Issue no. 13, 2005 Published: Apr 22, 2005 |
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Adobe to acquire Macromedia |
Tech giants explore 'hybrid' DVDs |
AMD releases dual-core server chips |
EU warns about firms offering .eu internet address |
Nikon's photo encryption reported broken |
Superlens breakthrough |
Minuscule microscope testing hope |
Computer generates verifiable mathematics proof |
Toshiba squeezes 3D images onto flat display |
'Robotic' dental drill to be tested on humans |
Ivory encore for dead piano greats |
Project to open internet to blind |
Mobile phonies |
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| Adobe to acquire Macromedia |
Adobe Systems, one of the world's largest providers of document-design
software, will acquire Macromedia in an all-stock transaction valued at
approximately $3.4bn, the companies announced Monday.
Under terms of the deal, approved by the companies' boards of directors,
Macromedia stockholders will receive 0.69 shares of Adobe common stock
for every share of their Macromedia common stock. That will result in
Macromedia stockholders owning about 18 per cent of the combined company
when the deal closes. The transaction, contingent upon the approval of
both companies' stockholders, is expected to be complete by the autumn.
It also requires the approval of federal regulators.
Adobe's software includes the popular Acrobat and Photoshop program.
Macromedia makes the Dreamweaver and Flash web-design software.
Combining the two businesses will allow them to create more powerful
programs that can be used across multiple operating systems, which
should pave the way for expansion into new markets, the companies said. |
| Washington Post
Apr 18, 2005 |
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| Tech giants explore 'hybrid' DVDs |
Technology giants Toshiba and Sony are in talks to come up with a
compromise on the next generation of DVD format. The two have been
pushing different formats which has so far split movie studios and
technology firms.
Toshiba, with NEC and Sanyo, is promoting the HD-DVD format, while
Sony's Blu-ray technology is backed by a group including Dell and
Samsung. Both want to avoid a format war. The technology and movie
industries recognise that a format war, like the VHS-Beta battle in the
1980s which saw the death of the Beta video cassette, is undesirable.
Toshiba said a single 'hybrid' format would be better for people and it
said it would aim for that as a compromise. Sony is reportedly pushing
Blu-ray's disc structure and HD-DVD software technology as a hybrid
solution. Toshiba wants to use HD-DVD's disc structure, which is closer
to that of DVDs now, and use Sony's multi-layer data recording
technology. |
| BBC News
Apr 21, 2005 |
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| AMD releases dual-core server chips |
Intel may have come out with dual-core processors a few days earlier,
but AMD says it is bringing out dual-core chips to the market where it
counts. The chipmaker on Thursday released its first three dual-core
Opteron processors for servers. It plans to follow that release with
three more server chips and a desktop line during the next two months.
Although desktop buyers will inevitably consume the performance that
dual-core chips can provide, server customers will be able to use the
performance almost immediately. Several applications and operating
systems have already been retrofitted for running on dual-processor
systems. Intel's dual-core chips, which debuted Monday, are designed for
desktops. Its Xeon server chips will not come out before early 2006.
Overall, a dual-core Opteron will outperform a single-core version
running at the same speed by 40 to 70 per cent, depending on the
application, according to AMD. Meanwhile, AMD's desktop chips will come
out around June and will be called the Athlon 64 X2. |
| ZDNet / CNET
Apr 21, 2005 |
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| EU warns about firms offering .eu internet address |
Companies claiming to offer Europeans the chance to register in advance
for a new .eu internet address may not be able to deliver on their word,
the European Commission said on Thursday.
The new address or domain will offer European companies and individuals
an alternative to the .com suffix or having to list a series of national
addresses in Europe. The new pan-European domain name will go live from
the start of 2006.
But some companies are already offering and charging individuals to
register for a .eu internet address in advance. However, only public
bodies and companies with a trademark can register in advance, during a
so-called sunrise period lasting four months, the Commission warns. A
precise date for the start of the sunrise period will be announced later
this year. |
| Yahoo! / Reuters
Apr 21, 2005 |
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| Nikon's photo encryption reported broken |
A Massachusetts programmer says he has broken a proprietary encryption
code that has effectively forced some Nikon digital camera owners to use
the company's own software.
Because Nikon scrambled a portion of the file, legal worries have kept
third-party developers such as Adobe Systems from supporting Nikon's
uncompressed 'raw' photos in their software. Nikon sells its Nikon
Capture utility for $100.
'It's an open format now,' said programmer Dave Coffin, who posted the
decryption code on his website this week. Coffin gained some fame in
digital photography circles as the author of the popular Dcraw utility,
which translates raw images from cameras into a nonproprietary format.
Coffin said that the publication of his discovery may let Adobe include
support for Nikon's file format in the next version of its Camera Raw
software without violating the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. |
| ZDNet / CNET
Apr 21, 2005 |
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| Superlens breakthrough |
Physicists at the University of California at Berkeley have made the
first optical superlens from a thin layer of silver. The lens has a
negative refractive index and can be used to image structures with a
resolution that is about one sixth the wavelength of light - thus
overcoming the so-called diffraction limit. The lens could have many
applications, such as imaging nano-scale objects with light.
Conventional, positive-refractive-index lenses create images by
capturing the light waves emitted by an object and then bending them.
However, objects also emit 'evanescent' waves that contain a lot of
information at very small scales about the object. These waves are much
harder to measure because they decay exponentially and never reach the
image plane - a threshold in optics known as the diffraction limit.
In 2003, the researchers already showed that optical evanescent waves
could be enhanced as they passed through a silver superlens. Now they
have taken this work one step further and have imaged objects as small
as 40-nm across with their superlens, which is just 35-nm thick. Current
optical microscopes can only resolve objects down to around 400-nm. |
| PhysicsWeb
Apr 21, 2005 |
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| Minuscule microscope testing hope |
Scientists at Cardiff University have developed a tiny microscope - the
width of a human hair - which they say could revolutionise the
examination of biological samples.
The researchers say the optical biochip could help doctors test for
diseases and develop new drugs. The team is looking to integrate the
biochip into medical technology, such as diagnostic equipment.
The biochip works by emitting tiny lasers which analyse a cell.
Biological samples can be placed on the biochip - just visible to the
human eye - which then relays what it finds via an electrical signal. In
theory, the biochip could detect diseases such as HIV, malaria and some
cancers, or aid drug development by analysing how a cell reacts to a
substance. Cell diagnosis is currently done by traditional microscope or
by hospital-based equipment. |
| BBC News
Apr 17, 2005 |
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| Computer generates verifiable mathematics proof |
A computer-assisted proof of a 150-year-old mathematical conjecture can
at last be checked by human mathematicians. The Four Colour Theorem,
proposed by Francis Guthrie in 1852, states that any four colours are
the minimum needed to fill in a flat map without any two regions of the
same colour touching.
A proof of the theorem was announced by US mathematicians in 1976. But a
crucial portion of their work involved checking many thousands of maps -
a task that can only feasibly be done using a computer. So a
long-standing concern has been that some hidden flaw in the computer
code they used might undermine the overall logic of the proof.
But now researchers at Microsoft, UK and INRIA in France have translated
the proof into a language used to represent logical propositions -
called Coq - and created logic-checking software to confirm that the
steps put forward in the proof make sense. Microsoft hopes to develop a
similar system for checking the logic used in computer programs, which
could pre-empt some unforeseen bugs that cause programs to crash. |
| New Scientist
Apr 19, 2005 |
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| Toshiba squeezes 3D images onto flat display |
Toshiba this week claimed an imaging breakthrough with the development
of technology that allows 3-D images to be viewed on a flatbed display
without the need for special glasses. Viewing the display from an angle
allows the viewer to experience 3-D images that appear to stand out
several centimetres from the surface of the display.
Toshiba said that its displays employ an integral imaging system that
reproduces light beams similar to those produced by a real object, not
its visual representation. Toshiba developed proprietary software that
uses 10 or more views of an object, and which processes and reproduces
the images in 3-D with a wide viewing angle. Specially developed
middleware and dedicated circuitry supports fast playback of the images
with only a graphics card.
Toshiba is working to refine the technology to include integration of
touch-screen controls, and expects to create commercially available
products within two years. |
| VNUnet UK
Apr 18, 2005 |
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| 'Robotic' dental drill to be tested on humans |
A 'robotic' dentist's drill is to be tested on humans in Europe and the
US, and could represent the first step towards more automated dental
procedures. The drill, developed by Israel's Tactile Technologies, is
designed to take the complexity out of dental implant work. It could
make operations cheaper, quicker and less painful for patients.
A dental implant is a small metal pin fixed into the jaw to mimic a
tooth's root. It is used to anchor replacement teeth and bridges and
installing one normally involves complicated and lengthy surgery.
Firstly, a frame is clamped onto a patient's jaw and very thin needles
penetrate the gum to determine the location of the bone. This data is
wirelessly transmitted to a PC, which combines it with CT scan data to
configure a set of drill guides. The guides are then attached to the
frame and finally the dentist presses a button to start the drilling in
the precise location required. Once activated the drill is self-guiding
but the practitioner can still alter the drilling process at any time. |
| New Scientist
Apr 20, 2005 |
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| Ivory encore for dead piano greats |
Next month music lovers in Raleigh, North Carolina, will be able to hear
two of the greatest pianists of the 20th century in concert. Both the
pianists, however, are long dead. Zenph Studios, a software company
based in Raleigh, has found a way to take a music recording and convert
it into a live concert played on real instruments. The concert will be a
completely faithful rendition of the original pianists' work.
Zenph resurrected a scratchy mono recording of Bach's Goldberg
Variations, made by Glenn Gould in 1955 and a recording of a Chopin
prelude by Alfred Cortot in 1928. Zenph has found a way to extract the
sounds from audio recordings and convert them into a high-resolution
version of MIDI, the standard way of coding music for computers.
Zenph says it has also solved the problem of polyphonic transcription -
distinguishing several notes played simultaneously. The company will
organise a concert, at which a Disklavier Pro piano will replay Gould
and Cortot's work. The piano will replicate every note struck, down to
the velocity of the hammer and position of the key when it was played. |
| New Scientist
Apr 22, 2005 |
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| Project to open internet to blind |
A three-year project to improve blind access to the internet has started
at Queen's University in Belfast. Researchers are working to devise ways
to guide the blind and visually impaired through the web, as part of the
Enabled initiative. The EU has provided EUR 3.8m funding for the project
which 13 other bodies across Europe are taking part in.
As well as schemes involving tactile display screens and audio cues,
there is also the potential to use mobile devices as audio guides for
the blind. Trials will be carried out in Belfast in conjunction with the
Blind Centre for Northern Ireland and the Royal National Institute of
the Blind which will help organise user focus groups and training and
evaluation sessions.
Queen's University is the project leader and is joined in the project by
13 other universities and organisations across Europe. |
| BBC News
Apr 19, 2005 |
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| Mobile phonies |
Many people who use mobile phones in public, are faking their
conversations to make themselves seem important. According a Rutgers
University Center for Mobile Communications Studies report, a surprising
number of people make fake phone calls on their cell phones just for the
benefit of those around them.
James Katz, a professor of communication at the university, said that in
one survey he conducted, more than a quarter of people said they had
faked it. Often it is to cover something up. Like if they are late for
work they will wander into the office pretending to be talking to an
important customer. Apparently, the bigger the deal on the phone, the
more likely it is to be faked.
According to the study, men will often pretend to be on an important
call as they walk over to try and pick up a woman. A woman, on the other
hand, will pretend to be on the phone to avoid being picked up. It is a
wonder humanity ever gets the chance to breed. |
| The Inquirer
Apr 21, 2005 |
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