Sunday, October 25, 2009

Eyes to the skies for the ‘Galilean Nights’


PARIS: Astronomers around the world are gearing up for three days of intense sky-watching in honour of Galileo, whose observations 400 years ago revolutionised our understanding of the cosmos.
The 'Galilean Nights' promoted by the International Astronomical Union (IAU) aim at giving hundreds of thousands of people the thrill of looking through a space telescope for the first time.
More than 1,000 public events in over 70 countries are being staged on Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights.
In October 1609 Galileo Galilei began observations with a two-lens telescope that eventually led him to discover the four main satellites of Jupiter and realise that Earth's Moon was pitted with craters and not a perfect sphere.
These and other discoveries led Galileo to conclude, like Nicolaus Copernicus, that Earth revolved around the Sun and not the other way around.
He was persecuted for heresy by the Vatican and forced to recant. The last ten years of his life were spent under house arrest. -AFP

Mobile phone giant Nokia sues Apple over patents


HELSINKI: Nokia, the world's biggest mobile phone maker, took on the iconic iPhone on Tuesday by suing US rival Apple for infringing 10 Nokia patents on mobile phone technology.
'The patents cover wireless data, speech coding, security and encryption and are infringed by all Apple iPhone models shipped since the iPhone was introduced in 2007,' Nokia said in a statement.
Nokia said it had filed the complaint against Apple on Thursday with the Federal District Court in Delaware in the United States.
'By refusing to agree appropriate terms for Nokia's intellectual property, Apple is attempting to get a free ride on the back of Nokia's innovation,' Ilkka Rahnasto, deputy head of Nokia's legal department, said in the statement.
The company stressed that it had spent 40 billion euros (60 billion dollars) in research and development over the past two decades.
'The ten patents in suit relate to technologies fundamental to making devices which are compatible with one or more of the GSM, UMTS (3G WCDMA) and wireless LAN standards,' Nokia said.
Nokia earlier this month posted its first quarterly loss in a decade amid falling sales. Analysts said the poor results were partly due to the growing popularity of Apple's iPhone and RIM's Blackberry over Nokia models. -AFP

Iodised salt intake dips to 17 per cent


ISLAMABAD: As the international community prepared to mark Iodine Deficiency Disorder Day on Friday with significant advances and campaigns to ensure good health, Pakistan has progressively lagged behind its South Asian neighbours in salt iodisation policy.
The Network for Consumer Protection said on Thursday that in Pakistan iodised salt intake had dipped to 17 per cent from a high of 90 per cent during vigorous campaigns back in the 90s, it had increased to nearly 80 per cent both in Bangladesh and Nepal.
Iodine deficiency was the world’s most prevalent, yet easily preventable, cause of brain damage. This micronutrient deficiency disorder was most commonly seen among poor, pregnant women and pre-school children.
The whole spectrum of health consequences linked were birth defects, increased neonatal mortality, brain damage, goitre and thyroid, impaired physical and mental growth and diminished school performances besides decreased fertility, spontaneous abortions and still-births in pregnant women.Pakistan ranked 6th amongst the countries where iodine deficiency was a serious public health problem, despite efforts over the past several decades there has been little improvement in the situation.
According to the most recent National Nutrition Survey of Pakistan in 2001-02, more than 50 per cent population of the country was at risk of Iodine Deficiency Disorders (IDDs). The survey said that nearly 30 per cent of school children and 36.5 per cent of mothers of children under 5 years of age were severely deficient in iodine.
The 1990 World Summit for Children set the goal of eliminating iodine deficiencies by 2000 and Pakistan government planned to eliminate IDD by the year 2000. The national goal of Universal Salt Iodisation (USI) was modified to 2010 and elimination of iodine deficiency was to be achieved by 2013.
Executive Coordinator of The Network for Consumer Protection, Dr Arif Azad, said that IDD global days provided an opportunity to take stock of slippage from health targets on USI campaign. It was troubling that Pakistan had fallen behind Bangladesh and Nepal. Steady investment and a strong political government could improve public health goals of mother and child health by fully signing up to the USI campaign.
'By promoting awareness and consumer demand for iodised salt we can prevent a whole generation from falling into diminished mental and physical health,' he said.

Japanese university plans huge ‘manga’ library


TOKYO: In a move to promote serious study of Japanese manga, a university in Tokyo plans to open a library with two million comic books, animation drawings, video games and other cartoon industry artifacts.

Tentatively named the Tokyo International Manga Library, it would open by early 2015 on the campus of the private Meiji University, and be available to researchers and fans from Japan and abroad.

‘Manga has been taken lightly in the past and there has been no solid archive for serious study,’ said Susumi Shibao, a library official at the university told AFP by telephone.

‘We want to help academic studies on manga as part of Japanese culture.’To give an early taste of its collection, the university will open the Yoshihiro Yonezawa Memorial Library of Manga and Subculture this October 31, featuring the late manga critic’s collection of 140,000 comic books.

Some of the books date back to before World War II.

Japan, which grew rich on exporting cars and high-tech goods, has stepped up an official campaign to promote its cultural offerings, from Tokyo city wear to video games and award-winning animation films.

Japanese manga, ranging from classic Astro Boy and the Doraemon robot cat to the latest smash hit Naruto, a tale of a ninja boy, has charmed children and adults worldwide.

The former conservative government of Taro Aso, which was ousted in August elections, had earmarked 11.7 billion yen (128 million dollars) for a museum on Japanese cartoon art and pop culture to be built in Tokyo.

But the plan, part of wider stimulus measures, was axed by the new centre-left government, which criticised the construction as a ‘state-run manga cafe’ that has nothing to do with boosting the economy.— AFP

Microsoft launches Windows 7


SAN FRANCISCO: Microsoft’s much-heralded Windows seven went on sale around the world Thursday as the US software giant seeks to reboot after the disappointment of its previous generation operating system Vista.
Windows seven made its global debut to generally good reviews with most technology analysts and users who tested a demo version praising it as a significant improvement on the much-maligned Vista.
‘We think our customers will enjoy the new capabilities, the speed, the performance,’ Microsoft chief executive Steve Ballmer said at a Windows seven launch event in New York. ‘There’s more you can do with this system.
‘The range and diversity of the application software is unsurpassed.’
By the time the day was a minute old, Microsoft workers were handing out Windows seven software as gifts at a party the US technology giant held at a San Francisco night club to coincide with a Web 2.0 Summit here.
‘Now we see if real people love Windows,’ said Brian Hall, general manager of Microsoft’s Windows Live business group.
Feedback from the millions of test users has Microsoft confident they have hit the mark with the new-generation operating system, which reportedly logged more pre-orders in Britain than did the final Harry Potter book.
‘This is the most customer excitement we’ve had in a long time for a Windows release,’ Hall said.
Microsoft is also celebrating the availability of Windows seven with parties and by opening its first retail shop, in the US city of Scottsdale, Arizona.
The shop features netbooks, laptops, desktop computers, Zune players, Xbox 360 videogame consoles, and mobile phones running on Microsoft software.
A second Microsoft store will open in northern California next week.
Microsoft on Thursday also began selling Windows-powered PCs from companies such as Sony, Dell, and Lenovo in its online store.
Microsoft hired David Porter, a retail industry veteran, in February to open retail stores that challenge the successful chain of Apple Stores operated by the maker of iPhones, iPods, and Macintosh computers.
The launch of Windows seven is expected to open the flood gates for low-priced, feature-rich personal computers based on the operating system. ‘We have great PCs coming out for Windows 7,’ Hall said.
An upgrade from Vista or the previous operating system Windows XP to the most basic version of Windows seven costs 120 dollars in the United States.
Analyst Rob Enderle of Silicon Valley’s Enderle Group said the Windows seven launch is a ‘big deal for Microsoft.’
‘Windows Vista was a train wreck,’ he said.
While computer users may not give much thought to the operating systems that serve as the brains of their machines, they are at the heart of Microsoft’s global software empire and run more than 90 per cent of the world’s computers.
Microsoft apparently learned a lesson from Vista and worked closely with computer makers, users and software developers while crafting Windows 7.
More than eight million people have dabbled with Windows seven since Microsoft began a beta test phase in January, according to Parri Munsell, director of consumer product management for the Windows client group.
Among the new features in Windows seven is a redesigned taskbar for launching programs and switching windows, enhanced ability to share files with other PCs, improved photo and video editing software and the ability to stream digital music or video to other devices.
Windows seven also features Microsoft’s latest Web browser, Internet Explorer 8.
Microsoft shares gained 0.04 per cent on Wall Street on Thursday to close at 26.59 dollars. —AFP

Hydropower industry braces for glacier-free future


BERN: Standing on the glacier at the source of the Rhone river, glaciologist Andreas Bauder poses next to a 3-metre high pole sticking out of the ice, and gestures above his head.

‘This is about the melt of one month,’ he says, as fellow scientists drill into the ice. ‘I’m about two metres tall.’

From the Himalayas to the Andes, faster-melting glaciers spell short-term opportunities — and long-term risks — for hydroelectric power and the engineering and construction industries it drives.

The most widely used form of renewable energy globally, hydro meets more than half Switzerland’s energy needs. As summers dry and glaciers that help drive turbines with meltwater recede, that share may eventually fall.

A study by Lausanne’s EPFL technical university forecast a decline to 46 per cent by 2035 for hydro from around 60 per cent now as precipitation declines and total energy use increases.

In the same way as the Himalayas are ‘Asia’s water-tower,’ Switzerland is the source of Europe’s biggest rivers, supporting agriculture and waterways, and cooling nuclear power stations.

Water trickles down white-blue crevasses and ice cracks and creaks as Bauder, who for Zurich technical university spends about 20 to 30 days a year working on Swiss glaciers, explains that most of the mighty Rhone glacier will be gone by the end of the century.

‘Nature can adjust to the circumstances,’ he said. ‘It’s just people who are much more fragile about living conditions.’

More than a billion people worldwide live in river basins fed by glacier or snow-melt.

Glaciers have been retreating dramatically since the end of the Little Ice Age in the 19th century, particularly in the Himalayas where they feed rivers including the Mekong and Yangtze and ensure water and power for fast-growing economies.

A lack of water for hydropower is already ‘critical’ in Bolivia, Peru, Colombia and Ecuador, according to the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, which also sees risks to water supplies to southern California from the loss of the Sierra Nevada and Colorado River basin snowpack.

In Europe, 20 per cent of electricity comes from hydro — generating potential that is projected to decrease by the 2070s, falling sharpest in the Mediterranean.

Bauder pointed to an area of stony ground and small lakes beyond the end of Rhone glacier ice field: ‘When I was a kid, I remember that the glacier was much larger.

The glacier tongue was still reaching over this rocky area.’

Winners and losers

The Swiss hydroelectric industry is part-funding Bauder’s research, to help it take a long view on new projects in an industry where licenses often run for up to a century.

Other risks researchers have identified include sudden floods from swollen glacial lakes. Demand for more pumping technology and dams is one response in countries which can afford them.

Experts stress that forecasts so far ahead are highly uncertain, particularly in predicting precipitation, and note that some regions may even benefit.

‘With climate change there will be some areas in the world with more precipitation year round,’ said Petra Doell, a professor of hydrology at the University of Frankfurt and a member of the UN climate panel.

‘That will mean more hydropower generation even if glaciers melt.’

For example Norway, which generates almost 100 per cent of its power from hydroelectricity, is likely to get more rain and snow because of climate change even as glaciers retreat.

But if glaciers do disappear, one main impact will be lower river flows in dry seasons — when irrigation is often needed for crops. That would particularly threaten people in the world’s biggest rice-growers, China and India.

Nations with high power demand in dry seasons could suffer from lower flows, but Doell said hydropower reservoirs could be used to mute the overall impacts of melting glaciers downstream.

‘A reservoir helps to broaden the availability of water throughout the year,’ she said. ‘But there are few dams in south-east Asia, where the impacts of melting glaciers will be most severe.’

Ways to store water

From the Swiss perspective, the Lausanne study forecasts run-off from the Swiss Alps will fall by seven per cent to 2049, as glaciers recede and precipitation rises by six per cent in winter and drops by eight per cent in summer.

These wetter winters and drier summers may force changes in the way Switzerland stores and moves water.

In the past, the country used to make sure its storage lakes were full in September to provide hydropower for heating as energy demand peaked in winter, while they were empty in April, ready to be replenished by melting snow and ice.

‘Since the electricity market was liberalised and listed companies involved, which are more oriented to earning money and delivering energy at the best price, it has been more difficult to fill the lakes in the winter,’ said Bruno Schaedler, a hydrologist from Bern University.— Reuters

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Chinese group says Google violating copyrights


SHANGHAI: A Chinese group is accusing search engine powerhouse Google of illegally copying Chinese-language works for its digital library, adding to disquiet about a project to scan millions of books.
The China Written Works Copyright Society, based in Beijing, posted a notice on its Web site urging authors to 'bravely stand up and adamantly defend their legal rights.'
It also urged authors to check if their works are in a list of books that's part of a tentative legal settlement between Google and US authors and publishers.
Google's project to scan and post online snippets from millions of out-of-print but copyrighted books has raised objections from many quarters. The company has called the project, which also scans public domain works, an invaluable chance for books to receive increased exposure.
Chen Cun, a novelist based in Shanghai, said he found material from 38 of his works in Google's digital library, including 12 novels and three other books.
'Google never bothered to notify me or Chinese authorities. They should have let me know my works would be put online,' Chen said.
The government-affiliated Chinese group was set up a year ago to represent various associations of writers, who face rampant and blatant infringements of copyright in their home market, as do foreign authors.
But it is now taking US critics to task for protesting Chinese copyright violations while Google is copying works without prior authorization and posting them online.
'Google's digital library scanned those copyright-protected works without permission. This violates American copyright laws and international treaties,' Zhang Hongbo, deputy director-general of the group, told The Associated Press.
'This also violates the basic principle that they should ask permission from the authors first, pay to use then and then use them,' he said.
The proposed settlement between Mountain View, Calif-based Google and US authors and publishers applies only to the United States, Google said in an emailed statement.
'Of course, we listen carefully to all concerns and will work hard to address them,' said the statement by an unnamed Google spokesperson.
'We are actively encouraging authors, publishers, and rightsholders around the world to register for the settlement,' it said.
Parties involved in the settlement are revising the agreement to meet Justice Department concerns over antitrust and copyright issues, with a US court due to rule on its validity early next month.
Under the Google Print Library Project, snippets from millions of out-of-print but copyrighted books have been scanned and indexed online by libraries.
Google also works with publishers that choose to partner with it to include parts of their copyrighted materials.
Copyright holders can opt out of the project if they choose to do so, Google says. 'Control over the works remains firmly in the hands of the rightsholders, they can leave their works in the program and decide on all the toggles for access, or even pull their books out,' the Google statement said.
A China Daily report said the Chinese Written Works Copyright Society had found nearly 18,000 books by 570 Chinese authors had been scanned by Google and included in its digital library, most of them without any notification or payment to the writers. -AP