Regional IT professionals, engineers and scientists face disappointment, inconvenience and expense as conferences and educational events planned for Bahrain this year are being canceled or rescheduled due to the recent unrest.
WASHINGTON: A NASA scientist reports detecting tiny fossilized bacteria on three meteorites, and maintains these microscopic life forms are not native to Earth.
LOS ANGELES: Land a rover on Mars to collect rocks and soil samples that could later be returned to Earth. If that’s a budget-buster, then orbit Jupiter’s moon Europa, which may have a liquid ocean beneath its frozen surface, or study Uranus’ atmosphere.
NEW YORK: Here’s how Apple Inc.’s iPad 2, unveiled on Wednesday, stacks up against competing tablets.
SAN FRANCISCO: More than a year after igniting the tablet computing craze, Apple Inc. prepares to unveil the second version of its blockbuster iPad — possibly minus lead showman Steve Jobs. Plenty has changed over the course of the year.
JERUSALEM: A new Israeli weapons system knocked down a Palestinian anti-tank rocket in its first combat test Tuesday, the military said, showing off technology that could protect the heavy vehicles that have been the mainstay of the world’s ground forces for decades.
SAN DIEGO: The Pentagon has poured millions of dollars into the development of tiny drones inspired by biology — including the hummingbird — each equipped with video and audio equipment that can record sights and sounds. They could be used to spy, but also to locate people inside earthquake-crumpled buildings and detect hazardous chemical leaks.
The smaller, the better.
Besides the hummingbird, engineers in the growing unmanned aircraft industry are working on drones that look like insects and the helicopter-like maple leaf seed.
CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida: The International Space Station got a sorely needed storage room Tuesday, a 21-foot(6.4-meter)-long supply closet packed with goods and a humanoid robot that will remain boxed up for another two months.
TOKYO: A technology company is organizing the world’s first marathon for robots in Japan, a country known for its love of gizmos.
MEXICO CITY: Monarch butterfly colonies in Mexico more than doubled in size this winter after bad storms devastated their numbers a year ago, conservationists said on Monday although the migrating insect remains under threat.
BARCELONA, Spain: Nokia Corp. will get billions of dollars from Microsoft Corp. to ditch its current smart-phone software in favor of Windows Phone 7, Nokia CEO Stephen Elop said Sunday, in a defense of the deal.
LONDON: Britain’s leading heart charity launched a 50 million pound ($80 million) research project on Tuesday into the potential of stem cells to regenerate heart tissue and “mend broken hearts.”
LONDON: Cellphone security threats rose sharply last year as a proliferation of Internet-enabled mobile devices like smartphones and tablets provided new opportunities for cybercriminals, security software maker McAfee said. San Antonio Spurs guard George Hill, right, drives past Detroit Pistons guard Will Bynum during the first half of their NBA basketball game in Auburn Hills, Michigan, on Tuesday. (Reuters)
SAN FRANCISCO: Google Inc. launched a special service to allow people in Egypt to send Twitter messages by dialing a phone number and leaving a voice-mail, as Internet access remains cut off in the country amid anti-government protests.
SEATTLE: Google is accusing Microsoft Corp. of cheating to make its Bing search engine better. Microsoft says the way it is improving results isn't copying. Matt Cutts, head of Google's Web spam team, said Tuesday that Bing was returning search results that seem a little too close to Google's own. That was especially the case for obscure searches.
ARLINGTON, Virginia: US aviation security authorities on Tuesday unveiled a new pilot program aimed at quelling an uproar about full-body scanners used to screen air travelers — the new software will no longer produce an image of the actual person.
ANCHORAGE, Alaska: Fossilized tracks from two newly discovered prehistoric birds have been found in Alaska’s Denali National Park, according to findings released by an expert in Arctic paleontology.
BEIJING: China’s capital is facing its longest wait for winter snowfall in 60 years as drought in the northern part of the country affects millions of people.
BEIJING: China has blocked the word “Egypt” from the country’s wildly popular Twitter-like service, while coverage of the political turmoil has been tightly restricted in state media.
TOKYO: Tiny bats, no bigger than a car key, have been discovered roosting in carnivorous pitcher plants in Borneo — with their droppings a vital nutrient for the plants.
HONG KONG: The cholera bacterium has undergone important mutations in recent years, causing longer outbreaks of the disease with increased fatalities, researchers reported on Wednesday.
TOKYO: Tiny bats, no bigger than a car key, have been discovered roosting in carnivorous pitcher plants in Borneo — with their droppings a vital nutrient for the plants.
The development engineers at Canon must believe they are in a technological paradise — when they can get round to separating reality from the virtual reality they create.
The web has changed publishing enormously. The first eBooks were simply text in a digital format. But now e-books feature audio, video and text files, plus hyperlinks to other content outside the book. The publishing industry itself has changed dramatically, too. That has left many established publishers searching for new ways to compete. Houghton Mifflin Company traces its history to 1832. Famous authors such as Longfellow, Emerson, Hawthorne, Twain and Thoreau were published by the company.
California: The US Air Force’s secrecy-shrouded X-37B unmanned spaceplane returned to Earth early Friday after more than seven months in orbit on a classified mission, officials said.
NEW YORK: If you have people on your gift list who travel a lot, you may want to think about giving them something to keep them comfortable and entertained while on the go, even if they’re not as nomadic as George Clooney’s road warrior character in the movie “Up in the Air.” We can’t do anything about delays, cramped seating, jetlag, traffic jams and noisy passengers, but these gadgets could make it easier to tune them out:
NEW YORK: Suppose you could repair tissue damaged by a heart attack by magically turning other cells into heart muscle, so the organ could pump effectively again.
STEVENAGE, England: Eden Sawczenko used to recoil when other little girls held her hand and turned stiff when they hugged her. This year, the 4-year-old autistic girl began playing with a robot that teaches about emotions and physical contact — and now she hugs everyone. The robot, named Kaspar, is programmed to do things like smile, frown, laugh, blink and wave his arms. There are several versions of Kaspar, including one advanced enough to play Nintendo Wii.
A few months back Acer announced their Alive content store. At the press conference held for the launch there was a good amount of grumbling from journalists because Acer wasn’t very clear about how it would be protecting user’s privacy — particularly concerning the sharing of information about content downloads. New research from Professor Trevor Pinch reveals that there is good reason to be concerned about such data collection and sharing because some personality traits can be revealed through people’s app downloads and use habits.
Every week, Arab News in conjunction with I.Zone — Apple Premium Resellers in Saudi Arabia — will highlight amazing apps in various categories. Apart from the chance to explore the world of apps, viewers will have the opportunity to rate and comment on the featured apps of the week.
SAN FRANCISCO: Apple CEO Steve Jobs briefly emerged from his medical leave and walked on stage to a standing ovation Wednesday to unveil the second generation of the popular iPad. It comes with two cameras and will go on sale worldwide later this month.
How Apple’s iPad 2 compares to rivals
GENEVA: Mass-market automakers like Toyota, Fiat and Ford say green technologies on display at the Geneva Auto Show will help them weather the impact of skyrocketing fuel prices — while less humble sportscar makers like Lamborghini flaunted their gas guzzlers.
Poor battery life has long been an issue for business users of mobile computers. A business day can stretch 12 hours or more and business laptops generally offer batteries lasting nine hours or less. Those hours start to lessen further within just a few months of purchasing a new notebook. The battery issue creates bizarre behavior where road warriors are on the lookout for any opportunity to plug in and charge up. Constantly charging the battery before it runs down diminishes battery performance in the long run, but the quest to keep a battery pack at full power is an obsession for many business people who depend on a mobile computer.
• Take shots almost anywhere
• Made of plants
• Focus on women
• For the style conscious
• Shopping Mall on Facebook
Typefaces are an area that has generally been overlooked, but without Arabic typefaces that can be used digitally, the Arab world wouldn’t be able to move forward in this Internet Age,” remarked Mourad Boutros from his headquarters in London.
The Internet is such an incredible enabler for business that companies can hardly imagine how work ever got done without it. Unfortunately, the Internet is also a great enabler for industrial espionage. In 2009, and possibly earlier, the Night Dragon came after global oil, energy and petrochemical companies. It’s only now that those firms are discovering what data the beast ripped out of their networks.
Last week’s GSMA Mobile World Congress (MWC) in Barcelona was attended by more than more than 60,000 visitors from 200 countries— a new record. The star of the show of course was the Android mobile operating system, which featured in most of the 24 new phones introduced at MWC. If you’re an Android app developer, the future looks very bright.