From AnandTech: ZTE Mimosa X: First Smartphone Powered by NVIDIA’s Icera 450 Modem

In May of last year NVIDIA was on a roll. Hot off the release of the first Tegra 2 based phones, NVIDIA announced the intent to acquire baseband manufacturer Icera for $367M. Four months later, NVIDIA announced that it would have a new addition to the Tegra family, codenamed Grey, in 2013 with an integrated Icera modem. The timing makes sense (albeit a bit aggressive) as it does take time to integrate new technology into an SoC, followed by all of the testing and validation that goes along with the integration. Between now and 2013 however there was always the chance that NVIDIA would deliver a discrete Icera based solution to a customer. Today we have the first customer that has done just that.

The ZTE Mimosa X is a Tegra 2 based Android phone running Ice Cream Sandwich (4.0.x). It features a 4.3-inch qHD (960 x 540) display, 5MP rear camera and 0.3MP front facing camera and 4GB of NAND (expandable up to 32GB). The big news with the Mimosa X is that it integrates an NVIDIA Icera 450 modem (ICE8065 baseband + ICE9225 transceiver). The 450 gives ZTE’s Mimosa X support for up to 21Mbps HSPA+ (category 14).

This is a huge milestone for NVIDIA as it marks the first apps processor + baseband design win for the company. A single datapoint isn’t enough to declare NVIDIA’s Icera acquisition a success but it’s a start. Icera’s software baseband is supposed to offer greater flexibility to device manufacturers, especially in bringing products to market with varying network requirements. Icera also promises smaller die sizes as a result of its software based architecture, which should translate into lower cost offerings (or more profit for NVIDIA). The Tegra 2 SoC guarantees that the Mimosa X will be focused squarely on the value/mainstream smartphone market. The Mimosa X will be shipping in Q2 of this year.

from AnandTech

From Autoblog: Video: How Forza Motorsport 4 gets its cars

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The ladies and gentlemen at Turn 10, the studio behind Forza Motorsport 4, take their cars just as seriously as their gaming. They’re not the only gamers to invest heaps of time rendering metal into pixels, but you might be surprised just how much travel, how many microphones, how long on the dyno and what kinds of owners go into gathering the selection of rides.

If you’ve wondered what goes into taking a Bugatti Veyron, or even a Honda Civic Si, from the parking lot to the game’s custom Bernese Alps track, then there’s a video just for you after the jump.

 

from Autoblog

From Engadget: MIT duo successfully tests wireless drug-delivery microchips, more consistent than injections

Despise those daily injections of essential medication? Well folks, relief could be on the way. Over a decade ago, two MIT professors, Robert Langer and Michael Cima, first considered developing a drug-delivery microchip that could be wirelessly controlled. This past week, researchers in Cambridge — alongside scientists from MicroCHIPS, Inc. — announced that they have successfully used the aforementioned chip to give osteoporosis patients their daily allotment of teriparatide. “You can do remote control delivery, you can do pulsatile drug delivery, and you can deliver multiple drugs,” Langer noted. Chips used in this particular study housed 20 doses each and results indicated that the delivery showed less variation than administered injections. In theory, microchips like these could be used alongside sensors that monitor glucose levels — creating tech that could adapt to changes in a patient’s condition. More info on the trial awaits in the source link below.

[Thanks, Lydia]

 

from Engadget

From Technology Review RSS Feeds: Self-Driving Tech Veers into Mid-Range Cars

Sensor technologies once limited to luxury cars are increasingly available in the mass market.

Fully autonomous self-driving cars are still far from the market, but a wide range of features—including sensor systems that warn of lane departures and imminent crashes, and can even apply the brakes if you don’t—are rapidly showing up in midmarket cars.




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From Technology Review RSS Feeds: A Very Young CEO

At 23, Seth Priebatsch has a life that’s all about winning, and not much else.

Seth Priebatsch comes to his office door in bare feet and a wrinkled orange polo shirt. Even at 6 p.m. on a Saturday, this isn’t normal garb for the CEO of a company of 100 people. But Shoeless Seth isn’t your typical CEO. For one thing, he’s 23. For another, his formal title is Chief Ninja.




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