Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Google


'China's Google' Baidu is making

smart glasses

Baidu, China's largest search engine, is working on its own smart glasses technology - similar to Google's Glass project.
A spokesman for the Chinese firm said the glasses would be able to search by using facial recognition.
Kaiser Kuo told Reuters that Baidu had not yet decided whether the glasses would be made commercially available.
"We experiment with every kind of technology that is related to search," Mr Kuo said.
Like Google Glass, the Baidu glasses - reportedly known internally as Baidu Eye - consist of a small LCD screen attached to a slim headset.
leaked image taken at Baidu's offices show a person wearing a headset matching the description - but Baidu would not confirm if it was Baidu Eye.
Some early reports had suggested that news of the technology was in fact an April Fool's joke - but while some reports on 1 April were embellished, there was truth behind the rumours.
Alarm
Mr Kuo said that the technology makes the most of Baidu's considerable expertise in facial recognition.
"What you are doing with your camera, for example, taking a picture of a celebrity and then checking on our database to see if we have a facial image match, you could do the same thing with a wearable visual device."Such words are likely to alarm those worried about the capabilities of this type of technology.
Campaign group "Stop the Cyborgs" has called for limits on when the headsets can be used.
"We want people to actively set social and physical bounds around the use of technologies and not just fatalistically accept the direction technology is heading in," a campaigner told the BBC last month.
Meanwhile, in San Francisco - home of Google - a cafe has said it will ban customers from using Google Glass on its premises.
In response to worries, Google has said: "We are putting a lot of thought into how we design Glass because new technology always raises important new issues for society."

EUROPA LEAGUE QUARTER-FINAL


Chelsea are without Ashley Cole and Gary Cahill for the first leg of their Europa League quarter-final tie against Rubin Kazan at Stamford Bridge.
Left-back Cole has a hamstring injury, while central defender Cahill is sidelined with a knee injury.
Demba Ba is ineligible after playing for Newcastle in the group stage.The Russian visitors will be without striker Alexander Ryazantsev and French midfielder Yann M'Vila, who both miss the trip to London through injury."I have to pick a team that can win any game," said Benitez. "You have to approach the next game like the most important game.
"Sometimes we will pick one team for one game and we will change three, four, seven players for the next one. That is the way to compete and to be capable of winning in every competition.
"Rubin can score goals away, they will try to do that. It will be tough. It's important to score and to do well."
Rubin are competing in the last eight of a European competition for the first time after beating holders Atletico Madrid in the last 32 and their Spanish compatriots Levante in the last round.
Rubin manager Kurban Berdyev believes Chelsea are the toughest quarter-final opponents they could have faced.
"However, for us, it will become just an extra motivating factor that will make this tie more attractive," said Berdyev.
"We will try to give our best in these matches against a top English team to perform at their level."
They also have fitness concerns over midfielder Alan Kasaev, who was ruled out of their weekend league win against Lokomotiv Moscow.
Chelsea boss Rafael Benitez is expected to reshuffle his starting XI as the Blues prepare for their third match in six days.
The Spaniard was forced to defend his team selection after his much-changed side were beaten 2-1 at Southampton on Saturday - a result which hindered their hopes of a top-four Premier League finish.
He made another seven changes for Monday's FA Cup quarter-final win against Manchester United and the move paid dividends as Chelsea reached the competition's semi-finals for the fifth time in seven years.
Benitez will be forced to make at least two changes from that team with the absences of Cole and Ba.
Cole, 32, could be sidelined for two weeks after being substituted after 21 minutes against United and, along with Cahill, looks set to miss next week's return leg in Russia.

anti-HIV


Body's anti-HIV 'training manual' offers vaccine hopes


The body's own "training manual" for successfully attacking HIV has been recorded by scientists and it is hoped it can be used to design vaccines.

HIV mutates in order to survive the onslaught of a patient's immune system. 

However, some patients develop highly effective antibodies that can neutralise huge swathes of HIV mutants.
An analysis of the arms race between body and virus, published in the journal Nature, has shown how these antibodies are made.
When someone is infected with HIV, their body produces antibodies to attack it. But the virus mutates and evades the offensive, so the body produces new antibodies that the virus then evades and the war goes on.
However, after about four years of this struggle some patients hit on to a winner by targeting something the virus finds harder to change - an Achilles heel.
"Even though the virus mutates and there are literally millions of quasi-species of virus because of all these mutations, but there are parts the virus can't change otherwise the virus cannot infect - these are the vulnerable sites," Prof Barton Haynes, of Duke University, in North Carolina, told the BBC.
At this stage of the infection it is far too late to make a difference for the patient as the virus is hiding in untouchable reservoirs.
However, some researchers believe that vaccines that encourage the body to produce these "broadly neutralising antibodies" may give people immunity to the virus.
Super antibody
The research team's study is based on a patient in Africa who had a rapid diagnosis, about four weeks after being infected with the virus.
They were eventually able to produce an antibody named CH103 that could neutralise 55% of HIV samples.
It was not produced in one easy step. Rather it was the product of the war of the immune system and HIV trying to out-evolve each other.
However, through regular genetic analyses of both the immune system and virus, researchers could piece together each of the steps that culminated in the production of CH103.
It is like a training manual for the immune system.
Prof Haynes said: "What we were able to do was map out the arms race of both virus and antibody, and in doing so we have now a map.
"This is the first time we've been able to see the actual road map."
He said the challenge now was to see if re-creating those steps could lead to a viable vaccine.
However, he said it would almost certainly need to be a vaccine combining multiple "Achilles heels" - in the same way that HIV therapies are a combination of drug treatments.
Prof Jane Anderson, consultant at Homerton hospital in London and chair of the British HIV Association, said: "The study gives important insights into the ways in which the human immune system responds to HIV infection and increases our understanding about the relationships between the virus and the human host.
"This is another welcome step on the path to develop vaccines against HIV."
Dr Sarah Joseph, who tests HIV vaccines at the Medical Research Council clinical trials unit, said: "This paper is really interesting. Some people do make antibodies that neutralise a lot of HIV virus, bit it is not of use to them as they produce it way too late."
She said harnessing these antibodies "could be a big deal" and there was "even talk about mass-producing antibodies and infusing people with them".
appeared on bbc

microcar


Selling the world’s largest microcar collection

Small, quirky and exceedingly rare, the cars of the Bruce Weiner Microcar Museum will seek new homes on 15 and 16 February.

The auction, conducted by RM Auctions in Madison, Georgia – where themuseum has stood for 15 years –includes roughly 200 cars and more than 300 pieces of automotive ephemera. Isettas, Messerschmitts andPeels are among the notable micros that will go to the auction block.
For further information on the individual auction lots, click here.

McLaren P1


McLaren reveals P1 performance stats

Want to know how fast the 903bhp supercar will go/cost? Step this way. Plus, first official production pics.

This is the moment quite literally some of you have been waiting for. You've seen the camouflage development mules. You've seen the interior. You've learned about its hybrid drivetrain and how much power its packing.
Today, you will learn that the McLaren P1 supercar will accelerate from 0-62mph in "less than three seconds" and on to a limited top speed of 218mph. Fast, no?
That's not all. McLaren has revealed more acceleration details with which you can arm yourself in the inevitable Discussing Which Supercar Is Best In The Pub On Friday Night With Friends game (deluxe edition). The P1 will sprint from 0-124mph (0-200km/h) in less than seven seconds, and go from 0-186mph (0-300km/h) in 17 seconds. McLaren rightly informs us that last benchmark is some nine seconds quicker than the old McLaren F1.
To provide you with some perspective, the Porsche 918 Spyder is estimated to hit 62mph in under three seconds and 124mph in around eight seconds, while a Bugatti Veyron SS – the 1,183bhp orange merchant of speed – hits 124mph from rest in 7.3 seconds and 186mph in 15 seconds dead. So despite McLaren's claims that the P1 was never meant to be the fastest outright, it's clearly no slouch.
Production is limited to 375 models only, combining – as you know – a 3.8-litre twin-turbo V8 to an electric motor to provide 903bhp. And because it's a hybrid, emissions (combined) sit below 200g/km of CO2. There are also DRS and IPAS technologies on board to ally it closely with the company's Formula 1 activity. This is good.
Pirelli has been working with McLaren on the tires too, and has developed a special compound for the P1, probably something a little bit less rubbish than the F1 tire TopGear.com made in Turkey. Ahem.
And here's one of the best bits about the P1. We're told the brakes are akin to those on a GT3 racer, developed by Akebono and featuring a new kind of carbon ceramic disc, previously used in space. Space!
Sadly, for us mere mortals, the price is equally cosmic. Because McLaren has confirmed that this limited run, 903bhp rear-wheel-drive hypercar that we estimate will weigh around 1,500kg (3,305lbs), will cost £866,000 ($1.3 million).
That's quite a chunk of change, but then the upcoming Porsche 918 Spyder and new Ferrari Enzo aren't going to be cheap.
This story originally appeared on TopGear.com.

Venom GT


Hennessey Venom GT: A record surplus of speed



John Hennessey, the Texas-based tuner of performance automobiles (“making fast cars go faster” is his company's credo), has reason to be a little smug. His Hennessey Venom GT recently set the production-car speed record, edging out the Volkswagen Group’s Bugatti Veyron SuperSport.

In the asterisk-strewn realm of speed records, the Venom GT’s run to 265.7mph (427.6kph) at a Texas airfield in February is not unblemished; the SuperSport was tested to 268mph, but Hennessey is quick to note that production versions of that car are limited to 258mph to prevent their tires from exploding.
Regardless of what Veyron defenders may say, Hennessey’s run, explored in depth in the April issue of Top Gear magazine, was the loudest salvo yet from a company that has fuelled garish horsepower fantasies since 1991. The question facing Hennessey is, quite literally, where to now? With two miles of runway to work with before reserving the last nine-tenths of a mile for deceleration, the Venom GT has few straightaways on which to discover its outermost limits.
“You can run at Bonneville,” Hennessey said, referencing the expansive salt flats in the southwestern state of Utah, “but that’s like running on the beach. We ideally would be testing next in another controlled environment, like the runway, which minimises risk of critters crossing the road.”
The on-board video of the attempt shows the test driver pump his fists as he decelerates from the record run, in a seeming display of exaltation. Hennessey explained this was not the case.
“Our goal was 270, which would have silenced the Veyron camp for good,” he said. “So he was actually mad. If you watch closely he had some trouble shifting from fourth to fifth. He was angry at himself. But you also see him up around 262, 263 adjusting his visor, which had fallen down. That goes to show how comfortable and stable this car is, even at those speeds.”
About that car: maximum output of 1,244 horsepower and 1,115 pound-feet of torque, with a curb weight of 2,743lbs (1,244kg). The Venom GT presents a perverse interpretation of the “Simplify, then add lightness” axiom of Lotus Cars founder Colin Chapman.
Based, incidentally, on the chassis and body of the Lotus Exige sports coupe, the Venom GT is limited to a total run of 29. “We’ve built and delivered eight, we have four on order, and we expect to sell out the run next year,” Hennessey said.
By the time the company locates a suitable straightaway, it may have already moved to Venom 2.0. “The Venom GT2 is coming next year,” Hennessey said. “Different roof, new headlamps, some other changes in store.”
Though he did not confirm a timeline, Hennessey noted that higher-horsepower versions of the 2014 Chevrolet Corvette, which debuted at the Detroit auto show in January, are in the pipeline, as is a blown SRT Viper. New, Frankenstein-esque builds like the Venom GT are not on the immediate horizon, at least that Hennessey will admit to.
“I’m always looking at potential cars, but to do a standalone kind of car, it doesn’t make sense for us right now,” he said. “All in, we might have spent $4 million, $5 million on developing the Venom GT. The Pagani Huayra, you’re looking at least at $25 million.”
“Look, if the car is cool, and the performance potential is there, we’re always interested.”
To read more about the Venom GT’s record run, pick up the April 2013 issue of Top Gear magazine.


Didier Drogba says Chelsea still a lure for Jose Mourinho


Didier Drogba says Jose Mourinho could return to Chelsea because he has "unfinished business" with the Blues.

The striker was a key member of the Portuguese manager's squad during his three years at Stamford Bridge.

Drogba lines up for Galatasaray against Mourinho's Real Madrid in the Champions League on Wednesday - a trophy the forward won with the Blues last May.
"I don't think he's got over Chelsea," the 35-year-old Drogba said of Mourinho. "They haven't got over him."
Drogba, who left the west London outfit in the summer, feels his former club would benefit from having the 50-year-old manager back in charge for next season.
The Ivory Coast international also feels Mourinho's failure to win the Champions League at Stamford Bridge could tempt him to return.
The Real Madrid coach, who has won the Champions League with Porto and Inter Milan, claimed two Premier League titles, one FA Cup and twice lifted the League Cup during his three years in charge at Chelsea, between 2004 to 2007.
"When he came, he brought success," said Drogba, who scored the winning penalty in last season's Champions League final shootout win over Bayern Munich.
"We won league titles back-to-back with some great football and the only thing he didn't win was the Champions League.
"Maybe that is one of the reasons why he might want to come back. It is unfinished business."
Interim Blues manager Rafael Benitez, who has been an unpopular figure with some of the club's fans, has already stated he expects to leave the club in the summer.
And Drogba added: "I think for the club it is the best solution to bring Jose back. The fans want him back. He loves Chelsea.
"Because you want to rebuild a team and to give them the strength we had a few years ago, he could be the right person.
"He is a winner and is close to the players. He went to Inter and is at Real Madrid, but is still talking about Chelsea, so he loves this club."
Drogba might also be interested in returning to Chelsea in some capacity, should Blues owner Roman Abramovich pursue a deal for Mourinho.
The former Marseille striker, brought to the club by Mourinho in 2004, said: "Let me finish at Galatasaray first and then we will talk about that."
But he added that he still has strong feelings for the Blues.
"For this club I gave everything and, of course, they gave it back to me," he said. "I feel at home when I go to London. When I go to Chelsea's training ground, I can walk around with my eyes closed."


Croods retains


Croods retains top spot at UK box office


Caveman cartoon The Croods has topped the UK and Ireland box office chart for a
second successive week.
The Dreamworks animated feature about a prehistoric family who are forced to abandon their cave pulled in £3.3m between Friday and Sunday.
The Croods easily held off Bruce Willis' action figure-inspired sequel GI Joe: Retaliation, which debuted at number two with £2.8m.
Danny Boyle's Trance is third after taking £1.6m in its opening week.
The thriller stars Rosario Dawson as a hypnotherapist attempting to help James McAvoy's amnesiac art thief remember where he hid a stolen masterpiece.
The Croods, which features the voices of Nicolas Cage and Emma Stone, started out in 2005 as a co-production with British animators Aardman, scripted by Monty Python's John Cleese.
Dreamworks took over the project - originally titled Crood Awakening - when Aardman's five-film deal was curtailed after just two productions with the US studio.
Elsewhere, other new releases in the top 10 include US science fiction film The Host, a new entry at number five with £991,000, and Finding Nemo 3D, which took £265,000 to claim the number nine spot.
Wreck It Ralph finally slipped out of the top 10, but the arcade-based animation has now taken £22.6m since its release eight weeks ago.


Expert's Expect Drought to Last Until My




The severe drought in parts of northwestern and southwestern China is likely to continue into May because of the hot, dry weather, authorities said.
Sourch by: cctv

Mobile phone celebrates 40th anniversary


The first mobile phone call was made 40 years ago today, on 3 April 1973.
Martin Cooper, a senior engineer at Motorola, called a rival colleague at another telecoms
company and announced he was speaking from "a 'real' cellular telephone".
In 2012 a report carried out by the International Telecommunication Union found that there were six billion mobile phone subscriptions worldwide.
At the time the global population was seven billion.
"In 40 years we've moved rapidly from the mobile phone as a businessman's tool, through consumerisation and internet access to everything being connected," Dr Mike Short CBE, former president of the Institute of Engineering and Technology and Vice President of Telefonica Europe, told the BBC.
"In the future we will see a much wider range of devices - many of which will be wearable," he added.
"We will work more fully with all the senses. The move to glasses has begun - how can we use eye control to change and look at pages?
"Wearables, in terms of (smartphone) watches, are coming. We'll also see health measurement body vests that can communicate with your phone and then your doctor," said Dr Short.
Phone father
Martin Cooper, now aged 85, is renowned as the "father" of the mobile phone.
In a previous interview with the BBC he admitted he thought the initial cost of the devices (in 1983 the first models cost $3,500, or £2,317) might be prohibitive to the mobile phone becoming a mass-market product, but he did recognise that the hefty handsets would probably shrink.
"We did envision that some day the phone would be so small that you could hang it on your ear or even have it embedded under your skin," he said.
Mr Cooper said his vision for a mobile phone was first conceived in the late 1960s when the car telephone was invented by AT&T.
He wanted to create "something that would represent an individual so you could assign a number not to a place, not to a desk, not to a home but to a person," he said.
"It pleases me no end to have had some small impact on people's lives because these phones do make people's lives better. They promote productivity, they make people more comfortable, they make them feel safe and all of those things," Mr Cooper added.
He was also pleased to have been one step ahead of the competition.
"When you are a competitive entity like we were, it's one of the great satisfactions in life," he said.
Do you remember your first mobile phone call or have a picture of your first handset? Send us your comments using the form below

Apple's 'Map's Ground Trurth Specialists' fix Map apps flub


Apple's Maps mess of six months ago is a distant memory for some, but not for the Cupertino company, which has worked quickly to rectify matters and improve its map app, introduced as part of its iOS 6 mobile operating system. That damage control includes hiring employees with the title of "Maps Ground Truth Specialists" around the globe to make sure Apple's maps are up to snuff.
While Apple isn't the first company to have the Orwellian-sounding position of "Maps Ground Truth Specialists" — Google has them, too — it's noteworthy because of Apple's map flubs, something that caused CEO Tim Cook to make a public apology.
In the United States, those flubs included initially showing the Brooklyn Bridge as almost plunging into the water and marking a Florida supermarket site as one for a hospital.
Right now, there are seven openings for "Maps Ground Truth Specialists" around the world, including one in the United States. That role, Apple says in the job description, will include:
  • Evaluating competing products in-region relative to our maps.Apple job description
  • Testing new releases of map code and data around the U.S.
  • Collecting ground truth data to allow for analysis of the impact of potential map code or data changes relative to known truth.
  • Utilizing local expertise to provide feedback about U.S.-specific mapping details.


As you can see, there are jobs all over the globe, including Australia.
There last fall, police were warning drivers not to use Apple Maps
because it wrongly placed the city of Midura in a national park,leaving some motorists stranded and in a snake-infested area.


Forsooth! Shakespeare was a tax dodger, study says


Hoarder, moneylender, tax dodger — it's not how we usually think of William Shakespeare.
But we should, according to a group of academics who say the Bard was a ruthless businessman who grew wealthy dealing in grain during a time of famine.
Researchers from Aberystwyth University in Wales argue that we can't fully understand Shakespeare unless we study his often-overlooked business savvy.
"Shakespeare the grain-hoarder has been redacted from history so that Shakespeare the creative genius could be born," the researchers say in a paper due to be delivered at the Hay literary festival in Wales in May.
Jayne Archer, a lecturer in medieval and Renaissance literature at Aberystwyth, said that oversight is the product of "a willful ignorance on behalf of critics and scholars who I think — perhaps through snobbery — cannot countenance the idea of a creative genius also being motivated by self-interest."
Archer and her colleagues Howard Thomas and Richard Marggraf Turley combed through historical archives to uncover details of the playwright's parallel life as a grain merchant and property owner in the town of Stratford-upon-Avon whose practices sometimes brought him into conflict with the law.
"Over a 15-year period he purchased and stored grain, malt and barley for resale at inflated prices to his neighbors and local tradesmen," they wrote, adding that Shakespeare "pursued those who could not (or would not) pay him in full for these staples and used the profits to further his own money-lending activities."
He was pursued by the authorities for tax evasion, and in 1598 was prosecuted for hoarding grain during a time of shortage.
The charge sheet against Shakespeare was not entirely unknown, though it may come as shock to some literature lovers. But the authors argue that modern readers and scholars are out of touch with the harsh realities the writer and his contemporaries faced.
He lived and wrote in the late 16th and early 17th centuries, during a period known as the "Little Ice Age," when unusual cold and heavy rain caused poor harvests and food shortages.
"I think now we have a rather rarefied idea of writers and artists as people who are disconnected from the everyday concerns of their contemporaries," Archer said. "But for most writers for most of history, hunger has been a major concern — and it has been as creatively energizing as any other force."
She argues that knowledge of the era's food insecurity can cast new light on Shakespeare's plays, including "Coriolanus," which is set in an ancient Rome wracked by famine. The food protests in the play can be seen to echo the real-life 1607 uprising of peasants in the English Midlands, where Shakespeare lived.
Shakespeare scholar Jonathan Bate told the Sunday Times newspaper that Archer and her colleagues had done valuable work, saying their research had "given new force to an old argument about the contemporaneity of the protests over grain-hoarding in 'Coriolanus.'"Archer said famine also informs "King Lear," in which an aging monarch's unjust distribution of his land among his three daughters sparks war.
"In the play there is a very subtle depiction of how dividing up land also involves impacts on the distribution of food," Archer said.
Archer said the idea of Shakespeare as a hardheaded businessman may not fit with romantic notions of the sensitive artist, but we shouldn't judge him too harshly. Hoarding grain was his way of ensuring that his family and neighbors would not go hungry if a harvest failed.
"Remembering Shakespeare as a man of hunger makes him much more human, much more understandable, much more complex," she said.
"He would not have thought of himself first and foremost as a writer. Possibly as an actor — but first and foremost as a good father, a good husband and a good citizen to the people of Stratford."
She said the playwright's funeral monument in Stratford's Holy Trinity Church reflected this. The original monument erected after his death in 1616 showed Shakespeare holding a sack of grain. In the 18th century, it was replaced with a more "writerly" memorial depicting Shakespeare with a tasseled cushion and a quill pen.