Issue no. 15, 2001 Published: Nov 23, 2001 |
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Scientists build tiny computer from DNA |
Innovation gap between EU and US widens |
UN task force formed to address global tech gap |
Internet connectivity on the rise in Europe's schools |
Microsoft settles private antitrust cases |
Cut down on cookies, advertisers told |
Nokia opens up its phones |
New sensor chip 'sniffs' dangerous gases |
Finally! A way to block cell phone rings |
TV 'Time Machine' sparks controversy |
Email increases use of paper |
FBI runs Trojan horse |
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| Scientists build tiny computer from DNA |
Scientists at Israel's Weizmann Institute have built a computer so tiny
that a trillion of them could fit in a test tube and perform a billion
operations per second with 99.8 per cent accuracy. The computer's input,
output and software are all made up of DNA molecules - the material that
stores and processes encoded information in living organisms.
Scientists see such DNA computers as future competitors to their
more conventional cousins because miniaturisation is reaching its limits
and DNA has the potential to be much faster than conventional computers.
The invention could form the basis of a future DNA computer that could
operate within human cells and act as a monitoring device to detect
potentially disease-causing changes and synthesise drugs to fix them.
DNA can hold more information in a cubic centimetre than a trillion CDs.
The double helix molecule that contains human genes, stores data on four
chemical bases - A, T, C and G - giving it massive memory capability
that scientists are only just beginning to tap into. |
| Yahoo / Reuters
Nov 21, 2001 |
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| Innovation gap between EU and US widens |
Underperformance in the field of innovation and slower introduction of
information and communication technologies are major factors behind
Europe's widening standard of living gap with the United States.
The EU's Competitiveness Report 2001 reveals that Gross Domestic Product
(GDP) per head in the EU is now less than two thirds of that in the US,
the widest gap since the 1960s.
A large part of the EU's lower standard of living is seen as being due
to higher employment in the US. While this has increased strongly in
recent years, the Union is losing out in labour productivity measured by
value of output per employed person.
Investment in capital goods, in IT skills, and organisational reforms
are seen as the answer to improving labour productivity. ICT investment
in the EU's business sector have been smaller than in the US - in 1999,
2.4 per cent of GDP against 4.5 per cent in the US.
Full report at: http://europa.eu.int/comm/enterprise/enterprise_policy/competitiveness/doc/competitiveness_report_2001/ |
| EUbusiness
Nov 22, 2001 |
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| UN task force formed to address global tech gap |
A new UN task force on technology pledged Tuesday to fight poverty,
improve education and create jobs by expanding access to the internet
and other communications tools in the developing world.
Task force and UN officials believe technology will be important in
fighting poverty, illiteracy, AIDS and societal ills identified during
last year's UN Millennium Summit.
One of the task force's ideas involves giving developing countries free
or subsidised access to the excess capacity the industrialised nations
have in low-orbiting satellites. The task force also can help individual
countries develop their technology strategies.
The 43-member task force is made of corporate executives, UN and
government officials and leaders of nonprofit organisations that work on
closing the gap between countries with and without access to technology. |
| CNN / AP
Nov 21, 2001 |
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| Internet connectivity on the rise in Europe's schools |
New figures on internet connectivity in schools in three EU Member
States show that Germany and the UK have succeeded in increasing the
number of web-connected schools, but still lag behind Sweden.
In Germany some 35,000 schools have an internet connection and the last
secondary school was connected in October of this year. In the UK, 96
per cent of primary schools are connected and now have one computer for
every 11.8 pupils, compared with 17.6 in 1998. Secondary schools have
one computer for every 7.1 pupils.
Sweden remains far ahead in Europe. However, access is not always equal
across the country. 86 per cent of primary schools and 95 per cent of
upper secondary schools are now connected, but access varies according
to ethnic background, gender, age, education, income and housing area.
For further information, see:
http://europa.eu.int/comm/education/elearning/what.htm |
| Cordis
Nov 19, 2001 |
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| Microsoft settles private antitrust cases |
Microsoft reached a settlement on Tuesday with lawyers pursuing more
than 100 private antitrust lawsuits against the software giant. The
company will provide free software and computers to approximately 14,000
schools in low-income areas.
The five-year agreement - which will require Microsoft to donate $500m
to schools for grants, training, and technical support, as well as
provide the free equipment, which will likely be valued at more than
$1bn - could lead to dismissal of all private class-action suits against
the company if a federal judge approves the deal.
The software and grants will go to all US public schools that have more
than 70 per cent of students earning federal subsidies for school
lunches, which will cover approximately 7m students in approximately 14
per cent of all schools. |
| Financial Times
Nov 21, 2001 |
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| Cut down on cookies, advertisers told |
Internet application vendor BroadVision is backing European parliament
proposals to restrict the use of cookies. The software maker, whose
customers include BT, Vodafone and Dixons, has agreed that third party
cookies that are tied to advertising should be banned.
BroadVision slammed comments made by UK's Internet Advertising Bureau
that the internet industry would suffer heavy losses if the amendments
receive final approval from MEPs.
''It's time the whole business realised that if you have personal data,
you must give some value back,'' said Alan Ranger, marketing director at
BroadVision. ''I do not think restrictions on cookies will affect
corporates with an online presence at all.''
However, BroadVision does not back a total ban, as user-permitted
cookies speed up the navigating experience for web users. ''There should
be a balance between intrusion and convenience,'' Ranger said. |
| VNUnet UK
Nov 19, 2001 |
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| Nokia opens up its phones |
Finnish phone giant Nokia has founded an alliance that will share
information about the workings of handsets to ensure that forthcoming
services can be used by any phone owner. The alliance has also agreed to
co-operate with a coalition of computer companies working on ways to
make it easy to access data while on the move.
Nokia unveiled the ''open mobile architecture initiative'' at last
week's Comdex trade show. Nokia has pledged to reveal the workings of
the software controlling its handsets to members of the alliance.
With all phones working to a common set of specifications, it should
become easier for network operators to offer services to more customers.
The alliance is particularly interested in ensuring that future
third-generation phones can use the widest set of services possible. |
| BBC News
Nov 19, 2001 |
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| New sensor chip 'sniffs' dangerous gases |
Scientists at three European universities have developed a chip that can
''sniff'' dangerous gases, paving the way for wallet-card-sized sensing
devices.
The prototype, which integrates three different kinds of gas sensors on
a single chip, could be used to detect organic solvents leaking from
containers, or for safety monitoring in the chemical industry, the
researchers said in an article published in the journal Nature.
The sensor technology is implemented on a single 7 by 7 millimetre
silicon chip, making it suitable for low-cost mass production, according
to the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich, which teamed on the
project with the universities of Tuebingen, Germany, and Bologna, Italy.
The prototype is part of a project to develop a palm-sized gas analysis
device, the Institute said. |
| CNN / IDG
Nov 19, 2001 |
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| Finally! A way to block cell phone rings |
A Hong Kong company hopes to sell signal jamming technology, previously
used by the military to thwart lethal missiles, to block annoying cell
phone calls in places such as hospitals, cinemas and restaurants.
''This is a way to enforce the etiquette of mobile phone usage where
polite persuasion has failed,'' Paul Kan, chairman of Champion
Technology Holdings, said at the launch of its MuteTone product.
Champion, which has modified the device for commercial use, hopes to
sell the mobile signal blocking device in about 50 countries. The device
sells for around $1,600.
The response from would-be customers so far has been encouraging, Kan
said, although his company has not yet been able to surmount regulatory
hurdles in its home base of Hong Kong. |
| ZDNet / Reuters
Nov 21, 2001 |
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| TV 'Time Machine' sparks controversy |
A machine that ''squeezes'' television shows including news programming
so that broadcasters can fit in extra commercials is stirring
controversy in the industry in the United States.
The Time Machine's patented technology shears seconds off of programming
by editing out repetitive video frames in real time. With most TV shows
running at 30 frames per second, a missing frame here or there is
undetectable to viewers, but the accumulated time enables a station to
insert an additional 20- to 30-second commercial.
People in the TV industry say there is nothing controversial about using
such a device during a local news show. It is more of a problem, they
say, when a station uses it on programming from an outside source, such
as a professional sports organisation, that has strict limits on local
commercials. |
| IFRA Trend Report / Wall Street Journal
Nov 19, 2001 |
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| Email increases use of paper |
Far from heralding the dawn of the paperless office, email has increased
paper use by 40 per cent, according to new research.
Professor Richard Harper of the University of Surrey, co-author of the
report said that putting new technologies in place rather simply shifts
the point at which documents are printed out.
Harper slated e-book designers for not paying enough attention to the
needs of readers to navigate through, mark up and work across many
documents as they read. Looking at paper use suggests innovative ways
forward for digital reading as well as for other technologies.
Co-author of the report, Abigail Sellen, senior research analyst at HP's
laboratories, added: ''Until such time as digital technologies can
provide equal or better support for many of the tasks that are central
to using information, the future for paper continues to look bright.'' |
| VNUnet UK
Nov 19, 2001 |
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| FBI runs Trojan horse |
The FBI may be in possession of software capable of remotely
compromising a suspect's computer and installing a keylogger to harvest
encryption key passwords.
A report on the so-called 'Magic Lantern' software by MSNBC reveals that
the tool operates much like a Trojan horse. It arrives in an email and
then installs itself invisibly and sets up a keylogger which presumably
captures such data as the pass code for an encryption program such as
PGP and forwards it to the FBI.
However, the online tech community has met the news with much derision
and slammed the software on its scant technical detail. ''This only
works if: a) The FBI kicks in your door and installs Outlook; b) You
always open email with the subject 'Snow White and the 7 FBI Agents'; c)
You run the attachment called 'FBILOVESYOU.VBS','' came one humorous
retort. |
| VNUnet UK
Nov 21, 2001 |
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