Apple cuts iPhone price

viernes, 12 de junio de 2009



Apple unveils a faster iPhone and slashes prices on the original 3G to $99.

Carmen Roberts reports.

Big laser, bigger implications



Scientists hope the home of the world's largest laser will change the way the world produces energy.

EA "changing the game" with FIFA 10



Jun 8 - The games manufacturer Electronic Arts says consumer feedback from online gamers has helped it deliver a new level of authenticity with its new soccer game.

Matt Cowan reports.

Microsoft's campus of dreams



Jun 3 - A 'whereabouts' clock, 'sensecam' and Second Light are just a few of the futuristic visions revealed at Microsoft's flagship European research laboratory in Cambridge.

Matt Cowan reports.

Plane's sensors under scrutiny




Jun 12 - An aviation expert takes a closer look at speed sensors, known as pitot tubes, which have become central in the investigation of the Air France 330 crash that killed 228 people.

Wind power makes strides in China





Jun 12 - China's wind power generation has doubled in the last year as the country looks for greener ways to wean itself off cheap, but dirty, coal.


Kitty Bu reports.

Sony's new handheld game device

jueves, 4 de junio de 2009




Sony has unveiled its new portable gaming device, the PSP Go.

Video and photos of the PSP Go were leaked online before the official announcement, revealing a lighter, slimmer console.

Speaking after the launch at the E3 gaming conference in Los Angeles, Sony Computer Entertainment chief, Kazuo Hirai, told the BBC's Daniel Emery that the media giant had received "a good buzz" from the event and did not think the leaks had done any harm.

Real-life relationships with Xbox





Lionhead Studios' Peter Molyneux has shown off a game character that recognises and responds to a player's mood.

The human interaction system is possible with Natal, a system being developed for the Xbox 360.

It monitors and reacts precisely to the player's movements and the way they talk.

Microsoft demonstrated Natal at the start of the E3 gaming conference in Los Angeles.

Virtual pet at tech show




A computer generated animal and a skateboard game with players riding real boards are among the big hits at the E3 gaming show in LA.


The exhibition's organisers say 40,000 people are attending the event.

Ellie Gibson has toured the stands.

Common GPS could help better track airline flights

Get lost in the woods and a cell phone in your pocket can help camping buddies find you. Drive into a ditch and GPS in your car lets emergency crews pinpoint the crash site. But when a transcontinental flight is above the middle of the ocean, no one on the ground can see exactly where it is — in the air, or worse, in the water.

The disappearance of Air France Flight 477 and its 228 passengers over the Atlantic Ocean this week has critics of radar-based air traffic control calling on the U.S. and other countries to hasten the move to GPS-based networks that promise to precisely track all planes. Current radars are obsolete more than 200 miles from land.

"The technology's there — we've had this stuff for 15 years and little's happened," said Michael Boyd, a Colorado-based airline analyst. "My BlackBerry can be used to track me, so why can't we do it with planes?"

U.S. officials have discussed setting up such a network since the 1990s and the technology is being tested in parts of the country, including Alaska and off the Gulf Coast. A few carriers, like Southwest, already use GPS to help planes make quicker landings that burn less fuel.

But full implementation, estimated at a cost of $35 billion, has languished amid funding delays and disputes over technical complexities. Although Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood has said the project will be among the Federal Aviation Administration's top priorities in the Obama administration, the existing radar system is likely to remain for at least another decade.

"It's a crude system they're using now," said Robert Poole, an aviation expert with the free market-oriented Reason Foundation. "For 100 dollars, you can run down and buy a GPS system, put it in your car and know exactly where you are. But planes don't have it."

Some European and Asian countries are moving more quickly toward establishing pricey satellite systems. But many other countries lag behind, including Brazil, where the ill-fated Air France took off Sunday.

Current air traffic systems do not allow controllers to see a transoceanic plane on radar until it is within about 200 miles of land. Instead, controllers often estimate a plane's location based on flight plans and departure times. Such imprecision leaves planes vulnerable in emergencies, such as water landings, Boyd said.

"If a plane ditches and there are survivors, you may not be able to get to it fast enough," he said. "And if an airplane was hijacked in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean, we wouldn't know until it pops up somewhere else."

A reported electrical system failure aboard Flight 477 likely would have knocked out any GPS devices even if the flight had been equipped with that technology. But under a satellite system, rescuers would have known the aircraft's precise location when the failure occurred, presumably making the search area much smaller and helping authorities locate the wreckage faster. That timeliness that can also be crucial in determining a cause of a crash.

Radar quality varies from country to country. For example, many U.S. control centers at least enable planes to send more frequent updates about their location, even when beyond radar's reach.

But over oceans, including vast blind spots in the middle of the Atlantic on U.S.-European routes, pilots usually have to resort to calling controllers with estimated positions every hour or so. The call-ins can frustrate pilots, especially in and around South America, where radio and radar coverage can be patchy, said retired airline pilot Vaughn Cordle, who lives in the Washington area.

"There's nothing worse than going through the painful exercise of trying to talk to someone and letting them know where you are," Cordle said. "The South American region can be more dangerous because pilots are sometimes on their own."

A plane failing to check in after more than two or three hours can be an air traffic controller's worst fear, said New York-based controller Pat McDonough.

"It's very disturbing to the controller to lose an aircraft — you feel responsible," he said. "I sympathize with those guys watching the Air France flight."

GPS proponents say satellite-based air traffic systems provide another benefit that could have directly affected Flight 477, which disappeared into a band of towering thunderstorms. Such systems would collect information from around the globe and allow for real-time weather maps to appear on cockpit displays, giving pilots a tool to better determine how to navigate oncoming weather.

"The point is if we have GPS to monitor airplanes, could it save lives?" Boyd said. "The answer is clearly yes."

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