Issue no. 12, 2002 Published: Mar 22, 2002 |
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Compaq votes in favour of merger |
Court rules is favour of Lindows |
Net body sued by own official |
NTT DoCoMo begins building experimental system for 4G technology |
Cell phone to tap into unused airwaves |
Video games 'stimulate learning' |
IBM to link US government computers in powerful grid |
Microsoft password research looks to images, not text |
Orbiting TV pictures dodge screen burn |
Hackers could have exploited net's hidden flaw |
Virtual keyboard unveiled at world computer show |
Darwin software is evolutionary time machine |
Scholarly publisher plans largest online reference |
Women beat men in web browsing |
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| Compaq votes in favour of merger |
Compaq's shareholders have voted in favour of a $20bn merger with
Hewlett Packard (HP). But the positive vote - which was widely expected
- only goes half way in clearing the way for the largest ever merger
between personal computer makers.
In sharp contrast to Compaq enthusiasm for the tie-up, HP shareholders -
including the company's founding families - have bitterly opposed the
deal. Whether the deal goes through rests on the result of the HP
shareholder vote, with the official count not due for weeks. HP claims
its shareholders have approved the merger with a 0.5% margin.
The management of both HP and Compaq say the deal is essential for their
survival in the personal computer industry, where demand is slack. |
| BBC News
Mar 20, 2002 |
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| Court rules is favour of Lindows |
A Seattle court has denied a request by Microsoft to block a California
software company from calling itself Lindows.com and its Linux-based
operating system, LindowsOS. Lindows is a version of Linux that its
maker claims can run both Linux and Windows programs.
The ruling denied Microsoft's request for a preliminary injunction in
the case but does not stop the software giant from seeking a trial on
the issue. Microsoft had argued that the close similarity in the Lindows
and Windows names would confuse customers and dilute its trademark for
Windows products. The company sued Lindows over its name in December.
Meanwhile, Lindows.com chief executive Michael Robertson said the
company hopes to roll out its products 'without further impedance'. |
| VNUNet UK
Mar 19, 2002 |
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| Net body sued by own official |
One of the directors of the net's ruling body is suing the organisation
over the way it spends money. Karl Auerbach, one of the elected
directors for the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers
(ICANN), has filed a lawsuit against the group to gain the access to its
records he says he has previously been denied.
Auerbach wants to see details of staff salaries, travel records and
information about the day-to-day running of the organisation. Since
being elected in December 2000, Auerbach says he has repeatedly asked to
see ICANN's records but was told he first had to sign a binding
confidentiality agreement, an offer he says he has refused.
Auerbach was elected to represent US and Canadian web-user interests on
the ICANN board. Under a re-organisation plan floated by ICANN head
Stuart Lynn last month, Auerbach looks likely to lose his post as an
ICANN director. |
| BBC News
Mar 20, 2002 |
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| NTT DoCoMo begins building experimental system for 4G technology |
Japanese mobile carrier NTT DoCoMo said Monday it has begun building an
experimental system for fourth-generation wireless communications that
can relay high-quality video.
Fourth-generation or 4G technology would carry information about 260
times faster than NTT DoCoMo's 3G service, the only commercial 3G
service in the world. In October, DoCoMo began 3G, which relays
information at about 40 times the speed of current cell phones and
includes a videophone.
Video on 4G will be as good as high-definition television or more than
double the resolution of regular TVs, DoCoMo said. The experimental 4G
system will begin testing key technologies by this summer. DoCoMo hopes
to start offering 4G commercially by 2010. |
| Nando Times / AP
Mar 18, 2002 |
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| Cell phone to tap into unused airwaves |
A new cell phone that works in a relatively unused portion of radio
spectrum is coming to the US this year, bringing with it the tantalising
prospect of relief for wireless companies battling a shortage of
airwaves to broadcast calls.
The phone is the first to use the Global System for Mobile
Communications (GSM) standard to broadcast its signal using the 800MHz
band of spectrum. GSM phones have never operated in that particular
portion of radio-wave real estate.
The upcoming shipments of the so-called 850 phones are part of a broader
effort by wireless carriers to make more efficient use of the available
spectrum. While the 800MHz spectrum was always available, it was not
until this year that carriers and handset makers were able to develop
the technology needed to use it. |
| ZDNet
Mar 19, 2002 |
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| Video games 'stimulate learning' |
A UK study concludes that simulation and adventure games - such as Sim
City and RollerCoaster Tycoon, where players create societies or build
theme parks, developed children's strategic thinking and planning
skills. Parents and teachers also thought their children's mathematics,
reading and spelling improved.
The investigation into the habits of 700 children aged seven to 16 also
found that, far from being a solitary activity, children preferred to
play games in pairs or small groups. The researchers found games
developed strategic thinking.
The research from the group Teachers Evaluating Educational Multimedia
(Teem) is being studied by UK's Department for Education. According to
Teem there is much to learn from the games industry in terms of
developing scenarios that really challenged and engaged children, rather
than reproducing text books on the screen. |
| BBC News
Mar 18, 2002 |
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| IBM to link US government computers in powerful grid |
IBM said on Friday it has a deal to link a US government research
laboratory's far-flung computers in a powerful grid, massively boosting
their ability to study complex issues such as global climate change.
IBM said it will work with the National Energy Research Scientific
Computing Center, based in Berkeley, California, on developing software
to connect the lab's supercomputers and data storage machines to other
computers in four different locations.
The goal is to enable scientists to connect supercomputers and storage
machines to off-site scientific instruments like telescopes, making it
easier to do research or analyse data stored in diverse locations. In
addition Scientists will be able to tap into computing power at
far-flung locations.
Grid computing is based on an open source software called Globus. In
February, IBM and other groups announced a standard for grid computing. |
| Yahoo / Reuters
Mar 22, 2002 |
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| Microsoft password research looks to images, not text |
Researchers at Microsoft are working on new types of passwords that will
be easier for people to remember but harder for hackers to crack. The
key -- images, which tend to make more of an impression on people than
strings of text characters.
A user can click on a number of points within images on their computer
screens that correspond to specific pixels. The series of pixels is then
converted into a random number and stored in the computer. Users simply
remember exactly where on the images they clicked and in what order.
Because of their mnemonic limitations, people often choose names and
simple words and phrases for their passwords. But those can be cracked
within minutes with so-called 'dictionary attacks', software that is
easily downloaded off the internet that systematically guesses words
until it finds those used in passwords. |
| Yahoo / Reuters
Mar 21, 2002 |
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| Orbiting TV pictures dodge screen burn |
Sending TV images into a gentle orbit around the screen is the latest
strategy to tackle the burning issue of fixed logos permanently marking
screens. Sony's new Pixel Orbiting system will be incorporated into its
new range of WEGA plasma TVs, when they launch around Europe in June.
The picture content is continually and very slowly moved in a small
circle. This spreads logos over an area sixteen times greater than if it
were fixed, so the burn is also spread, and reduced, with no clear edge
lines. The full orbit takes five minutes and viewers will not notice.
The logos, called DOGS (Digital Onscreen Graphics) by broadcasters, have
increased in number over the last five years. This is because the many
new TV channels are trying to win viewer loyalty and are signalling
interactive options with coloured blobs. Some logos are dim and safe,
but others are bright and over time can burn the intense CRTs used in
rear projection TVs, and the phosphor coating in plasma panels. |
| New Scientist
Mar 21, 2002 |
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| Hackers could have exploited net's hidden flaw |
Information about a major security flaw on the internet that could have
brought down large sections of the web was suppressed for two weeks last
month. Oulu University in Finland, which discovered the flaw in
February, suppressed the information for fear that if it were made
public hackers would attack the weakness and create chaos. It told,
however, a few companies including Cable & Wireless, WorldCom and Cisco.
The scale of the threat was such that it sparked near panic among the
companies that were informed about it. The threat centred on a
ubiquitous networking device, simple network management protocol (SNMP),
which manages key components of the internet network. It only affected
one version of the device, but because its use is so widespread it could
have damaged huge parts of the network. However, improved versions of
SNMP unaffected by the vulnerability have been available for some time. |
| The Independent
Mar 17, 2002 |
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| Virtual keyboard unveiled at world computer show |
A full-size virtual keyboard projected by light on to any surface has
been invented. Beams of light, which detect the user's movements, make
up the keyboard. It can be integrated into mobile phones, laptops,
tablet PCs or even sterile medical environments.
The gadget was unveiled by Siemens at the CeBIT computer fair in
Hanover, Germany. Siemens sad the keyboard could represent a revolution
for data entry and the mini computer. The mini projector that detects
user interaction with the surface also simulates a mouse pad. |
| Ananova
Mar 19, 2002 |
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| Darwin software is evolutionary time machine |
A computer is accurately predicting the course of evolution. Doctors are
using it to find out how bacteria will evolve immunity to medicines. The
new software was tested by asking it to predict how bacteria evolved
from a known point 40 years ago. The predictions accurately matched what
was actually observed during that time.
The system was tested by Barry Hall, at the University of Rochester, New
York, who said: 'One of the things that came out of this experiment is
that there's a new drug, called cefepime, that is lethal to many
bacteria and looks to be a promising antibiotic. But, we found mutations
that allowed bacteria to hydrolyse, or use, cefepime, and we think there
is a very good chance that this capability will arise in nature soon.'
He added: 'If we can predict how (the bacteria) are going to get around
our treatments, we can work out a way to make that route impossible for
them. We can cut them off at the pass.' |
| Ananova
Mar 21, 2002 |
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| Scholarly publisher plans largest online reference |
The Oxford University Press says a new effort to turn many of its
well-known reference books into online databases could create one of the
largest stores of general knowledge on the web.
The company on Wednesday launched the first stage of its Oxford
Reference Online, unveiling what it calls 'the Core Collection' - more
than 1.5m entries from nearly 100 of Oxford's English and bilingual
dictionaries, collections of quotations and subject reference books.
When Oxford Reference Online is complete, it could weigh in at more than
130m words, or what the company said is equivalent to about 300 books.
The Oxford University Press said the results so far reflect two years of
work by its US and UK arms and an investment of more than $1.5m. With a
subscription fee of $250 a year, Oxford Reference Online will not be
cheap for readers, either, but the company said 1,000 institutions are
already on board for free trials. |
| Newsbytes
Mar 20, 2002 |
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| Women beat men in web browsing |
Women know what they want from the internet and spend less time than men
getting it, according to analyst firm Jupiter MMXI. Women spend an
average of seven hours online compared with male surfers who clocked up
10 hours per month, its study found.
While there are still half as many European women online as men, the
number of females getting wired has shot up by 29 per cent in the past
year. Spain has one of the lowest numbers of women surfers - 29 per cent
compared with 46 per cent in Sweden. But they spend the most time
online, favouring instant messaging sites and file-sharing. The majority
of wired women across Europe are young, except in Germany where the
over-50s spend over nine hours online each month.
Generally men are more interested in browsing, reading content and
downloading software. Women use their time online more purposefully -
shopping, organising travel, banking and sending e-greeting cards.
See: http://uk.jupitermmxi.com/xp/uk/press/releases/pr_032102.xml |
| BBC News
Mar 21, 2002 |
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