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Microsoft makes room-based game tech

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 07 Oktober 2014 | 23.43

7 October 2014 Last updated at 12:12
Roomalive

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Microsoft's prototype RoomAlive gaming system

Microsoft researchers have shown off a prototype gaming system that turns any room into an interactive, augmented reality display.

Called RoomAlive it uses projectors and depth cameras to work out the dimensions of a room so any surface within it can be used as a display on which to show images.

The ceiling-mounted cameras keep an eye on people moving round in the space to work out how they interact with projected objects.

Demonstrations created by the research team show players shooting and hitting creatures appearing on walls or dodging virtual projectiles fired across the room.

One demo shows a player controlling a small projected robot that shoots foes appearing from behind furniture.

Another shows virtual creatures scurrying over surfaces in the room and projects video that appears to turn a carpet into a fast flowing river.

Microsoft said the video was made to demonstrate the possibilities of augmented gaming and, so far, it had no plans to turn the system into a commercial product.


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Facebook sues fake 'like' scammers

6 October 2014 Last updated at 11:55

Facebook has vowed to "aggressively get rid of fake likes" on its network.

The site said it had won more than $2bn (£1.3bn) in legal judgements against scam artists who sold fake likes to businesses.

Many businesses buy likes to make their products or brands appear more popular.

But Facebook said bumping up likes this way did "more harm than good", and could mean companies "could end up doing less business" on the social network.

In a post on its security blog, Facebook said: "We have a strong incentive to aggressively get rid of fake likes because businesses and people who use our platform want real connections and results, not fakes."

It explained: "Fake-like-pedlars tempt Page admins with offers to "buy 10,000 likes!" or other similar schemes.

"To deliver those likes, the scammers often try to create fake accounts, or in some cases, even hack into real accounts in order to use them for sending spam and acquiring more likes.

"Since these fraudulent operations are financially motivated businesses, we focus our energy on making this abuse less profitable for the spammers."

It said as well as the legal action, these efforts included investing in sophisticated anti-spam algorithms.

An investigation by BBC News in 2012 revealed the extent of the fake like problem.

BBC technology correspondent Rory Cellan-Jones set up a fake company - VirtualBagel - to see what happened when he paid for advertising through the network.

He discovered that many of the likes VirtualBagel received were from suspicious accounts - none of which would have ever been actual customers had his business been real.


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Attack code for USB flaw released

6 October 2014 Last updated at 16:29

Computer code that can turn almost any device that connects via USB into a cyber-attack platform has been shared online.

Computer security researchers wrote the code following the discovery of the USB flaw earlier this year.

The pair made the code public in an attempt to force electronics firms to improve defences against attack by USB.

One of the experts who found the flaw said the release was a "stark reminder" of its seriousness.

Attack tools

Details of the BadUSB flaw were released at the Black Hat computer security conference in August by Karsten Nohl and Jakob Lell.

Their work revealed how to exploit flaws in the software that helps devices connect to computers via USB. The biggest problem they discovered lurks in the onboard software, known as firmware, found on these devices.

Among other things the firmware tells a computer what kind of a device is being plugged into a USB socket but the two cybersecurity researchers found a way to subvert this and install attack code. At Black Hat, the BBC saw demonstrations using a smartphone and a USB stick that could steal data when plugged into target machines.

Mr Nohl said he and his colleague did not release code in order to give firms making USB-controlling firmware time to work out how to combat the problem.

Now researchers Adam Caudill and Brandon Wilson have done their own work on the USB flaw and produced code that can be used to exploit it. The pair unveiled their work at the DerbyCon hacker conference last week and have made their attack software freely available via code-sharing site Github.

Karsten Nohl and Dave Lee

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Karsten Nohl shows Dave Lee a threat on a USB-connected smartphone

"We're releasing everything we've done here, nothing is being held back," said Mr Wilson in a presentation at DerbyCon.

"We believe that this information should not be limited to a select few as others have treated it," he added. "It needs to be available to the public."

Mr Wilson said cybercrime groups definitely had the resources to replicate the work of Mr Nohl and Mr Lell to produce their own attack code so releasing a version to the security community was a way to redress that imbalance.

Responding to the release of the attack tools Mr Nohl told the BBC that such "full disclosure" can motivate companies to act and make products more secure.

"In the case of BadUSB, however, the problem is structural," he said. "The standard itself is what enables the attack and no single vendor is in a position to change that."

"It is unclear who would feel pressured to improve their products by the recent release," he added. "The release is a stark reminder to defenders, though, that BadUSB is - and always has been - in reach of attackers."


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"Instagram for doctors" takes off

7 October 2014 Last updated at 16:19 By Zoe Kleinman Technology reporter, BBC News

An app which enables healthcare professionals to share photos is to be rolled out across western Europe by the end of the year.

The app was designed to enable doctors to share pictures of their patients, both with each other and with medical students.

So far, more than 150,000 doctors have uploaded case photos with the patient's identity obscured.

However, some experts have expressed concern about patient confidentiality.

Patients' faces are automatically obscured by the app but users must manually block identifying marks like tattoos.

Each photo is reviewed by moderators before it is added to the database.

No secrets

Founder Dr Josh Landy told the BBC that the Figure 1 service did not access any patient records.

"We do not possess any personal medical data at all. The best way to keep a secret is not to have it. We are not an organisation that delivers healthcare," he told the BBC.

But doctors must provide identifying credentials and are also advised to notify their employees and patients to find out about consent policies.

"Legally, we found that identifying the doctor does not identify the patient," said Dr Landy.

"However some [medical] conditions are so rare that they can't be posted. One user wanted to post something but there are only seven cases of it in the US and they had all been reportable because they are rare, so the patient could have been identified."

Anybody can download the app for free, but only verified healthcare professionals can upload photos or comment on them, he added.

"Colourful"

"We reject sensationalistic images," said Dr Landy.

"Everything is there for educational purposes. That said, there are very colourful images - things medics see every day. It's a transparent view into a world you rarely get to see."

The app is already available in North America, the UK and Ireland.

While digital services such as UpToDate and DynaMed - both requiring a subscription - are already widely used within the healthcare community as clinical knowledge databases, they are not rivals to Figure 1, said Dr Landy.

"UpToDate is an app I love, and have used for years. However, they have a highly curated repository of articles written and edited by experts in the field.

"What our app does is provide the opportunity to contribute any case no matter how classic or unusual. Ours is all image-based and totally crowdsourced."

The app has received $6m (£3.75m) in investment in the last year.

British GP and author Dr Ellie Cannon gave it a cautious welcome.

"I think it's potentially really useful to share photos with medical students and other doctors," she said.

"Obviously the potential pitfall is the confidentiality. Of course, they are anonymised but even uploading from a certain doctor may go some way to identify a patient," she added.

"And can a patient later opt out? We've seen with other sites the downsides of sharing too much."


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Bitcoin price falls to 11-month low

6 October 2014 Last updated at 14:40

The value of one bitcoin has fallen to its lowest level for almost a year.

On Sunday afternoon Bitcoin hit a low of $290 ($181), and the virtual currency lost about 18% of its value across the whole weekend.

The crypto-currency has seen its value steadily fall since December 2013, when each bitcoin was briefly worth more than $1,100.

Economic experts put the steady fall in value down to the internal mechanics of the system used to generate bitcoins.

Money makers

Since the fall at the weekend, values have recovered. Now, according to Coindesk, individual bitcoins are worth about $330 (£263) each.

An increasing number of shops and payment-processing firms have signed up to let people use the virtual currency to pay for goods and services.

Paypal's announcement in late September that it was putting in place systems to let its merchants accept bitcoins caused a brief bump in the value of the crypto-cash, but this has now been eroded.

Some speculated that the fall was due in part to the greater number of businesses accepting bitcoins, which had led to more of the coins being in circulation, depressing prices.

However, said economic historian Garrick Hileman from the London School of Economics, the numbers of bitcoins being put back into circulation via this route was not significant enough to effect prices so markedly and for so long.

The most recent swings in value were down to speculative trading, he said, but this did not explain the long term decline.

One significant factor, he said, was the steady supply of new bitcoins introduced in to the market every day by miners. These are people who use powerful computers to carry out the complicated mathematics involved in validating transactions made in bitcoins. In return for carrying out this work, miners are regularly rewarded with newly minted bitcoins.

"Approximately every 10 minutes 25 new bitcoins are mined into existence, which works out to approximately 3,600 new bitcoins created every day," he said. "At current prices that's $1.2m in new supply coming into existence every day."

Miners converted some of their coins to pay for the power needed to keep machines running and to ensure they used the fastest computers available, he said.

"How much of this $1.2m miners have to sell to pay for these things is a closely guarded trade secret, but unless the market can absorb the new bitcoins which miners sell, the price will fall," he said.

In addition, said Mr Hileman, a whole host of other factors including regulatory concerns, competition from alternative payment systems and the strength of the dollar were all impinging on the Bitcoin world.

Not all Bitcoin enthusiasts were worried by the ongoing slide. Roger Ver, who has invested in several Bitcoin start-ups, pointed out in a tweet that those holding bitcoins had enjoyed a good year.

"For anyone complaining about the current price of Bitcoin, remember it has more than doubled over the last 12 months." he wrote. His message was accompanied by a graph of values from exchange Bitstamp, which showed this time last year the Bitcoin was worth about $120.


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Sapphire screen maker in bankruptcy

6 October 2014 Last updated at 21:06

Shares in GT Advanced Technologies plunged over 90% after the firm filed for bankruptcy on Monday.

The US company, which makes sapphire crystal glass, is now worth just $175m (£109m), down from $1.5bn on Friday.

Last November, GT announced it had signed a deal with Apple to manufacture sapphire materials.

That led to speculation that the technology giant would be using GT's glass in its new iPhone models.

Continue reading the main story

However, in August, GT announced that an Arizona factory it was building with Apple would not be up-and-running until next year - too late to be producing glass for Apple's phones.

Its sapphire crystal glass is still expected to be used in two models of Apple's new Watch wearable device.

"GT has a strong and fundamentally sound underlying business," said the firm's chief executive office Tom Gutierrez in a statement.

"Today's filing does not mean we are going out of business; rather, it provides us with the opportunity to continue to execute our business plan on a stronger footing, maintain operations of our diversified business, and improve our balance sheet," he continued.

GT said in a filing that it currently had $85m in cash and was hoping to be granted "debtor-in-possession" financing status.


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Turing's bombe pips Concorde in poll

6 October 2014 Last updated at 21:45

A codebreaking machine credited with saving millions of lives has topped a list of engineering feats.

Members of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers voted the bombe machine as their favourite recipient of the Engineering Heritage Award, which has run since 1984.

Alan Turing oversaw the development of the machine, used to crack the Enigma, at Bletchley Park during World War Two.

Concorde came second in the vote, which was open to 105,000 members.

John Wood, chairman of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers' Heritage Committee, said the 210 bombe machines helped decode up to 5,000 messages a day during the war.

"Estimates suggest that they could have helped cut the war by as much as two years, saving countless lives," he said.

The bombe machine topped the list with 19% of the vote, closely followed by Concorde with 17%.

The supersonic plane was a technological marvel when it was introduced in the 1960s.

It went on to reach speeds of 1,300mph (2,080kph), meaning it could go from London to New York in three hours and 20 minutes.

In April 2003 British Airways and Air France announced the plane would be retired due to falling passenger revenue and rising maintenance costs.

The Rolls Royce RB211 engine received 11% of the vote.

It was developed in the late 1960s but cost miscalculations led to the company going bust in 1971.

In 1938 the steam locomotive Mallard hit a top speed of 126 mph (203km/h), breaking the world speed record for steam traction.

It was designed by Sir Nigel Gresley and built in Doncaster in 1938. By the time it retired on 25 April 1963, it had covered almost 1.5 million miles (2.4 million km).

Mallard received 10% of the votes.

In fifth place, with 10% of the votes, was the Crossness Engine House, and the James Watt rotative beam engine.

The Institution of Mechanical Engineers said the engine, along with the pumps, were a key part of Sir Joseph Bazalgette's sewage system that rid London of cholera and typhoid.


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Nobel Prize for blue LED invention

7 October 2014 Last updated at 10:51 By Jonathan Webb Science reporter, BBC News

The 2014 Nobel Prize for physics has been awarded to a trio of scientists in Japan and the US for the invention of blue light emitting diodes (LEDs).

Professors Isamu Akasaki, Hiroshi Amano and Shuji Nakamura made the first blue LEDs in the early 1990s.

This enabled a new generation of bright, energy-efficient white lamps, as well as colour LED screens.

The winners will share prize money of eight million kronor (£0.7m).

They were named at a press conference in Sweden, and join a prestigious list of 196 other Physics laureates recognised since 1901.

The portraits of researchers (L-R) Isamu Akasaki, Hiroshi Amano and Shuji Nakamura are displayed on a screen

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Staffan Normark, Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, announces the physics prize

Prof Nakamura, who was woken up in Japan to receive the news, told the press conference, "It's unbelievable."

Making the announcement, the Nobel jury emphasised the usefulness of the invention, adding that the Nobel Prizes were established to recognise developments that delivered "the greatest benefit to mankind".

"These uses are what would make Alfred Nobel very happy," said Prof Olle Inganas, a member of the prize committee from Linkoping University.

The committee chair, Prof Per Delsing, from Chalmers University of Technology in Gothenburg, emphasised the winners' dedication.

"What's fascinating is that a lot of big companies really tried to do this and they failed," he said. "But these guys persisted and they tried and tried again - and eventually they actually succeeded."

Although red and green LEDs had been around for many years, blue LEDs were a long-standing challenge for scientists in both academia and industry.

Without them, the three colours could not be mixed to produce the white light we now see in LED-based computer and TV screens. Furthermore, the high-energy blue light could be used to excite phosphorus and directly produce white light - the basis of the next generation of light bulb.

Continue reading the main story

With 20% of the world's electricity used for lighting, it's been calculated that optimal use of LED lighting could reduce this to 4%"

End Quote Dr Frances Saunders President, Institute of Physics

Today, blue LEDs are found in people's pockets around the world, inside the lights and screens of smartphones.

White LED lamps, meanwhile, deliver light to many offices and households. They use much less energy than both incandescent and fluorescent lamps.

That improvement arises because LEDs convert electricity directly into photons of light, instead of the wasteful mixture of heat and light generated inside traditional, incandescent bulbs. Those bulbs use current to heat a wire filament until it glows, while the gas discharge inside fluorescent lamps also produces both heat and light.

Inside an LED, current is applied to a sandwich of semiconductor materials, which emit a particular wavelength of light depending on the chemical make-up of those materials.

Gallium nitride was the key ingredient used by the Nobel laureates in their ground-breaking blue LEDs. Growing big enough crystals of this compound was the stumbling block that stopped many other researchers - but Profs Akasaki and Amano, working at Nagoya University in Japan, managed to grow them in 1986 on a specially-designed scaffold made partly from sapphire.

Four years later Prof Nakamura made a similar breakthrough, while he was working at the chemical company Nichia. Instead of a special substrate, he used a clever manipulation of temperature to boost the growth of the all-important crystals.

Previous winners of the Nobel Prize in Physics

2013 - Francois Englert and Peter Higgs shared the prize for formulating the theory of the Higgs boson particle.

2012 - Serge Haroche and David J Wineland were awarded the prize for their work with light and matter.

2011 - The discovery that the expansion of the Universe was accelerating earned Saul Perlmutter, Brian P Schmidt and Adam Riess the physics prize.

2010 - Andre Geim and Konstantin Novoselov were awarded the prize for their discovery of the "wonder material" graphene.

2009 - Charles Kuen Kao won the physics Nobel for helping to develop fibre optic cables.

In its award citation, the Nobel committee declared: "Incandescent light bulbs lit the 20th Century; the 21st Century will be lit by LED lamps."

Commenting on the news, the president of the Institute of Physics, Dr Frances Saunders, emphasised that energy-efficient lamps form an important part of the effort to help slow carbon dioxide emissions worldwide.

"With 20% of the world's electricity used for lighting, it's been calculated that optimal use of LED lighting could reduce this to 4%," she said.

"Akasaki, Amano and Nakamura's research has made this possible. This is physics research that is having a direct impact on the grandest of scales, helping protect our environment, as well as turning up in our everyday electronic gadgets."

LED lamps have the potential to help more than 1.5 billion people around the world who do not have access to electricity grids - because they are efficient enough to run on cheap, local solar power.

At the University of Cambridge in the UK, Professor Sir Colin Humphreys also works on gallium nitride technology, including efforts to produce the crystals more cheaply and reduce the cost of LED lamps. He told BBC News he was thrilled by the Nobel announcement.

"It pleases me greatly, because this is good science but it's also useful science. It's making a huge difference to energy savings. And I think some of the Nobel Prizes we have had recently - it will be years, if ever, before that science is usefully applied."

Professor Ian Walmsley, a physicist at Oxford University, said the jury had made a "fantastic choice".

"The ideas derive from some very important underpinning science developed over many years," he said, adding that the technology "makes new devices possible that are having, and will have, a huge impact on society, especially in displays and imaging".

Follow Jonathan on Twitter


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Samsung forecasts 60% fall in profit

7 October 2014 Last updated at 11:15

Samsung Electronics has forecast a 60% fall in quarterly operating profit from a year ago because of slowing Galaxy smartphone sales.

The world's biggest mobile phones and TV maker said it expects an operating income of 4.1tn won ($3.8bn; £2.5bn) for the three months to September.

That is below analysts' expectations for earnings of 5.2tn won.

The South Korean company will publish full financial results later this month.

Continue reading the main story

Samsung's mobile division, its biggest business, has been struggling to maintain its dominance against rivals such as Apple and Chinese smartphone-makers Xiaomi and Lenovo.

Its flagship Galaxy smartphone line has been losing market share to cheaper models that also have large screens and multiple features.

The firm said quarterly sales amounted to 47tn won, which was below analyst estimates for 50.3tn won.

"Smartphone shipments increased marginally amid intense competition," Samsung said in a statement.

"However, the operating margin declined due to increased marketing expenditure and lowered average selling price."

The company also said it is "preparing new smartphone line-ups featuring new materials and innovative designs, as well as a series of new mid-to-low end smartphones".

Samsung shares rose about 1.6% in Seoul despite the weak profit outlook.

Analysis: Rory Cellan-Jones, BBC technology editor

Samsung has been the standout success of the smartphone era - certainly in terms of building market share, with the South Korean firm overtaking Nokia to become the world's leading phone manufacturer.

It is still holding on to the number one spot, but competition at both the top and budget ends of the market is now exerting an intense pressure on its profits.

Samsung still has around 25% of the market, down from 33% a year ago, but a trio of Chinese firms Lenovo, Huawei and Xiaomi have rapidly grabbed a big slice. It was the whole Galaxy range which propelled Samsung's profits ever higher and phones like the latest Galaxy Note 4 still get glowing reviews.

But it hasn't managed to pull off the same trick as Apple, which continues to charge luxury prices and make chunky profits on its new phones.

The recent launch of the iPhone 6 and 6 Plus is a case in point - analysts say Apple's profit margins have come down but are still above 40%.

Samsung is struggling to keep prices up at the high end, and with smartphones now becoming a commodity product it's failing to match its Chinese rivals' prices for similar phones. The competition is only going to get more intense - and it isn't clear how the Korean giant can respond.

Chip plant

Samsung announced on Monday that it would spend about $15bn on a new semiconductor plant in South Korea, to meet the growing demand for memory chips.

It is set to be the biggest single investment in a chip factory, and construction will begin in the first half of next year with operations due to start in 2017.

Samsung is a major chip supplier to other electronics firms, including major rival Apple.

Samsung is also facing some pressure at its consumer electronics division, which makes televisions, air conditioners and other appliances.

Sales and overall profit are forecast to have dropped because currency fluctuations made Japanese-made rival products cheaper to buy.

The Korean won strengthened about 3.5% against the Japanese yen in the third quarter.


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No user data lost in Yahoo hack

7 October 2014 Last updated at 11:16

Yahoo has said no user data was lost when hackers breached its servers.

The web firm was alerted to the breach by security experts seeking computers vulnerable to the recently discovered Shellshock bug.

Shellshock is a flaw found in many widely used versions of the Unix operating system.

Although the Yahoo servers were vulnerable to Shellshock it said attackers used a different vulnerability to get at the machines.

In a statement, Yahoo said that early on 6 October it isolated several servers that it had been informed were vulnerable to compromise via Shellshock.

They were identified as being vulnerable by security researchers scanning servers around the net seeking those running software susceptible to Shellshock. If exploited, the Shellshock bug would allow attackers to run commands as if they were in control of that machine.

"After investigating the situation fully, it turns out that the servers were in fact not affected directly by Shellshock, but by a minor bug in a parsing script," said Yahoo in a statement.

The vulnerable servers were used by Yahoo to provide live sports updates and news feeds to users.

Added Yahoo: "After a comprehensive investigation, we have found no evidence that user information was affected by this incident."

In a separate statement released to the Hacker News wire Alex Stamos, security chief at Yahoo, said: "This flaw was specific to a small number of machines and has been fixed, and we have added this pattern to our code scanners to catch future issues."

Millions of machines are believed to be vulnerable to Shellshock and security firms have found some cybercrime groups using it to take over machines they then organise into a single network that can be used to send out spam or to carry out other attacks.


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