Handyscope attachment turns your iPhone into a dermatoscope, no residency required

Just think — a decade from now, you won’t even need to spend eight grueling years in the books to be able to practice medicine. Instead, you’ll be able to drop endless cash on smartphone attachments while letting the robots handle the rest. FotoFinder Systems is one company working hard to make that future a reality, with its recently updated Handyscope iOS app working in conjunction with the camera attachment shown above. To do what, you say? To turn your iPhone 3GS or iPhone 4 into a digital dermatoscope for mobile skin examination. It’ll probably make quite a few stomachs turn, but the peripheral + app combo allows mere mortals to take dermoscopic photos which can be viewed with a magnification of up to 20X, enabling users to email them directly to their physician (Dr. Spaceman, we hope) for a second opinion. In all seriousness, we can’t imagine anyone at risk for skin cancer even waiting for this thing to arrive before going to get checked out, but if you’re willing to pay big bucks to play doctor, the attachment is on sale now for €1,166 ($1,582), with the accompanying app going for a comparatively modest $11.99. Vid’s after the break, if you’re into it.

Continue reading Handyscope attachment turns your iPhone into a dermatoscope, no residency required

Handyscope attachment turns your iPhone into a dermatoscope, no residency required originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 24 Jan 2011 21:27:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink MedGadget, Gizmag  |  sourceHandyscope, iTunes App Store  | Email this | Comments

Daily Downloads: Sumatra, GIMP, CDBurnerXP, and More

This article was written on August 25, 2008 by CyberNet.

gimp filezilla cdburnerxp logos icons.pngWelcome to Daily Downloads brought to you by CyberNet! Each weekday we bring you software updates for widely used programs, and it’s safe to assume that all the software we list is freeware (we’ll try to note the paid-only programs).

As you browse the Internet during the day, feel free to post the software updates you come across in the comments below so that we can include them the following day!

–Stable Releases–

The software listed here have all been officially released by the developers.

  • CCleaner 2.11.636 [Homepage] [Changelog] [Review]
    Operating System: Windows Windows only
    Type of Application: Computer cleaner
    Changes: Improvements and bug fixes
  • CDBurnerXP 4.2.1.919 [Homepage] [Changelog] [Mirror] [Review]
    Operating System: Windows Windows only
    Type of Application: CD/DVD burning
    Changes: Bug fixes
  • Sumatra PDF 0.9.1 [Homepage] [Changelog] [Mirror]
    Operating System: Windows Windows only
    Type of Application: PDF reader
    Changes: Supports links inside of PDF’s, and bug fixes

–Pre-Releases (Alpha, Beta, etc…)–

The software listed here are pre-releases that may not be ready for everyday usage.

  • FileZilla 3.1.2 [Homepage] [Changelog] [Review]
    Operating System: Windows Windows; Mac Mac; Linux Linux
    Release: Release Candidate 1
    Type of Application: FTP client
    Changes: Performance and bug fixes
  • GIMP 2.5.3 [Homepage] [Changelog]
    Operating System: Windows Windows; Mac Mac; Linux Linux
    Release: Beta
    Type of Application: Image editor
    Changes: UI changes, brush dynamics, and more

–Release Calendar–

  • August – Internet Explorer 8 Beta 2 [Review]
  • August – Firefox 3.1 Alpha 2 [Review]
  • September 2 – OpenOffice.org 3.0 [Review]
  • October 30 – Ubuntu 8.10
  • December 18 – openSUSE 11.1 [Review]
  • Late 2008 – Firefox 3.1 [Review]
  • Late 2008 – Internet Explorer 8 [Review]
  • 2009 – Windows Mobile 7 [Review]
  • 2009 – Paint.NET 4.00 [Review]
  • January 2010 – Windows 7 [Review]

Thanks Omar!

Copyright © 2011 CyberNet | CyberNet Forum | Learn Firefox

Related Posts:


T-Mobile’s Nokia Nuron 2 shelved?

Of all the phones we didn’t expect to have a successor, T-Mobile USA’s Nuron ranks high on that list — though it was a great deal seeing how it didn’t require a smartphone data plan, the device itself offered users a pretty miserable (and unnecessarily WiFi-less) experience. New rumors suggest that the carrier had fixed its sights on Nokia’s Symbian^1-powered C5-03 as the successor to the Nuron for launch early next month… but don’t get your hopes up, because in the same breath, PocketNow reports that the project has already been killed off. No word on the logic behind the move, but the killing echoes the recent news that the X7’s AT&T debut had been axed after the two companies failed to agree on marketing and pricing. Doesn’t seem like T-Mobile would be playing those same games, but you never know.

T-Mobile’s Nokia Nuron 2 shelved? originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 24 Jan 2011 20:56:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink TmoNews  |  sourcePocketNow  | Email this | Comments

Apple creates App Store Twitter account

Apple has created a Twitter account to help promote apps in its App Store.

Originally posted at iPad Atlas

‘Compostmodern’ fertilizes the creative mind

editor’s notebook S.F. confab devoted to sustainable design attempts to get the good ideas growing.

Originally posted at News – Cutting Edge

Nioncom announces Android-based, pico projector-equipped MemoryKick Vision

MicroVision may not have any plans to turn the pico projector-equipped “mini-tablet” prototype it showed off at CES earlier this month into an actual product, but it looks like little-known Nioncom is now taking the idea and running with it. While it’s still a bit too render-y for our tastes, the company insists that its MemoryKick Vision device is real, and that it will hit the US market sometime in the second quarter of the year. It’s based around the same PicoP projector used in MicroVision’s prototype, but it beefs things up with a larger 4.3-inch capacitive touchscreen and, perhaps most notably, a 2.5-inch hard drive that promises to allow for 500GB to 1TB of storage (it also pushes the device’s thickness to a full inch). Otherwise, you can expect to get Android 2.2 for an OS, a 5 megapixel camera, WiFi and Bluetooth, an accelerometer, HDMI in and out, a USB port, and an SD card slot for additional storage. Still no firm word on a price, but the company apparently expects it to be in the “mid-$500 range.”

Nioncom announces Android-based, pico projector-equipped MemoryKick Vision originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 24 Jan 2011 20:28:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourcePicopros  | Email this | Comments

Electric cars you can buy, soon

CNET Car Tech assembles a graph of electric cars and their announcement dates.

Originally posted at The Car Tech blog

Power Spot Tours on Tokyo subway

One of the much-noted trends last year was the ascendancy of the “power spot” frenzy. These centers of spiritual energy are apparently the answers to all our problems. Although the term itself (パワースポット) was coined in the Nineties, going to the places deigned to have this “extra” potency became a big activity last year, especially among women.

While a majority of Japanese people do not claim to follow a faith — other than perhaps a vague affiliation with Buddhism — there is no shortage of people eager to buy talismans, rub their hands on lucky stones, and visit power spots everywhere from Mount Fuji to, um, Iidabashi.

tokyo-power-spot-tour-subway[Meiji Shrine well “power spot” image via Kyodo.]

Now Tokyo Metro is offering one-day train passes for girls looking for romance and the power spots to help them on their quest.

Limited to just 5,000 passes, the 710-yen ($8.60) tickets will be on sale for only six months at major stations. With it in hand love-sick ladies can proceed on their task to channel energy from the seventy power spots inside Tokyo. These include ones at Meiji Shrine, Asakusa and Tokyo Daijingu, famously a shrine visited by girls keen to get married.

beams-tokyo-cultuart-banner-1

RIM: PlayBook battery life will be ‘equal or greater than the iPad with smaller battery size’

Hey, can everyone please stop talking about the iPad? RIM’s been skirting around Apple’s tablet, saying only that its upcoming PlayBook slate would have “comparable” battery life, but now it’s dropped all pretense and called the iPad out by name. Specifically, the Canadian company’s senior business marketing VP Jeff McDowell has promised that the PlayBook will offer “equal or greater” battery endurance to Apple’s device, while using a smaller cell size. The latter part isn’t hard to achieve, considering Apple filled most of its slate’s innards with Li-Pol juice packs, but the promise of matching its autonomy from the wall socket is a big claim to make. Many people consider that to be among the iPad’s foremost strengths, so RIM is surely aiming high by pledging to not only match it, but potentially better it. The PlayBook we saw in person wasn’t quite up to that level yet, but there’s still time until that March launch for RIM to turn bold words into a beautiful reality.

RIM: PlayBook battery life will be ‘equal or greater than the iPad with smaller battery size’ originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 24 Jan 2011 19:53:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink @Lessien (Twitter)  |  sourceReuters  | Email this | Comments

More details on HP’s WebOS Topaz tablet

Leaked specs for one of several expected tablet models to be unveiled next month by HP have emerged. The Topaz is rumored to have wireless charging, and integration with music, e-book, and photo-printing services.

Originally posted at Circuit Breaker