Nokia hits new low as Moody's cuts rating
Moody's cut Nokia's long-term credit rating to Baa3, one level above speculative grade, sending the already battered shares to a historic low of 2.948 euros. Standard & Poor's announced a similar downgrade in March.
The shares have been on a declining trend since a profit warning last Wednesday, and they broke through the technical and psychological barrier of 3 euros earlier on Monday for the first time since 1997.
Nokia said last week that it would post losses for the first and second quarters.
"Moody's believes that the structural challenges facing Nokia's mobile phones segment may not be easy to address, such as the market share gains recorded by makers of very low-end phones or new phone promotions by Chinese carriers," the U.S. ratings agency said.
Nokia quickly defended its financial position, saying it had gross cash balances of 9.8 billion euros ($12.8 billion) and a net cash position of 4.9 billion euros as of March 31.
"Nokia will continue to increase its focus on lowering the company's cost structure, improving cash flow and maintaining a strong financial position," Timo Ihamuotila, Nokia's chief financial officer, said in a statement.
In the first quarter Nokia's cash flow was 700 million euros negative.
In the second quarter, when losses from the phone business could widen, the firm is also due to pay out dividends of around 750 million.
Nokia is in the midst of a restructuring program to cut annual costs at its phone unit by more than 1 billion euros, and is expected to unveil further cuts over coming months. The latest round of 4,000 job cuts was announced in February.
The once-dominant mobile phone maker lost the top spot in the lucrative smartphone market last year to Apple and phones running Google's Android system. It also faces tough competition from nimble Asian competitors at the low end.
The stock had already crashed more than 50 percent since Nokia announced in February 2011 that it was dropping its own Symbian operating software and switching to the largely untried Windows Phone system developed by Microsoft.
Sales of Symbian phones have been falling faster than originally expected, and sales of new Windows phones have yet to make up for those losses.
Nokia is due to report first quarter results on April 19. ($1 = 0.7644 euros)
(Reporting by Helsinki Newsroom; Editing by Helen Massy-Beresford and Hans-Juergen Peters)
Soutrce: http://articles.orlandosentinel.com/2012-04-16/features/sns-rt-us-nokia-moodysbre83f0h9-20120416_1_cash-position-finnish-mobile-phone-moody
See: Profile
Canon Cinema EOS C500 camera hands-on (video)
Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/04/15/canon-cinema-eos-c500-hands-on/
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Marketron Introduces Its Mobile Marketing and Advertising Technology to the TV Industry KLWB-TV and KDCG-TV are Among Marketron's Initial Customer Wins
Source: http://www.marketwatch.com/story/marketron-introduces-its-mobile-marketing-and-advertising-technology-to-the-tv-industry-2012-04-12
See: Profile
Using phones, maps, laptops...and the M5 "Sun investigation: Crash M-way madness"
DRIVERS are pictured on a death crash motorway using phones, maps and even a LAPTOP at the wheel.
A Sun probe found truckers, van drivers and other motorists on the M5 chatting into mobiles and fiddling with their sat navs.
Some were poring over maps or documents and gulping from steaming cups of coffee.
Many took their eyes off the road to look down while several even took both HANDS off the wheel to stretch and adjust clothes.
The shocking photos were taken on the M5, one of Britain's busiest routes — the same motorway where two men died following a collision between a lorry and a coach near Halesowen, West Midlands, last Saturday.
Seven people were killed and 51 were injured following a massive 30-car pile-up on the M5 near Bridgwater, Somerset, last November. We snapped drivers on the stretch of the motorway in nearby Taunton.
Source: http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/4220999/Drivers-using-phones-maps-laptops-behind-the-wheel-on-the-M5.html
The Nav13X from Netbook Navigator
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Upwardly mobile: More Indian homes have phones, laptops and other gadgets...BUT some of them don't even have a toilet
Source: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/indiahome/indianews/article-2114553/Upwardly-mobile-More-Indian-homes-phones-laptops-gadgets--BUT-dont-toilet.html?ito=feeds-newsxml
See: Profile
Lights, camera, and action at your fingertips
Source: http://www.vancouversun.com/business/Lights+camera+action+your+fingertips/6291066/story.html
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Home | News £22 PC Raspberry Pi Launches, Crashes Retailer Site
Source: http://www.nowgamer.com/news/1264384/22_pc_raspberry_pi_launches_crashes_retailer_site.html
See: Profile
Google's Motorola takeover could trigger fresh patents battle with Apple
Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2012/feb/14/google-motorola-mobility-apple-patents
See: Profile
Apple admits it has a human rights problem
Source: http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/apple-admits-it-has-a-human-rights-problem-6898617.html
See: Profile
OWC supercharges storage for MacBook Air, Mac Pro, and enterprise
The folks from Microchip Technology have announced an HID-class MCP2210 USB to SPI protocol converter, which they describe as: “The simplest, smallest-footprint, and most cost-effective option for adding USB-Certified connectivity to SPI-based systems.”
Microchip also provides free downloads of supporting software drivers, DLLs and a PC configuration tool, in addition to an evaluation board, to make it fast and simple for designers without USB expertise to add USB connectivity.
The converter comes in small, 20-pin SSOP and 5x5 mm QFN packages, for space-constrained applications. Additionally, the MCP2210 has nine flexible, general-purpose I/O that can be configured via a PC as standard digital I/O pins or in alternate configurations, providing additional system I/O that simplify designs and support a wide range of applications.
According to eTForecasts, current annual PC shipments are greater than 300M and are projected to grow to more than 500M within the next four years. While most PCs have standardized on USB as the primary protocol for connecting to other devices, many of those devices still utilize the SPI protocol. In combination with the above features, software and tools, the MCP2210 converter utilizes the USB HID class, which is supported by the Windows®, Linux and Mac OS operating systems, and is a 100% plug-and-play solution, making it even simpler to add USB to existing designs for data collection, transfer and analysis, along with many other USB functions.
“USB connectivity continues to be one of our customers’ most requested items,” said Bryan J. Liddiard, marketing vice president of Microchip’s Analog and Interface Products Division. “Microchip’s PIC microcontroller families with integrated USB functionality continue to expand. This MCP2210 USB to SPI protocol converter and supporting tools give customers a simple, small-footprint and cost-effective option to add USB connectivity to SPI-based systems.”
Development Support
The MCP2210 Evaluation Kit (part # ADM00421) is available today for $29.99 . Additionally, the MCP2210’s free software drivers, DLLs and PC configuration tool are all available today for download.
Pricing and availability
The MCP2210 is available in a 20-pin SSOP package for $1.40 each, and a 20-pin 5x5 mm QFN package for $1.52 each, in 5,000-unit quantities. Samples and volume-production orders are available today. For additional information, contact any Microchip sales representative or authorized worldwide distributor, or visit Microchip’s Web site. at www.microchip.com/get/0QTF. To purchase products mentioned in this press release, go to microchipDIRECT or contact one of Microchip’s authorized distribution partners.
If you found this article to be interest, visit Microcontroller / MCU Designline where – in addition to my blogs on all sorts of "stuff" (also check out my Max's Cool Beans blog) – you will find the latest and greatest design, technology, product, and news articles with regard to all aspects of designing and using microcontrollers.
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Source: http://www.embedded.com/electronics-products/electronic-product-reviews/logic-interfaces-products/4234690/New-USB-to-SPI-protocol-converter-from-Microchip
CES 2012: A Roundup
Releasing its 55-inch OLED HDTV alongside LG, it heralded a new direction for its TV ecosystem; one that was predictively obvious and logical (apps and content tie-ins), and spontaneously brilliant to be industry-leading (networked integration and dynamic annual SoC packages).
Canonical gave us quite the surprise with their concept, the Ubuntu TV(a Linux-based set-top box), too.
As that taste lingered with us, we were, o, bombarded by a tributary of tablets, mostly unremarkable and in-your-face enough to be inconsequential to the general scheme of the market.
It was mostly about spec-upgradation and catching-up than feature-innovation, a game of me-too that was predictable but cheerless.
Not a lot of good news for us Indians, but for the sake of highlights — Acer’s Iconia 700 seemed fairly competent in the 10-inch category and the Galaxy Tab got a 7.7-inch sibling.
On the smartphone front, the big guns came fully fleshed. Nokia’s Lumia 900 became Windows Phone’s new flagship, and just when we thought we wouldn't, we uttered Xperia again; the Ion is Sony’s “beast-category” entry with a “reality” display similar to a “retina” one.
Sony also introduced an Android-based PMP of the iPod touch’s ilk, and a wristwatch like the iPod nanos. Catch-up or improvisation? You decide.
Interestingly, the OnLiveDesktop for iPad project announced their app release here. The app allows you to use Microsoft Office apps on a native Windows interface from your iPad over the web, for free.
Sound neat? Cameras saw some heat; Fujifilm’s X-Pro 1 mirrorless camera really stood out from the iterated lot, however, promising resolutions equivalent to a full-frame sensor.
Now that’s what I call sweet. Quirky gadgets thrived as well; take an iPad-based guitar, iOS controlled quadcopter, USB sticks that work as media streamers, for instance.
The P.C. part
Our old and faithful PCs got plenty of attention at CES as well. Sony showed off a tablet and keyboard made from flexible material that can change shape (to change the rear of the device to a stand, for example), and a very thin ultrabook-tablet hybrid device that had a slide-out keyboard with a stylus mounted on it.
Cooler Master had a weird and wonderful idea: they managed to fit a tiny nano-ITX motherboard inside a Hyper 212+ CPU cooler, complete with a processor and ports, including support for Wi-Fi, HDMI, Gigabit Ethernet, USB 3.0, as well as VGA and eSATA.
Razer, well known to PC gamers for their peripherals, is planning a Tablet PC that’s aimed at the “serious” road-warriors. It has two integrated game controllers in addition to the touch-screen display. Packing a Core-i7, “Project Fiona”, looks to be interesting.
Ultrabooks were out in full force at the trade show, and we found Lenovo’s IdeaPad Yoga to be a great concept (that will make it to production in about 10 months).
The laptop has a 10-finger multi-touch display that can be rotated 360o away from the keyboard, and can then be used a tablet. It’s thin, light, and packs a big punch with top-of the line hardware. Another ultrabook that will use glass (and will launch next month) is the HP Envy 14 Spectre.
With a Core-i5 and a host of media and network-oriented features, the $1400 price tag seems to be reasonable considering you get full versions of Adobe’s Photoshop and Premier as well as Norton Internet Security.
A nine hour battery life is the icing on this glass cake. Dell will also look to introduce their XPS 13 ultrabook, with high-end hardware and a host of ports and other tech all for $999. It’s a MacBook Air killer in our opinion.
Then there was the usual the plethora of laptops, desktops, and motherboards along with a super secure HDD from Rocstor and a 4TB SSD from OCZ.
Source: http://www.deccanchronicle.com/channels/sci-tech/gadgets/ces-2012-roundup-903
Roku Introduces Flash-Drive-Sized "Streaming Stick" for (Future) TVs
Roku Streaming Stick Roku |
Roku, makers of, you know, the Roku, introduced a new product this morning, to be called the Streaming Stick. It's a teeny little device that looks mostly like a Roku-branded USB flash drive, but instead of a USB plug, it has a particular kind of HDMI plug. You plug it right into your HDTV's HDMI port, and, theoretically, you have a brand-new connected TV that you can even control with your regular remote.
So this is a pretty cool idea; it's not a wild step forward over, say, the current-gen Roku 2 XS (reviewed here), which is, as its name suggests, ridiculously small, but the Streaming Stick would definitely streamline matters a bit. It'll take up no space at all in your entertainment center, require no additional power supply to crowd your outlets nor an HDMI cable to muck up your perfectly minimalist TV Room of the Future, and you'll be able to control it with your TV's remote, rather than a separate Roku remote. All great! And Roku has somehow managed to cram an entire Roku's guts into this tiny thing, including the processor, memory, and Wi-Fi antenna.
Roku Streaming Stick in TV: Roku |
And MHL is so new that it's only been available for three months, on a very small number of TVs (like, three or four). And those TVs, because they're high-end enough to pack this brand-new tech, are also high-end enough to already have built-in Wi-Fi and, in the case of this $3,500 Samsung, a whole bunch of the Roku's key apps, like Netflix and Hulu. Roku already has Insignia, Best Buy's house brand, on board to release a Streaming Stick-compatible line sometime this year, but it's a long ways from the kind of "plug into any TV!" compatibility we'd like.
Still, we like Roku, and this is a cool idea, provided MHL takes off the way Roku seems to be betting it will. Roku says it'll be released in the second half of 2012, and may be sold separately or bundled in with TVs.
Victorinox fit world’s smallest 1TB SSD in a Swiss Army Knife
Source: http://www.geek.com/articles/gadgets/victorinox-fit-worlds-smallest-1tb-ssd-in-a-swiss-army-knife-20120110/
Rental Option Provides Access to Latest High-Speed Camera Technology
Instrumentation specialist Ashtead Technology has added the i-SPEED 3 camera to its rental fleet of testing and monitoring instruments. By offering this device for hire, Ashtead is making the technology available to a much wider community. Initially designed for industrial applications and ballistics, the camera is now being employed in an enormous variety of applications in which the ability to capture high resolution images and film for fast moving images is important.
Explaining the popularity of the new instrument, Ashtead's Josh Thomas says: "As industrial processes become faster and increasingly automated, it has become more difficult to detect problems before they become serious or result in plant failure. However, the development of high-speed cameras has made it possible to visually slow down a process so that faulty or inefficient parts of the process can be identified before they cause a problem.
"This is extremely useful for inspection and maintenance staff and for product development teams looking to assess the performance of prototypes. However, high-speed cameras are finding their way into all sorts of applications; an ever increasing number of television programmes, films and web sites such as YouTube are now exploiting the benefits of this technology, so that viewers are able to see the finest detail of a dragonfly's beating wings for example, or a drop of sweat falling from a sportsman's face."
The i-SPEED 3 is able to record at a phenomenal speed of up to 150,000 frames per second (up to 1 second/picture in time lapse mode) and 10,000 pictures per second at a resolution of 1280 x 1024 pixels. However, despite the camera’s high specification and lengthy feature list, it is still relatively simple to operate and the unit's rechargeable batteries and Controller Display Unit (CDU) improve portability because they obviate the need for mains power and a computer.
The i-SPEED 3 joins a wide variety of video cameras and endoscopes in Ashtead's inspection fleet and Josh Thomas says: "This new camera offers an enormous array of very powerful features so it is a valuable (and expensive) tool. However, now that it has been added to the Ashtead Technology rental fleet; even those with a small budget can exploit the latest technology."
To view a video of the i-SPEED 3 in action please visit www.youtube.com/ashteadtechnology or use the following QR Code:
source: http://www.pandct.com/media/shownews.asp?ID=31640
Australian Businesses Investing in Fast-Changing Technology Amidst Low R&D Tax Incentive Program
Some 540 local businesses in Australia have been investing in rapidly changing technology in the last three years in spite of the low tax incentive from the federal government, according to the latest Australian Industry Group/Deloitte National CEO report.
The report, "Business Investment in New Technologies," tested business expectations about the changed Research and Development Tax Incentive, finding that 40 percent of the businesses that developed new technologies in-house over the last three years did so without the assistance of the R&D tax concession. More than a quarter of businesses that did use the concession in this period were concerned that the recent changes to the R&D Tax Incentive would be negative for their business, with a similar number expecting them to be positive. Many others were uncertain about its impacts.
"The report found that businesses had a polarized view about the new R&D Tax Incentive program. With 27 percent of businesses that used R&D concessions over the past three years expecting the recent changes to the program to have a negative impact on their business; while 22 percent were uncertain and 25 percent expected the changes would have a positive impact on their business," the survey stated examining business investment in new technologies over the past three years.
The report, based on a new survey of 540 business CEOs in the manufacturing, services and construction sectors, found business investment in new technologies is contributing to improved business performance through to higher productivity, ongoing product innovation, improved energy efficiency and better workplace safety.
Importantly, the investment in new technologies in these sectors - estimated at $25 billion per year over the past three years - comes at a time when non-mining businesses, particularly those in trade-exposed sectors, are facing intense competitive challenges due largely to the strength of the Australian dollar.
The survey also explored how well prepared businesses are to take full advantage of the emerging opportunities from a national broadband network. While businesses are preparing to train their workforce and recruit new staff as the network expands, only 30 percent report having a high or medium degree of information about the practical impacts of faster broadband speeds. Just over 50 percent are adequately prepared to take advantage of the opportunities that may arise.
Other key findings include:
- Close to 80% of respondents invested in new technologies over the past three years.
- Around 16% of the productivity gains achieved by these businesses were attributed to investment in new technologies. 71% of these businesses invested in order to improve productivity.
- Improving workplace safety was also rated as a major motivation for investment in new technologies - particularly among construction companies and manufacturers.
- Computer hardware and software along with machinery and equipment - particularly automation and control equipment - were the most common areas for investment.
- The report found that businesses had a polarized view about the new R&D Tax Incentive program. With 27% of businesses that used R&D concessions over the past three years expecting the recent changes to the program to have a negative impact on their business; while 22% were uncertain and 25% expected the changes would have a positive impact on their business.
The report makes a number of constructive suggestions for policy changes to build on the existing momentum in investment in new technologies and remove barriers to, and facilitate investment by, a broader range of businesses.
This report highlights a number of areas for policy action to stimulate investment in new technologies.
Improving the competiveness of tax arrangements by lowering the company tax rate or through more targeted measures is a practical way for the Federal Government to stimulate business investment in new technologies.
Better industry-driven mechanisms for collaboration between publicly funded research organisations and business should be given a high priority, including in the Prime Minister's Taskforce on Manufacturing.
There is strong scope for governments to improve the dissemination of information about new technology so as to obtain maximum impact to the economy.
The new R&D Tax Incentive needs to be closely monitored and the Federal Government should be ready to respond to any shortcomings that become apparent.
This report confirms the need for the Federal Government to boost understanding by small-to-medium businesses in particular of the opportunities provided by a national broadband network.
Australian Industry Group (Ai Group) Chief Executive, Heather Ridout, said: "With the adoption of new technologies being an important contributor to business-level productivity improvements, the report shows that businesses in the manufacturing, services and construction sectors have been active investors in a broad cross-section of new technologies over the past three years. Investment in new technologies accounted for an average of 21% of respondents' total investment over this period."
Deloitte National Technology, Media and Telecommunications leader Damien Tampling said: "Better managing the explosion of data being delivered through the internet and social media channels was a key reason given by the respondents for investment in new technologies. With our capacity to tag and measure anywhere, anytime and across multiple channels, ensuring there is adequate technology, digital media knowledge, and expertise at the most senior levels of business, is critical. By combining data insights, businesses can better understand who their customers are and how they behave, in order to deliver the right products and services."
"In addition with investment in new technologies delivering greater productivity, much of it through the internet, grasping the potential of this change agent, including the opportunities, services and applications of the National Broadband Network, will help drive further productivity. It will also expand customer bases and enable jobs growth to meet the forecast of an additional 80,000 Australians to be employed in areas directly related to the internet over the next five years," Mr Tampling said.
Source: http://au.ibtimes.com/articles/282636/20120117/australian-businesses-investing-fast-changing-technology-amidst.htm