Issue no. 6, 2007 Published: Feb 16, 2007 |
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New mobile phone system to send cash home |
Mobile phones to help Africa's health workers deliver |
Scientists dubious of quantum claims |
Chinese develop e-waste technology |
IBM makes computer memory quicker |
Satellite could see shadow of extra dimensions |
Red Planet 'hiking maps' produced |
Speed could kill for internet worms |
MIT student invents device for wall crawling |
Edible radios |
Mobile phones 'second worst invention ever' |
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| New mobile phone system to send cash home |
Mobile communications operators and banks joined forces Monday to make
it easier and cheaper for hundreds of millions of immigrants and migrant
workers to send money home by using their mobile phones. The aim is to
reduce to just a few per cent the transaction costs for sending small
amounts of cash. Current costs run to 24 per cent for amounts as small
as USD 50.
A group of 19 mobile operators with networks in more than 100 countries
and representing more than 600 million customers will create a global
system that could double the number of recipients of international
remittances to more than 1.5bn, while helping to quadruple the size of
the remittances market to more than USD 1 trillion by 2012.
MasterCard, which has a network of 25,000 member banks, will serve as a
global hub linking national markets with the local payment systems run
by mobile operators. The idea is that a person will be able to load cash
into a mobile phone and order it sent to a mobile phone number in
another country. The recipient will receive a message that the money has
arrived, making the transaction as easy as sending a text message.
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| International Herald Tribune / Reuters
Feb 12, 2007 |
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| Mobile phones to help Africa's health workers deliver |
Mobile phone companies have announced a new USD 10m initiative to help
health workers in Africa deliver quality services to HIV/AIDS patients.
The Phones for Health project, launched this week, will equip workers in
remote areas of Rwanda with mobile phones and software for exchanging
information on patients. The workers will also be able to order
medicines, receive news alerts and download treatment guidelines and
training materials.
According to the National Institute of Statistics of Rwanda (NISR),
health workers in remote areas of the country rely on paper records -
often out of date - to track diseases' spread and have no transport for
gathering field data or collecting medicines. The new project aims to
make things easier. Workers in the field can use phones to record
patient information and send it to a central database via a high-speed
network or text message. The information is then available to health
officials via the internet and can be sent to field staff by sms.
If the project in Rwanda is successful, it will be extended to other
African countries, as well as Asia, and will also address other diseases
like tuberculosis and malaria. |
| SciDev
Feb 15, 2007 |
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| Scientists dubious of quantum claims |
Quantum computing is such an elusive goal that even the company claiming
to have the 'world's first commercial quantum computer' acknowledged it
isn't entirely sure the machine is performing true quantum calculations.
And independent quantum computing researchers said they are dubious of
some of the claims made by D-Wave Systems because the privately held
Canadian company has not yet submitted its findings for peer review, a
standard step for gaining acceptance in scientific circles.
D-Wave held its first public demonstration Tuesday of a machine it
claims uses quantum mechanics to solve a certain type of problems, such
as searching a database for matching molecular structures. But the
company did not make the machine available for inspection and instead
showed video from a remote location, saying it was too sensitive to be
easily transported. D-Wave acknowledged that the machine is not a true
quantum computer and is instead a kind of special-purpose machine that
uses some quantum mechanics to solve problems.
The machine currently runs at 16 qubits, the basic unit of quantum
computing. That's less power than most standard computers and what the
company calls a proof of concept. The company plans to have it running
at about 1,000 qubits by the time the product goes on sale next year. |
| MSNBC / AP
Feb 14, 2007 |
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| Chinese develop e-waste technology |
Chinese scientists say they have developed a recycling and recovery
technology designed especially for disposal of printed circuit boards.
The researchers at Shanghai Jiao Tong University said printed circuit
boards are an ideal target for recycling and reuse since they are
self-contained modules of interconnected electronic components formed by
a thin layer of conducting material deposited, or 'printed', on the
surface of an insulating board. Such boards contain materials
potentially toxic if released to the environment, but they are also a
rich potential source of valuable metals and other materials that could
be recovered and reused.
The researchers say the technology they developed involves special
crushing of scrap boards, followed by separation of the metallic and
non-metallic materials with an electric field. The scientists say the
technique has advantages over other methods proposed for recycling
printed circuit boards. |
| PhysOrg / Environmental Science & Technology
Feb 15, 2007 |
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| IBM makes computer memory quicker |
IBM unveiled new computer memory technology Wednesday that it heralded
as a boon for networking, gaming, and multi-media applications.
IBM said its embedded dynamic random access memory (eDRAM) clocked
record access speeds, and was designed to provide high performance
without guzzling electricity. The company outlined the technical details
of its breakthrough at the International Solid State Circuits Conference
in San Francisco.
IBM expects to make the eDRAM technology available in its 45-nanometer
microprocessor line beginning in 2008. Tests of eDRAM showed it
processed data 10 times faster than the DRAM technology commonly used in
personal computers, according to IBM engineers. |
| Middle East Times / AFP
Feb 15, 2007 |
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| Satellite could see shadow of extra dimensions |
Some theories that attempt to unify all known forces into a single
'theory of everything' posit the existence of extra spatial dimensions
beyond the three familiar ones. But string theory has proven stubbornly
resistant to experimental tests. Now, physicists at the University of
Wisconsin say the shape of the extra dimensions could leave an imprint
in the afterglow of the big bang. This so-called cosmic microwave
background, reveals the structure of the universe about 370,000 years
after the big bang.
They use a popular model of the universe's early growth called
Dirac-Born-Infeld (DBI) inflation, which is inspired by string theory.
It is one of a class of ideas called braneworld models, which state that
our universe is like a sheet of paper floating in a higher dimensional
space. Because we are confined to our 3D universe, we ordinarily have no
way of seeing the extra dimensions.
But the researchers show that in this scenario, the big bang's afterglow
is affected by the precise shape that the extra dimensions take. The
effects are subtle, however, and other inflation theories that do not
require extra dimensions could probably produce similar signals. But if
some other evidence is found to support the DBI inflation scenario, the
new study shows that the detailed shape of those extra dimensions could
be distinguished by Europe's Planck satellite, to be launched next year. |
| New Scientist / Physical Review Letters
Feb 12, 2007 |
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| Red Planet 'hiking maps' produced |
Scientists using data from a European space probe orbiting Mars have
produced new topographic maps of the Red Planet. The European Space
Agency (ESA), which compiled the maps, said it hoped the maps would
become a standard reference for future research on the Red Planet. The
data, from the Mars Express spacecraft, has also been turned into 3-D
models of the surface of Mars.
The topographic maps use contour lines to show the heights of the
landscape. The contour lines are superimposed upon high-resolution
images of Mars, taken by the High-Resolution Stereo Camera (HRSC) aboard
Mars Express. The maps are much like those of Earth used by hikers and
planning authorities.
The samples released by ESA show the Iani Chaos region of Mars because
of its major topographical interest. It is covered in individual blocks
and hills that form a chaotic pattern across the landscape. Mars Express
entered orbit around the Red Planet in December 2003. |
| BBC News
Feb 12, 2007 |
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| Speed could kill for internet worms |
Computer security researchers are developing ways of protecting PCs from
malicious programs known as worms by monitoring how fast data is sent
through networks.
The scientists at Penn State University in the US s have devised new
anti-worm technology that can identify and contain worms milliseconds
after an attack by analysing data packets' rate or frequency of
connections, and their diversity of connections to other networks. That
allows the technology they term 'proactive worm containment' to react
more quickly to security threats.
Many current security methods focus on 'signature or pattern
identification' and cannot respond fast enough to prevent worms from
exploiting networks. Those approaches often miss worms that mutate
automatically, bypassing the existing anti-worm controls. |
| London Times / AP
Feb 15, 2007 |
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| MIT student invents device for wall crawling |
Nathan Ball, a mechanical-engineering graduate student at MIT, led a
team that has invented a motorised pulley that will let paramedics and
firefighters zip up the side of buildings sort of like Spider-Man. Ball
is this year's recipient of the Lemelson-MIT Student Prize, a USD 30,000
award for invention awarded to a student at the school every year.
Ball's Atlas Powered Rope Ascender can pull a firefighter loaded down
with 80 to 100 pounds of equipment up a 30-story building in 30 seconds.
Trudging up the stairs weighed down with equipment that heavy can take
six to eight minutes. A rope is fixed to the roof of a building or other
surface where a firefighter or paramedic wants to go. Down below, the
rope is woven through a series of specially configured rollers on top of
a turning spindle on the Atlas. As the battery-powered spindle rotates,
it pulls the rope through the device and hoists the person.
Like a boat anchor, the Atlas exploits the capstan effect, which lets
the rope grip tighter each time it wraps around a cylinder. As the grip
tightens, more weight can be applied to the line. The key is that the
Atlas also has a system that prevents the rope from overlapping or
winding up on itself on the internal cylinder, thereby ensuring
continuous movement. |
| CNET News
Feb 14, 2007 |
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| Edible radios |
Inventors keep coming up with new ways to exploit RFID tags. The latest
brainwave, from Kodak, is to use them to probe a person's digestive
system.
RFID tags are tiny radio chips that resonate with a single echo when hit
with a radio trigger. Kodak's digestible tags are harmless and
intentionally fragile. The tags would be covered with soft gelatine that
takes a while to dissolve in the stomach. After swallowing a tag a
patient need only sit next to a radio source and receiver.
They stop working when exposed to gastric acid for a specific period of
time, providing a subtle way to monitor a patient's digestive tract.
Kodak says that similar radio tags could also be embedded in an
artificial knee or hip joint in such a way that they disintegrate as the
joint does, warning of the need for more surgery. Attaching tags to
ordinary pills could also help nurses confirm that a patient has really
taken their medicine as ordered. |
| New Scientist
Feb 12, 2007 |
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| Mobile phones 'second worst invention ever' |
Mobile phones are the second worst items ever invented, according to a
recent BBC poll. The communication devices were beaten only by 'weapons'
as the worst inventions in a survey of 4,164 people for the BBC's Focus
magazine.
Mobile phones were the next worst invention, according to 17 per cent of
those questioned. Nuclear power, television and the Sinclair C5 came
joint third with nine per cent.
The weapons category captured 35 per cent of the vote and included items
as diverse as guns, explosives, biological weapons and atomic bombs.
Surprisingly, religion snuck into the top 10 with two per cent of the
vote. The poll ran on the Radio Times website and web surfers were
allowed to type in any answer they wanted.
The top 10 in full:
Weapons (35%)
Mobile phones (17%)
Nuclear power (9%)
Sinclair C5 (9%)
Television (9%)
The car (6%)
Cigarettes (6%)
Fast food (3%)
Speed cameras (3%)
Religion (2%) |
| VNUnet UK
Feb 15, 2007 |
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