NVIDIA: Ice Cream Sandwich to Unify Android Platform
Speaking to a crowd into NVIDIA's press conference on CES eve, NVIDIA CEO Jen-Hsun underlined the companies efforts to power Android tablets and smartphones using a single platform.
Already, Android powers three-inch phones through to 10-inch tablets, with at least seven sizes in between. It reads the swipe of a finger, the tap of an artist's pen, the thrum of a keyboard, the flick of a game controller. It supports 3D viewing, plus plain old 2D.And that's after only four short years on the market.
More variety will be fueled by Google's new Ice Cream Sandwich operating system. Nvidia believes that by providing a unified platform that serves both smart phones and tablets, the new OS provides a single, massive installed base for developers to target.
"Ice Cream Sandwich unites, unifies and turns all the Android devices into a single platform, with one enormous installed base," he said.
Already, 700,000 Android activations occur daily, with 3.7 million on Christmas weekend alone.
Skeptics aver that Android apps lag behind those for iOS. But Jen-Hsun noted that the gap?s closing fast. In fact, Android apps hit 400,000 in November, iOS's level in mid-2011.
Underscoring this trend, Manuel Wille, Nik Software's top engineer, came on stage to demonstrate Snapseed ? a photo-enhancement tool named an iPad app of 2011 by Apple - that's coming to Android, exclusively on Tegra devices.
Jen-Hsun also called on stage gaming-legend Jonathan "Fatal1ty" Wendel, who showed off the new Splashtop app, which allows you to use a Tegra 3 tablet to play games like Skyrim and Battlefield 3 by connecting remotely to a GeForce GTX-based gaming PC, even with a gaming controller. This marks the first time remote PC gaming is available on a portable device.
He made the point that while gaming is among the most popular apps on mobile devices, tablets are about more than gaming apps. They're a new way to game - a trend not lost on GameStop, which has 200 stores selling Tegra tablets.
A new Tegra 3-based seven-incher announced at the press conference by Asus CEO Jerry Shen, who also came to the stage. He said the Ice Cream Sandwich tablet, the Asus ME370T, will sell for $249, targeting the japan and China markets first.
Jensen also said that the Transformer Prime tablet, which began shipping last month with the Honeycomb OS, is now available with Ice Cream Sandwich. Direct over-the-air updates are also now available.
Huang emphasized that the quadcore Tegra 3 processor, has 5x the power of its predecessor. He cited three technologies it utilizes that help tablets get up to 12 hours of battery life.
- A "ninja" core. Tegra 3?s Variable SMP architecture enables it to switch between the four main CPU cores and a fifth lower-power "companion" CPU core for less demanding tasks and active standby mode.
- PRISM, a power-saving backlight technology. It deploys algorithms that can reduce backlight power consumption by up to 40 percent by modulating the backlight per pixel, frame and scene, all in real time.
- DirectTouch. It offloads much of the touch panel?s processing to just one of the CPU cores, enabling 6x faster touch processing, lower costs and lower power consumption.
Looking ahead, Microsoft's Aidan Marcuss, senior director of Windows marketing, came on stage to share Nvidia's plans for Windows 8?s potential on Tegra-powered devices.
Windows 8, he noted, will be heavily multi-threaded, which Tegra 3 will take full advantage of for a fast, fluid experience. He confirmed that Microsoft and Nvidia are working together on a developer-seeding program to enable ISVs to quickly begin development on NVIDIA hardware once the next preview of Windows 8 is released in late February.
Jen-Hsun wrapped up by talking about how cars ? which he called "the latest consumer device" - are increasingly featuring fabulous capabilities enabled by NVIDIA processors. Among the cars he cited as benefiting from the company?s partnerships are the Tesla S, Audi A7 and the Lamborghini Aventador.
More variety will be fueled by Google's new Ice Cream Sandwich operating system. Nvidia believes that by providing a unified platform that serves both smart phones and tablets, the new OS provides a single, massive installed base for developers to target.
"Ice Cream Sandwich unites, unifies and turns all the Android devices into a single platform, with one enormous installed base," he said.
Already, 700,000 Android activations occur daily, with 3.7 million on Christmas weekend alone.
Skeptics aver that Android apps lag behind those for iOS. But Jen-Hsun noted that the gap?s closing fast. In fact, Android apps hit 400,000 in November, iOS's level in mid-2011.
Underscoring this trend, Manuel Wille, Nik Software's top engineer, came on stage to demonstrate Snapseed ? a photo-enhancement tool named an iPad app of 2011 by Apple - that's coming to Android, exclusively on Tegra devices.
Jen-Hsun also called on stage gaming-legend Jonathan "Fatal1ty" Wendel, who showed off the new Splashtop app, which allows you to use a Tegra 3 tablet to play games like Skyrim and Battlefield 3 by connecting remotely to a GeForce GTX-based gaming PC, even with a gaming controller. This marks the first time remote PC gaming is available on a portable device.
He made the point that while gaming is among the most popular apps on mobile devices, tablets are about more than gaming apps. They're a new way to game - a trend not lost on GameStop, which has 200 stores selling Tegra tablets.
A new Tegra 3-based seven-incher announced at the press conference by Asus CEO Jerry Shen, who also came to the stage. He said the Ice Cream Sandwich tablet, the Asus ME370T, will sell for $249, targeting the japan and China markets first.
Jensen also said that the Transformer Prime tablet, which began shipping last month with the Honeycomb OS, is now available with Ice Cream Sandwich. Direct over-the-air updates are also now available.
Huang emphasized that the quadcore Tegra 3 processor, has 5x the power of its predecessor. He cited three technologies it utilizes that help tablets get up to 12 hours of battery life.
- A "ninja" core. Tegra 3?s Variable SMP architecture enables it to switch between the four main CPU cores and a fifth lower-power "companion" CPU core for less demanding tasks and active standby mode.
- PRISM, a power-saving backlight technology. It deploys algorithms that can reduce backlight power consumption by up to 40 percent by modulating the backlight per pixel, frame and scene, all in real time.
- DirectTouch. It offloads much of the touch panel?s processing to just one of the CPU cores, enabling 6x faster touch processing, lower costs and lower power consumption.
Looking ahead, Microsoft's Aidan Marcuss, senior director of Windows marketing, came on stage to share Nvidia's plans for Windows 8?s potential on Tegra-powered devices.
Windows 8, he noted, will be heavily multi-threaded, which Tegra 3 will take full advantage of for a fast, fluid experience. He confirmed that Microsoft and Nvidia are working together on a developer-seeding program to enable ISVs to quickly begin development on NVIDIA hardware once the next preview of Windows 8 is released in late February.
Jen-Hsun wrapped up by talking about how cars ? which he called "the latest consumer device" - are increasingly featuring fabulous capabilities enabled by NVIDIA processors. Among the cars he cited as benefiting from the company?s partnerships are the Tesla S, Audi A7 and the Lamborghini Aventador.