US backs nuclear fuel bank plan

An international scheme to produce a controlled supply of enriched uranium has won support from the US and Russia.
BBC News | 05/31/07


The US Congress Foreign Affairs Committee has approved a bill that supports the creation of an global nuclear fuel bank.

It would be supervised by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), which inspects reactors.

The aim is to end uncertainty over states that enrich uranium and if they plan to use it for fuel or weapons.

The fuel bank would produce enriched uranium, which is a necessary ingredient in nuclear power reactors, keeping stocks of it for sale.

Countries that are building nuclear reactors would not have to make their own uranium fuel - they could simply buy it from the bank.

Inter-governmental agreement

The US decision comes less than two weeks after Russia and Kazakhstan signed an inter-governmental agreement with the IAEA to consider setting up such a facility in Siberia.

Concerns over nuclear proliferation have most recently been raised over Iran, which is building a reactor in Bushehr and has a uranium enrichment facility in Natanz.

Co-sponsor of the bill, US Democrat Tom Lantos, stated, "Those who truly seek to develop nuclear power solely for peaceful means will jump at the chance to take part in this fuel bank."

Uranium is usually enriched using hundreds or thousands of centrifuges - cylindrical rotors moving at high-speed in an almost friction-free environment - that slowly separate uranium from its ore.

But because similar equipment is also used to enrich uranium for nuclear bombs, it is often difficult to be certain about the true intentions of states that build them.

According to the IAEA, Iran has constructed more than 1,300 centrifuges at Natanz.

Iran insists that its nuclear ambitions are peaceful, but the international community has imposed sanctions on the country over fears that it wants to develop a nuclear weapon.

Possible solution

A nuclear fuel bank that guaranteed uranium access to Iran could provide a possible solution to the political dilemma. It would remove the need for Iran to enrich uranium for fuel at all.

It would also allow the IAEA to more accurately measure how much nuclear fuel is being used, making it easier to spot if any uranium is diverted for non-peaceful purposes.

However, Frank Barnaby, a security expert at the Oxford Research Group, an independent security charity, does not believe it will work:

"Countries will simply not agree to it," he said.

"Iran says it has an unalienable right to enrich uranium to fuel nuclear power reactors, and there is no reason for it to choose to use the bank."

A recent paper published by the IAEA said that the nuclear fuel bank would be supervised by the IAEA but "financed on a commercial basis or by the [IAEA] Member States".

The US has committed $50m of funding to the bank, matching $50 million that was offered in 2006 by the Nuclear Threat Initiative, a US-based charity.

Following an agreement in May 2007 between Kazakhstan and Russia, a site for the nuclear fuel bank is now being considered in the remote city of Irkutsk, in Eastern Siberia. There is already a large uranium enrichment plant in the area.

Kazakhstan has about 20 per cent of the world's uranium ore and it reportedly has plans to triple production to 15,000 tonnes by the end of the decade.

The proposed nuclear fuel bank in Irkutsk will be discussed at a meeting of the IAEA's Board of Governors in June 2007.

Despite these commitments by the US and Russia, security expert Frank Barnaby says that other countries are likely to oppose the plans.

He said: "The UK and Japan have historically made objections to the idea of a nuclear fuel bank because they see enriching uranium as a secret operation and any international efforts to create a bank will mean information will leak, which threatens their security."

Google Goes Offline With 'Gears'

Flanked by partners, Google offers new APIs and focuses on its plans to move further into Microsoft's desktop space.
InformationWeek | 05/30/07


At the San Jose Convention Center on Thursday, as Google Developer Day 2007 gets under way in the United States, Google engineering VP Jeff Huber plans to demonstrate how one of his company's online applications, Google Reader, can be used without an Internet connection.

"Ajax-based applications, browser-based applications, are great and have many, many wonderful properties," said Huber. "But we found that, every so often, people get on airplanes."

Google's recently disclosed purchase of browser security startup GreenBorder suddenly makes a lot more sense: Google is moving into Microsoft territory, the desktop.

Google Developer Day 2007 is taking place around the world in 10 different countries: Australia, Brazil, China, France, Germany, Japan, Russia, Spain, the United Kingdom, and the United States.

In conjunction with the commencement of Google Developer Day 2007 in Sydney, Australia, Google on Wednesday plans to announce Google Gears, a free, open-source multi-platform JavaScript application programming interface (API) that lets Web applications work offline.

"With Google Gears, we're tackling a key limitation of the browser in order to make it a stronger platform for deploying all types of applications and enabling a better user experience in the cloud," said Eric Schmidt, CEO of Google, in a statement. "We believe strongly in the power of the community to stretch this new technology to the limits of what's possible and ultimately emerge with an open standard that benefits everyone."

Google hopes Gears will become the standard for adding offline capabilities -- data storage, application caching, and multithreading -- to online applications.

As part of Google's announcement, representatives of Adobe Software, Mozilla Corp., and Opera Software have expressed their support for Google Gears. Kevin Lynch, senior VP and chief software architect at Adobe, welcomed the addition of "a standard cross-platform, cross-browser local storage capability" and said that the Google Gears API would work with Apollo, Adobe's new rich Internet application development platform. Brendan Eich, CTO at Mozilla Corp., and Håkon Wium Lie, CTO of Opera Software, each expressed their appreciation of Gears as a way to extend the Web browser and make it more useful.

David Mitchell Smith, Web analyst for Gartner, characterized the announcement as particularly significant. "The idea of taking Web applications offline is big," he said. While Google Gears can be viewed as a competitive move against Microsoft, he said that's not the only valid frame of reference.

More broadly, Google Gears weakens the case for rich Internet applications. "Rich clients become less compelling the more the Web applications continue to grow," said Smith. "Ajax has certainly taken a bite out of the opportunities that RIA developers thought they had."

Huber acknowledges that the browser isn't necessarily the best platform for every application. "There will certainly be cases that make sense for separate clients," he said. "For example, we have Google Earth as a separate client. The makes sense because we need access to the 3-D accelerator and the machine. But in general, we'd like to make these applications basically as simple as using Google Search. We find more and more cases of these applications being very popular and making a lot of sense."

One reason for this is that many users have become impatient with the hassles of managing desktop applications, particularly during hardware upgrades. "I think the growth of the Internet has really reflected the difficulties people have running desktop software," said Chris DiBona, open source programs manager at Google.

Google's online word processing and spreadsheet applications, Google Docs & Spreadsheets, represent obvious candidates for offline use. "We're not launching those just yet," said Huber, who emphasized that Google Gears will be useful not just to Google but to anyone developing browser-based applications for the desktop or for mobile phones. "This is really the beginning of that process. This is the initial release to get it out to the world so lots more people can get their hands on it."

Sony Makes Paper-Thin Video Screen

Sony has found a way to create video screens that are as thin and pliant as a piece of paper, but the company hasn't settled on what to do with the cutting-edge technology as yet. "It would be perfect for mobile and media devices like the iPod, Zune and other MP3 players," suggested Todd Day, an analyst with Frost & Sullivan.
TechNewsWorld | 05/29/07


Sony (NYSE: SNE) Latest News about Sony has developed a display screen so thin it can bend like a piece of paper while at the same time showing full-color video.

In the continuing race to shrink the size of gadgets while increasing the amount of cutting-edge technology crammed inside, Sony has topped its competitors with the release of a 2.5-inch display that is only 0.01 inch thick.

"In the future, it could get wrapped around a lamppost or a person's wrist -- even worn as clothing," said Chisato Kitsukawa, a Sony spokesperson. "Perhaps it can be put up like wallpaper."

Although there is a seemingly endless array of applications Get the facts on wireless solutions suited to your industry. for the technology, Sony has yet to decide on how to use it in commercial products.

Wanted Technology

There are myriad possibilities for an ultra-thin display like Sony's, Todd Day, an analyst with Frost & Sullivan Latest News about Frost & Sullivan, told TechNewsWorld.

"It would be perfect for mobile and media devices like the iPod, Zune and other MP3 players," he suggested. "There is a big demand for smaller devices."

A paper-thin display could ease cost burdens for manufacturers, noted Day, allowing them to basically create devices without screens and add them after production. "It would take a complicated step out of process."

Cost and durability could be issues if Sony decides to compete in the home plasma market, he observed. However, the "electronic paper" display could be a competitor with projection devices.

"Increasing the display size is another obstacle facing Sony," Day said.

The Competition

So far, Sony is alone in the e-paper space. Other companies have shown off similar technologies, but they are only capable of producing stagnant images. Sony's new display is revolutionary, because it is the only one that can run videos at a consistent frame rate.

LG, Philips (NYSE: PHG) Latest News about Philips and Seiko Epson are all known to be working on a different e-paper technologies, but Sony maintains that its organic electroluminescent display delivers better color images and is more suitable for video.

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