Ubuntu demonstrated running on Galaxy Tab 10.1, summarily dubbed ‘Tabuntu’ (video)

Ubuntu demonstrated running on Galaxy Tab 10.1, summarily dubbed 'Tabuntu' (video)

Sure, you can run Linux on robots and on desktops and, apparently, on small cats, and we’ve also seen it on plenty of tablets before, but this one is a little different. Max Lee over at Galaxy Tab Hacks created the video below to demonstrate a Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 running Ubunbu, but doing it on top of Android such that the tablet’s native OS is running Linux in the background and then using a VM client to launch the UI. In other words: it’s running both operating systems at once, and despite that we think the results are quite usable, even loading up this very website with aplomb. It’s demonstrated after the break and if after watching you just gotta get a piece of that the full instructions are on the other end of the source link below.

Continue reading Ubuntu demonstrated running on Galaxy Tab 10.1, summarily dubbed ‘Tabuntu’ (video)

Ubuntu demonstrated running on Galaxy Tab 10.1, summarily dubbed ‘Tabuntu’ (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 29 Jun 2011 08:35:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Wakemate Wristband Monitors Your Sleep, Wakes You Refreshed

The Wakemate promises to get you out of bed pain-free, every morning

Wakemate promises to bring you around from the land of dreams into an alert, awakened state every single morning, without a klaxon or bacon cooker in sight.

It’s wristband that monitors your movements throughout the night and, when you get close to your pre-set optimum waking time, it waits for the shallowest part of your sleep cycle before sounding the alarm. The Wakemate pairs with your Android or iOS device via Bluetooth, and uses this to track your sleep and wake you with your favorite music.

Our sleep runs in 90-minute cycles, and ideally we should wake at the part of shallowest sleep. If you feel like your regular alarm clock sometimes drags you from the very depths of sleep, that’s because it is — it’s waking you from deep sleep.

There are iOS apps which use the iPhone or iPad’s accelerometers to do the same thing and — once calibrated — they do a good job. They also require you to sleep with your device in the bed, and for the app to remain powered on, draining the battery rather quickly. Bluetooth also sucks the juice from your phone, but not nearly as much.

The Wakemate is available to buy right now, for $60. Or you could do what I do, and live nine time zones ahead of your employer, so that you can get up as late as you like and still be early.

Wakemate product page [Wakemate. Thanks, Renee!]

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NC State discovery finds optimal connections 10,000 times more quickly, ResNet admins do a double take

Ever wondered how just one message in an average Chatroulette session finds its way to whatever destination fate may deem suitable? Sure you have. As it stands, every single pulse from your Ethernet socket starts its initial journey by hunting for an optimal connection path; in some cases, that involves routing through massive ring networks crossing over untold miles of fiber optic cabling. Using traditional techniques, nailing down an optimal solution for a ring can take eons (or days, whichever you prefer), but there’s a new methodology coming out of NC State‘s den that could enable the same type of scenario to reach its natural conclusion 10,000 times faster. Dr. George Rouskas, a computer science professor and proud Wolfpacker, has just published a new paper describing the scheme, with the focal point being a “mathematical model that identifies the exact optimal routes and wavelengths for ring network designers.” More technobabble surrounding the discovery can be found in the source link below, but unfortunately, there’s no telling how long it’ll take your impending click to be addressed using conventional means. Here’s to the future, eh?

NC State discovery finds optimal connections 10,000 times more quickly, ResNet admins do a double take originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 29 Jun 2011 08:11:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Windows Live Messenger Available To The Public

This article was written on April 16, 2006 by CyberNet.

Windows Live Messenger Available To The PublicMicrosoft has frustrated many people by making Windows Live Messenger an invite only service while it was being tested, but the frustration is now over! If you would like to test out the latest version of Windows Live Messenger then simply follow the link below and under the section that says “Windows Live Messenger beta” select “Sign Up”. After logging into your Passport account you should be prompted to download the new Windows Live Messenger. Finally, everyone gets to enjoy this messenger service.

Also, a few weeks ago Microsoft had a bug on their servers that allowed people to signup for the service without being invited but this time it is official.

Get Windows Live Messenger

Copyright © 2011 CyberNetNews.com

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HP: $50 TouchPad rebate, with a catch

The company is offering the $50 rebate through July 31 on the purchase of its 32GB TouchPad. However, the company rebate is only available to those who own one of its smartphones.

Originally posted at The Digital Home

Kinetic Theater Chairs: Immersion or Distraction?

D-Box movie-theater chairs will shake you in time to the on-screen action

Imagine if, every time there was an explosion up on the cinema screen and a crashing thunder of sound from the theater’s THX speakers, your seat shook, spilling your beer/coke/popcorn into your lap. Well, imagine no more. The Kinetic Movie Theater chair could make this messy, pants-wetting fantasy into a moist reality.

The D-Box, already in several theaters across the U.S and also available for home use, takes “motion-codes” embedded in the movies (DVD and BD for home use) and uses them to control motors in the seats that rock, roll, shake and rattle you in time with the on-screen action.

I can see this being great for games, but who really wants to watch a movie and be jerked around while doing it? Does being shaken in time to Jake LaMotta’s punches in Raging Bull, or bobbing up and down as you descend the rapids in Deliverance really add to the movie? My guess is that this will work best in crappy action movies, which are pretty low on content as it is.

Still, if there’s one thing that can tempt me to part with my money, it’s a scary-sounding health warning, and the D-Box has a great one:

The D-BOX motion system and motion enabled seats may be harmful to women who are pregnant, persons with heart conditions, the elderly, persons with back, head or neck conditions or injuries or those with other pre-existing medical conditions.

Available now, in various first and third-party forms.

D-Box Movie Theater Seats [D-Box via Core77]

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OCZ’s RevoDrive 3 X2 review roundup: SSD melts faces with 1.5GBps read and 1.2GBps write speeds

Did our footage of OCZ’s new RevoDrive 3 X2 whet your appetite for more info on the super speedy SSD? Well, your wish is the web’s command, and we’ve got a full roundup of reviews that’ll tell you all you need to know. After putting OCZ’s latest through its paces, the consensus is that the SSD is seriously quick in remembering and retrieving data. According to Tom’s Hardware, the RevoDrive 3 X2 — with its max 1.5GBps read and 1.2GBps write speeds — “smokes everything” they’ve had pass through their lab. However, AnandTech noted that such capacious bandwidth is “simply overkill” for most users, as the drive only really flexes its muscles once the queue depth increases from enterprise-level workloads. Several sites noted that the lack of TRIM support on Windows machines was also a concern, and that more cost effective (albeit slower) storage solutions can be had with a DIY RAID array of SATA SSDs. Of course, you don’t have to take our word for it, get down to the nitty gritty in the links below.

Read – Hot Hardware
Read – AnandTech
Read – Tom’s Hardware
Read – PC Perspective
Read – The SSD Review

OCZ’s RevoDrive 3 X2 review roundup: SSD melts faces with 1.5GBps read and 1.2GBps write speeds originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 29 Jun 2011 07:41:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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The Elliptical Machine Office Desk: putting the ‘commute’ back in ‘telecommuting’

Quite frankly, you’ve got it just a bit too easy. You rise 98 seconds before you’re scheduled to clock in, you mash a power button, and suddenly, you’re at work. PJs still caked to your legs, mouth still steaming from a lack of brushing. You’re a telecommuter, and you’re the envy of the working world. In fact, it’d be just stellar if you’d do us all a solid and add a sliver of complexity to your workday — you know, like swapping out your OfficeMax special for an elliptical machine. And maybe, just maybe, you can convert your laptop into one that’s pedal-powered, forcing you to keep churning for fear of dropping from the virtual office. And no, you can’t ask for donations to cover the $8,000 price tag — your fuel savings from last week alone should just about cover it. Harrumph.

The Elliptical Machine Office Desk: putting the ‘commute’ back in ‘telecommuting’ originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 29 Jun 2011 07:08:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Medical Xpress  |  sourceHammacher Schlemmer  | Email this | Comments

Triggertrap Trips You Camera With Just About Anything

Triggertrap is an open source, Arduino-based box that will take pretty much any input and use it to trigger your camera. Lasers, a clap of the hands, even your old TV remote — all of them will work to trip your camera’s shutter.

The project differs from other Kickstarter projects in a few ways. First is that there will be two very different versions. Photographer and geek Haje Jan Kamps has already built an Arduino-based laser trigger for a camera (break the beam, take the shot) and he will be selling a more complex kit with various inputs for DIY-loving photography hackers.

The second product will be a smaller, more polished box designed to be sold — eventually — in camera stores. This will contain a laser trigger and other inputs, along with variable time-lapse controls. It will still be hacker friendly thanks to a USB port through which it can be programmed.

The idea is that if you can connect it to an Arduino board, you can use it to fire you camera. This means that you will only be limited by your ideas.

To get in on the Kickstarter action, you’ll need to pledge $75 to get an assembled, Arduino-based model (Haje says prices will rise in the future). If that’s a little rich for you DIY types, you can download the open-source plans and build your own.

Triggertrap: The Universal Camera Trigger [Kickstarter]

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New Two-Wheeled Professional Tool Slices Through Air

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Just days before the start of the 2011 Tour de France, bike manufacturer Cervélo has announced its newest model, the S5. Though aggressively aerodynamic, the carbon-fiber S5 is not a triathlon bike. It’s made for road racing, and it will be under the riders of team Garmin-Cervelo when they line up on July 2 at Passage du Gois for the start of the three-week, 2,132-mile race.

Wired was the first media outlet of any kind to get a look at the S5, let alone ride it, which we did this spring. Our access included behind-the-scenes time with Cervélo engineers in the wind tunnel at the University of Washington and our exclusive test ride in Marin County, California, just north of San Francisco.

Following are our photos from the wind tunnel sessions, along with shots and impressions from our test ride.

Above: A prototype of Cervelo’s new aero-road bike frame, the S5, at the Kirsten Wind Tunnel on the campus of the University of Washington in Seattle. Engineers at the wind tunnel compared the S5 with older Cervelo designs and with competitor’s bicycles.

Photo: Mike Kane/Wired.com

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