Friday, August 21, 2009

btx motherboards

Our one-hour stress test was intended to reveal how well the BTX concept stands up to extreme use. Following Gigabyte's recommendation, we installed a full size CPU cooler to ensure sufficient air circulation. But this doesn't necessarily impact noise levels too negatively. We cabled this barebones PC with six temperature sensors to make our heat measurements as accurate as possible. We also used the Prime95 program to ensure constant CPU utilization levels. To heat up the graphics card, we busied it with D3Dfortune. Finally, we used Throttle Watch to log CPU throttle levels throughout the testing period.
Results
Heat dissipation stayed within reasonable limits. This is a testament to the functionality of the BTX concept in this barebones PC. Noise output during stress testing was also a pleasant surprise. We measured output of barely 42 decibels, which was reasonable. The Throttle Watch monitoring tool confirmed that the CPU ran continuously at maximum clock rates, just as we wanted it to.
To force the BTX fans to run as loudly as possible, we redirected airflow by using a piece of cardboard to block air circulation. The CB91's noise levels quickly rose as the CPU cooler's fan speed increased. Temperature measurements from our sensors likewise climbed quickly to uncomfortably high levels.

Someday BTX Will Be Everywhere




















What a typical Micro-BTX motherboard looks like.
BTX should soon have an impact on both the desktop and tower segments of the PC market - at least, if Intel has its way - and ultimately replace the ATX form factor. In fact, more and more vendors offer cases that work for both ATX and BTX motherboards. Soon, BTX-only enclosures will also be available soon, as upcoming test results from Yeong Yang will clearly illustrate.




















Motherboard with BTX fans.















Air circulation channels in a BTX case.


















The innards of a Yeong Yang BTX case.

File:Visual 50 computer-motherboard.png







This is the motherboard for the wikipedia:Visual 50 computer. It shows the SGS (now ST Microelectronics) Z8400AB1 CPU, as well as all the other components. This computer has not daughter cards.

Computer Trading is Good Competition

Paul Wilmott today warns us against the scourge of computer trading, and it seems everyone has an opinion on it (see NYTimes , Trader Magazine, Chuck Schumer, Tyler Cowen). Alas, this covers such a broad umbrella of strategies, one can be against this only like one may dislike unpopular books. The panic piece begins as follows:
The idea is straightforward: Computers take information — primarily “real-time” share prices — and try to predict the next twitch in the stock market. Using an algorithmic formula, the computers can buy and sell stocks within fractions of seconds, with the bank or fund making a tiny profit on the blip of price change of each share.This has been ongoing with Moore's law. In the bad old days orders were given to a human (called a 'specialist') who then had the ability to accept, or back away, from orders as they came in. With electronic exchanges, much of this is being done not by a priviledged specialist, but rather computers. They basically do the same thing, only now their is much more competition. Remember back in the 1990s when Harris, Christie and Schultz and reported tha Nasdaq quotes bizarrely omitted 'odd eigths'. That is, the could post a bid-ask as 3/8-1/2, but instead regularly posted 1/4-1/2. This was for many very large companies such as Microsoft and Apple, that even then traded millions of shares a day. This was collusion, and shortly after the publication of this piece these stocks magically began trading at odd eigths, though no one was ever convicted of any collusion. Stock specialists who consolidate retail orders to buy and sell have been ripping off customers since trading began. The first head of the SEC was Joe Kennedy, who was a master stock manipulator in the 1920's. He was a master of the stock pool (bucket shop), a then-legal stunt in which a few traders conspired to inflate a stock's price, selling out just before the bubble burst. Regulation to protect the integrity of the investor invariably meant stiflying competition, allowing the big exchanges (NYSE and AMEX) to make easy money by being 'in the club'. For generations, specialists would sit on trades for minutes, not milliseconds, while they decided how to maximize their profits. I know one guy who worked for a specialist around 2000, and he noted his boss lost money only a handful of days every year. Specialists would emphasize the risk they took in providing liquidity, yet on big gap days like October 19 1987 they did not step in and exacerbated the situation. The risk they took on providing orderly markets was a license to steal for decades, and they now scream 'unfair!' as their order flow evaporates. With electronic exchanges, the competition is much greater. Bid-ask spreads are only a penny for most S&P500 companies (as opposed to 25 cents 20 years ago), and they are generally very deep. It is rumored that Renaissance's flagship hedge fund (not the long only fund) makes most of its money as an off-the-exchange market maker. They invested a lot of money in computers, and algorithms that efficiently set bids and offers given recent order flow, the depth of the market (level 2 quotes), and their own inventory. Good for them. There are basically three types of algorithmic trading strategies. In one, you are basically slicing a big order into littler bits to minimize trade impact. No longer do you need a human to work a 5000 share order, rather, a machine spits it into digestable chunks and by the day you are done, and don't owe anyone a big holiday basket for their hard work. In another, you basically have a machine implement relative value trades. The famous pairs trading, where if Pepsi rises, but Coke stays flat, you sell Pepsi and buy coke, is based on this idea. But it can be generalized to indices versus sectors, or baskets against each other based on statistical properties, or even oil futures vs. Exxon. Lastly, there are the market making algorithms that try to capture the spread in the market by correctly anticipating the future distribution of retail order flow based on the current book, and this strategy can complement a relative value trading algorithm. Many times these algorithms try to reverse engineer future trades via the way current trades are coming in. As many trades come in each second, for many stocks the best bids and offers are adjusted several times a second. One article noted that some algorithms basically infer the price increase from trades, getting rid of the profits otherwise available. But these are all short term scenarios, and basically make a market efficient. That is, say Apple announces good news, suggesting a sharpe bounce in the stock. An investor tries to buy, and would like to trade 1MM shares, but clearly that's too much, so he puts in an order for 1000, then next minute, another 1000, and another. A machine might sense the pattern and basically jump on for the ride with him, diluting his profits. Is that bad news? Only for the short-term trader. For the longer run investor oblivious to this, who was on the other side, they got to sell at a higher price (the price rose faster than otherwise). The short-term speculator basically makes less because the algorithm reverse engineers his insight. This is the essence of an informationally efficient market, where news gets into the price asap. That those at the bleeding edge are making a profit is not a bug, it's a feature. Several bloggers have made a big deal out of 'flash trading' article in Traders Magazine, where exchanges give priviledged access to order flow, letting them accept or reject these trades prior to hitting the general market. Normally this would upset me, but they have an option lasting only 30 milliseconds (30 thousandths of a second). For a computer, this is enough time to make a decision. This is certainly enough time to make a tenth of a cent or so on market orders by leaning on the existing book. That is, if the market is bid-ask at 10.03-05, with 100 shares on each, a market order to buy 100 shares might make you hit the offer at 10.05 because you know there is 100 shares following you, and you hope the price increases based on this flow. This is known as 'front running'. Or you might see more buying coming in at a limit price of 10.02, and decide to increase your bid at 10.03 because you know your downside is now limited to a penny, as you can sell at 10.02 in size. This is known as pennying a bid, because you basically use the other person's limit orders as a backstop, giving you a penny downside risk. As tendencies move probabilistically, on any one trade such shenanigans are worth much less than a penny, but it can add up for the one doing it. For your average investor, in contrast, it is totally irrelevant. In the context of buying a $20 stock, does the fact that a highly competitive group can make tenths of a cent on market transactions bother me? No. It is orders of magnitude lower than 10 years ago, which is orders of magnitude lower than 30 years ago. Commissions for most investors are at least a penny. Of all the financial skullduggery in the world today, Flash Trade front running worth a fraction of a penny is small beer.But Wilmott paints a scary picture:
the problem with the sudden popularity of high-frequency trading is that it may increasingly destabilize the market. Hedge funds won’t necessarily care whether the increased volatility causes stocks to rise or fall, as long as they can get in and out quickly with a profit. But the rest of the economy will care.I surmise that poor Paul has not been invited to consult on these algorithms, and like many experts, finds those excelling at something in his field of expertise is useless at best, but probably damaging. After all, if it was important and useful, he should be a player, because that's his wheelhouse, right? Of course, given the many different types of algorithms extant, it could be they glom on to some vicious positive-feedback loop, but given the profits they are chasing, these are micro-bubbles, a couple pennies. An algorithm chasing micropennies does not instigate trends the way portfolio insurance did in the 1987 crash, because in that case long-only funds were looking at their total long position, selling into declines (emulating a put option). The current algorithms generally look at relative value trades between sectors or issues, momentary order imbalances, a very different beast. Trade imbalances have always and will continue to move prices, but that isn't the computers fault. If there's continually 10x as many sell orders as buy orders, the result is going to be lower prices no matter what market is created. When buys and sells are coming in with equal size, price stability will be restored. To suggest the computers could exaggerate a movement is hysterical fear mongering in this context, because while anything is possible, it's a baseless hypothetical. Maybe we should regulate financial textbook writers as they popularize models that create things like CDO's that were so prominent in our latest financial crisis? Perhaps he is diverting our attention from his crime of the century? Paul then concludes:
Buying stocks used to be about long-term value, doing your research and finding the company that you thought had good prospects. Maybe it had a product that you liked the look of, or perhaps a solid management team. Increasingly such real value is becoming irrelevant. The contest is now between the machines — and they’re playing games with real businesses and real people.He is bringing up the perenial idea that investors should trade less, which I think is good practice. But earlier he suggested insiders make too much money off short term trades, implying higher trading costs. Isn't this then a disincentive to trade? So what should it be? When you propose two conflicting ideas why you are against something this reveals you aren't arguing on principle. And aren't houses the prototypical asset with high transaction costs and long investment horizons that should make them immune to bubbles? Remember, before there were maniacal machines making money in a competitive market, there was a a government-backed oligopoly or monopoly of trade execution. Basically, people who do not understand a market where some participants are making a lot of money are often eager to call for regulation of that market because it seems obviously unfair. The solution, however, is invariably to merely entrench a status quo with a bigger shield against competition, but one where the profits can be shared equally by the exchanges, their member firms, and their regulators (through revolving door employment at the top ranks between exchanges, firms, and government). There was little 'change' on the exchanges prior to the 1990 computer revolution, and they robbed the public blind the whole time because they had a monopoly on order flow, all the while regaling their friends at the country club about their deft risk management skills and financial acumen ('the market was down and I still made money!').Leave the market alone. It is very competitive, and if some electronic exchanges have different rules where people feel their orders are treated more fairly, volume will flock there (there are about 5 electronic exchanges). Competition is the best regulator ever invented. If you think someone making a tenth of a cent on your order is a big problem, you trade too much.

Fujitsu Siemens Amilo Xi 3670 Q9000 4GB 1TB


**New Model - Intel Core 2 Quad Q9000**

he AMILO Xi 3670 is a high-power desktop PC in a notebook skin. Packed with enthusiastic multimedia, great connectivity and endless power the AMILO Xi 3670 meets the highest expectations. With a 18.4" Full HD display with 16:9 ratio the Blu-ray Disc drive ensures the ultimate high-definition entertainment experience with crystal clear picture quality and rich beautiful surround sound. Intergrated webcam, built in digital array microphone are perfect for internet telephony (VoIP) and video chats.

Intel Core 2 Quad Q9000 Processor (2.00GHz, 6MB, 1066MHz)
4GB DDR3 RAM 1066MHz
1000GB SATA hard drive
18.4” Full HD Dual Lamp BrilliantView display, 1920 x 1080 - 16:9. External of 1920 x 1200
Blu-Ray(read)/DVDRW Dual Layer Optical Drive (combo)
Intel WiFi Link 5100 802.11 a/g/n
NVIDIA Geforce 9600M 512MB DDR3 Dedicated
VoIP (Skype) Ready - Make free voice/video calls to other Skype Users
Support of HD audio - S/PDIF with up to 7.1 channels
1 x IEEE1394, 3 x USB 2.0 ports, 1 x eSATA, 1 x HDMI including HDCP and S/PDIF out, 1 x VGA, 1 x LAN, 1 x ExpressCard slot (36/54mm), 1 x line in, 1 x microphone in, 1 x headphone out combined with line out
Integrated Logitech QuickCam Auto focus Webcam 1.3 mega pixels featuring low light technology
15 in 1 card reader
Remote Control (size of Express-card, shipped in slot)
Li-on battery 8 cells, approx 4hrs 30mins battery runtime depending on usuage and graphics settings.
Weight: 3.9kg
Microsoft Windows Vista Home Premium Edition
12 Months Collect & Return WarrantyApplication Software
Microsoft Works
Microsoft Office Home and Student Trial
Adobe Acrobat Reader
Nero Essentials S (CD/DVD burning software)
Cyberlink PowerDVD BD
Norman Security Soloutions
Logitech Quickcam Software
£1,399.99 (inc. VAT)
£1,217.38 (ex. VAT)
VFY:X3670MPVX3GB
Availability: In Stock

Fujitsu Siemens Amilo Si 3655 P8400 4GB 320GB


**New Model**
Enjoy your personal independence and experience the smooth and pearly finish of the Amilo Si 3655. Packed with enthusiastic multimedia, great connectivity and endless power the AMILO Si 3655 meets the highest expectations. Intergrated webcam, built in digital array microphone are perfect for internet telephony (VoIP) and video chats.

Intel Core 2 Duo P8400 Processor (2.26GHz, 3MB, 1066MHz)
4GB DDR2 RAM 800MHz
320GB SATA hard drive
13.3” TFT WXGA BrilliantView display 1280 x 800 with 1920x1200 external resolution
SuperMulti-format DVD burner with dual double layer support
Intel WiFi Link 5100 802.11 a/g/n
Mobile Intel Graphics Media Accelerator 4500MHD
Spillproof Keyboard, silentmode for quiet operation
Integrated speakers (2 x 2W)
Integrated Webcam (1.3 megapixels) and array microphone for video chat
Integrated 15-in-1 Cardreader, Bluetooth 2.1
Interfaces: DVI-I, eSATA, FireWire, USB 2.0, ExpressCard, S/PDIF
Li-Ion battery with approximately 4.5 hours runtime -depending on usage
Weight 2.4Kg
Microsoft Vista Home Premium
12 Months Collect and Return WarrantyApplication Software
Microsoft Works
Nero 8 Essentials (CD / DVD write software)
Adobe Acrobat Reader
Logitech QuickCam application software

Amilo Desktop Pi 3410 - E5200 2GB 320GB



** New Model **

Be it school homeowrk or home office tasks, be it Internet or watching DVDs - the versatile AMILO Desktop Pi 3410 is ideal for the whole family. Enough space to store all your family pictures, holiday videos and personal data. Watch your facourte movies with friends or listen to music. The AMILO Desktop Pi 3410 is a perfect all-rounder at an affordable price.






Intel Pentium Dual-Core processor E5200 (2.5GHz, 800MHz FSB, 1MB 2nd Level Cache)
Genuine Microsoft Windows Vista Home Premium Edition
2GB DDR2 RAM 800MHz
320GB 7200rpm SATAII hard disk drive
NVIDIA Geforce 7100 graphic with up to 256MB shared VGA memory
SuperMulti-format DVD burner double layer support
10/100/1000 Mbps LAN
HD Audio 7.1, 6 x USB Ports, 1 x Firewire Port, 1 x Mic-in, 1 x Line in, 1 x S/PDIF
Front - 6 x USB 2.0, 1 x Mic in, 1 x Headphone out, 1 x 20-in-1 Cardreader
Standard keyboard and Optical Mouse
12 Months Collect & Return Warranty

Guangzhou Kingsem Technology Co.,Ltd.

Latest PC Multi-User Network Computer Terminal


Detailed Product Description

Key Features
_ Enables sharing one host PC with up to 30 users*
_ Connects to host PC via Ethernet over any distance
_ USB Port (connect USB Flash memory,USB camer and USB printer etc)
_ Includes terminal services software for Windows/Linux
_ Extension protocol supports multi-media applications
_ Slashes computing acquisition & support costs
_ Easy to setup, maintain and secure
_ Compact, reliable & energy efficient (no fans or disks)
_ Zero-footprint monitor mount
_ All in a stylish new smaller chassis (just 1 inch tall and 4.5 inches square)

System Configuration
With the Kingsem solution, each user still has a standard monitor, keyboard, mouse and speakers.However, instead of connecting directly to a PC, these peripherals connect to the UTC56i access terminal on their desk. The UTC56i has USB ports connecting USB equipment like USB Flash memory, USB camer and USB printer etc(if you want preventing users from connecting USB flash memory refer to the UTC55).The solid state UTC56i connects securely over standard Ethernet to the host PC using the high-performance Kingsem User eXtension Protocol (UXP).The UTC terminal services software divides the PC’s resources into independent sessions that give each user their own full PC experience. Up to ten users can be supported from one PC when running on a desktop operating system such as Microsoft Windows XP.With a server operating system on the host (Linux or Microsoft Windows 2003 Server) up to 30 users* can be supported simultaneously. The UTC terminal services software also works with the UTC series software which add more centralized management capabilities such as remote monitoring and host PC data backup. By delivering all the key components of this multi-user computing system, Kingsem uniquely delivers a high performance solution at the lowest possible cost to you.

UTC56i Ultra Thin Client Specifications
HARDWARE

Size Width: Width: 115 mm / 4.5 inches, Depth: 115 mm / 4.5 inches, Height: 26 mm / 1 inches
Weight UTC56i Access Terminal: 150 g / 0.33 lbs
Shipping Weight (includes power adapter, packaging, documentation, etc.): 0.76 kg / 1.6 lbs

Power Supply
Input: 100-250 VAC, 50-60 Hz
Output: 5 VDC, 2 A
Nominal consumption: 4.5 Watts

Place of Origin:Guangdong in China

Model No:UTC56i

Brand Name:Kingsem

FOB Price:100-200 USD Guangzhou

Payment Terms:T/T(Bank Transfer),Western

Union,Minimum Order:Piece/Pieces 10

Package:ctns

Delivery Time:3 working days after payment