Friday, 20 July 2012

Space Shuttle Enterprise goes on display in New York

The Space Shuttle Enterprise exhibit at the Intrepid Sea, Air and Space Museum opens to the public in New York City.


 The Space Shuttle Enterprise, the first of the six space shuttles, is now on display in New York.

          Several months after its high-profile fly-by of the New York City skyline, the Space Shuttle Enterprise has landed on display at a New York exhibit presented by the Intrepid Sea, Air and Space Museum. The show finally opened to the public today.
The Enterprise has found its final home on the USS Intrepid. For now, it's housed in a temporary pavilion; the museum is planning a more permanent structure in the future.
The space shuttle was unveiled as part of Samsung's SpaceFest week at the museum, which also included the "launch" of the company's newest product, the 75-inch ES9000 television.
Susan Marenoff-Zausner, president of the Intrepid Museum said the space shuttle would serve as an invaluable learning tool for the schoolchildren who visit.
"We are just so proud to be able to have the Enterprise now, as this brings...a whole new dimension to our ability to excite the kids," she said.
The Enterprise is the original prototype for NASA's space shuttle program and, though it never saw space, it was instrumental in determining the cause of the Columbia disaster, as well as supplying spare parts to the other five shuttles.
Click through to the photo gallery below for more information on the space shuttle and a behind-the-scenes look at the exhibit.

 

Friday, 13 July 2012

Ferrari F750 Concept Car For Year 2025

Ferrari has been one of the most popular car manufacturers around due to their elegant, luxurious and expensive yet the fastest of its class sport cars. And to bring us the company’s future car, designers, namely Marc Devauze, Vianney Brecheisen and Alexandre Labruyere, have created a concept of how Ferrari will look like in 2025, combined with all the future and green technology in it, beside the mind blowing aesthetics make way for the Ferrari F750. See full gallery after the break.

Gallery

The ’750′ on its moniker represents the weights that might only amount to 750Kg. There will be also two engines running the rear with petrol and the front with electric –seemed to be a normal hybrid setup. Where the petrol engine would act as a range extender and there could be shifting of engines depending on driving situations

Adobe Conducts Road Shows For Creative Suite 6

for india

 
           Adobe has upped its ante for recently launched Creative Suite 6 product line for design, Web and video professionals in India. The company has started series of road shows to generate awareness among the partners as well as the customers.


Adobe has conducted road shows in Mumbai, Delhi and Bengaluru. “Creative Suite 6 has received enthralling response from the professionals and the partners. We will cover Chennai, Hyderabad and Ahmedabad within next three weeks. Later on, we will focus on other tier-1 cities in the next phase,” said Shrihari Palangala, Country Marketing Manager, Adobe Systems.

The series of road shows is in line with the objective to expand its base to more than 120 active partners in 2012. “We have already over-achieved that target and have about 160 active partners on-board under our recently introduced Adobe Partner Connection program,” he said.

Besides hands-on experience on latest tools in CS 6, technical sessions highlighted features for design and print digital imaging professionals, cross-media designers, Web developers, VFX artists and videographers. “All the sessions have been recorded and will be uploaded on the Website for partners and customers who missed the event,” added Palangala

Microsoft Details Four Windows Server 2012 Editions, Pricing

Microsoft will offer the upcoming Windows Server 2012 in four editions that will provide dramatically simplified licensing



The software major also disclosed that it is retiring the Small Business Server Edition, a product that had been popular among small and midsize businesses and the solution providers that sell to them.

The release candidate version of Windows Server 2012 has been available since May 31, but Microsoft has not revealed a target date for the Release to Manufacturing (RTM) version that immediately precedes general availability. Like Windows 8, the next release of the desktop and tablet operating system, Windows Server 2012 is widely expected sometime this fall.

Windows Server 2012 will be offered in Datacenter, Standard, Essentials and Foundation editions. Which editions customers choose will hinge on the size of their organizations and their requirements for virtualization and cloud computing, according to Microsoft.

The Datacenter Edition is targeted at highly virtualized, private and hybrid cloud environments with unlimited virtual instances. It carries a $4,809 price tag under Microsoft's Open No Level licensing, excluding Windows Client Access Licenses (CALs).

The Standard Edition is designed for lightly virtualized or non virtualized environments, offering the same Windows Server functionality as the Data center Edition but permitting only two virtual instances. That edition costs $882, not including CALs.

Of most interest to the partners will be Windows Server 2012 Essentials Edition, which has a 25-user limit and no virtualization rights. Microsoft describes Essentials as an ideal cloud-connected first server with its simple interface and preconfigured connectivity to cloud-based services such as Office 365. The Essentials Edition, which has no virtualization rights, has a $425 price tag.

Microsoft, in a FAQ accompanying the Windows Server 2012 editions and pricing lineup, said it is discontinuing Windows Small Business Server because more small businesses are turning to cloud computing for email, backup and other services, rather than running those applications on premise. The new lineup also eliminates the Enterprise, Home Windows Server, HPC and Web Server editions that round out the current Windows Server 2008 R2 product lineup.

The new Foundation Edition, with a 15-user limit, is only available to OEMs.

Facebook highlights weddings with new feature

As the social network debuts its redesigned Events page, it tops it off with another feature that displays friends' weddings and engagements alongside birthday announcements.

 

 

What Facebook's new "Weddings and Celebrations" feature looks like.
(Credit: Facebook)
Sometimes it can be easy to miss a friend's engagement or wedding announcement on Facebook's News Feed. So the social network has decided to do something about this.
Facebook announced today a new feature called "Weddings and Celebrations." Similar to the birthday feature, the weddings and celebrations feature shows friends' status on the top right-hand side of the page once they change it to "married" or "engaged."
Here's what a Facebook spokesperson told CNET in an e-mail:
Facebook has become a unique way people share and congratulate friends around exciting life events such as engagements and weddings or the arrival of a child. To make it easier to keep up with these momentous occasions and to ensure you can share in your friends' joy, we are rolling out a "Weddings and Celebrations" feature. Beginning today, special events starting with engagements and weddings will be displayed along with friends' birthdays when you log into Facebook.

The "Weddings and Celebrations" feature comes on the heels of a comprehensive redesign to the social network's Events page, which has new Calendar and List views that let users see birthdays, parties, and RSVPs several months in advance. It also comes as Facebook changed its wedding icons to include same-sex marriages, in addition to the traditional icons for heterosexual couples. According to The Next Web, the "Weddings and Celebrations" feature is to be fully rolled out today

 

Microsoft exec's defection adds to Amazon phone mystery

A new clue for the latest parlor game on Amazon's possible entry into the smartphone race.

 

This may rate as one of the tech industry's worst-kept secrets, but another clue has surfaced to suggest that, yes, Amazon is indeed hard at work developing its own phone.
If you're keeping score, the latest data point concerns the job-hopping status of one Robert Williams, who used to be the top business development exec at Microsoft's Windows Phone division. Williams has now joined Amazon -- we know this thanks to Williams, who blabbed the news on his Twitter feed, complete with a tweak to his bio with this tease: "working on a top secret project called....oops, gotta go." (Good thing it's Amazon; at Apple, that's a crime punishable by death.)
We've contacted Amazon for comment and will update the post when we hear back. But the personnel move follows in the aftermath of a recent Bloomberg report that Amazon is working with Foxconn to build a device that would challenge the iPhone and Android-based phones. Separately, here's one more to toss in for today's tea leaf-reading ritual: The Wall Street Journal's sources confirm that Amazon is testing a device said to feature a screen in the neighborhood of four to five inches.
By way of context, don't forget this prediction from late last year when Citigroup also claimed the existence of an Amazon-Foxconn collaboration on a smartphone with the projected debut date sometime in the fourth quarter of 2012.
Rich Edmonds of WP Central reminds everyone that Brandon Watson, who used to be Microsoft's director of developer experience for Windows Phone, joined Amazon five months ago to work on the Kindle.

 

Thursday, 12 July 2012

Obama signs order outlining emergency Internet control

A new executive order addresses how the country deals with the Internet during natural disasters and security emergencies, but it also puts a lot of power in the government's hands.





President Barack Obama signed an executive order last week that could give the U.S. government control over the Internet.
With the wordy title "Assignment of National Security and Emergency Preparedness Communications Functions," this order was designed to empower certain governmental agencies with control over telecommunications and the Web during natural disasters and security emergencies.
Here's the rationale behind the order:
The Federal Government must have the ability to communicate at all times and under all circumstances to carry out its most critical and time sensitive missions. Survivable, resilient, enduring, and effective communications, both domestic and international, are essential to enable the executive branch to communicate within itself and with: the legislative and judicial branches; State, local, territorial, and tribal governments; private sector entities; and the public, allies, and other nations. Such communications must be possible under all circumstances to ensure national security, effectively manage emergencies, and improve national resilience.

According to The Verge, critics of the order are concerned with Section 5.2, which is a lengthy part outlining how telecommunications and the Internet are controlled. It states that the Secretary of Homeland Security will "oversee the development, testing, implementation, and sustainment" of national security and emergency preparedness measures on all systems, including private "non-military communications networks." According to The Verge, critics say this gives Obama the on/off switch to the Web. Presidential powers over the Internet and telecommunications were laid out in a U.S. Senate bill in 2009, which proposed handing the White House the power to disconnect private-sector computers from the Internet. But that legislation was not included in the Cybersecurity Act of 2012 earlier this year.
After being published by the Federal Register, executive orders take 30 days to become law. However, the president can amend, withdraw, or issue an overriding order at any time.

Hackers post 450K credentials pilfered from Yahoo

Credentials posted in plain text appear to have originated from the Web company's Yahoo Voices platform. The hackers say they intended the data dump as a "wake-up call."

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Yahoo has been the victim of a security breach that yielded hundreds of thousands of login credentials stored in plain text.
The hacked data, posted to the hacker site D33D Company, contained more than 453,000 login credentials and appears to have originated from the Web pioneer's network. The hackers, who said they used a union-based SQL injection technique to penetrate the Yahoo subdomain, intended the data dump to be a "wake-up call."
"We hope that the parties responsible for managing the security of this subdomain will take this as a wake-up call, and not as a threat," the hackers said in a comment at the bottom of the data. "There have been many security holes exploited in webservers belonging to Yahoo! Inc. that have caused far greater damage than our disclosure. Please do not take them lightly. The subdomain and vulnerable parameters have not been posted to avoid further damage."
The hacked subdomain appears to belong to Yahoo Voices, according to a TrustedSec report. Hackers apparently neglected to remove the host name from the data. That host name -- dbb1.ac.bf1.yahoo.com -- appears to be associated with the Yahoo Voices platform, which was formerly known as Associated Content.
Yahoo confirmed that it is looking into the matter. "We are currently investigating the claims of a compromise of Yahoo! user IDs," it said in a statement, according to the BBC. The company also told the BBC that it was unclear which portion of its network was affected, after first having said the problem originated at Yahoo Voice.
CNET has contacted Yahoo for comment independently and will update this report when we learn more.
Because the data is quite sensitive and displayed in plain text, CNET has elected not to link to the page, although it is not hard to find. However, the page size is very large and takes a while to load.
The disclosure comes at a time of heightened awareness over password security. Recent high-profile password thefts at LinkedIn, eHarmony, and Last.fm contributed to approximately 8 million passwords posted in two separate lists to hacker sites in early June. Yesterday, Formspring announced it had disabled the passwords of its entire user base after discovering about 420,000 hashed passwords that appeared to come from the question-and-answer site were posted to a security forum.

Yahoo breach: Swiped passwords by the numbers

If there's one thing we can learn from the recent security breach at Yahoo, it's that we need to be more creative with our passwords.





Hackers yesterday exposed more than 450,000 login credentials, which appeared to be gleamed from Yahoo. The hackers said they hoped this would be taken as a wake-up call to the parties responsible for the security of the hacked site, but individuals should see this as a warning to strengthen their own personal passwords.
CNET broke down the most frequently used passwords and email domains. The following are the swiped passwords broken down by the numbers:
• 2,295: The number of times a sequential list of numbers was used, with "123456" by far being the most popular password. There were several other instances where the numbers were reversed, or a few letters were added in a token effort to mix things up.
• 160: The number of times "111111" is used as a password, which is only marginally better than a sequential list of numbers. The similarly creative "000000" is used 71 times.
• 780: The number of times "password" was used as the password. Apparently, absolutely no thought went into security in these instances.
• 233: The number of times "password" was used in conjunction with a few numbers behind it. Apparently, the barest minimum of thoughts went into security here.
• 437: The number of times "welcome is used. With a password like that, you're just asking to be hacked.
• 333: The number of times "ninja" is used. Pirates, unfortunately, didn't make the list.
• 137,559: The number of Yahoo credentials that were leaked.
• 106,873: The number of Gmail credentials that were leaked. Hotmail, which was the next most frequently cited e-mail service, had fewer than half the number of users hit.
• 161: The number of times "freedom" is used, suggesting a lot of patriotic users. "America" was used 68 times.
• 161: The number of times the f-word is used in some combination. There are a lot of angry people out there.
• 133: The number of times "baseball" appears as a password. It's the most popular sport on the list, proving that it is indeed America's national past time. It just may not be the best password.
• 106: The number of times "superman" is used as a password. That's nearly double the amount of times "batman" is used and triple the frequency of "spiderman."
• 52: The number of times "starwars" is used. The force is not with this password.
• 32: The number of times "lakers" appears. It tied with "maverick," although fortunately the Heat or Celtics weren't on this list.
• 56: The number of times "winner" is used.
• 27: The number of times "ncc1701" is used as a password. For those of you who aren't trekkies, that's the designation code for the star ship Enterprise. "startrek" is used 17 times, while "ncc1701a," the designation for the Enterprise used in later Star Trek movies, is used 15 times.
Chances are, if you're a trekkie or comic book fan, you should probably change up your password.

Malware went undiscovered for weeks on Google Play


















Breaking the malware into separate, staged payloads allowed the Trojan's authors to avoid detection by Google's automated screening process.

 

 

 

Security researchers have discovered malware hosted on the Google Play marketplace that went weeks undetected masquerading as games.
Android.Dropdialer, a Trojan that sends costly text messages to premium-rate phone numbers in Eastern Europe, had gone undiscovered for two weeks in the form of two game titles, Symantec researcher Irfan Asrar wrote in a blog post yesterday. The two games -- "Super Mario Bros." and "GTA 3 - Moscow city" -- were uploaded to Google Play on June 24 and generated 50,000 to 100,000 downloads, Asrar said.
"What is most interesting about this Trojan is the fact that the threat managed to stay on Google Play for such a long time, clocking up some serious download figures before being discovered," Asrar wrote. "Our suspicion is that this was probably due to the remote payload employed by this Trojan."
The Trojan's authors avoided detection during Google Play's automated screening process by breaking up the malware into separate, staged payloads, Asrar said. Once downloaded and installed from Google Play, the apps would download an additional package for installation that sent the text messages.

The discovery highlights another flaw in Google's Bouncer, an automated process introduced earlier this year that scans apps for known malware, spyware, and Trojans, and looks for suspicious behaviors and compares them against previously analyzed apps. If malicious code or behavior is detected, the app is flagged for manual confirmation that it is malware.
However, Duo Security's Jon Oberheide and Charlie Miller demonstrated in June how they exploited weaknesses in Bouncer to sneak malicious apps onto Google Play. Their technique allowed them to "fingerprint the Bouncer environment, allowing a malicious app to appear benign when run within Bouncer, and yet still perform malicious activities when run on a real user's device," Oberheide said at the time.



 






NASA News Conference to Preview August Mars Rover Landing

http://www.nasa.gov/images/content/551033main_pia14156-43_226-170.jpg

                                    PASADENA, Calif. -- NASA will hold a news conference at 10 a.m. PDT (1 p.m. EDT) Monday, July 16, to discuss the upcoming August landing of the most advanced robot ever sent to another world. A new public-engagement collaboration based on the mission also will be debuted.
The event for NASA's Mars Science Laboratory spacecraft will be held at NASA Headquarters in Washington. The event will be broadcast live on NASA Television and streamed on the agency's website. To view a JPL live stream with a moderated chat, visit: http://www.ustream.tv/nasajpl .
Mars Science Laboratory will deliver the Curiosity rover to the surface of Mars at approximately 10:31 p.m. PDT on Aug. 5 (1:31 a.m. EDT on Aug. 6). Curiosity, carrying laboratory instruments to analyze samples of rocks, soil and atmosphere, will investigate whether Mars has ever offered environmental conditions favorable for microbial life.
Participants will be:
-- Doug McCuistion, director, Mars Exploration Program, NASA Headquarters
-- Michael Meyer, lead scientist, Mars Exploration Program, NASA Headquarters
-- John Grotzinger, MSL project scientist, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, Calif.
-- Pete Theisinger, MSL project manager, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena
-- Jeff Norris, manager, planning and execution systems, Jet Propulsion Laboratory
For NASA TV streaming video, scheduling and downlink information, visit: http://www.nasa.gov/ntv
For more information about the mission, and to view or submit events surrounding the landing, visit: http://www.nasa.gov/mars and http://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/msl.
The public can follow the mission on Facebook and Twitter at: http://www.facebook.com/marscuriosity and on Twitter at: http://www.twitter.com/marscuriosity .
JPL, a division of the California Institute of Technology, manages the Mars Science Laboratory mission for NASA.

Saturday, 7 July 2012

Experimental headlight system can see through rain and snow


A lab test illustrating how the new system can make raindrops 'disappear'
A lab test illustrating how the new system can make raindrops 'disappear'
Driving at night in falling rain or snow can be treacherous, but not just because the asphalt is slippery – visibility is also greatly reduced, as the driver’s view of the road ahead is obscured by brightly headlight-lit raindrops or snowflakes. In the future, however, that may not be so much of a problem. A team led by Carnegie Mellon University’s Prof. Srinivasa Narasimhan has developed an experimental headlight system that renders most foreground precipitation virtually invisible, while still adequately illuminating the road beyond.
At the heart of the system are a digital light projector (which serves as the actual headlight) and an adjacent video camera. The camera is able to “see” the projector’s exact field of illumination, via a beamsplitter. As a raindrop falls into the top of this field, it is illuminated by the projector and its image is picked up by the camera.
A microprocessor then calculates the drop’s trajectory, and proceeds to selectively deactivate the projector’s light rays along that path. The result is that the raindrop is able to fall through the field of illumination, but with no light rays actually striking it – except for at the very top of the field, as it’s first detected. All of the other rays, or at least those that aren’t lined up with a raindrop falling within three to four meters (10 to 13 feet) in front of the projector, proceed through to light up the road.
The lab setup, consisting of the projector, camera and beamsplitter
This process is carried on for multitudes of drops simultaneously. For each individual raindrop, the amount of time between detection and reaction is approximately 13 milliseconds. Because the light rays are turned off and back on so quickly, there is reportedly no noticeable “flickery” quality to the light.
Needless to say, because numerous rays from the projector are continuously being disabled, it isn’t able to illuminate the road quite as brightly as would be possible otherwise ... although it’s not as pronounced of an effect as one might think. Even in heavy rain, the air volume consists of only about two to three percent raindrops, so the projector’s light output would only drop by about the same amount.
According to a report in Technology Review, the system is able to “hide” 70 percent of raindrops in simulated thunderstorm conditions, at a driving speed of 30 km/h (18.6 mph). That figure drops to 15 to 20 percent when the speed is increased to 100 km/h (62 mph).




Source: Carnegie Mellon University via Technology Review

How NASA plans to land a 2000 pound rover on Mars

A month from now, the Mars Science Laboratory (Curiosity) rover is set to touch down on the surface of the Red Planet and begin its mission to learn more about the possible existence of life - past or present. Curiosity will attempt to touch down using a complex and unusual landing sequence unlike any other used for previous Mars rovers ... here's how the plan will unfold.

The challenge

In the past, NASA's preferred modus operandi for landing Mars rovers has been to wrap them into a spheric "airbag" that breaks the fall and absorbs the impact with the terrain. This time around NASA is going for a much more complicated, multi-stage approach that seems to have come out of a science fiction movie.
Among the stages are a sophisticated rocket-guided entry system, a huge supersonic parachute that will be traveling almost parallel to the Martian surface, and a skycrane that will tether the rover directly onto the Martian surface while hovering just a few feet above. The entire process will be executed completely autonomously, managed not by human intervention, but by a computer algorithm made of some 500,000 lines of code. The success of this ambitious US$2.5 billion mission lays in the balance.
"Most people look at this system - particularly the skycrane at the end - and they say, 'What are you guys thinking, are you out of your mind?,'" says Pete Theisinger, project manager of the Mars Science Laboratory. "But the vehicle is too big and heavy for airbags."
Curiosity weighs 2,000 lbs (making it five times as heavy as the Spirit and Opportunity rovers launched in 2003) and carries an impressive 180 lbs of science payload. Theisinger says that, for its size, this is the safest, simplest landing sequence that NASA could muster.
During the landing phase, the main challenge is that Mars's atmosphere is 100 times thinner than Earth's - thick enough that engineers need to worry about a heat shield, but not quite thick enough to slow the spacecraft fast enough to prevent it from crashing to the ground at high speed. Altitude on Mars ranges from minus 4 to plus 12 miles (minus 6 to plus 20 km) and the whole of the southern hemisphere has positive altitude. Until now, no attempt has been made to explore this region because engineers need the extra space to slow down the rovers.
This is going to be a very risky landing. Only 40 percent of missions to Mars have been successful, either because of engineering problems or because of the hostile Mars environment. But at the very least, should the landing falter, the data collected on it by the three current Mars orbiters - Mars Express, Odyssey and Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter - will help scientists learn from their mistakes and increase the probability of success in future missions.

The testing phase

The technology behind the landing is an interplay of hardware and software. On the software side, the computer algorithms that guide each part of the craft can be tested from Earth, simulations can be run, and new software updates can be installed - the final stable version was uploaded in the last few days of May.
Testing the hardware was not nearly as easy, since the right conditions can't be recreated on Earth. "One of the problems you have with entry and descent landing with any Martian vehicle is, how do you test it on Earth? We have the wrong atmosphere, the wrong gravity, and we would need to start at 13,000 mph outside the atmosphere," says Theisinger.
NASA's answer was to construct a long series of compartmentalized tests, and to then stitch them together using computer simulations. The individual tests were quite elaborate, and the scientists often had to go to great lengths to simulate the conditions they would be facing on Mars.
To test the radars that will help direct the thrusters toward the landing site, the devices were flown on a helicopter over a desert landscape (representative of the Martian terrain). To characterize the high-velocity, high altitude portion of the landing sequence, the equipment was put on a F-18 accelerating toward the ground (each dive only gathered about six seconds worth of data).

Landing on Mars, with style

In the context of Mars exploration, the landing ellipse describes the area inside of which a rover has a 99 percent chance of landing. Previous Mars landers (Spirit, Opportunity, Pathfinder and Phoenix) have operated with a ballistic landing system that meant a very elongated landing ellipse: Pathfinder, for instance had a 185 by 9 miles (300 by 15 km) ellipse, and the limited mobility of the rovers meant that scientist have had very little control over exactly which terrain the rovers would find themselves in.
By contrast, Curiosity will use guided entry, including thrusters during the supersonic phase of the mission, to achieve a much smaller landing ellipse of only 4 by 12 miles (6 by 18 km). This allows scientists to select landing sites that would have otherwise been inaccessible, with the potential of a much greater scientific payoff.
Built to operate for at least two Earth years, Curiosity will be the first mission in which the rover will be able to venture outside its own landing ellipse.
The landing sequence will start at 13,200 miles (21,000 km) above the planetary surface, and will last only seven minutes. At the date of the scheduled landing, Earth and Mars will be separated by 14 light-minutes. The process will therefore be performed completely autonomously by the spacecraft, and it will be a grueling few minutes at NASA and around the world before news on the result, whether good or bad, reaches Earth.
Ten minutes before hitting the atmosphere, the "cruise stage" of the craft will separate and the final preparations for entry begin. Hitting the atmosphere at 13,000 mph, the spacecraft will start to slow down while using thrusters, guided by radars and data from the Mars orbiters, to help steer toward the landing target.
A supersonic parachute will be deployed to slow the craft down to the speed of sound and enable the rover to descend on an angle almost parallel to the Martian ground, gaining more time to slow the craft down. Meanwhile, the heat shield will separate to clear the view for MARDI, the rover's camera system, which will hopefully provide us with a spectacular, hi-def video of the descent at eight frames per second.
At an altitude of about a mile and speeds of 200 mph (320 km/h), the craft will then fire up its six landing engines, bringing the rover down very gently to only a few yards of altitude. The rover will then deploy its wheels and - this is the fancy part - a skycrane will slowly start lowering the vehicle to the ground.
After detecting touchdown, the skycrane will remove its tethers and fly away to a controlled crash far from the landing site, leaving the rover on the surface of Mars. Or, at least, that is the plan.
The NASA video below illustrates the different phases of the landing.
Source: NASA

ESO approves European Extremely Large Telescope

Upon completion, the E-ELT is expected to be the largest optical telescope in the world 
Upon completion, the E-ELT is expected to be the largest optical telescope in the world


The European Southern Observatory (ESO) council met on Monday in Garching, Germany and approved the European Extremely Large Telescope (E-ELT) program, pending the confirmation of ad referendum votes from the authorities of four member states before the next council meeting. Assuming all goes according to plan, the E-ELT is expected to begin operation early in the next decade.
The long-anticipated decision was announced as this year marks the 50th anniversary of the ESO, which is supported by fifteen countries - Austria, Belgium, Brazil, the Czech Republic, Denmark, France, Finland, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and the United Kingdom
The ESO is responsible for the construction of several important telescopes located at favorable locations in the southern hemisphere and currently employs approximately 700 staff, while receiving annual contributions from its member states in excess of €140 million (approximately US$175.5 million).
Upon completion, the E-ELT will be the world’s largest optical/infrared telescope and will help contribute toward the advancement of astrophysical knowledge. The E-ELT promises to facilitate detailed studies of super-massive black holes and the little-understood dark matter and dark energy which make up much of the universe. Further to this, the E-ELT will also be assigned the task of searching the habitable zones of stars for possible Earth-like planets which could potentially harbor life.

“This is an excellent outcome and a great day for ESO. We can now move forward on schedule with this giant project,” said the ESO Director General, Tim de Zeeuw.

The E-ELT site in northern Chile
All this innovation comes with a significant price tag attached however, as the E-ELT is expected to cost a staggering €1.083 billion (approximately US$1.3 billion). The construction of the E-ELT will also pose a logistical challenge to rival its scientific promise and design work is said to be ongoing for both the leveling of the E-ELT's site, situated atop the Cerro Armazones mountain in northern Chile, and construction of a suitable road to provide access to the telescope.

Source: ESO

IBM's Sequoia confirmed as world's fastest supercomputer

Sequoia's 96 racks during installation (Photo: Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory) 
Sequoia's 96 racks during installation (Photo: Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory)



Clocking a performance of 16.32 petaflop/s, IBM's Blue Gene/Q-class supercomputer Sequoia has become the fastest supercomputer in the world according to the latest TOP500 rankings released today. Sequoia, owned by the Department of Energy and based at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, has relegated Fujitsu's K to second place.
Using LINPACK benchmarking, Sequoia was found to be approximately 55 percent faster than K, which achieved 10.51 petaflop/s to Sequoia's 16.32 petaflop/s (or 16,320,000,000,000,000 flop/s). Standing for floating point operations per second, flop/s are a more sophisticated measure of computer performance than instructions per second, representative of the scientific calculations such supercomputers are likely to perform.

Impressively, Sequoia is reportedly one of the most energy-efficient computers on the list, consuming 7.9 MW of power to K's 12.7 MW. This gives Sequoia an efficiency of approximately 2.07 teraflop/s/W to K's 0.83 teraflop/s/W. Lower power consumption is central to IBM's ongoing Blue Gene project.
The June 2012 top ten looks like this:

1. IBM: Sequoia (DOE Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory - USA)
2. Fujitsu: K (RIKEN Advanced Institute for Computational Science - Japan)
3. IBM: Mira (DOE/SC/Argonne National Laboratory - USA)
4. IBM: SuperMUC (Leibniz Rechenzentrum - Germany)
5. NUDT: Tianhe-1A (National Supercomputing Center in Tianjin - China)
6. Cray: Jaguar (DOE/SC/Oak Ridge National Laboratory - USA)
7. IBM: Fermi (CINECA - Italy)
8. IBM: JuQUEEN (Forschungszentrum Juelich - Germany)
9. Bull: Curie thin nodes (CEA/TGCC-GENCI - France)
10. Dawning: Nebulae (National Supercomputing Centre in Shenzhen - China)
Perhaps the most notable characteristic of the top ten is that IBM supercomputers make up half the list. This marks the first occasion a US computer has topped the list since November 2009.
Sequoia is used by the Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security Administration to help assess the USA's nuclear deterrent.


Source: TOP500

Asteroid deflection schemes go green with solar-powered laser spacecraft

      Scientists are proposing that spacecraft could use solar-powered lasers to deflect an Eart... 
Scientists are proposing that spacecraft could use solar-powered lasers to deflect an Earth-bound asteroid (Image via Shutterstock



                     The threat of an asteroid hitting our home planet may not an immediate one, but it better be tackled before it becomes imminent. The brief visit of the 99942 Apophis asteroid in 2004 served as a reminder that a collision with Earth is by all means possible. Scientists have been working on a solution since then, and several bold plans were hatched. The latest one comes from Massimiliano Vasile and Christie Maddock from the University of Strathclyde in Scotland, who reckon we should build a spacecraft fitted with solar-powered lasers.
                       Blowing a 46 million tonne (50.7 million ton) asteroid into pieces with lasers would be difficult, but that won’t be necessary. The goal here, instead, would be to ablate some of the asteroid's surface and steer it away from us as a result. As material is vaporized from the asteroid’s surface, it generates thrust and propels the asteroid away from its original course. "[Our] paper demonstrates how significant deflections can be obtained with relatively small sized, easy-to-control spacecraft," say Vasile and Maddock.
                     Although the idea in itself is not new, scientists previously believed that only a megawatt laser could do the job, and a supply of nuclear power would be necessary. Launching a nuclear power station into space would be neither safe nor practical, with heat management being the most prominent problem. The new design does away with this problem by proposing to replace one very powerful laser with several smaller, sun-powered ones. Additionally, the smaller, kilowatt-class lasers require no fuel, and are simpler and safer to operate.
                    Also, investing our hopes into one massive laser is like putting all our eggs in one basket. An array of independent lasers, on the other hand, leaves more room for error ... and in such a hostile environment, we cannot just assume everything will go smoothly. For one thing, the material removed from the asteroid’s surface could block the lasers and diminish their effectiveness. Orbiting further away from the asteroid would solve the problem, but then mirrors used to focus the rays of sun onto the surface might not work.
                      The different lasers beams could be collimated in order to allow aiming from further away, thus reducing the risk of blocking the spacecraft optics. But, even if that problem is solved, there remains the matter of asteroids with orbits that are too far removed from the Sun to provide a continuous supply of the necessary solar energy. However, Vasile and Maddock reckon that even then, their design should be able to muster enough of a blast to steer Apophis away from the blue planet.
It is not yet clear how the plan compares to other proposed solutions, such as using a nuclear bomb, a gravitational tractor (deflecting the asteroid through speeding it up using solely the spacecraft’s own mass and its gravitational field) or provoking a kinetic impact. Nor is it clear how much money a deflection mission ran according to Vasile and Maddock’s plan would cost. What we do know, however, is that we cannot afford to pay the price in human lives, should an Earth-bound asteroid catch us unprepared.
Source: University of Strathclyde via technologyreview

Sentinel mission to place asteroid-hunting telescope into orbit around the Sun

                California-based non-profit B612 Foundation has announced its intention to place an asteroid-hunting infrared telescope into orbit around the Sun. Named Sentinel, the ambitious endeavor is to be the world's first privately funded deep space mission and will aim to map up to 90 percent of all asteroids larger than 140 meters (459 ft) in Earth’s region of the solar system. In addition to these sizable asteroids, Sentinel will further provide data on a number of smaller asteroids, down to a size of approximately 30 meters (98 ft) in diameter
        Sentinel will measure 7 m (25.4 ft) tall x 3.2 m (10.5 ft) across and will weigh 1,500 kg ...                      Sentinel will provide enough accurate data to project the locations of sizable asteroids f...                       Sentinel is to be primarily built by the same manufacturers of successful projects like th...


          
                    Originally established in 2002 following a one-day workshop focused on asteroid deflection, the B612 Foundation boasts a wealth of experience and expertise in its ranks, with several former NASA astronauts and senior team members involved. Since its inception, the B612 Foundation has maintained a core mission of both moving toward the exploration of the solar system, while also raising awareness of the potential for a catastrophic asteroid impact, as the project's website highlights:
"An asteroid that is 140 meters across (i.e. one that would fit comfortably inside a high school sports stadium) packs an impact energy of about 100 Megatons of TNT, which is about five times larger than all the bombs used in WWII."





                The Sentinel Space Telescope will take approximately four years to build and test, and the B612 Foundation expects a launch sometime in 2017-18 with the aid of a Falcon 9 rocket. It will then travel through space and make use of Venus's gravity to slingshot into solar orbit and revolve around the Sun every seven months while mapping asteroids within the solar system. Approximately five and a half years of mapping should provide enough data to project the paths of asteroids for around the next 100 years or so and, crucially, give decades notice of any large asteroid on a collision course with Earth.
Sentinel will be primarily constructed by Ball Aerospace & Technologies, the spacecraft manufacturer responsible for the Kepler Space Observatory and Spitzer Space Telescope.
Sentinel will measure 7 m (25.4 ft) tall x 3.2 m (10.5 ft) across and will weigh 1,500 kg (3,300 Ibs). The space telescope will also contain 96 GB of on-board storage and will be designed to be highly autonomous, requiring only once-weekly ground contact.


 
                     The Sentinel mission follows in the wake of NASA's own efforts at mapping asteroids and the B612 Foundation acknowledge the space agency as a major contributor in the tracking of Near Earth Asteroids thus far. NASA will also provide valuable technical help to the Sentinel mission in the form of communications and tracking support. However, as all government agencies face severe budget constraints in the current economic climate, the B612 Foundation feel that the torch of asteroid hunting has been passed to privately funded initiatives such as itself.
                        At present, the B612 Foundation is unable to commit to a definite overall cost for the Sentinel mission, speculating that it will be in the region of "a few hundred million dollars." The team also point out that this is comparable to other philanthropic projects such as museums, arts centers and academic buildings - so perhaps such a sum is a relatively small cost compared to the possible ramifications of not acting to secure Earth from the threat of asteroid impact.
Check out the video below to hear some of the B612 Foundation's members thoughts on the need for asteroid-mapping.
Source: B612 Foundation
 


Scientists capture the shadow cast by a single atom



             A team of researchers at Griffith University has managed to stretch the capabilities of microscopy to its ultimate limit. Culminating a five-years effort, the scientists have obtained a digital image of the shadow cast by a single atom, in a development that might soon lead to important advances in scientific observations ranging from the very big to the very small.

        Holding an atom in place long enough to take its picture has been within our technological grasp for some time. This is done by isolating the atom inside a chamber and holding it still through electrical forces, a method known as a radio frequency Paul Trap (named after Wolfgang Paul, who shared the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1989 for this work).
The researchers trapped single ytterbium ions using this technique and exposed them to a very specific frequency of laser light. Under this light, the atom's shadow was cast onto a detector and then captured by a digital camera. This was possible because of a super high-resolution microscope, which makes the shadow dark enough to see. No other facility in the world sports a resolution high enough to allow for such an extreme feat.

                   The process requires extreme precision, as changing the frequency of the light illuminating the atom by just one part in a billion is already enough to make the shadow disappear.
"Atoms only respond to very specific light frequencies, and these frequencies are different for each element. The very fine frequency control that we use is a fairly standard feature of modern atomic physics experiments," Professor Kielpinski, who led the research efforts, told Gizmag. The breakthrough pushes microscopy to its ultimate limit because, as Kielpinksi explained, it is impossible to see anything smaller than an atom using visible light.
But the researchers' ultimate goal wasn't just to take a simple picture. Absorption imaging plays a fundamental role in modern scientific research, from astronomical observations of dust clouds to biomicroscopy. Measuring how much light a single atom can absorb is crucial to understanding exactly how far scientists can stretch the limits of this imaging technique.
Using their results, the researchers can now predict how much light an atom should absorb when forming a shadow, measure whether the microscope is achieving maximum contrast, and adjust their parameters accordingly to achieve the best possible image quality without damaging the samples. This is important because an excessive amount of X-rays or UV light could damage fragile biological samples, such as DNA strands.
A paper describing the results was published on the scientific journal Nature Communications.


Touchscreen ignores unintentional taps and swipes




                             If you're anything like me, you'll have accidentally tapped or swiped buttons on a smartphone or tablet that you didn't mean to. This has not only caused gaming calamities - like dropping the landing gear while still hypersonic in X-Plane Space Shuttle on the iPhone (arrgh!) - but also tweeting or emailing half-written missives or photos by leaning on the screen.
An answer of sorts is on the way. Nokia researchers Juha Matero and Ashley Colley have developed software that can tell the difference between an intentional tap and a clumsy accident.
Their trick, they told last month's Designing Interactive Systems conference in Newcastle, UK, was to cajole 17 colleagues - all smartphone users admitting they had particular trouble with unintended touches - into taking a few basic smartphone use tests to see how often they goofed.
In more than 4000 "touch events", some 1500 were unintentional mistakes. They noticed that 99.7 per cent of intentional touches ranged between 70 and 400 milliseconds long, but unintentional touches were much shorter. They also noted that many unintentional presses were on icons up to a millimetre from the screen edge. By continuing to analyse the factors that caught out the user, they have worked out how to design a software-based filter that can rid users of 80 per cent of unintentional touches.
I'd welcome such code in my phone - but app user interface designers could play a part too, by not positioning buttons such as tweet or email "send" buttons too close to screen edges. In my view, the worst example of misconceived button-placement is in Apple's Voice Memo app, which has a large "delete" button right next to the progress bar - so scrolling through audio often activates the delete function. Not good.
If you have an app button placement horror story, tell us in the comments.

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