Archive for January, 2008

Direct Inward Dialing - Internet VoIP program

Thursday, January 31st, 2008

Direct Inward Dialing (DID, also called DDI in Europe) is a feature offered by telephone companies for use with their customers’ PBX systems, whereby the telephone company (telco) allocates a range of numbers all connected to their customer’s PBX. As calls are presented to the PBX, the number that the caller dialed is also given, so the PBX can route the call to the desired person or bureau within the organization.

Developed by AT&T in the 1960s, patterned upon the earlier IKZ service of the Deutsche Bundespost, this feature enables companies to have fewer lines than extensions, while still having a unique number for each extension, callable from outside the company.

By way of example, each extension of the PBX system may be assigned a seven-digit external telephone number, with a fixed four- or five-digit prefix. Someone who knows the internal extension of his/her correspondent can dial the seven-digit number and be connected directly to the person called, bypassing the operator or PBX auto-attendant.

This system is also used by fax servers. Instead of an exchange at the end of the 234 000 line, a computer running fax server software and fax modem cards uses the last three digits to identify the recipient of the fax. This allows 1000 people to have their own individual fax numbers, even though there is only one ‘fax machine’.

When people give out their work number and say it’s a “direct line”, often what they mean is that it’s a DID number.


DID (DDI) and VoIP aka “Call Through”

DID” numbers have particular relevance for VoIP communications. In order for people connected to the traditional PSTN network to call people connected to VoIP networks, DID numbers from the PSTN network are obtained by the administrators of the VoIP network, and assigned to a gateway in the VoIP network. The gateway will then route calls incoming from the PSTN across the IP network to the appropriate VoIP user. Similarly, calls originating in the VoIP network will appear to users on the PSTN as originating from one of the assigned DID numbers.

US DID numbers can be purchased in bulk from a Competitive Local Exchange Carrier.

International DID numbers can be purchased in bulk from international DID providers like:

DID World Wide (60 countries covered)

Voxbone (40 countries covered)

There are also a number of DID resellers offering DID numbers for individuals and small enterprises:

DID eXchange

Ring WorldWide call forwarding service

Virtualphoneline

PimpMyNumber (UK Numbering Options)


See also

  • Dialed Number Identification Service

Links

DSL modem - transceiver. They

Thursday, January 31st, 2008

ADSL modem or DSL modem is a device used to connect a single computer or router to a DSL phone line, in order to use an ADSL service. The acronym NTBBA (network termination broad band adapter, network termination broad band access) is also common in various countries. Some ADSL modems also manage the connection and sharing of the ADSL service with a group of machines: in this case, the unit is termed a DSL router or residential gateway. Asymmetric digital subscriber line transceiver or ATU-R, as the telephone companies call it, is a functional block inside every ADSL modem which actually performs modulation, demodulation and framing, while other functional blocks perform Asynchronous Transfer Mode Segmentation and Reassembly, IEEE 802.1D bridging and/or IP routing. Typical user interfaces are Ethernet and USB. Although an ADSL modem working as a bridge doesn’t need an IP address, it may have one assigned for management purposes.


Compared to voiceband modem

The two devices serve fundamentally the same purpose, but differ in important ways.

  • DSL modems are more popularly external to the computer and are wired to the computer’s Ethernet port, or occasionally its USB port, whereas voiceband modems are usually built inside the computer. Internal DSL modems (with PCI interface) are also available in the market.
  • Microsoft Windows and other operating systems do not recognize external DSL modems, and hence have no Property Sheet or other internal method to configure them. This is because the transceiver and computer are considered separate nodes in the LAN, rather than the transceiver being a device controlled by the computer (such as webcams, mice, keyboards etc.). Routers can be configured manually, using a Web page provided by the modem via the ethernet that the router connects to. DSL modems rarely need to be configured, because they are part of the physical layer of computer networks. They are only forwarding ones and zeros from one medium (CAT5) to another one (telephone line).
  • In case of internal DSL modems Microsoft Windows and other operating systems provide interfaces similar to provided for voiceband modems. This is based on the assumption that going forward, as the CPU speeds increase, internal DSL modems may become more mainstream.
  • DSL modems use frequencies from 25 kHz to above 1MHz (see Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line), in order not to interfere with voice service which is primarily 0-4 kHz. Voiceband modems use the same frequency spectrum as ordinary telephones, and will interfere with voice service.
  • DSL modems vary in data speed from hundreds of Kilobits per second to many Megabits, while voiceband modems are limited to approximately 50 kbit/s.
  • DSL modems exchange data with only the DSLAM to which they are wired, which in turn connects them to the Internet, while most voiceband modems can dial directly anywhere in the world.
  • DSL modems are intended for particular protocols and sometimes won’t work on another line even from the same company, while most voiceband modems use international standards and can “fall back” to find a standard that will work.

Most of these differences are of little interest to consumers, except the greater speed of DSL and the ability to use the telephone even when the computer is online.

Because a single phone line commonly carries DSL and voice, filters are used to separate the two uses. (See DSL filter)


Hardware components

As technology advances, functions that are provided by multiple chips can be integrated onto one chip. Higher levels of integration have benefited DSL just as they benefited other computer hardware. A DSL modem requires the following for its operation; exactly what is on the circuit card and how it is arranged can change as technology improves:

  • Power: Transformer and capacitor
  • Data connection and power circuitry (for example, USB, Ethernet, PCI)
  • DSL digital data pump
  • DSL analog chip and line driver
  • Micro controller
  • Filter


Service Features

Apart from connecting to an ADSL service, many modems offer additional integrated features:

  • ADSL2 or [[ADSL2+]] support
  • Router functionality that uses Network Address Translation (NAT) to share the connection
  • An 802.11b or 802.11g wireless access point
  • A built-in switch (typically 4 ports)
  • Virtual Private Network termination
  • Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) server
  • Dynamic DNS (Domain Name System) clients
  • Voice over IP functionality including Quality of Service (priority control for data flows between users)

Many ADSL modems can have their firmware upgraded to support additional features or fix existing problems. This can be done over the network, or using a dedicated serial connection.


Manufacturers

Currently, Taiwan manufactures most of the ADSL modems in the world, ODM plays a large role with designs from various parts of the world. Below lists an array of designers.

  • 2Wire (United States)
  • 3Com (United States)
  • A-Link (Finland)
  • Alcatel (France)
  • Amplebit (India)
  • AVM (Germany)
  • Aztech (Singapore)
  • Belkin (United States)
  • Billion (Taiwan)
  • Comtrend (Taiwan)
  • D-Link (Taiwan)
  • Draytek (Taiwan)
  • Efficient Networks (Germany, related to Siemens)
  • Fujitsu (Japan)
  • Huawei (China)
  • Intertex (Sweden)
  • NetComm (Australia)
  • LevelOne (Germany)
  • Netgear (United States)
  • Netopia (United States)
  • OvisLink (United States)
  • Sagem (France)
  • Siemens (Germany-United States)
  • Symphony [1]
  • Thomson (France)
  • U.S. Robotics (United States)
  • Westell (United States)
  • ZTE (China)
  • ZyXEL (Taiwan)
  • Zoom Technologies (United States)


External links

  • Understanding the lights on your ADSL modem/router

Links

  • The VoIP Weblog Today's New York Times has an interesting story on the impact VoIP services have had on the traditional phone companies. Basically, VoIP services like
  • Business VoIP - Gradwell Dot Com If you have broadband at home or at work, Gradwell's VoIP services allow you to deploy all the features of office-based telephony, with a fraction of the
  • VoipDiscount | Free Calls and SMS Free phone calls with VoipDiscount. Call your online friends for free as well as a special selection of popular international destinations.

Tapioca (framework) - research VoIP security education

Thursday, January 31st, 2008

Tapioca is a free framework for Voice over IP and Instant Messaging. Its main goal is to provide an easy way for developing and using VoIP and IM services in any kind of application. It was designed to be cross-platform, lightweight, thread-safe, having mobile devices and applications in mind. It is fully interoperable with Google Talk.

Tapioca’s main goals are:

  • Create a solution that integrates all components used by VoIP and IM applications in a single, reliable and easy to use framework, which is able to work on different platforms.
  • Spare resources, providing central services for multiple applications. Eg.: The control of all incoming and outgoing SIP requests are managed by the SIP service, avoiding the creation of one SIP stack and allocation of a network port for each SIP-based application.
  • Reduce the overhead of control layers and library dependencies.


See also

  • Telepathy
  • Decibel


External link

  • Tapioca Wiki at SourceForge

Links

List of text-based MMORPGs - External links

Thursday, January 31st, 2008

This is a list of massively multiplayer online role-playing games (MMORPGs) which primarily use text to communicate with their players, and are typically played within a web browser.

For graphical MMORPGs, see list of MMORPGs.


List by theme


Survival horror

  • Urban Dead


Medieval fantasy

  • DragonRealms
  • GemStone IV
  • Lusternia, Age of Ascension
  • Achaea, Dreams of Divine Lands
  • Materia Magica
  • Medievia
  • Travian
  • Utopia


Music

  • Popomundo


Space

  • Ogame


Sport

  • Hattrick
  • Battrick


Other themes

  • Game Neverending - Theme: Barter society.
  • Hollywood Stock Exchange - Theme: Cinema management
  • Jennifer Government: NationStates - Theme: Politics.
  • Kingdom of Loathing - Theme: Humour


See also

  • Turn-based MMORPGs

Links

MGC - VoIP security

Thursday, January 31st, 2008

MGC can refer to:

  • Machine Gun Corps
  • Mitsubishi Gas Chemical Company, Inc.
  • Media Gateway Controller, a device in Voice over IP networks
  • Museums and Galleries Commission
  • MGC, a British sports car.

Links

SIPfoundry - VoIP

Thursday, January 31st, 2008

SIPfoundry is a not-for-profit open source community, whose mission is to promote and advance Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) - related open source projects. Through SIPfoundry, the users, developers, and distributors of SIP-based products can collectively support each other and accelerate the growth and adoption of SIP.

Founded in March 2004, SIPfoundry established close ties with the SIP Forum as well as the IETF. SIPfoundry actively promotes the standardization of SIP and interoperability of SIP products and solution across the industry through the SIP Forum Test Framework (SFTF).

SIPfoundry is also the place where the development of sipX, an open source SIP PBX for Linux, takes place. This project aims at commoditizing PBXs by offering a fully featured, standards-compliant, and easy-to-use SIP IP PBX for free as an open source solution. SIPfoundry would like SIP to become part of the Internet the same way HTTP, SMTP, and XML became ubiquitous and drove rapid adoption of new services across the Internet.


See also

  • reSIProcate (formerly homed in SIPfoundry, now independent)
  • sipX
  • VoIP


References

  • SIPfoundry projects
  • sipX Documentation Wiki


External links

  • sipfoundry.org
  • sipforum.org

Links

ENOVIA MatrixOne - customers such

Thursday, January 31st, 2008

ENOVIA MatrixOne or MatrixOne is a provider of Internet business collaboration software. The company is a subsidiary of Dassault Systemes.

MatrixOne specializes in Product Lifecycle Management (PLM). Most customers of MatrixOne are big Fortune 1000 companies. For the year 2004 they reported 650 global customers. Their flagship product is the Matrix10, which consists of a bundle of business process applications based on a common interoperable foundation platform.

The company has its headquarters in Chelmsford, Massachusetts and several offices throughout United States, Canada, Europe, Asia, and Pacific Rim. As of 2005, MatrixOne employs approximately 450 people globally. MatrixOne was founded in 1983 as Adra Systems and changed its name in 1997. The company held its initial public offering of shares in March 2000.

On March 2, 2006, Dassault Systemes announced their $408 million buyout of MatrixOne. The company was subsequently renamed ENOVIA MatrixOne at that time.


External link

  • http://www.matrixone.com

Links

  • Adobe Graphics Server - Partners MediaBin customers such as Ford Motor Company, Delta Air Lines, and Samsonite use MediaBin as a media asset clearinghouse, where employees and partners can
  • parties to this proceeding have interests are adverse to File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - View as HTMLare adverse to industrial customers such as AEEC wishes to be heard on each matter at issue herein, as each such matter. may affect the costs, terms,
  • Frederick's of Hollywood - Help We also use collected information to evaluate and administer our products and services, fulfill customer requests, respond to any future problems, such as
  • Cyber Threat Meter from VeriSign, Inc. LEVEL 4 - HIGH: A substantiated threat to customers, such as active exploitation, warrants immediate and focused action. The likelihood of damage is high,
  • Days Inn: Privacy Policy Like many other Internet sites, we may automatically collect certain non-Personal Information regarding our Customers, such as software client information
  • Service Untitled - customer service and customer service Ask customers why they are requesting a refund (but don’t make it a big deal). Explain any unique policies or procedures to customers (such as how a charge

Lior Haramaty - VoIP

Wednesday, January 30th, 2008

Lior Haramaty (born in Tel-Aviv, Israel in 1966) is the co-founder of VocalTec Inc. (1989) and the inventor of the Audio Transceiver () that enabled the creation of Voice Over Networks products and eventually the VoIP industry, that changed the face of the telecommunication industry.

According to Om Malik, “Two entrepreneurs barely out of their teens, Lior Haramaty and Alon Cohen, founded VocalTec Communications in 1993 based on the promise of packet voice technology they observed as members of the Israel Defense Force…. the idea of commercializing packet voice did not occur to anyone until the arrival of Lior and Alon.”Malik, Om. “The Voice over IP Insurrection”, September 19th, 2004.

TMCnet’s Internet Telephony Magazine - , “In fact, at that time the company’s CTO, Lior Haramaty, knew more about VoIP than just about anyone else, and we were fortunate to have him as a columnist in this magazine for a number of years.
“Internet Telephony Magazine. “[1]”, Oct, 2006.

NTIA New Directions in Telecom A Conversation with Assistant Secretary Larry Irving - , “Lior Haramaty, co-founder and Vice President of technical marketing of VocalTec Communications”NTIA. “http://www.ntia.doc.gov/forums/telecom/bios.htm]”, Feb 4, 1998.


References

Links

  • VoIP Australia - VoIP products - NetComm Limited Scott McGregor walks you through the basics of VoIP in this short movie that shows you how simple it is to start saving on your phone bills.
  • Tech news blog - VoIP - CNET News.com Technology, trends, and more from the CNET News.com Technology news blog.
  • VoIP Howto VoIP Howto. Roberto Arcomano berto@fatamorgana.com. v1.7, August 7, 2002 3.3 What is the advantages using VoIP rather PSTN?
  • VoipBuster - Free Calls Free* phone calls with the VoipBuster. Call your online friends for free as well as a special selection of popular international destinations.
  • VoipDiscount | Free Calls and SMS Free phone calls with VoipDiscount. Call your online friends for free as well as a special selection of popular international destinations.
  • VoIP VoIP, VoIP application developer AudioCodes produce VoIP phone, voice over DSL, and voice over ATM packet processors. IP telephony leaders, Audiocodes

Internet Speech Audio Codec - to VoIP. The stated

Tuesday, January 29th, 2008

For the Indian Satellite facillity, see ISRO Satellite Centre

internet Speech Audio Codec (iSAC) is a wideband speech codec, developed by Global IP Sound (GIPS). It is suitable for VoIP applications and streaming audio. The encoded blocks have to be encapsulated in a suitable protocol for transport, eg. RTP. Unlike iLBC, this codec is proprietary and implementations have to be licensed from GIPS.

It is one of the codecs used by AIM Triton, Skype, the Gizmo Project, and Google Talk.


Parameters and features

  • Sampling frequency 16 kHz
  • Adaptive and variable bit rate (10 kbit/s to 32 kbit/s)
  • Adaptive packet size 30 to 60ms
  • Complexity comparable to G.722.2 at comparable bit-rates
  • Algorithmic delay of frame size plus 3ms


See also

  • G.722
  • Speex
  • List of codecs


External links

  • Global IP Sound VoIP codecs

Links

Qiu Miaojin - and emerging

Tuesday, January 29th, 2008

Qiu Miaojin 邱妙津 (1969-1995) was a lesbian author from Changhua, Taiwan.

She graduated from Taipei First Girls’ High School, and the Department of Psychology at National Taiwan University. Later she worked at The Journalist (新新聞) as a reporter. In 1994 she went to Paris to study clinical psychology and feminism.

Her death was a suicide.

Her most famous book was Diary of a Crocodile (鱷魚手記), published in 1991. Luo Yijun’s book Forgetting Sorrow 遣悲懷 was written in her memory.


References

Links

Salient Synergy - provider of

Tuesday, January 29th, 2008

Salient Synergy is a leading provider of mobile and interactive telecommunications solutions in Malaysia.


External link

  • Official Site

Links

  • VOIP: For Home And Business Use VOIP is a new communications technology that allows local calls from any location, find out how it can be useful for you.
  • IP-Telefonie - Wikipedia Im Unterschied zur klassischen Telefonie werden bei VoIP aber keine . Die 032-Rufnummern konnten sich bislang bei den meisten VoIP-Providern noch nicht
  • VoIP | Overview Making phone calls over the Internet could save you

Bioinformatics - Lior

Tuesday, January 29th, 2008

Bioinformatics and computational biology involve the use of techniques including applied mathematics, informatics, statistics, computer science, artificial intelligence, chemistry, and biochemistry to solve biological problems usually on the molecular level. Research in computational biology often overlaps with systems biology. Major research efforts in the field include sequence alignment, gene finding, genome assembly, protein structure alignment, protein structure prediction, prediction of gene expression and protein-protein interactions, and the modeling of evolution.


Introduction

The terms bioinformatics and computational biology are often used interchangeably. However bioinformatics more properly refers to the creation and advancement of algorithms, computational and statistical techniques, and theory to solve formal and practical problems arising from the management and analysis of biological data. Computational biology, on the other hand, refers to hypothesis-driven investigation of a specific biological problem using computers, carried out with experimental or simulated data, with the primary goal of discovery and the advancement of biological knowledge. Put more simply, bioinformatics is concerned with the information while computational biology is concerned with the hypotheses. A similar distinction is made by National Institutes of Health in their working definitions of Bioinformatics and Computational Biology, where it is further emphasized that there is a tight coupling of developments and knowledge between the more hypothesis-driven research in computational biology and technique-driven research in bioinformatics. Bioinformatics is also often specified as an applied subfield of the more general discipline of Biomedical informatics.

A common thread in projects in bioinformatics and computational biology is the use of mathematical tools to extract useful information from data produced by high-throughput biological techniques such as genome sequencing. A representative problem in bioinformatics is the assembly of high-quality genome sequences from fragmentary “shotgun” DNA sequencing. Other common problems include the study of gene regulation using data from microarrays or mass spectrometry.


Major research areas


Sequence analysis

Since the Phage Φ-X174 was sequenced in 1977, the DNA sequences of hundreds of organisms have been decoded and stored in databases. The information is analyzed to determine genes that encode polypeptides, as well as regulatory sequences. A comparison of genes within a species or between different species can show similarities between protein functions, or relations between species (the use of molecular systematics to construct phylogenetic trees). With the growing amount of data, it long ago became impractical to analyze DNA sequences manually. Today, computer programs are used to search the genome of thousands of organisms, containing billions of nucleotides. These programs would compensate for mutations (exchanged, deleted or inserted bases) in the DNA sequence, in order to identify sequences that are related, but not identical. A variant of this sequence alignment is used in the sequencing process itself. The so-called shotgun sequencing technique (which was used, for example, by The Institute for Genomic Research to sequence the first bacterial genome, Haemophilus influenzae) does not give a sequential list of nucleotides, but instead the sequences of thousands of small DNA fragments (each about 600-800 nucleotides long). The ends of these fragments overlap and, when aligned in the right way, make up the complete genome. Shotgun sequencing yields sequence data quickly, but the task of assembling the fragments can be quite complicated for larger genomes. In the case of the Human Genome Project, it took several months of CPU time (on a circa-2000 vintage DEC Alpha computer) to assemble the fragments. Shotgun sequencing is the method of choice for virtually all genomes sequenced today, and genome assembly algorithms are a critical area of bioinformatics research.

Another aspect of bioinformatics in sequence analysis is the automatic search for genes and regulatory sequences within a genome. Not all of the nucleotides within a genome are genes. Within the genome of higher organisms, large parts of the DNA do not serve any obvious purpose. This so-called junk DNA may, however, contain unrecognized functional elements. Bioinformatics helps to bridge the gap between genome and proteome projects–for example, in the use of DNA sequences for protein identification.

See also: sequence analysis, sequence profiling tool, sequence motif.


Genome annotation

In the context of genomics, annotation is the process of marking the genes and other biological features in a DNA sequence. The first genome annotation software system was designed in 1995 by Dr. Owen White, who was part of the team that sequenced and analyzed the first genome of a free-living organism to be decoded, the bacterium Haemophilus influenzae. Dr. White built a software system to find the genes (places in the DNA sequence that encode a protein), the transfer RNA, and other features, and to make initial assignments of function to those genes. Most current genome annotation systems work similarly, but the programs available for analysis of genomic DNA are constantly changing and improving.


Computational evolutionary biology

Evolutionary biology is the study of the origin and descent of species, as well as their change over time. Informatics has assisted evolutionary biologists in several key ways; it has enabled researchers to:

  • trace the evolution of a large number of organisms by measuring changes in their DNA, rather than through physical taxonomy or physiological observations alone,
  • more recently, compare entire genomes, which permits the study of more complex evolutionary events, such as gene duplication, lateral gene transfer, and the prediction of factors important in bacterial speciation,
  • build complex computational models of populations to predict the outcome of the system over time
  • track and share information on an increasingly large number of species and organisms

Future work endeavours to reconstruct the now more complex tree of life.

The area of research within computer science that uses genetic algorithms is sometimes confused with computational evolutionary biology, but the two areas are unrelated.


Measuring biodiversity

Biodiversity of an ecosystem might be defined as the total genomic complement of a particular environment, from all of the species present, whether it is a biofilm in an abandoned mine, a drop of sea water, a scoop of soil, or the entire biosphere of the planet Earth. Databases are used to collect the species names, descriptions, distributions, genetic information, status and size of populations, habitat needs, and how each organism interacts with other species. Specialized software programs are used to find, visualize, and analyze the information, and most importantly, communicate it to other people. Computer simulations model such things as population dynamics, or calculate the cumulative genetic health of a breeding pool (in agriculture) or endangered population (in conservation). One very exciting potential of this field is that entire DNA sequences, or genomes of endangered species can be preserved, allowing the results of Nature’s genetic experiment to be remembered in silico, and possibly reused in the future, even if that species is eventually lost.

Important projects: Species 2000 project; uBio Project.


Analysis of gene expression

The expression of many genes can be determined by measuring mRNA levels with multiple techniques including microarrays, expressed cDNA sequence tag (EST) sequencing, serial analysis of gene expression (SAGE) tag sequencing, massively parallel signature sequencing (MPSS), or various applications of multiplexed in-situ hybridization. All of these techniques are extremely noise-prone and/or subject to bias in the biological measurement, and a major research area in computational biology involves developing statistical tools to separate signal from noise in high-throughput gene expression studies. Such studies are often used to determine the genes implicated in a disorder: one might compare microarray data from cancerous epithelial cells to data from non-cancerous cells to determine the transcripts that are up-regulated and down-regulated in a particular population of cancer cells.


Analysis of regulation

Regulation is the complex orchestration of events starting with an extracellular signal such as a hormone and leading to an increase or decrease in the activity of one or more proteins. Bioinformatics techniques have been applied to explore various steps in this process. For example, promoter analysis involves the identification and study of sequence motifs in the DNA surrounding the coding region of a gene. These motifs influence the extent to which that region is transcribed into mRNA. Expression data can be used to infer gene regulation: one might compare microarray data from a wide variety of states of an organism to form hypotheses about the genes involved in each state. In a single-cell organism, one might compare stages of the cell cycle, along with various stress conditions (heat shock, starvation, etc.). One can then apply clustering algorithms to that expression data to determine which genes are co-expressed. For example, the upstream regions (promoters) of co-expressed genes can be searched for over-represented regulatory elements.


Analysis of protein expression

Protein microarrays and high throughput (HT) mass spectrometry (MS) can provide a snapshot of the proteins present in a biological sample. Bioinformatics is very much involved in making sense of protein microarray and HT MS data; the former approach faces similar problems as with microarrays targeted at mRNA, the latter involves the problem of matching large amounts of mass data against predicted masses from protein sequence databases, and the complicated statistical analysis of samples where multiple, but incomplete peptides from each protein are detected.


Analysis of mutations in cancer

In cancer, the genomes of affected cells are rearranged in complex or even unpredictable ways. Massive sequencing efforts are used to identify previously unknown point mutations in a variety of genes in cancer. Bioinformaticians continue to produce specialized automated systems to manage the sheer volume of sequence data produced, and they create new algorithms and software to compare the sequencing results to the growing collection of human genome sequences and germline polymorphisms. New physical detection technology are employed, such as oligonucleotide microarrays to identify chromosomal gains and losses (called comparative genomic hybridization), and single nucleotide polymorphism arrays to detect known point mutations. These detection methods simultaneously measure several hundred thousand sites throughout the genome, and when used in high-throughput to measure thousands of samples, generate terabytes of data per experiment. Again the massive amounts and new types of data generate new opportunities for bioinformaticians. The data is often found to contain considerable variability, or noise, and thus Hidden Markov model and change-point analysis methods are being developed to infer real copy number changes.

Another type of data that requires novel informatics development is the analysis of lesions found to be recurrent across many tumors
.


Prediction of protein structure

Protein structure prediction is another important application of bioinformatics. The amino acid sequence of a protein, the so-called primary structure, can be easily determined from the sequence on the gene that codes for it. In the vast majority of cases, this primary structure uniquely determines a structure in its native environment. (Of course, there are exceptions, such as the bovine spongiform encephalopathy - aka Mad Cow Disease - prion.) Knowledge of this structure is vital in understanding the function of the protein. For lack of better terms, structural information is usually classified as one of secondary, tertiary and quaternary structure. A viable general solution to such predictions remains an open problem. As of now, most efforts have been directed towards heuristics that work most of the time.

One of the key ideas in bioinformatics is the notion of homology. In the genomic branch of bioinformatics, homology is used to predict the function of a gene: if the sequence of gene A, whose function is known, is homologous to the sequence of gene B, whose function is unknown, one could infer that B may share A’s function. In the structural branch of bioinformatics, homology is used to determine which parts of a protein are important in structure formation and interaction with other proteins. In a technique called homology modeling, this information is used to predict the structure of a protein once the structure of a homologous protein is known. This currently remains the only way to predict protein structures reliably.

One example of this is the similar protein homology between hemoglobin in humans and the hemoglobin in legumes (leghemoglobin). Both serve the same purpose of transporting oxygen in the organism. Though both of these proteins have completely different amino acid sequences, their protein structures are virtually identical, which reflects their near identical purposes.

Other techniques for predicting protein structure include protein threading and de novo (from scratch) physics-based modeling.

See also structural motif and structural domain.


Comparative genomics

The core of comparative genome analysis is the establishment of the correspondence between genes (orthology analysis) or other genomic features in different organisms. It is these intergenomic maps that make it possible to trace the evolutionary processes responsible for the divergence of two genomes. A multitude of evolutionary events acting at various organizational levels shape genome evolution. At the lowest level, point mutations affect individual nucleotides. At a higher level, large chromosomal segments undergo duplication, lateral transfer, inversion, transposition, deletion and insertion. Ultimately, whole genomes are involved in processes of hybridization, polyploidization and endosymbiosis, often leading to rapid speciation. The complexity of genome evolution poses many exciting challenges to developers of mathematical models and algorithms, who have recourse to a spectra of algorithmic, statistical and mathematical techniques, ranging from exact, heuristics, fixed parameter and approximation algorithms for problems based on parsimony models to Markov Chain Monte Carlo algorithms for Bayesian analysis of problems based on probabilistic models.

Many of these studies are based on the homology detection and protein families computation.

See also comparative genomics, bayesian network and protein family.


Modeling biological systems

Systems biology involves the use of computer simulations of cellular subsystems (such as the networks of metabolites and enzymes which comprise metabolism, signal transduction pathways and gene regulatory networks) to both analyze and visualize the complex connections of these cellular processes. Artificial life or virtual evolution attempts to understand evolutionary processes via the computer simulation of simple (artificial) life forms.


High-throughput image analysis

Computational technologies are used to accelerate or fully automate the processing, quantification and analysis of large amounts of high-information-content biomedical imagery. Modern image analysis systems augment an observer’s ability to make measurements from a large or complex set of images, by improving accuracy, objectivity, or speed. A fully developed analysis system may completely replace the observer. Although these systems are not unique to biomedical imagery, biomedical imaging is becoming more important for both diagnostics and research. Some examples are:

  • high-throughput and high-fidelity quantification and sub-cellular localization (high-content screening, cytohistopathology)
  • morphometrics
  • clinical image analysis and visualization
  • determining the real-time air-flow patterns in breathing lungs of living animals
  • quantifying occlusion size in real-time imagery from the development of and recovery during arterial injury
  • making behavioral observations from extended video recordings of laboratory animals
  • infrared measurements for metabolic activity determination


Protein-protein docking

In the last two decades, tens of thousands of protein three-dimensional structures are determined by X-ray crystallography and Protein nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (protein NMR). One central question for the biological scientist is whether it is practical to predict possible protein-protein interactions only based on these 3D shapes, without doing protein-protein interaction experiments. A variety of methods have been developed to tackle the Protein-protein docking problem, though it seems that there is still much place to work on in this field.


Software tools

Software tools for bioinformatics range from simple command-line tools, to more complex graphical programs and standalone web-services. The computational biology tool best-known among biologists is probably BLAST, an algorithm for determining the similarity of arbitrary sequences against other sequences, possibly from curated databases of protein or DNA sequences. The NCBI provides a popular web-based implementation that searches their databases.

SOAP-based (Service Oriented Architecture Protocol) interfaces have been developed for a wide variety of bioinformatics applications allowing an application running on one computer in one part of the world to use algorithms, data and computing resources on servers in other parts of the world. The availability of these SOAP-based bioinformatics web services through systems such as the BioMoby service register demonstrate the applicability of web based bioinformatics solutions. These tools range from a collection of standalone tools with a common data format under a single, standalone or web-based interface, to integrative and extensible bioinformatics workflow management systems.


See also


Related topics

  • Biocybernetics
  • Bioinformatics companies
  • Biologically-inspired computing
  • Biomedical informatics
  • Computational biology
  • Computational biomodeling
  • Computational genomics
  • Dot plot (bioinformatics)
  • Metabolic network modelling
  • Molecular modelling
  • Morphometrics
  • Natural computation
  • Pharmaceutical company
  • Protein-protein interaction prediction
  • List of numerical analysis software


Related fields

  • Applied mathematics
  • Artificial intelligence
  • Biology
  • Cheminformatics
  • Computational biology
  • Computational science
  • Computer science
  • Cybernetics
  • Genomics
  • Informatics
  • Mathematical biology
  • Neuroinformatics
  • Proteomics
  • Scientific computing
  • Statistics
  • Structural biology
  • Systems biology
  • Theoretical biology


References

  • Aluru, Srinivas, ed. Handbook of Computational Molecular Biology. Chapman & Hall/Crc, 2006. ISBN 1584884061 (Chapman & Hall/Crc Computer and Information Science Series)
  • Baldi, P and Brunak, S, Bioinformatics: The Machine Learning Approach, 2nd edition. MIT Press, 2001. ISBN 0-262-02506-X
  • Barnes, M.R. and Gray, I.C., eds., Bioinformatics for Geneticists, first edition. Wiley, 2003. ISBN 0-470-84394-2
  • Baxevanis, A.D. and Ouellette, B.F.F., eds., Bioinformatics: A Practical Guide to the Analysis of Genes and Proteins, third edition. Wiley, 2005. ISBN 0-471-47878-4
  • Baxevanis, A.D., Petsko, G.A., Stein, L.D., and Stormo, G.D., eds., Current Protocols in Bioinformatics. Wiley, 2007. ISBN 0-471-25093-7
  • Claverie, J.M. and C. Notredame, Bioinformatics for Dummies. Wiley, 2003. ISBN 0-7645-1696-5
  • Cristianini, N. and Hahn, M. Introduction to Computational Genomics, Cambridge University Press, 2006. ISBN 9780521671910 | ISBN 0521671914)
  • Durbin, R., S. Eddy, A. Krogh and G. Mitchison, Biological sequence analysis. Cambridge University Press, 1998. ISBN 0-521-62971-3
  • Gilbert, D. Bioinformatics software resources. Briefings in Bioinformatics, Briefings in Bioinformatics, 2004 5(3):300-304.
  • Keedwell, E., Intelligent Bioinformatics: The Application of Artificial Intelligence Techniques to Bioinformatics Problems. Wiley, 2005. ISBN 0-470-02175-6
  • Kohane, et al. Microarrays for an Integrative Genomics. The MIT Press, 2002. ISBN 0-262-11271-X
  • Lund, O. et al. Immunological Bioinformatics. The MIT Press, 2005. ISBN 0-262-12280-4
  • Michael S. Waterman, Introduction to Computational Biology: Sequences, Maps and Genomes. CRC Press, 1995. ISBN 0-412-99391-0
  • Mount, David W. Bioinformatics: Sequence and Genome Analysis Spring Harbor Press, May 2002. ISBN 0-87969-608-7
  • Pachter, Lior and Sturmfels, Bernd. “Algebraic Statistics for Computational Biology” Cambridge University Press, 2005. ISBN 0-521-85700-7
  • Pevzner, Pavel A. Computational Molecular Biology: An Algorithmic Approach The MIT Press, 2000. ISBN 0-262-16197-4


External links

  • Major Organizations

    • Bioinformatics Organization (Bioinformatics.Org): The Open-Access Institute
    • EMBnet
    • European Bioinformatics Institute
    • European Molecular Biology Laboratory
    • The International Society for Computational Biology
    • National Center for Biotechnology Information
    • National Institutes of Health homepage
    • Open Bioinformatics Foundation: umbrella non-profit organization supporting certain open-source projects in bioinformatics
    • Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics
    • Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute
  • Major Journals

    • Algorithms in Molecular Biology
    • Bioinformatics
    • BMC Bioinformatics
    • Briefings in Bioinformatics
    • Evolutionary Bioinformatics
    • Genome Research
    • The International Journal of Biostatistics
    • Journal of Computational Biology
    • Molecular Systems Biology
    • PLoS Computational Biology
    • Statistical Applications in Genetic and Molecular Biology
    • International Journal of Bioinformatics Research and Applications
  • Other sites

    • The Collection of Biostatistics Research Archive
    • Human Genome Project and Bioinformatics

Links

  • Locating Info On The Net For Voip Info on a few of the sites for voip now available on the internet, and how to find out more.
  • VoIP Howto VoIP Howto. Roberto Arcomano berto@fatamorgana.com. v1.7, August 7, 2002 3.3 What is the advantages using VoIP rather PSTN?
  • Business VoIP - Gradwell Dot Com If you have broadband at home or at work, Gradwell's VoIP services allow you to deploy all the features of office-based telephony, with a fraction of the
  • LowrateVoip.com | Free Calls Free phone calls with the LowrateVoip. Call your online friends for free as well as a special selection of popular international destinations.
  • OnGuard Online - VoIP Voice over Internet Protocol

Ósanwe-kenta - thought

Tuesday, January 29th, 2008

The Ósanwe-kenta or Enquiry into the Communication of Thought is a text by J. R. R. Tolkien, written as a typescript of eight pages, probably in 1960, published in Vinyar Tengwar (39) in 1998.

In the framework of the legendarium of Middle-earth, the text is a summary by an unnamed editor of a longer treatise by Pengolodh of Gondolin.

The subject-matter is “direct thought-transmission” (telepathy), or sanwe-latya “thought-opening” in Quenya. Pengolodh included it as an appendix to the Lhammas because of the implications of tengwesta (grammar, language) on thought-transmission, i. e. with the development of language, telepathy became more difficult and all but fell out of use among the incarnated (c. f. hröa).

Links

Gizmo Project - VoIP

Monday, January 28th, 2008

Gizmo Project is the name of a peer-to-peer VoIP network and of a proprietary freeware soft phone for that network.

Gizmo Project was founded by Michael Robertson.http://www.voipplanet.com/reviews/article.php/3607481 Unlike its competitor network Skype, the Gizmo Project network uses open standards for call management, the Session Initiation Protocol and Jabber.http://www.tomsnetworking.com/2006/01/18/crowning_the_king_of_free_talk_/ But it uses several proprietary codecs, and like Skype the Gizmo Project client is proprietary/closed source software. The Gizmo Project is run by the company SIPphone.

Since the Gizmo Project is based on the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP), it can interoperate with other SIP-based networks directly, although some data will always be routed via central SIPphone-servers, making it less than ideal in these settings from a privacy and security perspective.http://support.gizmoproject.com/index.php?_a=knowledgebase&_j=questiondetails&_i=202 This avoids the phone system and is thus free of charge. Gizmo also will use encryption (SRTP) for Gizmo to Gizmo calls and works well with Phil Zimmermann’s new Zfone secure add on.

The Gizmo Project software also has features that Skype lacks, or offers at an additional fee. Interoperability with other systems and services via the SIP standard, built-in recording and free voicemail are the main advantages that Gizmo has over Skype. Gizmo also allows paid members of LiveJournal to make ‘voiceposts’ if they are unable to use the voicepost telephone lines provided by the website.http://voipservices.tmcnet.com/feature/articles/3141-livejournal-adds-gizmo-letting-users-make-free-voip.htm

The text chat function of Gizmo Project utilizes the Jabber protocol. Users using Gizmo can be reached through the Jabber protocol at username@chat.gizmoproject.com


Free calls to landline/mobile phones

The Gizmo project offers free calls from a computer to the landline/mobile phones of other Gizmo users, but with restrictions that aren’t fully disclosed.http://support.gizmoproject.com/FAQs/freecalls.php As a result, accounts can switch between a qualified and unqualified status without notice.

This service is available for landlines in 60 countries and mobile phones in 17 of them.


See also

  • Comparison of VoIP software
  • List of Jabber client software


References


External links

  • Official site

Links

  • The VoIP Weblog Today's New York Times has an interesting story on the impact VoIP services have had on the traditional phone companies. Basically, VoIP services like
  • VOIP Please note: ADSL broadband and VOIP still requires you to have a regular landline in your home. Our regular home phone service,
  • Understanding VOIP If you are new to VOIP, here is a description of how this new technology works.
  • Free VOIP Solution Free calls Worldwide Voice over Internet Protocol lets you make free long-distance phone calls using your computer. voip solution for free voip calls predictive dialer.
  • VOIP with Vonage Canada Use your high-speed Internet connection to make all of your phone calls with Vonage digital phone service. Plans start at $19.99 per month.

Domain analysis - methodologies

Monday, January 28th, 2008

In software engineering, domain analysis, or product line analysis, is the process of analyzing related software systems in a domain to find their common and variable parts. Several methods for domain analysis have been proposed. Each produces domain models such as feature tables, facet tables, facet templates, and generic architectures. A generic architecture describes all of the systems in a domain. [Frakes and Kang, 2005] Frakes, W.B. and Kyo Kang, (2005), “Software Reuse Research: Status and Future”, IEEE Transactions on Software Engineering, 31(7), July, pp. 529-536. provides an overview of proposed methodologies for domain analysis.

The products, or “artifacts,” of a domain analysis are sometimes object-oriented models (represented with the Unified Modeling Language (UML)) and/or data models (represented with entity-relationship diagrams (ERD)). Software developers use these models as a basis for the implementation of software architectures and applications.

In library science, the term “domain analysis” was suggested in 1995 by Birger Hjørland and H. Albrechtsen.B. Hjørland, H. Albrechtsen, “Toward a New Horizon in Information Science: Domain-Analysis”, Journal of the American Society for Information Science, No. 6, vol. 46 (1995), pp. 400-425Birger Hjørland’s definition of domain analysis


References

Links

  • Voice over IP - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Encyclopedia article with background information, technical details, and the advantages and disadvantages of VoIP.
  • VoIP Lowdown | Business VoIP PBX News Matt Hodkinson presents The iPhone and VoIP; Revolution or Pricey Gimmick? posted at The VOIP Provider Guide. For the most part, the technology of the
  • VoIP & Gadgets Blog voip gadget blog with the latest gadget news, voip products, must have cool gadgets mobile wireless phones, product reviews.
  • VoIP Forum VoIP Forum discussed hot VoIP topics, interesting VoIP news including Skype Vonage.

ITS Connect - provider

Monday, January 28th, 2008

iTS Connect Inc is a Sudbury, Ontario based VOIP provider. On August 1, 2004, it merged with Unitz Online Inc.


External links

  • ITS connect home page

Links

Lior Haramaty - VocalTec

Monday, January 28th, 2008

Lior Haramaty (born in Tel-Aviv, Israel in 1966) is the co-founder of VocalTec Inc. (1989) and the inventor of the Audio Transceiver () that enabled the creation of Voice Over Networks products and eventually the VoIP industry, that changed the face of the telecommunication industry.

According to Om Malik, “Two entrepreneurs barely out of their teens, Lior Haramaty and Alon Cohen, founded VocalTec Communications in 1993 based on the promise of packet voice technology they observed as members of the Israel Defense Force…. the idea of commercializing packet voice did not occur to anyone until the arrival of Lior and Alon.”Malik, Om. “The Voice over IP Insurrection”, September 19th, 2004.

TMCnet’s Internet Telephony Magazine - , “In fact, at that time the company’s CTO, Lior Haramaty, knew more about VoIP than just about anyone else, and we were fortunate to have him as a columnist in this magazine for a number of years.
“Internet Telephony Magazine. “[1]”, Oct, 2006.

NTIA New Directions in Telecom A Conversation with Assistant Secretary Larry Irving - , “Lior Haramaty, co-founder and Vice President of technical marketing of VocalTec Communications”NTIA. “http://www.ntia.doc.gov/forums/telecom/bios.htm]”, Feb 4, 1998.


References

Links

Low latency - VoIP

Monday, January 28th, 2008

Low latency allows human-unnoticeable delays between an input being processed and the corresponding output providing real time characteristics. This can be especially important for internet connections utilizing services such as online gaming and VOIP - VOIP is not as important as a minor delay between input from each side of the conversation is generally blamed on non-technical issues.

However, online gaming demands low latency so as not to disadvantage players with low latencies due to highly varied ping times among fellow players - for this reason, game server applications generally favour players with lower latencies by determining the data relating to a player as known to the server, and allowing players to act on that, not the data as known by the fellow player’s client.


See also


External links

  • Low-Latency.Com


Vendors

Endace

Links

  • VoIP VoIP, VoIP application developer AudioCodes produce VoIP phone, voice over DSL, and voice over ATM packet processors. IP telephony leaders, Audiocodes
  • OnGuard Online - VoIP Voice over Internet Protocol

AUSTPAC - customers such

Monday, January 28th, 2008

AUSTPAC is a public X.25 network operated by Telstra. Started by Telecom Australia in 1982, AUSTPAC was Australia’s first public packet-switched data network, supporting applications such as online betting, financial applications (the Australian Taxation Office has made use of AUSTPAC) and remote terminal access to academic institutions, some of which maintained their connections to AUSTPAC up until the mid to late 1990s. Austpac can be accessed by dial-up to a PAD or by linking an X.25 node to the network permanently.


Austpac Shutdown

On July 31, 2006, Telstra announced the following timetable for the shutdown of Austpac:

From July 31 2006, Austpac dedicated and dialup services via X.25, X.28, X.32 & X.75 will no longer be sold to new customers.

From December 31 2007, Austpac dedicated and dialup services via X.25, X.28, X.32 & X.75 will no longer be sold to existing customers.

On June 30 2008, the Austpac network will be decommissioned and will no longer be available to customers.

Austpac will continue to be provisioned to Argent and Digital Data Services (DDS) customers to access and manage their service, until further notice. Argent and DDS customers’ service will not be terminated as a result of the withdrawal of Austpac.


External links

  • Important changes to the AUSTPAC service

Links

.sm - Telekom and Telecom

Monday, January 28th, 2008

.sm is the Internet country code top-level domain (ccTLD) for San Marino.


External

links

  • IANA .sm whois information

Links