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Home Blog Page 7618

Apple Wins A Significant Battle Against Samsung – Galaxy Tab 10.1 Off The Shelves In Europe

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The lawyer that advised Samsung Electronics to take on Apple over the IP dispute might have lost his job already.  They would have settled long ago.  They lost the DRAM business which they have held for ages now with Apple. They also lost in the production of the A series microprocessor. A series chips are the microprocessors Apple designs internally which power most of their systems and products.

 

Now, Apple just added a big one. Apple won a huge victory on Tuesday in its campaign against Samsung Electronics over alleged intellectual-property infringements. The EU legal system has asked Samsung to stop the sell of Galaxy Tab 10.1 tablet in Europe.  The  injunction from Germany extends to 26 countries that belong to the European Union, excluding the Netherlands.  Apple has filed a separate suit to cover Netherlands which has a slightly different legal jurisprudence in this type of case.

 

Yet, it is important to note that this injunction can be reversed in hours, but now, it is in effect. An Apple spokeswoman confirmed that the company had received notice of the injunction ruling.

 

“It’s no coincidence that Samsung’s latest products look a lot like the iPhone and iPad, from the shape of the hardware to the user interface and even the packaging,” Apple has said. “This kind of blatant copying is wrong, and we need to protect Apple’s intellectual property when companies steal our ideas.”

 

Apple requested a similar injunction against Samsung in an Australia federal court a week ago. As a result, Samsung postponed the launch of its Galaxy Tab 10.1 there.

 

“A Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 for the Australian market will be released in the near future,” Samsung said in a statement. “Samsung will continue to actively defend and protect our intellectual property to ensure our continued innovation and growth in the mobile communication business.”

 

Apple is also pursuing its infringement claims in other countries, including in U.S. courts. Do not worry if you hope to buy Galaxy Tab 10.1 in Africa. There is no indication that Apple is pushing for injunction in any African court. It is not likely they will do that owing to the slow sales and smaller markets in most African nations. Also, it will be very expensive to do that. African Union has not formed into one business entity and that means Apple has to sue individually in each nation and that will be a colossal waste of resources for the small and fragmented markets. Yet, they can decide to try in South Africa and Nigeria. But so far, Tekedia does not have any knowledge of any suit in Africa from Apple in this regards.

 

 

Samsung Dribbles Pass RIM’s Blackberry – Takes 2nd Spot In Global Smartphone Market. But RIM Remains Strong In Africa.

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Nokia lost the #1 spot to red hot Apple.  And Samsung seized on a shipment decline at Research In Motion Ltd. (RIM) to vault to second place in the smartphone market for the second quarter, says IHS iSuppli. RIM’s shipments declined by 10.8% during the period, making it the only other major brand besides Nokia to suffer a sequential decline in shipments. As a result, RIM fell to the fourth ranking, down from third place in the first quarter.

Like Nokia, RIM is losing share to the Android platform as it struggles to develop a complete ecosystem for its operating system and develop a device capturing consumer trends. Most of RIM’s market share loses are taking place in Europe and North America. So, Africa is still a RIM Country! Yes, Continent.

Meanwhile, Samsung’s shipments have surged because of its broad focus on all parts of the smartphone business with its shotgun approach to address all segments and leverage the Android platform. In addition to premium smartphones, Samsung has been offering low-end models that appeal to consumers in China and Latin America, driving up the company’s shipments.

Smartphones represent the fastest-growing and most lucrative segment of the global cellphone business. Because of this, the smartphone has become the central focus for mobile handset makers.  The researchers concluded that they  expect smartphone shipments to reach 478 million units by the end of 2011, up 62.4 percent from 2010. In comparison, the overall cellphone business will expand by 13.5 percent for the year. The average selling price for smartphones ranges from two to five times the average for all mobile phones in 2011.

The Latest Trend In Embedded systems Sector – A Key Driver Of Future Economy

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A major latest embedded systems trend is the Systems on Chip (SoC) . The emergence of SoC has enabled extremely powerful systems including hardware and software to run on configurable platforms that contain all the building blocks of an embedded system : microprocessors, DSPs, programmable hardware logic, memory, communication processors and display drivers, to give but a few examples.

 

Other trends are related to built-in wireless communication and self-configurable networked devices . These trends enable extended use of intelligent field devices in applications where wiring costs for such devices are prohibitive. ABB Ltd, First Atlantic Semiconductors & Microelectronics Ltd and some other embedded systems technology companies are at the forefront of developing technologies and applications that benefit from the latest advances in research combined with technologies from other industries such as telecommunications and consumer electronics.

 

Exactly what power and automation systems will look like twenty years from now is impossible to predict. But whatever developments we witness, embedded systems will be key enablers and drivers for change. And these  factors will define the winners:

 

(a)                Availability and reliability.

Automation and power systems must have very high availability and be extremely reliable in order to minimize the cost of operation (ie to minimize scheduled as well as unplanned maintenance time).

 

(b)                Safety

While customers demand high quality and reliability from most of their embedded systems, it is not necessarily critical if, say, a PDA (personal digital assistant) needs to be restarted after an application causes the system to fail. For industrial applications, however, the effect of a failure in the system could be devastating. A gas leakage at an oil platform, for example, must be detected and followed by a safe shutdown of the process. Otherwise, expensive assets or even human lives could be at risk. Similarly, instabilities in power transmission and distribution networks should be detected before they are allowed to propagate and cause large blackouts. Economic security and personal safety depend on high-integrity systems.

 

(c)                Real-time, deterministic response

‘Real-time’ is a term often associated with embedded systems because these systems are used to control or monitor real-time processes. They must be able to perform certain tasks reliably within a given time. But the definition of ‘real-time’ varies with the application. A chemical reaction, for instance, may proceed slowly, and the temperature at a given point may need to be read no more than once per second. However, the schedule must be predictable. At the other end of the scale, protection devices for high-voltage equipment need to sample currents and voltages thousands of times per second in order to detect and, where necessary, act within a fraction of a power-cycle.

 

(d)               Power consumption

At first glance, the power consumption of industrial electronics may appear insignificant because of the abundance of power that is available. However, this power is not always available, and the need to keep installation costs low has created a demand for electrical protection devices that do not require a separate power supply for the electronics. These devices are self-sufficient with respect to power and meet their needs by extracting small amounts of energy from their surroundings. Wireless sensors for building, factory or process-automation must offer years of battery life or a completely autonomous mode of operation. Self-sufficient power supplies can be designed to extract minute levels of energy from electromagnetic or solar power, temperature gradients or vibration in the environment. This is frequently referred to as energy “harvesting.” Even when power is available, low-power design can be used to reduce the generation of excessive heat that would otherwise necessitate expensive and error-prone cooling devices.

 

(e)                Lifetime.

Yet another requirement that is frequently imposed on industrial embedded systems is a long lifetime of the product itself and the life-cycle of the product family. While modern consumer electronics may be expected to last for less than five years, most industrial devices are expected to work in the field for 20 years or more. This imposes challenges not only on the robustness of the electronics, but also on how the product should be handled throughout its lifecycle: Hardware components, operating systems and development tools are constantly evolving and individual products eventually become obsolete.

Africa’s eLibrary To Be Relaunched This Month – Get Your Theses Abstracts, Projects And More Archived Online

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[In simple words; we accept to host (FREE) all theses, dissertations or projects from African tertiary institutions to promote our students and their ideas globally]

 

Africans delight on their oral tradition of folklores. In many African villages, boys and girls gather around their elders to listen to stories of hope, imagination, bravery and justice. These students of culture are expected to pass that tradition to newer generations. For many centuries, Africans have lived that life- a life of ‘more talking, no writing’. It helped shaped family values and embedded the spirit of service and honor.

 

For generations, except Ethiopians, no African culture or nation was able to develop an indigenous way of writing.  Contracts were executed with words, marriages were concluded with words, lands were sold with words, and indeed all was about the memory of the human species. When neighbors disagree over land, an arbiter would come in to settle the disputes by telling stories his own parents or elders had passed to him.

 

Typically, Africans talk a lot. That was the tradition. It has remained like that and will be the same for many generations to come. While the western world works hard to document on black and white or in modern times on bytes and bits, we still do not bother. Many African universities have no organized way of processing massive data or ideas that emanate from their students theses/projects/dissertations.  Last year, while visiting Nigeria, we were unlucky to witness more than 800 student dissertations being burnt.

 

We wanted to know what motivated that decision. We were told that it was a tradition; space has to be made for the next academic documents.  Few of those documents made it to the university library. Years after years, we are burning ideas that can unlock the future of better harvest, and curing diseases that corporations think make no economic sense to invest resources. (In this world, if a disease is not suffered by the Westerners, the big Pharma corporations see no major benefit to invest on their R&D since it will not generate lots of profit. Why make drugs for people that cannot afford them?  So for the cholera or TB, not many thoughts get into them in the big Pharma meetings).

 

Strange as it may seem, but that is the reality of many African schools where we run round in cycles wasting time without making progress. When you destroy your progress, you have to repeat it. Instead of preserving legacies which can be built upon, we have students solving a problem someone that graduated a year before had solved. With no means of sharing data or documenting these works, innovation suffers.

 

Besides, it hurts the students because they spend money to recreate processes which had been validated a few years ago.  It brings a tradition of constantly managing crises without a process to envision bold world changing ideas. They deprive the schools opportunities to attract funding because no one knows what they do.  They are rarely published because local conferences are not common.
Now a portal is ready for this, courtesy of Fasmicro and AFRIT. We are launching it in coming days. We have launched it in the past but killed it because of capacity issues. Now, it is for real.

Africa Must Focus On Advancing Technology And Knowledge Capital To Mitigate Trade Shocks – Kill The Single Currency Project

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According to Bloomberg BusinessWeek (Feb 22, 2010), national governments have about $55 trillion debt- more than double the tally a decade ago. Standard & Poor’s anticipates lowering the credit ratings of many countries including Botswana, South Africa and Ghana within a year. South Africa has a rating of BBB+, the current rating of Greece.

Over the last few months, Greece has shown that the experiment with a single regional currency could also be catastrophic (euro currency has been hailed as the pulse of the European economy in the last few years). In good times, Greece borrowed and over borrowed at low interests on the promise that it could keep its budget deficit low. It was rewarded with admission into the European Union single currency. But alas, the country was on another world. It over spent to the point that debt is about 125% of GDP, more than double the EU benchmark. In the investing world, it is being punished right now. Many have betted against this high debt. And the euro is under a major test since the debut in Jan 1, 1999. It is not only Greece; Portugal, Ireland, Italy and Spain (they complete the PIIGS) are brooding on the same paths.

Let’s get back to Africa. See Towards knowledge economic communities in Africa.

We wrote this article in early 2009 calling into attention the need to revamp the whole concept of African single currency. Our point is that strengthening the regions through infrastructure and advancing our knowledge capability will be a worthwhile effort by AU and NEPAD than the whole program of blind folded single currency.

If the current rating of South Africa is this poor, perhaps if one country in Africa messes up as Greece did in the EU, there will be no means to bail out the whole continent. It is becoming riskier to think of this common currency as many African leaders are not fiscal conservatives. They will borrow and overspend their nations into trouble. Traditionally, monetary policies could have helped worked out the magic through currency manipulations, but under a supranational central bank, no African nation will have that power.

The implication will be drowning the entire continent along. And the good responsible ones will suffer and the AU will lose credibility as enforce of fiscal rigor. And it will be a domino effect that will cripple the continent. Africa is too leveraged on commodities and hydrocarbons that our chances of coming out of any vicious cycle will be very difficult.

Let us we focus on advancing technology and knowledge capital in Africans to mitigate the impacts of trade shocks across the continent. This will help the continent better prepare for the cyclical ups and downs.  Let Africa build technology clusters and advance knowledge. It is a better idea of having integration when regions join resources to create Knowledge Economic Communities (KEC). If African regions are connected through technology partnerships and networks, we will realize that currency integration will evolve naturally in this already interconnected world. Our monetary structures are weak and a single currency could hurt Africa deeply since our national budgets are still deficits-prone. Greece has offered a practical lesson for African scholars of current integration and we have to plan very well.

orginally penned in early 2010