Showing posts with label pledges. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pledges. Show all posts

Thursday, 11 July 2013

EU pledges €4.8 billion to boost electronics sector

In a new effort to boost Europe’s electronics manufacturing capabilities, the European Commission on Wednesday proposed €4.8 billion (US$6.2 billion) in funding for research and innovation partnerships with the private sector and European Union countries.

The Commission hopes the public-private partnerships under the planned Joint Technology Initiative (JTI) will reverse the decline of the E.U.’s global share in the electronic components and systems market. Digital Agenda Commissioner Neelie Kroes wants to double Europe’s chip production by 2020 and overtake the U.S.

The plans should also help meet the E.U. target of 20 percent of GDP coming from manufacturing by 2020, particularly through work in areas such as embedded systems, semiconductor equipment and materials supply and the design of complex electronic systems.

After a competitive call, the best projects will be selected for funding through peer review. The JTI will set out seven-year commitments and establish a strategic research and innovation agenda for all those involved—companies, universities, research laboratories, innovative small and medium businesses or other groups.

The electronics JTI is expected to start in early 2014 and to run for 10 years. It will be a merger of three current initiatives: ARTEMIS (embedded/cyber-physical systems), AENEAS (nanoelectronics), both set up in 2008, and EPoSS (smart integrated systems).

The current initiatives have been successful in jump-starting five manufacturing pilot lines valued at €730 million in nanoelectronics and ARTEMIS’s first launch of two large-scale innovation pilot projects valued at €150 million.

According to the Commission, the electronics sector has grown at about 5 percent per year since 2000. In Europe today it directly employs 200,000 people.

“But it’s not just about this one sector,” said Kroes in a statement. “It’s about every sector enabled and stimulated by new electronic innovations. You’ve probably got a good example in your pocket; but it’s not just phones, it’s all sorts of gadgets. The fact is, electronics supports and enables a huge value chain, reaching across the economy.”

Therefore, a public-public partnership between the European Commission and E.U. member states focused on support for high-tech small or medium-size enterprises (SMEs) was also proposed Wednesday. The Eurostars program is for SMEs that dedicate at least 10 percent of their turnover or full-time equivalent to research activities.

The total E.U. contribution will be up to €1.2 billion from the Horizon 2020 fund, matched by contributions from E.U. countries. The industrial partners will contribute at least half of the total costs—about €2.4 billion.

The proposals now need to be approved by the Council of the E.U. and the European Parliament.

Thursday, 27 June 2013

Build 2013 keynote: Microsoft unveils Windows 8.1, pledges 'rapid release' schedule

Microsoft formally unveiled Windows 8.1 to developers on Wednesday, with executives promising a “rapid release” schedule to keep the pace of new innovations coming.

 

For those who have read PCWorld’s hands-on of the Windows 8.1 preview, Microsoft’s announcements were nothing new. Executives confirmed the reworking of the Start menu, new boot-to-Desktop options, as well as a slew of updated apps that take advantage of Windows 8.1, which can be downloaded in preview form from preview.windows.com.

 

For Microsoft, the Build 2013 developer conference represents a chance to connect or reconnect with developers, luring them back to the Windows platform. Although Microsoft is nearing 100,000 Windows 8 apps, that still falls well short of the millions of apps that have been written for the Apple iOS and Google Android platforms.

 

For Steve Ballmer, the chief executive of Microsoft, the company is undergoing a transformation to a business that develops devices and services, and not just software. “And the only way that can happen is by a company undergoing a rapid-release schedule,” he said.

 

Although Ballmer and other Microsoft executives focused on Windows 8, they took a few moments to make a few announcements regarding Windows Phone, which provides an interface consistent with that of the other Windows platforms. “It’s beautiful, and it looks like the same software that we have on Windows tablets, Windows PCs, and our Xbox systems,” Ballmer said.

 

New Windows Phones will appear on Sprint. The big news for Windows Phone is that Sprint will add the HTC 8XT as well as the Samsung ATIV S Neo, meaning that Windows Phones will appear on all U.S. wireless carriers.

 

But whether it’s a phone or a tablet, smaller screens will become increasingly important, Ballmer said.

 

”The PC of today doesn’t look a lot like the PC of ...five or seven years ago,” Ballmer said, referring to an “explosion of new devices,” including small-form-factor tablets. Acer’s eight-inch ATIV tablet is “flying off the shelves,” Ballmer said, enabling kids to do homework and do a little bit of entertainment, too.

 

”This small form factor is very important,” Ballmer said.  “I wouldn’t call them PCs, but this small form factor is very important.”

 

Ballmer also promised that hardware makers would deliver Windows 8 devices with touchscreens, a capability that was neglected within early Windows 8 offerings. Consumers will see an “outpouring” of new devices that are notebook computers in every respect, and touch-enabled, Ballmer promised, Customers that have touch systems are much happier than non-touch-enabled customers, or Windows 7 customers, he said.

 

lenovo-ideapad-yoga-13 Ballmer showed off the Helix notebook from Lenovo, a Core i7 device with a full day’s worth of battery enabled with a keyboard dock.. “It literally makes it the most powerful PC, and the most powerful lightweight tablet... should we call it a PC? Should we call it a tablet? I’d call it all Windows, all the time,” Ballmer said.

 

Finally, Ballmer moved to the meat of the presentation, the changes that it had made to make Windows 8.1 a bit more consumer friendly—or in Ballmer’s words, to “refine the blend” between the Start page and the Desktop, among other changes.

 

Ballmer said that the way in which the Desktop and the Start page will be integrated will represent a better blend of both, with boot to Desktop, common backgrounds between the Desktop and the Start page, and other features bringing both together.

 

Combining the Desktop and Start pages "refines the blend," according to Steve Ballmer. Julie Larson-Green, who runs the Windows division at Microsoft, said she was proud of how responsive Microsoft’s engineering team had become.  The company had over 800 updates to the products since Microsoft launched Windows 8 last October, and Windows 8.1 is the biggest.

 

In portrait mode, the new Start screen works well on the new small-form-factor devices, Larson-Green said. The Twitter app has been designed for the new, smaller form factor. With Windows 8.1, she said that Microsoft had added gestures to the on-screen keyboard, where users can slide their fingers across, tap, and then the word appears. Users can also press and hold to access.

 

 

Microsoft's message at Build 2013 is that apps rule—both its own, and the ones created by third-party developers.

Larson-Green showed off the new Mail app, due in the fall. Users will be able to banish or Sweep emails from a certain sender, and then segregate automated emails, such as those from Facebook and Twitter, or subscribed newsletters, into their own folder.

 

Free music streaming from from Xbox Music will comes with Windows 8, Larson-Green said, together with the ability to create a playlist from music it finds on the Web, she said.

 

Larson-Green also showed off personalization features, such as the ability to show photos via the lock screen, the ability to take a Skype call from the lock screen, and Windows 8.1’s ability to add personalized backgrounds. She also briefly explained integrated photo editing, plus new apps including Food & Drink, which can be manipulated via hands-free mode. Basically, all the apps “in Windows 8.1 have either been written for Windows 8.1 or updated for it," she said. Those apps can be snapped together,  with four per widescreen monitor.