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Keyword: tech

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  • Fearing Border Check, Students Sit Out Trip

    07/03/2006 12:50:21 PM PDT · by ApplegateRanch · 79 replies · 2,078+ views
    AP via Excite ^ | July 3, 2006 | none listed
    PHOENIX (AP) - Students who placed second in a national underwater robotics competition won't be going to next year's contest because of the possibility of their illegal status in the United States. The students, from Carl Hayden High School in Phoenix, recently beat out high school and college students from across the country, including the prestigious Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and fell only to the reigning champs from the Marine Institute of Memorial University in Newfoundland, Canada. On the heels of their success, the students learned that next year's contest will be held in Canada, and that they won't be...
  • Could a new breed of very light jets transform aviation?

    06/30/2006 3:51:50 PM PDT · by phantomworker · 65 replies · 6,931+ views
    The Economist (UK) ^ | July 1, 2006 | FT McCarthy
    The idea that small is beautiful seems to have been lost on the aviation industry. But while most attention is lavished on the Airbus A380, the giant pterosaur of the skies, many think that the new, diminutive Eclipse 500, a mere bumblebee by comparison, is the aeroplane with the real potential to transform air travel. The Eclipse 500 is the first of a new kind of small aircraft called the very light jet (VLJ). It seats five passengers and a pilot, weighs 3,536lb (1,603kg) when empty and is so petite that seven of them could fit along the wings of...
  • 'Silicon Velcro' could make sticky chips

    06/21/2006 6:54:36 PM PDT · by annie laurie · 1 replies · 347+ views
    New Scientist Tech ^ | 19 June 2006 | Tom Simonite
    An exotic form of silicon that can be stuck together and then peeled apart has been developed by German researchers. The material, dubbed "silicon Velcro", could be used to manufacture microprocessors and devices that manipulate fluids on microscopic scales. Researchers at the Technical University of Ilmenau in Germany created the material from "black silicon". This is generated when normal silicon is hit with a powerful laser beam or bombarded with high-energy ions, producing a dense, microscopic array of needle-like structures on its surface. Light bounces around between the needles without escaping to give the material its black appearance. The German...
  • First Biometric Reader Installed In Florida Business

    06/21/2006 7:41:04 AM PDT · by ritewingwarrior · 17 replies · 531+ views
    St. Petersburg Times ^ | June 20, 2006 | MARK ALBRIGHT
    TAMPA - Customers can pay with cash, plastic or their index finger at a new Coast to Coast Family Convenience store here. Taking a big step beyond the ease of the Mobil SpeedPass, Coast to Coast has installed what's claimed as Florida's first biometric payment system. There are no cards or PIN numbers to remember. Just stick your finger in the scanner and be on your way. While applications are available to process credit and store loyalty card transactions by fingerprint, this one is limited to processing only debit account transactions. "People either love it or think it's a sign...
  • Vanity: Can't get our powerpoint projector to project, help please!

    06/11/2006 3:11:02 PM PDT · by hindsfeetnhighplaces · 44 replies · 761+ views
    Hello fellow freepers. First, I apologize for the vanity but I need a bit of help. My church just purchased a computer and a projector to use during our worship services. We had man come down and hook everything up, install all the software etc. and everything worked fine. Now we can,t get the projector to project. Everything with the computer, programs and all the connections is fine but for some reason we just can't figure out how to get the projector to turn on. Is there a setting that needs to be changed in the computer in order for...
  • Who owns the Internet? We have a map that shows you.

    06/10/2006 11:27:44 PM PDT · by LibertarianInExile · 24 replies · 605+ views
    CIO (CIO blogs) ^ | March 17, 2006 | Ben Worthen
    What is this ball of colors? It is the North American Internet, or more specifically a map of just about every router on the North American backbone, (there are 134,855 of them for those who are counting)...
  • The 25 Worst Tech Products of All Time

    06/09/2006 2:55:56 PM PDT · by Recovering_Democrat · 106 replies · 1,958+ views
    America Online (1989-2006)RealNetworks RealPlayer (1999)Syncronys SoftRAM (1995)Microsoft Windows Millennium (2000)Sony BMG Music CDs (2005)Disney The Lion King CD-ROM (1994)Microsoft Bob (1995)Microsoft Internet Explorer 6 (2001)Pressplay and Musicnet (2002)dBASE IV (1988)Priceline Groceries and Gas (2000)PointCast (1996)IBM PCjr. (1984)Gateway 2000 10th Anniversary PC (1995)Iomega Zip Drive (1998)Comet Cursor (1997)Apple Macintosh Portable (1989)IBM Deskstar 75GXP (2000)OQO Model 1 (2004)CueCat (2000)Eyetop Wearable DVD Player (2004)Apple Pippin @World (1996)Free PCs (1999)DigiScents iSmell (2001)Sharp RD3D Notebook (2004)
  • Is DRM Just a Consumer Rights Issue?

    06/07/2006 10:45:48 AM PDT · by E. Pluribus Unum · 50 replies · 767+ views
    Technocrat.net ^ | 06 Jun 2006 | Bruce Perens
    Is DRM just a consumer rights issue effecting your record collection? A UK board is treating it as such. But it's much more important than that. Before Gutenberg, copyists, using pen and ink, duplicated written political dialogue laboriously. Only the wealthy and the church could afford to employ copyists, and during this period the paucity of communications limited the exercise of democracy to small groups. The advent of Gutenberg's press made the mass distribution of written political dialogue possible. People vote based on what they hear and read, and the improvement in communications brought by the press made egalitarian mass...
  • 'Batman Wings' Developed for Covert Army Missions

    06/07/2006 6:24:15 AM PDT · by croak · 8 replies · 635+ views
    Military scientists are putting the finishing touches to a Batman-style set of 'wings' that could enable troops to glide undetected into enemy territory. According to a statement by the developers of the new technology, German firm ESG, the wings can enable paratroopers to glide up to 25 miles after being dropped from a height of over 30,000 ft. "Parachutists can penetrate into areas that are difficult to reach without their transport planes having to fly into a danger zone," a spokesperson for ESG explained.
  • Toshiba Reaches 200GB Milestone (2.5" drive)

    06/05/2006 5:55:25 PM PDT · by xcamel · 25 replies · 813+ views
    MCPW ^ | June 5th 2006 | release
    Toshiba Reaches 200GB Milestone Stroage, storage, storage. That's what a media center laptop needs and Toshiba's new 2.5 inch hard drive gives you just that. The 200GB dual-platter MK2035GSS is Toshiba's first Perpendicular Magnetic Recording drive to incorporate tunnel magneto-resistive recording (TMR) head technology (no, we don't know what that last bit means either, but it sounds impressive). PMR technology enables bits of data to be stored in a perpendicular format rather than longitudinally and, thus enables the magnetic disc to store significantly more data in the same space.The new drive sets a density record, says Toshiba, although the outright...
  • PDF images to JPG?

    06/03/2006 8:46:16 PM PDT · by SWAMPSNIPER · 13 replies · 488+ views
    self | June 03, 2006 | swampsniper
    Is there a way to convert photographs in PDF files to JPG images, without a bunch of expensive software? I'm not trying to steal someone's pics, just need the images in JPG.
  • Invisibility cloaks are in sight

    05/27/2006 5:07:51 AM PDT · by billorites · 14 replies · 607+ views
    Nature ^ | May 25, 2006 | Philip Ball
    Two prescriptions for an invisibility cloak have been unveiled by physicists in the United Kingdom and the United States. The researchers say that in principle the technologies needed for building these devices already exist. "Invisibility is visibly close," says Ulf Leonhardt of the University of St Andrews in Scotland, one of the researchers behind the proposals. He and John Pendry of Imperial College London, UK, and their co-workers have independently described similar ways to create an invisible 'hole' in space, inside which objects can be hidden. They say it is possible to guide light around the hole, rather like water...
  • Nike shoes talk to Apple's iPod in new system

    05/23/2006 10:30:11 AM PDT · by nickcarraway · 25 replies · 637+ views
    Reuters ^ | Tue May 23, 2006
    LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Nike Inc. said on Tuesday that its shoes will now be able to talk to Apple Computer Inc.'s iPod music players about how far anathlete has run with a new wireless system called Nike+iPod. Shares of Nike rose nearly 4 percent. Using a Nike+iPod Sports Kit, expected to retail for about $29, consumers will be able to access distance, time, pace and calories burned on the screen of a nano version of the iPod via a sensor inside the shoes that communicates with the digital music player. The kit will be available in stores within two...
  • Dell to start using AMD chips

    05/18/2006 2:37:45 PM PDT · by HAL9000 · 1 replies · 201+ views
    Business Journal ^ | May 18, 2006
    Dell Inc. said Thursday it will begin using chips from Advanced Micro Devices rather than its rival Intel Corp., as the computer maker posted a first quarter drop in net income. Round Rock, Texas-based Dell had an exclusive agreement with Santa Clara-based Intel, but said in its second-quarter earnings press release that it will switch to Sunnyvale-based Advanced Micro Devices chips in some of its products by the end of the year. Dell, which had lowered its forecast last week, posted net income of $762 million, or 33 cents a share, compared with $934 million, or 37 cents a...
  • Americans seek opportunity in booming Bangalore

    05/01/2006 12:18:49 AM PDT · by Lorianne · 6 replies · 650+ views
    Deseret News ^ | May 1, 2006 | Terence Chea
    BANGALORE, India — After graduating from Northwestern University last year, Nate Linkon contemplated job offers in Chicago and New York. But he chose a less conventional path and started his career here, in India's booming tech capital. The 22-year-old Milwaukee native works in marketing at Infosys Technologies Ltd., India's second-largest software exporter. He's part of a small but growing number of young Americans moving to Bangalore and other Indian cities to beef up their resumes, launch businesses or study globalization in one of the world's fastest-growing economies. Despite the traffic-choked streets, unsteady electrical supply, occasional digestive troubles and other daily...
  • Microsoft Subpoenaed by AMD in Intel Suit

    04/17/2006 7:18:20 PM PDT · by Coastal · 28 replies · 765+ views
    The National Ledger (UPI) ^ | 04-17-06 | Stokely Baksh
    WASHINGTON, (UPI) -- Microsoft is the latest company to be subpoenaed by chip maker Advanced Micro Devices for its antitrust lawsuit against rival Intel Corp. AMD filed the suit Monday with the U.S. District Court in Delaware which instructs the PC company to produce unlimited documents necessary for its claim that Intel has bullied companies as part of its business practices. Microsoft has until May 15 to hand over the requested hardcopy and electronic documents which also includes e-mail, instant messages, shared network files, and databases dating as far back as January 2000.
  • TDK first to market with Blu-ray discs

    04/12/2006 9:04:40 AM PDT · by Ernest_at_the_Beach · 14 replies · 515+ views
    vnunet.com ^ | 11 Apr 2006 | Matt Chapman,
    25GB recordable and rewritable discs hit the shops in the US Matt Chapman, vnunet.com 11 Apr 2006 TDK has begun shipping 25GB recordable and rewritable Blu-ray discs to retailers in the US.  The 25GB BD-R recordable discs will sell for $19.99 (£11.50), while the 25GB BD-RE rewritable discs will retail at $24.99 (£14.35). TDK is one of the founding members of the Blu-ray Disc Association alongside companies such as Sony and 20th Century Fox. The company plans to expand on the offerings with discs that hold 50GB.  50GB recordable discs will cost $47.99 (£27.50) and rewritables will be $59.99 (£34.50)....
  • (Vanity) Peak Labor

    04/06/2006 12:19:37 AM PDT · by grey_whiskers · 6 replies · 1,181+ views
    grey_whiskers ^ | 03-06-2006 | grey_whiskers
    INTRODUCTION In a prior vanity about outsourcing Another Look at Outsourcing I argued that the phenomenon of offshoring as practiced by multinational corporations in the United States was the result of demographic trends, and the search for new markets, in addition to the opportunity for wage arbitrage. In a subsequent vanity A Falling Tide Grounds All Boats I extended the position to argue that the practice of offshoring risked undermining the United States as an economic power, and that the current trend was intrinsically unsustainable, due again to demographic trends. In this article, I consider the possibility that the offshoring...
  • Microsoft, Linux and Patents

    04/05/2006 8:39:22 AM PDT · by luthers_inkwell · 508 replies · 3,748+ views
    AP Lawrence ^ | 04/05/2006 | AP Lawrence?
    At http://www.no-lobbyists-as-such.com/florian-mueller-blog/ballmer-linux/ we're reminded that Microsoft wants Linux dead. Ballmer is once again making noise about patents. Unfortunately, Microsoft likely does have patents it could use against Linux. IBM can probably be replied upon to fight back on the side of Linux with its own patents - supposedly they've called Microsoft patent bluffs in the past just by pointing out that they also have stacks of patents and idle lawyers ready to look for violations by Windows code. However, Microsoft might now be willing to risk the battle. Microsoft is not in a happy place right now. Vista is delayed,...
  • Imagine any chip, and India's IT wizards can design it

    03/31/2006 8:26:03 AM PST · by CarrotAndStick · 13 replies · 733+ views
    Rediff.com ^ | March 31, 2006 | Elizabeth Corcoran / Forbes
    Michael Fister has come to India not to save money but to make money. He has seen opportunity budding at Beceem Communications, a young chip design company tucked into a few floors of a building in a bustling residential area of Bangalore. He has watched it surge at Wipro, one of India's outsourcing giants. And Fister has spotted a burst of opportunity at MindTree, an R&D and consulting firm that is building a 15-acre campus west of downtown Bangalore, a few kilometers away from streets choked with shanties. Fister runs Cadence Design Systems, a $1.3 billion (sales) vendor of software...