Thursday, 17 October 2013

Cool ship higly integrated desktop computer

It’s not only a computer keyboard, but also a fully featured computer.
CoolShip is a highly integrated desktop computer that measures 395 x 215 x 34mm and weights 1.2kg. The desktop computer features a full-size keyboard with touchpad for comfortable typing experience, and runs on Google Android 4.0 Sandwich mobile operating system (optional customized Android OS called CoolShip OS). This means you can easily access numerous Android apps, games, books, music and movies from Google Play for entertaining. Moreover, the desktop computer is powered by Rockchip 1.5GHz dual-core processor, and comes with 1GB DDR3 RAM, ARM Mali 400 GPU, 4GB/8GB internal storage, and stereo speaker, moreover, other interfaces also include WiFi, RJ45 port, earphone jack, VGA output, HDMI output, 2 USB 2.0 ports, and SD card slot. Apart from that, the replaceable palm-sized core board contains its processor, RAM and ROM for easy upgrade.

Feasibility of Intelligent Monitoring of Construction Workers for Carbon Monoxide Poisoning

  • Research calling for the use of a wearable computing system installed in a helmet to protect construction workers from carbon monoxide poisoning, a serious lethal threat in this industry, has garnered the Virginia Tech investigators a Best Paper Award from a prestigious scientific and engineering community.
    This award will be presented at the August 17-21, 2013 Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers (IEEE) Conference on Automation Science and Engineering.
    Carbon monoxide poisoning is a significant problem for construction workers in both residential and industrial settings. The danger exists because the exhaust from gasoline-powered hand tools can quickly build up in enclosed spaces and easily overcome the tool's users and nearby co-workers.
    In the paper, the researchers explained how they integrated a pulse oximetry sensor into a typical construction helmet to allow continuous and noninvasive monitoring of workers' blood gas saturation levels. The results of their study showed that a user of this helmet would be warned of impending carbon monoxide poisoning with a probability of greater than 99 percent.
    The award-winning research and resulting paper was written by Jason B. Forsyth, of Durham, N.C., and a Ph.D. candidate in computer engineering, his adviser Thomas L. Martin, professor of electrical and computer engineering, Deborah Young-Corbett, assistant professor of civil and environmental engineering and a member of the Myers-Lawson School of Construction, and Ed Dorsa, associate professor of industrial design.
    The paper, Feasibility of Intelligent Monitoring of Construction Workers for Carbon Monoxide Poisoning," can be found at: http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpl/articleDetails.jsp?arnumber=6200386. It was the focus of Forsyth's master's thesis, and Martin, Young-Corbett and Dorsa were all members of his graduate committee.
    Ten Virginia Tech students participated in the study conducted on the university campus. They mimicked simple tasks of construction workers.
    To show the feasibility of monitoring for carbon monoxide poisoning without subjecting the users to dangerous conditions, the researchers used a prototype for monitoring the blood oxygen saturation. The difference for monitoring for oxygen and for carbon monoxide differs only in the number of wavelengths of light employed, so if this monitoring proved feasible, then the monitoring for carbon monoxide would be feasible as well.
    They selected a helmet for the installation of a wearable computer because they needed a design that could be worn year round which ruled out seasonal clothing such as overalls or coats. They also wanted a design that was socially acceptable, and one that struck a balance between comfort, usability, and feasibility.
    "This helmet is only a first step toward our long-term vision of having a network of wearable and environmental sensors and intelligent personal protective gear on construction sites that will improve safety for workers," according to their report. "While this helmet targets carbon monoxide poisoning, we believe there are compelling opportunities for wearable computing in reducing injuries due to falls, electrocution, and particulate inhalation, as well as workers on foot being struck by vehicles."
    Martin is a past recipient of both the Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers and the National Science Foundation CAREER Award, both furthering his research in the design of electronic textiles and "smart" clothes.
    Young-Corbett is working in a new field of engineering known as Prevention through Design or PtD. This optimal method of preventing occupational illnesses, injuries, and fatalities is to "design out" the hazards and risks; thereby, eliminating the need to control them during work operations. She is also the associate director of the Center for Innovation in Construction Safety and Health Research of the Institute of Critical Technology and Applied Science at Virginia Tech.
    Dorsa has a National Science Foundation funded studio in interdisciplinary product development, working with faculty from the College of Engineering and the College of Business' Department of Marketing. In 2005, Design Intelligence chose him as one of the 40 most admired industrial design faculty in the U.S.

Goodbye paper playbooks, hello tablets!

Ultrabook™ with touch1 display delivers stunning graphics and offers you the ultimate in precision and control. With multiple input options in a 2 in 1 device, you can type when you need to work, and touch when you want to play. Simply switch your full performance PC into tablet mode to play games, watch movies, and more.
Experience the power of Ultrabook™.
Ultrabook™ keeps up with you, thanks to the Intel® Core™ processor3 that delivers Intel-level performance.
So you can enjoy movies, photos, and games smoothly and seamlessly. Feel the burst of speed that comes with Intel® Turbo Boost Technology 2.0.4 And with Windows 8*, get the compatibility, performance, and flexibility to do everything you want. It all just works with Ultrabook™.
Snappy, responsive, and ready to go.
Say goodbye to waiting around—with an Ultrabook™, you have faster access to the files and applications you use most.5 And when you wake your Ultrabook™ from deep-sleep, it jumps from standby mode to life in less than three seconds,2,6 so you can resume what you were doing in the blink of an eye.
The no-compromise device.
You don't have to sacrifice performance, portability, or battery life for beauty. Ultrabook™ is a sleek, go-anywhere, do-everything device that combines the best features—plus application support, multiple input options, and multitasking capability. Because you need a machine that performs as great as it looks.
  • Security that’s built in.7
    Helps keep your personal information personal. Intel® Anti-Theft Technology8 helps protect your data by disabling your Ultrabook™ if lost or stolen. And Intel® Identity Protection Technology9 helps keep your identity safe by ensuring popular web sites and social networks know it’s really you.

Intel 4th Generation

Quad-core CPUs are generally found in higher-end desktops and laptops, and are part of Intel's i7 CPU line. Most mainstream PCs use Core i3 and i5 dual-core CPUs -- the Haswell versions of those are coming later. For laptop and desktop shoppers, this means some PCs you buy over this summer and beyond will include the fourth-gen chips, although the new parts retain the same Core i3/i5/i7 series names as the previous generations. Adding to the potential confusion, current-gen (and even last-gen) Intel CPUs are more than powerful enough for everyday use, such as Web surfing, HD video playback, social networking, office tasks, and e-mail -- so you're right to ask what the motivation to upgrade is. Besides faster application performance, Intel is touting better battery life, much-improved integrated graphics, and special features such as Wireless Display, all of which may be more important to the typical PC shopper than basic application performance. Intel claims that fourth-gen laptops can possibly run for 50 percent longer than third-gen Core i-series systems, jumping from 6 hours to 9.1 hours in one Intel-reported Core i7-versus-Core i7 test. Our first Haswell/fourth-gen Core i-series hardware comes in the form of a small-form-factor FragBox gaming desktop from Falcon Northwest and Razer's new Blade 14 gaming laptop. That means these tests won't tell us much about Intel's new integrated graphics, in some systems to be called HD 5000 (the current gen is HD 4000), and in higher-end laptops called Iris. Current HD 4000 graphics still can't run many new or popular games well, and being able to do that without the need for a separate graphics card is something a lot of laptop shoppers have been seeking for a long time.
 Instead, this high-end desktop gives us a chance to run our CNET Labs benchmarks on new quad-core Intel Core i7-4770K and i7-4702HQ CPUs. As an added bonus, the FragBox system also includes the very latest new Nvidia GPU, the GeForce GTX780.In the charts below, we compare the Falcon Northwest FragBox with a high-end gaming desktop from the previous Intel/Nvidia generation, and the Razer Blade 14 with a recent Toshiba Qosmio X875 gaming laptop. Note that the two desktops referred to here were both originally overclocked for faster performance. For the results below, we've run them at their stock clock speeds. In a full review of the FragBox, we'll return to the overclocked performance scorces.

it's also worth noting that we're testing complete retail systems in the above comparisons, not individual components, so a lot of factors are in play in determining performance. Additionally, the gaming tests are hugely influenced by the included GPUs. That said, these are reasonable generation-over-generation comparisons, and show you what enthusiast shoppers have to look forward to over the summer and into the holiday season.
Especially for the gaming tests, we'd be very interested in the new integrated graphics, but again, with the high-end hardware more often found in combination with quad-core CPUs -- in this case the Nvidia GeForce 780 -- you're not actually taking advantage of any improvements in Intel's built-in integrated graphics. To really get a feel for the HD 5000 and Iris, we'll have to wait for near-future dual-core Haswell systems, such as ultrabooks, that won't have Nvidia or AMD graphics cards. Battery life, however, is one area where quad-core laptops could use some real help. The just-announced Razer Blade 14, a gaming laptop with the new Intel i7-4702 and an Nvidia 675 GPU, is so far running very impressively in the CNET Labs. We're still running our battery life benchmarks on that system and will update this story with final numbers when we have them. Our similarly configured gaming laptop from the previous Intel generation, the the Toshiba Qosmio X875, with a third-gen Core i7-3630QM and Nvidia GTX670, ran for only 1:39 in earlier tests -- but keep in mind that's a huge 17-inch desktop replacement laptop not designed for portable use. Also remember that these are all enthusiast-level systems with enthusiast-level parts. What Intel is most interested in pushing is thin ultrabooks and funky laptop-tablet hybrids. Nodoubt the mainstream and low-voltage fourth-generation Core i-series CPUs, expected early next week at the Computex trade show, will offer a lot more in terms of features, power efficiency, and mainstream pricing (the Razer Blade 14 is $1,799, while the FragBox as configured is more than $3,000).
For now, Intel is leading with its high-end quad-core chips,For now, Intel is leading with its high-end quad-core chips, so look for full reviews of several quad-core fourth-generation Core i-series desktops and laptops in the coming weeks.

Monday, 14 October 2013

How to find out what's taking up space on your hard drive

Free disk inspection tools for Windows, Mac, and Linux

With the move toward faster, more power efficient solid state disks (SSD) in laptops and desktops, storage space has become a factor once again. If you find yourself low on disk space and are seeking a clue as to where your free space has gone, here’s how to find out.
Many companies are pairing a relatively small SSD for the operating system with a larger hard drive for file storage in their machines. The trouble is that the average user doesn’t know the difference between the two and may end up saving everything to their C: drive which can quickly be consumed by photos, music, and video if it’s only a 128GB SSD.
When your disk runs low on available storage, the first thing you want to know is, what’s taking up all this space? Then, once you find out, you can copy the bulk of the items over to your larger hard drive. Instead of wading through your drive and checking the properties for every folder to determine it’s file size, here are the free tools you need for Windows, Mac, and Linux.

Windows: WinDirStat

WinDirStat is the most widely known of the three despite being a clone of KDirStat.

Mac: Disk Inventory X

Inspired by WinDirStat, this Mac port contains equivalent functionality for Mac OS X 10.3 and later.

Linux: KDirStat

The original ‘DirStat’ software (as they’re anxious to let you know on the website), this is where the former two stemmed from. It runs on KDE and X11 based GUIs.

How they work

All three programs do essentially the same thing. You tell the program which drive or folder to scan and it processes all of the files and folders in the location. When it’s complete you’re presented with a visual representation of your filesystem which resembled a heat map. You’re also given a tree-view to browse, sorted by the largest size, so that you can drill down into each directory and location the folders and files taking up the most space. Additionally, you’re given a view of the file extensions which consume the most space as well.
Within the software you’re able to select elements from any view and jump to that file location in the explorer, or even delete the element directly.
It’s an extremely handy tool for cleaning up your system, migrating files, troubleshooting, or even just to satisfy your curiosity.

Facebook Unfriends Another Privacy Setting

Get ready, Facebook users: More changes are coming to your privacy settings. The social network announced Thursday that it is removing a privacy setting that lets you decide whether or not you want your profile to appear when people search for you by name.


The setting, called "Who can look up your Timeline by name," was already removed last year for people who weren't using it. Facebook said there is a "small percentage" of people still using the setting; they will see reminders about its removal in the coming weeks.As a result, all Facebook users will be searchable when someone types their name into the search bar. Michael Richter, chief privacy officer at Facebook, said that the privacy setting became antiquated as Facebook search evolved.
[ Facebook indexes more than you think. Read Facebook Graph Search: 5 Privacy Settings To Check. ]
"For example, it didn't prevent people from navigating to your timeline by clicking your name in a story in News Feed, or from a friend's timeline," Richter said. "Today, people can also search Facebook using Graph Search (for example, "People who live in Seattle,") making it even more important to control the privacy of the things you share rather than how people get to your timeline."
If you still use the "Who can look up your Timeline by name" feature, Facebook will show you a notice on your homepage to remind you that the setting will soon be removed. You can click to learn more or close it to be reminded again later.
How to Adjust Your Privacy Settings
Since all users will be searchable on Facebook, it's important to revisit your privacy settings so you know what parts of your profile are visible to certain people. Facebook said that if you share posts publicly in the coming weeks, you will see a notice reminding you that those posts can be seen by anyone, including people you may not know. The notice reminds you how to change the audience for each post.
To adjust your privacy settings now, start by using the "View As" feature to see what information is visible to the public, your friends and your various friend lists. You can find this feature by navigating to your profile and clicking the gear icon at the bottom of your cover photo, then choosing "View As ..." At the top of your profile, type in the names of friends or friend lists to view your profile as they see it.
If you find information you want to remove, visit your Activity Log. Use the timeline slider on the right and the menu on the left to find the post you want to edit, then click the pencil icon or the privacy setting drop-down list to make changes.
Another option is using a blanket privacy setting that will control the privacy of all past posts. If you use this setting, all posts that were previously shared with friends of friends or public will be changed to friends only.
To find this setting, navigate to your privacy page. Under the first option -- Who can see my stuff? -- is the option "Limit the audience for posts you've shared with friends of friends or public?" Click "Limit Past Posts" to enable this option.
There's no single migration path to the next generation of enterprise communications and collaboration systems and services, and Enterprise Connect delivers what you need to evaluate all the options. Register today and learn about the full range of platforms, services and applications that comprise modern communications and collaboration systems. Register with code MPIWK and save $200 on the Entire Event and Tuesday-Thursday Conference passes or for a Free Expo pass

HP gets serious about Android and Chrome

Hewlett-Packard saw the future this week, and that future has more and more Android and Chrome devices in it.
The largest Windows PC maker has gotten the Google religion.
Hewlett-Packard's CEO and top PC executive came out swinging this week. And they both took swipes at the traditional Windows-Intel (Wintel) PC.
"Wintel-based devices are being aggressively displaced by ARM-based PCs and mobile devices running competing operating systems," CEO Meg Whitman said this week at a company event, referring to Android and Chrome OS devices.
And she took those comments a step further by referring to (apparently erstwhile) partners Microsoft and Intel as rivals. "Long-term HP partners, like Intel and Microsoft, are increasingly becoming outright competitors," she said.
Dion Weisler, executive vice president of printing and personal systems at HP, chimed in too. "Chrome and Android represent $46 billion of opportunity and it's growing at 12 percent," he said, speaking at the same event.
While HP will continue to offer a range of Windows products -- including new Windows 8.1 laptops like the HP Spectre 13 -- a lot of the new blood is coming from Android and Chrome offerings.
Below is a sample of HP's newfound commitment to products running Google OSes.
HP Chromebook 11 doesn't do Windows.
HP Chromebook 11 doesn't do Windows.
(Credit: Sarah Tew/CNET)
The Chromebook 11, announced this week, is an 11.6-inch laptop running the Chrome OS on top of a Samsung Exynos 5250 processor. It's 2.3 pounds, about 0.7-inches thick, and priced at an affordable $279.
HP Slate 8 Pro.
HP Slate 8 Pro.
(Credit: Hewlett-Packard)
The Slate 8 Pro is HP's first small, high-resolution tablet.
The 8-incher has a 1,600x1,200-pixel resolution IPS display and Nvidia's Tegra 4 processor to drive all those pixels. And it comes with 2GB of RAM.
That pixel count, by the way, beats the Samsung Galaxy Note 8's and Galaxy Tab 3's 1,280x800-pixel resolution screen. Not to mention the iPad Mini. But we'll have to wait for a full review to see if the screen holds up in other respects.
HP Chromebook 14.
HP Chromebook 14.
(Credit: Hewlett-Packard)
The $299 Chromebook 14, announced back in February, was HP's first entry into the market.
It has an Intel Celeron processor. Only time will tell if HP opts for Intel again in the future or looks to ARM chip vendors like Samsung, Nvidia, and Qualcomm