(Reuters) Toshiba Corp, Japan's biggest chipmaker, said Monday it will cut 18,800 jobs -- almost solely in Japan -- and streamline its sprawling industrial empire by March 2004 as it faces its worst net loss ever. The company, which now expects a net loss of 115 billion yen ($957 million) for the year to next March after projecting a 60 billion yen profit just four months ago, will also consolidate or close six of its 21 domestic plants over the same period. The job cut total represents 10 percent of the global workforce, the firm said.
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ZD Net has a new article discussing Fujitsu who is on the verge of breaking the 100-gigabit barrier on hard drive capacity. Several of the leading hard-drive manufacturers have been professing that they have been innovating technologies that will allow them to store more than 100 gigabits per square inch on a platter, the current ceiling for storage density.
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ATI Technologies Inc. has unveiled POWERPLAY, a new technology that extends notebook battery life using a number of techniques, including scaling GPU (graphics processor unit) clock speeds and voltage settings. POWERPLAY technology will be featured in notebooks powered by ATI's new MOBILITY RADEON 7500 graphics processor.
Independent benchmark tests concluded that the POWERPLAY-enabled MOBILITY RADEON 7500 can extend DVD playback by 25 percent or more compared to competing solutions,'' said David Cummings, Group Product Manager, Mobile Business Unit, ATI Technologies Inc. ``On a typical system, this will extend battery life by more than 30 minutes, making it possible, for example, to watch a full-length feature movie on an air flight without running out of battery power.
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(Reuters) - Reaching a long-sought goal in computing research, scientists have created a computer circuit based on a single molecule, which could lead one day to far smaller and faster computer chips that use less power. International Business Machines Corp. said Sunday that its researchers have built a logic circuit -- a set of electronic components that performs a processing function -- based on a tiny cylindrical structure made up of carbon atoms that is about 100,000 times thinner than a human hair. The breakthrough is IBM's second this year using the molecules called carbon nanotubes as semiconductors, making them an increasingly viable alternative to silicon, which forms the base of current chips, IBM said.
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