Tuesday, September 10, 2013

iPhone's new fingerprint sensor knows you from Adam



touchID
                                                                         Wilson Rothman / NBC News  
Apple's iPhone 5S, announced Tuesday, will come with a powerful new security feature called Touch ID, a fingerprint scanner built right into the home button. You won't have to type in a PIN on your phone ever again — and apparently, many people weren't doing it to begin with.
As we've gone from checking our phones a couple times a day to every few minutes, the inconvenience of having to type in a passcode, or PIN, has gone from trivial to truly annoying — but what's the alternative, just leave your phone unlocked?
For some people, the answer has been "yes." Apple estimates only about half of iPhone users take advantage of the existing passcode system. And that means that a new iPhone is a tempting target for a thief; with no passcode, a quick factory reset and a new SIM card means an iPhone can easily be converted into a few hundred bucks via Craigslist or a pawn shop.
It's such a common crime for high-end smartphones that it has a nickname, "Apple picking," and task forces have been organized to handle the high volume of lost and stolen phones. Samsung and other phone makers have begun to take the problem seriously, and could introduce improved security measures in their phones that discourage thievery or at least make it less profitable.
Apple's got the jump on them: on the iPhone 5S, your password will be your thumbprint. And it will entered automatically when you hit the home button, so there's no reason to skip the step — which means thieves might be a bit more cautious about snatching your phone.

SaptechThe designers made it work by sandwiching an ultra-thin sensor underneath the surface of the home button, which is now made of super-hard sapphire glass and lacks the familiar square home icon. Instead, a metal ring surrounds the button — more in keeping with iOS 7's rounded design.
The button detects when you put your thumb on it, and the scanner looks through the glass to observe the loops and whorls that make your fingerprint unique.
NBC News Technology & Science Editor Wilson Rothman did some brief hands-on tests Tuesday, and the scanner worked quickly and well, and while it occasionally rejected the "right" print, it never accidentally recognized a "wrong" print.
You have to "train" it first, however, by letting it scan your finger from several angles. You can do your thumb, your index finger, or both — or let your spouse or kid scan their fingers to give them password-less access to your phone.
But fingerprint scanners aren't exactly new, and it's possible to fool them — with a print lifted from any item you've touched and recreated in silicone, for instance (although that's certainly a lot of effort to get into one phone). And if someone else has your prints, it's not like you can go into the settings menu and change them.
Software security firm Lookout warns that that people who really want to protect their data will want multiple layers of protection: a fingerprint, sure, but also a password, and the ability to lock down the phone if it is stolen — just in case.
Whether it really saves time in everyday situations, we'll have to find out when we do our full review. Expect to see that close to the iPhone 5S's release date on Sept. 20.


IDF 2013: From Quark to Xeon, Intel wants to be inside everything



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Summary: We expected the new low-power Haswell chips and Bay Trail Atoms for tablets. But on the first day of its annual conference, Intel offered a few surprises too including working 14nm Core processors and a new Quark chip family for tiny devices.


In an odd bit of timing Intel’s annual conference began this morning on the same day that HP--still one of the world’s largest PC companies--was dropped from the Dow Jones Industrial Average. The coincidence symbolizes that challenges facing Intel and its new CEO, Brian Krzanich, in a post-PC era. In his first keynote, Krzanich, addressed this head-on, arguing that Intel has the right technology and products to power everything from tiny wearable devices to massive supercomputers.
“Our strategy is very simple,” Krzanich said. “Our plan is to lead in every segment of computing--servers, PCs, tablets, phones and beyond. Segments that are still being developed such as the Internet of Things.”
While some of the products Intel announced--including low-power Haswell chips and Bay Trail Atom for tablets--were expected, there were few surprises as well. These included the first working laptop running on a 14nm “Broadwell” Core processor and a smartphone powered by a 22nm “Silvermont” Atom chip. Intel also announced a new Quark processor family, which is even smaller and uses less power than Atom, designed for wearable devices and the Internet of Things.
These new areas are important for Intel, but the PC remains the bulk of its business even as growth slows and new devices emerge. “The PC is in the process of reinventing itself,” Krzanich said. “There’s more innovation in the PC than I’ve ever seen before. It’s battery life, it’s form factor, it’s capabilities.”
Intel showed an HP system based on a Haswell Y processor and said that the chips in this product family will use as little as 4.5 watts of power. Note that Intel is referring here to typical tablet usage (what it calls Scenario Design Power or SDP); based on the standard TDP rating it uses for PC and server chips these new Haswells are rated at 11.5 watts. There are 10 Haswell Y processors--most of which are Core i3 and Core i5 chips Intel HD 4200 graphics--but there is also a 1.20GHz Pentium 3560Y at the low end and a 2.90HGz Core i7-4610Y at the high end. These Haswell Y processors are significant because they will enable thinner, fanless devices with the performance of Core-based laptops. Krzanich said there will be more of these types of devices “as we exit this year.”
The next step after Haswell is Broadwell, a shrink to 14nm process technology. To prove that Intel was on schedule, Krzanich showed what a working laptop running a Broadwell processor (more specifically, he showed it playing Angry Birds, though hopefully they’ll come up some more compelling use cases for all this power). Krzanich confirmed Broadwell will be shipping by the end of the year and available in systems in 2014.
Although Krzanich didn’t provide any details on Bay Trail—there’s a separate session on this tomorrow—he said that Intel’s chips were already showing up tablets, holding up a Lenovo tablet to prove the point. He said the ability for Intel’s customer to choose between Atom and Core, and between Android and Windows 8 would give the company an edge in tablets. “It’s not just one tablet,” he said adding that numerous tablets would be available at prices starting at under $100 this holiday season.
Intel has also been focused on the concept of a 2-in-1 device that works as both a laptop and a tablet. Krzanich said that by the end of this year there will be more than 60 Intel-based tablets in the market with prices starting at under $100. In a question-and-answer session after the keynote, Krzanich confirmed rumors that new Chromebooks shipping later this year will also use Intel silicon.
While it may be making progress on convertibles and tablets, Intel still has a lot to prove with smartphones. Krzanich said the smartphone he showed with a 22nm Merrifield Atom SoC will deliver 50 percent better performance and longer battery life than its current solutions such as the 32nm Medfield processor used in the Lenovo K800. (He later said that the 14nm Atoms would begin shipping at the end of 2014.)
Krzanich acknowledged that the lack of 4G LTE support had been holding the company back in smartphones. Intel recently began shipping a its XMM 7160 cellular baseband that supports LTE data and 3G voice, and it will add LTE voice by the end of this year. In addition, he said, a team of engineers in San Diego has been working on LTE-Advanced with carrier aggregation. Intel demonstrated how this can boost data bandwidth from 35Mbps to 70Mbps, and Krzanich said that by the time Intel ships its XMM 7260 with LTE-Advanced sometime in 2014 it will deliver peak bandwidth of 150Mbps.
Perhaps the biggest surprise was the new Quark X1000 processor family. Krzanich said that wearable computing devices and Internet of Things have similar requirements—electronics that are low power, small and lightweight, always connected and secure. In comparison with Atom, the Quark processor is one-fifth the size and uses one-tenth the power. Quark is also “fully synthesizable” meaning that other companies can take the basic chip and customize it adding their own technology for specific tasks.
Intel showed some reference designs including a board for industrial applications and a consumer bracelet, designed to get hardware companies and developers working on Quark-based solutions, but Krzanich said Intel isn’t likely to get into the hardware business itself. In a follow-on session, Intel President Renee James talked about how Intel technology will be used in “integrated computing” to solve complex problems in areas such as smart cities and healthcare.
Many chip companies have similar strategies to expand into new applications. ARM’s low-power cores are already used in millions of microcontrollers and processors, many of which integrate technology from other companies. AMD is pursuing a semi-custom strategy and just announced a new line of embedded processors using both ARM and x86 cores. IBM’s latest Power processors, announced at the Hot Chips conference last month, has a new interconnect that will allow customers to add their own technology and the company recently announce it will license the architecture to other chipmakers to create customized chips.
Krzanich also touched on Intel’s latest server processors for datacenters. Last week the company He started with the datacenter. Last week Intel announced the Atom C2000 family, based on the Silvermont architecture and 22nm process technology. Keeping with the customization theme, there are 13 different C2000 chips tailored to different micro-server, storage and networking workloads. At IDF, Intel announced its latest Xeon E5 v2 processor for mainstream servers.
In a later session, Diane Bryant, senior vice president and general manager of Intel’s Datacenter and Connected Systems Group, provided details on the E5-2600 v2 family code named Ivy Bridge-EP.” There are 21 new E5 processors in the line including 18 E5-2600 v2 chips, ranging in price from $202 to $2,614, and three single-socket E5-1600 v2s for workstations ranging in price from $294 to $1,080.
Based on Intel’s 22nm process technology, the E5 v2 has up to 12 cores and more cache than the current Xeon E5s at the same or lower power. Intel is claiming up to 50 percent better performance or 45 percent better energy efficiency than the current Xeon E5 processors. The E5 v2 is designed to cover everything from workstations (Apple’s redesigned Mac Pro, for example) to supercomputers such as China’s MilkyWay-2, currently the fastest computer system in the world.
Bryant and some of Intel’s customers talked about how the E5 v2 will be used not only in servers, but also in storage and networking applications to replace proprietary, fixed-function hardware.
Rather than a threat, the post-PC era is an opportunity for Intel, Krzanich concluded. “The landscape of computing has never been bigger,” he said. “We showed you everything from the biggest server with E5 to the smallest SoC Intel has ever built with Quark.” The strategy makes sense--and there is no denying that Intel has the best manufacturing technology to put behind it--but the company will need to back it up with some wins, most notably in tablets and smartphones that consumers actually want to buy.
  Source: zdnet

Корпорация Apple представила новые модели iPhone



Новые смартфоны Apple
Новые смартфоны Apple впервые выйдут на рынок в двух разных ценовых категориях


Корпорация Apple обнародовала прототипы двух новых мобильных телефонов - дорогого iPhone-5S и более дешевого iPhone-5С.

Первый из них имеет дактилоскопический сенсор, встроенный в главную кнопку, что позволяет телефону опознавать владельца.
Apple впервые применила стратегию вывода на рынок двух различных моделей одного устройства.
Новая дактилоскопическая система может быть использована для разблокирования устройства и для идентификации при продажах в интернет-магазине корпорации.
Такой сенсор может дать Apple значительное преимущество.
Сообщается, что iPhone 5C будут выпускать в корпусах пяти цветов - зеленого, желтого, синего, красного и белого. Корпус смартфона изготовлен из пластика.
Как и представленный в 2012 году iPhone 5, новый смартфон использует процессор Apple A6.
iPhone 5S будет изготовлен из стекла и алюминия. Он будет продаваться в корпусах черного, серебряного и золотого цветов.
В смартфоне установлен 64-разрядный процессор Apple A7. До этой модели Apple применяла в своих устройствах только 32-разрядные процессоры.

В борьбе за нишу на рынке

Новые телефоны будут совсем не дешевыми - 5S на британском рынке будет стоить до 709 ф. ст. за модель с памятью в 64 Гб.
Новые телефоны Apple поступят в продажу в США, Британии, Китае, Австралии и Канаде 20 сентября. Впервые Китай включен в число стран, где телефоны будут продаваться в первую очередь.
Мобильные телефоны iPhone являются самыми прибыльными товарами для корпорации Apple, принося ей более 50% доходов.
Однако при этом американская компания, несмотря на рост продаж, постепенно теряет свою долю рынка.
Во втором квартале этого года доля iPhone на глобальном рынке смартфонов составила 13%, уменьшившись за год на 4%.
А вот доля смартфонов на основе системы Google Android возросла с 69% до 79%.
 источник: bbc.co.uk