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  Aug 2010
   
 
 

Intel turns to light to replace copper wires in PCs – Intel has developed a prototype that uses light to connect to accelerate the transfer of data in computers with a speed of 50 gigabits per second. Intel researchers note that the final optical technologies, the use of copper wires for electrons transfer information in and around computers to replace. An entire high-definition movie can be transmitted each second with the prototype, according to researchers. There will also be the possibility of transferring data over long distances than copper, for the son of transport, Intel researchers said. Research prototypes as a breakthrough in the investigation and the copper wire reached its limit. There is a great amount of data transferred and the transfer of data at 10 Gb / s or higher on the copper wire is always a challenge. Even if the data can be transferred to the copper wire as speed, distance, there are compromises. Optical Interconnects on this problem, allowing transferring data much faster over long distances.

 
 

Microsoft Releases Internet Explorer 9 'Platform Preview' – Microsoft announced on its Windows Team Blog that it will launch Internet Explorer 9 at a media event in San Francisco on 15 September. Microsoft announced a "platform preview" of IE 9 back in March. The Platform Preview was basically the IE 9 rendering engine presented in a plain window - no toolbars, no extra features. IE 9 will feature better support for new web technologies such as HTML5 and CSS3. It'll also provide hardware acceleration for rendering graphics and text on a web page and a faster JavaScript engine for better web app performance, among other features. The idea behind Web standards is that ideally every Web browser would be able to view any Web site. You'd no longer have to rely on using the leading browser in order to view Web sites the way they were supposed to be. And support for Web standards means support for the latest and greatest Web technologies like HTML5. The result is better Web sites, and a better experience for everyone, no matter what OS or browser the use.

 
 

Google Improves Realtime Search – Since its December 2009 launch, Google has been making minor improvements to Google Realtime Search. Today, the offering has been refreshed with three key additions: conversation view, location refinements and Google Alerts for updates. With conversation view, tweets are organized from oldest to newest and are threaded to provide full context around real-time conversations. Conversation view includes replies and retweets. The user can click the "whole chain" below the live update of the menu. In practice, as in the random tweet or two appear out of context. The front of the site, and not only in near real-time updates in the search, researchers can obtain precise location in the "Custom" box to narrow down the results a particular city, state or country. Users can also click on the update to the address below to filter the results in this region. Google Realtime Search, accessible via the left-hand search options menu, now also exists as a standalone product at google.com/realtime. It is currently being rolled out to users, but those who can't access the page yet can do so here http://www.google.com/realtime?esrch=RealtimeLaunch::Experiment.

 
 

Google to roll out e-mail prioritizing feature in Gmail – Google plans to begin rolling out to Gmail users on Tuesday a new feature designed to automatically rearrange messages in their inbox so that the most important and pressing ones appear at the top. Called Priority Inbox, the feature will be released with the beta, or test, label and is being described for now as "experimental" by the company. This new Gmail feature in beta called Priority Inbox, which sorts your incoming e-mail into three sections, "important and unread," "starred," and "everything else". A software engineer of google explained in a post on the company's Gmail blog that the feature targets mail that isn't outright spam "but isn't very important." It separates the important stuff from the "bologna," or "bacn," he said.

 
 

 

 
 

 

 
 

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