Issue no. 22, 2005 Published: Jul 08, 2005 |
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Europe rejects patent proposal |
EU seeks pan-European license for online music use |
Vienna kicks off open source migration |
Microsoft pays out $775m to IBM |
Watching TV harms kids' academic success |
New wireless broadband 'whispers' below the radar |
Special shark senses studied for US Navy |
Suicide bombers not easily foiled by technology |
Entering a dark age of innovation |
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| Europe rejects patent proposal |
The European Parliament has rejected a controversial measure that would
have legalised software patents in the European Union. Out of 729
members of the European Parliament 648 voted Wednesday to reject the
proposal, called the Computer Implemented Inventions Directive, which
would have widened the extent to which software could be patented.
The Foundation for a Free Information Infrastructure, or FFII, described
the decision as a 'great victory for those who have campaigned to ensure
that European innovation and competitiveness is protected from
monopolisation of software functionalities and business methods'.
While many software developers have spoken out against the directive
from the start, large companies have lobbied in its favour, often via
campaign groups such as the Business Software Alliance, CompTIA and the
Campaign for Creativity. |
| CNET News / ZDNet UK
Jul 06, 2005 |
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| EU seeks pan-European license for online music use |
The European Commission will push for measures to establish a
pan-European copyright license for online music use by October to allow
EU industry to compete better with the United States, it said Thursday.
Right now there are 25 different licensing bodies in the 25-nation EU,
and anyone who wants to open an online store for music faces the trouble
and expense of approaching the royalty collector in each member state.
The Commission is now consulting interested parties about the
initiative, which could result in legislation or a set of
recommendations. US online music revenue in 2004 came in at EUR 207m
compared with EUR 27.2m in Europe. Forecasts for 2005 put the US figure
at nearly EUR 500m compared with Europe's EUR 106.4m. |
| CNET News / Reuters
Jul 07, 2005 |
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| Vienna kicks off open source migration |
The Austrian capital city of Vienna kicked off its soft migration to
open source software on the desktop on Tuesday. Plans for the migration
were announced in January.
Vienna town councillor Rudi Schicker presented the city's bespoke Linux
distribution, known as Wienux, at a press conference. Departments in the
city administration will now be given the option to migrate to open
source software on the desktop.
The city is currently running Microsoft Windows 2000 and Office 2000 on
its 16,000 desktop PCs but has identified 7,500 that could be migrated
to the open source productivity application OpenOffice.org. Of these,
4,800 could also be migrated to the open source operating system Linux. |
| Silicon.com / ZDNet UK
Jul 06, 2005 |
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| Microsoft pays out $775m to IBM |
Microsoft is to pay $775m to computer giant IBM to settle an anti-trust
claim. Under the settlement, the software maker will also give IBM a
$75m credit for its computer programs. The settlement resolves
discriminatory pricing and overcharging allegations made by IBM.
The action dates back to a 1990s US federal case which found Microsoft
had been acting as a monopoly by forcing computer firms to take its
software. The $775m payout is the latest in a long line of such payments
following the action brought by the US Department of Justice - last year
Microsoft agreed to pay $2bn to Sun Microsystems.
The case does also not resolve another outstanding claim launched by
IBM. The computer group alleges that Microsoft's software dominance
damaged its server hardware and software business. However, IBM has said
it will not launch any compensation claims in the case for two years -
it will also limit such claims to damages suffered after June 2002. |
| BBC News
Jul 01, 2005 |
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| Watching TV harms kids' academic success |
Too much time in front of the TV reduces children's learning abilities,
academic achievement, and even the likelihood of their graduating from
university, suggest three new studies.
Researchers at the University of Otago in New Zealand studied nearly
1,000 children born in 1972 and 1973. Kids who watched the least TV -
especially between the ages of 5 and 11 - had the highest probability of
graduating from university by the age of 26, regardless of IQ or
socioeconomic status. While those who watched the most TV, more than 3
hours per day, had the highest chance of dropping out of school without
qualifications. Two other studies found similar results.
One proposed mechanism of how TV harms educational achievement is that
TV takes time away from creative play, reading or doing homework. But,
the editorial notes, research specifically examining this suggests it is
especially the content of what is viewed that matters. They suggest that
parents should encourage kids to watch quality, educational programming. |
| New Scientist / Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine
Jul 04, 2005 |
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| New wireless broadband 'whispers' below the radar |
A new communications tool that 'whispers' on busy radio channels could
enable broadband internet services for on-the-go wireless devices or
hook up homes that cannot yet get fast web access.
xMax, developed by XG Technology, is a very quiet radio system that uses
radio channels already filled up with noisy pager or TV signals. The
system can emit signals that are too weak to be picked up by normal
antennas, but that can be 'heard' by special aerials which know where to
'listen', thus enabling dual usage of the same scarce radio spectrum.
The technology could interest a telecoms or internet operator with no
radio spectrum because it can begin a wireless broadband service with
very few base stations and add more stations and increase density as
demand rises. It is also appealing for rural areas which operators find
too costly to cover with the current third-generation mobile phone
networks which need base stations every few miles. |
| ZDNet
Jul 04, 2005 |
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| Special shark senses studied for US Navy |
Could technology duplicate the innate ability sharks and stingrays
possess to detect electrical fields generated by other creatures in the
ocean?
RD Instruments, which develops acoustic sensors for detecting the speed
of currents for marine safety, is trying to find out as part of a US
Navy research project that could lead to new ways for the military to
detect enemy submarines or mines at sea.
Sharks use their ability to detect electric fields created by other
animals moving underwater both for navigation and targeting prey. The
firm is studying sharks to gauge the feasibility of duplicating that
sensory skill. If feasibility studies are successful and the Navy opts
to fund RDI, the company estimates it could take two years to develop a
prototype. |
| Yahoo / AP
Jul 06, 2005 |
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| Suicide bombers not easily foiled by technology |
When it comes to preventing suicide-bomb attacks technology cannot beat
good old-fashioned detective work, a new study suggests. The development
of sensitive explosives sensors and scanners have in recent years raised
the hope that technology could one day be used to detect suicide bombers.
However, widespread deployment in urban areas would still fail to reduce
casualties in any meaningful way, according to Edward Kaplan at Yale
University, US. Working with Moshe Kress at the Naval Postgraduate
School in Monterey, US, he used mathematical models to predict how
effective networks of sensors would be in early detection of pedestrian
bombers, both in a city grid scenario and an open plaza environment.
They found that even if the sensors worked perfectly, to detect more
than 80 per cent of all attacks with sufficient time to respond would
require between 70 per cent and 80 per cent sensor coverage of the area
of a city. Sensors are still likely to be effective in protecting
specific target areas, such as government buildings. But many suicide
bomb attacks appear to be random and investment in intelligence-
gathering to prevent an attack seems a wiser strategy, says Kaplan. |
| New Scientist / Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Jul 04, 2005 |
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| Entering a dark age of innovation |
Far from being in technological nirvana, we are fast approaching a new
dark age, according to Jonathan Huebner, a physicist working at the US
Pentagon's Naval Air Warfare Center.
Huebner plotted major innovations and scientific advances over time
compared to world population, using the 7200 key innovations listed in
the recently published book 'The History of Science and Technology'.
Rather than growing exponentially, or even keeping pace with population
growth, they peaked in 1873 and have been declining ever since. When he
plotted the number of US patents granted per decade divided by the
country's population, he found the graph peaked in 1915.
The global rate of innovation today, which is running at seven
'important technological developments' per billion people per year,
matches the rate in 1600. Despite far higher standards of education and
massive R&D funding 'it is more difficult now for people to develop new
technology', Huebner says. Extrapolating this curve just two decades
into the future, the innovation rate plummets to medieval levels. |
| New Scientist
Jul 02, 2005 |
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