TechSoup Canada Launched
Thursday, February 12, 2009 at 10:06AM
TechSoup for the Soul
TechSoup Canada was launched yesterday at the Center for Social Innovation in Toronto.
Developed from of the oldest and most respected technology assistance agencies in the US, TechSoup Canada is a collaborative effort by the Centre for Social Innovation, TechSoup Global and the Information Technology Association of Canada. This initiative is made possible by a grant from the Ontario Trillium Foundation.. More on TechSoup after the break.
CompuMentor, the predecessor of TechSoup, was founded in 1987 as The CompuMentor Projectis a non-profit that provides technology assistance internationally to other non-profit organizations. Based in San Francisco, TechSoup Global offers a wide range of programs and services that help nonprofits and schools use technology to achieve their missions. TechSoup.org, a technology website for the nonprofit sector and TechSoup Stock, a technology product philanthropy service for nonprofits.
The features and benefits offered by TechSoup Canada to its member non-profit organizations include:
* Local and regional technology learning events
* New Canadian-specific technology resources and learning content
* More opportunities to interact on / off-line with other Canadian tech-curious organizations
* Ability to process Donated Products Program admin fees in Canadian Dollars rather than US Dollars
TechSoup Global is a technology resource provider and distributor of donated software--saving the global not for profit sector millions of dollars annually. TechSoup Global currently serves organizations in 21 countries, with an additional 18 countries expected to join the network by June 2009.
TechSoup Canada is the Canadian partner of TechSoup Global. Many nonprofits and social benefit organizations worldwide serve the needs of low-income, underserved populations and create positive social change. We believe these organizations could have even greater impact through the appropriate use of technology. This requires assistance with obtaining, using, and sustaining technology.
In an innovative strategic partnership, Microsoft, TechSoup Global, and others are developing a global technology platform for the voluntary sector. As part of their commitment to the this sector, corporations such as Microsoft, Symantec, Adobe and Cisco use this platform to provide donations, at scale, to worthy organizations around the globe.
Recipient organizations benefit from the consolidation of many donation programs into one, and further benefit from the wide range of training, collaboration, and support provided by TechSoup Global and its partner organizations.






















This marks a bold step in processor design, with more cores built into chips than ever before. Think of each chip as being a cluster of cores acting as mini-computers, each core with the processing power of one desktop from 2 years ago. Intel isn’t just bunching together Core 2 Duo chips to create 4 core Frankenstein processors, it is building multi-core processors on a single-die. This guarantees improved bandwidth and reduced latency
Coupled with Intel’s fastidious architecture and cooling design, its is only a matter of time before we see these chips powering all sorts of PCs from slim servers to notebooks and tablets. There are actually three variants of the Core i7. The first, Bloomfield, is the high-performance and gaming-class chip which is already out in the market and which slings a 3.2Ghz Quad Core processor. Soon to hit the market are more affordable mainstream models called Lynnfield and Ibex Peak. The bandwidth on these bad boys is expected to be double that of the fastest bus interconnect available on current Core 2 chips.
Turbo Mode and Multi-threading inside
These fast processors will be offering users some new features such as Turbo Mode, which independently ramps up the operating frequency of individual cores. This means that the clock speed of one, two or three cores can be increased by up to 266 MHz above the official rating whenever the chips detect single, double or triple-threaded software is being processed.
As multi-threaded applications become more common, the power of the eight core Nehalem processors will be put to better use.
Caption: Nehalem Demoed by Intel.
The processor game isn’t just about raw power and brute force but also about properly channeling all this computing power effectively and distributing the workload among the different cores. Expect great things from Intel on the processor front, those who are slated to replace their desktops in 2009 and who are considering getting Nehalem processors will be no doubt rewarded with unparalleled power, efficiency and versatility that these new chips offer in abundance.
-By Gadjo Cardenas Sevilla

