Unifying Undersea Wireless Communication Using TCP/IP

Nerval’s Lobster writes “Wireless and cellular networks cover beaches and extend over the ocean to ships at sea but not, so far, under the ocean. A team of researchers at the University of Buffalo believe they’ve solved at least the technical problem of how to push wireless networking signals for long distances through the deep ocean to connect offshore oil and gas platforms, floating and underwater tsunami sensors and other remote facilities without having to bounce signals off a satellite first. Radio waves tend to be smothered or distorted by travel through water; most ocean-based sensors use acoustic waves instead, which link sensors into underwater acoustic sensor networks (UWASN). The team designed a low-power IPv4/IPv6-compatible networking protocol that uses very low power, compresses headers, is tolerant of fragmented data and connection delays, allows bi-directional communication with (and reconfiguration of) existing underwater sensors and is compatible with standard TCP/IP networks and IP router proxies. The approach is more than a simple translation from one networking medium to another. It leaves the higher-level TCP/IP networking protocols intact, but adds an adaptation layer between the data-link layer and network layer that compresses headers, changes packet size, transmission time-out settings and other requirements to be compatible with slower underwater transmissions. The team tested the implementation using a Linux-based driver, both PC and ARM-based computers and a Teledyne Benthos SM-75 Modem. They sealed two network nodes in 40-pound waterproof cases, dumped them into Lake Erie near Buffalo and transmitted instant-messaging signals from the application IPTUX from one to the other. They were also able to transfer files using FTP from an underwater client to server.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Unifying Undersea Wireless Communication Using TCP/IP

Angry Birds Go! is MarioKart with birds, arrives for free on iOS and Android December 11th

Angry Birds Go! (they’re emphasis, not ours) is the next big entry in the Angry Birds franchise, first teased back in June by the Finnish bird-flinging game company. The game takes the “universe” of Angry Birds and applies it to downhill cart racing; it’ll even accept new karts in the form of telepods, the Skylanders -esque system first introduced in Angry Birds Star Wars 2 . As the teaser shows, players employ power-ups to take their birds, pigs, and other Angry Birds characters past opponents on a variety of downhill courses. Beyond it being an entirely new genre for the Birds , the game looks dramatically prettier than other Angry Birds series entries. We’ll get to see just how those fancy new graphics play out when the game arrives worldwide on December 11th for both iOS and Android devices. Head below the break for the debut gameplay trailer. Filed under: Gaming , Software , Mobile Comments Source: Rovio

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Angry Birds Go! is MarioKart with birds, arrives for free on iOS and Android December 11th

Amped Wireless announces APA-20 long-range access point

Ready for another Amped Wireless announcement? The company’s 802.11ac revolution continues with the APA-20 long-range access point. The unit promises to bring Amped’s trademark high-power WiFi know-how to your existing setup, promising to configure itself as soon as it’s plugged in. Available for pre-order from today, the APA-20 will set you back $190 and will ship to customers on October 29th. Filed under: Wireless Comments

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Amped Wireless announces APA-20 long-range access point

A Major Breakthrough in Bringing the Sense of Touch to Prosthetic Limbs

Prosthetic limbs have gotten more lifelike — and also more useful — recently. But how do you let people feel what they’re touching? Recently, scientists have developed a number of supersensitive artificial skins, but the goal of restoring sensation has remained elusive. That is, until now. Read more…        

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A Major Breakthrough in Bringing the Sense of Touch to Prosthetic Limbs

These Next Generation Drones Carry Gear and Machine Guns into Battle

When most people hear the word “drone, ” they probably picture a cockpit-free plane zipping over the Iraqi desert. But there’s more to it than that. The Army is in the process of adopting a whole new generation of unmanned vehicles that will assist soldiers on the battlefield—and they’re by far the scariest remote-controlled cars you’ll ever see. Read more…        

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These Next Generation Drones Carry Gear and Machine Guns into Battle

Giant, rare "sea serpent" dragged to shore in California

Jasmine Santana of the Catalina Island Marine Institute was snorkeling off the coast about 20 miles southwest of L.A. when she spotted an 18-foot-long oarfish. It was dead. From the AP: “We’ve never seen a fish this big,” said Mark Waddington, senior captain of the Tole Mour, CIMI’s sail training ship. “The last oarfish we saw was three feet long.” Because oarfish dive more than 3,000 feet deep, sightings of the creatures are rare and they are largely unstudied, according to CIMI… The carcass was on display Tuesday for 5th, 6th, and 7th grade students studying at CIMI. It will be buried in the sand until it decomposes and then its skeleton will be reconstituted for display, Waddington said. ” 18-foot-long sea creature found off Calif. coast ”        

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Giant, rare "sea serpent" dragged to shore in California

Twitter Now Lets Any User Send You Direct Messages (If You Enable It)

Twitter now allows anyone you follow to send you direct messages, if you enable the feature in your settings. The feature can be useful for people who get followers begging them to follow back in order to DM something private, but it could also lead to a ton of spam—that’s why it’s off by default. Read more…        

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Twitter Now Lets Any User Send You Direct Messages (If You Enable It)

This Insane Six-Axis 3D Printer Even Works On Curved Surfaces

Still upset about breaking the handle on your favorite mug? A 3D printer can make it as good as new, and thanks to researchers at the University of Southern California, the process is even easier now since they’ve developed a printer that can build directly on curved surfaces. Read more…        

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This Insane Six-Axis 3D Printer Even Works On Curved Surfaces

NSA collecting email and messaging contacts worldwide, Yahoo moves to encrypt webmail by default

Don’t think that the NSA’s bulk communication data collection is focused solely on the communications themselves . The Washington Post has published more Edward Snowden documents which reveal that the agency collects large volumes of contact lists from email and instant messaging users around the world. While the NSA gathers the information on foreign soil, its method reportedly prevents it from automatically screening out any Americans in the list. The NSA and anonymous officials argue that American laws prevent analysts from accessing data unless they believe there’s a foreign target hidden with, but the strategy still has the government storing contacts for “millions” of people. Yahoo customers are some of the most common targets of this surveillance, as the company doesn’t normally encrypt webmail sessions. That’s about to change, however. The internet firm tells the Post that its webmail service will default to using SSL encryption on January 8th, catching up with Facebook and Google. Yahoo isn’t officially tightening its security in response to NSA activity, and using SSL won’t necessarily stop interceptions when spies frequently have workarounds . However, the upcoming encryption will at least complicate any snooping — whether or not it’s part of an intelligence operation. Filed under: Internet Comments Source: Washington Post (1) , (2)

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NSA collecting email and messaging contacts worldwide, Yahoo moves to encrypt webmail by default