Friday, June 27, 2014

Samsung SMART CAM

Samsung SMART CAM
Samsung SmartCam HD Pro makes it simpler than ever to keep an eye on home. View your SmartCam through your phone, and set up motion and audio alerts so you don’t miss anything. The SmartCam introduces many advanced features to deliver a high-caliber experience.
Simple Wi-Fi Setup Simply download the free Samsung SmartCam app for Android or iOS, available on the App Store® and Google Play®, to your mobile device and the intuitive set up wizard helps you begin viewing your camera in a matter of minutes.
Two-Way Talk Enhanced Two-Way Talk feature not only lets you hear what’s going on around the camera but also allows you to talk back through your phone, no matter where you are. You can also enhance the sound quality with external speakers.
Advanced Detection Advanced motion and audio detection knows the difference between a rustling plant and true motion. If your pet enters an “off-limits” room, the kids come home from school or a window is shattered, you’ll immediately be notified.

Samsung OLED TV

Samsung OLED TV
OLED panels consist of thousands of organic LED pixels that independently display richer and brighter images compared to current LED TVs, creating a picture that is breathtakingly clear and bursting with rich color, unlike anything you’ve ever seen.
Floating Canvas Samsung OLED TVs bring beauty into any space with a timeless curved design that draws you into the picture and frame inspired by something you’d find in a modern art gallery. The One Connect box merges all cable connections into a single cable for a “clean back” finish. Samsung OLED TVs boast minimalistic elegance that’s stunning when turned on or off.
Multi View Two TVs in one: The first TV that allows two people simultaneously to watch different full-screen programs in Full HD and stereo sound. Your friends and family will love watching two separate shows at the same time both with complete full HD video and sound all on the same TV

UHD TV

Our market has been filled to the brim with all types of televisions, ranging from small types to big ones. They also come in different shapes. But the one that stood from the rest was the curved TV. We have seen this concept being used in our daily life. Have you gone to watch a movie in a theater? There the screen is rather curved. The screens built in the theaters were curved due to the way the picture was projected onto the screen. The curved screen provides a wider field view of the objects than that seen on a flat screen. Hence, the viewers of the pictures can see more without moving their heads.
The curved screens of new generation televisions wrap the picture around you. As a result, they provide a uniquely immersive viewing experience. The electronic majors like Samsung and LG have released the curved screens at CES this year. They unveiled the prototypes of their curved televisions in the last year version of CES. Projecting a picture from a single source onto a wise screen can create a distortion in the image. However, if you keep the screen slightly curved, this distortion of the projected image could be to some extend avoided. This visual distortion is called pincushion effect. According to the manufacturers, the curved TVs provide a cinema-like watching experience by sitting at home. Traditionally, this kind of experience can be had only when you watch a program from a very large television. In such a set up, the screen would appear wrapping around you to give a cinema-like experience. With the curved TV, the cost of experiencing cinema-like feeling is less when compared to that for watching a large television. It is for the people to think what best suits for them.

Tuesday, June 3, 2014

Fitness Tracker

Fitness trackers have come a long way. A few years ago it was hard find a device that could track your fitness beyond the simple clip-on pedometer and an atrocious wrist watch. Today, there are dozens of options that collect a broad swath of biometric data all in a tiny, wearable device no larger than a bracelet. And while 2013 didn’t favor fitness gadgets in a statistical sense, 2014 could be a different story thanks to a growing interest in wearable technology and the ever-persistent swath of smartwatch rumors. The industry is bustling, with giants like Sony, LG, and Nike taking the helm and lesser-known companies such as Fitbit closing the gap. That said, there are dozens of fitness devices on the market. Most are conveniently designed to be worn directly around your wrist or neck, while others easily clip to your pocket or zipper. Though each device touts different capabilities and functionality, most chart everything from the amount of calories you burn on a run to the number of times you wake up while sleeping, while curating data on your heart rate, elevation gain, and travel distance among other statistics. The bulk of fitness devices even connect your smartphone via built-in Bluetooth, automatically syncing health data with accompanying apps and showcasing your progress through wealth of analytical trends and charts. Here are our top picks for the best fitness gadgets, so you can keep track of all those calories you burn — or don’t — on your daily commute around town or jog through the park. Additionally, check out our handpicked selection of the best fitness apps for Android and the best fitness apps for the iPhone, or our choices for the best headphones for running.

Smart Oven

If you're going to buy a high-end oven range, it may as well be one of the smartest ovens out there. At CES Unveiled today, Dacor is announcing what it says is the first professional smart oven range — a two-oven, six-burner appliance with a built-in Android tablet that controls all of its operations. With a selling price of $11,999, Dacor's president admits that the range is meant for the "luxury kitchen." While its wealth of high-end cooking abilities are certainly a highlight, the oven's most interesting feature is the Android tablet that controls it. Though it works just like a normal tablet — it runs Ice Cream Sandwich and any Play Store apps you might want to install — an app called Discovery IQ comes preinstalled and is used to control the entire oven. You can set the temperature by dragging a slider side to side, or even download cook settings to allow the oven to automatically prepare your food properly. Dacor is also introducing a companion app today that'll work with this new oven range and its existing wall oven, which also includes the Discovery IQ app. Through the mobile app, users can control many of the major functions of their stove, such as setting it to preheat or detecting the temperature of cooking meat. For safety reasons, the oven will automatically kick off all mobile controllers whenever someone at home is actually using the stove. You also won't be able to control the burners through the app — likely also for safety reasons — though Dacor says it's working on it. The oven range on display today is a prototype of Dacor's 48-inch model, but a 36-inch model is in production as well. Both models of the smart oven should debut this summer, giving enthusiast home chefs some time to start saving up.

High-Tech Bra

We remember when bras did what they were supposed to and very little else. Apparently the technology age has changed that and now even our lingerie is wired, for better or worse. These two conceptual brassieres use technology to perform some high-tech (and very sexist) deeds. The True Love Tester bra from Japanese lingerie company Ravijour is supposed to be “a revolutionary bra that knows how women truly feel.” The bra is equipped with sensors that are supposed to recognize the wearer’s differing heart rates during a variety of activities. The front clasp only opens when the wearer experiences “true love” as determined by an associated smartphone app. The apparent purpose of the Love Tester Bra is to keep vulnerable women from having casual flings, ignoring the fact that women are smart enough to make their own decisions. The ridiculous concept doesn’t explain what happens when a wearer runs into her true love on the street and her bra flies open – we aren’t even sure how you might get into and out of the bra every day. microsoft emotional eating bra Perhaps more useful and associated with a more reputable company, this bra is meant to stop women from indulging in emotional eating. Researchers from Microsoft, the University of Southampton (UK), and the University of Rochester (NY) came together to develop a tool that would recognize and help prevent emotional eating. The bra is full of sensors that measure the wearer’s vital signs, which are then sent through an app that is supposed to determine the wearer’s emotional state. Along with the bra’s sensors, users can rely on the smartphone app to help them stop emotional eating. The app would allow users to log their food intake and emotional states day by day, making a connection between emotions and eating. It may seem as sexist as the Love Tester Bra, but the researchers say that they chose a bra only because it rests close to the heart all day, and men don’t typically wear a similar garment. The bra and app were found to be 75 percent accurate in determining the wearer’s emotional state, but it probably won’t be put into production anytime soon.

Flexible Battery

A Rice Univ. laboratory has flexible, portable and wearable electronics in its sights with the creation of a thin film for energy storage. Rice chemist James Tour and his colleagues have developed a flexible material with nanoporous nickel-fluoride electrodes layered around a solid electrolyte to deliver battery-like supercapacitor performance that combines the best qualities of a high-energy battery and a high-powered supercapacitor without the lithium found in commercial batteries today. The new work by the Rice laboratory of chemist James Tour is detailed in the Journal of the American Chemical Society. Their electrochemical capacitor is about a hundredth of an inch thick but can be scaled up for devices either by increasing the size or adding layers, said Rice postdoctoral researcher Yang Yang, co-lead author of the paper with graduate student Gedeng Ruan. They expect that standard manufacturing techniques may allow the battery to be even thinner. In tests, the students found their square-inch device held 76% of its capacity over 10,000 charge-discharge cycles and 1,000 bending cycles. Tour said the team set out to find a material that has the flexible qualities of graphene, carbon nanotubes and conducting polymers while possessing much higher electrical storage capacity typically found in inorganic metal compounds. Inorganic compounds have, until recently, lacked flexibility, he said. “This is not easy to do, because materials with such high capacity are usually brittle,” he said. “And we’ve had really good, flexible carbon storage systems in the past, but carbon as a material has never hit the theoretical value that can be found in inorganic systems, and nickel fluoride in particular.” “Compared with a lithium-ion device, the structure is quite simple and safe,” Yang said. “It behaves like a battery but the structure is that of a supercapacitor. If we use it as a supercapacitor, we can charge quickly at a high current rate and discharge it in a very short time. But for other applications, we find we can set it up to charge more slowly and to discharge slowly like a battery.” To create the battery/supercapacitor, the team deposited a nickel layer on a backing. They etched it to create 5-nm pores within the 900-nm-thick nickel fluoride layer, giving it high surface area for storage. Once they removed the backing, they sandwiched the electrodes around an electrolyte of potassium hydroxide in polyvinyl alcohol. Testing found no degradation of the pore structure even after 10,000 charge/recharge cycles. The researchers also found no significant degradation to the electrode-electrolyte interface. “The numbers are exceedingly high in the power that it can deliver, and it’s a very simple method to make high-powered systems,” Tour said, adding that the technique shows promise for the manufacture of other 3-D nanoporous materials. “We’re already talking with companies interested in commercializing this.”