Samsung WB250F Smart Camera Gets Evernote Photo Sync Support

Samsung WB250F Smart Camera Gets Evernote Photo Sync SupportThose who use the Samsung WB250F Smart Camera in the U.S. are in for a treat. Samsung has partnered up with Evernote to bring photo sync support, this means that users will be able to sync their photos with any mobile device or computer that has Evernote installed and configured with one particular account.

The camera is equipped with Wi-Fi, which already allows users to sync photos with a tablet or a smartphone while shooting. The camera is also capable of e-mailing pictures straight from itself. Users also have the ability to back up photos to SkyDrive from the camera. Users will obviously need to connect to a Wi-Fi network before they can sync photos to Evernote. Alternatively, one can also tether to a smartphone’s data connection, but that would result in astronomical data costs. This 14.2 megapixel camera is capable of taking decent photos and is a good option for those who want to use traditional point and shoot cameras instead of the ones on their smartphones for casual photography. The new firmware update that enables Evernote sync for WB250F is now available from Samsung’s support website.

Like It , +1 , Tweet It , Pin It | Samsung WB250F Smart Camera Gets Evernote Photo Sync Support original content from Ubergizmo.

    

Trace collects your kick, push, coasting metrics, shares them on social media

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If you land a kickflip and no one’s around to watch, did it really happen in the first place? Should ActiveReplay secure its $150,000 Kickstarter goal, skaters may never have to grapple with such existential crises again. The company, which includes a number of fairly impressive pedigrees like the former CTO of Magellan, is looking to bring a new action sports tracker to market. Trace is sort of a pedometer for skaters, surfers and snowboarders, clipping to a mount on the bottom of your board and collecting data via nine-axis inertial sensors. The info collected is transmitted via the module’s built-in Bluetooth 4.0, allowing you to share tricks and other metrics via sites like Facebook and Twitter. Still need some convincing? There’s a Kickstarter pitch video after the break.

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Source: Kickstarter

LG QuickWindow Case for the upcoming LG G2

It goes without saying that every single company needs a defining product that they can call their flagship, as that would represent the pinnacle of the company’s achievement in that particular niche. For instance, when it comes to the world of smartphones, Nokia of Finland has their recently introduced Nokia Lumia 1020 with a whopping 41-megapixel camera, while Samsung has been riding high with their Samsung Galaxy S4 (and its many variants) for some time already, with Apple preparing a new iPhone, leaving the iPhone 5 to be the standard bearer at the moment. What about LG? Well, LG used to have its Optimus G Pro as its flagship device, but in the months to come, we do know that there is a new smartphone arriving that will take over the Optimus G Pro, and that would be the LG G2. Having said that, the LG G2, being a flagship smartphone, should be accompanied by a case worthy of its calling, no? This is where the LG QuickWindow case comes in.

The LG QuickWindow is said to be an aesthetically beautiful case, and it would certainly set a high standard for the rest of LG’s growing premium smartphone accessory range which will comprise of cases, headsets and portable chargers. Why is it called the LG QuickWindow? Well, the answer is pretty obvious thanks to an opening or “window” that is located on the cover of the QuickWindow, allowing users to take a glance at different information displays without having to go through the hassle of opening the cover flap.

With but a light swipe of a finger, the QuickWindow UX will appear in the window which users are able to check out while on-the-go. All information that can be viewed through the QuickWindow cover are important ones, including a clock, weather report, alarm, music player, incoming phone call details and incoming text messages.

We have no word on pricing, but it should arrive in seven different colors including black, white, pink, purple, blue, mint and yellow at the same time that the LG G2 is unveiled.

Press Release
[ LG QuickWindow Case for the upcoming LG G2 copyright by Coolest Gadgets ]

Tooth Sensor Tells Your Doctor If You’re Over-Eating or Smoking When You Shouldn’t Be

People lie to their doctors all the time, even though it’s for their own good. There’s a new invention in the works that makes it impossible to deny you had that extra slab of steak or that you smoked a couple of cigarettes: tooth sensors.

tooth sensor

They were developed by a team from the National Taiwan University. Aside from being able to detect if the person is overeating or sneaking in a couple of smokes when he or she shouldn’t be, the system also informs the doctor about it.

The sensors were tested by sticking them onto eight dentures. The researchers discovered that the sensor had the capacity to distinguish between chewing, speaking, and smoking about 94% of the time.

It’s definitely an interesting gadget, although it might be a while before it’s deployed. But the question is: would you be willing to wear it, knowing your teeth will tell on you?

[via New Scientist and Motherboard via Engadget via Geeky Gadgets]

ActiveReplay’s Trace Wants To Bring Quantified Self Tech To Action Sports For Players And Spectators

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New Kickstarter project Trace is like a Fitbit for your extreme sports needs, allowing people who skate, surf, snowboard and ski to track a lot more than just time, distance and pace while participating in the sport they love. The Trace is the latest from ActiveReplay, a company that created AlpineReplay, an app and network for skiers to track and share their stats on the mountain.

Both AlpineReplay and the Trace are the brainchildren of Dr. Anatole Loshkin, one of the founders of GPS company Magellan, and his team of seven engineers based out of Hunting Beach, CA. The waterproof and shockproof Trace is a small cylinder, roughly the size of a Reese’s Peanut Butter Cup, which can affix to your board using a separate mount (and it’s detachable so that you can use it on multiple boards in multiple sports).

It’s designed to gather data including speed, distance, jump height and rotation, and has specialized free apps on iOS and Android for surf, skate and snow sports. The apps not only collect your data and give you a history you can check at any time, but add in a social element, allowing you to share that info with other athletes in your field. Through repeated use, ActiveReplay says they’ll be identify more and more tricks, letting them know exactly when a user lands a kickflip, for instance, or a 360, etc.

I spoke to ActiveReplay VP of Products David Loshkin, who himself has a background in applied mathematics from Harvard and has been writing a lot of the code for ActiveReplay, and whose personal interest in and passion for surfing, skating and snowboarding drove a lot of the product direction for ActiveReplay.

“If you’re a biker or a hardcore runner you have all these really cool gadgets to tell you your mile splits, heart rate and so forth,” he said. “I grew up skiing and snowboarding, and surfing and skating, and none of this exists for those sports, even though I think the information is way cooler. You’re doing complicated tricks where the board is spinning in all sorts of directions around you, you’re getting air time, you’re not just going in a straight line. This is a product I’ve always wanted, and there’s no reason at this point why surfing can’t be measured, why I can’t know how many waves I’ve caught for the year, for the month, or for just that session.”

The Trace is definitely cool, but is it something that can scale? Action sports are already more limited in appeal than general fitness activities like biking and run, after all, and only a small portion of people who participate in those sports track their activity with a dedicated device. But Loshkin argues that there’s a very big market for Trace, and notes that huge brands like Red Bull and ABC invest a lot in action sports, and they make up a good chunk of marquee broadcast events like the Winter Olympics.

“There are two sides: There’s the athlete’s side, and we feel that this is definitely going to change everything for surfers and skaters and stuff, but there’s also that spectator side,” he said. “When Tony Hawk says that he did a tre flip for example, my friends don’t know what a tre flip is, but that trick could instantly populate on the screen and you could instantly know that that’s one rotation in the x-axis and one rotation in the y-axis, and we could show that with cool graphics.”

The ActiveReplay Trace campaign is seeking $150,000 to get the device to mass production-ready state, with funding set to close in September and a ship date of January for the first batch of devices. The Trace starts at $99 for an early-bird pledge, and the company is being smart and staging batches so that they only have to manage fairly small volume shipments with each. Dr. Anatole Loshkin has lots of experience shipping hardware at Magellan, and clearly knows that promising too much too quickly is a pitfall to be avoided with hardware startups.

As a former (very) amateur skateboarder, I’m very interested in the kind of data the Trace can gather and report. Action sports may have a smaller user base than more broad activities like running, but it’s not as small as you might think, and it’s also a much more dedicated and invested group, so something like this makes a lot of logical sense for that market.

The Guardian: NSA’s XKeyscore tool is its ‘widest reaching’ system for collecting online data

The Guardian NSA's XKeyscore tool is its 'widest reaching' system for collecting online data

Edward Snowden has said that he still has more information about the NSA than what he’s already leaked, and we’re now getting a look at another big piece of that. According to a new set of documents provided to The Guardian, the NSA is using a tool called XKeyscore that is said to be its “widest reaching” system for collecting information from the internet — one that lets it examine “nearly everything a typical user does on the internet,” as one presentation slide explains. That apparently includes both metadata and the contents of emails, as well as social media activity, which can reportedly be accessed by NSA analysts without prior authorization; as The Guardian notes, a FISA warrant is required if the target of the surveillance is a US citizen, but not if a foreign target is communicating with an American.

According to The Guardian, the amount of data collected is so large that content is only able to stored in the system for three to five days, or as little as 24 hours in some cases, while metadata is stored for 30 days. That’s reportedly led the NSA to develop a multi-tiered system that lets it move what’s described as “interesting” content to other databases where it can be stored for as much as five years. In a statement provided to The Guardian, the NSA says that “XKeyscore is used as a part of NSA’s lawful foreign signals intelligence collection system,” and that “allegations of widespread, unchecked analyst access to NSA collection data are simply not true. Access to XKeyscore, as well as all of NSA’s analytic tools, is limited to only those personnel who require access for their assigned tasks.” The agency further adds that “every search by an NSA analyst is fully auditable, to ensure that they are proper and within the law.”

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Source: The Guardian, NSA

What Happens to Your Skin in Space

Thought good old Commander Hadfield already taught you everything there is to know about space livin’? Shame on you—there’s always more to learn. Like about how your skin molts and floats off your body in giant flakes and calluses, for instance.

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Microsoft Office For Android Released

Microsoft Office For Android Released

A few weeks after releasing Office for iPhone, Microsoft today announced the launch of Office for Android. Any smartphone running version 4.0 or higher would be able to install the Office app. It brings Word, PowerPoint and Excel though there’s a little caveat. Microsoft isn’t offering a standalone version that one can purchase, the app itself is free, but users will require a Microsoft Office 365 subscription in order to view and edit their documents, presentations and sheets.

Given that the editing functionality on this app is very basic, its meant to be used so as to make corrections on the go. One can’t expect to create full fledged documents and presentations through this app. Microsoft hasn’t revealed its plans for an Android tablet version of the app, it recommends using Office Web Apps on tablets. Documents will be stored in SkyDrive and they can be shared via e-mail through the app. The only noticeable different when compared to Office for iPhone is that this app doesn’t lets users purchase Office 365 subscriptions, so you’ll need to get a subscription in advance before being able to use Office for Android.

Like It , +1 , Tweet It , Pin It | Microsoft Office For Android Released original content from Ubergizmo.

    

Microsoft Office Mobile for Android arrives, requires Office 365 subscription

We’ve been enjoying Microsoft Office on the iPhone for a little while now, but it has finally arrived on Android smartphones, with support for tablets still MIA, just as with the iPad on iOS. Office Mobile for Android brings cloud-based office suite fun to Google’s mobile platform in the form of Word, Excel, and PowerPoint.

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Samsung’s 14-megapixel WB250 point-and-shoot now posts directly to Evernote

Samsung's 14megapixel WB250 pointandshoot now posts directly to Evernote

The WB250 Smart camera, Samsung’s $179 WiFi-enabled point-and-shoot, just scored a major sharing boost. The pocketable cam can now boot images directly to Evernote. After downloading a software update, WB250 owners will be able to sync their images with the service seamlessly — shots can then appear on connected smartphones, computers and tablets simultaneously. Users will also be able to tap into a 3-month Evernote Premium trial, bringing a 1GB monthly upload allowance and additional sharing options. Update your software to get started.

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Source: Samsung (download link)