Thursday, February 19, 2009

CompEd2009XL:Latest Technology of 2009









CompED2009XL: Latest Technology of 2009

























Mobile Memory Initiative
Enabling a new generation of media-rich mobile products
Consumers will come to expect the High Definition (HD) experience of the living room from the mobile devices they carry everyday. In addition, they'll want features including HD resolution video recorders, multi-megapixel digital still cameras, 3D games, and media-rich web applications. These advanced mobile devices will be capable of encoding and transmitting high definition content directly to HDTVs, home PCs and servers. To pack all that functionality in a form factor that's thin, light and delivered with a pleasing aesthetic presents a tremendous challenge for mobile device designers. Chief among these challenges will be the development of a high-performance memory architecture that meets the power efficiency constraints of battery-operated products.
The Rambus Mobile Memory Initiative pioneers high-bandwidth, low-power memory signaling technologies that can meet the needs of future smartphones, netbooks, and mobile gaming and multimedia products. Technologies developed through the Mobile Memory Initiative will enable future mobile memory architectures capable of achieving data rates of 4.3 gigabits per second (Gbps) at best-in-class power efficiency. With this performance, designers can realize more than 17 Gigabytes per second (GB/s) of memory bandwidth from a single mobile DRAM device.
Breakthrough innovations achieve performance and power efficiency
To achieve a high-bandwidth, low-power memory interface solution, Rambus has developed breakthrough innovations that include:



one of the world's premier technology licensing companies specializing in high-speed memory architectures, today announced its Mobile Memory Initiative. This development effort focuses on high-bandwidth, low-power memory technologies targeted at achieving data rates of 4.3Gbps at best-in-class power efficiency. With this performance, designers could realize more than 17Gigabytes per second of memory bandwidth from a single mobile DRAM device. These technologies enable a memory architecture ideal for next-generation smartphones, netbooks, portable gaming, and portable media products. Rambus will demonstrate a silicon test vehicle for its Mobile Memory Initiative at DesignCon 2009.









CompEd2009XL:Computerized Maintenance Management Systems


Computerized Maintenance Management Systems (CMMS) enable the facility manager, subordinates and customers to track the status of maintenance work on their assets and the associated costs of that work. CMMS are utilized by facilities maintenance organizations to record, manage and communicate their day-to-day operations. The system can provide reports to use in managing the organization's resources, preparing facilities key metrics to use in evaluating the effectiveness of the current operations and for making organizational and personnel decisions. In today's maintenance world the CMMS is an essential tool for the modern facilities maintenance organization.


CMMS software package maintains a database of information about an organization’s maintenance operations. This information is intended to help maintenance workers do their jobs more effectively (for example, determining which storerooms contain the spare parts they need) and to help management make informed decisions (for example, calculating the cost of maintenance for each piece of equipment used by the organization, possibly leading to better allocation of resources). The information may also be useful when dealing with third parties; if, for example, an organization is involved in a liability case, the data in a CMMS database can serve as evidence that proper safety maintenance has been performed.

CMMS packages may be used by any organization that must perform maintenance on equipment, assets and property. Some CMMS products focus on particular industry sectors (e.g. the maintenance of vehicle fleets or health care facilities). Other products aim to be more general.





CompEd2009Xl:Samsung cell phone Show W7900


Samsung officially unveiled its Show W7900 cell phone, also known as the i7410, will feature Texas Instruments’ integrated DLP Pico technology. It will come with the built-in chipset and compact projector which is able to throw an image from the handset to a screen or wall at up to 50″ in size.
Features:* OLED touchscreen display* Flick gestures support* 5 megapixel camera* Built-in speakers


wind



this is original i swear..



















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