New projected smartphone display could make device size irrelevant
As regular TechWatch readers (hi Mom!) readers know, I'm a big "phan" of giant phablet devices. That's not because I like to tote around comically large slabs of metal and plastic, but because I find smartphones more useful the more screen real estate they present.Last week, Chinese tech manufacturer Lenovo showed off its Smart Cast concept phone at its own Tech World conference in Beijing. Like a concept car, it's not clear if the Smart Cast phone will ever make it to production, but the technology has the potential to eventually shatter the connection between device size and screen size. By projecting the device's touch screen on to any convenient surface, smartphones may one day be able to have displays of any size. Critically, the Smart Cast technology lets you interact with the projected screen, so you can use it as a keyboard or other input channel, as well as a monitor. To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here
The deal is done: Intel will buy Altera for $16.7 billion.
Not surprisingly, Rob Lloyd and Gary Moore are leaving Cisco.
The UBIqube webinar featuring the Rayno Report discusses orchestration platforms, agility, and the findings of a special report on LSO.
Ansible's Director of EMEA Business Development, Mark Phillips, presented at the recent IPEXPO. His talk Simplicity - The Art of Automation was recorded and he was able to combine the slides and the video.
As IT vendors like HP move into telecom, Nokia wants in on the data center business.
Check out SDxCentral's most-read articles of May 2015.