Category: Science &Technology

  • Obama Launches Brain Mapping Initiative

    {{US President Barack Obama on Tuesday announced a $100 million project to map the intricate inner mysteries of the human brain, targeting cures for diseases like Alzheimer’s.}}

    “The most powerful computer in the world isn’t nearly as intuitive as the one we’re born with,” Obama said at the White House.

    “There’s this enormous mystery waiting to be unlocked. And the BRAIN initiative will change that by giving scientists the tools they need to get a dynamic picture of the brain in action,” Obama said.

    The research initiative, financed with $100 million of Obama’s budget that will be unveiled next week, will seek to find new ways to treat, cure and prevent brain disorders like epilepsy and Alzheimer’s.

    Researchers will try to make complex pictures of the inner brain that show how individual cells and neural circuits work and interact and examine how the brain records, uses and retrieves vast amounts of information.

    The BRAIN (Brain Research through Advancing Innovative Neurotechnologies) initiative will be run by the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency, and the National Science Foundation.

    Obama was introduced as “scientist in chief” at the White House event by NIH Director Francis Collins, and his administration makes the case that despite tough fiscal times, investments in science are vital.

    “I am glad I have been promoted to scientist in chief – given my grades in physics, I am not sure it is deserving,” the president said.

    “But I hold science in proper esteem, so maybe I get some credit.”

    AFP

  • Modern Vet Laboratory to be Constructed in East

    {{The Eastern Province is set to have a new Veterinary laboratory with modern equipment aimed at enhancng, detecting and responding to Livestock diseases.}}

    The Eastern province predominantly a livestock region, has in the recent past suffered sequencies of livestock disease attacks sending the region into frequent quarantines.

    Deputy Director General of Rwanda Agriculture Board, Dr. Christine Kanyandekwe, while addressing farmers and local leaders said Nyagatare district will host the new modern laboratory.

    “The lab will be equipped with what it takes to detect diseases. Farmers will not gamble with animal treatment. Livestock drugs will be prescribed based on the disease, something we lacked,”she said.

    She noted that Lab equipment are already available in store and will be installed soon.

  • IEA Report Says 1.3 billion People don’t Have Access to Electricity

    {{While it is indisputable that modern and clean energy services are essential for people’s wellbeing and crucial for economic growth and human development, many people in the world, still have no access to electricity.}}

    Globally that number is over 1.3 billion and people without clean cooking facilities in the world are about 2.6 billion.

    The United Nations is warning that for the Millennium Development Goals to be attained, the problem of lack of modern energy services must be quickly sorted out.

    In this part of the world, the wide use of biomass for cooking better manifests the high levels of energy poverty prevalence.

    The International Energy Agency (UIEA) defines energy poverty as the lack of access to modern energy services.

    “These services are defined as household access to electricity and clean cooking facilities, such as fuels and stoves that do not cause air pollution in houses.

    Modern energy services are crucial to human well-being and to a country’s economic development, and yet globally, over 1.3 billion people are without access to electricity and 2.6 billion people are without clean cooking facilities,” the agency notes in a recent report.

    “More than 95 per cent of these people are either in sub-Saharan Africa or developing Asia and 84% are in rural areas,” it adds in World Energy Outlook 2012 report.

    Globally, there are also around 400 million people who rely on coal for cooking and heating purposes, which causes air pollution and has serious potential health implications when used in traditional stoves.

    The challenge of energy poverty should be quickly dealt with and measures taken to modernise the use of biomass and other fossil fuels.

    “We need a global clean energy revolution – a revolution that makes energy available and affordable to all. This is essential for minimising climate risks, for reducing poverty and improving global health, for empowering women, for global economic growth, peace and security; and the health of the planet,” argues UN secretary-general Ban Ki-moon.

  • Zanzibar Airport Project in Error, Says Expert

    {{Additional funding is required to provide a safe landing of aircraft at the Zanzibar Terminal II (T2) operations, an expert has said. }}

    The expert — who requested not to be mentioned because he is not a spokesperson of the parties involved — told a local daily in Dar es Salaam on Wednesday that the Airport’s T2 has been constructed at the wrong level and requires additional investment to rectify the error.

    “In short, the Terminal 2 structure has been constructed on an area that was meant to be an aircraft parking bay,” the source said.Its construction does not match well with the general alignment of the structures to allow for safe landing, he observed.

    The instrument landing system (ILS) — a ground-based instrument approach system that provides precision guidance to an aircraft approaching and landing on a runway — is not in the right alignment.

    In the same vein, the terminal’s apron design has not been coordinated to match with the World Bank’s financed apron project, leading to a level gap between the two projects.

    WB provided a loan of over $50 million for extension and improvement of the southern taxiway and extension of the existing aircraft parking area (apron) by 1,000 sq metres.

    There is lack of understanding of the work required by T2 contractor — Beijing Construction Engineering Group — to successfully make the facilities operational.

    The source stated that the terminal’s internal layout has not been agreed with airport stakeholders and service providers, and the turnkey contract scope of work was not clearly defined.

    Turnkey contract is a contract under which a firm agrees to fully design, construct and equip to manufacturing business/service facility and turn the project over to the purchaser when it is ready for operation for remuneration.

    The study, which highlighted the T2 problems was conducted in November last year, and established that the subcontractor did not have sufficient skills of designing and constructing Terminal II as agreed previously.

    The government of China through Exim Bank China disbursed $70.4 million to construct the T2 turnkey project, which was awarded to the BCEG Company.

    The whole project includes a 17,000-square-metre terminal building, a small power station, and a bigger apron.

    The construction of the new passenger terminal began in February 2011 and will be completed by January 31, 2014.

    Thecitizen

  • Yahoo Spends ‘millions’ on UK teen Summly app

    {{An app SUMMLY created by Nick D’Aloisio 17 from Wimbledon, UK, has been acquired by web giant Yahoo in a deal worth “dozens of millions” of pounds.}}

    The application summarises news stories from popular media companies.

    The app itself will now close, but its features will be used in mobile products at Yahoo, where Mr D’Aloisio has been given a job.

    He will be joined by several of Summly’s “top staff” in new roles at Yahoo in the next few weeks.

    Nick said, “I like shoes, I will buy a new pair of Nike trainers and I’ll probably get a new computer, but at the moment I just want to save and bank it.

    “I don’t have many living expenses.”

  • Govt to Save Frw500M Through Video Conferencing

    The Ministry of Local Government James Musoni has said a new method of video conferencing will save government over Frw 500million.

    Government usually spends over Frw 500M in facilitating meeting of local admnistration leaders that have to travel from their areas of jurisdiction to Kigali.

    The new plan was revealed by Minister Musoni during a meeting of provincial officials and districts Mayors.

    He said Video conferencing is a less costly of conducting meetings for district mayors and Sector leaders that usually make expensive trips to Kigali to attend meetings.

    The Minister said video conferencing allows people to offer services without wasting time and money on traveling.

    To minimize expensive trips, the Minister also told media that soon documents would be scanned and shared among officials through internet.

  • Experts Say NKorea Training ‘cyber warriors’

    {{Investigators have yet to pinpoint the culprit behind a synchronized cyberattack in South Korea last week. But in Seoul, the focus remains fixed on North Korea, where South Korean security experts say Pyongyang has been training a team of computer-savvy “cyber warriors” as cyberspace becomes a fertile battleground in the standoff between the two Koreas.}}

    Malware shut down 32,000 computers and servers at three major South Korean TV networks and three banks last Wednesday, disrupting communications and banking businesses, officials said.

    The investigation into who planted the malware could take weeks or even months.

    South Korean investigators have produced no proof yet that North Korea was behind the cyberattack, and on Friday said the malware was traced to a Seoul computer.

    But South Korea has pointed the finger at Pyongyang in six cyberattacks since 2009, even creating a cyber security command center in Seoul to protect the Internet-dependent country from hackers from the North.

    It may seem unlikely that impoverished North Korea, with one of the most restrictive Internet policies in the world, would have the ability to threaten affluent South Korea, a country considered a global leader in telecommunications.

    The average yearly income in North Korea was just $1,190 per person in 2011 — just a fraction of the average yearly income of $22,200 for South Koreans that same year, according to the Bank of Korea in Seoul.

    But over the past several years, North Korea has poured money and resources into science and technology. In December, scientists succeeded in launching a satellite into space aboard a long-range rocket from its own soil.

    And in February, North Korea conducted an underground nuclear test, its third.

    “IT” has become a buzzword in North Korea, which has developed its own operating system called Red Star. The regime also encouraged a passion for gadgets among its elite, introducing a Chinese-made tablet computer for the North Korean market. Teams of developers came up with software for everything from composing music to learning how to cook.

    But South Korea and the U.S. believe North Korea also has thousands of hackers trained by the state to carry its warfare into cyberspace, and that their cyber offensive skills are as good as or better than their counterparts in China and South Korea.

    “The newest addition to the North Korean asymmetric arsenal is a growing cyber warfare capability,” James Thurman, commander of the U.S. forces in South Korea, told U.S. legislators in March 2012.

    “North Korea employs sophisticated computer hackers trained to launch cyber-infiltration and cyber-attacks” against South Korea and the U.S.

    In 2010, Won Sei-hoon, then chief of South Korea’s National Intelligence Service, put the number of professional hackers in North Korea’s cyber warfare unit at 1,000.

    North Korean students are recruited to the nation’s top science schools to become “cyber warriors,” said Kim Heung-kwang, who said he trained future hackers at a university in the industrial North Korean city of Hamhung for two decades before defecting in 2003.

    He said future hackers also are sent to study abroad in China and Russia.

    In 2009, then-leader Kim Jong Il ordered Pyongyang’s “cyber command” expanded to 3,000 hackers, he said, citing a North Korean government document that he said he obtained that year. The veracity of the document could not be independently confirmed.

    Kim Heung-kwang, who has lived in Seoul since 2004, speculated that more have been recruited since then, and said some are based in China to infiltrate networks abroad.

    What is clear is that “North Korea has a capacity to send malware to personal computers, servers or networks and to launch DDOS-type attacks,” he said. “Their targets are the United States and South Korea.”

    Expanding its warfare into cyberspace by developing malicious computer codes is cheaper and faster for North Korean than building nuclear devices or other weapons of mass destructions.

    The online world allows for anonymity because it is easy to fabricate IP addresses and destroy the evidence leading back to the hackers, according to C. Matthew Curtin, founder of Interhack Corp.

    Thurman said cyberattacks are “ideal” for North Korea because they can take place relatively anonymously. He said cyberattacks have been waged against military, governmental, educational and commercial institutions.

    North Korean officials have not acknowledged allegations that computer experts are trained as hackers, and have refuted many of the cyberattack accusations. Pyongyang has not commented on the most recent widespread attack in South Korea.

    In June 2012, a seven-month investigation into a hacking incident that disabled news production system at the South Korean newspaper JoongAng Ilbo led to North Korea’s government telecommunications center, South Korean officials said.

    In South Korea, the economy, commerce and every aspect of daily life is deeply dependent on the Internet, making it ripe grounds for a disruptive cyberattack.

    In North Korea, in contrast, is just now getting online. Businesses are starting to use online banking services and debit cards have grown in popularity.

    But only a sliver of the population has access to the global Internet, meaning an Internet outage last week — which Pyongyang blamed on hackers from Seoul and Washington — had little bearing on most North Koreans.

    “North Korea has nothing to lose in a cyber battle,” said Kim Seeongjoo, a professor at Seoul-based Korea University’s Department of Cyber Defense. “Even if North Korea turns out to be the attacker behind the broadcasters’ hacking, there is no target for South Korean retaliation.”

    Associated Press

  • Samsung Unveils Champion Smartphone

    {{Intensifying its smartphone battle with Apple, Samsung unveiled the feature-rich Galaxy S4, with groundbreaking eye motion technology to let users control key functions at a glance.}}

    In one highlight, sensors in the S4 detect when a person looks away from a video and then pauses play until the distraction has passed and eyes are once again directed at the screen. The eye motion technology can also screen through emails.

    The South Korean consumer electronics giant introduced the Galaxy S4 Thursday on the stage of New York City’s Radio City Music Hall and said the smartphones would roll out in 155 countries in late April. Pricing was not disclosed.

    “For each of us, life is a journey,” said Samsung mobile communications division head JK Shin. “What we want is a device that can join us on that journey; a companion that helps us experience life in the fullest.”

    S4 features include a high-definition, five-inch (12.7-centimeter) screen, enhanced picture-taking capabilities and the capacity to translate to and from nine languages.

    “It is now clearly Samsung’s flagship device; jam-packed with technology,” said Gartner analyst Michael Gartenberg.

    “The question is how many of these features will resonate with consumers.”

    Samsung played up its online hub for music, books, and video and the ease with which the S4 can share video with televisions made by the company.

    “At this point, smartphones are all about software and ecosystems; showing up with compelling hardware is the expected starting point,” Gartenberg said.

    “This is about a Samsung ecosystem that happens to be built on Android.”

    Samsung is the biggest and most successful maker of smartphones powered by Android software that Google makes available for free.

    Samsung has become the top smartphone maker worldwide with a 29 percent market share, according to IDC, while in the US market Apple remains the king and sells more than one of every three mobile phones.

    The Galaxy S3 has sold more than 40 million worldwide since its launch last May and has some analysts debating which of the two firms is ahead in innovation.

    “We are always listening to learn from people around the world about what kind of progress they really want,” Shin said.

    Samsung stressed innovation as it continues to defend itself against charges made by Apple in public and in lawsuits that the South Korean rival has copied the California company’s creations.

    The S4 is thinner than its predecessor and weighs just 130 grams despite having a bigger screen and battery.

    The smartphone also boasts a “dual camera” function that lets the front and rear-facing cameras be used simultaneously for pictures or videos that combine images of subjects with that of the photographer.

    A Group Play function lets S4 handsets close to one another share music, photos, documents or games, or even work in unison as a sound system for a song.

    An S Translator feature lets people speak or enter text in one tongue and have it instantly converted to another.

    S4 sensors combined with S Health software enable handsets to be used to track exercise, eating, heart rate and other fitness factors.

    The handsets were also designed to measure temperature and humidity to help people “understand what is going on around them.”

    Samsung also took aim at the trend of people using their own smartphones for work with the addition of new Knox software that builds a secure wall between personal and business data on handsets.

    “The Samsung Galaxy S4 is very good, but looks like an evolution to the S3, not a revolution,” said technology analyst Jeff Kagan.

    Apple, which is known for keeping its plans private, is believed to be working on its own upgrades, including a new version of the iconic iPhone. But Apple shares have slumped some 40% from highs hit last year.

    {wirestory}

  • Minister Challenges KLab ICT center on Market Solutions

    {{The Minister of Youth and ICT Jean Philbert Nsengimana and the Governor of Southern Alphonse Munyantwali have visited kLab- an open innovation space where young innovators in ICT meet entrepreneurs.}}

    KLab’s mission is to promote, facilitate, and support the development of innovative ICT solutions by nurturing community of entrepreneurs and mentors in Kigali.

    The center is set to open its doors to young, dynamic innovators and entrepreneurs who will then utilize its ICT infrastructure to turn their innovations into viable solutions.

    Governor Alphonse Munyantwali challenged young innovators at kLab to find an ICT solution that could help the province to track families’ performances regularly basing on what they achieved.

    The wished solution will be entitled ‘Umuhuza w’Iterambere’.

    Minister Nsengimana added on that although kLab tenants might be good in writing codes and in programing they still need to closely work with potential buyers of their solutions so that they make them relevant by considering all users requirements.

    Kalisa Migisha Claude, Founding Manager at kLab, said that “The kLab community appreciates the visit by Minister Nsengimana and the delegation; it really shows they have hope in us.”

    kLab’s goals are to support development of ICT in Rwanda.

  • Ethiopia to Emulate Rwanda’s ICT Policy

    {{Ethiopians are on a study tour in Rwanda to acquaint themselves with how Rwanda uses ICT in Education sector.}}

    The delegation from Ethiopia today visited the Rwanda Education Board as a part of the study tour.

    Wondalle Dawoude, the Head of the delegation and representative of department of ICT engineering at the Ethiopian Ministry of Education hopes that the one week study tour will help them to learn about Rwanda’s policy of ICT, its usage and how government funds ICT sector.

    Dr Mukama Evode, the REB Deputy Director General in charge of ICT explains that Rwanda has made significant progress in the use of ICT adding that more services are delivered via ICT facilities.

    He added that more trainings in ICT are being provided by different experts including University Lecturers.

    Throughout the whole week, Ethiopian delegation will have an opportunity to share knowledge and experience on how ICT can be improved in Ethiopia.