Issue no. 18, 2002 Published: May 03, 2002 |
|
Adobe wins Flash patent lawsuit |
Intel to make chipsets for disposable cellphones |
Cellphone radiation could exceed limit in train carriages |
Genetically engineered viruses make liquid crystal structures |
Liquid crystal displays 'painted on' |
New advances in quantum cryptography |
Here come the ratbots |
Researchers create high-tech fibre |
Supercomputer predicts materials strength |
Pain from computer use more common than thought: study |
Surveillance cameras to predict behaviour |
SETI@Home celebrates major milestone |
Mobile phones 'an obsession' for couples |
|
| Adobe wins Flash patent lawsuit |
Software maker Adobe Systems won its lawsuit Thursday claiming that
rival Macromedia infringed on the company's patents. Adobe filed the
suit in August 2000, alleging that the user interface of Macromedia's
Flash web animation tool infringed on Adobe's patent for 'tabbed
palettes', a feature that allows users of design software to rearrange
the work space on the PC screen.
The jury agreed with Adobe and awarded the company $2.8m in damages.
Adobe said it also expects a judicial injunction preventing Macromedia
from selling the infringing software.
A trial is scheduled to begin in the same court Monday regarding
Macromedia's first countersuit, charging that Adobe's Photoshop
image-editing software and its GoLive Web design software infringe on
two patents that Macromedia holds for editing tools. A second Macromedia
countersuit is not yet scheduled for trial. |
| ZDNet
May 02, 2002 |
back to top
|
|
| Intel to make chipsets for disposable cellphones |
Disposable diapers. Disposable cameras. And now, disposable cell phones.
US company Hop-On said on Wednesday that it had struck an agreement with
Intel to provide chipsets for its disposable cellphones.
Intel, the world's largest semiconductor company, has a small second-
generation chipset business, and is more than happy to sell the older
products, an Intel spokesman said.
Hop-On said Intel will provide chipsets using the TDMA cellphone
standard for use in its disposable phones worldwide. Initial target
markets will be in the US and Latin America, the company said.
Hop-On's disposable cellphones, which it says are recyclable, will carry
an hour's worth of prepaid calling minutes in the US. |
| Yahoo / Reuters
May 01, 2002 |
back to top
|
|
| Cellphone radiation could exceed limit in train carriages |
Passengers on packed trains could unwittingly be exposed to electro-
magnetic fields far higher than those recommended by the International
Committee for Non-Ionising Radiation (ICNIRP), according to Tsuyoshi
Hondou, a physicist from Tohoku University in Sendai, Japan.
Japanese commuter trains are often packed with people surfing the web on
their mobile phones. The trend spurred Hondou to find out what effect
this had on the electromagnetic radiation in a train carriage.
For a standard train carriage, with a carrying capacity of 151 people,
Hondou's calculations show that it is possible to exceed ICNIRP exposure
limits if 30 people, each with a mobile phone that emits radio waves at
a power of 0.4 watts, all use their phones at the same time. The peak
power a mobile phone is allowed to produce is two watts. Hondou says his
findings point to what could become a new environmental issue,
especially as new wireless devices come onto the market. |
| New Scientist
May 01, 2002 |
back to top
|
|
| Genetically engineered viruses make liquid crystal structures |
If you want to build a molecular-scale computer chip you will need tiny
builders. Researchers in Texas used a virus as their nano-construction
worker. Genetically engineered to grab up zinc sulphide, these 'viral
semiconductors' arrange themselves into highly ordered structures that
may serve as the raw material for future nanoscale devices.
The researchers genetically engineered a virus to carry random bits of
protein in its outer coat, and comparing each altered virus' ability to
latch onto zinc sulphide particles. They used the 'best binding' virus
to infect bacteria where it could make millions of copies of itself.
Added to a zinc sulphide solution, the viruses attached themselves to
the semiconductor material, grew zinc sulphide nanocrystals at their
ends, and assembled themselves into a highly ordered hybrid film with
the attached particles. By tinkering with different solution
concentrations and applied magnetic fields, the researchers were able to
alter the stacking direction of the film's layers. |
| MSNBC / AAAS
May 02, 2002 |
back to top
|
|
| Liquid crystal displays 'painted on' |
Liquid crystal displays could soon be painted straight on to surfaces,
using a technique currently being refined by researchers at Philips
laboratories in the Netherlands. The technique could potentially allow
manufacturers to make displays more quickly because the liquid crystal
mixtures do not have to be carefully poured between two surfaces.
The mixture is painted across a surface covered with electrodes and then
treated with two different wavelengths of UV light. The first treatment
solidifies part of the mixture to create a grid. This separates the
surface into different cells, which act as the pixels of the display.
The second treatment creates a hardened layer above the cells.
Conventional LCDs pass current between the top and bottom layer to
switch the cells on and off. The current 'twists' the crystals, altering
their ability to transmit light. But the new display changes the
alignment of the crystals by altering the current flowing between the
electrodes on only the lower surface. |
| New Scientist
May 02, 2002 |
back to top
|
|
| New advances in quantum cryptography |
A new technique for encrypting messages called quantum cryptography
might result in the first unbreakable codes of the 21st century.
The technique combines a reliable, decades-old encryption method with a
new and simple way of distributing the encryption key - by using the
laws of quantum mechanics. Anytime this subatomic process is observed,
it is immediately disturbed by the observer. Two parties exchanging a
quantum-protected encrypted message would know immediately if a third
party was trying to eavesdrop.
Researchers at the Los Alamos National Laboratory in the US said they
have been successfully sending and receiving messages using the quantum
technique and believe it can be made foolproof. It works over both wired
and wireless media and in good weather and bad. |
| Tech Review / UPI
Apr 30, 2002 |
back to top
|
|
| Here come the ratbots |
Guided rats controlled through implants in their brains could one day be
used to search for landmines or buried victims of earthquakes, according
to scientists at the of the State University of New York. The
extraordinary experiment involves researchers steering five rats through
an obstacle course by remote control.
Electrodes were implanted into areas of the rat brain responsible for
sensing reward as well as those that process signals from their
whiskers. The commands and rewards were transmitted by radio from a
laptop computer to a backpack receiver strapped to each rat.
The scientists were able to make the rats run, turn, jump and climb
where they wanted from distances of up to 500 metres away. The ratbots
negotiated an obstacle course which involved climbing a vertical ladder,
running along a narrow ledge, hopping down a flight of steps, squeezing
through a hoop and descending a steep ramp. |
| BBC News
May 01, 2002 |
back to top
|
|
| Researchers create high-tech fibre |
A team of researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology has
created high-performance mirrors that can be formed into hair-thin
fibres and woven into fabrics or even paper.
Future fabrics woven with the mirror fibres could create clothes that
reflect and protect against invisible microwaves and radiation. When
incorporated into paper, the super-thin fibbers could create hidden 'bar
codes' that would be visible only when scanned by specific colours of
light. That could lead to documents that would be nearly impossible to
forge or duplicate.
The MIT mirror fibre uses multiple layers of two materials - a polymer,
or plastic, and a chalcogenide, an inorganic glass substance. The large
difference in the index of refraction between these materials causes a
strong backward scattering of light, leading to high reflectivity. The
result: A 'perfect mirror' that reflects all light from any angle with
very little loss due to absorption by the mirror's materials. |
| ABC News
Apr 27, 2002 |
back to top
|
|
| Supercomputer predicts materials strength |
Using one of the world's most powerful supercomputers as a 'microscope',
IBM and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory scientists in the US
believe they can demonstrate a major advance in simulating the strength
of materials.
The supercomputer allows scientists to create simulated cubes of
materials containing up to one billion atoms. They then deform the cubes
to see how they break, what makes them strong or weak, stiff or
flexible.
This technique, called creative computer visualisation, can reveal
stress responses at the atomic level, with cracks moving at supersonic
speeds and expanding tangles of defects developing deep inside the cube
that can harden a tough and flexible material to the point of brittle
fracture. |
| Tech Review / UPI
Apr 30, 2002 |
back to top
|
|
| Pain from computer use more common than thought: study |
More than half of computer users developed neck or shoulder symptoms
during the first year on a new job, a new study has found.
For three years, researchers at the Emory University in Atlanta tracked
632 men and women who were hired for jobs requiring 15 hours or more per
week of computer use. The workers' posture and risk factors were
assessed at the beginning of the study, and the dimensions of their work
stations were measured. Every day, the participants recorded their work
practices and incidence of musculoskeletal symptoms in their neck,
shoulder, hands or arms. Participants who reported symptoms were then
examined for specific musculoskeletal disorders.
The results showed nearly 40 per cent of participants developed a hand
or arm symptom each year while using a computer and 21 per cent actually
developed a disorder. Poor posture and improper positioning of the
monitor, keyboard and mouse are all risk factors for injury. |
| CBC News
Apr 29, 2002 |
back to top
|
|
| Surveillance cameras to predict behaviour |
CCTV cameras that can predict behaviour could play a vital role in the
fight against crime. The software, dubbed Cromatica, is being developed
at London's Kingston University to improve security on public transport
systems but it could be used on a wider scale.
It works by detecting differences in the images shown on the screen. For
example background changes indicate a crowd of people and possible
congestion. If there is a lot of movement in the images it could
indicate a fight. It could also detect unattended bags, people who are
loitering or even predict if someone is going to commit suicide by
throwing themselves on the track. The biggest advantage of Cromatica is
that is allows the watchers to sift the evidence more efficiently.
Transport systems across Europe have expressed interest in the software
and it has already been tested at London's Liverpool Street station. |
| BBC News
May 01, 2002 |
back to top
|
|
| SETI@Home celebrates major milestone |
The SETI@Home project will receive its 500 millionth result this week.
The project, which uses the spare computing power of volunteers from
around the world to analyse data in a search for intelligent alien life,
has received 497,976,462 results to date. By Saturday it should cross
the 500 million mark.
Faced with 50Tb of information to analyse, SETI@Home asked the public
for help back in 1999. Volunteers downloaded a screensaver from its
website and turned their computers' idle time to crunching numbers for
the project.
SETI@Home has now clocked up almost one million years of computing time,
with 453,000 computers running continuously in the last 24 hours.
Although the project is yet to find evidence of alien life, it has
recently concentrated on processing more promising signals. |
| VNUnet UK
May 01, 2002 |
back to top
|
|
| Mobile phones 'an obsession' for couples |
Modern couples are becoming obsessive about keeping in touch by mobile
phone, according to a new survey from Orange. The figures suggest that
one in three couples exchange over 10 calls and text messages daily.
Some of these calls are made within minutes of saying goodbye in the
morning, and more than 80 per cent ring a partner to update them on
their journey to work. Some 67 per cent will use the phone to nag a
loved one into doing something they had forgotten, and 28 per cent use
the phone to check what's on the menu for dinner.
Brett Kahr, a senior fellow in psychotherapy at Regent's College in
London, insisted that the trend was healthy. 'Before the era of mobile
phones, husbands and wives had fewer opportunities to communicate with
one another during the course of the working day,' he said. However, New
York psychologist Dr John Gladford said that there was a certain amount
of control involved in some calls between partners. Some people use the
mobile to make sure that their partner is not being unfaithful, he said. |
| VNUnet UK
May 01, 2002 |
back to top
|