Category: blog

  • Hole-in-the-Wall experiment launched in Sea Lots, Port of Spain, #Trinidad

    Via a Newsday article dated September 8 2014 :

    “CHILDREN in Sea Lots, Port-of-Spain, now have free Internet service and can play educational games on a computer, thanks to the international social learning experiment “Hole-in-the-Wall”

    Created in India by educational researcher Prof Sugata Mitra, the experiment allows children to explore the Internet on their own and in so doing learn new skills…..

    ……Mitra explained that Hole-in-the-Wall is a 19-inch monitor and keyboard secured in a booth, which is accessible to the children who would be able to learn and enhance their skills while researching on their own.”

    “Mitra was participating in the launch of the Ministry of Tertiary Education and Skills Training and the Youth Training and Employment Partnership Programme’s (YTEPP) Public Access Learning System (PALS) yesterday at the Sea Lots Community Centre.”

    Professor Sugata Mitra talked about his “hole in the wall” experiment at a TED talk in 2007

     

     

  • Over 10 million iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus models sold by Apple in first weekend

    Apple® announced it has sold over 10 million new iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus models 3 days after the launch on September 19.

    Impressive numbers given China wasn’t one of the countries where the new iPhone models weren’t available.

    Read the Apple Press release for more details.

  • Adobe releases critical security updates for Adobe Flash for Windows, Mac and Linux (September 2014)

    adobe-flash-logo-screenshot

    According to the Adobe Security Bulletin dated September 9 2014 :

    Adobe has released security updates for Adobe Flash Player for Windows, Macintosh and Linux. These updates address vulnerabilities that could potentially allow an attacker to take control of the affected system.  Adobe recommends users update their product installations to the latest versions…

    So update ASAP!

    To determine what version of the Adobe Flash player you have on your Windows, Macintosh or Linux system, visit http://www.adobe.com/software/flash/about/

    To download the latest version of Adobe Flash Player without any adware or bundled third party offers, visit
    http://www.adobe.com/products/flashplayer/distribution3.html

    Windows users should note that the Flash Player in Microsoft Internet Explorer v9 and earlier versions of Internet Explorer and the Flash player in web browsers like Opera, Mozilla Firefox and Safari are separate installs.
    You should install and update both versions of Adobe Flash.

    For Internet Explorer v10 and Internet Explorer v11 (for users for Windows 7 Service Pack 1 and Windows 8), these browsers have Adobe Flash Player built-in and users should update their Internet Explorer browser versions.

    Google Chrome browser users has Adobe Flash Player built-in and users should update the Google Chrome browser to the latest version. See http://www.google.com/support/chrome/bin/answer.py?answer=95414 on how to do so.

     

  • Apple submitted trademark application for “Apple Watch” in #Trinidad and #Tobago in March 2014

    Interesting article in the Wall Street Journal’s Law Blog of how Apple registered “Apple Watch” in Trinidad and Tobago in March 2014 and why Apple submits trademark applications in Trinidad and Tobago first. Quoting from the full article  :

    “….On March 11, [Apple] the company submitted a trademark application for “Apple Watch” in Trinidad and Tobago……

    …..Under U.S. law, a company seeking to register a federal trademark starts to secure initial rights when it files an application with the United States Patent and Trademark Office. “If your company is the first to file a trademark application, your company is first in line to obtain the trademark registration in the United States,” says Josh Gerben, a trademark attorney in Washington, D.C. It’s what he described as a “first-come, first-served system.”

    Here’s where Trinidad and Tobago enters the picture. The nation and the U.S. are signatories to an international treaty allowing applicants to secure rights in a foreign country and then transfer them over to their home country.

    Under the agreement, an applicant that files in Trinidad and Tobago has a six-month window to apply for the same trademark in the U.S. without resetting the clock. In other words, if Apple applies for an “Apple Watch” trademark in the U.S. by Thursday, its application would be treated as if it were filed six months ago on March 11. So if another company trying to acquire the same trademark filed its application in the U.S. after that date, it would take a backseat to Apple’s.

    So Apple got a head start in securing trademark rights for Apple Watch without the publicity that a domestic application would certainly generate.”

    Read the full article at http://blogs.wsj.com/law/2014/09/10/name-of-apple-smartwatch-wasnt-a-secret-at-least-in-trinidad-and-tobago/

  • Government Laptop ‘Spyware’

    Government Laptop ‘Spyware’

    A father whose daughter is the recipient of a government-issued laptop has reportedly uncovered ‘spyware’ on the computer, according to a recent article published in the Trinidad Guardian.

    Julien Dedier has stated that while searching for malware on his daughter’s computer, he discovered that it was taking pictures using the in-built camera and transmitting them to an undisclosed location.

    If the computer was used at all by Mr. Dedier or his daughter prior to the spyware being found, we must consider the possibility that it was inadvertently installed through normal usage – browsing of the internet and downloading of music and games for example.

    It is also possible that the anti-theft software installed on the laptops might, in fact, be the ‘spyware’ in question, and it may have been triggered to legitimately start sending location and image data automatically as part of its normal operation in response to what it may have perceived as a theft situation.

    While TTCS does not condone any unnecessary breach of privacy by the Government through these laptops, many questions remain unanswered about this matter, and we urge the authorities to investigate thoroughly and respond by informing the public of the outcome of the investigation.

    UPDATE 01: Response from the Minister of Education: http://www.trinidadexpress.com/news/Nothing-wrong-with-laptops-274038691.html

    Ryan Shripat

  • Free Seminar on Net Neutrality on Wednesday August 20 2014 from 6:30pm to 8:30 pm

    Net Neutrality - All Bits are created equal

    Three organisations at the forefront of Information and Communications Technology in Trinidad and Tobago are working together to host a seminar on the issue of Network Neutrality  on Wednesday 20th August 2014,  from 6:30 to 8:30 pm at the UWI Engineering Building, ENG 101. Registration for the seminar can be found at https://meetings.vtools.ieee.org/m/27527 or at the Facebook event page at https://www.facebook.com/events/804220909609343/

    Network neutrality (or Net Neutrality) is the principle that Internet service providers and network operators should enable access to all content and applications regardless of the source, and without favouring or blocking particular products or websites.

    The Trinidad and Tobago Computer Society (TTCS), the Internet Society Trinidad and Tobago Chapter (ISOC-TT) and the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers Trinidad and Tobago Section (IEEE-TT) encourage all citizens and stakeholders to attend this session.

    The Seminar has been designed as a round table discussion including representatives of various stakeholder groups with the opportunity for attendees to make interventions with respect to how the issue of Network Neutrality in Trinidad and Tobago will be shaped given recent developments of network operators.

    The Seminar is FREE! But please register at https://meetings.vtools.ieee.org/m/27527 so we can estimate for refreshments.

  • Microsoft Research demos first person hyper-lapse videos

    Microsoft Research has demoed a method “for converting first-person videos, for example, captured with a helmet camera during activities such as rock climbing or bicycling, into hyper-lapse videos, i.e., time-lapse videos with a smoothly moving camera.”

    Very cool, check out the YouTube video:

    and read more at http://research.microsoft.com/en-us/um/redmond/projects/hyperlapse/

     

  • TTCS pizza lime on Wednesday August 13 2014 from 7 to 9pm

    pizza yum!

    The Trinidad and Tobago Computer Society (TTCS) will host our August pizza lime this Wednesday August 13 2014, at Joe’s Pizza, St. Augustine from 7pm to 9pm.

    Topics for discussion:

     Do you have a particular topic you would like to talk about? Send me your suggestions at [email protected]

    Come join us as we eat and chat about current ICT issues! Any persons interested in computing or ICT are welcome to attend. A contribution of $50 is expected toward the food bill.

    Address:

    Joe’s Pizza
    #5-6 Emerald Plaza
    Eastern Main Road, St Augustine

    Detailed Directions:

    Heading East on the Eastern Main Road after UWI, just before St. John’s Road (the road with Scotia Bank), look for Emerald Plaza on your right. Take the second entrance on your right.

    See you there!

  • Telegraph: Wikipedia refuses to delete photo as ‘monkey owns it’

    Wikimedia, the US-based organisation behind Wikipedia, has refused a photographer’s repeated requests to remove one of his images which is used online without his permission, claiming that because a monkey pressed the shutter button it should own the copyright.

    Read the full article at
    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/news/11015672/Wikipedia-refuses-to-delete-photo-as-monkey-owns-it.html