Issue no. 35, 2003 Published: Sep 26, 2003 |
|
EU software patent plan gets thumbs up |
Europe looks at radio spectrum trading |
China to help Europe develop GPS rival |
Microsoft shuts down chat rooms |
Microsoft monoculture allows virus spread - report |
W3C to study patent's threat to HTML |
ICANN asks VeriSign to pull '404' redirect service |
Electronic paper prepares for video |
Patchwork design may give speedier chips |
Tuner chip turns mobiles into television |
Radio tags provide guidance |
Mobiles make you senile - study |
Intel helps fingers type faster |
|
| EU software patent plan gets thumbs up |
The European Parliament this week voted to approve highly controversial
legislation that governs patents for computer-related inventions. The
'Directive on the Patentability of Computer-Implemented Inventions' was
presented as a technical adjustment to harmonise the way patents are
treated by national governments across the EU.
The directive was passed with several amendments that had been supported
by critics. One amendment, its advocates said, more clearly defines what
can be patented and what cannot. Another allows a patented technique to
be used without authorisation or royalty payments if it is needed solely
to ensure interoperability.
However, on Tuesday, in a debate ahead of the vote, Commissioner Frits
Bolkestein criticised the amendments, telling the Parliament that 'the
majority of those amendments will be unacceptable to the commission'. He
said if the 'unacceptable' amendments were passed, the commission could
withdraw the directive entirely and seek to achieve patent harmonisation
through a renegotiation of the European Patent Convention. |
| CNET / ZDNet UK
Sep 24, 2003 |
back to top
|
|
| Europe looks at radio spectrum trading |
The European Commission has initiated a study to examine the possible
trading of radio spectrum within the EU. Allowing secondary trading of
radio spectrum for electronic communications services such as mobile
phones and broadcasting could create much needed flexibility in the
trading of a limited resource.
Experts believe that the continued growth of new mobile and broadcasting
services would benefit from granting spectrum licence holders the power
to sell on or sell off part or all of their rights to frequencies.
But there are many challenges associated with the practical introduction
of spectrum trading, and the options available for resolving each of
these are varied. The Commission is concerned that this array of options
will lead to individual EU member states adopting sufficiently disparate
approaches so as to prevent spectrum trading being realised at a
European level. The Study is expected to be completed in May 2004. |
| VNUnet UK
Sep 25, 2003 |
back to top
|
|
| China to help Europe develop GPS rival |
China is to contribute to a new global satellite navigation system being
developed by European nations. The Galileo satellite system will offer a
more accurate civilian alternative to the Global Positioning System
(GPS), operated by the US military. China will provide €230m in funding
and will cooperate with technical, manufacturing and market development.
A new centre that will coordinate co-operation was also announced by the
European Commission, the European Space Agency (ESA) and the Chinese
Ministry of Science and Technology. The China-Europe Global Navigation
Satellite System Technical Training and Cooperation Center will be
located at Beijing University. China has a substantial satellite launch
industry and could potentially help launch the Galileo satellites.
But the project had already drawn heavy criticism from the US Department
of Defense, and the involvement of China is unlikely to improve the
situation. The US has claimed that Galileo could interfere with the US
ability to downgrade the GPS service during military conflicts. |
| New Scientist
Sep 19, 2003 |
back to top
|
|
| Microsoft shuts down chat rooms |
Microsoft is shutting its internet chat rooms in 28 countries because of
concerns over the safety of children using them. MSN, Microsoft's
internet division, said the threat that paedophiles could use its chat
rooms to locate vulnerable children who they might go on to abuse had
forced it to close them down.
MSN chat rooms in Europe, the Middle East, Africa, Asia and Latin
America will be shut down on 14 October. Subscription only chat services
will then be introduced in the US, Canada and Japan only. Microsoft says
these will be more secure because users must provide identification in
order to pay. Microsoft will also continue to provide its MSN Messenger
chat client, which links up individual computers for conversation.
But some experts argue that shutting the chat rooms will only shift the
problem to less regulated online chat systems. Some observers have
suggested that MSN's decision might be partly motivated by economic
factors, in particular the cost of running a free service. |
| New Scientist
Sep 24, 2003 |
back to top
|
|
| Microsoft monoculture allows virus spread - report |
A report published on Wednesday by the Computer and Communications
Industry Association says that Microsoft’s dominance in PC operating
systems has created a 'monoculture' that allows viruses to spread like
wildfire over the internet.
The security problems are a direct result of the Microsoft's business
practices, who's systems are designed to keep out competitors rather
than intruders, claims the report. The authors argue that governments
should use their buying power to force Microsoft to open up the Windows
source code. This would allow security vulnerabilities to be spotted and
closed far quicker and allow security software to interact more
effectively with the operating system and reduce the opportunities for
virus writers to produce malicious code, the authors say.
Flaws in a product would normally mean it would lose its dominance but,
this cannot happen in operating systems because Microsoft controls at
least 90 per cent of the operating system market, the report says. |
| New Scientist
Sep 25, 2003 |
back to top
|
|
| W3C to study patent's threat to HTML |
With a patent threat looming over the web's de facto standard browser,
the Worldwide Web Consortium launched a strategy group to evaluate the
implications for the web's standard markup language. The W3C conceived
the patent advisory group to study the threat posed by the Eolas plug-in
patent to HTML and related W3C recommendations.
The Eolas patent has roiled the Web since a federal district court jury
slapped Microsoft and its Internet Explorer browser with a $521 million
patent infringement judgment, one of the largest in history. Fear of the
patent has quickly spread to other browser makers, which also provide
the patented ability to launch plug-in applications within their
browsers' windows. It has also hit makers of those plug-ins, such as
Macromedia, along with the W3C itself.
The W3C's plug-in patent advisory group will have legal as well as
technical questions to answer. The advisory group has posted its
charter, which sets a 90-day deadline for completing its work. |
| New York Times / CNET News
Sep 25, 2003 |
back to top
|
|
| ICANN asks VeriSign to pull '404' redirect service |
The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) has
asked VeriSign to voluntarily suspend a new service that redirects web
surfers to its own site when they seek to access unassigned web
addresses, rather than return an error message.
ICANN last Friday posted a notice on its website discussing its response
to the so-called wildcard service, which launched on 15 September and
sends users to a VeriSign page with search results including links to
paid advertisements. VeriSign runs the registry for the .com and .net
domains, which are the domains affected by the wildcard service.
ICANN said it is investigating complaints over the wildcard service and
asked VeriSign to pull it pending further study. The service effectively
replaces the common '404 page not found error' that until now has been
the default for absent web addresses. |
| Silicon.com / CNET News
Sep 22, 2003 |
back to top
|
|
| Electronic paper prepares for video |
Flexible paper-like colour computer displays that can show moving video
are under development by the Dutch electronics giant Philips. Philips
and others have already succeeded in making prototype flexible displays,
but their refresh rates - the speed at which they can turn a single dot
on or off - have been slow. The new technology can significantly improve
the refresh rate using a faster effect called electrowetting.
The technology works on the old premise that oil and water do not mix.
In each unit, or pixel, of the device, water and coloured oil is
naturally separated into layers above a white backing sheet. When an
electric field is applied across the paper, the oil is quickly deflected
to one side, revealing the white underlayer. This rapid switching gives
the paper the potential ability to display moving images.
Moreover, the pictures are four times brighter than reflective LCDs and
twice as bright as other emerging technologies. The system works at low
voltages, making it usable in a wide range of electro-optic devices. |
| BBC News / Ananova / Nature
Sep 24, 2003 |
back to top
|
|
| Patchwork design may give speedier chips |
Future microprocessors could exchange data hundreds of times more
efficiently than today's processors according to researchers at Sun
Microsystems. The researchers have developed a simple prototype capable
of transferring 21.6bn bits of data per second. 'Capacitive coupling'
could eventually be used to transfer a trillion bits of data per second.
The fastest desktop PC can transfer data at about 50bn bits per second.
At the moment, a signal has to pass from one chip to another through a
circuit board - which slows it down significantly. But an effect which
couples the storage capacity of two adjacent electrical components could
make it possible to transfer data hundreds of time faster.
Changing the electrical properties of one component has a corresponding
effect on another a few millionths of a metre away - a phenomenon that
could be used to transfer bits of information extremely quickly. The Sun
prototype proposes harnessing this effect for many chips at once. The
system consists of a 'checkerboard' of chips facing up or down and
overlapping at the edges. |
| New Scientist
Sep 23, 2003 |
back to top
|
|
| Tuner chip turns mobiles into television |
Consumer electronics maker Sony said on Wednesday it planned to ship in
December samples of a mini digital broadcast tuner module that would
enable mobile phones to act as televisions. The tuner module, which is
smaller than a postage stamp, can be used in mobile applications such as
cell phones or PDAs. Sony says the module is the smallest of its kind
and has the lowest power consumption.
Japan plans to roll out terrestrial digital broadcasting in certain
regions by the end of 2003 and launch a signal specifically designed for
mobile applications in 2005. The sample module will sell for 50,000 yen
(€390) with strong demand expected from manufacturers looking to develop
new products using the tiny chip, Sony said. |
| Reuters
Sep 24, 2003 |
back to top
|
|
| Radio tags provide guidance |
University of Rochester researchers have found a new use for the radio
frequency identification tags that manufacturers are aiming to use to
track products. These radio ID tags contain small radio transponders
that broadcast unique identification numbers, allowing radio receivers
in retail stores and warehouses to track inventories in real time.
The Rochester team has reversed the standard setup by making the
receivers mobile and the transponders fixed. The system, dubbed
Navigational Assistance for the Visually Impaired (NAVI), includes a set
of permanently mounted passive transponders and a reader/playback device
carried by the user. A transponder trips a particular CD track when a
playback device comes within range.
The system could be a low-cost alternative to GPS-based schemes for
providing location-specific information and pedestrian navigational
assistance. The system could eventually be used in self-guided tours in
museums. |
| Technology Review / TRN
Sep 24, 2003 |
back to top
|
|
| Mobiles make you senile - study |
A new study has re-ignited the controversial question of whether mobile
phones are harmful to users. The US government research concentrates on
whether radiation can affect the blood supply to the brain. Its findings
contradict previously inconclusive research, which has focused solely on
whether mobile phones can cause cancer in the human brain.
The study found that exposure to microwave radiation emitted by GSM
phones and other wireless home and office technology is capable of
breaking down the 'blood-brain' barrier, a permeable network of
capillaries that allows essential substances such as glucose to permeate
the brain and fuel its metabolism.
This breakdown releases a protein called albumin that can trigger the
destruction of cells, resulting in reduced brain capacity and possibly
inducing premature senility. And although the research is still in its
infancy, it is thought that the effects of the release of albumin are
irreversible and may even promote other brain diseases. |
| VNUnet UK
Sep 19, 2003 |
back to top
|
|
| Intel helps fingers type faster |
Intel is backing a novel way to make it easier to input text on mobile
handsets. At its autumn developer event, Intel showed off a concept
universal communicator using the Fastap keypad that fits 26 letters
alongside the numbers on a handset.
The Fastap keypad does away with the need to press keys several times to
scroll through the letters associated with each number. Intel's
prototype device rolls together mobile phone technology with wi-fi,
video and audio streaming and improved security.
Fastap was developed by former Apple ergonomic design boss David Levy as
a way to make it easier to enter text using the tiny keypad on a
handset. The design puts letters of the alphabet on raised buttons that
fit between the keys. Words can be typed by pressing the raised keys,
and numbers by pressing the four keys that surround a particular number. |
| BBC News
Sep 20, 2003 |
back to top
|