EU directive aims to make all batteries removable, even THAT battery

October 7th, 2008 by

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The European Union already initiated a Battery Directive in 2006 that aimed to make it easier to dispose of and recycle old batteries, but it looks like it’s now taking things one big step further with its “New Battery Directive,” which proposes that batteries in all electronic devices should be able to be “readily removed” for replacement or disposal. New Electronics’ Gary Nevison further adds that “the requirement is clearly intended to ensure that users can remove batteries by opening a cover by hand or after removal of one or two screws,” which would obviously pose a bit of a problem for the iPhone, not to mention every iPod and even a few non-Apple devices. Then again, this wouldn’t be the first time that Apple has tangled with the EU, and we have a sneaking suspicion that it won’t be the last.

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Posted in iPhone, Apple, ipod, eu, battery directive, BatteryDirective, new battery directive, NewBatteryDirective | No Comments »

EC cuts a slice of spectrum for vehicle-to-vehicle communication

August 6th, 2008 by

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It seems that Dash-like devices that rely on plain old GPRS for two-way vehicle communications could one day be a bit redundant in Europe, as the European Commission has just set aside a slice of spectrum that’s intended specifically to let vehicles communicate with each other. As with the Dash and other similar devices, the idea here is to give drivers a heads up about traffic jams and other potential hazards, with real-time data provided by other drivers ensuring all that info is as up to date as possible. The system, which will make use of 30MHz of spectrum in the 5.9GHz band, will also apparently allow roadside transmitters to send vital info to vehicles passing by, although exactly when that might happen is, of course, a bit unclear at the moment.

[Via The Register]

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Posted in europe, eu, european union, EuropeanUnion, spectrum, ec, 5.9ghz, european commision, EuropeanCommision | No Comments »

EU slaps Intel with three more antitrust charges

July 17th, 2008 by

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Man, the EU is really not too fond of Intel, is it? Adding to all the other antitrust charges filed against the chipmaker, the friendly grey suits at the European Commission have slapped on an additional three: paying a “leading European retailer” not stock AMD products, giving incentives to PC makers to switch to Intel chips, and paying an unspecified company to delay the launch of an AMD-based product. For its part, Intel is reacting like it always does when the Europeans get prickly: by steadfastly denying everything. Intel has eight weeks to file a formal response, but as with all of these cases, we wouldn’t expect a resolution any time soon.

[Thanks, Ricky]

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Posted in Intel, lawsuit, legal, antitrust, eu, European Commission, european union, EuropeanCommission, EuropeanUnion | No Comments »

Sensor vest promises to affirm that we’re always stressed out

July 7th, 2008 by

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So maybe your stress level isn’t sky high just yet, but even after an extended weekend, all it takes is that one email to get you right back where you were last Wednesday. As if you really needed something to tell you that (and if you don’t have time to wait for Sweety to become a reality), a host of researchers have created a sensor-laden vest that will be able to inform wearers just how stressed they are. Developed as part of the EU’s CONTEXT project, this sure-to-be-hip vest packs ultra-sensitive electrodes which register changes in muscle tension as individuals get more and more stressed, and in theory, letting someone know what’s happening will allow them to simmer down before they further jeopardize their health (and the livelihood of colleagues, if you dig). Eh, we still prefer the Dr. Whippy method, honestly.

[Via Talk2MyShirt, thanks Tony]

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Posted in research, stress, eu, sensor, invention, Vest, clothing, garb, CONTEXT, electrical, sensor vest, SensorVest | No Comments »

US files complaint with WTO over EU tariffs on high-tech products

May 28th, 2008 by

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Yeah, so Sony’s hitting us with magically-thin OLED TVs, Microsoft is showing off Windows 7, and Google’s demoing hot new Android phones, but nothing gets us going like an old-fashioned tariff agreement dispute based on the classification of certain types of goods, you know? That’s just good clean fun. It’s also what’s going down between the US and the EU — our charming government has just filed a complaint with the World Trade Organization, alleging that the EU is mis-classifying multifunction printers, flat-panel computer displays, and cable boxes that fall under the 1996 Information Technology Agreement in order to collect tariffs on their imports. Essentially all these products should be duty-free, but the EU says their additional functions require the ITA be re-negotiated to cover them — LCD displays can also be used with DVD players, for example, and so qualify as “video monitors,” which are taxed. Sure, it’s a totally semantic fight, but that’s what trade representatives live for — we hear this one’s going to be bigger than the 2006 Canadian Softwood Lumber Import showdown.

[Via Physorg]

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Posted in eu, european union, EuropeanUnion, us, united states, UnitedStates, information technology agreement, InformationTechnologyAgreement, world trade organization, WorldTradeOrganization, wto | No Comments »

Nintendo pushes back against 149.1 million Euro fine

May 21st, 2008 by

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The EU has doled out some pretty hefty fines in the past, but it looks like Nintendo is pushing back against the one it got slapped with back in 2002, with the company now saying that it was “unfair, illegal, even shocking.” That fine (some 140.1 million Euros, or about $220 million), was the result of some alleged price fixing on Nintendo’s part back during the SNES-fueled glory days of 1991 to 1998, during which time European Union regulators say Nintendo colluded with seven different distributors to raise hardware and software prices. For its part, the EU commission maintains that the fine “was not of a capricious nature, or based on wild estimates,” and that it “was for an infringement that was considered very serious.” No word on Nintendo’s next move just yet, but if past appeals of EU rulings are any indication, they certainly seem to be facing an uphill battle.

[Via Pocket-lint]

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Posted in Nintendo, antitrust, eu, european union, EuropeanUnion, eu fine, EuFine | No Comments »

CHRIS project aims to put a robot in the kitchen

May 16th, 2008 by

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We’re not certain what’s up with the sudden rash of news about EU- and EC-funded robotics research, but we’re not going to turn down robotic kitchen assistance either, so say hello to the Cooperative Human Robot Interaction System (CHRIS) project, which aims to build a service robot capable of working safely with humans. According to the researchers, the plan is to “to develop the rules we need to introduce this level of sophistication into service robots who are working closely with people,” and to that end they’ve already built several prototypes and started testing specific scenarios, like how a bot should react to accidentally splashing a human worker with hot soup, or how to read facial expressions and tones of voice. Thats fine by us — we’re pretty certain an army of deathbots can’t do too much damage with soup — but let’s make sure we leave the chopping to the people, k?

[Via Primidi]

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Posted in eu, ec, chris, Cooperative Human Robot Interaction System, CooperativeHumanRobotInteractionSystem, kitchen robot, KitchenRobot | No Comments »

Beavers and bugs inspire robotic creations

May 15th, 2008 by

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Rest assured, this won’t be the first or last time you hear of insects and mammals being used as inspiration for robotic creatures. Nevertheless, a recent MIT mechanical engineering course saw students craft bots that could handle “beaver-like tasks” such as “knocking down trees and gathering food in the form of street hockey balls” while fending off competitors in 45-second rounds. Separately, the EU-funded SPARK endeavor is seeking to “develop a new robot control architecture for roving robots inspired by the principles governing the behavior of living systems and based on the concept of self-organization.” There’s plenty more material to make your skin crawl in the read links below, just don’t feed the mechs, okay?

Read - SPARK project
Read - MIT competition

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Posted in europe, research, eu, insects, animal, team, Beaver, robot team, RobotTeam, SPARK | No Comments »

Microsoft to appeal $1.35B EU antitrust fine

May 9th, 2008 by

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Microsoft’s no stranger to appealing antitrust decisions before the European Commission’s Court of the First Instance, and it looks like it’s saddling up for another go ’round: the software giant has decided to appeal that $1.3B antitrust fine handed down in February. Saying that it was only filing as part of a “constructive effort to seek clarity from the court,” Microsoft has asked that the decision be annulled. Yeah, that seems pretty clear. As always, our suggestions that this be resolved with a GTA IV / CoD4 round-robin deathmatch on Live have gone unheeded in favor of tedious paperwork and months of delay, but we’re still holding out hope.

[Thanks, Hosain]

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Posted in Microsoft, lawsuit, legal, antitrust, eu, European Commission, european union, EuropeanCommission, EuropeanUnion | No Comments »

European Commission gives approval to in-flight calling over Europe

April 7th, 2008 by

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Not even a week after hearing that Air France was forging ahead with an in-flight calling trial, the European Commission has now voiced its approval of using mobiles on planes in European airspace. After six months of deliberating, the decision was finally made to give airlines the choice of offering up services in order for guests to dial loved ones at 3,000-meters or more. The EU telecoms commissioner, Viviane Reding, went on to warn operators to “keep the cost of calls made on planes at a reasonable level,” and of course, not all is clear just yet. For starters, the European Aviation Safety Agency still needs to green-light the whole ordeal by approving any hardware that would be used, and we won’t be seeing any 3G action up high just yet. Still, at least one less hurdle stands in the way of you phoning home from over Europe (and simultaneously making enemies out of all your neighbors trying to get a few decent minutes of shuteye).

 

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Posted in europe, eu, European Commission, EuropeanCommission, airplane, flight, plane, france, in-flight, in-flight calling, In-flightCalling, trial, OnAir, ofcom, pico cell, pico cells, PicoCell, PicoCells | No Comments »

Nokia’s NAVTEQ acquisition draws probe from the EU

March 28th, 2008 by

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It may have won approval from the U.S. Federal Trade Commission and NAVTEQ shareholders alike, but it looks like the EU’s European Commission needs a bit more time to think over Nokia’s acquisition of the company, and it’s now launched an “in-depth” probe into the matter. According to Reuters, the Commission said that the “proposed merger raises serious doubts with regards to … competition concerns,” although it was quick to add that the decision to open the inquiry does not prejudge the result of the probe. Among other things, the probe will apparently attempt to asses whether whether the purchase would affect the cost of maps for other companies providing navigation services on cellphones. If all of this has a familiar ring, it should, because it wasn’t all that long ago that the EU launched a similar probe into TomTom’s similar acquisition of map-maker Tele Atlas.

 

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Posted in nokia, navteq, eu, European Commission, european union, EuropeanCommission, EuropeanUnion | No Comments »

Researchers claim to have developed robotic AI on par with a puppy

March 21st, 2008 by

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The robot uprising, it inches ever closer — researchers working on the EU-funded COSPAL project have developed a new robotic AI that they say is the most advanced of its type ever created. Using both learning neural AI techniques and traditional rules-based AI as a control mechanism, the robot can be trained “like a child or a puppy,” and has managed to figure out simple sorting tasks on its own. The next step is to try and integrate the system into a car that can adjust to unforeseen driving conditions, but the researchers in charge aren’t worried about creating an army of KARRs set to mow us all down — according to researcher Michael Felsberg, adult-level AI based on this system probably won’t happen in our lifetimes. On the other hand, we’ve heard machines will match us by 2029 — that’ll be a fun debate to have when we’re all slaving away in the robo-mines.

[Apologies for the terrible photo — sure, COSPAL can develop puppy-level AI, but they’re apparently still rocking a QuickTake 100.]

Read - Physorg article on the COSPAL robot
Read - COSPAL site

 

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Posted in eu, ai, aritifical intelligence, AritificalIntelligence, cospal | No Comments »

European Commission standardizes on DVB-H, Nokia dances jig on Qualcomm’s grave

March 18th, 2008 by

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As expected, the European Commission just did the obvious and made the EU’s de facto DVB-H standard, standard. The move is expected to accelerate the deployment of mobile television services across Europe in the same way that GSM standardization in the early 90s gave Europe a head-start on backwater cellular locations like North America. So get outta Dodge Qualcomm and South Korea with your MediaFLO and DMB mobile television technologies, you aren’t welcome around Brussels anymore.

 

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Posted in europe, nokia, eu, European Commission, EuropeanCommission, qualcomm, dmb, DVB-H, mediaflo | No Comments »

Third-gen Zune to hit in 2009, make it to Europe

March 13th, 2008 by

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Seeing how long it took the Zune to make it over the northern border and into Canada, it shouldn’t be any surprise that it’s going to take even longer to get to Europe — not until late next year, according to the director of Microsoft France. The wait should be worth it, though: that’s when the third generation of Zunes will be released, as well as a Europe-friendly version of the Zune Marketplace. There are also some sketchy rumors that Windows Mobile 7 devices will be able to take advantage of Zune content and services, but it doesn’t look like Microsoft has anything to say about that yet — but if that goes down you know a Zune phone is right around the corner.

[Via Anything But iPod]

 

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Posted in Microsoft, europe, winmo, zune, windows mobile, WindowsMobile, eu, zune marketplace, ZuneMarketplace, photon, windows mobile 7, WindowsMobile7, winmo 7, Winmo7 | No Comments »

European Xbox 360 price cuts officially official

March 10th, 2008 by

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Yeah, we had plenty of advance notice, but it looks like those European Xbox 360 price cuts are now the real deal. The 360 Arcade is now just €199.99 / £159.99, while the Premium drops €80 / £50 to €269.99 / £199.99 and the Elite comes down €80 / £40 to €369.99 / £259.99. That means the Arcade is now half the price of the 40GB PS3 in the EU — not necessarily a great 1:1 comparison, but something tells us it’s going to look awfully convincing on store shelves.

 

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Posted in Microsoft, xbox 360, Xbox360, 360, xbox, price cuts, PriceCuts, eu, uk | No Comments »

EU now formally opposed to TomTom / Tele Atlas deal

March 1st, 2008 by

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Reuters is reporting that the European Commission, apparently having completed is inquiry into the $4.2b acquisition offer TomTom made Tele Atlas last year, is apparently issuing a “statement of objections.” Apparently it’s not a flat-out rejection / do not pass go / do not collect $200, but now TomTom has until May 5th to work on resolving the issues the EU’s presented before it can get the thumbs up to make its big buy.

 

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Posted in acquisition, tomtom, eu, tele atlas, TeleAtlas, delay | No Comments »

EU says it’ll believe Microsoft is going open when it sees it

February 21st, 2008 by

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Echoing the reactions of many to Microsoft’s decision to open things up this morning, the European Commission issued a statement this morning saying that while it welcomes any moves towards “genuine interoperability,” it’s not going to believe it until it sees it — it’s counted four similar announcements by Redmond in the past, with nothing to show for it. Of course, Microsoft is currently being investigated for antitrust violations in Europe, so there’s a whispered belief that the new steps are a ploy to derail that process, but that’s pretty doubtful — and the EU’s not having it anyway, saying that “Today’s announcement by Microsoft does not address the tying allegations.” For its part, Microsoft actually agrees, saying that it’s opening things up on its own — the move reflects both “the reality of our unique legal situation” as well as “new opportunities and risks in the connected world.” That’s certainly an interesting approach — but we’ll see how the EU reacts if and when Microsoft follows through on these promises.

 

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Posted in Microsoft, antitrust, eu, European Commission, european union, EuropeanCommission, EuropeanUnion, interoperatbility | No Comments »

iTunes movie rentals in Europe on a slow boat to China

January 21st, 2008 by

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It may be exceptionally easy to use, but rolling out Apple’s iTunes movie rental service to Europe will be no easy task. This according to a piece just published by the The New York Times. Despite known collectively as Europe, the EU’s 27 member countries remain a patchwork of convoluted regulatory fragments related to digital media. For example, in The Netherlands, it remains uniquely and ambiguously legal to download, but not upload, copyrighted material. Release schedules also vary widely across Europe — sometimes releasing the same day as in the US or months later. Notably for Apple, a distributor of content must secure individual licenses to films in every country they wish to do business. No easy task given Apple’s rental agreements cover all the major and many smaller studios. This lack of coherence makes a pan-European iTunes rental agreement daunting, to say the least. Fortunately, commissioner Vivian Reding of the European Commission, plans to make a proposal mid-year that would streamline digital commerce efforts across European borders. Remember, Viv is the force responsible for stomping out the EU’s ridiculous roaming rates. In other words, we can expect more than just lip-service in the months ahead. Unfortunately, given Apple’s history of trouble with the EU over pan-European iTunes pricing and DRM, you can bet they’ll tread the EU waters carefully (read: slowly) as they attempt to go live in Europe.

 

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Posted in europe, eu, European Commission, EuropeanCommission, itunes, rent, rental, vivian reding, VivianReding | No Comments »

Microsoft due for another round of EU antitrust probes

January 14th, 2008 by

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Microsoft, the ever-present target of scorn from the little guy, has once again been hit with antitrust charges in the EU, according to a report in the Wall Street Journal today. This time it’s charges related to the company’s refusal to disclose “interoperability information” for a variety of products, including Office, which is keeping competitors from marketing compatible software (we’ve heard complaints of this type from Open Office users for some time). Additionally — just as we reported in December — Norwegian web browser outfit Opera is stepping up to the plate, alleging that Redmond’s inclusion of Internet Explorer with its ubiquitous operating system leaves little room for rival companies to enter the game. Considering how Microsoft’s last antitrust case went in the EU, this may bode poorly for the giant, though a ruling in favor of reforms could benefit the end user. Stay tuned to this space for more information as we get it.

 

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Posted in Microsoft, antitrust, eu, european union, EuropeanUnion, investigation, opera, interoperability, probe | No Comments »

EU says all sheep and goats must be electronically tagged by 2010

December 20th, 2007 by

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We’re not exactly sure why the EU feels the need to track sheep and goats across Europe, but it just voted to make electronic tagging mandatory by the end of 2009. The move comes after a two-year delay at the insistence of the UK, and it means that all sheep and goats will be implanted with a €1 ($1.43) tag that will allow anyone with a €200 ($286) handheld reader to get a complete history of the animal. We’re pretty certain that infringes on sheep / goat privacy rights — quick, someone start a petition!

[Via The Register]

 

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Posted in eu, european union, EuropeanUnion, Tagging, electronic tagging, ElectronicTagging, goats, sheep | No Comments »

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