sábado, 26 de fevereiro de 2011

Disco Rígido LaCie com Thunderbolt (10Gbps)

URL: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/digitaldrops/~3/m5qgMmLq3UQ/disco-rigido-lacie-com-thunderbolt-10gbps.html


A LaCie anunciou o primeiro disco rígido externo com a nova tecnologia de transferência super rápida Thunderbolt, da Intel, logo em seguida ao anúncio de ontem do primeiro notebook com Thunderbolt, o novo MacBook Pro.

O LaCie Little Big Disk Thunderbolt tem as mesmas características que o modelo anterior com a fundamental diferença da conexão Thunderbolt com taxas de transferências de até 10 GB por segundo! Assim é possível transferir arquivos grandes ou filmes em HD em apenas alguns segundos. Eu quero!

O preço e a data de lançamento ainda não foram divulgados e para mais informações confira o Press Release no site da LaCie.

Veja outros gadgets LaCie aqui no Digital Drops.

Via Geeky Gadgets.


Aproveite a Água da Chuva com a Bomba D’Água Solar

URL: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/digitaldrops/~3/YfF2tzICoAc/aproveite-a-agua-da-chuva-com-bomba-d%e2%80%99agua-solar.html


O RainPerfect é um ótimo gadget para quem mora em casa e tem um jardim que precisa ser regado constantemente.

O RainPerfect Solar Powered Rain Barrel Pump System é uma bomba d'água solar para ser usada em conjunto com um barril destinado a coletar água da chuva. Assim você pode regar o jardim usando água da chuva e sem gastar nenhuma energia.

O RainPerfect Solar Powered Rain Barrel Pump System usa uma bateria NiMH recarregada por painel solar 3.5 kW com 4,5 metros de fio (para ser colocado em qualquer lugar) e a cada recarga a bomba é capaz de bombear até 378 litros d'água.

O sistema RainPerfect custa US$150 nos Estados Unidos e a ITT Flow Control tem alguns distribuidores no Brasil.

Veja outros gadgets ecológicos aqui no Digital Drops.

Via Inhabitat.


sexta-feira, 25 de fevereiro de 2011

Pesquisadores criam computador do tamanho da ponta de uma caneta - IDG Now!

URL: http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNG5yr7cSlYbVX7S0RHL3R-LBG_wLg&url=http://idgnow.uol.com.br/mercado/2011/02/24/pesquisadores-criam-computador-do-tamanho-da-ponta-de-uma-caneta/



O Globo

Pesquisadores criam computador do tamanho da ponta de uma caneta
IDG Now!
Sistema criado por universidade dos EUA abre nova classe de aplicações em monitoração do corpo humano, do ambiente e de estrutura de prédios. Pesquisadores da Universidade de Michigan anunciaram na quarta-feira (23/2) a criação do primeiro protótipo de ...
Universidade americana desenvolve computador do tamanho da tampa ...O Globo
Universidade nos EUA cria computador com 1 mm³Adrenaline
Pesquisadores montam menor computador do mundoMidia News
Terra Brasil -Galileu -Sol
todos os 14 artigos »

The Intel Core i7-990X Extreme Edition Processor Review

URL: http://www.pheedcontent.com/click.phdo?i=835de006b5f699b3947b9165d4c2fb82


The Intel Core i7-990X Extreme Edition Processor ReviewWe were impressed enough with Intel's Sandy Bridge architecture that we awarded the Core i5-2500K our coveted Recommended Buy award. Just north of $200, that's a solid value. But it's not Intel's flagship. That honor goes to the new Core i7-990X Extreme.

Add to del.icio.us Email this Article Add to digg Add to Google

Intel Thunderbolt: a closer look (updated with video)

URL: http://www.engadget.com/2011/02/24/intel-thunderbolt-a-closer-look/


So what's this Thunderbolt stuff, and why is it in your new MacBook Pro? Intel just broke it down for us, and now we'll do the same for you. Simply put, Thunderbolt's a familiar-looking port, a brand-new chip, and a cord, which allows devices to pipe two data streams simultaneously -- in both directions -- over a single cable at up to 10 gigabits per second to start, primarily using PCI Express x4 for data and DisplayPort for video. The Thunderbolt controller chip -- required for the system, but Intel says it's hardware-agnostic and doesn't require an Intel processor or chipset to use -- acts as a miniature router of sorts that rapidly switches between the two bidirectional channels of data.

Sounds great, but why would you want to buy into yet another copper cord? Intel defends that Thunderbolt will be backwards and forwards-compatible depending on the cable used. Representatives explained that the basic system can work with any other PCI Express 2.0-compatible I/O system with, say, a FireWire or eSATA adapter doing the dirty work --Intel wouldn't specifically comment on USB 3.0 -- and that the port you'll find in new MacBook Pros and storage devices can actually take an optical cable when those are cost-effective enough to roll out, because Intel will eventually bake the optical transceivers into the cables themselves. In the meanwhile, you can get up to three meters of range out of a basic cable, plus a fairly generous 10 watts of power over the bus, and since Thunderbolt devices are designed to be daisy-chained, you may be able to get another three meters for each device you add on that sports a pair of the ports.

Though Intel wasn't talking about likely prices for the chips or cables in even the most general terms, Promise and LaCie had prototype devices on hand headed to the market soon -- get a peek at them and a closer look at the cable in our gallery below, and we'll have video up in a little while too.

Update: Looks like LaCie's product now has a name and vague release date: it's the LaCie Little Big Disk, coming this summer, with a pair of solid state drives inside.

Update 2: Video after the break -- get a load of Thunderbolt streaming four 1080p clips from a MacBook Pro and attached Promise NAS simultaneously!

Continue reading Intel Thunderbolt: a closer look (updated with video)

Intel Thunderbolt: a closer look (updated with video) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 24 Feb 2011 16:19:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Intel promises native USB 3.0 support someday

URL: http://www.engadget.com/2011/02/24/intel-promises-native-usb-3-0-support-someday/


So, now that Intel's fully revealed its proprietary high-speed interface technology and shoehorned it into Apple's new MacBook Pro, wither the fate of barely-incumbent USB 3.0? Intel says the two ports will co-exist in the market, and not just because third parties will obviously continue to roll SuperSpeed devices out -- Chipzilla's actually pursuing a native solution itself. "Intel fully supports USB 3 and plans to integrate it in the future," said the company's Jason Ziller, which sounds like a fairly potent promise to us. Still, considering how long Intel's been dragging its heels, we have to wonder if eventual support will be more than a token move -- Intel could wait until Thunderbolt not only has a foothold, but also a dozen pitons and a nice big rope securing it to a mountain of peripherals.

Intel promises native USB 3.0 support someday originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 24 Feb 2011 15:53:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Intel's Codename Light Peak Launches as Thunderbolt

URL: http://www.anandtech.com/show/4194/intels-codename-lightpeak-launches-as-thunderbolt


Back at IDF 2010, we wrote about Intel Light Peak nearing its eventual launch in 2011. Back then, the story was a 10 Gbps or faster physical link tunneling virtually every protocol under the sun over optical fiber. Though an optical physical layer provided the speed, in reality the connector and physical layer itself wasn’t as important as the tunneling and signaling going on beneath it. Daisy chain devices together, and connect everything with one unified connector and port. 

 

That dream lives on today, but sans optical fiber and under a different name. Intel’s codename “Light Peak” is now named Thunderbolt. 

quinta-feira, 24 de fevereiro de 2011

Core i7-2820QM: Sandy Bridge Shines In Notebooks

URL: http://www.pheedcontent.com/click.phdo?i=c6c758468fe0dba82d4ffef65b9a8c7d


Core i7-2820QM: Sandy Bridge Shines In NotebooksWe were impressed with Sandy Bridge's performance on the desktop, but how does it behave in a notebook? Today we break down performance, including surprising power consumption results. The new Core i7s even use less power than older Core i5s in daily use.

Add to del.icio.us Email this Article Add to digg Add to Google

Thunderbolt smokes USB, FireWire with 10Gbps throughput

URL: http://feeds.arstechnica.com/~r/arstechnica/index/~3/TdnagL5Uy1Q/thunderbolt-smokes-usb-firewire-with-10gbps-throughput.ars


Intel has finally launched its new peripheral interconnect technology—formerly codenamed "Light Peak"—now branded "Thunderbolt." Developed in cooperation with Apple, which introduced Thunderbolt on its newest MacBook Pro laptops on Thursday morning, the new interconnect is designed to bring workstation-class I/O throughput to mobile workflows as well as serve as a next-generation connector for peripherals, including displays, storage, and video and audio devices.

Intel first announced Light Peak at the Intel Developers Forum in 2009. The proposed standard was intended to replace interconnects like FireWire, USB, and others with fiber optic connections capable of up to 100Gbps bi-directional throughput. Moving to fiber instead of copper allowed increased speeds as well as dramatically longer cable runs. The original demos used a 30m fiber optic cable to transmit dual 1080p video streams, LAN traffic, and files to an SSD RAID setup.

Read the rest of this article...

Read the comments on this post