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Technology bytes: The future is here

By Si Tingting (China Daily)
Updated: 2007-06-15 10:33


A mobile TV clip developed by Beijing-based manufacturer,Innofidei Inc.[China Daily]
From mobile TV chips to digital recognition scanners that can pick out disguised terrorists by reading their facial bone structures, the Beijing Games is expected to showcase new technological innovations that will make peopel's lives easier, safer or simply more fun.

When the world of science fiction meets the world of sports, it seems, anything is possible.

From tree branches to Teflon:

How technology has moved forward at the Summer Olympics

Athens 1896: As swimming pools were not available, swimmers had to compete in the open sea. Swimmers were taken out to sea by boat and were supposed to swim back in any style of their choosing.
Paris 1900: Long-jump athletes had to dig the jumping pit by themselves, and tree branches were used to set the height of the hurdles.
Stockholm 1912: Electric stop watches and photo finishes were used to improve the accuracy of results to within 0.1 second.
Antwerp 1920: A stadium that could seat 30,000 spectators was built. A cinder track, which was 400m in circumference, was used for the first time as a standard track.
Amsterdam 1928: The Olympic flame was lit for the first time using a condensing lens.
Berlin 1936: With the invention of television in the early 1920s, the Olympic Games was shown on television for the first time.
Melbourne 1956: A plane was employed for the first time to carry the Olympic fire tinder. It flew for more than 20,000 km from Mount Olympia to Melbourne.
Rome 1960: Stimulants made their first appearance at the Games when Danish cyclist Knud Enemark Jensen died mid-competition after having consumed a cocktail of narcotics.
Tokyo 1964: A communications satellite was employed to broadcast the Games for the first time to the entire world.
Mexico City 1968: Electronic stop watches helped improve the accuracy of official competition records to within 0.01 second.
Munich 1972: Upgraded stop watches moved to within 0.001 second accuracy. Cameras, laser equipment and computers were widely used to decide a dead heat, when a stop watch could not separate the two runners.
Montreal 1976: A satellite was used to transmit Olympic fire signals, and a laser gun was used to light up the Olympic torch.
Barcelona 1992: A computer network was used to connect all the stop watches and result recorders.
Sydney 2000: An information management system was widely used to record athletes' results, which were also put up on the official website for the Games. The new generation Teflon-coated swimming bodysuit made its debut.
Athens 2004: Running shoes that deflect heat and sweat, swimsuits that imitate the flow dynamics of shark's skin or planes, and "cool" woollen clothing that kept athletes comfortable between events in high temperatures were used to improve their performance.

The Olympics has long been a test bed for new technological innovations. With security a higher priority in the post-September 11 world, one of the showcase gadgets that may be introduced to Beijing's Olympic Village this year enables apartment doors to recognize their guests using codes that are almost impossible to crack.

"Once you get to the door, a linked-up camera captures the features of your face, including your bone structure," said Chinese inventor Ma Xin. "These features are then translated into codes, which are forwarded to a computer and crosschecked with a database. As long as your codes do not correspond to any 'bad codes,' that is, those belonging to people on our blacklist, the door will open."

Ma was explaining the functions of the device to an audience at last month's Olympic technology exhibition, part of Beijing Science and Technology Week.

"The camera can pick a (potential terrorist) out of a large crowd," he said, "The whole process takes about 1/100 of a second."

Ma said that even wigs, sunglasses and make-up would not be able to fool the computer by masking the person's identity.

"Even if the suspect changes his hairstyle or gains a lot of weight, the door can still recognize him," he said. Ma has a PhD from the Chinese Academy of Sciences and is a member of the Security Advisory Committee for the 2008 Beijing Olympics.

The door, which is expected to be installed at Olympic venues and the Olympic Village, could also be used in regular households across China.

This could signal the end of house keys, meaning one less headache for the forgetful and one major obstacle for pickpockets and burglars.

Of course, security is only one aspect of the Games, and something that most people would prefer not to concern themselves with as they sit back and enjoy watching sporting history in the making.

With another innovation in the offing, viewers will be able to take in the action while walking to the office, taking a bus or simply waiting in line for lunch.

Beijing-based Innofidei Inc claims to have developed the first mobile TV chip for the domestic market, potentially transforming hundreds of thousands of mobile handsets into micro-TVs.

The technology is based on a domestic specification called China Mobile Multimedia Broadcasting (CMMB), which was approved by the State Administration for Radio, Film and Television (SARFT) last September.

With this chip, people can receive TV signals on their phones and watch programs without any temporal or space-based restrictions.

"As long as the handset terminal has a colored screen and a battery, our chip can turn it into a mobile TV," said Meng Fei, director of Innofidei's business development department. "The chip can be plugged into a cell phone, a PDA, an MP4, a digital camera or even a laptop.

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