Friday, March 25, 2011

The rear Stone tools ‘demand new American story’


The long-held theory of how humans first populated the Americas may have been well and truly broken.
Archaeologists have unearthed thousands of stone tools that predate the technology widely assumed to have been carried by the first settlers. The discoveries in Texas are seen as compelling evidence that the so-called Clovis culture does not represent America’s original immigrants. Details of the 15,500-year-old finds are reported in Science magazine. A number of digs across the Americas in recent decades had already hinted that the “Clovis first” model was in serious trouble. But the huge collection of well-dated tools excavated from a creek bed 60km (40 miles) northwest of Austin mean the theory is now dead, argue the Science authors. “This is almost like a baseball bat to the side of the head of the archaeological community to wake up and say, ‘hey, there are pre-Clovis people here, that we have to stop quibbling and we need to develop a new model for peopling of the Americas’,” Michael Waters, a Texas A&M University anthropologist, told reporters. For 80 years, it has been argued that the Clovis culture was the first to sweep into the New World. These people were defined by their highly efficient stone-tool technology. Their arrow heads and spear points were formidable hunting weapons and were used to bring down the massive beasts of the Ice Age, such as mammoth, mastodon and bison.
Clovis first? The hunter gatherers associated with this technology were thought to have crossed from Siberia into Alaska via a land bridge that became exposed when sea levels dropped. Evidence indicates this occurred as far back as about 13,500 years. But an increasing number of archaeologists have argued there was likely to have been an earlier occupation based on the stone tools that began turning up at dig sites with claimed dates of more than 15,000 years. Dr Waters and colleagues say this position is now undeniable in the light of the new artefacts to emerge from the Debra L Friedkin excavation.
These objects comprise 15,528 items in total – a variety of chert blades, bladelets, chisels, and abundant flakes produced when making or repairing stone tools. The collection was found directly below sediment containing classic Clovis implements. The dating – which relied on a technique known as optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) that can tell how long minerals have been buried – is robust, says the team. And, they add, the observed sequence is also reliable; the sediments have not been mixed up after the tools were dropped. “The sediments were very rigid in the fact that they were clay, which worked to our advantage,” explained Lee Nordt from Baylor University. “If you go to many other sites, they are loamy or sandy in texture, and they are mixed very rapidly by burrowing from animals or maybe from plant roots, etc.”
Getting around
The newly discovered tools are small, and the researchers propose that they were designed for a mobile toolkit – something that could be easily packed up and moved to a new location. Although clearly different from Clovis tools, they share some similarities and the researchers suggest Clovis technology may even have been derived from the capabilities displayed in the earlier objects.
“The discovery provides ample time for Clovis to develop. People could experiment with stone and invent the weapons and tools that would potentially become recognizable as Clovis. In other words, [these tools represent] the type of assemblage from which Clovis could emerge.”
But anthropologist Tom Dillehay, who was not involved with the latest study, commented: “The ‘Clovis first’ paradigm died years ago. There are many other accepted pre-Clovis candidates throughout the Americas now.”
Professor Dillehay, from Vanderbilt University in Tennessee, told BBC News: “If you look at the prose of this paper, it bothers me a little bit because it’s as if they are reconstituting the Clovis-Pre-Clovis debate and saying, ‘Here’s the site that kills it’.”
He commended the researchers on their well-presented data and “tight discussion”. But he said that the OSL technique was less reliable than radiocarbon dating, which has been applied to other early American sites.
And assigning the artefacts to Clovis and pre-Clovis technologies was not straightforward because the site lacked the projectile points required to reliably distinguish between the two. Clovis projectile points are unmistakable. In addition, said the Vanderbilt anthropology professor, the tools come from a floodplain deposit that is just 6-7cm thick. This, he said, was “potentially problematic” because of the possibility that artifacts were transported around by water.
Professor Gary Haynes, from the University of Nevada in Reno, US, praised the “good work” by the research team. But he said it was plausible that natural processes could have caused some stone tools to migrate downwards in the clay – giving the impression of a pre-Clovis layer.

Way Google fined over Street View privacy breach?


Google received its first ever fine for improperly gathering and storing data for its Street View application on Monday when it was penalized by France's privacy watchdog. The euro100,000 ($141,300) penalty the largest ever by French body CNIL sanctions Google for collecting personal data from Wi-Fi networks including e-mails, web browsing histories and online banking details from 2007 to 2010 through its roaming camera-mounted cars and bicycles.

The fine is the first against Google over the data-gathering, which more than 30 countries have complained about. At least two other European countries are considering fines, while some others have ruled against penalizing Google. Google Inc. has apologized and says it will delete the data.
"As we have said before, we are profoundly sorry for having mistakenly collected payload data from unencrypted Wi-Fi networks," Google's Global Privacy Counsel Peter Fleischer said in an e-mailed statement. "As soon as we realized what had happened, we stopped collecting all Wi-Fi data from our Street View cars and immediately informed the authorities." Google has two months to appeal the fine. It hasn't yet decided whether it will, a company spokesman said.

How to Charge Mobile Phone by lung movements


Indian technology student Kancharla Sampath Reddy poses with his invention - a cellular telephone charger activated by lung movements - strapped to his chest in Hyderabad. Reddy, studying Electrical and Electronics Engineering at Arjun College of Technologies invented the device which is triggered by the expansion and contraction of the body when breathing; this connected to a gearbox rotates a turbine which gives an electrical energy output of 3-5 volts. The human breath charger is useful when a main power supply is not available. The market value of the charger is approximately around Indian Rupees 150 (USD 2.32).

PlayBook will come to contest crowded tablet market


 

It's official: with the launch of Research In Motion's PlayBook tablet now just a month away, the BlackBerry maker's battle against Apple and Google is at the cusp of a fierce new phase. RIM said on Tuesday its tablet will finally hit store shelves April 19, seven months after the device was announced. The North American rollout will come almost a month after Apple's iPad 2 goes on sale outside of the United States, where it sold up to 1 million units in its first weekend alone.
On Tuesday, Apple confirmed it would start selling the iPad 2 in more 25 countries from Friday. [ID:nN22147683] That eased concerns that the crisis in Japan might curtail the supply of crucial components for electronic devices. Shares in both Apple and RIM closed higher. As it enters the tablet market, RIM has little room for error and a small window to impress. It was once undisputed king of mobile communications, but slicker Google Android and Apple products have become must-haves for young consumers while also threatening RIM's corporate bastion.
"The big question is the Playbook's appeal to those not already part of the BlackBerry world," said CCS Insight's Geoff Blaber. While investors await the consumer's verdict, the Canadian company has one more set of quarterly results to unveil without the PlayBook. The report, due Thursday, is likely to show RIM's global growth story on track. As with recent quarters, the catalysts are sure to be higher overseas sales of cheaper handsets and U.S. discounts. Turmoil at Nokia, the leader in the low-end of the market, probably didn't hurt matters either.
The PlayBook will likely contribute only marginally to sales and earnings this year. Even so, it represents a nascent opportunity for RIM in a booming tablet marketplace.
RIM is hoping the PlayBook's natural affinity with its corporate-friendly smartphones gives sales an early boost and offsets a move by more companies to allow workers to use their own non-BlackBerry smartphones to access work-related email and data. Unlike the almost 10-inch iPad, the 7-inch PlayBook boasts support for Flash, but the RIM tablet will not ship with its own cellular connection until mid-year.
The first version of the PlayBook pairs with a BlackBerry smartphone for features such as corporate email and to any smartphone for connectivity when not near a WiFi connection.



Bangladeshi NEWS: Spectrum fees need a rethink: GSMA




Bangladesh's telecom regulator should rethink its expectations of revenue generation otherwise the proposed licence and spectrum fees and sector and non-sector taxes could drive mobile operators out of the market, said London-based GSM Association. According to the draft licence renewal guidelines of Bangladesh Telecommunication Regulatory Commission (BTRC), Grameenphone, the market leader, would have to pay Tk 5,504 crore, Banglalink Tk 2,994 crore, Robi Tk 3,000 crore and Citycell Tk 620 crore for 2G license renewal, which will expire in November this year.
The four operators -- who together control over 93 percent of the country's 7-crore subscriber’s base -- said the draft guidelines fail to look beyond revenue generation to economic efficiency. In a comment on the draft regulatory and licensing guidelines, GSM Association (GSMA) said Bangladesh's mobile operators could end up paying over Tk 12,118 crore for GSM and CDMA licenses, plus non-sector-specific taxes and duties.
"The proposed model for spectrum fees and charges punishes mobile operators for extensive use of their assigned spectrum. This level of tax may bring unintended consequences and may not be sustainable for mobile operators and their investors." Headquartered in London, the GSMA represents the interests of the worldwide mobile communications industry. Spanning 219 countries, it unites nearly 800 of the world's mobile operators, as well as more than 200 companies in the broader mobile ecosystem, including handset makers, software companies, equipment providers, internet companies, and media and entertainment organizations.
The association said the BTRC should switch from a short-term perspective of revenue maximization to a medium-long term perspective of making sure the mobile bands are used' as efficiently as possible.
The observations came as the four operators anxiously wait for the government's next move on the issue.
Telecommunication Minister Rajiuddin Ahmed Raju, on several occasions, said there would be a discussion with all stakeholders including operators before finalizing the guidelines. But no such move has been taken yet.
The GSM association urged the government to limit license fees to recovery of the administrative costs of the licensing process and associated regulatory costs, including spectrum management. Where there is excess demand for spectrum, there should be an auction or assignment in line with the marginal forward-looking opportunity cost of the spectrum, it said.
It said the "utilization factor" seriously risks forcing operators to cut back on their use of spectrum, deploy fewer base stations, and consider handing some of their spectrum back to the regulator to cut fees and charges. Marginal customers and Bangladesh's mobile penetration will suffer.
Mobile operators say the BTRC license renewal proposals pose a direct threat to the success story of telecom sector. If implemented in their current form, they would do grave damage to both the mobile phone and financial sectors, and send wrong signals to potential investors into other sectors in Bangladesh, they say.
Among other problems, operators say, the proposed fees are too high, are not rational or proportional and significantly exceed the true market value of the spectrum. Moreover, Bangladesh's financial markets, both stock and bond markets, are not strong enough to finance them.
The operators say the draft renewal guidelines -- which also drew flak from World Bank -- consist of legal and financial uncertainties, non-license elements and non-telecom issues, and lack stability, transparency and best practices.
Analysts say if mobile operators are forced to pay such high fees for 2G license renewal then the government's own Digital Bangladesh vision will be in jeopardy, as it will leave the telcos with little to introduce 3G technology in the country.
Chris Doyle, a telecom expert, said the BTRC's approach appears consistent with that of many administrators who focus on technical parameters and revenue generation.
Doyle, an associate of Warwick Business School and Department of Economics, Warwick University, said he found little information in the draft regulations to indicate that spectrum charges are set to reflect relative scarcity, although operators with more spectrum will clearly pay more.
"Moreover, it is far from clear what might happen to the spectrum fees obtained. There is also no impact assessment that considers alternative scenarios, such as whether the country would be better off setting lower or higher spectrum charges," he told PolicyTracker, a telecom publication.
Doyle said given that mobile telephony is the only form of telecoms access for most of the population, lower annual spectrum charges would help deliver services at lower prices and directly benefit consumers.
He said the government must choose the best estimate. "If it opts for licence renewal fees at the top end, it may end up setting the wrong price for the spectrum, jeopardising investment and harming digital productivity and the public interest."
Telecom companies have invested Tk 30,000 crore between 1997 and 2009, and now contribute 10 percent to the national budget.
Six mobile operators cover more than 90 percent of the territory and 99 percent of population in the country -- a scenario the policymakers could not think of over a decade ago when Bangladesh prepared its first telecom policy.
Last year, the sector made up over 60 percent of the total foreign direct investments flown into Bangladesh. 

Google says China disrupting e-mail service


Google has blamed the Chinese government for problems accessing its e-mail service in the country.  Internet users have complained that the authorities have stepped up disruption of its Gmail service in recent weeks.  Google said it had found no technical issues, and blamed "a government blockage carefully designed to look like the problem is with Gmail".  Users say the interference coincided with an internet campaign calling for protests like those in the Middle East, reports BBC.  Last year, Google said it suffered cyber-attacks from China-based organizations intent on hacking into the Gmail accounts of Chinese rights activists.  The incident caused tensions between China and the United States, and led to Google reducing its presence in the Chinese market.  Beijing has always denied any state involvement in the cyber-attacks, and has in the past called such accusations "groundless".  But problems resurfaced this month with Google writing in its official blog about hackers exploiting a vulnerability in Internet Explorer to attack some Gmail users.  "We've noticed some highly targeted and apparently politically motivated attacks against our users. We believe activists may have been a specific target," it wrote.

How to set up WAP BanglaLink Mobile network?


Hi, if you need set up or configure wap for your handset, this article will most helpful for you , If you like to use some value added Service such as internet, 1st you need configure your handset, to do this here is some essential tips ?

  • Via SMS Send a text message to 3343:
Write <Package Name> and SMS it to 3343.
  • Call at 121 Hotline – You can call to 121 Hotline & request Customer Manager for your settings.
  • Manual Configuration – You can configure your Handset Call to 121 Hotline & request to Customer Manager for settings.

 

Configuration for WAP:


For WAP Configuration the following information must be provided in a EDGE or GPRS enable Handsets:
Account Name: BL WAP
Access Point Name (APN): blwap
Authentication Type: Normal
IP Address/Gateway/Proxy: 010.010.055.034
Port/ Proxy Port: 8799
Connection type: GPRS/ Packet Data
Homepage: http://wap.google.com