Apr
15
2009
An anonymous reader writes “New York City is soliciting ideas from the public about possible technology improvements for its 13,000+ fleet of taxis. TLC (the city agency in charge of cabs) is ‘seek[ing] input and information on ways to enhance the technology systems in each taxicab for the benefit of passengers, drivers and owners alike.'”

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Comments Off on NYC Wants Ideas For "Taxi Technology 2.0" | tags: google, technology | posted in technical news
Apr
15
2009
DesScorp writes “The Wall Street Journal is reporting that Energy Secretary Steven Chu is endorsing ‘clean coal’ technology and research, and is taking a pragmatic approach to coal as an energy supply. ‘”It absolutely is worthwhile to invest in carbon capture and storage because we are not in a vacuum,” Mr. Chu told reporters Tuesday following an appearance at an Energy Information Administration conference. “Even if the United States or Europe turns its back on coal, India and China will not,” he said. Mr. Chu added that “quite frankly I doubt if the United States will turn its back on coal. We are generating over 50% of our electrical energy from coal.”‘ The United States has the world’s largest reserves of coal. Secretary Chu has reversed his positions on coal and nuclear power, previously opposing them, and once calling coal ‘My worst nightmare.'”

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Comments Off on Energy Secretary Chu Endorses "Clean Coal" | tags: cap, china, google, technology | posted in technical news
Apr
15
2009
narramissic writes “A team of researchers at the University of Southampton, UK, has received funding from the UK’s Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council to learn whether otoacoustic emissions (OAE), the ear-generated sounds that emanate from within the spiral-shaped cochlea in the inner ear, can be used as a viable biometric technology like fingerprints and IRIS recognition. According to a report in New Scientist, someday instead of asking for passwords or pin numbers, a call center or bank would simply use a device on their telephone to produce a brief series of clicks in the recipient’s ear to confirm the person is who they say they are.” Try faking that with gummy bears.

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Comments Off on Human Ear Could Be Next Biometric System | tags: google, Phone, technology | posted in technical news
Apr
15
2009
clickclickdrone writes “The BBC are reporting that Amazon has said it will not allow online advertising system Phorm to scan its web pages to produce targeted ads. For most people this is a welcome step, especially after the European Commission said it was starting legal action against the UK earlier this week over its data protection laws in relation to Phorm’s technology. Anyone who values their privacy should applaud this move by Amazon.”

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Comments Off on Amazon To Block Phorm Scans | tags: amazon, google, privacy, technology, web | posted in technical news
Apr
14
2009
Thanks to Amazon.com’s Kindle, the e-book reader has gone from a niche curiosity to a mainstream, oft-cited technology in a little more than a year. But now buzz is snapping and crackling about a second wave of electronic readers coming down the pike to give Amazon a run for its undisclosed monies.
Comments Off on Electronic ink + flexible screens = wireless | tags: amazon, e-book, kindle, technology, wireless | posted in technical news
Apr
14
2009
blackbearnh writes “Yahoo! has been working for a while to promote a unified system for referring to places, through their Where On Earth IDs. Using a WOEID, you can query Yahoo’s publicly available APIs to find out things like what cities are in a county, or what counties border each other. In an interview for O’Reilly Radar, Tyler Bell, the product lead for the Yahoo Geo Technology Group, talks about their Open Location program (not to be confused with openlocation.org, a different group altogether.) He also talks about how privacy concerns interact with the increasing use of personal geotracking, and the troublesome problem of what to call places. ‘I’m not even going to tell you about the problems we had when we accidentally called Constantinople Byzantium, just slipping back about 800 years there accidentally. That’s a very sensitive issue. Any company dealing with geography is going to have to address it somehow. So I’ll be very candid in how Yahoo addresses this. I mean first, our stated goal is to capture the world’s geography as it is used by the world’s people. We don’t see ourselves as the definitive authority on how a place should be called.'”

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Comments Off on Tyler Bell On Yahoo’s Open Location API | tags: cap, google, privacy, program, technology | posted in technical news
Apr
14
2009
Afforess writes “‘Proxy servers are an everyday part of Internet surfing. But using one in a crime could soon lead to more time in the clink,’ reports the Associated Press. The new federal rules would make the use of proxy servers count as ‘sophistication’ in a crime, leading to 25% longer jail sentences. Privacy advocates complain this will disincentivize privacy and anonymity online. ‘[The government is telling people] … if you take normal steps to protect your privacy, we’re going to view you as a more sophisticated criminal,’ writes the Center for Democracy and Technology. Others fear this may lead to ‘cruel and unusual punishments’ as Internet and cell phone providers often use proxies without users’ knowledge to reroute Internet traffic. This may also ultimately harm corporations when employees abuse VPN’s, as they too are counted as a ‘proxy’ in the new legislation. TOR, a common Internet anonymizer, is also targeted in the new legislation. Some analysts believe this legislation is an effort to stop leaked US Government information from reaching outside sources, such as Wikileaks. The legislation (PDF, the proposed amendment is on pages 5-15) will be voted on by the United States Sentencing Commission on April 15, and is set to take effect on November 1st. The EFF has already urged the Commission to reject the amendment.”

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Comments Off on Using Net Proxies Will Lead To Harsher Sentences | tags: cell phone, google, Phone, privacy, technology | posted in technical news
Apr
14
2009
coondoggie writes “While Ethernet technology has gone places no one would have envisioned 36 years ago, NASA today signed an agreement with a German Ethernet vendor to build highly fault-tolerant networks for space-based applications. TTTech builds a set of time-triggered services called TTEthernet that is implemented on top of standard IEEE802.3 Ethernet. Its technology is designed to enable design of synchronous, highly dependable embedded computing and networking, capable of tolerating multiple faults, the company said.”

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Comments Off on NASA Taking Ethernet Into Deeper Space | tags: cap, google, network, networking, technology | posted in technical news
Apr
14
2009
MJackson writes “The European Commission has opened an infringement proceeding against the UK after a series of complaints by Internet users, and extensive communication with UK authorities, about the use of Phorm’s behavioural advertising system, which uses Deep Packet Inspection (DPI) technology, by internet service providers. Phorm works with UK ISPs to monitor what websites you visit for use in targeted advertising campaigns, though its methods have raised more than a few fears about invasions of privacy. Similar services in the USA have caused an equal level of controversy.”

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Comments Off on EU Investigates Phorm’s UK ISP Advertising System | tags: google, privacy, technology, web | posted in technical news
Apr
14
2009
An anonymous reader writes “Technology Review has a roundup of some of the weirder ideas on show at last week’s Computer-Human Interaction conference in Boston. They include a trackball that heats up as you roll over different parts of an image, a pair of goggles that track eye movements using electrooculography, and a miniature robot with a cellphone for its head.”

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Comments Off on Some of the Weirder Ideas From CHI 2009 | tags: google, Phone, robot, technology | posted in technical news