on Tuesday, March 6, 2012
Prosthetic limbs, like this one, might one day be as lifelike as the real thing. Photo: Sgt. Ray Lewis/Bouhammer.com

A replacement limb that moves, feels and responds just like flesh and blood. It’s the holy grail of prosthetics research. The Pentagon’s invested millions to make it happen. But it’s been elusive — until, quite possibly, now.

The body’s own nerves are arguably the biggest barrier towards turning the dream of lifelike replacements into a reality. Peripheral nerves, severed by amputation, can no longer transmit or receive any of the myriad sensory signals we rely on every day. Trying to fuse them with robot limbs, to create a direct neural-prosthetic interface, is no easy task.

But now a team of scientists believe they’ve overcome that massive barrier. Their research is still in the early stages. But if successful, it’d yield artificial arms and legs that can move with agility; discern hot from lukewarm from freezing; and restore even the subtlest sensations of touch.

“We think the interface problem is key to enabling the neuro-prosthetic concept,” Dr. Shawn Dirk, one of the researchers behind the finding, tells Danger Room. “And solving that is how we’re going to give amputees their bodies back.”

Dirk, alongside colleagues at Sandia National Laboratories, the University of New Mexico and the MD Anderson Cancer Center, set out to develop a synthetic substance that could act as a scaffold — that is, an artificial structure that can support tissue growth — successfully merging severed nerves with robotic limbs.

Of course, researchers have already made plenty of efforts to directly integrate nerves and prosthetics. But, according to Dirk, they typically “didn’t use technology that was compatible with nerve fibers,” which are tightly bundled and flexible. “Nerves need to grow and move around; they’re not going to integrate well with a stiff interface.”

Yes, the material comprising the scaffold had to be flexible and fluid, but it also needed to be extremely conductive. Nerve signals are highly localized, and also very, very subtle. An effective neural-prosthetic interface would need to transmit thousands of different signals per second to mimic the behavior of a real limb and its relationship to the brain and body.

To create that ideal interface, Dirk and his colleagues developed their own biocompatible polymers, meant to mimic the properties of nerve tissue. The material is also porous, so that nerves can extend through it, and lined with electrodes, to vastly enhance conductivity.

When surgeons placed the scaffolds onto the severed leg nerves of rats, it didn’t take long before the rats’ own nerve fibers started to grow through the scaffold and fuse back together. Even better, the synthetic material wasn’t rejected by the rats’ immune systems.

“There was a very limited inflammatory response,” Dirk says. “That’s important, because we’re looking for an interface that won’t be rejected by the body. We want something that can last years, decades, and hopefully entire lifetimes.”

The finding marks a huge, huge improvement over previous research efforts. Even Darpa, the Pentagon’s far-out research arm and a leader in prosthetic science, couldn’t seem to figure out a direct neural-prosthetic interface that was adequately sensitive and had a lifespan longer than a few months. In 2010, the agency asked for new research proposals that’d solve both those problems.

And while new prototype prosthetics have some incredible abilities, none of them include a direct interface. In fact, they’ve been designed to avoid one altogether. One Pentagon-funded project used “targeted muscle reinnervation surgery” to develop prosthetics that transmit signals from a bundle of nerves in the chest. Another, led by Johns Hopkins scientists, uses brain-implanted micro-arrays to transmit cues to an artificial limb.

A direct neural-prosthetic interface still remains years away. But if this polymer holds up in subsequent tests, it’ll mean prosthetics far more lifelike than even the most impressive artificial limbs currently in development. Most importantly, in the words of Darpa, prosthetics hooked right into the nervous system “would incorporate the [artificial] limb into the sense-of-self.”

Katie Drummond is a New York-based reporter at Danger Room, covering the wild world of military research, and a contributing editor at The Daily.
Follow @katiedrumm on Twitter.

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Despite the death and destruction his security forces are raining down on opposition-held neighborhoods in Syria, President Bashar al-Assad is unlikely to succeed in crushing a year-old rebellion. International revulsion at the crackdown and the breadth of an uprising that has seen Syrians take up arms in a fight to the death also make it increasingly unlikely that Assad will manage to reestablish the status quo ante through military force. But even if he can't win, Assad may have reason to believe, as he surveys the national and international battlefield he has created, that he can nonetheless fight to a messy draw. The difference between a draw and a defeat, for Assad, now amounts to this: Will he be at the table when a political solution to the conflict is negotiated?

The European Union on Monday announced new sanctions against Assad's regime in support of demands that he end his assault on opposition strongholds and accept an Arab League plan that requires him to surrender power. But the EU measures amounted largely to an incremental tightening of those previously imposed. The meeting in Tunis last Friday of the "Friends of Syria" ad-hoc forum also confirmed that while Western and Arab powers concur on the need for Assad to step down -- and before that, to halt his assaults on rebel-held areas and allow in humanitarian relief supplies -- there is limited agreement on new strategies to pursue those goals. Western powers have no appetite for direct military involvement in Syria, not only because of post-Iraq, Afghanistan and Libya intervention fatigue, but because the sectarian and regional political stakes in Syria's conflict threaten region-wide chaos. Support for direct military intervention appears to be lacking even if those doing the fighting are not Western troops: Qatar failed in its efforts to persuade the Friends of Syria to back intervention by an Arab force that would invade Syria to open humanitarian corridors to besieged cities.

(PHOTOS: Free Syrian Army Joins Anti-Assad Protests)

Qatar has since defaulted to the Saudi view that arming Syria's rebels is, as the Saudi foreign minister, Prince Saud al-Faisal, put it, "an excellent idea." The vociferous advocacy of the Gulf states for funneling weapons to the insurgents reinforces widely held suspicions that they're probably already doing so. There may even be some non-lethal aid from Western countries, including communications equipment, medical supplies, night-vision goggles and other such equipment, reaching rebel forces. But the Saudis, who reportedly walked out of the Friends of Syria forum at one point, allegedly decrying its "inaction," could not persuade the forum to endorse even that idea.

The U.S. certainly remains skeptical of the proposal to send weapons to the opposition. "We don't really know who it is that would be armed," said Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in a CBS interview last weekend, noting the amorphous nature of the opposition and the fact that some of its elements are inimical to U.S. foreign policy goals. The Syrian opposition had the backing of al-Qaeda and the Palestinian Islamist organization Hamas, she said, raising the question of who the U.S. would be supporting if it provided arms. "Despite the great pleas that we hear from those people who are being ruthlessly assaulted by Assad, you don't see uprisings across Syria the way you did in Libya," she continued. "You don't see militias forming in places where the Syrian military is not, trying to get to Homs... So if you're a military planner or if you're a Secretary of State and you're trying to figure out do you have the elements of an opposition that is actually viable, that we don't see."

(PHOTOS: Inside Syria's Civil War)

The U.S. and its allies may have hoped to crown the Syrian National Council (SNC) as the legitimate representative of the Syrian people, as they did with the Benghazi-based Transitional National Council ahead of the intervention in Libya last year, but the fact that the Tunis gathering hailed the SNC as "a" rather than "the" representative of the Syrian people was telling. The extent of the SNC's authority on the ground remains questionable, and even its influence over the Free Syrian Army -- the umbrella insurgent organization of defectors from the regime's army and civilian volunteers, whose own control over fighting units on the ground appears to be limited -- is far from established. Some have argued that providing arms will help to organize the rebellion and build up the political authority of the SNC leadership under whose auspices such arms would be provided. But Clinton's concerns may have been underscored by Sunday's news that some of the SNC's most senior leaders had broken away to form the Syrian Patriotic Group, challenging the effectiveness of the SNC and giving less equivocal backing to armed rebellion.

While the majority of U.N. member states have backed the Arab League plan, Assad still enjoys strong support from Russia and Iran, and countries such as China and Iraq insist that any solution in Syria be based on diplomatic reforms and dialogue with the regime, rather than its a priori replacement. Needless to say, the Assad regime concurs: Even while it continued to rain artillery fire down on Homs and other opposition strongholds on Sunday, the regime also managed to stage a referendum on a package of constitutional reforms. Opposition leaders denounced the vote as a farce given the war being waged, and there's no way it could be taken as a sign of national consensus behind Assad-led reforms. But even if the regime's claim of a 57% turnout was exaggerated, Western journalists in the major cities of Damascus and Aleppo saw thousands of young voters turning out to participate in the poll in spite of opposition calls for a boycott. That served up a timely reminder that Assad's regime retains a substantial support base, with a number of key constituencies -- particularly his Alawite sect that dominates key military units, as well as Christians and other minorities that together make up as much as a third of the population -- fearful of their prospects should the rebellion triumph.

(MORE: Three Acclaimed Journalists Die Covering the War in Syria)

By militarizing the political contest in Syria, Assad has effectively created a sectarian civil war that presents the Syrian population with stark choices that work in his favor. And the more intense and protracted the military conflict becomes, the greater the danger that the de facto leadership of the rebellion passes to more extreme and sectarian elements -- which, of course, reinforces Assad's own hold on his core support.

All sides in Syria, then, appear to be hunkering down for a protracted civil war -- a conflict of a type that, given the external backing on which the combatants rely, is unlikely to end in a rout by either side. And if it ends at the negotiation table, as the Balkan wars of the 1990s did, Assad will be hoping at least to secure his place as a key player at the table. Indeed, even the SNC in a statement last Friday appeared to walk back from its refusal to engage with the regime, saying that negotiation -- if the regime first agrees to a cease-fire -- "is still possible and is likely the best way to achieve the desired goal of regime change." Council members and Western diplomats also tell reporters that Russia's role remains crucial in achieving any settlement to end the violence, despite its dissent from the international consensus.

No surprise, then, that European Union officials were careful following the adoption of the new sanctions on Monday to stress the importance of the role of Kofi Annan, the former U.N. Secretary General who has been appointed as joint U.N.-Arab League envoy for Syria. His job, of course, will be to talk the Assad regime and its enemies into some sort of workable compromise that can end the violence.

MORE: Just When They Needed It Least: The Syrian Opposition Fractures Again

VIDEO: Why They Protest: Egypt, Libya and Syria

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Nokia Lumia 900 to be released in Europe on April 9th. Lumia 610 on June 11th.

Nokia has presented at the MWC 2012 the Nokia Lumia 900 version for Europe as well the newest and most affordable member of their Windows Phone 7 phone family, the Lumia 610. The biggest question left open was the release date of these phones. Today, Mobilefun site had advanced with these dates.

Nokia Lumia 900 to be released in Europe on April 9th. Lumia 610 on June 11th.

The Lumia 900 is, according with this site, to be released on the April 9th. The top-end WP7 by Nokia, featuring a 1.4 Ghz processor, stands out from the other models essentially by his a 4.3? display and front-face camera. One curious detail is also, according with the same source, that this phone will arrive with WP7 Tango OS version.

Nokia Lumia 900 to be released in Europe on April 9th. Lumia 610 on June 11th.

The Nokia Lumia 610, the first 256 Mb RAM phone operating with a WP7 OS, should arrive only on June 11th and it will be destined mainly to youngsters due to his lower price tag that is expected to be 189 Euros before taxes.

[Via]





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HTC One S Android 4.0 Smartphone to be released by T-Mobile
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February 27, 2012HTC One S Android 4.0 Smartphone to be released by T-Mobile

HTC One SAt the Mobile World Congress 2012, HTC and T-Mobile announced the upcoming availability of the HTC One S smartphone which will be released in the U.S. this Spring. The HTC One S will be T-Mobile’s thinnest smartphone measuring 7.95mm in a sleek aluminum unibody design. The device will run T-Mobile’s 4G (HSPA+42) Network, and it will be T-Mobile’s first smartphone to ship with Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich OS and HTC Sense 4 user interface.

The HTC One S from T-Mobile is powered by a 1.5GHz dual-core Snapdragon S4 processor by Qualcomm, and offers Web browsing, streaming movies and watching TV shows on the device’s 4.3-inch qHD Super AMOLED touch screen. The HTC One S is also enhanced by Beats By Dr. Dre's Beats Audio technology and it comes with Google Music pre-loaded on the device for easy cloud-based access to music.

HTC-One-S

The HTC One S aims to rival traditional digital cameras with an 8-megapixel camera and the introduction of HTC ImageSense improvements to images, lens, sensor and software on the smartphone as described below:

Camera enhancements include: 

- Superfast Capture – The HTC One S dramatically reduces the time it takes to capture those key moments, with an estimated 0.7-second shot time and a 0.2-second autofocus that allows for nearly unlimited continuous shots.

- High Quality Photos in Adverse Conditions – The HTC One S delivers dramatic enhancements in image capture quality even in adverse lighting conditions. The f/2.0 lens on the HTC One S offers amazing low-light performance, capturing 40 percent more light than the f/2.4 lenses available on other high-end phones.

- Concurrent Video/Still Capture – HTC One S lets the user capture a shot and shoot video at the same time – perfect for capturing life’s moments as they happen. While shooting 1080p HD video, consumers just need to tap the shutter button and the device snaps a high-resolution still photo while the video continues to shoot.  Consumers can also capture a still from a previously recorded video.

February 27, 2012 in Android, Smartphones, Superphones | Permalink


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It just feels like yesterday that we were talking about Android 5.0 Jelly Bean. Actually, wait, it was yesterday that we were talking about Jelly Bean. And now we are hearing that the version of Android to come after that will be named Key Lime Pie.

This information comes courtesy of The Verge, who received this tip from the same source that informed them about Jelly Bean (which turned out to be real). Unfortunately, they don't know when exactly Google will release this update but going by its current pace it should be some time in the early 2013.

While all this sounds delicious and exciting, the current reality is that only a handful of devices are running the latest Ice Cream Sandwich update, three months after it was released. And while Google continues to operate at a breakneck speed with its Android updates, the truth remains that most of us will never get them at the same speed.

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The Mars Science Laboratory rover gets the clean-room treatment. (NASA/JPL-Caltech)

After completing its mission, a satellite re-enters the Earth’s atmosphere and lands, kicking up a cloud of dust in the American southwest.  The recovery team mobilizes, but when they begin to inspect the spacecraft, things start to go horribly wrong.  Team members suddenly collapse, dead, and it soon becomes clear that the entire population of the nearest town has suffered a similar fate.

Michael Crichton completionists will recognize the above scenario as the plot of the 1969 thriller The Andromeda Strain, but to a select group of scientists and engineers, it represents a real – if remote – possibility of harmful interplanetary contamination.  That’s right, all that lies between you and this horror story is NASA’s Planetary Protection Office (PPO), with its understated motto to keep watch over “all of the planets, all of the time.”

Planetary protection deals with both sides of the interplanetary coin: it must prevent the transfer of Earth-based life to other celestial bodies (known as forward-contamination, which would complicate the detection of any native biology), and avoid the introduction of any extraterrestrial biota to life on this planet (back-contamination).

To the more sober-minded members of the public, planetary protection seems foolhardy at best and wasteful at worst: after all, both forward- and back-contamination of sites like Mars has almost certainly already happened.

The protocol for sterilizing the Viking Landers involved cooking the spacecraft to 111.7 degrees Celsius for 30 hours, and the team searched for potential contaminants by trying to culture microbes in pre-defined nutrient mixes.  What 1970s scientists didn’t realize is that some organisms can survive such high temperatures, and the tests for survivors may have missed the hardiest microbes.  Dr. Moogega Cooper, a planetary protection engineer at JPL, believes the dependence on culturing is a problem.  “It is a well known fact that only 1% of microbes can be grown on culture media,” she notes.  “Using our culture-based methods may not be enough in my opinion to effectively assess how much contamination we are transporting to other solar bodies.”

In the case of back-contamination, about 40 kilograms of Mars snows down on Earth every year, mostly as micrometeorites, slipping in under the PPO’s radar.

Of course, none of this means we shouldn’t seek to limit contamination in the future, and NASA’s Planetary Protection team thinks about their directive in terms of probabilities and risk-benefit analyses.  In general, risk can be evaluated as a balance between the likelihood of a negative event happening and the severity of that event.  Back-contamination of planet Earth presents an extremely low risk, but the seriousness of that risk – an interplanetary pandemic – is extremely high.  Given this calculus, it’s worth investing in safeguards for all of the samples we can control.

Dr. John Rummel, a Professor of Biology at East Carolina University, is the author of NASA’s draft protocol for handling martian samples, written during a fit of budgetary optimism in 2002.  (Reading from a slide during last week’s Conference on Life Detection in Extraterrestrial Samples, Rummel referred to a mission plan that would “return no earlier than 2011.  So far so good,” he quipped, sardonically acknowledging the endless delays that have characterized the elusive sample return mission.)

The protocol calls for sterilization by heat and gamma irradiation in proportions that would kill any viable organisms but leave geochemical traits – like isotopic ratios, elemental compositions, or crystal structures – unchanged.  High radiation doses or high temperatures can irreversibly alter rock samples, but using moderate radiation levels at elevated temperatures allows you to combine the killing power of both without the deleterious effects of either.

The Planetary Protection team would be the first line of defense against potential biological contaminants, but it would also be the first – and possibly only – team to study pristine martian samples, a fact that irks some scientists.  After all, the thinking goes, sterilization would destroy any primary evidence of viable cells, obscuring critical information from the most valuable cargo to ever be acquired from an interplanetary mission.

What much of the scientific community is overlooking is that both planetary protection officers and scientists have the same overall goal: to find and describe any biological organisms that may be inside martian rocks.  Secondary motivations aren’t quite as synergistic, but scientists and the PPO must find workable compromises.  Determining which instruments to include in the quarantined laboratories, developing sterilization techniques that are minimally destructive, and establishing a workflow that follows the “first life detection, then biohazard analysis” mantra are all important opportunities to bring the two groups together.  Such coordination would improve everyone’s ability to do his job, maximizing scientific yield and minimizing the risk of an Andromeda Strain reality show.

Jeff Marlow is a graduate student in Geological and Planetary Sciences at the California Institute of Technology where he studies exotic microbial metabolisms in an attempt to understand the limits of life on Earth and beyond.

View the original article here

The Mars Science Laboratory rover gets the clean-room treatment. (NASA/JPL-Caltech)

After completing its mission, a satellite re-enters the Earth’s atmosphere and lands, kicking up a cloud of dust in the American southwest.  The recovery team mobilizes, but when they begin to inspect the spacecraft, things start to go horribly wrong.  Team members suddenly collapse, dead, and it soon becomes clear that the entire population of the nearest town has suffered a similar fate.

Michael Crichton completionists will recognize the above scenario as the plot of the 1969 thriller The Andromeda Strain, but to a select group of scientists and engineers, it represents a real – if remote – possibility of harmful interplanetary contamination.  That’s right, all that lies between you and this horror story is NASA’s Planetary Protection Office (PPO), with its understated motto to keep watch over “all of the planets, all of the time.”

Planetary protection deals with both sides of the interplanetary coin: it must prevent the transfer of Earth-based life to other celestial bodies (known as forward-contamination, which would complicate the detection of any native biology), and avoid the introduction of any extraterrestrial biota to life on this planet (back-contamination).

To the more sober-minded members of the public, planetary protection seems foolhardy at best and wasteful at worst: after all, both forward- and back-contamination of sites like Mars has almost certainly already happened.

The protocol for sterilizing the Viking Landers involved cooking the spacecraft to 111.7 degrees Celsius for 30 hours, and the team searched for potential contaminants by trying to culture microbes in pre-defined nutrient mixes.  What 1970s scientists didn’t realize is that some organisms can survive such high temperatures, and the tests for survivors may have missed the hardiest microbes.  Dr. Moogega Cooper, a planetary protection engineer at JPL, believes the dependence on culturing is a problem.  “It is a well known fact that only 1% of microbes can be grown on culture media,” she notes.  “Using our culture-based methods may not be enough in my opinion to effectively assess how much contamination we are transporting to other solar bodies.”

In the case of back-contamination, about 40 kilograms of Mars snows down on Earth every year, mostly as micrometeorites, slipping in under the PPO’s radar.

Of course, none of this means we shouldn’t seek to limit contamination in the future, and NASA’s Planetary Protection team thinks about their directive in terms of probabilities and risk-benefit analyses.  In general, risk can be evaluated as a balance between the likelihood of a negative event happening and the severity of that event.  Back-contamination of planet Earth presents an extremely low risk, but the seriousness of that risk – an interplanetary pandemic – is extremely high.  Given this calculus, it’s worth investing in safeguards for all of the samples we can control.

Dr. John Rummel, a Professor of Biology at East Carolina University, is the author of NASA’s draft protocol for handling martian samples, written during a fit of budgetary optimism in 2002.  (Reading from a slide during last week’s Conference on Life Detection in Extraterrestrial Samples, Rummel referred to a mission plan that would “return no earlier than 2011.  So far so good,” he quipped, sardonically acknowledging the endless delays that have characterized the elusive sample return mission.)

The protocol calls for sterilization by heat and gamma irradiation in proportions that would kill any viable organisms but leave geochemical traits – like isotopic ratios, elemental compositions, or crystal structures – unchanged.  High radiation doses or high temperatures can irreversibly alter rock samples, but using moderate radiation levels at elevated temperatures allows you to combine the killing power of both without the deleterious effects of either.

The Planetary Protection team would be the first line of defense against potential biological contaminants, but it would also be the first – and possibly only – team to study pristine martian samples, a fact that irks some scientists.  After all, the thinking goes, sterilization would destroy any primary evidence of viable cells, obscuring critical information from the most valuable cargo to ever be acquired from an interplanetary mission.

What much of the scientific community is overlooking is that both planetary protection officers and scientists have the same overall goal: to find and describe any biological organisms that may be inside martian rocks.  Secondary motivations aren’t quite as synergistic, but scientists and the PPO must find workable compromises.  Determining which instruments to include in the quarantined laboratories, developing sterilization techniques that are minimally destructive, and establishing a workflow that follows the “first life detection, then biohazard analysis” mantra are all important opportunities to bring the two groups together.  Such coordination would improve everyone’s ability to do his job, maximizing scientific yield and minimizing the risk of an Andromeda Strain reality show.

Jeff Marlow is a graduate student in Geological and Planetary Sciences at the California Institute of Technology where he studies exotic microbial metabolisms in an attempt to understand the limits of life on Earth and beyond.

View the original article here



The Beer Drinker's IPhone Case

By Kate Knibbs | Thu Mar 01, 2012 3:25 pm

Intoxicase, an iPhone case and accompanying app, keeps track of beer-drinking habits, appealing to die-hard fans of both Apple and alcohol.

Apple iPhone 4SThe iPhone case features a sleek stainless steel bottle opener and comes with a free download of the Intoxicase app, catering to the beer-and-Apple enthusiast's needs.

The Intoxicase app counts how many bottles the case opens, and lets users share their alcohol intake on Twitter and Facebook. There's a competition feature, pitting users against each other to see who drinks what, and the app provides graphs illustrating the frequency users drink, and which brands they favor.

The app also features a tool that helps users find where they parked their car, and while its Blood Alcohol Estimator guesses how inebriated users are, the app lacks a feature explicitly discouraging drunk driving.

That may put it at odds with lawmakers clamping down on DUI-dodging apps, as its car locator could facilitate driving after a few too many. The app, however, also locates local cab services, so the responsible user will opt for a taxi instead of using the car locator.

The Intoxicase encourages drinking with an iPhone in hand, featuring fun programs and that handy bottle opener. Users interested in the Intoxicase could also have need of the Textalyser app, which prevents drunken text messaging.

The Intoxicase app is available for download for anyone over the age of 17, an age inconsistent with the legal drinking age in the U.S. The cases, made by Spicebox, are $35 and are expected for sale online soon.



NUTS: Tech Leaders Give Glimpse of Future, Google Makes Privacy Changes Sat Mar 03, 2012 5:25 am | By
Tech leaders gathered at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, while Google's controversial privacy policy went into effect.



MWC: Phones That Test How Drunk You Are Fri Mar 02, 2012 4:05 pm | By
Checking for sobriety could be as easy as breathing on your cell phone, with new technology from a Japanese operator that takes personal monitoring to new levels.

Republicans Push Cyber-Security Bill as Threats Loom Fri Mar 02, 2012 3:58 pm | By
Republicans' cyber-security bill lessens corporate regulation, countering the Democrats' original initiative as the two sides wrestle for over the best way to protect national interests.

Samsung Galaxy S2 Named Best Phone at MWC Fri Mar 02, 2012 3:42 pm | By
Samsung's Galaxy S2 was named the best smartphone of the year at the Mobile World Conference, giving the manufacturer and the Android OS a big boost.

The Score: Google, Beer Drinkers' App Offer a Little TMI Fri Mar 02, 2012 3:34 pm | By
Google started its new privacy policy this week, prompting a Leap Day ruckus as people scrambled to erase their search history and keep their YouTube cute kitten video-watching their own secret.


Editorials & Opinion By Kate Knibbs
NUTS: Tech Leaders Give Glimpse of Future, Google Makes Privacy Changes Tech leaders gathered at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, while Google's controversial privacy policy went into effect.













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Nokia 808 Pureview wins Best New Mobile Handset, Device or Tablet award at Mobile World Congress 2012

Nokia has won the prestigious “Best New Mobile Handset, Device or Tablet at Mobile World Congress 2012? award with their new Nokia 808 Pure View.

The decision was made by a panel of leading journalists and analysts at the show that elected Nokia 808 as the best mobile at the event and the 41 Mpixels camera sure helped Nokia to get their hands on this prize. This way, Nokia finally returns as a leading brand in terms of technology and Jo Harlow has left a promise in the air: “There’s lot more to come”.

(In the photo from left to right: product manager Jussi Asikainen, co-inventor Juha Alakarhu, SVP smart devices Jo Harlow, co-inventor Eero Salmelin)

[Via]





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The Mars Science Laboratory rover gets the clean-room treatment. (NASA/JPL-Caltech)

After completing its mission, a satellite re-enters the Earth’s atmosphere and lands, kicking up a cloud of dust in the American southwest.  The recovery team mobilizes, but when they begin to inspect the spacecraft, things start to go horribly wrong.  Team members suddenly collapse, dead, and it soon becomes clear that the entire population of the nearest town has suffered a similar fate.

Michael Crichton completionists will recognize the above scenario as the plot of the 1969 thriller The Andromeda Strain, but to a select group of scientists and engineers, it represents a real – if remote – possibility of harmful interplanetary contamination.  That’s right, all that lies between you and this horror story is NASA’s Planetary Protection Office (PPO), with its understated motto to keep watch over “all of the planets, all of the time.”

Planetary protection deals with both sides of the interplanetary coin: it must prevent the transfer of Earth-based life to other celestial bodies (known as forward-contamination, which would complicate the detection of any native biology), and avoid the introduction of any extraterrestrial biota to life on this planet (back-contamination).

To the more sober-minded members of the public, planetary protection seems foolhardy at best and wasteful at worst: after all, both forward- and back-contamination of sites like Mars has almost certainly already happened.

The protocol for sterilizing the Viking Landers involved cooking the spacecraft to 111.7 degrees Celsius for 30 hours, and the team searched for potential contaminants by trying to culture microbes in pre-defined nutrient mixes.  What 1970s scientists didn’t realize is that some organisms can survive such high temperatures, and the tests for survivors may have missed the hardiest microbes.  Dr. Moogega Cooper, a planetary protection engineer at JPL, believes the dependence on culturing is a problem.  “It is a well known fact that only 1% of microbes can be grown on culture media,” she notes.  “Using our culture-based methods may not be enough in my opinion to effectively assess how much contamination we are transporting to other solar bodies.”

In the case of back-contamination, about 40 kilograms of Mars snows down on Earth every year, mostly as micrometeorites, slipping in under the PPO’s radar.

Of course, none of this means we shouldn’t seek to limit contamination in the future, and NASA’s Planetary Protection team thinks about their directive in terms of probabilities and risk-benefit analyses.  In general, risk can be evaluated as a balance between the likelihood of a negative event happening and the severity of that event.  Back-contamination of planet Earth presents an extremely low risk, but the seriousness of that risk – an interplanetary pandemic – is extremely high.  Given this calculus, it’s worth investing in safeguards for all of the samples we can control.

Dr. John Rummel, a Professor of Biology at East Carolina University, is the author of NASA’s draft protocol for handling martian samples, written during a fit of budgetary optimism in 2002.  (Reading from a slide during last week’s Conference on Life Detection in Extraterrestrial Samples, Rummel referred to a mission plan that would “return no earlier than 2011.  So far so good,” he quipped, sardonically acknowledging the endless delays that have characterized the elusive sample return mission.)

The protocol calls for sterilization by heat and gamma irradiation in proportions that would kill any viable organisms but leave geochemical traits – like isotopic ratios, elemental compositions, or crystal structures – unchanged.  High radiation doses or high temperatures can irreversibly alter rock samples, but using moderate radiation levels at elevated temperatures allows you to combine the killing power of both without the deleterious effects of either.

The Planetary Protection team would be the first line of defense against potential biological contaminants, but it would also be the first – and possibly only – team to study pristine martian samples, a fact that irks some scientists.  After all, the thinking goes, sterilization would destroy any primary evidence of viable cells, obscuring critical information from the most valuable cargo to ever be acquired from an interplanetary mission.

What much of the scientific community is overlooking is that both planetary protection officers and scientists have the same overall goal: to find and describe any biological organisms that may be inside martian rocks.  Secondary motivations aren’t quite as synergistic, but scientists and the PPO must find workable compromises.  Determining which instruments to include in the quarantined laboratories, developing sterilization techniques that are minimally destructive, and establishing a workflow that follows the “first life detection, then biohazard analysis” mantra are all important opportunities to bring the two groups together.  Such coordination would improve everyone’s ability to do his job, maximizing scientific yield and minimizing the risk of an Andromeda Strain reality show.

Jeff Marlow is a graduate student in Geological and Planetary Sciences at the California Institute of Technology where he studies exotic microbial metabolisms in an attempt to understand the limits of life on Earth and beyond.

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Nokia 808 PureView Smartphone features high-resolution 41 megapixel sensor
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February 27, 2012Nokia 808 PureView Smartphone features high-resolution 41 megapixel sensor

Nokia-808-PureView

Nokia has introduced its new high-end camera phone at the 2012 Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Spain. The Nokia 808 PureView smartphone features a large high-resolution 41 megapixel sensor with high-performance Carl Zeiss optics and new pixel oversampling technology.

The video above shows how at standard resolutions (2/3, 5 and 8 megapixels) the Nokia 808 PureView has the ability to zoom without loss of clarity and capture seven pixels of information, condensing into one pixel for the sharpest images.  According to Nokia, at high-resolution (38 megapixel maximum) the Nokia 888 can capture an image, then zoom, reframe, crop and resize afterwards, and then save in compact file sizes for sharing in email, MMS, or on social networks. The Nokia 808 PureView also features full HD 1080p video recording and playback with 4X lossless zoom and the world's first use of Nokia Rich Recording, which enables audio recording at CD-like levels of quality. Exclusive Dolby Headphone technology is also onboard for surround sound in headphones, and Dolby Digital Plus for 5.1 channel surround sound playback.

February 27, 2012 in Camera Phone, Smartphones, Superphones | Permalink


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(Carlos Osorio/AP)

DEARBORN, Mich.-- As the state of Michigan prepares for Tuesday's presidential primary, questions remain about whether Democrats could skew the results via crossover voting. The state of Michigan has no party registration requirement, so any registered voter can participate in Tuesday's Republican presidential primary, including Democrats and independents.

But select party leaders surveyed by Yahoo News say they're not concerned about the potential impact of crossover votes.

"The Michigan Republican party believes that voters who vote in a primary do so because they're encouraged and inspired to participate in the process… not to create some type of mischief," state party spokesman Matt Frendewey told Yahoo News.

In the past, Democrats and independents have been credited with some major vote outcomes in Michigan: surveys from the 1996 reportedly indicated that 16 percent of voters in that year's Republican primary were Democrats and 17 percent were independents; many believe John McCain won Michigan's 2000 presidential primary with the help of Democrats and Independents; and others suggest Republican Gov. Rick Snyder won the 2010 primary with a boost from those same voting groups.

Frendewey said that the state GOP has been focused solely on Republican turnout for this primary and has made no efforts to appeal to independents or "soft Democrats."

For their part, Democrats say they have made no effort to encourage their fellow party members to vote on Tuesday.

United Auto Workers' President Bob King when asked last week at an anti-Mitt Romney rally in Detroit if he's encouraging auto union members (who typically vote Democratic) to participate Tuesday, he rejected the suggestion. "No, we're not," King told reporters. "I'm urging my members to work hard, to rebuild the right to organize, the right to collective bargaining, to support President Obama, and really we want to build a broader movement…" he said.

The state Democratic party chairman also flatly denied any efforts to promote Democratic participation.

"We do not encourage crossover voting," chairman Mark Brewer told Yahoo News.

Brewer made that comment in a phone interview this weekend even though he put out a statement last week highlighting a video of two Republican state Senators encouraging Democrats to vote in the primary:

Democrats who accept this invitation will still be able to vote in our May 5th caucuses. If Democratic crossover votes affect the results on February 28th, Republicans will have no one but themselves to blame.

Statements such as this combined with the state's history have kept questions about crossover voters in the news. And other outlets have helped stoke interest in the subject.

Liberal Daily Kos founder Markos Moulitsas launched a call for Democratic voters to participate in open Republican primaries in Michigan, North Dakota, Vermont and Tennessee in an effort he dubbed "Operation Hilarity." (He made the same plea in Michigan in 2008.)

It's difficult to gauge exactly how many Democrats and Independents will head to the polls to vote Republican on Tuesday. Public Policy Polling-- which conducted robo-calls in Michigan-- on Sunday estimated that just 5 percent of likely primary voters in Michigan are Democrats and that their impact may not be felt at all. "They're splitting their votes 28-28 between Romney and Santorum," the survey outfit stated in its report.

More popular Yahoo! News stories:

• Obama welcomes construction of southern part of Keystone Pipeline

• As gas prices rise, Republican candidates step up the attacks on Obama's energy policy

• Show us your primary: Yahoo! News wants your photos

Want more of our best political stories? Visit The Ticket or connect with us on Facebook, follow us on Twitter, or add us on Tumblr. Handy with a camera? Join our Election 2012 Flickr group to submit your photos of the campaign in action.


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(Reuters) - Virtual boxing, tennis and dancing along with video game systems may not be helping children meet daily exercise requirements, according to a U.S. study.

Researchers from Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, Texas found that children who were given so-called active video games to play on a Nintendo Wii didn't end up logging any more moderate or vigorous physical activity than those given games they could play sitting on the couch.

Some public health researchers have hoped that active video games might be an alternative to outdoor play and sports for at least some of the physical activity children need, especially for those who live in unsafe neighborhoods where playing outside isn't always an option.

"We expected that playing the video games would in fact lead to a substantial increase in physical activity in the children," said Tom Baranowski and colleagues at Baylor.

"Frankly, we were shocked by the complete lack of difference."

For the study, they passed out Wii consoles to 78 children who didn't already have one. Half were given their choice of an active game, such as Wii Sports or Dance Dance Revolution-Hottest Party 3, and the other half their choice of inactive game, such as Disney Sing-It Pop Hits or Super Mario Galaxy.

Halfway through the study, which was published in Pediatrics, the children -- all 9 to 12-years-old and above average weight -- got their choice of a second game from the same category as their first.

Baranowski and his colleagues tracked the children for 13 weeks, testing their physical activity levels with a motion-measuring device called an accelerometer.

Participants wore the devices on a belt during four different week-long periods throughout the study, which allowed the research team to determine when they were sedentary, lightly exercising, or engaged in moderate-to-vigorous exercise.

Accelerometer logs showed that throughout the study period, children with the active games didn't get any more exercise than those given inactive video games.

At weeks one, six, seven and 12, children in the active game group got an average of 25 to 28 minutes of moderate or vigorous physical activity each day, compared to between 26 and 29 minutes for those in the inactive video game group.

There was also no difference in the time spent doing light physical activity or being sedentary during any week the researchers monitored.

Baranowski said his team couldn't tell if children just didn't exert much energy playing the active games, or if they compensated for exercise they got playing Wii with less exercise at other points in the day.

Nintendo was not available for comment and other researchers said that while the games were no substitute for the real thing, they might be better than no exercise at all.

It's possible that children playing active Wii games burned a few extra calories that the movement device didn't pick up on -- for instance, if they were moving their arms a lot in a boxing game, said Jacob Barkley, an exercise scientist from Kent State University in Ohio who didn't take part in the study.

"Maybe the Wii isn't going to increase physical activity a whole heck of a lot," Barkley told Reuters Health.

"But it might increase caloric expenditure a bit more than a traditional sedentary video game, and if you do that on a daily basis that could have a cumulative effect that might be beneficial."

(Editing by Elaine Lies and Bob Tourtellotte)


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Huawei Ascend D quad touted as world's fastest smartphone
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February 28, 2012Huawei Ascend D quad touted as world's fastest smartphone

Making a big splash at the 2012 MWC this week, Huawei introduced the Ascend D quad, touted as the world's fastest quad-core smartphone, and powered by the Huawei's K3V2 quad-core 1.2GHz/1.5GHz processor.  The Huawei Ascend D quad measuring 64mm narrow and 8.9mm slim, and it packs a 4.5-inch 720P high definition touchscreen, a PPI 330 screen that is said to be a crystal clear display even under direct sunlight.

The Ascend D quad will ship with the latest Android 4.0 operating system, and it is equipped with an 8-megapixel BSI rear-facing camera, 1.3 megapixel front-facing camera, and 1080p full HD video-capture and playback, Dolby 5.1 Surround Sound, Audience earSmart voice technology, and an 1800mAh battery which is said to last for one to two days with normal usage. 

Huawei-Ascend-D-quad-smartphone

Also in the Ascend D series, Huawei introduced the Ascend D quad XL and the Ascend D1 smartphones. The Ascend D quad XL offers a 2500mAh battery for two to three days of normal usage.The Ascend D quad XL measures 10.9 mm slim, and has the same specs as the Ascend D quad . The Ascend D1 model features a 1.5 GHz dual-core CPU and has a 1670mAh battery.  

The Ascend D quad series will be available in China, Australia, Europe, Asia-Pacific, North and South America, and the Middle East in Q2 2012, while the Ascend D1 will hit these markets in April 2012. Pricing was not announced.

February 28, 2012 in Android, Smartphones, Superphones | Permalink


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on Monday, March 5, 2012

Android 4.0 update for Samsung Galaxy S2 on Mar.15

At least in Israel anyway.  Samsung Mobile Israel made a statement that they expect to roll out the update for unlocked and carrier-branded handsets in Israel starting March 15.

The announcement came from their official Facebook page and said:

We promised we were working on it. You waited patiently. And on 15 March it’ll arrive: Android version 4, ICS, to tens of thousands of GALAXY S II devices purchased from cellular companies in the country or directly from us. We are very excited for the launch, hope you are too :)

Whether other markets will see the same thing is still unclear.  Hopefully the updates will roll out internationally around the same time.

[VIA]





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Giving Up Facebook for Lent

By Kendra Srivastava | Mon Feb 27, 2012 3:40 pm

Facebook addicts are giving up the social media site for Lent, highlighting their increasingly common struggle to balance online connections with real-life friendships.

Christine Melendes of Chicago won't be poking anyone or checking status updates during the forty days before Easter, according to CBS.

"I kind of feel like I forget to do something every morning before I go to work, but I'm doing pretty good. I haven't cheated yet," she reports.

Melendes is not alone in her quest, as 28-year-old Glena Suiter of French Island is also avoiding Facebook for Lent.

"I'm not sure I'll make it, but I'm going to try," Suiter said, adding, "I didn't think about how much I use it until now. I didn't think it would be such a sacrifice to give up."

Suiter plans to fill the Facebook gap by knitting forty infant hats during Lent instead of posting videos and browsing friends' photo albums.

Neither Suiter or Melendes consider themselves extreme Facebook addicts, but their difficultly in ditching the social network suggests it is increasingly hard for some people to balance online activities and real life.

Facebook and Twitter are actually more addictive than cigarettes, according to research from Chicago University's Booth Business School. The study ranked social networking just behind sleep and leisure time, which people regularly prioritized even above drinking and smoking.

These findings explain "Facebook Depression," a phenomenon occurring when users are unable to visit the site and connect with friends, prompting feelings of isolation and distress.

A study last spring documented students' reactions when told to shut off digital media for 24 hours. One participant reported, "I was itching, like a crackhead, because I could not use my phone," highlighting his visceral connection to Facebook.

To combat Facebook addiction, some like Suiter and Melendes are turning to "tech fasts."

"The Winter of Our Disconnect," for example, details Susan Maushart's attempt to live for six months without the Internet, cell phones, television, iPods or video games. The author says this experience drew her family closer together, although she admits it was difficult at first.

Last year the "National Day of Unplugging" on March 19 saw professionals of all persuasions avoid technology in favor of live communication, followed by a similar "No E-Mail Day" on October 18.

Whether or not Suiter and Mendeles succeed in their forty-day technology fast, their determination may encourage others to consider occasionally unplugging from Facebook to forge stronger real-life connections.


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There was no Galaxy S III from Samsung, contrary to expectations, but they did show a new phone - the Samsung Galaxy Beam, with (you guessed it) a built-in projector. It shared the spotlight with two 10.1-inch tablets, the Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 and the Tab 2 10.1.

The Galaxy Note 10.1 brings Samsung's S Pen stylus where it belongs - a big screen. We've no talent for painting whatsoever, but couldn't wait to try and sketch something on the Android version of Photoshop Touch.

The Galaxy Tab 2 10.1 should be a more affordable tablet (though pricing isn't revealed yet), with specs comparable to those of the original Tab 10.1. The Tab 2, however, tops the old version with Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich out of the box and records FullHD video.

Samsung's earlier attempts to combine a phone and a portable microprojector fizzled out, but they're at it again. The Samsung Galaxy Beam is a fairly standard dual-core droid, with the notable exception of the nHD projector. It can project an image with a 50" diagonal.


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As the GOP primary race comes down to the wire in Michigan, Rick Santorum’s campaign has a last trick up its sleeve.

The campaign has launched telephone robocalls throughout the state slamming rival Mitt Romney for opposing the auto industry bailout in late 2008 and early 2009, and urging Democrats to show up for Tuesday’s Republican primary and cast ballots for Santorum. 

“Michigan Democrats can vote in the Republican primary on Tuesday. Why is it so important?” the voice on the call says. “Romney supported the bailouts for his Wall Street, billionaire buddies, but opposed the auto bailouts. That was a slap in the face to every Michigan worker, and we’re not going to let Romney get away with it.”

The call urges listeners to “send a loud message” to Romney by voting for Santorum, even though Santorum, too, opposed the auto industry bailout. It ends with the line: “This call is supported by hard-working Democratic men and women and paid for by Rick Santorum for president.”

Ryan Williams, a Romney spokesman, issued a statement late on Monday that said: “It is outrageous that Rick Santorum is inviting Democrats into the Republican primary to vote against Mitt Romney. Rick Santorum has moved beyond just ‘taking one for the team.’ He is now willing to wear the other team’s jersey if he thinks it will get him more votes. We believe that Republicans will decide who wins Michigan, and we are confident that will be Mitt Romney.”

A Santorum spokesman defended the attempt to turn out Reagan Democrats for Santorum, despite the fact that Santorum’s position on the bailout was the same as Romney’s.

“Any conservative message that reaches out, when it's about creating jobs for all Americans is going to be attractive to Reagan Democrats,” Santorum spokesman Hogan Gidley said in an interview, explaining the raionale for the robocalls. “We’re going to need those Reagan Democrats to win this election.”

Asked about the contradiction in Santorum's robocalls criticizing a position Santorum himself took, Gidley said the content of the robocalls is justified because Romney supported the financial industry bailout while opposing the auto bailout, while Santorum opposed both, suggesting the issue is consistency.

“Governor Romney opposed the auto bailout for the workers of Detroit, but was fine pushing the bailout for his friends on Wall Street,” Gidley said. “Either be all for the bailout or all against the bailout, but don’t pick winners and losers.”

However, the robocalls do not mention Santorum's opposition to the auto bailout, or the consistency issue, and in fact leave listeners with the impression that Santorum supported the auto bailout.


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Apple Buys Chomp to Boost App Store's Edge

By Janet Maragioglio | Fri Feb 24, 2012 11:52 am

Apple plans to acquire Chomp, an app search and discovery company, to revamp its App Store and stand out in a crowded marketplace.

Chomp, which makes a tool designed to help users find apps, provides search results based on an app's function, rather than its name.

The Cupertino, Calif.-based company's move comes on the heels of an announcement to overhaul its iTunes and App stores. Apple is aiming to make it easier for users to find apps among the more than 550,000 its App Store offers, and the Chomp acquisition will help it reach that goal.

Best-selling offerings are often most visible in the App Store, while newer or less popular apps get buried. It's difficult and time-consuming for users to get at those deeper offerings, especially if they don't know the name of the app or exactly what they're looking for.

With its Chomp acquisition, users will likely discover lesser-known apps that appeal to their unique tastes and usage patterns. As a result, Apple will enable App Store users to find what they need more quickly and easily, competing more successfully for users' eyes and downloads in an increasingly crowded app market.

The tools are also good news for Apple's developers, because they will help new apps break in and get more visibility.

Apple's acquisition comes as apps begin to help companies draw in advertising revenue. For example, Google's new privacy policy, which allows it to cross-market between all its sites and services, will open new advertising routes based on users' Android app activity.

Likewise, social network Facebook now targets ads to users' precise interests and tastes based on their mobile app activity, in the hopes of raising conversion rates.

Apple's purchase of Chomp hints it plans to jump on this trend as well. The ability to harness app use as a revenue-boosting tool hinges on users' ability to ferret out apps that suit their individual preferences from a sea of competing offerings.

Once it integrates Chomp's search and discovery tools with its App Store, Apple will ease that process and gain a new way to market to users, as well as widening the appeal of its apps.

Apple also expects to release new products this year, including the iPad 3 and iPhone 5. These devices are expected to incorporate faster 4G LTE technology, making them especially suited for using apps to perform a host of data-hungry activities.

Rolling out new search and discovery features in the App Store before its new round of products hit the market will help Apple bolster increased app use, as well as ensure Apple gets exclusive use of Chomp's innovative technology for an edge in the marketplace.


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Apple Plays Hardball in TV Negotiations

By Joe Arico | Fri Mar 02, 2012 11:47 am

Apple plans to launch a television streaming service by the end of the year, aiming to replace traditional cable offerings and digital subscription companies like Netflix and Hulu.

The Cupertino, Calif.-based company is in negotiations with various content providers, but has been unable to come to any agreements on how it should share the programming, according to the NY Post. Apple is approaching companies with a "we decide the price, we decide what content" offer, which isn't wooing potential partners.

Apple reportedly wants to offer channels as apps for its devices, but content providers are likely not pleased with the way the company plans to share revenue. The tech giant attempted to make similar deals with providers a few years ago, but talks eventually broke down because Apple did not want to pay for a license to the content, offering to share money made from advertising dollars instead.

Apple and content providers have much to discuss before the programming is offered in any capacity, and it's unclear whether the channels would be offered as individual apps or if customers will need to buy them in bundles.

In addition, the companies will have to agree whether to offer content at a one-time cost with advertising, or charge a subscription fee.

In the past, Apple has run into resistance from music labels and publishers as the company attempted to get the rights to offer content while doing so in its own way. The company eventually won over its book and music partners, leading to the success of iTunes and iBooks. However, even with the overwhelming popularity of those services on its resume, Apple has run into its most stubborn opponents yet.

Film and TV entertainment providers have shown a resistance to the digital revolution, leaning instead on offering physical copies of their content after its aired on TV or made its way through the movie theatre. As digital distribution emerges as the preferred way to offer video content and studios, cable channels and the networks are all looking for a way to cash in, while not suffering any financial drop off from the physical medium.

Apple is unlikely to bend its demands to appease content providers, especially if it can get some to agree to its terms. As a result, Apple's new streaming service may be a bit thin on content if it launches later this year, as the company continues its "stare down" with providers, who hold out to see which side blinks first.



Are E-Books Fairly Priced? -- Part 2 Wed Feb 29, 2012 1:19 pm | By
Publishers attempted to reassert control over the e-book marketplace to charge higher e-book prices, and Amazon is pushing back hard. But as all parties jockey for control, where does this leave consumers and authors?



Apple to Unveil IPad 3 on March 7 Tue Feb 28, 2012 4:03 pm | By
Apple confirmed it will hold an event on March 7 in San Francisco, as analysts expect the company to announce the iPad 3.

Are E-Books Fairly Priced? -- Part 1 Tue Feb 28, 2012 12:47 pm | By
Struggles over the sale and distribution of digital books are wreaking havoc on the publishing industry, and amid all the confusion, one question continually surfaces: Are e-books fairly priced?

Best Buy Clears Way for IPad 3, Drops IPad 2 Price Mon Feb 27, 2012 4:07 pm | By
Best Buy cut the iPad 2's price by $50, an unusual move signaling the iPad 3's release is likely imminent.

Apple's Victory Over Sales Ban Raises Questions Over Fair Use Mon Feb 27, 2012 3:31 pm | By
Apple notched a victory over an attempted sales ban on its devices by Motorola, raising more questions over how common technology gets used under intellectual property ownership.


Editorials & Opinion By Kate Knibbs
NUTS: Tech Leaders Give Glimpse of Future, Google Makes Privacy Changes Tech leaders gathered at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, while Google's controversial privacy policy went into effect.













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The winner for one last category of the Global Mobile Awards - the Best New Mobile Handset, Device or Tablet at Mobile World Congress 2012 award - was left to be announced and looking at the photo of smiling Nokia execs makes it easy to guess which device took that award home.

The Nokia 808 PureView, which arguably caused the biggest splash with its 41MP camera sensor, was voted worthy of the award by a panel of journalists and analysts attending the show.

Here's what Jo Harlow, Executive Vice President of smart devices at Nokia, had to say about the award:

It?s a fantastic award because it signifies that consumer experience counts. It?s about tech, but it?s about how tech is used to make a consumer have a fantastic experience. The imaging is fantastic; the audio is fantastic; the navigation technology is fantastic.

These are first signals that we are executing against our strategy. That we?re back. That we?re bringing great products to our consumers ? and that this is just the beginning. There?s lot more to come.

We have a lot of work ahead of us. We?re still a challenger, and we are going to operate as we have done in this last year to deliver these great results.

You can also check out our interview with Damian Dinning who shared a lot of interesting details on the PureView camera on the Nokia 808 at length.

Source


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Best Buy Clears Way for IPad 3, Drops IPad 2 Price

By Kate Knibbs | Mon Feb 27, 2012 4:07 pm

Best Buy cut the iPad 2's price by $50, an unusual move signaling the iPad 3's release is likely imminent.

Apple expects to reveal the iPad 3 later this week, and Best Buy's gambit, coupled with shipping reports from Foxconn, support speculation that the device is right around the corner.

Apple rarely allows price cuts on its devices by retailers, and Best Buy's generous discount and a similar sale at Meijer point to something big in the works, as the companies' sales reduce current iPad inventory.

"The timing of Best Buy's sale may be yet another indication that the world's most valuable company is getting ready to announce the iPad 3," said Tom Cheredar of VentureBeat.

Apple has not confirmed any specs for its new tablet, but analysts believe it will have the same form factor as the iPad 2, feature a retina display, faster processor and possibly offer LTE capability, a surprise since LTE technology often hurts battery life, a highly valued iPad 2 feature.

The iPad 3 will likely have updated cameras, since many users complained about the poor quality of both the front and rear-facing lenses in the iPad 2.

Apple's latest tablet will hit the market nearly a year after the iPad 2, which dominates the tablet market. In the past year, however, rivals stepped up their tablet offerings and changed key dynamics in the playing field, and competition will likely continue to heat up.

Google just revealed its focused push into the tablet market this year, announcing its intention to rival Apple's popular tablets. The search giant is releasing an Android-branded tablet in April, and the Android-powered Samsung Galaxy Tab and tablet-smartphone hybrid Galaxy Note are experiencing strong sales.

Besides Google, Apple also faces stiff competition from Amazon's Kindle Fire, another Android-powered tablet with a significantly less-expensive price point. Along with Barnes & Noble's Nook Tablet, the Kindle Fire cuts into the iPad's customer base by attracting budget-conscious customers.

Apple is considering releasing a smaller, more affordable iPad to regain that corner of the market, but the project is still in development.

Analysts expect the iPad 3 will debut at the same price as its forerunner, $500 for a 16-gigabyte model, which could widen the gap between the capabilities of Apple's tablet and devices like the Fire and Nook Tablet. By offering the iPad 2 at a reduced price, Apple could position itself with a tablet in two different price categories, making it more competitive.

Some customers will flock to buy the iPad 2 at a lower price, but many will likely hold out for the newer model. The iPad 3 will enter a changed tablet market this time around, but Apple pioneered the market and all eyes will be on its latest offering to see if can continue to compete and innovate, generating big sales and transforming the way people use tablet devices.



Apple's Victory Over Sales Ban Raises Questions Over Fair Use Mon Feb 27, 2012 3:31 pm | By
Apple notched a victory over an attempted sales ban on its devices by Motorola, raising more questions over how common technology gets used under intellectual property ownership.



Proview Targets Apple in U.S., Tries to Avoid Bankruptcy Fri Feb 24, 2012 2:05 pm | By
Proview filed another lawsuit against Apple, expanding the trademark battle to the U.S. and upping the stakes for both companies in the high-profile case.

Apple Buys Chomp to Boost App Store's Edge Fri Feb 24, 2012 11:52 am | By
Apple plans to acquire Chomp, an app search and discovery company, to revamp its App Store and stand out in a crowded marketplace.

Apple IPad Sales Continue in China, For Now Thu Feb 23, 2012 1:49 pm | By
A Shanghai court ruled Apple can continue to sell the iPad in China, as a lawsuit over trademark threatens to disrupt the company's success in the country.

Apple, Google Agree to App Privacy Policies Thu Feb 23, 2012 12:26 pm | By
Tech companies agreed to stronger privacy policies for mobile apps, as scrutiny ramps up among lawmakers and consumer advocates about how apps handle personal information.


Editorials & Opinion By Kate Knibbs
NUTS: Apple Preps IPhone 5, Revamps App Store Apple is gearing up for the iPhone 5, while adding improvements to its App store.















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Samsung Beam Video Demo

Ever since Samsung revealed their projector in a phone, the Beam, people have been wondering how good it could be.  They’ve recently gave a demo of the projector phone in action, and the images are surprisingly good considering it’s coming from a phone.  See for yourself in the video after the break.

[VIA]





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Stories about rocket monkeys and other spacefaring animals are perfect for children.
Photo: U.S. Army

Former astronaut Mike Kelly — I like the phrase “former astronaut,” as if he decided that the astronaut game wasn’t for him and went into real estate instead — is writing a children’s book called Mousetronaut: A Partially True Story.

bug_altextIn it, he tells the tale of a mouse who supposedly enjoyed being in zero gravity, unlike all the other rodents in his cage who clung to the sides of it in pure, searing murine terror.

Ignoring the fact that a “mousetronaut” is technically someone who travels through a mouse, I’m happy that we’re finally seeing stories about lab animals that are at least partially true. Previous children’s favorites like Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH and Monkey Shines: An Experiment in Fear have taken tremendous liberties with the truth. For instance, in Frisby the titular mouse wears a little cape, and in Monkey Shines, the murderous, jealous, mind-reading tufted capuchin makes noises that sound much more like a golden-bellied capuchin.

Let’s hope Mousetronaut is a tremendous success, if not for the children’s sake, then for me personally. I have a series of amusing and edifying children’s books about lab animals in the works.

For example:

Bravebunny, The Rabbit Who Was Probably Somewhat Less Terrified Than the Other Experimental Rabbits

One Fish, Two Fish, Red Fish, Control Group

Gaster, The Eyeless Fruit Fly

Are You My Mother, Or Just Chicken Wire Wrapped With Terrycloth?

The Special Amazing Friendship Club: Animals Who Were Launched Into Space and Left to Die

Screw You, Professor Jerk, and Screw Your Stupid Maze Twice

Vivisection Vivian, The Inside-Out Frog

The Prettiest Bunny: A Story of Cosmetic Testing

The Giving Beagle

Junkie: The Rat Who Died Because He Preferred Heroin to Food

Where the Statistically Valid Things Are

The Very Hungry Caterpillar Who Was Not Allowed To Eat in Order to Learn Something About Carbohydrates or Something

Pat the Bunny for Precisely 10 Seconds at 10 Minute Intervals for Three Weeks

Everyone Poops; Graduate Students Have to Clean It Up

Bread and Iodopropynyl Butylcarbamate for Frances

Clifford the Big Red Swollen Infected Dog

If You Give a Mouse a Cookie Laced With Pesticide

The Cat in the Lab

Why Mosquitoes Buzz in People’s Ears: An Analysis of Frequency Modulation in the Female Aedes aegypti (Journal of Entomological Research, Vol XXVII, No. 3)

Puff, the Magic Dragon Does Not Exist

The Runaway Bunny and the Resulting Tularemia Outbreak

Curious George Is Not So Curious Now, Huh?

Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Research

Frog and Toad Are Excellent Instruction Tools for High School Biology Classes

The Tale of Squirrel No. 341593-B

Chocolate, the Chocolate Lab Who Ate Chocolate in a Lab

The Cat Who Could See Colors: A Psychoactive Tail

The Ugly Duckling Who Got Uglier

The Lorax Drinks Clorox

The Monster at the End of This Academic Career

Old McDonald Had a Laboratory Animal Supply Company

Grab Your Sister’s Hamster: Fun Science Experiments for Kids

The Tale of 4,000 Bad Rats

The Poked Little Puppy

- - -

Born helpless, naked and unable to provide for himself, Lore Sjöberg eventually overcame these handicaps to become a control group, a control freak and a control tower.

Award-winning humorist Lore Sjöberg is the author of The Book of Ratings, a founder of The Brunching Shuttlecocks, and the creator of The Cyborg Name Decoder. His work has appeared in Wired magazine, Adbusters, and has appeared on NPR's Talk of the Nation and All Things Considered.
Follow @loresjoberg and @theunderwire on Twitter.

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