Here is a map of where Dell says Fresh Air Cooling will work with their hardware.
The blog post is here.
5 Sep 2013 12:50 PM
- Likes0
And the video is here.
Your Custom Text Here
Here is a map of where Dell says Fresh Air Cooling will work with their hardware.
The blog post is here.
5 Sep 2013 12:50 PM
- Comments0
- Likes0
We are proud to announce the next iteration of the Dell Fresh Air Hot House, an ongoing project at Dell with partner Intel and customer Essor Partners LLC. The Fresh Air Hot House, located in Round Rock, Texas, showcases the extreme temperature and humidity tolerances of off-the-shelf Dell Fresh Air capable hardware while performing at high workload levels in a non-air-conditioned environment.
Dell embarked on the Fresh Air design mission after hearing from our customers. They told us they were challenged for operating expenditure and data center capacity, and they needed a solution. Based on those conversations, we set out to design a server capable of performing continuously up to 35°C (95°F) and for time-based excursion operation up to 45°C (113°F) with humidity up to 90%, covering most of the environmental ranges in the world. Through years of comprehensive research and development, we found that a fresh air cooled data center using our Dell Fresh Air capable hardware could be deployed almost anywhere.
And the video is here.
Intel Inside ® is a recognized label on your laptop. Now Intel has announced Intel Inside in a Cloud. Amazon Web Sevices Cloud.
· Amazon Web Services becomes first cloud service provider to use the “Intel Inside®” brand, letting its customers know that the services it provides utilize Intel technology.
Why did Intel negotiate with Amazon to have Intel Inside brand in the Cloud? It looks like there is co-marketing of Intel advertising to sell the use of compute on AWS on this site http://www.powerof60.com/en/.
Intel advertising money showing up in a Cloud to market compute scenarios is something the ARM vendors are going to have a tough time competing against.
The media is all in a tizzy that Stephen Elop is the leading CEO candidate.
The point I make and still stick to is the next CEO is going to be someone Bill trusts. How long did Bill work with Stephen Elop. Not much.
He spent way more time with his CEO of the Gates Foundation Jeff Raikes. And Jeff just resigned as CEO.
Thanks
@jeffraikes for your leadership@gatesfoundation. You've been a great partner.
Thanks
@MelindaGates and@BillGates for the opportunity to work with you in leading the@GatesFoundation these last five years.
Geekwire doesn't think Jeff is the next Microsoft CEO. Maybe Steve Ballmer will be the next CEO of the Gates foundation.
Raikes was recently included on some speculative lists of potential candidates to replace Ballmer. However, based on what I’m hearing from multiple sources this morning, Raikes’ retirement is not a sign that he is going to back to Microsoft.
Intel announced last week the Intel ARM C2000 at 6W
The ARM processor was claimed to be more efficient. And now the C2000 is 6x performance per watt
Barrons blog has a post on the business impact of the Intel Atom. Here are the two analyst views.
Doug Freedman of RBC Capital Markets reiterated an Outperform rating and a $29 price target on the shares, writing, “INTC’s new Atom low-power C2000, successor to S1200, is a very compelling offering in that it not only offers up to 6x performance/ watt (vs. S1200), but will enable newer markets leveraging prior SoC efforts in mobile (smartphone/tablet).
Thus INTC stands to pick-up ground in new markets with attractive ROI on more customized solutions [...] Performance vs. select S1200 parts are expected to be up to 7x faster, offering up to 6x higher performance per watt. The product is expected to be a best-in-class solution vs. competitive ARM solutions in the marketplace [...] We were encouraged to hear that the gross margin impact is expected to be “a wash”. To us, this implies that the margins are at least comparable to performance-based parts, and potentially better due to 22nm and cost efficiencies realized as a result of leveraging mobile resources.”
From the bear camp, Hans Mosesmann of Raymond James, reiterating an Underperform rating, wrote that “Intel introduced today an impressive number of Atom-based processor, switch, memory, and optical connectivity products/technologies for the datacenter in a move that highlights, in our view, Intel’s sense of urgency to defend its server processor supremacy.”
It is hard to fathom Intel making this big of a splash had ARM not released its 64-bit v8 architecture (for licensing) nearly two years ago with the subsequent strong design interest. Intel was at pains to explain that microservers, as a category, are small but the opportunity for adjacent markets is big. Translation: we are worried about the ARM threat and are willing to cannibalize existing low-end, highly profitable XEONs to make sure this does not happen.”
Some things that get written up are random things that aren't an issue. For example? Steve Jobs didn't write code covered in Business Insider.
Steve Jobs Never Wrote Computer Code For Apple
DYLAN LOVE AUG. 29, 2013, 11:02 AMPublicly answering an email over at his site, Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak goes into a few details on Steve Jobs's technical background.
"Steve didn't ever code," writes Wozniak. "He wasn't an engineer and he didn't do any original design, but he was technical enough to alter and change and add to other designs."
Why does the visionary CEO need to write code? To inspire the coders to write better code?
Introvert-Friendly Career - Computer Programmer
Spending time alone with a computer could be a dream come true for any introverted techie. For them, life as a computer programmer might sound like a dream that could also pay the rent.
"From my understanding, computer programmers work by themselves, in the world of ideas," Anthony says. "That's more on the introverted side because introverts are more comfortable alone and like working on their own."
Apple products work because there is a huge amount of effort to hide the technical issues and just make things work. Who cares if the code is beautiful if it doesn't solve an end user problem.
BTW the article got the introverted and extroverted pictures switched. Here is the extrovert post.
Extrovert-Friendly Career - Computer Support Specialist
If you're a computer geek - sorry, computer aficionado - who isn't afraid of terms like face time and small talk, you might be hard-wired for a computer support specialist career.
"I think as a computer support specialist you have to feel comfortable interacting with people, unlike a computer programmer where you'll be working alone for long periods," Anthony says. "You'll want to make sure people are at ease so you can get information about their computer problems and then be effective in solving them."