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Sunday, November 18, 2007
Smilies that make your system cry!
Chances are,you would already know such ads well enough now to be fooled that easily.Then again, ads get more tempting.
I bet you use some kind of instant messaging service.Be it Yahoo,Skype whatever.You usually would use the 'cute' smilies too, invariably.I guess u feel the preloaded smilies are too basic and do not cover all the emotions you want to express, right?Thats when u see the ads on the websites saying "New smilies!More funny!100% free!Click here!"
If you install these smilies, u get more than just smilies.You get rootkits too(VERY well hidden malware-like stuff).Yep.Got to think twice these days.The same principle can apply to ads for free screensavers,desktop backgrounds, etc.Rootkits need not cause too much harm,but they really slow down your system if they keep mounting.
So beware.Do NOT click on these ads and install their content.If you already have done so and are worried about it, I'll give u some help.Try this application-RootKit Revealer[RKR].It does not remove the rootkits by itself,but it tells you about the rootkits installed on your system,since it is freely available but the site itself gives you directions about how to destroy the rootkits you find.I think you will be in for a surprise after you see the results your first scan has to offer.
Here's the link-http://www.microsoft.com/technet/sysinternals/utilities/rootkitrevealer.mspx
Don't worry,RKR is supposed to be absolutely safe.
NOTE:If you use some big time antivirus system, u most probably need not worry about all this!Also,rootkits are less in Windows Vista.
Okay then.Best of luck!Stay safe!
Saturday, November 17, 2007
16-cores???!!!Overdrive!
Some company 'Tyan', has made (a?)motherboard that has slots for eight processors.You can put a solo core AMD Opteron processor on each slot,basically.[It only supports AMD's Opteron processors, although.Dumb, isn't it?]
Or you can also put eight dual core Opterons on it. 2x8=? 16!!!
Here's how it works-It has a main motherboard,that has 4 CPU slots.Then,it has another daughterboard that has yet another 4 CPU slots.So in a way, you get a PC with 8 or 16 cores, but not technically.You will NOT get the real performance of an 8-core or 16-core CPU with this layout.It is just namesake-"I have a 16-core computer!".
This stuff could be 512-bit processing capable, though I'm not saying it is.
Let's face it-who needs this much power?It's gonna be USELESS for gaming.Not a single application I know of can utilise all the 16 cores to their maximum potential.Plus, consider the amount of-
- Electricity required,
- Heat generated and
- Space taken,
This is crazy,isnt it?Oh well,some people just want attention for things anyone can do,though not as easily.
Okay then.Give me a motherboard with 4 CPU slots.Give me a daughterboard with another 4 slots.Give me a grand-daughterboard that has yet another 4 slots.Give me a great grand-daughterboard with YET another 4 slots.Yay,I have made a motherboard that has 16 slots for CPUs.Yaaaaaaay!!!I have beaten Tyan!!!!!I will earn millions for my new 'discovery'! [Big deal.]
Anyone can make such nutty things,which can handle multiple CPUs.But as long as the CPUs themselves are not good enough & applications are not ready etc,all this fancy stuff is of no use.
Now do you understand how dumb this concept is?(!)
Add to that-the cost of buying eight AMD Opteron dual core processors!!!See?
In human terms,this is how the layout will look like this-
We have to take a two-storey building, ground floor representing the motherboard and first floor representing the daughterboard.The ground floor will have four rooms, each room consisting of one person[solo-core] or one person with two brains[dual-core].(The people act as the processors.) Then, we have person A, the application.Person A will have to visit the building,then a room and finally, reach one of the people.
In real 16-core CPUs,There would be just one person who has all the 16 cores in him,in the form of brains.(so he will have 16 small but powerful brains).By then,the applications too would have commands to give all the 16 brains(cores) individual commands.
Anyway-congratulations Tyan, for doing something like this.
I mean no offence to you readers who find this news exciting.Still, we have to face the truth about all this.in this case, its not so nice.
I guess it would be fun to have one though.....!!!
Tuesday, November 6, 2007
- Compaq Presario 3600 series desktop
- Pentium 4- 1.5 Ghz,400 Mhz FSB,256 KB L2 cache[The first few to come off production],Willamette edition.
- A-BIT Motherboard with 3 RAM slots,1 AGP 4x port,overclocking supported!
- 768 MB 133MHz SDRAM 1x 512MB,1x 256MB
- 40 GB HDD at 5400RPM
- 17" Compaq MV740 CRT [which was upgraded from 15" thanx to a scratch card offer,which I won!!] Supports upto 120Hz refresh rate!
- Creative Sound Blaster 5.1 VX
- JBL Platinum Series 2.0 CH speakers.
- Nvidia Vanta L/T chipset,16 MB graphics!XD
There you have it.Crazy,isn't it?
Consider this-my dad spent $1555.55 for it!!!![Of course that was 5-6 years back.]
CPU Development: Too fast,Too furious?
- Solo core.[For ages!!]
- Hyper threading.(fools computer into thinking it has two cores.)[sometime in 2003]
- Dual core.[2005]
- Quad core-[late 2006,almost 2007]
- Octo core-coming 2008!
[PS:I chose Intel's processor line up since they developed faster than,for example-AMD.]
Look at that!Can we go faster than this?We have gone from single to eight cores in just three years!This is defying Moore's Law!
Don't you feel we are going too fast right now?
I bet a lot of you would have bought a Pentium 4 in those days,replaced by one with HT technology.Got hands on it,find it outdated by pentium D.Then find out its defects.Get a Core2 Duo.Then get a Core2 Extreme.Worried about the octo core already?
I dont know about this.Today, we have barely adjusted to dual-core processors.And now quad-core has arrived?Fantastic.
The issue is- even today,VERY few applications are MULTI-THREADED for even dual core processing, remember?You get a new app, chances are, it wont utilise all the cores on your processor, unless it is a high end 3D editing app or such.
In simple terms?Intel and AMD are not giving time for-
- Us (We the people, not the U.S.!)
- The applications commonly used etc etc...............
-To adjust to new age, multicore processors.Even before applications get used and modified to use dual-core processing, companies create quad core, to give extra confusion.
What is the confusion, you may ask?I'll describe it using myself-
Here's the scene-I made a new software.My software's basic version itself is in high demand.I plan everything well, after spending a lot of money to develop a new, more advanced version of my software.
Then,I find myself between a rock and a hard place.Do I make applications for dual or the quad-core processors?!?Both type of processors are in circulation.Both are popular.I cannot make both,without running skint or bankrupt.Do I ignore the vast amount of dual-cores already in circulation?Or do I focus on future technology, which seems to be spreading well too?As if that wasnt enough, I also hear about octo-core coming up soon..............
Enough to give me several sleepless nights!!!!
It looks like Intel is worried about AMD catching up, though AMD's Athlon 64 X2 did not really touch Intel Core2 duo's performance!
Intel is aiming too high...
There is so much more that could be done to improve dual core processors itself, which has not been done yet.
- It could be shrunk at least a bit more,especially AMD's, which are still manufactured under 90 nm process.AMD is planning to shrink it to 65nm soon, but Intel is already using 65 nm, and will switch to 45 nm quite soon!!The smaller, the better.
- They could poke around and try reducing heat generation, which is always a nuisance.
- Plus, they could try making processors that bring back high clock-speed too.
- Then there is energy efficiency.The more, the better, though the Core2 Duo is already good in that area.
Mainly-it's the suspense that is broken!If it didnt arrive already, we would have seen a lot of dual core processors, then slowly moved to quad core after we just cannot get more stuff out of dual core processing.
I dont know about you.You may fantasise and say the faster it gets here the better,but thats not the case.The more time one technology is kept alive,the more refined it gets.The more we can learn from this technology,and use this knowledge to create better technologies in future.
Statement to support my statements?
'Slow and Steady Wins The Race.'