304 posts categorized "Communication"

01/10/2013

The Big Internet Museum: Milestones and Memes

Thebiginternetmuseum-1

If you were given the opportunity to curate a historical museum about the Internet, what would you include? Now's your chance to add to the collection of The Big Internet Museum, a virtual hall exhibiting the milestones and memes of the 43-year history of the World Wide Web. The online museum project was created by Dutch advertising pros Dani Polak, Joep Drummen and Joeri Bakker.

BLOG: Top 10 Social Networking Sites

The collection begins precisely on October 29 1969, the day when former NASA researcher, Robert William Taylor, launched the ARPAnet operational network for the Pentagon's Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA). The network is widely recognized as the precursor of what we now know as the Internet.

The exhibit concludes with South Korean megastar Psy, whose 2012 song "Gangnam Syle" became the first video to tally one billion views on YouTube.

As you can imagine, the space between those two bookends spans all that is significant and silly about the network platform that, for better or worse, has redefined our lives. America Online (AOL), Internet Relay Chat (IRC), .GIFs, chat lingo, Hyper Text markup Language (HTML), Flash, Google, Facebook -- even Double Rainbow guy -- get equal billing in this gallery. But that's only a smattering of the collection.

BLOG: Thin, Flexible PaperTab To Redefine The Tablet

Take a tour here and decide for yourself if each icon is deserving or not. The public is able to vote on whether each "piece" belongs in the museum or not. Or better yet, submit your own idea.

via Gizmag

Credit: The Big Internet Museum




Email:


Silence Turned Into Secret Skype Messages

Secret_message

A team of encryption specialists has figured out a way to communicate with each other using silence. No, it's not a Cold War era spy trick, but it's still very tricky. Welcome to SkypeHide.

The group that created the technique for SkypeHide was led by Wojciech Mazurczyk, an assistant professor of computer networks and switching at the Warsaw University of Technology. Mazurczyk and his colleagues specialize in network steganography. Spy nerds know that's the science of hiding information and messages within computer networks.

Redditors Decrypt Mysterious Subway Message

SkypeHide works using something called "packet hijacking." Mazurczyk, along with Maciej Karaś and Krzysztof Szczypiorski, found that whenever we use Skype, the program keeps sending 70-bit data packets during the silences that occur within a conversation. So the computer scientists put their own secret messages into those data packets, according to Nancy Owano at Phys.org.

Mazurczyk told Owano, "The secret data is indistinguishable from silence-period traffic, so detection of SkypeHide is very difficult." This opens up the potential to transmit secret text, audio files and even video during a red herring conversation that's happening. At best, the speed for transmitting these secret messages was 1 kilobit per second, which isn't superfast but could be fast enough to communicate something important.

Spy techniques can backfire, though. What if this technique gets into the wrong hands? Hopefully that long pause between birthday greetings doesn't end up being an ideal time for terrorists to touch base. If secret messages are discovered and have a criminal connection, a law enforcement entity could compel Skype to share messages stored temporarily on its server.

Skype does tells its users to be careful. As much as the site tries to protect users, the site can't guarantee their safeguards "will prevent every unauthorized attempt to access, use or disclose personal information."

10 Trickiest Spy Gadgets Ever

More answers may be forthcoming later this summer, when the Warsaw University of Technology group plans to present SkypeHide at the ACM Workshop on Information Hiding and Multimedia Security in Montpellier, France. In the meantime, if you want to send some secret spy messages, there's always the classics: a red flag in the flowerpot or the chalk mark on the mailbox.

Credit: Hotblack

01/09/2013

Thin, Flexible PaperTab to Redefine the Tablet

Papertab-0

One of the many things I love about old media such as magazines and newspapers is their flexibility. You can roll 'em up, stick em' in your back pocket, bang 'em around and even use 'em to swat house flies.

New media tablets, on the other hand, require almost a custodial reverence when it comes to ownership. Cases and sleeves are a must for transport and safe keeping, lest it get scratched or shattered. And you can forget about rolling one up in your back pocket or swatting house flies. Unless you want gashes in your drywall.

NEWS: Nanoprinter Achieves Insane Resolution

Potentially bridging this gap is a team from Canada's Queen's University. They're collaborating with Intel Labs and Plastic Logic to redefine the tablet's form as a flexible, paper-like touchscreen computer called PaperTab.

But PaperTab's flexible form isn't its only innovation. Unlike tablets, which switch between apps on a single display, multiple PaperTabs are designed to be used together. Each tab acts as a window for separate applications, but they still interact with each other. 

For example, when a PaperTab is placed beyond reaching distance, it reverts to a thumbnail overview of the document, like icons on a desktop computer. When the tab is picked back up or touched, it switches back to a full screen view, like opening a new window.

Additionally, PaperTab's interface allows functions simply by tapping tabs together. For example, a photo can be sent via email simply by tapping a tab of a draft email together with a tab of a photo. Even cooler, when that email is ready to go, it can be sent by bending the top corner of the display. Also, placing tabs side by side can create a larger display surface.

BLOG: The Eyes Have It: Control Of Your Tablet

Designers say these functions emulate the natural handling of multiple sheets of paper. This may sound like a cluttered step back, but think how long it takes to back track through a tablet to close out or switch apps as opposed to picking up a piece of paper that's right in front of you.

"Using several PaperTabs makes it much easier to work with multiple documents," Roel Vertegaal, Director of Queen's University's Human Media Lab said on the university's website. "Within five to ten years, most computers, from ultra-notebooks to tablets, will look and feel just like these sheets of printed color paper."

via Gizmag

Credit: Queen's University

01/08/2013

Disney World To Track Your Fantasy

Jp07disney2-popup

Looks like the "Happiest Place On Earth" is about to become the "Most Connected Place On Earth."

According to the New York Times, this spring Walt Disney World in Orlando, Fla. will roll out MyMagic+, a new vacation management system that will include radio-frequency identification bracelets called "MagicBands." The rubber RFID bracelets will be encoded with credit card information, allowing visitors to buy ride tickets, pass through turnstiles and purchase food with a flick of the wrist.

PHOTOS: Top 10 Social Networking Sites

The MagicBands will also include user information such as the wearer's name and birthday, so that costumed Disney characters may offer a more personalized interaction. Imagine Mickey approaching someone and saying, "Hello Billy, I understand it's your birthday." This seemingly clairvoyant feature just adds to the fantasy says Disney officials.

“If we can enhance the experience, more people will spend more of their leisure time with us,” Thomas O. Staggs, chairman of Disney Parks and Resorts, told the New York Times.

The bands are part of a new website and app called My Disney Experience that will enable users of MyMagic+ to select three FastPasses for rides or VIP seating for special events. Visitors can register here for the MagicBands, which will also serve as room keys for on-site resorts and parking tickets.

The bands will remain optional, however Disney does plan to mine the wealth of consumer data it will collect from those who decide to participate. What rides did you visit? Did you purchase Mickey Mouse Ears or a balloon? Did you stop and say hi to Goofy or make a beeline to Donald Duck? These are all questions Disney believes MyMagic+ will answer.

Disney says they're aware of potential privacy concerns, especially with children, but explains that integrating the technology of MyMagic+ to the theme park is essential to staying relevant in the digital age. MagicBands will not be mandatory and guests will decide how much information to provide.

BLOG: Disney Patents Augmented Reality Food

Analysts expect the initiative will cost $800 million to $1 billion and affect the roughly 30 million people who visit Disney World every year.

Yes, the MagicBands are optional, but news like may make some people feel like a duck being gavaged for foie gras. So if you're not into being force fed monoculture, how about Black Flag's "Rise Above" for a little dessert. If that's a little too heavy for your palate, might I recommend the Dirty Projectors' more delicate version, one of my personal faves.

via NPR, the New York Times

Credit: Kent Phillips/Disney




Email:


Unlock Your Door With ShareKey

Fk01_13_g_Thema2_Smartphones_SIT

In the last year, I've locked myself out of my home no less than three times. Consequentially, that's resulted in me having to shimmy through open windows like a burglar. I'm surprised my neighbors never called the cops on me.

If only I had ShareKey, a near field communication (NFC) app for a smartphone, I could have avoided all the breaking and entering.

PHOTOS: Top 10 Social Networking Sites

Developed by Dr. Ahmad-Reza Sadeghi of Germany's Fraunhofer Institute for Secure Information Technology (SIT), the Android app communicates with smartlocks on one's door via NFC, which allows data to be exchanged wirelessly over a short range. To lock or unlock the door, simply wave the phone near the lock.

Unlike systems such as Lockitron and UniKey that use Wi-Fi and Bluetooth to send instructions remotely, ShareKey requires that a phone be physically waved in front of their locks, making it more difficult for hackers to steal the signal.

Better yet, the system allows for any smartphone to be granted access to the doors for a specified amount of time, be it a few hours or a few weeks. House guests, dog walkers and plant waterers all know what a three-ring circus it can be swapping keys and getting them made, so this feature is an added bonus. ShareKey can send these "electronic keys" directly to the recipient's smartphone as a QR code via email or a multimedia text message.

"For instance, I can grant the building superintendent access to my apartment for a short period so that he can open the door for the gas meter to be read while I'm at work," explains Alexandra Dmitrienko from the SIT. “The solution is built around modern security technologies and can be easily integrated into existing access control systems."

NEWS: When Will My Fridge Tweet Me?

At this year's CeBIT trade fair in Hannover, Germany, researchers from the Fraunhofer Institute for Secure Information Technology SIT in Darmstadt will demo ShareKey in an attempt to drum up interest in hopes that it will be on the market soon.

 via Gizmag

Credit: Fraunhofer SIT




Email:


01/07/2013

Gangsta Search Yo' Results With Gizoogle

Gizoogle-622

Google's search results are way too vanilla for an OG like yourself. You need a search engine with a little gansta funk in it. Fo' shizzle my nizzle, here's one that's "realer than Real Deal Holyfield": Gizoogle.

What's Gizoogle you ask? Though not affiliated with Google in any way, it's just like its more straight-laced cousin, with one noticable difference: it translates all search results into gangstalicious slang popularized by Snoop Dogg.

Not hip to Snoop's linguistic flair on his "Doggy Fizzle Televizzle" show on MTV? No worries, just log on and get schooled. But before you do, Gizoogle has a few words of warning.

DNEWS NUGGET: Snoop Dogg is Now A Lion

"This website is only intended for mature audiences farmiliar with the slanguage used by Snoop Dogg, and anybody under the age of 13 should not visit this website without adult supervision," the website states.

For example, let's type in the most non-gangsta thing we can think of. How about the "Lawrence Welk Show." Here's what Gizoogle's "Wikipizzle" page spits out:

"Da Lawrence Welk Show be a American televised musical variety sheezy hosted by bangin' band leader Lawrence Welk. Da series aired locally up in Los Angelez fo' four muthaf****n' years (1951-55), then nationally fo' another 27 1/2 muthaf****n' years (1955-1971) via the ABC network..."

According to the website, "Gizoogle was originally created by John Beatty, who started the site in 2005 as a joke after inspiration from a friend's constant use of the slang on America Online's Instant Messenger service" and also by Snoop's" show on MTV.

Over the years Gizoogle has encountered some glitches, ungergone address changes and been on and off line. However, now it's been restored to its former glory.

NEWS: This Is Your Brain On Freestyle Rap

"The slanguage used in our algorithm has been quoted from Snoop Dogg himself and is commonly used in movies, conversations and music he has written," states the website. "These words are based on slang and can not be interpreted in any other way other than how they are quoted. There are no racist words used in the algorithm."

Sure, Gizoogle isn't sheets-and-burning-crosses racist, but it does wander into the ironic "hipster racism" territory, a topic that's been hotly discussed in recent years. Regardless, this is probably a questions for Yo, Is This Racist?

via Wired

Credit: Gizoogle




Email:


01/04/2013

A Robocall Blocking Contest? You're On!

Smashed_phone

The Federal Trade Commission, overwhelmed by complaints about robocalls, is getting desperate. Come up with a winning solution and you could walk away with big prize money. No, it's not a scam.

If you've ever picked up the phone and heard an automated message you never agreed to get, that's a robocall. And it's illegal. The FTC fields more than 200,000 complaints about these calls every month -- many of which are scams, according to NPR's Lauren Silverman. In the fight to stop more than a billion robocalls, the FTC is asking citizens for solutions.

Top Twitter Takedown Tweets: Photos

The contest, called the FTC Robocall Challenge, will be accepting submissions until 5 pm EST January 17. According to the rules, the person or team that the judges think has the best overall solution gets $50,000 and a travel for up to two representatives to Washington, D.C. The winning solution will be announced on April 15.

Robocallers can use Voice over Internet Protocol or VOIP from offshore locations to stay just beyond the FTC's grasp. That makes the challenge even harder. So far, hundreds of individuals and teams have submitted ideas for solutions. Some are high-tech, while others are fairly straightforward.

One submission by Ron Prosky highlighted on CNN Money proposes phone service providers offer a robocall filter called Robo Nono that asks inbound callers to enter a three-digit code in order to leave a voicemail message.

The Verge's Adrianne Jeffries pointed out that an app submitted to the contest, the Robocall Lookup Tool, allows robocall recipients to automatically submit the call details to a database and is currently free on iTunes. Another submission suggested simply turning your phone off and changing the outgoing voicemail message to say "Due to the number of robocalls I'm receiving, I've turned off my phone so that it won't ring," Silverman reported.

How Do You Hack Into a Phone?

Robocalls are basically phone spam, and they're awful to receive. To me, they're even worse than the early days of email spam because they tie up your phone line. That feels more personal somehow. Here's hoping someone out there has a solution that makes persistent robocalls a thing of the past.

Credit: Solarbotics



Email:


12/26/2012

2012: Science Fiction Dreams That Came True

Science-fiction-622

As a longtime reader of science fiction, it's always interesting to see how the visions of writers eventually become real. Take Arthur C. Clarke's letter to Wireless World in 1945, which details the geostationary communications satellite network everyone uses today. The satellites are in what is called the "Clarke Orbit." And Isaac Asimov wrote frequently about humanoid robots, which are becoming more common in research labs -- although we have yet to see R. Daneel Olivaw from Asimov's Robot series.

So inspired by these writers and others, I decided to take a look at 2012 and the futuristic technologies that are materializing before our eyes.

ANALYSIS: Robot Prostitutes, the Future of Sex Tourism

Bionic Limbs
The term "cyborg" was coined in 1960 by Manfred E. Clynes and Nathan S. Kline, in an article they wrote for the journal Astronautics. Since then bionic limbs have been a trope in many pieces of fiction -– The Six Million Dollar Man of the 1970s, the Borg of the Star Trek franchise, and even Darth Vader. In 2012 for the first time, a paralyzed woman was able to control a robotic limb and feed herself directly with her brain. Continuing work with primates demonstrated that it's possible to make the brain-computer interface efficient enough to design more realistic movement into the limbs. The bionic limbs so far don't look anything like their fictional counterparts, as they are still connected via external electrodes to the skull. But that dream seems to be a lot closer than it was even a decade ago.

Quantum Teleportation and Communication
While it's not possible -- yet -- to "beam" an object around as in Star Trek, new records for zapping photons instantly from one place to another were set this year. Quantum teleportation has been done in the lab for some time, but the distances were on the order of a few yards. In 2012 the new record was 89 miles. In addition to teleporting, scientists built the first quantum Internet. It's only a beginning, but teleporting photons for miles would enable communications that can't be hacked or eavesdropped.

Genetic Disease Prevented
Genetic engineering for "better" humans is a theme that's appeared repeatedly ever since Aldous Huxley's Brave New World in 1931 -- although at that point nobody knew what DNA really was. Later, films such as Gattaca and novels such as Beggars in Spain explore the implications of widely available genetic alterations. In 2012, we saw a proof-of-concept for mitochondrial diseases. About one in 200 people are born with a disorder of the mitochondria, the energy factories of cells. For the first time scientists were able to transfer the nuclear DNA of one human egg cell to another. Two groups independently found a way to transplant nuclei between human egg cells, leaving behind the mitochondrial DNA, which is passed from mother to child. The finding means that mitochondrial disorders could be cured before a child is born. Such techniques won't cure something like Down's syndrome, which involves nuclear DNA. But it shows that some manipulation of the human genome is not only possible, but happening. 

ANALYSIS: Ray Bradbury's Visions

The Universal Translator
Most of the time when intrepid explorers in fiction meet aliens, they always seem to speak perfect English. Doctor Who's TARDIS generates a field that allows travelers to be understood, while the crew of the Enterprise never seem to need a dictionary. Kim Stanley Robonson's Mars Trilogy features one, but he didn't think it would appear until late in the 21st century (the novels were written in the 1990s). While they won't let you talk to aliens, in the last year several speech-to-speech translators have managed to reach real consumer devices -- and even one type that uses your own voice. Most of the apps require an internet connection, though some, such as Jibbigo, can store their dictionaries locally. (If they ever add Klingon I'm taking it to the next ComicCon).

Head-mounted Computer Glasses
Readers of Charles Stross' novel Accelerando would have eagerly anticipated Google Glasses -- the Internet giant's foray into augmented reality. In the novel, "venture altruist" Manfred Macx carries his data and his memories in a pair of glasses connected to the Internet. Google Glasses allow the wearer to access data, the Internet and capture life via a head-mounted digital camera. Memories will have to wait.

Private Space Flight
In many science fiction stories, space travel is private. In Ridley's Scott latest movie, Prometheus, the Weyland Corporation funds an expedition to follow a star map to the distant moon LV-223. In real life, Elon Musk's SpaceX launched the first of a dozen planned missions to the International Space Station. The Dragon capsule is designed to resupply the ISS, but Musk, who made his fortune as founder of PayPal, has bigger plans: a colony on Mars. Is 2013 going to be the year human spaceflight becomes an enterprise like railroads? We won't know that for a while, but SpaceX is a heck of a start.

This list isn't comprehensive, and it isn't meant to be the last word on anything; readers, if you think there's something I missed, please sound off in the comments!

Credit: Colin Anderson/Blend Images/Corbis




Email:


12/18/2012

NRA Vanishes From Facebook, Silent on Twitter

Nra-logo-622

In the aftermath of the Sandy Hook tragedy, the national outcry and debate over gun control continues to grow louder with each passing day. Yet on social media, one voice remains uncharacteristically silent. The Facebook page of the National Rifle Association (NRA) vanished over the weekend. Users are now  redirected to Facebook's homepage after clicking on the association's former location.

BLOG: Gun-Control Petition Demands Congress To Act

The staunch anti-gun-control organization's Twitter account has also fallen silent. Its last tweet was an ad for "10 Days of NRA Giveaways -- Enter today for a chance to win an auto emergency tool!" and appeared on the morning of December 14, the day of the shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School.

The NRA's social-media blackout is not uncommon. In July, after the fatal shooting of 12 people in an Aurora, Colo. movie theater, the NRA did not tweet for 10 days.

The NRA's Google+ and YouTube pages remain up, however the the NRA's most recent Google+ post on December 13th is locked. The NRA's last YouTube upload was on December 14th. Comments for this video have been disabled.

In a tweet last Thursday, the NRA celebrated it's 1.7 millionth Facebook "like," encouraging users to "KEEP THE MOMENTUM GOING! ASK YOUR FRIENDS TO 'LIKE' THE NRA!"

NEWS: Can Gun Laws Save Lives?

A Facebook spokesman told CNET the social network had nothing to do with the disappearance of NRA's page, leading many to assume the NRA took down their page rather than face the ire of anti-gun advocates. When contacted by Wired, a public affairs spokesperson for the NRA declined comment about the organization's Facebook page.

This has been a popular discussion on Discovery News, so we encourage the debate to continue. Is the NRA burying its head in the sand? Or is the NRA giving victims the space they need while the organization continues to strategize?

via Wired

Credit: Bettmann/CORBIS




Email:


12/12/2012

Oh, I WILL Find My iPhone!

Iphone-5

If you've ever had your iPhone stolen, you have have erased it completely using Apple's "Find my iPhone." This feature, which can be accessed online or through another iOS device, allows you to remotely lock your missing device with a four-digit passcode. You can even go so far as to delete your personal data and restore your iPhone, iPad, iPod touch, or Mac to its factory settings.

NEWS: See How Purchases Directly Impact Climate Change

Yesterday, Apple quietly released an update to the app that will show user's a road map to the exact location of a missing iPhone, iPad or iPod. When searching for the device's location on another iOS device, a tiny car icon will show up on the screen and when prompted, will provide directions to the lost device's whereabouts. The feature is only available on Apple device running iOS 6, so if you haven't already, bite the bullet and upgrade, if this kind of thing is important to you.

One would like to think this feature was added to serve as a memory jogger for those who may have left their phone somewhere and not as a tracker for a potential thief. Just be sure to have a cool head if you decide to hunt down your iPhone. It may be best to let the authorities handle it, or bring a big friend.

via PCMag

Credit: Rob Pegoraro / Discovery




Email:


Categories

My Other Accounts

Blog powered by TypePad
Member since 04/2005