fbpx
Category

computer

Israel concerned it may be under cyber attack

Israeli officials said on Friday they were concerned the country may be under cyber attack after a wave of credit card code thefts in the past week by a hacker who claims to be operating out of Saudi Arabia.

New computer virus detected in Iran

A computer virus similar to the Stuxnet virus that attacked Iran\’s nuclear program last year has been detected in Iran.

UCLA’s new hospital takes technology to new frontiers

During a procedure, surgeons can use a touch-screen panel or voice commands to display and control images, adjust room lighting, or phone a colleague. They can access patient histories, X-rays and lab results, and use their fingers on the console to draw — just like a football commentator — on images displayed on a screen.

Israeli invention could pave way for hydrogen cars

Everyone\’s heard that old story about the scientist who invents a \”magic pill\” that turns water into gasoline — with the invention eventually getting into the hands of the oil companies that bury it, fearing they will be driven out of business when word gets out about their competition

Should laptops be allowed in class?

Laptop use involves a lot of controversy, from students who believe they should be used to their maximum potential to those who don\’t want to see laptops at all.

Have laptop, will prosper

Last Shabbat at Sinai Temple Rabbi David Wolpe stood at the bimah to deliver his sermon — and brought out a small, colorful laptop to push his congregants to participate in a remarkable, world-changing program called One Laptop per Child. One Laptop per Child (OLPC) is the name of a USA-based nonprofit launched in 2005 by Nicholas Negroponte and faculty members of the MIT Media Lab, with the goal of bringing computer technology to the children of the developing world.\n\n

Joyce Rabinowitz: A Type Like No Other

Joyce Rabinowitz, 76, is a volunteer Braille transcriber. She takes the printed word and, using a special computer program called Braille 2000, transforms it letter by letter into a prescribed set of dots that she saves to disk and gives to the Braille Institute. Each disk, with the help of an embossing machine, is used to produce a book written in raised dot text that a blind person can read with his or her fingers.

‘On_Line’ Takes Byte Out of Cyberspace

\”I got hooked peering into the lives of strangers,\” said Jed Weintrob, a self-described Jewish \”techno geek.\” \”It was both calming and mind-blowing to log on and see Jenni on Jennicam.org who was also awake at 4:30 a.m., but in the end it was also kind of alienating…. You\’re watching this person do the most intimate things, yet you\’re never going to know them or touch them.\”

More news and opinions than at a
Shabbat dinner, right in your inbox.

More news and opinions than at a Shabbat dinner, right in your inbox.

More news and opinions than at a Shabbat dinner, right in your inbox.