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Fujitsu makes 'smart walking stick'

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 02 Maret 2013 | 23.52

28 February 2013 Last updated at 15:08 ET

A walking stick with built-in sat-nav has been developed by Japanese technology giant Fujitsu.

The Next Generation Cane is designed to help elderly people find their way, as well as monitor things such as heart rate and temperature.

Its location can also be followed online - and can be set up to send email alerts if it thinks the user may have fallen over.

Technology for the elderly is a key concern for Japan's ageing population.

Fujitsu, like several companies in the region, is looking at ways to help us remain mobile and connected later into our lives - potentially extending our ability to keep on working.

The prototype device, shown off at Mobile World Congress (MWC) in Barcelona, is equipped with various connection technologies such as GPS, 3G and wifi - and has an LED display on top of the handle.

If a change of direction is needed, the walking stick vibrates, and an arrow appears.

'Mature customer'

Although designed for the elderly, Fujitsu envisions it being used by any vulnerable person.

The stick sends data back to a host computer, so a carer or relative can see the location of the user, with additional data, such as heart rate, being streamed.

If the stick detects an irregular heartbeat, it can automatically contact emergency services.

Also on show at MWC was Fujitsu's smartphone designed for the elderly - or the "mature customer", in their words.

The Stylistic runs Google's Android operating system, but is modified to aid people who have perhaps not used a smartphone before.

The interface includes question marks at various locations to explain what each function is.

The phone is also able to change the frequency of audio to make it easier for older ears to hear.

There is as yet no planned release date for the Next Generation Cane, but the phone will launch in Europe in June, beginning with France.


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Sky buys O2 broadband and fixed line

1 March 2013 Last updated at 04:31 ET

British Sky Broadcasting is buying the UK broadband and fixed line businesses of Spain's Telefonica.

It will give Sky half a million customers who use the O2 and BE brands for their home phone or broadband.

It will pay an initial £180m to Telefonica, with up to another £20m being paid once the customers have been switched to Sky.

Sky said the transaction would make it the second biggest UK broadband provider.

Telefonica said the deal would allow it to concentrate on providing better mobile services, including rolling out 4G.

Continue reading the main story
  1. BT retail 6,569,000
  2. Virgin Media 4,465,000
  3. Sky Broadband 4,235,000
  4. TalkTalk 4,053,000
  5. EE 693,000
  6. O2 560,100

Source: ISP Review

Sky has taken on 4.2 million broadband customers since launching the service in 2006.

The deal will allow Sky to leapfrog Virgin Media and close the gap on the number one provider: BT.

If it is cleared by regulators the deal should be completed in April.

"Sky has been the UK's fastest-growing broadband and telephony provider since we entered the market six years ago," said BSkyB chief executive Jeremy Darroch.

"The acquisition of Telefonica UK's consumer broadband and fixed-line telephony business will help us accelerate this growth."


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Film studios target 'pirate' apps

1 March 2013 Last updated at 05:30 ET

Film studios are starting to target mobile applications that use copyrighted images and film clips without permission.

All the big five movie studios have told Google to remove Android apps that "pirate" content, reports Reuters.

The rogue apps were taking images and clips from films such as The Hobbit as well as popular TV shows like Glee.

About 90% of Oscar-related apps use material that may not have been properly authorised, a survey suggests.

'Growing problem'

Brand monitoring firm IP Lasso's study of 100 Oscar themed apps found 90 made use of material they might not have licences to reproduce.

Reggie Pierce, head of IP Lasso, told Reuters: "With the rise of the second screen comes a new band of villains who pose a serious threat to the entertainment industry's move to mobile."

Mr Pierce said film studios were "actively monitoring" app stores for programs that did not have licences or permission for the movie and TV show images or clips they use.

A spokesman for the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA), which represents film studios, told the news agency that apps for smartphones were a "growing problem" that needed to be addressed.

Most recently action was taken against an Android app called Hobbit 3D Wallpaper HD that let people use stills from the film as a background screen on their handset. Google removed the app soon after being notified about its unlicensed use of images.

In the past, film studios have pursued Google, Apple and others over apps that use content from films such as Ted, Spiderman and Green Lantern.

The MPAA spokesman said many apps that pirated content were malicious in other ways.

"They also pose risks to consumers from malware and often fail to provide viewers with the quality product they could often get through a growing number of legitimate sources," said the spokesman.

Ciaran Bradley, head of handset security at security firm Adaptive Mobile, said copyright infringement on phone apps was nothing new and had been seen since the days of ring tones and other extras.

However, he said, the MPAA risked overstating the threat posed by apps on official marketplaces.

"When using unofficial channels consumers can expose themselves to more risk, especially if they download free or pirated versions of apps that are normally charged for," he said. "but this applies to all pirated apps not just ones containing Hollywood content."


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iTunes spree boy, five, refunded

1 March 2013 Last updated at 06:05 ET
Danny Kitchen

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Danny said: "I just clicked on it because it said it was free"

The family of a five-year-old boy who spent £1,700 of his parents' cash on iTunes has received a full refund.

Danny Kitchen, from Bristol, was using the family's iPad when father Greg put in a pass code, believing his son was downloading a free game.

The next day the Kitchens received emails which itemised successive £69.99 purchases, but they were believed to be sent in error and dismissed.

Sharon Kitchen said Apple had been "fantastic" in helping with the refund.

'Very upset'
Continue reading the main story

We are hearing stories like this all the time"

End Quote Martyn Landi Apps magazine

The Kitchens were alerted to the situation after receiving a phone call from their credit card company to query last weekend's transactions.

Danny said he had learned "not to do it again".

Mrs Kitchen said "He was very upset when he realised what he had done.

"His brothers and sisters were telling him off, but of course he didn't know what he did - he's only five.

Nathan Rae

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Nathan Rae said iPads have security settings that can prevent children from accessing payment details

"To be honest, I'm not sure how he did it."

She added that he had asked for the pass code for a free download and then continued to play with the device for a further 15 minutes.

Martyn Landi, a writer with Apps magazine, said: "We are hearing stories like this all the time, so credit to Apple for paying the money back.

"But it is a risky strategy for parents to simply think they can claim the money back if all goes wrong.

"A few seconds spent checking these things can save a lot of money and stress in the long run."


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O2 launches app to challenge Skype

1 March 2013 Last updated at 07:11 ET

O2 has launched an app which lets users make and receive phone calls and texts via a tablet, computer or smartphone.

Tu Go is available for Android, Apple's iOS devices and Windows 7 PCs but limited to "pay monthly" subscribers - so excludes corporate accounts.

Tu Go deducts charges from the user's existing call minutes allowance, unlike Skype and other chat apps which involve the purchase of credit.

Analysts suggest this billing innovation could prove disruptive.

O2's owner Telefonica has experimented with Voip (voice over internet protocol) before with its Tu Me app which was launched in 2012 with limited success.

However, the earlier program required both parties in the conversation to be using the software, while Tu Go only needs the the caller to have launched the app.

Web mail

Tu Go has been available through Apple's iOS store since October last year, but had previously restricted its functions to about 1,000 testers.

It works over wi-fi or 3G/4G data connections. The cost is the same as if the user had made a normal call through their O2 mobile.

The aim is to free people from being tied to a single handset, said product manager Caroline Dundas.

"Customers can now take their mobile number wherever they like, even away from their mobiles," she said.

Users can be logged into the service on up to five devices at once - meaning all will ring if they receive a call - including handsets using Sim cards associated with different networks and internet enabled gadgets such as iPods.

Ms Dundas likened the service to the way email developed.

"In the early days you could only access email from the machine it was installed on but then web mail came along and that allowed you to access messages from any device," she said.

"This is opening up comms in the same way."

Declining profits

The effort represents the telecom industry's latest attempt to tackle competition from Skype and other third-party Voip services.

These typically do not charge for app-to-app calls, but do require the user to buy credit if they want to call or send a text to a standard mobile or landline number.

BT already offers its own service - SmartTalk - offering its residential customers the ability to make calls on their smartphone for the same price as if they were using their landline.

Orange and T-Mobile are also finishing work on their own facility which they plan to roll out later this year,

But the scale of the threat was highlighted earlier this week when the chairman of China Mobile - the world's largest telecom carrier - said his firm was now more concerned about the challenge posed by Microsoft's Skype and Tencent's WeChat services than it was about competition from China's rival mobile networks.

"The networks are losing revenue from declining voice traffic," Chris Green, tech analyst at Davies Murphy Group, told the BBC.

"Some of it is down to services such as Skype but we are also just making fewer phone calls.

"So, they are all thinking of wacky new ways to get us making more calls - there is a lot more profit in voice than in data."

There are already dozens of Voip apps on the market including lesser-known names such as Tango, Fring, Bria and Zerofone as well as manufacturer's own services including BlackBerry BBM and Apple's Facetime.

But the Ovum telecoms consultancy believes Tu Go will stand out from the crowd.

"The application is more than just another "me too" Voip app by an operator," said analyst Jeremy Green.

"It is intrinsically linked to your existing telephone number and bill, so any charges are just deducted from your bundled call deal rather than you having to buy extra credit.

"It merges the best of internet telephony and old fashioned calls and and is a lesson for O2's peers in the industry."


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Web bug allows data dump on PCs

1 March 2013 Last updated at 07:30 ET

Gigabytes of junk data could be dumped onto PCs via a loophole in web code, a developer has found.

The loophole exploits a feature of HTML 5 which defines how websites are made and what they can do.

Developer Feross Aboukhadijeh found the bug and set up a demo page that fills visitors hard drives with pictures of cartoon cats.

In one demo, Mr Aboukhadijeh managed to dump one gigabyte of data every 16 seconds onto a vulnerable Macbook.

Clever code

Most major browsers, Chrome, Internet Explorer, Opera and Safari, were found to be vulnerable to the bug, said Mr Aboukhadijeh.

While most websites are currently built using version 4 of the Hyper Text Markup Language (HTML), that code is gradually being superseded by the newer version 5.

One big change brought in with HTML 5 lets websites store more data locally on visitors' PCs. Safeguards built into the "local storage" specification should limit how much data can be stored. Different browsers allow different limits but all allow at least 2.5 megabytes to be stored.

However, Mr Aboukhadijeh found a way round this cap by creating lots of temporary websites linked to the one a person actually visited. He found that each one of these associated sites was allowed to store up to the limit of data because browser makers had not written code to stop this happening. By endlessly creating new, linked websites the bug can be used to siphon huge amounts of data onto target PCs.

Only Mozilla's Firefox capped storage at 5MB and was not vulnerable, he found.

"Cleverly coded websites have effectively unlimited storage space on visitor's computers," wrote Mr Aboukhadijeh in a blogpost about the bug.

Code to exploit the bug has been released by Mr Aboukhadijeh and he set up a website, called Filldisk that, on vulnerable PCs, dumps lots of images of cats on to the hard drive. So far, no malicious use of the exploits has been observed.

In a bid to solve the problem, bug reports about the exploit have been filed with major browser makers.


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Arm lifts BigDog robot to new level

1 March 2013 Last updated at 08:28 ET
BigDog robot

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Developer footage of the robot performing a "hurl" - Courtesy of Boston Dynamics

A four-legged robot called BigDog now sports an arm powerful enough to lift and throw breeze blocks.

Made by US robotics company Boston Dynamics, the machine is backed by the Pentagon.

BigDog was designed primarily for military use, and the arm could help soldiers pick up and carry heavy loads.

But one robotics expert said the technology's potential was "enormous" for use in other areas, such as search and rescue.

BigDog is one of several robots created by the Massachusetts-based firm and funded by the US Army Research Laboratory.

Continue reading the main story

[Imagine] setting off these units across a rough terrain if they were looking for a lost child or a walker on a mountainside"

End Quote Chris Melhuish Bristol Robotics Laboratory

It has been in development since 2005 and is the the size of a large dog "or a small mule," says the company.

Its legs mimic an animal's legs, and are able to absorb shock and recycle energy as the machine moves around. It is powered by an engine which drives a hydraulic pump to send oil under high pressure around its plumbing in order to animate its limbs.

In a video created by Boston Dynamics, BigDog is seen lifting a breeze block with an arm attached to where the head would go on its animal equivalent, and then throwing it backwards.

"The goal is to develop techniques for using the strength of the legs and torso to help power motions of the arm," posted the company underneath the video.

"This sort of dynamic approach is routinely used by human athletes and is now improving the performance of robots."

Robot racing?

The mechanical "dog" is already able to move about a varied, rugged terrain while carrying a load. It can perform simple tasks and obey voice commands.

Chris Melhuish, director of Bristol Robotics Laboratory, told the BBC it was "a phenomenal piece of technology".

"It's cost a lot of money, but you tend to spend a lot of money on first prototypes, and later on as these things get rolled out, they get cheaper," he said.

He added that the robot's ability to follow a person made it "an interesting navigation machine which might end up useful in other domain, such as search and rescue".

"[Imagine] setting off these units across a rough terrain if they were looking for a lost child or a walker on a mountainside.

"I think the potential is enormous - from pets to robots that are going to help you move your shopping, to a robot on a building site that's moving bricks from one place to another, following a bricklayer around.

"I wouldn't be surprised if they could even do sport one day - such as robot racing."

BigDog is one of a range of robots developed by Boston Dynamics, among them the Cheetah - a headless machine that is able to reach 28.3mph (45.5km/h) on a treadmill, faster than the fastest human.

Cheetah robot

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The Cheetah Robot developed by Boston Dynamics breaks the speed record - Video courtesy of Darpa and Boston Dynamics


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Groupon shares regain some losses

1 March 2013 Last updated at 16:27 ET Continue reading the main story

Shares in daily deals firm Groupon have risen 13% following the ousting of its founder and chief executive Andrew Mason.

Its shares lost a quarter of their value on Thursday after the company reported falling sales and profit margins after the close on Wednesday.

By mid-morning on Friday the shares had risen to $5.10.

However, when the company floated in 2011 they were sold at nearer $20, valuing the firm at $13bn.

The departure of founder and chief executive of Groupon, Andrew Mason, had been widely expected.

The online firm, which offers discounts to subscribers on local goods and services such as meals and beauty treatments, posted another quarterly loss this week.

Continue reading the main story
  • Born in Pittsburgh in 1980
  • Studied piano at Northwestern University in Chicago, during which time he played in a rock band and directed Jesus Christ Superstar
  • He graduated with a degree in music which he described as "useless"
  • Became a software developer and dropped out of a subsequent degree after three months when he got funding for his first enterprise
  • He launched The Point Inc, a networking and fundraising site for campaigners, in 2007
  • This led to Groupon, the deal-a-day website which launched in 2008
  • His other business attempts included delivering bagels like newspapers, he says

Investors fear its business model, which is increasingly copied by competitors including Amazon, may be unsustainable.

Gartner analyst Michael Gartenberg said the model was too easy to replicate: ``The question is whether this as a business model can last.

`It's easy to replicate and under a lot of pressure. The question is where the company goes from here.... Clearly something wasn't working, isn't working.''

Some retailers have complained that the company takes too big a cut of the offer price, although it has recently reduced this from 40% to 35%.

However, news of that lower margin was one of the key reasons for the share price fall as it led investors to fear it would take even longer for the company to become profitable.

The challenge for Groupon, and its competitors, is to keep the businesses happy through the amount of profit it can make from the people it brings in, but also to keep the users of the offers happy by giving them a genuinely discounted product.

Groupon is seen as having high marketing expenses and a large employee base, with more than 11,000 employees.

It attracted the notice of regulators over its reporting as revenue the total amount its customers spent on deals rather than the amount it made from them.

It had to restate the accounts, and new documents showed that net revenue in the first half of 2011 was around half of what was originally reported.

It made its only profit in the second quarter of last year.

Mr Mason, who set the firm up in 2008, is a colourful character who was once photographed for a leading magazine with a cat on his head.

His departure note to employees, stated: "After four and a half intense and wonderful years as CEO of Groupon, I've decided that I'd like to spend more time with my family. Just kidding - I was fired today. If you're wondering why... you haven't been paying attention."

Groupon's executive chairman Eric Lefkofsky and vice chairman Ted Leonsis are stepping in as temporary joint chief executives until a replacement for Mr Mason can be found.


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Einhorn drops case against Apple

1 March 2013 Last updated at 16:27 ET

The hedge fund manager David Einhorn's Greenlight Capital has withdrawn his legal attempt to get Apple to release some of its huge cash pile to shareholders.

Mr Einhorn had wanted the iPhone and iPad maker to create a new class of special preferred shares.

Apple originally said it would only do this if all shareholders were given a vote on the plan, but has since dropped this idea.

Apple shares fell to a 52-week low.

The shares fell to $430.47 in trading on Friday.

The price has fallen 35% since peaking in September.

On Wednesday, Apple withdrew the proposals for a shareholder vote on the preference share matter, making the legal battle unnecessary.

Apple is sitting on a $137bn (£91bn) cash pile that some shareholders would like to see put to work.

The sum is the equivalent of Hungary's annual gross domestic product.

Mr Einhorn's Greenlight said in a statement: ."Apple removed the bundled proposal from the shareholder meeting, therefore resolving the issue."

Apple's chief executive, Tim Cook admitted at the company's annual shareholder meeting on Wednesday that he was aware of widespread disappointment among investors.

He said he was actively looking for ways to reward shareholders.

He gave no details, but said the company was working on a pipeline of "great stuff".

Some investors are worried that Apple may be losing its edge and the pipeline of stand-out products may have run dry.

Apple has seen its share price fall from a record $702.10 on the back of disappointing sales and worries about competitors such as Samsung. On 14 March, Samsung will launch the Galaxy SIV, the version of its flagship smartphone


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US judge orders cut in Apple award

1 March 2013 Last updated at 18:29 ET

A judge in the US has ordered $1bn (£660.4m) in damages awarded to Apple last year against Samsung be cut by 40%, and set a new trial to assess the level of damages.

Last year's award was the biggest in a series of global legal fights between the two companies over patents.

The ruling, in California, means the two are set to meet again in court.

The judge said the jury, which set the $1bn original award, had incorrectly calculated part of the damages.

The $450.5m ordered to be removed from the payout will be reassessed, and could be increased or lowered.

At the trial, Apple convinced the jury that Samsung had infringed its iPhone and iPad patents.

The patents case encompassed 14 products that Apple said Samsung had used Apple patented designs in.

The jury found that some Samsung products illegally used Apple ideas such as the ``bounce-back'' feature.

This comes into action when a user scrolls to the end of an image. The case also centred on the zoom function activated by touch.

The two companies have court cases in eight other countries, including Samsung's homeland South Korea, Germany, Japan, the UK and Australia.

Samsung and Apple are locked in a battle for the smartphone market that currently Samsung is winning.

The firms sell one in every two mobile phones between them.

Last year, the South Korean company overtook Apple as the world's biggest seller of smartphones.

On Friday shares in Apple closed down 2.5% at $430.47, a 52-week low.


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