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Thursday, August 23, 2007

Nikon enlists new cameras, faces in battle vs Canon


Nikon Corp`s newest advanced cameras and a lineup of fresh faces will help it outrun rival Canon Inc in a scramble for loyal fans throughout Asia, Nikon executives said on Thursday. The precision-equipment maker said it would hold on to at least a 40 percent market share in Japan this year, while winning more customers in South Korea and China, helped by its new D300 and D3 digital single-lens reflex (SLR) cameras, to go on sale in November. "This is the real thing," Nikon President Michio Kariya told a news conference, when asked how Nikon`s cameras were different from Canon`s new digital SLRs targeting the same mid- to high-end market. Nikon held a 47.5 percent market share in January-June, beating Canon`s 36.5 percent, Tokyo-based research firm BCN said. Nikon is pricing its D300 at around 230,000 yen ($1,980) with initial monthly production of 60,000 units. The D3, aimed at professionals, would sell for about 580,000 yen, with initial production of 8,000 a month. Earlier this week, Canon announced the launch of its EOS 40D model from August 31, and the EOS-1Ds Mark III for professionals from late November, vowing to regain its lead over Nikon by year-end. While Canon picked Oscar-nominated veteran Japanese actor Ken Watanabe to promote the EOS 40D, Nikon opted for younger faces, including South Korean actor Bi in South Korea and Taiwanese-American singer and actor Wang Leehom in China. "We want to attract young, hip users, especially in China," Nikon Operating Officer Yasuyuki Okamoto said. "If we do not somehow corner the China market, there is no future." Nikon expects to ship a total 3.2 million digital SLRs in the year ending March 2009, up from 2.6 million this business year. Shares of Nikon closed up 2.5 percent at 3,280 yen, while Canon, which announced a share buyback program, rose 5.9 percent to 6,260 yen.

Saturday, August 18, 2007

IBM Desktop Hindi Speech Recognition Software launched in India


Software giant IBM gas developed a speech recognition software in Hindi. The company hopes that this development will help physically challenged and less literate Hindi speakers to access information using a variety of applications.

Called the Desktop Hindi Speech Recognition technology, this software was developed by the IBM India Software Lab jointly with the Centre for Development of Advanced Computing.

The new IBM technology could help to provide a natural interface for human-computer interaction.

According to Dr. Daniel Dias, Director, IBM Indian Research Laboratory, the technology which helps transcribe continuous Hindi speech instantly into text form, could find use in a variety of applications like voice-enabled ATMs, car navigation systems, banking, telecom, railways, and airlines.

Besides, the technology could also enable C-DAC to ensure a high level of accuracy in Hindi translation in a number of domains like administration, finance, agriculture and the small-scale industry.
The IBM Desktop Hindi Speech Recognition software is capable of recognizing over 75,000 Hindi words with dialectical variations, providing an accuracy of 90 to 95%. What’s more; this software also has an integrated spellchecker that corrects spoken-word errors, enhancing the accuracy to a great extent.

The Desktop Hindi Speech Recognition Technology also integrates a number of user-friendly features such as the facility to convert text to digits and decimals, date and currency format, and into fonts which could be imported to any Windows-based application.

“IBM believes in taking high-end research to the benefit of the masses and bridging the digital divide through a faster diffusion process,” concluded Dias.

SOURCE : TECH SHOUT.COM

Wednesday, August 8, 2007

Rare river dolphin 'now extinct'


Yangtze river dolphin (Image: Stephen Leatherwood)
An extensive survey of its habitat failed to find any sign of the baiji
A freshwater dolphin found only in China is now "likely to be extinct", a team of scientists has concluded.

The researchers failed to spot any Yangtze river dolphins, also known as baijis, during an extensive six-week survey of the mammals' habitat.

The team, writing in Biology Letters journal, blamed unregulated fishing as the main reason behind their demise.

If confirmed, it would be the first extinction of a large vertebrate for over 50 years.

The World Conservation Union's Red List of Threaten Species currently classifies the creature as "critically endangered".

We have yet to take full responsibility in our role as guardians of the planet
Dr Sam Turvey,
Zoological Society of London

Sam Turvey of the Zoological Society of London (ZSL), one of the paper's co-authors, described the findings as a "shocking tragedy".

"The Yangtze river dolphin was a remarkable mammal that separated from all other species over 20 million years ago," Dr Turvey explained.

"This extinction represents the disappearance of a complete branch of the evolutionary tree of life and emphasises that we have yet to take full responsibility in our role as guardians of the planet."

If confirmed, it would be the first extinction of a large vertebrate for over 50 years.

'Incidental impact'

The species (Lipotes vexillifer) was the only remaining member of the Lipotidae, an ancient mammal family that is understood to have separated from other marine mammals, including whales, dolphins and porpoises, about 40-20 million years ago.

The white, freshwater dolphin had a long, narrow beak and low dorsal fin; lived in groups of three or four and fed on fish.

The team carried out six-week visual and acoustic survey, using two research vessels, in November and December 2006.

"While it is conceivable that a couple of surviving individuals were missed by the survey teams," the team wrote, "our inability to detect any baiji despite this intensive search effort indicates that the prospect of finding and translocating them to a [reserve] has all but vanished."

The scientists added that there were a number of human activities that caused baiji numbers to decline, including construction of dams and boat collisions.

"However, the primary factor was probably unsustainable by-catch in local fisheries, which used rolling hooks, nets and electrofishing," they suggested.

"Unlike most historical-era extinctions of large bodied animals, the baiji was the victim not of active persecution but incidental mortality resulting from massive-scale human environmental impacts - primarily uncontrolled and unselective fishing," the researchers concluded.

Sunday, August 5, 2007

Phoenix spacecraft launches to Mars


The NASA mission embarks on a 10-month journey to the Red Planet's north pole, where it is expected to be the first to sample the water of another world.
By John Johnson Jr., Times Staff Writer
August 5, 2007

NASA's Phoenix spacecraft launched Saturday morning from Cape Canaveral, Fla., on a 10-month journey to the north pole of Mars, where it is expected to be the first craft to taste the water of another planet.

The Delta II rocket carrying the 7-foot-tall lander lifted off at 5:26 a.m. on a scheduled 423million-mile journey that should deliver Phoenix to the Martian surface on May 25.

"Today's launch is the first step in the long journey to the surface of Mars," said Peter Smith, a University of Arizona astronomer who is lead scientist on the mission.

"We certainly are excited about launching, but we are still concerned about our actual landing, the most difficult step of this mission," Smith said.

NASA has a mixed record with Mars missions. Its twin rovers Spirit and Opportunity have been resounding successes, still going strong after 3 1/2 years on the surface.

But the last mission to the polar region, Mars Polar Lander, was lost on arrival in 1999.

If this mission unfolds as planned, the lander will parachute to the Red Planet's surface, using its descent engines to slow itself to about 5 mph. Once on the ground, it will unfurl its power-generating solar panels and extend its 7.7-foot robotic digging arm, the key component of the $420-million mission.

A scoop on the arm will dig down to a layer of water ice — thought to lie within 3 feet of the surface — that the Mars Odyssey spacecraft detected from orbit in 2002. A drill-like tool was added to the scoop after scientists realized that the ice on Mars could be much harder — more like cement — than ice on Earth.

Samples of soil and ice collected by the robotic arm will be transferred onboard for analysis. Phoenix carries eight tiny ovens that will heat the samples in search of organic compounds that could indicate past or present biological processes. Each oven will be used only once to avoid contamination.

NASA has tried to keep expectations low, asserting that Phoenix is not searching for life, merely trying to understand the water story. "Water is central to every type of study we will conduct on Mars," Smith said.

NASA learned to manage expectations with the Viking missions to Mars in 1976. The public, its appetite whetted by generations of science fiction writers envisioning Martians plying canals like Venice boatmen, waited excitedly for news of the discovery of life, only to have the spacecraft report a sterile, lifeless world.

That disappointment haunted the Mars program for decades. Only in recent years, with such discoveries as large subterranean deposits of ice and tantalizing evidence of surface flows, has there been renewed interest in Mars.

Some scientists now believe that the Viking landers either were searching in the wrong places or weren't equipped to look for the right clues.

Even the optimists acknowledge that Mars is, and possibly always has been, too hostile an environment for complex life forms. But scientists no longer rule out the possibility that some rudimentary forms of life could once have existed, and may still, possibly in some watery underground environment heated by the planet's interior.

In contrast to Earth and Venus, with their substantial internal sources of heat-causing volcanic activity, Mars' volcanoes appear to be long dead, a kind of "warm corpse," researchers say.

Scientists believe that Mars has gone through three ages, starting with what they call the Noachian, the first billion years and the most livable era, when the planet may have had a much warmer surface with running streams and possibly rain. The Hesperian era came next, a 500-million-year period when geologic activity slowed and water pooled underground.

The current period is referred to as the Amazonian, a 2- to 3-billion-year era during which the surface became desiccated and the atmosphere grew thin.

Scientists hope that scientific instruments aboard Phoenix will fill out the story.

In a space mission, as with air travel, the launch and landing are the most dangerous events. Phoenix's landing site is on an arctic plain called Vastitas Borealis, which is similar in most respects to central Greenland or northern Alaska.

The craft is expected to touch down in a shallow valley 30 miles wide and 800 feet deep.

The site was chosen after an early favorite turned out to be covered with large rocks. If one of the lander's three legs came to rest on one, it could tip precariously.

During Mars' winter, when temperatures can drop to minus-199, the area is covered with carbon dioxide frost and ice. So the craft will land in late spring, when the surface is more typical of Mars, covered with thick dust.

Winter's harshness is one reason Phoenix will not contend with the rovers for longevity. The lander will become shrouded in carbon dioxide ice, imposing a short lifetime of about 90 Martian days for the mission.

The spacecraft was designed and built by Lockheed Martin Space Systems Co. and is managed by NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory.