Archive for the ‘Hardware’ Category

HDBaseT

Friday, July 2nd, 2010

The big story this week seems to be a new cable standard for high definition TV’s. “Valens, LG, Samsung and Sony teamed up to work on an entirely new cabling system named HDBaseT.Valens, LG, Samsung and Sony teamed up to work on an entirely new cabling system named HDBaseT.” (Tech.Blorge).

This is an ‘about time’ thing. The new standard uses existing and well proven Cat 5 network wiring. The interesting parts will be how they can run 100 watts over 24 gauge wires while still supporting extremely high data rates. EE Times indicates this may be a result of some DSP magic by Valens. A comment at Tech Reports illustrates the power feed problem, though.

Appliance Magazine says “The cornerstone of the technology is 5Play, a feature-set that converges uncompressed HD video, audio, 100BaseT Ethernet, high power over cable, and various control signals through a single 100-m/328-ft CAT5e/6 LAN cable.”

The comparison chart (PDF) indicates a data rate of nearly twice that of HDMI 1.4, cable lengths an order of magnitude longer, standard cable and connectors, power delivery sufficient for medium sized TV’s, and daisy chain, USB, and networking capabilities.

Engadget says this was introduced at CES 2009 so it’s taken a while to settle to the 1.0 specification.

The telephone company designed the twisted pair cable and the RJ connectors for low cost and reliability. Ethernet has used that technology successfully and enhanced data rates by improving cable quality. The key to this HDBaseT standard is in the interface chips that Valens is producing. If those chips can be provided at low cost and if clones can be developed, also at low cost, this new standard could indeed match its hype.

Cost of the machine

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

The first PC system I bought was a TRS-80 Model I for about $3k in 1979. That was a Z80 based 64k machine. Then there was the Gateway 386 with 1 MB of memory for about the same price in about 1990. I would be hard pressed to figure out how to spend that much money on a machine nowadays.

Technologizer takes a look at Classic PCs vs. New PCs: Their True Cost to demonstrate just what has happened to make these machines so much of a common appliance.

What is hidden in the look at personal computing systems is how the cost effectiveness of computing power has infiltrated so many established technologies and enabled so many new ones. Whether it is automobiles or cell phones, it is hard to look around at the many things in our lives without seeing some rather significant computing power that has made those things less expensive yet more capable.

And still some folks moan about the “good ol’ days” when life was rosy and all that.

The UPS is beeping, the UPS is beeping!

Tuesday, January 26th, 2010

When the grid power does strange things around here, the UPS systems let you know. The NAS is connected to the Triplite via USB so it will know when it needs to shut down. The NAS will send an e-mail when it gets word from the UPS about going to battery power and whatnot.

The client computer on an APC UPS just beeps. It also beeps when grid voltage gets above 124v. Since the grid voltage goes over that threshold in afternoons this winter, the beeping can be annoying. The short term fix is to turn on a space heater. Even at the low, 800 watt, setting, the space heater will reduce the voltage to the UPS by 3 volts or so and stop the blasted beeping. The additional heat is, this winter, a nice side effect, too.

Then there’s the oven in the Kitchen. The gas valves don’t work if the grid voltage goes below about 108v. Since voltage drops like that were common this past summer, I had to put a Variac and meter on the line so the voltage could be adjusted to be closer to nominal to bake supper.

Low voltage was also a problem for the RV air conditioner parked in the driveway. For that, I used an autoformer manufactured for such problems. It provides a voltage sensing 8% or 16% voltage boost to prevent brownouts.

The source of these problems is probably a forty year old grid supply network. There are too many drops on the transformer and the drops are too long and their age may be taking a toll. The power company can only compensate so much so my UPS beeper gets exercise.

Femtocells, VOIP, and cordless phones synthesis?

Thursday, January 7th, 2010

It has been a big change taking a lot of time. The landline telephone network started development just a bit over 100 years ago. Cable TV is less than half that and its expansion into networking is less than half of that. Cell phones have an age similar to cable networking of only a couple of decades.

It was a big deal when cordless phones could replace the old telephone sets in homes. Now that technology is up to DECT 6.0 standards with many features and, just as that standard is taking hold, another technology is encroaching on its territory.

Cordless household phones were only a small step towards wireless freedom. Those phones have only limited range and are still rather bulky. Cell phones, on the other hand, can be used nearly anywhere and are small, convenient, and packed with many features that make them much more than just a telephone. That is why the wired connections to houses business is shrinking.

Back towards the 1970′s you had to have specially certified equipment to connect to the telephone network and that network was the only readily available public method for communications. That gave Amateur Radio operators headaches as they built the interface between their hobby equipment and the telephone networks to extent the utility of their services in emergencies. It also raised costs on early data modems and other equipment that connected computing devices.

That monopoly was broken and now the back end networks are separated from front end consumer access points. Ironing out the standards to keep all of these parts functionally integrated has been a difficult process and is still suffering rough spots. What has happened is that there are now many ways to get into and out of the back end network and cost and pricing pressures are stimulating innovation.

VOIP is old hat now. The next step may be that of circumventing the front end cell network to be able to use common cell phones to connect more directly to less expensive I’net service points while still retaining the cell network access. This is where the femtocell idea comes in. (see Airvana Femtocell Technology)

Femtocells have the potential to transform communications by making the mobile device the tool of choice even in home settings.  However, vendors and operators face substantial technical challenges to realize the potential of femtocells.  For example, femtocells will increase the number of base stations by several orders of magnitude over the existing “macro” base station infrastructures.  This increase will demand new approaches to areas such as mobility and interference mitigation.  At such volumes, femtocell vendors will also need to follow an aggressive cost curve.  Femtocells will require new approaches to installation and configuration, because they will be installed by non-technical users.

Where the shift occurs is in the purchase of I’net services via an ISP and then using various service providers for such things as addressing such as telephone numbers and access methods. The interface out the the PSTN (public service telephone network) is the province of VOIP providers and they use either computer audio (e.g. Skype) or dedicated phone set to I’net devices (e.g. Vonage, Teleblend) or phone set to computer interfaces (typically USB) like Magicjack. These devices make it possible to use an existing I’net backbone like a regular telephone and that means that the costs for long distance and other such features are paid for in a customized way between your ISP and your VOIP provider.

Now it looks like Magicjack is going to provide a femtocell option (CES PSA) to build on their POTS to USB service interface. This means that you can ‘introduce’ your cell phone to the femtocell and then your cell phone calls will use that access point rather than a cell phone tower when you are in range of the femtocell. Since you don’t access the cell network, your cell phone provider should not charge you for the use of the phone when using the femtocell. What that means is that your cell phone acts like an old cordless phone around home except that is will still work when you are away from home, will be more compact, and may still have many features the cordless doesn’t have.

The portability aspects for travelers also have interesting implications. The Magicjack is intended to be portable so it can be used wherever there is a decent high speed I’net connection. If their femtocell works the same way, it means that you can reduce cell phone costs when traveling if you have access to a motel or RV park or other public access broadband service with your laptop.

Exactly when this will happen is a question. Magicjack has promised number porting and Linux capable software as being available ‘Real Soon Now’ and the wait has been extended. Someday. And someday, the femtocell, too. It is coming together and the pace, if looking back, is breathtaking. But seeing what is in the pipe can still be a frustration of anticipation.

Modem history

Sunday, December 27th, 2009

SSB and echo cancellation were two technologies that allowed modems to up the speed on POTS landlines. TechRadar has the story in Getting connected: a history of modems

It took 14 years, from 1980 until 1994, for the speed of the modem to develop from 14.4Kpbs to 28.9Kbps but it was only two years later, in 1996, that Brent Townshend came up with the technology for the 56k modem.

A lot of things happened in the 90′s. The I’net move from nonprofit only to commerce capable provided a social impetus to go along with data transfer rate improvements at the same time as operating systems could take advantage of new computer architectures and video systems to provide WIMP (windows, icons, mouse, pointer) interfaces. Two years to double modem speeds and then another two years before cable and DSL wideband started to up that by an order of magnitude.

An article like this is a good way to sit down and marvel at just how much things have changed in such a little time.

It do seem to make a difference: system crash

Thursday, December 10th, 2009

I’d be going along transcoding some video, checking for e-mail, perusing the news reader, listening to some recording, and organizing files – then, wham! black screen and all is quiet. A hard reset was the only recovery.

I had been using a case designed for a Pentium III mobo. Nice case. But, no modern mobo’s the power supply was positioned over the CPU cooler and there was only a front fan to encourage air flow. You’d think the power supply exhaust fan would help the CPU cooler. No dice. An Asus board with a P4 would get hot enough to howl in pain. The Athalon 7750 would run up to 60C and that may have contributed to the system crashes.

Slickdeals noted that Newegg had a deal on the CM Storm Scout case and 600 watt OCZ power supply after a good rebate. That looked like it might help. It did. Temperature of the Athalon now only goes up to the low 40′s C and the crash frequency has decreased to ‘still waiting’ – if this keeps up, maybe I’ll be able to use the machine again without trepidation.

The Cooler Master Scout case is a rather straightforward design with the power supply below the ATX sized mobo and a stack of drive mounts in the front. There are five 5 1/4 drive bays with front access and five 3 1/2 behind a big LED lighted fan towards the bottom. There are two large exhaust fans, one to the rear and one to the top. You can also add two fans to the side of the case if you need more air. The power supply can be mounted to pull air from the underside of the case for its cooling or turned upside down to pull case air. The front panel with power, reset, and LED lighting switches, 4 USB, 1 ESATA, and 2 audio ports is at front top.

The power supply features efficiency and modular cables. 600 watts should be enough for a 100 watt CPU based system with only a modest GPU for graphics.

The key is that my machine now runs in a reasonable temperature range and seems solid and stable when I load it down. That is nice. Good upgrade.

small pc

Friday, December 4th, 2009

TG Daily: CompuLab showcases 13 ounce mini-PC.

These things are getting interesting. This one has 2 gigabit ethernet ports and HD video and audio and only 8 watts power draw. That means that it could serve as a home theater storage network I’net gateway for automated home control or something.

This Fit-PC2i, due out in January, also has 4 USB, serial RS-232, Mini SD, WLAN, and internal SATA HDD as part of the package. Memory capability is 1 or 2 GB. That puts this computer in the realm of low end laptops and and interesting option if you don’t want the bundled screen and keyboard of a laptop.

The question now, is price. If this can get down to low netbook pricing it will have all sorts of interesting possibilities, even as a toy.

Pinouts and cable wiring

Wednesday, June 24th, 2009

The AllPinouts Main Page might be a place to start if you need to figure out how to wire a plug on a cable. If you can’t find it there, you can always add a new page to the wiki once you figure out your particular cable pinouts.

AllPinouts collects information about hardware interfaces of modern and obsolete hardware, including pinouts of ports, expansion slots, and other connectors of computers and different digital devices (i.e. Cellular Phones, GPS, PDA, Game Consoles, etc.). This website is a Wiki, a website which the users (you) easily can contribute to and improve. All text is available under the GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) and may be distributed or linked accordingly.

It appears to be a bit more than just pinout diagrams. For instance, RS232 serial to USB converter cable schematic shows 2 schemes to make this common adapter. The S-Video to Composite Video RCA is a simpler example as it only needs a capacitor.

So I’ll add this one to the reference list for next time I try to figure out how to connect this to that.

Netgear ReadyNAS on automatic

Wednesday, May 6th, 2009

One of the interesting features of the Netgear ReadyNAS is the automatic shares for users and USB devices.

Each user you define on the NAS gets an automatically created private share. The share is not seen unless you log into the NAS as that user.

Printers or storage devices plugged into the NAS USB ports will have a share defined for them while they are active. This is one reason why you should access the NAS admin page in order to disconnect the USB storage devices properly as you not only dismount them from the system but you have to remove the share.

This automatic share handling is convenient and seems to work well.

Energy costs

Monday, April 13th, 2009

The big black rack box with its PIII was replaced by a Netgear ReadyNAS DUO. That step increased storage by a factor of 7 and reduced noise significantly. It also reduced the power need from 49 watts to 21. With 8760 hours in a year that’s a drop from 429 KwH to 184. The electric rates sheet at NV Energy, Statement of Rates, indicates an electric energy cost of about fifteen cents per kilowatt hour. That means the annual expense drops from about $65 to $28.

The NAS has automatic power down capabilities so it can be turned off for 6 hours or so each night. That reduces the annual hours on to 6570 and the annual power cost to about $21. That’s about $7 per year for the processor and $7 for each hard drive in the NAS.

From a capital cost perspective, the $40+ potential annual energy cost savings would pay for the NAS in something under ten years. Rated life is probably closer to 5 so benefits other than power draw are needed to rationalize its expense.