Archive for April, 2009

Sleep Talking PCs Save Energy and Money

Thursday, April 30th, 2009

San Diego, CA, April 23, 2009 — Personal computers may soon save large amounts of energy by “sleep talking.” Computer scientists at UC San Diego and Microsoft Research have created a plug-and-play hardware prototype for personal computers that induces a new energy saving state known as “sleep talking.” Normally PCs can be in either awake mode—where they consume power even if they are not being used—or in a low power sleep mode—where they save substantial power but are essentially inactive and unresponsive to network traffic. The new sleep talking state provides much of the energy savings of sleep mode and some of the network-and-Internet-connected convenience of awake mode.

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Researchers give high marks to new technology for fingerprint identification

Tuesday, April 28th, 2009

Overworked crime scene investigators can take heart at the results of recent tests at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) of new technologies that automate the manual portion of latent fingerprint identification. Prototype systems evaluated by NIST performed surprisingly well for a developing technology: half of the prototypes were accurate at least 80 percent of the time and one had a near perfect score. Automating the manual portion of the work frees up time for trained examiners to spend time on very difficult images that the software has little hope of processing.

As any TV crime series fan knows, latent prints are left behind any time someone touches something. While ubiquitous, “latents” often include only part of the finger—maybe just a few ridges—and sometimes are left on textured materials, adding even more challenges.

To identify the owner, a fingerprint examiner must first carefully mark the distinguishing features of the full or partial print, beginning with the positions where ridges end or branch. Then the latent is entered into a counter-terrorist or law enforcement identification system such as the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s Integrated Automated Fingerprint Identification System (IAFIS). The FBI’s system compares latents against the 55 million sets of ten-print cards taken at arrest.

The IAFIS system was a significant advance. Now the manual, mark-up portion of latent fingerprint identification is being automated with an emerging technology called Automatic Feature Extraction and Matching (AFEM). NIST biometric researchers assessed prototypes that eight vendors are developing.

In the evaluation, researchers used a data set of 835 latent prints and 100,000 fingerprints that have been used in real case examinations.

The AFEM software extracted the distinguishing features of the latent prints, then compared them against 100,000 fingerprints. For each print the software provided a list of 50 candidates that the fingerprint specialists compared by hand. Most identities were found within the top 10.

In order of performance, the most accurate prototypes were furnished by NEC Corp., Cogent Inc., SPEX Forensics, Inc., Motorola, Inc. and L1 Identity Solutions. Results ranged from nearly 100 percent for the most accurate product to around 80 percent for the last three listed.

The evaluations also showed a strong correlation between the number of distinguishing features in a latent print and its ability to match for all prototypes and that the quality of the image data strongly influences accuracy.

“While the testing has demonstrated accuracy beyond pre-test expectations, the potential of the technology remains undefined and further testing is required,” said computer scientist Patrick Grother. “In the future we will look at lower quality latent images to understand the technology’s limitations and we will support development of a standardized feature set that extends the one currently used by examiners for searches.”

fingerprint.jpg

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Interesting Cell Phone Facts

Monday, April 27th, 2009

Interesting Facts About Mobile Phones

Very Useful information

1. Emergency Number: The Emergency Number worldwide for Mobiles
112.
If you find yourself out of coverage area of your mobile network and
there is an emergency, dial 112 and the mobile will search any
existing network to establish the emergency number for you and
interestingly this number 112 can be dialed even while the keypad is
locked. Try it out.

2. Keys Locked in the Car? This may come in handy someday. Good
reason to own a Mobile Phone: If you lock your keys in the car and
the spare keys are at home, call someone on your mobile phone. Hold
your mobile phone about a foot from your car door and have the other
person at your home press the Unlock button, holding it near the
phone on their end. Your car will unlock. Saves time for someone to
drive your keys to you. Distance is not a problem. You c ould be
hundreds of miles away and if you can reach someone who has the
other remote” for your car, you can unlock the doors(or the boot).

Note: *It works fine! We tried it out and it unlocked our car over
a mobile phone!”

3. Your Mobile Battery is Very Low, you are expecting an important
call and you don’t have a c harger”. Nokia instrument comes with a
reserve battery. To activate the battery, the key-in *3370# your
cell will restart with this reserve and your instrument will show a
50% increase in battery. This reserve will get charged when you
charge your mobile next time.

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