Welcome to a laptop battery specialist of the Toshiba Ac Adapter
Fujitsu has taken the plunge into Windows 8 business with an Intel based tablet that snaps into a docking station to form-up like a laptop. Fujitsu Stylistic Q702 has an 11.6-inch IPS-grade display, choice between an Intel Core i3 or Core i7 processor, 4GB RAM, and up to 256GB of storage on SSD. The tablet has dual-camera configuration; USB 2.0 and 3.0, HDMI, and SD/SDHC ports; and optional 3G or 4G support.
The docking station, in addition to keypad and track pad, adds 4-cell battery-pack, Ethernet port, and VGA-out. Fujitsu's selection of security suite for this hybrid includes fingerprint sensor, Computrace, hardware password protection, Trusted Platform Module (TPM), Intel anti-theft technology, and optional Intel vPro. Before taxes, the Fujitsu Stylistic Q702 will set you back by Rs.69,000.
TweetinShare0 Power consumption is the biggest technical challenge facing chip makers today as they try to cram computer-level electronics into tiny smartphones and other mobile devices. But SuVolta plans to alleviate some of that burden with a new technology that reduces power consumption by up to 50 percent.
The Los Gatos, Calif.-based company has been talking about this semiconductor capability for 18 months and today it announced that its Deeply Depleted Channel technology has been proven in factories at Fujitsu Semiconductor, a major Japanese chip manufacturer. SuVolta said it plans to have the technology commercially available in the first half of 2013.
SuVolta and Fujitsu Semiconductor will talk about the development at the International Electronic Devices Meeting in San Francisco tomorrow.
The technology reduces power consumption without impacting a chip's performance. The result is that chip makers will be able to reduce the power supply voltage and transistor sizes to smaller dimensions below 20 nanometers. (A nanometer is a billionth of a meter).
The company says its PowerShrink technology addresses a fundamental problem in the physics behind transistors, the basic building blocks of all electronic chips. If it works, the technology could help improve battery like Toshiba PA3380U-1ACA Ac Adapter, Toshiba PA3396U-1ACA Ac Adapter, Toshiba PA3432U-1ACA Ac Adapter, Toshiba PA3467U-1ACA Ac Adapter, Toshiba PA3468U-1ACA Ac Adapter, Toshiba V000061300 Ac Adapter, Toshiba Libretto 100CT Ac Adapter, Toshiba Portege 2010 Ac Adapter, Toshiba Libretto U100 Ac Adapter, Toshiba Portege M200 Ac Adapter, Toshiba Portege M700 Ac Adapter, Toshiba Portege R500 Ac Adapter life in portable products — smartphones, tablets, and notebooks — and offer an alternative to a revolutionary Intel technology known as Tri-Gate.
SuVolta attacks a problem called transistor variation. It minimizes the electrical variation in each of the millions of transistors on a chip. On the manufacturing level, SuVolta merely tweaks the "recipe" for making a chip. The result is that it reduces the variation in voltage for a chip, allowing for efficiency improvements.
"The IEDM paper results confirm that Fujitsu Semiconductor's DDC-enabled process offers the best combination of performance and reduced power consumption of any 65 nanometer or 55 nanometer process," said Haruyoshi Yagi, corporate senior executive vice president at Fujitsu Semiconductor Limited. "The integration of the DDC technology into Fujitsu Semiconductor's low-power process has met all of our expectations. The DDC-based technology is expected to be commercially available in the first half of 2013 in a 55 nanometer process offering."
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