Jumat, 12 September 2008

New Sims 3 Screens

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Source: http://thesims3.ea.com/view/pages/screenshots.jsp



The iPhone’s Move to Intel

Silverthorne ChipComing to an iPhone near you: Intel Processors. The Inquirer is reporting more information from CeBIT where the iPhone was used to represent the smartphone move to Intel’s Moorestown platform. It would be wise to point out the iPhone could have well been representing smartphones in general and not meant a thing about the device itself, but iPhone 24×7 wouldn’t be a true Apple-related blog if we didn’t make the jump.


To clarify, the Moorestown platform is based on Intel’s Atom processor which will still use the Core 2 Duo instruction set. This means bringing an amazing amount of power and flexibility to the iPhone, especially when it comes to software. In addition, reports are telling us these chips could cut idle power consumption 10 times over.



The platform likely wont be making a move to the iPhone until 2010 according to AnandTech, so all recent or considering iPhone buyers can rest assured that they won’t be missing out on this at least for another while.


To give you a sense of how small these processors are, the image above is a picture of Intel’s Atom processor, formerly known as Silverthorne.


These chips are literally the future of mobile computing and could end up in a “MacTouch” device, an idea I have mentioned before. Not only could these chips bring seamless integration between computers and mobile devices for software, but they can bring the horsepower to run those applications.


With platforms such as Moorestown, “The Future is Calling,” and Apple is waiting to pick up.



See More:

Inquirer Article



What Steve Jobs Might Say to Microsoft’s Bid on Yahoo

Steve JobsWhat might Steve Jobs think about Microsoft’s bid for Yahoo? Here’s a hint.


Steve Jobs, the founder of Apple Computer, has had his own experience of seeing Microsoft enter a market and overwhelm the original innovator (the Apple Macintosh) with a similar, competing product (Windows). Jobs regards the Web as “the defining social moment for computing.” He foresees all current mail-order commerce (15 percent of the retail economy), and more, shifting to the Web. He approves of the provocative fact that on the Web, the smallest company can look like the largest, and regards the Web as having “breathed a whole new generation of life into personal computing.” Steve Jobs is also both a perennial critic and partner of Microsoft and its monolithic tendencies: “The Web is incredibly exciting, because it is the fulfillment of a lot of our dreams, that the computer would ultimately not be primarily a device for computation, but metamorphosis into a device for communication. And with the Web that’s finally happening. And secondly, it’s exciting because Microsoft doesn’t own it, and therefore there is a tremendous amount of innovation happening.”



That quote is from Nerds 2.0.1: A Brief History of the Internet by Stephen Segaller.


Google has already come out and made a the statement on their blog as to why Microsoft acquiring Yahoo would be a very bad thing. To sum it up, if you think of massive sum of IMing and Email accounts Microsoft owns though MSN, and you were to add those to the substantial amount Microsoft would be gaining from Yahoo you will find Microsoft left with a large chunk of the Internet’s communications.


We’ve all seen what happened when Microsoft gained too much control over browsers or operating systems. I don’t think that needs too much more explanation.


Now to the quote, why does Steve Jobs think the Internet is exciting? “Because Microsoft doesn’t own it.” To take words out of Steve’s mouth, if Microsoft were to acquire Yahoo it could make a fundamental basis of the Internet crumble to pieces. Again, the reason the Internet is moving forward and innovating is because Microsoft (or any other single company such as Microsoft) doesn’t own it.



In my opinion, if Microsoft does acquire Yahoo it could very well mean some of today’s developing Internet companies and technologies could be trumped by Microsoft’s need to “make sure things are just right.” Even for the mobile device user, technologies that are moving us forward could be inhibited if Microsoft chose to make that level of influence.


My every hope is a company with the fundamentals of Google or Apple will acquire Yahoo and make good use of its resources. We all know Yahoo is on the decline and will be acquired by some company, but does it have to be Microsoft?


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