Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Nintendo tops April video game console sales

Saturday, September 4th, 2010

While it’s true that the game was only out for two days last month, it seemed as though it had driven significant sales of both the Xbox and the PS3.

NPD also pointed out that both the Nintendo DS and Sony PSP outsold the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3. The DS sold 414,800 units, and the PSP sold 192,700.

In its own release, Nintendo touted its success with its own games during April, according to the NPD numbers.

NPD said that Microsoft sold 188,000 Xbox 360s in April, while Sony moved 187,100 PlayStation 3s.

Its Mario Kart Wii was the second best-selling game of all during the month, with 1.12 million copies sold. Overall, 6 of the top 10 best-selling games during April were Wii games.

The fact that the Wii came out on top in April is notable given that the industry’s biggest event last month was the April 29 launch of Rockstar Games’ Grand Theft Auto IV on the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3.

Update at 3:30 p.m. PDT: This post has been modified to reflect the public release by NPD of its April video game industry sales figures.

Overall, NPD’s research indicates that the video game industry is doing well. It said that there was a total of $1.23 billion in game sales in April, a 47 percent increase over the $839 million sold a year earlier. Similarly, hardware sales were up 26 percent, from $339 million in April 2007 to $426 million in April 2008.

For its part, Microsoft on Wednesday said it had reached the 10 million mark for total Xbox 360s sold in the U.S., making the Xbox 360 the first next-gen console to reach that number. Microsoft argued that that’s a milestone that historically has been met by the eventual winner of each console generation.

Still, NPD said that GTA IV took two of the three top slots for software sales, with the Xbox version moving 1.85 million copies, and the PS3 version selling 1 million units.

Nintendo had earlier put out its own release citing NPD’s numbers.

Note: On June 10, Geek Gestalt hits the highways for Road Trip 2008. I’ll start in Orlando, Fla., and visit many of the South’s most interesting destinations. Stay tuned, and be sure to keep up, both now and during the trip, with what I’m doing on Twitter.

Nintendo’s
Wii was the best-selling next-generation video game console in April, research firm NPD Group said Thursday afternoon.

According to NPD, the Wii outsold Microsoft’s
Xbox 360 and Sony’s
PlayStation 3 in April. The Wii sold 714,000 Wiis during the month, bringing its total sales in the United States since the Wii’s launch in late 2006 to 9.5 million units.

New CMOS sensors catching on in cameras

Sunday, August 29th, 2010

CCD sensors are still widely used, though, in part because many more years of work have been invested into milking the most out of the process, said Mike DeLuca, Kodak’s CCD market manager for professional and applied imaging.

In this rarefied atmosphere, where camera equipment costs tens of thousands of dollars, CCD still rules the roost. In part that’s because a camera doesn’t need to shoot at high speeds, and in part because consuming a lot of battery power isn’t a top-level problem.

CMOS itself has been around for decades–it’s the method used to manufacture the vast majority of computer processors–but its use as an image sensor rather than an information processor is a relatively new development. In recent years it’s begun making inroads against CCD, a technology with many more years of refinement in image sensor technology.

“It has been for some time generally held that CMOS technology in image sensors will overtake CCD at some point. I would say that three or four years ago, the predictions were that by the time 2007 or 2008 rolled around, CMOS would be done replacing CCD,” Weir said. “History has shown those predictions were premature.”

“Because it’s a standardized process, with high-volume production, the pricing is very competitive. It’s better than CCD and getting better,” Mosleh said. Kodak, a digital imaging pioneer, builds its own CCD sensors and and more recently started designing CMOS sensors to be built by Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Corp. and IBM, so it’s relatively neutral in the debate over which technology is superior.

CMOS advantages can include lower noise, lower power consumption, lower price, and faster response times. In the prestigious and fast-growing digital SLR (single-lens reflex) camera market, Canon and Olympus have used CMOS sensors for years, but high-profile new arrivals on the CMOS bandwagon include Sony, Pentax, Samsung, and most notably Nikon.

In compact cameras, CCD still dominates. Where CMOS has caught on most widely is videocameras, mobile phone cameras, and notably, SLR cameras. In this latter category new CMOS-based cameras include Nikon’s D3 and D300, Sony’s Alpha A700, and Pentax’s K20D, and Samsung’s GX20, which is derived from Pentax’s K20D. All these cameras top the companies’ respective lines, and the Pentax and Samsung cameras are being shown off here at the Photo Marketing Association trade show here.

Pentax's K20D, the company's new top-end camera, is the first SLR from the company to employ a CMOS sensor.

But in the long run, Weir still gives CMOS the edge. “Are there long-term advantage suggest that transition will take place? Probably.”

(Credit:
Pentax)

Deep within every digital camera is a sensor chip whose job it is to capture light. Most camera sensors today use CCD (charge-coupled device) technology, but a newer approach called CMOS (complementary metal oxide semiconductor) is catching on, particularly at the high end of the market.

LAS VEGAS–You may not know it from the outside, but digital cameras are getting something like an eye transplant.

Sony, like Canon, builds its own CMOS sensors. Using CMOS means that some processing can be done on the sensor chip, including the conversion of analog information produced by the light being photographed into digital signals. Sony’s 12-megapixel A700 sensor has more than 4,000 analog-to-digital converters, said Mark Weir, Sony’s technical prod manager for digital cameras.

“For those customers, the first, second, and third priority is the image quality the sensor provides,” DeLuca said.

Canon builds its own CMOS sensor. Shown here is a silicon wafer with high-end "full-frame" image sensors

Because that conversion happens earlier in the image-handling pipeline, before image data is transferred off the sensor, there’s less opportunity other camera electronics to sully the image with noise. In digital photography, noise takes the form of colored speckles, and it’s a major bane, especially when shooting in dim conditions.

Phase One, which uses Kodak CCD sensors, agrees. “For the 50- to 80-megapixel sensors on the horizon, we still feel the CCD will be the best way forward,” said PhaseOne Chief Executive Henrik Hakonsson. “We are carefully monitoring CMOS all the time, but for the customers we working for we have not found the quality we’re looking for.”

(Credit:
Canon)

CMOS also sensors can power a live view of the scene on the camera’s LCD, a feature that’s universal in compact cameras but still a relative novelty among SLRs. CCDs get too hot and consume too much power for live view on the large sensors used in SLRs, Carlson said.

CMOS’s reputation in digital imaging has suffered from inflated expectations.

Pentax makes the move to CMOS
John Carlson, Pentax’ product manager for imaging systems, is outspoken on the CMOS advantages for SLRs. “Lower power is the key thing,” he said; it enables more shots per battery, smaller batteries, or more energy for image-processing tasks. Pentax buys its K20D’s CMOS sensor from Samsung.

CCD today leads CMOS when it comes to performance and a wider bright-to-dark range, said Fas Mosleh, CMOS market segment manager for professional and applied imaging at Eastman Kodak, but because CMOS sensors can ride the coattails of the rest of the chipmaking business, CMOS outdoes CCD in one very important domain: price.

Where CCD still has the edge
“One problem with CMOS is it’s difficult to get the manufacturing process optimized both for the imaging part and the processing part,” DeLuca said. In contrast, “CCD technology was built for imaging. The architecture was set up to optimize the imaging characteristics available on the silicon.”

Kodak has begun selling a 5-megapixel CMOS sensor–and the company’s camera division is the first customer, using the chip in the low-end $99 Easyshare C513. But the company also has a business selling some of the biggest image sensors around: 39-megapixel CCDs used by medium-format camera companies such as Hasselblad and Phase One. These measure a whopping 48×36mm, twice the surface area of a full frame of 35mm film (though not as large as medium-format film).

Video games as art, literally

Tuesday, August 24th, 2010

Here’s a cool little collectible vinyl toy we saw this weekend, in the form of a quirky anthropomorphic video game cabinet. Apparently, there’s an entire subculture of fans who collect these limited edition vinyl toys (although they’re not really very toy-like, with no moving parts and limited production runs).

Designer Erick Scarecrow created the $30 Soopa Coin-Up Bros. as an homage to classic arcade machines, and its blank surface (available in white, black, green, orange, and a few other colors) can be customized with paint, markers, or stickers–giving a new twist to the old games-as-art debate.

Apple gets patents on scroll wheel, iMac design

Monday, August 23rd, 2010

(Credit:
USPTO)

MacNN summarized the four patents, awarded based on applications filed as far back as 2002. The most familiar ones involve the scroll wheel for the iPod and the flexible support arm used on the iMac, but the other two appear to involve sound or video editing on a split screen and speech recognition. Patent reading might just be the missing cure for insomnia.

The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office has awarded Apple several patents this week on technologies inside the
iPod, iMac, and Apple software.

If you’re interested in further details, check out the patents themselves for the iPod scroll wheel, the iMac support arm, the split-screen editing, and the speech recognition technologies. It’s interesting to note, however, how dated the pictures look for the scroll wheel and the iMac support arm next to the current designs in vogue for those products.

The iPod has come a long way from the original image attached to a recent Apple patent award.

Price cut moves U.K. iPhones

Monday, August 23rd, 2010

Price apparently was an object for U.K.
iPhone shoppers.

The decision by U.K. carrier O2 to cut the price of the 8GB iPhone prompted shoppers to exhaust stocks of that model at O2’s Web site and at Carphone Warehouse, an authorized iPhone reseller. Pocket-Lint confirmed with Carphone Warehouse that the 8GB models are kaput, and O2 told the site that while online stocks of the 8GB model are gone, retail stocks are dwindling fast.

It was only a week ago that O2 cut the price of the 8GB model from 269 British pounds ($533) to 169 British pounds ($335), a move that was seen as a inventory-clearing measure ahead of the expected introduction of a 3G iPhone. Both Carphone Warehouse and O2 told Pocket-Lint they were “reviewing” whether to order more 8GB models from Apple, which is yet another hint we’re going to see a new model soon.

(Credit:
CNET Networks)

The 8GB iPhone has practically disappeared from the U.K. after a price cut last week.

Does this mean Apple has a 32GB iPhone planned for the 3G launch, expected to come in June at or around the Worldwide Developers Conference? Perhaps, although it’s only been a few months since it upped the capacity to 16GB. At that time, Apple’s Greg Joswiak said the company still believed there was demand for a 8GB model, but that stance might have changed to reflect a “bigger is better” mentality.

BP CEO Today’s clean tech not nearly enough

Monday, August 23rd, 2010

He also said that BP is very optimistic it can make carbon capture and storage commercially viable because of its experience in oil and gas exploration. Carbon dioxide is injected underground to help oil and gas extraction.

Hayward spoke at the Washington International Renewable Energy Conference (WIREC) 2008 where he called for more aggressive government policies to address both climate change and energy security, which he said were interlinked.

Correction 10:20 a.m. PST: This blog misstated the day that BP CEO Tony Hayward spoke at the conference. It is Tuesday.

Altogether BP spends $1 billion a year in alternative energy; the company is rumored to be looking at a sale of that business. Hayward spoke last week at an investor conference, where company watchers interpreted his comments as a signal that it may choose to focus on its core oil and gas business.

He said carbon regulations should put a price on pollution. Hayward favors a cap and trade system, where polluters can trade carbon emission allowances, over a carbon tax because it is market-based and provides more “environmental certainty.”

Specifically, he said that nations need adopt a market-based mechanism, called a “cap and trade” system, to limit greenhouse gas emissions, including carbon dioxide. He also said that government “transitional” incentives are required to speed up development of clean technologies.

A global system, where carbon allowances are traded around the world, would be optimal. But individual countries or regions should implement their own systems and then seek to coordinate with other carbon-trading markets, a process that would mimic how financial markets evolved.

BP Chief Executive Tony Hayward

“Even though clean tech is growing fast, we all need to be honest,” he said during a ministerial plenary session. “The scale that the industry is working at today is not going to have much impact.”

It now has a wind and solar business and is partnering with universities to develop “next-generation biofuels” that do not use food crops and are better fuels than ethanol, Hayward said.

WASHINGTON–Amid rumors that BP will sell its alternative-energy business, company Chief Executive Tony Hayward on Tuesday said that the current scale of the clean-tech industry will not be enough to address the world’s energy challenges.

(Credit:
BP)

BP’s primary business is oil and gas exploration but the company has been on the forefront of developing an alternative-energy business, even changing its name from British Petroleum to BP and adopting the tagline “Beyond Petroleum.” It has spent $30 billion on exploration since 2001 and intends to invest another $30 billion in the next six years.

“Nobody can doubt the financial markets are now global but they grew up in individual countries,” he said, noting that California has already begun the process of integrating with Europe’s carbon market.

Adobe working to increase [its] usage of open sou

Monday, August 23rd, 2010

And yet, and yet, the company apparently sees a future in open source. Just ask Kevin Lynch, Adobe’s chief technology officer, who suggested that Adobe will be doing more and more with open source:

We’re really working to increase our usage of open-source technologies and to contribute to open-source. Because we developed AIR so openly, we were able to share it with developers and make sure we were developing the right things.

The other effect is hosted services. Software is moving from being packaged, where you develop for a particular operating system and put it in a box, to being developed and distributed over the internet and being designed to run across operating systems. That’s where all the innovation has moved to. Software isn’t as OS-specific anymore, it’s moving to rich internet applications. It’s a sea change in how software in general is being built.

Adobe has a massive, multi-billion dollar software business, roughly $0.00 of which has traditionally depended on open source. The company is on a tear, blowing out its last few quarters.

It makes no sense to develop software in an isolated bubble anymore. Adobe gets this. Other companies are still dragging their feet to this realization, perhaps because they haven’t felt the pull of the ‘Net as forcibly as Adobe and others have.

So it’s not just to be cool. There’s a compelling reason for Adobe to adopt more open source. And it has: SQLite, Flash Player (significant chunks of it), Flex, etc. etc. Adobe has been getting closer and closer to open source. Why?

Because Adobe recognizes the power and allure of the Internet, Lynch notes:

The fullest realization of that social network is that the community around the software not only wants to comment on it, they actually want to help improve it and change it and fix it. That’s what I think generates the impetus to make your software open-source and really embrace that network of people around your software who want to help make it better….

That’s OK. They’ll learn. Or they’ll go out of business. Either way, customers win.

commentary

Mundie Microhoo totally dead, unless…

Monday, August 23rd, 2010

This morning, instead of my usual Lemon Lift, I’m trying a cup of mandarin orange green tea. And, instead of Bill Gates, today’s quotes come from Craig Mundie, Microsoft’s chief research and strategy.

“Yahoo could always come back again and say please buy us for $33 (a share) and I’m sure we might reconsider it but we’re not assuming that’s going to happen,” Mundie told Reuters.

He reiterated that the economics just didn’t make sense. Microsoft was offering $33 a share, while Yahoo was demanding at least $37. Now, to open the door a crack.

The comments themselves are along the same theme. First, say how you are moving on. Second, leave the door open a crack, just to keep everyone guessing.

Speaking to Reuters in Indonesia, Mundie said “The market may wish that the Yahoo deal may come back together, but Microsoft at least at this point assumes it’s over.”

It’s become a morning ritual for me: grab a bagel and a cup of tea and sit down and parse the latest comments from a Microsoft executive interviewed overseas.

Now to the details, so I can get to my cup of tea.

The Digital Home podcast Episode 3 One in a thous

Monday, August 23rd, 2010

Don Reisinger sits down with Carey Holzman of the Computer America show to talk about Yahoo, Microsoft, Apple, Toshiba and more in segment 1. In Segment 2, Don has the opportunity to talk with Ryan Kuder, a former Yahoo employee who was laid off last week, to put a face to what really went on at the company’s headquarters. After that, Don asks for jingles and more! Listen now:

Download today’s podcast
EPISODE 3

TODAY’S LINKS: Microsoft holding off on HD DVD reaction, thinks “games” sell consoles - Engadget MacBook Air’s thinness, flash drive point to notebook future R.I.P. HD DVD: Toshiba reportedly ends the war Why Microsoft will announce an Xbox Blu-ray player soon Yahoo and News Corp. — the match made in hell Follow Ryan Kuder on Twitter Computer America

Green news harvest Climate bill scorecard, Bill G

Monday, August 23rd, 2010

Biomass, baby. Click on the image for 'green buildings on the cheap' photo gallery.

(Credit:
Martin LaMonica/CNET News.com)

American Biomass funded for wood-fueled home heating - VentureBeat
I’m a pellet stove guinea pig and a customer of this company. I wrote about my pellet stove and the industry on Earth Day this year.
Showtime: Your Guide to Today’s Senate Climate Bill Slugfest - The Wall Street Journal
For those of you keeping score at home, check out the debate lines on a climate bill that is not expected to go through.
Matt Damon Caught Test Driving Tesla Prototype: Wants One! - Autofiends.com
Although Damon confesses to be an electric-car geek, he shows himself to be a totally normal guy–wicked excited about the quick acceleration.

Gates set to dump half his stake in Pacific Ethanol - The Sacramento Bee
A reflection of investor discontent with the biofuels industry.
New Renewable Network Hopes to Make Greentech Connections - Greentech Media
Schmoozing leads to business. The Renewable Energy Business Network expands chapters and incorporates as a nonprofit with new sponsors.
Ocean Seeding Banned Until More Research - Earth2Tech
This is really just the opening phase of what I expect to be a much bigger debate about geoengineering ‘fixes’ to climate change.

Here’s a sampling of the latest
green-tech news, along with quick commentary.

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