Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Free Educational AP and AR Seminar Coming to Dallas


Nautilus Science and Technology News
By: Marco Ayllon
Dallas October 7,2008


AnyDoc Software, an award-winning developer of document and data capture solutions, along with Kodak, will be sponsoring a free educational live seminar entitled "Eliminate Your Processing Pains and Lower Costs: Automated Invoice, Remittance and Check Processing" to be held Thursday, October 23, 2008, from 11 a.m. until 2 p.m. at the Hilton Anatole in Dallas, TX.
Discussions will focus on how to automate the capture of AP invoices, AR remittances and check data for entry into financial and ERP systems. Other items to be explored include automatic balancing of invoice line items, auto- verification, database lookup capabilities, automatic check deposits, and Check 21 compliance. Attendees will also learn why top companies are selecting AnyDoc(R)INVOICE(TM) and AnyDoc(R)REMIT(TM) -- solutions that fit any company's business rules.
The "lunch and learn" will also feature details on how the typical manual accounting processes impact bottom line revenues and how automation can save time and money. Registration is free, and the agenda includes a complimentary lunch. There will also be an interactive session to address any attendee questions.
And, Kodak will host a raffle for an i1220 scanner -- a retail value of $1,199. The award-winning Kodak i1220 duplex scanner delivers on workgroup scanning needs with unprecedented image quality and 30 ppm performance. All end user attendees are eligible to win.
Suggested attendees include: AP and AR Managers, Disbursement Managers, Controllers, CFOs and COOs, or anyone interested in improving his or her accounting processes.
Based on industry-leading technologies, AnyDoc Software's complete line of solutions for accounting enables users to process more invoices, remittances, or checks per hour, eliminate the need for overtime, take advantage of early payment discounts, accelerate cash flow, and deposit checks without leaving their desks.
The Hilton Anatole is located on I-35E just north of the downtown Dallas Business District. To register for this event, visit www.anydocsoftware.com/accounting or call 1-800-775-3222 to speak with Client Services.
(Kodak is a trademark of Eastman Kodak Company.)
About AnyDoc Software
AnyDoc Software develops innovative document, data capture and classification solutions that have been the industry standard since 1991. Thousands of companies worldwide rely on AnyDoc solutions to eliminate millions of hours of manual data entry while improving their productivity and data accuracy. Any paper form or document including invoices, remittances, and checks can be automatically processed with full data extraction without the need for manual keying. Clients include: Sony Pictures Entertainment, Circuit City, BlueCross BlueShield, the U.S. Census, LeasePlan, Coop, and more. For additional information, please visit www.AnyDocSoftware.com
FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT:
Judy Mann, marketing communications manager, AnyDoc Software Inc.
(813) 222-0414, jmann@anydocsoftware.com
SOURCE AnyDoc Software
http://www.anydocsoftware.com

Market, Partners Positive On 'Fabless' AMD


Nautilus Science & Technology News
By: Marco Ayllon
Dallas October 7, 2008


Advanced Micro Devices (NYSE:AMD) finally pulled the trigger on a company-changing move that the technology industry had been expecting for months, announcing Tuesday that it will spin off its manufacturing operations in a multi-billion dollar joint venture with a newly formed high-tech investment company created by the government of Abu Dhabi.
Analysts and AMD partners reacted positively to news of the deal that will split Sunnyvale, Calif.-based AMD into two entities, a designer and marketer of AMD and ATI-branded computer products, and a new venture dubbed the Foundry Company, which will own and operate AMD's current semiconductor manufacturing assets.

Advanced Technology Investment Co. (ATIC), a government instrument formed in the United Arab Emirates capital of Abu Dhabi, will own 55.6 percent of the Foundry Co., with AMD retaining 44.4 percent ownership, according to a statement by the chip maker. Voting rights in the joint venture will be split 50-50, AMD said.

ATIC is to pay AMD $700 million for its stake and the new Foundry Co. would assume $1.2 billion of AMD's debt. Another Abu Dhabi party, UAE-owned Mubadala Development Co., will acquire 58 million, newly issued AMD shares for $314 million plus warrants to buy another 30 million, increasing Mubadala's stake in AMD from 8.1 percent to 19.3 percent.

Industry analysts on Tuesday praised the Sunnyvale, Calif.-based chip maker for simultaneously shedding a massive debt burden from its shaky books and positioning both its design side and the new foundry business for solid runs at future competitiveness.

"It takes [AMD] off the death watch list, and makes them a real player," said Enderle Group principal Rob Enderle. The San Jose, Calif.-based industry analyst also predicted that the move would "initially level the playing field substantially" between AMD and its much larger rival, microprocessor market share leader Intel of Santa Clara, Calif.

"What this does is make the AMD side a lot more agile. It allows them to focus on the future. The fab investments are necessarily done on a five-year strategic basis even as you also have to perform on a quarterly basis," Enderle said.

"This changes AMD from a company that was going out of business in the next couple of years to one that's in it for the long term."

Investors, too, were bullish at the outset of the deal's announcement, with large volumes of NYSE-traded AMD stock being shifted Tuesday on an opening of $5.27 per share. That price hit a high of $5.56 in the very early going before settling in to close at $4.59, an 8.51 percent gain for AMD on a day which saw competitors like Intel drop 5.38 percent and Santa Clara, Calif.-based Nvidia fall 7.77 percent.

Bullishness on AMD could be attributed to the chip maker's seemingly magical escape from the weight of seven straight quarters in the red, made even bleaker by the wider economic downturn, said Roger Kay of Endpoint Technology Associates

"It's a great move for AMD. I'm kind of thinking of it as a kind of Harry Houdini move. You couldn't imagine them getting out of where they were," said the Wayland, Mass.-based analyst.

American, Japanese Win Nobel Physics Prize


Nautilus Science & Technology News
By:Marco Ayllon
Dallas October 7,2008

The discovery of spontaneous broken symmetry in subatomic physics could be developed even further by research done at the Large Hadron Collider.

An American and two Japanese scientists will share the Nobel Prize in Physics for 2008.
The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences awarded one-half of the prize to Yoichiro Nambu, of the Enrico Fermi Institute at the University of Chicago, for discovering spontaneous broken symmetry in subatomic physics.

The other half goes jointly to Makoto Kobayashi, with High Energy Accelerator Research Organization (KEK), in Tsukuba, Japan, and Toshihide Maskawa, with the Yukawa Institute for Theoretical Physics (YITP) at Kyoto University, for discovering the origin of the broken symmetry that predicts the existence of at least three families of quarks in nature.

Nambu formulated a mathematical description of spontaneous broken symmetry in elementary particle physics in 1960. Spontaneous broken symmetry explains how nature's order hides beneath a surface that appears jumbled. Nambu's theories permeate the Standard Model of elementary particle physics. The Model blankets the smallest building blocks of all matter and three of nature's four forces to cover them under one theory.

Kobayashi and Maskawa describe different spontaneous broken symmetries, which scientists believe existed when the universe began. They came as a surprise when they first appeared in particle experiments in 1964. In 1972, Kobayashi and Maskawa explained broken symmetry within the framework of the Standard Model but they extended the Model to include three families of quarks.

Recent physics experiments have demonstrated their hypothesis surrounding the new quarks. In 2001, two particle detectors, BaBar at Stanford and Belle at Tsukuba, Japan, independently detected broken symmetries with results that Kobayashi and Maskawa predicted 29 years earlier.

Scientists are still trying to understand how broken symmetry allowed the universe to survive the Big Bang an estimated 14 billion years ago. They believe that if equal amounts of matter and antimatter appeared, they would have annihilated each other. Scientists believe that a deviation of one extra particle of matter for every 10 billion antimatter particles could have allowed the cosmos to survive. Just how that happened is unclear. Researchers at the Large Hadron Collider in Geneva hope to shed light on the process.


Analysis: How will Android compare to the iPhone?


The G1, the first Android-based smart phone, has a lot to prove.


Nutilus Science & Technology News
By: Marco Ayllon
Dallas October 7,2008

Google’s Android is as an open-source operating system meant to give smart phone manufacturers a powerful platform on which to base their phones. It’s even been touted as a challenger to Apple’s iPhone OS.

But iPhone users have grown accustomed to thinking about phone hardware and software as part of a unified whole. So the first Android-running smart phone bears the burden of representing Android to the world. The Google-backed G1’s user experience will be a function of the HTC hardware, the Google Android platform, and service provider (T-Mobile) combined. How will the G1 (introduced last month and scheduled for release later this month) stack up next to the Apple gold standard?

“Apple’s business is to be three steps ahead of everyone else. Apple is still two steps ahead,” said Gene Munster, senior research analyst at investment bank Piper Jaffray, on the launch of the G1.

The hardware
The philosophy of the G1 device is straightforward. Begin with an iPhone-like touch screen-based smart phone, then add all the features that critics wish the iPhone had. And knock $20 off the 8GB iPhone 3G’s $199 price.

A trackball and flip-out QWERTY keyboard may appeal to business people used to typing on their BlackBerries. A memory slot will let you swap microSD memory cards, and a removable battery means you can carry a spare. And the G1’s 3-megapixel camera should be an improvement over the iPhone’s 2-megapixel camera.

Of course, all these extra slots, keys, and buttons carry a cost. At .62 inches thick and 5.6 ounces in weight, the G1 is more than 25 percent thicker and nearly 20 percent heavier than the iPhone 3G. If you’re a fan of the iPhone’s sleek, single-button approach, you could find the G1 a tad chunky and inelegant.

And then there are limitations. The G1’s touch screen doesn’t support multi-touch, and the unit’s accelerometer won’t recognize that you want to use the screen in landscape mode unless you open the keyboard. Also conspicuously absent from the G1 is a standard headset jack. So if you want to listen to music or watch video, you’ll need a special headphone adapter to connect to its proprietary design. (The original iPhone had a recessed headphone jack requiring an adapter for many third-party headphones; Apple ditched that design in the iPhone 3G.) Finally, the G1’s memory slot will only support expansion up to a maximum of 8GB—not very impressive when you consider that the iPhone 3G ships with 8GB standard for $199, or 16GB for $299. (You can, of course, buy multiple expansion cards for a G1.)

The service provider
Thankfully, T-Mobile has already backed off on a planned 1GB monthly data cap for G1 service. This should let users take better advantage of the smart phone’s capabilities. Unfortunately, when the G1 launches on October 22, T-Mobile’s 3G network will only cover 22 markets in the U.S., jumping to 27 in November. In comparison, AT&T’s 3G network covers more than 275 markets, with up to 350 covered by year’s end. (Like the iPhone, G1 users will have the option of using T-Mobile’s slower EDGE network, or existing Wi-Fi networks.)

The software platform
As you would expect from a Google-based smart phone, the G1 appears to do a very solid job integrating Google applications including Gmail, Google Talk, and most impressively, Maps. Google Maps’ Street View, coupled with the G1’s GPS capabilities, will actually pan the first-person perspective screen image as you pivot the phone, helping you orient yourself with photographic landmarks. (It is rumored that the next update to the iPhone software will include Street View as well.)

Buyers may be surprised to discover that the G1 does not ship with an extensive library of pre-installed software or games. It does come with a few neat apps such as ShopSavvy, which allows you to comparison-shop online by scanning product barcodes using the built-incamera. Ecorio will help you track your carbon footprint, and, unlike iPhone apps, it can actually run in the background. The Amazon MP3 store will let you browse millions of songs using the 3G network, but Wi-Fi is required to purchase and download music.

But don’t expect to be able to sync your G1 with iTunes. In fact, don’t expect to sync your G1 with your desktop computer at all. That could make life tough for Outlook users, and may scare away potential business users attracted by the device’s added keyboard.

New software will be available for download using the beta version of the Android Market, Google’s answer to Apple’s App Store. But analyst Gene Munster warns that users could find the process of downloading and installing Android apps significantly less straightforward than they have come to expect based on experience with Apple’s App Store.

Developer perspective
Apple has come under fire by iPhone developers for restrictive nondisclosure requirements (since lifted) and arbitrariness when it comes to selecting which applications to include in its App Store. Will frustrated developers jump eagerly to Google Android’s open-source approach? Carl Howe, enterprise research director for technology research and consulting firm Yankee Group, speculates that the opposite may be the case.

“From a developer’s point of view, [Android’s] openness is trumped by having a consistent platform,” said Howe. “With the iPhone, there’s one screen size. There’s one interface. The SDK is designed to make it really easy to develop software. But most importantly they have a way to monetize that software quickly.”

That said, Google Android’s open-source, free market approach means that canny developers could build in device functionality that service providers might now want—and that Apple may not allow to see the light of day.

So why are handset providers so fond of Google Android? By opting for Google’s open OS, manufacturers save $2 to $10 per unit, said Howe. “Android is for handset makers, and the iPhone is for users.”

The possibilities of Google Android’s open approach may be endless, but whether and when such possibilities are realized remains to be seen. For the foreseeable future, Apple’s seamless user experience gives iPhone the clear edge.

MySpace Agrees To Integrate HP Printing Services


Nautilus Science & Technology News
By: Marco Ayllon
Dallas October 7, 2008

The partnership allows MySpace users to print photos stored on their profiles; there are about 4 billion images posted on the social network.

Hewlett-Packard (NYSE: HPQ) on Tuesday said it has made a deal with MySpace to have HP printing services integrated across multiple areas of the online social network, including all photo sections. Financial terms were not disclosed.
The agreement, unveiled at HP's Annual Imaging and Printing Conference in San Diego, opens up MySpace's millions of users to HP, which can offer to print photos stored on MySpace profiles. About 4 billion images are posted on the social network.

"Sharing and storing photos online is integral to the social networking experience and one of the most popular activities on MySpace," Chris DeWolfe, chief executive and co-founder of MySpace, said in a statement.
The first stage of the partnership will have an HP-branded print button that enables MySpace users to preview and print photos directly from their profiles. That service will launch in November in the United States, Australia, Western Europe, and Canada. In the future, the companies plan to add the option of buying personalized merchandise with photos from MySpace.

MySpace, which is owned by News Corp., has more than 120 million users worldwide, including 76 million in the United States, according to ComScore.

MySpace has multiple partnerships with companies to bring services to users. Last month, the company launched a digital music service that enables users to stream music free or buy songs through a partnership with Amazon (NSDQ: AMZN).com. Since Amazon sells MP3s without digital rights management technology, users can play the songs on most devices, create their own playlists with up to 100 songs, and share their playlists with people who visit their profile pages.

Saturday, May 24, 2008

OLPC spinoff in talks with four laptop makers


Nautilus Sci/Tech News
May 24, 2008

The broad influence of the One Laptop Per Child initiative continues to expand its sphere.

Not long ago it was unclear whether the PC--originally conceived as a $100 laptop for children in developing countries--would ever become a reality after a long series of delays. Now the XO laptop seems on the verge of becoming a hot item, and all the research that went into it is leading down divergent paths.

Case in point: Walter Bender, who just left the OLPC initiative to start up its open-source software spinoff, is reportedly in "informal discussions" to get its Linux operating system on low-cost laptops made by four manufacturers. The nonprofit spinoff, Sugar Laboratories, is having discussions with Pixel Qi and is interesting in pursuing a relationship with Intel, Bender told BetaNews. No other companies were named, though he mentioned Asus on Sugar Labs' Web site last week.

It's only the latest permutation in a long-running saga that has seen infighting, resignations, and other controversy since the project's inception. Last month OLPC founder Nicholas Negroponte said the XO might switch from Linux to Windows XP, but that change remains to be seen. Stay tuned.

LifeLock Identity Fraud Service Finds Skeptics



Nautilus Sci/Tech News
May 24, 2008
It is, without a doubt, one of the great marketing stunts in recent memory.

Two years ago, Todd Davis decided to put his Social Security number in the television commercials and print advertisements for LifeLock, the company he helped found. For a fee of about $10 a month, LifeLock offers what it calls a “proven solution” that prevents its customers from becoming victims of identity theft and fraud.

By putting those nine digits on public display, Mr. Davis was trying to show the world how confident he was in LifeLock’s service. And it worked. Today, he has just over one million customers. In January, Goldman Sachs led a $25 million round of financing for the company. Last week, Google’s chief financial officer joined its board.

But Mr. Davis’s stunt also amounted to a dare, and one man in Texas has already succeeded in getting a payday loan in his name.

Regulators and lawyers have the company in their sights, too. The state of Oklahoma accused LifeLock of selling insurance without proper certification. New York City has announced its intention to sue the company. Class-action lawyers have filed federal and state lawsuits, charging deceptive business practices and fraudulent advertising, among other things.

All this raises a couple of basic questions: What are the chances that an identity thief can do you real harm? And if you feel vulnerable, do you need to spend $100 or more a year to protect yourself?

First, let’s check the odds. The latest Federal Trade Commission statistical survey about identity theft found that 8.3 million American adults, or 3.7 percent of the adult population, were victims in 2005.

But the majority of those people ran into problems as minor as having a thief use their credit card numbers. This type of fraud is annoying, but it rarely costs any money as long you notice it and let the card company know.

The scarier situation is something called new account fraud. Thieves steal your personal information and open credit card and other accounts in your name. When they don’t pay the bills, it is your credit history that is wrecked.

Thankfully, new account fraud is much less common. The Federal Trade Commission survey showed only 1.8 million people, or 0.8 percent of the adult population, had fallen victim to that kind of fraud or to other crimes such as criminals giving an innocent person’s name to an arresting officer or using it to rent an apartment.

As for the trend, the overall number of identity theft crimes appears to be falling. An annual survey by Javelin Strategy and Research shows the number of incidents falling 20.6 percent in the last four years. The research company does expect the incidence of new account fraud to rise in the next five years, but it predicts that the annual dollar amounts will fall.

With the risk fairly low but the pain of falling victim quite high, it is best to think of identity theft and fraud as an illness that you do not want to contract. Early detection is good, but prevention is much better.

That is where LifeLock wants to play. One significant service it offers places a 90-day fraud alert on your credit files with Equifax, Experian and TransUnion, the three biggest companies that track credit histories. You can do this yourself at no charge, though LifeLock renews the alert every 90 days, which is convenient.

If your credit file contains this type of fraud alert, any credit card company, bank or other entity so alerted is supposed to hit the pause button when reviewing most types of credit applications in your name. Then, the company is required to use “reasonable” procedures to make sure the applicant is really you.

And therein lies the hitch. A fraud alert is not a lock for your life at all. “It’s not a red flag, it’s a yellow flag,” says Steve Ely, president of personal information solutions for Equifax. “Fraud alerts do not prevent new account fraud, and it’s a shame that lots of competitors are suggesting that to the public and getting away with it.”

Instead, a fraud alert is more like a burglar alarm. And if the alert repeatedly fires off false alarms, forcing creditors to constantly double-check the identities of LifeLock customers who have never been victims of fraud, it is possible that those credit issuers will pay less attention to them. Experian is so worried about this, along with other issues, that it has filed suit against LifeLock.

Mr. Davis of LifeLock says he does not believe his company is contributing to the degradation of fraud alerts. The deterrent effect of so many alerts, he said, will cause thieves to find some other way to make a living. Sure, he said, fraud alerts make the application process more time-consuming and expensive for creditors. But it would make no sense for them to start ignoring the warning flags. “Go figure that costly expense versus the write-off for laptops and plasmas” that thieves would buy if the alerts did not stop them, he said.

LifeLock also offers a $1 million service guarantee. This sounds like insurance, but it is really just a warranty. LifeLock promises that if there is a defect in its own performance — say, it fails to initiate or reset a fraud alert — it will pay up to $1 million to restore your good name. In practice, Mr. Davis said, the company helps customers who run into trouble even when LifeLock is not at fault. There is no guarantee it will continue to do that, though Mr. Davis says the company’s good name depends on it.

But it is unlikely that LifeLock will ever pay anything near $1 million. It won’t, for instance, cover the difference between the interest rate you will pay if a thief’s activities destroy your credit score and the lower rate you should be getting. It will not pay for lost wages or reimburse you for the time you may need to deal with the issue, though it may hire people to help you. The guarantee, as the company states in its own terms and conditions, is “limited.”

Though LifeLock offers a few other services, they are not enough to make me a buyer, not at this price. I do count myself among the paranoid and prevention-minded, which is why I have a freeze on my credit files. This is one (big) step beyond fraud alerts, since credit freezes lock your files so that no new creditor can get to them. It’s the closest thing to a silver bullet against new account fraud that exists at the moment — unless you live off the grid.

It is also a mild pain. You usually have to pay a small fee to each credit bureau for the freeze and pay for temporary thaws whenever somebody needs to look at your files. And you have to call the agencies with passwords in advance when you do want to grant access. You may need to do this a few times each year.

If you don’t want to spend anything, there is plenty you can do to drop your risk far below the 0.8 percent that the government figures suggest.

Lock your mailbox. Switch from paper bills. Shred confidential mail and credit card pitches. Secure your paper files. Do not carry paper checks or a Social Security card every day, lest you lose them. Be especially meticulous if a relative or others close to you are having financial or substance abuse problems.

Sunday, May 11, 2008

Windows XP SP3 Is Not Bug-Free


Nautilus Sci/Tech
May 11, 2008

With just a few days from its official release, the Windows XP Service Pack 3 is already receiving a large numer of post-instalation complaints.

Apparently, the up-date causes a series of problems, from random blue-screens to continuous reboots.

Jesper Johanson, a former program manager for security policy at Microsoft, who now runs a Windows blog, explained the situation in one of his recent blog posts:
"At this point, I want to clarify that the endless rebooting is not at all related to SP3 per se. The problem is that with some configurations, SP3 causes the computer to crash during boot, and Windows XP, by default, is set up to automatically reboot when it crashes. That is why you end up in the endless rebooting scenario."

According to Mr. Johanson, the easiest solution is to disable the "automatic restart on system failure" option, while operating in safe mode.

Errors and system failure are quite common with Microsoft’s service packs and usually, answers and solutions become available on a very short term.

Microsoft also announced that the installation of the XP SP3 will not allow users to downgrade from Internet Explorer 7 to IE 6.

The company stated that a series of tests and investigations are being conducted and as soon as results will show, the customers will be immediately informed. Also, through one of it’s officials, Microsoft asked its buyers to contact the Microsoft Customer Support Service on any issues concerning the Windows XP SP3 installation.

Google Gains on Microsoft With Hosted Security Offering




Nautilus Sci/Tech
May 11, 2008

With every Google enterprise announcement Microsoft must hear the war drums beating.

Sure, Google owns the search market. And, as a result, the company is the online advertising leader. But Microsoft has all those Windows desktops out there, and owns the corporate market, right?

Well, maybe not for long.

Sure, software as a service and cloud computing don't sound as sexy as free e-mail and pay-per-click, but they are the wave of the future, experts say.

On Thursday, Google unveiled a re-branded Web Security for Enterprise based on the Postini technology it acquired last year. The Web-hosted service protects corporate Web and e-mail users from viruses, spyware, and malicious Web sites, and extends protection directly to remote workers if needed.

This is all part of Google's hosted apps business, but targeted at corporate customers instead of consumers who expect--and get--hosted services for free, at least for now.

By putting traditional desktop applications, e-mail, word processing, and calendars into the cloud, Google relieves corporations of the administrative burden of having to buy hardware, install software, and hire people to maintain it.

This greatly reduces the costs for corporations and allows them to focus on their core businesses. And by beefing up the security of its hosted offerings, Google has removed a large impediment to widespread corporate adoption of its hosted services.

"Securing the current enterprise environment is futile," Philippe Courtot, chief executive of Qualys, which offers security as a service to corporations, said in an interview on Friday. "This is a problem Microsoft should have fixed a long time ago."

With an arsenal of search, Web-hosted apps and the advertising-supported "money-making machine...Google is going to kill Microsoft," he predicted.

Google's offering is compelling for corporations because of the ease with which they can be up and running without any IT headaches, says Nitesh Dhanjani, senior manager and leader of application security services at Ernst & Young.

"Microsoft says 'here's the software.' Google says 'it's already there; we just create the accounts and you can start today,'" Dhanjani says. "We're seeing, from an IT perspective, that in the next couple of years services will move into the cloud, even security services, so Google is really thinking ahead."

Microsoft certainly recognizes this trend. The company turned its FrontBridge acquisition into Microsoft Exchange Hosted Services, which includes security. But the software giant doesn't have a pure, software-as-a-service-based messaging security platform like Google or MessageLabs, says Paul Roberts, senior analyst for enterprise security at The 451 Group.

"Microsoft clearly sees the light that the Web and the Internet are the OS (operating system) of the future and that selling shrink-wrapped software isn't going to be feasible," Roberts says.

Peter Firstbrook, a program director at Gartner, summed it up this way: "I wouldn't ring the bells yet, but it is another feather in Google's cap; another service they can offer so that they become more strategic to their customers."

Stolen Laptop, Knowledge & Software Helps Turn Tables on Suspects

White Plains Police Department,
Edmon Shahikian, top, and Ian Frias were arrested.

Nautilus Sci/Tech
May 10, 2008

WHITE PLAINS — The thieves were voracious, filching flat-screen televisions and computer games, purloining iPods and DVDs, even making off with a box of liquor and a set of car rims in a burglary two weeks ago at an apartment three young people shared here. Luckily, they also took two laptop computers.


One of the laptops was a Macintosh belonging to Kait Duplaga, who works at the Apple store in the Westchester mall and thus knows how to use all its bells and whistles. While the police were coming up dry, Ms. Duplaga exploited the latest software applications installed on her laptop to track down the culprits and even get their photographs.

On Wednesday, the police arrested Edmon Shahikian, 23, of Katonah, and Ian Frias, 20, who lives in the Bronx. Virtually all of the property stolen from the apartment was recovered at the two men’s homes. They face charges of burglary and possession of stolen property; Mr. Shahikian was released on $3,500 bail, while Mr. Frias was at the Westchester County Jail, held in $7,500 bail.

“It doesn’t get much better than their bringing us a picture of the guy actually using the stolen property,” Daniel Jackson, the deputy commissioner of public safety in White Plains, said in a telephone interview on Friday. “It certainly made our job easier. The fact that they knew who these guys were certainly added solvability.”

The high-tech solving of the White Plains burglary, which was reported Friday in The Journal News, is one of several recent cases in which the police and crime victims have turned the keyboards on their adversaries, so to speak, taking advantage of computer software and other high-tech tools.

In March in Modesto, Calif., for example, the police recovered a stolen computer containing vital personal information, including Social Security numbers, belonging to the public school system’s 3,500 employees. Detectives used tracking software on the computer to apprehend a suspect, who had a long criminal record. The police said he had stolen the computer from a data processing firm, perhaps with the intention of committing identity theft.

Here in White Plains, a break in the case came on Tuesday when a friend of Ms. Duplaga’s sent her a congratulatory text message on the return of her stolen computer. “She said, ‘I don’t know what you’re talking about,’ and her friend said, ‘Well, you popped up as being online,’ ” Mr. Jackson said.

He said that Ms. Duplaga immediately signed on to another Macintosh computer and, using a feature called “Back to My Mac,” was able to gain access to her missing laptop remotely. She could see that that the person who had her computer was shopping for beds, Mr. Jackson said. Then it occurred to her that she could activate a camera on her laptop and watch the thief live.

At first, the photo application revealed only a smoky room and an empty chair, Mr. Jackson said, but then a man sat down. Ms. Duplaga, again using remote technology, typed in the command to snap a photo. “When you take a picture with that computer, it shows a countdown, and when it does, this guy figures out what’s going on,” Mr. Jackson said. “It all clicks for him, and he puts his hand up to cover the lens, but it was too late. She had already taken the picture.”

Had the suspect been a complete stranger, the photographic evidence would have been a “great lead,” but not the decisive clue, Mr. Jackson said. He said that when Ms. Duplaga described the tattooed subject of the picture to one of her roommates, the roommate replied: “Oh, I know exactly who that is — it’s Ian,” referring to Mr. Frias.

Mr. Frias and Mr. Shahikian, it turns out, had been among the guests at a party at the apartment weeks before, and were friends of friends of the victims, as Mr. Jackson put it. Ms. Duplaga was able to retrieve a photograph of Mr. Shahikian from the laptop as well, but Mr. Jackson was not aware of the circumstances. Mr. Jackson said that Mr. Frias and Mr. Shahikian were arrested last year on a felony marijuana possession charge, but are not career criminals. The disposition of their cases was not known.

Mr. Jackson said that Ms. Duplaga did not wish to be interviewed. On Friday, no one answered the door at the beige colonial-style house on Ridgeview Avenue where she rents an apartment diagonally opposite a church. The neighborhood is on the edge of the city’s downtown; in recent years, many of the prewar homes have been renovated.

An Apple spokesman declined to comment on the case or on the phenomenon of tracking criminals through computer software.

“Back to My Mac” is part of an online service that costs $99 per year and allows users to gain access to their personal computer from any connected Macintosh computer with the operating system Leopard. The software that Ms. Duplaga used to take a picture of the thief, called PhotoBooth, is standard on all newer Apple laptop models, perhaps an unintended new frontier in crime-fighting.

“It’s certainly a great use of what was probably meant as a business product,” Mr. Jackson said. “But if she had taken the picture and didn’t know who he was, we wouldn’t be in the same place as far as the investigation goes.”

Friday, March 28, 2008

Photoshop Express a Fine, Free Tool for Teachers and Students




Nautilus News
March 28, 2008
Adobe recently released into public beta (ready to go, though, for all intents and purposes) their online Photoshop Express application. A further distillation of Photoshop Elements accessible via a web browser with Adobe’s Air technology installed, Express is no GIMP, but it’s free, available across platforms, and serves the needs of the MySpace set very well.

Sure, you can make your head really big, but all of the basics (red eye reduction, retouching, cropping, etc.) are all available for the cost of a registration (meaning free). While Adobe is looking to monetize Express through some sort of premium service later on, it appears that Express will remain free in this form.

For the purpose of most teachers and students posting content to the web or editing pictures for presentations, reports, etc., Express provides plenty of features in an easy-to-use package with 2GB of web storage/sharing for your photos.

One caveat: no Linux support for Adobe Air yet, so this is basically a Windows/Mac party. While it would seem largely irrelevant on the Mac platform due to iPhoto, it does allow users to move between machines/platforms and keep their photos and editing work in the cloud (for free).

Microsoft Updates Windows Desktop Search


Nautilus News
March 28,2008
Desktop search is one of those really great things for people who have a lot of files and tend to forget where they all are.

From my experience, such engines can also be prone to glitches and slow performance. Microsoft is hoping to change some of those perceptions with an updated version of its desktop search product. Microsoft says Windows Search 4.0, of which a preview version was made public on Thursday, can speed query response time by a third as compared with the version of the search tool included in the initial release of Vista.

The software maker also said that it has fixed the majority of the reported bugs found in the product since the release of Vista, as well as added a feature that allows the search index to roll back to a previously saved version if it encounters an error, as opposed to needing to rebuild the index from scratch.

Windows Search 4.0 is available both as an update to Vista's built-in search engine and an updated version of the XP add-on that Microsoft has had available for some time, previously under the name Windows Desktop Search.

These changes are separate from moves Microsoft made within Vista Service Pack 1 to address concerns from Google. As part of those changes, Microsoft changed the way it displays search results in the operating system and created a mechanism for both users and computer makers to specify an alternate default desktop search program.

It's interesting that Microsoft is making these changes separate from Service Pack 1. I asked if this might be a trend toward updating operating system components outside of Windows releases. Here's the response I got back, in the form of a statement.

"Microsoft does not have any specific plans for releasing future updates to the search engine separately from Windows." the company said. "However, the company is always listening to customer feedback and will plan future releases with their feedback in mind."

Broken Ice in Antarctica


Nautilus News
March 28, 2008
Winter is coming to Antarctica, and that may be the only thing that keeps another of its major ice shelves from collapsing. On Tuesday, scientists from the British Antarctic Survey announced that there had been an enormous fracture on the edge of the Wilkins ice shelf, which started breaking last month.

Times Topics: Global WarmingThat province of ice, a body of permanent floating ice about the size of Connecticut, lies on the western edge of the Antarctic Peninsula, the part of the continent regarded as most vulnerable to climate change. Scientists flew over the break — itself covering some 160 square miles — and what they saw is remarkable: huge, geometrically fractured slabs of ice and, among them, the rubble of a catastrophic breach. A great swath of the ice shelf is being held in place by a thin band of ice.

What matters isn’t just the scale of this breakout. Changes in wind patterns and water temperatures related to global warming have begun to erode the ice sheets of western Antarctica at a faster rate than previously detected, and the total collapse of the Wilkins ice shelf is now within the realm of possibility.

It also comes as a reminder that the warming of Earth’s surface is occurring much faster at the poles than it is in more temperate regions. It is easy to think of ice as somehow temporary, but scientists say that the Wilkins ice shelf may have been in place for at least several hundred years.

Nothing dramatizes the urgency of global warming quite like a fracture of this scale. There is nothing to be done about a collapsing polar ice sheet except to witness it. It may be too late to stop the warming decay at the boundaries of Antarctic ice, yet there is everything to be done. Humans can radically change the way they live and do business, knowing that it is the one chance to find a possible limit to radical change in the natural world around us.

YouTube Debuts Viewer Analytics Tool


Nautilus News
March 28, 2008

Online video makers can now watch those watching their videos.
Google (NSDQ: GOOG)'s YouTube on Thursday released YouTube Insight, a free video analytics tool designed to help video makers understand more about where their viewers are and how those viewers found their videos.

"For example, uploaders can see how often their videos are viewed in different geographic regions, as well as how popular they are relative to all videos in that market over a given period of time," a YouTube blog post explains. "You can also delve deeper into the lifecycle of your videos, like how long it takes for a video to become popular, and what happens to video views as popularity peaks."

The metrics YouTube is making available are likely to be appreciated by marketers and professional video makers, who can use the information to see where videos are popular and to correlate changing viewership with related promotions and events.

As an example, YouTube suggests that a video maker who discovers that he or she has attracted a sizable audience in Spain might wish to consider posting subsequent videos in Spanish to better serve viewers in that country.

The information YouTube is providing -- view count over time and views by country -- is considerably more limited than similar data Google offers Web site owners through Google Analytics, which in turn reveals less about site visitors than Web server logs.

Google may, over time, expand the breadth of information it exposes to video makers about YouTube viewers, but privacy concerns are likely to prevent it from revealing identifying information like viewer IP addresses. Video makers who find that information useful would be well advised to embed YouTube videos on their own sites, where they have full access to server logs.

China Mobile Announces Commercial Deployment of TD-SCDMA Technology


Nautilus News
March 28, 2008
SHANGHAI, China,
Xinhua-PRNewswire-FirstCall via COMTEX/ -- Spreadtrum Communications, Inc. (Nasdaq: SPRD), one of China's leading wireless baseband chipset providers, today reports that China Mobile (CMCC) has announced commercial deployment of TD-SCDMA technology beginning in April. TD-SCDMA is a 3G wireless network standard developed by the China Academy of Telecommunications Technology (CATT: 5.55, +0.15, +2.77%) in collaboration with Datang and Siemens and endorsed by the Chinese government.

Dr. Ping Wu, Chairman & Chief Executive Officer, said, "We are very excited with this key development in the commercialization and deployment of TD-SCDMA technology in China. Our friends, customers, and partners are also extremely pleased to see TD-SCDMA technology reach this milestone. Today's announcement demonstrates China Mobile's strong commitment to commercialize the TD-SCDMA technology and includes a host of measures to facilitate market acceptance of this technology including attractively priced calling plans, availability of six subsidized handset models, availability of USIM cards for consumers who purchase TD-SCDMA handsets through other channels, demo centers in eight cities, financial incentives for resellers, publicity campaigns, and after-sale customer support.

"We are pleased to see that two of our customers received over 50% of the initial round of 60,000 handset order from China Mobile in January. As additional handset orders are placed in future rounds, we believe our portfolio of TD-SCDMA products and support will enable our customers to continue to benefit from these upcoming deployments."

Spreadtrum developed the first single-chip dual-mode TD-SCDMA/GSM baseband (the SC8800D) in 2004 and the first multi-mode HSDPA/TD-SCDMA/GSM/GPRS baseband (the SC8800H) in 2007. The company also offers a single-chip TD-SCDMA/HSDPA solution optimized for data cards (the SC8800S) and its Quorum subsidiary announced a TD-SCDMA/GSM/GPRS/EDGE RF transceiver. Spreadtrum's TD-SCDMA solutions have also been used in the commercial products that provide MBMS support and the TD-SCDMA USB modem cards. For details of these previous milestones, press releases are available on Spreadtrum's web site ( http://www.spreadtrum.com ).

About Spreadtrum Communications, Inc.:

Spreadtrum Communications, Inc. (Nasdaq: SPRD; the "Company") is a fabless semiconductor company that designs, develops, and markets baseband processor solutions for the mobile wireless communications market. The Company combines its semiconductor design expertise with its software development capabilities to deliver highly-integrated baseband processors with multimedia functionality and power management. The Company has developed its solutions based on an open development platform, enabling its customers to develop customized wireless products that are feature-rich and meet their cost and time-to-market requirements.

Safe Harbor Statements:

This press release contains "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of the "safe harbor" provisions of the U.S. Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Such forward-looking statements include, without limitation, the statement regarding our customers' ability to continuously benefit from the deployment of TD-SCDMA technology as additional handset orders are placed. These statements are forward-looking in nature and involve risks and uncertainties that may cause actual market trends and the Company's actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied in these forward-looking statements for a variety of reasons. Potential risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited to, the rate at which the commercial deployment of TD-SCDMA technology will grow, market acceptance of products utilizing TD-SCDMA technology, continuing competitive pressure in the semiconductor industry and the effect of such pressure on prices; unpredictable changes in technology and consumer demand for mobile phones; the state of and any change in the Company's relationship with its major customers; and changes in political, economic, legal and social conditions in China. For additional discussion of these risks and uncertainties and other factors, please consider the information contained in the Company's filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (the "SEC"), including the registration statement on Form F-1 filed on June 26, 2007, as amended, especially the sections under "Risk Factors" and "Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations," and such other documents that the Company may file or furnish with the SEC from time to time, including on Form 6-K. The Company assumes no obligation to update any forward-looking statements, which apply only as of the date of this press release.

Investor Contact:

Investor Relations
Tel: +86-21-5080-2727 x2268
Email: ir@spreadtrum.comSOURCE Spreadtrum Communications, Inc.

http://www.spreadtrum.comCopyright © 2008 PR Newswire. All rights reserved

Dell Adds Blu-Ray to Inspiron for Under $900



Nautilus News
March 28, 2008

Dell said Friday that it began selling an updated Inspiron 1525 on its Web site, a laptop with an optional Blu-ray drive that can be purchased for as little as $879.

The low price is a benefit of the instant savings Dell is offering on the laptop, which fared well in a recent PC Magazine review. Note that according to the Dell Web site, you'll need to purchase a version with an Intel 1.83-GHz Core 2 Duo T5550 processor inside, apparently to provide enough CPU horsepower to provide smooth Blu-ray playback.

The drawback is the anemic Intel X3100 integrated graphics; unfortunately, there is no discrete graphics option with this notebook. On the other hand, the laptop contains a built-in Broadcom Media PC chip mounted on an internal minicard, and designed to provide hardware acceleration for Blu-ray discs.

Optional accessories include a slim travel power adapter ($80), Dell's travel remote control (IR) that slips into the ExpressCard slot ($22), and Creative noise-isolation earphones ($25).


Dell Introduces Sub-$1000 Blu-Ray Laptop

Dell has announced that they has added a Blu-ray drive (with reading capability for Blu-ray Discs, and read/write capability for DVDs and CDs) to their award-winning Inspiron line of laptops. More impressive, the Inspiron 1525 with Blu-ray drive will only set consumers back a mere $879. The computer features a 15.4" 720p screen and HDMI output.

Blu-ray disc decoding will be accomplished via a dedicated Broadcom decoder located in the laptops mini-card slot. And for those consumers who want to watch Blu-ray movies on-the-go, Dell has available a slim travel power adapter and IR remote control for quick access to Blu-ray menus.

These laptops are available today directly from their website, and come in a variety of colors and configurations to match any Blu-ray fan's needs.

Xcor Rockets Into Private Space Flight


Nautilus News
March 28, 2008
Xcor Aerospace announced its intention to offer private suborbital space flights in 2010. The company plans to build the Lynx, a two-seat spaceship that is about the size of a private aircraft. The Lynx will let passengers experience weightlessness at the edge of outer space for about four and a half minutes.

"Lynx will be the greatest ride off Earth," said XCOR test pilot, former pilot, astronaut, and Space Shuttle commander, Col. Rick Searfoss (USAF-Ret.). He notes that passengers will be able to see stars and the Earth from space while riding up front in the spaceship, sitting next to the pilot.

Xcor has been developing rocket propulsion systems for nine years. It claims that the Lynx will be fully reusable, burn cleanly, and will have minimal impact on the environment.

Credit: Xcor Aerospace

Sunday, March 16, 2008

Spacewalkers Attach Canadian Robot's Mechanical Arms




Nautilus News:
3/16/2008

Two US astronauts, working outside the International Space Station early Sunday, attached mechanical arms to a Canadian-made robot, enabling it to take over human tasks and reducing the need for future risky spacewalks.

Mission Specialists Richard Linnehan and Mike Foreman finished their task at about 3:00 am (0700 GMT), stowing away instruments and making their way into the station's airlock.

But their job got slightly complicated early in the seven-hour spacewalk when they encountered trouble unscrewing a couple of fasteners and removing one of the robot Dextre's arms from its storage container.

The problem was eventually resolved with the help of a simple crowbar. But as a result, "the spacewalkers fell about 45 minutes behind their timeline," said a spokesman for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA).

Linnehan and Foreman, who arrived last week aboard shuttle Endeavour, recouped most of the lost time, performing their task using socket wrenches and drills to bolt the Dextre robot's two 11-foot (3.3 meter) arms.

Mission Specialist Robert Behnken coordinated the spacewalk activities from inside the orbital complex while Endeavour pilot Gregory Johnson and space station engineer Garrett Reisman operate Canadarm2.

The hitch notwithstanding, astronaut Steve Robinson, monitoring the events from Mission Control in Houston, Texas, offered all involved hearty congratulations.

"You sure did a great job," he radioed. "You guys ought to be proud of yourselves."

Pierre Jean, a program director from the Canadian Space Agency, echoed the view saying the crew did "a fantastic job."

The robot, which was re-powered immediately after the walk, will be able to handle maintenance tasks that have been performed by spacewalkers, allowing astronauts to focus on research inside the orbiting outpost.

"Dextre looks quite a bit different today," observed NASA flight director Dana Weigel. "It's almost fully assembled: It has two hands, two arms and the main body is pivoted up."
Astronauts installed Europe's first space laboratory in a shuttle Atlantis mission last month and Endeavour's crew added the first of three parts of Japan's Kibo research facility this week.

Dextre, sent up on Endeavour which is docked with the space station, is the third and final component of the Canadarm Remote Manipulator System, the robotic arm that is Canada's vital contribution to the station.

The 200-million-dollar robot encountered a technical glitch before its assembly, but the problem was resolved in time for Saturday's spacewalk.

The 1.56-tonne robot will conduct operations such as replacing small components on the station's exterior -- tasks which until now required a human touch.

Its presence will boost crew safety by reducing the number of hours that astronauts will have to be outside the station on spacewalks, and thus allowing them to focus on other tasks such as conducting scientific experiments in micro-gravity, according to the Canadian Space Agency.

Dextre's two hands are each about the size of a small microwave oven. They are equipped with built-in socket wrenches, retractable claws used to grip objects, and remote-control high-resolution cameras.

The robot's human-like upper torso swivels at the waist, and its arms were designed with seven joints to provide it with maximum versatility. Umbilical connectors provide power and data connectivity.

With Dextre delivered to ISS in nine separate pieces, the astronauts will use three of the Endeavour mission's five spacewalks to get it up and running.

Linnehan and fellow astronaut Garrett Reisman conducted the Endeavour mission's first spacewalk Friday to lay the groundwork for the robot's complicated assembly.

Dextre's assembly will be complete with a third spacewalk set to start Monday.

NASA plans to finish building the International Space Station by 2010, at which time it will retire its three-shuttle fleet.

Hackers At Harvard! University Admits Security Breach






Nautilus News:
March 14th 2008

Once they put their mind into it, hackers are perfectly capable of breaking even the most ‘secure’ databases. This time, it was Harvard University’s turn to suffer such an attack just last month, when an unauthorized person gained access to personal information of over 10,000 Harvard students and applicants.

The breach was discovered on February 16 and the university immediately opened an investigation. At the same time, all students and applicants whose data may have been compromised have been notified. The information on the web included Social each applicant’s name, Social Security number, date of birth, address, e-mail address, phone numbers, test scores, previous school attended, and school records.

After the incident, the Harvard University took 5 days to investigate on the source of the attack. The investigators said they couldn’t tell whether similar information has also been accessed, but the University is offering support for identity theft (monitor credit cards and receive alerts in case of fraud).

“Protecting personal information is something Harvard takes seriously, and we are truly sorry for the inconvenience and concern this incident may cause,” said Margot N. Gill, administrative dean of the Harvard Graduate School of Arts and Sciences (GSAS). “We are … apologizing to the affected individuals and making identity theft recovery services available to them at our expense. Please be assured that we are taking steps to do what we can to prevent future incidents of this kind.”

Harvard representatives also said that they couldn’t rule out the possibility that all the information stored in the server was accessed and copied, and so they continue to notify all persons whose personal information might have been compromised, and will continue to support expenses for identity theft and credit-monitoring activities.