Wednesday, June 19, 2013

Motorola/Google s Tech Development Strategy Starts to Emerge

Motorola invented the flip phone but its mobile offerings lagged in recent years

When Google acquired Motorola Mobility in 2011,? big changes were in store for the ailing cell phone maker. Thousands lost their jobs as part of the restructuring. Meanwhile, Google brought in top officials from DARPA to reenergize Motorola?s moribund mobile technology.

Regina Dugan who headed the agency and her lieutenant Kaigham Gabriel set about injecting DARPA?s fleet-footed technology development approach into Motorola?s more deliberate culture.

Motorola?s Advanced Technology and Projects Group, which Dugan now leads, does not even call itself a research organization. Instead, like DARPA, it has started to structure projects to demonstrate avant-garde technologies that are just beginning to make the transition from laboratories pursuing basic science.? Projects will rope in investigators from other companies and universities, even more than Motorola researchers, to pursue prototypes for communications and information technologies that incorporate advances beyond simply making a cell phone a few millimeters thinner.

Toward that goal, the company is announcing on June 19th a collaboration with eight of the top public and private research universities.? Motorola negotiated a common agreement for conducting joint research that would allow the company to initiate a project rapidly with one or more universities.

A so-called master agreement between a single university and a company that provides boilerplate provisions for multiple research projects at a single school is routine.? What distinguishes the Motorola effort is that it is a? standard agreement that lays the groundwork for collaborative projects with multiple schools.

It can take up to a year to negotiate a corporate-academic agreement with a single university, which would hamper the urgency that the advanced technology group wants to bring to these efforts. ?A technical project leader can reach out to researchers,? Gabriel says. ?They can identify what the scope of work is, what?s the duration, what?s the expense.? We?re assuming that it takes less than 30 days and then we?re off and running, no additional work is required?

Motorola signed with California Institute of Technology, Carnegie Mellon University, Harvard University, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Stanford University, Texas A&M University, and Virginia Tech University. The universities do not receive any funding up front, only when a project is initiated.

Gabriel gave an example from an ongoing effort of the type of project that might be contemplated under the new agreement. Motorola is investigating whether the emerging technology of 3D printing might be used by consumers to customize their cell phones. ?To what extent can I, at the last minute, make the back of the phone or the front or have certain functional as well as aesthetic elements that are part of the phone?? he asks. Current 3D finished parts do not meet commercial standards for product finish or durability. Gabriel speculated that a? small company on the East Coast might have created an innovative ink and a university in the Midwest might have devised a novel printable structural material. ?As part of a project we would go out to a company and a university and pull them in to to improve 3D printing,? Gabriel says.

It remains to be seen whether there is blowback as to whether Motorola/Google is trying to capture the best and brightest among IT researchers for its internal needs. But Fred Farina director of Caltech?s offfice of technology transfer did not seem worried. ?We?re open to Intel doing the same thing and IBM doing the same thing.? Just because they [Motorola] came and agreed on something and they were the first company to do this on the? IT side, I would say to other companies ?bring it on? and we will work with you as well.?

Others praised the flexibility that Motorola brought to the process after having dealt with companies that wished to dictate stringent contractual terms that could, say, hinder a researcher?s ability to publish in academic journals. ?Everybody?s goals were aligned, says Sam Liss, Harvard?s director of business development.

?I really enjoyed this negotiation because of its openness, says Lesley Millar, director of the office of technology management at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. ?It was very candid, on the table, let?s get out there and address the issues one by one,?

The agreement specifies that Google has the option to negotiate exclusive licensing of a technology for particular uses that it has funded the university to develop.? It does not impede researchers from publishing, but? lets Motorola review the final manuscript to ensure that it contains no confidential information.

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Source: http://www.scientificamerican.com/blog/post.cfm?id=motorolagoogles-tech-development-strategy-starts-to-emerge

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Thursday, June 6, 2013

Development not at cost of environment: Expert (Lead) - Prokerala

Kochi (Kerala), June 5

Noted ecologists and green activists Wednesday cautioned the government against aiming 8-9 percent GDP (gross domestic product) annual growth at the cost of environment and sought a balanced approach towards sustainable development for a equitable society.

"Alarming urbanisation and rapid westernisation with their concomitant extravaganza and wasteful consumption are the new challenges we are facing. Development cannot be for the privileged at the cost of the deprived who have as much right to better quality of life," former state chief conservator of forests M. Manoharan said at a seminar held to mark World Environment Day in this port city on the Malabar coast.

Noting that environment and society have many peculiarities, Manoharan said though India was blessed with rich biodiversity and abundant natural resources, meeting the needs of over 1.2-billion people was a major challenge, as fruits of development, including education, healthcare, jobs, housing and infrastructure have not reached about 70 percent of the population living in rural areas across the country.

"Majority of villages and urban areas face acute shortage of drinking water and other needs, including farming activity. About 300 million people are yet to get electricity in their homes despite the national rural electrification programme, millions of youth remain jobless or under employed despite the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA) and about 50 percent of the children are malnourished in spite of many healthcare programmes under the National Rural Health Mission," Manoharan noted.

Asserting that every developmental activity needed infrastructure, trained and skilled manpower and investments, the state electricity regulatory board chairman said it had to be sustainable with least adverse impact on environment.

"Clamouring for abandoning developmental projects, highlighting only their adverse impact will not solve the socio-economic problems of our society. Changes in policies and strategies of environmental movements with changes in political governance or proponents of projects will erode the credibility of such movements," Manoharan pointed out.

Admitting that any development would have some cost and benefit as well as adverse impact, the former IFS officer said sustainable strategies for implementing developmental projects was the only way forward for least adverse environmental impact.

"Projects for conservation of natural resources and human environment prepared without consulting their custodians and addressing problems of the affected people will not have social acceptance for implementation," Manoharan observed.

In this context, the regulatory official hoped policy makers, judiciary, executive and other stakeholders, including activists would work together for viable solutions and sustainable development in a democracy.

Earlier in the day, conservation evangelist M.K. Prasad was feted and honoured on the occasion by hundreds of activists, students and members of non-government organisations (NGOs).

Popularly known as MKP, the octogenarian was instrumental in saving the Silent Valley tropical rain forest in this southern state during the seventies by spearheading a national movement against a hydro power project in the fragile bio-diverse hotspot in Idukki district, about 140 km from here.

In a fitting tribute to the yeomen services Prasad rendered to protect the rich flora and fauna heritage in the state, 98-year-old former Supreme Court judge and constitutional expert V.R Krishna Iyer honoured the evangelist on his 80th birthday and released a Festschrift, a collection of articles and essays on environment and society, by green experts.

"Though am I very old at 98 with poor eyesight and hearing, I came to the event venue to personally greet Prasad and acknowledge his contribution to the environment and his inspiring guidance to a generations of social activists, students, ecologists, naturalists and NGOs," Iyer said raising his voice that drew thunderous applause and standing ovation from the packed hall.

Among experts who participated in the event and spoke on Prasad's dedication to the noble cause were Centre for Science and Environment (CSE) director-general Sunita Narain, World Wide Fund (WWF) India's former chief executive Dilnavaz Variava, Sanctuary Asia editor and veteran naturalist Bittu Sahgal, Western Ghats ecology expert panel chairman Madhva Gadgil and Manoharan.

"I am touched and moved by the occasion though the credit goes to the fraternity and the large community that dwells in the midst of nature in harmony with its flora and fauna," an emotional Prasad told IANS later on the margins of the event./eom/710 words.

Source: http://www.prokerala.com/news/articles/a384075.html

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Obama email flap: White House defends top officials' use of 'secret' accounts

White House spokesman Jay Carney defended the Obama administration?s commitment to transparency after an Associated Press investigation showed that some of the president?s top political appointees are using ?secret? government e-mail accounts in a bid to avoid unwanted messages.

Most of the agencies the AP contacted had not replied to its questions about secret e-mail accounts three months after the news agency requested the information under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA). The accounts in question, which are not published on agency websites, provide an alternate way for top officials to communicate without having to sort through a mountain of spam.

The Labor Department?s initial response ? later rescinded ? was to ask the AP to pay more than $1 million to receive its e-mail addresses. The Health and Human Services Department initially turned over a list of 240 accounts that did not include Secretary Kathleen Sebelius?s alternate, unpublished e-mail address.

RECOMMENDED: Barack Obama: How well do you know America's 44th president?

Agencies that had not turned over lists of e-mail addresses include the Environmental Protection Agency, the Pentagon, and the Transportation, Treasury, Justice, Homeland Security, Commerce, and Agriculture departments. So, the AP said, ?the scope of using the secret accounts across the government remains a mystery.?

The issue is a sensitive one, given a memo President Obama issued on his first full day in the White House pledging that his administration was "committed to creating an unprecedented level of openness in government.? The document went on to say, "we will work together to ensure the public trust and establish a system of transparency, public participation, and collaboration."

At Tuesday?s White House briefing, Mr. Carney offered a spirited defense of the practice of officials' use of nonpublic e-mail addresses. ?This is a practice consistent with prior administrations of both parties,? he said. Having alternate e-mail accounts makes "eminent sense,? the press secretary said. He told of having his e-mail made public by his predecessor, Robert Gibbs, shortly before Carney assumed his current position. "I changed it so I wouldn?t be inundated with ? tons of e-mails and spam and the like.... But that is a very reasonable thing to do.?

Want your top political issues explained? Get customized DC Decoder updates.

Carney disputed the AP?s use of the ?secret label? for unpublished e-mail addresses. ?The issue here is are these accounts ? these work accounts ? secret, and the answer is no, because they are subject to FOIA requests and they are subject to congressional inquiry, just like their public addresses,? he said.

He added, ?This administration has made significant strides in improving FOIA practices, compared with all of our predecessors?. [We] have disclosed more information, invoked FOIA exemptions less frequently, and answered more requests.?

The AP offered several reasons that top officials' use of alternate ? or secret ? e-mail addresses is problematic. The practice makes it harder to ensure that agencies are meeting their duty to turn over relevant documents in response to congressional investigations or civil lawsuits, the AP said. ?Secret accounts also drive perceptions that government officials are trying to hide actions or decisions,? the report stated.

Court decisions on federal privacy rules have set a high bar for withholding public officials? records.

?An e-mail address given to an individual by the government to conduct official business is not private,? Aaron Mackey, a FOIA attorney with the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press in Arlington, Va., told the AP.

As if to emphasize that point, the AP decided to publish Secretary Sebelius's unpublished account address, despite requests not to do so, citing her oversight of Medicare, Medicaid, and the implementation of the Affordable Care Act.

RECOMMENDED: Barack Obama: How well do you know America's 44th president?

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-email-flap-white-house-defends-top-officials-211400243.html

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This Inflatable Aircraft Carrier Houses a Solar-Powered Wonder Plane

This Inflatable Aircraft Carrier Houses a Solar-Powered Wonder Plane

When you're flying around the world in a lightweight solar-powered plane with a wingspan larger than most commercial airliners, you need to guarantee you've always got a safe place to store it on the ground. So the support team behind the Solar Impulse, the world's first globe circumnavigating solar-powered aircraft, decided that the easiest way to guarantee they always had adequate shelter, was to simply bring one with them wherever they went.

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/SHSc7a__wWU/this-inflatable-aircraft-carrier-houses-a-solar-powered-511443405

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Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Singer Sharon Jones says she has cancer

5 hours ago

Image: Sharon Jones

Jordi Vidal / Getty Images file

Sharon Jones performs in Barcelona, Spain, in 2010.

LOS ANGELES -- Soul group Sharon Jones & the Dap-Kings on Monday postponed the release of its forthcoming album and tour after Jones was diagnosed with early-stage bile duct cancer, according to a statement on the band's website.

The singer, 57, is to undergo surgery, and is expected to make a full recovery but will require a "lengthy" rehabilitation period, the statement said.

"Over the last few weeks I haven't felt good and I didn't know what was going on," Jones said in a statement. "We just found out that I have a stage-one tumor on my bile duct. Luckily we caught it really early and fast and the doctors say it's operable and curable!"

Bile ducts carry bile produced by the liver from the gallbladder into the small intestine to aid with digestion.

Sharon Jones & the Dap-Kings are best known for the 2007 song "100 Days, 100 Nights" and 2010's "I Learned the Hard Way."

The group's fifth album, "Give the People What They Want," was scheduled to be released on Aug. 6. A new release date has not been announced.

The band is credited with reviving interest in soul music over the past decade and preceding such acts as the late British soul singer Amy Winehouse.

Without Jones, the brassy Dap-Kings have also provided backing music to such artists as Winehouse and British rockers The Heavy and Muse.

Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters.

Source: http://www.today.com/entertainment/singer-sharon-jones-says-she-has-cancer-postpones-album-6C10168075

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EU slaps levies on Chinese solar panel imports

BERLIN (AP) ? The European Union announced Tuesday that it is to impose anti-dumping levies on imports of Chinese solar panels, in a move that could trigger a trade war between two of the world's largest economies.

EU Trade Commissioner Karel de Gucht said Tuesday the 27-nation bloc will impose a tariff of about 12 percent on the import of panels, cells and wafers immediately, increasing it to an average of 47 percent starting in August unless a settlement is reached with China.

China is the world's largest producer of solar panels and is accused by the EU of selling them below-cost to corner the market. Its exports of solar panels to Europe totaled 21 billion euros in 2011.

De Gucht said the price at which Chinese solar panels are sold in Europe should be 88 percent higher according to the Commission's calculations. Chinese solar panels' market share in the EU has risen to 80 percent over recent years.

The cheap Chinese products are flooding the market and threaten to bring down EU manufacturers, de Gucht warned.

"It has the potential to destroy an important industry in Europe if we don't act today," he added.

The Commission, the bloc's executive arm, hopes to reach a settlement with Beijing and has therefore taken a phased approach that leaves two months for intense negotiations before the special duties reach the punitive level of 47 percent.

"The ball is now in China's court," de Gucht said.

"This is a one-time offer to the Chinese side to negotiate."

The trade row between the EU and China is the world's biggest anti-dumping case by sales volume, according to EU officials.

The global solar panel market is suffering from overcapacity, which has led to stiff competition that has forced several European manufacturers out of business.

De Gucht added that to reach a settlement, Chinese manufacturers would have to agree to increase their prices and accept a lower market share quota.

"I would like to see an agreement. If we get it right it would be better for both sides," he stressed.

If a settlement can't be reached, the permanent anti-dumping tariffs would require approval by a majority of the EU's 27 member states six months from now.

But several EU nations, including heavyweight Germany, have spoken out against imposing special duties and urged the Commission to reach a settlement with China.

Germany has the bloc's biggest solar industry, but Berlin fears imposing special duties could provoke Chinese retaliation on imports of European goods which, in turn, would harm German exporters.

China rejects the EU's price-dumping allegations. Premier Li Keqiang warned last month imposing punitive tariffs would hurt European consumers and might encourage trade protectionism, stopping short of threatening retaliation.

But the problem with the solar industry is not new for Beijing. The U.S. last year imposed punitive tariffs on solar panel imports after finding that China's government was subsidizing companies that were flooding the U.S. market.

___

Follow Juergen Baetz on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/jbaetz

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/eu-slaps-levies-chinese-solar-panel-imports-135458692.html

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Points connected sign can show any place you need to go, what's up online (video)

Points connected sign shows you where to go and what's up

Most street signs aren't especially street-savvy when they can't change with the passing weeks, let alone the moment. Breakfast NY's new Points sign is much, much smarter. As long as it has an Ethernet or WiFi connection, it can spin its arrows toward locations on demand or as they become relevant, whether it's the local bar at night or a concert stage in the afternoon. The signage is also aware of what's happening, not just where: Points can tap into Foursquare, RSS feeds, Twitter and other sources to display trending hotspots, sports scores and other live updates. The curious can experiment with internet-connected demo signs today; Breakfast NY is taking rental requests now, with expectations that Points signs can deploy from July 1st onwards. As for pricing? You'll have to get a quote. While the company tells us that a days-long rental will likely involve a lower five-digit sum, it expects each order to be at least somewhat unique.

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