Friday, March 30, 2007

 

My face vs Smileys

exploits

Researchers at the University of Pittsburgh have developed Face Alive Icons, a software that can manipulate the picture of someone's face to show a range of emotions. Associated to an instant messenger like Skype or Windows Live Messenger, the smileys allow to change the chatter's face!

Once the user has uploaded a picture of himself with a neutral expression, he can warp the facial features by typing in common text symbols in his conversation ;)
Indeed, the picture is not sent with every smiley but a profile is stored the recipient device. This profile consists of a decomposition of the original photo. Every time the user sends an emoticon, the face is reassembled on the recipient's device in such a way as to show the appropriate expression.

To create the software, Li developed computational models for each type of expression using a learning program that analyzes the expressions stored in a database to identify features unique to each one.

At the moment, Face Alive Icons has been only incorporated into an application used for distance learning but we hope to use it also one day. More especially as Xin Li now works for Google. So what ? Google Talk ?


Source: TechnologyReview, tuesday.

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Further via Wi-Fi

exploits

Intel Research Berkeley is a research lab owned by Intel that cooperates on research projects with the University of California at Berkeley. Recently, a lab's team demonstrated a Wi-Fi system that can send a wireless signal over 60 miles !

It is regular Wi-Fi hardware but with modified software. It uses standard access point, lightly modified, but the antennas use new directional technology. The signal goes from a point and goes to another one, without going everywhere as the normal Wi-Fi does.

And what is it for? This is being developed for use in countries with poor communications infrastructures. One such antennae in a remote village, for example, could receive a signal and send it through various towers to fiber links, which would provide villagers with an Internet connection.

The Wi-Fi antennas would cost about 700 dollars, compared with WiMax towers that cost about 15,000 to 20,000 dollars. And since Wi-Fi spectrum is not regulated by local telecoms, it could be used without the government permission. Tests are now running in Pakistan and soon in Uganda.


Source: News.com, tuesday.
For those who do not know: WiMAX (Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access) is described by the WiMAX forum as being "a standards-based technology enabling the delivery of last mile wireless broadband access as an alternative to cable and DSL."

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Thursday, March 29, 2007

 

wey hey Greenpeace !

ecology



no comment...

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Friday, March 23, 2007

 

A software which notes the women's beauty

anecdote

All researchers are not good people. Sometimes, they can be awful mysoginists with an obvious lack of tact.

The today's proof: the Australian Hatice Gunes and Massimo Piccardi who are now looking for commercial partners to distribute a software designed to quickly analyze a photograph of a women's face and immediately produce a beauty rating between 1 and 10.

According to those people, potential applications exist in the entertainment industry, cosmetic industry, virtual media, and plastic surgery. Piccardi is especially excited about the idea of having doctors who his technology to ensure that modifications for plastic surgery patients improve their attractiveness. Better than worst... The beauty quotient of the software is based on 14 facial measurements, 13 related ratios, and images of supermodels, actresses, and more than 200 other women.

It remind us that, in Augustus, two esearchers of Tel Aviv in Israel developed the "digital beautification" algorithm.

Source: SMH.com, last week.

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headphones wireless and ... headphoneless

exploits

Employees of Microsoft do not have only wrong ideas. Hotmail, Live Search, copy-paste of Word, the greediness of Vista, all right ... but some Microsoft researchers are working on a system that could allow simple speakers to send a sound to a particular place of the room ... but not elsewhere!

An array of speakers that output the same sound whith very short delays so that the sound waves overlap: the sound is cancelled out in some parts of the space while growing louder in others.

Ok, this technology isn't new: it's called beamforming and we can read expériences from 10 years ago, but only in ultrasound and radar. Having the same result with music or speech is much more complicated since since the range of frequencies is much bigger.

Ivan Tashev, the project's leader, explains that additional peripherals could track a person's movements so his virtual headphones could follow them in real time. Better than bluetooth! The most complicated part of beamforming is calibrating the system for specific speakers and rooms, since all speakers have slight variations that can potentially cause large distortions. Or reflection on walls or windows. Anyway, the team expects to do it in 3 years and 212 boxes of aspirines.


Source: Technology Review, wednesday.

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Tuesday, March 20, 2007

 

The peer-to-peer soon for the motorists

automotive

Cebit is the world's largest computer expo, it happens now in Hanover and then, sonner or later, we're gonna talk about it.

This year, German researchers have (finally!) developed a peer-to-peer network that vehicles could use to pass along information concerning road conditions.

Cars would be fitted with more and more sensors: GPS, TPEG, proximity,... Starting from there, detected information concerning traffic jam or an object on the road would travel from a car to another behind them and be displayed on a dashboard screen, a mobile device or played over headphones. If a car knew its tires were slipping, it could alert the vehicles around it to the presence of a slippery substance on a digital map.

Source: BBC News, saturday.
For those who do not know:
- CeBIT (Centrum der Büro- und Informationstechnik; German for "Centre of Office and Information technology") is held each spring on the fairground in Hanover, Germany, and is a barometer of the state of the art in information technology. With an exhibition area of roughly 450,000 m² and up to 700,000 visitors, it had more than 6,200 exhibitors from around 70 countries all over the world. The 2007 expo dates are 15 March to 21 March.

- A peer-to-peer system is a distributed system whose component nodes participate in similar roles, and are therefore peers to each other. Peer-to-peer can be viewed as decentralized network architecture. In contrast, a client-server architecture implies a sharp distinction between the clients which request and consume services, and servers which provide services. aEven though the nodes have similar roles, there may still be some structure to the peer-to-peer system, and it usually possesses some degree of self-organization where each node finds its peers and helps maintain the system structure. This makes a peer-to-peer network node more complex than a client in client-server system. The main benefits of peer-to-peer system are scalability, fault-tolerance, and the lack of resource bottlenecks in servers. Recently, the concept has achieved recognition in the general public in the context of peer-to-peer file sharing which is one application of peer-to-peer networks.

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Sunday, March 04, 2007

 

Statistics on hard disk drives failures

informatique

3 employees of Google analyzed and summarized the behavior of more than 100,000 hard disks within their park. The study lasted nearly 5 years, from 2001 to 2006. The discs have a capacity from 80 to 400 Gb, assembled in parallel or serial, running from 5400 to 7200 RPM.

We learned, among others things, that there is no correlation between failure and a frequent use or a too high temperature.

The intensive use is an influential factor only during the first 6 months or after 5 years, whiwh is the average longevity of a hard disk. Oddly, a lower temperature can lead to a breakdown. Or of course a torrid heat...If a disc is in trouble, there is more chance that it will die sooner.

Source: Failure trends in a large disk drive population, last month.
For those who do not know: Revolutions per minute (abbreviated rpm, RPM, r/min, or r·min−1) is a unit of frequency, commonly used to measure rotational speed, in particular in the case of rotation around a fixed axis. It represents the number of full rotations something makes in one minute. The International System of Units (SI) unit for rotational velocity is the radian per second (rad·s−1).

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