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Britain's MI5 bungles again, now PC with anti-terror files stolen
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Written by ANI   
Friday, 03 October 2008

London, Oct.3 (ANI): Agents of Britain's MI5 intelligence service have bungled again.

If last week a top MI6 agent accidentally sold a camera on the Internet auction site eBay containing secret files for 17 pounds, this time round a computer holding secret anti-terror files has been stolen from a house because MI5 agents left a window open on a property rented to them.

Cops believe an opportunist burglar spotted the open window and sneaked inside on Sunday night. He made off with the palm-sized device that held files about the fight against fanatics.

MI5 officials insist the computer was encrypted, making it impossible for anyone to access the data.

The latest bungle happened at a secret address in Manchester. (ANI)

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Last Updated ( Friday, 03 October 2008 )
 
Foldable computer and TV screens come closer to reality
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Written by ANI   
Friday, 03 October 2008

Washington, October 3 (ANI): Computers that can be folded up to be put in the pocket and televisions sets that can be bended to view may soon be a reality, thanks to the efforts of researchers from Sony and the Max Planck Institute.

Published in the New Journal of Physics, a study conducted by the researchers heralds the beginning of a technological revolution for screen displays.

It demonstrates, for the first time, the possibility of bendable optically assessed organic light emitting displays, based on red or IR-A light upconversion.

The researchers say that such a technology can also lead to the mass-production of moving image posters for display advertising, and newspaper display systems that let readers to upload daily news to an easy-to-carry display contraption.

Sony announced the development of flexible OLED display screens in 2006, but the designs could not reach the market due to glitches like size and resolution limitations, and the difficulty of structuring the organic compounds so as not to be distorted when bent.

The researchers insist that the new technology for optically excited organic emissive displays does not have this problem, and gives further opportunities for new applications.

Through the use of a new structure and unique combinations for the organic compounds within viscous polymeric matrix, according to the researchers, there need not be any size or resolution limitations for the new screens.

The researchers conclude: "To the best of our knowledge we demonstrate for the first time a versatile colour all-organic and transparent UC-display. The reported displays are also flexible and have excellent brightness." (ANI)

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Last Updated ( Friday, 03 October 2008 )
 
Belief in god makes people helpful and generous, but under certain conditions
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Written by ANI   
Friday, 03 October 2008

Washington, Oct 3 (ANI): Your faith in the almighty could help you become more helpful, honest and generous, but only under certain psychological conditions, says a new study by University of British Columbia researchers.

For the study, the scientists analyzed the past three decades of social science research.

UBC social psychologists Ara Norenzayan and Azim Shariff said that religious people are more likely than the non-religious to engage in prosocial behaviour - acts that benefit others at a personal cost - when it enhances the individual's reputation or when religious thoughts are freshly activated in the person's mind.

Firstly, the study reviewed data from anthropology, sociology, psychology and economics. Later, the researchers explored how religion, by encouraging cooperation, became a factor in making possible the rise of large and stable societies made of genetically unrelated individuals.

Norenzayan said that till date, the public debate whether religion fosters cooperation and trust has largely been driven by opinion and anecdote.

"We wanted to look at the hard scientific evidence," said Norenzayan, an associate professor in the Dept. of Psychology.

Across all the disciplines, the researchers closed in on complementary results. Empirical data within anthropology suggests there is more cooperation among religious societies than the non-religious, especially when group survival is under threat

Economic experiments indicate that religiosity increases levels of trust among participants, while psychology experiments show that thoughts of an omniscient, morally concerned God reduce levels of cheating and selfish behaviour.

"This type of religiously-motivated 'virtuous' behaviour has likely played a vital social role throughout history. One reason we now have large, cooperative societies may be that some aspects of religion - such as outsourcing costly social policing duties to all-powerful Gods - made societies work more cooperatively in the past," said Shariff.

The authors observed that across cultures and through time, the notion of an all-powerful, morally concerned "Big God" usually begat "Big groups" -large-scale, stable societies that successfully passed on their cultural beliefs.

Also, the study highlighted that in today's world religion has no monopoly on kind and generous behaviour.

In many findings, non-believers acted as prosocially as believers. In the last several hundred years, the world has seen the rise of non-religious institutional mechanisms that include effective policing, courts and social surveillance.

"Some of the most cooperative modern societies are also the most secular. People have found other ways to be cooperative - without God," said Norenzayan.

The findings appear in the paper "The Origin and Evolution of Religious Prosociality" published in the latest issue of the journal Science. (ANI)

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Last Updated ( Friday, 03 October 2008 )
 
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