Issue no. 45, 2003 Published: Dec 05, 2003 |
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DVD format war on the horizon |
'Anonymous' file-traders arrested |
Spammers attack critics |
Office gossip drives storage spending |
Eye implant may reverse blindness |
Virtual autopsies might replace scalpels |
Software paraphrases sentences |
Largest prime number ever is found |
Biochip puts it all together |
Electronic back-seat driver tells gadgets to shut up |
Internet mapping project weaves colourful web |
Bell 'did not invent telephone' |
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| DVD format war on the horizon |
As the DVD Forum embraces their technology, Toshiba and NEC have won a
round in the fight for standardising the format for DVDs. Last year, the
two companies pitched their version of a blue-laser DVD player against
that of a consortium of the world's biggest electronics makers,
including Sony, Matsushita and Royal Philips Electronics.
Blue-laser DVD players are set to replace the current generation of
red-laser DVD players in a few years. A blue-laser disc can store about
five times more information than can red-laser discs - up to three hours
of high-definition video. The electronics industry expects that over the
next few years, high-definition TV will reach a critical mass, which in
its turn will push the need for higher quality DVDs.
The DVD Forum said it will endorse only one technology. By backing the
so-called HD DVD standard from Toshiba and NEC, a new format war is
looming. The DVD Forum did not approve the DVD+RW recordable technology
of Sony and Philips - yet this technology has a significant chunk of the
market. Its inventors even claim that it is the dominant standard. |
| ZDNet / Reuters
Dec 01, 2003 |
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| 'Anonymous' file-traders arrested |
Japanese police have arrested two people suspected of distributing
pirated films and computer games through a supposedly anonymous
file-sharing network. Police also raided the home of the programmer who
created the software used to connect to the network, called 'Winny'.
Interest in anonymous file sharing networks has grown rapidly since the
US music industry began taking legal action against individual users as
part of a controversial attempt to stamp out illicit online music
trading. This is the first time anyone has been arrested in relation to
use of this type of secretive trading network. The most popular
file-sharing networks provide little or no secrecy for users who can
easily be traced through their computer's IP address.
Winny is reportedly based on probably the best-known anonymous
file-sharing application Freenet. This network provides anonymous
untraceable sharing by dividing up files and distributing them across
different computers. The network is also cryptographically secured. |
| New Scientist
Dec 01, 2003 |
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| Spammers attack critics |
Anti-spam organisations are the target of a new internet worm outbreak
that tries to knock them offline with a crippling data barrage, computer
security experts said Tuesday. Virus experts believe the worm,
W32/Mimail-L, is the work of a vengeful spam e-mail peddler bent on
paralysing organisations that try to deal with spam.
The Mimail-L program comes as an attachment to an e-mail purporting to
be from a woman named Wendy who details an erotic encounter and then
offers naked photographs. Clicking on the attachment activates the
virus, which forwards itself to other e-mail users. The worm can also
turn the affected PC into a 'zombie', which can then be remotely
commanded and used for dos-attacks on anti-spam organisations.
In a new twist, a follow-up e-mail is sent to the infected user stating
that an order for a CD containing images of child pornography will be
delivered to their postal address. To stop the order they should respond
an email address, which is actually an address for one of the targets. |
| CNN / Reuters
Dec 02, 2003 |
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| Office gossip drives storage spending |
E-mails filled with office gossip or forwarded jokes may be costing
firms more than just minutes of employees' time - storing the electronic
missives is draining companies' cash too, according to research.
With analyst house IDC predicting that e-mail traffic will reach 35
million messages a day by 2005, and data retention legislation such as
the United States' Sarbanes Oxley Act making storage a business
priority, the costs of keeping e-mails is set keep rising.
A survey of IT directors has found that e-mail storage now makes up
around 40 per cent of data retention costs in businesses in Europe, the
Middle East and Africa, with IT heads reckoning that 20 per cent of all
the e-mails they have to keep are personal or non-work-related messages.
Out of the 630 IT directors questioned by Hitachi Data Systems, ten per
cent thought that e-mails were making up 40 per cent of their total
storage capacity, with another quarter believing that e-mails are adding
up to 20 per cent of their entire storage. |
| ZDNet / Silicon.com
Dec 04, 2003 |
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| Eye implant may reverse blindness |
Scientists at Stanford University in California have described their
first complete design of an implant that will take the place of
light-sensitive cells in the retina of a damaged eye. Current implants
use chips that convert light into electrical impulses that are fed to
the brain via the optic nerve. The new device will work differently.
The implant releases neurotransmitters just as the retina does
naturally. The researchers want light to strike the chip, causing it to
release a small amount of neurotransmitter fluid that will stimulate
retinal nerve cells. The implant is to be made of a soft polymer
material that will conform to the curvature of the back of the eye. A
key component will be retinal nerve cells that have been persuaded to
grow behind the chip so that they can be stimulated effectively.
The back of the implant will be coated with proteins designed to attract
filaments that grow out of retinal cells. It is hoped they will connect
the implant to the optic nerve, so that signals can be sent to the
brain. |
| BBC News
Dec 04, 2003 |
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| Virtual autopsies might replace scalpels |
In the not-too-distant future, autopsies might be performed using
computerised scanning rather than scalpels. The 'virtual autopsy' as
developed by researchers at the University of Bern's Institute of
Forensic Medicine offers advantages in criminal cases since bodies are
not cut up and juries view simulations rather than photos of cadavers.
Technicians use advanced computed tomography - CT scans - to get an
overview of the body, then follow that up with magnetic resonance
imaging for details of organs, muscles and soft tissue. Three-
dimensional surface scanning provides a picture of the outside of the
body. All the images can then be merged on the computer, giving
investigators a picture of the entire body.
The researchers have used the techniques for three years and 100 cases
of crime victims. First they conducted a virtual autopsy, then a
standard one. The results showed that the virtual autopsy is as accurate
as traditional autopsies. |
| Yahoo / AP
Dec 04, 2003 |
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| Software paraphrases sentences |
Researchers at Cornell University are using online journalism and
computational biology to automatically paraphrase whole sentences. The
method could eventually allow computers to more easily process natural
language, produce paraphrases that could be used in machine translation,
and help people who have trouble reading certain types of sentences.
Key to the technique is comparing news sources that cover the same
events but employ slightly different styles. The researchers' system
uses word-based clustering methods to identify sets of text that have a
high degree of overlapping words. They then employed computational
biology techniques to identify sentence templates, or lattices. The
technique allowed the researchers to identify common templates that
journalists use to describe similar events.
Given a sentence, the system finds the closest match among one set of
lattices, then uses the matching lattice from the second source to fill
in the argument values of the original sentence to create paraphrases.
The sentence can perhaps be paraphrased in as many as 20 ways. |
| Technology Research News
Dec 03, 2003 |
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| Largest prime number ever is found |
A 26-year-old graduate student in the US has made mathematical history
by discovering the largest known prime number. The new number is
6,320,430 digits long. It took just over two years to find using a
distributed network of more than 200,000 computers.
Michael Shafer, a chemical engineering student at Michigan State
University used his office computer to contribute spare processing power
to the Great Internet Mersenne Prime Search (GIMPS). The project has
more than 60,000 volunteers from all over the world taking part.
Prime numbers are positive integers that can only be divided by
themselves and one. Mersenne primes are an especially rare type of prime
that take the form 2 p-1, where p is also a prime number. The new number
can be represented as 220,996,011-1. It is only the 40th Mersenne prime
to have ever been found. Primes have practical uses too, for example by
providing a way of exchanging the cryptographic keys that keep internet
communications secure from eavesdropping. |
| New Scientist
Dec 02, 2003 |
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| Biochip puts it all together |
It is not easy cramming all the hallmarks of labs - the chambers and
channels that hold and guide fluids, the pumps and valves that shunt
fluids around, and the heaters, mixers and sensors that carry out
experiments - onto a self-contained chip that works automatically.
Researchers from Arizona State University have taken a large step in
that direction, however, with a plastic biochip that packs simple
versions of these elements in a 12- by 6- centimetre, 2-millimetre-thick
inexpensive package. The device could eventually be used to carry out
genetic analysis, environmental testing and biological warfare agent
detection.
The chip performs all the work needed to test from a raw sample like
whole blood, including target cell capture using immunomagnetic beads,
cell preconcentration, purification and lysis, and DNA multiplication
and detection. The researchers' prototype detected a disease-causing E.
coli bacteria in a sample of rabbit whole blood in 3.5 hours. |
| Technology Research News
Dec 01, 2003 |
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| Electronic back-seat driver tells gadgets to shut up |
Engineers are developing an electronic back-seat driver to try to ensure
motorists pay attention to the road. The system is designed to stop
drivers being put off by the increasing number of gadgets in cars,
including mobile phones. The research being conducted by engineers at
BMW and Bosch is partly funded by the German government.
By monitoring road, traffic and driving conditions, it will decide when
a situation is too dangerous for the person behind the wheel to be
distracted. Phone calls will then be diverted to voice-mail, arriving
emails hidden, and the controls of the satellite navigation system and
CD player locked.
A variety of sensors are used to detect other traffic, the road layout,
and the driver's actions. The system then applies the information to
work out what sort of situation the driver is heading for. Each
situation is allocated a complexity rating. If this exceeds a certain
threshold, a divert function is activated until the complexity level
drops. |
| Ananova
Dec 03, 2003 |
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| Internet mapping project weaves colourful web |
A project to create a comprehensive graphical representation of the
internet in just one day and using only a single computer has already
produced some eye-catching images.
Networking engineer Barrett Lyon thought he could 'map' every node on
the internet in far less time than that taken by other projects. Some
efforts to produce images of the internet have taken months to complete.
Lyon reckoned he could quickly provide a simple picture of all the
networks linking internet nodes using a standard networking program and
began his mapping project, called Opte.
Lyon's software streamlines the process by only mapping larger 'class C'
networks. By performing 194 traceroute searches per second, it should be
possible to scan the whole internet in a day, Lyon says. He has
developed a distributed version of the software that would use more
starting points and therefore create a more comprehensive map of all the
links between network addresses. |
| New Scientist
Nov 28, 2003 |
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| Bell 'did not invent telephone' |
Claims that a German scientist invented the telephone 15 years before
Alexander Graham Bell are supported by evidence from newly surfaced
archive papers. Successful tests on a German device manufactured in 1863
were covered up to maintain the Scot's reputation, the documents show.
A series of experiments in 1947 on the 'Telephon', developed by German
scientist Philipp Reis, found that it could work as well as Bell's
design when amplified. Using a modern receiver, the engineers found the
German's device could transmit speech and that Reis's receiver would
also 'reproduce speech of good quality but of low efficiency'.
It is alleged UK businessman Sir Frank Gill was behind the cover-up. The
evidence is contained in files from the archives of the Science Museum
in London. Gill was chairman of Standard Telephones and Cables (STC),
the company that conducted the tests on Reis's device. The company was
at the time bidding for a contract from the American Telephone and
Telegraph Company, which evolved from the Bell Company. Gill thought the
test results would scupper STC's chances of winning the contract. |
| BBC News / Sunday Herald
Dec 01, 2003 |
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