Archive for 2014
Best of both worlds: Samsung announces production of three-bit, 3D, high-density NAND flash
By : Unknown
Over the past few years, Samsung has risen to dominate much of the consumer NAND business thanks to a stream of well-reviewed SSDs that combined excellent performance and low prices. The company’s first SSD with three-bit (Triple-level Cell, or TLC) NAND, the Samsung 840, offered modest performance but was quite affordable, and the Samsung 840 Evo upped the ante last year by combining slower TLC with faster SLC NAND. Now, Samsung is moving to combine its TLC NAND production and its 3D vertical NAND in a move that could hit a real consumer sweet spot.
One note is that Samsung is attempting to have its cake and eat it too as far as the NAND is concerned, referring to this as “3-bit multi-level cell (MLC).” That’s not how the term is typically used, and until Samsung demonstrates that it’s built TLC NAND with MLC characteristics in both performance and longevity, it’s a misapplication of terminology for the sake of marketing.
Underneath that marketing, however, there is reason to think that TLC built vertically could be superior to its traditional planar counterpart. Samsung’s 850 Pro, the first SSD to use V-NAND, has substantially better reliability and performance than traditional planar counterparts. If Samsung can keep those characteristics and extend them into a TLC drive, it could create the most attractive consumer drive on the market.
Samsung’s PR also inadvertently highlights the misleading ways that process nodes are used to market to consumers. While it claims that its 3D NAND is more than twice as productive per wafer as its 10nm-class NAND, an editor’s note remarks that “10 nanometer-class means a process technology node somewhere between 10 and 20 nanometers.” Independent analysis from Anandtech has shown that Samsung’s V-NAND has a very small die advantage over the leading 16nm NAND from Micron.
If Samsung’s V-NAND has truly doubled wafer productivity over its old “10nm-class” NAND, either its feature sizes were nowhere near as good as what Micron is building or its wafer yields were absolutely terrible. Or, as is most likely, it’s using alternate meanings of wafer productivity to make the comparison look better.
The reason I’m less concerned about the underlying technology, even if I’m snarky on the marketing, is because Samsung’s 3D NAND has already proven itself as a potent force and the company’s TLC drives have done equally well — even if the 840 Evo family has aperformance issue with older data (there’s a fix for that coming in less than a week, if you own an affected drive). In short, there’s good reason to think the company can take the two products and combine them into something even better — possibly pushing SSDs below the 50 cents per GB line that they’ve been bumping against for a while.
How mobile apps can be doctors’ ‘virtual assistants’
By : UnknownApple’s Health app may have grabbed plenty of headlines since its recent launch, but there’s plenty of other app innovation happening across the healthcare industry.
Mobile phone applications, for example, are serving as “VIRTUAL ASSISTANTS
“This is an excellent application of technology,” said Dr. Steven Levine, a neurologist who serves as the chief of neurology at the University Hospital of Brooklyn and the associate dean for CLINICAL RESEARCH
An eyeful of information
This is all part of an innovative trend in medicine that enables doctors’ offices to become more focused on their patients’ needs. Patients require education, for example, on how to take new medicines, when to take them, and what to avoid when taking them. For generations, kindly Marcus Welbys have been giving patients their best bedside practice, telling them about the effects, and side effects, of their latest prescription. Or giving them other, post-clinical advice.
Now, using the Kareo patient education application, and Google Glass, a doctor can simply tap on the frame of his Google Glass EYEGLASSES
“We’ve been innovating with the new Google Glass system, a hands free computer system that has the ability to connect to the Internet and capture audio and video through the lens” said Dr. Tom Guiannuli, chief medical information officer of Kareo. “Studies show the majority of patients do not recall specific instructions given by their provider within minutes of the encounter. This can impact their health, lead to readmissions, and increased costs.”
At the end of the encounter, the physician taps on the Google Glass frame, and images of patients who have registered with the Kareo ELECTRONIC HEALTH RECORDS
These kinds of apps are being customized, based on patient surveys and focus groups, said Dr. Levine. “We have a grant to develop mobile apps specific to stroke survivors and CAREGIVERS
Medical establishment on board
This trend is new for healthcare, which has often been slow to embrace information technology to improve performance. The temptation for the traditional healthcare community is to write off “virtual medicine, integrated ecosystems, consumer transparency, and the like, arguing that healthcare is fundamentally a local business,” said Tom Main, founder of the Oliver Wyman Health Innovating Center. But the impact of these VIRTUAL ASSISTANTS
A reason for this – the medical establishment is on-board from the start. The Institute of Medicine (IOM) of the National Academy of Sciences has identified communication breakdowns as a significant source of medical errors. The healthcare environment is very complex and can be quite difficult for people to navigate.
“When you take that average person and add the stress of illness or injury, attention and comprehension suffer. The final ingredient in the recipe for disaster is time-pressured clinicians. Anything that can help a patient understand what they need to do to care for themselves can be beneficial,” said Christopher Hanifin, chairman of the PHYSICIAN ASSISTANT PROGRAM
However, like all new technologies, especially in medicine, there is a potential downside. “The chief downside to this technology is that it might fail to reach those who could most use it. People with lower socioeconomic status probably need the most help and may well lack access to the electronic resources necessary to draw a benefit from all this technology,” said Hanifin.
Snake robots! Slithering machines could aid search-and-rescue efforts
By : UnknownOne snake's ability to shimmy up slippery sand dunes could inspire new technologies for robots that could perform search and rescue missions, carry out inspections of HAZARDOUS WASTES
A new study looked at the North American desert-dwelling sidewinder rattlesnake (Crotalus cerastes), a creature better known for its venomous bite than its graceful movements. But this snake can climb up sandy slopes without sliding back down to the bottom a feat that few snake species can accomplish.
Snakelike, or limbless, robots are intriguing to scientists for several reasons. First, their lack of legs, wheels or tracks means they don't often get stuck in ruts or held up by bumps in their path. They could also be used to access areas that other bots can't get to, or to explore places that aren't safe for humans. [Biomimicry: 7 Clever Technologies Inspired by Nature]
The sidewinder shimmy
To get a closer look at their live study subjects, the researchers headed to Zoo Atlanta, where they were able to examine six sidewinder rattlesnakes. They tested the snakes on a specially designed inclined TABLE COVERED
Fifty-four trials were conducted, with each of the six snakes slithering up the sandy table nine times, three times each at varying degrees of steepness. As the snakes worked their way up the makeshift sand dune, high-speed cameras tracked their movements, taking note of exactly where their bodies came into contact with the sand as they moved upward.
The researchers found that sidewinder snakes live up to their name. The slithery creatures moved up the sandy incline in a sideways motion, with their heads pointing toward the top of the incline and the rest of their bodies moving horizontally up the slope. The researchers then looked more carefully at how sidewinders carry out these complex movements.
"The snakes tended to increase the amount of body in contact with the surface at any instant in time when they were sidewinding up the slope and the incline angle increased," said Daniel Goldman, co-author of the study and an associate professor of biomechanics at the Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta. Specifically, the snakes doubled the amount of their bodies touching the sand when navigating the slope, he added.
And the parts of the snake's body that were touching the sand during the ascent never slipped back down the slope because the creature applied the right amount of force in its movements, keeping the sand under it from sliding, Goldman told Live Science.
Snake robots
To put their newfound understanding of sidewinding to good use, Goldman and his colleagues got in touch with Howie Choset, a professor at The Robotics Institute at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh. Choset, who has been developing limbless robots for years, already developed a snakelike bot that performs well both in the lab and in real-life situations. However, his slithering machine has run into one particular problem during field tests.
"These guys have been making a robot sidewind for years over a wide diversity of substrates, but they had a lot of trouble on sandy slopes," Goldman said.
To get the robot moving over sandy dunes, the researchers applied what they now know about the sidewinding rattlesnake's patterns of movement. They programmed the robot so that more of its body would come into contact with the ground as it slides up the slope. They also applied what they had learned about force, which enables the robot to move its weight in such a way that it keeps moving upward over the sand without rolling back down the slope.
Now that Choset's snake robot can move over tough terrain, it'll be better equipped to handle the tasks that it was built to tackle.
"Since these robots have a narrow cross section and they're relatively smooth, they can fit into places that people and machinery can't otherwise access," Choset told Live Science.
For example, these limbless robots could be used during search-and-rescue missions, since the slithery machines can crawl into a collapsed building and search for people trapped inside without disturbing the compromised structure. The snake bot could also be sent into containers that may hold dangerous substances, such as nuclear waste, to take samples and report back to hazmat specialists.
Choset also said these robotic sidewinding abilities could come in handy on archaeological sites. For instance, the robots could one day be used to explore the insides of pyramids or tombs, he said.
The research represents a key collaboration between biologists and roboticists, said Auke Ijspeert, head of the Biorobotics Laboratory at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology at Lausanne (EPFL), who was not involved in the new study.
"I think its a very exciting project which managed to contribute to the two objectives of biorobotics," Ijspeert told Live Science.
"On one hand, they took inspiration from biology to design better control methods for the robot," Ijspeert said. "By looking at how sidewinding takes place in a snake, especially with slopes, they found out the strategy that the animal uses and, when they tested it on the robot, it could really improve the climbing capabilities of the robot."
The researchers also achieved the second goal of biorobotics, he said, which is to use a robot as a scientific tool. By testing the different speeds at which the robotic snake could successfully climb up the sand, the researchers were able to pinpoint exactly how fast real snakes make their way up these slippery slopes.
"It's a nice example of how robots can help in biology and how biology can help in robotics."
The study was published online Oct. 9 in the journal Science.
Smartphone breathalyzers: Tech that takes your breath away
By : Unknown
It's not only Olympic superstars who misjudge their alcohol consumption.
Earlier this week, Michael Phelps was arrested in Baltimore for driving with a blood alcohol reading of 0.14. He's apologized for his behavior, but the goal is to prevent folks who are over the limit from getting behind the wheel in the first place. Not surprisingly, there are gadgets – and apps – to help stop them.
You may have faced a situation in which you were trying to convince a friend not to drive, or you may have wondered if that last glass of wine was enough to impair your own judgment. A personal breathalyzer, which cost from $30 to $120, can do the trick by demonstrating objectively that you or a companion has had one – or more – too many.
Matchbox-sized personal breathalyzers measure blood alcohol concentration (BAC) based on the level of alcohol in your breath (about 10 percent of the alcohol you drink is released into your breath). From that reading, they estimate the percentage of alcohol in your blood. Generally, these devices use either a semiconductor sensor, which is small and inexpensive, or a fuel cell sensor, which can be more accurate and is used by law enforcement in portable devices. I tested two models that work with smartphones.
The Breathometer costs $50 and plugs into the headphone jack of an iPhone or Android smartphone. It uses a semiconductor sensor and an AAA battery that should last for up to 75 tests. The company recommends waiting until 20 minutes after your last drink for a more accurate test, as it will avoid higher results from the alcohol residue in your mouth. It takes about a minute to warm up the device, and then you’re prompted to blow for four to five seconds through a hole from about two inches away.
I had to retest for accuracy several times. And in one case, after I toted it around in my briefcase, the sensor collected too much lint to be effective. (It was easily blown clear, however.)
But the Breathometer was reasonably accurate. If anything, it tended to err on the side of caution by yielding slightly higher results. One evening, after a glass of wine, I blew a 0.03, eliciting a yellow warning and a note: "You should be sober at 12:17 AM" – roughly 2 hours away. A retest brought the number down. And here’s a bonus feature: The app provides a list of local cab companies.
Breathalyzers need to be calibrated regularly, and the Breathometer is no exception. The company says it should be recalibrated every 250 tests, or after nine months. The mail-in service costs $20
Alcohoot, another smartphone accessory, is a competitor. It costs $100, but it uses a fuel cell sensor, the same technology police officers use, and it has a rechargeable lithium-ion battery that will last for up to 500 tests. It's slightly larger than the Breathometer, and it works almost identically. You blow through a hole where the sensor is. The company recommends using one of the eight washable and reusable plastic mouthpieces that come with the device.
The Alcohoot started up more quickly and delivered consistent results, probably because I used the nozzle. I blew a typical 0.017 after a large glass of wine. The program reminded me that the legal limit is 0.08 BAC. The app charted my reading and the time of day, and it recorded that I was below the red line that denotes the legal limit. It also warned me, "You may begin to feel moderate effects." I noted that I could call an Uber, Lyft or Hailo car service from the app.
In addition to being more accurate, the higher-priced Alcohoot doesn't need to be recalibrated as often as the Breathometer. The company says it lasts for up to 1,000 tests or one year. Its recalibration service costs $30.
I trusted the Alcohoot more than the Breathometer, mainly because of its ergonomics, but keep in mind that while these are FDA registered devices, they are not a license to drink and drive. Both companies repeatedly note that you should not do so.
Furthermore, breathalyzers can be imprecise. Using a mouthwash or breath spray can affect the accuracy of the measurement, and alcohol affects everyone differently. On the other hand, having one of these devices at the ready to convince a friend that he should take a cab or sleep on the couch could end up saving a life.
Earlier this week, Michael Phelps was arrested in Baltimore for driving with a blood alcohol reading of 0.14. He's apologized for his behavior, but the goal is to prevent folks who are over the limit from getting behind the wheel in the first place. Not surprisingly, there are gadgets – and apps – to help stop them.
You may have faced a situation in which you were trying to convince a friend not to drive, or you may have wondered if that last glass of wine was enough to impair your own judgment. A personal breathalyzer, which cost from $30 to $120, can do the trick by demonstrating objectively that you or a companion has had one – or more – too many.
Matchbox-sized personal breathalyzers measure blood alcohol concentration (BAC) based on the level of alcohol in your breath (about 10 percent of the alcohol you drink is released into your breath). From that reading, they estimate the percentage of alcohol in your blood. Generally, these devices use either a semiconductor sensor, which is small and inexpensive, or a fuel cell sensor, which can be more accurate and is used by law enforcement in portable devices. I tested two models that work with smartphones.
The Breathometer costs $50 and plugs into the headphone jack of an iPhone or Android smartphone. It uses a semiconductor sensor and an AAA battery that should last for up to 75 tests. The company recommends waiting until 20 minutes after your last drink for a more accurate test, as it will avoid higher results from the alcohol residue in your mouth. It takes about a minute to warm up the device, and then you’re prompted to blow for four to five seconds through a hole from about two inches away.
I had to retest for accuracy several times. And in one case, after I toted it around in my briefcase, the sensor collected too much lint to be effective. (It was easily blown clear, however.)
But the Breathometer was reasonably accurate. If anything, it tended to err on the side of caution by yielding slightly higher results. One evening, after a glass of wine, I blew a 0.03, eliciting a yellow warning and a note: "You should be sober at 12:17 AM" – roughly 2 hours away. A retest brought the number down. And here’s a bonus feature: The app provides a list of local cab companies.
Breathalyzers need to be calibrated regularly, and the Breathometer is no exception. The company says it should be recalibrated every 250 tests, or after nine months. The mail-in service costs $20
Alcohoot, another smartphone accessory, is a competitor. It costs $100, but it uses a fuel cell sensor, the same technology police officers use, and it has a rechargeable lithium-ion battery that will last for up to 500 tests. It's slightly larger than the Breathometer, and it works almost identically. You blow through a hole where the sensor is. The company recommends using one of the eight washable and reusable plastic mouthpieces that come with the device.
The Alcohoot started up more quickly and delivered consistent results, probably because I used the nozzle. I blew a typical 0.017 after a large glass of wine. The program reminded me that the legal limit is 0.08 BAC. The app charted my reading and the time of day, and it recorded that I was below the red line that denotes the legal limit. It also warned me, "You may begin to feel moderate effects." I noted that I could call an Uber, Lyft or Hailo car service from the app.
In addition to being more accurate, the higher-priced Alcohoot doesn't need to be recalibrated as often as the Breathometer. The company says it lasts for up to 1,000 tests or one year. Its recalibration service costs $30.
I trusted the Alcohoot more than the Breathometer, mainly because of its ergonomics, but keep in mind that while these are FDA registered devices, they are not a license to drink and drive. Both companies repeatedly note that you should not do so.
Furthermore, breathalyzers can be imprecise. Using a mouthwash or breath spray can affect the accuracy of the measurement, and alcohol affects everyone differently. On the other hand, having one of these devices at the ready to convince a friend that he should take a cab or sleep on the couch could end up saving a life.
Swarms Of Mouse-Sized Robots Scurry To Maintain The Nation's Bridges
By : UnknownA new kind of miniature robot can crawl on the parts of bridges humans never see.
Ask Sarah Bergbreiter, a professor of mechanical engineering and head of the University of Maryland’s Micro Robotics Laboratory, about the connection between miniature robots and bridges, and she’s likely to talk about watching people climb the Harbour Bridge in Sydney, Australia.
“It’s insane. The rivets—they’re not flat. It’s hard to see anything be able to move around these understructures of bridges,” she says.
But along with fellow UMD professors Nuno Martins and Richard La, that’s exactly what Bergbreiter will have to do. They’re not coming up with a better harness or weird contraption to make it easier for people to scale bridges, however. Instead, they’re at the beginning of a three-year project, bolstered by an $850,000 grant from the National Science Foundation, to design, build, and deploy a swarm of miniature robots, each no more than several centimeters long, that will aid in bridge inspection by climbing on them, traversing the tricky terrain of rivets and bolts on their undersides, and working together with minimal input from a human controller to store and relay images and measurements related to the strength and stability of the bridges they’re crawling over.
“The vision is you could have a whole bunch of these guys running around a bridge,” says Bergbreiter. “I don’t think that’ll happen in three years, but I think we’ll be at the point where we can make a decision how far this can be commercialized.”
The average age of the American bridge is 42 years old—as good an age as any for regular check-ups. Inspecting any one of the approximately 605,000 bridges in the U.S. today is a tedious, hours-long task usually undertaken by a team of experts. Releasing 50 to 100 bug-sized robots in tandem with human teams would cut down on the amount of time needed to inspect a bridge and prevent the need to shut down a bridge to pedestrian and vehicle traffic. The idea is that these robots, once given a certain command, would be autonomous, moving around a bridge on their own and organizing together to examine various surfaces and take measurements. Designing such a robot would be a feat of ingenuity in dynamic movement as well as adhesion, and both are areas Bergbreiter has dug into since helping establish UMD’s Micro Robotics Lab in 2008.
“The key is being able to stick and crawl over bridge surfaces, whether they’re concrete or steel or painted steel,” she says. Bergbreiter says the adhesion technologies being worked on in the lab draw inspiration from the Spiderman movies as well as Tom CRUISE
in Mission Impossible. Picture a robot using electroadhesion to latch onto a bridge, or one the size of an earwig using little hairs, or “gecko adhesion,” to remain affixed to a rivet. “The key there is being able to turn it off and on,” says Bergbreiter. Add a tail or a flexible backbone, and you have a robot that will stick to a bridge and move easily from horizontal surfaces to vertical ones, and over structures like rivets that are far from flat. Bergbreiter says small projects using new adhesion tech and different mechanisms for movement have already been demonstrated in UMD’s Micro Robotics Lab.
As for relaying information useful for bridge inspections, the professors might be pulling from the Micro Robotics Lab’s TinyTerps, quarter-sized robots named after UMD’s mascot, the terrapin (terp for short), that can be thought of as tiny Arduino boards. “They effectively have a radio microcontroller, and you can plug different sensors on and off of it,” says Bergbreiter.
It’s soon to tell what these bridge-inspecting, micro-scale robots will look like or how, exactly, they will work. But Bergbreiter says that’s part of the fun of this new project.
“We’ve been working on big robots since the late ’50s and ’60s, and there’s a lot of amazing things that people have done in that area,” she says. But, she adds wryly, “There’s plenty of room at the bottom.”
Robot Orb Could Scan Cargo Ships With Ultrasound
By : Unknown
Inspecting a ship’s cargo is a dull, tedious, time-consuming task. So a pair of researchers at MIT, including graduate student Sampriti Bhattacharyya and her advisor Harry Asada, created a small robot that resembles a squished foam ball to inspect ship cargo quickly, cheaply, and silently. They presented their findings earlier this month at the International Conference on Intelligent Robots and Systems.
Named EVIE, for Ellipsoidal Vehicle for Inspection and Exploration, the robot can swim as fast as three feet per minute. EVIE uses six jets to move underwater, with an algorithm determining which jets PUMP WATER
and when. The half of the body that doesn’t house the jets is watertight and sealed, protecting EVIE’s controls, a battery that lasts for up to 40 minutes, an antenna, and inertial sensors.
EVIE will inspect ships using an ultrasound scanner. The watertight half of the robot has a flat panel, so the robot can cozy up to the hull of a ship, and two of the robot’s six jets are directly opposite the panel, allowing it to stay in place against the hull. The current prototype lacks ultrasound, but the working version will use ultrasound to peer into cargo holds, possibly finding the panels and false doors used by smugglers for illegal transport.
In future practice, swarms of EVIE-bots might collectively inspect ships in port, swimming and scanning underwater as a team. Bhattacharyya hopes to get the price of a functioning inspection gadget down to around $600, so that the swarms are cheap enough to be useful.
Paralyzed humans can walk again through this
By : UnknownWe can now remotely control paralyzed rats, letting them walk again: Humans are next
In the void left by the anticlimactic World Cup exoskeleton adventure, other efforts to make the paralyzed walk again are recapturing the spotlight. Chief among them is Grégoire Courtine’s research group at the EPFL in Switzerland. Their latest breakthroughs, just published in Science Translational Medicine, suggest that a more grounded approach is to repower the locomotive effort at the level of the spinal cord. The researchers were able to get the paralyzed rats to walk on their hind two legs with the help of a treadmill and harness.
What makes this feat impressive is that the rats had no control over their own legs because their spinal cords were completely severed. The key advance, and what may eventually make similar feats possible in humans, is that manual adjustment of the electrical stimulation of the spinal cord has been successfully automated into a realtime feedback loop. [DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.3008325]. This primarily means that stimulation parameters like pulse width, amplitude, and frequency are adjusted by a single algorithm that incorporates the full leg kinematics. Or, as Courtine would say, “We have complete control of the rat’s hind legs.”
While that statement is no doubt true, it is not meant to imply that the researchers have the ability to make the rat’s legs do whatever they want. Considering that other researchers have demonstrated that simple ball and stick models of legs can “walk” down an incline under the direction of nothing but gravity alone, I would like to suggest another challenge to meet before any measure of control over a spinal circuit might be claimed. That challenge would be not just to have the legs follow a powered walk on a treadmill, but rather the flip of the remote control switch would convert between a simple step and a two-legged hop.
The basic alternating step gait is as old or older then the backboned fish which have swiped their tails from side-to-side for eons unimaginable. That primitive spinal circuit in fish is still as much in us as adults as the gills and tail we have when in the womb. The elaborations on that key circuit which first flexed fins to push fish onto land at some point learned to cooperate in unison to lift the creature in synchronous defiance of gravity. Capturing the conversion point from asynchrony to synchrony would be the ideal milestone to mark our our accomplishment, and the foundation on which to build a more nuanced control platform.
For those who don’t feel it is essential to be able to rise first from the chair before walking across the floor, human trials for a device based on the Swiss protocols are scheduled to begin during summer 2015. With any luck, they will be a success. With a little more luck, the existing spinal circuits will survive the electrical hammering that already lets rats take upwards of 1000 steps, and the researchers will have learned how best to work with the wetware that paraplegics still have rather than forcing it to match their vague intuitions of it
Windows Smart Table
By : Unknown
If you want to get a taste of what the future might look like CES is a good place to start. The people and companies here have many visions for what the future will hold, and they all include their products. One company is looking to improve the restaurants and retail store experiences with Windows based table PCs.
Imagine this: you walk into your favorite restaurant and you’re seated at a table. The waitress doesn’t leave a menu, and she doesn’t ask what you want to drink. Instead you look through the menu on a screen in the table and just tap what you want to eat or drink. As soon as it’s ready the waitress brings the food that you ordered to the table. This could also work in a retail store for clothes or shoes too. Instead of looking through racks of shirts just scroll through a list and select it.
The table that we saw was based on Windows 7, but they said they would upgrade it to Windows 8. This is good because the touch responsiveness wasn’t that great in the table we saw, and it’s much improved in Windows 8. The table also has a credit card reader built right in. You will no longer need to wait for your waitress to take your card up to pay.
iPhone 6 Features
By : UnknownThe 5 best features of your new iPhone 6
Today, millions of happy customers are unboxing their brand new iPhone 6 or iPhone 6 Plus. Bigger screens, better battery life, and faster internals are all neat advancements, but these new devices have much more to offer than harder, better, faster, stronger. With a combination of improved internals and a shiny new operating system, your iPhone 6 has quite a few impressive tricks up its sleeves.
Sure, you can go to Apple’s site and read the mile-long list of cool new features with theiPhone 6 and iOS 8, but there are a handful of additions that stand out above the crowd. Below are five amazing features that will actually make your life a bit better. None of these are going to flip the mobile market on its head, but taken as a whole, they’re definitely worth the price of the upgrade.
Optical image stabilization
If you’re lucky enough to have snagged an iPhone 6 Plus, you’ll probably notice that your photos are a lot less blurry. Why? Apple is using a combination of the A8 SoC, the M8 motion coprocessor, and the lens of the camera itself to offer optical image stabilization. Your phone is sensing the shaking of your hand, and it’s compensating for that with image processing as well as movements of the camera lens. The result is clearer pictures — even in low light situations. The best part? It’s completely automatic, so you don’t have to change a thing.
1080p 60fps video recording
You’ve been able to record 1080p video on smartphones for a while now, but Apple wants to push the limits with this release. With both models of the new iPhone, you can record all of your videos in full 1080p HD at either 30 fps or 60 fps. Crisp, clear, and virtually no motion blur to speak of. If you’re recording your kid’s soccer game, or shooting from a moving vehicle, this will make all the difference in the world. Even better, the slo-mo mode now supports upwards of 240 fps, so you can capture an insane amount of detail in your home movies.
VoLTE and WiFi calling
Traditional voice calls over cell networks sound awful to everyone involved. Thankfully, that’s not our only option anymore. With the advent of the iPhone 6 and iOS 8, VoLTE (Voice over LTE) support is now available. In addition, iOS 8 adds the ability to make calls over WiFi when cell coverage isn’t available. For people with spotty coverage, that’s a godsend. Unfortunately, both of these features need to be approved by your carrier, so not everyone gets to partake in better, more reliable calls.
More sensors
Over the years, Apple has continually packed more sensors into its devices. For example, the ambient light sensor, proximity sensor, accelerometer, gyroscope, and TouchID sensorwere introduced in previous models. This time around, Apple has added a barometer into the mix. Now, apps can more accurately track where you are, and what’s going on around you. This helps keep track of your altitude, and effectively makes every iPhone 6 a potential data point for small changes in the weather. If citizen science is your bag, the addition of this sensor holds a lot of potential.
Apple Pay
Other companies have been trying to get NFC payments to stick in the US for years. It hasn’t taken off as of yet, but hopefully Apple Pay will change all of that. Apple has slapped an NFC chip its new phones, and partnered with companies like McDonald’s, Walgreens, and Staples to help make NFC payments a reality across the United States. It’s still too early to tell whether or not Apple Pay will catch on, but just the idea of using your phone to pay for your sandwich is incredibly novel and exciting to most of us.
The best iPhone ever made
Of course, there’s much more to these devices than these highlights, and we’ve got all of the information you need right here at ExtremeTech. From analysis of the new A8 SoC that powers the phone to band breakdowns to review round-ups, everything you’re dying to know about the iPhone 6 is yours for the taking.
Does Technology help or destroy ?
By : UnknownWhen the world was created, there was no technology but yet MAN survived. MAN walked on barefoot and traveled miles: then MAN starts to realize that it will be much better if someone else do the trekking so he can sit and enjoy the ride. So MAN starts to mount donkeys, from donkeys to horses to camels.
When MAN got to the river. He wondered how on earth is he going to cross it, so he build himself a boat, from boats to ships and he was able to travel through the atlantic.
MAN realized again that the horses and camels are like them, they breathe and they can die. MAN was fed up, he needs something that cannot breath but can move; and so he build a four wheeled machine and named it a CAR. All he has to do was put his legs on the pedal and keep his hands straight on the wheels. It worked, so MAN drived around town in comfort and in style.
As if that wasn't enough, MAN sat on the mountain and watch the birds flying high in the sky. He envied them, he wished he could be free to fly and soar anywhere he desire. His thinking got the best of him, so he build a flying machine and named it AN AIRPLANE.
MAN got his wish. Yet it wasn't enough. "It's time to look beyond your levels", He thoughts. He wondered and pondered what's at the other side above the sky. His greed got the best of him and he builds a giant machine and named it SPACESHIP. MAN got crazy and starts to build nuts, from nuts to phones to bombs.
Finally, MAN realised he has tried creating so he decides to rest and enjoy the beauty of his creation. BUT ALAS! It strucks. All his creation began to go crazy at one time.
-His cars began to crash.
-His planes began to drop.
-His ships began to sink.
-His spaceships are disappearing.
-His bombs are exploding against him.
Everything is going bizzare. MAN realised what he has done but it's too late, so MAN made a quote instead "the worst thing about creating a monster, is that one day it will come against you"
And so MAN lived to enjoy and suffer in the works of his own hands till this day.
Technology is good. It helps man to achieve certain heights but one way or the other technology is destroying man. Man has taken advantage of technology and are now using it against each other. People that invented technology did it for the good of mankind but little did they know it's going to be the greatest challenge man ever has to face. And if extra measures are not taken, technology might destroy man.
Technology has made man lazy. Man depends on technology to do everything.
-WHEN MAN CREATED TELEPHONES: PEOPLE STOPPED VISITING RELATIVES AND FRIENDS AT HOME, THEY PREFER TO CALL INSTEAD.
-WHEN MAN CREATED TELEVISION: PEOPLE REFUSE TO GO OUT AND VIEW THE NATURE AND IT'S BEAUTY, THEY PREFER TO WATCH IT ON THE BIG SCREEN.
-WHEN MAN CREATED COMPUTER: PEOPLE ALLOWED COMPUTER DO EVERYTHING.
-WHEN MAN CREATED INTERNET: PEOPLE STARTS TO BRING OUT THE WORST IN THEM.
Technology has been been implanted into people's blood. Man cannot do without technology. If technology is taken away, man will die. Imagine this world now without electricity. Do you think man will survive it? Imagine if the planes, the cars and ships are destroyed? Do you think the world will survive it? The big answer is NO! So technology has come to stay and will stay. That's our biggest fear.
Too much of technology and scientific blah blah blah is killing the nature.
-Our climates are changing.
-The whether is going bizzare with the likes of hurricane katrina.
-The seas are under attack.
-The earh is undersiege.
No wonder we have countless of Earthquakes, Hurricanes, Volcanoes, you name them.
Different diseases are pouring into the world and into man's system.
-Death rate has increased by the second.
-People are experiencing usual body pains.
-Cancers are killing more people than death itself...
WHY? Because
-people now breath in gas instead of air.
-People now drink in substances instead of pure water.
-Animals and Plants are dying too.
-The earth is losing it's grips. WHY?
Because Technology and Science are getting heavier and heavier.
-Do you have any idea how much a single human being weighs? Then multiply it by the total population of the world.. How much?
-How much does a single animal weighs? Multiply it by the total number of the animal world.. How much? Not to mention the mountains, trees, seas, oceans and each stones and rocks.
-Then how much does a single nuclear weapon weighs? Multiply it by the total nuclear weapon ever built..How much?
Then tell me, how can one single planet EARTH carry all that heaviness? When God created the world to accommodate us, the animals and other creation. He didn't make plans over our excessive technology denture.
So don't be surprised that when the earth finally loses it's grips. MAN is going to fall so hard on their buttocks and no one might survive to tell the story.
This was my own perspective about technology. Up until now, I haven't made up my mind about technology because it's very useful today and it makes life easier. On the the other hand, it's makes all the people lazy and dependent on technology. So know you decide, does technology help or destroy?
GeForce GTX Titan Z
By : Unknown
Are you tired of having a poor performance in gaming with your PC? Well, your problem's solved once you get your hands with the GeForce GTX Titan Z.
With the DNA of the world’s fastest supercomputer and the
soul of NVIDIA® Kepler™ architecture, GeForce® GTX TITAN GPU is a revolution in
PC gaming performance. GeForce GTX TITAN graphics card combines extraordinary
power, advanced control features, and game-changing thermal and acoustic
capability to provide an entirely new class of super-performance graphics card.
As you can see in the graph above, the GeForce GTX 700 Series, where the Titan is included, gives you a gaming performance that you've been dreaming of. The Titan also provides you a better performance than the previous series. You may have noticed that the GTX 690's higher than the Titan. Obviously, it provides faster performance than the Titan but, it consumes more power than the Titan. GTX Titan has the potential to give high-end gamers similar performance to the GTX 690 with more efficient power and cooling needs.
There you go, with Titan installed in your PC, it will give you a good gaming performance. This thing costs 999$, the same with the GeForce GTX 690. It's very expensive but it's worth it. ^___^
OnePlus One Preview
By : Unknown
More than half way through this year, and we can already accurately predict which big phones will be on many end-of-year lists. Devices like the Galaxy S5, HTC ONE
(M8) and the LG G3. We’re expecting other high profile phones to hit the market this fall, too, rounding out what will likely be remembered as one of the strongest years in mobile ever.
But there’s another device people are excitedly talking about, a dark horse that’s rising from the SMARTPHONE
ether, and it’s already showing tremendous promise. Maybe you’ve heard of it? The OnePlus One is this year’s so-called “flagship killer,” and it has many mobile nerds gawking.
Put out by Chinese company OnePlus, the device promises to be a no-compromise savior with a bold “never settle” philosophy. “‘Never Settle’ is about understanding our users’ root problems and making the best product decisions to solve them,” OnePlus says. “It’s not about tipping the scale toward one extreme end, but rather finding how to create the best day to day experience.”
That day to day experience OnePlus speaks of is without question among the best out there. Aside from a few small quibbles, I’d actually recommend this over the current crop of existing Android juggernauts. Not only is it a terrific device, but it’s cheap as heck; cheaper than the Nexus 5 even, which is one of the most affordable handsets available.
It’s such a shame, then, that OnePlus so severely bungled the One’s launch. Even now, a few months removed from the device’s initial announcement, the One still isn’t available to purchase publicly. I haven't received any invitation yet. But hopefully I'll get some soon.


















