Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Solar Energy News .




INTERNET SPACE
Intel takes leap into wearable computing
by Staff Writers
Las Vegas (AFP) Jan 07, 2014


Taiwan's Acer looks to Internet trading
Taipei (AFP) Jan 07, 2014 - Taiwanese computer maker Acer said Tuesday it has made its first major investment since overhauling its top management late last year, acquiring a 15.6 percent stake in a PChome subsidiary.

While declining to disclose the value of the deal, the statement said the market capital of PChomePay, the payment business of the leading Internet trade group, had increased to TW$450 million ($14.9 million) from TW$380 million as a result.

"Under the ICT industry's paradigm shift Acer is going beyond hardware-based thinking; the investment in e-commerce and our self-built cloud (Build Your Own Cloud, 'BYOC') is our important deployment of 'hardware + software + services' transformation," Acer Chairman and company founder Stan Shih said.

Acer termed the deal as part of the "corporate transformation" under way, led by the new management headed by Shih.

The board in November pulled 69-year-old Shih out of retirement to name him chairman and interim president, replacing two top executives who quit in the space of less than a month over the firm's poor performance.

Then Acer appointed Jason Chen, a former senior executive of Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co, as both CEO and president, effective from January 1.

Shih has high hopes of Chen, describing him as the "ideal executive to lead our transformation".

Acer posted a worse-than-expected net loss of Tw$13.1 billion ($442.2 million) in the three months to September.

The company has said this was due to a rise in inventory levels and one-time compensation payments related to longstanding litigation.

But it has forecast that shipments of Acer's notebooks, tablet PCs and Chromebooks will fall 10 percent in the fourth quarter compared to the third quarter.

In the face of the tough outlook, Acer has set up a business restructuring group led by Shih and co-founder George Huang.

Shih founded Acer in 1976 and built it into the world's second largest PC maker in its heyday, and one of the best known Taiwanese brands internationally, before he retired in 2004.

But Acer's fortunes worsened in recent years. In 2011 it lost Tw$6.8 billion in the second quarter -- compared to a profit of Tw$3.59 billion in the same period the previous year -- as sales were hit by competition from Apple's iPad.

The company has cut several hundred jobs in Europe, the Middle East and Africa in recent years to reduce operating expenses. It envisages a seven percent cut in its global workforce in 2014.

Computer chip giant Intel unveiled a major new push Monday into wearables and connecting everyday devices as it seeks to leapfrog the competition in mobile computing.

Chief executive Brian Krzanich said Intel would produce on its own or with partners a range of products from a health monitor integrated into baby clothes to heart monitor in earbuds.

Speaking at the opening keynote of the massive Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, Krzanich showed the company's new "personal assistant" dubbed Jarvis, which is Intel's answer to the voice-activated Google Now and Apple's Siri.

Intel will be producing a smartwatch with "geofencing" which allows families to get alerts if children or elderly parents leave a specific geographic area.

The new devices shown to the large CES crowd will all be available this year, Krzanich said, without offering details on pricing or specific partners for the products.

Krzanich said Intel is taking a new approach to wearable computing, seeking to address specific problems with the simplest technology.

He showed a turtle-shaped sensor on baby clothing which can send information to a smart coffee cup about an infant's breathing, temperature and position.

He said the earbuds would enable runners and athletes who already listen to music while exercising to get detailed health information in real time.

"We want to make everything smart. That's what Intel does," he said.

The chief executive who took the reins at Intel last year said the new technology all revolves around its new chip called Edison, which is said integrates a full-fledged computer in the size of a memory card.

He said Intel will be partnering with the luxury retailer Barneys New York, the Council of Fashion Designers of America and design house Opening Ceremony to explore and market smart wearable technology.

And Intel will offer $1.3 million in prizes for other developers who come up with new ideas for wearable computing, including a first prize of $500 million.

"This will allow creation and innovation to come to life" in wearables, he said.

To address questions about security, Intel will offer its McAfee mobile software free of charge.

"We believe this will allow this ecosystem to flourish."

Intel remains the world's biggest producer of chips for personal computers but has been lagging in the surging mobile marketplace of tablets and smartphones. The new initiative could allow the California firm to get a bigger slice of the mobile market's newest iterations.

Intel also said its new chips would allow for a "dual boot" that enables computer makers to include Microsoft Windows and Google Android on a single device, with users able to change with the switch of a button.

"There are times you want Windows, there are times you want Android," he said. "You don't have to make a choice, you can have both."

Intel also unveiled a new 3D camera called RealSense which can be integrated into tablets and enable users to produce and manipulate three-dimensional images.

This can for example allow a user to design a toy or other object and then send it to a 3D printer. Intel produced chocolate bars using the technology which were handed out to the attendees at CES.

Mooly Eden, senior vice president for perceptual computing, said Intel is moving to a more intuitive kind of computing.

"We'll make human-computer interaction natural, intuitive, immersive. We'll make it more human," Eden said.

"We finally removed the fiction from science fiction and made it real."

Intel will implement a new policy in 2014 ending the use of "conflict minerals," from the Democratic Republic of Congo, as part of an effort to reduce the money flowing from the technology sector to those committing atrocities, Krzanich said.

"We are inviting the entire industry to join us in this effort," he said.

soe-rl/dw

INTEL

DELL

ASUSTEK COMPUTER

LENOVO GROUP

MICROSOFT

GOOGLE

.


Related Links
Satellite-based Internet technologies






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








INTERNET SPACE
Netflix to stream "ultra" high-def shows to LG televisions
Las Vegas (AFP) Jan 06, 2014
LG on Monday announced an alliance with Netflix to stream "ultra high-definition" shows to new televisions being released by the South Korean consumer electronics giant. The announcement came on the eve of the formal opening of an international Consumer Electronics Show due to be packed with announcements about vibrant new screens displaying content about four times richer than what is seen ... read more


INTERNET SPACE
Inexpensive technique could drive down costs of biofuel production

York scientists' significant step forward in biofuels quest

Seaweed Energy Solutions (SES) acquires wild seaweed operation in Norway

Algae to crude oil: Million-year natural process takes minutes in the lab

INTERNET SPACE
Robots invade consumer market for play, work

Electronic 'mother' watches over home

Wall-Crawling Gecko Robots Can Stick In Space Too

Geckos in space: Novel robot takes a step to cosmos

INTERNET SPACE
Researchers Find Ways To Minimize Power Grid Disruptions From Wind Power

Bolivia opens China-built wind power plant

Austria's wind industry laments new zoning restrictions

Wind energy: TUV Rheinland certifies PowerWind wind turbines

INTERNET SPACE
Electronic valet parks the car, no tip required

Self-driving vehicles offer potential benefits, policy challenges for lawmakers

Three-wheel $6,800 car gears for 2015 US launch

China auto sales up nearly 14% in 2013: industry

INTERNET SPACE
Shell New Zealand to drill in Great South Basin

Lebanon's prospects of gas bonanza slip further away

Abe to offer help in Africa tour as Ethiopia hopes for trade

India urges Asian unity for fair LNG pricing

INTERNET SPACE
Czech environment minister cancels nuke waste repository site survey

Greenland and Denmark to agree on uranium in 2014: Danish PM

Japan scientists to create controlled nuclear meltdown

Westinghouse Announces Setting of AP1000 Plant Shield Building Conical Roofs

INTERNET SPACE
US energy secretary delays India trip amid row

Suburban sprawl cancels carbon footprint savings of dense urban cores

The entropy of nations

United Nations Proclaims "International Year Of Light" In 2015

INTERNET SPACE
Long-term overstory and understory change following logging and fire exclusion in a Sierra Nevada mixed-conifer forest

Brazil moves to evict invaders from Amazon's Awa lands

Indonesia struggles to clean up corrupt forestry sector

Mangrove forests march up Florida coast as killing frosts decrease




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement