Monthly Archive for October, 2003

Scientists think universe shaped like soccer ball

The universe may be finite, spherical and patched together like a soccer ball, according to U.S. and French researchers.

In research reported in the recent edition of the science journal Nature, the scientists said data from NASA’s Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe, which maps background radiation left over from the Big Bang, is not consistent with an infinite universe. The astronomical data suggests the universe is finite and made of curved pentagons joined together into a sphere.

Read the report at CNN.com.

Talking WindScreens can prevent Accidents.

BBC NEWS reports that an idea is being promoted by Dr Charles Spence, from the University of Oxford, who carried out research using a state-of-the-art driving simulator. He claims that Hi-tech “talking windscreens” used in cars instead of mobile phones could reduce the risk of accidents.

The researcher claims that that the major contribution to an increased accident risk is the distraction of a driver’s attention; rather than problems with physically handling a phone. He has carried out many tests, and the drivers found it easier to divide their attention between the eye and ear if the relevant sources of information came from the same direction.

So maybe, in the near future, the mobile phones would give way to talking windscreens. However, I feel one aspect of communication that the researcher did not address is privacy of the conversation with the windscreen via media. Does everyone get to listen in on the conversation or is there a one-to-one module for this medium of communication?

Self Destruct E-Mail

News is on the web about Microsoft entering into a partnership with a San Fransisco based agency, which is a provider of corporate management systems, to help companies evaluate, implement and monitor email policies.

Disappearing Email for Microsoft Outlook is a plug-in that allows the corporate user to email messages and attachments that self-destruct at a time specified by the user or the user’s corporate email policy.

Will be posting more on this, as and when I get to know more about this new plug in.

Cell Phone company Thinks out of the Box

News.com reports that in Manila, Philippines, Jessica Gazo has found a job as part of a new long-range sales team at the Philippine cellular operator Smart Communications and that too without sitting through a job interview or even submitting a resume.

Gazo, a 33-year-old housewife who lives 600 miles south of Manila in Davao City, is one of more than 100,000 mobile phone users who re-sell Smart’s cellular services through a new prepaid service called Smart Buddy e-Load. With a special $20 chip for her mobile phone, Gazo can transfer bits of air time to her friends’ and acquaintances’ phones–as little as 55 cents (30 pesos) worth.

Since Smart began the program in May, Smart Buddy has exploded in popularity, giving the company a more inexpensive way of distributing service to the country’s poorest, most remote neighborhoods and villages. The first such service of its kind, Smart Buddy marries the latest in cellular commerce with a much older marketing concept of miniature packaging that helped bring middle-class amenities to developing countries decades ago.

“It’s a good idea in encouraging air time,” said Karen Ang, regional telecommunications analyst at Citigroup Smith Barney in Singapore. “It widens the affordability of the product without Smart having to reduce prices.”

While Smart said it was unaware of any similar services outside the Philippines, analysts say the concept behind Smart Buddy could help operators expand not only into rural areas of developing countries like China and India, but among lower-income segments of the population in developed countries like the United States, particularly among teenagers.

It is also hard to find anyone who actually talks on his or her phone. In a nation where the average annual income is less than $1,000, most Filipinos rely instead on cheaper text messaging. “Texting,” as it is known, has cult status in Philippines, and everyone from the poorest student to the loftiest government official uses it. Executives tap out messages during business meetings. When hot news or juicy rumors erupt, they spread like wildfire over the country’s text networks, which have become a kind of handheld national chat room.

Offering cheap text helped Smart’s largest rival, Globe Telecom, to become the largest cellular operator in the country. But Smart has gradually surpassed Globe, taking a 46 percent share of the cellular market, thanks in part to offering innovative new ways to capitalize on texting’s popularity.
In addition to financial information, news and celebrity gossip, some of the text messaging services Smart offers are uniquely Filipino. Safe Taxi, for instance, was developed in response to a rash of assaults by taxi drivers. When Smart’s customers get in a cab, they can send a message to the company’s network recording their taxi’s license-plate number. If they do not send a message again within 30 minutes indicating they have arrived at their destination safely, the network sends a message to a friend or relative alerting them to a potential problem.

Smart will not say just how much air time is being bought over Smart Buddy, but analysts say more than a third of the companies’ prepaid use is already being carried by the service. For Smart, that reduces the need to print and distribute prepaid cards for calls.

Best of all, Smart Buddy buyers can request such a card from re-sellers like Gazo by phone wherever they happen to be. Gazo says she has one customer who lives two hours away. Selling to distant customers means selling on credit, but Gazo said she did not mind.

A public toilet with TV and newspapers!

Chalomumbai.com reports that the luxury of television sets inside washrooms is not restricted to five-star hotels alone. A public pay-and-use toilet in Govandi is now offering residents a chance to watch their favourite programmes and also read the morning newspaper while waiting their turn to answer nature’s call.

The toilet, managed by Nav Disha Samajit Shaikshanik Sanstha, caters to about 1,000 residents of Datta Nagar, Buddha Nagar, Gautam Nagar and Kamgar Vasahat. It is also frequented by taxi drivers and truckers.

As many as 250 families from the area are members of the public toilet and have monthly passes.

This seems like a really healthy change in the pathetic state of public restrooms. Reminds me of the Tom Peter’s repeatedly stressed paradigms about public service and profitability from his book, “In Search of Excellence”. A small effort leading to a customer (read consumer) centric endeavour is a sureshot winner any day.

More such projects should come up in nearly all the suburbs of the city. And its a sure way to improve the society and make money at the same time, which I am sure no one would mind given the benefits.

Shine on Mumbai :-).

Your face can be your Password

The Economic Times reports that there is a high-tech solution that could render obsolete your growing jumble of credit card PINs and computer passwords — and it’s as plain as the nose on your face or fingerprint.

The concept is based on biometrics — a branch of technology that identifies individuals based on biological traits. Already, a host of firms including Minnesota-based Identix and Paris-based Schlumberger Smart Cards and Terminals built businesses on military and government contracts. But with costs of raw material, computer chips and scanners plummeting, the technology is moving to the high street.

The USP of this whole biometrics business is the price of the chip and doing away with remembering PIN ids et al. The chip unit costs in the past year are believed to have fallen from £40 ($66.79) to four pounds. This drop in price is expected to attract the interest of cost-conscious consumers and businesses, building the biometrics market into a $4 billion segment by 2007, up from $900 million in 2002, according to recent industry studies.

According to a recent study by Aberdeen Group, large organisations spend as much as $350 per employee annually on computer password management as employees invariably ring the IT “help” crew asking them to reset one of the myriad password codes needed to access the corporate computer network.

IIT Bombay currently uses smart cards for login access at the institute computer centre. Says a student, “As I can login with my smart card on a terminal, leave my work in a GUI running…. Just take out the smart card… go do whatever work I want to do and come back and insert the smart card back again in any comp having those smart card slots, and Voila!! my whole desktop magically reappears… I don’t even need to put my password or go through any such login procedures…”

Personally, I find the concept of moving from any terminal to any otherterminal in CC, without having to go through the hassle of savingwork, logout, go to other comp, login, open the work again.

The utility of a single smart card is such an effort-saving process on the part of the customer or user who has to remember a lot of passwords or carry such stuff as smart cards. However, this new application obviates the need for even the smart cards, which till now proved a lot better than having to remember passwords.

So now, imagine a quick scan of your iris, fingerprint or entire face to authorise a credit card transaction, speed your way through customs at the airport or log you onto your computer.

MIT’s OpenCourseWare Project

MIT has come up with a very commendable effort; a worldwide applauded project, called the OpenCourseWare Project.

MIT OCW is a publication of the MIT course materials, the best part of which is that the material is freely accessible and does not require any registration. Its a great effort to further the education process by opening up the courseware for the whole world to see. I hope that a lot of Indian universities take cue from this, learn from the method of instruction and teaching at MIT and improve their own educational modus operandi. I am just waiting to see when IIT comes up with the same idea, and I am so sure that the IIT course curriculum would be a toughie for the world to match up with.

Check out the site at MIT OCW.