Posts Tagged "way"

  • Researchers develop silicon ReRAM chip, send warning shot to Flash memory

    Does the word ReRAM ring a bell? No? Well, the key point is that it’s much faster than NAND memory, and it’s making its way into chips from Elpida, Sharp and Panasonic. Further proof that ReRAM is on the up and up? Researchers at University College London have used this technology to make a chip that operates at 100 times the speed of standard Flash memory. The device is composed completely of silicon oxide, which improves the chip’s resistance, and it doesn’t require a vacuum to work (which makes it cheaper to produce). But this new chip is more than just a faster alternative to Flash; its ability to move between different states of conductivity means it can be configured as a memristor, or a device that handles both data-processing and storage tasks. In the long term, researchers hope this technology can pave the way for silicon oxide CPUs — and UCL is already using this design to help develop transparent memory chips for mobile devices. Need to know more? Feast your heart on the gritty details via the link below.

    Researchers develop silicon ReRAM chip, send warning shot to Flash memory originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 20 May 2012 06:54:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink Phys.org  |   | Email this | Comments

    Read More...
  • Image

    We here at Engadget tend to spend a lot of way too much time poring over the latest FCC filings, be it on the net or directly on the ol’ Federal Communications Commission’s site. Since we couldn’t possibly (want to) cover all the stuff that goes down there individually, we’ve gathered up an exhaustive listing of every phone and / or tablet getting the stamp of approval over the last week. Enjoy!

    Continue reading FCC Fridays: May 18, 2012

    FCC Fridays: May 18, 2012 originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 18 May 2012 23:52:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

    Read More...
  • At the end of Facebook’s first day of public trading, shares were selling for around 9.5 percent less than their opening price. By the time the closing bell rang, the stock ticker symbol FB sat at $38.06.

    Facebook got off to a rocky start this morning, offering shares at $38. Intense trading volume early in the morning led to an opening price of $42. However, share prices slowly sank back down to the company’s original offering price.

    Analysts who had previously been bullish on Facebook are surprised. Early investors are disappointed. And social media enthusiasts are at least somewhat shocked.

    “Our Private Shares Group traded stock the week before the first S-1 at $45, and we did a lot of volume. The market clearly supported a share price in the $40s,” said Michael Pachter, managing director for equity research at Wedbush Securities.

    “But Facebook showed a sequential decline in revenue in Q1, so it is likely that some investors were spooked and began to question the company’s growth prospects,” he continued.

    “I have a $44 one-year price target, so it’s a great investment below that level, not as good an investment above that level.”

    The Facebook IPO

    Shares were priced at $38

    Bad sign: GM pulls out of Facebook ads

    Facebook employees celebrated the IPO with a hackathon

    ON IPO day, the company get slapped with a privacy lawsuit

    Facebook stock slides, taking other tech stocks with it

    Analysts warn us: This one won’t pop

    Calling the $38 price “fair,” Dunn & Bradstreet tech expert Lee Simmons said before the closing bell, “Facebook was less likely to rocket out of the gates on opening day… My educated guess places Facebook comfortably above the top-end of its price range on Friday.”

    Still, touting the site’s billion-strong userbase, investors are pegging Facebook stock as a good bet for the long haul.

    “I think it is a good long-term investment,” said Mark Siegel, managing partner at Menlo Ventures. “The nature of the product itself makes it difficult to be displaced… I think it’s that kind of a core, bellweather company in a tech sector. It’s gotten there remarkably fast, but it’s there.”

    However, Siegel noted at in the short term, he expected “volatility” in Facebook’s performance and said there was “no way, not a chance” it would see the eight-fold growth that competitor Google has had since its 2004 IPO.

    “There’s going to be a lot of crazy demand by people, but I don’t think it’s going to get to $60 [any time soon],” the VC continued. “In the next couple years, it might trade at $60 per share, but… I think institutional investors would start getting heartburn before it got up that high.”

    But this low closing price isn’t necessarily a bad thing for Facebook, points out Gartner analyst Ray Valdez.

    “Well-managed IPOs reward initial sellers (early investors and the company itself) with robust prices that don’t leave too much money on the table,” he said.

    “Facebook’s revenue model is still a work in progress. The mobile sector will remain a challenge for Facebook in the short-term. Over the long-term, Facebook has a good chance of cracking the code of monetizing user engagement across platforms, but accomplishing this will require significant innovation in both business and technology domains.”

    David-Michel Davies, president of The Webby Awards and co-founder of Internet Week New York, had the honor of ringing the closing bell at the NASDAQ stock exchange. “There’s been a huge focus on… what this means for the future of the web and what this means for other IPOs,” he told us in a phone conversation.

    And despite the social network’s inauspicious debut, Davies and millions like him remain optimistic about the future of Facebook and of other, smaller social media companies.

    “At the end of the day, its hard to overstate how important social is to the web. We’re living in a world where people have changed behaviors in a significant way. People now will start their day in a social environment and make a lot of important decision for their life there — what to buy, what to eat, where to go at night, what books to read.

    “It’s a really big change, and it’s not going away… This is definitely a big moment, and this IPO showcases how big that change is.”

    We’re honoring FB at the Webbies on Monday… They won the Webby for people’s vote for social change.

    Filed under: VentureBeat

    Read More...
  • Today, Fab.com is launching its third and most ambitious version of the site, and CEO Jason Goldberg said it’s going to remind you of window-shopping with your best friends.

    “Imagine you’re shopping with your friends, and one of them picks up a shirt and says, ‘Oh, that’s cute!’ We think we can replicate that online,” the founder told VentureBeat in a recent phone call.

    Fab is accomplishing this not just with a few dinky plug-ins or add-ons, but with a wholesale redesign that will “really get the experience of shopping with friends — not just what they bought, but what they’re tweeting, what their pinning, what they’re liking,” Goldberg said.

    Fab.com 3.0

    The relaunched Fab homepage will feature algorithmically derived featured products based on real-time activity from Fab members. It will also show you a ticker for what’s being bought at any given moment.

    Starting today, members can see what their friends from various social networks are noticing and buying in real time. They can also choose to pin items on Pinterest or even make a purchase directly from this live feed.

    And Fab is bringing a much-needed search module to the site, so you can drill down for specific products, designers, and categories.

    The new Fab.com will also feature Smile pages to give members in-depth profiles and stories about the designers behind Fab’s product inventory.

    “It’s about making people smile,” said Goldberg. “We’re showing them that e-commerce can be fun. … We care more about that, about the long-term relationship, than just about making money.”

    Here’s a sneak peek at the new designs:

    Getting social shopping right

    “We want to take the fab product and design up another level … we want to reimagine social shopping.”

    As a longtime Fab fan myself, I cringe at the thought of bringing more noise and clutter to the clean, lean shopping experience I’ve grown to appreciate. But Goldberg and the rest of the Fab team, ever focused on great design, are several steps ahead of me, natch.

    “Everything we do has to be well-designed,” the CEO said. “Social can’t be a bolt-on; it has to be part of the core experience and designed really, really well. I personally design everything that goes on the screen … a virtual product doesn’t get on Fab unless I think it’s a great product.”

    Last year, Fab brought its members a live feed feature to show Fab members’ buying, fave-ing, and liking activity in real time. The decision to focus on the social side was a direct result of Fab’s organic social activity: More than half its members as of last December had come to the site through social channels.

    “It has to be authentic,” Goldberg told us. “Up to 40 percent of our traffic comes from social feeds. You can’t force that. Social isn’t just a way to get something from the user; it’s a way to give value to the user. The traffic will come when you deliver a great experience.”

    In the end, the live feed turned out to be a huge success, with 15 percent of visits to the feed resulting in an actual purchase. That metric proved to the Fab team that a more social direction could also be more profitable.

    The growth continues

    As previously mentioned, Fab’s growth has been a bit legendary in the tech startup scene.

    One of its more recent success stories involved integrating with Facebook’s Timeline. The startup saw a 50 percent increase in traffic from Facebook since its Actions integration) at the beginning of 2012.

    As a result of that and other factors, Fab more than doubled its membership in the first quarter of 2012 (from 1.2 million at the end of 2011 to a whopping 3 million members in March 2012.

    “Now, we’re at 3.25 million users in the U.S., nearly 4.25 million worldwide, and we’re a couple weeks shy of our first birthday,” said Goldberg.

    One area of growth that’s still a bit mysterious is Pinterest. “We get about 2 percent of our traffic from Pinterest today,” said Goldberg. “That number came out of nowhere in February, and it’s held steady since then.”

    But Fab users have expressed a deep and abiding love for Pinterest, and the Fab team is making pinning more integral to the Fab.com experience. That 2 percent might see a bit of an increase as a result.

    Combating feature creep

    Fab’s new-feature rollout schedule is unrelenting, but Goldberg said he and the rest of the team have an eye on feature creep and will always aim to maintain Fab’s simplicity — one of the things that makes the site such a pleasure to use in the first place.

    “Keep it simple. The best design gets out of users’ way and lets them do what they want to get done,” he told us.

    “A lot of sites end up building silos of features. If you go to Fab.com today, in our top navigation, there are eight different items. We’re simplifying that to four in the new release.”

    He concluded, “Even when you add, you make it simpler.”

    Fab.com launched in June 2011 and has received $51.3 million in funding to date. Its most recent cash infusion was a stunning $40 million Series B last December.

    Image courtesy of Robbi, Shutterstock

    Filed under: social, VentureBeat

    Read More...
  • Plastic Logic flexible, color e-reader

    Plastic Logic demo-ed its flexible, color e-reader today — another screen to add to the growing reality that e-readers may one day act like paper.

    According to Engadget, Plastic Logic received a funding round of $700 million from Rusnano, which the company has used to create the new screen. The screen is able to display over 4,000 different colors, and has 1.2 million plastic transistors. It also used the funding to deploy its e-textbook reader to schools in Russia.

    Flexible e-reader screens are gaining a lot of popularity. As tablets become faster and more exciting, e-readers, which are naturally easier on the eyes, are expected to gain some cool new features as well. Flexible e-ink screens create that reading-a-magazine-or-newspaper feel that, honestly, just looks cool.  They can bend and fold like paper, though you won’t be able to fold your e-reader like a soft cover book just yet. What’s more impressive is that these new screens, Plastic Logic’s in particular, are being designed to keep images true and not distort them  as folding a screen might otherwise do.

    In March, LG released details of its flexible e-reader screen. LG referred to the screen as an electronic paper display, which stands about six inches tall and sports 1024×758 pixels. The screen can be bent at a 40 degree angle and can weigh half as much as its glass counterpart. Despite being new technology for today’s market of e-readers, LG believes these flexible, plastic displays will even be cheaper to produce than glass.

    Check out the video of Plastic Logic’s color, flexible screen below:

    via Engadget

    Filed under: VentureBeat

    Read More...
  • Image

    Sure, you’re having a grand old time in the cloud, but what fun is it, really, if you can’t bring your pets along? Fujitsu today announced a new collar-mounted device designed to monitor your dog’s activity level. This one does more than just filling up a Twitter stream, however, aimed at actually providing helpful health monitoring, including activity, external temperature and the like to a cloud-based health service set to launch later this year. According to Fujitsu, the device is small and lightweight, with minimal power consumption, assuring that your canine can wear it at all times, so you can monitor your pet’s activity while you’re away. Not much in the way of availability at present, but you can find a bit more info in the PR after the break.

    Continue reading Fujitsu collar monitor proves that all dogs go to the cloud

    Fujitsu collar monitor proves that all dogs go to the cloud originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 14 May 2012 17:22:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

    Read More...
  • Screenshot -- TERA

    Filed under: Fantasy, News items, TERA, Miscellaneous

    TERA players, have you been spending weeks trying to find that one perfect weapon? Or maybe you just want to know which mob drops the crafting mats you need to pimp out your gear. Either way, the ZAM Network is here to help. En Masse Entertainment has announced on the official TERA site that ZAM’s TERA database, alliteratively named TERA Tome, is live and kickin’.

    The current version of the site includes all of the nifty features that players have come to expect from ZAM’s MMO databases, such as information on quests, items, and abilities as well as helpful forums and comments. Players trying to get a handle on their character’s build should also find the site handy thanks to its useful glyph calculator that allows players to survey all currently available glyphs without the need to set foot in the game. Just head on over to the recently launched site to crack open the tome.

    TERA Tome database unleashes the mysteries of Arborea originally appeared on Massively on Mon, 14 May 2012 14:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments Source: TERA official site — TERA Tome is Live! Read More...

  • Zuckerberg in hoodie

    That little anecdote about Facebook’s roadshow meeting in New York was  widely reported this past week, but it’s being picked up as symbolic of Facebook chief executive Mark Zuckerberg’s indifference to Wall Street.

    For those of you who missed the report, Zuckerbeg was still in the men’s room as the audience of Wall Street heavy-hitters waited for him outside in the ballroom of the Sheraton hotel on Monday. His deputy, Sheryl Sandberg was apparently forced to get started with questions and answers while they waited for him. When he did come out, he wore a gray hoodie, which was considered a snub by some of the buttoned up suits of Wall Street. Here was Zuckerberg, supposedly trying to sell the street on the merits of Facebook’s IPO, and he just wasn’t taking them seriously.

    The anecdote anchors the NYT story this morning about Zuckerberg.

    Arguably, it’s exactly Zuckerberg’s defiance, and his focus on doing what is important to grow his company, and impatience with formalities that interfere with that focus, that make him such a strong product leader. Investors in Facebook better get used to it, because this isn’t going to change.

    Michael Pachter, an analyst for Wedbush Securities, also in widely reported remarks, said Zuckerberg’s actions were signs of immaturity. Pachter likened him to Steve Jobs, in that he’s an eccentric leader who doesn’t want to answer anyone. Pachter says Jobs’ attitude was a big reason he was forced out of Apple early in his career. Jobs was able to return only after learning some lessons. And only then did he lead his company to its greatest heights.

    It’s that worry, about whether Zuck is mature enough to lead the company, that accounts for the different accounts going on right now about how Wall Street is embracing Facebook’s IPO plans. Some are saying there is robust investor demand for the IPO shares, while other reports suggest that there is weakness. In fact, those two reports can be compatible, because the latter one referred mainly to Wall Street institutional investor appetite, and was simply citing a few representatives of that group of investors. If Facebook decides to rely on individual investors — the non-suits — there’s plenty of interest in the IPO.

    Despite his critical comments, analyst Pachter is recommending investors buy the company’s stock — and that’s even though he doubts whether Zuckerberg is the right person to lead the company.

    For now, Zuckerberg will be firmly in control, and he’s done very well so far along the road. At just eight years old, Facebook is about to be valued somewhere close to $100 billion as a public company, one of the biggest, if not the biggest accomplishments of an entrepreneur yet. It’s just way too early to start asking whether this guy is fit to run the company. He’s already come a long way as a leader, as I documented three years ago.

    As long as Facebook continues to grow revenue and profits decently over the next few years, my guess is there won’t be any serious question about his leadership. But if he fails to execute, you can be sure eyes will soon turn toward the more polished Sandberg for direction — and no, it wouldn’t come as a surprise if the board has to orchestrate a coup to put her in that leadership position (like what happened to Jobs).

    [Photo credit: Reuters].

    Filed under: VentureBeat

    Read More...
  • Star Trek Online - This is not a PvP screenshot because no one PvPs in STO

    Filed under: Sci-fi, Game mechanics, MMO industry, PvP, News items, Star Trek Online, Free-to-play

    How many times have you read a forum post that says insert-random-MMO’s PvP sucks? Well, in Star Trek Online PvP actually does suck, and that’s straight from the mouth of a developer. It’s so bad, in fact, that Dan “Gozer” Griffis makes no bones about the fact that it could even be removed from Cryptic’s sci-fi MMO.

    “Right now because PVP is in such bad shape we (the developers) have to decide if we think we can turn this problem around. Participation in PVP-related activities is so low on an hourly, daily, weekly, and monthly basis that we could in fact just completely take it out of STO and it would not impact the overall number of people [who] log in to the game and play in any significant way.”

    Griffis goes on to say that he is the only developer currently working on PvP, and as such he has to make some hard choices. He has a plan, and though he hasn’t shared specifics on it yet, he says there are huge changes in store over the next year.

    [Thanks to everyone who sent this in!]

    Cryptic developer: Star Trek Online PvP is ‘fail’ originally appeared on Massively on Sat, 12 May 2012 18:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments Source: STO forums Read More...