Saturday, September 29, 2012

5 Men Suspected of Pirating Hollywood Movies Ordered to Pay $1.4M (€1.1M)

Five individuals suspected of leaking pre-release copies of movies made by Disney, Warner Bros. and Universal have been sentenced to jail and ordered to pay damages totaling over $1.4 million (€1.1 million) by a court in Paris.
The pirates – some of them working under the CiNEFOX name since 2005 – attracted the attention of copyright holders back in 2007.

At the middle of 2008, three members of CiNEFOX and two of another pirate collective called Carnage were arrested

During the court hearings, which started earlier this month, the suspects were appointed as being on the top of the “piracy pyramid,” TorrentFreak reports.

The studios accused the groups of leaking hundreds of motion pictures. Although, officially they were accused of leaking 56 movies, it’s believed that Carnage actually released copies of over 2,000 films. 

CiNEFOX, on the other hand, was accused of leaking 504 movies, including Mission Impossible 3, Jumper, X-Men and 10,000 BC. 

Furthermore, some of the suspects were accused of operating “topsite” servers, the ones used to share theater movie recordings and DVDs that were unavailable for the public at the time.

One of the defendants - who owned a movie theater pass that gave him unlimited access - admitted to have utilized a hearing aid device in order to capture audio content with the purpose of splicing it onto international versions of the film. 

He claimed that everything was a game to them, his lawyer stating that they didn’t make any money from their illegal activities.

The members of CiNEFOX have been sentenced to six-month suspended prison sentences, being ordered to pay 710,000 EUR ($915,000) in damages. A fine of 410,000 EUR ($530,000) and three-, respectively four-month suspended prison sentences have been given to the two Carnage pirates.

5 Facebook Crimes That Led to Severe Fines or Jail Time

This compilation of offences presents some of the silliest ways to commit a crime, or get caught after you've committed a crime, all facilitated by the popular social networking site Facebook.

In June, the Telegraph reported that police officers in England and Wales receive Facebook-related crime reports every 40 minutes, of every day.

In April 2011, a teenager flooded the men’s toilets at Portsmouth Central Library, by filling plugholes with toilet paper. This innocent prank cost taxpayers $247,000 damage, and lead to the destruction of one of a kind, irreplaceable books. 

The Central library was closed for repairs for 6 months after the act of vandalism. The 16-year-old was caught after posting about it on Facebook, OddStuffLab reports.

Another teenager was imprisoned after trying to hire a hitman on Facebook. 19-year-old Corey Christian Adams of West Chester, Pennsylvania, responded to online rape allegations posted by a classmate by posting: “I go 500 on a girls head, who wants that bread.” He was charged with rape and criminal solicitation of murder, CBS News informed.

In another silly Facebook crime, a woman was tried after decapitating a mouse, filming the event and posting it online. 23-year-old Naomi Anderson from Caboolture, Queensland, walked off with 180 hours of community service. According to news.com.au, the mouse wasn't as lucky, as those who saw the 40-second footage testified.

Shannon Jackson from Tennessee broke the law by "poking" a man on Facebook. ABC News reported about the woman had a restraining order out against her from the defendant, and failed to prove she didn't violate it after prosecutors presented the Facebook “poke” as a form of saying “Hi.”

Moroccan Fouad Mourtada, 26, was charged in 2008 after pretending to be the brother of King Mohamed IV, in a fake Facebook profile. The Moroccan Government viewed that as a crime, and sentenced him to 3 months in jail. 9,000 people signed a petition for his release, and he was freed after 43 days in jail.

Friday, September 28, 2012

Sony Invests $650 Million / 502 Million Euro in Olympus, Gets 51% Ownership


Amidst losses of hundreds of millions and a fraud scandal to which its former employees have pleaded guilty, Olympus isn't doing so hot. In fact, it is doing so badly that it has had no choice but to accept selling a majority stake in one of its most important businesses.

This would not have been so ironic if it hadn’t been Sony that bought those 51% of the shares in the Olympus medical imaging technology business arm. 

While the $650 Million / 502 Million Euro will do Olympus good, certain parties won't stay blind to the irony of a former rival getting a controlling stake.   

That doesn't mean the deal isn't convenient though. It includes several other entries as well, most relevant of which is a component-sharing agreement in the photography space. Olympus mirror cells and camera lenses will be given to Sony, while the latter will provide Olympus with image sensors. 

Sony now has an overall voting right of 11.46% in Olympus as a whole.

World powers open to more nuke talks with Iran


Iran insists its program is solely for peaceful energy and medical research purposes. 


World powers decided to lay the groundwork for another round of negotiations with Iran over its disputed nuclear program, a senior U.S. official said, but they want a significantly improved offer from the Islamic republic.

Neither the U.S. nor any of its international partners was ready to abandon diplomacy in favor of military or other actions, as Israeli President Benjamin Netanyahu has advocated.

The new hope for a negotiated end to Iran s decade-long nuclear standoff came Thursday after Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton met with the foreign ministers of Britain, China, France, Germany and Russia powers that have sought, over several rounds of talks, to persuade Iran to halt its production of material that could be used in nuclear weapons. All such efforts have failed so far.

The latest stab at a diplomatic compromise collapsed this summer after Iran proposed to stop producing higher-enriched uranium in exchange for a suspension in international sanctions, which Clinton has termed a "nonstarter." The U.S. official said Iran would have to bring a much better offer to the table this time, but stressed that nations were seeing some signs for optimism and that diplomacy remained "far and away the preferred way to deal with this issue."

Catherine Ashton, the European Union s top diplomat, who has been spearheading the international diplomacy with Iran, was instructed to reach out to Iran s top nuclear negotiator, Saeed Jalili. Still, no date was set for the possible resumption of the so-called P5+1 talks with Iran, said the U.S. official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because she wasn t authorized to comment publicly about the closed-doors meeting at the United Nations.

After looking for a diplomatic solution there, Clinton met later Thursday with Netanyahu one-on-one for 75 minutes at a New York hotel where she was expected to hear the alternative argument for possible military action. The U.S. official said they agreed that Iran must be prevented from becoming a nuclear power, without going into details.

Their meeting occurred just hours after the Israeli leader warned in an address to the U.N. General Assembly that Iran will have enough enriched uranium for a nuclear weapon by next summer.

Pulling out a red marker while holding a poster depicting a cartoon-like bomb that measured Iran s nuclear progress, Netanyahu drew a "red line" across the second-to-last stage of nuclear development, reminding everyone of his demand for President Barack Obama to declare when the U.S. might attack Iran. Obama has rejected the demand.

It is getting "late, very late" to stop the Iranian nuclear threat, Netanyahu said at the United Nations.

"Red lines don t lead to war; red lines prevent war," he said.

Iran insists its program is solely for peaceful energy and medical research purposes, while the U.S. and many Western and Sunni Arab states see that as a cover for developing nuclear arms. But there is disagreement on how to stop Iran, with Obama insisting there is more time for diplomacy and hard-hitting sanctions while Netanyahu presses for a military response.

That disagreement has spilled over into Obama s bid for re-election, with Republican challenger Mitt Romney accusing the president of being weak on Iran. Romney has promised a more credible threat of military action and closer alignment of U.S. policy with Netanyahu s positions an argument that resonates with some Jewish and pro-Israel evangelical Christian voters.
Neither presidential candidate, however, advocates clearly for military action.

An attack on Iran s nuclear facilities would surely prompt retaliation. Iran could seek to disrupt fuel supplies from the Persian Gulf, through which about one-fifth of the world s oil flows, or it could support proxies such as Hezbollah to attack Israel or U.S. allies in the Gulf. A worst-case scenario might see the U.S. dragged into another major war in the Muslim world at a time of staggering American debt and continued economic struggles.

Obama and Netanyahu probably will speak by telephone Friday, the White House said, after Clinton s meeting are over. She is doing the bulk of America s diplomatic work at this year s gathering of global leaders in New York, with Obama ruling out any bilateral meetings with presidents or prime ministers so he can spend more time campaigning for re-election.
America s partners also prefer diplomacy.

"We discussed at length the need for Iran to take action urgently," said Ashton, who briefed officials for more than an hour on her recent discussions with the Iranians.

"We were united," said French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius, refusing to comment on Netanyahu s call for red lines.

McLaren unveils P1 supercar


The new P1 is the third in McLaren's range of road-going sportscars
Like a child playing king of the castle, Ron Dennis is on top of the world.
The executive chairman of McLaren, the British Formula 1 racing and technology group, is positively buzzing, and so is the entire hall as he unveils the company's £800,000 ($1.3m) P1 supercar.
The crowd of hundreds of journalists and industry executives from rival carmakers make the whole event resemble a rock'n'roll gig.
And Mr Dennis owns the stage.
"We strive for perfection," he declares. "Our real DNA is about this constant search for perfection."

Peshawar blast kills top Pakistan bomb disposal officer


A senior Pakistani bomb disposal officer has been killed while attempting to defuse a device in the restive north-western city of Peshawar, police have said.
Bomb squad veteran Hukam Khan had successfully defused one device but was killed when a second one exploded as he was trying make it safe.
Three police officers were wounded in the blast.
Mr Khan saved many lives by defusing dozens of bombs in his career.
Police say that Mr Khan, who was in his late 50s, rushed to the city's Matni neighbourhood after hearing that insurgents had planted two bombs near a road used by security convoys travelling to the Khyber tribal region.
Senior police officer Fazal Mola Dad told the AP news agency that Mr Khan's role in making so many bombs safe in recent years meant that he played a key role in the battle against militants in Peshawar.
Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari on Tuesday told the UN General Assembly that his country had lost more than 7,000 soldiers and policemen as a result of "terrorism" since the 9/11 attacks in the US. He said that in addition 37,000 civilians had been killed.
Peshawar is near Pakistan's tribal belt - a stronghold of Taliban and al-Qaeda militants. Violence from the tribal regions has in recent years spilled over into the city.
Last week a bomb exploded on a busy road in the city, killing at least nine people and wounding at least 20 others.
Earlier in September, a suicide bomber killed two people and injured 19 others when he drove his car into a vehicle from the US consulate in Peshawar.
Hundreds have died in attacks in and around the city in recent years.

Blackberry maker RIM reports loss but sees cash pile grow



Research In Motion has posted a smaller-than-expected quarterly loss, sending its shares up nearly 18% in after-hours trading.
The maker of the Blackberry also boosted its cash pile, as it nears the launch of its next-generation devices.
RIM reported a net loss of $235m (£145m) for the second quarter, ending 1 September, compared with a profit of $329m for the period last year.
Excluding one-time restructuring items, the loss was $142m.
RIM increased its cash to about $2.3bn from $2.2bn.
Being able to dip into a cash reserve could be key to a successful launch of RIM's line of revamped smartphones that will run on its new Blackberry 10, or BB10, operating system.
The struggling company has staked its future on BB10.
Once a smartphone pioneer, RIM's fortunes have faded as rivals such as Apple and Samsung have taken market share.
Thorsten Heins, chief executive of the Ontario-based firm, said: "Despite the significant changes we are implementing across the organization, our second quarter results demonstrate that RIM is progressing on its financial and operational commitments during this major transition."
Technology analyst Rob Enderle, of the Enderle Group, told the BBC: "RIM's turnaround will have to wait until the new platform comes out.
"Its strength is the business-centric audience - and what's hurting them most is they still don't have Blackberry 10 to offer them.
"But given the business market is not that happy with Android over security, and Apple's prevalence means it is also becoming a target - there is still a reasonable chance RIM can still come back.
"Of course, Microsoft is targeting the same audience with Windows Phone 8, but there is an opportunity for a challenger in 2013."
RIM said it shipped 7.4 million Blackberry smartphones in the quarter and 130,000 BlackBerry PlayBook tablets.

Sharp's Business Sacrifices Continue

Sharp's status as a world-class technology player has been slipping for months, with the number of projected job cuts growing almost by the week. 

The last time we heard something about the matter, 11,000 jobs were going to be sacrificed, on top of the previous ones. 

Those who have been keeping up to date on such things may also know that the corporation intends to sell some assets and shut others down. 

It turns out that the solar panel manufacturing in Europe and the United States will be reduced, perhaps discontinued completely. 

The resources will be diverted to Japan and other Asian markets, where Sharp hopes to increase its share from 30% to 40% in 2013, although the report says that four solar cell plants from Japan will be sold as well. 

This may still be a good mid- to long-term tactic though. Sharp does, after all, intend to turn the Sakai City, Osaka plant into the main facility for such things. At least layoffs will be avoided this time (the extra workforce will be shifted to other departments).

Thursday, September 27, 2012

Curiosity Mars rover beams images of ancient streambed


Nasa's Curiosity rover has only been on the surface of Mars seven weeks but it has already turned up evidence of past flowing water on the planet.
The robot has returned pictures of classic conglomerates - rocks that are made up of gravels and sand.
Scientists on the mission team say the size and rounded shape of the pebbles in the rock indicate they had been transported and eroded in water.
Researchers think the rover has found a network of ancient streams.
The rocks, which were described in a media briefing at Nasa's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California, were likely laid down "several billion years ago". But the actual streams themselves may have persisted on the surface for long periods, said Curiosity science co-investigator Bill Dietrich of the University of California, Berkeley.
"We would anticipate that it could easily be thousands to millions of years," he told reporters.
Satellites at Mars have long captured images of channels on the planet's surface that were cut by some kind of flow, assumed to be liquid water. Curiosity's discovery at its landing site in the equatorial Gale Crater provides the first real ground truth for those observations.
By luck, the rover just happened to roll past a spectacular example of the conglomerate. A large slab, 10-15cm thick, was lifted out of the ground at an angle.
"We've named it Hottah," said rover project scientist John Grotzinger. The name refers to a lake in Canada's Northwest Territories. The team is using names from this region to catalogue objects at Gale.
"To us it just looked like somebody came along the surface of Mars with a jackhammer and lifted up the sidewalk that you might see in downtown LA at a construction site," he joked.
Link rockScientists are now studying the images of the pebbles in the rock. The sizes and shapes will give them clues to the speed and distance of the ancient water flow.
In this view, some of the pebbles have weathered free from the rock
The discovery site lies between the northern rim of the crater and the huge mountain that rises up from its central plain.
Previous orbital imagery of the region had hinted there might have been a water feature there. Curiosity's conglomerates support that hypothesis.
The current interpretation is that the rover is sitting at the head of an alluvial fan of material that washed down through the crater wall and across the plain, cutting many individual streams. Researchers even think they can identify the particular valley at the rim where the water entered the crater, and they have named it Peace Vallis.
There is an eagerness also to study the chemistry of the conglomerates because that will give an indication of the nature of the water - its pH value, for example - and that will provide some clues as to what the environment at the time might have looked like.
At the moment, the rover is heading towards a location dubbed Glenelg. Scientists think this will give them the best access to the rocks of interest.
The US space agency's $2.6bn mission touched down on the Red Planet on 6 August (GMT).
Much of the time since then has been spent commissioning the immensely complex, six-wheeled machine and its suite of 10 instruments.
Curiosity is funded for one Martian year (two Earth years) of study. It will try to determine in that time whether past environments at Gale Crater could ever have supported microbial life.

Nepal plane crash kills all 19 on board: police

Aircraft and pilots often have to contend with difficult landing strips in the Himalayan nation.


A small plane flying 19 people towards Mount Everest crashed on the outskirts of the Nepalese capital Friday, killing everyone on board including seven Britons and five Chinese, police said.

The Sita Air Dornier craft had just taken off from Kathmandu airport and was headed to the small town of Lukla, a gateway to the world s highest mountain, when it plunged into the banks of a river near the city.

National police spokesman Binod Singh said there were no survivors.

"The crash has caused the death of 12 foreigners, including seven British and five Chinese tourists. The remaining seven, including three crew members, are Nepalese," Singh told AFP.

The spokesman said that the plane had crashed less than one kilometre (half a mile) from the airport at around 6:30 am (0045 GMT), next to the Manohara river.

"The pilots seem to have tried to land it safely on the banks of the river but unfortunately the plane caught fire."

Police had initially said five Japanese, two Italians and a Briton were killed in the crash but later corrected the information, which had been given in error by an officer at the crash site.

Dozens of army personnel had arrived at the crash site, said Nepalese army spokesman Ramindra Chhetri, and were battling to bring the blaze under control.

Local television channels showed dozens of soldiers and police officers picking through the smouldering wreckage of the aircraft with a large crowd of shocked bystanders watching.

A number of badly burned bodies were laid in a line a few metres from the craft s shattered fuselage.

Tulasha Pokharel, a 26-year-old housewife who lives near to the crash site, told AFP she was among the first on the scene.

"We could hear people inside the aircraft screaming, but we couldn t throw water at the plane to put out the fire because we were scared that the engines were about to explode," she said.

Nepal has a poor road network and large numbers of tourists, pilgrims and professional climbers often rely on the country s 16 domestic airlines and 49 airports to reach remote areas.

The accident is the sixth fatal air crash in Nepal in less than two years and raises new questions about the safety record of the country s numerous small airlines.

Aircraft and pilots often have to contend with bad weather and difficult landing strips in the Himalayan nation.

In May, 15 people were killed when a small Agni Air plane taking tourists to a treacherous high-altitude airport near Nepal s Annapurna mountain region ploughed into the ground.

In September last year a small plane taking tourists on a sightseeing trip around Everest crashed into a hillside near the Nepalese Kathmandu, also killing all 19 people on board.

The Buddha Air Beechcraft plane, carrying 10 Indians, two Americans, one Japanese citizen and three local passengers, came down in heavy rain and fog at Godavari, about 10 kilometres from the capital.

Man behind anti-Islam film arrested

The man behind anti-Islam film has been arrested for violating terms of his probation.


The California man behind a crudely produced anti-Islamic video posted to YouTube that has inflamed parts of the Middle East was arrested for violating terms of his probation, authorities said Thursday.

Nakoula Basseley Nakoula, 55, was convicted in 2010 for federal check and sentenced to 21 months in prison. Under terms of his probation, he was not allowed to use computers or the Internet for five years without approval from his probation officer.

Nakoula was arrested after federal probation officials determined he violated the terms of his supervised release, said Thomas Mrozek U.S. Attorney s spokesman in Los Angeles.

A U.S. District Court hearing was scheduled for Nakoula on Thursday afternoon. It was closed to media and the public.

Protests have erupted around the Middle East over a 14-minute trailer for "Innocence of Muslims". Though the trailer was posted to YouTube in July, the violence didn t break out until Sept. 11 and has spread since, killing dozens.

Nakoula, a Christian originally from Egypt, went into hiding after he was identified as the man behind the trailer.

The full story about Nakoula and the video still isn t known.

The movie was made last year by a man who called himself Sam Bacile. After the violence erupted, a man who identified himself as Bacile called media outlets including The Associated Press, took credit for the film.

The next day, the AP determined there was no Bacile and linked the identity to Nakoula, a former gas station owner with a drug conviction and a history of using aliases. Federal authorities later confirmed there was no Bacile and that Nakoula was behind the movie.

Before going into hiding, Nakoula acknowledged to the AP he was involved with the film, but said he only worked on logistics and management.

A film permit listed Media for Christ, a Los Angeles-area charity run by other Egyptian Christians, as the production company. Most of the film was made at the charity s headquarters. Steve Klein, an insurance agent in Hemet and outspoken Muslim critic, has said he was a consultant and promoter for the film.

The trailer still can be found on YouTube. The Obama administration asked Google, YouTube s parent, to take down the video but the company has refused, saying it did not violate its content standards.

Meantime, a number of actors and workers on the film have come forward to say they were duped. They say they were hired for a film titled "Desert Warrior" and there was no mention of Islam in the script. Those references were dubbed in after filming was completed.

Actress Cindy Lee Garcia has sued to get the trailer taken down, saying she was duped.

Google+ Has 400 Million Users, 100 Million Actually Use the Site or Apps

Google+ keeps on growing, fuelled by Google's huge presence. It's hard to detach Google+ growth and popularity from Google itself so it's hard to compare it to other similar sites. 
It's also hard to know how much of a correlation there is between the number of users who've created a Google+ profile and the ones that active use the service.

Still, Google+ now has 400 million users, less than a year and a half after launch. The site just celebrated its first birthday in June, late June actually.

At the time, it had an impressive stat to share, 250 million people had created a Google+ profile. 150 million more in less than three months is even more impressive.

"This week we also hit an important milestone--over 400,000,000 people have upgraded to Google+. It was only a year ago that we opened public sign-up, and we couldn’t have imagined that so many people would join in just 12 months," Google+ chief Vic Gundotra wrote.

But, for the very first time, he also shared a much more important figure, the active users number. And, unlike the last time, Google is actually providing an active users number, i.e. it's saying how many people visit plus.google.com or use the mobile apps in a month.

That number is 100 million, not bad, but not huge either. Still, it is the first time we've gotten such an honest number from Google.

When Google+ turned one year old, Google counted 150 million monthly active users. But it counted those that clicked on the notification box that's spread across the Google sites or engaged with Google+ in one way or another, not necessarily by visiting the site or using the mobile apps.

"While Google+ is all about creating a better experience across Google, it’s also a destination. And here too, I’m happy to report that we have just crossed 100,000,000 monthly active users on Google+ (plus.google.com and mobile app)," Gundotra explained.

Google to appeal charges against exec


Sao Paulo - Google's most senior executive in Brazil was questioned by police and released on Wednesday after the company failed to take down YouTube videos attacking a mayoral candidate in violation of local electoral law.
Google is appealing the charges against Fábio José Silva Coelho, who was brought in by federal police in São Paulo and released after he agreed to cooperate with the case, according to a police statement.
The questioning came a day after a state court in São Paulo banned an online video that sparked violent protests across the Muslim world, giving Google 10 days to pull the video from its YouTube unit. Google has not been formally notified about that case by legal authorities, according to a spokesman for the company.
Taken together, the legal scrutiny represents the strongest pressure Google has faced in Brazil to control third-party content uploaded to its websites and the first time its senior executives have come under such intense fire.
“Google is providing clarification to legal authorities,” a spokesman for the company in São Paulo said on Wednesday.
Coelho was questioned over a case filed in the western state of Mato Grosso do Sul, where a regional electoral court ruled that the executive was at fault for the company's failure to take down online videos in violation of a stringent 1965 Electoral Code.
Brazilian electoral law bans campaign ads that “offend the dignity or decorum” of a candidate.
The ruling follows a similar decision by another electoral judge in the northeastern state of Paraiba, which also held a senior Google executive responsible for videos in violation of elections laws. That decision was overturned last week. 

Its chocolate cake doodle on Google's 14th birthday


The search engine turned 14 on September 27. 

Today, visitors are being greeted with a doodle that has an animated chocolate cake with 14 candles placed on it.

The cake is, later eaten up and appears as the word “Google.” The candles get arranged in a tally format that can be seen under the doodle. 

Earlier, when Google entered its teenage, it marked its 13th birthday with a doodle that depicted the company logo with party hats placed on each letter of its logo and a cake with balloons and gifts around. 

The Internet giant Google was found by Larry Page and Sergey Brin in September 1998.

Malaysia Combats Illegal Online Gambling, 812 PCs Smashed with Excavator


Authorities in Malaysia are doing everything in their power to put an end to illegal online gambling. In the past period, they seized a total of 4,194 computers on which gambling software had been installed.
According to New Straits Times, Kota Setar district police representatives say that such crimes have tripled in the past year. If last year they conducted 204 operations, in 2012, 708 locations have been raided, many of them being run by legitimate businesses and cyber cafes. 

A number of 812 computers used for illegal online gambling have been crushed with an excavator and buried.

In Malaysia, those found to be in violation of the Common Gaming House Act, Section 4B in particular, face hefty fines and even jail sentences of up to five years.

Hackers Form “Arab Electronic Army” to Protest Against Mohammed Video


“I love Mohammed” is the message written in ten languages on websites defaced by the newly formed Arab Electronic Army hacker collective. The crew was established with the purpose of defending “Allah’s prophet.”
One of the members has told Al Arabiya that the group is formed of individuals from Morocco and Syria. He claims that they were independent hackers who decided to unite their forces after the Innocence of Muslims video was posted on YouTube and a French magazine published “blasphemous” cartoons featuring the prophet.

“The hacking operations are of course a response to the offense against the prophet, peace and blessing be upon him,” he said.

They already breached several websites, many of them from Brazil, to deliver their protest message.

“To all the enemies of Islam, we say: by Allah, we will not lost this war and we will continue to this way (sic),” they wrote on the defaced sites.

Hitachi Invents Glass That Can Store Data Forever


There are many means of storing data nowadays, but few of them can claim to have almost unlimited staying power, and the ones that do aren't commercially available anyway.
What Hitachi has to show isn't commercially available either, but it is a concept that has very high odds of catching on.

After all, it isn't every day that someone invents a piece of perfectly transparent glass that can hold as much data as a CD and has the potential of going well beyond that information density.

Granted, it isn't quite accurate to compare the two in that manner. The piece of quartz glass made by Hitachi is a small square with two-centimeter width (0.78 inches). Still, the slate can hold 6 MB of data, inscribed as binary-coded dots in four layers.

This is the same areal density as that of compact disks, but Hitachi believes it can take things much further.

That isn't the main asset of the glass though. Hitachi seems to be more enthusiastic about the endurance, the ability to survive, unscathed, being exposed to a 1000 degrees C flame for up to two hours.

The glass is resistant to most chemicals as well, and will not be negatively affected by magnets, water exposure or radio waves either. After all, the data isn't magnetically written, but etched physically into the transparent material.

Unless the glass is broken, something that isn't easy to do, the data should survive indefinitely. This makes Hitachi's quartz slate a very convenient component in databases meant to store data for future generations, like the subterranean areas where toxic waste was dumped.

The only pitfall with this plan is the same as with all other such plans: the means of storing data may be super-tough, but the hardware capable of reading it isn't as long-lived. Then again, assuming civilization progresses instead of collapsing during the next millennium, it should be a simple matter for our advanced descendants to figure out how to read the slate, even if no hardware or instructions as to how to build it survive. This is assuming Hitachi decides to market the technology, which it hasn't, yet.

Transcend Launches 128 GB JetFlash 760 USB 3.0 Flash Drives


Well-known computer memory and storage manufacturer Transcend has just launched two new flash drive series that feature impressive capacities and high transfer rates. The new thumb drives are using the new USb 3.0 connection technology and thus are able to deliver high speeds.

The official names for the two series are Transcend JetFlash 760 and JetFlash 600.

The company also touts high transfer rates even on the standard USB 2.0 ports as the internal layout of the NAND chips is a dual-channel one.

The company further offers the free download of the exclusive Transcend Elite data management software, which features intelligent backup scheduling and the often required 256-bit AES file encryption capability.

The USM sticks are backed by a welcomed Lifetime-warranty and the 128 GB JetFlash 760 will be available for $200 (155 EUR).