Mahdin Mahboob’s Articles

Entries from April 2009

[StarTech] TechNews: Sixth Sense ready to become a reality!

April 24, 2009 · Leave a Comment

http://www.thedailystar.net/story.php?nid=85321

MIT wearable gadget gives you Sixth Sense

The sixth sense, often quoted in novels, books and articles, is about a rare and mystical sense of things happening around you or things which could happen. Now it is set to become a common man’s thing, thanks to MIT Media Lab researchers, who have cooked up Sixth Sense, a wearable computing device that turns any surface into a Web interface, augmenting the five senses we’ve been given naturally.

The researchers at MIT’s Media Lab (Fluid Interfaces Group) have developed a gesture-controlled wearable computing device that feeds you relevant information and turns any surface into an interactive display. Called the Sixth Sense, the gadget relies on certain gestures and on object recognition to call up virtual gadgets and Web-based information, in a way that conjures up the Hollywood movie Minority Report.

The team built the Sixth Sense $350 (approx. BDT 24,500) prototype using off-the-shelf componentsa simple web cam and portable battery-powered projector with a small mirrorthat are fashioned into a pendant-style necklace that communicates with a cell phone.

When might Sixth Sense hit retail shelves? There’s no release date, and MIT Associate Professor and Founder of the school’s Fluid Interfaces Group Pattie Maes calls it “very much a work in progress.” (Perfecting the image recognition, for example, is an ongoing challenge.) Still, the MIT team says it has the potential to be made available today in a limited form.

Developed by Maes and MIT grad student Pranav Mistry (who Maes describes as the genius behind the gadget), along with the help of other MIT students, Sixth Sense aims to more seamlessly integrate online information and tech into everyday life. By making available information needed for decision-making beyond what we have access to with our five senses, it effectively gives users a sixth sense, says Maes.

Things you could do using the Sixth Sense include making a call, calling up a map, taking pictures, create multimedia reading experiences, calling up e-mail, getting flight updates and of course, checking the time!

Information Source: cio.com

Categories: StarTech
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Globalisation – The Bangladesh Scenario

April 19, 2009 · Leave a Comment

http://www.thedailystar.net/campus/2009/04/03/feature_globalisation.htm

JUST the other day, I was browsing through the newspaper and I came across this interesting advertisement for a job in a managerial position in a certain company. One of the requirements was ‘the incumbent must be a foreign national’. Thought-provoking to say the least! Why a foreign national is a must (and not any particular skills) for any job continues to baffle me, but one thing is for sure; globalisation has started to make its presence known in Bangladesh.

Towards the end of last year, US President Barack Obama was speaking about how an American university graduate from Boston today has to compete for a job with someone from Bangalore. Thanks to jobs being outsourced and most finished goods being imported rather than being produced in US, an acute shortage of jobs has been created and this has gradually pulled down the economy. Although this has come as a form of blessing for countries like India or Vietnam (which has benefited most from the outsourcing) and China or Mexico (which has benefited from the overwhelming imports), it still remains to be found where this leaves a country like Bangladesh.

The world wide web, once designed by the American Defence to ensure smooth, uninterrupted and secure communication between US military personnel spread out all over the world has today become the tool of communication for business, news, academics, research and anything and everything between heaven and earth. Using a computer or internet is no longer considered rocket science and from villages like Ta Van in Vietnam or Shagatha in Bangladesh, people are using the easily available information for many different purposes.

Bidding for a book or a musical accessory is now possible over the Internet, no matter where you are or what nationality you belong to. Job hunters in Chittagong are looking for available job opportunities in Dhaka, or elsewhere in the country simply by logging onto their bdjobs or prothom-alo jobs accounts online. No longer do we have to wait for the weekend show on TV for the US or UK movie or music Top 10. Everything, it seems, is just a click away, in the truest sense of the word. Communications and the free flow of information is now no longer a luxury, but a necessity.

The fact that many Bangladeshi students are going to different countries in the world for higher studies are also influencing the global culture that we seem to have today. The USA and UK were always places sought after for university education, but today, you will hear people going for their Bachelors, Masters or PhD to Australia, New Zealand, Sweden, Finland, Netherlands, Germany, Japan, Singapore, South Korea, Malaysia, China and even Thailand and South Africa for that matter! Although many opt to stay back after their studies, the majority of these people come back to Bangladesh, and with them, brings back not only their education, but a rich cultural experience.

In addition to the students, there are Non Resident Bangladeshis who keep coming and going in and out of the country are also slowly and decisively shaping the cultural pattern of the country. Although the demand for skilled professionals will always remain high in the developed countries, this has also led to certain individuals taking advantage of the situation and fooling the less privileged and educated classes of the society into complete doom with offers of lucrative dream jobs in Malaysia, UAE and other middle eastern countries. These people, who contribute to the bulk of our foreign currency income, get minimal importance and priority and the government should take stern actions to stop the human traffickers and cheats who rob the common people of all their belongings.

Add to that are all the foreign nationals that reside in this country because of many sorts of different jobs and business in the development field, foreign missions and many other purposes. Dhaka, if not the whole country, has truly become a melting pot of people of all different nationalities and races. This has effected the demand pattern of Bangladeshis as well; demand for different international branded cars, clothes, shoes, lighters and perfumes is thus high paving the way for bulk imports of such products. This comes at the cost of hard earned foreign currency essential to buy important products like powdered milk, fruits, fuel and different other raw materials required for our factories and industries.

Whether we see a glass of water to be half full or half empty depends on our perception and attitude. The effects of globalization can have equally positive and negative impacts. We as a nation should try to make best use of the situation like our neighbouring countries of India and China and not delve into the luxuries that come with globalization.

Categories: Star Campus
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Spotlight: Pahela Baishakh Festivity

April 12, 2009 · Leave a Comment

http://www.thedailystar.net/campus/2009/04/02/camspotlight.htm

IF there is any festival that unites all of us Bangalis, it is none other than the Bengali New Year or Pahela Baishakh. This is a time that enables us to forget all the differences and indulge in celebrating our Bangaliana.

Pahela Baishakh also brings in forefront the everlasting folk songs of this region. Folk songs have recently been even more popularised by singers and musicians like Habib, Ornob, Anushesh and Maksud who have made the young generation once again interested in this genre of music. This week’s spotlight is about the revival of folk music in Bangladesh.

Mahdin Mahboob
Star Campus Desk

Photo:
Mustafizur Rahman

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[StarTech] TechViews: Artificial Intelligence – The way forward

April 10, 2009 · Leave a Comment

http://www.thedailystar.net/story.php?nid=83486

A humanoid robot newly acquired by Imperial College London will lead to a deeper understanding of human intelligence, top, researchers at Cornell adjust a double pendulum, left, and ‘Adam’ at Aberstwyth University at work.
Whenever we hear about Artificial Intelligence (AI), many of us tend to think about a world where Robots would take over the entire world, or at least try to do so, as portrayed by sci-fi novels of Isaac Asimov or Hollywood blockbusters like Terminator-2 or i-Robot! Whether robots can ever be developed to that stage where it/they might plan to ‘take over the world’ is a completely different question, but some recent discoveries in the field of AI, has indeed left us flabbergasted, to say the least!

Imperial College London, UK
The College’s Departments of Computing and Electrical and Electronic Engineering believe that iCub, a humanoid robot the size of a three year old child, will further their research into cognition, the process of knowing that includes awareness, perception, reasoning and judgement.

Researchers want to learn more about how humans use cognition to interact with their world. They believe iCub’s human-like body will help them to understand how this is done.

The iCub has mechanical joints that enable it to move its head, arms, fingers, eyes and legs similarly to the way that humans do. Professor Murray Shanahan, of the Department of Computing, says this is important because cognition is very much tied up with the way we interact with the world.

“Nature developed cognition for us in order to make us better at interacting with the physical and social world,” he explains. “If we want to understand the nature of cognition better then we really need to understand it in the context of something that moves or interacts with objects. That is where iCub can help us.”

The team will test their theories about cognition by creating a computer simulation of a brain, which will replicate how neurons in real brains communicate through short bursts of electrical energy. In people, this process helps us to interact with the physical world. For instance, the electrical signals sent by neurons control muscles that enable people to lift a cup to the mouth to sip on a drink.

The research team at Imperial will also link the computer simulation of a brain to iCub so that it can process information about its environment and send bursts of electrical energy to its motors to allow it to move its arms, head, eyes and fingers to carry out very simple tasks such as lifting a ball and moving it from one place to another.

If the researchers are successful, they will have made an important step in reproducing the way that humans use cognition to interact in their world.

In the long term, they believe their research could help develop a new generation of intelligent factory robots that have much more versatility and do a wider variety of jobs.

Cornell University, USA
If Isaac Newton had had access to a supercomputer, he’d have had it watch apples fall and let it figure out what that meant. But the computer would have needed to run an algorithm developed by Cornell researchers that can derive natural laws from observed data.

The researchers have taught a computer to find regularities in the natural world that represent natural laws — without any prior scientific knowledge on the part of the computer.

The research is described in the April 3 issue of the journal Science by Hod Lipson, associate professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering, and graduate student Michael Schmidt, a specialist in computational biology.

Their process begins by taking the derivatives of every variable observed with respect to every other — a mathematical way of measuring how one quantity change as another changes. Then the computer creates equations at random using various constants and variables from the data. It tests these against the known derivatives, keeps the equations that come closest to predicting correctly, modifies them at random and tests again, repeating until it literally evolves a set of equations that accurately describe the behaviour of the real system.

Technically, the computer does not output equations, but finds “invariants” — mathematical expressions that remain true all the time, from which human insights can derive equations.

Once the invariants are found, potentially all equations describing the system are available: “All equations regarding a system must fit into and satisfy the invariants,” Schmidt said. “But of course we still need a human interpreter to take this step.”

Computers will not make scientists obsolete, the researchers conclude. Rather, they said, the computer can take over the grunt work, helping scientists focus quickly on the interesting phenomena and interpret their meaning.

Aberystwyth University, Wales, UK
The discovery of 12 new functions for genes in one of the most studied organisms in the world wouldn’t be news, except that scientists didn’t discover them. A robot named Adam designed, carried out and discovered the new gene functions.

“Our goal is to make science more efficient,” said Ross King, a professor of biology and computer science at the University of Wales and author of a new paper in this week’s issue of Science detailing Adam’s work.

“If we had computers designing and carrying out experiments we could get through many more experiments than we currently can,” said King, adding “robots don’t need to take holidays.”

The 10-year-old Adam, which is housed at Aberystwyth University in the U.K., might replace humans eventually, but it doesn’t look like one. From the outside Adam is 45 cubic meters of elongated white plastic instruments. Inside Adam sits a biological library of more than 12,000 chilled petri dishes. Each dish contains a different yeast strain with various genes removed from them. With its various mechanical tools, Adam can grab the petri dishes, remove a sample of yeast, grow it, clean it and analyze the results of the experiment.

Adam actually discovered more than 12 new gene functions. When King and his colleagues compared the functions of all the genes Adam found, they realized that some of them had previously been described. So Adam had independently confirmed those results.

Adam is still a prototype, but King’s team hopes their next robot, Eve, will help boost the search for new drugs to combat diseases such as malaria.

“This system is still a prototype,” explained King. “The first car wasn’t as efficient as a horse.”

Adam and Eve not only have the hardware to physically manipulate objects, they also have advanced artificial intelligence systems that let them make their own decisions and then act on those decisions, without help from their human creators.

Information Source: Imperial College London Website, Cornell Chronicle and Discovery News

Compiled by Mahdin Mahboob

Categories: StarTech
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Spotlight: Adda @ Coffee World

April 5, 2009 · 2 Comments

http://www.thedailystar.net/campus/2009/04/01/camspotlight.htm

Photos by:
Ishtiaque Bin Quashem & Rajiv Ashrafi

Star Campus, since its inception has hosted different interactive events, aptly titled Adda in both The Daily Star office as well as different other venues outside. As Chief Guests, it has brought in eminent personalities like Professor Kabir Chowdhury (renowned academic, Dhaka University), Professor Nazrul Islam (Chairman, University Grants Commission, Bangladesh), Professor Syed Munir Khasru (Institute of Business Administration, Dhaka University), Professor Shaheen Kabir and Asrar Chowdhury (Jahangirnagar University), Syed Badrul Ahsan (Editor, Current Affairs, The Daily Star) and many others.

Campus Adda is back again this year and from now on, we’ll have regular events bringing in celebrities from different walks of life, sports, music and the literary world as well as academics. This month’s event was jointly organized by Star Campus, Coffee World and Pizza Corner.

To participate in these lively discussions, send an email to starcampus@gmail.com and get invited!

We look forward to seeing YOU in our Addas.


Mahdin Mahboob
Star Campus Desk

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[StarTech] TechRoundtable: Connecting people a topmost priority

April 3, 2009 · Leave a Comment

http://www.thedailystar.net/story.php?nid=83449

ON the concluding day of the BCS Digital Expo at BCFCC, Dhaka, a roundtable titled ‘Connecting People: Priority for Digital Bangladesh’ was held with active participation from policymakers in the government and industry people alike.

The keynote presentation was delivered by Munir Hasan, programme implementation specialist, Access to Information Programme of the Prime Minister’s Office.

The topics covered in the keynote paper included broadband for all, local content and locally relevant content, widespread usages of ICT, Expanding the ICT horizon and the state of Local language computing.

In his paper Hasan explained the concepts surrounding the idea of a Digital Bangladesh, pledged to be turned into reality by the current government by the year 2021. He explained the things that are needed to be done in order to build a national information infrastructure to meet the targets, the systems and the ICT must work in tandem, which would enable the people, the government and business houses to come under one common platform.

Hasan said that with the advances of technology, that day might not be too far away when the Prime Minister might want to take people’s opinion electronically; sending a SMS to all mobile phone users and collecting the results in just a couple of hours time!

He mentioned that with all the hype on cellular phones and high-speed internet, the television and the radio must not be forgotten as the most effective way to reach the people.

Talking about the famous $100 laptop for underprivileged children in developing countries, Hasan put forward the examples of Portugal and India, who had asked Intel to manufacture the laptops in their own countries.

That step not only boosted the economy, but also provided employment to many and saved valuable foreign currency. A similar attitude for ICT development should also be taken by the Bangladeshi government, he added.

The moderator of the roundtable was Mustafa Jabbar, president of BCS (Bangladesh Computer Samity) and the panel discussants included S M Iqbal, former president, BCS, Reza Selim, director, Amader Gram, Parvez Ahmed, consultant, Bangla Lion Ltd. and Ahmed Hasan, CEO, Ryans Computer.

Categories: StarTech
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