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Montag, 06. Februar 2012 00:00:00 Technik News
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Der Internet-TV-Anbieter Zattoo hat mit Nick Brambring seit Anfang Febraur einen neuen CEO (Chief Executive Officer). Brambring folgt Beat Knecht nach, der das Unternehmen mit Sitz in Zürich seit 2005 aufgebaut und geführt hat.

Die auf den Bau und Unterhalt von drahtgebundenen und drahtlosen Netzen ausgerichtete Swisscom-Tochter Cablex hat mit Kornel Reutemann einen neuen Leiter Marketing & Sales unter Vertrag genommen. Der 41-Jährige, der sein neues Amt am 5. März antreten wird, soll laut Mitteilung auch Einsitz in die Geschäftsleitung von Cablex nehmen.

Laut einem Test der finnischen Computerzeitschrift Micro-PC sind Smartphones besonders empfindlich gegen Kälte. Speziell Apples iPhone 4S. Bei einem entsprechenden Test schnitt das Apple-Gerät mit Abstand am schlechtesten ab. Bei Minustemperaturen gab es sofort den Geist auf. Viel besser schnitten Samsungs Galaxy SII und Nokias N9 ab, sowie auch alle Billiggeräte.

Der taiwanesische Smartphone-Hersteller HTC hat im vierten Quartal des abgelaufenen Jahres einen Gewinneinbruch von 26 Prozent zur Kenntnis nehmen müssen. Der Gewinn des Weihnachtsquartals ging laut Eigenangaben des Unternehmens bei einem Umsatz von 2,6 Mrd. Euro auf 282 Mio. Euro zurück.

Im Rahmen der Umstellung der SBB auf die nächste Generation von Mobiltelefonen bei ihrem Zug- und Lokpersonal hat die Zürcher Ergon Informatik für die Bahn mehrere Spezialapplikationen für die neuen Android-Smartphones programmiert.

EWL (Energie Wasser Luzern) und Swisscom arbeiten auf Hochdruck am Ausbau des Glasfasernetzes für die Stadt Luzern. Die Glasfasernetzkomponenten zur Erschliessung der Haushalte (FTTH - Fibre to the Home) liefert dabei der Netzausrüster Ericsson.

Steve Appleton, Chairman und CEO der US-amerikanischen DRAM- und Nand-Flash-Spezialistin Micron mit Hauptsitz in Boise (Idaho) ist vergangenen Freitag bei einem Flugzeugabsturz mit einer kleinen Maschine ums Leben gekommen. Appleton war 51 Jahre alt. Das Unglück passierte in der Nähe seines Arbeitsortes in Boise.

Während Geschäftsleute im Silicon Valley früher elegante Anzüge oder Schulterpolster als Erkennungszeichen trugen, hat nun ein neuer, seltsamer Trend die High-Tech-Branche erfasst. Besonders ausgefallene, bunte Socken sind dort gerade besonders in, denn sie gelten als eine Art geheimes Erkennungszeichen. In Meetings wandert deshalb der Blick zuerst auf die Füsse, schreibt die New York Times.

Kubas Altpräsident Fidel Castro hat das Internet zu einem „revolutionären Instrument“ erklärt. Bei der Vorstellung zweier neuer Memoirenbände sagte der ehemalige Staatschef nach Angaben der Zeitung „Granma“: „Das Internet ermöglicht die Aufnahme und die Aussendung von Ideen, in zwei Richtungen. Und wir müssen lernen, damit umzugehen.“

Die Schäden einer möglichen Kriegsführung mit Computertechnologie wären nach Ansicht des russischen Experten Jewgeni Kasperski unkalkulierbar. "Weil wir gar nicht wissen, wie sehr wir von Informationstechnologie abhängig sind, wie stark Informationstechnologie in unser tägliches Leben eingreift", sagte er am Sonntag bei der Sicherheitskonferenz in München.

crookedvulture writes "Intel continues to partner with third-party controller makers for high-end SSDs. Its new 520 Series drives pair the latest SandForce controller with Intel's own firmware and 25-nm NAND. HotHardware, Tech Report, and PC Perspective all have reviews of the drive, and the verdict is pretty consistent. While the Intel 520 Series offers slightly better performance than competing SandForce solutions, it also costs 30-40% more. That's a steep margin even considering the Intel SSD's five-year warranty."

Hugh Pickens writes "Anna Leach reports that Siri support has been a contentious issue for owners of earlier iPhones, but a recent filing from Audience shows that Siri won't run on the iPhone 4 because the phone's chip can't handle it. Linley Gwennap of the Linley Group cracked one of the secrets of the new iPhone's A5 chip after working out that it packs some serious audio cleaning power not available on the iPhone 4's A4 chip. Audience has developed technology that removes most or all of the background noise when someone places a cell-phone call from a restaurant, airport, or other noisy location. The iPhone 4S integrates Audience's 'EarSmart' technology directly into the A5 processor, improving its technology to handle 'far-field speech,' which means holding the device at arm's length rather than directly in front of the mouth. Apple has also licensed the Audience technology for a 'new generation of processor IP,' which may mean that the forthcoming A6 processor will appear in the iPad 3 and iPhone 5. 'Why Apple has not simply purchased Audience is unclear. An acquisition would prevent Audience's other major customer, Samsung, from using the technology to compete with Apple,' says Gwennap. 'The company may be hedging its bets, as it could switch to Qualcomm's Fluence noise-reduction technology in the future.'"

Trailrunner7 writes "Adobe, which has spent the last few years trying to dig out of a deep hole of vulnerabilities and buggy code, is making a major change to Flash, adding a sandbox to the version of the player that runs in Firefox. The sandbox is designed to prevent many common exploit techniques against Flash. The move by Adobe comes roughly a year after the company added a sandbox to Flash for Google Chrome. Flash, which is perhaps the most widely deployed piece of software on the Internet, has been a common attack vector for several years now, and the attacks in some cases have been used to get around exploit mitigations added by the browser vendors. The sandbox is designed to prevent many of these attacks by not allowing exploits against Flash to break out into the browser itself."

An anonymous reader writes "Scientists at the Universities of Southampton and Penn State have found a way to embed electronic components into optical fibers, in a breakthrough that could lead to the creation of super high-speed telecommunications networks. Rather than trying to merge flat chips with round optical fibers, the team of scientists used high-pressure chemistry techniques to deposit semiconducting materials layer by layer directly into tiny holes in optical fibers. This bypasses the need to integrate fiber-optics onto a chip, and means that the data signal never has to leave the fiber."

New submitter Hector's House writes "'Nothing is certain. Nothing is secure,' reflects one of the characters in Paolo Bacigalupi's novel The Windup Girl. In 23rd century Bangkok, life for many hangs by a thread. Oil has run out; rising seas threatens to engulf the city; genetically engineered diseases hover on Thailand's borders; and the threat of violence smolders as government ministries vie for power. Environmental destruction, climate change and novel plagues have wiped out many of the crop species that humanity depends on: the profits to be made from creating — or stealing — new species are potentially enormous. After a century of collapse and contraction, Western business sees hope for a new wave of globalization; Thailand's fiercely guarded seed banks may provide just the springboard needed." Keep reading for the rest of Aidan's review.

judgecorp writes "A research team at Manchester has taken a big step toward building transistors with graphene. So far graphene's marvelous conductivity has actually proved a drawback, but the team has sandwiched a layer of molybdenum disulfide between layers of graphene to provide a high on/off ratio. Also, the British Government is finding £50 million to fund Manchester as a center for graphene study and development, led by two professors there, Sir Kostya Novoselov and Sir Andre Geim, who shared the 2010 Nobel prize for Physics for their work on graphene."

astroengine writes "It's a strange irony that to afford the expense of space exploration, international collaboration is often sought after — spreading the cost across several international partners means the biggest space missions may be accomplished. And yet in times of austerity, national budgets balk at the prospect of investing in international projects like ExoMars. Sadly, that's exactly what could be facing the ambitious ESA-led Mars rover/satellite mission if NASA's Science Mission Directorate budget is slashed in the next financial year. NASA may pull out of the project, leaving ExoMars with no rockets or a means to actually land on Mars. Could Russia help out? Possibly, but it will still lead to ESA taking on more cost than it has budgeted for."

jfruh writes "In an email exchange with privacy blogger Dan Tynan, Columbia law professor Eben Moglen referred to Facebook as a 'man in the middle attack' — that is, a service that intercepts communication between two parties and uses it for its own nefarious purposes. He said, 'The point is that by sharing with our actual friends through a web intermediary who can store and mine everything, we harm people by destroying their privacy for them. It's not the sharing that's bad, it's the technological design of giving it all to someone in the middle. That is at once outstandingly stupid and overwhelmingly dangerous.' Tynan is a critic of Facebook, but he thinks Moglen is overstating the case."

New submitter Kiyyik writes "After weeks of wrangling over shared space on utility poles, Google and the KC Board of Public Utilities have gotten their act together and Google is starting to wire Kansas City, Kansas today. They will be paying attachment fees and hanging the fiber optic lines in the space on the poles reserved for telecommunications. The Kansas City, Missouri side is still on track to begin a few months behind the Kansas side."

tykev writes "The Czech government suspended the ratification process of the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement, ACTA, said Prime Minister Petr Necas today. The government wants to further analyze the issue. There were a number of public demonstrations against ACTA in several Czech towns, and some Czech Euro MP's oppose ACTA as being 'completely wide of the mark'. Earlier, Poland announced its intention to suspend the ratification process as well. In the meantime, the website of the ruling Czech Civic Democratic Party was attacked and defaced by Anonymous who also publicly released personal data of the party's members."

Zothecula writes "Research scientist Andreas Mershin has a dream to bring inexpensive solar power to the masses, especially those in developing countries. After years of research, he and his team at MIT's Center for Bits and Atoms, along with University of Tennessee biochemist Barry Bruce, have worked out a process that extracts functional photosynthetic molecules from common yard and agricultural waste. If all goes well, in a few years it should be possible to gather up a pile of grass clippings, mix it with a blend of cheap chemicals, paint it on your roof and begin producing electricity. Talk about redefining green power plants!"

itwbennett writes "A Court in Delhi, India has ordered Google to remove content that 'is said to mock gods worshipped in India,' according to an IDG News Service report. Mufti Ajiaz Arshad Qasmi, a private citizen, 'had filed a civil suit against Google and other Internet companies including Facebook, objecting to certain content on their websites.' While Google agreed to remove the content, citing a 'long-standing policy of responding to court orders,' other Internet companies named in the suit are likely to appeal."

First time accepted submitter tonique writes "Perl Data Language (PDL) 2.4.10 has been released. Highlights of the new release are automatic multi-thread support, support for data structures larger than 2 GB and POSIX threads support. Also available is the first draft of the new PDL book. PDL is especially suitable for scientists. For those not in the know, 'PDL gives standard Perl the ability to compactly store and speedily manipulate the large N-dimensional data arrays which are the bread and butter of scientific computing.' Commercial languages used for the same purpose include MATLAB and IDL."

suraj.sun writes in with a story about the spread of full body scanners. It reads in part:"Passengers at airports across Australia will be forced to undergo full-body scans or be banned from flying under new laws to be introduced into Federal Parliament this week. In a radical $28 million security overhaul, the scanners will be installed at all international airports from July and follows trials at Sydney and Melbourne in August and September last year. The Government is touting the technology as the most advanced available, with the equipment able to detect metallic and non-metallic items beneath clothing. It's also keen to allay concerns raised on travel online forums that passengers would appear nude on security screens as they had when similar scanners were introduced at US airports. The technology will show passengers on a screen as stick figures of neither sex."

First time accepted submitter Cyberax writes "After 30 years of drilling and weeks of media attention the Antarctic underground lake Vostok has been reached by Russian scientists (translated article). Deep drilling in the vicinity of Vostok Station in Antarctica began in the 1970s, when the existence of the reservoir was not yet known. Scientists are beginning paleoclimatic studies and further exploration of the lake will continue in 2013-2014."