How the Post Office Sniffs Out Anthrax Before It Hits Your Mailbox

The Amerithrax case of 2001, in which letters harboring Anthrax spores were delivered to media outlets and a pair of US Senators’ offices, killed five people and sickened another 17. In the wake of these attacks, the US Postal Service (USPS) installed a system of electronic noses in mail processing facilities around the country designed to sniff out the deadly bacteria before someone else does. More »        

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How the Post Office Sniffs Out Anthrax Before It Hits Your Mailbox

HP To Package Leap Motion Sensor Into — Not Just With — Some Devices

cylonlover writes “It hasn’t even been released yet but the Leap Motion could already be considered something of a success – at least with PC manufacturers. Following in the footsteps of Asus, who announced in January that it would bundle the 3D motion controller with some of its PCs, the world’s biggest PC manufacturer has joined the gesture control party. But HP has gone one step further, promising to build the Leap Motion technology into some future HP devices.” (See this video for scenes of users scrabbling with their hands in empty air, and get ready for more of it.) Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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HP To Package Leap Motion Sensor Into — Not Just With — Some Devices

Universities inject neuron-sized LEDs to stimulate brains without a burden (video)

Existing methods for controlling brain activity tend to skew the results by their very nature — it’s difficult to behave normally with a wad of optical fibers or electrical wires in your head. The University of Illinois and Washington University have developed a much subtler approach to optogenetics that could lift that weight from the mind in a very literal sense. Their approach inserts an extra-thin ribbon into the brain with LEDs that are about as big as the neurons they target, stimulating deeper parts of the mind with high precision and minimal intrusion; test mice could act as if the ribbon weren’t there. The solution also lets researchers detach the wireless transceiver and power from the ribbon to lighten the load when experiments are over. Practical use of these tiny LEDs is still a long ways off, but it could lead to both gentler testing as well as better treatment for mental conditions that we don’t fully understand today. Filed under: Science , Alt Comments Via: Mobile Magazine Source: University of Illinois

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Universities inject neuron-sized LEDs to stimulate brains without a burden (video)

Average DDoS Attack Bandwidth Jumps Eight-Fold In One Quarter

judgecorp writes “Distributed denial of service attacks have increased their bandwidth by 700 percent in the last quarter, according to DDoS specialist Prolexic. the average bandwidth has gone up from 5/9Gbps to 48.25Gbps — and the number of packets-per-second is also up. However, claims of a 300Gbps attack on Spamhaus are almost certainly false.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Average DDoS Attack Bandwidth Jumps Eight-Fold In One Quarter

Why is it so hard to make a phone call in emergency situations?

When bombs exploded at the Boston Marathon on Monday, my Facebook feed was immediately filled with urgent messages. I watched as my friends and family implored their friends and family in Boston to check in, and lamented the fact that nobody could seem to get a solid cell phone connection. Calls were made, but they got dropped. More often, they were never connected to begin with. There was even a rumor circulating that all cell phone service to the city had been switched off at the request of law enforcement. That rumor turns out to not be true . But it is a fact that, whenever disaster strikes, it becomes difficult to reach the people you care about. Right at the moment when you really need to hear a familiar voice, you often can’t. So what gives? To find out why it’s frequently so difficult to successfully place a call during emergencies, I spoke with Brough Turner , an entrepreneur, engineer, and writer who has been been working with phone systems (both wired and wireless) for 25 years. Turner helped me understand how the behind-the-scenes infrastructure of cell phones works, and why that infrastructure gets bogged down when lots of people are suddenly trying to make calls all at once from a single place. He says there are some things that can be done to fix this issue, but, ultimately, it’s more complicated than just asking what the technology can and cannot do. In some ways, service failures like this are a price we pay for having a choice and not being subject to a total monopoly. Maggie Koerth-Baker: The problem of not being able to reach loved ones on the phone during an emergency isn’t exactly new, right? Land lines had to deal with this, as well. Just to refresh our memories, what happened when land lines got congested with call traffic? Brough Turner: Well, say you’d have an earthquake in California. This was for the old Bell system. The national long distance routing has a set of standard, predefined routes and it had network control centers in New Jersey and other places. Things would get overloaded and they would manually intervene by putting access restrictions on new calls coming into the area that was congested. In the 60s, 70s, and 80s they would let through one out of every five call attempts. They were doing that manually and just arbitrarily to reduce congestion. Over time things got more automated. During the long-distance competition of the 1990s, AT&T introduced computerized routing and started using automated rate limiting. It all really got quite sophisticated before the whole industry went away. MKB: What about with cell phones? We aren’t talking about wires anymore, so what’s really going on behind the scenes when we say that the phone network is congested? BT: First off, different cell phone providers use different technologies, different systems. I’m talking about the GSM system used by AT&T and T-Mobile. I know less about the Qualcomm version that’s used by Verizon and Sprint. They evolved in different ways and the details are different, but the same basic principles are the same for all. With 4G, by the way, that’s changing. Everybody is converging on the technology that comes from that GSM tradition. In general, though, there are a bunch of different places where congestion can happen. Networks consist of different technologies, and different levels. You start with the mobile switching center that may cover a large area. There are only one or two mobile switches for Eastern Massachusetts. We’re talking about a room full of racks, full of computers and other switching elements. The densest switch is in China, and they have something that will serve more than several million customers at a time. So you have the mobile switching center. Then you have groups referred to as radio node controllers. There are dozens to hundreds of these conrolled by one switch. They’re located closer to the radios and they deal with handoffs between different radios. Then, of course, you have the individual radios and that’s where you see antennas on top of and on sides of buildings. Those are everywhere. Each of those is a cell, and in each cell you have users who are connected to the network. MKB: So this is really about how you, as a cell phone user, move around a physical area? You get handed off from one radio to another, from one node controller to another, and as you travel a lot farther, from one switch to another? BT: Yup. The other thing about the radios is that they have different sizes of cells. You’ve got regular cells and then smaller sub-cells. You also have larger overlay macro-cells that are really big. They try to handle you within the small cell you’re closest to. But it’s a trade off between capacity — they’d like to have lots of small cells for that — and coverage — they don’t want to put 100k small cells everywhere. So you might have a cell that covers a mile ara and then smaller cells within that that handle most of the traffic. Interesting thing is that most people are actually stationary, sitting on their butts. For most people, calls originate from one or two locations and they stay there the whole time. But we have to have this incredibly complicated system to deal with the 5-8% of people who move around. Maybe less than that. MKB: So what happens when you suddenly get a lot of calls happening within one cell? BT: They can offload some of that to a macro-cell. When it’s a planned event — the Boston Marathon, for instance, before the bombings — they can bring in aditional mobile cells. They park little trucks around the edge of the event. All those radios, though, have to connect back to the radio network controller. If it’s an installed radio it’s probably a wired connection — copper or fiber. But when you can’t get that, then they use point-to-point wireless. Either way, they call that the backhaul. In different parts of the system different things will get congested. In some cases, the specific cell site might be overloaded and macros are also overloaded. In other cases, it’s the backhaul that gets overloaded. And that doesn’t even have to be an emergency to cause that. There’s this great story where [telecommunications expert] David Reed was driving from New York to Boston in the middle of the night. His wife was driving and he was sitting there with one of the first iPads that had 3G service, and has they drove through Connecticut he was running speed tests along the way. Just to see the different responses in different cells. And at one point, he was limited to, like, 3 mbps. It was 3:00 am, so it wasn’t about lots of people using the system. It was just that he was driving through a cell where the only backhaul was two T1 lines. So 3 mbps was the maximum anybody in that cell could ever get. And this was like a 20 mile stretch of highway. MKB: So there was only so much information that could go in and out at a time. Wow. I know that channels, the actual wireless signals from and to your phone are also important. Can you talk about those? BT: There are a bunch of separate channels in the wireless system. But the big division is between a control channel and all of these traffic carrying channels. Control channels are used for a lot of different things. For instance, they’re used for call set-up and call tear-down. Your handset looks on a particular control channel for permission to make a request. It uses the control channel to request to make a call, like, “I need enough capacity to set up call,” so then the system can find the traffic channel with enough free space. But they’re also used for sms messages. Which is interesting. MKB: Yeah. I’ve heard that, when you’re in a situation where lots of people are placing phone calls, it’s often easier to get a text message through. Is this why? And, if so, is it a good way to use the system? What I mean is, is the system as a whole better off if you text your friend in Boston to check in, rather than trying to call him? BT: Yes. It’s much better. The SMS messages have a relatively light footprint, first of all. The second thing is that they’re asynchronous. If they can’t get through this instant, they keep trying. If it gets over the radio to the cell site, it will get through. Even if it’s delayed for 30 seconds or something. With voice you’re either connected or you’re not, and when you are that means that the traffic channel is tied up until you’re done talking. More likely, it means you never get connected because traffic channels are already saturated. MKB: In an emergency, can the cell phone companies limit access to the network the same way the Bell system used to do with land lines? BT: Yes. Now this is a piece where I know what equipment these large carriers have, but I don’t know how they’ve chosen to implement capabilities that are there. So one way they can do this is they can bar new traffic being originated by people based on “class”. There are typically 10 classes for regular subscribers and another six classes that handle things like 911 calls and emergency services. They can control which classes have access at the level of cells, or by groups of cells, or all of Eastern Massachusetts if they wish. I’m not clear on how automated all of this is. They definitely have the ability to have it totally automated. There’s technology you can buy from Ericsson that features call-load-triggered access class barring, so it automatically invokes certain policies about who can place calls in an area if the traffic there exceeds a pre-determined threshold. But that’s an extra feature and you have to pay extra for it … I guarantee it’s in the range of 10s of thousands of dollars per mobile switch. So who knows what decision the carriers made about that. It might have been automated and it might not be. What I am sure of is that they set up priorities for people with fire and safety access classes. And I think it’s also clear that the Verizon mobile switching center was overloaded on Monday. The effect I observed in Massachusetts was you could not place a call from a landline into the Verizon mobile network for some period of time. They blocked all incoming calls for some period of time. But within the network [Verizon to Verizon] some number of calls were getting through. I didn’t succeed, but some friends did after trying for 5 or 10 minutes. In overload cases they won’t turn off everything. They’ll say fire and safety get through immediately and maybe 10% of the other calls get to go through. They don’t throttle down to zero, though, because you don’t know if somebody desperately needs to make that connection. MKB: Is this an issue that can be fixed? In some of our background conversations before this interview, I got the impression that this isn’t all about what the technology can do, but also what companies do with it. That there’s a lot of trade-offs people make and congestion like this during emergencies are one of the side-effects of those trade-offs. BT: In the end, it does come down to trade-offs. That’s true of any network. You’re interested in coverage first and then capacity. If you wanted to guarantee that a network never had an outage your capital investment would have to go up orders of magnitude beyond anything that is rational. So each network is trying to invest their budget in ways that make network appear to perform better. The cost of providing temporary extra capacity for the Boston Marathon, that’s something that’s in the budget and they plan for that event. But when you get something unexpected like a terrorist event, or an earthquake, or damage from a hurricane or tornado, then you have trade offs between capital and how robust your network is. Every time you have an event people say, “Oh, they didn’t invest enough.” But you look at New York City after Hurricane Sandy and Southern Manhattan was under 6 feet of water — all the buried infrastructure was lost. Meanwhile, in other places, a significant number of cell sites were knocked out because connections ran on overhead poles and got knocked down by trees. The antenna site literally got destroyed. Interestingly, you can lose 30% of your cells and stil get coverage. Coverage was there in New Jersey after Sandy, even with 1/3 of the network out. The catch is there wasn’t much capacity. MKB: Are more robust networks something that could be regulated? I ask because I’ve gotten the impression that some people are concerned that when cell service is congested during a disaster, there will be a cry for the government to do something … and the unintended effects of that would actually leave us with a cell system that we maybe don’t want, something that gives a few corporations a lot more power. BT: I honestly don’t know how you could regulate it to work the way you wanted it to all the time. Reliability on the old Bell system was relatively high … and we paid the a high price for that as consumers because to get that level of service they got to be a monopoly and they got to charge us a rate that allowed them to make a return on their investments. With cellular systems, competition seems to drive more optimal decisions. We don’t have as much competition as we used to, but there’s still some. You really want at least four-to-six carriers, and most places it’s really only like three or three-and-a-half. For the public, we have to have a trade-off between getting coverage we want and being stuck with a monopoly. You look at electricity or fixed-line phone systems, and there are regulations on those industries about how much coverage and capacity they have to have because it has to be a good system — you as the consumer have no other choice. They’re monopolies. Image: ~ Timepass ! ~ , a Creative Commons Attribution No-Derivative-Works (2.0) image from neokratz’s photostream        

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Why is it so hard to make a phone call in emergency situations?

Harvard Grid Computing Project Discovers 20k Organic Photovoltaic Molecules

Lucas123 writes “In June, Harvard’s Clean Energy Project plans to release to solar power developers a list of the top 20,000 organic compounds, any one of which could be used to make cheap, printable photovoltaic cells (PVCs). The CEP uses the computing resources of IBM’s World Community Grid for the computational chemistry to find the best molecules for organic photovoltaics culled the list from about 7 million. About 6,000 computers are part of the project at any one time. If successful, the crowdsourcing-style project, which has been crunching data for the past two-plus years, could lead to PVCs that cost about as much as paint to cover a one-meter square wall.” The big thing here is that they’ve discovered a lot of organic molecules that have the potential for 10% or better conversion; roughly equivalent to the current best PV material, and twice as efficient as other available organic PV materials. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Harvard Grid Computing Project Discovers 20k Organic Photovoltaic Molecules

Bugs can survive space-like vacuums with “nano-suit”

By bombarding insects with electrons, Japanese researchers formed a microscopically thin layer that protected them from the ravages of a vacuum. The discovery suggests a way that microbes might survive the harsh conditions of outer space — and perhaps humans as well. Read more…        

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Bugs can survive space-like vacuums with “nano-suit”

This Lab-Grown Kidney Can Keep Rats—And Maybe Even You—Alive

For the first time ever, a whole lab-grown kidney has been successfully transplanted into a rat , where it allowed the creature to process urine like a really kidney would—and it could someday save your life. More »        

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This Lab-Grown Kidney Can Keep Rats—And Maybe Even You—Alive

TurboTax Went Down At a Kind of Crucial Moment and Didn’t Handle It Well on Twitter

So taxes are due…any minute now. And TurboTax is a popular service for doing taxes. Yes? Sure. Well, that’s a lot of pressure! Cue meltdown. More »        

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TurboTax Went Down At a Kind of Crucial Moment and Didn’t Handle It Well on Twitter

Making brains transparent

Stanford University researchers developed a process to make a mouse brain totally transparent. The brain has to be, er, removed from the mouse first but it’s still an amazing process that enables scientists to see the entire brain in great detail, without chopping it up. Brilliant bioengineer, Karl Deisseroth, a pioneer in the field of optogenetics, postdoc Kwanghun Chung, and their colleagues have used the same technique, called CLARITY, to make fish and, yes, bits of human brains transparent as well. The process involves replacing the fatty molecules, called lipids, with a hydrogel. As a result, the brain can be studied with visible light and chemical markers with unprecedented clarity and resolution. Check out the stunning fly-through of the rodent’s brain above. ” Getting CLARITY: Hydrogel process developed at Stanford creates transparent brain ”        

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Making brains transparent