Issue no. 14, 2005 Published: Jun 06, 2008 |
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EU warns Microsoft of extra fines |
Supercomputing 'Grid' passes latest test |
New cellphone to challenge MP3 players |
Microsoft adds flash memory to hard drives |
Europe's largest supercomputer eavesdrops on stars |
VR headset spots concussion in minutes |
Mind-reading machine knows what you see |
Scientists make bacteria behave like computers |
Tiny fridge aims big |
Last call for 2006 EU technology prize |
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| EU warns Microsoft of extra fines |
The EU has warned Microsoft it could incur additional fines unless it
makes more effort to stop abusing its dominant position. The comments
were made by an EU spokesman after a meeting between EU competition
commissioner Neelie Kroes and Microsoft chief executive Steve Ballmer.
In March 2004, the EU found Microsoft guilty of preventing competition,
and ordered it to open up its systems. In addition to a EUR 497m fine in
March 2004, the EU ordered Microsoft to open up its core software
systems to rivals.
Following Kroes' meeting with Ballmer, the spokesman said Europe
remained unhappy on both counts. Although Microsoft brought out a
version of Windows without Media Player last month, Kroes is not
convinced it was technically up to standard. Under EU rules Europe could
fine Microsoft up to 5 per cent of its daily global turnover for each
day that a decision is not applied to its liking. |
| BBC News
Apr 27, 2005 |
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| Supercomputing 'Grid' passes latest test |
When the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) comes online at the CERN in 2007 it
will produce more data than any other experiment in the history of
physics. Particle physicists have now passed another milestone in their
preparations for the LHC by sustaining a continuous flow of 600
megabytes of data per second (MB/s) for 10 days from the Geneva
laboratory to seven sites in Europe and the US.
This is the first time that such high rates of data transfer have been
maintained between so many sites and over such a long period of time.
The total amount of data transmitted during the challenge - some 500
terabytes - would take about 250 years to download using a typical 512
kilobit per second household broadband connection.
The next service challenge will take place this summer and will involve
connecting more computing centres over a three-month period. CERN plans
to use an internet-like worldwide supercomputing 'Grid' of computing
centres to handle the data from the collider, which will then be
analysed by more than 6,000 scientists all over the world. |
| PhysicsWeb
Apr 26, 2005 |
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| New cellphone to challenge MP3 players |
A cellphone that can store as much music as Apple's popular iPod Mini
MP3 player will be launched by Nokia later in 2005. The move follows
Sony-Ericsson's unveiling in March of a music-storing 'Walkman' phone
and marks another nail in the coffin for pure MP3 players.
Like the basic iPod Mini, Nokia's N91 phone incorporates a diminutive
4GB hard disc drive capable of storing at least 3,000 music tracks. By
comparison the first Walkman phone - the Sony-Ericsson W800 - will store
about 150 tracks on a 0.5GB flash-memory card.
A version with a 3G connection will be available to allow the wireless
downloading of music while the standard GSM phone will use a computer
and USB connection. Like the, the N91 has a 2-megapixel camera built in.
Apple has already struck a deal with US phone and chip maker Motorola to
jointly create an 'iPod phone' capable of interfacing easily with
Apple's iTunes music purchasing and track management service, but the
relationship has yet to bear fruit. |
| New Scientist
Apr 27, 2005 |
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| Microsoft adds flash memory to hard drives |
Microsoft has revealed a hybrid hard disk that includes flash memory to
reduce laptop power consumption by a claimed 10 per cent. The power
saving is achieved because the flash memory chip reduces the need for
the disk to spin. The technology is aimed at laptops running Longhorn,
Microsoft's upcoming version of Windows.
The technology also promises to reduce the number of hard drive failures
in laptop computers. A hard disk in a laptop typically lasts just half
as long as one in a desktop system, according to Microsoft.
Instead of constantly spinning the hard drive to store and retrieve
data, the flash memory can be used as a temporary storage area. The
prototype that Microsoft unveiled at WinHEC in Seattle used 128MB of
flash memory. The memory is also used to accelerate the wake up time for
a system once it has gone into sleep mode. By storing information on the
chip, a laptop can resume operation within 10 seconds as opposed to the
current 15-20 seconds. |
| VNUnet UK
Apr 26, 2005 |
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| Europe's largest supercomputer eavesdrops on stars |
Europe's biggest supercomputer will crunch data from thousands of radio
antennae eavesdropping on the history of the universe, its Dutch
developer ASTRON and US computer giant IBM said this week. The computer,
based in the northern Netherlands, will process signals from up to 13
billion light years from earth - as far back in time as the beginnings
of the earliest stars and galaxies after the formation of the universe.
Running on 12,000 PowerPC microprocessors, the computer can execute 27.4
Teraflops, or 27.4 trillion floating-point operations, per second. While
that makes it Europe's most powerful computer in terms of sustained
performance, the world's biggest computer remains the US-based BlueGene
with a capacity of 70.1 Teraflops.
The new computer will consume 150 Kilowatts of power - the equivalent of
2,500 60-watt light bulbs - which is considered economical for a
supercomputer. It will form the heart of a new type of radio telescope
developed by ASTRON, and gather and analyse information from ASTRON's
Low Frequency Array 'software telescope' network. |
| Yahoo! / Reuters
Apr 26, 2005 |
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| VR headset spots concussion in minutes |
You've had a blow to the head, but how do you know whether you are
concussed or not? The answer could be a matter of life or death, yet it
takes hours of testing by professionals to know for sure.
Now, researchers at the Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, and
the Emergency Medicine Research Center at Emory University are
developing a virtual-reality headset that can diagnose the extent of a
head injury within minutes. Non-medical personnel will use it to quickly
gauge the extent of brain damage, and the system works in noisy
emergency rooms, on the battlefield or at the side of a sports field. It
can also pick up early signs for dementia.
The person who has suffered the blow wears a VR headset, plus
headphones, and is given a device similar to a video game controller to
operate. The system puts the wearer through an array of neuro-
psychological tests designed to pick up reduced reaction times and
deficits in working memory, conditions that would indicate injuries to
different parts of the brain. |
| New Scientist
Apr 27, 2005 |
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| Mind-reading machine knows what you see |
It is possible to read someone’s mind by remotely measuring their brain
activity, researchers have shown. The technique can even extract
information from subjects that they are not aware of themselves and
could help doctors work out if patients apparently in a coma are
actually conscious.
Researchers at ATR Computational Neuroscience Laboratories in Kyoto,
Japan, and Princeton University in New Jersey, US, have achieved these
'mind reading' feats remotely using functional MRI scanning. They showed
patterns of parallel lines in 1 of 8 orientations to four volunteers. By
focussing on brain regions involved in visual perception they were able
to recognise which orientation the subjects were observing.
Each line orientation corresponded to a different pattern of brain
activity, although the patterns were different in each person. What is
more, when two sets of lines were superimposed and the subjects were
asked to focus on one set, the researchers could work out which one they
were thinking of from the brain images. |
| New Scientist / Nature Neuroscience
Apr 25, 2005 |
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| Scientists make bacteria behave like computers |
Bacteria have been programmed to behave like computers, assembling
themselves into complex shapes based on instructions stuffed into their
genes. The research could lead to smart biological devices that could
detect hazardous substances. Eventually, the process might be used to
direct the construction of useful devices or the growth of new tissue,
perhaps restoring function to a severed spinal cord.
The Princeton researchers programmed E. coli bacteria to emit red or
green fluorescent light in response to a signal emitted from another set
of E. coli. The living cells were commanded to make a bull's-eye
pattern, for example, around central cells based on communication
between the bacteria. Other patterns produced with this new 'synthetic
biology' technique include a pretty good semblance of a heart and a
rudimentary flower pattern.
Previously, the Princeton team showed they could insert DNA into cells
to make them behave like digital circuits. The cells could be made to
perform basic mathematical logic. The latest work expands this concept
to vast numbers of bacteria responding in concert. |
| MSNBC / LiveScience.com / Nature
Apr 28, 2005 |
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| Tiny fridge aims big |
Physicists at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)
in Boulder, Colorado, and the University of Notre Dame in Indiana, US
have made a chip-sized refrigerator that can cool objects much bigger
than itself to millikelvin (mK) temperatures. The device relies on the
quantum mechanical tunnelling of electrons between a metal and
superconductor and could find applications in a variety of cryogenic
sensors in the semiconductor industry and astronomy.
Many next-generation scientific instruments will rely on sensors cooled
to temperatures near 100 mK. However, present-day solid-state
refrigerators cannot go below about 1 K. The physicists now have created
a chip-scale electron-tunnelling refrigerator that could ultimately be
capable of cooling centimetre-sized objects to 100 mK and below.
Such a combination could then be used in a variety of cryogenic
applications, including X-ray sensors for defect analysis in the
semiconductor industry or photon detectors in a planned satellite
mission to search for polarisation in the cosmic microwave background. |
| PhysicsWeb
Apr 28, 2005 |
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| Last call for 2006 EU technology prize |
The EU has issued a final call for entrants to the European Information
Society Technologies 2006 Prize. Thursday 12 May is the final date for
submissions and the three winners of the 2005 prize will each receive
EUR 200,000.
Prizes will be awarded to 'novel products with a high information
technology content and evident market potential'. If the product is
already being marketed, it should have been introduced after 1 June 2003
or at least be in prototype stage. The 2005 winners will be announced at
a ceremony next week. |
| VNUnet UK
Apr 22, 2005 |
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