General 8068 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Tweakers Australia has posted an article on the Memory Chip Industry

It's all systems go in the Taiwan memory chip line. According to statistics from the Market Intelligence Center (MIC) of the Institute for Information Industry (III), Taiwan's DRAM manufacturers churned out about 19 percent of all DRAM chips produced in 2001. R&D shows no signs of slowing down either: new chips boast faster memory speeds and higher storage capacities. Production capabilities are also being enhanced. Chipmakers have been upgrading their process technologies in order to shrink the die size and bring costs down, while module companies are honing their packing and testing technologies to improve module quality and reliability. In terms of buyer trends, there is a move away from Single Data Rate (SDR) memory modules toward Double Data Rate (DDR) modules. Rambus modules are being squeezed into a niche.
Read more

General 8068 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

In this episode of The .NET Show, we talk with Shaykat Chaudhuri and Habib Heydarian about just a few of the debugging features and capabilities of Visual Studio .NET. They will show how easy it is to debug a local client application, a remote ASP.NET server component, as well how to use Visual Studio .NET to debug a SQL Server stored procedure.

Download

General 8068 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

The next version of the Pentium 4, code-named Prescott, will enhance desktop performance through hyper-threading, among other changes, Intel's Louis Burns, vice president of the Desktop Platforms Group, said at the four-day Intel Developer Forum here. Burns also demonstrated a 4GHz Pentium 4, which should come out sometime next year.

Read more

General 8068 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

The computer maker on Tuesday announced the release of its first 19-inch LCD (liquid crystal display), the 1900FP, which is selling for $1,299.

Dell's strategy of selling flat-panel monitors is aimed at improving margins and lifting PC sales, according to Tim Rhodes, chief executive at research firm Provizio.

Read more

General 8068 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

USBMan send some USB news:

NetChip Technology Inc, a leader in Hi-Speed USB 2.0 semiconductors, announced the availability of the world’s first Hi-Speed USB 2.0 PC to PC network solution in a reference design platform, TurboCONNECT 2.0. This solution enables two or more Hi-Speed USB 2.0 equipped PCs to connect to each other using USB ports as a network and have data rates up to 480Mbps, almost five times faster than a conventional 100BT Ethernet network.

Read more

General 8068 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Thanks Inside Project for this one:

IBM said it has built the world's fastest microchip, which runs at more than 110 GigaHertz, or one hundred and ten billion cycles per second, and will enable communications systems to run more quickly.

Read more