Sunday, March 29, 2009

HP now selling super-safe laptop battery with three-year guarantee



It is a great time now to who ever using laptop and want to stay it without power socket when using it outside of house.HP now produce super-save laptop battery with three years warranty.



Below is description of it.

Considering that we're still getting reports every month or so about laptop batteries catching on fire and exploding, it's not really paranoid to be a little worried about the chemical cells that keep your notebook up and running.

When the crisis broke a few years ago, much research went into battery safety, but nothing ever came of it commercially, and today's batteries are more or less designed the same as they've ever been, just with a little stricter production processes.

Now, finally, one of these "safer" batteries has come to market via HP, which is selling batteries based on technology from Boston Power. The company claims its Sonata cells are "designed to meet and beat any safety standard" available. The HP version of these battery packs, known as the HP Enviro Series, are the first end-user products to use the Sonata technology, a technology which was first demonstrated over two years ago.

Priced at $150 (about a $20 premium over a standard battery), the six-cell battery packs are compatible with 16 existing HP and Compaq notebook models. Right now you can only get them as an add-on cell, but HP says it will begin selling the batteries with new laptops later this month.

There's more to this battery than just safety, though. First off, they charge lightning-fast, reaching up to 80 percent of total capacity in just 30 minutes. Arguably even better than that, the batteries can be recharged many more times than standard cells: Up to 1,000 times before performance and capacity begin to degrade, and HP backs that up with a three-year warranty on the batteries.

For comparison: Typical batteries take hours to hit 80 percent capacity and can only be recharged a few hundred times before capacity degrades to the point of uselessness (a problem called "battery fade").

Very cool technology, and I'd love to get a Sonata cell for my rig. I just wish they weren't so expensive!

Saturday, March 14, 2009

Windows Vista Ready Boost

ReadyBoost is a component of Microsoft's Windows Vista operating system. It works by using flash memory, USB 2.0 drive, SD card, CompactFlash or any kind of portable flash mass storage system as a drive for disk cache.

ReadyBoost is present, with fewer restrictions than in Vista, in the beta version of Windows 7.ReadyBoost is also used to facilitate SuperFetch, an updated version of Windows XP's prefetcher which performs analysis of boot-time disk usage patterns and creates a cache which is used in subsequent system boots.

Using ReadyBoost-capable flash memory (NAND memory devices) for caching allows Windows Vista to service random disk reads with performance that is typically 80-100 times faster than random reads from traditional hard drives. This caching is applied to all disk content, not just the page file or system DLLs.

Flash devices are typically slower than the hard drive for sequential I/O, so to maximize performance, ReadyBoost includes logic to recognize large, sequential read requests and then allows these requests to be serviced by the hard drive.
When a compatible device is plugged in, the Windows AutoPlay dialog offers an additional option to use the flash drive to speed up the system; an additional "ReadyBoost" tab is added to the drive's properties dialog where the amount of space to be used can be configured.

250 MB to 4 GB of flash memory can be assigned. ReadyBoost encrypts, with AES-128, and compresses all data that is placed on the flash device; Microsoft has stated that a 2:1 compression ratio is typical, so that a 4 GB cache could contain upwards of 8 GB of data.

According to Jim Allchin, for future releases of Windows, ReadyBoost will be able to use spare RAM on other networked Windows Vista PCs.For a device to be compatible and useful it must conform to the following requirements:
• The capacity of the removable media must be at least 256 MB (250 after formatting)
• Devices larger than 4 GB will have only 4 GB used for ReadyBoost
• The device should have an access time of 1 ms or less
• The device must be capable of 2.5 MB/s read speeds for 4 KB random reads spread uniformly across the entire device and 1.75 MB/s write speeds for 512 KB random writes spread uniformly across the device
• NTFS, FAT16 and FAT32 are supported (Windows 7 and Vista SP2 will support also the new exFAT filesystem)
• The initial release of ReadyBoost for Windows Vista supports one device. Windows 7 supports the simultaneous use of ReadyBoost on multiple flash drives.
• The recommended amount of flash memory to use for Windows ReadyBoost acceleration is one to three times the amount of random access memory (RAM) installed in your computer depending on the brand, wear and tear due to read-write cycles, and size of the flash memory, the ability to format as NTFS may not be available. Enabling write caching on the flash drive by selecting Optimize for performance in Device Manager will allow formatting as NTFS.

source:wikipedia