Thursday, 10 October 2013

The new HP Envy 17 Leap Motion Special Edition is the first computer with Leap Motion's technology built in.
(Credit: Leap Motion)
From the beginning, Leap Motion's founders were certain their gesture-control technology was a natural to be embedded directly into computers.
That bet paid off Thursday when Hewlett-Packard became the first computer maker to build Leap Motion's technology into one of its machines. Starting in a few weeks, the San Francisco startup said, the HP Envy17 Leap Motion Special Edition laptop will go on sale.
Leap Motion's technology is designed to allow users to control their computers with hand gestures alone. Until now, the only way to use it was with the Leap controller, a USB stick-sized device that plugs into a computer's USB port. The technology measures -- and translates to the computer -- motion with an accuracy of a hundredth of a millimeter. Already, more than a hundred applications have been built to leverage the technology. They are available through Airspace, the company's app store.
In January, Leap Motion announced its first bundling deal, with Asus, in which its controller was packaged alongside a number of Asus' computers. Then in April, it announced it had struck a deal to embed its technology into then-unspecified HP computers. The Envy 17 laptop is the first fruit of the HP partnership.
Embedding the technology directly into a computer is possible, explained Leap Motion CEO Michael Buckwald, because the company has significantly reduced the size of the module housing the Leap's sensors and other hardware. Buckwald said the new module is 70 percent smaller than its predecessor.
Leap Motion's new module (right) is 70 percent smaller than the exiting Leap controller.
(Credit: Leap Motion)
For now, HP is the only manufacturer signed on to embed the Leap technology. But Buckwald said Leap Motion is in similar discussions with others. In fact, those discussions are, at least in part, geared towards the company's ultimate goal -- getting its technology build into smaller devices, such as tablets or smartphones. "We want to be embedded everywhere," Buckwald said.
While the actual applications for such a melding of hardware would be up to developers, Buckwald said he can imagine things like a smartphone with embedded Leap technology being used as a remote control for another device. Such an integration would not be possible with the Leap controller on the market today, but would be entirely feasible with the company's current technology.
Via CNET

UK government should 'stay the course' on climate change policies

OECD Secretary General Jose Angel Gurria
OECD secretary-general, Ángel Gurría, said the UK had been 'exemplary' on climate change. Photograph: Junko Kimura/Getty Images
The UK government should "stay the course" on its green policies instead of weakening the commitment to tackle greenhouse gases, the head of the club of the world's richest nations has urged.
The comments by Ángel Gurría, secretary-general of the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), come after the chancellor, George Osborne, last week told his Conservative party's conference that the UK should not be at the forefront of tackling global warming.
Gurría said the UK had been "exemplary" on the issue and urged: "Stay the course! I think they should stay the course. We said stay the course with the economy [on austerity policies], and that is having good results. We are saying the same thing about climate and environmental policies."
Gurría said: "The UK is our poster child [for climate policy] - it is the one that has legislated [through the Climate Change Act]. This kind of leadership, which is so difficult to achieve, has been so useful to the UK, and all around the world. It has not taken away from [economic] competitiveness. It is making the UK not only a better world citizen, but making all world citizens better by the UK's example."
His unusually strong and clear message is unlikely to be welcomed by some sections of the coalition, where an antipathy to green policies is increasingly marked. Osborne made it clear at the Conservative conference that to be the "poster child" for climate change policy was the last thing he wanted for the UK, saying: "I don't want us to be the only people out there in front of the rest of the world. I certainly think we shouldn't be further ahead of our partners in Europe".
The question of which side wins out will be key to the UK's future for the next two decades, and an important test of the coalition's climate credentials. Within months, ministers will have to decide on the UK's fourth carbon budget for the period 2023-27, and this is already giving rise to serious rows.
The government's statutory adviser said last week there was currently no reason to weaken the targets, and urged ministers to make a swift decision to placate nervous investors, while a group of MPs weighed in this week to argue for keeping to the current emissions goals.
But sections of industry are lobbying for a watering down of the fourth carbon budget. They drew solace from the chancellor's vow, and from remarks by the environment secretary, Owen Paterson, that global warming might be good for the UK.
Gurría's comments will carry weight as his organisation is better known for its economic advice than its pronouncements on climate, and has praised some of Osborne's policies. He also compared the climate crisis to the financial one of recent years, but said: "it's worse than the [financial] crisis because there is no bailout."
Soon it will be possible to compare the UK's performance on key policy indicators with other rich nations, as Gurría unveiled plans on Wednesday to include a new chapter devoted to climate and environmental performance in every edition of the annual country reports the OECD publishes.
Gurría also said rich countries would have to "compensate" poorer nations for keeping a proportion of their fossil fuel reserves in the ground. The world's "carbon budget" - the aggregate amount of carbon that can be emitted before triggering dangerous levels of climate change - was set out by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change two weeks ago. The clear implication, according to some experts, was that many countries would have to keep some of their fossil fuels in the ground, unexploited.
But that is highly controversial, especially when it comes to developing countries. Gurría said that compensating such countries for the missed opportunity of burning the reserves would involve "transfers" from rich nations, but declined to spell out what form these would take.
"There are going to have to be adjustments made for those who have a relative abundance of this asset, that now proves unburnable," he said. "These countries are going to have to be preparing for that."
He said that rather than aiming for gradual reductions in emissions without a clear end date, the world must espouse a new goal of zero emissions from burning fossil fuels by 2050. To do so would require clear policies starting from now, tightening as the decades proceed. He likened the world's energy infrastructure to a vehicle driving towards a wall, with the choice of applying the brakes gradually from now or of trying to stop suddenly before impact, which would be much riskier.
Commenting on shale gas, which has radically transformed the US economy, Gurría said gas could be a "way station" but "not the end point". He also warned against a reliance on carbon capture and storage (CCS) technology, noting that even if all the current CCS projects come to fruition, they will account for less than 1% of emissions.
The best way of avoiding dangerous climate change and encouraging emissions cuts, according to Gurría, would be to put a "a big, fat price on carbon". This could involve emissions trading systems or taxes, but Gurría noted: "Tax is a bad word for politicians."
Carbon trading has been most fully pioneered in Europe, where an emissions trading scheme obliging heavy industries to pay for their carbon through a system of permits has been in place since 2005. But the scheme has run into serious trouble as companies were issued with far too many free carbon permits to cover their needs. As a result, the price of permits is now close to a record low, and creates almost no incentive for companies to cut their emissions.
Gurría urged governments to return their attention to the problem of global warming, as countries begin to emerge from the financial crises. He said: "Climate change is back on the front burner - it is back in the crosshairs."
At a global conference in Paris in 2015, world governments will try to forge a new international deal on greenhouse gases. Officials and ministers will meet this November for a preliminary meeting in Poland. However, there is still little agreement on what form any new deal should take or what targets might be enshrined in it

HP first to get Leap Motion tech onto a computer

The new HP Envy 17 Leap Motion Special Edition is the first computer with Leap Motion's technology built in.
(Credit: Leap Motion)
From the beginning, Leap Motion's founders were certain their gesture-control technology was a natural to be embedded directly into computers.
That bet paid off Thursday when Hewlett-Packard became the first computer maker to build Leap Motion's technology into one of its machines. Starting in a few weeks, the San Francisco startup said, the HP Envy17 Leap Motion Special Edition laptop will go on sale.
Leap Motion's technology is designed to allow users to control their computers with hand gestures alone. Until now, the only way to use it was with the Leap controller, a USB stick-sized device that plugs into a computer's USB port. The technology measures -- and translates to the computer -- motion with an accuracy of a hundredth of a millimeter. Already, more than a hundred applications have been built to leverage the technology. They are available through Airspace, the company's app store.
In January, Leap Motion announced its first bundling deal, with Asus, in which its controller was packaged alongside a number of Asus' computers. Then in April, it announced it had struck a deal to embed its technology into then-unspecified HP computers. The Envy 17 laptop is the first fruit of the HP partnership.
Embedding the technology directly into a computer is possible, explained Leap Motion CEO Michael Buckwald, because the company has significantly reduced the size of the module housing the Leap's sensors and other hardware. Buckwald said the new module is 70 percent smaller than its predecessor.
Leap Motion's new module (right) is 70 percent smaller than the exiting Leap controller.
(Credit: Leap Motion)
For now, HP is the only manufacturer signed on to embed the Leap technology. But Buckwald said Leap Motion is in similar discussions with others. In fact, those discussions are, at least in part, geared towards the company's ultimate goal -- getting its technology build into smaller devices, such as tablets or smartphones. "We want to be embedded everywhere," Buckwald said.
While the actual applications for such a melding of hardware would be up to developers, Buckwald said he can imagine things like a smartphone with embedded Leap technology being used as a remote control for another device. Such an integration would not be possible with the Leap controller on the market today, but would be entirely feasible with the company's current technology.
Via CNET

'Hackproof' Quasar IV Android smartphone approved for production

The self-funded Quasar IV "ciperphone" promises to rebuff hackers.
(Credit: QSAlpha)
Remember the self-funded high-end smartphone with an approach to security so strong, it promises to rebuff data thieves? Well, startup QSAlpha announced on Wednesday that its Quasar IV Android smartphone is now going into production.
What's more, the company reveals that its manufacturing partner is "one of the world's largest consumer electronics OEM manufacturers."
My instinct says this mystery partner is Samsung, based on the company's interest in security through itsSamsung Knox product, and in Samsung's willingness to take risks with unique and niche products, like the deeply curved Samsung Galaxy RoundSamsung Galaxy Golden Android flip phone, and even theSamsung Galaxy Note series, which the company has turned into a successful line.
Although QSAlpha has a prototype phone to show off, it isn't the hardware the company is most concerned in selling. Instead, it's QSAlpha's secure take on Android that will be this mobile security company's bread and butter.
QSAlpha says it will ship the high-end smartphone -- which will include Android 4.3, a quad-core Qualcomm Snapdragon 800 processor, and a 13-megapixel camera -- sometime in 2014. Read all about the Quasar IV here.
Via CNET

How the US raid on al-Shabaab in Somalia went wrong

Al-Shabaab fighters
Al-Shabaab fighters in Somalia. The raid in Barawe aimed to capture Abdulkadir Mohamed Abdulkadir, a senior commander. Photograph: Farah Abdi Warsameh/AP
As a mother of young children, Fadumo Sheikh is used to rising early. Last Saturday she was due to prepare their breakfasts before they went to the local madrasa. But the day started earlier than ever when, at around 2am, she was woken by the sound of sporadic gunfire.
Within sight of Sheikh's home in Barawe, Somalia, crack American navy Seals had launched a lightning amphibious assault on the Islamist militant group al-Shabaab. Less an hour later they would be forced to retreat, their mission far from accomplished. Based on interviews with witnesses and members of al-Shabaab, as well as official statements and media reports, the Guardian can present the most comprehensive picture yet of the daring pre-dawn raid – and where it went wrong.
The Americans' target was an innocuous two-storey beachside house in Barawe, a fishing town of about 200,000 people that was a crucial slave trade port in the colonial era. In particular, they had planned the delicate operation of capturing, not killing, Abdulkadir Mohamed Abdulkadir, a Kenyan of Somali origin and senior commander of al-Shabaab who was linked to a number of terrorist plots.
The house, about 200 metres from the sea on the town's east side, is understood to be used by foreign extremists who have gone to Somalia to take up al-Shabaab's cause. The group's presence there was not news to Sheikh.
"I live in a house near the beach and I used to see the house every day. There were so many al-Shabaab fighters entering and coming out," she said. "I usually see them going back and forth but I had never thought that so important a person was living inside the house."
Early morning gunfire was unusual, Sheikh continued, except when al-Shabaab was conducting training exercises. "I raised my ears and I continued to hear the gunfire growing. I had no feeling or thought of such an attack from the Americans. I looked at my watch about 30 minutes later and heard one explosion and then, a few minutes later, another explosion occurred, like boom!"
What had been invisible to Sheikh and other residents of Barawe was the stealthy advance of navy Seal team six – the same unit that killed Osama bin Laden in Pakistan – in a speedboat towards the Somalian coastline before first light. The team consisted of about 20 Seals, according to leaked accounts, and their craft was flanked on the Indian Ocean by three small boats to provide back-up.

'They looked like three big cows'

The Seals swept ashore, but not everyone in Barawe was asleep in those chilly early morning hours. Abdurahman Yarow, a longtime resident of the town, recalled: "I was wrapping my turban on my neck and head to protect against the cold and heading to the mosque. When I had nearly entered it, I heard a sound behind me. I saw what looked like three big cows going towards the north of the mosque – it was dark so I could not identify well what they were.
"After only 10 minutes I heard the first guns – that is, when the gun battle occurred between al-Shabaab fighters in the house and the US forces. I now understand the big cows I saw in the night were the American special forces with their military bags on their backs going in the direction of the house they targeted."
The Seals took up positions inside the house's compound, according to a report by NBC, which continued: "Then a lone al-Shabaab fighter walked out into plain view, smoked a cigarette, and went back inside, one source familiar with the details of the raid said. The fighter played it cool, and gave no indication that he had spotted the Seals. But he came back out shooting, firing rounds from an AK-47 assault rifle."
Barawe map
The element of surprise had been lost and al-Shabaab's fighters unleashed gunfire and grenades in a cacophony that rang out across the town, murdering sleep before dawn prayers. But the Americans continued on the offensive, according to an elder who did not wish to be named. "The attackers from the US divided into two groups," he said. "Group one, comprising six men, stormed the house and began shooting the people inside it, while group two, also of at least six men, were staying outside the house. The worst shooting took place inside where one al-Shabaab fighter was killed. Al-Shabaab had more fighters inside and they fought extremely hard against the Americans."
The elder continued: "The Americans tried to enter room by room into the house to start searching for the big fish but al-Shabaab got reinforcing fighters from other houses and then the situation deteriorated until the Americans retreated."
According to the NBC account, several Seals could see Abdulkadir through windows but he was heavily protected; according to al-Shabaab, he was not in the building. While Pentagon officials have been reluctant to provide a full narrative, they have said US forces retreated from the gun battle out of a concern for potential civilian casualties. Details leaked to the press suggest that the compound contained far more women and children than the Seals expected.
The commandos returned to their boat, grateful for having suffered no casualties, and finally there was calm. Sheikh recalled: "At 3am the call for prayer started, and all the gunfire stopped. A neighbour called me on the phone and said there is an attack against the mujahideen. When it became safe enough to see everything outside, I came out to look around. Outside the house which came under attack there were some fighters of al-Shabaab and some residents come to witness the incident.
Members of al-Shabaab, which was reportedly targeted in a foreign military raid on the Somali coastMembers of al-Shabaab, targeted in a failed US military raid on the Somali coast. Photograph: Feisal Omar/Reuters
"These al-Shabaab fighters were not talking to the people. Some of them were masked and you could not see their faces. I saw one dead man and he was loaded into a car for burial. They were saying 'the martyr', which is the only word that you can understand for an al-Shabaab member who's been killed."
The dead man was Abdulkadir's bodyguard, according to one source in the town. On Tuesday, the Somali defence minister, Abdihakim Haji Mohamud Fiqi, claimed two al-Shabaab members had been killed: "We have found that two senior commanders – one of them foreign – were killed in the attack despite the top target not being found." A UN official in Somalia also said two al-Shabaab figures had been killed: one Sudanese man and another of Somali and Swedish origin.
Sheikh continued: "There were more fighters and supporters of al-Shabaab coming to the house in the morning; they were vowing that they will kill anyone who is found working with the non-believers.
"On the beach, the residents were looking at items left by US forces. I saw a grey military bullet-proof jacket. There was also blood scattered on the ground. There were military boots on the ground which we suspect were those of the Americans."

Local backlash

In the aftermath of the US assault, al-Shabaab deployed more heavily armed fighters to patrol the streets of Barawe, while also posting men and anti-aircraft weapons on the beach. There was also a local backlash with a hunt for suspected informants who helped US intelligence locate the house. A man who frequently used the local internet café was arrested on Sunday and is still being held.
Al-Shabaab took control of Barawe in 2008 and it became a refuge for its senior figures after they lost control of the capital, Mogadishu, and other towns in 2011. These have included the leader Ahmed Godane, who has been described as Africa's most wanted man after the Westgate mall bombing in Nairobi; Omar Hammami, the so-called "jihadist rapper" from Alabama killed last month after falling out with Godane; and Abdulkadir himself.
A destroyed section of the Westgate mall in Nairobi, Kenya A destroyed section of the Westgate mall in Nairobi, Kenya, an attack blamed on al-Shabaab. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images
Barawe is about 135 miles (218km) from Mogadishu. The nearest town where government and African Union forces have control is Shalanbood, only 68 miles (110km) away. To the east is the Ambaresa training camp for al-Shabaab's foreign fighters. Forced marriage is common in Barawe: when al-Shabaab commanders including foreign fighters come for their daughter, few parents can say no, even if the girl is underage.
The events of Saturday 5 October could boost al-Shabaab's confidence in its defences but also give it notice that the world's most powerful military is ready to bring the battle to its doorstep. Speaking at a mosque in Barawe on Monday night, al-Shabaab's military operations spokesman Sheikh Abiasis Abu Mus'ab said: "Western countries … have to bear in mind we know that we are your target, but we will not be caught off guard.
"We know you are sharpening your knives to cut our heads off. We know our enemies. We will not oversleep so you can attack us at once. We are always vigilant and your cowardly attacks will end in failure."
Daveed Gartenstein-Ross, who studies Somalia and al-Shabaab at the Foundation for the Defence of Democracies, described Barawe as "right now the strongest area of sanctuary" for the militant group. He said it was likely that al-Shabaab expected something like a foreign raid after it perpetrated the attack on Nairobi's Westgate mall.
Gartenstein-Ross said the probable immediate response by al-Shabaab would centre around strengthening its internal security and grip on Barawe, rather than launching another terror attack.
"The raid has made them very nervous," he added. "In Barawe it's already been reported that al-Shabaab has implemented curfews. There will be an uptick in operational security and they will certainly use the way they repulsed this attack by navy Seals as a propaganda piece."
U.S. Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel speaks to the traveling press about the U.S. government shutdown, at his hotel in Seoul, South Korea, on Tuesday, Oct. 1, 2013.US Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel speaks to the press in Seoul. Photograph: Jacquelyn Martin/AP
But the US defence secretary, Chuck Hagel, said the operation in Somalia, along with a near-simultaneous one in Libya, demonstrated the "unparalleled precision, global reach and capabilities" of US counter-terrorism. "These operations in Libya and Somalia send a strong message to the world that the United States will spare no effort to hold terrorists accountable, no matter where they hide or how long they evade justice," Hagel said.
Pentagon spokesman George Little suggested that more special operations raids against al-Shabaab were yet to come. "Working in partnership with the government of the Federal Republic of Somalia, the United States military will continue to confront the threat posed by al-Shabaab," Little said in a statement on Monday. "The United States military has unmatched capabilities and could rely on any of them to disrupt terrorist networks and plots.

Wednesday, 9 October 2013

TTP ready to reciprocrate govt's 'serious' peace talk efforts: Hakimullah Mehsud

Hakimullah Mehsud. PHOTO:FILE
Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) leader Hakimullah Mehsud said on Wednesday that the government had not followed up on the decision of talks made in the September All Parties Conference, however, if any such effort is made, a government jirga would be welcomed and provided full security. 
In a rare television interview, the TTP leader told the BBC that the government should have made the peace talks announcement and called a jirga, as per convention instead of handing over responsibilities to the media.
Mehsud said that the Taliban were ready for peace talks and if serious attempts at negotiations were made, the Taliban would reciprocate.
“If a jirga nominated by the government comes to us, we will ensure its security,” he said, adding that the TTP were not going to start negotiating with the government through the media.
“We don’t want to talk through the media. Neither do we want to listen to the government’s conditions through the media nor do we want to present our conditions via media.”
US Withdrawal from Afghanistan
With many believing that the 2014 US withdrawal from Afghanistan could deflate the militant movements, Mehsud said that the situation in drawdown will not have any affect on Pakistani Taliban and they will continue to carry out their activities.
“We carry our fight in Pakistan for two reasons. One reason is that Pakistan is friends with America and at the behest of America, Pakistan has killed ulema and destroyed madrassas,” he said.
He said that the other reason for their fight against Pakistan was the prevalent “non-Islamic” system in the country.
Drones
The TTP leader reiterated that if America agreed to stop drone strikes, the Taliban would also stop their fight.
He said that that they were aware of the appeals of ulema who want them to stop the war.
“But in the case of us ending the war, we also want a stop to drone strikes. If drone strikes are stopped, we will be ready to stop our jihad.”
Blasts in public spaces
The TTP leader, who carries a $5 million bounty on his head, disowned the recent blasts in public spaces. “Other agencies are involved in that.”
“The purpose of the blasts is to misguide the people against Taliban, so that the people who support us can stop doing so.”
Mehsud said that the TTP have distanced themselves from such blasts before and will do so again.

Billo or Paani Da Bulbula, Abrarul Haq still has it

Punjabi singer talks about Zinda Bhaag OST, Coke Studio and upcoming album.
LAHORE: 
You don’t need to be familiar with Punjabi to sing along when Kinney Kinney Jana Billo De Ghar plays on the radio. There are always just a handful of lucky singers whose debut numbers become instant hits, and Abrarul Haq’s Billo De Ghar is one such example. The bhangra folk singer enjoyed his time in the spotlight and gave his fans fun Punjabi tunes to groove to until he decided to gradually step away from the fore. And following what could be called a hiatus, Abrar has now made a comeback with the release of Pani Da Bulbula, original sound track (OST) of Zinda Bhaag.
Pani Da Bulbula — a rendition of a track originally sung by Yaqoob Atif Bulbula in the ’70s — is a song Abrar remembers humming and listening to as a child. “I look at it as a spiritual message which says everything is a bubble of water and has a fleeting nature. Everything is perishable, whether it’s alive or not,” explains Abrar. “So why the fighting and thirst for power?”
“The success [of the song] has been more than what I had expected. The way it has been accepted by the public, I think it’s a milestone for cinema’s revival,” he says, adding that music has an important role to play in the film’s industry’s resurgence.
Abrar feels the music industry has changed and the desire to create good music has faded away. “Before, people loved music. And now, music has become secondary and the perks [that come with being a musician] have become the priority,” he regrets. “Maybe it’s destiny or lack of creativity, but there is something wrong.” Back in the day, bands like Junoon and other pop musicians who had genuine mass appeal existed, reminisces the singer. And he feels this isn’t the case anymore.
His debut in Coke Studio this season will be a breath of fresh air and he is thrilled with the prospect. He feels it’s the only platform in today’s time where a blend of Eastern and Western tunes takes place — it’s where music is digestible and acceptable, he says.
“The public’s liking is generally unpredictable,” Abrar continues about his contribution to Coke Studio 6. “But I think people will say that the songs sound different, and the mystic poetry will come forward as well in a positive manner.” About his music, he says, “I am just a man of the people — one who has always tried to include his voice in his poetry.”
An altruistic Abrar
When Abrar isn’t in a studio recording music, he’s busy with social work. With the assistance of his organisation Sahara Welfare Trust, Abrar is currently working on building a medical college. “To be honest, if my popularity graph can improve through music, then my social welfare organisations receive a lot of help,” he explains. “We need to raise a lot of money for that and by improving my music, I can help in that.”
He admits his music has always been politically-charged. “I think the more politically aware you get, the more in-depth your lyrics become,” he says, referring to deep, meaningful poetry. “But it’s not like I have left light poetry. That is still there, too.”
About his eighth studio album, which is expected to release in the coming months, Abrar reveals there will be a total of 10 tracks which will bring together all his recent endeavours — entertainment, politics and social work. “It will be an amalgamation of different thoughts and feelings,” he says, adding there will be songs on terrorism, love, mothers, friendship, bhangra and a spiritual kalam.