Thursday, December 29, 2011

drag2share: This Tabletphone Has Shipped 1 Million Units And Isn't Even Out In The US Yet

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/galaxy-note-2011-12


galaxy note

The Samsung Galaxy Note has shipped 1 million units in less than 2 months, reports The Verge.

This doesn't mean 1 million end users have bought it, but that 1 million units have been sold to retailers around the world.

Consumers in Asia and Europe seem to have taken a particular liking to it.

The device has a huge 5.3" screen and a stylus, blurring the line between smartphone and tablet.

We have yet to see a device quite like this in the States, but when it arrives in 2012 we'll get to see how American consumers respond to it.

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

drag2share: Zeo Mobile Is A Delight to Sleep With [Fitmodo]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5871451/zeo-mobile-is-a-delight-to-sleep-with

Zeo Mobile Is A Delight to Sleep WithI'm tired. I'm old and I'm groggy and mentally slow. I don't get enough exercise, or family time, and I'm sick too often. I don't perform my best at work, or anywhere else, and I'm grumpy when I don't mean to be and it's all largely because I'm so damn tired.

Next year, I want to get a better night's sleep. Maybe you do too. The $99 Zeo Mobile can help.

Sleep is so strange and mysterious. Why do we need it? It's restorative, sure, but on a fundamental evolutionary level it's such a weird process. Why should I have to power down every night? Go without it for an extended duration, and you basically go nuts. Get too little of it over time, and you become fatigued and ineffective. Get too much and you waste your life away. What's the deal?

So, it's little wonder that we're under a deluge of sleep tracking services. The Fitbit, Sleep Cycle, Path, and the Jawbone UP all spent much of last year trying to count your Zzzzzz's. One of the newest entries is the Zeo Mobile, which is a more portable, smartphone-based version of its bedside sleep monitoring system.

So what's it tracking? And how does it track?

Most sleep trackers use a simple accelerometer to calculate REM sleep, assuming that you are dreaming as you are moving. Zeo does things a little differently. The headband measures brain activity as you sleep. That helps it break down your important sleep stages: REM, deep and light sleep. (Interestingly, the company also has an accelerometer in the Zeo Mobile, but it's not in use yet.)

Every night, as you go to bed, you place an adjustable headband around your noggin' and fire up the Zeo app on your phone (iOS and Android only for now). Throughout the night, the headband tracks your sleep stages and quality and sends that data to your phone via Bluetooth. The app will automatically upload everything to Zeo's website, where you can dive even deeper into your sleep data.

The mobile app (and to an even greater extent Website) makes understanding all this really easy and interesting. It visualizes your sleep each night, segmenting it up moment-by-moment into color-coded bands for deep sleep, light sleep, REM sleep and wakefulness. Green is good; red is bad. Easy!

It also scores each night's sleep with a Zeo Quotent, or ZQ, score. The ZQ is a little bit of science and a little bit of marketing. But it's a quick, easy way to gauge your sleep each night, and there's an age and gender-based dataset for you to compare your ZQ with other averages.

It even has a smart alarm. Choose a time you'd like to wake up, and give it a time window (like 15 or 30 minutes) and the Zeo will monitor your brain waves to find the best time to wake you based on when you are in your lightest sleep cycle closest to your target wake time.

But mostly, this thing is about data. And there was a lot of interesting data to uncover. For example, I found that although it can take me several hours to hit my first REM sleep cycle during the night, when I nap I tended to tap into it right away, and stay in it just about the entire time. This propensity for the body to drop into REM quickly during naps was something I'd read about before in relation to polyphasic sleep, but seeing it take place with my own body made a strong argument for the occasional nap when I don't get a good night's sleep.

I also saw proof of something I'd thought for a long time—it takes me an inordinately long time to go to sleep at night. It was often 45 minutes or more from the time I turned on the Zeo and out the lights until I was actually snoozing.

The great thing about learning all this is that it's not only interesting, it's largely actionable. Zeo has an online coaching program that helps your analyze the sleep you are getting, and make lifestyle changes accordingly. This component is something that's all too often missing from, well, all kinds of biofeedback tracking devices. I found that I don't get a great amount of deep and REM sleep. Some of that is probably booze-related. Some of it probably has to do with the baby monitor beside my bed. Some of it has to do with checking my email right before I go to bed. I loved that it helped me understand not only what was happening, but why and how to change it.


Bad Dreams

Still. There were several things I wasn't crazy about. The most obvious thing is that wearing a headband to bed every night is a little off-putting. It was surprisingly comfortable, I expected it to be more awkward. But I was always aware of it. And worse, so was my partner. It's not a sexy look.

But moreover it has connectivity problems. mean that in two senses of the word. You've got to seat the headphone on its base exactly right for it to charge up. If you're off, even by a little bit, it won't charge. This means that sometimes after you put it on and got to sleep it dies in the night, leaving you with incomplete sleep data.

I also had, on a couple of occasions, instances where my phone didn't receive data from the headband at various points in the night. I'm not sure if this was a Bluetooth problem, or an issue with the headband not being on my forehead properly, or what. But there were gaps.

And finally: I'm a little weirded out by wearing a Bluetooth antenna right on my skull all night long. Hey, that's my brain!

Should I Buy This

Yes. By all means. Despite a few minor problems, it's great and I expect it will only get better with time. Zeo tracks hard to capture data, shows it to you in an easily digestible manner and helps you understand and act on those numbers. And it does it all at a great price. It's a very well-done health and wellness product, and I'd certainly recommend it to anyone looking to improve his or her sleep patterns. Sweet dreams.

$99 [My Zeo]

Fitmodo runs Wednesdays, covering the world of personal fitness technology. You can play along on our Fitocracy group or the Fitmodo Forum.

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drag2share: Intel starts shipping Atom N2600, N2800 processors for netbooks, ten hours of battery life promised

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/12/28/intel-starts-shipping-atom-n2600-n2800-processors-ten-hours-of/

We've already seen a few benchmarks and other hints that they'd soon be shipping, and Intel has now officially announced that its new Cedar Trail Atom processors are finally available, with the first systems using them set to roll out early next year. The two chips you'll likely be seeing the most of are the Atom N2600 and N2800 -- both dual-core, and both designed for use in netbooks, where they promise to allow for up to ten hours of battery life and "weeks of standby," and offer support for 1080p video playback. Also rolling out today are the D2500 and D2700, which are designed for use in entry-level desktops and all-in-one computers, as well as more commercial systems. As for all those systems themselves, details remain a bit light, but Intel says you can expect to see some from Acer, Asus, HP, Lenovo, Samsung, and Toshiba.

Continue reading Intel starts shipping Atom N2600, N2800 processors for netbooks, ten hours of battery life promised

Intel starts shipping Atom N2600, N2800 processors for netbooks, ten hours of battery life promised originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 28 ! Dec 2011 12:54:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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drag2share: RunCore outs new storage solutions for CES, Marvell-based Falcon series included

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/12/28/runcore-outs-new-storage-solutions-for-ces-marvell-based-falcon/

If you're looking to quell your inner storage enthusiast after the holidays, RunCore may have something to satisfy your appetite. The company announced that it has two products intended for launch at CES. The Falcon series is a Marvell-based storage solution that boasts R / W IOPS speeds that best the outfit's Pro V SATA 6Gb/s SSDs. Speaking of the Pro V series, RunCore is looking to set up shop in Ultrabooks with a 7mm model of its 2.5-inch SATA 6Gb/s SSD with 540 MB/s read and 500 MB/s write speeds. Looking for a bit more info? Hit the full PR after the break.

Continue reading RunCore outs new storage solutions for CES, Marvell-based Falcon series included

RunCore outs new storage solutions for CES, Marvell-based Falcon series included originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 28 Dec 2011 18:52:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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drag2share: Researcher finds vulnerability in WPS protocol, looks for manufacturers to offer fix

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/12/28/researcher-finds-vulnerability-in-wps-protocol-looks-for-manufa/

On the plus side, your router's mostly secure. Security researcher Stefan Viehbock has just discovered a major security hole which allowed him to use a brute force technique to access a WPS PIN-protected network in about two hours. According to Viehbock, a design flaw allows the WPS protocol's 8-digit PIN security to fall dramatically as additional attempts are made. With each attempt, the router will send a message stating whether the first four digits are correct while the last digit of the key is used as a checksum and then given out by the router in negotiation. As a result, the 100,000,000 possibilities that the WPS should represent becomes roughly to 11,000.

The US-CERT has picked up on this and advised users to disable WPS on their routers. Viehbock, in turn, claims to have attempted to discuss the vulnerability with hardware vendors such as Buffalo, D-Link, Linksys, and Netgear, but says he has been roundly ignored and that no public acknowledgement of the issue has been released. As a possible final step, Viehbock has promised to release a brute force tool soon, thereby pushing the manufacturers to work to resolve the issue. In other news, that evil supercomputer from the movie War Games just got a few more digits of the nuclear launch codes -- maybe one of Stefan's pals can look into that one.

Researcher finds vulnerability in WPS protocol, looks for manufacturers to offer fix originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 28 Dec 2011 19:55:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink The Verge  |  sourceStefan Viehbock, US-CERT  |  Email this | Comments

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