Tag Archive for Hardware

DisplayPort v1.2 Arrives

VESAThe Video Electronics Standards Association (VESA) has approved DisplayPort version 1.2. DisplayPort (DP) is a royalty-free technology which key IT players like Intel, Microsoft, HP, Nvidia, AMD, Dell, Apple, Lenovo, and other key IT players. DisplayPort aims to replace the DVI and HDMI interfaces by offering interoperability over a DP connector. The new standard allows any digital display to be driven from a multi-mode DisplayPort source. The new standard adds a higher speed auxiliary channel which will enable bi-directional data transfer over a single cable. This will support USB data at up to 720 Mbps, enabling embedded webcams, speakers, and USB hubs over a single cable.

DisplayPort v1.2 also supports Ethernet data. DisplayPort DisplayPort v1.2 doubles the data rate of the existing v1.1a standard to 21.6 Gbps. To achieve the 21.6 Gbps rate, the data rate across the four lanes has doubled from 2.7Gbps to 5.4Gbps. With the increased data rate a single DP connector can support multiple monitors. The new standard will enable a resolution of up to 3840×2400 at 60Hz on a single monitor, two WQXGA (2560 x 1600) monitors, or four WUXGA (1920 x 1200) monitors. The new spec will support 3D Full HD Stereo content at 120Hz and High Color Range Quad Full HD (3840 x 2160 p). DisplayPort v1.2 also adds new audio enhancements including multiple channels, video synchronization assistance, and support for high-definition audio formats including the DRA standard from China.

DisplayPort ConnectorThe new version is also backward compatible with the older standard, so all the ports, cables, and devices will be interchangeable. However, they will revert to the lowest common denominator, “It is completely backward-compatible with DP v1.1a and requires no new cables or other equipment, making it the standard of choice across the industry,” said Bill Lempesis, executive director of VESA. DP v1.2 provides copyright protection.

DisplayPort v1.1 added support for High Bandwidth Digital Content Protection (HDCP). Digital Content Protection, an Intel subsidiary developed and licenses HDCP. The technology encrypts the audio and video components of HD content to prevent unauthorized copying and viewing of the  HD video content as it travels across DisplayPort, DVI, HDMI, GVIF, and UDI connections. In the past, adding HDCP has forced users to buy and/or upgrade their equipment with HDCP-compliant products.

DisplayPort also includes an optional DPCP (DisplayPort Content Protection) copy-protection from Philips, which uses 128-bit AES encryption. It also features full authentication and session key establishment (each encryption session is independent). There is an independent revocation system, which is licensed separately. DPCP also verifies the proximity of the receiver and transmitter to make sure users are not bypassing content protection systems to send data out to distant, unauthorized users.

DisplayPort’s main competition is High-Definition Multimedia Interface (HDMI) which recently updated its specifications. Ars Technica points out that the new HDMI standard is more confusing than ever, ” … the one cable to rule all AV equipment will now have 45 potential variations for customers to choose from—let alone the numerous (and often dubious) “quality” levels offered at hard-to-swallow prices.” Ars Technica concludes that the new HDMI standard seems, ” to add complexity to a system that was originally designed to greatly reduce the complexity of connecting AV equipment in the first place. The new micro-HDMI connector also seems redundant.”

Brian O’Rourke, the principal analyst for In-Stat, told EDN in 2008 that manufacturers’ shipments [of DisplayPort] will grow to more than 600 million units in 2012. Most of these shipments will be PCs and PC peripherals.

DisplayPort Adoption

“I don’t see DisplayPort really gaining significant market share in the consumer-electronics world in the next five years,” says O’Rourke. “During that time, it will dominate the PC and PC-peripheral world, and HDMI will dominate the consumer-electronics world … The key for DisplayPort in the PC segment is that you can get rid of both the DVI controller and the VGA silicon.” Randy Lawson, iSuppli’s senior analyst for display electronics told EDN that iSupply expects that by 2010 DP will dominate desktop and notebook PCs adoption rates.

DisplayPort has several advantages for use on mobile equipment. DP is easier than HDMI to integrate and implement in silicon as chips get smaller. Alan Kobayashi, a director of R&D at  STMicroelectronics says that as semiconductor processes shrink, DisplayPort is more efficient than current display technologies. DisplayPort has a lower power consumption than HDMI, according to Pericom Semiconductor’s Abdullah Raouf. DisplayPort in on the newer north-bridge chip sets’ integrated graphics on newer CPUs, as well as in discrete GPUs on graphics cards, according to Bruce Montag, chairman of the DisplayPort Task Group and senior technical staff member at Dell. “The market is quickly moving toward the integration of  DisplayPort IP into a north-bridge or a discrete-graphics solution,says In-Stat’s O’Rourke. Digital TVs will begin adopting DisplayPort as an external port by 2010.  In-Stat expects that, higher-end digital TVs and then to other digital-CE products, including Blu-ray players and recorders and set-top boxes. will then adopt DP in the consumer market.

DisplayPort is an attractive option for those seeking to cut the cost and improve the bandwidth and scalability of A/V interface connections. The computer electronics industry is increasingly adopting open industry standards. DisplayPort’s support of  A/V, USB, and Ethernet make it a more open standard. Open standards like DisplayPort v1.2 provide a more versatile system which should be a consideration in any purchasing decision. ISuppli, “believes that the DisplayPort interface standard will be the successor to the venerable VGA interface on PC monitors as well as desktop and notebook PCs“. VESA’s Lempesis points out that DisplayPort  is “a truly open, flexible, extensible multimedia interconnect standard” and “is rapidly gaining traction in consumer electronics applications.

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

New Disk Drives Degrade XP

IBM 350 disk storage unit The International Disk Drive Equipment and Materials Association (IDEMA), the industry group which promotes the technological, manufacturing, marketing, and business needs of the disk drive industry, is leading the Big Sector initiative to update computer hard disk drives from 512 bytes to 4,096 bytes (4 Kilobytes) sectors.

IDEMA claims the need to change the hard drive sector size which has been consistent for thirty years, developed as hard disk sizes grew. 4 Kb sectorThe old 512-byte sectors limited the amount of error correction required to handle more data on the newest drives.  Dr. Martin Hassner of Hitachi GST said: “(The) increasing areal density of newer magnetic hard disk drives requires a more robust error correction code (ECC), and this can be more efficiently applied to 4096-byte sector lengths” in a 2006 TechWorld article.  According to the trade group, the change to 4 Kb sectors will allow hard drives to continue to grow to 2 Tb in size.

Western DigitalWestern Digital (WDC) is the first manufacturer to release products under this initiative. WD calls these drives Advanced Format. According to an article at AnandTech, In order to reach the 2 Tb size Western Digital and other drive manufacturers have developed a 512 b emulator which resides on the drive controller for the Microsoft (MSFT) Windows 5.x family (Windows 2000, XP, 2003, Windows Home Server) which are unaware of 4 Kb sectors.

AnandTech says the emulators will allow Windows 5.x systems to continue to think they are seeing 512 b but there are still problems. The article reports that the Windows 5.x family has a habit of misaligning the first disk partition under the new system which will result in poor default performance. The Windows 6.x family (Vista, 2008, Win7) and later are programmed to take into account the alignment issues. This also creates issues for imaging software. Drive imaging software like Norton’s Ghost needs to be 4 Kb aware. Otherwise, it may inadvertently create misaligned partitions with any Windows product.  The article claims that all current imaging products will write misaligned partitions and/or clusters.

Linux and Apple (AAPL) Mac OS X are not affected by this issue. Western Digital has tested modern versions of both operating systems and officially classifies them as not-affected. They also found that Linux and Mac OS X drive imaging products are also unaffected.

Western Digital is offering two solutions to solve the misalignment issue. The first solution is specifically geared towards Win 5.x. The first option is to use an offset created by jumpering pins on an Advanced Format drive. This will force the drive controller will use a +1 offset. This crude hack means the operating system is no longer writing to the sector it thinks it’s writing to. Jumpering is simple to activate and effective in solving the issue on a PC with a single partition. If multiple partitions are installed this hack cannot be used because the offset can damage later partitions. The offset can not be later removed without repartitioning the drive, because that would break the partition table.

The second method of resolving misaligned partitions is through the use of Western Digital’s WD Align utility available online from WD. The utility moves a partition and its data from a misaligned to an aligned position. This is the recommended solution for using multiple partitions under Win 5.x, along with correcting any misaligned partitions generated by imaging software. The utility also serves as the only way to find an Advance Format drive without physically looking at it.

AnandTech calls the WD Align utility the recommended solution for single-partition drives being used under Win 5.x too since it prevents breaking the partition table. The amount of time needed to run the utility depends on the amount of data that needs to be moved and not the partition size (it simply ignores empty space), so it’s best to run the utility immediately after creating a partition or installing Windows, as there’s less data to move around.

WD Green Cavier HDDThe first Advanced Format drives are WD Caviar Green drives using multiple 500GB platters which are now available. There are two ways to identify these drives:

1) They all have 64 Mb of cache – the first WD Caviar Green drives to come with that much cache; and

2) They all have EARS in the drive model number, e.g. WD10EARS.

It seems that WD is not pushing these drives as part of any major product launch. The new drives are quietly entering the marketplace. The IDEMA plan called for everyone to have 4 Kb sector drives by 2011, so there will be similar soft-launches from the other manufacturers over the next year.  It is reasonable to expect all the HDD manufacturers to have similar problems with Win 5.x,  All of the vendors will have to support WinXP, in one way or another until at least 2014, when extended MS support for WinXP ends.

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Digital Food for Dinner

Digital Food for DinnerThe Fluid Interfaces Group at MIT has developed a “personal food factory.” The scientists have created a prototype 3D printer that stores, mixes, deposits, and cooks layers of ingredients that will rival your grandmother’s multi-layered lasagna according to Globalspec.

The project called Cornucopia is a concept design for a personal food factory that brings the versatility of the digital world to the realm of cooking.

MIT 3D Food Printer, Virtuoso Mixer and Robotic Chef

MIT says Cornucopia’s cooking process starts with an array of food canisters, which refrigerate and store a user’s favorite ingredients. These are piped into a mixer and extruder head that can accurately deposit elaborate combinations of food. While the deposition takes place, the food is heated or cooled by Cornucopia’s chamber or the heating and cooling tubes located on the printing head. This fabrication process not only allows for the creation of flavors and textures that would be completely unimaginable through other cooking techniques, but it also allows the user to have ultimate control over the origin, quality, nutritional value, and taste of every meal.

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Will work for food

Related articles

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

1 in 3 Notebook Computers Dead Within 3 Years

1 in 3 Notebook Computers Dead Within 3 YearsThe ChannelInsider reports that SquareTrade, a provider of PC extended warranty services, studied the failure rates of the most widely used notebook computers and found that an alarming one in three notebooks will fail within three years. The SquareTrade study proved the old adage that you get what you pay for. Premium priced notebooks had a lower malfunction and failure rate than lower-priced notebooks and netbooks. 3-year failure rate by price. SquareTrade says Netbooks have a 25.1% failure rate, Entry level notebooks have a 20.6% failure rate and Premium notebooks have a 18.1% failure rate.

According to the SquareTrade report

  • HP is the market share leader in notebooks, and has the highest failure rate. Nearly 26% of its notebooks fails after three years.
  • Gateway sees 23.5% of its machines fail after three years of use.
  • Acer’s three-year failure rate is 23.3% .
  • Lenovo has more than 21% of its notebooks fail or have maintenance issues after three years of use.
  • Dell’s 3-year failure rate is 18.3%.
  • Macs have a 3-year failure rate of 17.4%.
  • Sony’s VAIOs have a 3-year failure rate of 16.8%
  • Toshiba’s 3-year failure rate is 15.7%
  • Asus has a 3-year failure rate of 15.6%.

Only 4.7% of all notebook computers failed from a hardware malfunction in the first year of ownership, that rate more than doubled to 12.7% by the end of year two, and then leaped again to 20.4% by the time three years had passed.

SquareTrade said that the increasing high failure rate was no surprise. “Laptops have a high usage rate,” Vince Tseng, the vice president of marketing, told ComputerWorldPeople leave them on all the time, and notebook components are sensitive to heat. Two, they’re portable and take a lot of abuse. And three, they’re more complex than most other consumer electronics devices.

RESCUECOM’s Computer Reliability Reportfor Q2 2009 shows similar results to SquareTrade’s results. The Syracuse NY computer support vendor reported in August 2009 that the ASUS brand of personal computers for the second time in a row, results have shown ASUS to be the newest leader in reliable personal computers.

  1. ASUS (416)
  2. APPLE (394)
  3. IBM/LENOVO (314)
  4. TOSHIBA (218)
  5. HP/COMPAQ (142)

The SquareTrade findings must have hit close to home because Lenovo corporate media relations contact Ray Gorman took some strong objections to the report. A point by point response from SquareTrade is available on their blog.

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Asus maintains it leadership position even though they introduced the Eee, an early notebook, in 2007. The challenge for Asus will be to maintain their position as they roll out more products and new models and gain corporate acceptance.

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him at LinkedInFacebook and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Researchers Recycle LCDs into Meds

Researchers Recycle LCDs into MedsFastCompany reports that researchers at the University of York have discovered they can recycle waste polyvinyl-alcohol (PVA), from old LCD televisions for medical purposes. The researchers believe that PVA a material used in polarizing films on the front and back of LCD displays can be transformed into pills, dressings, and even a substance used in tissue scaffolds to help body parts regenerate. PVA isn’t normally used in these applications, but the researchers have figured out that it doesn’t provoke an immune system response, so it could be used in any number of medical settings.

Recycle LCD panel parts

The process for recycling PVA is simple according to the article. The process for creating “expanded PVA” suitable for medical use, involves dousing the material in water, microwaving it, and then washing it in ethanol.

The research “Expanding the potential for waste polyvinyl-alcohol” can be found on the Green Chemistry website. The paper was written by five academics in the University’s Department of Chemistry. Professor James Clark, director of the York Green Chemistry Centre of Excellence and one of the authors of the research, told EurekaAlert. “It is important that we find ways of recycling as many elements of LCDs as possible so we don’t simply have to resort to burying and burning them.

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.