Prompt's TechBlog
Robots ride out
31 January 2006Loop the movie to your favourite old skool drum and bass soundtrack and imagine how much better Formula 1 motor racing would be if a robot was allowed to drive around in the Ferrari instead of Michael Schu... Aha!
Virus writers target PR industry..?
30 January 2006Your photograph has reached editing stage as part of an article we are publishing for our February edition of the Guardians business section. Can you check over the format and get back to us with your approval or any changes?
If the picture is not to your liking then please send a preferred one. We've attached the photo with the article here.
This looks like a new variant of a virus that was unleashed last November to exploit the weaknesses introduced by Sony BMG's evil DRM software.
The email signs off with the name of an editor and the wrong website address for The Guardian. This is quite convincing, especially for those in media circles. Remember kids, if someone asks you to open an unexpected attachment. Just say no...
Vinyl Solutions
In the new millennium I may be getting older and fatter myself, but the equipment I now use to play music on is modern, svelte, and as completely incompatible with my old long players as I now find myself to be with the Top 40.
All of my vinyl is stacked in dusty boxes, taking up loft space alongside various generations of record players and 'music centres'. But it remains the best music I've ever owned, and it's frustrating to replace it piecemeal with painfully trawled digital downloads each time the old tunes spring to mind.
And I'm not alone - many of my friends, even the really geeky ones, bemoan the loss of their vinyl memories and complain that legal download sites simply don't encode the range of music they're after. All this despite the fact that deep down they know that with a PC, an old Hi-Fi and a suitable tangle of cables there must be a simple solution out there.
This featurette from BBC Technology digs deeper, unearthing the GF-350 turntable / CD-R combo from Teac that just screams 'birthday present', as well as discussing the dark art of hooking up phono pre-amps and record deck outputs to boost record signal levels. Be careful how much of the advice you follow though - Sonic Solutions for example is in the business of removing all the hisses, crackles and pops from analogue transfer, and surely those are some of the best bits?
Mobile Phone Web Server
24 January 2006Easy to laugh at this - but when you think about how fast the bandwidth and processing horsepower available to mobile devices is increasing, the idea starts to look intruiging. Imagine a world where everybody carries around their own web server, it raises some interesting prospects.
Happy birthday PC virus, happy birthday to you!
23 January 2006If you're a grumpy old man like myself, you can now add "Eeeh, I've got computer viruses older than you!" to your list of cantankerous mutterings reserved for policemen, traffic wardens, CTOs and the like.
In case you were wondering, the very first of 150,000 PC viruses (at last count) was discovered in the wild in 1986 and was called Brain. It wasn't particularly nasty though, and could only travel about on 5 1/4 inch floppy disks. [Remember those? Oooh, this Internet lark was all fields etc... etc...]
Brain is of course still alive and self-propagating happily in her special hermetically sealed enclosure in a quiet corner of Whipsnade.
Devices on standby waste power
The story says:
To put it another way, the entire population of Glasgow could fly to New York and back again and the resulting emissions would still be less than that from devices left in sleep mode.
Possible solutions include forcing manufacturers not to include a standby button or rating TVs for energy efficiency in a similar way to how fridges are rated now. Until then, we'll all just have to take a few steps across the living room to turn the telly off properly.
Apple spies on iTunes listeners
13 January 2006Apple's abuse of its own privacy policy.
Big Bother for George!
12 January 2006It is no surprise then that his constituents are up in arms over this apparent abandonment and are starting to voice their unrest with a little help from the Internet. The majority of Galloway's constituents are Muslim and feel that by entering the Big Brother house, their MP has gone against many of their values and traditions. One particularly discontented constituent has now set up a website called: Why isn't he at work? at which visitors are able to sign a petition for his eviction, and see how much George Galloway's stay in the house has cost the taxpayer so far. This website is proving to be quite a success, with the owner claiming that it has received over 25,000 hits since it was set up last Friday. On another website, pledgebank.com, a correspondent promised to write to the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards to complain about the conduct of the MP, if 100 others would as well.
Big Brother may be watching, but more importantly for Mr Galloway, so are the constituents who voted him into office, and can hold him accountable and kick him out of a job as effectively as the rest of the population can boot him out of the BB house!
Symantec uses malware cloaking technique in its own software
As Mark Russinovich, the discoverer of the Sony rootkit, points out: "When you use rootkit-type techniques, even if your intentions are good, the user no longer has full control of the machine. It's impossible to manage the security and health of that system if the owner is not in control."
Video games do make us violent.
Or so they say.
10 January 2006
The more balanced response to previous research into the subject has always been that people who play such games are more likely to be aggressive simply because violent people are more likely to be drawn towards such games. It doesn't necessarily mean violent games breed violence, cynics would argue, but sure, it stands to reason that people who are violent in any case would undoubtedly get off on shooting and maiming pixel-people in the safety of their bedrooms. Doesn't it?
But now according to the New Scientist, a team from the University of Missouri-Columbia has conducted a more grounded study into violent gamers which monitored the brain activity of 39 game players, and apparently detected a causal link. Researchers measured a type of brain activity they call the 'P300 response' which they claim reflects the emotional impact of an image. When shown images of real-life violence, people who played violent video games were apparently found to have a diminished response.
Check out a fuller picture of the findings for yourself, and let us know what you think of it all. We'll get back to you after a few rounds of Battlefield II and San Andreas...
Starbucks Economics
06 January 2006Vegas technology jamboree!
05 January 2006The annual consumer electronics extravaganza that is the Consumer Electronics Show has flung open its doors once again, with over 2,500 exhibitors and 130,000 visitors expected to flock to CES 2006 to see all that is new and exciting in the world of electronica.
Big name keynote speakers such as the bosses of Microsoft, Sony, Google and Yahoo! will be strutting their stuff, so it's sure to be a high-profile informative event as always.
The show will see plenty of product plugging and must-have gadgetry to lust over for next years' Christmas wish list. A fair chunk of floor space will be taken up by Panasonic and Philips, for example, who will each be showcasing new high-definition television screens that most of us will only be able to dream of for a few more years to come.
But be warned, before you pack your bags and rush to buy air tickets to Vegas, CES 2006 is not open to the general public (which hardly seems fair to the average 'consumer'),
I guess that's me out then!
Worms survive space crash
04 January 2006Aluminium canisters containing roughly 1mm long soil roundworms were taken on the shuttle so the creatures could be studied in space. Live worms were discovered in four of the five recovered canisters.
Fascinating stuff - it suggests that tiny lifeforms can survive a relatively unprotected re-entry. It suggests the possibility that alien creatures inside meteorites might be able to survive re-entry. Perhaps the first earthling to land on Mars will be Laika the Worm.

Posted by Dave Wilby
Posted by Sean McManus
Posted by LC
Posted by Annie - prompt