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Archive for August 30th, 2008

Gadgetell Review: SugarSync.  Leaving the laptop at home

Saturday, August 30th, 2008



Developer: Sharpcast
Price: $2.49 per month to $24.99 per month for 10GB to 250GB of storage
Availability: Out now
Pros: All your info, everywhere you need it.
Cons: I’ll be dragged kicking and screaming to pay for it; coming to terms with your online security fears
Overall: This service is good.  The system is dialed, works flawlessly.  Makes working on a desktop, laptop and mobile device a heck of a lot easier.

Right on the edge. The edge of being overwhelmingly excited and scared of how far reaching this change can be for me, personally.  SugarSync is making this leap possible.  What leap is that?  Why, its the one that means I don’t need to lug around my 30lbs laptop to customer visits.  And for me, that is huge.

SugarSync is an online storage/sync/web viewer of your files.  That is a basic concept and SugarSync takes it a bit further.  More than backup, online access, and my favorite: mobile phone access.  Right now, I’ve got 3 machines sync’d to the cloud and that gives me access from one machine to files in all of them.  That is power: access your stuff from anywhere.

I’ve got work stuff backed up and available, photos and my entire iTunes library.  SugarSync gives you some cool options on what is sync’d where, a lot of my files are just sync’d with the cloud, but accessible from any machine I choose; on any platform.  Hot.

The iphone App (available in the App Store) is pretty slick and works better for me than just going on the web to access the info.  Over WiFi, accessing my files is quick and painless.  Over an Edge connection, the same couldn’t be said.  Could just be where I was at the time, but it was a long download.

Function

To start, I downloaded the desktop application.  The application walks you through what you want sync’d (to web, to web and other computers, to other computers).  You can get very specific, drilling down on which folders you want and which ones you don’t.  The app was very well done. 

You can access you files via the web by logging in.  Doing so allows you to view them, download them or send them via email.  Pretty handy.  Otherwise, files sync’d between computers are instantly transferred.  Sugarsync calls this push file sync; similar to push email.

To date, a number of sites have done reviews on the service and the consensus seems to be, we like it.  A lot.

The elephant in the room: security.

How secure is secure?  Here is my Q&A with Sugarsync engineers:
* I love the concept but am completely nervous about security here.  How do you soothe this fear?

SugarSync is a modern application that is built with the latest and greatest security technologies throughout the system, such as secure communication between clients and servers over SSL, AES encrypted files, and a highly secure data center.  In fact, you are much more secure syncing an important file with SugarSync than you are sending it over email (which can easily be intercepted by hackers) or copying files to a USB keychain (which can be lost or stolen, and accessed by anyone).

* A competitor of sorts (I’ve only briefly looked at their stuff) uses 428 bit encryption which is stronger (right?).  Why are you using only 128?

They are likely using a different algorithm altogether, in which case there are other factors than the number of bits in comparing the strength of their encryption to ours.  That being said, the NSA has deemed 128-bit AES encryption sufficient for classified government documents, so the differences between it and other algorithms is immaterial in practice.  What is more important is the design of the system as a whole - using encryption in the right places, properly managing passwords, having proper datacenter security, etc.  SugarSync was developed by a team with extensive experience building secure, carrier grade systems, and we feel confident with the security of our customers’ data.

* That conversation aside, SSL isn’t the weakest link in the chain, it leaving the SSL open while surfing or other things.  What extra precautions is SugarSync taking to minimize hacking attempts?

All communication is through dedicated SSL connections, and there is no risk to leaving a connection open in the background.  SSL is a rock-solid protocol that prevents a background connection from being hijacked or otherwise compromised.

* The download communicates at will?  Is there a security risk there?

These “background” downloads only occur on computers that have the SugarSync manager running and on which the user has logged in, and as such does not pose a threat.  If a user is on a public computer, such as at an Internet cafe, she would likely access her data through the secure personal website, and when she is finished no more data can be downloaded without logging in again.

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Philips 42PES0001

Saturday, August 30th, 2008

Just over a week ago we reported on the tip of a new Philips Essence LCD HDTV to be announced at this years IFA. It turns out that most of the information in the rumors were correct, and the Essence is a 42-inch LCD model called Philips 42PES0001.

Philips has taken a similar route to Sony, where they have designed a minimalist and stylish thin HDTV which can be wall mounted and look like a picture frame. The Philips 42PES0001 has one of the slimmest frames (21mm) I have seen on an HDTV, given it a great look with a glossy black aluminum frame. The 42-inch 1080p LCD HDTV is just 33mm / 1.5 inches deep and makes use of a connectivity hub, so that only one cable connects to the HDTV, sending the video, audio and power. This all helps make the 42PES0001 / Essence very clean and simple, which makes it a pleasure to be wall mounted, or of course on the stand.

Also featured is dedicated 2x 15W speaker bar, which can be connected to the bottom of the set, or not used at all if you have your own sound setup for a cleaner look. Philips Perfect Pixel HD Engine is used on the Philips 42PES0001 which processes 500 million pixels per second and 2250 trillion colors to deliver vast image enhancements such as sharper pictures, better colors and reduced noise. The 1080p LCD screen on the Philips 42PES0001 has a very fast 2ms response time and high 66,000:1 dynamic contrast ratio, and wide color gamut for deep blacks and rich colors.

100Hz Clear LCD technology doubles the frame rate to provides smooth flowing motion without image blur. DLNA networking is also featured to steam media from other networked devices.

French doctors use laser to destroy brain tumor in conscious patient

Saturday, August 30th, 2008

by Nilay Patel, posted Aug 30th 2008 at 3:12PM

Neurosurgery with robotic assistance is getting pretty old hat nowadays, so it looks like scientists are trying to up the difficulty factor by keeping their patients awake — a team of French doctors just completed the first successful removal of malignant brain tumor from a still-conscious patient, using a computerized laser and an MRI scanner to guide the probe. The fiber-optic laser was fed into the brain through a 3mm (.12 inch) hole in the patient’s skull and guided via MRI to the tumor, where it fired for two minutes and completely destroyed the cancerous tissue. Once the tumor cells were dead, the cable was removed and the patient was allowed to return home — all within a single day. That’s pretty impressive, and it comes on the heels of 15 similar trials where five out six patients who underwent the total removal procedure were cancer-free nine months after surgery. The team says further research will cost an additional two million euros to progress, but if this technique works as well as they claim after peer review, we’d guess that money won’t be hard to come by.

[Via Fark]

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Filed under: Misc. gadgets

Creative’s Zen Mozaic, X-Fi players hands-on

Saturday, August 30th, 2008

by Paul Miller, posted Aug 30th 2008 at 2:01PM


We won’t belabor these two: X-Fi has been spotted plenty of times before, and the Zen Mozaic “is a crap,” as our friends at Engadget Spanish put it. There was no functioning WiFi to test out the X-Fi’s networking features, but they looked pretty tedious on the surface, and the player is otherwise okay but unimpressive. Meanwhile, the Zen Mozaic is just another in a long line of shoddily built — if interesting looking — low-end DAPs from Creative. Next!

Gallery: Creative’s Zen Mozaic, X-Fi players hands-on

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Filed under: Portable Audio, Portable Video

The Decapitated Teddy Bear USB Drive is Grotesquely Cute

Saturday, August 30th, 2008

Look, I’ve never had, even once in my life, had the desire to decapitate anything. So, no, this doesn’t fulfill one of my childish dreams, but I find it terribly cute anyways.

For sure, a lot of people would be weirded out. But growing up with my younger neighbours decapitating my dolls anytime they get a chance, I don’t even find this remotely weird. Yep, the protrusion you see from the laptop is the body of a teddy bear that’s turned into a USB drive. Sure, the 1GB capacity is lackluster, but I’ll gladly pay the 8 for a teddy bear that’s actually a USB flash drive. I mean, sure, you have to take its head off when you need to use it, but seeing as you can put it back, that’s not an issue for me.

via

TAO 1.4″ Digital Key chain Review

Saturday, August 30th, 2008

Last year we covered the launch of the new digital key chain from TAO Electronics. This year TAO sent us one to use in the real world.

The 1.4″ keychain produce comes packaged in a decent quality box, containing the keychain, mini CD, usb cable and usage instruction leaflet.

The mini CD provided drivers for Windows XP machines. This is where the big problem began.
The TAO website provides downloads of their TAO Image manager software for Windows Vista and Mac OS X. I was pleasantly surprised to find support for Apple’s OS provided at all.

When plugged in to a USB port the device doesn’t show as a mass storage drive, meaning you have to use the incredibly painful TAO software.

Under Windows Vista the software continually crashed when trying to navigate the file system to even find my photos to load in and resize. Rubbish

So I swapped to the software on the Mac, which looked similar in badly designed user interface as the Windows version. The Mac version loaded the images okay, cropped and resized them fine. However when it came to publishing the image collection to the keychain it all went down the pan and eventually caused the key chain to reverse all its status messages on the 1.4″ screen - along with changing the background colour to red.

A red background colour would seem to signify an error - see thumbnail image above. No support response on the issue via email, and no help from their website have finally brought me to the conclusion that these mini digital keychain products are rubbish.

It’s worth noting that TAO Electronics are not alone with shitty key chain products, this is the third one I’ve had no joy with this year.

Avoid at all costs.

HTC’s Android-driven Dream revealed in glorious spy photos

Saturday, August 30th, 2008

by Joshua Topolsky, posted Aug 30th 2008 at 12:25PM


Sure, we’ve seen some blurry videos and managed a few stolen glimpses when Andy Rubin demonstrated this beast, but now we’ve gotten our hands on a slew of pictures showing off a very real T-Mobile-branded Dream in all its Android-running glory. Not only does this confirm the design spied in those FCC docs as well as show off that nearly-done version of Android, but it seems to confirm the fact that this will be headed to T-Mobile, and sooner rather than later judging from the looks of the above device. Needless to say, our inner-geeks are completely geeking out right now. Hit the gallery below for a handful of other views of the phone.

[Thanks, Michael]

Gallery: HTC’s Android-driven Dream revealed in glorious spy photos

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Filed under: cellphones

DayWalker case mod is amazing, can’t solve Wesley Snipes’ tax evasion problems

Saturday, August 30th, 2008

by Darren Murph, posted Aug 30th 2008 at 1:20PM


There was no shortage of case mods at NVIDIA’s NVISION conference, but this one in particular managed to snag the majority of the spotlight. Created by Richard “DarthBeavis” Surroz, the Blade-themed DayWalker actually houses three separate computer systems; two are for playing games, while the other acts as a server. Conceptually, at least, the rig is designed to enable two users to play against one another, and given the “50+ fans” and triple SLI GTX 280 GPU setups (among other things), it’s no shock to hear that it’d cost around $18,000 to $20,000 to build again. ‘Course, that’s chump change when you’re stuffing away millions of dollars owed to the government — just ask Snipes… oh, wait.

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Filed under: Desktops

MSI’s Wind U90 to boast 8.9-inch display

Saturday, August 30th, 2008

by Darren Murph, posted Aug 30th 2008 at 10:49AM


Well, that took long enough, now didn’t it? We’ve been hearing about an 8.9-inch MSI Wind for months now, but it has just now popped up on the outfit’s website. The Wind U90 will pack an Atom N270 processor, built-in 1.3-megapixel webcam, stereo speakers, microphone, 802.11b/g WiFi, Bluetooth, 512MB or 1GB of DDR2 RAM, a 1,024 x 600 resolution panel, 80GB hard drive and a 4-in-1 card reader. Additionally, you’ll find an Ethernet port, three USB 2.0 sockets, VGA out, a 3-cell battery (optional 6-cell available upon request) and a weight of 2.2-pounds. Your guess is as good as ours when it pricing / availability, but hey, we’re just thrilled to know this thing is destined to be more than a trade show crasher.

[Thanks, Peter]

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Filed under: Laptops

MSI’s Wind U90 to boast 8.9-inch display

Saturday, August 30th, 2008

by Darren Murph, posted Aug 30th 2008 at 10:49AM


Well, that took long enough, now didn’t it? We’ve been hearing about an 8.9-inch MSI Wind for months now, but it has just now popped up on the outfit’s website. The Wind U90 will pack an Atom N270 processor, built-in 1.3-megapixel webcam, stereo speakers, microphone, 802.11b/g WiFi, Bluetooth, 512MB or 1GB of DDR2 RAM, a 1,024 x 600 resolution panel, 80GB hard drive and a 4-in-1 card reader. Additionally, you’ll find an Ethernet port, three USB 2.0 sockets, VGA out, a 3-cell battery (optional 6-cell available upon request) and a weight of 2.2-pounds. Your guess is as good as ours when it pricing / availability, but hey, we’re just thrilled to know this thing is destined to be more than a trade show crasher.

[Thanks, Peter]

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Filed under: Laptops