Taken with Instagram at Студентски град
Taken with Instagram at Студентски град
Taken with instagram
Well I guess SGS2 wasn’t such a bad choice after all .. ;)
Visualization of Android fragmentation
Over the past 6 months we’ve been logging the new devices that download OpenSignalMaps, we’ve based this study on 681,900 of these devices. We’ve looked at model, brand, API level (i.e. the version of Android) and screen size and we’ve tried to present this in the clearest form we can.
Wow. 3997 different devices from 599 brands have downloaded the OpenSignalMaps app in the last 6 months. Interesting post with a lot of graphs showing the fragmentation of Android and with thoughts on the ups and downs of being a developer for such a platform.
Intel’s new CPUs [finally] arrive.
After months of delays, the first Ivy Bridge chips from Intel are ready for release, with the first Ivy Bridge computers currently being released to reviewers. Those units should be available to order from April 29.
The CPUs are significant in that they are the first to offer a ‘3D transistor’ design, while using an even smaller 22nm manufacturing process. Check out an explanation of the 3D design here, or watch this video.
The smaller 22nm process means there is more room for the integrated graphics block, and early reports indicate that the chip’s Intel 4000 graphics is better than an entry level graphics card, meaning users can play any current generation PC game without needing a separate graphics card. (Provided you’re willing to have it set to low detail levels, no doubt)
Meanwhile the chip speeds are looking to be the same as current generation ‘Sandy Bridge’ Processors, with the clock frequency of 3.5GHz (up to 3.9GHz in turbo mode) remaining the same. However Intel notes that users can still expect to see either a 20% performance increase, or a 20% reduction in power consumption depending on usage.
Customers looking to buy computers with the new chip should look for the “Intel third-generation Core” series branding, with the chips still going by the Core i3, Core i5, and Core i7 names.
And if you’re wondering how small 22nm is, compare it to a human hair, which is usually up to 100,000nm in diameter!
Finally, it’s here. There aren’t any Core i3s now, but the technology will develop further.
The three stages of public reaction to a scientific consensus:
1) Denial
2) Say it contradicts the Bible.
3) Over time finally just say you’ve known it all along.
“Steve Grand points out that you and I are, ourselves, more like a wave than a permanent thing. He invites us, the reader, to “think of an experience from your childhood — something you remember clearly, something you can see, feel, maybe even smell, as if you were really there. After all, you…