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Keyword: tech

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  • California risks losing tech edge, study says

    03/31/2004 3:33:23 PM PST · by Constitutionalist Conservative · 9 replies · 77+ views
    CNET News ^ | 03/31/2004 | Dinesh C. Sharma
    Story last modified March 31, 2004, 2:47 PM PST California retains much of its allure as a tech center, but other states are chipping away at its technology edge, says a new report. Among the assets of the Golden State, home to Silicon Valley, are strong technology clusters, a venture-capital foundation and an excellent higher education system, while in the debit column is a declining ability to attract academic research funds, according to a study released Wednesday by the Santa Monica, Calif.-based Milken Institute.A key setback for California was a drop in the number of business starts per capita. In...
  • Noah Johnson: Folding Proteins at Home

    03/30/2004 2:11:05 AM PST · by Swordmaker · 34 replies · 385+ views
    Apple Computer ^ | 3/30/2004 | By Barbara Gibson
    Noah Johnson: Folding Proteins at Home By Barbara GibsonIn what is rapidly becoming a new world of democratic computing, Noah Johnson’s three Power Macs are humming quietly away, helping Stanford University scientists solve a complex problem that, one day, may help them fight disease. As part of a groundbreaking distributed computing experiment, Johnson and half a million other people are donating their spare computer capacity so Stanford can remotely simulate protein folding, an essential biochemical process that controls vital body functions. The project, called Folding@home, represents a sort of ad hoc democracy because anyone with an Internet connection can...
  • Tiny radar could make driving safer

    02/28/2004 7:57:31 AM PST · by aculeus · 6 replies · 177+ views
    New Scientist.com ^ | 27 February 04 | Celeste Biever
    The entire functions of a radar system have been squeezed on to a single silicon chip about one fifteenth the size of a penny for the first time. The miniature system has been created by researchers at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, US, who managed to fabricate all the sensing and communications components out of silicon. Their chip is capable of transmitting, receiving and directing high frequency microwaves. "Until now radar has been a very expensive very large bulky item," says Ian Gresham, an automotive radar engineer at M/A-Com in Lowell, Massachusetts. Gresham says the radar chip could...
  • Two level 3 virus/worms in two days [Netsky.B]

    02/18/2004 11:18:16 AM PST · by FourPeas · 17 replies · 96+ views
    The email has the following characteristics: From: (Spoofed) Subject: (One of the following) hi hello read it immediately something for you warning information stolen fake unknown Message: (One of the following) anything ok? what does it mean? ok i'm waiting read the details. here is the document. read it immediately! my hero [here is that true? is that your name? is that your account? i wait for a reply! is that from you? you are a bad writer I have your password! something about you! kill the writer of this document! i hope it is not true! your name is...
  • World's first computer hip-replacement at Hadassah

    02/13/2004 10:27:24 PM PST · by yonif · 5 replies · 129+ views
    Jerusalem Post ^ | Feb. 12, 2004 | JUDY SIEGEL
    The world's first computer-assisted, minimally invasive hip replacement has been performed at Hadassah-University Hospital on Jerusalem's Mount Scopus. The hospital was chosen by two giant foreign companies, Zimmer and Medtronics, to be the pioneers in the use of its hardware and software because of its orthopedists' expertise in computer-assisted surgery, including the removal of shrapnel from the bodies of terror victims. In Zimmer's annual report to stockholders this week, the head of Zimmer specifically mentioned the first use of this advanced technology in Israel. Hadassah came out ahead of medical centers in England and Germany, but the technology will later...
  • H-1B Training Program to Be Axed

    02/11/2004 11:41:22 PM PST · by anymouse · 5 replies · 137+ views
    Wired ^ | Feb. 11, 2004 | Joanna Glasner
    <p>Facing a drop in funding and a tough job market for technology professionals, the Department of Labor is poised to kill a program that trains Americans to fill positions held by foreign guest workers.</p> <p>The department created the H-1B Training Program in the late 1990s as a way for Americans to learn skills in high demand by employers. The funding came from fees employers of foreign workers paid to get H-1B visas, which allowed the foreigners to take technical jobs that went unfilled during the dot-com boom. The Labor Department used those fees and other funding to pay $328 million in scholarships and grants to community groups to develop training programs for U.S. citizens and permanent residents.</p>
  • Bobby Knight, David Smith {TX Tech Chancellor} in Public Spat

    02/03/2004 5:29:26 AM PST · by Theodore R. · 41 replies · 248+ views
    Louisville, KY, Courier-Journal ^ | 02-03-04 | Gonzales, Patrick
    Knight, Smith in public spat BY PATRICK GONZALES A-J SPORTS EDITOR A popular Lubbock lunch spot was the scene Monday of a verbal dust up between Texas Tech Chancellor David Smith and head basketball coach Bob Knight. Knight and Tech athletic director Gerald Myers did not return repeated telephone calls Monday seeking comment. Smith would say only that the university will have a comment at the appropriate time. ``I can't comment on it. It's a personnel matter,'' Smith said. An eyewitness to the incident gave the following account to The Avalanche-Journal: Smith was having lunch with another Tech employee at...
  • Israel's Revolutionary Lie-Detector Eyeglasses

    01/29/2004 7:02:38 PM PST · by yonif · 9 replies · 1,540+ views
    Israel National News ^ | 21:56 Jan 29, '04 / 6 Shevat 5764
    A new Israeli invention called “Voice Analysis Eyeglasses” has created a new brand of lie detectors that make the need for wires and electrodes absolute. In fact, the new lie detector developed in Israel is so inconspicuous that one may not even know they are being monitored. The glasses provide lie detection analysis on the inside of their lenses about whoever is speaking at the time, claims Nemesysco, the Israeli company which developed the new technology. Mathematician Amir Lieberman at Nemesysco’s headquarters in the town of Zuran, developed the glasses for military, insurance claim, and law enforcement use. The technology...
  • Experts: Mydoom worm spreading faster than last year's Sobig-F [email servers being clogged]

    01/27/2004 4:50:47 PM PST · by yonif · 44 replies · 569+ views
    Computer World ^ | JANUARY 26, 2004 | Paul Roberts
    A new e-mail worm that first appeared on the Internet this afternoon is spreading rapidly, according to leading security companies. The worm is being called several names by antivirus software vendors, including W32/Mydoom, Shimg, Novarg and Mimail.R. It is now being analyzed by the antivirus companies. Experts differed on the worm's payload, but said it is spreading faster than Sobig-F, the most widespread email worm of 2003. "It has been moving very quickly for the past three hours and has been generating a hell of a lot of e-mail," Vincent Gullotto, vice president of the Anti-Virus Emergency Response Team at...
  • Sykes shuts down (Ada OK location)

    01/08/2004 12:06:17 AM PST · by kenth · 14 replies · 181+ views
    Ada Evening News ^ | 01-07-2004 | Brenda Tollett
    ADA — Employees at Sykes were given news Tuesday they would be out of a job by early March. The Ada Evening News received several phonecalls from persons claiming to be Sykes employees who asked to remain anonymous. One caller said, “We were asked not to speak to the media.” Another employee of the computer support call center who asked not to be identified said she was afraid she would be fired and not be eligible for benefits if company officials knew she had talked to the media. Many of the callers blame the shut down on the opening of...
  • Israel sends Amos-2 to space

    12/27/2003 1:52:58 PM PST · by yonif · 2 replies · 164+ views
    Jerusalem Post ^ | Dec. 27, 2003 | ARIEH O'SULLIVAN ARIEH O'SULLIVAN
    Israel's Amos-2 telecommunications satellite was to lift off just before midnight last night atop a Russian rocket in Kazakhstan, ensuring Israel's firm membership in the international space market. The 160-kilo satellite, built by Israel Aircraft Industries' MBT Division, is expected to eventually reach a geo-stationary orbit, where it will provide cellular phone and on-line data links, and television transmissions. Only seven other nations are capable of developing and producing communication satellites. As much as the design and construction of a communication satellite is a source of pride for this small country, the Zionist endeavor is almost totally a business venture...
  • 10 technologies to watch in 2004

    12/24/2003 4:31:29 PM PST · by Walkin Man · 45 replies · 744+ views
    Business 2.0 / CNN ^ | David Pescovitz
    <p>Ultra-wideband: Imagine a television that can wirelessly send three different programs to separate monitors. Low-power, low-cost, and with roughly 45 times the data transmission speed of run-of-the-mill Wi-Fi, this wireless technology is finally ready to debut in the living room.</p>
  • Technology exists to make guns safer (3rd day in the row, hatchet job)

    12/16/2003 7:55:37 AM PST · by Dan from Michigan · 20 replies · 115+ views
    Detroit News ^ | 12-16-03 | Melvin Claxton
    <p>The advertisement for the brand new Smith & Wesson handgun promised it all.</p> <p>"Safe for the expert," the ad stated. "Safe for the layman, his family and friends. Safe for the novice. Safe from the child and the careless. Safe from all possibility of discharge from a blow, fall, or any kind of accident.</p>
  • IBM Claims Nanotech Breakthrough

    12/08/2003 6:20:30 PM PST · by Vermonter · 20 replies · 293+ views
    AP via Yahoo ^ | 12/8/2003 | By Brian Bergstein, AP Technology Writer
    Associated PressIBM Claims Nanotech BreakthroughMonday December 8, 12:07 am ETBy Brian Bergstein, AP Technology Writer IBM Researchers Claim They Have a Nanotech Breakthrough That Works With Existing Chip Design NEW YORK (AP) -- Researchers at IBM Corp. claim they have made an important breakthrough in the race to design circuitry at the molecular level: a system that works with existing methods of electronics manufacturing. ADVERTISEMENT In a paper being released Monday at an industry conference in Washington, D.C., IBM researchers Chuck Black and Kathyrn Guarini say they used a naturally occurring pattern of molecules as a stencil to etch flash...
  • Ridge says technology could help fight smuggling on border

    12/03/2003 3:19:16 PM PST · by yonif · 23 replies · 142+ views
    AZCentral ^ | Dec. 3, 2003 | Associated Press
    <p>The use of unmanned aerial vehicles and other technology could help curb smuggling on the U.S.-Mexico border, Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge said Wednesday.</p> <p>Ridge said such technology could reduce illegal immigration and cut deaths among border-crossers. Many migrants die of heat exposure and in accidents while crossing the harsh Arizona desert.</p>
  • Thank tech companies for helpful off-shoring

    11/30/2003 11:13:43 PM PST · by gd124 · 17 replies · 177+ views
    Mercury News ^ | 11/14/2003 | Mike Cassidy
    Whew! For a minute there I thought the growing trend of sending technology jobs overseas was another example of Silicon Valley companies caring more about profits than people. But no, no, no. Such thinking is wrong-headed. Ask the companies that are moving work to India, China and elsewhere. They're doing it to ``be close to our customers'' or to ``follow the sun'' or to ``free workers up to do more exciting jobs.'' They are definitely not -- and this is important -- they are not doing it to find cheap labor and bigger profits. In fact, such thinking is hurtful....
  • Cash machines infected with worm [Diebold ATMs (gasp!) running Windows XP (Horror!)]

    11/26/2003 6:24:00 PM PST · by Timesink · 24 replies · 282+ views
    NewScientist.com news service ^ | November 26, 2003 | Celeste Biever (huh huh huh)
    Cash machines infected with worm11:02 26 November 03 NewScientist.com news service Cash dispensing ATMs belonging to two US financial institutions were shut down when the computer worm Welchia invaded their embedded Windows XP operating systems in August. Diebold, the Ohio-based company that makes the machines, revealed the security breach on Tuesday. It is the first known case of a worm actually installing itself on individual ATM operating systems, says Peter Lind, a security expert at Spire Security in Malvern, Pennsylvania. Earlier in 2003, the Blaster worm shut down Bank of America ATMs, but only by causing a flood of traffic that clogged the...
  • Slowing job losses suggest 'lean and mean' tech firms

    11/19/2003 8:55:51 AM PST · by Tumbleweed_Connection · 1 replies · 63+ views
    USA Today ^ | 11/18/03 | Jon Swartz
    <p>Tech-related job losses in the USA this year are expected to be less than half the 539,000 in 2002. That's because the industry has reached the bottom of its three-year slide, finds an annual economic study by the American Electronics Association released Wednesday.</p>
  • Why This Tech Bubble Is About to Blow

    11/15/2003 5:38:37 AM PST · by DoctorMichael · 30 replies · 491+ views
    Business 2.0 ^ | November, 2003 | Paul Sloan and Michael V. Copeland
    Why This Tech Bubble Is About to BlowA year after the market hit bottom, tech stocks are back to dangerously inflated levels. Sadly, there's only one way this can end.By Paul Sloan, Michael V. Copeland (November 2003 Issue) As is their normal state on a busy September trading day, Seth Tobias's phones were lit up like Times Square, and at the other end of the line was a broker with an investment "idea." "Have you looked at Vignette (VIGN) lately?" the salesman urged. "Or Verso Technologies?" Both were software companies that had raised millions of dollars in boom-era IPOs and...
  • Ayalon Highways Control System (A Main Highway in Israel) *IPVideo; see an Israeli highway live

    11/12/2003 2:02:00 PM PST · by yonif · 1 replies · 418+ views
    On each weekday, some 600,000 vehicles use the Ayalon Highway, which serves as a fast metropolitan freeway for the millions of inhabitants of the Tel Aviv metropolitan region. The Ayalon Highway is one of the best roads in Israel. Built to the highest standards, it enjoys a high standard of maintenance and supervision. It was designed as a freeway, with 4 to 5 lanes in each direction, from the Herzlia interchange in the north, to the Holon and Kibbutz Galuyot interchanges in the south. The section of the freeway to the Holot interchange will be completed shortly. In January 2000,...