An administrative law judge for the International Trade Commission issued a recommendation that the commission ban 4GB and 250 GB Xbox gaming consoles from import to the United States. The recommendation(PDF) was released to the public on Monday, and would punish Microsoft for infringing against some of Motorola’s patents. The patents permit video transmission and compression on the console and between the console and its controllers.
Not all import bans are created equal though. In Judge David Shaw’s statement, he suggested a cease and desist order be placed against Microsoft. It would, “require the respondent to submit an annual report to the Commission regarding the number and value of infringing goods in its domestic inventory,” according to the authors of ITC Remedial Orders in the Real World(PDF). “Failing to do so, or providing false information in the report, may lead to criminal prosecution under 18 U.S.C. § 1001.” The cease-and-desist order is more strict than a standard exclusion order, which would simply require US customs agents to keep tabs on Microsoft’s activities.
Judge Shaw also ordered “that Microsoft post a bond equal to 7 percent of the declared value of unsold Xbox inventory already in the country,” according to Courthouse News.
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ITC judge recommends import ban on Microsoft’s Xbox

They may not be “robots” as most have come to expect, but these so-called microrobots developed by a team of researchers from the University of Hawaii at Manoa do have at least one thing in common with many of their mechanical counterparts: lasers. As IEEE Spectrum reports, the bots themselves are actually nothing more than bubbles of air in a saline solution, but they become “microrobots” when the laser is added to the equation, which serves as an engine of sorts and allows the researchers to control both the speed and direction of the bubbles. That, they say, could allow the bots to be used for a variety of tasks, including assembling microstructures and then disappearing without a trace when the bubble is popped. Head on past the break for a video of what they’re already capable of.
Continue reading Researchers power microbots made of bubbles with lasers
Researchers power microbots made of bubbles with lasers originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 22 May 2012 21:27:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Researchers power microbots made of bubbles with lasers

Bits & Pieces has a fun collection of “double take” photos. Each one caused a fun moment of “huh?” in my mind, until reality snapped into place.
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Fun gallery of “double take” photos
Microsoft has been going into very exacting detail as to how Windows 8 works, but one area it hasn’t explored much is what happens before you even see the Start screen. As user experience manager Chris Clark notes, the days of mashing F8 repeatedly to reach a pre-boot configuration are (mostly) over: you can invoke it either through an “advanced startup” in settings, through Start menu shortcuts or, if your PC is truly sick, let it show automatically. At least on systems blessed with UEFI instead of an aging BIOS, you’ll get a lot more to tinker with as well, including going straight to the command prompt, recovering from a system image or booting from external storage. The emphasis on choosing your environment before you hit the power button is virtually necessary. A Windows 8 PC with a solid-state drive leaves just a 200-millisecond slice of time for any user input, and Microsoft would rather not have users caught in an infinite loop of restarting their systems as they unsuccessfully try to boot from USB drives. You’ll likely discover the pre-boot space first-hand when the OS ships later this year, but for now you can check the source for more.
Microsoft details Windows 8’s pre-boot world, helps you skip the F8 F8 F8 routine originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 22 May 2012 23:09:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Microsoft details Windows 8’s pre-boot world, helps you skip the F8 F8 F8 routine
Tuesday morning at 0344, right on schedule (and it had to be right on schedule), Elon Musk’s baby finally left the launch pad on its way to the International Space Station (ISS). Two babies, actually: the Falcon 9 launch vehicle is what we watched as it took off from Cape Canaveral — the first private spaceship headed for the ISS — with the Dragon spacecraft perched on its nose. The Dragon carried over 1000 pounds of supplies and experiments for the ISS. The launch went off without a hitch. But don’t stop holding your breath quite yet; Dragon isn’t scheduled to dock at the ISS until Friday.
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At Long Last, a Private Cargo Spaceship Takes Off
Today is World Goth Day. Celebrate with the Sisters of Mercy.
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Happy (Sad?) World Goth Day
Charitable entrepreneur Martha Lane Fox has teamed up with Microsoft, TalkTalk, and Simplify Digital to bring a cheaper option for cash-strapped folks in the UK. Starting today, you can buy a refurbished computer with broadband service for a year (with a 40GB monthly cap) for as little as £149 ($240) — and that price drops even lower for people on state benefits. The “Go On UK” initiative also throws in a WiFi router and Windows 7 to further spread that non-profit love around the nation — just like we have going on in the US.
Cheap £149 PC and broadband bundle gives the UK something to smile about originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 22 May 2012 16:55:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Cheap £149 PC and broadband bundle gives the UK something to smile about
CWmike writes “The maximum areal densities of hard disk drives are expected to more than double by 2016, according to IHS iSuppli. Hard drive company Seagate has also predicted a doubling of drive density, and now IHS iSuppli is confirming what the vendor community already knew. Leading the way for greater disk density will be technologies such as heat-assisted magnetic recording (HAMR), which Seagate patented in 2006. Seagate has already said it will be able to produce a 60TB 3.5-in. hard drive by 2016. Laptop drives could reach 10TB to 20TB in the same time frame, IHS iSuppli stated. It said areal densities are projected to climb to a maximum 1,800 Gbits per square inch per platter by 2016, up from 744 Gbits per square inch in 2011. Areal density equals bit density, or bits of information per inch of a track multiplied by tracks per inch on a drive platter. This year, hard drive areal densities are estimated to reach 780Gbits per square inch per platter, and then rise to 900Gbits per square inch next year.”
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60TB Disk Drives Could Be a Reality In 2016