General 8068 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Adrian's Rojak Pot has posted an article on reconfigurable computing called Reconfigurable Computing - The Future Of Computing

Imagine a processor that dynamically adapts itself to changing requirements. Such a processor would be able to reconfigure itself into a DSP or GPU as and when such functions are needed. Imagine the implications!

This is what one of our new writers, David Du will be touching on in his exciting debut article called Reconfigurable Computing - The Future Of Computing!
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General 8068 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Advanced Micro Devices Inc. on Tuesday released the newest version of its two-way 64-bit Opteron chip.

The Sunnyvale, Calif., company's Opteron 246 is the latest addition to the two-way line of chips. The previous fastest was the 244 model, which ran at 1.8GHz. AMD, which downplays the clock speed in its chips, did not release the frequency of the 246.

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General 8068 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

The graphics chipmaker continues its push into new arenas with a $70 million purchase of MediaQ, which specializes in chips for wireless devices.

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General 8068 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Retail sales of laptop and desktop computers with DVD recorders jumped 550 percent in unit terms in the first half of this year, according to research from NPD Group.

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General 8068 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

A new survey of Fortune 1000 corporate Web sites (http://www.port80software.com/surveys) conducted by Port80 Software, Inc., a developer of software to secure, accelerate and customize Microsoft’s Internet Information Server (IIS), reports that only 29 of the top 1000 corporations' sites use HTTP compression. This new study illustrates the opportunity for all companies to leverage standards-based HTTP compression technologies for their Web sites and applications, reducing bandwidth bills, speeding up file delivery and serving more users with existing resources.

"Although it is difficult to calculate exact savings across all Fortune 1000 sites, the value of HTTP compression is clear. And with bandwidth bills in the thousands or tens-of-thousands of dollars a month, it is surprising that more Fortune 1000s do not use compression," said Joseph Lima, COO of Port80 Software. "For perspective, if all Fortune 1000 sites used compression, the aggregate savings would be 20 times greater than at present, and the average site would save over 25% on bandwidth bills."

Standardized in HTTP 1.0 since 1996 and supported in all browsers released in the last five years (Microsoft Internet Explorer and Netscape versions 4 and above), HTTP compression reduces network bandwidth, optimizes download time and improves end-user performance.

Port80 Software offers monthly surveys investigating how the world’s largest companies use Web server and development technologies. To review an update of the popular Port80 Web Servers Survey and the new Compression Survey, including archived reports, a top ten list with the best and worst of compression among the Top 1000 sites, methodology and a tool to check any company’s Web server compression, please visit http://www.port80software.com/surveys.