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Отправлено: 25 мая 2005 г. 20:11
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Тема: ACM TechNews - Wednesday, May 25, 2005
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ACM TechNews
May 25, 2005

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HEADLINES AT A GLANCE:

  • C++ Gets a Multicore Tune-Up
  • ACM Joins World Community Grid
  • 'Future' Reviews Human-Machine Connection
  • Software Antagonists Square Off in EU Parliament
  • 'Sound the Alarm'--Congress Gets Candid
  • Database Hackers Reveal Tactics
  • Enron Offers an Unlikely Boost to E-Mail Surveillance
  • Survey: Little U.S. Interest in Next Generation Internet
  • The Valley in a World Gone 'Flat'
  • Scientist Blames Web Security Issues on Repeated Mistakes
  • Debating the Safety of a Tiny Technology
  • Hardware Today: Grid Computing Means Business
  • Complexity, Chemistry, Commuting and Computing
  • Cyberinfrastructure for E-Science
  • The Robot Army That Thinks for Itself
  • Fiber Wars
  • Taking on the Cheats
  • Coming: Sensors and Pixels Everywhere
  • Building Large-Scale ZigBee Systems With Web Services

     

    C++ Gets a Multicore Tune-Up

    University of Waterloo computer science professor Peter Buhr is offering a new set of extensions for the C++ programming language that aims to help software developers take advantage of multicore and multi-threading processors. Buhr has released the micro-C++ project under an open-source ...

    [read more]      to the top


    ACM Joins World Community Grid

    The ACM joined IBM's World Community Grid on May 24, and will encourage its 80,000 members to join the legions of participants contributing idle computing time to conduct humanitarian scientific research. "[ACM] has the potential to double our membership and ...

    [read more]      to the top


    'Future' Reviews Human-Machine Connection

    The Future in Review (FIRE) conference featured views from leading technologists who offered predictions about lifetime storage, the impact of multiprocessing on software applications, the increasing importance of statistical analysis, and other issues. A CTO roundtable with AMD's Fred ...

    [read more]      to the top


    Software Antagonists Square Off in EU Parliament

    Technology companies and open-source advocates are clashing over a broader patent protection scheme from the European Union. Supporters of open source contend that Linux and other freely distributed software would be threatened by the current draft, which extends patent protection to ...

    [read more]      to the top


    'Sound the Alarm'--Congress Gets Candid

    Prior to a hearing before the House Science Committee last week, Reps. Frank Wolf (R-Va.), Vern Ehlers (R-Mich.), Sherwood Boehlert (R-N.Y.) and Don Manzullo (R-Il.) announced plans to hold a national "Innovation Summit" later this year. Wolf said he recently met with a prominent group of ...

    [read more]      to the top


    Database Hackers Reveal Tactics

    Three young hackers suspected of breaking into the LexisNexis database claim the intrusion was done to make a name for themselves rather than to commit identity theft. One of the suspects is also a member of the Defonic Crew hacking group, and says his hack of America Online encouraged him and ...

    [read more]      to the top


    Enron Offers an Unlikely Boost to E-Mail Surveillance

    The public disclosure of reams of email messages investigated in the Enron probe gave scientists the opportunity to test their theory that a group's intentions could be inferred by tracking emailing and word usage patterns without actually reading the messages. After just a few months of ...

    [read more]      to the top


    Survey: Little U.S. Interest in Next Generation Internet

    The implementation of next-generation Internet Protocol (IPv6) is a low priority for IT decision-makers in U.S. industry and government, according to a recent Juniper Networks survey, despite warnings that without wide IPv6 adoption the United States could lose its global technology ...

    [read more]      to the top


    The Valley in a World Gone 'Flat'

    Silicon Valley will face competition from all over the world in the near future as other regions gain access to the same knowledge and other crucial resources needed to innovate, says New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman an interview. Friedman's new book, "The World Is Flat," argues that a ...

    [read more]      to the top


    Scientist Blames Web Security Issues on Repeated Mistakes

    BBN Technologies researcher Peiter Zatko believes the Internet's vulnerability to catastrophic failure is rooted in scientists and engineers repeatedly committing the same mistakes, but he does think this situation can be remedied and is heartened by industry's growing awareness of the ...

    [read more]      to the top


    Debating the Safety of a Tiny Technology

    Critics of a State Department initiative to embed radio frequency identification (RFID) tags in passports warn that such measures will make U.S. citizens easy targets, while advocates claim the technology will ensure tighter security and more efficient confirmation of travelers' IDs ...

    [read more]      to the top


    Hardware Today: Grid Computing Means Business

    Dr. Carl Kesselman with the USC/Information Sciences Institute believes grid technology use is poised to explode. "Increased deployment of grid technologies in the commercial sector will break the traditional silos that characterize current infrastructure deployments," he says. Major hardware ...

    [read more]      to the top


    Complexity, Chemistry, Commuting and Computing

    The programming language wars are likely never to go away because they represent different people's opinions about how to manage inherent complexity, writes XML expert and Propylon CTO Sean McGrath. Tesler's law states that for every business process, there is a base level of complexity ...

    [read more]      to the top


    Cyberinfrastructure for E-Science

    Participants in Britain's e-Science program are developing an infrastructure for a new generation of multidisciplinary and collaborative science software applications capable of searching, accessing, moving, manipulating, and mining data contained in massive, distributed ...

    [read more]      to the top


    The Robot Army That Thinks for Itself

    Robots such as "Grunts" from Frontline Robotics could patrol areas in teams using Wi-Fi to share input, but their usability is limited by cost and size issues; moreover, such machines are not fully autonomous and cannot function without centralized control. Researchers such as MIT postgraduate ...

    [read more]      to the top


    Fiber Wars

    U.S. phone companies are pouring investment into fiber-to-the-home (FTTH) service after federal regulations pulled back line-sharing requirements, but companies still face challenges from municipalities that have gone ahead with their own fiber initiatives. Verizon, SBC, and BellSouth have ...

    [read more]      to the top


    Taking on the Cheats

    The incidence of plagiarism by academics--particularly self-plagiarism--is increasing, but evaluating the scope of the problem is difficult. Academic publishers and editors hope to use software designed to identify plagiarism in student essays to uncover academic plagiarism. Student anti-plagiarism ...

    [read more]      to the top


    Coming: Sensors and Pixels Everywhere

    Anatole Gershman, Accenture Technology Laboratories' global director of research, foresees the advent of three technologies that will drive business applications over the next three to five years: Intelligent sensor networks, scalable intelligence methods, and pixel-driven technology ...

    [read more]      to the top


    Building Large-Scale ZigBee Systems With Web Services

    Large-scale ZigBee systems can be enabled for network discovery, extraction, commissioning, configuration, management, security, event/rule logic, and data management applications via Web service "brokers," write Tendril Networks CEO Tim Enwall and Ember's Venkat Bahl. Application ...

    [read more]      to the top


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