الأرشيف لـ 'مستقبل'تصنيف

Abu Dhabi Hosts Thinkers’ Fête

2007 / نوفمبر / الجمعة

By PRANAY GUPTE
Special to the Sun
October 26, 2007

ABU DHABI, United Arab Emirates — Of the 22 countries that constitute the Arab League, only three have formal diplomatic ties with Israel. The United Arab Emirates is not among them.

It would be fair to suggest, though, that the UAE — far more than Egypt, Jordan, and Mauritania, which maintain legations in Tel Aviv — is far more of an open society, far less hostile to Jewry, and much more welcoming to Western and, specifically, American, economic, political, and cultural interests. With a population of less than 5 million, of whom 80% are expatriates, the UAE is certainly a far more cosmopolitan place than practically any other Arab country, and one where there are virtually no restrictions on the nature of national discourse.

That was conspicuously evident during the four-day Festival of Thinkers that ended here late Wednesday. The idea was to expose young Emirati students to the world’s finest minds so they could better integrate into an evolving global culture, notwithstanding the fact that in the UAE no citizen is poor and no native really has to work for a living. The UAE, after all, pumps 2 million barrels of crude oil a day, has reserves of nearly 100 billion barrels of oil that will last at least 150 years, and will enjoy a surplus of more than $500 billion this year alone due to oil prices that have touched $90 a barrel.

At the heart of the festival was the notion that it isn’t enough for Emiratis to be born wealthy; it is far more critical to accelerate the cross-fertilization of ideas with the outside world. The festival attracted 16 Nobel laureates, and more than 100 thinkers, including American and New York luminaries such as the astronaut Buzz Aldrin; the president of the International Longevity Center, Dr. Robert Butler; the president of Cooper Union, George Campbell; the founder of NewYorkSocialDiary.com, David Patrick Columbia; the chairwoman of the New York Institute of Technology, Linda Davila; the editorial director of American Media, Bonnie Fuller; the president of the Institute of International Education, Allan Goodman, who also administers the Fulbright Program; the editor of Discover magazine, Bob Guccione Jr., and the CEO of Prudential Douglas Elliman, Dottie Herman. Also attending were the executive vice president of Edelman Financial Communications, Kathleen Lacey Hoge; the editor of Reader’s Digest, Jacqueline Leo; the senior editor of Vogue, Shirley Lord; the president emeritus of Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, Dr. Paul Marks, and his wife, the Sarah Lawrence geneticist, Dr. Joan H. Marks; journalist Judith Miller; literary agent Lynn Nesbit; the president of Hunter College, Jennifer Raab; the president of Business for Diplomatic Action, Keith Reinhard, who is chairman emeritus of DDB Worldwide; the president of the New York Times Company Foundation, Jack Rosenthal; the president of the New York Academy of Sciences, Ellis Rubinstein; the CEO of the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, Carl Schramm; President Kennedy’s closest adviser and speech writer, Theodore Sorensen; the president of Ursinus College, John Strassburger, and the head of the Elie Wiesel Foundation for Humanity, Marion Wiesel.

They may have been surprised at the warmth with which His Highness Sheik Nahayan Mabarak al-Nahayan, the biennial festival’s founder and the UAE’s minister of higher education, received the guests, many of whom are Jewish. Mrs. Wiesel sat next to the sheik at last night’s farewell dinner. The Oxford-educated sheik, a member of Abu Dhabi’s royalty, put it this way: “We have had a record of trading with the world from ancient times, and we want to be even more open to the world in this age of globalization. Some might say that we are moving too fast. But change is the order of the day, and our country wants to play its role in promoting global peace, security, and progress.”

The role has many dimensions. Dubai, one of the seven sheikdoms that formed the UAE in 1971, has transformed itself into a glitzy metropolis; its financial institutions have taken stakes in Nasdaq and other bourses. The more conservative Abu Dhabi, which possesses more than 90% of the UAE’s reserves of crude oil and natural gas, has decided to concentrate on developing institutions of culture, science, technology, and education.

It has already arranged to support the establishment of an outpost of New York’s Guggenheim Museum, which will be designed by the Los Angeles-based architect Frank Gehry. It has invited the Louvre to plant roots here. Sheik Nahayan inaugurated the Nobel Museum a couple of days ago. New York University has agreed to start a campus in Abu Dhabi. In addition, The New York Sun has learned that the general manager of the Metropolitan Opera, Peter Gelb, is being asked to come over to begin discussions to create a branch of his institution in this city of parks, palm trees, and beaches at the edge of what the Emiratis prefer to call the Arabian Gulf.

Clearly, Sheikh Nahayan seeks closer ties with New York’s cultural and intellectual establishment, and American participants at the festival came away with the impression that the UAE — a traditional American ally that hosts the largest American naval base outside America itself — represents a role model among Arab states, even if its governance is by family rule and not in the style of Westminster or Washington democracy.

Of course, every aspiring institution builder in the world seems to want the UAE’s money: At the festival, for instance, Columbia University’s Jeffrey Sachs seized the microphone at three major events on the opening day, repeated his signature mantra of protecting the global environment and alleviating global poverty, and then promptly proceeded to get signed commitments from the organizers to host a science and technology summit here next year.

الإخفاء بعد التشفير للنقل الآمن للمعلومات (ملخّص)

2007 / أكتوبر / الثلاثاء

قال الله تبارك و تعالى في سورة الحاقة: ((فلا أقسم بما تبصرون و ما لا تبصرون)).

المعركة بين علم الإخفاء وتحليل الإخفاء لا تزال محتدمةً وتمثِّلُ حجر الزاوية في حرب نقل المعلومات السرية . الوجه الاول لهذه المعركة يمثل الاتصالات السرية حيث يتم نقل معلومات و بيانات من دون إشعار أحدٍ أن هناك اتصالاً يجري ، بينما يمثل الوجه الآخر محاولة الوقوف ضد هذا النوع من الاتصالات.

ومن المهم التأكيد على ضرورة التشفير الآمن للمعلومات قبل إخفائها ، وذلك موضوع مستقل عن علم إخفاء المعلومات يسمى علم التشفير.

يعامل علم التشفير على أنه سلاح الكتروني -وهو كذلك- لأ نه أساس في تأمين الا تصالات وضمان سلامة المتصلين وحماية الأسرار. وليس هناك أخطر من أن يعتمد شخص على برنامج أجنبي لحماية أسراره وتأمين اتصالاته ، فربما اكتشف بعد فوات الأوان أن جميع اتصالاته كانت مخترقة من قبل العدو . قال عمر بن الخطاب رضي الله عنه (لست بالخب ولا الخب يخدعني)، فأول الاحتياطات الأمنية أن تؤمن جميع الاتصالات ببرامج موثوقة!!!
طيف الألوان
هناك عدة برمجيات تقوم بوظيفة الإخفاء ، (مثلاً : برامج للإتصالات السرّية تقوم بإخفاء الأسرار داخل الصور) ، ولكن أكثرها له برمجيات مضادة تستطيع الكشف عن احتمال وجود رسائل سرية.

وفي أكثر الحالات فإن إدعاء البرامج قدرتها على إخفاء المعلومات هو محض كذبٍ وخداع، وهذا ينبهنا أنه لا يجب استخدام أي برنامجٍ نقل سري أو تشفير للمعلومات من دون أن يكون لدينا تحليل ٌ تفصيلي دقيق لعمل البرنامج يبين قدراته وإمكانيات فشله أو إحباط مهمته.

و لهذا لا يجب استخدام البرامج الغربية فهي خداع محض، وكلها لها نوع من التوقيع (Signature) يكشف مثلاً أن الوسيط (صورة) وتم تعديله ببرنامج معين يدل عليه!!!

الإخفاء المتقدم يدمج عدة تقنيات متطورة بكفاءة عالية منها:

1- ضغط البيانات بنسب عالية
2- تشفيرها بخوارزمية 2048 بت
3- إخفائها

يمكن إخفاء رسائل قصيرة داخل ملفات صوتية قصيرة ، ومن برامج الإخفاء ما يستغلُّ عدداً محدوداً من طبقات الألوان الأساسية محاولاً الإفلات من احتمال كشف أي تغييرٍ عن طريق تحليل الإخفاء الذي يعتمد على التوزيع الإحصائي للألوان. وتقوم برامج أخرى بإخفاء البيانات أو الرسائل عن طريق استغلال أحدث التقنيات في عالم هندسة الاتصالات لتفلت من جميع الإجراءات المضادة لتحليل الإخفاء.

كما يجب اختيار مناطق الإخفاء سواء داخل الصور الفوتوغرافية أو الصور الطبيعية أو مقاطع الصوت أو الفيديو ضمن نطاقات الطيف العريض(Spread Spectrum) المناسبة التي يعجز التحليل البصري أو السمعي بالإضافة للتحليل الإحصائي عن الكشف عن احتوائها على رسائل خفية، مما يجعل الإخفاء يستحق بجدارة هذا الاسم وينفرد بنقل المعلومات السرية دون أن تراها الأبصار. قال الله تبارك و تعالى في سورة الحاقة: ((فلا أقسم بما تبصرون و ما لا تبصرون)).

مصطلحات
Steganography علم الإخفاء
(Steganos graphy) علم الإخفاء
Steganalysis تحليل الإخفاء
Multi-media وسائط متعددة
Digital رقمي
Morse Code شيفرة مورس
Digital Communication إتصالات رقمية
Digital Signal and Image Processing معالجة الإشارة و الصور الرقمية
Watermarking العلامة المائية
LSB البت ذي الدلالة الصغرى
(Least Significant Bit) البت ذي الدلالة الصغرى
MSB البت ذي الدلالة الكبرى
(Most Significant Bit) البت ذي الدلالة الكبرى
Pixel عنصور
(Picture element) عنصر صورة
Grayscale السلم الرمادي
Message Digest version 5 هضم الرسالة: تقنية خاصة بتشفير كلمة السر
(MD 5) هضم الرسالة: تقنية خاصة بتشفير كلمة السر
Byte ثمانية (بضم الثاء و تشديد الياء)
Bit بت
Hexadecimal سداسي عشري
Editor محرر
Concatenation الالصاق او الالحاق
Digital Fingerprint البصمة الرقمية
Data Redundancy تكرار بياني
Histogram) Frequency distribution of RGB) ( هيستوغرام) رسم بياني لتوزيع الالوان الترددي
One Way Encryption تشفير أحادي الإتجاه
Discrete Cosine Transform Coefficients معاملات التحويل الجيبي المتقطع
Enhanced LSB Layers Analysis التحليل الطبقي
Visual Analysis التحليل البصري
Statistical Analysis التحليل الإحصائي

المصدر : (منقول)

Opening the Information Economy: IEEE International Professional Communication Conference 2008

2007 / سبتمبر / الثلاثاء

Call for Panel and Paper Proposals: IEEE International Professional Communication Conference 2008 (IPCC 2008)

Conference Theme: Opening the Information Economy

Conference Location: Concordia University, Montréal, Canada

Conference Dates: July 13-16, 2008

The information economy is based on the collection and the exchange of data and ideas. We all either contribute to or use materials from the information economy in most aspects of our everyday lives. As a result, the information economy exists as an environment in which we are all contributors and consumers. Within this system, effective communication is essential to success, allowing individuals to contribute ideas and information effectively and to make efficient use of the goods and services. Few of us, however, understand all of the nuances of the information economy or the communication factors that affect its operations.

This conference seeks to examine or to “open” this economic model by examining the connections between communication practices and the products, practices, and services that constitute the information economy. The objective of such an examination will be to help attendees better understand and participate in the information economy as both contributors and consumers.

The conference will take place on the campus of Concordia University in Montréal, Canada and will consist of paper presentations and panel discussions that focus on various communication, design, social, and cultural aspects of the information economy.

POSSIBLE TOPIC AREAS
Suggested topic areas include but are not limited to the following:

• Establishing and assessing the value of knowledge work and knowledge products

• Information design, usability, and accessibility

• Virtual teams, online collaboration, and distributed models of work

• Cross-cultural communication, globalization, outsourcing, translation, and localization

• Legal policies and social issues related to the information economy

• Media selection and multimodality

• The role of and perspectives on teaching and training within the information economy

• Content management, open source software, single sourcing, and XML

PROPOSAL SUBMISSION PROCESS AND SUBMISSION DATES Send 1-2 page (250-500 word) proposals to IPCC2008@gmail.com by

• 15 October 2007 (deadline for submissions to be considered for early
acceptance)

• 15 December 2007 (deadline for regular submissions)

UAE cyber crimes law

2007 / سبتمبر / الأحد

 UAE cyber crimes law

04/30/2007 10:37 AM | Gulf News Report

Abu Dhabi: President His Highness Shaikh Khalifa Bin Zayed Al Nahyan has issued a federal law on combating cyber crimes.

* Law No.2 of 2006, issued last month, includes 29 articles, and shall take effect from the date of its issuance, and is to be published in the official gazette.
* Article No.2 considers any intentional act resulting in abolishing, destroying or revealing secrets or republishing personal or official information, as a crime. It says anyone convicted of logging onto information website or system shall be punished with jail term, or fine, or both. If the act resulted in abolishing, destroying, or revealing, changing or republishing information, he/she shall be sentenced to no less than six months in jail and be fined, or both. If such information are personal, a fine of not less than Dh10, 000 shall be imposed, and a jail term of not less than one year shall be handed out to the convict, or both punishments.
* The law also reads that anyone convicted of stimulating a male or female to commit adultery or prostitution via the Internet will be jailed up to five years and fined.
* Anyone convicted of abusing holy shrines or religious rituals or insulting them or inciting others to do so, shall be sentenced to five years in jail and be fined.
* Anyone convicted of opposing the Islamic religion will be jailed up to seven years. Anyone convicted of transcending family principles and values shall be jailed for one year and fined Dh50, 000. Anyone convicted of setting up a website for groups promoting programmes in breach of public decency and order shall be sentenced to five years in jail.
* Article No.3 reads that anyone convicted of committing any crimes stipulated in Article No.2 of this law, shall be sentenced to no less than one year in jail, and fined not less than Dh20, 000, or both.
* Article No.4 says anyone convicted of forging any document of Federal or local government?s documents, or any of federal or local institutions, shall be temporarily imprisoned, and fined, or both.
* Anyone convicted of using the forged document with knowledge it is forged, shall be handed out the stipulated punishment for forgery crime. Article No.5 of the law reads anyone convicted of hampering, blocking or preventing the reach of service or logging onto computer programmes, or information sources with any possible means whether via the use of internet or any information technology mean, shall be punished with a jail term, or a fine, or both.
* Article No.6 says anyone convicted of inserting certain information via the internet or using any IT or electronic mean for the purpose of stopping or breaking down, or destroying, deleting or amending programmes and information, shall be either jailed or fined, or both.
* Article No.7 says anyone convicted of using the internet or any electronic or IT means for changing or destroying medical tests or medical diagnosis, or medical treatment or healthcare, or even assisted others to do it, shall be temporarily jailed or fined.
* Article No.8 says anyone convicted of deliberately eavesdropping, or receiving or intervened information or messages sent via the internet by using any electronic or high-tech means, shall be jailed or fined.
* Article No.9 says anyone convicted of using the internet or any other high-tech means for threatening or black mailing another person, to incite him to carry out an act or not, shall be sentenced to no more than two years in jail and fined no more than Dh50, 000, or both.
* Anyone convicted of using the internet for threatening or black mailing another person, to incite him to commit lewd acts or honour crimes, shall be sentenced up to 10 years in jail and fined Dh50, 000.
* Article No.10 reads that anyone convicted of putting his hands on immovable funds, or a document to sign for himself or others, by using the internet or any high-tech means in a fraudulent way or by taking a nick name or assuming the identity of others with intent to defraud, shall be sentenced to no less than one year, and fined no less than Dh30, 000, or both.
* Article No.11 reads that anyone convicted of reaching data of credit card or any other electronic cards by the use of the internet or any high-tech means, shall be imprisoned and fined. If the act takes place with intent to use credit or electronic cards to get other?s money or their available services, the convict shall be jailed for no less than one year, and fined no less than Dh30, 000, or one of each punishments.
* Article No.12 says anyone convicted of producing, preparing, sending, or saving information with intent to exploit, distribute or providing others with information that causes harm to public decency, via the internet or high-tick means, shall be sentenced to no less than six months in jail and fined no less than Dh 30, 000.
* Article No13 says anyone convicted of inciting or luring a male or female to commit adultery or prostitution, by using the internet or high-tech means, shall be imprisoned and fined. If the victim is a juvenile, a jail term of no less than five years and a fine shall be imposed.
* Article No14 says anyone convicted of logging onto a website with intent to change the designs of this site, deleting it, amending its information, or taking its address, shall be jailed and fined.
* Article No.15 stipulates that anyone convicted of using the internet or high-tech means for the purpose of committing the following crimes, shall be imprisoned or fined.

* The crimes are as follows:

* 1-Abuse of any Islamic holy shrines or rituals
* 2- Abuse of holy shrines and religious rituals stipulated in other religious since such rituals are maintained in accordance to the rulings of Islamic Sharia
* 3- Insulting any recognised religion
* 4- 4-Inctiment or promotion of sins

* If anyone convicted of opposing the Islamic religion, or abusing its principles, or carrying out any missionary activities for the benefit of other religions, he should be sentenced to more than seven years in jail.

* Article No16 reads that anyone convicted of transcending family principles and values, or publishing news or pictures related to the private life of the family?s members, shall be jailed for no one year and fined Dh50, 000.
* Article No.17 stipulates that anyone convicted of setting up a website, or publishing information vi the internet or any other cyber means for the purpose of trafficking in human beings or facilitating human trafficking, shall be temporarily imprisoned.
* Article No.18 reads that anyone convicted of setting up a website or publishing information with the aim of promoting narcotics shall be temporarily jailed.
* Article No.19 says anyone convicted of transferring dirty money or concealing their sources, or transferring illegal properties via the use of internet or other cyber means, shall be sentenced to no more than seven years and a fine of no less than Dh30, 000 and up to Dh200, 000.
* Article No.20 reads anyone convicted of setting up a website or publishing information for groups calling for facilitating and promoting ideas in breach of the general order and public decency, shall be sentenced to nor more than five years in jail.
* Article No.21 says anyone convicted of setting up a website or publishing information for a terrorist group under fake names with intent to facilitate contacts with their leadership, or to promote their ideologies and finance their activities, or to publish information on how to make explosives or any other substances to be used in terrorist attacks, shall be sentenced to no more than five years in jail.
* Article No22 reads anyone convicted of logging onto government websites with intent to obtain secrete information shall be sentenced to jail. If the practice resulted in deleting, destroying or publishing such information, the convict shall be sentenced up to five years in jail.
* Article No.23 says anyone convicted of inciting, or assisting or agreed with other person to commit a crime of crimes stipulated in this law, he shall be punished with the same punishment stipulated in the law.
* Article No.24 says with no prejudice to others? rights, all devices, programmes and means used in committing any of the previous mentioned crimes will be confiscated.
* Article No.25 stipulates if the convict is an expatriate, he shall be deported after serving his term.
* Article No.26 says the implementation of penalties stipulated in this law does not contradict any other tougher punishment stipulated in the penal Code or any other laws.
* Article No.27 says law-enforcement officials are allowed to catch criminals and report violations.
* Article No28 says any provision contradicts the provisions of this law shall be abrogated.
* Article No.29 says this law shall take effect from the date of its issuance, and is to be published in the official gazette.

WiMAX Day

2006 / أكتوبر / الأثنين

WiMAX Club formed to undermine 3G and GSM telcos

Today, according to WiSOA (http://www.wisoa.com/site/) itself, is WiMAX Day.An analysis by WiFi Planet (http://www.wi-fiplanet.com/columns/article.php/3634386) sees this as an an insurgency by the wannabe telcos who don’t have 3G licences. They are listed: Unwired Australia (http://www.unwired.com.au/), Network Plus Mauritius (http://www.networkplus.mu/), UK Broadband (http://www.ukbroadband.co.uk/), Irish Broadband (http://www.irishbroadband.ie/), Austar Australia (http://austar.com.au/)/Liberty Group (http://www.lgi.com/), Telecom New Zealand (http://www.telecom.co.nz/), WiMAX Telecom Group (http://www.wimax-telecom.net/), Enertel (http://enertel.nl/) and Woosh Telecom (http://woosh.com/).

According to Robert Liu (http://voipforenterprise.tmcnet.com/feature/next-generation-mobility/articles/2759-wisoa-forms-with-goal-international-wimax-roaming.htm) at TMCNet, its purpose is “to pledge roaming interoperability of next-generation commercial WiMAX networks.”

Faultline’s (http://www.theregister.co.uk/2006/09/29/oz_wimax_roaming_alliance/) Caroline Gabriel says: “It limits its membership to companies that own licenses and operate WiMAX or pre-WiMAX services, contrasting with a previous, defunct attempt at creating a roaming group – the WiMAX Global Roaming Alliance (WGRA) – which was largely based around license exempt WISPs.”

And she adds: “The contrast reflects the shift of the WiMAX movement away from such markets and towards carrier class, licensed band deployments, but the fading of the WGRA does not detract from the truth of its objectives,” quoting CEO Doug Bonestroo: “We realise that the larger telecom providers have a virtual lock on the 3G marketplace, and that the best way to counter that leverage is with a large group of partners in the US and around the world that are committed to standards-based WiMAX roaming.”

The strong Australian influence on this body is reflected in a significant number of Pacific Rim reports, including one from TechWorld’s Sandra Rossi, who was rather more enthusiastic than the known facts appear to justify, saying: “The agreement will act as the backbone of a future global WiMAX network and adheres to the 802.16e standards.”

Presumably, this was meant to read: “eventual” 802.16e standards” – they aren’t defined yet. “Today there are 25,000 roaming agreements worldwide generating just under £10 billion in revenue every year,” this report continues, without in any way drawing a distinction between mobile GSM, 3G, or other phone roaming deals, and the putative WiMAX plans.

One of the founders was noted as remarking: “We are not engineers.” That seems apparent, especailly from reports emphasising the multi-spectrum nature of the body’s remit: “This will cover all WiMAX services and operate acrosss in all WiMAX frequency ranges and will act as the backbone of a future global WiMAX network that adheres to the 802.16e standards,” as Stuart Corner (http://www.itwire.com.au/content/view/5711/127/) of IT Wire reported.

In fact, unless and until WiMAX acquires a universal frequency band worldwide, it’s hard to see what value the technology offers to the consumer.

Its value to the industry grouping is less obscure. As one potential member of the club told NewsWireless, “God bless Intel’s budget! – and long may they pour resources into WiMAX promotional activities!” – a reference to Intel’s recent Amazonian island (http://www.newswireless.net/index.cfm/article/2906) publicity effort.

There’s no record of any Intel contribution to the WiSOA at this point. The chip giant is known to favour a 2.5 GHz (http://www.wisoa.com/site/category/25-ghz/) spectrum band for universal WiMAX, with acceptance of the probability that the world will, probably, pick a series of different frequencies somewhere in the 3GHz band (http://www.wisoa.com/site/category/35ghz/) and up to 4 GHz, and have to compromise somewhat on the “universal” objective at first.

A wise speculator would probably do well to hold all bets on where Intel’s money goes, until such time as the WiSOA group drops its inclusion of WiBro, the Korean standard. But if the club members are sensible, they’ll not let such prudence discourage them; early cheerleader support will doubtless be noted and approved in Santa Clara.

Source: Newswireless.net (http://www.newswireless.net/)

أقرأ باقي الموضوع »

Digital Right Management : The Worst Apples Are Very Rotten And Very Greedy

2006 / مايو / الثلاثاء

Introduction: 

Digital Rights Management , what a term !

Digital Rights Management is the term being used for companies to take control of your computer and drive it in the roads they want you to go !

Event : 

French Parilament is Currently Discussing the DRM scheme : 

If France bans device-specific digital music and video downloads, companies like Apple would presumably need to alter technology to allow content from Web sites to play on competitive devices. This movement toward interoperability could eventually become global, and could loosen Apple's stranglehold on the digital music player market.

Apple iPod, iTunes, and Greed on big scale 

Story :

In an interview last week with the International Herald Tribune, Renaud Donnedieu de Vabres, the French minister of culture, said: "I have absolutely nothing against iTunes, and this is not some payback or protectionism against a foreign company."

He continued, "We are simply defining a fundamental value and principle that I believe will be demanded by Internet users and consumers."

InterOperability : Music Playing Programs Shuold Be Able To Play The Songs

Industry sources speculated that the proposed regulation, if enacted, might force Apple to cease digital music sales in France, or STOP its "digital rights management" scheme of encoding music in such a way that only Apple iPods can play the songs and music it puts in its iTunes website.

If the two houses of the French Parliament stand with the rights of the people of France, then the U.S. Commerce Department will back Apple Computer Inc. in the dispute that will be a good story to follow.

Comment:

Apple Computer Inc. is rotten and very rotten indeeed. It is technology was one day good, not any more, and the reason is simple : GREED

Related resources:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_rights_management

http://www.eff.org/about/

Professor Asad Abidi Develops A Universal Chip for Cell Phones

2006 / مايو / الأثنين

A Universal Chip for Cell Phones

News : A universal radio antenna receives all kinds of signals traveling through the air  some strong, some weak  and all at different frequencies.

In order to convert every analog signal to digital signals, a chip would require an analog to digital converter that burns “several hundred watts” of power, says Prof. Abidi far too much for a portable device.

Therefore, his team used a modified version of SDR that exploits the fact that not all incoming signals need to be converted at once. People are usually interested in only one channel at a time, he says, such as using Wi Fi or talking via a specific frequency on a cellular network.

So Abidi research group incorporated a type of device – previously used only in obscure applications into their circuit that’s able to examine the vast range of radio frequencies, pick out the band of interest, and emphasize it, while de emphasizing the others. In essence, this device – what engineers call a “wideband anti aliasing device” – is able to access the spectrum and focus on a single band, so that only small amounts of analog information need to be converted to a digital signal. By building band choosing into the circuit, the analog to digital conversion takes only tens of milliwatts of power, Professor Abidi says.

Their advance, he notes, starts from discovering the potential for this previously under used wideband anti aliasing device and integrating it with other wide band circuit components to build a complete receiver. “The concept had been around for a while,” he explains, “but no one saw how powerful it would be for software defined radio applications.”

“A chip that sorts out the incoming signal such as Prof. Abidi’s is the type of technology that could help SDR become a reality in cell phones”, says Bruce Fette, chief scientist of communication networks at General Dynamics C4 Systems, a company that builds large software defined radio equipment for military use. And the idea of SDR is becoming more attractive to the mobile device industry, he says, because it provides so much more flexibility in the functions of a single device, ranging from using the same cell phone all over the world, to having a PDA unlock your car door.

Prof. Abidi says there’s still more research to be done before the chip is ready for commercial applications. For one thing, his team has only solved the problem of converting incoming analog to digital signals over such a wide range of frequencies.

Wireless devices must also transmit an outgoing analog signal. A truly universal chip will need to convert outgoing signals from digital to analog form over a similarly wide range of frequencies. Still, his team has solved the most difficult part of the problem by addressing the receiver, Prof. Abidi says. Incoming signals are much more complicated because, with a receiver, “you’re listening to the whole world,” he says, whereas “with transmitters, you’re not contending with unwanted signals.”

Prof. Abidi and his team hope to smooth out the remaining technical issues with their universal chip by late summer. From there, the work of other researchers who design the digital processor and software for SDR will come into play, he says. Professor Abidi estimates that all these pieces will come together for a prototype sometime next year. And, he says, a universal chip could be in handheld wireless gadgets within three to five years.

Source : http://www.technologyreview.com/read_article.aspx?id=16756&ch=infotech
Information: (AA) research group comes with a single chip advanced mobile phone
Note : (AA) UCLA research group = Asad Abidi research group at UCLA More
Information: http://www.icsl.ucla.edu/aagroup/
 
Professor Asad Abidi

Asad A. Abidi received the B.Sc. (with Honors) degree from Imperial College, London, U.K. in 1976, and the M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in electrical engineering from the University of California, Berkeley, in 1978 and 1981, respectively.

He was at Bell Laboratories, Murray Hill, NJ, from 1981 to 1984 as a Member of Technical Staff in the Advanced LSI Development Laboratory. Since 1985, he has been with the Electrical Engineering Department of the University of California, Los Angeles, where he is Professor.

He was a Visiting Faculty Researcher at Hewlett Packard Laboratories in 1989. His research interests are in CMOS RF design, data high speed analog integrated circuit design, conversion, and other techniques of analog signal processing.

Dr. Abidi was the Program Secretary for the International Solid State Circuits Conference from 1984 to 1990, and General Chairman of the Symposium on VLSI Circuits in 1992. He was Secretary of the IEEE Solid state Circuits Council from 1990 to 1991. From 1992 to 1995, he was Editor of the IEEE Journal of Solid State Circuits.

Dr. Abidi received an IEEE Millennium Medal. He has received the 1988 TRW Award for Innovative Teaching and the 1997 IEEE Donald G. Fink Award. He was a corecipient of the Best Paper Award at the 1995 European Solid state Circuits Conference, the Jack Kilby Best Student Paper Award at the 1996 International Solid state Circuits Conference (ISSCC), the Jack Raper Award for Outstanding Technology Directions Paper at the 1997 ISSCC, and the Design Contest Award at the 1998 Design Automation Conference, and received an Honorable Mention at the 2000 Design Automation Conference. 

Office: 53 143, Eng. IV, UCLA

Homepage: http://www.icsl.ucla.edu/aagroup/aaa

Biography: http://www.icsl.ucla.edu/aagroup/cv.html

Students:
Abbas Amirichimeh (Ph.D. Student)
Abbas Amirichimeh received his B.Sc. (with Honors) in Electrical Engineering with emphasis on Microelectronics from Iran University of Science and Technology, Tehran, Iran, and ranked 4th in the class of 1988. During his bachelors program, he worked on several projects including a “Low Frequency Digitized Sweep Generator”. Abbas was with the Air Force for 5 years working on a G&C system before he joined Center for Advanced Electron Devices and Systems (CAEDS), University of Texas at Arlington in 1994 where he worked as a research assistant on 0.5 micron GaAs MESFETs and passive components at the device level and designed several monolithic wideband amplifiers. He received his Masters degree in GaAs MMIC circuits and technology with G.P.A 4.00 in 1995. Abbas was with Intel High Performance Architecture Group (IAG) in Portland, Oregon, from 1996 to 2000 working as an integral member of High-Speed Circuit Group (Fireball) in Pentium 4 development team (Willamette) where he developed and designed the Scheduler Scoreboard Unit (SSU) Fireball critical circuitries running at 2X the frequency of the rest of the chip, custom circuits and layouts running at 3GHz+ on Intel’s 0.18 micron process. Abbas joined Broadcom Networking Business Unit, Irvine, California, in 2000 and has been designing 10Gb/S SERDES chips since then. He joined UCLA Integrated Circuits and Systems Lab (ICSL) in fall 2002 where he is working toward his Ph.D. degree in the field of Analog Circuit Design. His research interests are RF, Analog and Mixed-Mode Circuits.
Abbas has been a member of IEEE since 1987 and has published a paper in “2000 Intel Design and Technology Conference (IDTC)” on “High frequency on-die interconnect modeling”, and a paper in  “1996 International Conference on GaAs Manufacturing Technology,” on “Electrostatic discharge protection for GaAs devices and MMIC circuits”.
 
 

Rahim Bagheri (Ph.D. Student)


Rahim Bagheri received the B.Sc. (Ranked First) in EE and M.S. in BioElectric both from Sharif University of Technology,Tehran,Iran in 1997 and 1999 respectively. He joined UCLA in 1999, studying toward his Ph.D. and was a Graduate Student Researcher in MOSFET Research Lab (UCLA,1999-2000) working on deep submicron CMOS devices. He was at Valence Semiconductor, Irvine, as a senior design member of wireless group(2000-2001). His current research is the design of High Efficiency Linear RF Transmitters in ICSL, UCLA.
Rahim is the recipient of Gold Medal in national physics olympiad (IRAN) and Honorable Mention Diploma in the XXIV International Physics Olympiad,Virginia, USA. 
Homepage: www.icsl.ucla.edu/~rahim
 
 

Rodney Chandler (M.S. Student)
Rodney Chandler received the B.E. (Electrical and Electronic) from the University of Queensland, Australia in 1998. From 2001-2003, Rodney worked for Cisco Systems Wireless Networking Business Unit (formerly Radiata) in Sydney, Australia, designing Analog to Digital Converters (ADC) and analog baseband filters. This work resulted in two patents related to design of ADCs. He joined the Integrated Circuits and Systems Lab (ICSL) at UCLA in Fall 2003, and is currently studying for the M.Sc. degree. His research interests are high speed Analog-to-Digital converters, wireless transceivers for high speed networks, and analog filters. Rodney plans to continue to the Ph.D. degree, after completing the M.Sc.

Jae-Hong Chang (Visiting Scholar)
Jae-Hong Chang was born in Republic of Korea. He received the B.Sc. degree in Electronic engineering at Kyungpook national university, Daegue, Korea, in 1998 and the M.S. degree in EECS at Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST), Daejeon, Korea in 2000, respectively. He is currently working toward the Ph.D. degree in EECS at KAIST. He was at RF CMOS TEAM in ETRI, Daejeon, as a part time engineer (2000-2002). His current research interests include the RF CMOS IC design, passive and active device modeling and RF MEMS. He received the Silver Prize in 9th 2003 Samsung Humantec Thesis Award.

Saeed Chehrazi (Ph.D. Student)


Saeed Cheharzi received his B.Sc. from Sharif University of Technology, Tehran, Iran in 2001 and his M.S. from University of California, Los Angeles in 2004. His research interests are RF, Analog and Mixed Mode Circuit Design.
Saeed was the Software Committee chair of the International Millennium Seminar on Electrical Engineering (IMSEE) held at Sharif Univ. of Tech. on March 1-3, 2000. He received the UCLA Graduate Division Fellowship for Fall 2001.

Mohammad Esmaeil Heidari (Ph.D. Student)


Mohammad Esmaeil Heidari received his B.Sc. degree in electrical engineering in 1995 and MS degree in electrical engineering in 1997 both from Sharif University of Technology, Tehran, Iran. From 1997 to 2000, he was with Emad Semiconductor Co., designing CMOS analog IC for high precision data converters, analog filters and power amplifiers. He joined Valence Co. in 2000 and was involved in the design of analog sections of Codec for telephony applications.  He is currently a Ph.D. candidate at Integrated Circuits and Systems Lab (ICSL), University of California, Los Angeles. His research interests are in the area of low power CMOS RF transceivers, low phase noise Phase Locked Loops and Delta-Sigma data converters. 

Aly Ismail (Ph.D. Student)


Aly Ismail received his B.Sc. and M.S.degrees both in electrical engineering from Cairo University, Giza, Egypt, in 1998 and 2000 respectively. Since September 2000, he has been with the University of California, Los Angeles as a Graduate Student Researcher. In January 2002, he joined Conexant Systems where he was working on the design of BICMOS RF circuits for cellular systems.
He is currently working toward his Ph.D. degree in integrated circuits and systems, his research is involved in the design of Ultra Wide-Band (UWB) receivers in CMOS technology. 

Minjae Lee (Ph.D. Student)


Minjae Lee received his B.Sc. and M.S. degrees both in electrical engineering from Seoul National University, Seoul, Korea in 1998 and 2000 respectively.
He was a consultant with GCT semiconductor, Inc., and Silicon Image Inc., designing analog circuits for wireless communication and digital signal processing blocks for Gigabit Ethernet. He joined Silicon Image Inc., in 2001, developing Serial ATA product. Since 2003,  he has been working toward the Ph.D. degree in the field of analog and mixed mode circuit design at ICSL, UCLA.

Ahmad Mirzaei (Ph.D. Student)


Ahmad Mirzaei was born in Tabriz, Iran, in 1978. He received the B.Sc. and M.S. degrees (with honors) both in Electrical Engineering from Sharif University of Technology, Tehran, Iran in 2000 and 2002 respectively. He was working in Novin Rayaneh and Emad Company in designing of high speed data-converters and  RF frequency synthesizers. He is currently studying toward his PhD. in Electrical Engineering at University of California at Los Angeles. His main research interests include high speed analog integrated circuit design, high speed low-voltage ADCs, RF integrated circuit design and High-Frequency Gm-C Filters. He was the winner of Silver Medal in National Mathematical Olympiad in 1996, and was the first rank in Student Olympiad in Electronics in Iran in 2002. He was also the first rank in National University Entrance exam in Iran in 2000.

Sohrab Samadian (Ph.D. Student)


Sohrab Samadian received his B.Sc. in electrical engineeing from Sharif University of Technology, Tehran, Iran in 1998 and his M.Sc. from UCLA in 2002 where he’s pursuing his PhD degree. His research interests are RF and analog circuit design and low power frequency demodulators. He worked on a direct conversion receiver for Bluetooth and especially on a low power demodulator for his Masters. Sohrab is currently with Sequoia Communications, San Diego working on 3G transceivers. Sohrab is the recepient of the design contest award at International Symposium on Low Power Electronics and Design, 2002 and the design contest award of the 16th International conference on VLSI Design, India, 2003 for his work on low power GFSK demodulator. He also received APSIH’s award of excellence in engineering education in April 2003.
Zheming Li (Ph.D. Student)
Shervin Moloudi (Ph.D. Student)

Alumni: Hooman Darabi (Ph.D., 1999)
Hooman Darabi was born in Tehran, Iran in 1972. He received the B.Sc. and M.S. degrees in Electrical Engineering from Sharif University of Technology, Tehran, Iran in 1994 and 1996 respectively. He received the Ph.D. degree from the University of California, Los Angeles in 1999. He is currently a principle scientist in Broadcom Corporation, El Segundo, CA. His interests include analog and RF IC design for wireless communications. 

Emad Hegazi (Ph.D., 2002)


Emad Hegazi received his M.S. from Ain Shams University, Cairo, Egypt, in 1998 and his Ph.D. from University of California, Los Angeles in 2002. He joined UCLA Integrated Circuits and Systems Lab. in 1998. His Ph.D. research was focused on Fractional-N Frequency Synthesizer Design. His research interests are Low Phase noise VCO design,  Nonlinear Circuits, Frequency Synthesizer design and optimization methods. He is currently an Assistant Professor at Ain Shams University, Egypt.
Emad is the recipient of the IEEE Solid-State Circuits Society Pre-doctoral Fellowship award (2001-2002) and ADI Outstanding Student Designer Award from Analog Devices Inc., 2000. He has received the UCLA Graduate Division Fellowship for 1999 and the Outstanding Doctor of Philosophy in Electrical Engineering Award from UCLA.
Homepage: http://www.icsl.ucla.edu/~emad

Ali Karimi (Engineer Degree, 2001)


Ali Karimi was born in Tehran, Iran in March 1974. He received the B.Sc. and M.S. degrees (highest honors) in electrical engineering from Sharif University of Technology, Tehran, Iran, in 1995 and 1997, respectively. He received the Engineer Degree from the University of California, Los Angeles in March 2001 focusing on researches about 2.4GHz WLAN and 2.1GHz WCDMA receivers. His area of interests include analog IC’s for communication either wireless or optical applications.
Homepage: http://www.icsl.ucla.edu/~karimi

Daniel Q. Sun (Ph.D., 2004)

Daniel Qicheng Sun received B.E. in 1989 from Tsinghua University, Beijing, China, and M.Eng. in 1996 from National University of Singapore, Singapore. He is now pursuing the Ph.D. degree in eletrical engineering at University of California, Los Angeles. In 1989-1993, he was with the National Lab on Digital Microwave Communications at Tsinghua University, Beijing, China. In 1996, he joined Data Storage Insitute, Singapore, where he was engaged in the circuits design of the first MDFE read channel. Since 1997, he has been a Graduate Student Researcher at UCLA. His research interests include high-speed mixed-signal IC design, HDD read channels, signal processing and communications. 

Andrea Xotta (Visiting Scholar, 2002)
Andrea Xotta received his “Laurea” degree (summa cum laude) in electrical engineering from University of Padova, Padova, Italy in 1999, where he is currently a Ph.D. Student. His Ph.D. research activity is focused on development of analog turbo decoder for Hard Disk (HD) applications. His research interests include continuous-time filters, sampled-data analog filters and analog turbo decoders. 
Asad Abidi Group Members

Kashif Asad Ahmed
Farbod Behbahani (Ph.D. )
Anthony Brewster
Jing Cao
Patrick Chan
Glenn Chang
James Yung Chang
Jeffrey Chang
Paul Jinyung Chang
Michael Choi (Ph.D.)
William Colleran
Siavash Fallahi
Ramon Gomez
Koichi Hoshino
Karapet Khanoyan
Jikun Kim
Kwang-Young Kim
Haruo Kobayashi
Alexandre Rudolf Karl
Jaesup Lee
John Cumming Leete
Yoan-Tsang Liaw
Danny Daysang Loh
David John Loh
Patrick Pai
Hui Pan (Ph.D.)
Jacob Jude Rael
Ahmadreza Rofougaran (Ph.D.)
Maryam Rofougaran
Thomas Spargo
Wade Jay Stone
Shahrzad Tadjpour (Ph.D.)
Wee-Guan Tan
Chun Sei Tsai
Tyson Tuttle
Myles H. Wakayama
Yun-Ti Wang
Chun-Kai Wei
Joanne Joh-Mei Wu

Information as publishde by Prof. Asad Abidi group in 2005

The Fractal Geometry of Nature

2006 / أبريل / الأثنين

Book Review:

The Fractal Geometry of Nature
by Benoit B. Mandelbrot



The Fractal Geometry of Nature

The Fractal Geometry of Nature is a mathematics text. But buried in the deltas and lambdas and integrals, shines the main Mandelbrot’s point: that somewhere in mathematics, While most of it is about the mathematics behind fractals (wouldn’t be so much a book of mathematics if it wasn’t), it does adress the philosophical aspects. It says clearly that there is an explanation for nature.

So much into nature, It is not a coincidence that fractal math is so good at generating images of cliffs and shorelines and capillary beds.

There is a difference between quoting a book because it is famous, and actually reading it, as in having enlightenment for our own sake! In this book, Mandelbrot does explain most of the concepts practically “ab initio”, from the very scratch, including etymology and history related to the fractal mathematics.

While the book does have all the needed graphics to grasp the concepts, it does not do justice to the beauty of fractals at all, especially considering the advances in printing technologies since the book was first published.

“A rarity: a picture book of sophisticated contemporary research ideas in mathematics.”–Douglas Hofstadter, author of Godel, Escher, Bach

“Mandelbrot presents unique and infinitely deep look at nature. The emerging theory of interaction shows that his notion of fractal turned to be more fruitful than anyone could guess. Savov’s theory of interaction rigorously proves that nature is one self-reproducing and therefore self-similar fractal like interaction. Its oscillating sources remain always finite and synchronize to eject smaller similar ones.” –Patrick Gorn

For more information on Fractals Theory click here : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fractal

For more information on “Eugene Savov’s Theory of Interaction” – The Final Theory !!! ;) – click Here : http://www.thefinaltheory.com/pages/8/index.htm

Dubai International Ports transfers its operations of American ports to a “U.S. entity”

2006 / أبريل / الخميس

WASHINGTON (CNN) — United Arab Emirates-owned DP World said Thursday it would transfer its operations of American ports to a "U.S. entity" after congressional leaders reportedly told President Bush that the firm's takeover deal was essentially dead on Capitol Hill.

دبي للسيليكون توقع مذكرة تعاون علمي وتقني مع وزارة التعليم الأردنية

2006 / مارس / الأحد

 

الشيخ أحمد بن سعيد آل مكتوم:هدفنا إثراء المنطقة العربية بتقنيات الشرائح الالكترونية

Dubai Silicon Oasis

 

 

قام الشيخ أحمد بن سعيد آل مكتوم رئيس واحة دبي للسيليكون ـــ نيابة عن حكومة دبي ود. خالد طوقان وزير التعليم العالي والبحث العلمي بالمملكة الأردنية الهاشمية بتوقيع مذكرة تفاهم للتعاون العلمي والتقني المشترك وتشجيع البحث العلمي في مجال تصميم وتصنيع الشرائح الالكترونية وتبادل الخبرات في مجالات التقنية الحديثة وأشباه الموصلات

 

وعقب توقيع المذكرة التي حضرها نائب رئيس واحة السيليكون د. محمد الزرعوني، صرح الشيخ أحمد قائلاً :تهدف مذكرة التفاهم مع وزارة التعليم العالي والبحث العلمي الأردنية لإحداث جسر تواصل وتعاون في مجالات التقنية مع الأشقاء العرب، وتطوير هذه الصناعة بما يتناسب مع مستجدات العصر

 

.وأكد بأن واحة دبي للسيليكون قد آلت على نفسها تقديم الدعم المناسب والبرامج الدراسية في مجال تصميم الشرائح الالكترونية.وقال ان التعاون التقني والعلمي بين واحة دبي للسيليكون ووزارة التعليم العالي الأردنية سوف يوفر الدراسات والبرامج المتخصصة لتخريج كوادر فنية متخصصة في أشباه المواصلات والدوائر الإلكترونية التي تشكل أهم عناصر صناعة التكنولوجيا.وأضاف أن واحة دبي للسيليكون تسعى لنشر الوعي التقني في المنطقة وتزويد العديد من الجامعات العربية بالبرامج الدراسية المتخصصة

 

ومن جهته قال الوزير الأردني إننا فخورون باختيار دبي ممثلة بواحة دبي للسيليكون لجامعاتنا ومؤسساتنا التعليمية العليا للحصول على البرامج التعليمية المتقدمة ضمن الجامعات العربية المستهدفة ببرامج تطوير تقنيات تصميم وصناعة الشرائح الإلكترونية.وأضاف إن هذه الخطوة الكبيرة من المسؤولين في دبي تعكس روح التعاون المشترك بين البلدين الشقيقين وتدل على حرص واهتمام المسؤولين في دولة الإمارات العربية المتحدة وخاصة دبي بدعم الشباب العربي في المجالات التقنية لتخريج خبراء في هذا المجال في المستقبل

 

وأكد د. طوقان على استعداد المؤسسات الأكاديمية بالأردن للتجاوب مع هذه المبادرة الشجاعة لتأهيل الكوادر البشرية الفنية لقيادة العمل في مجال صناعة التكنولوجيا.وأضاف أن المؤسسات الأكاديمية الأردنية تفتح ذراعيها واسعتين استعداداً لإحداث التغيير المناسب والإضافة الاستراتيجية في المناهج الجامعية بما يخدم متطلبات شركات التقنية الحديثة العاملة في الإمارات والعالم العربي وواحة دبي للسيليكون بشكل خاص

 

وأكد على توفر الطاقات البشرية بالأردن لسد حاجات الشركات العاملة في مجالات التكنولوجيا الحديثة مؤمنا على البدء في تنفيذ الخطوة مباشرة. وأكد طوقان ضرورة إعطاء صناعة الشرائح الالكترونية مزيداً من الاهتمام وذلك لتخريج كوادر فنية عربية قادرة على التواصل مع أحدث التقنية في هذا المجال.وقال إن تزويد جامعاتنا في الأردن بأحدث البرامج الدراسية في مجال الشرائح الإلكترونية يمثل خطوة هامة وغير مسبوقة من المؤكد أن تحدث طفرة في نوعية الكفاءات المؤهلة ومخرجات التعليم في الكليات الهندسية بشكل عام.وقال إن الأردن تعد من أولى الدول العربية التي تتوفر بها أكثر من ثمانية وعشرين جامعة تضم أكثر من مئة وعشرين ألف طالب غالبيتهم في كليات التقنية وصناعات الكمبيوتر

 

وأضاف أننا ممتنون لهذا العطاء والذي سوف تنعكس ثماره خلال السنوات القليلة المقبلة.ومن جانبه أوضح د. محمد الزرعوني بأن خطوة التوقيع اتفاقية التعاون جاءت نتيجةً لزيارة وفد واحة دبي للسيليكون للمملكة الأردنية في نوفمبر من العام الماضي والتي تم فيها بحث سبل التعاون المشترك.وأضاف لقد حصلت واحة دبي للسيليكون على أحدث البرامج والحلول الدراسية من شركة سينوبس الأميركية والتي تم تزويد بعض الجامعات الإماراتية بها خلال الشهور الماضية.وتسعى الواحة لتزويد عدد من الجامعات العربية بهذه البرامج بغية تخريج كوادر بشرية وفنية تكون قادرة على سد العجز في هذا القطاع الصناعي الحيوي خاصة في ظل اهتمام العديد من الشركات العالمية بالعمل في واحة السيليكون