Wednesday, January 19, 2011

SanDisk intros UHS-I SDHC Card ideal for capturing high resolution photos, full HD videos

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"SanDisk has a long history of developing fast, highly reliable cards for photography enthusiasts and professionals,"said Susan Park, director, retail product marketing, SanDisk."Our new SanDisk Extreme Pro SDHC card lets consumers take their skills to the next level by capturing high-resolution still images, fast-moving action shots and HD videos of the highest quality."

As DSLRs offer increasingly sophisticated features such as high megapixel continuous burst shooting and high-definition (HD) video capture, photographers need advancedcapable of unlocking their cameras' full potential. The card achieves high performance and efficientin UHS-enabled cameras such as the Nikon D7000.

The SanDisk Extreme Pro SDHC card's write speed of up to 45 MB/sec delivers improved shot to shot performance of RAW images using continuous burst mode. The card also adheres to the new UHS Speed Class 1 video class rating, offering 10MB/sec minimum sustained write speed capable of recording HD 1080p videos or even 3D content. In addition, the card's fast read speeds of up to 45 MB/sec let users avoid lengthy wait times when transferring content from the card to a computer.

SanDisk develops its flash controllers andtogether, allowing the company to perfectly match and fine-tune the two technologies throughout the testing process. The SanDisk Extreme Pro SDHC card uses an intelligent Power Core controller to achieve its speed. The controller's data prediction and binary caching features allow for improved overall performance.

Featuring an automatic error-code correction (ECC) engine, the SanDisk Extreme Pro SDHC card offers long-term reliability that comes from the brand trusted by professional photographers. Advanced wear leveling extends card endurance by distributing data evenly throughout the card. For added protection, the card includes one year of RescuePRO media recovery software, which lets photographers recover their images in case of accidental deletion.

Designed to withstand the most extreme conditions, the new card offers photographers peace of mind knowing that their photos are stored on one of the most rugged cards in the world. Able to withstand punishment, the SanDisk Extreme Pro SDHC card is water proof, temperature proof, shock and vibration proof, x-ray and magnet proof. The card is backed by a lifetime limited warranty.

The card is shipping to major retailers worldwide and is available immediately at www..com. The card comes in 8GB to 32GB capacities carrying suggested retail prices ranging from $109.99 to $349.99.


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Friday, January 7, 2011

New Intel chip a coup for Hollywood

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The second-generationCore processors, referred to as"Sandy Bridge,"have been built into computers big and small, many of which will be displayed at thekicking off here Thursday.

"This is the best product we've ever built,"said Intel chief executive Paul Otellini."We've shifted to processor-based graphics."

Building graphics computing into chips enables slick handling of games, images and video at a time when lifestyles are increasingly shifting to online entertainment loaded with data sent online.

"We are hooked on the Internet,"Intel vice president Shmuel"Mooly"Eden said while showing off Sandy Bridge-driven computers at a press event."PCs (personal computers) are no longer a luxury, they are a necessity."

Sandy Bridge was welcomed by Hollywood and Bollywood film studios that have been reluctant to make prime releases available online to computers, where they could potentially be copied or shared without permission.

Intel worked with major US and India film studios, including Warner Brothers, DreamWorks, Yash Raj Films and 20th Century Fox to craft copyright-guarding technology into the chips.

Warner Brothers has avoided putting high-definition or 3D releases online because of the potential for piracy.

"You've taken the excuse away from us,"Warner Brothers Home Entertainment Group president Kevin Tsujihara told Eden during an on-stage appearance.

"Sandy Bridge lets us put our content out there on a global basis."

Studios working with Intel will make hot releases available to Sandy Bridge-driven PCs through online services such as Cinema Now.

Films can be routed from PCs to TVs.

"Our partnership with Intel creates a game changing opportunity to provide consumers around the globe our highest value content in a secure environment,"said 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment worldwide president Mike Dunn.

Eden predicted that Sandy Bridge, with 1.16 billion transistors on each, would be"a cornerstone of the computer revolution."

A million PCs are sold daily, with consumers driving the market instead of businesses, according to Intel.

"The consumer is king, and queen,"Eden said."It is all about consuming and creating digital content."

People are shifting to communicating with photos and video instead of simple text email.

Sandy Bridge enables fast conversion of video for increasingly common tasks such as shifting digital snippets from personal computers to iPads or iPods, or transferring content from handheld cameras onto desktop machines.

The chips have enough power to smoothly handle real-time gesture-based controls and even enhance computer games with animated versions of players that mimic movements and facial expressions, according to Eden.

"Finally, we have enough computer power to deliver real-time interaction between us and the computer,"Eden said.

"Soon, you will be able to take my face and I will be able to be the hero, or some would argue villain, in a game."

He predicted that in the coming two to four years, Sandy Bridge will enable advances that have people looking at computer keyboards as though they were from"the Middle Ages."

"Pretty soon, you will not know if you are in the real world or the virtual world,"he said.

Sandy Bridge chips will be featured in 500 devices from mobile handsets to notebook and desktop computers, according to Intel.

Sandy Bridge will represent more than a third of Intel's revenue this year, and generate 125 billion dollars in revenue for the PC industry, Otellini predicted.


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Thursday, January 6, 2011

World's fastest high-capacity CompactFlash card announced by SanDisk

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"No other product on the market can match our new card's combination of speed and,"said Susan Park, director, product marketing,."By consistently pushing the boundaries of flash innovation, we are able to develop advanced products not found anywhere else."

With a set of features optimized for professional photographers and videographers, the 128GB SanDisk Extreme Pro CompactFlash card is ideally suited for imaging applications requiring Full HD 1920x1080 resolution, up to 50Mbps bit rate and 4:2:2 color sampling. The card's unprecedented combination of speed and storage lets photographers capture more frames when shooting in continuous burst mode, and enables them to record high quality Full HD videos.

• Up to 100MB/sec write speed enables shorter wait times and faster continuous burst shooting.
• Video Performance Guarantee allows for superior Full HD video recording at a sustained 20MB/sec write speed.
• 128GB capacity aoffers more room for capturing RAW+JPEG photos, sequential bursts, even Full HD and 3D video content.
• SanDisk's proprietary Power Core controller distributes data across the card more rapidly and efficiently, and the UDMA-7 interface allows for maximum data transfer between card and camera.
• Best-in-class quality assurance offers photographers peace of mind knowing that the card is backed by rigorous stress, shock, vibration, humidity and moisture testing procedures and a lifetime limited warranty. The card features RTV silicone coating for added protection.

The 128GB SanDisk Extreme Pro CompactFlash card is available now for preorder atwww.sandisk.com, and will be available at retailers worldwide later in Q1 2011. The card carries a suggested retail price of $1,499.99.


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Tuesday, January 4, 2011

New computer chips help PCs compete with tablets

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Intel Corp. andInc., whose processors are the"brains"of PCs, are unveiling significant changes to their chips' designs at this week's Internationalin Las Vegas.

Tablet computers and other gadgets have taken on many of the tasks once performed by PCs, and there are already signs that those devices - led by Apple Inc.'s iPad - are eating away at PC sales.

and AMD are responding with new chips designed to make people think twice before picking a tablet over a new PC. The new chips won't dampen the success of tablets, but they will make traditional, low-cost computers more competitive - by making them better at doing graphics-intensive tasks and playing video.

The improvements that Intel and AMD make to their products are felt with every keystroke or click of a mouse, even if most computer buyers aren't paying attention to the intricacies of.

For example, people have come to expect the benefits of Moore's Law, even if they don't know the technical specifics underlying the prediction that computer processors' performance will double every two years. The principle has guided the industry for more than 40 years, and is a key reason why computers have gotten smarter even as they've gotten smaller.

One major change in chip design that Moore's Law enabled and consumers felt came several years ago. That's when Intel and AMD took chips known as"memory controllers,"which have historically been separate from a computer's main processor, and put them on the same piece of silicon as the processor itself.

The controllers act as middlemen between the processor and a computer's memory. Shortening the distance between the parts cuts the amount of time they needed to talk to each other, helping the computers work faster.

A similar thing is happening in the new generation of chips.

This time, Intel and AMD have thrown another feature - graphics, which too had historically been handled by a separate chip - also onto the same silicon as the computer's main, general-purpose processor.

And by coupling graphics more tightly with a computer's main processor, there's another benefit besides faster communication. The power the parts need to talk to each other is also reduced, leading to longer battery life.

Think of what's happening in chips like what's happened with cell phones: Technical innovations mean more stuff can fit into a smaller space. In the case of computer processors, Moore's Law is driven by the fact that transistors, the tiny on-off switches that regulate the flow of data in computer chips, keep getting smaller.

"It's a natural evolution of integration,"said Jon Peddie, who studies the semiconductor industry as president of Jon Peddie Research."We keep putting more and more stuff into the processor - now it's graphics' turn to get shoved into the processor along with all the stuff that previous generations have shoved in. The big difference this time is because of the processors' smaller size, the capability of the graphics is significantly better."

With the current chips, cheap, low-end laptops are largely poor at playing high-quality video, a task too taxing for the machines' underpowered chips. Those laptops, which also include so-called"netbooks,"will likely benefit first from the new chip designs, said Martin Reynolds, a vice president and research fellow at Gartner Inc. who studies the computer market.

Intel and AMD are using different technical approaches, but the results are similar: Consumers should expect"snappier operations in anything involving pixel movement,"from playing games to editing photos and video and preparing PowerPoint and other visually rich presentations, Peddie said.

But Peddie cautions that even with the new chips, the low-end computers will still be too weak for certain uses, including graphics-intensive video games.

Still, the changes could eliminate the need for many people to buy separate graphics cards, which can add hundreds of dollars to the price of a PC. The shift is an opportunity for Intel and AMD, which can charge higher prices for chips that have higher-quality graphics capabilities built in. Intel doesn't mind if people buy fewer graphics cards since it doesn't sell them. Intel's graphics have been built into its"chipsets,"yet another type of chip inside computers. They handle a range of tasks.

The situation is more delicate for AMD, which does make the cards. AMD hopes that stealing even small amounts of business from Intel offsets any risks to graphics-card sales.

The latest lines of chips can be seen as a response to the sudden popularity of tablet PCs, starting with the launch of thelast April.

Tablet makers have turned to such chip-makers as Samsung Electronics Co., Texas Instruments Inc. and Qualcomm Inc. Even Apple now makes its own chips. Their chips are built on a different design and sip power rather than gulp it - a requirement of mobile devices and a problem that Intel and AMD have yet to crack.

Intel and AMD are trying to address that problem by aping the sleek and streamlined approach that has helped make tablets so popular.

"Tablets have forced the PC ecosystem to be thin and light,"said Doug Freedman, an analyst with Gleacher&Co."If they don't want to lose market share, they're going to have to design a more efficient PC."

The new chips aren't likely to upset the historically steady breakdown between Intel and AMD. Intel sells 80 percent of the chips that run on the so-called"x86"standard for chip design, which is used in Windows and Mac computers. AMD has the remaining 20 percent of the market.

But the new products could help keep both companies relevant in a tablet era. After all, despite the rise of tablets, they aren't good for everything.

"Tablets are great devices for consuming content, but creation of content is best done on PCs,"said Tom Kilroy, an Intel senior vice president.

The attack on tablets by Intel and AMD isn't without a key disclaimer: Now that Apple has proved that there's an appetite for tablet computers, both chip-makers want in.

Both companies have been chosen to make chips for tablets, but analysts say power consumption will likely remain an issue that needs to be resolved.

"It's a great opportunity for them,"Reynolds said."They just haven't figured out a way to do that yet."


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