Issue no. 3, 2003 Published: Jan 17, 2003 |
|
Microsoft to reveal source code |
Music and tech industries strike copy-protection deal |
Mandrake Linux files for bankruptcy |
KaZaA next in line for media companies' legal wrath |
Device demos terabit storage |
Remote monitoring aids data access |
Reformatted hard drives still contain information - study |
Technology that will shape the future: Revealed |
Pop-ups: Unpopular, but effective |
Phones lose millions of text messages |
|
| Microsoft to reveal source code |
Microsoft is to share the secrets of its closely-guarded source code for
the Windows operating system with governments and international
organisations around the world in an effort to beat off rivals and
strengthen its position in government markets.
Under an initiative called 'the government security program', the firm
will allow governments and their agencies to examine the source code so
they can improve the security of their software.
NATO and Russia have already signed up and Microsoft said discussions
were taking place with more than 60 other governments and agencies.
Microsoft said it was confident governments would respect its
intellectual property and said it was not worried about piracy or other
infringements. |
| BBC News
Jan 15, 2003 |
back to top
|
|
| Music and tech industries strike copy-protection deal |
The US music and technology industries have announced a deal to drop
their support for new laws that would require copy-protection to be
built into consumer electronics.
The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), a powerful
lobbying body representing the five biggest record labels, agreed to
drop support for legislation that would require computers and other
electronic devices to have built-in copy-protection technology.
In return, the Business Software Alliance and the Computer Systems
Policy Project, which represent hardware and software technology firms,
vowed to drop support for legislation that would extend user's rights to
make back-up copies of digital music and video files.
The recording industry has pushed for legislation to enforce the use of
software and hardware locks to stop buyers copying music. But technology
companies say the technology is costly and restricts innovation. |
| New Scientist
Jan 15, 2003 |
back to top
|
|
| Mandrake Linux files for bankruptcy |
MandrakeSoft, the financially strapped creator of the Mandrake version
of Linux, said Wednesday it filed for the French equivalent of
bankruptcy protection from creditors.
The Paris-based company said its financial liabilities prompted it to
file for 'declaration de cessation des paiements'. The move allows the
company to take court-overseen actions such as renegotiating its debt
while continuing its operations.
Mandrake's revenue has been increasing and its expenses decreasing, but
the company remains unprofitable thus far. The company's stock is
publicly traded on an unregulated European market.
While the company is based in Paris, the largest fraction of its revenue
comes from North American buyers. It competes with better-established
Linux sellers such as Red Hat and SuSE. Version 9.1 of Mandrake Linux
software is expected in April, the company said. |
| New York Times / CNET News
Jan 15, 2003 |
back to top
|
|
| KaZaA next in line for media companies' legal wrath |
A US federal judge has ruled that record companies and movie studios can
proceed with a lawsuit against the parent company of KaZaA, which has
become the most popular file-swapping service in the post-Napster age.
Sharman Networks is headquartered in Australia and incorporated in the
Pacific island nation of Vanuatu. The company had filed a motion to
dismiss the lawsuit, arguing it was not bound by US laws since it did
not have substantial contacts with California, where the lawsuit
originated.
But the judge said the lawsuit could proceed, since KaZaA software had
been downloaded and used by millions, including California residents -
in direct breach of copyright protection. Moreover, many music and video
copyrights are owned by California-based companies, the judge argued. |
| silicon.com
Jan 13, 2003 |
back to top
|
|
| Device demos terabit storage |
Cramming lots of information into very small spaces means making and
measuring infinitesimal containers for each bit of data. Researchers
from Tohoku University, the Japanese National Institute for Materials
Science, and Pioneer Corporation in Japan have found a way to store huge
amounts of data by making many tiny, inverted dots in a thin film of
metal and determining how to sense the state of each dot.
The dots are 10 nanometres in diameter and store one bit of information
each. The prototype packs 1.5 trillion dots per square inch, and could
store 1.5 terabits in one square inch, the equivalent of 47 DVDs. The
researchers were able to read 25 KB of data per second, which is slow.
They think it is possible to increase the read speed to 3.75 MB per
second. Current disk drives have read speeds of 20 to 50 MB per second.
The researchers are ultimately aiming to increase the storage capacity
of the material to 4 thousand trillion bits, or 4 petabits, per square
inch - the equivalent of 125,000 DVDs worth of information. |
| Technology Research News
Jan 15, 2003 |
back to top
|
|
| Remote monitoring aids data access |
One of the ongoing challenges facing scientists is how to remotely
access and visualise vast amounts of data. Researchers from Sandia
National Laboratories in the US have found a way to work with large
amounts of data over networks in near real-time.
Remote access schemes tend to focus on moving data. The Sandia method
instead uses the internet to transfer the video signal that normally
carries image information from a computer to its monitor.
The video signal is digitised, compressed and then formatted into
standard network protocol packets of data, which are transmitted across
a network. At the remote location the data are rebuilt into a video
stream, and translated for a locally-attached monitor.
Because each frame looks a lot like the frame before, it saves a lot of
time to only transmit image changes. The system identifies and transmits
only differences between successive video frames across the network. |
| Technology Research News
Jan 15, 2003 |
back to top
|
|
| Reformatted hard drives still contain information - study |
So, you think you cleaned all your personal files from that old computer
you got rid of? Two MIT students suggest you think again.
Over two years, the students bought 158 used hard drives at secondhand
computer stores and on eBay. Of the 129 drives that functioned, 69 still
had recoverable files on them and 49 contained 'significant personal
information' such as medical correspondence, love letters, pornography
and 5,000 credit card numbers.
The students found that even reformatting a drive may not be sufficient.
Fifty-one of the 129 working drives in the MIT study had been
reformatted, and 19 of them still contained recoverable data. The only
sure way to erase a hard drive is to 'squeeze' it: writing over the old
information with new data - all zeros, for instance - at least once, a
job for which inexpensive software is available. |
| Nando Times / AP
Jan 15, 2003 |
back to top
|
|
| Technology that will shape the future: Revealed |
Nine new technologies have been identified by IDC researchers, that have
backing from universities and major national laboratories and which
offer the potential to change lives.
The researchers identified smart dust, lily pads, ratbots, nanotubes,
nanomachines, quantum computing, plastic transistors, the Semantic Web
and grid computing as technologies to watch, although they noted some of
these were more likely to materialise in our lifetime than others.
Ratbots are being used to test the possibility of transmitting
information between a living thing and a computer via implants and the
technology could be used for prosthetics and memory aids. Smart dust
refers to tiny sensors, used for logistics, monitoring and preventative
maintenance and are already in limited use. Ultrastrong, light-emitting
nanotubes will also likely be put to use in the foreseeable future,
gaining use for computer circuits and flat panel displays. |
| Silicon.com
Jan 16, 2003 |
back to top
|
|
| Pop-ups: Unpopular, but effective |
Pop-up ads seem to be the internet equivalent of the tabloids: everyone
claims to hate them, but somebody keeps reading. According to a study
conducted by GartnerG2, 78 per cent of respondents claimed they found
pop-up ads 'very annoying'. In contrast, only 49 per cent of
participants applied the same rating to banner ads.
Yet pop-ups had click-through rates almost twice as high as those of
banner ads, meaning they are probably going to stick around for a while.
Indeed, Nielsen/NetRatings' online-advertising rating, AdRelevance,
found that pop-up impressions jumped from 1.2 billion to 4.9 billion
between January 2002 and September 2002.
And companies are looking for ways to make pop-ups perform better. One
new type of ad clicks through to the advertiser's site even if users
simply move their mouse over the advert. But there may be some relief on
the way. Several companies have decided that no matter what the possible
gains, the possibility of annoying customers makes pop-ups a risk. |
| Silicon.com
Jan 15, 2003 |
back to top
|
|
| Phones lose millions of text messages |
Millions of short text messages sent between mobile phones in the US are
lost every month, and the chance of two parties connecting depends on
which networks they use. Internet performance measurement company
Keynote Systems says in its study that 7.5 per cent of all short text
messages sent between wireless telephone companies are lost.
In Europe 10 to 15 per cent of wireless operators' revenue comes from
SMS, but adoption of the service has been slower in the US, where users
were not able to send messages to networks other than their own until
last year.
AT&T Wireless Services had the highest success rate in terms of messages
sent to users on other networks as well as messages sent within its
network at 95.5 per cent and 97.8 per cent, respectively. T-Mobile USA
was one of the worst performers. Only 86 per cent of messages sent to a
user on another network and 87 per cent of messages sent within its
network were successfully received. |
| CNN / Reuters
Jan 15, 2003 |
back to top
|