BlueWire Headset Records Calls From Both Ends

bluewireIn this day and age, it is not too much to ask for a device that is capable of recording not only audio, but a video call as well from both ends. However, to be able to find a headset that does just that – now this is something different which is pretty much a rarity. BlueWire is a unique Bluetooth enabled headset that will require just an app in order to transfer all of the recorded files onto your computer or other compatible devices, as it goes about its job of recording 2-way communications from your audio as well as video calls.

This would place it in a really unique situation, where you can now have a black and white record of voices from standard audio calls, as well as capture what is seen on your Skype or FaceTime video chats. Not only that, with the BlueWire, one can also record voice notes of up to a 5 minute duration, where all of these files will then be stashed away in the 16GB of internal memory that has been specially dedicated for audio files.

Apart from that, you do not need to solely rely on this mono-speaker device in order to carry out calls as well as handle recording simultaneously, courtesy of its Bluetooth integration with your smartphone. Using the BlueWire is extremely simple – all that you need to do is to plug in any other headset device and start chatting away, where the BlueWire will begin its recording feature even. Other hardware specifications include NFC support and accelerometer sensors. Right now, the Bluewire happens to be on Indiegogo, where it needs to raise another $12,000 more so that it can roll off production lines in due time.

BlueWire Headset Records Calls From Both Ends , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

First Operation In England Performed By A Surgical Robot

surgical-robotIt does look as though robots are starting to help mankind out in many more practical ways than previously thought imaginable – while they are more or less indispensable in this day and age where the production line at factories are concerned, robots too, do assist in terms of automated writing, and in the realm of medical surgery to boot. Here we are with word that the very first operation was carried out in England by a surgical robot, which could be the medical breakthrough that could make new treatments possible for the first time ever.

Known as the Da Vinci XI, this robot is not fully automated, as it will still require surgeons to operate it manually, but what the Da Vinci XI brings to the table is the ability to make tiny and precise incisions, which would oust some of the traditional operations that require cutting patients open with months of recovery to follow, resulting in a whole lot less invasive keyhole surgery.

Surgeons at the Royal Marsden Hospital claimed that this particular technology pushed the boundaries where surgery is concerned, especially in the area of cancer care, as the maiden operation on a patient with a tumor was performed. We do know that the Da Vinci robot will help minimize scarring and pain, which should bring a great amount of relief and comfort to future patients.

First Operation In England Performed By A Surgical Robot , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Google X Labs made synthetic skin to test a cancer-detecting bracelet

If someone asks you to name a Google X Labs moonshot, you’d probably say Glass, self-driving car or maybe even Project Loon. But as you might remember from the WSJD Live conference last year, it also has a flourishing Life Sciences division that empl…

Nickelodeon to introduce its own video subscription service

As consumers continue to drop traditional cable in favor of various video streaming services, some companies and networks are (finally) accepting reality and getting on board with their own offerings. HBO announced its own video subscription service plans in the recent past, and consumers recently scored another option with the introduction of Sling TV. Viacom, which has notoriously been picky … Continue reading

Nissan recalls 768k vehicles over hood latch, moisture issues

Nissan is recalling approximately 768,000 SUVs and crossovers due to issues with moisture and the hood latch. The issues affect different batches of the recalled vehicles, with the moisture being the most pervasive problem. Of that, the affected vehicles are at risk of a fire via an electrical short that could be caused by moisture making its way through the … Continue reading

George Toca Freed From Louisiana Prison After 30 Years

By Jonathan Kaminsky

NEW ORLEANS, Jan 29 (Reuters) – A Louisiana inmate whose case for leniency is before the U.S. Supreme Court was freed from prison on Thursday after 30 years behind bars in a deal with prosecutors that cancels his life sentence handed down when he was a teenager, his lawyers said.

In exchange for his release from prison and having his second-degree murder conviction vacated, George Toca entered a “best interest” plea to the killing and pleaded guilty to attempted armed robbery, his attorneys said.

Toca has long maintained his innocence, but pleaded guilty to the lesser charges in order to secure his release, his attorneys said.

A “best interest” plea admits no guilt while acknowledging the prosecution would likely secure a conviction.

“George Toca is innocent of the crime for which he was convicted and those to which he pled guilty today,” his attorneys at Innocence Project New Orleans said in a statement. “It is understandable and appropriate that he chose certain release from Angola prison over the uncertainty of continuing his legal fight.”

The Supreme Court had taken Toca’s case to determine whether an earlier ruling striking down mandatory life sentences for juveniles also applied to older cases.

Toca was arrested at age 17 and convicted in 1985 of killing his friend, Eric Batiste. Batiste’s family has long sought Toca’s freedom, Toca’s attorneys said.

Representatives of the Orleans Parish District Attorney’s Office, which struck the deal with Toca’s attorneys, did not immediately respond to messages seeking comment. (Editing by Eric Walsh)

Our Five Deaths

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In the 16th century, French philosopher Michel de Montaigne wrote: “To begin depriving life of its greatest advantage over us, let us deprive death of its strangeness, let us frequent it, let us get used to it…. A man who has learned how to die has unlearned how to be a slave,” (Essays). Certainly, one of the most serious and necessary aspects of religious epistemology is the way religion compels human beings to confront the void of death. While the philosophical meaning of such a proposition shall forever remain mysterious, a tangible byproduct of not knowing our ultimate fate gives us more than enough impetus to improve our lives and the lives of others around the world.

As an understandable consequence of the unknowable providence of death, the inevitability of it provides a myriad of spiritual and moral opportunities for us to learn and reflect. To be sure, the fear of death is only natural, but this palpable anxiety can yield productive action. After we have evolved through the five states of grief model articulated by Elisabeth Kubler-Ross (the familiar cycle of denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance), we can begin to transcend prior emotional states to have our own deaths motivate and inspire our own humble actualizations.

Because of the psychological clichés about death that are so prevalent in society today, I would like to propose a newer, more radical metaphysical model, one that defines that each of person dies at five distinct moments in temporal time:

• When we stop loving life
• The irreversible cessation of our heartbeat
• When our body is lowered into the earth
• The last time our influence has any direct impact through posterity
• The last time our name is ever mentioned on Earth

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With each death, there is a tendency to have an unnatural and unhealthy response:

• When we stop loving life – we seek a vacuous shell of empty ecstasy and pleasure
• With the irreversible cessation of our heartbeat – we obsess upon the external health of the body
• When our body is lowered into the earth – we seek materials over love
• The last time our influence has any direct impact through our posterity – we seek unilateral control over our legacy
• The last time our name is ever mentioned on Earth – we try to build an ostentatious reputation rather than one of humility.

One of religion’s hidden potencies is the ability it can provide to each of these different death responses, especially in relation to the yearly holiday celebrations:

• When we stop loving life – we must learn to seek joy in the eternal (Simchat Torah)
• The irreversible cessation of our heartbeat – we must learn to identify our true selves as our souls, not as our bodies (Shavuot)
• When our body is lowered into the earth – we must learn to embrace material impermanence (Sukkot)
• The last time out influence as any direct impact through our posterity – we must extend our moral strivings humbly, courageously, and collaboratively (Pesach)
• The last time out name is ever mentioned on Earth – we must learn modesty before a Higher Power (Yom Kippur)

In the nineteenth century Rabbi Simcha Bunim of Przysucha, one of the great Hasidic teachers of the age, relayed his own concise epitaph. On his deathbed, with his wife crying hysterically, he turned towards her and urged silence: “My whole life was only that I should learn to die.” Likewise, The rabbis taught that a baby enters the world with fists clenched and a person dies with palms open to signify that we enter wanting everything of this world but we leave modestly taking nothing with us, (Ecclesiastes Rabba 5:14).

Only two things will remain after all five of our deaths: our eternal soul and the indirect effects of all we put into the world. As we edge closer to the precipice of death, we must strive, carefully and wisely with all of our might, to cultivate our eternal soul and to put positivity into the world. That in the end is all that will last.

Rabbi Dr. Shmuly Yanklowitz is the Executive Director of the Valley Beit Midrash, the Founder & President of Uri L’Tzedek, the Founder and CEO of The Shamayim V’Aretz Institute and the author of seven books on Jewish ethics. Newsweek named Rav Shmuly one of the top 50 rabbis in America.”

Happy Takes an Earnest, Moving Look at Positive Psychology

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“The Constitution only gives people the right to pursue happiness. You have to catch it yourself.” – Benjamin Franklin.

When a film opens with a cute, bubbly quote such as the one above, which would be equally at home on a poster in a dentist’s office showing cute puppies frolicking in a field of daises, I must admit that my antennae usually go up in the worst way, and I’m scrambling to prep an insulin shot for what’s to come. However, Roko Belic’s 2011 documentary Happy left me with a very pleasant, if somewhat familiar, aftertaste.

Belic, who gained notoriety with his 1999 doc Genghis Blues, takes his camera around the globe, interviewing people in slums of India, the bayous of Louisiana, and other disparate locales such as Brazil, England, Scotland, Egypt, Japan, Bhutan, Denmark, Namibia, Kenya, China, and Thailand to find out what their definition of happiness is.

There is the motivational speaker who travels to American high schools to talk about the lasting scars of bullying, while also teaching the teens the value of perspective, giving an example of a time a Special Olympics team he coached shocked him with their comradery as they approached the finish line. There is the rickshaw driver in India who lives a life, by Western standards, of extreme hardship, but all he can see from his ramshackle home, constructed of tar paper and bamboo, is that an open space (“my window”) allows fresh air to circulate and gives him an unobstructed view of the river.

Happy might not be the most original documentary ever made, as it’s a subject matter which has been trod over numerous times by many different outlets, but it’s a subject matter that defines the word universal, and remains topical and riveting, even when it nearly wears out its welcome during the film’s hour and fifteen minute running time.

Of all the subjects covered, none is more harrowing than the story of Melissa Moody, a former debutante and beauty queen who was run over by truck in 1992, resulting in the permanent disfigurement of her face. After her husband divorced her and enduring years of physical therapy and surgeries, Moody found herself dealing with a plethora of repressed memories and emotions, including sexual abuse at the hands of a family member. After remarrying and dealing with her past trauma, Moody began to see her accident as a blessing, and began working with others, becoming a staff member at San Francisco’s School of Self-Healing, where she was treated for vision impairment caused by the accident.

“What I saw is that in places like the slums in Calcutta, people do not have any measure of success,” she says. “What I saw, instead, was that people had a strong sense of community. Their purpose in life was being part of something bigger than themselves: Being as good as they can be among their friends and families.”

In many ways, the film is almost an infomercial for the “positive psychology” movement, which Wikipedia defines as “a branch of psychology that uses scientific understanding and effective intervention to aid in the achievement of a satisfactory life, rather than merely treating mental illness.” From the time it originated in 1998, this field invested tens of millions of dollars in research, published numerous scientific papers, established several masters and Ph. D programs, and has been involved in many major news outlets.

Positive psychology began as a new area of psychology in 1998 when Martin Seligman chose it as the theme for his term as president of the American Psychological Association, though the term originates with Dr. Abraham Maslow, in his 1954 book Motivation and Personality, and there have been indications that psychologists since the 1950s have been increasingly focused on the promotion of mental health rather than merely treating illness. In the first sentence of his book Authentic Happiness, Dr. Martin Seligman claimed: “for the last half century psychology has been consumed with a single topic only – mental illness”, expanding on Maslow’s comments. He urged psychologists to continue the earlier missions of psychology of nurturing talent and improving normal life.

Dr. Richard Davidson and Dr. P. Read Montague, neuroscientists who are interviewed in the film, have identified the part of the brain that is associated with feelings of happiness, specifying the left frontal lobe as the area where the feeling originates. They also break down happiness into several different behavioral components.

First, there is connectedness, which involves building and maintaining strong relationships with friends, family and community; Generosity, giving back to the community at large and society in general has been found to increase happiness; Novelty, which involves breaking out of old routines and habits, such as choosing a new path for hike or a new route to work; Play, people who engage in regular physical aerobic exercise tend to be happier, due to stimulation of the endorphin glands; Flow, which involves engaging in a fully absorbing hobby, such as carpentry, painting, or writing; Health and longevity: there is a strong correlation between happiness and healthiness. A positive mental attitude has been proven to help people live longer.

The formula for happiness is not the same for everyone, but research shows that almost everyone is capable of becoming happier if they choose to be.

For more information on the subject of positive psychology and the science of happiness, you can visit the following websites:

Adventures in Positive Psychology by PsychCentral

Authentic Happiness by Positive Psychology Center at the University of Pennsylvania

Dream Positive psychology blog by Canadian Positive Psychology Network

From Functioning to Flourishing by Psychology Today

The Happiness Project by Gretchen Rubin

The Positivity Blog by Henrik Edberg

25 Financial Terms Everyone Should Know

Do you know your AGI from your ARM from your PMI? Or does the mere mention of those acronyms make you go, “Huh?”

If you don’t speak personal finance, don’t worry — we’re here to help.

We know that managing your money can sometimes make you feel like you’re learning a foreign language. So we compiled a handy glossary of must-know money terms that affect all aspects of your financial life.

Whether you’re confused about amortization or not sure what escrow, exactly, is good for, this primer will help you get up to financial speed.

Handy Banking and Credit Terms
1. Compound interest
When you’re investing or saving, this is the interest that you earn on the amount you deposit, plus any interest you’ve accumulated over time. When you’re borrowing, it’s the interest that is charged on the original amount you are loaned, as well as the interest charges that are added to your outstanding balance over time.

Think of it as “interest on interest.” It will make your savings or debt grow at a faster rate than simple interest, which is calculated on the principal amount alone.

2. FICO score
A number used by banks and other financial institutions to measure a borrower’s credit worthiness. FICO is an acronym for the Fair Isaac Corporation, a company that came up with the methodology for calculating a credit score based on several factors, including payment history, length of credit history and total amount owed.

FICO scores range from 300 to 850, and the higher the score, the better the terms you may receive on your next loan or credit card. People with scores below 620 may have a harder time securing credit at a favorable interest rate.

3. Net worth
The difference between your assets and liabilities. You can calculate yours by adding up all of the money or investments you have, including the current market value of your home and car, as well as the balances in any checking, savings, retirement or other investment accounts. Then subtract all of your debt, including your mortgage balance, credit card balances and any other loans or obligations. The resulting net worth number helps you take the pulse on your overall financial health.

RELATED: Net Worth: Why You Need to Know It — and Grow It

Handy Investing Terms
4. Asset allocation
The process by which you choose what proportion of your portfolio you’d like to dedicate to various asset classes, based on your goals, personal risk tolerance and time horizon. Stocks, bonds and cash or cash equivalents (like certificates of deposit) make up the three major types of asset classes, and each of these reacts differently to market cycles and economic conditions.

Stocks, for instance, have the potential to provide strong growth over time, but may also be more volatile. Bonds tend to have slower growth, but are generally perceived to have less risk. A common investment strategy is to diversify your portfolio across multiple asset classes in order to spread out risk while taking advantage of growth.

5. Bonds
Commonly referred to as fixed-income securities, bonds are essentially debt investments. When you buy a bond, you lend money to an entity, typically the government or a corporation, for a specified period of time at a fixed interest rate (also called a coupon). You then receive periodic interest payments over time, and get back the loaned amount at the bond’s maturity date.

6. Capital gains
The increase in the value of an asset or investment — like a stock or real estate — above its original purchase price. The gain, however, is only on paper until the asset is actually sold. A capital loss, by contrast, is a decrease in the asset’s or investment’s value.

You pay taxes on both short-term capital gains (a year or less) and long-term capital gains (more than a year) when you sell an investment. By contrast, a capital loss could help reduce your taxes.

RELATED: What Are Capital Gains? A Guide to When These Taxes Apply

7. Rebalancing
The process of buying or selling securities over time in order to maintain your desired asset allocation. For example, if your target allocation is 60 percent stocks, 20 percent bonds and 20 percent cash, and the stock market has performed particularly well over the past year, your allocation may now have shifted to 70 percent stocks, 10 percent bonds and 20 percent cash.

To rebalance your portfolio, you could sell some of your stocks and reinvest the proceeds in bonds, or invest new money in bonds to bring the portfolio back to the original balance.

8. Stocks
Also called equities or shares, stocks give you ownership in a company. When you buy stocks, you become a company shareholder, giving you a claim on part of that company’s assets and earnings. The two main types of stocks are common and preferred.

If you hold common stock, you can vote at shareholders’ meetings and receive dividends — however, you’re also lowest on the totem pole in the corporate ownership structure. Preferred stockholders have a higher claim on assets and earnings than owners of common stock (for example, they receive their dividends first), but they don’t have voting rights.

RELATED: Stocks, Bonds, Funds: What’s the Difference?

Handy Real Estate Terms
9. Amortization
This is the process of paying off your debt in regular installments over a fixed period of time. Your mortgage is amortized using monthly payments that are calculated based on the amount borrowed, plus the interest that you would pay over the life of the loan.

10. ARM
An acronym for adjustable rate mortgage, a type of mortgage in which the interest you pay on your outstanding balance rises and falls based on a specific benchmark. ARMs usually start out at a fixed rate for a short period of time, and then the rate resets annually based on the benchmark, plus an additional amount.

For example, if you have a five-year ARM, you will have a set rate for the first five years. Then the rate will change based on the terms of your mortgage. This means your monthly mortgage payment may start out low, but then rise (sometimes significantly) after the fixed-rate period is over.

RELATED: Adjustable Rate Mortgages Make a Comeback

11. Escrow
An account held by an impartial third party on behalf of two parties in a transaction. During the home-buying process, the buyer will deposit a specified amount in an escrow account that the seller can’t touch until the terms of the contract, such as passing an inspection, have been fulfilled and the sale is completed.

An escrow account can also hold money that will later be used to pay your homeowner’s insurance and property taxes. You can put money in escrow every month, so that when your premiums and taxes are due, you have enough to cover those bills.

12. Fixed-rate mortgage
A mortgage that carries a fixed interest rate for the entire life of the loan. With a fixed-rate mortgage, you don’t have to worry about your payments going up if interest rates rise. The downside is that you could be locked into a more expensive mortgage if interest rates go down.

RELATED: 4 Couples, 4 Home Purchases: How Much Can They Afford?

Handy Career Terms
13. Defined-benefit plans
Employer-sponsored retirement plans, such as pensions, in which the employer promises a specified retirement benefit based on a formula that may include an employee’s earnings history, length of employment and age. The employee may or may not be required to contribute anything to the plan. Because of their high costs, many companies no longer offer this type of benefit.

14. Defined-contribution plans
A retirement plan companies may offer as a benefit to their workers in which the employer, the employee or both make contributions on a regular basis. The 401(k) and 403(b) are the most common forms of defined-contribution plans. The money that goes into these accounts comes out of earnings pre-tax, so you don’t pay taxes on the amount you put away every year.

Qualified withdrawals (usually those you make at age 59½ or older) are taxed as ordinary income. The value of the retirement benefit is determined by its investment performance. Unlike with defined-benefit plans, the employee, rather than the employer, shoulders the investment risk in the account.

RELATED: 401(k) Loans: What You Should Know

15. Executive compensation
The pay and benefits package provided to senior executives, which is usually different from what’s offered to the typical employee. Executive compensation often includes a base salary, bonuses, incentives based on the company’s earnings (such as stock options), income guarantees in the event of a sale or public stock offering, and a guaranteed severance package. These packages are typically negotiated individually and spelled out in employment contracts.

16. Stock options
An employee benefit that gives the owners of the option the right, but not the obligation, to buy their employer’s stock at a preset price and within a specified period or on a specific date. Companies often use these as management incentives.

For example, if a manager helps boost the value of the company’s stock above the price of his or her option, the manager can buy the stock at the lower price and pocket the gain if they sell. But all shareholders benefit from the increased value of the stock.

RELATED: 10 Things You’re Embarrassed to Ask About Negotiating

Handy Insurance Terms
17. Permanent life insurance
A type of policy that provides coverage over the lifetime of the insured and also offers an investment component called cash value. You can withdraw or borrow against that cash value after a surrender period. Premiums for permanent life insurance are typically more expensive than for term life insurance.

18. Premium 
The payments you make to an insurance company in return for protection from financial losses within the scope of your policy. You can pay premiums monthly, quarterly, semiannually or annually.

19. Private mortgage insurance
A type of policy that mortgage lenders require when home buyers provide a down payment of less than 20 percent. Also called PMI, this protects lenders against loss if borrowers default on their payments, and the premiums increase the amount homeowners pay each month. For some mortgages, once your loan-to-home-value ratio reaches 80 percent, you no longer have to pay PMI, but in some cases, it is permanent for the life of the loan.

RELATED: 13 Things That May Make Life Insurance More Costly

20. Term life insurance
A type of policy that provides coverage over a set period, generally anywhere from five to 30 years. If you die within the set term, your beneficiaries receive a payout. If you don’t, the policy expires with no value. The policy owner can decide to renew coverage after the term is over and can cancel at any time without penalty.

21. Umbrella insurance
A type of policy that provides additional liability coverage beyond what your home, auto or boat insurance may provide. You might consider umbrella insurance if you’re at risk for being sued for property damage or other people’s injuries, such as if you hire a nanny or other employees to regularly work in your home. Umbrella insurance can also protect your assets if someone sues you for slander or defamation of character.

RELATED: The Facts and Myths of Life Insurance

Handy Tax Terms
22. AGI
Short for adjusted gross income, your AGI is calculated as your gross income (e.g., what you earn from your job, a pension or from interest on investments) minus certain IRS-specified deductions. You fill out your AGI at the bottom of page one of Form 1040 when you file your taxes. Your AGI is used to determine your taxable income, minus any additional IRS-qualified deductions that you’re eligible to take.

23. Dependent
A person who is financially dependent on your income, typically a child or an adult relative you may support. You can claim a tax credit or exemption for these dependents when filing your taxes, which reduces your taxable income.

24. Itemized deduction
A qualified expense that the IRS allows you to subtract from your adjusted gross income, which further reduces your taxable income. Itemized deductions can include mortgage interest you paid, medical and dental costs, or gifts to charity. Itemized deductions must be noted on IRS form Schedule A.

25. Standard deduction
A standard amount that can be used to reduce your taxable income if you decide not to itemize your deductions. Your standard deduction is based on your tax-filing status, and it’s the government’s way of ensuring that at least some of your income is not subject to tax.

RELATED: What You Need to Know About Tax Exemptions

This post originally appeared on LearnVest.

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Obama Budget To Call For $1 Billion For Central America

WASHINGTON (AP) — Vice President Joe Biden says President Barack Obama’s budget will call for $1 billion in aid for Central America. He says that’s three times what the U.S. typically gives the region.

Biden writes in an op-ed in The New York Times that the aid will help Central American leaders make tough reforms needed to address security, political and economic challenges. He’s specifically citing the economic conditions in El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras that contributed to a surge in unaccompanied minors showing up on the U.S. border last summer.

The White House says $400 million will go to promote trade, economic integration and energy. Another $300 million is for police reform, defense cooperation and organized crime reduction.

Obama also wants $250 million to help countries strengthen their courts and government institutions.