Space Station Pilots ‘Interplanetary Internet’

A new networking technology called Disruption Tolerant Networking (DTN) could give astronauts direct Internet access within a year. The technology currently is being tested aboard the International Space Station (ISS), and could lead towards what has been dubbed the Interplanetary Internet. DTN communications protocol is a like TCP/IP, which defines how information is encoded and routed through a network. However, while TCP/IP deals with a continuous end-to-end network of Internet hosts and computers, DTN deals with spacecraft whose communications may be disrupted as they travel. DTN deals with disruptions by storing unsent data packets in a queue until conditions allow for them to be transmitted

Conroy Named Internet Villain of the Year

Stephen Conroy’s mandatory internet filtering plans have earned him the title of Internet Villain of the Year at the 11th annual Internet Industry Awards. The Internet Villain category recognises individuals or organisations that have upset the Internet industry and hampered its development — those whom the industry loves to hate. As Australia’s communications minister, and supporter of one of the world’s most ambitious internet censorship plans, Senator Conroy beat out tough competition from the likes of the European Parliament and French President Nicolas Sarkozy

Twitter Suspends Accounts of Users With Infected Computers

Twitter is suspending the accounts of some users whose computers have fallen victim to a well-known piece of malicious software that has targeted other sites such as Facebook and MySpace. The malware, Koobface, is designed to spread itself by checking to see if person is logged into a social network. It will then post fraudulent messages on the person’s Twitter account trying to entice friends to click the link, which then leads to a malicious Web site that tries to infect the PC

Government Honours Veterans of Bletchley Park at Last

The surviving workers from the Bletchley Park cryptography unit are to be honoured, nearly 70 years after the unit was formed. The Bletchley Park code breakers, known as Station X during the Second World War, were never officially recognised for their invaluable work in deciphering German, Italian and Japanese military codes — work this is thought to have shortened the war by more than two years and saved millions of lives

The Inhale-Exhale Diet

In a study published in Cell Metabolism, chemical and biomolecular engineering professor James Liao, associate professor of human genetics and paediatrics Katrina Dipple, and their research team at UCLA showed that genetic alterations enable mice to convert fat into carbon dioxide and remain lean while eating the equivalent of a fast-food diet

Could BugMeNot Face Legal Action?

An Australian web site that allows users to bypass registration details on other web sites using communal usernames and passwords could be shut down for breaching terms and conditions of other sites, a law expert says. Deacons partner Nick Abrahams says BugMeNot.com, which was created by former realestate.com.au employees Guy King and Bevan Clark has put safeguards on its site but could still face legal action

PCs Used in Korean DDoS Attacks May Self Destruct

There are signs that the concerted cyber attacks targeting US and Korean government and commercial Web sites this past week are beginning to wane. Yet, even if the assaults were to be completely blocked tomorrow, the attackers could still have one last, inglorious weapon in their arsenal: New evidence suggests that the malicious code responsible for spreading this attack includes instructions to overwrite the infected PC’s hard drive

Germanium Diodes Mean Progress Toward Silicon-Chip Lasers

Teams at Stanford and MIT have each reported getting strong light signals from germanium-based diodes on silicon at room temperature. Engineers have long sought to do this because, with further refinement into lasers, such diodes would allow for optical interconnects on chips. Optical interconnects could operate much faster and with less power than electrical (metal) ones that are becoming bottlenecks on current chips — via Slashdot

Google Lifts Gmail Beta Tag

Google has finally removed the beta tag from a slew of applications, including Gmail and Docs, in a bid to woo large corporate clients. The software giant hopes the move will convince Microsoft and IBM customers to switch to Google Apps Premier Edition, comprising Gmail, Docs, Calendar and Talk. The Premier version is the paid service for Google’s online application suite for communication, productivity and collaboration — areas where Microsoft traditionally dominates with its Office and Outlook products, and where IBM has a legacy foothold with Lotus. The beta tags carried an air of unfinished business and the applications were perceived by some customers as not enterprise-ready

New Phone Hack Inquiry Ruled Out

Police say there will be no further investigation of claims that a huge mobile phone-hacking operation was launched by the News of the World. The Guardian alleged the tabloid’s reporters paid private investigators to hack into thousands of phones, many owned by politicians and celebrities. But the Metropolitan Police said no new evidence had emerged since an original inquiry saw two men jailed in 2007

Study Suggests Dry Spells here to Stay

The author of a new climate study commissioned by the Federal Government says people in southern parts of Australia can expect the dry weather in many areas to continue indefinitely. The study by Australian National University (ANU) professor Will Steffen looked at scientific papers published since the Inter-Governmental Panel on Climate Change’s last major report in 2007. He found there is growing evidence that prolonged dry spells in certain parts of Australia are linked to climate change rather than nature

Google Plans a PC Operating System

In a direct challenge to Microsoft, Google has announced that it is developing an operating system for PCs that is tied to its Chrome Web browser. The software, called the Google Chrome Operating System, is initially intended for use in the tiny, low-cost portable computers known as netbooks, which have been selling quickly even as demand for other PCs has plummeted. Google said it believed the software would also be able to power full-size PCs. The move is likely to sharpen the already intense competition between Google and Microsoft, whose Windows operating system controls the basic functions of the vast majority of personal computers

Cyberattacks Jam Government and Commercial Web Sites in US and South Korea

A wave of cyberattacks aimed at 27 American and South Korean government agencies and commercial Web sites temporarily jammed more than a third of them over the past five days, and several sites in South Korea came under renewed attack on Thursday. The latest bout of attacks, which affected service on one government and six commercial Web sites in South Korea, was relatively minor, and all but two of the sites were fully functional within a few hours, an official from the state-run Korea Communications Commission said

Can Urine Rescue Hydrogen-Powered Cars?

It takes a lot of energy to split hydrogen out from the other atoms to which it binds, either in natural gas or water. Which means energy analysts are skeptical about the overall energy balance of cars fueled by hydrogen. Ohio University researcher Geraldine Botte has come up with a nickel-based electrode to oxidise (NH2)2CO, otherwise known as urea, the major component of animal urine. Because urea’s four hydrogen atoms are less tightly bound to nitrogen than the hydrogen bound to oxygen in water molecules, it takes less energy to break them apart — via Slashdot

Google Removes ‘Beta’ Label from Gmail, Calendar, Other Services

Google is removing the beta label from many of its key services, including Gmail, Google Calendar, Google Docs, Google Talk and Google Video for Business. The move is seen as a way to attract large businesses to Google Apps, its suite of messaging and productivity applications. For most users of Gmail and Google Calendar, today’s news is little more than a lifting of the beta label for these already-reliable Google services. But Google says removing the beta label is a big deal for the businesses that it hopes will switch to Web-based Google services — and away from software-based services offered by Microsoft and IBM

2009 Bulwer-Lytton Fiction Contest

The winner of 2009 Bulwer-Lytton Fiction Contest is David McKenzie, a 55-year-old Quality Systems consultant and writer from Federal Way, Washington. A contest recidivist, he has formerly won the Western and Children’s Literature categories. His winning entry was the appalling: Folks say that if you listen real close at the height of the full moon, when the wind is blowin’ off Nantucket Sound from the nor’ east and the dogs are howlin’ for no earthly reason, you can hear the awful screams of the crew of the ‘Ellie May’, a sturdy whaler Captained by John McTavish; for it was on just such a night when the rum was flowin’ and, Davey Jones be damned, big John brought his men on deck for the first of several screaming contests

VX-200 Demonstrates Superconducting First Stage at Full Power

Ad Astra Rocket Company has successfully demonstrated operation of its VX-200 plasma engine first stage at full power and under superconducting conditions in tests conducted today at the company’s Houston laboratory. This achievement is a key milestone in the engine’s development and the first time a superconducting plasma rocket has been operated at that power level