Just over a week ago we caught a glimpse of a device that claimed to be a Telus -branded version of the 4.3-inch HTC Desire HD , a beast that has yet to make the leap to North America and doesn’t officially exist in any variants that fully support the 3G frequencies used there. Well, now we’ve got the smoking gun in the form of an FCC approval for a device with model number PD98120 that supports WCDMA Bands II and V, which means it’s ripe for uses on AT&T, Bell, Telus, and Rogers (sorry, T-Mobile). The original European version of the Desire HD is the PD98100 — and the DLNA’s certification site actually refers to the phone as the “PD98 series” — so we think we can safely say that’s what we’re looking at here, particularly considering that the FCC label location document shows a device laid out in the Desire HD’s very unusual way . It’s anything but a slam dunk that AT&T might take an interest in this… but yeah, Telus subscribers, you can probably start saving your cash now. HTC Desire HD gets FCC approval with North American 3G, might be for Telus originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 28 Dec 2010 14:41:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …photo: A Girl With Tea / Creative Commons Oh no! If you’re a tea lover like this TreeHugger then some reporting from The Guardian comes as doubly dire news: Apparently climate change is both reducing crop yields of India’s Assam tea and changing its much-prized characteristic flavor. Besides being a personal issue of tea preference–Assam tea … Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …Strong winds may have picked up some rail containers and blown them off a bridge near Harrisburg, Pa. The accident disrupted rail traffic, including Amtrak passenger trains. (Dec. 28)
Continue reading …We’ve already seen field programmable gate arrays (or FPGAs ) used to create energy efficient supercomputers , but a team of researchers at the University of Glasgow led by Dr. Wim Vanderbauwhede now say that they have “effectively” created a 1,000 core processor based on the technology. To do that, the researchers divvied up the millions of transistors in the FPGA into 1,000 mini-circuits that are each able to process their own instructions — which, while still a proof of concept, has already proven to be about twenty times faster than “modern computers” in some early tests. Interestingly, Intel has also been musing about the idea of a 1,000 core processor recently, with Timothy Mattson of the company’s Microprocessor Technology Laboratory saying that such a processor is “feasible.” He’s referring to Intel’s Single-chip Cloud Computer (or SCC , pictured here), which currently packs a whopping 48 cores, but could “theoretically” scale up to 1,000 cores. He does note, however, that there are a number of other complicating factors that could limit the number of cores that are actually useful — namely, Amdahl’s law (see below) — but he says that Intel is “looking very hard at a range of applications that may indeed require that many cores.” [Thanks, Andrew] Researchers create ultra-fast ’1,000 core’ processor, Intel also toys with the idea originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 28 Dec 2010 14:21:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …A Wind of Change Blows Through Indiana A Reddit user going by the username of QueenBeeCassi has posted a… Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …A new study shows smokers who continue to smoke after being diagnosed with cancer may experience more pain and are more troubled by the disease in their daily lives than nonsmokers.A new study shows smokers who continue to smoke after being diagnosed with cancer may experience more pain and are more troubled by the disease in their daily lives than nonsmokers.
Continue reading …NGO reports Eritreans traveling to Israel to seek asylum are being held captive by terrorist group in northern Sinai. ‘Extortion, organ trafficking fund Hamas and al-Qaeda,” EveryOne co-President Roberto Malini says
Continue reading …Photo by jkirkhart35 via Flickr Creative Commons Keeping honeybees safe from viruses is a top concern among beekeepers. However, they may be the ones spreading diseases to other pollinators. Researchers from Pennsylvania State University in University Park have found eleven species of wild pollinators that are carrying some of the viruses found in honeybees. Because most of the pollinators have never been known to carry honeybee diseases before, it could be that domesticated bees are spreading viruses. … Read the full story on TreeHugger
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