Issue no. 24, 2004 Published: Jul 02, 2004 |
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Microsoft in appeals court victory |
EU: Microsoft punishment on hold |
Europe sees nano-electronics as 'future oil' |
Pop-up program reads keystrokes, steals banking passwords |
Television watching may hasten puberty |
Hybrid nano-wires provide link to silicon |
Entanglement breaks new record |
Mobiles 'could cut male fertility' |
Breakthrough boosts digital camera quality |
Paper promises better e-paper |
Could laptops run on spinach? |
Bad driving the secret to traffic forecasts |
Webcam lets users eyeball others |
Gadget may help sleepers choose dreams |
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| Microsoft in appeals court victory |
Microsoft on Wednesday scored a big victory when an appeals court upheld
the Justice department's landmark 2002 settlement with the company. The
state of Massachusetts last year appealed the settlement, calling it an
'ineffective' remedy for preventing anti-competitive behaviour. But the
Washington DC appeals court on Wednesday rejected that argument, calling
the agreement within the public interest.
Microsoft was found guilty in 2000 of engaging in anti-competitive
practices by maintaining a monopoly in personal computer operating
systems. In 2002, the court approved the remedy settlement that
Microsoft agreed with nine states and the Justice department. But
Massachusetts refused to join the settlement.
The settlement required Microsoft to allow vendors to hide its
'middleware' products, such as internet browsers and multimedia players,
and replace them with rivals' applications. But Massachusetts argued the
company should remove the software code for the hidden programmes.
Microsoft contested that such a demand would damage their product. |
| Financial Times
Jul 01, 2004 |
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| EU: Microsoft punishment on hold |
The European Commission has temporarily suspended an order requiring
Microsoft to begin to offer a version of Windows without a media player
this week. The decision gives a Luxembourg court time to sort out the
case without feeling pressure to reach an immediate decision.
Microsoft has filed a 100-page appeal before asking the court to annul
the European Commission's €497m fine and media player requirement. The
Court of First Instance, Europe's second-highest judicial body, is
expected to hold a hearing on Microsoft's request within the next two
months.
The Commission's 24 March decision gave Microsoft 90 days to offer an
operating system without the media player included and 120 days to begin
sharing proprietary information with its competitors regarding its
server software. |
| Silicon.com / CNET News
Jun 28, 2004 |
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| Europe sees nano-electronics as 'future oil' |
A group of Europe-based technology companies and research organisations
has called on the European Commission to co-ordinate massive investment
in the transition from micro to nano-scale electronics.
The group, which includes representatives from Nokia, AMD, Philips, IBM
and Ericsson presented the report on Thursday to Erkki Liikanen,
Commissioner for Enterprise and Information Society, and his colleague
Philippe Busquin, European Research Commissioner. It calls for
investment of at least €6bn per year to bolster Europe's bid to lead the
world in the sector it says will be 'the oil of the future economy'.
The Commission already plans to launch the European Nano-electronics
Initiative Advisory Council (ENIAC), which will be a public-private
partnership responsible for drawing up a strategic research agenda for
nano-electronics in Europe, and implementing it. |
| The Register
Jun 30, 2004 |
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| Pop-up program reads keystrokes, steals banking passwords |
A malicious program that installs itself through a pop-up can read
keystrokes and steal passwords when victims visit any of nearly 50
targeted banking sites, security researchers warned on Tuesday. The
targeted sites include major financial institutions, such as Citibank,
Barclays Bank and Deutsche Bank, said researcher Marcus Sachs, director
of the Internet Storm Center, a site that monitors network threats.
Even though all financial sites use encryption built into the browser to
protect log-in data, the Trojan horse program can capture the
information before it gets encrypted by the browser software.
Researchers at the Internet Storm Center studied the Trojan horse file,
called 'img1big.gif'. They reverse-engineered the program and discovered
that it targeted a long list of banks and attempted to steal the account
information of those institutions' customers. Once the Trojan horse
captures financial information, it encrypts the data by using a program
hosted on an internet server and sends the data back to the attackers,
who appear to be in South America. |
| ZDNet
Jun 29, 2004 |
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| Television watching may hasten puberty |
Girls nowadays are reaching puberty much earlier than in the 1950s. One
reason is due to their average increase in weight; but another may be
due to reduced levels of melatonin, researchers at the University of
Florence suggest. They found that children who watch a lot of TV produce
less melatonin. The hormone has been linked to timing of puberty.
The researchers studied 74 children aged between six and 12 years old,
who normally watched an average three hours of TV in the evening. The
youngsters were encouraged to watch more TV than usual for a week
preceding the study.
During the subsequent seven-day experiment, the children were not
allowed to watch TV and their families were also asked to reduce the use
of other sources of artificial light. At the end of the week, the
children's melatonin levels had risen by an average of 30 per cent. The
effect was most pronounced in the youngest children. |
| New Scientist
Jun 28, 2004 |
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| Hybrid nano-wires provide link to silicon |
Nanoscale electronic components that could be plugged into conventional
computer circuits have been developed for the first time by researchers
at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts. They have developed
highly conductive nanowires by blending silicon and nickel together.
The researchers coated tiny silicon wires measuring 20 nanometres in
diameter with the metal nickel before heating them to 550°C to blend the
two elements together. After etching away excess metal, they then tested
the electronic properties of the resulting nickel silicide wires.
They were found to have an extremely high conductivity, making them very
promising for use as electronic components. Furthermore, by coating only
part of the wire, the process could be used to make wires that were part
silicon and part nickel-silicon, providing a way to interface with
existing silicon electronics. |
| New Scientist / Nature
Jun 30, 2004 |
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| Entanglement breaks new record |
For the first time, physicists have succeeded in entangling five
photons, which is the minimum number needed for universal error
correction in quantum computation. Moreover, the same team has
demonstrated a process called 'open-destination teleportation' for the
first time. The results represent a major breakthrough in efforts to
exploit the laws of quantum mechanics in quantum information processing.
The researchers began by producing a high intensity and ultra-stable
source of entangled photons. They used two entangled pairs of photons to
generate a four-photon entangled state, which they then combined with a
single-photon state. They were able to produce a five-photon entangled
state by detecting the coincidence of five photons.
To demonstrate open-destination teleportation, the researchers first
teleported the unknown quantum state of a single photon onto a
superposition of three photons. They were then able to read out this
teleported state at any one of the three photons by performing a
measurement on the other two photons. |
| PhysicsWeb
Jun 30, 2004 |
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| Mobiles 'could cut male fertility' |
Carrying a mobile phone could significantly affect a man's fertility,
scientists from the University of Szeged, Hungary, have suggested. The
radiation could cut the number of sperm a man has by a third, the
researchers say.
The research, presented to the European Society of Human Reproduction
and Embryology (ESHRE) meeting in Berlin, studied over 200 men. The men
who had their phone on standby throughout the day had about a third less
sperm than those who did not. Of the remaining sperm, high numbers were
found to be swimming abnormally, reducing the chances of fertilisation.
The researchers say their findings suggest that mobiles do have a
'negative effect' on male sperm and fertility. But other experts said
the Hungarian study did not allow for other factors which could have
affected the men's fertility. |
| BBC News
Jun 27, 2004 |
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| Breakthrough boosts digital camera quality |
A US company this week unveiled digital camera technology that it claims
gives picture quality that is 'just like film'.
Digital imaging firm Foveon said its F19 sensor, a 1/1.8in 4.5megapixel
CMOS direct image sensor which incorporates the company's X3
stacked-pixel technology, captures colour in three layers.
According to Foveon, its X3 direct image sensor captures red, green and
blue light at every pixel location and is the first to make use of
silicon's inherent colour separation property.
The company said the X3 technology's stacked-pixel design eliminates the
need for colour interpolation and blur filters. The Foveon X3 F19 direct
image sensor will be included in the Polaroid x530 consumer digital
camera, available this September in the US. |
| VNUnet UK
Jun 25, 2004 |
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| Paper promises better e-paper |
Researchers from Korea Electronics Technology Institute (KETI) have
produced electronic paper made from ordinary paper coated with thin
layers of plastic electronics. Paper has the advantage of being light,
inexpensive and thermally and mechanically stable during processing.
Their method could be used to make roll-up displays of all types,
including electronic paper, electronic maps, and advertising displays.
The researchers made the device by coating a sheet of inkjet paper with
the plastic parylene to protect the paper from moisture and provide a
uniform surface, then applying a second layer of parylene followed by
layers of nickel, three types of organic material and a metal top layer.
The top layer is semi-transparent, transmitting more than 75 per cent of
the light generated beneath it to provide a maximum brightness of 417
candelas per square metre. Computer display brightness values typically
range from 150 to 2,000 candelas per square metre. The prototype device
has emitting areas of 10 by 2 millimetres and worked while rolled around
a pen with a diameter of 8 millimetres. |
| Technology Research News
Jun 30, 2004 |
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| Could laptops run on spinach? |
Researchers at MIT have made electrical cells that are powered by plant
proteins. The biologically based solar cells, which convert light into
electrical energy, could one day be used to coat and power laptops,
providing a portable source of green energy.
The team isolated photosynthetic proteins from spinach and preserved
them by mixing them with peptide surfactants. The protective molecules
form a shield around the energy-producing proteins, fooling them into
thinking that they are still part of the plant. The proteins were
layered on to a thin gold film, attached to a sheet of transparent,
electrically conducting metal, and then covered with a top layer of
organic, conducting material.
When light is shone on to the unlikely sandwich, the proteins spit out
electrons, which pass into the lower layer in the form of an electric
current. The prototype can generate current for up to 21 days. So
alternatives that last longer are needed. |
| Nature / Nano Letters
Jun 28, 2004 |
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| Bad driving the secret to traffic forecasts |
A traffic simulation system is helping drivers by predicting jams on
Germany's autobahn network up to an hour before they happen.
When engineers model the way road traffic flows they break the traffic
down into three categories: freely flowing, jammed, and an intermediate
state called synchronised flow in which dense traffic moves in unison.
But this synchronised flow is unstable. One car pulling into another
lane and forcing the driver behind to brake hard is enough to start
traffic bunching up. Failure to predict this 'pinch effect' has stymied
past attempts to model traffic flow.
Now researchers at the University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany, have
developed a computer model that successfully reproduces the pinch
effect. The key is to be realistic about driver behaviour - 'aggressive'
or 'defensive'. And where previous models have simplified the way cars
move, the new model is more sophisticated. The result is a software
model that combines realistic driver behaviour with realistic physics. |
| New Scientist
Jun 30, 2004 |
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| Webcam lets users eyeball others |
Instant messaging could get a lot more interesting if webcam technology
by Microsoft gets the go-ahead. i2i, in development at Microsoft
Research labs, Cambridge UK, is a two-camera system which follows a
person's movement. It uses specially-developed algorithms to fuse what
each camera sees to create an accurate stereo 'cyclopean' image. This
means it looks as if users are looking each other in the eye.
Recent research has revealed that more than 18.5 million people are
using webcams while they use instant messaging (IM), according to
Microsoft. But the problem has always been that users appear to be
looking at something other than the person they are chatting with.
The biggest challenge for the researchers was working out how the visual
brain works; how it sorts out colours, distances and shapes, and then
creates models of what the eye sees. The stereo algorithm created by the
researchers, makes it possible to reconstruct 3D geometry in real-time
and accurately on a standard computer. The system can also generate
background images so that users can pretend they are somewhere else. |
| BBC News
Jun 30, 2004 |
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| Gadget may help sleepers choose dreams |
Ever wished you could decide what to dream at night? Tokyo-based Takara
says its 'Dream Workshop' stand can be programmed to help sleepers
choose what to dream.
While preparing for bed, the user mounts a photograph on the device of
who should appear in the dream, selects music appropriate to the mood
and records key word prompts. Placed near the bedside, the dream-maker
emits a special white light, relaxing music and a fragrance to help the
person nod off.
Several hours later, it plays back the recorded word prompts, timed to
coincide with the part of the sleep cycle when dreams most often occur.
It then helps coax the sleeper gently out of sleep with more light and
music so that the dreams are not forgotten.
In a study conducted on a group of men and women between the ages of
20-40, the device had a success rate of 22 per cent in inducing dreams
in which one of the prompt words appeared. |
| Silicon Valley / Yomiuri Shimbun
Jun 30, 2004 |
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