Advances in Computers thread

New breakthrough could bring quantum encryption to smartphones

New breakthrough could bring quantum encryption to smartphones | ExtremeTech
In light of recent events, you have to wonder where your data is really going every time you pull the phone of of your pocket and type your deepest, darkest secrets into it. Even with encrypted connections, a third party could access all the data if they managed to surreptitiously snatch the encryption key. Then thereÂ’s the concern that encryption as we know it isnÂ’t as secure as we once thought. A shining beacon of hope that would allow us to reclaim our mobile privacy may be coming as a result of a breakthrough in quantum cryptography.
 
Advancing graphene for post-silicon computer logic: Researchers pioneer new approach for graphene logic circuits

A team of researchers from the University of California, Riverside's Bourns College of Engineering have solved a problem that previously presented a serious hurdle for the use of graphene in electronic devices.

Scanning electron microscopy image of graphene device used in the study. The scale bar is one micrometer. The UCR logo next to it is implemented with etched graphene.

Graphene is a single-atom thick carbon crystal with unique properties beneficial for electronics including extremely high electron mobility and phonon thermal conductivity. However, graphene does not have an energy band gap, which is a specific property of semiconductor materials that separate electrons from holes and allows a transistor implemented with a given material to be completely switched off.



Read more at: Advancing graphene for post-silicon computer logic: Researchers pioneer new approach for graphene logic circuits
 
Sony to launch own VR headset for PlayStation 4 - Report
Sony to launch its own virtual reality headset for the PlayStation 4 and compete with the Oculus Rift, according to sources.

The next chapter in Sony's next-gen technology strategy might come in the form of a custom virtual reality headset for the PlayStation 4, reports have claimed.

Sony's virtual reality plans for the PlayStation 4, reported by both Eurogamer and CVG, are said to involve hardware technology similar to the Oculus Rift headset, which has been a source of intense industry interest since its barnstorming Kickstarter success in August 2012. A consumer version of the Oculus Rift has yet to be dated
Sony to launch own VR headset for PlayStation 4 - Report - GameSpot.com
 
Samsung beats Apple to the punch, unveils Galaxy Gear smartwatch

We've known for a while now that just about every company under the sun is making a smartwatch. Apple, Microsoft, Google, LG ... you name the manufacturer, and it probably a wrist-based computer in the works. Sometimes there's something to be said for being first, though, and Samsung just beat out the other major mobile manufacturers. Say hello to the well-leaked, but no less intriguing, Samsung Galaxy Gear.
Samsung beats Apple to the punch, unveils Galaxy Gear smartwatch
 
Samsung announces the Galaxy Note 3


The term "phablet" became something of a household name during the last couple of years. Though we've seen some solid entries from other companies, Samsung's Galaxy Note line deserves full credit for popularizing the giganto-phones. Today the company announced the 2013 edition of its flagship phablet, the Galaxy Note 3.

The Note 3 should have plenty of horsepower under its hood, as it rocks Qualcomm's Snapdragon 800 processor. The LTE version has a quad core processor clocked at 2.3 GHz. The HSPA+ version, meanwhile, rocks a 1.9 GHz octa core CPU. With an abundant 3 GB of RAM rounding out the performance-related specs, this puppy should scream.

Samsung announces the Galaxy Note 3
 
HDMI Forum announces specs for HDMI 2.0
HDMI 2.0 specifications have just been released by the HDMI Forum’s technical working group. Most importantly, HDMI 2.0’s extra bandwidth of up to 18Gbps will allow 4K (2160p) pictures at 50Hz and 60Hz frame rates (3,840 x 2,160 resolution video at up to 60fps), which is four times the clarity of existing 1080p at 60Hz video resolution. The new functionality also includes 32 audio channels, dynamic auto lip-sync and extensions to the Consumer Electronics Control (CEC).

HDMI Forum announces specs for HDMI 2.0
 
Pioneer's new HUD gives drivers Terminator-style vision
Many of the Head-Up Displays (HUDs) in the market right now focus on unobtrusively giving drivers navigation information. Pioneer doesn't seem too interested in that model. Instead of being mounted on the dashboard, their NavGate SATNAV HUD hangs from the driver's visor, encompassing much of their field of view. It looks pretty cool, from a Terminator-y perspective.

However, whether actually floating ten feet in front of you or just pretending to, a 30-inch (virtual) screen takes up a sizable portion of your field of vision. With the NavGate HUD capable of displaying all kinds of augmented reality data including turn-by-turn directions, the current speed limit, a clock, and the remaining travel time and distance to your destination, it's hard to think of a time when you wouldn't want the thing powered on.
Pioneer's new HUD gives drivers Terminator-style vision | DVICE
 
Scientists Demonstrate Leaner System For Quantum Encryption
Scientists have demonstrated the ability to scale-up an 'uncrackable' computer encryption system that utilizes quantum physics to ensure security.

The technique is based on information that is carried by photons, the basic particles of light. While it's been demonstrated on a small scale, the team headed by Andrew Shields and publishing in Nature says they've shown that up to 64 users can share a single photon detector, eliminating the need for each one to have such an (expensive) device.

It's part of a burgeoning technology known as Quantum Key Distribution, or QKD, that works off the principle that a quantum system cannot be observed without being disrupted — thus revealing that encrypted information has been compromised.

We don't claim to really understand all this stuff, but others do. As PhsyOrg writes:
Scientists Demonstrate Leaner System For Quantum Encryption : The Two-Way : NPR
 
Quantum chip connected to internet is yours to command
00:01 06 September 2013 by Jacob Aron
For similar stories, visit the Quantum World Topic Guide
Quantum computing is in the cloud, and you don't need a degree in advanced physics to run your own programs. For the first time, anyone with a web browser will soon be able to log in and run basic algorithms on a quantum chip hooked up to the internet.

A quantum chip processes information in qubits, or quantum bits, which, unlike the digital bits in a regular computer, can be both 0 and 1 at the same time. In theory, this ability should allow quantum computers to offer far speedier computation than current PCs – although devices that can definitely outperform standard machines don't yet exist.

"A quantum computer can do things faster for you, but someone has to program it, and at the moment there are only a handful of people around the world who would be qualified," says Bristol's Jeremy O'Brien, who led the development of the quantum chip being used in the cloud project.

Quantum sim

The more traditionally quantum chip made at the University of Bristol works by guiding two photons through a series of optical channels. As the photons pass through the chip they become entangled, meaning that a measurement on one influences the outcome when measuring the other. Programming the computer involves tweaking the extent of this entanglement to produce different computations.

Would-be quantum coders will first use an online simulator that lets them practice programming. A tutorial explains the key quantum-mechanical ideas that are central to the device, then guides users through the steps required to adjust the chip and change its output. Once experienced enough, users can ask for permission to connect to the real chip, which is sitting in a lab in Bristol. It will run programs and return results via the internet.

"You can sit on the bus with your mobile phone and do a quantum optics experiment which might never have been seen before," says team member Peter Shadbolt. The simulator is already online, but the ability to directly access the chip won't launch until 20 September.

Cloudy future

Exactly what a member of the public might want to use the quantum chip for is unclear. And the version being used online only has two qubits, so its processing power is a very limited.

"It's not going to calculate something that your PC couldn't calculate, because it's not at that scale by a long way," says O'Brien. His team has made 6-qubit and 8-qubit computers, but those projects are still in development. In the meantime, they are happy to let others use their older technology for free as a way to encourage engagement.

The beginnings of a quantum cloud should be a fun way to demonstrate the technology for the public, says Scott Aaronson at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, who is not part of the project. And while a 2-qubit device won't be more useful than your regular PC, putting it online might foreshadow how we will access large-scale quantum computers in future, he says.

"If quantum computing does become a practical technology, there will be a relatively small number of quantum computers, which people will access remotely."

Quantum chip connected to internet is yours to command - tech - 06 September 2013 - New Scientist
 
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Nissan launches Nismo smartwatch for drivers
A smartwatch that monitors the performance of a vehicle as well as the driver has been launched by car manufacturer Nissan.

Just like a traditional smartwatch, the Nissan Nismo measures the user's heart rate, temperature and other biometrics.

But it also allows users to keep an eye on their car's performance - including average speeds and fuel consumption.

Experts say that the watch could be an important step towards greater connectivity in cars.

"Connectivity is the new battleground for car manufacturers," said Chas Hallett, editor-in-chief of What Car?

"In-car internet is coming and now with consumer electronics focusing on watch-based connections, Nissan is getting ahead of the game and joining the two together very cleverly."

The Nismo watch can be connected to the car's on-board computer system to allow users to monitor vehicle telematics and performance data. Users can also receive tailored messages from Nissan via the gadget.

It was unveiled ahead of the Frankfurt Motor Show, which runs until 22 September.
BBC News - Nissan launches Nismo smartwatch for drivers
 
Seagate's super skinny 500GB hard drives are ready for tablets
In general, tablets top out at around 128GB or 256GB of storage. But, most people don't need that much for a tablet. The rising popularity of cloud storage has also cut the need for tons of internal storage.

Storage maker Seagate doesn't see things that way, though. Its 3.3 ounce — about the weight of a lightbulb — Ultra Mobile HDD is a 5mm thick 500GB hard drive; perfect for Android tablets.
Seagate's super skinny 500GB hard drives are ready for tablets | DVICE
 
Apple's iPhone 5s: 64-bit A7 chip, with Touch ID fingerprint sensor
If you were hoping Apple would break from tradition with its latest iPhone, well, today wasn't your lucky day. As expected, the company stuck with its "S-phone every other year" pattern, and pulled back the curtain on the iPhone 5s. Like previous S-series entries, the iPhone 5s looks almost exactly like its predecessor, only with a few upgrades thrown in. Here the big star of the show is the long-anticipated biometric fingerprint sensor, which Apple branded as Touch ID.

Apple's iPhone 5s: 64-bit A7 chip, with Touch ID fingerprint sensor
 
A world first! Success at complete quantum teleportation

Furusawa group at the University of Tokyo has succeeded in demonstrating complete quantum teleportation of photonic quantum bits by a hybrid technique for the first time worldwide. In 1997, quantum teleportation of photonic quantum bits was achieved by a research team at Innsbruck University in Austria. However, such quantum teleportation couldn't be used for information processing, because measurement was required after transport, and the transport efficiency was low. So, quantum teleportation was still a long way from practical use in quantum communication and quantum computing. The demonstration of quantum teleportation of photonic quantum bits by Furusawa group shows that transport efficiency can be over 100 times higher than before. Also, because no measurement is needed after transport, this result constitutes a major advance toward quantum information processing technology.

A world first! Success at complete quantum teleportation | AkihabaraNews
 
iPhone transforms security with fingerprint reader
With the swipe of a finger, Apple could jumpstart a new era of smartphone security and strip away fear of tending to banking or other business on mobile devices.

Fingerprint recognition technology built into a sophisticated iPhone 5S set to hit the market on September 20 was hailed by computer security specialists as a welcome move that rivals will likely rally to match.

"It could be amazing," Lookout principal security researcher Marc Rogers told AFP on Wednesday.

"What is going to happen really depends on Apple's implementation," he continued. "We've seen Apple take obscure technologies and make them mainstream overnight."


Read more at: iPhone transforms security with fingerprint reader
 
Flexpad: Moveable displays made of paper (w/ Video)
Recently at the 2013 IFA international trade show for consumer electronics and home appliances in Berlin, major electronics manufacturers displayed new types of displays that are thin, and even curved, but expensive. IT experts in Saarbrücken have gone a step further. Their more cost-effective approach, called Flexpad, allows a simple, standard sheet of paper to be transformed into a moveable, flexible display. Already today, this could help patients better review the results of a computer tomography, for example. In the long term, the IT experts want to discover what new applications are viable in future for ultra-thin, deformable, mobile end devices, and how they can best be operated.

Read more at: Flexpad: Moveable displays made of paper (w/ Video)
 
In-flight Wi-Fi to get 6x faster than current turtle speeds
Even faster in-flight Wi-Fi is coming. Gogo Inc., the leading airline ISP is planning to roll out a new system that will boost Wi-Fi speeds to six times over. Virgin America will be the first carrier to use Gogo's new 60 megabits per second — current speeds max out around 10 megabits per second) — in-flight Wi-Fi staring in mid-2014. From there, the company plans to trick out its fleet of 53 planes with the faster surfing speeds.

Just last week, JetBlue Airways Corp. got the green light from the government to install a high-capacity satellite link that would enable them to provide Wi-Fi that would allow fliers to use their video streaming services right on their own devices.

The previously Internet-less airline decided to go with an ISP that uses the high-cap Ka-band spectrum, ViaSat Inc, which uses a different connection than Gogo's. While JetBlue plans to charge fliers for streaming their own video due to the increased bandwidth it would use, basic Internet browsing will be gratis (subject to change, of course, as they deliberate pricing). So far, that's a great deal compared to Virgin's Gogo service, which will charge fliers $14 for a one-day pass and $50 for a monthly one to use their internet.
In-flight Wi-Fi to get 6x faster than current turtle speeds | DVICE
 
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The '50-50' chip: Memory device of the future?
A new, environmentally-friendly electronic alloy consisting of 50 aluminum atoms bound to 50 atoms of antimony may be promising for building next-generation "phase-change" memory devices, which may be the data-storage technology of the future, according to a new paper published in the journal Applied Physics Letters, which is produced by AIP Publishing. Phase-change memory is being actively pursued as an alternative to the ubiquitous flash memory for data storage applications, because flash memory is limited in its storage density and phase-change memory can operate much faster.
The '50-50' chip: Memory device of the future? | e! Science News
 
Software turns 2D objects 3D; lets you 'reach into' photos; bends your mind
Modeling products in three dimensions can be a time-consuming process. It's easy enough for humans to identify the presence of 3D objects in 2D scenes, but extracting these with algorithms is tricky. A new system developed by a team of researchers from the Interdisciplinary Center in Israel and Tel Aviv University aims to simplify the process by using a technique to pull out 3D shapes and objects from regular photos.

The system is simple enough to be used and understood by almost anyone. To start with, the user traces around the object, defining its three dimensions. Then the outline will automatically snap to the object in the photo.

But 3-Sweep is not just for tracing out 3D objects. The resulting model can then be edited or manipulated, and placed back into photos or 3D scenes. This might not sound like much on paper until you see the results in the video below.
Software turns 2D objects 3D; lets you 'reach into' photos; bends your mind | Cutting Edge - CNET News
 
Samsung says to unveil smartphone with curved display

Samsung said Wednesday it would unveil a smartphone with a curved display in October—a technological innovation aimed at maintaining its lead in a lucrative but increasingly saturated market.

Curved displays are at a nascent stage in display technology which is shifting towards flexible panels that are bendable or can even be rolled or folded.

"We will introduce a smartphone with a curved display in October," Samsung mobile business head of strategic marketing D.J. Lee told reporters.


Read more at: Samsung says to unveil smartphone with curved display
 
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A first: Stanford engineers build computer using carbon nanotube technology

7 hours ago

A team of Stanford engineers has built a basic computer using carbon nanotubes, a semiconductor material that has the potential to launch a new generation of electronic devices that run faster, while using less energy, than those made from silicon chips.

This unprecedented feat culminates years of efforts by scientists around the world to harness this promising material.

The achievement is reported today in an article on the cover of Nature magazine written by Max Shulaker and other doctoral students in electrical engineering. The research was led by Stanford professors Subhasish Mitra and H.S. Philip Wong.

Read more at: A first: Stanford engineers build computer using carbon nanotube technology
 
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