Signing Up for Google’s Glasses Is Like Asking for Problems

Are you prepared to manage the distractions inherent in a portal to the internet that you can’t  take your eyes off?

In the previous issue of this publication, Farhad Manjoo made  a plausible case that Google’s new augmented-reality glasses,  known as Project Glass, could make computing less distracting  by replacing every other device in our pockets and laps. Rather  than checking out of a conversation by looking down at our phones,  we could get in and out of our computing environment without  even turning our heads.


Someday, maps and other applications could come up in your feld of view.
Someday, maps and  other applications
could come up in your feld of view.
But here’s where human behavior comes in. We are really bad  at ignoring distractions at hand. And the more accessible they  are, the more addictive and distracting they can become. Let’s  take all those distractions and put them on our face, directly in  our line of sight? I don’t know about you, but when I want to  avoid distractions, I often have to physically avoid them. “Out of  sight, out of mind” isn’t just a cliché—it’s a commentary on the  narrow spotlight of human attention and our inability to ignore  something ever-present in our feld of view.

Already, computers grab so much of  our attention that savvy users deploy  apps like SelfControl and Freedom,  which switch of social media, e-mail, and  other distractions. Certainly, we could use  such aids on Google’s Glass. But I’ll bet most of us won’t.

Do you fnd it unnerving when the person next to you at the  grocery store is having a conversation with himself or herself,  and at frst you don’t realize it’s because he or she is speaking  into a phone headset? Google Glass is a camera, headphones,  and a display all in one. So now imagine that the person in the  grocery store seems to be having full-blown visual hallucinations. 

Don’t get me wrong—I fnd the prospect of augmented reality tantalizing. I’m just not sure we yet know how to manage the  ways it’s going to change our interpersonal relations.

Panasonic RP-BTGS10: bone-conduction headphones

The CES show floor is rarely the best environment to test audio equipment, but a relatively quiet moment this morning was our first chance to try on Panasonic's new bone conduction headphones. The Bluetooth-based wraparound set doesn't actually fit into your ears - instead, two "speakers" sit just outside them and vibrate the sound directly into your skull. The general idea behind this and other bone conduction products is to create a low-power device that lets listeners hear both music and ambient noise, something that's ideally suited to the fitness market Panasonic looks to be targeting. Unfortunately for us, the fact that the headphones were prototypes made it difficult to test these claims.

I'd never used bone conduction before, and the sensation was fascinating: if normal headphones are like putting your ear very close to the speaker in a room, these are like listening to the noise in two rooms at once. Without anything blocking your ears, listening to either music or the noise around you is more a matter of concentration than anything. That said, though the sound felt nicely balanced and mellow, the headphone volume was low enough that you had to really focus to catch details. We were told that this could change later, since the final set won't be released until the fall.



The design was similarly hard to judge. An inside band will eventually provide adjustability and a snugger fit, but my set was loose enough that it shifted when I moved - not ideal for exercise. We're also not sure what kind of battery life it'll get. Right now, it runs on a single AAA battery, but that could be changed in the future. As for price, there's still no official word, but a representative told us they'll be roughly in the Beats headphone range, and wouldn't cost more than $300.


BABY’S ON VIDEO - Samsung SEW-3037


Samsung’s latest hi-tech toddler-surveillance system trains an unblinking eye on your offspring…

The Samsung SEW-3037 with 3.5-inch, colour LCD is your baby’s new Big Brother. It keeps a watchful 2x-zooming eye on your babe, while pan and tilt will check twins or scan the playroom for hidden axe-wielding madmen. Just kidding, obvs. A two-way radio with talk-back lets you and your other half
argue remotely over whose turn it is to change Junior. 253,69 USD, samsung.com/uk

THE TECH
Samsung’s SEW-3037 in detail

1/ Babies should be seen...
 Resolution on the “parent hub” monitor is only 320x240, but it’s clear enough even in low light. When lights go out the unit automatically switches to black-and-white, night-vision mode.

2/ …And also heard
Switch to Vox mode and the screen will switch off if all’s quiet. As soon as the wailing begins, the screen switches itself back on.

3/ Even a one-year-old could use it
The screen isn’t a touchscreen, but the menu system is easy to navigate and allows access to all camera options and sound settings.

4/ Surveillance state
You can connect up to four cameras at a  time for full, round-the-clock coverage, with each cam promising to be interference-free up to 300 metres.


3D PRINTED GUNS


Last month the first shots were fired from a 3D printed gun. As expected it sparked debate regarding the future of 3D printed firearms.


For many, 3D printing is a revolution, using a special hardened plastic to print, layer by layer, actual physical objects. While there are many uses for this, for example the printing of spare parts for models or architects
constructing 3D replicas of their projects, American Cody Wilson had other ideas. Starting last year in August he created the non-profit organisation Defense Distributed, with the aim of providing freely available plans for 3D printable firearms.

Shoot ‘em up

In a relatively small amount of time, Wilson’s ideas came to fruition, since last month he managed to fire the first shot from a 3D printed gun. Called the Liberator, the gun is constructed out of 16 pieces, 15 of which were printed on an $8 000 3D printer. The final part is a simple nail that you can buy from a hardware store (the bullets are also shop bought).

Wilson’s success led him to release the plans on his website, even though at this stage the Liberator cannot fire more than one shot at a time. This, while its ability to withstand the pressure associated with shooting more than a few rounds, is in doubt. In the two days before the American State Department ordered him to take it down, the blueprints for the gun were downloaded 100 000 times. And just because it is not available on his site any longer doesn’t mean they are gone – the plans quickly made their way to torrenting networks such as The Pirate Bay.

To the point

The availability of 3D printed guns, and the US government’s attempt to regulate these, brings up numerous difficult questions. On the one side, the Liberator is crude, costs a lot to produce and seems to be as much
of a danger to the person behind the gun as in front – for now at least. For the US government the problems are numerous: Is it at all possible to stop the distribution of these blueprints? Is banning the plans not a violation of freedom of speech? How do you enforce a ban on printing 3D guns? Do you regulate the sale of 3D printers at all? These questions will most probably be answered by US courts.

EbEn Upton - His ultracheap computer is perfect for tinkering


Eben Upton thought a new generation of youngsters might never develop valuable hardware and software hacking skills unless they had access to cheap, hobbyist-friendly computers. So he set out to build one himself. The resulting tiny box, which sells for just $25, has been a big hit. It could boost computer skills not only among children but among adults in poor countries as well.

Upton came up with the idea in 2006, when he was fnishing his PhD in computer science at the University of Cambridge. Having agreed to help out with undergraduate computer science admissions, he was looking forward to interacting with teenagers who loved messing around with computers as much as he had when he was younger.

Upton had done all that messing around partly for the thrill of bending the machines to his will, and partly because the 1980s boom in video games had made it easy to imagine making a fortune working with
computers. “I was a mercenary child,” he says, sounding a bit apologetic. “One of the things that drew me to computing was that there were 15-year-old kids who made so much money from computing they actually
bought Ferraris.”

To judge by the applicants Upton was looking at, however, kids had lost interest. They were still messing around on computers, but they weren’t messing around with them. They weren’t writing programs and
taking apart circuit boards. They were the kinds of kids who played World of Warcraft and exchanged cat pictures on Facebook.

They had changed from active hackers to passive consumers. Perhaps the dot-com bust had killed some
of the enthusiasm for hacking. But to Upton, one other possible factor loomed large. In the 1980s, he and his friends had learned basic computer science on a BBC Micro, a line of computers built for the British Broad-
casting Corporation by Acorn Computers and installed in most English schools. Small, rugged, inexpensive, and expandable, the Micro introduced a generation of British children to hardware engineering and soft-
ware programming.

There was no contemporary equivalent to the Micro. “Sure, everyone in the middle class has a PC,” Upton says. “But even then, often there is only the one family PC. You won’t let kids screw around with it.” Schools
aren’t going to let students take apart their machines, either. As a result, he observes, “computing” classes teach children how to use Microsoft Word and PowerPoint. “Even Microsoft wants schools to produce software engineers,” Upton says. To successfully restore literacy in computer tinkering, he decided, the world needed a modern analogue of the BBC Micro.

Being a hardware guy at heart, Upton went ahead and built a prototype of a next-generation hobbyist machine - the sort ofstripped-down device that would enable its users to become acquainted with the guts of
a computer. It would also allow its users to put the machine to work in projects ranging from robotics to wearable computing to gaming. He eventually took up a Cambridge professor’s suggestion to call his device
Raspberry Pi, tipping his hat to the old tech tradition of naming computers after fruit.

But he didn’t immediately see a way to produce Raspberry Pi in sufcient numbers to make a diference, so he reluctantly moth-balled the project.

After fnishing his PhD, Upton went to work at the Cambridge, U.K., ofce of Broadcom, a networking company based in Southern California. (He is now one of the company’s technical directors for Europe.) Upton was instrumental in the creation of Broadcom’s frst microprocessor intended for multimedia applications - the BCM2835. Released in 2011, it is a single chip that’s small enough to ft in a phone
but big enough to contain vital parts such as a central processing unit and a graphics processor. By some measures it was the most powerful chip in the mobile market at the time, and it was a tremendous success
for Broadcom.

It was also, Upton realized, the way to restart Raspberry Pi, given that a singlechip computer would be much less costly to produce. He and half a dozen volunteers worked on the new version on evenings and  weekends. But the BCM2835 wasn’t easy to deal with: it was dauntingly jammed with tiny components, including no fewer than fve power supplies.

To keep Raspberry Pi small and cheap, the team wanted to build it on a   single circuit board that could be stamped out, no further assembly required. But to enable the phone chip to work with computer periph-
erals and run full-scale computer software, they would, it appeared, need to build a board with more than eight stacked layers of circuitry, a prohibitively complex and expensive proposition. Working furiously to simplify the circuitry, the team eventually managed to shave the board design down to six layers.

The first prototypes were ready in December 2011, but Upton discovered, to his horror, that they didn’t work at all. Fighting panic at the thought of all the various subtle faws that might be buried in all those layers of tangled circuitry, the team discovered that one pin on the chip had been inadvertently disconnected. It was a blessedly easy fx, and within minutes, his invention was popping to life.

The Raspberry Pi is strikingly unlike other computers. About the size of an Altoids box, the computer has no keyboard, monitor, or disk drive—it doesn’t even have an internal clock or an operating system.

In other words, the machine requires a fair amount of hardware and software tinkering just to get started. It almost dares you to take it on and try to hack together a robot or gaming system. It can’t get by on looks. Lacking a case,  the Raspberry Pi ofers a dense, bristling cluster of tiny electronics to the owner’s
view, with fve ports: HDMI, to hook the computer up to a television; USB, to hook it to multiple devices; Ethernet, for data; and analog TV and analog stereo. But having to face the guts of the device is a good
thing, according to Upton. “Kids can see what they ordinarily can’t see, unless they smash a phone,” he says.

The really surprising feature of the Raspberry Pi is the $25 price: about a tenth the cost of the lowest-priced computers available in stores (if you ignore tablets, which no one can hack anyway). It was intended for kids, but hackers of all ages wanted it, and so did budding com-puter scientists in poor countries. Almost
the instant the Raspberry Pi went on sale, orders crashed the websites of its two vendors, RS Components and Premier Farnell.

The companies reported that they were taking in orders fast enough to tear through the entire initial stock of 10,000 computers in minutes.

Thrilled with the reception, Upton is making more of the devices through a non-profit Raspberry Pi Foundation he put together - his mercenary tendencies having abated over the years. In fact, he says,
he intends to sell two million Raspberry Pis a year in order to reach a critical mass that will support an active community of owners to share tips and applications. He also hopes that the existence of this community
will prompt schools to adopt the Raspberry Pi for courses.

Even more important, Upton hopes, is that kids start to take them apart. “That would be real success,” he says.


COOL GADGETS: PRODUCTIVITY BOOSTING, WINDOW WASHING ROBOT, SURVIVAL STRAW, BIOFEEDBACK POSTURE TRAINER, SOLAR POWERED, LED IRON MAN SHIRT, HANDHELD DIGITAL MICROSCOPE, BODY HEAT MIMICKING MOSQUITO TRAP

1. PRODUCTIVITY BOOSTING NAP POD

Power Naps have been proven to boost productivity efficiently. Aitliough it is always a challenge to not fall back asleep after a 20-minute nap, you will be rewarded for your restraint. The Pod is cushioned for comfort and has a spherical dome for privacy. A timer can be set for a 20-minute nap and slowly brightening lights and vibration gently wake nappers. Music can be played through a built-in speaker or headphone jack. Of course, the question remains as to whether it is wise to spend USD16,000 for perfect power naps.




2. WINDOW WASHING ROBOT

Introducing the world's first robot that automatically cleans glass of any thickness. This robot is equipped with a powerful internal vacuum pump which seals onto the glass while anti- slip thread is driven by two motors so that the robot will not fall while it is cleaning. The Window Washing Robot chooses the most efficient route to clean the glass by calculating the glass size. If you have been planning to join the window cleaning profession, start thinking of another career.


3. NDUR SURVIVAL STRAW

Bear Grylls, the adventurer of the television series 'IVIan VS Wild', is well known for drinking his own urine in almost every episode to survive in the wild. If only he forked out USD30 for an NDuR Survival Straw, he could avoid resorting to drinking his own urine. This straw is not an ordinary one, of course. It is a very effective filtration tool that eliminates up to 99.99% of harmful bacteria, chemicals, viruses, you name it. This is definitely something I'd bring with me on every outdoor

4. BIOFEEDBACK POSTURE TRAINER

Slouching is not only seen as an unattractive habit, it is also the cause of various health problems such as back and breathing problems. Even if you have a very high level of discipline, it can be a real challenge correcting your posture. The Biofeedback

Posture Trainer should make this a lot easier. This device is worn like a backpack to help the user develop a good posture.

Every time the user slouches, the device will buzz and vibrate to alert the user. It might be annoying at first but the results are definitely worth the struggle and certainly more presentable than walking around balancing books on your head.



5. SOLAR POWERED CAT TANTALIZER

A cat tantalizer is a great toy for keeping your cat occupied and for it to practice its hunting skills. It is always better to keep your cat busy when there is no one at home to prevent it from tearing up your couch and what not. Instead of getting a regular cat tantalizer, why not get solar powered one? The Solar Powered Cat Tantalizer moves when it is struck by sunlight, causing a dangling plastic ball with colourful feathers to sway and bounce. It is about time for you to give your fat cat some exercise.




6. TONY STARK LIGHT-UP LED IRON MAN SHIRT

Since the screening of the first Iron Man movie, many people have been intrigued by Tony Stark's arc reactor which powers his Iron Man suit and prevents shrapnel from reaching his heart. After the success of all three movies, I'm sure that many people wouldn't mind owning this shirt at all. The fact that it is powered by three AAA batteries does make me question the comfort of the shirt though. But who cares? As long as you can look a little like the billionaire playboy philanthropist you could only dream of becoming, three batteries dangling somewhere on your shirt is a small price to pay.

 
7. 500X HANDHELD DIGITAL MICROSCOPE

Whether you are a germaphobe or a science enthusiast, you can find a good use for the 500X Handheld Digital Microscope.

This digital microscope magnifies small objects up to 500 times. The magnification can be displayed on its flip-out screen. There are eight built-in LEDs at the front to illuminate subject and images captured can be saved onto a microSD card. The 500X Handheld Digital Microscope operates up to four hours on a three-hour charge. It is so much easier than using a normal microscope.


8. BODY HEAT MIMICKING MOSQUITO TRAP

Did you know that mosquitoes are the deadliest animals on earth?

More deaths are associated with a mosquitoe than any other animal on earth. Most people would also rate it as the most annoying one as well. This is why the Body Heat Mimicking Mosquito Trap was invented, to get these pests away from you.

This USD600 trap (I kid you not) mimics human bodyheat and emits odourless carbon dioxide. The trap also comes with a blue light, giving mosquitoes every reason to be attracted by the trap.

MOBILE GEAR

1. BACTRACK MOBILE BREATHALYZER

Driving under tlie influence of alcoliol is still one of the main causes of accidents even to this day. You'd think that after progressing so far technologically, people of this age would have learned to abide by this simple law. With this breathalyzer, all you have to do is blow into it after a night of drinking and your iPhone will receive the stats of your blood alcohol levels. You can then hand the car keys to someone sober enough to get you home safely.


 

2. CANDYSHELL CARD IPHONE 5 CASE

This protective case is a great gear for iPhone 5 users. Its special feature is that it can hold up to 3 cards or folded bills. That's not enough to completely replace your wallet but it is good enough for you to leave your wallet at home if you are going somewhere with a high chance of losing your wallet such as a concert. When you need your cards or money, simply push a thumb release to pop them out. It also comes with a dual-layer casing to ensure your phone is always protected.

 

3. BLUETOOTH BBQ THERMOMETER


I love barbeques because I love to eat. That beautiful sensation of sinking your teeth into that perfectly grilled slab of meat as the juice trickles onto your tongue is what I look forward to in barbeques. However, I never throw any barbeque parties myself because I always burn the meat. If you're an ungifted griller like me, let me introduce to you the Bluetooth BBQ Thermometer. This thermometer monitors a few slabs of meat simultaneously and will alert you via an app on your iOS device up to 200 feet away when your meat is cooked. If you think a perfectly grilled piece of meat is important, get it.

4. SMARTPHONE SECURITY SENSOR

Since many of us nowadays are obsessed with our phones and the thought of being separated from them gives us nightmares, the Smartphone Security Sensor would be a great investment.

This nifty little device is compatible with most smartphones and is powered for up to 3 months from a single charge. Whenever your phone surpasses a 20-metre radius from you, the security sensor will emit a loud siren sound while vibrating and flashing its embedded LED lights.

5. IPHONE CONTROLLED MUSICAL MERCEDES SLS

This is a toy IVIercedes SLS that can be controlled by an app in your iPhone via Bluetooth. As you make it speed across the floor, you can play your favourite songs on your iPhone to comfort yourself about how you can't afford a real Mercedes SLS. Once you stop the car, its gulf wing doors will open and music will stream to the car's onboard speakers. Your Mercedes SLS toy can be controlled by tilting your iPhone. Besides that, your iPhone Controlled Musical Mercedes SLS can also flash its lights on sync with the beat of your music.

6. PORTABLE SOLAR POWERED SPEAKER

Here is a unique speaker that has many great features. It is solar powered, water resistant and shock proof. So you won't need to worry if it rains while you leave it out in the sun to charge or if an earthquake strikes. The Portable Solar Powered Speaker pairs with your devices via Bluetooth to play your tunes. This speaker also has a microUSB cable to charge your devices if you don't have a power outlet nearby You can get up to 8 hours of operation from this speaker after just a 5-hour solar charge.

7. CELL PHONE CALL CLARIFYING TELEPHONE


If you live in an area with a terrible mobile phone reception, you can say goodbye to the days where you have to repeat what you said on your phone numerous times. This amplified cordless telephone not only amplifies and enhances the clarity of mobile phones calls; it also allows users to adjust the tone for the best clarity After pairing the Cell Phone Call Clarifying Telephone with a mobile phone, the telephone will flash its LED lights when a call is incoming. There are additional buttons on the telephone for one-touch dialling.

8. POWEROCK TAROT

Not many people like carrying around a bulky power bank but it gives them the assurance that there will be no need to panic should their phone run out of battery. Well it is time to ditch those bulky power banks because thanks to Powerock, you can now fit a power bank into your wallet. The Powerock Tarot has been announced as the world's thinnest portable power bank. No larger than the size of a credit card but slightly thicker, this life-saver comes with a 1,500 mAh capacity that is enough for emergencies.