Google knows you stink and wants to help

It takes a special patent to pique our interest these days, but Google has just been issued actual intellectual property for a device that would help others evade your stank . The “odor removing device” (below) is designed to “emit a fragrance in response to detected parameters, ” but that’s not the half of it. It would also detect your body temperature, heartrate and other factors to determine if you’re extra rank from working out. Not only will it then dispense perfume to cover it, it’ll even track the location of your friends and find you a route home to avoid them. It could also figure out “fragrance emission schedules” gleaned from your social networks or calendar and how much to spray “based on your sweat history.” Google has cooked up other, similarly bizarre usage cases for the device, but the illlustrations do look legit. Still, though some Google patents do end up as commercial products ( soft of ), we doubt we’ll be smelling this concept later. [Image credit: Getty/Jupiter Images] Filed under: Peripherals , Google Comments Via: Tech Digest Source: USPTO

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Google knows you stink and wants to help

Oldest Twin Remains Found In Siberia

astroengine writes A team of Canadian and Russian researchers investigating an early Neolithic cemetery in Siberia have identified the world’s oldest set of human twins, buried with their young mother. The skeleton of the woman was exhumed in 1997 from a hunter-gatherer cemetery in south-eastern Siberia. Found with 15 marmot teeth — decorative accessories which were probably attached to clothing — the remains were photographed and labelled, but were not investigated by anthropologists. Now Angela Lieverse, a bioarchaeologist at the University of Saskatchewan, Canada, and colleagues Andrzej Weber from the University of Alberta, Canada, and Vladimir Bazaliiskii from Irkutsk University, Russia, have examined the skeleton and found remains of twin fetuses nestled between the pelvis and upper legs. The twins, about 36 to 40 weeks old, probably suffocated during their mother’s troubled labor nearly 8, 000 years ago. “This is not only one of the oldest archaeologically documented cases of death during childbirth, but also the earliest confirmed set of human twins in the world, ” Lieverse said. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Oldest Twin Remains Found In Siberia

VESA Embedded DisplayPort 1.4a Paves Way For 8K Displays, Longer Battery Life

MojoKid writes: The VESA standards organization has published the eDP v1.4a specification (Embedded DisplayPort) that has some important new features for device manufacturers as they bump up mobile device displays into the 4K category and start looking towards even higher resolutions. eDP v1.4a will be able to support 8K displays, thanks to a segmented panel architecture known as Multi-SST Operation (MSO). A display with this architecture is broken into two or four segments, each of which supports HBR3 link rates of 8.1 Gbps. The updated eDP spec also includes VESA’s Display Stream Compression (DSC) standard v1.1, which can improve battery life in mobile devices. In another effort to conserve battery power, VESA has tweaked its Panel Self Refresh (PSR) feature, which saves power by letting GPUs update portions of a display instead of the entire screen. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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VESA Embedded DisplayPort 1.4a Paves Way For 8K Displays, Longer Battery Life

Google and Mattel update View-Master for the VR generation

Remember View-Master ? That hunk of plastic you held up to your face, stuck cardboard reels into and advanced through 3D images of landscapes, animals and cartoons with the satisfying pull on a lever. Well it’s back and Mattel has Google to thank for helping drag the classic toy into the 21st century. The main piece is an update to the iconic red-bodied View-Master that looks a little bit like a Fisher-Price take on the Oculus Rift . The orange lever is still there, albeit in a more compact form, and the front is dominated by a black, branded piece of plastic. But rather than stationary slide, you insert a smartphone into the plastic body which, when paired with the View-Master app and a View-Master “experience reel, ” lets you experience 360-degree worlds, photosphere and educational “field trips.” There will even be bonus content such as historical footage, photos and behind the scenes video that you can access by clicking on icons hovering around objects, people and landmarks in the virtual world. The View-Master experience reels are a little different from the slide reels you’re used to. Instead of inserting them into the View-Master itself, you place them in front of you while you look through the device. Icons representing different experiences then pop out of the reel as augmented reality navigational aids. The reels are purely optional, kids can simply download content directly from the app if they so wish. But, as Doug Wadleigh of Mattel told the press at an event today, kids still like to collect things, and having physical reels to collect will satisfy that urge. It should also help placate older fans who have spent lifetimes collecting slide reels. This is actually the first major update to the View-Master since it was first introduced in 1939. Sure, it has a history beyond simply being an educational toy (both the military and medical schools have used its 3D images to train people), but it’s always worked pretty much the same way; A circular cardboard reel containing 3D slides is inserted into a stereoscopic viewer and manually advanced. That basic experience hasn’t changed for nearly 75 years. The whole experience is built around Google’s Cardboard , a simple and affordable VR platform that uses an Android smartphone as the heart of the device. As we’ve learned, Cardboard is not some half-hearted hobby project from Mountain View, it’s the earnest starting point for the company’s virtual reality ambitions. That also means that you don’t necessarily need to buy Mattel’s $30 View-Master to get the same experience. Though, seeing as how that price gets you a sample experience reel and the plastic viewer that should be more durable than a version actually built of cardboard, if you don’t already own a viewer this would seem like a good value. Sadly, you’ll have to wait until the fall to get your hands on the new View-Master. Once the viewer and app land later in October, you’ll be able to pick up additional experience reels as packs of four for $15. What’s more, iOS support for the gadget is on its way, too. Filed under: Peripherals , Software , Google Comments

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Google and Mattel update View-Master for the VR generation

Nissan has a glow-in-the-dark Leaf EV, but you can’t buy one

Oh, Nissan, you tease. The company has just coated a Leaf EV with some custom-made glow-in-dark paint , which can apparently last for up to 25 years — but it has no plans (not yet, anyway) to make it available for purchase. Nissan partnered with glow-in-dark pavement creator Hamish Scott to concoct a special paint as a symbolic representation of how Leaf inspires its owners to convert to solar energy. It’s easy to find glow-in-the-dark paints these days, of course, and you can even do Tron-like designs on your car if you want, but the company claims the one it mixed up isn’t like any other. The secret formula apparently uses organic materials, including an ingredient called Strontium Aluminate . This concoction absorbs energy from the sun during the day, which gives it power to glow at night for up to 10 hours. A glowy Leaf certainly sounds like it’ll go well with glow-in-the-dark roads ; not to mention, it looks a lot tougher to steal. As we’ve mentioned, though, you can’t waltz into a dealership and demand one ASAP, so you’ll just have to make do with watching it on video for now. Filed under: Transportation Comments Source: Nissan

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Nissan has a glow-in-the-dark Leaf EV, but you can’t buy one

That "Holy Grail" Les Paul is "just a broken-down guitar," says Paul’s son

Geoff Edger’s Washington Post article about the controversy surrounding the upcoming auction of a Les Paul guitar, advertised as “the most important Les Paul guitar of all time, ” is a fun read. Read the rest

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That "Holy Grail" Les Paul is "just a broken-down guitar," says Paul’s son

Apple made it harder for hackers to breach FaceTime and iMessage

As a means to further secure your digital life, Apple said today that it’s adding two-step verification to FaceTime and iMessage. That still leaves the likes of iTunes and the Apple website vulnerable to ne’er-do-wells who want to remotely access your sensitive info (and have your password), of course, but now Cupertino’s universal messaging and video chat programs are locked down a bit further. Given the progress that’s been made toward adding the second authorization step to the rest of its ecosystem in recent months , it likely won’t be too long before those spots are buttoned up too. Any questions? The Apple two-step verification FAQ is only a click away. Filed under: Cellphones , Mobile , Apple Comments

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Apple made it harder for hackers to breach FaceTime and iMessage

US Gas Pump Hacked With ‘Anonymous’ Tagline

An anonymous reader writes Researchers at Trend Micro have uncovered a gas pump in the United States whose ID has been changed from ‘DIESEL’ to ‘WE_ARE_LEGION’ — the call-sign of the Anonymous hacking group. Following up recent revelations regarding the vulnerability of gas pump systems to online attackers, the researchers found 1, 515 completely unprotected gas pump monitoring devices via the Shodan device-based search engine. The report notes that the exposed devices are capable of being protected via six-digit pins, but this security measure is not being used. The report concludes: “Our investigation shows that the tampering of an Internet-facing device resulted in a name change. But sooner or later, real world implications will occur, causing possible outages or even worse.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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US Gas Pump Hacked With ‘Anonymous’ Tagline