Issue no. 17, 2002 Published: Apr 26, 2002 |
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European Commission adopts cybercrime penalties proposal |
Intel tests potential chip breakthrough |
AMD's Hammer chips get Microsoft nod |
PC networks inspired by gossip |
Spin may be the key to molecular computing |
3D images in your hand |
Squishy cellphones add a buzz to calls |
China's net usage leaps to second in world |
Microsoft launches e-book association |
Volunteers move into HomeLab to test latest technology |
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| European Commission adopts cybercrime penalties proposal |
The European Commission (EC) has approved a proposal that would
harmonise definitions and penalties for a range of computer crimes
across all EU member states.
A European Council Framework Decision on 'attacks against information
systems' will address cybercrimes such as hacking, denial-of-service
attacks and the release of destructive computer viruses. The proposal is
for all EU member states to have consistent definitions and criminal
penalties for cybercrimes, rather than the hodgepodge of different
national laws or lack of laws altogether that exists today.
The commission says the implementation of the proposal will give
European law enforcement authorities additional legal means to act in
their fight against cybercrimes. The proposal encompasses laws
criminalising 'illegal access to computer systems (hacking)' and
'illegal interference with information systems (denial-of-service
attacks or the distribution of viruses).' |
| Newsbytes
Apr 24, 2002 |
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| Intel tests potential chip breakthrough |
Intel is experimenting with Extreme Ultraviolet Lithography (EUV)
techniques that will enable chip makers to place more transistors on a
semiconductor. As more transistors means better performance, this
overcomes barriers to faster processors that have been concerning chip
manufacturers. It opens up possibilities for chip speeds of up to 10GHz
which are impossible with today's techniques.
Current photolithography techniques used to create chips are based on
photographic principles. Machines shrink and print images of circuits
onto silicon wafers, but EUV differs from current photolithographic
methods by using a shorter light wavelength to create the image.
Intel has bought a machine to create chips in this way, and is the first
manufacturer to do so. The machine itself is still at a beta stage of
development, and Intel does not expect commercial production of EUV
chips to start for around five years. |
| VNUnet UK
Apr 23, 2002 |
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| AMD's Hammer chips get Microsoft nod |
AMD confirmed Wednesday that it will collaborate with Microsoft to tune
Windows to run on its upcoming family of Hammer chips. AMD also unveiled
the official names for Hammer chips. The desktop versions of the chip,
slated for release at the end of the year, will be sold under the Athlon
name. The multiprocessor versions of the chip for servers, due in the
first half of 2003, will be sold under the name Opteron.
Hammer chips differ from existing chips in that they can read 32-bit
code, the basis for nearly all software for PCs today, and 64-bit code,
used by high-end servers. Among their other advantages, 64-bit computers
can manage more than 4GB of memory, the physical limit for 32-bit
machines.
Although Microsoft's endorsement is significant, AMD will still have to
convince hardware manufacturers, software developers and corporate
customers to invest time and energy into using Hammer as a 64-bit chip. |
| Yahoo / Reuters
Apr 24, 2002 |
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| PC networks inspired by gossip |
Scientists at Microsoft are looking at ways to help networks form and
manage themselves spontaneously, as well as reliably pass on information
to all members as they join and leave it. At the moment, most
peer-to-peer networks are made up of people swapping music, programs,
movies and images. But as the web becomes more about doing business,
machines are expected to form peer-to-peer networks automatically.
The researchers are working on software called Pastry, which uses a
peer-to-peer addressing scheme inspired by the way that rumours and
gossip spread through human communities. The members of a Pastry network
only connect to a few nodes in the entire system. Typically they link to
machines that have addresses close to theirs, as well as at least one in
the other numerical domains of the addressing scheme.
Experiments have shown that Pastry can reliably send information to
network members, even though they may regularly join and leave the
system. It also reduces the burden of passing information around because
one node does not have to send its data to all the nodes requesting it. |
| BBC News
Apr 24, 2002 |
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| Spin may be the key to molecular computing |
Scientists are developing a new kind of computer technology known as
spintronics. The system uses the way individual molecules spin as a way
of carrying information.
Molecules can spin in an upward or downward direction so the system can
be used to carry the binary code which computers use. It could lead to
computers which remember everything when the power is turned off, and
superfast quantum computers.
A new spin valve, developed by scientists at Bell Laboratories in New
Jersey, uses magnetism to control which type of spinning molecules pass
through it. Because of the way it uses individual molecules to carry
information it could revolutionise hand-held devices. Its small size
means circuits made from the devices could be more densely packed and
therefore be more powerful. |
| Ananova
Apr 20, 2002 |
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| 3D images in your hand |
Researchers at Microsoft are putting sensing devices used to trigger
airbags into handheld computers to help create virtual 3D images on the
devices' screens. When a handheld fitted with the sensor is angled, its
screen shows different parts of an image giving a pseudo-3D effect.
The micro-machined tilt sensors are typically used to trigger airbags in
cars by measuring sudden changes in acceleration or deceleration. On a
PDA, the sensor triggers the device to show a different part of an image
depending on how it is being held. The sensor makes the screen act like
a square hole in a piece of paper being slid over a larger document or
image underneath.
Moving the device around allows the palmtop computer to display pictures
and documents far larger than would otherwise fit on the small screen,
often only 240 by 320 pixels in size. |
| BBC News
Apr 23, 2002 |
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| Squishy cellphones add a buzz to calls |
Vibrating rubber cellphones could be the next big thing in mobile
communications, allowing people to communicate by squishing the phone to
transmit vibrations along with their spoken words. According to a
research team at the MIT Media Lab in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the idea
will make phoning more fun.
When you grip the team's prototype latex cellphone, your fingers and
thumb wrap around five tiny speakers which vibrate against your skin
around 250 times per second. Beneath these speakers sit pressure
sensors, so you can transmit vibration as well as receiving it.
When you squeeze with a finger, a vibration signal is transmitted to
your caller's corresponding finger, its strength dependent on how hard
you squeeze. |
| New Scientist
Apr 24, 2002 |
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| China's net usage leaps to second in world |
Interviews with Chinese householders conducted by internet analysis firm
Nielsen//NetRatings suggests that 56.6 million Chinese people now use
the internet at home. This promotes China to second place in the world
rankings, ahead of Japan, which has 51.3m users, Germany (32.2m) and the
UK (29.0m). The US still leads the pack with 166m users.
But the survey also concludes that Chinese surfers could outnumber those
in the US by two to one within the next three to four years. The Chinese
Ministry of Information reports that internet subscriptions are
increasing at a rate of five to six per cent each month. If this rate is
sustained, home internet use could reach 257m by 2005.
Some say that such an explosion in internet use could have profound
implications on the Chinese government's programme of censoring online
content. Government-controlled ISPs screen out some Western news
services. But there are online projects that allow banned content to be
reached by routing it through seemingly innocent internet servers. |
| New Scientist
Apr 23, 2002 |
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| Microsoft launches e-book association |
Only days after the Frankfurt eBook Awards announced it would have to
shut down because it had lost its funding from Microsoft, the US
software giant announced it would start its own e-book association to
promote 'policy and industry progress, not prizes'.
Microsoft said it is launching the Europe-based International eBook
Association (IeBA), which is to include an e-book award, but plans to
focus on reducing the barriers facing the e-book industry.
The new association plans to be a 'neutral representative of the
electronic publishing industry and its issues,' Microsoft said. It
expects to work with the EU and member states to overcome widely varying
taxation and regulatory policies that are harming the e-book industry.
It would also try to address technological issues, like readability and
display quality, hoping to increase the popularity over e-books by
improving the electronic reading experience. |
| Europemedia.net
Apr 22, 2002 |
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| Volunteers move into HomeLab to test latest technology |
Philips has opened a 'laboratory house' to test technology on people in
an everyday environment. HomeLab in Eindhoven, the Netherlands, is
linked through hidden cameras, microphones and one-way mirrors to
observations rooms. Researchers will be able to follow the occupants 24
hours-a-day to get a better idea of their needs and motivations.
HomeLab features home entertainment systems that can respond to human
voice commands, or create digital fantasy environments for virtual
reality games. TV pictures can be projected on to blank walls. Music
will come from MP3s stored on the HomeLab computer jukebox, which can
even recognise and play a hummed tune. Most connections are wireless,
with systems controlled by handheld devices and flat-panel displays. A
wireless LAN provides access to broadband internet. |
| Ananova
Apr 23, 2002 |
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