Issue no. 14, 2002 Published: Apr 05, 2002 |
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Global 'flop' of Microsoft Xbox console - CEO resigns |
HP refuses to nominate Hewlett heir to board |
Studios unite for digital standard |
Quantum cloning nears perfection limit |
Sneak peek: the computer screen of the future (I) |
Sneak peek: the computer screen of the future (II) |
Signs of 'Trustworthy Computing' |
Web search patterns are evolving - study |
Distributed program to translate many languages |
Start-up offers intelligence for travellers |
Smart glasses order own refills |
Technology for perfect-pitch karaoke |
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| Global 'flop' of Microsoft Xbox console - CEO resigns |
Microsoft's Xbox games console is thought to have flopped around the
world, with sales a poor second to its arch-rival, Sony's Playstation 2.
Analysts expect the sales slump will force a cut in the Xbox price
within the next couple of months.
Microsoft claims there is 'strong demand' in Europe. However, reports
from Europe, Japan and the US all suggest the Xbox, launched with a huge
marketing push last month, has so far failed to capture the imagination
of the gaming public.
Meanwhile, Microsoft surprised investors with the shock resignation of
Rick Belluzzo, the software giant's president and CEO and most highly
ranked executive behind founder Bill Gates and chief executive Steve
Ballmer. Some observers suggested he had been pushed as punishment for
the slow progress of the Xbox. He had spent one year in the job. |
| The Independent
Apr 05, 2002 |
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| HP refuses to nominate Hewlett heir to board |
Hewlett-Packard marked the end of an era on Monday by announcing it
would not nominate dissident director Walter Hewlett to another term on
the board.
The new board, which would include several current Compaq Computer
directors in the wake of the planned merger, would be the first on which
the Hewlett and Packard families were not represented since HP was
formed in 1938. Shareholders will vote on the slate of nominees, which
includes seven HP and five Compaq representatives, on April 26.
HP's board said its decision to exclude Hewlett was 'based on his
ongoing adversarial relationship with the company, as evidenced by his
recent litigation against HP'. The group also cited other 'concerns'. |
| Financial Times
Apr 02, 2002 |
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| Studios unite for digital standard |
In a rare joint venture seven major film studios in the US are to
establish technical standards for the development of digital cinema. The
aim of the project will be to set the agenda so that rival digital
projectors, software and distribution will use a universal language.
Goals for the scheme will be to establish minimum standards for picture
quality and protecting films from piracy. There are fears that when
digital cinema is more widespread, with images being beamed by satellite
or internet lines, hackers could break security systems and make perfect
copies.
Disney, 20th Century Fox, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Paramount Pictures, Sony
Pictures Entertainment, Universal Studios and Warner Bros will all be
paying an equal share to the project. |
| BBC News
Apr 03, 2002 |
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| Quantum cloning nears perfection limit |
A new experiment has brought 'quantum cloning' to the edge of its
theoretical limit of fidelity. Particles such as photons and electrons
have quantum properties that, according to the theory of relativity, can
never be copied exactly unless you destroy the original in the process.
That is the basis of quantum cryptography - an eavesdropper cannot copy
a message without disrupting it and revealing its presence. The theoret-
ical accuracy limit of copying quantum information is 83 per cent.
Researchers at Oxford University now have successfully copied a photon's
quantum state with 81 per cent accuracy by using stimulated emission.
The researchers sent single photons into a crystal whose atomic states
had been excited by laser pulses. When the original photon enters this
environment, its presence stimulates the emission of a clone. However,
the original photon also causes the crystal to spontaneously emit light
- the noise that prevents achieving 100 per cent fidelity. |
| New Scientist
Mar 30, 2002 |
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| Sneak peek: the computer screen of the future (I) |
Light-emitting polymer (LEP) technology is creating a new class of
flat-panel displays that are thinner and lighter than ever before.
British company Cambridge Display Technology is the inventor of the
technology, which might eventually replace the cathode ray tube standard
used in television sets and computer monitors, the company claims.
In LEP technology, a thin film of light-emitting polymer is applied onto
a glass or plastic substrate coated with a transparent electrode. A
metal electrode is evaporated on top of the polymer. The polymer emits
light when the electric field between the two electrodes is activated.
Response time is ultra-fast and is unaffected by temperature. Light
emission occurs at low voltage, and it can be fabricated on a single
sheet of glass, unlike liquid crystal or plasma displays.
Also, because it can be made on flexible plastic substrates, it not only
could be extremely difficult to break, but also could be melded into
different shapes and contours. |
| Yahoo / Newsfactor
Apr 03, 2002 |
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| Sneak peek: the computer screen of the future (II) |
A research team at UCLA recently developed a way to direct the molecular
action of crystalline materials that have properties of both liquids and
solids. Their work means that in less than 10 years, users might be able
to watch images literally leaping from their computer screens.
Although this technology is in its infancy, it poses the possibility
that information and images revealed by light passing through such
crystalline materials could form virtually any shape or series of shapes
moving in extremely fast sequences.
In a different 3D-development, a small Silicon Valley startup called
Canesta is working on giving 3D vision not to the viewer but to the
computer. The company said that by combining its chip technology and
image-processing software, it can allow a PC to literally 'look' at the
world through a small lens and create a 3D image of what it sees. |
| Yahoo / Newsfactor
Apr 03, 2002 |
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| Signs of 'Trustworthy Computing' |
European consumers will soon get a first taste of what Bill Gates meant
by 'Trustworthy Computing'. NEC Computing International has announced a
trial program in which Packard Bell PCs will be equipped with keyboards
that include secure smart-card readers.
The keyboards are designed to hold credit card numbers, PINs and other
personal information in encrypted form, without leaking them into the
rest of PC where they could be stolen by crackers, malicious programs or
other users.
Bill Gates launched its Trustworthy Computing initiative earlier this
year in a widely distributed e-mail to staff. But developers of secure
systems say Microsoft's plans will go nowhere without new hardware that
addresses fundamental security problems in the PC's aging architecture,
which allows data to travel around inside unencrypted. |
| Wired news
Apr 04, 2002 |
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| Web search patterns are evolving - study |
The way people use search engines to navigate the internet is evolving,
but according to a new study, a next-generation box of web searching
tools is needed. The study, by Pennsylvania State University associate
professor Amanda Spink, examined more than 1 million search queries from
200,000 users of the Excite search engine.
From 1997 to 2001, there has been 'little change' in search terms per
query, queries per user or pages per query. However, a trend noted by
the study was a shift in topics people searched for when using the
Excite engine. In 1997, the most frequently searched topic category was
'entertainment or recreation', 'Sex and pornography' was second,
followed by 'commerce, travel, employment or economy'.
Two years later, 'sex and pornography' had dropped to fifth place with
'entertainment or recreation' in sixth. 'Commerce, travel, employment or
economy' topped the list in both 1999 and 2001 with 24.5 per cent and
24.7 per cent of searches, respectively. |
| Newsbytes
Apr 02, 2002 |
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| Distributed program to translate many languages |
A US software designer plans to harness the brains of the world's
computer users to build a multilingual translation database. Brian
McConnell believes it could provide a free way to translate the many
languages not included in existing online translators.
The World Wide Lexicon (WWL) project will need multilingual volunteers
to download a software program. This will automatically detect when the
computer user is less busy and ask them to translate a word or phrase.
McConnell has designed a program that roams the web and selects common
words from foreign websites. These will be sent to relevant volunteers
for translation. The next stage begins when a sufficiently large word
database has been built. Users will then be able to download another
client program and search these servers for different words. Words that
are not found will be sent to volunteers for translation. |
| New Scientist
Apr 02, 2002 |
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| Start-up offers intelligence for travellers |
Thanks to a surge in demand for detailed security information in the
wake of September 11, an US start-up now provides more than 350,000
corporate employees and 21,000 travel agents with access to detailed
travel intelligence on 156 countries.
iJET's operations centre in Annapolis is filled with ex-spies. Most of
iJET's 58 employees have some sort of experience with US, Russian, South
African, Israeli or British intelligence on their résumés.
With the help of computerised filters and knowledge of 17 languages,
iJET staffers absorb files from 5,000 sources a day, monitoring
conditions in 10 areas of intelligence, including security, health,
transportation and environment. When troublesome situations develop,
iJET can send real-time intelligence alerts to travellers, via e-mail,
phone, fax or pager together with advise on what to do about it. |
| Newsbytes / Washington Post
Apr 04, 2002 |
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| Smart glasses order own refills |
Japanese company Mitsubishi Electric has developed drinking glasses
which signal when they are almost empty so that table staff know when to
bring a refill. The technology is an adaptation of the tagging systems
used to try to stop people stealing from shops.
The glass' coating conducts electricity and makes it behave like a
capacitor, an electrical device which stores charge. As the drinker
drinks, less of the glass is in contact with the liquid inside and the
capacitance of the glass falls. A microchip in the base of the glass
reads this change and uses a coil to signal when the level has fallen
far enough to assume that the drinker might be ready for a refill.
A code in the chip identifies each individual glass and could be used to
signal to mobile devices carried by table staff or a central display
behind a bar. |
| BBC News
Apr 04, 2002 |
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| Technology for perfect-pitch karaoke |
Some might call it Japan's biggest victory against noise pollution since
pop duo Pink Lady split up two decades ago. Karaoke sound systems
provider Taito said on Tuesday it had teamed up with a US professor and
chipmaker Analog Devices on technology that could give even the most
tone-deaf crooner perfect pitch.
Using the 'Csound' computer music language pioneered years ago by MIT
professor Barry Vercoe, Taito will market a system this summer that
adjusts sing-along music automatically to the pitch and tempo
best-suited to an individual singer. Eventually, Taito hopes to use the
technology to reconfigure a singer's errant tones to the proper pitch,
without otherwise altering the sound.
That could be good news for the millions of regular patrons at Japan's
karaoke bars - both those who dread the inevitable pressure to sing even
if they cannot carry a tune, and those who have to listen to them. |
| Yahoo / Reuters
Apr 02, 2002 |
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