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Отправлено: 24 марта 2004 г. 20:26
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Тема: TechNews Alert for Wednesday, March 24, 2004
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ACM TechNews
March 24, 2004

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HEADLINES AT A GLANCE:

  • U.S. Students Shun Computer Sciences
  • Online Swindlers, Called 'Phishers,' Lure the Unwary
  • Next Net Moves Forward
  • Copy Protection Plan Squeezes Home Users
  • Pay Once, Share Often With LWDRM
  • Robolympics Contestants Shoot for Gold
  • Ad-Hoc Wireless Networking Technology for Battlefield Environments
  • Technology Solution to Slicing Spam Lags
  • Clever Critter May Detect Hard-Drive Failures
  • Computers and Sensors Find Home in UF Seniors Project
  • 'Nano-Lightning' Could Be Harnessed to Cool Future Computers
  • Digital Revolutionary: Interview With Leonardo Chiariglione
  • All Our Lives Are on File, for Sale
  • IIT Software to Break Language Barriers
  • Location Awareness: The Key to Better Mobile Networks
  • Blueprint for Code Automation
  • All Eyes on Google
  • Primary Concerns
  • Search Beyond Google

     

    U.S. Students Shun Computer Sciences

    Enrollment of U.S. undergraduate students in computer technology and engineering fields declined by 19 percent in the 2002-03 academic year, while the number of newly declared computer science majors experienced a precipitous 23 percent drop-off last year, according to the Computing ...

    [read more]      to the top


    Online Swindlers, Called 'Phishers,' Lure the Unwary

    A growing number of "phishing" emails is worrying Internet companies, banks, and insurance firms who often end up absorbing the cost of identity theft. ISP Earthlink has launched an aggressive campaign against phishers, who cost the company approximately $100,000 in customer support and related ...

    [read more]      to the top


    Next Net Moves Forward

    The second phase of testing for Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6) was recently completed as the Moonv6 testbed network was put through its paces for two weeks in March by the North American IPv6 Task Force, the Defense Information Systems Agency's Joint Interoperability Testing Command, and ...

    [read more]      to the top


    Copy Protection Plan Squeezes Home Users

    Consumer electronics makers, PC hardware firms, and software companies are working together to define an "Authorized Domain" where all the digital content in a home would be subject to technical constraints. Metadata attached to the content would regulate how it is copied, stored, displayed, ...

    [read more]      to the top


    Pay Once, Share Often With LWDRM

    Light Weight Digital Rights Management (LWDRM) technology developed by Germany's Fraunhofer Institute has the potential to resolve the bitter feud between the music industry and file sharers by granting consumers more freedom without compromising the rights of the industry. The institute ...

    [read more]      to the top


    Robolympics Contestants Shoot for Gold

    Some 414 robots and 600 human entrants have registered for the first-ever Robolympics, an international competition that will test the machines' mettle across a variety of disciplines through an assortment of grueling contests. Robotics Society of America President James Calkins, who founded ...

    [read more]      to the top


    Ad-Hoc Wireless Networking Technology for Battlefield Environments

    Under the auspices of its Multidisciplinary Research Initiative (MURI) program, the U.S. Defense Department has apportioned about $3 million in funding over three years to a project to develop "space-time processing for tactical mobile ad-hoc networks" for establishing wireless mobile ...

    [read more]      to the top


    Technology Solution to Slicing Spam Lags

    Efforts to develop anti-spam technology standards are displaying a profound lack of unification, and some anti-spam experts are taking a long, hard look at the standards issue's progress in the wake of AOL, EarthLink, Microsoft, and Yahoo!'s joint lawsuit against scores of spammers. There ...

    [read more]      to the top


    Clever Critter May Detect Hard-Drive Failures

    Variations in temperature may presage a hard-drive failure, and Carnegie Mellon University (CMU) researchers have designed a new sensor to detect such variations. Chriss Swaney of CMU reports that gauging the amount of heat produced in a hard drive on a daily basis could help extend the life ...

    [read more]      to the top


    Computers and Sensors Find Home in UF Seniors Project

    University of Florida researchers are developing and testing assisted-living technologies designed to aid senior citizens without sacrificing their freedom. A lab in UF's computer science engineering building is decked out as a mockup of a living space outfitted with ...

    [read more]      to the top


    'Nano-Lightning' Could Be Harnessed to Cool Future Computers

    Purdue University scientists have developed an ion-driven cooling device for electronic circuits that could prove significantly more reliable and less expensive than liquid-based cooling, and perhaps enable laptops to employ higher-performance chips whose heat output is beyond the tolerance ...

    [read more]      to the top


    Digital Revolutionary: Interview With Leonardo Chiariglione

    After ushering in the MP3 and MPEG standards, electronics engineer Leonardo Chiariglione says the digital revolution is still far from being realized: His new Digital Media Project (DMP) is meant to complete the picture and bring about a new digital music experience for end users, new business ...

    [read more]      to the top


    All Our Lives Are on File, for Sale

    Many companies sell or trade consumers' personal information, gathering it from Internet sites, credit applications, government Web sites, and other sources. Much of the data is publicly available, and volunteered by consumers, but privacy experts worry that the accumulation of such data ...

    [read more]      to the top


    IIT Software to Break Language Barriers

    Students and professors in IIT Kharagpur's computer science department are collaborating with leading Indian linguists to develop translation software designed to close the gap between the "educated elite" of India's urban centers and the less literate rural residents. "We have been given the ...

    [read more]      to the top


    Location Awareness: The Key to Better Mobile Networks

    Mobile phones' location awareness capabilities could be tapped to significantly improve mobile network performance and management, as demonstrated by tests conducted under Information Society Technologies' CELLO project. The network-capacity difficulties mobile operators must ...

    [read more]      to the top


    Blueprint for Code Automation

    Model-driven architecture (MDA) is slowly gaining acceptance among organizations that start with small projects highlighting MDA's benefits: For instance, the state of Wisconsin used MDA to develop a new Web-based unemployment insurance benefit system, laying down business process ...

    [read more]      to the top


    All Eyes on Google

    The Google search engine developed by Stanford grad students Sergey Brin and Larry Page has turned Web searching into a profitable enterprise and become so vital that former Lycos CEO Bob Davis exclaims, "The Internet without search is like a cruise missile without a guidance system." ...

    [read more]      to the top


    Primary Concerns

    During the Democratic primary on March 2, Maryland used touch-screen voting machines statewide for the first time with no instances of voter fraud, but RABA Technologies security advisor Michael Wertheimer says the silence is deafening because those with malicious intent have had an opportunity to ...

    [read more]      to the top


    Search Beyond Google

    Google's enormous success with its search engine--and its apparent inability to develop a follow-up innovation momentous enough to sustain the company's market dominance--is encouraging Microsoft and other companies to invent their own tools that could eventually capture a good portion of ...

    [read more]      to the top


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