Saturday, November 10, 2012

GOOGLE IN NEPAL


Google Installs Cache Servers in Nepal


Google in association with Nepal Telecom, one of the largest Internet Service providers in the country has installed its cache servers in Nepal. A telecom official speaking to Nagarik News in Nepal revealed that the servers are still in testing phase and will be extended after successful months of testing in Nepal. Nearly after five months of continuous effort from NTC, the search engine giant has decided to test its servers in Nepal.
The Google cache servers have been installed in NTC office located in Jawalakhel in Kathmandu. Cache servers will help internet users in Nepal to access Google data faster. This means Google products and services such as Gmail, Youtube, G+ etc will now be accessed faster from Nepal. This will also help NTC by reducing its bandwidth access and thus reducing its cost.
A cache server, also referred as cache engine is a dedicated network server that saves Web pages or other Internet content locally. It places previously requested information in cache and a cache server speeds up access to data also reducing the demand on enterprise’s bandwidth. “After installation of Google server, Internet bandwidth use has been decreased. Even if NTC saves 1GB bandwidth, the company will save two lakhs dollars yearly” added another official at NTC.
Google engineers are in Nepal presently to install the cache servers and train NTC engineers and technicians to handle it. Previously NTC had installed Akamai Technologies server which made easier accessing Microsoft and yahoo services in Nepal.
Source :Nepaliblogger

Tuesday, November 6, 2012

Ball-shaped camera 'to help police and firefighters'


It's a common scenario for police and other emergency services. They need to enter a building but don't know what awaits them inside.
It could be a gunman or structures made dangerous by an earthquake.
A tennis ball-sized device made by US start-up Bounce Imaging could provide an answer. Six cameras instantly send a 360-degree picture to a smartphone.
The ball has a rubber shell that makes it bounce
 while taking pictures
The firm suggested it could sell the device for about a tenth of the cost of the cheapest rival devices.
However, a robotics expert said the technology had privacy implications.
Bounce Imaging's founder Francisco Aguilar said the device could have a range of uses. "Disaster search and rescue after an earthquake is currently left to highly specialised teams with sophisticated and very expensive equipment," he said.
"But we hope that with our technology it could be expanded to volunteers with low-cost units that could be tossed into air pockets and collapsed spaces in search of victims."
The technology is still a prototype, but it was named one of Time Magazine's Best Inventions of 2012.
'Different' tech
The Boston-based company is not the first attempt to create a ball-shaped camera; researchers around the world have been trying to make similar devices for years.
For instance, in the 1990s, scientists at Columbia University in the US developed 360-degree cameras for use in remote locations, but they depended on being attached to robots.
In 2008 Scottish company Dreampact announced it had begun work on a standalone sphere containing fish-eye lenses that could be fired from a grenade launcher - but it later abandoned the project.
The ball is equipped with various sensors, to send back other data along with photos
Others have been more successful but Bounce Imaging says they typically sell upwards from $5,000 apiece and are more cumbersome.
"The key to the design is ease of use and low cost - under $500 (£313) - relative to expensive robotic or fibre-optic alternatives that are too costly, classified, and complex," Mr Aguilar told the BBC.
He added that other similar devices required a skilled operator to manage the unit and data - but Bounce Imaging's technology was built following a "fire and forget" principle.
"After the ball is thrown, it sends whatever imaging and data it gathers back to a smartphone or tablet with an easy-to-use app.
"When you're a police officer under fire working with your tactical gloves on, it is very difficult to operate a complex, often briefcase-sized, remote terminal or viewing unit.
"It's much easier to just look on a smartphone strapped to your wrist."
He added that his company had already received calls from police, fire, industrial and mine inspection units, "even nature photographers trying to look inside animal holes".
"The unit has slots for other types of sensors - for example, smoke and temperature sensors in a firefighting model, methane or coal dust detectors in mine inspection units, and so on - so the ball can send back additional data along with the images," said Mr Aguilar.
To create a full panoramic image in the dark, the device captures light in the near-infrared range.
Paparazzi and criminals
But Noel Sharkey, an expert in artificial intelligence and professor of robotics at the University of Sheffield, said that the technology could have privacy implications.
"This could be brilliant from a photographic point of view, but it could be a further intrusion on our privacy," he said.
"You can throw it anywhere, into someone's garden for instance, and you'll be able to see everything that's going on - it's not much different from the use of a drone except that it's much more immediate.
"So if you throw it over someone's private property, it could be used, for instance, by the paparazzi or by criminals who could just throw it over the roof and get lots of images in between."
Source: BBC

Thursday, November 1, 2012

New Technology Let’s You Edit Real World Paper Drawings Using Computer

You draw something on paper and it gets modified or erased through a computer – the concept that has been materialized by the engineers at the University of Tokyo, the Naemura Group. Calling the “paper computing technology”, this new system let’s users automatically erase, copy and print hand-drawn sketches on paper using a laser and UV light. What you’re essentially doing here is converting an ordinary paper into a display. Never before have we been able to control what’s on paper through a computer in real time. In a video compiled by DigInfo, you can see that a user will be able to create 3D-like text by leaving only the edges of hand-written characters or simply draw a figure by hand and it gets automatically.

The setup includes a pen that uses Frixion thermo-sensitive ink, which gets erased to a high level of accuracy, at intervals of 0.024 mm. The paper used here is coated with a photochromic material and there is DMD-driven UV projector with a 1024 x 768 pixels resolution that prints the image onto the paper. So, what we’re looking at could be a paper-based version of Google Docs in the future. We will dynamically edit a real-world paper while sitting in two different countries. Sounds great, doesn’t it?