Posts Tagged Friends

Evigroup drops SmartPaddle Pro price to €699, optional head-tracking feature watches you intently

Posted by on Saturday, 7 January, 2012

Are you and all of your friends flocking to buy that thing shown above at full retail price? Exactly. Evigroup’s SmartPaddle Pro tablet is now available from €699 (under 0) for the base 10-inch configuration with no GPS, no 3G and a 32GB solid-state hard drive. Additional configurations are available with 1 or 2GB of RAM, and the high-end configuration, which includes 3G and GPS goes for under ,500. The SmartPaddle Pro, with all the trimmings (including head-tracking), retails for around ,530. Other specs include a 1.66GHz Intel Atom N450 processor, five hour run time, mini-HDMI port and capacitive touchscreen, none of which seem to justify the (still bloated) new price tag. Click past the break for the full video, which is apparently set to an Enya album.

Continue reading Evigroup drops SmartPaddle Pro price to €699, optional head-tracking feature watches you intently

Evigroup drops SmartPaddle Pro price to €699, optional head-tracking feature watches you intently originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 07 Jan 2012 01:56:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceNicolas Ruiz, SmartPaddle Pro  | Email this | Comments
Engadget


Tired of your face? Use Face Swap to try your friend’s on for size

Posted by on Wednesday, 21 December, 2011
Have you ever wondered what it would be like to find your face on somebody else’s body, or vice versa? Microsoft Research has finally addressed that oh-so-critical need with a Windows Phone app called Face Swap. Essentially, the free app can take an image of multiple people and trade faces with the others in the group, and then let you share the new photo on Facebook or Twitter. Of course, we’re not sure the person you swapped faces with will enjoy it as much as you did, but that’s the downfall of social networks, right?

Tired of your face? Use Face Swap to try your friend’s on for size originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 21 Dec 2011 09:47:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink WMPowerUser  |  sourceMarketplace  | Email this | Comments
Engadget


Pinoky makes it easier to pretend like your stuffed animals are real friends (video)

Posted by on Monday, 19 December, 2011

Seated above, from left to right, are Ms. Snuggleberry, Mr. Cuddlekins, and Professor Puddles. They congregated atop this egg yolk for what they thought would be another customary meeting of Mammalian Malice — a vaguely neo-Jacobean slam poetry collective founded in the aftermath of the Crimean War. Little did they know, however, that they were walking straight into Yuti Sugiura’s trap. Sugiura and his colleagues, you see, have created a toy known as Pinoky — a small, ring-like device that wirelessly brings stuffed animals to “life,” as Snuggleberry, Cuddlekins and Puddles soon discovered. Developed as part of a project at Keio University, Pinoky uses a micro controller, a Zigbee input device and a servo motor system to move an animal’s extremities, with a set of photo sensors designed to measure the angle at which it bends. All you have to do is grab your favorite imaginary friend, strap a Pinoky around his limb, and use the accompanying remote controller to make him flail around like a fish on house arrest. See it for yourself, after the break.

Continue reading Pinoky makes it easier to pretend like your stuffed animals are real friends (video)

Pinoky makes it easier to pretend like your stuffed animals are real friends (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 19 Dec 2011 16:05:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceJST ERATO  | Email this | Comments
Engadget


Hide DNS requests from friends, foes and the feds

Posted by on Tuesday, 6 December, 2011

TOpenDNS, which provides a domain name system resolution service that aims to be faster and more secure than those provided by your ISP, on Tuesday launched a new product it hopes will make DNS look up more secure. The company launched DNSCrypt, software that users can run which helps prevent man-in-the-middle attacks on domain names and can also help anonymize your web site requests from prying eyes.

Domain name servers are a crucial part of the Internet, containing the IP address of domain names you type into a browser. When a user types in a URL, the computer sends the request to a DNS server that then tells your computer the site’s IP address. But DNS queries are vulnerable to both spying and attacks. From the DNSCrypt release:

Despite DNSSEC, and the global improvements resulting from Dan Kaminsky’s discovery of a critical flaw in the DNS, there remains an inherent insecurity in the DNS protocol itself: it is transported in plaintext, unencrypted and in the open. This insecure connection between the end user and their DNS resolver, which might be described as the “last mile,” is ripe for abuse, and has been abused in the past. The insecure nature of that “last mile” connection enables an array or attacks and privacy violations. In truth, Internet users have very little privacy when accessing the Internet on unsecured wireless networks and as a result, are left highly vulnerable.

OpenDNS CEO David Ulevitch compares the software to secure socket layer encryption for HTTP traffic (it’s what puts the “s” in https), except he notes that it doesn’t require users to route their traffic through a different port. Technical details aside, the software aims to prevent hackers from intercepting your requests for a domain name and taking the opportunity to insert a malicious site. If they succeed, hackers could send a user off to a web site that masquerades as a bank’s portal or a user’s email home page, in hopes of snagging some passwords or financial information.

It also prevents your Internet service provider or your government from seeing what sites you visit, which may become important not just in repressive countries, but even in the U.S., especially if the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) passes. It does this by adding a layer of encryption between the user and OpenDNS. You have to be running OpenDNS for it to work, but Ulevitch says he hopes it won’t remain that way.

Ulevitch says the company will release the source code for DNSCrypt on Github, so developers can build interfaces for other operating systems and create new applications for people who desire a bit more privacy on the web. DNSCrypt is only available for the Mac. Downloads, code and more information can be found here. This is just the latest in efforts from OpenDNS aimed at keeping the web running smoothly, not just for big players, but for everyone.

Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
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  • U.S. Wireless Data Market: Q4 and Year-End 2008



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Lens Friends: Tools for Digital Filmmakers

Posted by on Thursday, 10 November, 2011

Already have a killer setup for watching movies? Here’s the gear you need to make those masterpieces.



Wired Top Stories


How to Secure Your Beer Stash Against Freeloading Friends [Booze]

Posted by on Saturday, 5 November, 2011