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Wednesday, July 4, 2012

The Largest LED-TV Sharp introduced in the world (by techli8)


Sharp has a presentation in New York has announced LED-TV with a diagonal of the biggest in the world. The size of the screen with the new AQUOS models with 3D support is 90 inches (2.3 meters). In other words, on its surface you can put about 56 tablets iPad. TV weighs about 64 pounds. Despite the size, due to LED-technology power unit is 150 watts. Representatives from Sharp promised in the U.S. electricity costs for the owners of the 90-inch AQUOS will not exceed $ 28 per year.


It is noted that the picture is clear enough from the TV (1080p). Included are 3D-glasses, the function AquoMotion 240, smoothing, "smeared" frames, Wi-Fi module and system SmartCentral, allowing to connect to the Internet and connect to "Skype". The price for the novelty of almost 11 thousand dollars. 
Sharp is the only company that produces television, "overgrown" with LED backlight. It already has a line of models with a diagonal of 70 and 80 inches. The screen size from other manufacturers did not exceed 65 inches.

Launches Microsoft Tablet Surface (by Tech Light)


Microsoft introduced the Tablet PC Surface, which is positioned as a competitor iPad from Apple. Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer, representing the Surface, said that the Tablet PC - part of the "new family", developed by the company. Ballmer presented one of the Tablet PC operating system is equipped with Surface Windows RT, weighs about 680 grams and a thickness of 9.3 millimeters. It is equipped with a detachable keyboard, fastened with special magnets. In the sale, it is expected to arrive in the autumn of 2012, presumably in conjunction with the release of the new operating system Windows 8. The price of this version of Surface, according to representatives of Microsoft, will be comparable with others on the market Tablet PCs. 

The second modification of the Surface, featured Ballmer, weighs about 910 grams and has a thickness of about 14 millimeters. This tablet PC will run under Windows 8 Pro, and its price is comparable to the price ultrabukov. In the present version of the tablet is equipped with a detachable keyboard, not just on magnets, and a stylus that allows the user to leave handwritten notes, for example, the documents in PDF. In addition, both represented by the tablet equipped with a special stand. Other technical parameters Surface were not disclosed. 
Under the name Surface Microsoft releases touch panels, designed for business users. Microsoft is developing software for tablet PCs since 2002, but production of such devices, the company had not previously worked.

The New Xbox console there is information about (Presented by Techli8)


In the Internet there was a presentation, which outlines plans for Microsoft's next-generation console. It was posted on the website. However, soon after information about this hit the media, the presentation was removed from the site at the request of the law firm Covington & Burling, which has been working with Microsoft.  According to the presentation, the release of the Xbox console next generation (the so-called Xbox 720) will be held in 2013 (at the beginning or end of the year - it is not clear). At the same time a new version of the controller Kinect - Kinect 2.0. Cost $ 299 console. It is reported that after the release, Microsoft plans to release a stereoscopic glasses that will also support technology "augmented reality". The presentation also confirmed that the Xbox 720 will be six times more powerful than the existing console - Xbox 360. In the next generation of consoles will be Blu-ray-drive, and it will have features that require a permanent connection to the Internet.


The paper describes a new version of the controller Kinect. It can simultaneously track the movement of four players, and it would be better to recognize voice commands. It is assumed that the controller will provide a new camera HD RGB. How to specify the media images of the document suggests that Kinect 2.0 there will be several cameras in order to better track the movement of players. Microsoft has opted not to comment on details of the presentation, and their reliability is questionable. However, representatives of mass media such as Xbox World and The Verge noticed that much of the data from the document is genuine and is consistent with other information about the upcoming console, Microsoft. In particular, Tom Warren of The Verge said that the network has fallen into the presentation referred to the technology SmartGlass, which was introduced in 2012.


Microsoft has repeatedly stated that the lifespan of the existing console - Xbox 360 - is about ten years, so the company is not going to produce next-generation consoles. However, regularly appear on the web information on what will be a new console, Microsoft, and when it goes on sale. Who shaped the media agree that the release of the next generation of consoles will be held in 2013.

Monday, July 2, 2012

Squishiness of Saturn's Moon Suggests Salty Ocean Below Surface


Scientists have reported the strongest sign yet that Saturn's giant moon may have a salty ocean beneath its chilly surface. If confirmed, it would catapult Titan into an elite class of solar system moons harboring water, an essential ingredient for life. Titan boasts methane-filled seas at the poles and a possible lake near the equator. And it's long been speculated that Titan contains a hidden liquid layer, based on mathematical modeling and electric field measurements made by the Huygens spacecraft that landed on the surface in 2005. The latest evidence is still indirect, but outside scientists said it's probably the best that can be obtained short of sending a spacecraft to drill into the surface — a costly endeavor that won't happen anytime soon. The research looks convincing, said Gabriel Tobie of France's University of Nantes. "If the analysis is correct, this is a very important finding," Tobie said in an email.


Squeezing, stretching suggests buried ocean

The finding by an international team of researchers led by astronomer Luciano Iess of Sapienza University of Rome was released online Thursday by the journal Science. The scientists pored over data from NASA's orbiting Cassini spacecraft, which flew by Titan half a dozen times between 2006 and last year and took gravity measurements for a glimpse of its interior. They found Titan got squeezed and stretched depending on its orbit around Saturn, suggesting the presence of a buried ocean. If Titan were solid rock and ice, such deformations would not occur.  "Titan is quite squishy," noted Jonathan Lunine of Cornell University, who was part of the research team.


Scientists did not delve into the characteristics of the ocean, but previous estimates suggested it could be 50 to 100 kilometres deep and contain traces of ammonia. Titan is one of the few worlds in the solar system with a significant atmosphere, and the presence of an underground ocean could help explain how Titan replenishes methane in its hazy atmosphere. Having an internal body of water would also make Titan an attractive place to study whether it would be capable of supporting microbial life. Other moons on the shortlist: Jupiter's Europa, where an underground ocean is thought to exist and another Saturn moon, Enceladus, where jets have been seen spewing from the surface. "Any environment that has liquid water needs to be investigated carefully," said planetary scientist Jean-Luc Margot of the University of California, Los Angeles, who had no role in the research.

Sunday, July 1, 2012

Milky Way Collision Reverberating 100 Million Years Later


A satellite galaxy or other massive object that passed through the Milky Way 100 million years ago sent shock waves through its many millions of stars that are still reverberating today, a team of Canadian and U.S. physicists has found. Astrophysicist Lawrence Widrow of Queen's University in Kingston, Ont., and his colleagues looked at data for hundreds of thousands of stars in the Milky Way and found that the way they were moving within what is known as the disk of the galaxy indicated they had been disturbed in some way.  The stars are moving up and down through the disk, and we expect them to have a distribution of positions and velocities in something close to an equilibrium distribution," Widrow said.


"What we've seen suggests that perhaps the galaxy isn't quite in equilibrium, and the hypothesis is that something has come through and perturbed the disk in this way." That "something" could have been a smaller satellite galaxy, such as the Sagittarius dwarf galaxy, or a massive dark matter object, Widrow said, and most likely was only one of many such satellites to pass through the Milky Way and disrupt its stars.  "The idea of satellites coming through the disk and perturbing the disk is an old idea; the idea that we're seeing a particular signature of this, a smoking gun, is what's new," Widrow said.


Ripples in a pond'

The Milky Way "disk" is the mass of stars orbiting around the centre of the spiral galaxy held together by gravity. The disk contains tens of billions of stars moving at a speed of around 200 kilometres per second around the galaxy centre as well as vertically above and below the so-called galactic midplane in a complex motion Widrow compares to a dance. "Each star has an ideal circular path around the centre of the galaxy, but they're also bobbing up and down in and out of the plane of the disk and they're also not quite on circular paths, they're on slightly elliptical orbits," he said. "When we studied these motions … we noticed what appeared to be perturbations or oscillations or waves in the positions and velocities."

By assuming that the undisturbed state of the stars should be a more even distribution of motion, the researchers speculated that the oscillations were a sign that something had passed through the galaxy and disrupted the equilibrium. "In physics, if there is some force trying to bring the system back into equilibrium, the system tends to overshoot, and that gives rise to oscillations, ripples in a pond," Widrow said. "You almost think of these stars as behaving like a fluid in the disk of the galaxy held together by gravity."


Sloan sky survey provided data

Widrow and his fellow physicists at the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory in Illinois, the University of Chicago and the University of Kentucky focused on a cluster of several hundred thousand stars in what astronomers call the solar neighbourhood — the region of the galaxy disk near the sun.

They used measurements from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, which compiles data from a telescope at the Apache Point Observatory in New Mexico and makes it openly available to scientists for their own use. By analyzing everything from the stars' brightness, colour, velocity and different kinds of motion and by setting up a computer simulation of how a galaxy might respond were it perturbed by one of the satellite galaxies known to surround the Milky Way, they were able to determine how long ago the disruption might have happened. "One has to set up a galaxy that has been perturbed and then evolve it and see how long it takes for those perturbations to die away, and they seem to die away on the time scale of hundreds of millions of years, so if we're seeing the perturbations now, they must have occurred within the last 100 or 200 million years," Widrow said.

Satellite galaxy interactions likely commonMost astronomers suspect that the Milky Way is never quite entirely in equilibrium but is continually being disturbed by one satellite or another passing through it, and Widrow admits that his team's explanation is only one hypothetical scenario of one kind of disruption that could cause the kind of motion detected by the Sloan telescope. 'It's an open question what might have caused this effect and when exactly it happened and how big the dwarf was. These are things we hope to study," he said. Widrow anticipates that the study of the motion of stars and the effect of satellite galaxies on the Milky Way disk will only get better as data from upcoming space missions accumulates over the next two years.

"There's quite a lot of discussion in the astronomical community about how many satellites there actually are and how they interact with the disk of the galaxy and what effect they're having on the disk," Widrow said. "What we'd like to think is that this is perhaps one piece of a broader discussion of how the disk galaxies interact with these satellites." The findings are published in the Astrophysical Journal Letters.

Chinese iPad Naming Case Apple to pay $60M


Apple has agreed to pay a Chinese company $60 million to settle a dispute over ownership of the iPad name, a court announced Monday, removing a potential obstacle to sales of the popular tablet computer in the key Chinese market.  Apple Inc. says it bought the global rights to the iPad name from Shenzhen Proview Technology in 2009 but Chinese authorities say the rights in China were never transferred. A Chinese court ruled in December that Proview still owned the name in China and the company asked Chinese authorities to seize iPads. 

"The iPad dispute resolution is ended," the Guangdong High People's Court said in a statement. "Apple Inc. has transferred $60 million to the account of the Guangdong High Court as requested in the mediation letter." China is Apple's second-largest market after the United States and the source of much of the Cupertino, California-based company's sales growth. Proview hoped for more money but felt pressure to settle because it needs to pay debts, said a lawyer for the company, Xie Xianghui. He said the company had hoped for as much as $400 million and might still be declared bankrupt in a separate legal proceeding despite the infusion of settlement money.


"This is a result that is acceptable to both sides," Xie said. The dispute centered on whether Apple acquired the iPad name in China when it bought rights in various countries from a Proview affiliate in Taiwan for £35,000 ($55,845). The December court ruling said Proview, which registered the iPad trademark in China in 2001, was not bound by that sale, even though it was part of the same company. Shenzhen Proview Technology is a subsidiary of LCD screen maker Proview International Holdings Ltd., headquartered in Hong Kong.