Showing posts with label starts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label starts. Show all posts

Monday, 2 September 2013

Samsung starts mass production of DDR4 memories


Samsung Electronics has started mass producing DDR4 memories that it expects will go into enterprise servers in next-generation data centers.

A successor to the DDR3 (Double Data Rate 3), DDR4 memories are expected to offer higher performance, reliability and lower power consumption than its predecessor.

However, there have been some doubts as to whether the market is ready to transition in volumes from DDR3 memories which are still being designed into servers and other products. Some analysts have forecast that the component will get designed into servers and later PCs only by 2015.

Samsung said on Thursday that early market availability of the 4-gigabit (Gb) DDR4 devices, which use 20-nanometer process technology, will create demand for 16GB and 32GB memory modules.


Samsung did not immediately provide information on the schedule for shipment of the new memories. The pricing information is not available, a spokesman said.

Microelectronics standards body JEDEC Solid State Technology Association published in September 2012 the initial DDR4 standard.

Thursday, 27 June 2013

Obama starts long awaited Africa tour at slave port

DAKAR, Senegal - Almost four centuries after Africans started being shipped to North America as slaves, the first U.S. president of African ancestry will on Thursday visit an infamous embarkation point for those destined for lives in chains.

In his first - and, many Africans say, long-overdue - extended tour of the continent, President Barack Obama will focus on political and economic issues, but is also paying homage to a painful chapter in American history.

On the first leg of his eight-day visit he is taking his family to the House of Slaves, a fort built in the late 18th century on Goree Island, off the coast of Senegal, as a transit point for the human traffic and now a museum.

The visit will be a somber reminder of a shameful period in U.S. and world history and provide a powerful contrast between Obama's stature as leader of the world's most powerful nation and the historical status of Africans, once treated as property in the country he governs.

"We have moved from a society in which African Americans were not viewed as citizens, in which social, economic equality was not provided, to one in which we could elect an African American president," said Junius Rodriguez, a historian at Eureka College in Peoria, Illinois.

"It's a remarkable transformation that we've made."

Many Africans feel a bond with Obama but have voiced disappointment that he has not engaged with the continent as much as previous presidents George W. Bush and Bill Clinton.

During his first term, Obama's only African trip was a one-day stopover in Ghana and many Africans have been impatient for him to make an extended tour of the continent.

"It's a real pleasure for us, that the world has advanced enough that a black man can be president of the United States," said Abdoul Aziz Signane, a tailor, purchasing an Obama T-shirt at a shop in the Senegalese capital Dakar.

"It makes us very proud. That's why I came to buy a T-shirt so I can welcome him and tell him 'We love you Obama, a lot'."

APOLOGY UNLIKELY

While George W. Bush gave a speech at Goree Island in 2003 in which he called slavery a sin, Obama is not scheduled to use the occasion to make a speech.

The president's major address during his three-country swing through Africa is scheduled for Sunday at the University of Cape Town.

Obama - who visited Cape Coast Castle, another slave port, during his Ghana trip in 2009 - will meet civic leaders in Goree before returning to the mainland to talk with lawyers and judges, keeping the emphasis of his trip on African political stability and economic opportunities.

For all the symbolism involved in Obama's trip to Goree, it raises the question of whether the time has come for a U.S. president to apologize for slavery.

"The magnitude of slavery is unimaginable," Harvard historian Johnson said. "Can Obama heal that wound with a single speech and with the extraordinary symbolism of his visit as U.S. president, is that going to close the circle? Absolutely not."

But an apology is seen as unlikely. A sovereign admission of culpability would open the door to a reparations process, something the Obama administration is unlikely to initiate.

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Tuesday, 25 June 2013

Starbucks starts paying U.K. tax

starbucks tax uk

Starbucks just paid £5 million ($7.7 million) in U.K. corporation tax, as the coffee giant starts to follow through on its pledge to pay £20 million in additional U.K. taxes in 2013 and 2014.

The coffee retailer said Monday that it handed over £5 million ($7.7 million) in U.K. taxes this month as it works to placate lawmakers and an angry public that believe the coffee retailer is not paying its fair share of tax.

Starbucks (SBUX, Fortune 500), along with a number of other American companies, has faced a public backlash in the U.K. for paying very little tax despite its high-profile presence in the country.

The coffee chain maintains that its British business is not profitable, which means it does not have to pay British corporate taxes. But even so, the company decided in December to pay £20 million in additional taxes in 2013 and 2014.

June's £5 million payment is the first in a series of payments from the company, which has stopped claiming tax deductions for royalties and other inter-company payments.

"We felt that our customers should not have to wait for us to become profitable before we started paying U.K. corporation tax," the company said Monday.

Related: Just because tax avoidance is legal doesn't mean it is right

Meanwhile, U.K lawmakers have slammed Starbucks and other well-known companies such as Google (GOOG, Fortune 500) and Amazon (AMZN, Fortune 500), arguing they use loopholes to avoid large tax bills.

The British government has been stepping up efforts to close loopholes for big companies as an economic slowdown makes it harder to meet revenue targets. To top of page

 

Monday, 24 June 2013

Starbucks starts paying U.K. tax

starbucks tax uk

Starbucks just paid £5 million ($7.7 million) in U.K. corporation tax, as the coffee giant starts to follow through on its pledge to pay £20 million in additional U.K. taxes in 2013 and 2014.

The coffee retailer said Monday that it handed over £5 million ($7.7 million) in U.K. taxes this month as it works to placate lawmakers and an angry public that believe the coffee retailer is not paying its fair share of tax.

Starbucks (SBUX, Fortune 500), along with a number of other American companies, has faced a public backlash in the U.K. for paying very little tax despite its high-profile presence in the country.

The coffee chain maintains that its British business is not profitable, which means it does not have to pay British corporate taxes. But even so, the company decided in December to pay £20 million in additional taxes in 2013 and 2014.

June's £5 million payment is the first in a series of payments from the company, which has stopped claiming tax deductions for royalties and other inter-company payments.

"We felt that our customers should not have to wait for us to become profitable before we started paying U.K. corporation tax," the company said Monday.

Related: Just because tax avoidance is legal doesn't mean it is right

Meanwhile, U.K lawmakers have slammed Starbucks and other well-known companies such as Google (GOOG, Fortune 500) and Amazon (AMZN, Fortune 500), arguing they use loopholes to avoid large tax bills.

The British government has been stepping up efforts to close loopholes for big companies as an economic slowdown makes it harder to meet revenue targets. To top of page