Issue no. 3, 2006 Published: Jan 20, 2006 |
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European patent policy back on the IT agenda |
Firefox gets a fifth of European market |
Inventor develops anti-malaria wristwatch |
New chip to detect bird flu |
Magnetic thinking |
Balloons to help scientists clear cloudy picture |
Clever car keeps an eye on stray pedestrians |
Every inch of Netherlands viewable online |
Computer to predict terrorist damage |
Dutch open Big Brother-style prison |
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| European patent policy back on the IT agenda |
The European patent system is back on the IT agenda for 2006 after the
European Commission launched a consultation on future patent policy, six
months after the European Parliament rejected the EC's controversial
technology patents directive.
Internal market and services commissioner Charlie McCreevy announced the
plan to seek views on how to improve the patent system in Europe and
push forward the long-delayed Community Patent initiative, prompting
anti-software patent campaigners to raise the alert. McCreevy said the
Community Patent remains central to EU policy and also invited
businesses and individuals alike to enter into a debate on ways to
improve the current patent system in Europe, and explore possible areas
for harmonisation across the EU.
The Community Patent plan to create a single European patent system has
been debated since the 1970s but stalled in 2004 as the Competitive
Council failed to agree on the details. It has been expected to return
to the political agenda since July 2005 when the European Parliament
voted unanimously to reject the directive on the patentability of
computer-implemented interventions, CII. |
| Computer Business Review
Jan 17, 2006 |
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| Firefox gets a fifth of European market |
The Mozilla Firefox browser has achieved a market share of more than 20
per cent in Europe, according to the latest figures released by French
web metrics firm XiTi.
XiTi, which based its figures on a sample of 32.5m website visits, said
Finland has the highest proportion of Firefox users, followed by
Slovenia and Germany. It found that the open-source browser is used by
38, 36 and 30 per cent of users in these countries, respectively. The UK
has one of the lowest proportions of Firefox users in Europe, accounting
for only 11 per cent of website visits there. The 20-per cent overall
figure for Europe is an average calculated from the figures obtained for
each European country, according to XiTi.
But XiTi's figures should probably be taken with a grain of salt, as
Firefox usage tends to be highest over the weekend, according to Mozilla
Europe. The Firefox browser is less used during the week, as enterprises
are more conservative when it comes to using a newer browser. |
| ZDNet UK
Jan 17, 2006 |
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| Inventor develops anti-malaria wristwatch |
A South African inventor has developed an anti-malaria wristwatch to
help combat one of Africa's biggest killers by monitoring the blood of
those who wear it and sounding an alarm when the parasite is detected.
Gervan Lubbe said his 'Malaria Monitor' wristwatch, due to launch next
month, could save lives and keep millions out of hospital by heading off
the disease before patients even feel ill. Malaria, caused by a parasite
carried by mosquitoes, kills more than a million people every year and
makes 300 million seriously ill, according to the World Health
Organisation. Ninety per cent of deaths are in sub-Saharan Africa.
The sturdy digital timepiece pricks the wrist with a tiny needle four
times a day and tests the blood for malaria parasites. If the parasite
count tops 50 an alarm sounds and a brightly-coloured picture of a
mosquito flashes on the watch face. The wearer must take three tablets
that kill all traces of the disease within 48 hours. |
| ABC News / Reuters
Jan 18, 2006 |
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| New chip to detect bird flu |
STMicroelectronics is planning to market a disposable laboratory
microchip that can confirm within about an hour a human case of bird flu
at a limited cost, the European chip maker said on Wednesday.
STMicroelectronics is developing a test that could be available to
healthcare providers this autumn, with Singapore-based medical
diagnostics company Veredus Laboratories.
Bird flu or the H5N1 virus has killed at least 79 people since 2003,
according to the latest WHO tally, which does not include some of the
most recent cases reported in Turkey and Indonesia.
Veredus is developing an application, based on STMicro's technology, to
identify if a patient is infected with the H5N1 strain or a subtype of
influenza in a single test that could replace the several tests
currently used to detect the illness. The diagnostic is built on
STMicro's 'In-Check' platform, which is described as a complete
laboratory on a chip. |
| ABC News / Reuters
Jan 18, 2006 |
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| Magnetic thinking |
Computers already use magnets to store their memories. Now scientists
are trying to make their whole 'brain' go magnetic.
Conventional computers do their 'thinking' by shuttling electrons
through arrangements of transistors called logic gates. But in order for
those thoughts to be stored as computer memories, the electrical signals
have to be translated by bulky components into magnetic fields on the
metallic grains that cover your hard drive. This additional step takes
up extra room in a computer. Moreover, transistors get so hot that it is
becoming increasingly difficult to pack more of them on to silicon chips
without melting something important.
Now, scientist at the University of Notre Dame, Indiana, have created
such a logic gate from a pattern of tiny nickel-iron magnets, each
around 100 nanometres long. Their magnetic fields can point in one of
two directions, which represent the computer bits '1' or '0'. Because
each nanomagnet influences the state of its neighbour, a range of input
signals at one side of the pattern can trigger a predictable outcome at
the other. |
| Nature / Science
Jan 12, 2006 |
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| Balloons to help scientists clear cloudy picture |
Scientists from 10 countries will release 1,000 weather balloons in
Australia's city of Darwin over the next month as part an international
experiment to try to find out the nature of tropical clouds.
The Tropical Warm Pool International Cloud Experiment involves
scientists from Australia, Europe, the United States and Japan and aims
to find out how the high-altitude cirrus clouds are formed and break up.
The experiment will see weather balloons launched from five sites every
three hours over the next month. Measurements of heat and water exchange
will then be taken from satellites, planes, ships and ground stations
within a 250 km radius.
Organisers of the experiment said the information would help them better
understand what impact cirrus clouds have on tropical climates and how
they can better forecast the intensity of tropical storms. |
| Yahoo / Reuters
Jan 19, 2006 |
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| Clever car keeps an eye on stray pedestrians |
A prototype vehicle capable of spotting pedestrians who stray into the
road has been built by Volkswagen and other companies. The Save-U system
was developed by a consortium including Volkswagen, DaimlerChrysler, and
several other technical companies. A prototype has already undergone
successful testing in the UK.
The pedestrian-recognition technology uses three different types of
sensor to identify a person, or even a cyclist, in the road ahead. The
system harnesses an array of radar sensors, as well as visual and
infrared cameras.
A connected computer can then identify an impending impact and either
alert the driver or take its own evasive action. This might mean
applying the brakes or activating external safety features, such as
outer airbags. |
| New Scientist
Jan 12, 2006 |
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| Every inch of Netherlands viewable online |
A website launched by Dutch real estate agents will allow house-hunters
and the merely curious to view every inch of the Netherlands - up close
- starting next week. Funda.nl, which lists 75 per cent of the Dutch
property that is for sale and is used by 2.6m visitors every month, will
offer a database of 15 million photographs initially, growing it to 21
million images by year-end.
Full-circle pictures taken at 20 metre intervals in metropolitan areas
and every 50 metres in rural areas will show the entire country at
street level, with satellite images supplied by Google Earth offering a
bird's-eye view. The pictures, put together by Cyclomedia, a spin-off of
Delft Technical University, show views taken from public roads and are
intended to help house hunters who want to check if their dream house is
located next to a garbage dump.
Google Earth, which allows internet users to zoom in on locations around
the world, caused concern when it was launched last year. Governments
feared terrorists might use the service to help plot attacks. |
| CNET News / Reuters
Jan 17, 2006 |
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| Computer to predict terrorist damage |
The Japanese government plans to put into operation a computer simulator
that can predict the damage caused by a large-scale terrorist attack.
The system contains data about the damage that can be expected from
different types of attack, including missile strikes and the release of
poison gas. In the event an attack takes place, topographic, climatic
and other data would be entered to generate an estimate of injuries and
damage.
Although Japan has not suffered an attack by Islamist terrorists on its
home soil, concerns have been high that the dispatch of troops to Iraq
and high-profile support for the US could make it a target for
militants. |
| The Japan Times
Jan 18, 2006 |
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| Dutch open Big Brother-style prison |
A hi-tech jail opened this week in the Netherlands. Dutch authorities
are convinced the newly dubbed 'big brother prison' is the future of
correctional facilities: cheap and efficient, while not coddling
criminals or violating their fundamental rights.
Detainees in the Lelystad jail will be kept in six-man cells, where they
can do their cooking and washing and run their schedules via a
touch-screen monitor by their beds. Inmates have limited choices for
activities and they are locked in cells at night. Camera surveillance is
only in public spaces. Cell microphones, linked to the control centre,
are equipped with sounds analysed by emotion recognition software to
alert guards to any violence.
The jail's estimated cost per prisoner per night is EUR 105, compared
with EUR 140 for other jails. The jail requires only six guards for 150
prisoners, instead of the usual 15. With good behaviour inmates can
build up credits to watch more TV or get more channels. They can also
earn more phone calls, longer visiting hours, or even 'buy' a switch to
another room. |
| The Guardian
Jan 19, 2006 |
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