Sunday, 27 January 2013
HTC has introduced a new piece of hardware to their ecosystem. The HTC Mini is a remote control aimed at the Chinese market for the HTC Butterfly, the Chinese market variant of the HTC DROID DNA. The device works by pairing it with an HTC Butterfly initially via NFC. Once paired, the devices can communicate wirelessly with the HTC Mini providing several remote functions.
Thursday, 3 January 2013
Apple Drops Samsung Chips From Devices – Report
Apple is reportedly migrating away from using the chips of arch rival Samsung for its iPads and iPhones
The relationship breakdown between Apple and Samsung is reportedly even spreading to the sourcing of components that Apple uses in its devices. Apple and Samsung have of course been fighting each other for months over patent-infringement claims. But during the courtroom tussle, Apple continued to build its iPhones and iPads using Samsung ARM-based chips.
Apple Samsung Divorce
However that is apparently changing, and occurs on the heels of some long-time rumours that the move was in the works, according to a report from Forbes.
“There’s a story coming out of Taiwan that Apple has already started to make the switch, commissioning TSMC to make the next round of the A6 chip and then on into production of the A7,” Forbes reported 2 January. “Apple has already requested Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company [TSMC] to produce its next-generation A6X processors, reports the Taiwanese financial newspaper Commercial Times.”
The ongoing legal fight between Apple and Samsung has been knuckle-busting for both. In August 2012, Apple won a $1.05 billion (£646m) verdict against Samsung from a California court over allegations that Samsung infringed on Apple patents in the designs of mobile devices.
With the legal battles in the background in recent months, Apple has reportedly been looking to reduce its dependency on Samsung for chips, turning to TSMC for production of its 20-nanometre chips.
Apple uses Samsung chips only in its iPhones and iPads, not in its desktop and laptop products.
Chip Specialists
In the meantime, chips haven’t been the only place where Apple has been moving to make some pointed statements to Samsung.
In October 2012, Apple hired chip engineer Jim Mergard away from Samsung, where he worked after some 16 years with chip rival Advanced Micro Devices. The move illustrates the demand for chip engineers – not only in PCs and servers, but also in mobile devices like smartphones and tablets – and sheds more light on the growing competition between x86-based chip makers like Intel and AMD and ARM Holdings and ARM’s list of partners, such as Samsung, Nvidia, Qualcomm and Texas Instruments.
While Intel and AMD chips dominate the PC and server markets, ARM-designed chips are found in the bulk of smartphones and tablets. And as both Intel and AMD push to gain inroads into the mobile market, ARM and some of its partners are looking to move their low-power chips into PCs and servers, widening the competitive field.
Mergard was a key PC chip engineer during his time at AMD and helped lead the development of the company’s Brazos accelerated processing unit (APU) aimed at entry-level PCs and notebooks. He came to Samsung as part of a wave of AMD engineers and officials leaving the company.
He also came at a time when Samsung reportedly began gearing up to challenge Intel and AMD in the server chip business. Samsung over the past couple of years has been aggressive in pursuing chip engineers from rival companies.
Courtroom Tussles
Also in October, Samsung won a legal round with Apple when a three-judge federal appeals court panel overturned a preliminary injunction awarded to Apple in August that blocked Samsung’s sales of its Galaxy Nexus smartphones in the United States. The injunction was awarded while both sides are tussling over patent-infringement claims involving the smartphones.
The decision means that Samsung will be able to continue to sell Galaxy Nexus phones while the legal fight continues. In their decision to toss the injunction, the judges wrote that the judge in the original case in August, US District Court Judge Lucy Koh, abused her discretion in issuing the injunction against Apple in the first place.
To have correctly earned such an injunction, the appeals court wrote, Apple would have had to have proven that consumers purchased Galaxy Nexus handsets because they specifically included the features that Apple claimed are infringing on its patents.
“In this light, the causal link between the alleged infringement and consumer demand for the Galaxy Nexus is too tenuous to support a finding of irreparable harm,” the appeals court wrote.
Pakistan Lifts YouTube Ban For Just Three Minutes
Government firewall fails to block unsavoury YouTube content
Pakistan, which had banned YouTube over a controversial video, allowed access to the Google-owned site again over the weekend, but it lasted for just three minutes.
The ban was imposed after a video known as “Innocence of Muslims”, which ridiculed the Prophet Muhammad, appeared on YouTube. It was the subject of anti-US protests in Egypt, Libya and Yemen, one of which led to the death of the US ambassador to Libya.
I predict a YouTube riot
YouTube made the video inaccessible in Egypt and Libya, but did not remove the video from the site or prevent access in other parts of the world.
Pakistan thought it had successfully censored blasphemous material from the website, but after lifting the ban, it found enough offensive content to shut down access again after a few minutes.
Rehman Malik, Pakistan’s interior minister, had indicated the ban would be lifted over the weekend and the government followed through with the promise.
He said there was great demand “from all sections of society” to unblock YouTube.
“PTA [Pakistan Telecommunication Authority] is finalising negotiations for acquiring a powerful firewall software to totally block pornographic and blasphemous material,” read another. Yet those firewalls, reportedly designed by government technicians, proved ineffective. According to the New York Times, the ban was lifted after pressure from the influential television news network Geo, which found that anti-Islam content could still be viewed on YouTube. Many in Pakistan remain angry at the ban, claiming it amounts to an attack on citizens’ rights.
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