Tuesday, March 1, 2011

On the wings of technology: drones of Hummingbird

SAN DIEGO — the Pentagon is pouring millions of dollars in the development of tiny drones inspired by biology — such as hummingbirds — each equipped with audio and video equipment that can record sounds and.

Could be used for spying, but also to locate people inside buildings earthquake-crumpled and detect leaks of hazardous chemicals.

The smaller the better.

In addition the hummingbirds, engineers in the field of pilotless drones are working on increasing that resemble insects and seed helicopter-like maple leaf.

Researchers are also exploring ways to plant surveillance and other equipment in an insect as it undergoes metamorphosis. Want to be able to control the creature.

The devices could end up being used by police officers and firefighters.

Their potential use outside of battle, however, is raising questions about privacy and the dangers of winged creatures buzzing around in the sky as the plane themselves.

For now, most of these devices are just awe inspiring.

With a 6.5-inch wing span, the controlled bird weighs less than a AA battery and can fly at speeds up to 11 km/h, driven solely by flapping its wings. A small camera sits in her belly.

The bird can climb and descend vertically, fly sideways, back and forth. It can rotate clockwise and counterclockwise.

More than anything can hover or perch on a window ledge while it collects intelligence, unbeknownst to the enemy.

"We were laughing almost to be afraid because we signed up to do this," said Matt Keennon, senior project engineer at AeroVironment in California, who built the hummingbirds.

The Pentagon has asked them to develop an air pocket for surveillance and reconnaissance that mimicked biology. Could be anything, they said, from a Dragonfly for a hummingbird.

Five years and $ 4 million later, the company has developed what it calls the first spy plane Hummingbird world.

"It was very daunting in front and remained that way for quite some time in the project," he said, after the drone blew with his head and landed on his hand during a demonstration of media.

The most difficult challenges were building a small vehicle which can fly for a prolonged period and be controlled or controls itself.

AeroVironment has a history of developing such aircraft.

Over the decades, has developed the company headquartered in Monrovia, California from a mechanical flying reptile with a hydrogen plane capable of flying in the stratosphere and measurement of an area larger than Afghanistan at a glance.

It has become a leader in drone launched by hand.

Troops hurl a plane four pounds, the Raven, in the air. Have come to rely on real-time video that defers to locate using roadside bombs or get a glimpse of what is happening over the next Hill or behind a corner.

The success of hummingbirds drone, however, "paves the way for a new generation of aircraft with the agility and the appearance of small birds," said Todd Hylton research arm of the Pentagon, Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.

These drones are not just birds.

Lockheed Martin has developed a suit of fake maple leaf, or so-called in whirly bird, loaded with sensors and imaging equipment. The spy plane weighs 0.07 ounces.

Research on the ends of the spectrum, DARPA also is studying the possibility of implanting live insects during metamorphosis with cameras or sensors, and control by applying electrical stimulation to their wings.

The idea is for the military to be able to send a swarm of bug glassfibre spy gear.

The military is looking at other uses.

Other science news story of MSNBC Tech & Science Black full circle is science editor Alan Boyle's Weblog: search for a man to find his African roots through genetic testing is turning into a history that stretches from America in Cameroon and Ghana. Air Force fully leverages the power of wave prehistoric dog lived, died between human beings on the wings of technology: drones of Hummingbird

The drones could be sent in to search for buildings in areas of urban combat. Police are interested in using them, among other things, to detect a loss of dangerous chemical. Firefighters could hurl them above a disaster to get better data, quickly.

It is difficult to say what, if anything, will make it out of the lab, but their birth presents challenges not only with physics.

What are the legal implications, especially with interest among police using lowercase for surveillance drones and their potential to invade the privacy of people, she asks Peter w. Singer, author of the book "Wired for war," war robotics.

Singer said that these questions will be increasingly discussed as Robotics become more a part of everyday life.

"It is the equivalent to the advent of the printing press, computers, gunpowder," he said. "Is that the scale of change".

Copyright 2010 the Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Odyssey black history comes full circle

Courtesy of William Holland

Genealogical researcher William Holland, Atlanta on the left, next to the Queen Mother for the Ghanaian village of Adidokpoe-Battor (Center) and William Akpaglo. The two Williams share genetic markers, suggesting that they are distantly related.

By Alan Boyle

William Holland based on his genetic profile, considers himself a descendant of the noble families dating back more than a Millennium. Between then and now, however, his ancestors have been scattered around the African continent — and some of them were brought to America as slaves. That is the branch of the family to which they belong Holland and his family.

Now, the Netherlands is bringing the age-old saga of his family full circle by inviting his relatives disappeared to come from Africa to America. If the plan works out of Holland, African royalty will meet face-to-face with the descendants of slaves and slave owners in Virginia.

"It is something that has never been done before," Holland told me today, the last day of black history month. "It is something that should not be missed."

The genesis of the Netherlands dates back to trips that took last year to fill gaps in its genetic patrimony. Testing of the y chromosome has suggested that his ancestors were related to a Royal family in the West African nation of Cameroon, but also to a noble family in Ghana, hundreds of miles away.

"I am overwhelmed now," said Holland, who is the grandson of a slave who found himself at the service of the Confederate Army during the civil war. But the Netherlands isn't too overwhelmed to make some kind of sense out of his genetic tangled tale.

This month, during a visit to his genetic relatives in Ghana, Holland put together a story of a great migration. A comparison of his y chromosome markers with those families in Ghana and Cameroon suggested that their most recent common ancestor lived maybe 50 generations ago, or approximately 1000 and 1500 years ago. Ghana's guests, members of the family Akpaglo, said that their ancestors migrated southwards from Sudan and settled in the Oyo Empire. Holland assumes that his ancestors were part of the Cameroonian migration as well.

"From there, it disbanded," he said. An ancestral line eventually took root in Ghana, another in Cameroon. Holland was now of both Nations to trace his pedigree. Armed with the results of genetic studies has been started in two families of Africa.

In Cameroon, the Netherlands has been given a real name ("Ndefru"). In Ghana, family Akpaglo gave three names more Africans during a ceremony for seven hours. New Holland names include Togbe ("old wise man," Although the Netherlands is in her 40s) Korsi ("BORN on Sunday," that he was) and Degboe ("brave person who has gone away and return").

"I'm satisfied now — now that I have four names" Holland joked.

But he is not yet finished. Holland still wants to share the experience he had with his fellow Americans and at the same time give visitors a taste of African America. Holland says that some of her friends and family at home in Atlanta are bothered by the idea that somehow were sold as slaves from their African ancestors. His African friends and relatives say that is not the way it was. So the Netherlands is trying to organize a daylong seminar and reunion on May 22, in Virginia, where his ancestors has worked as slaves, Africans and Americans the opportunity to talk through their history together.

Holland has invited Fon hierarchy III, who heads the Mankon tribal group in Cameroon, as well as representatives of family from Ghana. He hoped that his relatives African-Americans, as well as the descendants of the family of Virginia, who held his ancestors as slaves will be available as well.

"Hope brighten your family on Africa and what happened in the slave trade," explained Holland.

Holland has already heard that "Fon" accepted his invitation, and he is pretty sure that someone from Ghana also will be coming. It is not a done deal yet, but if everything works the way the hopes of the Netherlands, seeking a man to find his roots family turns into a gathering of clans from across the oceans of time and space.

Holland says that his newfound kin africana can hardly wait. "You're past excited now," he said. All in all, not a bad way to end Black History Month.

Feel free to tell your own family research in the comment section below. For more coverage of Black History Month and beyond, check-in with corporate cousins of msnbc.com at TheGrio.com.

Subsribe to Cosmic Log by clicking the "like" on our Facebook page or by following msnbc.com science editor Alan Boyle as b0yle on Twitter. For more information about the book by Alan Boyle on Pluto and planets, check the website for "The Case for Pluto."

Intel completes acquisition of McAfee

Intel has completed the acquisition of 7.68 billion from McAfee.

The completion of the transaction, announced yesterday, follows approvals from the various committees of Directors and shareholders, as well as reviews from Federal Trade Commission, the European Commission and other regulatory groups.

As a wholly owned subsidiary of Intel, McAfee will become part of the Software and Services Group, managed by Renee James, senior vice president of the company. McAfee Ceo Dave DeWalt will report directly to James.

McAfee will continue to offer its own branded line of products for safety and keep customers. The two companies, said that during the preparation of the "fruits" of their partnership to hit the market this year.

The need for greater security through greater variety of devices was the driving force behind Intel's offer to collect McAfee.

Pointing to the growing number of connected devices, from PCs to mobile phones to televisions to medical devices, the two companies said that today's approach to security is not enough. And with the growing threat of cyberattacks, you need a new security framework that combines hardware, software and services.

Security itself has become a "third pillar of computing," according to the company, on par with performance and efficiency and connectivity as key elements. Among other ways, Intel is trying to bring security to the Silicon hardware level by integrating it, before the operating system also comes into play. This core approach to security is embedded and mobile products, the company said.

"Security challenges put the potential future of computing at risk," James said in a statement. "The acquisition of McAfee adds not only a leading worldwide security products and technologies in Intel's portfolio of computing, but also brings the incredibly talented people focused on providing products and services that help make the Internet safer and more mobile.

Blogging about the acquisition completed yesterday, DeWalt said that Intel and McAfee will present a webinar in May to discuss how the two will partner with focus on security. McAfee will also have more to say to his security Focus 2011 Conference in October.

Ageing Japan squeezes out another kid robot

Babyloid is perfect for taking care of Humanoids. (Credit: Aichi Prefecture)

The nightmare of child robot continues apace in Japan, a rapid aging societies where human infants are going out of style. Babyloid is the newest cyber-tot to spring from the minds of engineers with little apparent regard for their offspring are as scary.

(Credit: Aichi Prefecture)

Kano Masayoshi creator of Chukyo University, Nagoya, and the fame of Ifbot Babyloid was on display, developed two years ago, in presentations, sponsored by the local government. Recently, explained the robot in a speech at the research promotion Foundation of artificial intelligence.

Inspired by a baby beluga whale, Babyloid is designed to be a therapeutic robot for the elderly depressed patients, similar to seal robot Paro Paro. Studies have suggested that taking care of dolls can improve the lives of adults suffering from dementia.

Boy Kano is 17 cm long and weighs about 3 pounds. Only can move his arms, head, mouth and eyelids and make sounds of baby robot. LED on his face can mimic emotions like sadness. Has optical sensors and microphones and PIR to detect people.

Babyloid is still a prototype, but was used in a small test with seniors in a nursing home. Five subjects were evaluated on how they accepted and retained an interest in the car, and apparently the results were positive. Kano, apparently, wants to sell the robot for about $ 600.

Fondly, CB2, Yotaro and Kindy and Noby, Babyloid reflects Japan's love of making children robot instead of human infants; the population peaked in 2004 and will contract by approximately one quarter from the middle of the century.

Of course, Babyloid will have grown since then and had children.

(Via plastic Pals, Robonable)

Pre-Caffeine: angry birds, toilet Tardis!

via Neatorama

By Helen A.S. Popkin

Danny Ayalon, Deputy Foreign Minister of Israel is just one of many true Beliebers wishing a happy birthday Justin Bieber on Twitter today.

That guy who played Napoleon Dynamite trying to finance a film via Kickstarter — the same site of fundraising that ensured the statue of Robocop Detroit.

And Sony wants you to help create the new Michael Jackson video.

It turns out that 70 percent of piracy to find people perfectly acceptable.

Talking about cheating, 40 percent of the players of angry birds pay for in-app purchase that allows you to skip levels.

Speaking of games, Nintendo 3DS is coming. You should get in line?

Might not be necessary to pay nearly as much for iPhone in the near future.

Antoine Dodson of Auto-tune "Bed Intruder" seems to be angry with someone on Facebook.

In closing, heads-up Dr. Who nerds! Here is a bar that looks like the Tardis toilet!

Nintendo 3DS is coming. Should get in line now?

Error in deserializing body of reply message for operation ' Translate '. The maximum string content length quota (8192) has been exceeded while reading XML data. This quota may be increased by changing the MaxStringContentLength property on the XmlDictionaryReaderQuotas object used when creating the XML reader. Line 1, position 8842.

By Winda Benedetti

The Nintendo 3DS portable game machine has just launched in Japan and stores have already sold out of their initial supply. And as Nintendo gears up to release the gadget in North America, the question is: Will the same thing happen here?

Will western consumers decide that playing 3-d games without the 3-d glasses is worth $ 250? Are we willing to drop the kind of cash we'd pay for a home game console on a handheld game machine? (You can purchase a Wii or an Xbox 360 for $ 50 less.) Is the 3DS so amazing that we should start lining up in front of electronics stores right now?

Nintendo 3DS will launch its game machine March 27th here in North America for $ 249.95. According to reports from Japan, retailers there — swamped by enormous lines during this past weekend's launch — quickly sold out of their first shipments, going through some 400,000 units.

Are you planning to buy a Nintendo 3DS?Absolutely! I can't wait to play 3-d games without those blades 3-D glasses.
I'm tempted. But I'm still trying to decide.
$ 250 is too much. My trusty DS Lite/DSi will do the job just fine.
Forget the 3DS. The portable game gadgets I'm waiting for is. .. (tell us in the comments below)
What's this three dee everyone keeps going on about?
VoteTotal Votes: 147

I recently had a chance to spend some time with to 3DS and I can say it's a compelling and wow-inducing machine with lots of bells, whistles and features that make that $ 250 price tag seem fair. But is it a must have game machine? As in, is it something you must have as soon as it arrives in stores?

I'll save my final verdict for our full review but I can say that, as of right now, I'm a bit torn.

The 3DS is a sleek, stylish gadget, about the same size as the best-selling Nintendo DS Lite and DSi. It's got that smart Nintendo DS clamshell design with the top screen being the one that shows off the 3-d images and the bottom screen being the touch screen. The top screen is larger than the older-model Nintendo DS Lite or DSi screens at 2.77 inches and the bottom screen is 3.02 inches.

The 3DS also has three cameras — two of which are designed to let you take your own 3-d pictures. And it has a Circle Pad, which is a much-appreciated analog stick for game control.

Meanwhile, seeing games in 3-d right there in your hands without any glasses is certainly the kind of thing that drops jaws.

The 3DS ' screens look great with their 800 × 240 pixels (top) and 320 × 240 pixels resolution display (bottom). Playing to 3DS launch game like Nintendogs + Cats "makes you feel like you could reach out and actually touch your virtual pet. Meanwhile "Super Street Fighter IV 3D Edition" simply jumps right off the screen in all its butt-kicking glory.

3-D + "Nintendogs + Cats" = seriously petable virtual pets.

And playing the augmented reality challenges in "AR Games" (a title that comes pre loaded on all 3DS devices) is a mind-boggling, surreal blast. In this game you use the 3DS ' cameras and motion sensors to look around your own real-world environment and interact with virtual creatures and items super imposed there.

But I have to say, after that wow factor wore off, I did find myself wanting to turn the 3-D off at times and just go back to good ol' 2-D gaming. Of course, the nice thing about the 3DS is that you can do just that — the 3-d slider allows you to easily adjust the intensity of the 3-d visuals as well turn off the 3-D completely while you're playing.

I don't believe that extended 3-d gaming on the 3DS would make me hurl (as 3-d viewing does to some people), but I can say that my eyes felt more strained as I played. More importantly, there's one question that nags at me — how good will the 3-d viewing really be when we're playing games that ask us to move our bodies around?

The 3DS comes with both a motion sensor gyro sensor and embedded. And several of the 3DS games I had a chance to test drive — "Steel Diver," "AR Games" and "Face" Raiders "(another pre-loaded title) — all task players with moving about during the game.

"Steel Diver," for example, is a game that has, at times, you turn your body right and left to search for enemy ships to gun down. It's as if you're in a submarine looking around through a periscope. The 3DS's motion sensors detect your movement and adjust the on-screen view as you turn your body, looking for enemy targets.

But the thing is, to see the 3-d imagery correctly, you have to keep your head directly in front of your 3DS. There's only a small window for wiggle room. Moving your body around and keeping your head aligned with the gadget at the same time isn't horribly difficult. But it does require some extra attention and, if you move your eyes too far out of alignment, the visuals go wonky.

My concern is, keeping our eyes in that sweet spot when playing games like this could quickly get frustrating and tiring and players could wind up flipping that 3-d slider to "off" before very long. As games editor Todd Kenreck Msnbc.com notes in his video preview up top, he experienced that very issue from shaking the machine while playing Super Street Fighter IV. "

It's no good if we're spending $ 250 for 3-D that we simply wind up turning off. But again, I'll save my official verdict until after I have a chance to spend more time with these games and have a chance to get used to this new feature.

Meanwhile, Nintendo has announced the list of games players will be able to purchase the very first day the 3DS arrives in stores. The suggested retail price for 3DS games will be $ 40. From Nintendo itself, you'll be able to grab "Pilotwings Resort," "Steel Diver," and "Nintendogs + Cats." And that's it from them on the day of launch.

In the past, Nintendo has launched a Mario Bros. game alongside most of its new game machines — and Mario and Luigi are sorely missed here, in what feels like a somewhat thin first-party launch lineup. But Nintendo has said that it does have several other games in the works and scheduled to arrive in 2011, including "The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time," "Star Fox 64 3D," "Kid Icarus: Uprising" and a new installment in the Mario Kart series. So Mario is on his way.

Meanwhile, third-party publishers will have the following games ready to go on launch day:

"Super Street Fighter IV 3D Edition," "The Sims 3," "Madden NFL Football," "Pro Evolution Soccer 2011 3D" LEGO Star Wars III: The Clone Wars, "" Ridge Racer 3D, "3D" Super Monkey Ball, "" Bust-A-Move "Universe," "Samurai Warriors: Chronicles," "Asphalt 3D," "Combat of GiantsDinosaurs 3D, 3D, "" Rayman "and" Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon Shadow Wars. "

While there are some really good offerings there, I'm not sure I see the killer game yet — the one that makes camping out for a 3DS worth doing. But stay tuned for more on the 3DS launch as we dig deep into the machine, its features and its games to help you decide whether you're ready to spend $ 250 on Nintendo's latest gaming creation.

For more gaming news, see:

Winda Benedetti writes about games for msnbc.com. You can follow her tweets about games and other things right here on Twitter.

Ex-Apple handler pleads guilty in Kickback case

A former manager of Apple has pleaded guilty in a case of greater backlash that could land him in prison for 20 years.

Paul Shin Devine, once employed by Apple as a catering Manager, admitted guilt yesterday in Federal Court in San Jose, California, on charges of wire fraud, conspiracy and money laundering. He was accused of taking bribes from suppliers of Apple in exchange for information, according to the Department of Justice of the United States.

Devine, who worked at Apple from 2005 until 2010, forecasts sent, roadmaps, product specifications and other confidential information to Asian suppliers and component manufacturers Apple, according to court documents. In return, received payments from those suppliers according to the amount of business that were able to win by Apple. Confidential information provided by suppliers that Devine helped negotiate better deals with Apple and cost the company more than $ 2.4 million, Devine admitted as part of his plea agreement.

In total, Devine was charged with 15 counts of wire fraud, one count of conspiracy, wire fraud, six counts of money laundering and one count of "engaging in transactions with criminally derived proceeds." Charges of wire fraud stems from several bank accounts in both the United States and abroad that Devine opened to hide its proceeds. Under the agreement yesterday admitted his guilt to a count of each violation.

The agreement calls for Devine give up over 2.28 million $ in cash and property. Devine still faces a maximum prison term of 20 years on wire fraud and money laundering charges. Sentencing is set for June 6.

Mr. Devine is a good man who has made a mistake, and now is trying to make amends, "his lawyer, Raphael Goldman, said yesterday, according to Reuters.

Apple has filed a civil suit against Devine, who has been suspended pending the outcome in criminal court.

The investigation started last April when Apple discovered evidence of kickbacks on portable property of Devine. Devine was arrested in August. He initially pleaded not guilty to the charges. A search of his home in Sunnyvale, California, by federal agents discovered more than 150,000 U.S. dollars in bills hidden in boxes of shoes along with $ 20,000 in other currencies.

Report: Panasonic handheld jungle ACEs

The jungle reportedly was cut and burned.(Credit: Screenshot by Don Reisinger/CNET)

If you were hoping to get their hands on Panasonic's jungle, you need to settle for something else.

Panasonic chose to discontinue his efforts on handheld gaming, announced today the Reuters. Apparently, the company announced it had "decided to suspend further development due to changes in the market and in our strategic direction," he told Reuters.

The jungle handheld was first revealed at the end of last year. The device was intended to compete with the Nintendo DS and Sony's PlayStation Portable. However, Panasonic has had an idea a little different with the jungle. Rather than allow developers to create titles and have the players to buy in-store, the jungle had to play only games online games and massively multiplayer online role-playing game (MMORPG). Panasonic said at the time who believed he was doing something unique in the market for portable gaming.

"We know that other companies out there are traditional handheld game", Panasonic said in an e-mail in November. "We are doing something very different."

But the Panasonic device with a clamshell design, and included a keyboard and touch pad, it was facing the same competition last year as this year.

The Nintendo 3DS, which launched (and subsequently sold out) in Japan over the weekend, has two screens and the ability for players to play titles in 3D without special glasses. Will be available in the United States for $ 249 on 27 March. And at the end of the year, Sony plans to refresh its lineup of portable-game with next-generation handset, which promises to PlayStation 3-like graphics and dual thumbsticks.

In a nutshell, those new products could provide more than could the jungle. And Panasonic, with his recognition of the "changes in the market," seemed to understand pretty clearly.

Now that the jungle was apparently clear, we can not say what the future looks like for Panasonic Cloud Entertainment Co. This Division was established as a subsidiary of Panasonic, when the project of the jungle before being hunted.

Panasonic has not immediately responded to the request of CNET for the comment.

How to look in this dress? New answers site

Last weekend was in Los Angeles and took some time to kill, so are placed shopping — alone. I found a dress that I liked and the salesperson told me that sounded great (obviously). When he returned to New York and tried to dress up for my husband, hated it. Should I go?

I uploaded a picture of the dress and placed the question honestly now to find out. The Web site and iPhone app (free at Apple.com) allow you to tap your friends, or all honestly now community for their opinion on everything from fashion to better photos than the tooth fairy headshot would pay for a tooth.

Here's how it works. It is first necessary to participate in the community honestly now. You can get an invitation from founder Tereza Nemessanyi on his profile page. Then you need to connect with your friends (once you're a member you can invite people to guarantee anonymity in a poll by private friends, you must have at least five friends).

Questions can be text or include photos and can be posed as multiple choice or Yes or no.  Then you choose who poll: all or only your friends. Your friends and all professionals that "heart" you will be informed that you have asked a question, and you just sit back and let the responses to roll in.

When your friends to answer your questions, their answers are anonymous.  As Nemessanyi says, "the honesty in the world market for analog is highly imperfect. Our friends often do not tell us the truth. So we make it easy for them to be honest with you. "

Once someone has replied to a question, you can see the percentages for all other respondents. So, answering questions can become highly addictive.

Professionals who are part of the community include Hollywood life Editor Bonnie Fuller, image guru Montgomery Frazier, designer Marc Bouwer, beauty expert Rachel Hayes, Erin Newkirk etiquette maven and photographer Liz Brown, among others. Professionals can post comments about your question, giving extra tips or explaining their response. Only professionals can publish comments.

Of course there are other options of opinion out there. But do not provide the same experience. For example, OpinionAided.com and the OpinionAided iPhone app (free of charge at Apple.com) allow you to target your questions, by sex and age group. They also allow you to filter the questions that are answered by age and content. However, anyone can leave a comment and there is a less serious bent, when questions are questions at all. For example, someone uploaded a picture of Blueberry pancakes made with the question "you gotta love IHOP."

There is also the Fashism.com fashion-oriented and its iPhone app, Fashism Mobile (free at Apple.com), that cater to a teen and twenty public. They allow you to see the comments of other people and their votes before giving your input, which makes good navigation, but inevitably deviations answers you get.

So how did my dress on honestly rate now? Now, 75 percent say I must keep it. But I also have a comment on my dress from guru image Frazier. He says, "at present, this dress makes her hair look mousey and lifeless! If you were to keep this habit, which is actually flattering for your body, but not for the coloring, I would advise to color your hair a deep rich red or copper. " Yikes! Since I'm not planning to dye my hair, I think you can go back.

Meet Suzanne on Facebook or get his daily newsletter Techlicious.

Other stories from Techlicious:

© 2011 Techlicious

See Windows 8 tablets in June?

By Athima Chansanchai

Microsoft may introduce its Tablet Windows 8 in June, if a reliable source is internal.

Microsoft Insider source of Business writer Matt Rosoff said that "the company hopes to show his new Windows 8 design for tablets by the end of its fiscal year in June," and that "Microsoft is taking a more Apple-like approach to this time around the design of interfacciae will also be using concepts from ' Metro ' developed for Windows Phone 7. "

Hmmm, more "Apple-like"? Maybe you take some cues from iPad 2, which is slated for introduction at the Apple event tomorrow.

The timing of the announcement, if it is done, it would align with Computex Taipei, the great fair which runs from 31 May to 4 June. It would also align with a similar program that Microsoft followed when they debuted for Win 7. Mary Jo Foley of ZDNet predicts that the coding phase should have begun yesterday, which would put a debut date more like September with a Dell tablet ready for market by January 2012.

A Microsoft spokesperson stated that the company does not have information to share at this time.

Apple iPad debuted in more than a year ago, at the end of January 2010, and at the end of last year, we saw the Samsung Galaxy Tab arrive as the first major competitor to Android. In Las Vegas, January, CES spit tablets as a trader shoots out cards with the Motorola Xoom bringing the pack as the closest thing to an iPad competitor. Suffice it to say, Windows 8 must be something really special to emerge in this increasingly crowded shindig.

Thus, the idea of a Windows 8 excite you at all?

Other stories of Tablet:

Check out technology on Facebook and on Twitter, follow Athima Chansanchai, who is managing to survive in a world less compressed. For now.

Schwarzenegger: time to change the energy debate

NATIONAL HARBOR, MD. -proponents of green technology need a better way to make their case, said Arnold Schwarzenegger, who, in a speech today, doubtless raised his profile as a main supporter.

Former California Governor and film star gave a keynote at ARPA-E Summit here, alternating one-liners funny and serious discussion on the importance of clean energy technologies for the future prosperity of the country.

(Credit: Martin LaMonica/CNET)

California offers a model for technology companies that can help revitalize the economy and reduce greenhouse gas emissions, helping the country reduce oil imports, he said. Schwarzenegger signed a law that mandates of global warming reductions in greenhouse gases and the State has a mandate of renewable energies, which resulted in nearly 20 percent of electricity from renewable sources.

But he complained the national debate and the political discourse on clean energy, saying too much of it is stuck in the debate on the science of global warming.

Instead, people should focus on immediate benefits from investing in green technologies, including the improvement of health, save money for consumers from efficiency, economic growth and reduced dependence on foreign oil. He said health, there are about 100,000 premature deaths a year, which may be linked to the use of oil.

"Think about what it means in the Central Valley of California, one in six children must walk with an inhaler. I know that we can change the debate and win the debate, "he said. "We cannot talk about global warming because people who can't relate to."

In California, found that policymakers had to fight efforts to repeal the environmental legislation forces the "status quo" in energy. Elections in the autumn, there was a question of ballot, Schwarzenegger said it was funded by the Ohio coal and oil companies of Texas, to scale back environmental legislation.

He said that the recent instability of the Middle East States sent gyrating oil prices, showing the geopolitical impact of our energy policies. "Why do leftovers small country (e.g. Libya) led by a dictator play havoc with the economic security of America?" he said.

Economically, California has been promoting a green economy with job growth in green technologies than other areas. A company, Solazyme, is the creation of algae fuel that reduce greenhouse gases significantly. It is tested by the Navy, not some wacky environmentalists, "she said.

Instead of crafting "far-sighted policies" in the area of energy, politicians are debating the science of global warming. "There is a disconnect between what is happening and what is being debated," he said.

Apple Chief hints at iPhone cheaper

By Rosa Rosa Golijan

Previously we heard that Apple is working on an iPhone cheaper and now some comments by Apple CEO Tim Cook all but confirms that the plan.

Eric Savitz of Tech Trade Forbes ' blog reports that a research note released recently from Bernstein Research analyst Toni Sacconaghi revealed information about a meeting with Apple COO Tim Cook, CFO Peter Oppenheimer and VP of Internet Services Eddy Cuetogether with some details about Apple's product plans:

Analyst says Cook "appeared to reaffirm the notion that Apple is likely to develop lower priced bids" to expand the market for the iPhone. Cook said the company is designing "smart things" to deal with the prepaid market and that Apple does not want the products to be "only for the rich", and that the company is "not cede any market."

It seems quite reasonable to interpret these comments as a sign that Apple is plotting to offer a cheaper iPhone and we hope certainly is — especially considering that our wallets will probably already have a nice success shortly after announcing the upcoming Apple iPad 2.

Related stories:

Rosa Rosa Golijan writes tech here and there. She is a little obsessed with Twitter, but still loves be liked on Facebook.

Scientists purchase suborbital space trips

XCOR Aerospace

The latest design of XCOR Aerospace Lynx rocket plane includes an optional pod that can hold the experimental payload.

By Alan Boyle

Researchers have struck deals with millions of dollars to a total of 17 flights aboard two types of private suborbital spaceships, with the prospect of more in the future for many years. "This is just whetting people's taste for what is to come," said Alan Stern, a planetary scientist who helped engineer the bids and is due to be one of the first to fly.

Stern, an associate vice President Research Institute in the Southwest, conducting suborbital research effort by SwRI and preside over next-generation suborbital researchers Conference this week in Orlando, Florida, the Conference is bringing together scientists and entrepreneurs to develop what Stern calls a "killer app" for space flight: zero-G research suborbital rocket vehicles.

SwRI is involved in both deals announced in recent days: one calls for two researchers to fly on aircraft of Virgin Galactic SpaceShipTwo rocket, with an option for the purchase of six seats for a total value of $ 1.6 million. The other set aside that six Lynx rocket plane on flights of XCOR aerospace, with an option for three more flights.

Virgin Galactic has started glide tests of his first SpaceShipOne craft, dubbed the VSS enterprise and plans to begin testing the rocket since the beginning of 2012. Chief operating officer of XCOR, Andrew Nelson, said the first flight tests were planned for the Lynx in early 2012 as well.

"I expect there is a good chance that the first flights could be at the end of next year," Stern told me today. "Most would in ' 13, two years from now."

If all 5 points are purchased, "this program will further launches of humans in space" than any single government agency beyond 2012-2014 period, said Stern. When grouped together all astronauts and cosmonauts Government going to the international space station, the total can be bigger, but "If you count only the number of NASA astronauts in these three years, you will find that it is a smaller number," he said.

The cost for Virgin Media's standard rate of $ 200,000 per seat. Virgin Galactic SpaceShipTwo says its flights will reach nearly 70 km altitude and provide a few minutes of zero gravity.

As Nelson would say Stern nor SwRI would pay for the XCOR Lynx flights, but the rate of tourism for the Lynx is $ 95,000 per seat. Nelson said the first model of Lynx to enter service, brand, would speak for a minimum of 38 km altitude and a little less than one minute to zero-G — which is sufficient for purposes of SwRI. The production model of Lynx, Mark II, could fly about twice as high and provide more long stretches of microgravity.

Stern said that he would be one of the researchers go into space as part of the agreement. Two other staff SwRI, Dan Durda and Cathy Olkin, were trained for space flight. SwRI will be paying for all flights out of its budget to research and development.

Three experiments were ready for flight, Stern said: one involves monitoring vital signs of researchers in zero-G as well as their high G climb and descent. Researchers will even out the Windows of the rocket plans using an ultraviolet imager astronomical observations. Durda, meanwhile, has prepared a sample of material that will be simulated asteroid studied during the different phases of flight. Such research with fake stuff asteroid could help scientists figure out what to expect if a human mission is sent to land on an asteroid, the Obama administration has proposed.

Stern said the space program was aimed at SwRI pump priming to scientific studies using suborbital piloted spacecraft. These flights offer a cheaper alternative, quick turnaround research on the international space station, which typically involves a long-term procedure for approval and execution of experments.

"Someone had to break the ice," said Stern. "We are very proud to be the first".

Other companies, including Armadillo Aerospace and blue origin, are also working on suborbital spaceships and Stern said SWRI was in discussions with those ventures, as well as for future flights.

"We are building a program of space flight, and we will take all comers," Stern said.

Other suborbital Science: perspectives on

Stern is due discuss suborbital science initiatives on 13 March on "virtually speaking science" with co-hosts Alan Boyle and Robin Snelson. Subsribe to Cosmic Log by clicking the "like" on our Facebook page or by following msnbc.com science editor Alan Boyle as b0yle on Twitter. Read more on the book by Alan Boyle on Pluto and planets, check the website for "The Case for Pluto."

Chu asks comeback in U.S. energy technology

NATIONAL HARBOR, MD. -Energy Secretary Steven Chu is drawing on the history of the United States in research and development to advocate for policies that encourage innovation in clean energy technology for the future.

Chu gave the speech at ARPA-E Summit here today once again saying that the United States is in a race with China, the European Union and other countries to create energy products due to growing demand.

He started showing a graph of the rise and fall of oil prices over time, saying that people can not say precisely where oil prices to be in a few years time. Rose recently passed $ 100 per barrel, and the United States spends about $ 1 billion per day, import of oil.

"What do we do? Do hope for the best and plan for a $ 40 a barrel? "he said. "I suggest taking a longer-term, more measured approach to the problem".

Secretary Chu to ARPA-E Summit 2011.(Credit: Martin LaMonica/CNET)

Beyond the question of the volatile price of fossil fuels, Chu argued that there is great peak energy demand clean accessible around the world. "Our strategy should not be hoping for the best ...Let's plan to which the world is going to be, "he said.

Has listed a number of areas where China is taking the lead in cleaner technologies. It has, for example, where only 7 percent of the energy it loses more than 1,200 miles of transmission lines of high-voltage direct current. The comparable U.S. loss on the grid would be 80 percent, he said.

Meanwhile, China, France and Japan have also invested in high-speed railway infrastructure. In finance, the United States lags behind other countries on project financing and public market clean energy financing, even if it leads in the investment firm. China surpassed the United States and other countries in the production of, high-tech, roboticized as well, he said.

The strategy at the Department of energy for the promotion of clean energy is to reduce costs lower than that of fossil fuels, Chu said. "We believe in some cases that can be competitive with fossil fuels. If it is 10 years from now or 50 years from now is the question, "he said. "If we get cost-competitive with fossil fuels, clean energy is a very different world."

Has promoted a series of research programmes, touching many areas, such as building efficiency, efficient, air conditioning and biofuels. Batteries, said the Argonne National Laboratory has made an advance of lithium ion batteries to improve safety, life and energy density of batteries. The technology has been licensed by General Motors and should be used in the second generation of Chevy Volt.

Lithium ion batteries were invented in the United States, supported by Energy Department research, but the products were marketed in Japan. Now in Japan and Korea dominate the industry of lithium-ion battery. But, as shown in the example of battery Argonne, technologies can be devised and marketed in the United States quickly, Chu said.

"Just because we lost the lead does not mean that we cannot go back," he said. "We still have a chance to lead the world in clean energy and capture the jobs of the 21st century, but time is running out. Is a race and the train is leaving the station. "

A double scoop of Saturn's moons

By John Roach

A new image from Cassini orbiter offers a delightful view looking over the South Polar region of Saturn's moon Dione's icy Moon Rhea into the distance, seemingly balanced on the rings of Saturn.

Rings of Saturn are closest to Cassini of Dione, obscuring the view of the South of Dione, according to an image Advisory. The image was taken in visible light with the acute angle camera of Cassini on January 11, 2011. The spacecraft was approximately 38,000 miles from Rea and 574,000 by Dione.

The composition is similar to the famous photo of Earthrise, NASA has done as the Apollo 8 crew swung around the moon on Christmas eve of 1968 and captured their planet suspended in the sky black. That image is credited for helping to trigger the environmental movement on Earth. What will Cassini image for Dione?

More information on Saturn's moon Rhea and Dione:

John Roach is a writer who has contributed for msnbc.com. Connect with the community of Cosmic Log by pressing the button "as" Cosmic Log onto Facebook page or following science editor Alan Boyle, msnbc.com on Twitter (@ b0yle).

WikiLeaks, Net nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize

WikiLeaks and Internet are among the 241 2011 candidate for the Nobel Peace Prize.

(Credit: Short)

Nobel's appointment comes as Julian Assange, spokesman for the secret-sharing site, is facing possible extradition to Sweden on charges of sex-related, and a criminal probe on charges of spying is likely underway in Washington, D.C..

Nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize can come from any Professor of "social sciences, history, philosophy, law and theology," in addition to national Governments and former recipients of the Nobel Peace Prize, according to the rules of the Norwegian Nobel Committee.

Previous winners of the Nobel Peace Prize have included Barack Obama, Jimmy Carter, the United Nations and Kofi Annan, Al Gore, Desmond Tutu and Henry Kissinger. They are awarded by a Committee composed of officials of the current and former Norwegian Government.

The Committee announces nominees, but individuals who have submitted proposals are free to disclose it.

"Looking at the long term, we can say interest is strong and growing with the number of candidates," Geir Lundestad's notion, a member of the Group of experts, without voting told Reuters. Winners will be announced in October.

The Internet may have been named one of the reasons is the role in catalyzing uprisings in Egypt, Tunisia and Libya. Activists coordinated protests using Facebook and instant messaging services, and filed dispatches with YouTube and Twitter, leader of a complete disconnect in serious interruptions in Egypt and Libya.

WikiLeaks imitators to endanger your email?

Translate Request has too much data
Parameter name: request
Error in deserializing body of reply message for operation 'Translate'. The maximum string content length quota (8192) has been exceeded while reading XML data. This quota may be increased by changing the MaxStringContentLength property on the XmlDictionaryReaderQuotas object used when creating the XML reader. Line 1, position 9220.

Imagine having every e-mail you've written published by hackers for the entire world to see. You don't have to stretch your imagination very far -- it's already happening to some folks.

Meet the new face of computer hacking. Inspired by the success of WikiLeaks, stealing and disclosing data is the new form of Internet revenge -- and chaos. There's concern that a new generation of WikiLeaks imitators will come along and use widespread dissemination of embarrassing information as its weapon of choice.

Hackers who call themselves Anonymous -- the group that has gained notoriety for attacking Visa and MasterCard in defense of WikiLeaks -- broke into computers operated by a government contractor named HBGary Federal in early February.  Once inside, Anonymous members wreaked all kinds of electronic havoc, including the theft of thousands of employee e-mails. These were then published in searchable form on a Web site similar to WikLeaks, leading to a host of embarrassing disclosures for HBGary employees.  The incident drew so much attention that it was featured in a recent segment on “The Colbert Report.”

At the world’s largest computer security conference in San Francisco last month -- RSA USA -- the attack dominated conversations outside meeting rooms.

But lost in the noise and the embarrassment was this chilling truth: It could happen to you. In the old hacker world, it was enough to deface a company's Web site and put up a sarcastic, embarrassing message.  The HBGary e-mail history incident -- stealing data, publishing it online, and creating an easy-to-use search engine that encourages its spread -- takes the game to a whole new level.

“Leaking has gone mainstream,” said Mikko Hypponen, chief research officer at Finland-based F-Secure.com. “It's likely this phenomenon isn't going to go away, and we will be seeing leak sites for years to come.”

In the aftermath of the WikiLeaks controversy over the release of secret U.S. diplomatic cables last fall, security research firm McAfee predicted that so-called hacktivism would take an aggressive new turn this year. Traditional electronic activists were generally content to perform online versions of sit-ins, temporarily disabling Web sites of targeted entities with denial-of-service attacks. The spreading of previously non-public information through a sophisticated network of Web sites beyond the reach of law enforcement is a far more effective -- and potentially damaging -- form of online protest.

In fact, security experts openly fretted at the security conference that WikiLeaks imitators will soon become commonplace.  And unlike WikiLeaks, not all imitators will consider their work to be goal-oriented hacktivism. In other words, they may not go to any trouble to redact information prior to publication in an attempt to avoid collateral damage to innocent bystanders. Some may simply be motivated by creation of pure anarchy.

"The question is, will the advent of WikiLeaks trigger a mass distribution of information from the hidden depths of public and private entities?" said Jeff Bardin, founder of security research firm Treadstone LLC.

Most who examined the HBGary incident came away with the view that CEO Aaron Barr willingly put a target on his own back by threatening to publicly expose members of Anonymous.  And since the release of the e-mails, several important discoveries have been made, suggesting the firm was part of a conspiracy to discredit WikiLeaks in advance of upcoming data leaks that could embarrass prominent U.S. companies.

On the other hand, many of the e-mails contained innocuous information, such as personal life details, information that could lead to identity theft, or potentially humiliating online purchases.  It’s important to note that both senders and recipients of the e-mails were made public, meanings hundreds -- if not thousands -- of outsiders were also dragged into the HBGary disclosure. Nearly everyone interviewed at the RSA conference in February had searched the database to see if their name and e-mail was in it.

"This goes way beyond exposing wrongdoing, though there was wrongdoing exposed by the e-mail," said Kevin Poulsen, author of the new book “Kingpin: How One Hacker Took Over the Billion-Dollar Cybercrime Underground.” Poulsen is also senior editor at Wired.com

Stealing someone's e-mail and publishing it online, regardless of the impact on innocent bystanders, is hardly new. It happened when a criminal stole Sarah Palin's e-mails during the last presidential campaign, and it's happened to plenty of so-called "white hat" security researchers in the past.  The Anonymous incident is different, however, because the group made it so easy for others to search the e-mails for embarrassing details.

"It's the sophistication with which they put it out there that's different," Poulsen said. "That was clearly WikiLeaks-inspired."

Gregg Housh calls himself an Internet activist who has been associated with Anonymous in the past. He describes himself as an avid observer of Anonymous, and he has at times served as the group’s public face. He said Anonymous had no concerns about such collateral damage when it published the data, and probably won't think much about that going forward.

"That's just the way it’s going to have to be now," he said. "It didn't have to go this way, but many people in your field (journalism) failed us. ... It was only natural that something would show up and replace it. I don’t see anyone at all, even slightly, caring about what happened. For the most part the Anons who did it feel like messengers.  It's Aaron's (Barr) fault it happened and all blame should be put squarely on his shoulders."

Housh agreed to act as a go-between for msnbc.com to get thoughts from Anonymous members, and said a spokesman from the group offered this response: "In all honesty, we didn't care what was in these e-mails, let alone what damage they might have caused. We were focused on getting revenge on Aaron Barr, everything else was just a bonus --  we don't regret what was uncovered and we'd do it again a thousand times over."

Barr resigned from HBGary on Monday, according to Forbes.com. Anonymous, meanwhile, knocked the website for Americans for Prosperity offline. That conservative organization has been very active in the Wisconsin standoff over collective bargaining rights, spending more than $400,000 in TV ads in support of Republican Gov. Scott Walker's plan to take away union bargaining rights.

In a press release attributed to the group, Anonymous said it was taking on the billionaire Koch brothers, who fund Americans for Prosperity.

"Their actions to undermine the legitimate political process in Wisconsin are the final straw. Starting today we fight back," the press release said.

Anonymous acts much like a traditional hacktivist group, having planned several old-fashioned denial-of-service attacks in support of WikiLeaks and other causes.  But theft and distribution of data as a method for revenge will likely bleed into pure anarchy, experts worry.

"The evidence is thin at this point but I think we will see a lot of that in the future," Poulsen said. "Intruders motivated by ideology and revenge, hacking for the purpose of shaming."

Such groups will be particularly troublesome because, unlike WikiLeaks, they will have little to lose. WikiLeaks had donors to please, Poulsen said, and leader Julian Assange showed signs that he was motivated by a quest for credibility.  As a result, the Web site improved efforts over time to remove information that might cause collateral damage from its releases, at one point experimenting with eliminating all proper nouns from some document dumps.

"We will not see that from copycat groups,” Poulsen said. “They don't care about respectability. They have no interest in fundraising."

One reason Poulsen thinks a rash of copycats might be coming: It's often easier to hack into mail servers than other computer targets.  Until recently, hackers seemed primarily interested in stealing financial information for personal gain. That means computer firms have spent most of their energy protecting computers which host that valuable data. But it also means that many have taken their eye off the ball when it comes to other servers, which were thought to be unattractive targets.

Until now.

Internet users have always been told that anything they write in an e-mail could end up in court, or in front of a boss's prying eyes. Now more than ever, that warning should be heeded: Don't type anything on a keyboard that you wouldn't want the entire world to see. Even if you feel like your company’s servers could never be hacked, can you trust every company you ever e-mail?

And here's another piece of advice from Poulsen.

"Don't piss off Anonymous," he said. 

Bardin is not quite as pessimistic as some of his peers. He thinks the current trend of leaked and hacked information being splattered all over the Internet will not continue unabated.  A combination of improved security techniques, and the establishment of alternate channels for airing government and corporate gripes, will ultimately slow down WikiLeaks imitators, he thinks.

"We are seeing the spikes of those releases until controls are put in place and it becomes a method of ethical disclosure as opposed to a state of information disorder," he said. 

RED TAPE WRESTLING TIPS
Hypponen said that even though he believes the likelihood that the average Internet user will get caught up in an Anonymous-style disclosure is small, there are some common-sense steps users can take to protect themselves.

“It might be worth considering deleting all e-mails that would be older than, say, six months. You could archive older e-mails to an offline storage that could not be reached by an online attacker. This would at least limit the amount of damage that could be done,” he said. “And of course, create a smart password and authentication policy and follow it through.”

Tweet


Restoring lost 40,000 Google Gmail account

By Rosa Rosa Golijan

At this moment there are 40,000 Gmail users whose accounts are basically lost — their email and contacts are simply disappeared. He's going to be okay, though, because Google has backup tapes of old school and use them to restore the missing data.

TechCrunch reports that Google's propensity to have some "mad data redundancy policies," which apparently include tape backups online, everything must be restored soon, and Google confirms this report in a post on his official blog of Gmail.

The search engine giant explains that the problem started with a "storage" software update that caused unexpected a "bug", which in turn has resulted in the loss of data:

I know that some of you are thinking: how could this happen if we have multiple copies of your data across multiple data centers? Well, in some cases rare software bug can affect different copies of data. What happened here. Some copies of mail have been removed, and we've been hard at work over the last few hours returning to those affected by this problem.

To protect your information from these unusual bugs, we also back up to tape. Since tapes are offline, you're protected from these software bugs. But also restore data from them requires more than transferring your requests to another data center, which is why it has taken hours to get the email back instead of milliseconds.

A detailed diagram of these events along with an explanation of how Google will avoid similar problems in future Status will be published on the dashboard Apps soon, but meanwhile there is something that has affected users should keep in mind:

If you have been affected by this problem, it is important to note that the email sent to you between 6: 00 PM PST on February 27 and 2: 00 PM PST on February 28, was probably not delivered to the mailbox, and the sender would receive a notification that has not been delivered their messages.

There are about 200 million users of Gmail, then 40,000 is roughly .02 percent of accounts involved.

Related stories:

Rosa Rosa Golijan writes tech here and there. She is a little obsessed with Twitter, but still loves be liked on Facebook.

Sunday, February 27, 2011

Life after death goes online

December 3, 2010 Last updated at 15: 39 GMT by Dave Lee, BBC World Service the machine Timecard save a Flickr account to keep safe for many years, that the death of a close relative, the elderly often can mean a gloomy weekend or two going through old things, sorting through photos, donating old clothes to charity.

But in an age when so much of our lives online, little thought was given to how to handle digital world of a person when they are no longer with us.

By the time that the "generation Facebook" become old and grey, throughout their lives can be poured with a million updates on Twitter, thousands of photos on Flickr, hours and hours of videos on YouTube and maybe your website too.

As a person dies, their online presence should terminate too? What happens to personal information in all this?

Continue reading
the main story In the past we might have worried about love letters coming through those physical and when you're going through things of your grandfather and be upset by it. "
End quote Abigail Sellen Microsoft Research Richard banks believes he may have the solution. He is an interaction designer for Microsoft and his team, based in Cambridge, worked on the concept of digital memories-and how, even if a person is no longer with us, their digital car can still be enjoyed.

He told BBC Radio 4 's all in the mind as the death of his grandfather, a few years ago I was thinking about the future of mourning.

"After his death, became the recipient of a suitcase full of photos of his life.

"Inside there was about 200 shots of different periods of his life, all the old analog photos, printed, stored away in envelopes.

"Got me thinking about what would be the difference, now with my photographic practices and the type of things that I could leave for my children."

He created several devices that run independently from any computer or other internet device acts as a traditional box of images and memories.

Rather than physical photos, however, displays the images of this device via an interactive touchscreen.

"If you touch one of those photos at any time, so I am taken to a timeline," explained Mr Banks.

"What is then a whole series of photos spread over time.

"Suddenly is a way of thinking we can begin to exploit the digital quality of some of these content, so that we can begin to make the objects that represent perhaps the life of a person, or perhaps give a sense of their evolution over time, or where they spent time at different points in their lives."

Mr banks hopes that its devices would mean digital memories would be far outlive the technology that were created on-as the old photographs in case of his grandfather.

The cloud

This task is made easier by our increasing dependence on "the cloud" for hosting our information-instead of physical storage such as floppy disks, hard drives.

The boxes are designed to function independently, so don't rely on keeping some hardware

"I think we tend to think of the physical limitations of digital things through objects like floppy disks, DVDs and CDs that we have stored our content on.

"I believe that some of these physical limitations are going to go away as we begin to store more and more content online. We'll put them in places and they will pretty much just stay there ".

This, however, is another matter. There are simply too much data? If these systems Save every utterance, the suitcase of 200 valuable images could become suddenly a huge collection of useless data.

"I think that sense of overwhelming numbers and quantity of content is more difficult to manage," says Mr. Banks.

"I think there are ways to tackle that computationally-always a sense of when the photos were taken or that might be the photo and those kinds of things."

Secrets beyond the Tomb

Our online personas can offer a look Back at life people Candido of giving glimpses into the personality and friendships. But with it comes a risk sharing too.

Abigail Sellen is also part of the team working on the project. She says that we can, while we're still alive, we must consider what might be left behind when we pass away.

"A lot of those materials can be quite sensitive or personal information.

Continue reading the main story exploring the limits and potential of the human is broadcast on mindIt Tuesday to 2100GMT and repeated on Wednesday 1630GMT to "So if you leave all that behind someone who interests you, is that the person will be comfortable going through them all?"

MS Sellen says that finding secrets left behind from a deceased relative is nothing new, but it could be interpreted in the archives of e-mail and other information.

"In the past we might have worried about love letters coming through those physical and when you're going through things of your grandfather and be upset by it.

"At least in this case, you know that they have kept them for a reason, and maybe it was important to them."

In future, it might be that how we write our will and perhaps even burn our secret letters, we may have to also spend time cleaning our lives online, ready to be put on display in those closest to us.

The world after Wikileaks

December 16, 2010 Last updated at 11: 46 GMT Wikileaks founder Julian Assange has caused protests by the Governments of the world, things will be different after Wikileaks, but not in ways that we could wait, says regular commentator Bill Thompson.

Wikileaks founder Julian Assange might not be Time Magazine Person of the Year for 2010-the distinction went to Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg-but certainly managed to dominate the global conversation the past few weeks.

You feel the reverberations of Wikileaks publishes many documents confidential and secret for many years and he has attracted a large band of supporters, but support for Assange is as much about your personal situation as it is an expression of support for what Wikileaks or proposing to do.

To properly understand the philosophy that underpins its activities or its long-term objectives, people should read interesting analysis by Aaron Bady Assange's policy, as posted on the blog zunguzungu.

Bady uses a narrow reading of an essay by Assange status and terrorist conspiracies that Assange sees modern governance as a conspiracy than those with the power that goes against the interests and wishes of the governed and that Wikileaks exists in order to weaken the ability of Governments to communicate secretly and decrease the power of authoritarian States.

By doing this, he believes, will be opening force and lead to more progressive forms of Government-or, at least, less repressive ones.

Also, inevitably, will lead to a response from the targeted institutions and in recent weeks we have seen what happens when a State feels threatened.

Although it is neither pleasant surprise: Governments, like other complex systems, will act to preserve themselves and try to hurt or neutralize the opposition, and nothing to the United States or other Governments have done so far is exceptional.

NET conflict

In a statement made to his mother, from his prison cell, Assange said "we now know that the Visa, Mastercard, PayPal and others are tools of u.s. foreign policy," referring to the way in which these large companies had decided not to provide the service of Wikileaks.

But anyone who has observed the growth of the internet might have been surprised by this.

Jack Goldsmith and Tim Wu wrote about this back in 2006 in their excellent book that rules the Internet, where they stressed that the Government will always go after gatekeeper and choke points in their attempt to regulate the online activities.

In that same year, Visa and Mastercard refused to pass the funds to the .com site allofmp3 download music, even if the site has been legal in Russia, but attracted little attention because it was cheap and not music freedom of expression.

Now we face a different type of conflict, and seems to be that shape the political landscape in the years to come.

The ending of the movie Ghostbusters heroes eponymous founders are obliged to defy God Gozer, but before he looks that are said to be "choose the shape of your destructor."

Gozer, they realize, will result in any form monstrous imagine and Venkman tells others don't display anything. Unfortunately, it's too late-Ray has already thought of "but which could, something that would never hurt me"-to the point that a giant Stay Puft Marshmallow man appears and proceeds to destroy New York City.

Something similar is behind the emergence of Wikileaks. Over the past two decades we have built the internet and the web and completed a process of digitization that has transformed most of the world's operational data in electronic form, from banking to love letters to diplomatic cables.

Status quo

We called away at the age of the network and still practiced in our daily lives as though nothing has really changed.

As a result we made this moment inevitable, even if it was impossible to predict the shape that would take our "destructor".

Wikileaks will inaugurate a new era of control, Bill Thompson wonders

Now it is materialized as a stateless person, formless "new media non-profit international organization that publishes observations of documents otherwise available from anonymous sources and leaks," as Wikipedia describes it.

This organisation is under threat from the outside by some of the world's most powerful States, whose action capacity is enormous. It is also challenged from within, as internal mail and documents, made available online on the website reveal the Cryptome.

But what really matters is that the disruptive power of the internet has been conclusively demonstrated, and the old order has been caused to respond.

This is the Napster of democracy, where the forms of Government that have evolved over 200 years of industrial society eager to demonstrate network, just as the business models of the recording industry were swept away by the ease with which the internet could make perfect digital copies of music file compressed.

Napster was castrated by court action in the United States, but his failure inspired-to-peer services that were much more difficult to control. Sharing of music, now is unstoppable and Wikileaks and organisations that come after will ensure that the same is true of secrets.

Of course we must never underestimate the power of the State, to reinvent itself, as well as modern capitalism and constitutional monarchy seem able to do.

Wikileaks has exposed weaknesses in the way their internal flow of information control of Governments and organizations dedicated to transparency and disclosure will observe the tactics used to shut it down and adapt accordingly. But the State may learn too and have the resources to implement what you learn.

I fear that Wikileaks is likely to usher in an era of more effective control as is to sweep away the authoritarian regimes that opposes Julian Assange.

He can look at a day when the conspiratorial power state has declined, but I think we are more likely to see new forms of governance emerge that take advantage of the features of the network age to ensure that their power is intact.

Bill Thompson is an independent journalist and regular commentator on the BBC World Service Digital Planet. Is currently working with the BBC on its draft archive.

YouTube movie in the works

December 15, 2010 Last updated at 09: 46 GMT from Dave Lee BBC World Service is a paratrooper longipes bare hurtles towards Earth in one of the clips submitted to Life In A Day-a film made by thousands of YouTube users, many of us would be hard to remember what they were doing on the 24th July this year.

But for many YouTube fanatics, amateur films and filmmakers or just those curious a unique experiment of movies, that day was the ability to produce a small part of film history.

Kevin Macdonald, Scottish filmmaker famous for the last King of Scotland and Touching the Void, invited the vast YouTube community to spend a few moments to shooting their day.

Their clips were then collected and are being edited together by a team based in Soho, London.

Approximately 5,000 hours of footage-80,000 individual clips-have been sculpted in an hour and a half of film due to be awarded at the Sundance Film Festival in January.

Continue reading
the main story it has not been done before, and of course can happen only because of new technology. "
End quote Kevin Macdonald Director if that sounds like a monumental task, which is why is Joe Walker, editor of the film, narrated Snezana Mali Losinj-apartments-rooms-accommodation-vaccation-Croatia-Travel-Curcic of BBC Digital planet the tiresome process.

"In the schedule time that we had, which was basically just a few months from beginning to end, no one could see all of that material.

"So the best thing we can do an Office was set up with 24 researchers. Each of them was very clever, a Director or someone with some behind-the-scenes documentary or fiction ".

The team sifted through the vast amount of video, currency up to approximately 200 hours of the best comments.

Although most clips should be left on the cutting room floor, all submissions will remain on YouTube in their life in the portal of a day.

' Extraordinary ' Material

The film, which is yet to be amended by Macdonald and his team, is trying to be a "one day on Earth".

Mr Macdonald I keep saying that it's like the story of a person, "she says.

"It's just that every time you cut a person's soul that goes with you, but the body remains behind. It almost is telling the story of the world as a person, but a person who keeps mutant form. "

Before the project began, Mr. Macdonald realized that, while it would have been easy getting floods of rich content, tech-savvy youth of the Western world, for the film truly represent the world to achieve enabled less community.

Please activate JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play.

/*-1 & & userAgent .search ("version/3.0") >-1) & &!(userAgent .search ("windows") >-1 & & userAgent .search ("safari") >-1 & & userAgent .search ("version/4.") >-1) & & userAgent .search ("android") ==-1) {bbc. fmtj. AV. emp. loadProxyPlayer ("emp-11986856-281580");}Else {BBC.FMTJ.AV.EMP. loadEmp ("EMP-11986856-281580");}}); /*]]>*/

"Life In a day to be truly representative we felt that we had to then do something about it. We went and bought 400 more cameras.

"Then we sent those cameras to parts of Africa, Asia, Latin America-they were distributed to people in remote parts of the world enough.

"As part of the material is really extraordinary for this reason".

Despite all the clips will probably not have any relationship to each other-except the day of filming-Mr Macdonald has made some attempt to tie them all up as evenly as possible.

"It was a full moon that day.

"So, with the first opening sequence with the Moon in different countries-Malawi, South Africa, Australia.

"So we established, right at the beginning, the idea that this is about the world at the same time. I do not believe that someone has made a film like this. It has not been done before, and of course can happen only because of new technology.

The dark side

These obstacles technology granted extensive headaches Mr Walker, who has been involved with over 60 different frame rate-the speed at which you shot a clip-making the entire production appear seamless.

He says that the film is about much more than just the typical casual YouTube clip.

Continue reading the main story that Digital Planet is the weekly program broadcast by the BBC World technology ServiceIt is broadcast on Tuesday 1232GMT to and 1632GMT repeated, 2032GMT and Wednesday 0032GMT to "this project has given us the opportunity to look a little deeper.

"There's a dark side, as well as the history, we have some very disturbing material that came from the Love Parade in Germany, for example, where the fact that there were so many kids with cell phones and Flipcams means that we had seen a YouTuber of a terrible tragedy taking place step-by-step."

More than 500 people were injured and 20 people were killed during a stampede at the dance festival of the city of Duisburg.

"There are some really shocking clips," adds Mr. Macdonald.

"May, for five minutes, 10 minutes, at the head of someone who has a unique view of how things function. Also there are some clips where you think this person needs help, not a camera. "

Yet, despite some strong, emotional scenes, Mr Macdonald believes that life looking one day will be an uplifting experience.

"It is an optimistic film. Is a film about how it is wonderful to be alive ".

IPTV: The Group Test

HomeReviewsTVMedia CentresIPTV: the Group TestPosted by Hannah Bouckley on Fri, February 25, 2011

Tired of mediocre TV offers? You want to watch exactly what you want, when you want? Accessible via the internet through Wi-Fi or ethernet, the increasing range of TV "iptv" web services available means that you can now watch catch up TV, movies on demand and only, often specialised content whenever you want for free or a small fee. Isn't just TV, with applications to games, news, RSS feeds and social networking quickly the television becomes more of an entertainment hub, tailored to your needs. Access points are a range of IPTV. Here, we're testing four different types: built-in, dedicated, hard disk, Apple TV, and streamer that is like the others, but, you know, Apple-y.

Apple TV
£ 101
Love: compact dimensions. User-friendly interface
I hate: film only on iTunes, some buffering issues
Apple TV review links: Apple

Sony Internet TV
£ 1200 (For 40-inch Bravia KDL-40LX903
Love: intuitive interface. iPlayer app and Qriocity/Lovefilm streaming
I hate: slow Interface. This particular TV isn't the best way to get the service
Sony Internet TV review links: Sony

WD TV Live Hub
£ 160
Love: Easy installation. Large hard drive. Generally excellent video quality and smooth streaming
I hate: limited as an IPTV/VOD device. Wi-Fi requires an adapter
WD TV Live Hub review Link: Western Digital

D-Link Boxee box
£ 190
Love: good choice of applications. Easy to use
I hate: Cumbersome to navigate for some content. Movies free and paid all together
D-Link Boxee box review Link: D-Link

Zambia pushes for connected future


The Internet has opened up worldwide communication for Zambian people

Africa may not be the first place you think of when talking about the digital revolution, but many Zambian villages are trying to change this.

The village of Macha is a long way from anywhere, the nearest town is almost 50 miles away.

But for the last few years it has nourished a dream surprising-pioneer internet penetration to 80% of Zambia that doesn't live in the city.

And this is good news for Fred Mweetwa, Zambia as who has lived and worked in his family's farm, since he was born.

One of his cattle was sick and the vet was hundreds of miles away. While the village had a mobile signal for a couple of years, there is now another way.

"With Skype I just contacted [a vet]."He was able to respond within a few minutes and I was able to give my animal medication right, says.

"After seeing that it is feasible, even with other farmers now we are hoping to organize a group that will be connected to Skype and veterinary offices in [City room] Mazabuka."

And last year, Mr Mweetwa had the local radio station back up and running-giving locals local listening to something.

Technology showcase

It is an opportunity to preserve African culture. Local bands use the studios to record songs which are then uploaded to the Web to share.

So how did Macha become technology showcase of Zambia?

A Christian mission sets a long ago provided support. Followed a malaria research centre and in 2003 was installed a satellite data connection.

But what made the difference is the way that the link was shared-showing ordinary internet as Zambia can help them.

The signal is bounced to the Hospital where the requirements can now be ordered online, schools have to study and so does the College of nursing education.

With new treatments and practices of development each year, the internet is a much more useful than the library.

Satellite internet access is more expensive than many other methods

And not only institutions that are connected. The water tower is the highest point of the village and is used to send a signal through wifi hotspots and then connected up to create a network.

There is wifi in the restaurant, now through many homes and at the cybercafé.

A teacher training Institute to focus on computer science and children from four years are given lessons-from scratch.

But there's another lesson taught-that nothing in life is free. When they leave the generous donors, this village wants to be able to pay for itself.

«Successful project»

Six months ago began a voucher system. While some have stopped recording at all, those who have seen the benefits to pay $ 30 (£ 19) a month or buy scratch cards for about $ 2 (£ 1.30) per hour. Everyone needs a voucher-the training college.

The satellite connection 500 KB costs $ 1,000 (£ 648) a month to run.

And it wasn't without its technical defects-the net had to be reconfigured so that the system could be manned. But one expert believes charging is crucial for success.

"Perhaps the most successful project came to me during my research in recent years," says Ugo Vallauri, Computer Aid International.

"Everywhere I have visited throughout Africa, I noticed that the time was running out of donor funding at the base of most of these projects, projects would be dead the following day.

Fred Mweetwa can now use Skype to contact people who he needs to speak with

"It is simply impossible to come up to these high costs for a single Community unless, as is happening here in Macha, things are introduced in a slow but steady-little by little that the costs are shared throughout the community."

And since the arrival of the internet, things are certainly different.

By the way, the village makes bricks-a crop plant Jatropha biofuel-what is hoped will diesel generators to power the places with no electricity, the arrival of technology has brought significant changes.

The city is moving even a Bank of Zambia. When these cashier stations open will save teachers a 100 mile round trip to collect their wages.

But this unique experiment can be used to connect other peripheral villages? Those who do not start the head that did Macha.

Solar-powered Internet

About 50 minutes by car, in vast areas of farmland and Woods, lies Chikanta.

While there is food and clean water, there is no electricity, radio station or newspaper, and if you want to make a call would need to walk a mile to the nearest Hill to get a weak signal.

Six months ago, British charity aid of computers installed first solar internet hub of Zambia.

The panels on the roof within PC power feeds. To reduce energy consumption, a further 10 screens in the hub are virtual desktop-sharing the computing power of the PC and connection of 128 kbps Saturday.

Radio brought the technology along with the traditions of African music

Is proving popular with the locals who use it to study and to catch up with their favorite football teams.

Head of area of Cape Chikanta believes that has transformed his village.

"We were able to reach the world, outside of Chikanta, also outside the district outside of Zambia," she says.

"Since the internet came we can now connect to anywhere in the world and in Zambia through these machines here.

"We have our own teachers who are now able to communicate with agricultural officers. Government officers who are working here will report directly to the headquarters of the district that we couldn't do before.

"Every head in Zambia wants this."

The boss wants a network to cover the local clinic, schools and shops and while access is still free, it's all smiles.

But at some point, users will have to pay for the $ 800 (£ 518) a satellite link of the month. It's almost three cows-the same as the dowry that a husband pays to his wife on the day of their marriage.

It is desirable that the blueprint Macha was already withdrawn to seven villages will help to connect several hundreds.

But if this will work for the rest of the country will depend on whether ordinary Zambia thinks that the web is worth it.

BBC.Adverts .Show ("storyprintsponsorship");BBC.Adverts .Show ("adsense_middle");

Apple iPad launch live 2

HomeNewsApple IPad 2 launch live CoveragePosted from Chris Smith on Fri, February 25, 2011

Date of launch of Apple's iPad 2 is imminent. Follow our Liveblog from event in San Francisco on Wednesday.

The countdown to the second iteration of epochal tablet PC Apple is almost finished. When the clock strikes 8 pm in the United Kingdom on Wednesday iPad 2 will be revealed to the world at a media event in San Francisco.

Once the 2 March press invite (pictured) landed in our inbox this week, the endless speculation and rumor-mongering turned to excitement and we can't wait to hear what Apple has in store for the legions of aspiring iPad 2 owners out there.

Will the camera FaceTime? A sleeker design? Retina the iPhone's screen? Faster processors and better graphics chips? Or will a new version-and-improved handling of iOS? All these questions will be answered on Wednesday.

We'll be liveblogging media unveiling of San Francisco, and we'll be in the hands of a specially organized media event in London to be among the first to get our hands on the new device that Apple hopes will bring the new wave of tablets rival firmly in their place.

We'll also be updating this page throughout the build-up to the event to bring you all the hottest gossip, the latest insider leaks and price-points, says so bookmark this page now and check back for the latest news between now and Wednesday.

The excitement is reaching fever pitch T3 towers. We hope you can join us on Wednesday.

Global map Web surveys of disease

19 January 2011, Last updated at 11: 28 alarm systems based on Software GMT disease are considered excellent indicators type seeking influence in Google and you will not find out how sick you are alone, but the data will be recorded on his influence monitoring service.

The service, which is part of the search engine's philanthropic arm, google.org, is just one of many alarm systems based on software disease across the worldwide web.

Through the collection of aggregated data from millions of people or scouring the web for online news reports, blogs and chat rooms, postings, these programs are considered excellent levels indicators of disease worldwide.

"We have found what you are looking for people are actually very good indicators of influenza in a population," Google Trends Flu spokesperson Corrie Conrad said Digital Planet of BBC World Service.

"We have estimates of influence to 28 countries and accuracy will vary depending on each country. But in the United States when compared with the official data from the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), we found that we were more accurate than 90%.

He added: "you can take one or two weeks for the CDC collect data from different doctors throughout the country that are part of their system but finding data is updated automatically every day."

Show map of Google world influence estimation influence levels in various countries

Users can track estimated levels of influence by displaying influence Google level map of the world (photo) that projects of different colours-green, namely the level of the virus is low and red, which means that it is high.

By clicking on each country, users will also find charts of levels of influence over time, month by month.

Signs of disease

Other systems, including the global network of public health Intelligence and HealthMap, use a different method.

Search internet news sites around the world for signs of illness.

Continue reading the main story
is a wonderful use of modern technology that is unbelievably fast "
end quote Prof David Spiegelhalter Cambridge University" we are essentially a web crawling tool very similar to Google that we're scouring the web through tens of thousands of websites, each time looking for specific evidence on infectious diseases, "explains co-founder HealthMap John Brownstein and Diana Schutz.

"Once we find articles about an outbreak, we hold that information and put it on a map available to our users."

According to Mr. Brownstein and Diana Schutz, the system is also useful for tourists who are planning to travel abroad.

"They can see events happening in places they could go," he said.

"For example, foot and mouth disease in South Korea, there is cholera in many parts of the world especially in Haiti. There is polio happening in many parts of Africa, including the Democratic Republic of Congo ".

While both systems of searching the web for news, HealthMap also uses a system of "citizen reporting" that allows the public to report events through iPhone and Android apps.

"These people take a picture of a cluster of dead birds from their home, a photo of a line from a vaccination clinic or pictures of yourself lying on a hospital bed," explains Mr. Brownstein and Diana Schutz. "Their event becomes a point on the map alongside all other events."

Economic crisis

While these warning disease based on software systems can be quick and user friendly, the real question is only how accurate are they compared to official bodies like the World Health Organization?

Mr. Brownstein and Diana Schutz admits that, while the disease based on software, alarm systems, they are not as reliable as official bodies.

"World Health Organization has a mandate to release information validated because if they release it without going through the appropriate channels, they could potentially face a serious economic crisis for reporting something that is not true," he says.

"In our case we are willing to sacrifice a little risk in terms of information and not necessarily always validate perfectly until we release it.

Continue reading the story main Digital Planet is the weekly program broadcast by the BBC World technology ServiceIt is aired on Tuesday 1232GMT to and 1632GMT repeated, 2032GMT and 0032GMT Wednesday continued: "on some level is a good balance between a Web site that provides a rapid dissemination of information that you need to take with a grain of salt at all times against the validated information you get from the World Health Organization or the health protection agency in the United Kingdom".

Agrees professor David Spiegelhalter, Centre for Mathematical Sciences at the University of Cambridge.

He argues that, while may not be as reliable as official figures, speed is the greatest force.

"It is a wonderful use of modern technology that is incredibly fast," he said. "Get things within a day without waiting for weeks.

"Are valuable for tracking what people are worried," he added.

"There are more accurate than the official surveillance but this is not the problem, the idea is to promptly and exit at people in a way that is easy to understand and see things."

The rights and wrongs of digital books

4 November 2010, Last updated at 14: 16 GMT buy an e-book and all you get is a license to try, says Bill Thompson.

Reading onscreen is getting more like reading a book, says Bill Thompson

The recent rapid growth of the market for electronic editions of contemporary fiction, with some titles selling more digital markets in what they do in printed form, it seems unlikely to the queue. The second part of 2010 could mark the starting point to future historians date the transition towards reading on the screen for literary fiction, as well as reference works.

Amazon recently announced that in September has sold more Kindle books that print books for the top ten bestselling books, one hundred and one thousand also on its website applicable U.S. and other resellers will undoubtedly see the same as Christmas nears.

Page Turner

All persons involved in the trading book, as you probably will continue to call for some years, trying to decide how to respond to this change and anticipate the impending arrival of the sort of creative destruction that has crossed the music industry, but few seem to have many good ideas.

Independent publishers Faber & Faber and Canongate, both of whom spend time talking about the impact of the digital publishing (although not for money), are trying hard to remain relevant and initiatives such as the new electronic publishing service, Faber, factory are a sign that they understand the evolution of the market.

However, still have not yet prepared to accept that the price of electronic texts is too high, and that readers will not pay the same for a bunch of bits as they do for a book bound, since the market knows that costs less than sending electrons in a network than it does to buy the paper, make books out of it and ship physical objects in the world.

Continue reading the main story
we should not allow the right to treat the products of creative expression in the same way as physical property "
end quote Bill Thompson also seem unprepared for fundamental change in the basis of their business that brings digital distribution on all.

When the text of a book is peeled away from the physical book, exposing the important distinction between the law applies to the property and copyright, and this has significant implications for publishers how to make money-or even if they do not all something important happens.

When you buy a book it takes ownership of the pulp, ink and glue that make up the object, and anyone taking away from you without your permission is theft. But I don't own and never owned the copyright.

If the author is still living or died less than 70 years ago, then this list of words and punctuation in this exact order, can be protected in various ways, by limiting the ability to play some or all of the list.

When you buy a digital copy to read on your e-book reader, phone or laptop all you get is the bit copyrighted, and what you pay for is a license to have a copy or copies of the text.

You are not an object "owners"-everything you need is an agreement, and the things you can do with it is limited by copyright law and the terms of this legal agreement that you enter in the licence when you make your purchase.

Kindle and iPad users are well aware of this, because the system of digital rights management used to limit copying of books purchased and makes it impossible to share with a friend in the way we are all accustomed to do with physical books, while the license makes it impossible to sell our e-Book bargain to others and cover the cost of new purchases.

List of loan

Amazon recently announced it will Kindle owners "lend" books, but only for two weeks and once for each title. Expected to clearly get a lot of positive publicity to follow the approach of other e-book readers such as Barnes and noble "nook", but all they did is to highlight exactly what we're giving as we move from buying books to content licensing for our digital devices.

Limits on lending rights might affect libraries

Perhaps worst of all the new features is that Amazon will give publishers a veto on the sharing of their titles. For a company with a reputation for push publishers into distribution deals that are very difficult to work with, Amazon seems to be very careful not to do anything that might upset holders.

When the new Kindle shipped with a feature that let him read text aloud in a voice synthesis which took only a few huffs and puffs from angry Guild we author before the plant has been made optional, to be turned off by Publisher.

And now Amazon is careful to announce aspects editor respectful of his new feature, highlighting the fact that when you pay your money for an edition of Kindle is not buying a book and certainly not buying an e-Book that is in no way equivalent to a printed code.

I would be happy with a system that would allow me to transfer my purchases, rather than sharing them-I don't expect my a download a copy of the new Jonathan Frantzen to provide for the needs of reading my entire extended family at the same time, but loan my Kindle-or in this case my iPad-means loan every book (and every other application), which is not the same as the only loan a book.

There is a point of light in all this, though. Amazon's business model gives us the clearest demonstration of may not let the right to treat the products of creative expression in the same way as physical property.

The idea of "intellectual property" deliberately encompasses two and allows politicians to pretend that the physical property laws should extend to digital downloads. We need to challenge this elision unconscionable if we want to think seriously about business models and copyright in the electronic age.

Bill Thompson is an independent journalist and regular commentator on the BBC World Service Digital Planet. Is currently working with the BBC on its draft archive.

Apple iPad controls the 93 percent of the Tablet PC market

HomeNewsApple IPad controls the 93% of Tablet MarketPosted by Luke Johnson on Fri, February 25, 2011

iPad dominates second generation before unveiling

A few days before the official inauguration of the second generation iPad Apple has confirmed for the March 2, new reports have suggested the current iPad controls 93 per cent of the Tablet PC market.

The relationship industry analysts ABI Research technology which claimed that the Apple was responsible for 93% of Tablet PC 4.5 million devices shipped in the third quarter of 2010. While it is known that Apple controls the market share of Tablet PC, to the extent that it dominates was previously unknown.


With a recent spate of high-end Android powered tablets is revealed by the likes of Samsung, LG, Motorola, Apple's market share of Tablet PC is expected to fall in the coming months, despite the arrival of iPad 2 which is believed to be the voice for the arrival with front and rear facing cameras and a slimmer form factor.

Senior Director of practice at ABI Research, Jeff Orr, said of the findings and the market share of Apple's future: "over time, first time-to-market advantage Apple iPad will inevitably erode to a certain extent. ABI Research has been monitoring media tablets since December 2009; future quarterly editions of this product will include market data tracking market share of all suppliers of Tablet PC main media. "

That of the new breed of tablets 3.0 Android powered is the best chance of rollover iPad? Let us know what you think via the feed T3 Twitter and Facebook.

Via: ABI Research