Issue no. 3, 2007 Published: Jan 26, 2007 |
|
EC's open-source study wins broad support |
'Uncrackable' secure gigabit quantum-encryption scheme created |
Breakthrough beams bits onto photons |
Scientists create the densest chip ever |
Aliens need a lot more time to find us |
Microsoft in hot water over Wikipedia edits |
US military unveils heat-ray gun |
Researchers compete to build real Terminator |
|
| EC's open-source study wins broad support |
The European Commission-sponsored report which urged organisations to
consider deploying open-source software has won widespread support from
key industry figures.
The report, written by researchers at UNU-MERIT in the Netherlands, said
the total cost of ownership of deploying open source was less than the
cost of running proprietary software, in 'almost all' cases. The report
spelt out many benefits of open-source software and tried to quantify
its contribution to the European economy.
Simon Phipps, chief open-source officer at Sun, said the report brought
'cold, hard facts' to the debate of whether open source was a feasible
alternative for businesses. 'There is a lot to praise in this report, in
particular the assertion that the EU seeks to eliminate discrimination
against open source, which has unwittingly crept into processes in the
EU,' Phipps said. Laurent Lachal, an open-source software analyst with
Ovum, shared Phipps's optimistic view of the report. 'It shows that open
source is now mainstream and that it's nothing to fear and something to
take into account in everyday business decisions in procuring software.'
For more information visit http://www.flossimpact.eu. |
| ZDNet UK
Jan 18, 2007 |
back to top
|
|
| 'Uncrackable' secure gigabit quantum-encryption scheme created |
Quantum encryption is uncrackable, but depends on communicating
individual photons as encryption keys. That physical limit means
individual photons take time to communicate, slowing overall data rates.
Now quantum cyptography company id Quantique in Geneva has teamed with
Australian cyptography company Senetas to create what the partners claim
in the world's first 1- to 10-Gbit/s secure network that combines
uncrackable quantum keys with classical encryption.
Senetas has delivered high-speed encrypted network hardware. With the
claimed added security of id Quantique's quantum cyptography using
single-photon encyption keys, the hybrid systems can provide security
for sensitive communications, the partners claimed.
The joint effort, which took less than a year, has so far produced a
1-Gbit/s Ethernet encryptor prototype. The partners plan to expand speed
to 10 Gbits/s before the end of the year. Testing has just been
completed and the first customer installations are scheduled to begin by
midyear. |
| Information Week
Jan 12, 2007 |
back to top
|
|
| Breakthrough beams bits onto photons |
Scientists at the University of Rochester, US, say they have made 'an
optics breakthrough' that allows them to encode all of the data
comprising an image into a single photon. They can slow the image down
for storage, and subsequently retrieve the data intact.
The scientists said that, while the initial test image consists of only
a few hundred pixels, the technique has the potential to store a
tremendous amount of information. Squeezing this much information into
so small a space, and retrieving it intact, opens the door to so-called
'optical buffering', or storing information as light.
Optical buffering is a particularly hot field because engineers are
trying to speed up computer processing and network speeds using light. |
| VNUnet UK
Jan 24, 2007 |
back to top
|
|
| Scientists create the densest chip ever |
Scientists at the California Institute of Technology and the University
of California, Los Angeles, have built a tiny memory chip that uses new
technology to pack a relatively large amount of information into a
square about one-2,000th of an inch on a side. Although the chip is
modest in capacity - with 160,000 bits of information - the bits are
crammed together so tightly that it is the densest chip ever made.
The achievement points to a possible path toward continuing the
exponential growth of computing power even after current silicon
chip-making technology hits fundamental limits in 10 to 20 years.
The density of bits on the chip - about 100 billion per square
centimetre - is about 40 times that of current memory chips.
Improvements to the technique could increase the density by a factor of
10, according to the researchers. A critical component of the chip is
its molecular switch. |
| International Herald Tribune
Jan 25, 2007 |
back to top
|
|
| Aliens need a lot more time to find us |
'So, where is everybody?' Nobel laureate Enrico Fermi reportedly quipped
to fellow physicists in 1950, when discussing why we have not seen any
signs of alien civilisations if, as many believe, our galaxy is teeming
with life. Now, a maths model may have an answer to Fermi's paradox.
Rasmus Bjork of the Niels Bohr Institute in Copenhagen, Denmark, has
calculated that eight probes - travelling at a tenth of the speed of
light and each capable of launching up to eight sub-probes - would take
about 100,000 years to explore a region of space containing 40,000
stars. When Bjork scaled up the search to include 260,000 such systems
in our galaxy's habitable zone, the probes took almost 10 billion years
- three-quarters the age of the universe - to explore just 0.4 per cent
of the stars. So, Bjork's answer to the Fermi paradox: aliens haven't
contacted us because they haven't had the time to find us yet.
He adds that the search could be optimised by visiting only those stars
that harbour habitable planets, which could be identified by
planet-finding missions such as NASA's Terrestrial Planet Finder. |
| New Scientist
Jan 20, 2007 |
back to top
|
|
| Microsoft in hot water over Wikipedia edits |
Microsoft has landed in the Wikipedia doghouse after it offered to pay a
blogger to change technical articles on the community-produced web
encyclopaedia site. While Wikipedia is known as the encyclopaedia that
anyone can tweak, it has blocked public-relations firms, campaign
workers and anyone else perceived as having a conflict of interest from
posting fluff or slanting entries.
Microsoft acknowledged it had approached the writer and offered to pay
him for the time it would take to correct what the company was sure were
inaccuracies in Wikipedia articles on an open-source document standard
and a rival format put forward by Microsoft. Microsoft believes the
articles were heavily written by people at IBM, which is a big supporter
of the open-source standard.
Microsoft said it had gotten nowhere in trying to flag the purported
mistakes to Wikipedia's editors, so it sought an independent expert who
could determine whether changes were necessary and enter them on
Wikipedia. |
| CNN / AP
Jan 24, 2007 |
back to top
|
|
| US military unveils heat-ray gun |
The US military has given the first public display of what it says is a
revolutionary heat-ray weapon to repel enemies or disperse hostile
crowds. Called the Active Denial System, it projects an invisible high
energy beam that produces a sudden burning feeling, but is said to be
harmless.
The beam has a reach of up to 500 metres, much further than existing
non-lethal weapons like rubber bullets. It can penetrate clothes,
suddenly heating up the skin of anyone in its path to 50C. But it
penetrates the skin only to a tiny depth - enough to cause discomfort
but no lasting harm, according to the military.
A journalist who volunteered to be shot with the beam described the
sensation as similar to a blast from a very hot oven - too painful to
bear without diving for cover. |
| BBC News
Jan 25, 2007 |
back to top
|
|
| Researchers compete to build real Terminator |
Singapore's Defence Science and Technology Agency (DSTA) has started a
competition to build a fully autonomous robot for urban warfare. One
million Singapore dollars (EUR 502,000) is up for grabs in the TechX
Challenge to build a robot that can climb stairs, negotiate obstacles,
use lifts and identify human targets without any human control.
The competition poses unique challenges for robotics developers, since
GPS signals usually used to control remote devices cannot be detected
inside most buildings. Sophisticated vision interpretation systems will
have to be developed with the appropriate computing power to manage
them. While it is possible to program in specific floor plans that allow
robots to move around buildings with ease, obstacles in the real world
may be left out that cause the robot confusion.
Applications must be submitted by the end of May 2007 and a shortlist
will be revealed in June. A qualifying round will be held in May 2008,
and the final competition is scheduled for August 2008. |
| VNUnet UK
Jan 25, 2007 |
back to top
|