From Ars Technica: Feature: How the Aussie government “invented WiFi” and sued its way to $430 million


US consumers will be making a multimillion dollar donation to an Australian government agency in the near future, whether they like it or not. The great majority won’t even know about it—the fee will be hidden within the cost of a huge array of tech products. After the resolution of a recent lawsuit, practically every wireless-enabled device sold in the US will now involve a payment to an Australian research organization called the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization, or CSIRO.

In the culmination of a nearly decade-long patent campaign, CSIRO has now scored a $229 million settlement from a group of nine companies that make a variety of wireless devices and chips, including Broadcom, T-Mobile, AT&T, and Lenovo. The settlement was reached last week just before the companies were scheduled to face a jury in Tyler, Texas—a location with a growing reputation for patent lawsuits.

CSIRO (commonly pronounced “si-roh”) adds this lump sum to the $205 million it received in 2009, when a settlement with 14 companies was struck midway through another East Texas trial. Soon after that, CSIRO began boasting to the Australian press that WiFi was a homegrown invention. By suing over its patents, it anticipated an additional “lazy billion” out of tech products sold in the US. Ultimately, this didn’t quite happen—but CSIRO is about halfway there.

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from Ars Technica

From Ars Technica: Flashback trojan reportedly controls half a million Macs and counting


Variations of the Flashback trojan have reportedly infected more than half a million Macs around the globe, according to Russian antivirus company Dr. Web. The company made an announcement on Wednesday—first in Russian and later in English—about the growing Mac botnet, first claiming 550,000 infected Macs. Later in the day, however, Dr. Web malware analyst Sorokin Ivan posted to Twitter that the count had gone up to 600,000, with 274 bots even checking in from Cupertino, CA, where Apple’s headquarters are located.

We have been covering the Mac Flashback trojan since 2011, but the most recent variant from earlier this week targeted an unpatched Java vulnerability within Mac OS X. That is, it was unpatched (at the time) by Apple—Oracle had released a fix for the vulnerability in February of this year, but Apple didn’t send out a fix until earlier this week, after news began to spread about the latest Flashback variant.

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from Ars Technica

From Ars Technica: Farm-fresh infringement: Can you violate a patent by planting some seeds?


Can a farmer commit patent infringement just by planting soybeans he bought on the open market? This week, the Supreme Court asked the Obama administration to weigh in on the question. The Court is pondering an appeals court decision saying that such planting can, in fact, infringe patents.

In 1994, the agricultural giant Monsanto obtained a patent covering a line of “Roundup Ready” crops that had been genetically modified to resist Monsanto’s Roundup pesticides. This genetic modification is hereditary, so future generations of seeds are also “Roundup Ready.” Farmers had only to save a portion of their crop for re-planting the next season, and they wouldn’t need to purchase new seed from Monsanto every year. The company didn’t want to be in the business of making a one-time sale, so when Monsanto sold “Roundup Ready” soybeans to farmers, it required them to sign a licensing agreement promising not to re-plant future generations of seeds.

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from Ars Technica

From Autoblog: New York: Delorean Electric surprises in New York, will cost $95,000 in 2013

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First announced last October, the reborn, all-electric Delorean has made a surprise appearance at the New York Auto Show this year. It’s a surprise because not even Delorean Motor Company president Stephen Wynne knew he was going to be here until a few weeks ago, when show organizers called with an invite.

With a prime spot near the EV ride along track – the DMCev is sadly not involved – Wynne said he’s been getting good attention, even though said track is in the basement. We asked Wynne what’s been going on with the car since last fall’s announcement and the short answer is that this is one EV concept that’s going into production.

The target date for fans to buy the DMCev is early 2013, but a lot has to happen between now and then. Right now, all the company has is the converted DMC-12 to show off the technology. To create this, the designers had to add 200 pounds of stuff, and the production version is going to be either the same weight as the gas version, or a few pounds less, in order to improve both performance and range. The car is powered by a 32-kWh lithium iron phosphate battery pack and has a 125 mile per hour top speed with a range of 100 miles. Published specs claim a 0-60 time of 4.9 seconds, but Wynne said the target is now under six seconds. Price for all this fun? $95,000.

DMC will assemble the car in Houston, TX with a lot of help from Louisiana’s Epic EV, the company working on the Torq and Amp vehicles (not the Amp conversions). These two companies are testing different motor/inverter combinations for the electric Delorean, and Wynne said they are looking for a “proven product” from a company that has at least “several hundred” units on the road. The current prototype also uses a DC motor, but the production will use AC for better range, performance and regenerative braking ability. The old-school dashboard is also due for an upgrade

Those are the details we could glean in New York. Can you believe we made it through this entire post without a Back To The Future reference? The DMCev can’t do it, though, with a license plate that reads “Gas? Where we’re going we don’t need gas” and a battery that carries the “Flux Power” nickname. For more, you can watch a video of Translogic going for a ride in the DMCev down below, where you’ll also find a related press release.

Continue reading Delorean Electric surprises in New York, will cost $95,000 in 2013

 

from Autoblog

From Ars Technica: Apps bar users from Internet, Facebook—and prove surprisingly popular


Fred Stutzman, a post-doctoral fellow at Carnegie Mellon University, has written two programs that allow users to block their own online activities. At first blush, they seem like the answer to a question nobody’s asking. But that has turned out not to be the case.

Stutzman, who researches social media at the university’s Heinz College, has released two apps, Freedom and Anti-Social. Freedom, which banishes a user from his or her Internet connection for up to eight hours, has been downloaded 350,000 times. Anti-Social, which blocks access to social networks like Facebook, has been downloaded by 125,000 users.

More surprising is that Freedom costs $10 and Anti-Social $15 (there are trial versions available with a limited number of uses). To a slightly higher degree than most apps, arguably, you have to really want what they offer. That is, the elimination of distraction.

“Freedom enforces freedom,” the app’s site 1984ishly proclaims. “You’ll need to reboot if you want to get back online while Freedom’s running. The hassle of rebooting means you’re less likely to cheat, and you’ll enjoy enhanced productivity.” The app has been praised by writers from Dave Eggers to Nick Hornby to Zadie Smith.

But Freedom might be too much for those who need online access for their work. “Anti-Social solves this problem,” Stutzman says, by “allowing you to do your online work, while preventing you from accessing top social sites.”

These apps, marketed by his company Eighty Percent Solution, may be indicators of a larger trend. Stutzman seems to think so.

“I think people are starting to pull back and realize how the time we spend online impacts their work, the quality of their work, and their ability to hit goals,” he told Ars.

“Freedom, and Anti-Social, are ways to get this time back—to turn off the constant social obligation of social networks, to better compartmentalize work time and play time. As a technology researcher, I am very positive on the impact of technology, particularly social technologies, on our lives The net effect of a lot of these technologies are positive. However, just because technology can be seamlessly integrated into our lives, does not mean that we need to engage with these technologies at all times. It is important to find space for solitude, concentration, and reflection. I believe a lot of technologies don’t consider this.”

 

from Ars Technica

From Popular Science – New Technology, Science News, The Future Now: Rec-Room Cockpit: How One Reader Built His Own Flight Simulator

Pitch Perfect Clint Fishburne initially tried a leaf blower to power his flight simulator’s movable platform. Courtesy Clint Fishburne

Clint Fishburne, a regional-airline pilot based in Atlanta, wanted to help his children develop the body movement and muscle memory necessary to fly and land a plane. With the cost of commercial flight simulators starting at $2,800, though, Fishburne, a longtime PopSci reader, decided to make one from scratch. Building the plywood-and-PVC plane, frame and control stick was relatively easy. The challenge was making a platform that could mimic a plane’s motion and that was strong enough to support and move a 75-pound child.

After some experimentation, Fishburne built four custom airbags made of PVC-coated fabric and, to inflate them, connected them to 457-air-watt central vacuum motor. The amount of air in the four bags varies, allowing the simulator to bank or pitch up to 25 degrees on either axis. When the pilot pushes the stick left, a valve increases airflow to the right airbag and vents air from the left. An accelerometer sends spatial-position data to a laptop by USB, and an LCD projector beams the imagery from Microsoft’s Flight Simulator software onto a wall. Fishburne is now trying to commercialize a kit version of his simulator, in part to inspire more young gamers to become pilots.

Cost $1,200
Time 20 months

TWO MORE BRILLIANT PROJECTS

Created by Popular Science readers

3-D Projector
Copper River, Alaska, science teacher Gene Crow built a 3-D camera and projector system that superimposes two video feeds of the same scene from two cameras at slightly different perspectives, creating the illusion of three dimensions on a two-dimensional screen. Circular polarized filters on the projectors and viewer’s glasses ensure that each eye sees video from only one of the projectors, producing the 3-D effect in the brain.

Since motion enhances the effect, Crow has also mounted the cameras on a remote-controlled vehicle.

Cost $935
Time 8 hours

Cocktail Mixer
Andrew Jaeger, an electrician in Wisconsin, turned a refrigerator into an automated mixed-drink dispenser. After the user chooses a drink on a touchscreen, a logic controller calls up a stored recipe and gives directions to the mixing system inside the fridge. Jaeger stripped the solenoid valves from an old soda-fountain machine, allowing him to route a pressure line of carbon dioxide into each bottle, and a second line that, when opened, causes the liquor or soda to flow out into a glass.

Cost $2,500
Time 3,000 hours

from Popular Science – New Technology, Science News, The Future Now

From There, I Fixed It – Redneck Repairs: Historical Thursday: Rain Inducing Rockets

After a brief(ish) hiatus, Historical Thursday is back! Spring has finally sprung in most places, so what better way to celebrate its and HT’s return than by profiling a device intended to change the very weather above us: the cloud-seeding silver iodide rocket.

white trash repairs - Historical Thursday: Rain Inducing Rockets

 

Ever get so tired of the rain that you wish you could just make the clouds dump it all out and get it over with? You’re not alone: in July of 1946, Vincent Schaefer, a machinist at General Electric, and Irving Langmuir, a Nobel Laureate, were climbing Mt. Washington in New Hampshire, when they happened upon the conversation topic of weather manipulation. Back at GE’s research lab in Schenectady, New York, Schaefer attempted to test his theory that supercooled water could be converted to ice crystals by filling a small deep freezer chamber with dry ice. Upon breathing on the dry ice mist, the mist turned a rich blue color, and shortly after, the chamber began filling up with microscopic solid crystals.

Building upon Schaefer’s discovery, Dr. Bernard Vonnegut (the older brother of author Kurt Vonnegut) explored ways of chemically converting supercooled water (water that has been cooled to temperatures lower than its typical freezing point of 32 degrees Fahrenheit) into a solid form.

white trash repairs - Historical Thursday: Rain Inducing Rockets

Bernard Vonnegut with his trademark “sunny” disposition

Enter silver iodide, a nifty little inorganic compound with a penchant for turning liquids into solids via a process called heterogeneous nucleation. Nucleation occurs when a given group of ions, atoms, or molecules arrange in the pattern of a crystalline solid. What happens next is the equivalent of molecular peer pressure: a small group of particles acts as a center point for the solid structure formation, and surrounding liquids and gases tend to fall into a similar pattern around said source point. In a process called “cloud seeding,” silver iodide acts as the aforementioned center point. Nearby supercooled water molecules ironically see themselves as “less cool” than silver iodide. So, in trying to conform to silver iodide, who is, like, so totally awesome, water molecules shun their liquid form for a trendier solid look. What results when a ton of small supercooled water particles coalesce together, you ask? Either a raindrop, or a snowflake, depending on the temperature.

white trash repairs - Historical Thursday: Rain Inducing Rockets

One can imagine this occurring on a rather large scale: a cloud stuffed to the gills with moisture suddenly receiving an overdose of cloud laxative is a surefire way to create a rainstorm when and where you want to.

white trash repairs - Historical Thursday: Rain Inducing Rockets

In the coming decades, numerous institutions would capitalize on the usefulness of Schaefer’s and Vonnegut’s research. One such institution was the United States military. In March 1967, the United States Air Force began Operation Popeye during the Vietnam War. Planes bombarded the stratosphere above North Vietnam with silver iodide rockets with the intention of flooding the strategically significant Ho Chi Minh trail and extending the monsoon season. The results were staggering: monsoon seasons from 1967 to 1972 in North Vietnam lasted longer by an average of nearly a month.

Cloud seeding has also been used for far more humanitarian purposes, however. In 1986, Soviet airplanes induced rainfall in weather systems carrying toxic radiation from the Chernobyl disaster toward Moscow. In 2003 and 2004, the appropriately named Weather Modification Inc. conducted cloud seeding operations over drought-affected areas of the Indian state of Maharashtra. Perhaps the most widely publicized occurrence of cloud seeding occurred in 2008, when the Chinese government used silver iodide rockets to release rain outside of Beijing to make for more favorable weather conditions for the Olympics.

Whether it’s being used to combat drought or to waterlog tactical landmarks in warfare, cloud seeding has seen varying uses across the board since its introduction 65 years ago. With a bit of ingenuity, effort, and monetary support, such a technology could be used to dramatically change the climate of communities in need of a good downpour. God knows we’ve got enough of it here in Seattle…

That wraps up the return of Historical Thursday, kludgers and kludgettes! As always, if YOU have an idea for Historical Thursday, drop me a line at thereifixedit@gmail.com!

Check out the entire compendium of Historical Thursday posts here!

Pictures courtesy of Fletcher Boland, Carleton College and SUNY Albany.

 

from There, I Fixed It – Redneck Repairs