News:

This week IPhone 15 Pro winner is karn
You can be too a winner! Become the top poster of the week and win valuable prizes.  More details are You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login 

Main Menu

Phoenix Intros Instant-On Laptop Tech

Started by Sunite, November 21, 2007, 09:18:03 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Sunite

Phoenix Intros Instant-On Laptop Tech
By Barry Levine
November 5, 2007 10:54AM

   Digg It!   Bookmark to You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login
Pheonix Technologies' new platform, which promises instant boots for certain applications, is a BIOS-based virtualized environment powered by a Phoenix hypervisor called HyperCore. Phoenix is now in the process of collaborating with various OEMs to provide what the company described as a foundation for PC 3.0.

Related Topics
   Phoenix
   Laptops
   Notebook PCs
   Windows
   Booting
   BIOS

Latest News
   MoveOn Slams Facebook Ad System
   Smartphones Becoming More Popular
   Verizon Releases Its iPhone Competitor
   Will Amazon Kindle an E-Book Fire?
   Chip Design Could Subvert Encryption
Advertisement

Advertisement

   Perhaps you have better things to do than wait minutes -- and minutes -- while your Windows computer boots. If so, Phoenix Technologies' new Hyperspace, which can enable instant-on booting that bypasses Windows so you can quickly access frequently used applications, could be your cup of tea.

The Milpitas, California-based company that is best known as a maker of BIOS software on Monday announced the release of Hyperspace, which it described in a statement as "an innovative platform that promises to ignite a PC revolution."

With "embedded simplicity," Hyperspace enables what the company described as "instant-on applications."

Self-Contained Appliances

Essentially, the applications become self-contained software appliances that can be embedded into new computers by system vendors. Applications can include such frequently used ones as instant-on instant messaging Relevant Products/Services, e-mail, Web browsing, shopping, or video playback.

The company said that the approach, aside from reducing wait time, allows one-click remote system maintenance and repair, lower battery consumption, and embedded security Relevant Products/Services.

The platform itself is a virtualized environment, with a Phoenix hypervisor called HyperCore that is embedded in the BIOS. The company said that HyperCore is a virtual machine monitor that "runs specialized core services side-by-side with Windows." Phoenix is now in the process of collaborating with various OEMs to provide what it described as a foundation for PC 3.0.

Phoenix created its original BIOS product in 1983, which, in various incarnations, has shipped in over a billion computer systems.

Bypassing the Core OS

Samir Bhavnani, a research director with industry research firm Current Analysis West, said that various companies over the years have released instant-on programs. "What Phoenix is doing," he said, "is taking more of the things that are commonly used and bypassing the core OS."

He added that, because this virtualized, stripped-down OS bypasses Windows, it could offer a "huge increase in battery life."

When Windows boots up, several processes and programs are loaded, but Phoenix's approach avoids that, said Bhavnani. "You just boot up into this alternate universe," he noted, using some applications built just for that universe, such as e-mail, Web browsing, or DVD-watching. Obviously, he said, "Microsoft Relevant Products/Services is not going to be too happy about this."

Bhavnani suggested that Dell or a similar vendor might use Hyperspace to offer instant-on applications on their laptops for travelers. Additionally, Phoenix and some observers have noted that, as a virtualized, walled-off environment, HyperSpace applications might provide increased security.