Casio Pro Trek PRW3100YB-1 amps up the style

The watch should not be overlooked as a crucial and stylish fashion item that can be worn by everyone and anyone, adding a dash of elegance to the wearer while providing the all-important aspect of timekeeping. Technology in recent times have made it possible for the ordinary watch to be smarter, as it keeps track of your heartbeat, take into account the number of steps that you have taken each day, provide variable watchfaces to suit your outfit of the day, among others. Casio’s foray into the smart watch market takes a slightly different route with the Pro Trek PRW3100YB-1.

Specially designed with a blue IP stainless steel bezel and black resin band, the PRW3100YB-1 will arrive with the entirety of the features that Pro Trek timepieces have long delivered in a more compact manner that is ideal for trekking, whether it is in the winter or when you would like to enjoy some outdoor air in the summer months.

Boasting of Casio’s vaunted Triple Sensor Version 3 Technology, the PRW3100YB-1 will boast of a direction sensor that will deliver accurate compass readings, a pressure sensor for altimeter/barometer readings as well as a thermo sensor for temperature. To keep in line with the best timepieces from Casio, this model also carries Multi-Band 6 Atomic Timekeeping technology. In essence, it will synchronize automatically with atomic clocks in the U.S., Germany, U.K., China and a couple in Japan depending on your home city setting, guaranteeing the correct time always.

To sweeten the deal, this Pro Trek timepiece will feature Casio’s Tough Solar Power technology, which gets rid of the need for battery changes. Even ambient lighting is good enough to juice up the PRW3100YB-1 without requiring you to stand under the sun. A full charge ought to provide the PRW3100YB-1 with enough energy to last for two years without any additional exposure to light, now how about that? The asking price for the Casio Pro Trek PRW3100YB-1 stands at $320 for those who are interested in jazzing up their wrist with a dependable timepiece that simply works.

Press Release
[ Casio Pro Trek PRW3100YB-1 amps up the style copyright by Coolest Gadgets ]

Spam Protection Feature Rolling Out To Google’s Messages

Image credit – Android Police

No one likes spam messages, especially on their phones because notifications can be distracting, especially if they’re not from anyone important, like spam. However according to a report from Android Police, it seems that they have been tipped off that spam protection for Google’s Messages is starting to roll out for some users.

At the moment it doesn’t seem like it is a particularly wide roll out as some users are claiming that they have yet to receive it. It also appears to be a server-side enabled feature, which means that you don’t really need to do anything on your end to get it, although we imagine that you might need to have the latest version of Messages.

Now according to Android Police, it seems that there could be some privacy concerns regarding this feature. This is because according to Google’s support page, it seems that some info about your messages will be sent to Google first. “To help identify spammers, Google temporarily stores the phone numbers of people sending and receiving messages with you and the times they messaged with you.”

However Google stresses that your phone number or the content of the messages will not be stored, so there’s that. That being said, spam protection is a feature that can be turned on or off anytime you want, so if you’d rather Google not have any access to your messages, spam or no spam, then you might want to consider turning it off or perhaps find a different app.

Spam Protection Feature Rolling Out To Google’s Messages , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

John Kelly Blames Jeff Sessions For Family Separation Policy: ‘He Surprised Us’

The outgoing chief of staff bashed the admin. for not foreseeing blowback over the “zero-tolerance” immigration policy.

Low-Poly Papercraft Sculptures by Oxygami

There’s something about art made with rudimentary low-polygon count forms that I find very appealing. I think it’s because it harkens back to early 1990s video games like Virtua Fighter and the original Tomb Raider. If you like the style as much as I do, then check out this awesome collection of papercraft art from Oxygami.



These 3D sculptures include forms like deer or unicorn heads you can hang on your wall like prize trophies, but I think the cat ones are the coolest, since they offer fully-formed animals. They’re all pretty awesome though, and best of all, each one is available as a PDF template, so you can print them out yourself and make your own.

The designs are available from Oxygami’s Etsy shop, starting at about $9 (USD) each. You’ll just need an X-Acto knife, a ruler, glue, patience, and a steady hand to build your own low-poly menagerie.

Put down your phone if you want to innovate

We are living in an interstitial period. In the early 1980s we entered an era of desktop computing that culminated in the dot-com crash — a financial bubble that we bolstered with Y2K consulting fees and hardware expenditures alongside irrational exuberance over Pets.com . That last interstitial era, an era during which computers got smaller, weirder, thinner and more powerful, ushered us, after a long period of boredom, into the mobile era in which we now exist. If you want to help innovate in the next decade, it’s time to admit that phones, like desktop PCs before them, are a dead-end.

We create and then brush up against the edges of our creation every decade. The speed at which we improve — but not innovate — is increasing, and so the difference between a 2007 iPhone and a modern Pixel 3 is incredible. But what can the Pixel do that the original iPhone or Android phones can’t? Not much.

We are limited by the use cases afforded by our current technology. In 1903, a bike was a bike and could not fly. Until the Wright Brothers and others turned forward mechanical motion into lift were we able to lift off. In 2019 a phone is a phone and cannot truly interact with us as long as it remains a separate part of our bodies. Until someone looks beyond these limitations will we be able to take flight.

While I won’t posit on the future of mobile tech, I will note that until we put our phones away and look at the world anew we will do nothing of note. We can take better photos and FaceTime each other, but until we see the limitations of these technologies we will be unable to see a world outside of them.

We’re heading into a new year (and a new CES) and we can expect more of the same. It is safe and comfortable to remain in the screen-hand-eye nexus, creating VR devices that are essentially phones slapped to our faces and big computers that now masquerade as TVs. What, however, is the next step? Where do these devices go? How do they change? How do user interfaces compress and morph? Until we actively think about this we will remain stuck.

Perhaps you are. You’d better hurry. If this period ends as swiftly and decisively as the other ones before it, the opportunity available will be limited at best. Why hasn’t VR taken off? Because it is still on the fringes, being explored by people stuck in mobile thinking. Why is machine learning and AI so slow? Because the use cases are aimed at chatbots and better customer interaction. Until we start looking beyond the black mirror (see what I did?) of our phones, innovation will fail.

Every app launched, every pictured scrolled, every tap, every hunched-over moment davening to some dumb Facebook improvement is a brick in the bulwark against an unexpected and better future. So put your phone down this year and build something. Soon it might be too late.

Today's Electronics Gold Box Is Full of Stuff You've Been Meaning to Buy

I don’t know your life, but I bet there’s something you need in today’s Gold Box of AmazonBasics electronics and accessories. Maybe you’ve been meaning to buy a UPS and just haven’t gotten around to it. Maybe, like me, you’re a peripheral junkie, and you need a USB hub to support your habit. Perhaps your New Year’s…

Read more…

Casio Pro Trek PRW3100YB-1 amps up the style

The watch should not be overlooked as a crucial and stylish fashion item that can be worn by everyone and anyone, adding a dash of elegance to the wearer while providing the all-important aspect of timekeeping. Technology in recent times have made it possible for the ordinary watch to be smarter, as it keeps track of your heartbeat, take into account the number of steps that you have taken each day, provide variable watchfaces to suit your outfit of the day, among others. Casio’s foray into the smart watch market takes a slightly different route with the Pro Trek PRW3100YB-1.

Specially designed with a blue IP stainless steel bezel and black resin band, the PRW3100YB-1 will arrive with the entirety of the features that Pro Trek timepieces have long delivered in a more compact manner that is ideal for trekking, whether it is in the winter or when you would like to enjoy some outdoor air in the summer months.

Boasting of Casio’s vaunted Triple Sensor Version 3 Technology, the PRW3100YB-1 will boast of a direction sensor that will deliver accurate compass readings, a pressure sensor for altimeter/barometer readings as well as a thermo sensor for temperature. To keep in line with the best timepieces from Casio, this model also carries Multi-Band 6 Atomic Timekeeping technology. In essence, it will synchronize automatically with atomic clocks in the U.S., Germany, U.K., China and a couple in Japan depending on your home city setting, guaranteeing the correct time always.

To sweeten the deal, this Pro Trek timepiece will feature Casio’s Tough Solar Power technology, which gets rid of the need for battery changes. Even ambient lighting is good enough to juice up the PRW3100YB-1 without requiring you to stand under the sun. A full charge ought to provide the PRW3100YB-1 with enough energy to last for two years without any additional exposure to light, now how about that? The asking price for the Casio Pro Trek PRW3100YB-1 stands at $320 for those who are interested in jazzing up their wrist with a dependable timepiece that simply works.

Press Release
[ Casio Pro Trek PRW3100YB-1 amps up the style copyright by Coolest Gadgets ]

Spam Protection Feature Rolling Out To Google’s Messages

Image credit – Android Police

No one likes spam messages, especially on their phones because notifications can be distracting, especially if they’re not from anyone important, like spam. However according to a report from Android Police, it seems that they have been tipped off that spam protection for Google’s Messages is starting to roll out for some users.

At the moment it doesn’t seem like it is a particularly wide roll out as some users are claiming that they have yet to receive it. It also appears to be a server-side enabled feature, which means that you don’t really need to do anything on your end to get it, although we imagine that you might need to have the latest version of Messages.

Now according to Android Police, it seems that there could be some privacy concerns regarding this feature. This is because according to Google’s support page, it seems that some info about your messages will be sent to Google first. “To help identify spammers, Google temporarily stores the phone numbers of people sending and receiving messages with you and the times they messaged with you.”

However Google stresses that your phone number or the content of the messages will not be stored, so there’s that. That being said, spam protection is a feature that can be turned on or off anytime you want, so if you’d rather Google not have any access to your messages, spam or no spam, then you might want to consider turning it off or perhaps find a different app.

Spam Protection Feature Rolling Out To Google’s Messages , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

These Star Trek Spock Socks Have Vulcan Ears

These Star Trek Spock Socks are completely logical. Allow me to channel my inner Dr. Seuss. Spock socks shock. They also rock. Whether on the outer rim or in dry dock. Be one of the flock and dress in Spock. It’s the fashion around the clock. Do you grok?

Okay, I make a terrible Dr. Seuss. Because I ran out of juice. My rhymes like a noose. Anyway, enough of that nonsense. I see you raising a Vulcan eyebrow.

So these Spock Socks have ears sticking out of their sides, which may not be very practical if you wear pants or boots since they’ll get in the way, but if you wear these with some Starfleet shorts and a uniform top you’ll be alright. I’m sure you won’t get any weird looks at all.

These bad boys are the logical way to keep your feet warm. They’re made of 80% Acrylic/17% Nylon/3% Spandex and 100% awesome. I feel like they are bound to follow this up with Romulan and a Ferengi versions. I can’t wait to wear Quark on my feet with his big Dumbo ears. I’d pay good Latinum for that.

Put down your phone if you want to innovate

We are living in an interstitial period. In the early 1980s we entered an era of desktop computing that culminated in the dot-com crash — a financial bubble that we bolstered with Y2K consulting fees and hardware expenditures alongside irrational exuberance over Pets.com . That last interstitial era, an era during which computers got smaller, weirder, thinner and more powerful, ushered us, after a long period of boredom, into the mobile era in which we now exist. If you want to help innovate in the next decade, it’s time to admit that phones, like desktop PCs before them, are a dead-end.

We create and then brush up against the edges of our creation every decade. The speed at which we improve — but not innovate — is increasing, and so the difference between a 2007 iPhone and a modern Pixel 3 is incredible. But what can the Pixel do that the original iPhone or Android phones can’t? Not much.

We are limited by the use cases afforded by our current technology. In 1903, a bike was a bike and could not fly. Until the Wright Brothers and others turned forward mechanical motion into lift were we able to lift off. In 2019 a phone is a phone and cannot truly interact with us as long as it remains a separate part of our bodies. Until someone looks beyond these limitations will we be able to take flight.

While I won’t posit on the future of mobile tech, I will note that until we put our phones away and look at the world anew we will do nothing of note. We can take better photos and FaceTime each other, but until we see the limitations of these technologies we will be unable to see a world outside of them.

We’re heading into a new year (and a new CES) and we can expect more of the same. It is safe and comfortable to remain in the screen-hand-eye nexus, creating VR devices that are essentially phones slapped to our faces and big computers that now masquerade as TVs. What, however, is the next step? Where do these devices go? How do they change? How do user interfaces compress and morph? Until we actively think about this we will remain stuck.

Perhaps you are. You’d better hurry. If this period ends as swiftly and decisively as the other ones before it, the opportunity available will be limited at best. Why hasn’t VR taken off? Because it is still on the fringes, being explored by people stuck in mobile thinking. Why is machine learning and AI so slow? Because the use cases are aimed at chatbots and better customer interaction. Until we start looking beyond the black mirror (see what I did?) of our phones, innovation will fail.

Every app launched, every pictured scrolled, every tap, every hunched-over moment davening to some dumb Facebook improvement is a brick in the bulwark against an unexpected and better future. So put your phone down this year and build something. Soon it might be too late.