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[audio https://garethstack.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/16_part1_technolotics.mp3]
[audio https://garethstack.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/16_part2_technolotics.mp3]
Listen: Part 1, Part 2
Google mobile is a new suite of features for US cell phones
Google SMS howto [2]
Currently the following features are available
Google are also allowing mobile carriers to integrate google search into their own sites – making google mobile search available in a variety of flavours
This summer George Christian was given a letter in person by the FBI instructing him to to surrender [3] “all subscriber information, billing information and access logs of any person” who used a specific computer at a library branch some distance away.
He refused and his employer, Library Connection Inc., filed suit for the right to protest the FBI demand in public.
The letter was a “National security letter”. Originating in the 1970’s as way for the FBI to review in secret the customer records of suspected foreign agents.
The Patriot Act now allows clandestine scrutiny of U.S. residents and visitors who are not alleged to be terrorists or spies. More than 30,000 letters are now sent out each year.
Letters do not need the imprimatur of a prosecutor, grand jury or judge. They receive no review after the fact by the Justice Department or Congress.
The information gathered is kept in government data banks and the government retains the right to share the information within the federal government and beyond. This includes “state, local and tribal” governments and for “appropriate private sector entities,”.
A national security letter cannot be used to authorize eavesdropping or to read the contents of e-mail. But it does permit investigators to trace revealing paths through the private affairs of a modern digital citizen including web browsing habits, with whom he lives and lived before, how much he gambles, what he buys online and who telephones or e-mails him at home and at work.
Most worrying of all the House and Senate have voted to make noncompliance with a national security letter a criminal offense. The House would also impose a prison term for breach of secrecy as the reciever of a letter is not allowed discuss the letter with anyone.
Article written by Molly Wood, section editor, CNET.com [4]
Sony’s actions regarding the rootkit, which may be criminal are an example of how so-called content creators and not on the side of consumers.
The increasing attempts by companies to restrict our fair use as encouragement for individuals and groups to circumvent these controls not because they want to break the law but “because you have sold us a crappy product, and, fundamentally, because it is not our responsibility to protect your profits.”
Short term solution is to not buy any Sony products of any kind.
Long term solution may be that suggested by Walt Mossberg of the Wall Street Journal. [5]
Copyright law with teeth that concentrates on prosecuting large scale piracy.
[6]
On November 15th TransMedia will launch Glide, an integrated suite of applications all of which are available online and accessable through a normal web browser.
Glide includes applications for creating, sharing, and selling photos, music, video, and documents, as well as doing content management, calendaring, E-mail, and conferencing and marks another step in the emergence of the software-as-a-service model exemplified by Google and Salesforce.com
Glide is not only being sold to end users, TransMedia is also licensing the software to media companies so they can sell it as a branded service. Hence media and cable companies can sell online applications and services which are more closely integrated than offerings from competitors.
The entire suite has be developed together hence Glide Mail is able to easily and securely send all sorts of media files, playlists, slideshows, and podcasts to anyone as tiny 5K messages.
Glide is able to share files securely because the actual files aren’t shared. Rather the act of sharing creates streaming browser-based preview files that are transcoded for universal compatibility. This neatly avoids the risk of piracy.
Cable and telecom companies may adopt Glide as a way to offer additional services on top of their broadband offerings. This would inevitably lead to further competition to software service providers like AOL, Google, MSN, MySpace.com, and Yahoo.
As we know many companies are moving towards the software as a service models, on November 15th we will see one of the first fully integrated services of this kind. The repercussions for the future and companies such as Microsoft will only emerge with time.
A new breakthrough promices the dream of fusion without the expense and environmental costs of existing projects [7]
Physicist Eric Lernet – has suggested a new process of converting hydrogen and boron to helium -> releasing large amounts of stored energy
This could be a cheap alternative to the multinational ubber expensive Tokamak fusion projec in France
Lerner has been researching the technology for 20 years, initially at NASA’s Jet Propulsion lab
Unlike existing nuclear power, the process would not harness a chain reaction, nor require an intermediate lossy conversion stage into usable electricity – instead it goes straight from fusion to energy
Device can be started or shut down at the flip of a switch
The science bit: The process works by firing pulses of electricity through a hydrogen / boron gas, creating hot conducting plasma whirlwinds, which are twisted by magnetic fields into plasmoids. Magnetic fields then fire an electron beam at the plasmoids, igniting fusion reactions, and gaining energy before finally being decelerated to produce electricity; some of which is recycled to restart the process.
Lerner maintains the process would be so safe and simple that onsight personel would not even be needed
Despite being the first researcher to surpass a billion degree temperature in the lab, Lerner alleges that the US governement is unwilling to fund his research – a serious alternative to Oil and Gas
Amazon have launched a service that ties human intelligence to the needs of software
agents [8]
The new amazon turk pays micropayments for cognitive tasks (they call Human
Intelligence Tasks or HIT) that humans find easy – but machines difficult or impossible
This human processing time can be used by companies in at least two ways
Companies set the price for specific tasks – and amazon takes its 10% vig off the top
A test patent was filed in November 2003, attempting to patent a fictional plot [10]
Israel have begun using sonic booms to terrorise the now totally palistinian population of the gaza strip [14]
US officials have admitted in the Washington post, that terror suspects are being held in a secret prison in the former soviet union
[19]
The prison is part of a system set up after 9/11 which has included eight countries, in a hidden global internment network
Gareth: It may not be 3D [21], but it sure is Gorillaz [22]
The Music Genome Project [24] which attempts to classify songs based on sound rather than genre. PS: Youll need a US zip code to sign up [25]
Francis: The cast of Lost sing Bohemian Rapsody. This is brilliant, if you are a Lost fan you will love this.[26]
[audio https://garethstack.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/16_part1_technolotics.mp3]
[audio https://garethstack.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/16_part2_technolotics.mp3]
Listen: Part 1, Part 2
Google mobile is a new suite of features for US cell phones
Google SMS howto [2]
Currently the following features are available
Google are also allowing mobile carriers to integrate google search into their own sites – making google mobile search available in a variety of flavours
This summer George Christian was given a letter in person by the FBI instructing him to to surrender [3] “all subscriber information, billing information and access logs of any person” who used a specific computer at a library branch some distance away.
He refused and his employer, Library Connection Inc., filed suit for the right to protest the FBI demand in public.
The letter was a “National security letter”. Originating in the 1970’s as way for the FBI to review in secret the customer records of suspected foreign agents.
The Patriot Act now allows clandestine scrutiny of U.S. residents and visitors who are not alleged to be terrorists or spies. More than 30,000 letters are now sent out each year.
Letters do not need the imprimatur of a prosecutor, grand jury or judge. They receive no review after the fact by the Justice Department or Congress.
The information gathered is kept in government data banks and the government retains the right to share the information within the federal government and beyond. This includes “state, local and tribal” governments and for “appropriate private sector entities,”.
A national security letter cannot be used to authorize eavesdropping or to read the contents of e-mail. But it does permit investigators to trace revealing paths through the private affairs of a modern digital citizen including web browsing habits, with whom he lives and lived before, how much he gambles, what he buys online and who telephones or e-mails him at home and at work.
Most worrying of all the House and Senate have voted to make noncompliance with a national security letter a criminal offense. The House would also impose a prison term for breach of secrecy as the reciever of a letter is not allowed discuss the letter with anyone.
Article written by Molly Wood, section editor, CNET.com [4]
Sony’s actions regarding the rootkit, which may be criminal are an example of how so-called content creators and not on the side of consumers.
The increasing attempts by companies to restrict our fair use as encouragement for individuals and groups to circumvent these controls not because they want to break the law but “because you have sold us a crappy product, and, fundamentally, because it is not our responsibility to protect your profits.”
Short term solution is to not buy any Sony products of any kind.
Long term solution may be that suggested by Walt Mossberg of the Wall Street Journal. [5]
Copyright law with teeth that concentrates on prosecuting large scale piracy.
[6]
On November 15th TransMedia will launch Glide, an integrated suite of applications all of which are available online and accessable through a normal web browser.
Glide includes applications for creating, sharing, and selling photos, music, video, and documents, as well as doing content management, calendaring, E-mail, and conferencing and marks another step in the emergence of the software-as-a-service model exemplified by Google and Salesforce.com
Glide is not only being sold to end users, TransMedia is also licensing the software to media companies so they can sell it as a branded service. Hence media and cable companies can sell online applications and services which are more closely integrated than offerings from competitors.
The entire suite has be developed together hence Glide Mail is able to easily and securely send all sorts of media files, playlists, slideshows, and podcasts to anyone as tiny 5K messages.
Glide is able to share files securely because the actual files aren’t shared. Rather the act of sharing creates streaming browser-based preview files that are transcoded for universal compatibility. This neatly avoids the risk of piracy.
Cable and telecom companies may adopt Glide as a way to offer additional services on top of their broadband offerings. This would inevitably lead to further competition to software service providers like AOL, Google, MSN, MySpace.com, and Yahoo.
As we know many companies are moving towards the software as a service models, on November 15th we will see one of the first fully integrated services of this kind. The repercussions for the future and companies such as Microsoft will only emerge with time.
A new breakthrough promices the dream of fusion without the expense and environmental costs of existing projects [7]
Physicist Eric Lernet – has suggested a new process of converting hydrogen and boron to helium -> releasing large amounts of stored energy
This could be a cheap alternative to the multinational ubber expensive Tokamak fusion projec in France
Lerner has been researching the technology for 20 years, initially at NASA’s Jet Propulsion lab
Unlike existing nuclear power, the process would not harness a chain reaction, nor require an intermediate lossy conversion stage into usable electricity – instead it goes straight from fusion to energy
Device can be started or shut down at the flip of a switch
The science bit: The process works by firing pulses of electricity through a hydrogen / boron gas, creating hot conducting plasma whirlwinds, which are twisted by magnetic fields into plasmoids. Magnetic fields then fire an electron beam at the plasmoids, igniting fusion reactions, and gaining energy before finally being decelerated to produce electricity; some of which is recycled to restart the process.
Lerner maintains the process would be so safe and simple that onsight personel would not even be needed
Despite being the first researcher to surpass a billion degree temperature in the lab, Lerner alleges that the US governement is unwilling to fund his research – a serious alternative to Oil and Gas
Amazon have launched a service that ties human intelligence to the needs of software
agents [8]
The new amazon turk pays micropayments for cognitive tasks (they call Human
Intelligence Tasks or HIT) that humans find easy – but machines difficult or impossible
This human processing time can be used by companies in at least two ways
Companies set the price for specific tasks – and amazon takes its 10% vig off the top
A test patent was filed in November 2003, attempting to patent a fictional plot [10]
Israel have begun using sonic booms to terrorise the now totally palistinian population of the gaza strip [14]
US officials have admitted in the Washington post, that terror suspects are being held in a secret prison in the former soviet union
[19]
The prison is part of a system set up after 9/11 which has included eight countries, in a hidden global internment network
Gareth: It may not be 3D [21], but it sure is Gorillaz [22]
The Music Genome Project [24] which attempts to classify songs based on sound rather than genre. PS: Youll need a US zip code to sign up [25]
Francis: The cast of Lost sing Bohemian Rapsody. This is brilliant, if you are a Lost fan you will love this.[26]