Microsoft, Sony Clash Over Vista Turbo Memory 161
Anonymous writes "Sony is claiming that the current release of Vista does not support Intel's Turbo Memory technology, but Microsoft has dismissed the allegation. If Microsoft is telling the truth then all is well. But if Sony is right, Microsoft has opened itself to being sued for deceptive marketing practices."
So, sue me (Score:4, Insightful)
That wouldn't be the first time Microsoft was sued. What does Sony have that the US-DOJ doesn't?
Re:So, sue me (Score:5, Funny)
Other than positive regard by a larger number of the American people, I have no idea.
Re:So, sue me (Score:5, Insightful)
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True. I don't buy CDs, though, and all I know is that my Sony has, for years, provided clean, crisp images of such things as the incompetent lackey in charge of the DoJ, lying desperately in order to cover his political ass. In fact, when I first purchased the Sony, it provided great imagery of his predecessor explaining the need to ruthlessly prosecute pornographers and head shops.
There's no end to this sadness (Score:5, Interesting)
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All Sony did is rootkit a few million PCs to make a quick buck. They were windows PCs so it's not like they weren't already stuffed full of spy/ad/crapware. The DOJ is trying to destroy the foundations of our nation just to avoid having to actually do their damn jobs.
Re:So, sue me (Score:5, Insightful)
Sony? The rootkit installing, graffiti sponsoring over priced pusher of mediocre quality products?
Microsoft? Of course not, we're on slashdot after all...
the US Department of Justice? After the media coverage of the Paris Hilton ordeal and the fact that millions of people now realize that convicted people in most cases only serve %10 of their time and even less if they're rich socialites... followed by the abrupt reversal of the status quo to put the rich socialite in jail to the fullest extent of her sentence rather than getting treated like any other common probation violator... I'd say the average American is rather unsure of where they stand with regards to the justice system in the US and I'd suspect that money would have a lot to do with it today in any case.
they're all pretty shady in their own respects if you ask me, and it all seems to come down to money.
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Re:So, sue me (Score:5, Informative)
In all likelihood, buckets of money. Compare MS' or Sony's ADVERTISING budget to the ENTIRE budget allocated to the DOJ's antitrust division:
My google-fu on financial info breakdowns for publicly traded companies is obviously weak, but Nintendo said they were going to spend $200M on marketing the Wii *alone*, so it's likely that Sony's advertising budget for the PS3 ALONE is on the order of the entire allocation for the DOJ's antitrust division.
Its all marketing... (Score:1, Interesting)
By attacking one of the few companies more hated than them, they're trying to re-direct some of their bad karma.
Sony is not dying .. (Score:5, Informative)
"By attacking one of the few companies more hated than them, they're trying to re-direct some of their bad karma"
http://finance.yahoo.com/q/bc?s=SNE&t=6m [yahoo.com]
was: Re:Its all marketing...
Re:Sony is not dying .. (Score:4, Funny)
http://finance.yahoo.com/q/bc?s=AAPL&t=6m [yahoo.com]
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Outrageous claims.
Re:Sony is not dying ..but memory stick is (Score:2)
Sony makes the Memory Stick, which is just about the most expensive and least widely-usable flash-memory solution out there. But, if you plugged it into a USB port on a Vista machine, it could give you a caching boost.
Switching that process to the motherboard is one less advertising opportunity for Sony to foist their proprietary, expensive solutions off on people. Not to mentio
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In the years I've owned mine the only thing I had to do was clean off the laser, it got dusty and wouldn't play.
It's not the end all, but it's not a POS in my opinion.
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Re:Its all marketing... (Score:4, Interesting)
Bad karma? What bad karma?
Microsoft Corp. founder Bill Gates proved even more appealing than cuddly babies in the eighth-annual Harris Interactive/The Wall Street Journal ranking of the world's best and worst corporate reputations.
Top-ranked Microsoft managed to beat Johnson & Johnson, whose emotionally appealing baby-products business had kept it in first place for a remarkable seven consecutive years. In the Reputation Quotient survey conducted by market-research firm Harris Interactive Inc., respondents gave Microsoft very high marks for leadership and financial results. But Mr. Gates's personal philanthropy also boosted the public's opinion of Microsoft. How Boss's Deeds Buff A Firm's Reputation [wsj.com]
Apple ranked 22nd in the Harris poll.
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If you gaze into their beautful pale blue eyes, you can just make out the words IRQL_NOT_LESS_THAN_OR_EQUAL_TO and a bunch of hex.
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So deciding that it is wrong for a company to try to deliberately install a rootkit on our computers makes one a crybaby? Unfortunately, like most other security issues this one is "nerd-focused," that is, until it's YOUR machine that is compromised.
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By attacking one of the few companies more hated than them, they're trying to re-direct some of their bad karma."
Shame. Looks like the end of your post got cut off, so I'll paste it here to avoid confusion:
"</sarcasm> LOLzers! Hahaha! I'm kidding rite, you don't real think I thought that sereously! OMGWTFBBQ hehehe! ROFLMAO"
Hmmm (Score:1)
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Ok it is no 360, but I wouldn't call the PS3 a niche product.
From TFA: (Score:4, Informative)
vs. Microsoft's vague assurances:
Guess who seems more confident in their assertion?
Re:From TFA: (Score:5, Insightful)
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1 stick inserted and recognized as "turbo boost" capable
2 one of the items in the menu is "use to speed up system"
3 it starts shoving stuff on the stick
4 the stick fails or you yank the stick out
5 the system then falls back to normal performance (or lack thereof)
reread the claims, sir. (Score:2)
MS already wins & Sony likely loses... (Score:2)
From TF Intel.com (Score:4, Informative)
Which in turn yields:
Performance measurements collected on pre-production Lenovo ThinkPad* T61 with pre-production BIOS. Detailed Notebook Configurations
PCMark05 Test from FutureMark is an application-based benchmarking tool used to measure overall PC performance. By using portions of real applications, this benchmarking tool can assess PC performance. (+36% improvement)
Google* Earth loading a fly through of a national park followed by Adobe Photoshop* Elements 5.0 creating a slideshow showing pictures from the same park. The input files for Adobe Photoshop Elements are 48 digital photos with a resolution of 10 MPel. (+127%)
Performance tests and ratings are measured using specific computer systems and/or components and reflect the approximate performance of Intel products as measured by those tests. Any difference in system hardware or software design or configuration may affect actual performance. Buyers should consult other sources of information to evaluate the performance of systems or components they are considering purchasing. For more information on performance tests and on the performance of Intel products, visit www.intel.com/performance/ or call (U.S.) 1-800-628-8686 or 1-916-356-3104.
But Sony is trustworthy, they'd never lie.
Re:From TF Intel.com (Score:4, Interesting)
Looks to me more like Sony overstating their case in explaining why they are not offering support now.
Why anyone would expect this to work 100% till the first service patch is beyond me.
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Why anyone would expect brakes on cars to work 100% till the first service visit it beyond me.
Yes, I know the car analogy is always flawed, but why the hell should we always expect to have to wait $deity how long till the company decides that they'll finish getting things working?
If they say they support $techonology, I expect them to support it. Not halfway or a quarter way. Same with cars - if they advertise a car as havin
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Bad analogy, the brakes on your car are the result of over a century of engineering effort.
We actually use less effective brakes than we could these days, drum brakes are actually superior in stopping power. The switch to disk brakes took place because disks are less prone to fade.
At the end of the day the stopping power of your brakes is no greater than the ability of your tires in any case.
Turbo memory i
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I don't think the feature is "broken" by definition, in fact I think the intended benefits are so tiny that people are left confused. According to this FAQ page [msdn.com], we know the following:
1. This is designed "at best" to deliver a few percent faster performance, targeting smaller files. It is intended as an upgrade path of last re
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Deceptive Marketing Practices... (Score:5, Funny)
Summary, if I understand it correctly: (Score:5, Funny)
Microsoft: It does too. See? It uses the flash memory for...things. Vroom.
Sony: You call that support? It doesn't do what it's supposed to.
Microsoft: Just because you can't see it doesn't mean it's not happening. It's integrated and magical.
Sony: Yeah, it'll half-work, as long as you micromanage what files are cached.
Microsoft: See? Integration.
Sony: Um...no. Not quite.
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Microsoft:Well you are seeing the beta version. We will have version 600 next week and 601 the week after.
Sony:Joy!
Microsoft:We also have turbo memory SP1 lined up, followed by SP2 to SP4 and RC1 afterwards.
Sony:Can't wait.
Re:Summary, if I understand it correctly: (Score:5, Funny)
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MOD PARENT DOWN (Score:2)
I need to purge this filth from my brain. Someone post a goatse link, quick.
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Your cheer was incomplete. I've finished it for you below.
"Give me a billion dollars a month or Steve will fucking crush you!"
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=)
It is likely that there is some support but it.... (Score:4, Interesting)
Sony is right... (Score:5, Interesting)
Must be a day that ends in "y"... (Score:4, Funny)
Huh.
Who'd of thunk it?
Must be a day that ends with "y".
(rolls eyes)
The real problem... (Score:5, Interesting)
It sounds to me like Microsoft may have implemented it poorly so it's a feature that doesn't really help.
How many people here are old enough to remember the transistor radio? I remember the big thing was to get a five transistor radio. That was a radio with five (5) transistors. And they had five too but if you looked you might see that one of the three leads on two of the transistors were cut.
Unscrupulous companies were putting five transistors into their radios so that they could advertise that feature but they were using two of them as simple diodes not as transistors. What you paid for was a five transistor radio but what you got was a in effect three transistor radio. You couldn't really sue because the unit had all five transistors, just some of them weren't being used as transistors.
Re:The real problem... (Score:4, Insightful)
I remember seeing an article about that. The first had one transistor, then two, then three. Then people kept adding transistors and claiming it made their radio better. While some actually did that, the article had pictures of radios where off on a part of the circuit board that wasn't connected to anything there would be 3 or more transistors just soldered onto the board, no connections. They would buy bad transistors and just stick them in, not even using them as diodes, so they could call it a 5 transistor radio.
Frankly, I believe Sony in this case. Getting the algorythim right for this would be tough. It woudn't surprise me if the one MS made is currently ineffective. It will take time to find a better one.
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The Regency TR-1 [arczip.com] had four [msoe.edu], using only one transistor in the audio section.
I just fixed an old 1958 vintage Sony TR-610 the other day. The schematic [roetta.it] shows a converter transistor (oscillator that also performs mixing function), two I.F. (intermediate frequency) amplifiers, an audio preamp stage and a push-pull audio power amplifier. Although many later radios had the PNP variety of germanium transistors, early ones like
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really only need 1 transistor (Score:2)
Check out this site [somerset.net] for a few examples.
However, if you insist on a superhet design, though, you still can get by with only three...
P.S. I'm not actually old enought to remember this stuff, but hacking topics of any generation are is still pretty
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I'm a bit confused... (Score:3, Insightful)
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Intel disagrees with you... (Score:4, Interesting)
Perhaps you can point to the specification which would allow it to be used by other operating systems. If I have a dual-boot system, does the specification allow it to keep info for each? If so, how is it determined which OS gets use of how much of this memory?
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It's interesting that Intel themselves calls it an "entirely new system innovation for Windows Vista PCs..." and says that it "Works on Windows Vista only."
The reason why it only works in Vista is that, right now, there are no other OS which support it.
Unless they have some funky hardware in there that actively monitors which OS is running and disables the Turbo Memory hardware if it doesn't recognize it as Vista, any OS should be able to support it.
The specifications might be closed though. (Haven't checked) Maybe Intel won't allow anyone but Microsoft to read the specs, forcing all other to reverse-engineer it if they want to support it? =/
Regarding dual-bo
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Deceptive marketing (Score:4, Funny)
Considering they got away claiming they were selling Operating Systems, I don't think this will be a problem.
Sony, psts! (Score:5, Funny)
The Death of "Turbo." (Score:2, Insightful)
Does anyone actually remember when "turbo" had a technical definition beyond "really fast?" Does anyone realize that, in the computing world, "turbo" is essentially meaningless? (Go ahead, demonstrate for me how you pressurize the incoming bitstream mix using the processor bitstream exhaust pressure...) Or has the influx of market-roids slapping a "turbo" badge on any slightly-faster-than-last-year's technology made this term utterly useless?
(/rant)
Re:The Death of "Turbo." (Score:5, Insightful)
Does anyone actually remember when "turbo" had a technical definition beyond "turbocharger"? Does anyone realize that, in the engineering world, all that "turbo" means is "involving turbines" (go ahead, demonstrate me how you pressurize the incoming steam mix using the turbogenerator exhaust pressure)? Or has the the influx of market-roids dropping the "charger" on any turbocharged piston engine made this term utterly useless?
(/rant)
SCNR.
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The Turbo Button! (Score:4, Insightful)
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Time for Nitro Memory? (Score:2)
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Yeah. I remember [porsche.com].
Have you heard the exhaust note on one of these?
But alas, I'm just a photographer.
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I'm guessing you never used Turbo Pascal or had an XT PC with a Turbo button on it.
I'm guessing there was a gap of about 30 seconds between turbochargers being advertised for engines and marketing putting them into common usage as "really fast and neat and new".
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s/dying/evolving
Actually, French is dying, specifically because there is Official Standard French and the French government won't allow people to use the language they way they want to. English, on the other hand, can be abused and mutated any way you like, and because of that flexibility it has become one of the world's most popular languages.
Not that this has anything to do
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x^1.01?
What it does, and why it doesn't work (and does) (Score:4, Informative)
To keep it simple, it is flash memory (slower then ram (regular memory), cheaper then ram, not as long lasting as ram) that is added as an extra cache.
That is it, nothing more. Just a file cache. The OS controls it and has to tell it what to cache and what not.
Cacheing in itself is pretty simple and its speed increase is pretty damn obvious to all those of us who have lived through the age of the minimal/full setup for games. The game/data comes on the CD, with it being optional to "cache" it to the HD. The more you cache on the HD, the faster the game will load its data.
Now there are problems with cacheing. What to keep, and what to loose.
Take again a game. Say I a racing game. As I drive around the track new scenery comes up and has to be taken into memory. If it is full then old scenery needs to dropped out. Obviously the machine that has enough memory to take the ENTIRE track into memory will perform the best. Next will be the machine that can at least load it from something like an HD, preferrably a special cache file of the track that combines all the needed data in one handy arrangement, slowest will be the machine that is forced to read the track data from the CD as you drive around.
Turbo Memory(cache) is designed to load frequently used data(applications are data as well) into its memory, so that it can be loaded into main memory faster then if it had to be loaded from HD.
And there is its problem. HD's ain't slow, and it still got to be loaded from the cache into memory. The game engine itself barely benefits from this, it just might reduce the loading time IF your OS deems the game engine to be fit to be loaded. The game data itself will be too big to load. In a linear game you wouldn't even have much to cache, either stuff is needed constantly, and needs to be in main memory OR is used once, and there is no point in cacheing it.
This kind of tech ain't knew. Were it excells is in reducing the startup time of many small often run applications. Were it sucks donkey balls is when it comes to big run once, stay loaded type apps.
What is even worse, AI in OS'es generally just isn't very good and often gets it wrong. In trying to guess what you are doing it will often guess wrong and actually hurt performance.
Turbo Memory works with certain workflows were you would be better off with just more memory and or faster HD but can't have/afford that.
I am therefore not suprised at the Sony and MS reaction. Both are absolutly correct. Sony tested it with their set of tests, and found it not worth the cost. Very likely they just have a certain workflow they test for with memory setups that are designed for that. (Might Sony make more money from selling main memory, then turbo memory) MS will have tested for different circumstances, perhaps those that favor their cacheing system and with the knowledge that MS does NOT sell main memory?
So what does this mean to you? Make sure you check that any review of technology like this resembles what YOU do with your computer. Always run the same apps that stay active, handfull of large apps and can afford/have enough main memory, then don't bother. Are you someone who runs countless little apps, constantly closing them and reopening them and just don't have enough or can't enough main memory, then it might work for you. IF Vista properly regonizes what you are doing and can use the cache as it is intended.
So no Sony OR MS bashing needed here. Simply different views of how users us their computer.
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Yes, in Linux you could use flash memory in this way ever since flash memory has been around. With Linux there is nothing special about a swap partition; it's a partition like any other, so you could set this up easily enough. Let's say that your USB flash drive is called /dev/sda in Linux. Then simply use 'cfdisk' or equivalent to mark /dev/sda1 as a swap partition,
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FYI, there is a difference between "hmm, I wonder what would happen if ..." and "shit, I must do this right now!" and this was a case of the former (and if it were the latter, Slashdot is one of the last places I would go). My system does no
Intel and Microsoft Marketing at it's best (Score:5, Informative)
According to several articles regarding this subject, the questionable utility of Turbo Memory is not the fault of MS alone:
http://www.tgdaily.com/content/view/31976/135/ [tgdaily.com]TG Daily reports that Intel's showcasing of Turbo Memory included benchmarks that's anything but real-world applicable: "The benchmark appeared to slam several pictures at lightning speed into Photoshop, something that would play to the strengths of flash memory because the pictures would already be stored in flash for fast opening by Photoshop. Realistically though, we think the average user wouldn't capture dozens of pictures and then open them all in Photoshop in one fell swoop."
Which leads to an Anandtech article showing that in many cases, performance suffered as a result of Turbo Memory implementation - particularly with boot and hibernation times. Now these are cases where users are MOST likely to notice performance differences.
Finally, in the cases where Turbo Memory would seem useful, it appears that HP discovered that using far more versatile, ubitquitous flash solutions such as SD and USB drives (not to mention just adding regular system memory (what a concept!)) yielded similar and more economically sensible results: http://news.zdnet.com/2100-9584_22-6188522.html [zdnet.com]
Maybe if Vista didn't need such obscene amounts of memory, this wouldn't be an issue; but I digress.
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It's a shame really. Howzabout just sticking a CF socket on the mainboard and calling it good? Any OS that can't support an IDE drive probably won't care anyway.
Turbo button? (Score:4, Funny)
The case of the AT box under my table which I use as a router-cum-fileserver has a "TURBO" button on the front display.
The box usually runs OpenBSD, so I tried starting a Vista installation to see what all the fuss was about.
Unfortunately, it appears 64MB of "tradtional" RAM is not enough for Vista.
Right. Call me when... (Score:4, Insightful)
...Sony have a fecking clue about software.
The day I trust Sony's views on what makes good software is the day I call up Satan for his advice on which Snow-Plough model gets you to work fastest.
Turbo? (Score:3, Funny)
Or is it memory that can only be used by TurboPascal?
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They use the spin of the harddrive, since it's spinning most of the time anyway, to run a compressor that compresses the data (It's a well known fact that data has properties very similar to a gas) so that more of it can fit into the memory at once, giving instantly improved performance.
For added performance, you can also have the data-bus go through a cooler.
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O.....kay. So a linux kernel is hard to set up? (Score:2)
Now there's an advertisement for hap-hap-happy Windows user friendliness. Wanna pay $400 to set me up with some Vista _real_ soon with news like that.
lawyer logic! (Score:2)
Bigger question (Score:3, Funny)
When is the Linux kernel going to make use of Turbo Memory? It would be funny if, after MS touting this tech for so long, we can say "but you need Linux before it will work properly".
I have a better answer for Turbo Memory (Score:2)
Re:Hmmm. (Score:5, Funny)
We used to play a (DOS) joke called "Turbo Copy"
Just press "ALT" then "E" then "A" ... then hit the Deliver key (DEL).
Turbo Copy! 100% data loss, but it sure is fast!
Maybe that's how MS saves their roadmap.txt file.
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I would guess that both Sony and Microsoft a