Software

Cell-based SpursEngine Enhances Net Video.

New Toshiba notebooks use special hardware to make YouTube less ugly Toshiba has adapted the technology behind the Cell Broadband Engine chip, most often found in the PlayStation 3, for use inside the latest Qosmio notebooks. The Cell-based chip has been modified for more graphics-related applications, and Toshiba has named it the SpursEngine. In a new line of Qosmio notebooks, the SpursEngine will help to improve the image quality of internet video presumably through smart filtering techniques. Toshiba had already used the SpursEngine chip to filter DVD-based video, but this is the first time itò€™s being applied to a format other than MPEG-2. The SpursEngine also features hardware decode and encode support for MPEG-4-based video. The image quality enhancing features are reported by IDG as working only when played full screen in Internet Explorer. Weò€™re unsure why the feature is limited to just Microsoftò€™s browser, but the full screen restriction could be a limitation posed by how the SpursEngine interacts with the rest of the graphics subsystem. With streaming becoming increasingly popular, and a legitimately viable way to deliver content through Hulu and Netflix, the hardware acceleration of internet video could be something big. The Toshiba Qosmios go on sale in Japan this week with a worldwide release planned for a later date.


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):

News of the day
No DRM for Prince of Persia PC.
A post over on the Ubisoft forums states that the PC version of Prince of Persia 2008 shipped without DRM protection.
Popular Articles

Microsoft Unveils the Bing Jingle.
Here it is, the winner of Microsoft"s "Bingle" contest.

dbx repair - repair Outlook Express dbx files.
AMD's Radeon 4800 In Production.
Mountain House (CA) ò€“ Unlike the ATI that we knew before, it appears that AMDò€™s graphics division is running perfectly these days ò€“ and ahead of deadlines. Even though the graphics unit has posted an $8 million loss in the first quarter of this year ò€“ in an effort to improve market share rather than average selling prices - the graphics business is making progress: We hear the company has struck gold with the RV770 and will be bring the chip to market earlier than expected.