Posts Tagged ‘Devices’

Best of 2011: Gadgets and Tech Devices

December 22nd, 2011

As 2011 nears its expiration date you’ve probably already wrapped up your holiday shopping and are looking forward to the year-end celebrations with your loved one and, well, find out what they got for you. Being the tech fanatics that we are we’d also like to take a moment and look back at what 2011 had to offer, from the greatest computer hardware produced to some of the cool gadgets you shouldn’t have missed.

We’ve used our Product Finder engine to selectively pick this year’s standout products in over twenty categories as reviewed by hundreds of seasoned specialists across the web. You’ll find each product listed alongside its aggregate review score, brief quote and number of reviews. Who knows, maybe you’ll find something worthy of a last-minute indulgence.

Source:http://www.techspot.com/news/46768-best-of-2011-gadgets-and-tech-devices.html

How ‘Stingray’ Devices Work

September 22nd, 2011

Law enforcement and the military are using devices called “stingrays” to track cellphones, as described in a story in today’s Wall Street Journal. The government considers the devices sensitive information, and not much is known publicly about how they are used. But it’s possible to get a good idea of how they work based on public documents and interviews with technology experts.

The systems involve an antenna, a computer with mapping software, and a special device. The device mimics a cellphone tower and gets the phone to connect to it. It can then collect hardware numbers associated with the phone and can ping the cellphone even if the owner isn’t making a call. This can be done through walls — something that is useful in finding suspects as well as victims of crimes or accidents.

There are two ways to use the devices, says Matt Blaze, a computer science professor at the University of Pennsylvania and a former researcher at AT&T Labs.

One way is to point the antenna at a location and collect the hardware numbers there. These numbers can be used to determine which phones are in a given place at a given time. The devices also can be used to locate a phone when the officers know the numbers associated with it but don’t know precisely where it is. In that case, the offers can drive around until they get a signal from the target phone while pinging it.

Once a signal is found, the stingray setup measures its strength and can provide a general location on the map. The officer can then move to another location and again measure the signal strength.

By collecting the signaling information from several locations, the system can triangulate the location of the phone more precisely.

Mr. Blaze said stingrays alter the normal behavior of cellular devices. In addition, the stingray was used in mode that allowed it to force the broadband card to communicate.

“They are getting your card to do something it doesn’t normally do,” Mr. Blaze said. “It’s pairing with a simulated base station rather than the usual base station.”

The exact way these stingray devices work is one of the big questions in a case currently playing out in U.S. District Court for the District of Arizona. The defense in that case wants to know just how the stingray was able to locate a mobile broadband card in an apartment building. The card was key in the later arrest of the defendant on fraud charges.

Source:http://blogs.wsj.com/digits/2011/09/21/how-stingray-devices-work/

Medical Devices Susceptible to Hackers

August 5th, 2011

People with medical conditions already have enough to worry about. Now, they can add computer hackers to their list of problems.

Jay Radcliffe is a security researcher, but he’s also diabetic.

“In the future, I see hardware hacking with medical devices,” he said. “If somebody gets hurt through a medical device being tampered with and potentially dying, it raises the stakes a bit. If one person were to be harmed, it would be a very big deal. It would be front page news everywhere.”

“It’s very important to me. I need it. I wear an insulin pump 24 hours a day, seven days a week,” he said.

During the Black Hat Digital Security Conference at Caesars Palace Thursday, Radcliffe identified flaws that could allow an attacker to remotely control insulin pumps and alter readouts of blood-sugar monitors.

“If you start adjusting that, you can adjust a person’s chemistry, a person’s body chemistry,” he said. “If a person’s blood sugar gets too low, their body starts to shut down. They can go into a coma. They can get respiratory failure, and people have even died from hypoglycemia.”

Radcliffe says he’s only experimented on his own equipment and hopes manufacturers learn from his discoveries. Experts say the threat of attackers accessing medical devices goes beyond insulin pumps.

Brad Smith, a private R.N., says pacemakers, medical records, or any electronic medical device is vulnerable to hackers.

“The medical people like to connect in remotely, read the records, change the pump, change your pacemaker, and they’re not aware,” he said. “Those that are aware don’t want to talk about it, that these are vulnerabilities in the field.”

While the threat right now is minimal, Smith says few safeguards are in place to prevent the risks from growing.

“Currently, there is no federal agency, no oversight in the security of the wireless medical devices out there,” he said.

Few studies have been done on the vulnerability of medical devices to hacking attacks. Industry representatives downplay the potential threat.

Source:http://www.8newsnow.com/story/15214436/medical-devices-susceptible-to-hackers

Software to Recover Missing Photos from Digital Media Storage Devices

June 22nd, 2011

Reliable and trustworthy photo recovery software retrieves missing, erased, deleted media files and folders such as pictures galleries, memorable photographs, digital images, snapshots, video albums from various storage devices in simplified manner.

Comprehensive image recovery software retrieves digital pictures, photographs, favorite snaps from bad sector infected hard disk drive.
www.picrecovery.com
Have you lost digital photographs from USB removable media or hard disk drive? Use complete and comprehensive photo recovery solution to retrieve inaccessible, virus infected and undetectable picture files and folders missing due to formatted drive, human mistake, improper device handling, system crash, improper system shut down or hardware malfunctions. Highly optimized digital images recovery software designed and developed by well educated team of professional software developers to restore picture galleries, favorite snaps, memorable photographs from computer hard disk (ATA, SATA, SCSI). Exclusively developed card recovery software retrieves missing image files and folders from USB removable media drives, different type of memory cards such as Secure Digital Card, Compact Flash Card, Multimedia Memory Card, XD Picture Card or other similar USB flash memory cards.
Technically advance memory card recovery software easily gets back virus infected photographs even if “drive not detected” “drive not formatted” error messages displayed on computer screen while accessing USB drive on Laptop, Desktop etc. One of the best digital photos recovery software retrieves images, pictures, photographs from hard disk drive with supports to different versions of Windows Operating System such as Windows Server 2003, Windows Server 2008, Windows 7, Windows Vista, Windows XP Editions, Windows NT etc.

Source:http://libcom.org/news/software-recover-missing-photos-digital-media-storage-devices-22062011

2010: the devices you wanted

January 2nd, 2011

Everyone’s saying that the world has gone mobile, but it hadn’t really sunk in until we saw the list of the most viewed reviews in 2010.
It seems that everyone who’s anyone is buying a mobile device. And they want the best. These are the gadgets everyone was looking at this year.

Number 1: Sony Ericsson Xperia X10
Sony Ericsson expands on Android’s excellent web browser with its huge 4-inch screen real estate and a first-class multimedia experience, but Timescape needs improvement.

Number 2: Samsung Galaxy S
Sure it looks like an iPhone, but on the inside the Galaxy S is a web-browsing, media-playing beast of a smartphone and one of the best Android phones in Australia today.

Number 3: Nokia N97 mini
The N97 mini is better than the original, but not so when compared with smartphones from other manufacturers. Its S60 OS helps the mini feel like an old phone even before it hits the stores.

Number 4: Apple iPhone 4
Some will still consider Apple’s iPhone the benchmark for today’s smartphones, but its revised design raises issues we haven’t seen in a phone of this calibre before. Those upgrading from an iPhone 3G would be wise to consider a 3GS instead.

Number 5: Apple iPad
The Apple iPad is the first affordable tablet computer worth owning, but it won’t (yet) replace your laptop.

Number 6: Nokia X6
The X6 delivers first-class features in a second-rate package. The excellent camera and media player are tarnished by a clunky on-screen keyboard and a sometimes confusing user experience.

Number 7: HTC HD2
There’s no doubt in our minds that the combination of power, features and good looks make the HTC HD2 the best Windows Mobile smartphone ever made.

Number 8: Samsung N150
The Samsung N150 is among the first netbooks to use the new Intel Atom N450 chip. As a result, it offers excellent battery life, but it’s far from perfect. Unfortunately, its cramped keyboard and comparatively small hard drive let the side down.

Number 9: HTC Wildfire
The Wildfire is a lot of phone for comparably little money. If you can live without 3D gaming, the Wildfire will tick the rest of the boxes needed by most users from a modern smartphone.

Number 10: Samsung Wave
Bolstered by excellent hardware and performance, the Samsung Wave outshines most phones at a similar price and showcases the promise of the Bada OS.

Source:http://www.zdnet.com.au/2010-the-devices-you-wanted-339308203.htm?feed=rss&utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter

Sennheiser intros six new headphones for Apple devices

September 27th, 2010

Personal audio hardware maker Sennheiser on Monday introduced six new headphones made especially for Apple’s mobile products, including the iPhone 4, iPhone 3GS, iPod touch and the iPad. All are designated by an ‘i’ badge and sport an in-line remote and microphone that lets users control playback as well as make phone calls or record audio. All are based on existing Sennheiser products, and include the IE 8i, MM 70i, PX 100-Iii, PX 200-Iii, HD 218i and HD 238i.

The remotes have a single button that can change music tracks, pause and skip to the next song, as well as answer or end phone calls. What is done depends on how often and how long the button is pressed. The Apple devices’ voice control function can also be triggered with the button. Volume control buttons are also integrated.

The IE 8i has manual bass adjustments and in-ear buds while offering passive isolation from noise. They are priced at $450. The MM 70i also sports an in-ear design and have six silicone ear adapters. They cost about $100.

The PX 100-IIi and PX 200-IIi are over-the-ear models that fold up; the 100 models are open ear while the 200 is close. They cost $90 and $110, respectively. The HD 218i and HD 238i reverse this pattern for a focus on audio quality. As such, the 218i set produces stronger low-end bass through its closed-ear design, while the 238i headset has a more balanced, open-ear sound. They cost $80 and $130, respectively.

Source:-http://www.ipodnn.com/articles/10/09/27/sennheiser.outs.six.headsets.for.apple.devices/

Apple seeks metal experts to forge devices from durable liquidmetal

September 14th, 2010

Apple is hiring a number of experts on amorphous metals, as the company looks to create hardware constructed from a newly licensed, super-durable custom metal alloy known as “Liquidmetal.

This week, Apple posted a number of new job listings (1, 2, 3) related to developing amorphous metal alloys for use in future products. The company is looking for an amorphous metal development manager and two metal process development engineers to work at its Cupertino, Calif., corporate headquarters.

Apple seeks extremely qualified applications for the positions, as candidates for the engineering roles must have 7 years of experience in manufacturing consumer electronics, while the manager must have 10 years of experience.

The listings refer to the positions as “highly visible” roles at Apple that will involve composition, molding and forming processes with amorphous alloys. The employees will also play a part in secondary operations, such as machining, grinding and finishing of the material.

Apple is looking to fill the positions soon after the company obtained exclusive rights to a metal alloy known as Liquidmetal, an agreement first revealed by AppleInsider in August. Developed at the California Institute of Technology, the material’s amorphous, non-crystalline structure makes it harder than alloys of titanium or aluminum.

Apple and the owner of the alloy, Liquidmetal Technologies, entered into an agreement that gives Apple the exclusive right to use the material in the field of electronics. In exchange, Apple paid a licensing fee to Liquidmetal Technologies that was worth at least $10.9 million.

Source:-http://www.appleinsider.com/articles/10/09/14/apple_seeks_metal_experts_to_forge_devices_from_durable_liquidmetal.html

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