Issue no. 39, 2003 Published: Oct 24, 2003 |
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Europe issues open source migration tips |
Study: Spam hurting e-mail use |
Smart screens sample DNA |
Body network gains speed |
Electricity squeezed out of water |
Cellphone 'radar' tracks traffic flow |
Microsoft offers 'self destructing' documents |
Researchers take debugging to the masses |
Molecule-sized circuits 'set to replace silicon chip' |
Robot skin stretches to the task |
Computer games can treat phobias |
New typeface to help dyslexics |
A third of users get violent with PCs |
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| Europe issues open source migration tips |
A European Commission initiative has issued guidelines to member
governments on how to migrate to open source software on both servers
and desktops. Designed to support the rapid electronic exchange of
information between member states' administrations, the guidelines are
aimed at IT managers in public administrations, and includes information
on staff changes, interoperability, security and user support.
Part of the EC, the Interchange of Data between Administrators (IDA)
drew up the Open Source Migration Guidelines to set out the basic
principles that countries should follow. Nine member states provided
input from their own practical experience. They place considerable
emphasis on desktop and groupware migration, with details of the open
source alternatives to, for instance, Windows applications. But it
stresses that handling inter-working with existing systems is vital.
The full document and a cost comparison model can be downloaded at
http://europa.eu.int/ISPO/ida/jsps/index.jsp?fuseAction=showDocument&parent=news&documentID=1647 |
| VNUnet UK
Oct 22, 2003 |
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| Study: Spam hurting e-mail use |
The billions of 'spam' messages that cross the internet daily are
beginning to erode users' faith in e-mail communications, according to a
report. Half of all internet users say spam has made them less trusting
of all e-mail in general, the Pew Internet and American Life Project
found, while one in four say they now use e-mail less because of spam.
The June survey of 1,400 internet users found that most feel they can do
little to block unwanted messages. More than half said the flood of spam
makes it difficult to find messages they do want. Most respondents said
they did not post their e-mail addresses to websites, and many said they
used filters to block spam.
But others admitted to behaviour likely to perpetuate the problem. Some
7 per cent said they had bought a product or service that was offered in
an unsolicited e-mail, while one-third said they had clicked a link to
get more information. Two-thirds said they had clicked a link to be
removed from a spammer's e-mail list, an activity consumer advocates say
is likely only to generate more spam. |
| Yahoo / Reuters
Oct 23, 2003 |
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| Smart screens sample DNA |
An intelligent liquid crystal displays which could bring mobile DNA
fingerprinting a step closer has been developed by scientists. Joint
research between Cambridge University scientists and Epson has yielded
an intelligent, ultra-thin display device which combines clever
circuitry and sensors. The technology could be used on a range of
wireless mobile devices, like handheld computers or even wrist watches.
The wafer-thin sensing displays are about the size of a film negative.
The chip technology behind the display will be able not only to store
but also to analyse information. It means in the future, police equipped
with mobile devices could take DNA fingerprinting samples from people
when they are on the beat.
This could make it is a lot easier for samples to be recorded and
stored, and raises the possibly of using wireless technology to compare
database information with samples. |
| BBC News
Oct 17, 2003 |
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| Body network gains speed |
Researchers from NTT Docomo Multimedia Labs and NTT Microsystem
Integration Labs in Japan have demonstrated a 10-megabits-per-second
indoor network that uses human bodies as portable ethernet cables.
The network, dubbed ElectAura-Net, is wireless, but instead of using
radio waves, infrared light, or microwaves to transmit information it
uses a combination of the electric field that emanates from humans and a
similar field emanating from special floor tiles. The system could
eventually provide high-speed wireless communications among portable
electronic devices whose positions constantly change.
The researchers' prototype network consists of a series of transceivers
that can be placed every square metre under a tile or carpet floor, and
a transceiver worn on the body or attached to a handheld device. The
transceiver transmits data by oscillating the electric field surrounding
the device. When the electric field that naturally emanates from a
person intersects the electric field of the nearest tile transceiver,
oscillations in one field are transmitted to the other. |
| Technology Research News
Oct 22, 2003 |
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| Electricity squeezed out of water |
Researchers at the University of Alberta in Canada have powered a light
bulb by pumping water through a glass filter riddled with tiny holes.
The 'electrokinetic battery' might drive portable electronic devices
such as mobile phones, the group suggests.
Inside the device, water molecules fall apart into positively charged
hydrogen ions and negatively charged hydroxide ions. In the prototype,
the surface of the porous glass filter is negatively charged, attracting
hydrogen ions to form a layer. The pores are about ten thousandths of a
millimetre wide - the same size as this layer. So the ions accumulate
preferentially in the pores. Pressure is then applied to drive the
liquid through the pores and move the charged ions from one side of the
porous membrane to the other. In other words, a current flows.
The current is tiny, but it adds up when the water flows through
thousands of pores at once. Gravity drives water through, as the inlet
pipe is 30 centimetres above the outlet. It produces a current of around
one microamp - enough to power microscopic gears and switches. |
| Nature
Oct 22, 2003 |
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| Cellphone 'radar' tracks traffic flow |
Signals from cellphone masts can be used to track aircraft, monitor
traffic congestion and spot speeding motorists without tipping them off.
Conventional radar works by transmitting a signal, listening for the
reflection and calculates the object's distance and speed. But the
signals they send out are easy to detect. An alternative technique,
called passive radar, listens in to the cacophony of radio signals in
the environment and monitors the way moving objects change them. Now two
British companies, Roke Manor Research and BAe Systems, have done the
same thing with signals from cellphone masts.
'Celldar' works out the position of objects in the area by comparing the
signals reflected from them with those it receives directly from a base
station, whose positions are known. From the Doppler shift in the signal
it can also calculate the target object's speed. Because the system is
passive, drivers will have no way of telling whether they are being
monitored. Passive systems cam also spot 'stealthy' aircraft and ships.
To passive radar, these objects show up as shadows that can be spotted. |
| New Scientist
Oct 22, 2003 |
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| Microsoft offers 'self destructing' documents |
The latest version of Microsoft's Office software suite launched on
Tuesday, with its most eye-catching feature a new ability to make
documents and emails 'self-destruct'. Office 2003 comes with the ability
to let users control the way other people use the documents they create.
This can be used to prevent other people forwarding, copying or even
printing a protected email message or document.
The rights control feature in Office 2003 depends on having an
intermediary computer system with Windows Server 2003 and a software
package called Rights Management Service installed. A protected email
message sent between two users is encrypted and the recipient's version
of Outlook will check with the server to see if the user is allowed to
edit, copy or forward the message. A time-stamp can also be applied to
make the message unreadable after a certain date.
Other documents that can be stored on a user's machine, such as Word
files, are encrypted. Each user's version of Word will access the central
server to determine how that person is allowed to use the document. |
| New Scientist
Oct 21, 2003 |
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| Researchers take debugging to the masses |
Researchers at the University of California and at Stanford University
have released versions of several open-source software packages modified
to send debugging information to a central site, letting people who use
the software contribute to the bug-hunting effort.
If the Cooperative Bug Isolation Project can get enough people to use
the special versions, they essentially will be providing the eyes of
debuggers more peepholes into software's inner workings. The project
takes an open-source tack on the problem. It provides software called
'sampler' that open-source programmers can add to their own software to
aid in debugging.
When the sampler software is inserted into a program - a process that
happens through use of a lightly modified version of the widely used GCC
programming tool - the resulting program is 'instrumented' with
instructions that capture data as the program runs. |
| ZDNet
Oct 17, 2003 |
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| Molecule-sized circuits 'set to replace silicon chip' |
US Scientists have created a minuscule electronic memory circuit from
gold atoms in a development which could one day replace the silicon
chip. The researchers have been able to make molecular-sized switches
and memory chips from clumps of atoms.
Their work, due to be published in the Journal of the American Chemical
Society, could eventually revolutionise computer technology as the
microelectronic device dwarfs the silicon chip. The technology could
lead to smaller, more powerful computers.
In one study at the University of California at Los Angeles, a mesh of
molecular-sized wires was created, with switches at the cross over
points. At Rice University, in Houston, Texas, scientists built circuits
from randomly laid out molecules. They created so-called nanocells,
which could be used as memory or computer logic chips, by repeating
electrical pulses between adjacent contact points. |
| Ananova
Oct 20, 2003 |
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| Robot skin stretches to the task |
The skin of a robot has to fulfil two apparently opposing needs: it must
be elastic enough to lend the robot human-like dexterity, and yet carry
enough wiring to allow it to sense its environment.
Electrical engineers at Princeton University have developed a kind of
connector incorporating broad metal strips that, unlike wires, can
stretch up to twice their length and still conduct electricity. They
think it will be ideal for use in robot skin as it could allow sensors
to be placed all over a robot's body.
The elastic metal film connectors based on gold film just 25 nanometres
thick can stretch by at least 15 per cent in the rubbery silicone
membrane in which they are embedded. Some of the contacts conduct even
when stretched to twice their original length. This is because the gold
film is corrugated, so it can be flattened out or compressed and still
conduct electricity. |
| New Scientist
Oct 22, 2003 |
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| Computer games can treat phobias |
Popular computer games such as Half-Life and Unreal Tournament could
provide a cheap and effective treatment for people with debilitating
phobias, say Canadian computer scientists.
Specially made virtual reality (VR) equipment is already used to treat
certain types of phobia. But researchers at the University of Quebec in
Canada took the simpler approach of customising existing games to create
VR worlds for a range of phobias. Tests showed that the games stimulated
a response that could be used to perform controlled treatment.
The researchers suggest that computer games might be a cheap and
easy-to-use form of VR treatment. The games also provide highly
realistic graphics and can be easily adapted to an individual patient's
particular fears. Within Half-Life, scenes containing various different
types of spider were built to treat people with arachnophobia. Unreal
Tournament was used to make environments for those with a fear of
heights or confined spaces. |
| New Scientist
Oct 20, 2003 |
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| New typeface to help dyslexics |
Dyslexics who have trouble reading words online and in print may soon
find relief in a new typeface being developed by a Dutch designer.
Unlike traditional typefaces, which reuse the same forms for multiple
letters - such as b and d, or p and q - the Read Regular typeface makes
each letter significantly unique so that dyslexics can more easily
distinguish one character from another. Additionally, Read Regular
features simplified forms and extended openings in letters like c and e.
Without these enhancements, the traditional fonts used on the web and in
print can contribute to letter-reversal errors and other problems
commonly associated with visual dyslexia.
As part of her research for the Read Regular project, Natascha Frensch,
who is dyslexic herself, tested her typefaces with nearly 100 dyslexic
people. Although the typeface is complete, Frensch says she still needs
to iron out licensing and distribution details before it is made
available to the public. |
| Wired News
Oct 21, 2003 |
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| A third of users get violent with PCs |
Almost 40 per cent of computer users admit to swearing, shouting and
becoming violent with troublesome PCs, and the problem is set to get
worse. As spam and online fraud increase the pressure on beleaguered PC
users, a fifth of them are threatening to give up on IT altogether.
Security firm Symantec, which conducted a survey of UK computer users,
said that a mere 14 per cent are never irritated by problems with their
PC. This leaves 86 per cent driven mad by so-called 'PC pests'.
The top problems are slow performance and system crashes (23 per cent);
spam, scams and too much email (20 per cent); pop-up advertisements (15
per cent); and viruses (14 per cent). According to the findings, 39 per
cent of us are likely to have an extreme reaction to computer-induced
stress, including swearing, shouting and even violence.
Mike Fisher of the British Association of Anger Management advises: 'The
best thing to do is breathe deeply, remind yourself to keep your cool
and take a break from your computer for a few minutes'. |
| VNUNet UK
Oct 22, 2003 |
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