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Intel advances the cutting edge
President and chief executive Paul Otellini unveiled new technologies in cross-platform sharing, reconstructing 3-D images from pictures, power saving and a new enterprise-communications and computing device.
"The transformation in computing has unleashed a wave of business and personal productivity," Otellini said. "Computing means more than computers. Computing is about experiences, about how we work, how we communicate, how we experience everyday life. And these experiences are available to us no matter what device we carry under our arm or in our pocket."
Emphasising the need for interoperable experiences across a variety of devices, Otellini and an Intel researcher demonstrated how to share local videos and pictures from any supported smart phone or tablet to a PC, or when using Intel's Wireless Display, to any TV regardless of network, size, shape or brand.
The interoperability concept is also applied to Intel Teleport Extender, which allows users to receive and respond to smart-phone or tablet SMS messages directly from a laptop and receive smart-phone call-alert notifications on a PC.
Another new computing device that changes office communication is Cius, which allows users to make a voice or video call, send an e-mail or initiate a chat with a person on a contact list, or visit a webpage, with a click on an icon.
An innovative technology that allows users to produce 3-D visualisation from pictures uploaded to popular photo-sharing sites such as Flicker was another highlight of Otellini's presentation. Intel's Xeon processors are being used in a Community Photos Collection project, a joint study involving The University of Washington's Graphics and Imaging Laboratory.
Rolling out Intel's future-development plan, Otellini predicted that platform-power innovation would reach a high level. He said Intel had created a chip called the "Near Threshold Voltage Core", which could power a computer from a solar cell the size of a postage stamp.
The new power-saving technology is still in a development stage and it will take time for Intel to adopt it into products, Otellini said.
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