Showing posts with label makes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label makes. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Nexus 7 makes an appearance in Picasa Web Albums

In case any of you curmudgeons were still doubting the existence of a 7? Nexus Tablet, more evidence is mounting for the soon to be announced slate. A picture of a ceiling was taken from inside Google’s Building 44, and EXIF data suggests the pictures were taken from a device named Nexus 7. While EXIF data are easy to manipulate, The Verge suggests the pictures are likely legitimate when you consider that the photographer’s Google+ account has several other Google employees in his circles.


 


The Nexus 7 should be making an appearance at Google I/O later this month, with a widespread release slated for July. With the Nexus 7, Google is hoping to get more users to adopt Android tablets by offering high-range components with a $150-200 pricetag. We’ll be bringing you all the news, Nexus 7 and otherwise, from Google I/O, set for June 27th in San Francisco.


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Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Intel: Android makes poor use of those multi-core processors


Nokia's CEO, Stephen Elop, has previously stated that dual and quad-core processors on mobile phones waste battery more than anything else. Now, Intel's GM of Intel's Mobile and Communications Group, Mike Bell, chimes in saying that Android just isn't ready for multi-core CPUs.
While Elop's statement sounded more like PR talk (Lumia phones are exclusively single-core), Bell says that Intel have run in-house tests to reach the conclusion. Apparently, it's the thread scheduler that needs work.
Simply put, the thread scheduler is the part of the operating system that decides which CPU core executes which app. It's not a simple decision - the scheduler figures out if it needs to activate more cores to cope with the load or keep the extra cores asleep to preserve power (a major consideration for a mobile device).
Bell points the finger at chipset makers - "The way it's implemented right now, Android does not make as effective use of multiple cores as it could, and I think - frankly - some of this work could be done by the vendors who create the SoCs, but they just haven't bothered to do it. Right now the lack of software effort by some of the folks who have done their hardware implementation is a bigger disadvantage than anything else."
Intel's sole (for now) processor aimed at the mobile phone space is a single-core unit with admittedly excellent performance for just one core, but we still get a feel that Intel is on the defensive. They are developing a dual-core SoC, though, and Mike Bell confirmed that Intel is working on Android's thread scheduler, so the performance race should soon become even more hotly contested.
Source

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