Issue no. 37, 2005 Published: Dec 02, 2005 |
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Free Software Foundation begins overhaul of GPL |
Entanglement reaches new levels |
Viral cure could 'immunise' the internet |
UK scientists drill world's smallest hole |
Dutch tech firm wants to rid the web of the .com |
Invention: Smarter surveillance |
Hitachi points to vein recognition |
Save your eyes - don't squint |
Scientists develop 'invisible diet' |
Microsoft Research tool 'snarfs' up unwanted e-mail |
Air guitarists' rock dreams come true |
Singapore scientists embrace plan for cyberhugs |
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| Free Software Foundation begins overhaul of GPL |
The Free Software Foundation (FSF) plans to revise the license that
regulates the use of open-source software. The US-based FSF released the
first version of the GNU General Public License in 1991, which was
originally intended for free software that was developed by the FSF. But
now there are over 50,000 different software developers that use the GPL
as a way of getting their software out to users.
According to the FSF, the GNU GPL is the most widely used free software
license worldwide, with almost three quarters of all free software
programs distributed under it. Use of software released under the GPL
allows distributors to charge for distributing the software - for
example, for the cost of putting it on a CD-ROM - but they cannot make a
charge for actual usage.
A draft of the new license, called GPLv3, will be released at the
International Public Conference for GPLv3 at MIT on January 16-17, 2006.
After the draft of the new license has been published, the FSF will
invite feedback from software developers and users. The organisation
hopes to publish a final discussion document by the autumn of 2006. |
| Yahoo / Newsfactor
Dec 01, 2005 |
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| Entanglement reaches new levels |
Two rival teams of physicists in the US and Austria have succeeded in
entangling the largest number of particles ever. Researchers at the
National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) in Colorado have
entangled six beryllium ions while the team at Innsbruck University has
independently entangled eight calcium ions. The results are the latest
step to large-scale quantum computers and may also be important for
quantum cryptography and ultra-sensitive measurement techniques.
Entanglement allows particles to have a much closer relationship than is
possible in classical physics: if two particles are entangled, we can
know the state of one particle by measuring the state of the other.
Besides, a particle can exist in a superposition of both these states at
the same time. By taking advantage of such phenomena, a quantum computer
could, in principle, outperform a classical computer for certain tasks.
The new results break the previous record of five entangled photons
achieved last year. Moreover, the entangled states can be produced 'on
demand' and made available for further tasks without being destroyed. |
| PhysicsWeb
Dec 01, 2005 |
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| Viral cure could 'immunise' the internet |
A cure for computer viruses that spreads in a viral fashion could
immunise the internet, according to researchers at Tel-Aviv University,
Israel. They propose developing a network of 'honeypot' computers,
distributed across the web, dedicated to the task of combating viruses.
To a virus, these machines would seem like ordinary vulnerable
computers. But the honeypots would attract a virus, analyse it
automatically, and then distribute a countermeasure. The honeypots would
be linked to one another via a dedicated and secure network. This way,
once one has captured a virus, all the others will quickly know about
the infection immediately. Each honeypot then acts as a hub of healing
code which is disseminated to computers connected to it. The
countermeasure then spreads out across the broader network.
Simulations show that the larger the network grows, the more efficient
the scheme is. If a network has 50,000 computers (nodes) with only 0.4
per cent honeypots, just 5 per cent of the network will be infected
before the immune system halts the virus. But, a 200-million-node
network should see just 0.001 per cent of machines get infected. |
| New Scientist / Nature Physics
Dec 01, 2005 |
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| UK scientists drill world's smallest hole |
A team of scientists from Cardiff University have developed machinery
that they claim can drill the smallest holes the world. The group can
drill holes as small as 22 microns (0.022 mm) - less than the width of a
human hair - in stainless steel and other materials.
The process is achieved by creating a minute electrode, with a diameter
of only six microns, which was itself produced by manufacturing a highly
precise wire electrode discharge grinder. Next year, the scientists
expect to acquire new nano-technological equipment which will enable
them to make even smaller holes and add surface materials of tiny
thicknesses to finish optical, medical and other components.
The ability to produce such quality tiny holes in any conductive
material will benefit designers in the medical and laboratory sciences,
as well as electronic design engineers in creating smaller electronic
systems which will cover a wide range of industrial and consumer
industries. |
| VNUnet UK
Nov 30, 2005 |
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| Dutch tech firm wants to rid the web of the .com |
A Dutch technology company has breathed life into a project to rid the
internet of suffixes such as .com, and instead offer single names which
can be countries, company names or fantasy words. Such a system, which
makes it possible to have a web address consisting of a single name,
offers flexibility and is language and character independent.
Amsterdam-based UnifiedRoot offers practically unlimited numbers of
suffixes. The company has installed 13 internet domain name system (DNS)
root servers on four continents.
Dutch airport Schiphol is one of the early customers. Registering a name
costs $1,000 plus an annual fee of $240. Companies can then invent
additional website addresses in front of their top-level domain (TLD)
name, such as flights.schiphol or parking.schiphol. To avoid conflicts
between TLDs from UnifiedRoot and ICANN, the Dutch company will not
register existing ICANN TLDs. |
| ZDNet News / Reuters
Nov 26, 2005 |
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| Invention: Smarter surveillance |
Surveillance cameras often capture only a blurred mug shot of a suspect,
either because they are moving or because the camera is not focused
correctly. But IBM has developed a solution. Instead of using a single
camera to monitor a scene, IBM has patented a system that uses several
cameras at once.
The idea is that a fixed camera takes a series of shots of a person,
enabling a computer to then calculate their direction and speed of
motion. This information will then be used to make movable cameras
follow the target's path, enabling them to focus accurately. The result
should be crystal clear pictures, no matter how fast the subject is
moving and should also be able to follow more than one target.
The system may be good for more than security surveillance too. IBM
reckons it could also be used at airports to rapidly identify passengers
standing in line, if combined with face recognition software. |
| New Scientist
Nov 29, 2005 |
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| Hitachi points to vein recognition |
Hitachi in Japan has unveiled its new Lora SE210 security laptop
computer featuring a biometric security device that uses vein
recognition. The security device is placed below the keyboard and uses
infra red light to scan a finger's tissue for vein patterns.
The laptop is the first mobile computer using the technology and targets
users handling sensitive or secure information. It is designed to be
used as a networked client. It has no hard drive but uses flash memory
to store the Windows XP embedded operating system.
While vein recognition is a less common form of biometric security, the
technology's backers claim that it is easy to perform a vein scan and
that it is very hard to damage or change the pattern. The technology
also offers an advantage over fingerprint scanners because identical
twins have highly similar fingerprints but different vein patterns. |
| VNUnet UK
Nov 30, 2005 |
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| Save your eyes - don't squint |
Researchers from Ohio State University found that people who squint at
their PC's monitor - looking at complex or detailed information
onscreen, for example - are prone to eye strain and a condition known as
'dry eye'. The 'dry eye' which results from a lack of blinking is not
debilitating but can be irritating and uncomfortable.
Computer users often squint at their monitors to cut the brightness or
to bring small details into clearer focus, according to the university's
scientists, and people may not be aware they are squinting. Most people
who use monitors will squint, which then causes them to blink less. Even
low-level squinting causing blink rates to half from 15 blinks a minute
to 7.5 per minute, the researchers found.
The researchers studied 10 volunteers' blink rates using electrodes
attached to an electromymogram and asked them to focus on a black dot on
a screen, squinting to varying levels. When volunteers were at their
most squinty, blinking reduced to four blinks per minute. |
| ZDNet / Silicon.com
Dec 01, 2005 |
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| Scientists develop 'invisible diet' |
Researchers at Utah State University are working a high-tech way to
trick people into desiring less fat without dangerous side effects. In
an effort to curb obesity, they would inject the body with manufactured
nanoparticles designed to fool the brain.
The team is engineering molecule-sized nanoparticles made of the same
fat molecules that occur naturally in your body. The nanoparticles would
be geared to fool specific cells inside you that communicate
with the brain about fat intake.
The research is in its early stages, but the researcher say they are
the preliminary tests are encouraging. The research is now focused on
developing fat substitutes that trick specific sites without harming the
rest of the body. Nanoparticles, which are small enough to slip through
cell membranes, could deliver drugs that would cause certain cells to
release and send more 'I've got my fill of fat' hormones to the brain. A
person would then presumably seek lower-fat foods. |
| Yahoo! / LiveScience.com
Dec 01, 2005 |
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| Microsoft Research tool 'snarfs' up unwanted e-mail |
Microsoft's research arm Thursday released a free tool to help users
slog through e-mail messages in their inbox in the order of importance,
according to one of the researchers who developed the software.
Created within Microsoft Research, the Social Relationship and Network
Finder, or SNARF, is an application that uses the same database as a
user's e-mail client to count the number of times users send and receive
e-mails from people, according to Microsoft Research. The 'social
sorting tool' will help e-mail users prioritise the e-mails in their
inbox based on how often they send and receive e-mails from contacts.
The tool runs simultaneously next to an e-mail client and allows a user
to look at unread e-mail in three views: Unread To/CC me, Unread Mail
and Unread Lists. The default sort mechanism ranks e-mail messages in
those categories based on how many times a user e-mails an address or
person on the list. SNARF also provides e-mail notifications. |
| InfoWorld /IDG
Dec 01, 2005 |
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| Air guitarists' rock dreams come true |
Aspiring rock gods can at last create their own guitar solos - without
ever having to pick up a real instrument, thanks to a group of Finnish
computer science students. The Virtual Air Guitar project, developed at
the Helsinki University of Technology, adds genuine electric guitar
sounds to the passionately played air guitar.
Using a computer to monitor the hand movements of a 'player', the system
adds riffs and licks to match frantic mid-air finger work. By responding
instantly to a wide variety of gestures it promises to turn even the
least musically gifted air guitarist to a virtual fret board virtuoso.
The system consists of a video camera and a computer hooked up to an
appropriately loud set of speakers. A player then needs only to don a
pair of brightly coloured gloves in order to rock out. Computer vision
software automatically keeps track of their hands and detects different
gestures. The team created a library of guitar sounds based around the
pentatonic minor scale - a progression commonly used for rock guitar
solos - in order to create the right sound for their virtual instrument. |
| New Scientist
Nov 28, 2005 |
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| Singapore scientists embrace plan for cyberhugs |
Researchers at Singapore-based Nanyang Technological University (NTU)
have discovered a way to 'cybertouch' by transmitting tactile movements
over the internet. A project presented at the CyberWorld International
Conference held last week at NTU demonstrated sending touch through the
internet using a live chicken.
The process works by dressing the chicken in a 'sensory jacket' that can
record and transmit the animal's movements. Movement data is sent over
the internet from a remote computer that is simultaneously monitoring
the animal over a web camera. The movement data is synchronised with the
remote image of the chicken, so that upon touching the image, the jacket
acts as a touch conductor, imitating the heat, pressure, and vibrations
of the real touch and passing them onto the chicken. As a result, the
chicken 'feels' the contact.
The concept of sending 'feeling' through the internet was developed by
NTU researchers as a way for pet owners and parents of young children to
maintain a degree of physical contact while away from their loved ones.
Wireless 'hugs' are the next move forward, according to the researchers. |
| VNUnet UK
Nov 29, 2005 |
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