Issue no. 6, 2008 Published: Feb 08, 2008 |
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Breakthrough helps 3D holograms come to life |
Rich-poor 'digital divide' still broad, says UNCTAD |
Scientists to launch paper planes from space |
'Swarm' intelligence enhances digital images |
Tattoos may help deliver vaccine |
Invention: Heartbeat radar |
Knee dynamo taps 'people power' |
Inventors unveil robot to fill car gas tank |
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| Breakthrough helps 3D holograms come to life |
A team of scientists from the University of Arizona announced a
technique for changing and updating three-dimensional holographic
images, an innovation that could one day lead to virtual surgery and
other useful applications.
With regular holograms scientists shine a series of lasers on a
photopolymer, chemically altering the substance to make light bounce off
the material in different ways depending on the angle observed,
producing the 3D effect. But such images, once created, are static. The
new device uses a different method, with the key ingredient being a
special film, called a photorefractive polymer, sandwiched between two
pieces of glass covered with transparent electrodes.
This polymer contains a dye that responds to light and rotates in
response to an external electric field. The result is a display that
looks like a regular hologram but can be updated in the same manner one
can write over data on a computer disk.
The technology could be used for everything from military field
simulations, keyhole surgery, advertising billboards or immersive 3D
entertainment. |
| CBC News / Nature
Feb 06, 2008 |
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| Rich-poor 'digital divide' still broad, says UNCTAD |
The digital divide between rich and poor countries is narrowing as
mobile phones and internet use become more available, but the developing
world still lags far behind, according to a United Nations report.
The United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) said
mobile phone subscribers have almost tripled in developing countries
over the last five years, and now make up some 58% of mobile subscribers
worldwide. The report said mobile phones were the main communication
tool for small businesses in developing countries, reducing costs and
increasing the speed of transactions.
Internet use and penetration continue to increase worldwide but
developed countries still account for the majority of internet users and
have the highest penetration. Developed countries also continue to lead
internet subscriptions worldwide, and the gap in terms of internet
broadband penetration has widened since 2002, it said.
UNCTAD said the revolution in information and communication technology
was spreading to the developing world but said more had to be done to
make sure poorer countries reaped its opportunities in growth and
development. Among its recommendations were that countries invest more
in human capital and infrastructure and better regulation of cyber laws. |
| Reuters
Feb 06, 2008 |
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| Scientists to launch paper planes from space |
A spacecraft made of folded paper zooming through the skies may sound
far-fetched, but Japanese scientists plan to launch paper planes from
the International Space Station to see if they make it back to Earth.
On Wednesday the University of Tokyo researchers tested small, origami
planes made of special paper for 30 seconds in 250 degrees Celsius heat
and wind at seven times the speed of sound. The planes survived the wind
tunnel test intact. The theory is that paper craft, being much lighter
than space shuttles, may escape the worst of the friction and heat that
much heavier space shuttles face on re-entry to the atmosphere.
The team has asked a Japanese astronaut to release the 20-cm planes,
made from paper chemically treated to resist heat and water, from the
space station. It will take several months for the craft to reach Earth,
and there is no way to predict their landing spot if they make it. |
| MSNBC
Feb 06, 2008 |
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| 'Swarm' intelligence enhances digital images |
The cleaning and enhancing of digital images has been improved thanks to
work into 'swarm intelligence' being carried out by researchers at the
Al-Balqa Applied University, Jordan, and De Montfort University, UK.
The research uses a Particle Swarm Optimisation (PSO) algorithm to
intelligently boost contrast and detail without distorting the
underlying features. The root of the PSO algorithm lies in a 'swarm
intelligence paradigm' inspired by models of living systems, such as
flocks of birds or schools of fish.
PSO relies on simple mathematics and does not need powerful computers to
run. It treats each version of an image as an individual member of the
swarm and makes a single small adjustment to contrast levels, edge
sharpness and other image parameters. The algorithm then determines
whether the new members of the swarm are better or worse than the
original according to an 'objective fitness criterion'. The objective of
the algorithm is to maximise the total number of pixels in the edges,
thus being able to visualise more details in the images. |
| VNUnet UK / International Journal of Innovative Computing and Applications
Feb 04, 2008 |
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| Tattoos may help deliver vaccine |
Scientists in Germany say that tattoos could be a useful way of
delivering therapeutic vaccines in humans, including for some cancers.
Such vaccines have often failed to produce the expected immune response
when delivered using an injection.
The researchers say that the rapidly vibrating tattoo needle could be a
useful way of delivering vaccines under the skin instead of insoluble
ink. In studies with mice, tattooing a vaccine produced 16 times more
antibodies than a simple injection into muscle tissue. The level of
antibodies indicates the strength of the immune system's response.
The researchers say that the greater damage to the body caused by the
tattoo needle may explain the better immune response. However, the
tattoo needles would never be suitable for preventative vaccines, such
as measles, in children as the pain would be too great. But there may
well be a role for the technique in the routine vaccination of animals. |
| BBC News
Feb 07, 2008 |
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| Invention: Heartbeat radar |
The tiniest chest movements, caused by breathing and even the beating of
the heart, can be monitored using Doppler radar. Just like road-speed
radar systems, this works by bouncing a radio wave off the chest and
measuring any change in frequency caused by chest movement.
In theory, the technique could be very useful since it allows a patient
to be monitored from a distance without fitting them with ECG leads. It
can even record a heartrate through a person's clothing. But the signals
can be easily swamped by noise caused by small movements of the patient
or of other people around them, for example in a busy hospital ward.
Now researchers at the University of Hawaii have developed a radar
device with several transmitters and receiving antennas that produce
multiple signals that can be picked up and processed in a way that
removes any random noise from other sources of movement. The resulting
signals are analysed by a computer to tease apart the various movements
of a patient, including their heart beat and breathing pattern. |
| New Scientist
Feb 04, 2008 |
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| Knee dynamo taps 'people power' |
US and Canadian scientists have built a novel device that effortlessly
harvests energy from human movements. The adapted knee brace can
generate enough energy to power a mobile phone for 30 minutes from one
minute of walking. The first people to benefit could be amputees who are
being fitted with increasingly sophisticated prosthetics.
The new device generates power by a process known as 'generative
braking', analogous to the braking systems found in hybrid-electric
cars. Such cars take advantage of stop-and-go driving using so-called
'regenerative braking' where the energy normally dissipated as heat is
used to drive a generator.
Using a series of gears, the knee brace assists the hamstring in slowing
the body just before the foot hits the ground, whilst simultaneously
generating electricity. Sensors on the device switch the generator off
for the remainder of each step. In this way, the device puts less strain
on the wearer than if it was constantly producing energy. |
| BBC News / Science
Feb 07, 2008 |
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| Inventors unveil robot to fill car gas tank |
Motorists nostalgic for the time they could sit tight while attendants
braved the elements to fill their tanks may yet see those days return -
thanks to a Dutch robot.
Inventors unveiled on Monday a car-fuelling robot they say is the first
of its kind, working by registering the car on arrival at the filling
station and matching it to a database of fuel cap designs and fuel
types.
A robotic arm fitted with multiple sensors extends from a regular gas
pump, carefully opens the car's flap, unscrews the cap, picks up the
fuel nozzle and directs it towards the tank opening, much as a human arm
would, and as efficiently.
The inventors hope to introduce the 'Tankpitstop' robot in a handful of
Dutch stations by the end of the year. It works for any car whose tank
can be opened without a key, and whose contours and dimensions have been
recorded to avoid scratching. |
| MSNBC / Reuters
Feb 04, 2008 |
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