Sunday, 31 January 2016

8 Ways to Save Time and Money by Automating Your Grocery Shopping

Last fall, Facebook users began receiving an alarming email warning. "For security reasons, your account will be disabled permanently," said the email. To confirm your identity, the message—which was signed by the "Facebook Team"—instructed users to click on a link and log into what looked like a real Facebook page. 
But this email had nothing to do with Facebook. It was a phishing (pronounced “fishing”) scam, a form of identity theft in which hackers use fraudulent websites and fake emails to attempt to steal your personal data, especially passwords and credit card information. Phishing scammers send emails that appear to come from trustworthy sources such as a social media website or a financial service provider, and tell you that they need you to follow certain links in order to rectify some problem. Then they steal your data as you enter it, lock you out, and begin using your account to send more scam messages in your name.

Phishing attacks are happening everywhere. Online security firm Kaspersky Labs says it repelled nearly 800 billion attacks in 2015, almost 2 million of which were attempts to steal money from online bank accounts.
According to Fraud watch International, a global online fraud protection service, some of the recent phished sites included Bank of America, PayPal, Chase Bank and Apple Store. Typical fake email alerts: “Westpac Bank—Your Account Has Been Blocked,” or “Apple Store—About your last Transaction.”
With tax season starting to ramp up, scammers have been targeting TurboTax users with fake subject lines such as “TurboTax Update: Resolve Account Issue Now” and “TurboTax—Important Notice” that urges users to open a fraudulent attachment.
Internet Service Providers (ISPs) are also now among scammers’ favorite phishing targets, surpassing the banking and financial services sectors during the first three quarters of 2015, reports the non-profit Anti-Phishing Working Group (APWG). Phishers like to break into ISP accounts so that they can send spam from those user accounts. ISP accounts can also contain other things that phishers want: personal identity information, credit card details, and access to domain name and hosting management.

The Best Defense

How can you protect yourself against phishing lures? Here's some advice:
  • If you aren’t 100 percent certain of the sender’s authenticity, don’t click on attachments or embedded links; both are likely to result in malware being installed. Instead, open a new browser window and type the URL directly into the address bar. Often a phishing website will look identical to the original, so check the address bar to confirm the address.
  • Similarly, never submit confidential information via forms embedded in or attached to email messages. Senders are often able to track all of the information you enter.
  • Be wary of emails asking for financial information. Emails reminding you to update your account, requesting you to send a wire transfer, or alerting you about a failed transaction are compelling. However, scammers count on the urgency of the message to blind you to the potential for fraud.
  • Don’t fall for scare tactics. Phishers often try to pressure you into providing sensitive information by threatening to disable an account or delay services until you update certain information. Contact the merchant directly to confirm the authenticity of the request.
  • Be suspicious of social media invitations from people you don’t know.According to Kaspersky Lab research, over one in five phishing scams target Facebook. Phishers rely on your natural curiosity to click on the person’s profile “just to find out who it is.” However, in a phishing email, every link can trigger malware, including links that appear to be images or even legal boilerplate; scammers use your hijacked account to send spam to your friends, because spam from real accounts is more believable than spam from a fake account.
  • Watch out for generic-looking requests for information. Many phishing emails begin with “Dear Sir/Madam.” Some come from a bank with which you don’t even have an account.
  • Ignore emails with typos and misspellings. Recent real examples targeting Turbo Tax include ”Your Change Request is Completed” and “User Profile Updates!!!”
  • Update and maintain effective software to combat phishing. Reliable anti-virus software should also automatically detect and block fake websites, as well as authenticating the major legitimate banking and shopping sites. 
Mobile device users should be especially vigilant. Scammers increasingly design mobile-friendly pages; what’s worse, many browsers hide the web address bars, so it can be even more difficult to spot scams on a mobile device.

Five Gadgets and Apps to Hack Your Way to the Gym

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So how’s your New Year’s resolution about going to the gym working out so far? It's just more than three weeks into 2016, and that newfound hope of getting in shape must seem so far away to many people. It can be a battle not only to simply go to the gym, but also to make sure you know what exactly to do while there.
These are the times that try men’s (and women’s) souls at the weight room or on the treadmill, but we have the technology to help you out. Whether it be wearables or smartphone apps, here are five things—all at $50 or less!—to help you reach your goals.
Garmin Vivofit ($50)
There are a million and one wearables out there seemingly selling you the same thing. From the ridiculously cheap Misfit Flash—selling at Amazon for $26—to the Apple Watch at $399, all these watches and wristbands track sleep, calories and heartbeats. So many choices can give you a headache when you are just trying to make going to the gym a little more palatable.
Garmin Vivofit is the best fitness tracking wearable on the market—for its price. The main selling points are that it is waterproof (then again, so is Fitbit and other wearables) and its incredible battery life. For the latter, Vivofit uses two watch batteries and can last for an entire year. The Vivofit is not there to wow you or anyone in the gym, but it will get the job done in motivating you to get to the gym. Every morning, the Vivofit will set up personalized goals to accomplish, which is a pretty smart idea for a smart gadget.
Ankovo Wireless Headphones ($30)
Bringing a tethered headphone to the gym can be a real pain. Headphones often won’t stay by your ears as you run on the treadmill or do sit-ups. While some people prefer the silence and convenience of working out without music, others need the music to keep their minds focused.
Like wearables, there are a myriad of wireless headphones available. We chose Ankovo wireless headphones because of its light weight and necklace-like strap that keeps the headphones from falling out. The headphones run on Bluetooth, and Amazon reviewers commented that the sound quality is good to excellent.
RIF6 Mini Tripod for Smartphones ($10)
For those who lift weights, form is everything. Bad form can mean muscle injuries. A common way weightlifters are correcting their forms is by using their smartphones to shoot videos of themselves doing squats or bench presses and uploading them to online fitness forums.
Instead of having your friend—or worse, a stranger—hold a smartphone to record, simply attach this RIF6 mini tripod onto a side of the machine, place your smartphone at an angle to capture you working out and record. It’s an unconventional gym hack, but it can pay huge dividends in the future, when you're practicing correct lifting form.
Zombies, Run! (Free)
If you have a competitive streak, going for a  run alone or with your best friend may not be enough bad blood to generate motivation. Zombies, Run! is a fun, immersive game that lets you get your sweat going by running away from zombies. Through voice commands via headphones, the commander will tell you to stop or run faster.
This app has been around since 2012, making it ancient for a smartphone application. A new version of the game was released last October, so there is no need to worry about playing an archaic fitness game.
5X5 StrongLifts (Free)
Another free smartphone application, 5X5 StrongLifts is a workout tracking app that revolves around its eponymous workout. The entirety of the 5X5 StrongLifts workout is to do 5 sets of 5 repetitions for three different kinds of exercises. It’s a simple formula and has attracted many people who want to start lifting to use this workout as the beginning base.
5X5 Stronglifts allow you to keep track of the workouts, keep a timer during the breaks in between sets and allow adjustments in adding weights to future workouts. It’s incredibly simple to use, minimalist in design and costs nothing. That’s as ideal as a workout app can get

K Lite Codec Pack

The K-Lite Codec Pack is a collection of Direct Show filters, VFW/ACM codecs and tools. Codecs and DirectShow filters are needed for encoding and decoding audio and video formats. The K-Lite Codec Pack is designed as a user-friendly solution for playing all your audio and movie files.
The K-Lite Codec Pack has a couple of major advantages compared to other codec packs:
  • It is updated frequently. So it is always up-to-date with the newest and/or best components.
  • All components have been carefully selected for specific purposes. It is not just a random bunch of stuff thrown together.
  • It is very user-friendly and easy to use.
  • The installation is fully customizable, meaning that you are able to install just those components that you really want.
  • The customization abilities go beyond the component level. Some components are able to handle multiple formats. You can specify exactly which components should handle which formats. The pack can thus be fully tweaked to your own specific needs and preferences.
  • Un installation removes everything that was installed by the pack. Including all registry keys.
  • It is extremely easy to make a fully customized unattended installation with the integrated wizard.
  • It does not contain any bad, buggy or unstable codecs.
With the K-Lite Codec Pack you should be able to play all the popular audio and video formats and even several less common formats.


Download


Viber for PC

Viber is a popular free Voice-over IP messaging service and Skype alternative, that can be used on your smartphone or PC. The Viber PC client takes the convenience of the mobile app and brings it to your PC so you can stay connected even when you don’t have your mobile phone. It also makes it easier to get on with work and multitask while communicating with your contacts.
Viber competes with Whatsapp for the title of the most popular cross platform/cross device messaging service globally. A key difference between Viber/Whatsapp and Skype is that you can communicate with all of your mobile phone contacts that are also using the service – not just your skype contacts. Voice call, chat, send SMS, pictures and videos for free to any of your phone contacts who also have the app installed. You can even video call with up to 100 of your contacts at the same time! A simple UI tops off the package nicely. The likes of Viber and Whatsapp have pretty much killed the traditional mobile SMS industry, thanks to their ease of use and ever improving data coverage.
To use Viber on your Windows PC you will first need install Viber on your mobile phone (Android, iPhone, Blackberry, Symbian and Windows Phone apps available). Next install the Windows desktop client on your PC and sign in to syncrhonize your contacts across the 2 devices. Then you’re done, call and chat to your heart’s content at no cost.
If you want to call other none VoIP users (landlines and mobile phones directly) you can using the Viber Out feature. These calls are not free, but do come at very competitive rates. You can use Viber Out by adding credit to your Viber account. Call quality is generally excellent, unless you are in an area with a poor internet connection




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Monday, 18 January 2016

Mood Bracelet That Wants to Make You Happier

Mood rings and mood sensing apps have been around for quite a while, but they’ve never really been anything more than unreliable gimmicky fads. Now, there’s a new wearable from New York-based startup Sentio Solutions that doesn’t change color, but wants to help you improve your mood by describing your emotional state, thanks to its bio-signal-tracking sensors.
The Feel Wristband looks like a pretty ordinary, rounded bracelet, but there’s a lot going on inside it. There are four sensors that track galvanic skin response, blood volume pulse, and skin temperature. A proprietary algorithm categorizes the signals into emotions. The data is transferred via Bluetooth to the connected app, which then visually charts your emotions throughout the day. What’s pretty neat is that it shows how your mood is affected by factors, such as who you meet with, the environmental conditions of where you are, and what you’re doing.

If the sensors pick up that you’re feeling incredibly stressed, it will vibrate and the app will offer breathing and meditation exercises to help you relax. Otherwise, the app will offer brief advice to make you feel better, such as “laugh more,” or “meditate.” You can also make an emotional wellness plan to learn and keep healthy habits and stick to long-term emotional goals. The app will track and notify you real-time on how you’re doing.
Will a wristband actually be able to make you feel happier? Is this even real or is it mumbo-jumbo? At this point, it’s hard to say whether the Feel band can actually unravel your emotions with data from its sensors and algorithm. We’ll have to wait and see until we can get a hands on with one of these, which won’t be available until December, according to Wearable. We’ve reached out to the company for more info.
The company first announced the device late last year, but unveiled a prototype at CES 2016 in Las Vegas. The Feel band will come in red, turquoise, black, and white

Friday, 1 January 2016

Technology Top 10 Predictions for 2016

Technology Top 10 Predictions for 2016

What’s going to happen to the tech world in 2016? While of course no one really knows for sure, it’s possible to make a few semi educated guesses. Here are 10 predictions for the biggest tech trends for the coming year — from the blindingly obvious to the wildly speculative.

1. Apple will unveil a new Watch and a new iPhone

One artists’s concept of the upcoming iPhone 7. 
This is the easiest prediction in the world, which is why we started with it (guaranteeing that at least one of these will be right). Apple is expected to release Apple Watch 2.0 sometime this spring, we hope with an improved interface and a lot more apps. And next fall will see the release of the iPhone 7, which (if rumors are to be believed) will include a fingerprint sensor on the screen, wireless charging, multiple cameras, and a USB-C port instead of power or headphone jacks.  

2. Apple’s dominance of tech culture will decline

Since the Second Coming of Jobs in 1997, interest in all things Apple has been climbing at a steady rate, going into hyper drive with the release of the iPhone (2007) and then the iPad (2010). Lately, though, the products coming out of Cupertino have been less than magical and life-changing. 
And for all of Tim Cook’s many fine qualities, he can’t generate a reality distortion field the way his predecessor could. Until Cook manages to pull another rabbit out of his i Hat — an Apple Car? a fully integrated smart home? — the Apple mystique has clearly peaked. Nowhere to go but down.  

3. Virtual reality will finally be real — and most people will go ‘meh’

Yahoo Tech’s Dan Howley tries out an early version of the HTC Vive. four years of teasing us, the Oculus Rift VR headset will finally reach consumers this year, probably some time in the early spring.HTC’s Vive and Sony’s PlayStation VR (formerly Morpheus) will likely appear a few months after that. And no matter how awesome they are — and odds are they will be pretty awesome — very few people will buy them. 

4. AR will beat up VR and steal its lunch money

While the world oohs, ahhs, and hurls over VR (but doesn’t buy it), Augmented Reality (AR) will infiltrate all kinds of industries, from design and engineering to architecture, education, and medicine. Why? Being less immersive — you can actually see the world around you, as well as virtual objects — makes AR much more practical. 
What the world of HoloLens looks like when you’re wearing one. That coffee table is real; the Minecraft house sitting on it is not.
Microsoft just released a new version of its HoloLens and will begin shipping $3,000 HoloLens development kits this spring. Google Glass will also emerge from the rock it’s been hiding under since its ill-fated debut, most likely aimed at industrial use.

5. Comcast will try to acquire Netflix — or possibly vice versa

Whether or not you’re a cord-cutter, streaming media is the future of entertainment — and nobody streams bigger than Netflix, which accounted for nearly 40 percent of all Internet traffic last year. Since big cable can’t beat the streamers at this game, the only thing left is for it to join them by acquisition; Comcast ($192 billion valuation) and Netflix ($42 billion) are the most logical candidates for an arranged marriage. While it stands to reason that the larger company will swallow the smaller one, it’s not inconceivable that the reverse will happen — not unlike AOL’s acquisition of Time Warner 15 years ago, but perhaps with better results.

6. Anti drone technology will rise

Battelle’s anti drone gun uses radio waves, not buckshot, to take drones out of the air. 
The only thing people love more than reading about drones is hating them — witness all the cheering when a Kentucky man blasted one out of the sky with his shotgun last July. (Not to mention all the animals that love to attack drones.) Look for companies to come up with anti drone technology that use non ballistic methods of ridding the flight zones of these pests. Let the games begin, and let the odds be ever in the anti drones’ favor.

7. Facebook will continue to eat the world

The Facebook juggernaut will continue, though most of its membership growth will be overseas. However, expect a public backlash as Facebook assumes just a bit too much control over the media it arbitrarily delivers to everyone’s feeds. How many auto play videos of bacon, egg, and cheese bread boats can one person watch?
How to make a bacon, egg, and cheese breadboat was Facebook’s most popular video in 2015. Anyone else hungry? 

8. Cyber terrorists will attack the Internet

We’ve seen targeted hack attacks on a massive scale, and we’ve seen state-sponsored cyber espionage. In 2016 we will see them converge, with a direct attack on the Internet infrastructure motivated by politics, not greed or misplaced juvenile aggression. Time to back up your data, encrypt your hard drives, and stock up on beef jerky and tinfoil.

9. There will be an Uber for friends

Need a date for a party or someone to hang with at a ballgame? Just share someone else’s. Frog Design predicts the rise of “friendship as a service” in 2016. We liked that prediction so much we decided to borrow it. Isn’t that what the sharing economy is all about?

10. Your next boss may be an algorithm

The Ethereum platform allows bots to post jobs, find qualified workers, and pay them when the work is done using virtual currency — no puny humans required.
Artificial intelligence will continue to be baked into an increasing number of devices and services. More than that, though, entire companies may be built around self-running programs, with business decisions made without any human intervention. Think we’re joking? The first decentralized organizations are already being developed for the Ethereum Frontier network. We have met our robotic overlords, and we’d like a 10 percent raise and more flex time, please.