June 2007 Archive

30 June 2007

DARPA [Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency], the US military's occasionally eccentric death-tech hothouse, is often lauded as having created the internet. Under its old name ARPA, the agency oversaw development of the so-called Arpanet, forerunner of today's IP net. Now, however, DARPA reckons the internet needs to be reinvented. This week the Pentagon's radical-boffinry specialists issued a request for revolutionary ideas

Despite goading from her co-hosts on the cable news channel MSNBC, including the former Republican congressman turned rightwing talkshow host Joe Scarborough, newsreader Mika Brzezinski stood her ground and refused to read her segment's lead news item on Paris Hilton. Clips of her shredding the script were the lead item on the Technorati search, while the blogosphere was alight with praise. I have a new hero, and her name is Mika Brzezinski, wrote one

Warner Music Group, Sony BMG and the billionaire Len Blavatnik on Thursday announced the creation of a digital music venture in Russia to sell products in one of the world's biggest markets for pirated content

Manufacturers are being offered the world's highest capacity optical storage technology to license, reportedly, leap-frogging 300GB holographic disks and offering 1TB in a DVD-size disk. But the technology has not been commercialised and product could be three to five years away

29 June 2007

US company Global Resource Corporation (GRC) is taking plastics recycling to another level — turning them back into the oil they were made from, and gas. All that is needed, is a finely tuned microwave and a mix of materials that were made from oil can be reduced back to oil and combustible gas (and a few leftovers). Key to GRC's process is a machine that uses 1200 different frequencies within the microwave range, which act on specific hydrocarbon materials. As the material is zapped at the appropriate wavelength, part of the hydrocarbons that make up the plastic and rubber in the material are broken down into diesel oil and combustible gas

The BBC has been accused of forcing people to use Microsoft operating systems and has been threatened with a complaint to the European Commission. The charge concerns the use of Microsoft technology in the corporation's forthcoming DRM iPlayer. The BBC has said it does intend to allow access to its content from computers with other operating systems

The eagerly awaited new album by Prince is being launched as a free CD with a national Sunday newspaper in a move that has drawn widespread criticism from music retailers. One music store executive described the plan as madness while others said it was a huge insult to an industry battling fierce competition from supermarkets and online stores. Prince's label has cut its ties with the album in the UK to try to appease music stores

Brisbane City Council is trialling new solar powered public rubbish bins which compact rubbish and email the council when they are full. In the next few months, 10 bins will be trialled in the CBD and Fortitude Valley at a cost of $30,000. Lord Mayor Campbell Newman says they will help council officers respond quickly to overflowing rubbish

28 June 2007

Westnet has admitted it has been employing traffic prioritisation on its network — but hadn't mentioned it to its customers until now. The company made the announcement on its blog, revealing that it has been prioritising some latency sensitive applications, such as gaming, Web browsing, e-mail and VoIP, ahead of peer-to-peer traffic for over a year

Mozilla and Google are collaborating on an effort to make web applications work offline. Firefox 3 will be the first internet browser to offer offline web application support when it launches at the end of this year. Mozilla is working with open-source messaging provider Zimbra, for example, to offer offline features for its email service — such as saving emails typed offline to a drafts folder, ready to be sent when the user next connects

German Scientists have constructed a custom enzyme that reverses the process by which the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) inserts its genetic material into host DNA, suggesting that treatment with similar enzymes could potentially rid infected cells of the virus. In tests on cultured human tissue, the mutated enzyme, Tre recombinase, snipped HIV DNA out of chromosomes. Curing real infections by this or any other technique, however, would require mastering one of HIV's sneakiest tricks--its ability to hide from the immune system by laying dormant for months or years in host cells

Scientists in the US say they have taken a major step towards producing life from scratch in the laboratory. Dr Craig Venter says in the journal Science that his team successfully transplanted an entire genome from one bacterium cell to another. He says he hopes eventually to use the technique to create designer microbes, which could produce artificial fuel or help clean up toxic waste. Dr Venter was a pioneer in mapping the human genome

27 June 2007

Microsoft will begin selling PCs in India next month as part of its Unlimited Potential program, an event that will mark the software giant's first entry into the PC sales business. Dubbed the IQ PC, the machines will cost RS21,000 (about $525), are manufactured in partnership with Zenith, and will sport AMD Athlon CPUs. Aimed primarily at students, the desktop PCs will initially be made available in a limited number of retail outlets in Pune and Bangalore. After a three-month trial, the program will be expanded if sales are strong enough to warrant it

Banks in New Zealand are seeking access to customer PCs used for online banking transactions to verify whether they have enough security protection. Under the terms of a new banking Code of Practice, banks may request access in the event of a disputed transaction to see if security protection in is place and up to date. The code, issued by the Bankers' Association last week after lengthy drafting and consultation, now has a new section dealing with Internet banking

Researchers at University of Maryland have developed a prototype of what may be the next generation of personal computers. The new technology is based on parallel processing on a single chip and is capable of computing speeds up to 100 times faster than current desktops. The prototype 'uses rich algorithmic theory to address the practical problem of building an easy-to-program multicore computer

Online auction site eBay has made public the details of a three-year long campaign to curb online fraud being perpetrated from criminals in Romania — an effort that has resulted in several hundred arrests

26 June 2007

The United Nations (UN) has agreed to send a high-level delegation to Tasmania to assess the threat of logging on the World Heritage-listed forests. Twenty-one countries passed a vote supporting the resolution at today's meeting of the UN's World Heritage Committee in Christchurch, New Zealand. Wilderness Society spokesman Alec Marr says it is recognition that logging on the edge of the World Heritage area in Tasmania is a threat to old-growth forests

Seagate Technology is serving up its first 1-terabyte hard drives. The company announced today that it will offer 1TB hard drives for retail and enterprise, beginning in the third quarter of this year

A prototype artificial skin used to heal wounds has been developed by British researchers. Writing in the journal Regenerative Medicine, UK-based company Intercytex said it had produced promising results in early trials. It said the skin seemed to incorporate itself much better with real tissue than any other skin substitutes tried in the past. The researchers hope it might provide an alternative to skin grafts

25 June 2007

The UK government has announced that it will publish guidance for schools on how creationism and intelligent design relate to science teaching, and has reiterated that it sees no place for either on the science curriculum. It has also defined Intelligent Design, the idea that life is too complex to have arisen without the guiding hand of a greater intelligence, as a religion, along with creationism

Google is taking a novel approach to global censorship by asking US trade officials to treat Internet restrictions as international trade barriers, similar to other hurdles to global commerce

The giant pengiun fossil, which was discovered in Peru and is described today in detail by scientists reveals a creature that was over 1.5 metres tall and weighed as much as a person. The 36 million year old tropical bird's intimidating appearance was topped off with powerful forearms, a chunky neck and a potentially vicious 18 centimetre long spear-like beak. The discovery of the giant penguin is also shaking up scientists' understanding of penguin evolution. The finds indicate that penguins made the journey to equatorial regions much earlier in their evolutionary history than researchers had realised

The trailer for the upcoming movie Babylon 5: The Lost Tales — Voices in the Dark has been posted at the official Babylon 5 site. For more on the creation of the film, the CG Society has an ongoing series of articles about the production's effects development — via Slashdot

24 June 2007

Recognising the threat of China's growing online community, Chinese President Hu Jintao called in January for the Internet to be purified, and the government has since launched a number of online crackdowns. One cannot truly say that the Internet in China is becoming more and more free, because at the same time as the development of citizen journalists, the government finds ways of blocking or censoring content, said Julien Pain, who monitors Internet freedom issues for Reporters Without Borders

Researchers from Nanyang Technological University in Singapore have created a model teleportation system using quantum dots. According to recent research, tiny clusters of atoms known as quantum dots may be excellent media for quantum teleportation, a physics phenomenon in which information — in the form of a quantum state, a very specific mathematical signature of an atom — can be transmitted almost instantaneously to a distant location without having to physically travel through space

Google is in acquisition discussions with telephone management startup GrandCentral. The basic idea around GrandCentral is one phone number for all your phones, for life. If you use GrandCentral you can give out a single phone number. What happens when that person calls that number depends on his/her relationship to you, and what you are doing at the time

23 June 2007

Some ISPs are resorting to a new tactic to increase revenue: inserting advertisements into web pages requested by their end users. They use a transparent web proxy (such as this one) to insert javascript and/or HTML with the ads into pages returned to users. Neither the content providers nor the end-users have been notified that this is taking place, and I'm sure that they weren't asked for permission either — via Slashdot

Mars will be transformed into a shirt-sleeve, habitable world for humanity before century's end, made livable by thawing out the coldish climes of the red planet and altering its now carbon dioxide-rich atmosphere. How best to carry out a fast-paced, decade by decade planetary facelift of Mars — a technique called terraforming — has been outlined by Lowell Wood, a noted physicist and recent retiree of the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and a long-time Visiting Fellow of the Hoover Institution

According to Microsoft's Trustworthy Computing Group, Vista is far more secure than competing platforms — or even previous Windows iterations

22 June 2007

Dell took notice earlier this year when customers and the media reiterated complaints over the glut of crapware, or preinstalled PC software, packaged with new computers. Many PC makers said they do offer ways for consumers to wipe a new computer's slate clean. But this week, Dell announced it would hand more control over to customers during the purchase process. Dell.com customers buying an XPS system, Inspiron notebook or Dimension desktop can select a no software preinstalled option. This will eliminate productivity, ISP, photo and music software, but not everything

As many as 1500 Pentagon computers were brought offline on Wednesday in response to a cyber attack. Defence Secretary Robert Gates reported of the fallout both that the attack had no adverse impact on department operations and that there will be some administrative disruptions and personal inconveniences. When asked whether his own e-mail had been compromised, Gates responded, I don't do e-mail. I'm a very low-tech person — via Slashdot

21 June 2007

A small New York state college will be the site of the first large-scale wireless LAN based on the draft 802.11n high-throughput standard. Within the next two weeks, Morrisville State College will start initial testing of thin access points from Meru, plus the vendor's existing 802.11abg devices and early models of its recently announced 11n device, the AP300. Even at this stage, the net is posing intriguing new challenges for Morrisville, Meru and IBM Global Technology Services, the systems integrator for the project

The founder of Creative Commons, the Stanford lawyer behind the Eldred vs Ashcroft case, and the author of 'Code' has spent the last 10 years working tirelessly on behalf of limited copyright terms, net neutrality, and the public domain. Tuesday, Lawrence Lessig announced on his blog that he has decided to shift my academic work, and soon, my activism from fighting the good fight for the public domain to fighting the good fight against corruption and the influence of big money's effects on legislation in general — via Slashdot

For months, the industry has been calling on Microsoft to ease restrictions forcing customers to use only the priciest versions of Windows Vista for desktop virtualisation, which it had planned this week before changing its mind at the last minute

20 June 2007

Google employees Brian Rakowski and Garrett Casto from the Antiphishing and Antimalware Teams have announced that the company is opening up its Safe Browsing API to the public. The Safe Browsing API allows easy access to Google's updated blacklist of suspected phishing and malware-infested web pages. The blacklists are the same ones used in Google's antiphishing plug-in for the Firefox web browser, as well as Google Desktop

EMI's recently-appointed senior vice president of digital Lauren Berkowitz has confirmed significant success with the company's move to sell DRM-free tracks through iTunes

In a quiet industrial park in Petaluma, a startup called Raydiance is miniaturising a type of laser that generates an ultrashort burst of photons so intense that it can vapourise matter without creating heat. CEO Barry Schuler, who founded Raydiance based on technology that arose from military research, says it could be used for any number of purposes, such as removing tattoos without burning the skin or killing cancer cells without affecting healthy ones. Now, Schuler is ready to proclaim that the Raydiance laser — which looks like an ordinary slide projector — could spawn an industry based on using brief bursts of photons to poke clean holes, with no burn marks, in anything from skin to steel

19 June 2007

A round of price increases over the past six months has left Australia's download-hungry internet users scrambling to find affordable ways to feed their appetite for online videos and music, and is raising some bigger questions about the future of Australia's broadband. Earlier this month Adelaide-based IP Internode raised prices for its broadband service by, in some cases, up to $40 a month. A week later, Sydney-based provider Exetel increased its prices

YouTube has announced international versions of its web video service. The video site, owned by Google, has launched nine versions across Brazil, France, Ireland, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, Poland, Spain and the UK. Each site is translated into local languages and has country-specific video rankings and comments

18 June 2007

Science fiction writer Charlie Stross has written an excellent and comprehensive explanation of why, thousands of SF books, movies, and games notwithstanding, human colonisation of other star systems is impossible. Although interstellar colonisation seems common-sensical to many, Charlie makes a clear-headed and unarguable case, so far as I can see, that it ain't gonna happen without a magic wand or two

Another crack in the Windows Genuine Advantage wall. A user at UbuntuForums.org managed to validate an Ubuntu installation as a genuine copy of Microsoft Windows and get to the download page of Windows Defender, using IE4Linux and Wine. Along with the advancement of LiveCD technology, this could spell the end of Microsoft's control over who gets their updates — via Slashdot

Want to know how much your boss earns? Or whether your daughter's fiance is in debt? For Swedes, it takes just a few clicks on the Internet to find out. But many feel the Web has taken things too far, and proud though they are of Sweden's unusual history of openness, they have pressured providers to put some limits on a service that allowed Swedes to snoop through each other's finances anonymously and free of charge

Prime Minister John Howard is pledging fast coverage for 99 per cent of Australians as he prepares to unveil the Government's new broadband strategy today. Mr Howard says prices in the cities and the regions will be comparable. But Opposition communications spokesman Stephen Conroy says Mr Howard will create a two-tier system

17 June 2007

The Venezuelan Government announced the roll-out of four different models of Linux-powered consumer computers, three desktop models and one notebook. Branded Bolivarian Computers, they will be will be produced by a joint venture of the Venezuelan Ministry of Light Industry and Commerce and a Chinese company named Lang Chao. The goal of the project is to jump-start a domestic IT industry and become an IT exporter to the rest of Latin America. At the ceremony introducing the program, Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez claimed that the Bolivarian Computers cost 40% less than other commercially available models and come with a 3-year warranty

16 June 2007

Google Video, the web-based service that provided almost the same functions as the popular YouTube, is not an online video sharing solution any more. The parent company Google upgraded the product and made it a search technology that allows users to find clips on the entire Internet. At this time, the official page of the service is exactly the same as before, but the searching abilities are 100 percent changed. For example, if you try searching for a certain video, Google Video returns you a list of clips from the entire Internet, allowing you to choose a result, just like any other Google search technology

Computers that control navigation and key life-support systems on the International Space Station were partially restored on Thursday after failing the day before. Flight controllers were able to re-establish some communication with the computers overnight, with Russian engineers working Thursday to restore the rest of the system, NASA space station flight director Holly Ridings said

15 June 2007

eBay has pulled its US advertising from search engine giant and adversary Google. The move comes after Google angered eBay with a provocative decision to hold an event on the same evening as eBay's annual merchants' conference. Google's party was aimed at attracting attention away from eBay's payment system PayPal to its own card processing service, analysts say. eBay spends an estimated $25m a year advertising on Google in the US. This makes eBay potentially the biggest single user of AdWords, Google's advertising system that shows adverts based on words in web searches and the biggest money-spinner for the internet search engine

London has taken the title of top wi-fi city according to a survey. The RSA Security report looked at the growth of wi-fi in three key financial centres: London, New York and Paris. According to the findings wireless access points in London grew by 160% in the last 12 month putting it ahead of the other two cities. The growth in London was not at the expense of security, found the survey, as the percentage of vulnerable access points fell

14 June 2007

Lin Zhong and Michael Liebschner at Rice University in Houston, Texas, want to use the human skeleton to transmit commands reliably and securely to wearable gadgets and medical implants. Their research, funded by Microsoft and Texas Instruments, could also lead to new ways for people with disabilities to control devices such as computers and PDAs. Wireless radio signals are already used to control gadgets and implants, but these can suffer interference from Wi-Fi and other sources. This makes them unreliable and, in the case of medical implants, potentially dangerous. They can also be hacked by anyone with an antenna, Liebschner points out. So the Rice team decided to investigate using sound instead of radio waves. Bone is known to be a great conductor of sound, but so far it has only been used to transmit analogue signals in applications such as checking how bone is healing after a fracture, and in hearing aids that transmit sound from outside the skull to the auditory nerve

Bruce Schneier: The recently publicised terrorist plot to blow up John F Kennedy International Airport, like so many of the terrorist plots over the past few years, is a study in alarmism and incompetence: on the part of the terrorists, our government and the press

Corn and potato crops may soon provide information to farmers about when they need water and how much should be delivered, thanks to a University of Colorado at Boulder invention optioned to AgriHouse, a Berthoud, Colorado, high-tech company. The technology includes a tiny sensor that can be clipped to plant leaves charting their thickness, a key measure of water deficiency and accompanying stress, said Research Associate Hans-Dieter Seelig of CU-Boulder's BioServe Space Technology Center. Data from the leaves could be sent wirelessly over the Internet to computers linked to irrigation equipment, ensuring timely watering, cutting down on excessive water and energy use and potentially saving farmers in Colorado millions of dollars per year — via scientificblog.newsvine.com

13 June 2007

A fragment of an exploding harpoon used by commercial whalers in the 1800s has been found in a whale caught off Alaska, suggesting the animal may be more than 100 years old. Local government officials say the fragment came from a bomb lance, manufactured around 1880. Alaska's Inupiat people found it lodged in a bowhead whale during a traditional subsistence hunt last month

Hustler magazine publisher Larry Flynt told the Examiner that the newspaper ad he took out last week offering a million-dollar bounty for evidence of illicit sexual activity with lawmakers has yielded about 200 tips so far. He said he'll let them continue to trickle in over the next two weeks or so before his team begins to follow up on them. Said Flynt: We'll be lucky if we get 2 to 4 percent hard leads that could yield a payout

12 June 2007

Apple is hoping for another crossover hit. After bringing iTunes over to Windows, the Mac maker announced on Monday that it is also making its Safari Web browser available for users of Microsoft's operating system. The company released a public beta version of Safari 3.0 that runs on Windows XP and Windows Vista, as well as on Mac OS X Tiger. When Apple first announced plans to bring iTunes to Windows PCs in October 2003, CEO Steve Jobs characterised the move as hell freezing over. These days, though, Apple does much of its work with the Windows world in mind

Flickr said on Monday it is moving to further internationalise its service by creating versions in seven major languages besides English. Flickr said it is set to introduce sites in French, German, Korean, Italian, Portuguese, Spanish and traditional Chinese, with other languages to follow. A Japanese site remains in the works with independently operated Yahoo Japan

A leading international broadband expert says Australia will be left behind if its Internet infrastructure does not keep up with international standards. Professor Larry Smarr from the California Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technology says the current political debate is critical to Australia's global economic status. Professor Smarr told ABC Radio's AM program that a full fibre optic network is needed, as the copper network is not fast enough

A Secure Digital memory card with built-in Wi-Fi networking will allow digital cameras to upload images automatically to home computers and photo-sharing web sites. This product of California-based company Eye-Fi is currently in beta and should be launched later this year

11 June 2007

US researchers have taken a leaf out of nature's book to develop a polymer-based system that can heal itself when it becomes damaged. The material relies on an underlying network of vessels — similar to blood capillaries — that carry a healing agent to areas on the material's surface that become damaged. Unlike previous self-healing systems that relied on capsules of agent buried in the polymer and which became depleted after one use, the new system can respond to damage at the same point many times over

A new report puts Google in last place when it comes to privacy protection. Despite recent moves to anonymise server logs and other pro-privacy gestures, Privacy International called the company an endemic threat to privacy. Only Google earned the dismal black color bar from the group, which has just issued a report on Internet privacy that took six months to assemble (see the rankings [PDF]). The current report is preliminary; final results will be released in September. The report rated top Internet companies on privacy issues and distilled the various results into a single color bar. Microsoft was two ranks up from Google, earning a curry-colored serious lapses rating. Amazon scored one level higher with its yellow notable lapses rank, and eBay did even better, earning a coveted blue bar. No company earned a top mark, however

China should not punish people for expressing their political views on the Internet, Yahoo said on Monday — one day after the mother of a jailed Chinese reporter announced she was suing the US company for helping officials imprison her son. Yahoo criticised China in a brief statement that didn't specifically mention the case of jailed journalist Shi Tao, whose mother visited Hong Kong on Sunday. Shi was sentenced to 10 years in prison in 2005 after sending an e-mail about Chinese media restrictions

10 June 2007

Activists from Binary Freedom Boston have launched a campaign calling on the BBC to release their content online without DRM or proprietary formats. The BBC asked about this earlier and even though the public chose not to use DRM by a landslide, they still decided to use it. EMI and Amazon have already ditched DRM. How long before the BBC does? — via Slashdot

The tuatara, which is both related to lizards and snakes, is one of the planet's oldest reptile species. It's been living in New Zealand for about 200 million years. Scientists still don't know much about their behavior, so they've asked Weta Workshop, a Wellington-based company known for its work on The Lord of the Rings trilogy, to build a robotic male tuatara. It is equipped with cameras which will help the researchers to discover how real male tuatara attract and keep females. The goal is to help conservation managers to the genetically fittest, most productive males — via Slashdot

09 June 2007

Three-dimensional maps from Google Earth are giving nonprofits new artillery in their battle to raise awareness of issues like deforestation and genocide. For example, Mary Ann Hitt, executive director of nonprofit Appalachian Voices, said a collective of grassroots organisations is using 3D maps in Google Earth to show how millions of acres of Appalachian Mountains across four states have been destroyed by mining companies. In a process called mountaintop removal, the coal-mining industry blows off the tops of mountains with explosives to get at coal faster and cheaper, she said. As a result, surrounding areas are buried by pollution and waste, streams dry up and a soot lingers in the air, she said. So with the help of Google, the nonprofit has built a virtual national memorial for 470 topless mountains in the area — marked by half-staff flags — with information and guides on the process of mountaintop removal. The map layer, found in Google Earth's featured content, also shows historic before and after aerial photos of the mountains; overlay comparisons to illustrate the scope of destruction; and links to first-hand stories and videos from the communities affected by mountaintop removal

Flickr has said that its service is being blocked in China, although the Yahoo subsidiary did not directly blame the Beijing government, which aggressively censors the Internet of material it deems subversive. The blocking, which began Thursday, is keeping Internet users across a large part of China from viewing photos on Flickr, home to millions of snapshots of everything from birthday parties to beach vacations to nudes. The Web site also hosts a smattering of images that may be frowned upon by Chinese censors, including student protesters in Tiananmen Square in 1989, which includes the famous photo of a man blocking the progress of Chinese army tanks, and bodies of students who were killed in the streets as part of a government crackdown

Germany will store digital fingerprints in addition to digital photos in passports as one of several biometric security measures planned to fight organised crime and international terrorism. All new passports issued from November will store two digital fingerprints in an embedded chip, which, since 2005, includes a digital photo, the German Federal Ministry of the Interior said Friday. While fingerprints will be stored exclusively in passport chips, photos will continue to be saved additionally in databases of local authorities. A new amendment gives police and other authorized government officials online access to these databases

08 June 2007

Massachusetts Institute of Technology researchers made a 60-watt light bulb glow by sending it energy wirelessly — from a device 2.1m away — potentially heralding a future in which mobile phones and other gadgets get juice without having to be plugged in. The breakthrough, disclosed Thursday in Science Express, the online publication of the journal Science, is being called WiTricity by the scientists. The concept of sending power wirelessly isn't new, but its wide-scale use has been dismissed as inefficient because electromagnetic energy generated by the charging device would radiate in all directions

Solid state drives (SSDs) have greater reliability and durability than hard disk drives (HDDs), because they have no moving parts. Data transfer rates can be faster, and booting a large operating system such as Windows Vista can be quick work for SSDs. In addition, they consume less power compared to HDDs, and they are quieter and lighter. But HDDs are still much larger in capacity, and their cost-per-gigabyte is a fraction of what it is for SSDs. SanDisk has introduced 64-GB SSDs that the company plans to have ready for shipment to manufacturers and to retail outlets by the end of this year

Microsoft has announced a cross-licensing deal with LG Electronics in which Microsoft grants rights to some of its patents, and in particular those patents that relate to Linux. Microsoft has said that Linux and related open-source software infringe on some 235 of its patents, a declaration that is adamantly opposed by members of the open-source community

07 June 2007

Four more US internet service providers will start charging banks, e-commerce sites and other large e-mail senders for guaranteed delivery. In deals expected to be announced Thursday Goodmail Systems is expanding its CertifiedEmail program to Comcast, Cox Communications, Time Warner Cable's Road Runner and Verizon Communications. Yahoo and Time AOL became inaugural participants last year. Individuals, businesses and organisations will be able to continue sending messages for free, but they risk finding those missives caught in increasingly aggressive spam filters. With Goodmail, a company can pay a quarter of a cent per message to bypass those filters and reach inboxes directly. Recipients see a blue seal verifying that the message is legitimate. Senders get confirmation and can resend messages lost in transit

Israeli scientists have taken a crucial first step in showing that a network of neurons outside the body can be stimulated to create multiple memories that they sustain for days. Researchers at Tel Aviv University in Israel have demonstrated that neurons cultured outside the brain can be imprinted with multiple rudimentary memories that persist for days without interfering with or wiping out others — via ageing-hippie.newsvine.com

06 June 2007

Amnesty International has warned that the internet could change beyond all recognition unless action is taken against the erosion of online freedoms. The warning comes ahead of a conference organised by Amnesty, where victims of repression will outline their plights. The virus of internet repression has spread from a handful of countries to dozens of governments, said the group. Amnesty accused companies such as Google, Microsoft and Yahoo of being complicit in the problem

There are no privacy issues with Google Street View, a Maps-based project that offers 360-degree panoramic views of various streets in cities around the US, according to Google Australia's head of engineering. At the Google developer day in Sydney last week, Lars Rasmussen denied that privacy was an issue when it came to Google Street View because, he said, the images are all taken in public areas

The largest and most valuable collection of ancient Chinese art and artifacts in the world is being entered into the digital universe in Taiwan by museum curators and tech managers intent on freeing it from its physical boundaries. The goal is to make the massive collection available on the Internet. Researchers will be able to find rare documents in an easy-to-use database, teachers will be able to download information and images they can use in course work, and visitors will enjoy vivid exhibitions, films, music, access to favorite works of art and virtual tours

05 June 2007

SixApart have released a new beta version of popular blogging content management system Movable Type. Moveable Type 4.0 is the first major release of Movable Type since MT 3.0 in 2004 and comes complete with a market disrupting announcement: SixApart will open source Movable Type before the end of the third quarter. The new version of Movable Type is a radical departure from previous versions

A Tel Aviv University scientist, Amir Sharon, may have discovered the next best alternative: a funky fungi in the form of a genetically-modified mushroom that yields a large biomass which can be converted into a first-rate biofuel. Sharon and his team have developed a transformation-based approach to cultivating fungi (Aspergillus niger) which means that they have genetically-engineered them to be less sensitive to external conditions and environmental stresses; the mushrooms are more sustainable in culture during fermentation, and have both enhanced growth rate and spore production. As a result, the fungal cultures exhibit a dramatic increase in fresh and dry biomass production, reduced sensitivity to stress conditions, enhanced spore production and extended viability — via stevenwandrews.newsvine.com

Conservationists warn a purple fluorescent frog, one of 24 new species found in the South American highlands of Suriname, is threatened by illegal gold mining. Leeanne Alonso of Conservation International, which led the expedition that found the new species, says the discovery of so many species outside the insect realm is extraordinary and displays the need to survey distant regions. The two-tone frog, whose skin is covered with irregular fluorescent lavender loops on a background of aubergine, was discovered in 2006 as part of a survey of Suriname's Nassau plateau. Scientists combing Suriname's Nassau plateau and Lely Mountains found four other new frog species aside from the purple one, six species of fish, 12 dung beetles and a new ant species, the organisation said in a statement

04 June 2007

A new inexpensive nanoglue that becomes stronger as it heats up could redefine the way computer chips are made and even pave the way for Spiderman-esque web-shooting devices in the near future, according to its creator. Developed by a group of US researchers led by Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute's materials science and engineering professor, Ganapathiraman Ramanath, the new nanoglue is made from commercially available ultrathin glue materials that when heated to extreme temperatures can bond materials that don't usually stick together

Scientists have set a new record in sending information through thin air using the revolutionary technology of quantum teleportation — although Mr Spock may have to wait a little longer for a Scotty to beam him up with it. A team of physicists has teleported data over a distance of 89 miles from the Canary Island of La Palma to the neighbouring island of Tenerife, which is 10 times further than the previous attempt at teleportation through free space

Palm's financial future looks a little more secure as private-equity firm Elevation Partners said it will pump US$325 million into the mobile device manufacturer. The recapitalisation plan will see Elevation take a 25 percent equity stake in Palm, buying a new series of convertible preferred stock. The conversion price will be $8.50 per share, a premium of around 16 percent compared with the implied post-distribution price over the last 10 trading days. Elevation is a $1.9 billion private-equity firm and one of its five partners is Bono, the lead singer of Irish rock band U2. The investment in Palm is by far the largest the firm has ever made

03 June 2007

For some time Mac users have been waiting to see who would bring 3D graphics to a Windows emulation/virtualisation solution under OS X. It looks like Parallels is going to be the winner. They have announced an RC of Parallels 3.0, with the final to be available in a few weeks

Scientists from Spectrolab, a subsidiary of Boeing, have recently published their research on the fabrication of solar cells that surpass the 40% efficiency milestone — the highest efficiency achieved for any photovoltaic device. Most conventional solar cells used in today's applications, such as for supplemental power for homes and buildings, are one-sun, single-junction silicon cells that use only the light intensity that the sun produces naturally, and have optimal efficiency for a relatively narrow range of photon energies

Solid state drives (SSDs) have moved another step closer to being a useful option for the enterprise, with Dell's announcement of two new notebook PCs that feature SSDs as a storage option

A platelet-rich gel derived from one's own blood could speed up the healing of wounds and cuts. Researchers at the University of Cincinnati say that a topical gel derived from a patient's own blood may help prevent infection while speeding up the healing process. The finding could mean that, in the not too distant future, a concentrated cocktail of a person's own blood could be used to help dress wounds, particularly in patients with diabetes or other disorders that slow the healing process

02 June 2007

A couple of former Yahoo execs are trying to create the next MySpace by aggregating fanfiction on a website called FanLib. But the fanfic writers recognised that exploitation was written all over the idea and they've refused to participate. Instead of creating the Myspace of fanfic since the launch two weeks ago, FanLib.com sparked a white-hot Internet firestorm. The meltdown is a hard lesson in how not to conduct business on the Internet. But it's a firestorm of FanLib's own making because, in spite of the Yahoo pedigree (or maybe because of it), they ploughed in like china shop bulls — via Slashdot

A device that specifically targets rapidly growing cancer cells with intermediate frequency electrical fields doubled the survival rates of patients with brain cancer, according to an article apperaring in PNAS. The device uses electrical fields to disrupt tumour growth by interfering with cell division of cancerous cells, causing them to stop proliferating and die off instead of dividing and growing. Healthy brain cells rarely divide and have different electrical properties than cancerous brain cells. This allows the device to target cancer cells without affecting the healthy cells. Essentially no device-related side effects were seen in the clinical trial — via Slashdot

Korea has just finished negotiating a free trade agreement with the US that is a complete disaster on copyright. Korea has agreed to give up all fair use to copyrighted works, and has agreed to shut down many of its web-hosting businesses. So much for Korea's power as a global Internet leader. It was nice while it lasted — via Boingboing

01 June 2007

Google released a new Javascript API called Gears that makes it possible to write modeless web applications that will function offline. A browser plugin is available for IE and Firefox (OS X, Linux, and Windows), with Safari support planned for the near future. The plugin will need to be installed by users of Gears-enabled applications

At some point in the not-too-distant future, a moth may take flight in the hills of northern Pakistan, and flap towards a suspected terrorist training camp. But this will be no ordinary moth. Inside it will be a computer chip that was implanted when the creature was still a pupa, in the cocoon, meaning that the moth's entire nervous system can be controlled remotely

Germany has just passed a new law that adds more anti-hacker provisions to the German criminal code. Although the new rules are meant to apply narrowly to hacking, critics are already complaining that they may prevent necessary security and network research. The new rules tighten up the existing sanctions and prohibit any unauthorised user from disabling or circumventing computer security measures to access secure data. Manufacturing, programming, installing or spreading software that has the primary goal of circumventing security measures is verboten, which means that some security scanning tools might become illegal. In theory, this applies only to illicit programs like trojans, but some groups worry about how the new criteria will be applied

With great power comes great responsibility, and apparently with DRM-free music comes files embedded with identifying information. Such is the situation with Apple's new DRM-free music: songs sold without DRM still have a user's full name and account e-mail embedded in them, which means that dropping that new DRM-free song on your favorite P2P network could come back to bite you

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