Traveling? Protect Your Backpack with an eXomesh Cage

When you carry a backpack, it’s like an invitation to thieves. A challenge even. It is tempting and they are no doubt hoping that you have some expensive Apple products in there. Don’t leave your bag unattended. But if you do, protect it with the Pacsafe steel mesh Bag Protector, which wraps around your valuables like a steel cage.
pacsafemagnify

It features their patented smart eXomesh® cage system, which provides an adjustable high-tensile stainless steel locking cage and cable for anything you want to surround.

Pacsafe protectors are perfect for small backpacks, luggage and other stuff. They come in a variety of sizes, and prices start at around $60(USD). Put a cage around your stuff and keep it safe.

[via werd via Oh Gizmo!]

How to Find Your Missing Phone

How to Find Your Missing Phone

Oh boy, now you’ve done it. Not only are you supremely hungover from last night’s rager, but your phone is nowhere to be found. Could you have left it at the bar, in a cab, in the gutter somewhere? Who knows! But don’t panic, there’s a host of apps that do. Here’s how to find your phone when it goes missing.

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Stop, Thief: Apple Patents Movement-Based Theft Detection System For iOS Devices

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An Apple patent application spotted Thursday by AppleInsider shows a system for detecting unusual motion via a portable gadget’s accelerometer which would sound an alarm, making said device harder to steal without causing unwanted attention. The system is a simple one, without the kind of sophisticated face detection we saw in a previous application, but it could be much more effective for curbing thefts at the moment they occur.

The Apple application describes a system by which an accelerator sensor is triggered by movement which qualifies as a “theft condition,” which would mean not just any motion, but specifically sudden or sudden changes. Obviously the worry is that in using a system like this, just about any action could trigger it – what’s the difference between hastily grabbing your iPhone when you’re late for an appointment, or a thief grabbing it quickly off a college cafeteria table when you’ve got your head turned?

To counter that kind of confusion, Apple describes a system through which a signal filter is a first step to eliminate completely innocuous action, like calmly carrying a device in a pocket, as well as specialized theft detection circuitry tuned to “detect certain acceleration frequency spectra characteristic of theft.” I still can’t help but hear the sound of countless car alarms going off in the street without justifiable cause, but Apple’s system would hopefully be more sophisticated and less subject to false alarms, should it ever make it to market.

Once triggered, the theft detection system would provide users with customizable alarm options, allowing them to select specific audio or visual warnings, a custom message for the display, the volume of audio alerts and more. Users could also tweak sensitivity, if they find they’re triggering it accidentally as described above. Once the alarm is triggered, a timer determines how long someone has to disable it before the phone is locked altogether.

Combined with Apple’s previous patent application for detecting when a device is being used by a party who isn’t the owner, this could make iOS handsets and tablets much less attractive targets to potential thieves, which could help counter the rising theft rates of Apple mobile hardware. Instituting this motion-based system, at least as described in the application, would likely require the addition of specialized hardware controllers, so it probably won’t make it to current devices. But in the future, if Apple feels the need to add more peace of mind to its products, this is one way of doing that.


Google patents Project Glass motion-based theft detection, locks up if it feels ‘unnatural’ movement

Google patents Project Glass motionbased theft detection, locks up if it feels 'unnatural' movement

We know that you’re never gonna take your Google glasses off, but if some nefarious lout feels differently, the boys and girls in Mountain View’s X lab have got you covered. The company has patented a system whereby the device can identify “unnatural” movements and lock the headset if it feels the violent motion of them being wrenched from your face. Even better, while your would-be assailant is making off with the $1,500 gear, it’ll be contacting the authorities to ensure that they can’t get far with their ill-gotten HMD. If nothing else, we’ll won’t worry as much when pre-order customers 782 and 788 go out of an evening.

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Google patents Project Glass motion-based theft detection, locks up if it feels ‘unnatural’ movement originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 17 Jul 2012 10:15:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple granted patent for accelerometer-aided theft-detection system

Apple granted patent for accelerometeraided theftdetection system

Despite the added risk brought on by Apple’s Find My iPhone feature, the iOS handset remains a frequent target for smartphone thieves, thanks to the device’s resale value and compatibility with networks around the world. There’s not much you can do to deter sticky fingers short of keeping your iPhone or MacBook in view at all times, but the issue does appear to have crossed the desks of Apple’s design team, which was just granted patent number 8,217,792 for a sophisticated anti-theft scheme. The acceleration-based system would detect a “known theft condition” based on acceleration characteristics, sounding an alarm and disabling the device. The smartphone or laptop would ignore vibrations from passing cars or those caused by items being dropped onto a nearby surface, instead focusing on undisclosed scenarios that likely involve direct movement. The device owner would use a GUI to configure and disable the system, at which point the handset or computer would return to its pre-disturbed mode. Overall, it sounds like a fairly straightforward hardware/software solution, with the added benefit of a technique to filter out regular motion in an attempt to reduce the number of false alarms. You’ll find the full patent at the source link below.

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Apple granted patent for accelerometer-aided theft-detection system originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 10 Jul 2012 15:16:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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This Bag Uses Medieval Technology To Protect Your Laptop From Thieves [Desired]

You might think you’re fooling thieves by choosing a colorful laptop bag that doesn’t look the part, but the added weight makes it really obvious you’re carrying precious cargo. So the React Messenger Bag from Travelon adds several layers of extra security, including the use of medieval chainmail. More »