Thursday, 16 January 2014

The Google hackers trying to make passwords obsolete...


Remembering strings of letters and numbers could become a thing of the past – Google wants us to access devices and websites via watches and parts of our bodies.

We may not have to remember a string of passwords to access devices, websites and mobile apps for much longer. Logging in will be seen as archaic behaviour. Going online will be a seamless and much more convenient activity because security will be built into the technology we use – as well as wearable devices such as watches. 
As part of a group of "hired hackers" Parisa Tabriz manages Google's information security engineering team at Google, which is responsible for improving the company's product security. Her job involves developing the technology that makes it easier to use our favourite devices and websites, without compromising security. 
Known as Google's Security Princess, Ms Tabriz spoke to BBC Future about her vision of a world without passwords – where our watches and even part of our bodies might be the key to getting online. 

Lit Motors: Super-shrinking the city car...



One company wants to reinvent urban transportation by developing a fully enclosed, two-wheeled electric vehicle that puts less car and more people on the road.


Look around a city at peak traffic time and you’ll probably notice that most gridlocked cars contain only one person, despite having seating for four and space for their luggage. One option is ride-sharing schemes, which aim to have fewer cars and more people on the streets. There is a problem, according to Daniel Kim, Founder and CEO of Lit Motors: “Very few people actually like to carpool.”
His company’s approach is different: shrink the car. Imagine if you could cut the size of a car in half, you could fit twice as many cars onto the streets, and into parking spaces. “We want to put less car on the road, and more people,” he says.
The solution that the San Francisco-based company hopes to roll out looks like a hi-tech, streamlined egg on two wheels. The C-1 is a fully enclosed, all-electric vehicle that is a motorcycle in all but name. It has a top speed of over 100mph (160kph), and should be able to travel up to 200 miles between charges. Acceleration should be respectable at 0-60mph (0-100kph) in less than 6 seconds –more than enough to beat most cars away from the lights.
“What we’re doing is taking the safety and the comfort of a car, but integrating that with the romance, the efficiency, and the thrill, of a bike,” says Kim. “That still preserves the elements of freedom and independence that commuters today demand.”
The real innovation in the vehicle, though, is that it can stay upright, all by itself. The driver does not need to balance it at all. This is achieved with the use of two gyroscopes, underneath the seats. They contain heavy metal discs which spin at over 10,000rpm, and in doing so generate torque.
A spinning disc has a tendency to stay upright, just like a child’s spinning top. If you were ever made to hold a spinning bicycle wheel horizontally at school then you will have experienced the physics at work. Using two flywheels spinning in opposite directions means the team of engineers at Lit Motors can cancel out (or oppose) any force they do not want, and use the torque generated in useful ways, such as keeping the vehicle upright, or leaning it in and out of corners. The gyroscopes are under full computer control; no driver input required. The company says it is confident that the C-1 will stay upright even if it is side-swiped by another vehicle at 30mph (50kph).
Down-size desire?
The prototype the company showed me was a work in progress, with one seat and a large bank of computer processors taking up most of the internal space, but the final design calls for two seats, one behind the other. “This would all be shrunk and nicely packaged for our production vehicle,” says Kim.
I was told that at 6 foot 2 inches (1.88m) I am at the upper end of the height range that it is designed for, but a small steering wheel meant there was enough room for my knees. Being surrounded by glass helps give the perception of space too, but I am not sure how I would feel pulling alongside a truck or SUV at speed.
Lit Motors doesn’t like to think of the C-1 as a motorbike as that could limit its market. This, the company believes, is a genuine car replacement for many people, but it remains to be seen if that will translate into sales. In the US, pick-up trucks and SUVs are still big sellers. Will their owners be persuaded to down-size to make their commutes easier? The Smart Fortwo micro city carmay be a good comparison. It also cuts the amount of car on the roads by halving the length rather than the width, and it was marketed on its ease of parking. Since its introduction 15 years ago it has become a common sight in European cities, though much less so in the US. The market for cars is strongly linked to the price of fuel. If there is a sharp increase in gasoline prices in the future electric, efficient, vehicles like the C-1 could see strong demand.
In the US at least, it will legally qualify as a motorcycle, meaning it can split lanes and park in motorcycle specific spaces. Lit Motors also has big plans for the future, which include new designs specifically for countries where the bike or scooter is already a dominant form of urban transport. I will be looking at that prototype in my next column article.

THE MAN WHO WANTS TO TACKLE THE IMPOSIBLE.


  









Helping a paralysed former street artist draw again inspired entrepreneur Mick Ebeling to tackle seemingly unsolvable problems.


Mick Ebeling says he wants to attempt the impossible.
Ebeling’s organisation, the Not Impossible Foundation, was set up to tackle seemingly intractable problems, via technology. His team is building everything from smart canes for the blind to 3D printed prosthetics for the victims of war.
Ebeling, a former film and TV producer, says it all began when he befriended a street artist named Tempt One, who had amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), a progressive disease which left him unable to draw or speak.
This encounter led to the development of the EyeWriter – a low-cost eye-tracking device that allows people with the nerve disease to draw using only their eyes.
Mick Ebeling spoke to BBC Future about the story and his philosophy at The Atlantic Meets The Pacific conference.

Scale The Walls in This 22-Foot-High Rock Climbing Office.

Perhaps not suited for the lazy or acrophobic, the four-month-old Brooklyn Boulders offices in Somerville, Mass., rests atop—yes, on top of—a 120-foot-long, 22-foot-high rock wall—combining the "utter chaos" of a climbing gym with a collaborative workspace in a way that even the wildest HQsout there have yet to do. Clearly a rather, uh, alternative environment, the bulk of the 40,000-square-foot facility is devoted to the actual gym, with various rock walls, tight ropes, and climbers cycling through, including the odd employee on a lunch break. Even in the elevated "work" space, though, gym equipment, pull-up bars, and balance ball chairs are easy to come by, encouraging employees to avoid the stagnancy more traditional and, well, less vertical, offices can foster.

"When you're really in touch with your body physically, it affects every facet of your life," the office's "Senior Cultural Chameleon" Jesse Levin, tells Co.Design. "I never quite understood why there was such a segregation between your career and working and going to the gym and community interaction. It made a lot of sense to me to bring it all together." Further upping the sense of community are the communal tables and standing desks sub'ing for more traditional ones, and graffiti murals ensuring the space stays as far away as possible from "your traditional sterile, polished workspace." 
                                                          · At This Coworking Space In A Climbing Gym, You Can Do Pull-Ups At Your Standing Desk

Thursday, 9 January 2014

Middle East helps drive up Rolls-Royce sales for 2013.


Sales of Rolls-Royce cars in the Middle East rose by 17 percent in 2013, helping push the global tally to a record 3,630, the luxury automaker said today.
The Middle East “was one of our strongest-growing regions”, company spokesman Andrew Ball told Al Arabiya News.
“In percentage [of our total sales], the U.S. and China are our top markets, followed by the Middle East,” Ball added.
The Middle East business accounts for close to 20 percent of the iconic British automaker’s total sales, Ball said.
Globally, Rolls-Royce sold 3,630 cars in 2013, marking “the fourth consecutive record year”, the company said. It added that it plans to create 100 jobs at its Goodwood, UK manufacturing plant in 2014.

France fines Google over data privacy.

France’s data protection watchdog has fined Google 150,000 euros after the U.S. search engine ignored a three-month ultimatum to bring its practices on tracking and storing user information in line with local law.
The privacy watchdog, known as CNIL, has also ordered Google to post the decision on its google.fr homepage for 48 hours within eight days of being officially notified of the ruling.
At issue was the new approach to user data that Google began in March 2012, in which it consolidated its 60 privacy policies into one and started combining data collected on individual users across its services, including YouTube, Gmail and social network Google+.
It gave users no means to opt out.
“The company does not sufficiently inform its users of the conditions in which their personal data are processed, nor of the purposes of this processing,” CNIL said in a statement.
A Google France spokesman told Reuters the company will take note of this decision and consider further action.
“Throughout our talks with CNIL, we have explained our privacy policy and how it allows us to create simpler and more efficient services,” he said.
Spain, Britain, Germany, Italy and the Netherlands have also opened similar cases against Google because the U.S.-based web giant’s privacy policy introduced in 2012 does not conform with local rules protecting consumers on how their personal data is processed and stored.
CNIL said the fine is the highest it has issued until now and is justified by the number and the seriousness of the breaches stated in the case.
But the penalties that France and most other EU countries can impose remain small compared with the $10.7 billion net profit that Google earned in 2012.
Spain can impose fines of up to 1 million euros, while the German Data Protection Act caps penalties at 300,000 euros.
There is no legal framework to levy European-wide fines.
In June, CNIL found Google to be in breach of privacy law on six counts, notably that it posted “insufficient” information for French users about how their private browsing data was collected and used.
Google has said that its privacy policy “respects European Law.”

Wednesday, 8 January 2014

Deep freeze stretches across the U.S.

Deep freeze stretches across the U.S.

A deadly blast of arctic air shattered decades-old temperature records as it enveloped the eastern United States on Tuesday, snarling air, road and rail travel, driving energy prices higher and overwhelming shelters for homeless people.
At least eight deaths have been reported across the country because of the polar air mass sweeping over North America during the past few days. Authorities have put about half of the United States under a wind chill warning or cold weather advisory.