural features that would come into play in the construction of Flash SSDs would be:

    • parallelization of the internal media arrays
    • improved media management technology
    • faster media controllers
    • faster host interface controllers
    • hypbridizing on board memory technologies

    The scale up of the technologies would require significant investment in IP. A lot of trial and error will become visible as OEMs throw products at the market.

    In this context it is interesting to note that it is expected that a single 3.5" form factor flash SSD will be able to deliver speeds of 2000 MBs of sustainable reads and writes.

    The Flash SSD through put and IOPS performance is predicted to be a multiple of the performance for a single disk, based on the proven scalability of the SSD RAID arrays.

    Expectation is also high that the asymmetry of sustained read to write IOPs will improve from 10 to 1. (However, there is apprehension that it will never achieve parity.)

    If this expectation is fulfilled, flash SSD arrays will become a viable choice for many Enterprise speed-up applications.

    While the latency in Flash SSDs is not expected to scale in the same way as throughput, the read access times are expected to improve.

    This is attributed to the fact that flash SSDs have not yet been optimized for latency. However, in the future the Flash SSD may increase in density and a read write cycle may become more complicated on chip process.

    Calibration, error correction and address translation may be done by controllers between the memory arrays and the host interface controller or card data bus.

    The flash may still evolve as a separate species that looks completely different from the typical RAM.

    On the whole, the improvement will be revolutionary and evolutionary and by 2013 flash SSD would have reached a point where architecture of an ideal SSD will be well established.

  • Storage Management Priorities: the Need of the Hour


    Most industries acknowledge that increasing IT Storage needs is a fact of life even in the face of economic downturn.

    Newer and more efficient ways of optimizing existing storage facilities are being explored as budgets are tight and capital outlay has been squeezed, writes Samantha Sai for storage.biz-news.

    Hu Yoshida, VP and CTO of Hitachi Data Systems, says: "In this economy, it will be important for IT professionals to stick to the fundamentals and focus on ROA and the ability to break even quickly."

    Major Storage investment priorities for IT Professionals in 2009 have been identified and listed unequivocally.

    Virtualized Storage services already in place require optimization. The direction of thinking seems to be virtualization of external storage and combining it with lower cost tiers of storage and thin provisioning.

    The stress is on curtailing data growth, while maximizing current investments, to get quick returns.

    The drive is to exploit the 70-80 per cent capacity that remains largely unused in existing storage.

    Unstructured data growth remains a persistent problem.

    Data storage optimization would require dealing with unstructured data on a war footing.

    The imperative is to archive unstructured data and map resources back to the bottom line of information needs.

    Tiered and priority ordering of information is identified as an essential activity that will help identify data that can be moved and archived without affecting critical data access.

    Consequently, the archiving solutions features being sought include simple process management, reduction in TCO and mitigation of risk.

    Active archiving solutions that are being put in place, have been recognized as integral to organization management initiatives and two tier storage systems are being moved to archival tier.

    Closely associated with the above processes is the data de-duplication process. Market conditions rule that duplicate data comes at a cost and de-duplication will save costs and improve productivity.

    Additionally, data compression and reduction in number of data backups are seen as methods to save costs.

    It is expected that as the year 2009 advances more and more companies will turn their attention from optimization and archiving needs towards Risk Mitigation and savings that can be had form power and cooling costs.

    Green, clean data centers will be seen as a real and urgent requirement.

    The need to stay ahead of energy issues will be dictated by upcoming regulations of EMEA and increasing purchasing requirements in the USA.

  • Mobile VoIP: Zer01 Announces Plans For Unlimited Voice and Data Service


    Zer01 will launch its "True" mobile VoIP service in the US on July 1st.

    Making the announcement at CTIA Wireless, the company said the unlimited voice and data plan will cost USD $69.99 and will support Windows Mobile 6 and newer smartphones.

    However, it expects to expand onto the BlackBerry, Android, and iPhone smartphone platforms ‘within months’.

    Users can either use their existing unlocked handset or buy one from Zer01’s online store.

    Zer01 has data agreements with multiple national and regional GSM carriers for its unlimited mobile VoIP calling service.

    The service works by using Zer01’s Veritable Mobile Convergence (VCM) technology, which bypasses carrier circuits by using VoIP – calls are sent instead into a virtual private network.

  • ArcSoft Plug-in Upscales Standard DVDs to HD-Like Quality on the PC


    ArcSoft today announced a plug-in for its universal high-definition multimedia player which it says brings most standard-definition video to near HD quality.

    Called SimHD, ArcSoft’s in-house upscaling technology uses NVIDIA CUDA parallel computing architecture to upscale standard DVD movies to up to 1,920 x 1,080.

    The company says it also sharpens and enhances the picture with vivid colours.

    To use the plug-in a copy of ArcSoft’s TotalMedia Theatre software and a sufficiently powerful CUDA-compatible GPU.

    Michael Steele, general manager of visual consumer solutions at NVIDIA, said the solution was a great way to upgrade an existing collection of DVDs into near-HD quality.

  • Telefónica Performs First LTE Tests – 10x Faster Than Current 3G


    Telefónica today conducted its first tests on a real 4th Generation network with LTE (Long Term Evolution) technology, installed at its Demonstrations Centre in Madrid.

    The initial tests consisted of a VoIP call and a videocall using an LTE mini-network installed by Ericsson, Video conference, and data and images downloads at speeds in excess of 140 Mbps.

    These are around 10 times those possible with current 3G networks using HSPA technology.

    With LTE and in recent experiences from manufacturers with which Telefónica works on a regular basis, laboratory tests have been conducted showing download speeds in excess of 326 Mbps, while uploads have been possible at up to 86 Mbps.

    Telefónica says that before the 4th Generation or LTE arrives, it will continue to improve the capacity of the current 3rd Generation network.

    This currently gives both voice and data coverage to around 90 per cent of the Spanish population.

    Half way through this year, Telefónica is to start rolling out its HSPA + technology network, unveiled at the last Mobile World Congress with 21 Mbps download transmissions. This will mean it will also be able to offer the first commercial services and data devices this year.

    Information download speeds of up to 21 Mbps and 5 Mbps for sending information will be possible, as new functionalities and terminals become available, reaching 84 Mbps speeds until the arrival of LTE.

    Telefónica currently covers more than 81 per cent of the Spanish population with HSDPA – for downloading information, which it expects will surpass 85 per cent by the end of the year.

    With HSUPA – for sending information – this cover will reach 50 per cent by the end of 2009.