iPhone-compatible 'smart watch' raises $100K in two hours | iPhone Atlas - CNET Reviews

2012-04-13 00:00:00 -0400

 

(Credit: Pebble)

 

via reviews.cnet.com

This looks kinda cool, but then I thought the wearable iPod Nano (http://store.apple.com/us/product/H6101ZM/A/LunaTik-Watchband-for-iPod-nano-6... looked cool.

Happy Easter 2012

2012-04-13 00:00:00 -0400

The yearly Easter family photo turned out great!  EVERYONE was looking at the cameras - including the dogs!

Img_6085

10 Pain-Fighting Foods | LIVESTRONG.COM

2012-04-13 00:00:00 -0400

10 Pain-Fighting Foods | LIVESTRONG.COM
http://www.livestrong.com/blog/10-pain-fighting-foods/ 

- Cinnamon (goes in my yogurts and cereal and sometimes my soy milk), ginger, onions, tart cherries (I drink the juice when my gout flares.. gout is such an ugly word), walnuts (we keep 'em for munchies), Turmeric (pass), Pineapple (too many calories?), Flaxseed (goes in my oatmeals and waffles), carrots, and dark leafy greens (I love me some spinach, kale, and swiss chard and collards)

(via Instapaper)

Google Chrome finally getting tab sync

2012-04-07 00:00:00 -0400

For being such a modern, forward-thinking browser, Google Chrome still has a few rather curious feature omissions ??? like the ability to right-click an image and set it as your wallpaper, something just about every other browser around can do. Chrome also only recently added a print preview, one other key feature it had been missing for the first 10-plus major releases.

One of Chrome???s strengths is its profile synchronization abilities. What began early on as a way to keep your bookmarks silently updated across all your Chrome installs evolved into something much more full-featured, syncing themes, extensions, apps, preferences, and just about everything else that makes your Chrome install yours. Now, one more piece of the sync puzzle is nearing readiness: your active tabs.

You???ll find the new option in bleeding-edge versions of Chrome (including the Dev Channel, Canary, and recent Chromium snapshot builds) on the about:flags page under ???enable syncing sessions.??? Once you???ve flipped the switch, relaunch Chrome and head to chrome://settings/syncSetup. The option ???Foreign Sessions??? will now appear in your sync options.

Check it out, and you???ll be able to enjoy a more seamless experience when changing computers and using Chrome. Power off your iMac and sign in on your 3G Chromebook, and Chrome will sync your last set of active tabs ??? letting you pick up right where you left off. It wouldn???t be a complete surprise to see this extended to the Android web browser at some point, especially since Chrome-to-Phone already allows a similar kind of syncing (albeit a more manual incarnation).

 

Looks like this is a hidden feature. In my beta version (18.0.1025.151 beta), "Foreign Sessions" is now "Open Tabs". I haven't yet seen how sync'ing of all open tabs on all my chrome browsers clashes..

Intego finds new, insidious strain of Mac Flashback Trojan horse | Macworld

2012-04-05 00:00:00 -0400

Media_httpimagesmacwo_qqahv

"Intego describes three unique methods that the Trojan horse uses to infect Macs: It attempts to exploit a pair of Java vulnerabilities in sequence, which the company says allows infection with no further user intervention. Failing those two approaches, resorts to social engineering. In that last case, the applet presents a self-signed digital certificate, falsely claiming that the certificate is ???signed by Apple Inc???; if you click Continue, the malware installs itself."

This isn't the first time that Apple's Java has had a gaping security hole that was exploitable from a web page. Shame on Apple for not caring enough about Java to make it as solid as the rest of their frameworks. Generally speaking, Macs are good about sandboxing apps from the web. One of my biggest criticisms of Windows has been its poor sandboxing of Active X and other crap in their Internet Explorer.