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Monday, 30 November 2015

Apple's Pencil Is In Town,Make On-The-Spot Notes Now!!


Apple's new Pencil marks a significant departure from the company's previous strategy in which it avoided manufacturing or marketing styluses. Priced at $99, the Lightning connector-equipped instrument provides 12 hours of battery life and receives another 30-minute charge simply by connecting it to an iPad Pro for just 15 seconds. Compatible with numerous iPad applications, including Notes, Mail, and Pixelmator, the stylus provides the ability to write, draw, and diagram using the iPad Pro.
Certainly, most business professionals are familiar with styluses, having used them with other devices. That said, Apple's Pencil is somewhat unique. Here are three things to know about Apple's newest innovation.

It's intuitive

Like most Apple products, the Pencil is incredibly intuitive. As the company says, you already know how to use it. This hasn't necessarily been the case with other manufacturers' attempts at creating similar instruments.
Pressing the Pencil harder results in a thicker, darker line, while gentle touches result in hairline notations. And, thanks to Apple's Multi-Touch technology, tilting the Apple Pencil's tip results in shading effects.

It's surprisingly sensitive

Award-winning designer Jonathan Ive narrates a short product video that showcases the Pencil's actual operation and responsiveness.
Possessing the ability to select a single pixel, the Pencil also delivers realistic performance. Because the Pencil's sensor data and movement is scanned 240 times per second, the tablet actually collects twice the data as when a user attempts to select, edit, or input data using a finger, resulting in more precise data manipulation and input. As a result, business professionals can write and draw using a stylus like never before.

For many, it's an unnecessary peripheral

The new Pencil presents compelling capabilities. The device can be used to draw diagrams, create flowcharts, draft blueprints, write text, edit email messages, and more. While those features all previously existed, these new capabilities are particularly pronounced with the new Pencil. And, thanks to Apple's palm-rejection support, users can rest their hand on the tablet as they write, and the palm contact won't confuse the iPad, resulting in unwanted blemishes and stray marks.
However, it's likely the new features will prove attractive to only a specific user group: those who don't mind carrying an additional peripheral and who require it for completing graphics tasks.
While the new stylus boasts impressive battery life and intuitive performance, legions of Apple professionals have become accustomed to performing most tasks without a stylus. Unless a business user works as a draftsperson, an architect, a graphic artist, or other creative professional, carrying another device (in addition to a keyboard, smartphone, wallet, charging cables, and even a laptop so many professionals juggle) is a possible deal breaker, especially considering the corresponding tablet's mobile nature.
The new Pencil is an unusual tool for Apple users. While the company avoided styluses for years, it may have a new hit, at least among some users.


Sunday, 29 November 2015

VIber Now Lets You Save Your Ass By Remotely Delete The Messages You've Sent By Mistake!!



How many times have you sent a message to someone and immediately regretted it? Whether it’s in the heat of an argument or just an embarrassing typo, Viber‘s latest update will make it all okay.
The messaging service is now letting you delete messages on the recipient’s phone after you’ve sent them, whether the person has seen it or not.
download
I’m surprised more messaging services haven’t made this possible by now. It seems like a logical thing to be able to do in an age where we’ve become accustomed to sharing sensitive information using our phones, often without considering the consequences.
It could certainly be one way of combating revenge porn.
And in a less sexy, more practical, setting, it means that if you need to send someone your bank details or credit card number, you can remotely delete the message after they’re done with it.

$19,000 For A Super Mario Watch???


Yes, I was a child of the nineties. Yes, I loved Mario. But no, I’m not sure I’d cough up just under $19,000 for the privilege of owning the Super Mario Bros. watch, even though 85 will only ever be made.
According to A Blog to Watch, the timepiece’s release has been designed to coincide with the 30 year anniversary of the hapless plumber and his sidekick and is the third video game-inspired creation from Romain Jerome, following Pac-Man and Space Invaders models.
For your $19,000 you get a 3D pixel-style Super Mario, mushroom, cloud and bush, none of which move in any way, before you get too excited.
If you’ve got that sort of money burning a whole in your pocket and want a watch straight out of 1985, then you know where to head.

Tackling The Security Threats For The Internet Of Things


The rapid expansion of the Internet of Things (IoT) and the security issues created in its wake have quickly captured the attention of governmental and regional bodies and consumers.
According to a survey by Auth0, more than 50 percent of consumers and 90 percent of developers are skeptical about IoT security.
The security problem — and, just as important, the security risks that consumers perceive in internet-connected devices — represents a real threat to the hundreds of millions of dollars companies are pouring into connected devices of all stripes.
And with the technology still in its infancy, defining a finite framework for its security is a challenging task.
“The Internet of Things is a complex idea and organism, constantly evolving to both its own needs and the needs of consumers. As such, to provide hard and fast security rules would be similar to knowing the workings of a biological creature,” wrote Jen Martinson, editor-in-chief of Secure Thoughts.
Taking lessons from past experiences, the tech community is scrambling to plug the leaks before the situation spins out of control, and many startups and established companies in the tech industry are using this window of opportunity to mitigate the threats and decide the fate of this fast-growing phenomenon.
From solutions for connectivity threats to data protection and the quarantine of potentially compromised devices, startups and tech giants are developing solutions for the problem areas in IoT security.
Dealing with network connectivity threats

The always-connected nature of IoT devices makes them especially vulnerable to breaches from outside attackers or from compromised devices sharing the same network.
Surveys show that there’s a general negligence when it comes to securing communications protocols and many IoT devices are still suffering from the famous HeartBleed vulnerability — which could allow hackers to stage man-in-the-middle attacks and steal sensitive information such as passwords.
Since engineers who build IoT devices aren’t necessarily network security experts, it’s only natural that they leave security gaps behind.
Patrick Foxhoven, CTO of Emerging Technologies at ZScaler, explains, “More often than not, IoT devices are developed by companies with a different mindset – they think about user experience before security or compliance. These devices increase the attack surface of a network, and IT needs to put a plan in place to secure them.”
The results from the Auth0 survey indicate that many developers ship their products while feeling pressured to rush an application to the market. Under such circumstances, they normally overlook security concerns and stick to being feature complete on their products.
Therefore if there was some way to abstract and outsource IoT device connection into readymade packages, a lot of the security issues that are being faced by this fledgling technology could be overcome.
This is the idea behind GENBAND’s new product, Kandy Communications Platform-as-a-Service (CPaaS).
According to Paul Pluschkell, who runs the project, Kandy “provides multiple layers of security that are important to IoT applications.” As Pluschkell explains, Kandy uses a combination of secure protocols and encryption technologies, including HTTPS and Secure Real-Time Protocol (SRTP), to provide data privacy, end-to-end encryption, and advance authentication mechanisms in order to ensure device integrity.
GENBAND offers its Kandy platform through simple and flexible APIs and wrappers, which allows systems to communicate without compromising or accessing each other’s underlying data and structure.
On-device data protection

Physical and on-board security is something that is generally neglected in respect with IoT devices. This can become the source of serious security headaches given that a wide range of these devices are often left unguarded in the open and attackers can gain direct access to data stored on devices.
But sensitivity varies for different devices. “A lot of innovation and development comes down to context,” says Martinson “Weather data doesn’t need to be protected, but someone’s GPS coordinates should be.” And device data context changes over time. “When our toasters eventually adapt to take biometric readings for optimal toasting efficiency,” she says, “security measures will form to protect that information.”
The most obvious solution to on-device protection is the encryption of data, an approach that is being endorsed by more and more vendors, including Apple and Microsoft, which are implementing default disk encryption on their new mobile operating systems.
Smaller vendors are also grasping on the idea of on-device encryption and including it as an out-of-box feature of their products. Sports Performance Tracking, a manufacturer of GPS performance trackers for contact sports, employs heavy encryption on all data kept on its devices.
Other companies such as Finnish VPN company Tosibox are providing versatile encryption solutions that add an encrypted control layer to remote data access mechanisms in order to improve file access security on devices that are lacking such features.
Device isolation

Without isolation, IoT devices allow attackers to move laterally across a network after they gain an entry point. This way, hackers infiltrate one device and start probing the entire system until they find the real prize, e.g. a database or repository that contains sensitive customer or business data.
“If one ‘thing’ is attacked,” says Foxhoven, “it can bring down the network and compromise the business.”
This issue is being tackled by companies like Luma, a WiFi home router shipped earlier this month by a tech startup with the same name. Aside from being a normal WiFi router, Luma is equipped with an Intrusion Detection System (IDS) that monitors traffic in your home IoT networks and looks for signs of infection or communications with a command-and-control (C&C) server. This can help in identifying and isolating compromised devices before they become conduits to breach other devices.
Describing Luma, Paul Judge, who cofounded the company, says, “We look at outbound traffic and do vulnerability scanning of all devices on the network: is the connected fridge talking to your cameras? The [networked] doorknob to your new light bulbs?”
F-Secure is taking a different approach by introducing the Sense security monitor, a device that sits between the home router and connected devices and scans all incoming and outgoing traffic for abnormal behavioral patterns, malware and phishing attacks.
According to Samu Konttinen, the company’s executive vice president, both the device and its cloud infrastructure “are not hackable.” F-Secure hopes that with Sense, consumers will never have to buy another security solution again, a goal the company wishes to achieve with the backing of 27 years of experience in the security industry.
F-Secure has many other IoT security items on its agenda is an idea called “device reputation,” a system that is supposed to scan all devices within a network and give owners indication of where they are lacking in security.
What else needs to be done?

Great strides have been taken, but we’re still very far from saying that we have the IoT security dilemma under control.
For one thing, updating mechanisms on IoT devices have become a sort of Rubik’s cube problem. Too many IoT device vendors have intentionally forgone including a means to patch and update their firmware, fearing that doing so will open up security holes to be exploited by hackers.
Others that do bake updating interfaces and features into their devices fail in implementing a secure delivery mechanism, effectively leaving openings for hackers to install and execute arbitrary code on IoT devices. Combined with poor network security, this kind of vulnerability can lead to remote hijacking of connected devices.
Another complicated issue is the huge amount of data being collected by manufacturers and stored on cloud servers. These servers are very attractive targets for hackers, and failure to secure these repositories can lead to the theft of company secrets and consumer information.
Martinson suggests user-end encryption, a method that is fast becoming popular as big data storages are increasingly being attacked by large-scale hacks. This way, even if the data vault is breached, the user data will remain safe and unusable. “The best way to not worry about cloud security breaches,” Martinson says, “is to make a server breach irrelevant.” But since vendors are one of the main beneficiaries of cloud-stored data, and they use the data for ad and sales-improvement purposes, whether they will actually opt for such a procedure remains in a “cloud” of doubt.
What the future of IoT withholds
At the chaotic pace that it is growing, the IoT industry will surely reveal great many surprises in the future months and years. The combined efforts and determination of the tech community can help us to enjoy the good surprises and avoid the bad ones.

Li-Fi Probably Won’t Be The New Wi-Fi For Most People!



Long restricted to the academic domain, Li-Fi, a light-based data delivery method is suddenly getting all sorts of attention. An Estonian startup Velmenni recently tested an commercial implementation and found it to be superior to Wi-Fi in almost every way – except as something you and I will probably ever use.


Velmenni’s technology, called Jungru, uses an LED bulb and transmits data at gigabit speed. It has a theoretical speed of 224 gigabytes per second, the BBC reported. While the Jungru product is commercially viable, it is still based on what seems to be a laboratory-grade MATLAB and Simulink setup paired with photodiodes as opposed to a final product which must transmit data in real world environments full of light pollution and other variables.
University of Edinburgh Professor Harald Hass first demonstrated Li-Fi as a part of the D-light project at the school’s Institute for Digital Communications back in 2010. He gave a 2012 TED Global talk about it but but despite several companies being interested enough to start a Li-Fi consortium, the technology is still not a commercial contender.

The technology uses protocols similar to the RF-band 802.11 protocols, with additional standards to eliminate the impacts of interference and impacts of ambient lighting. Despite this, however, the technology cannot be deployed in outdoors in sunlight or in other odd conditions.
While Li-Fi does come with the advantage of not interfering with radio signals, a lot of the benefits are overpowered by the simple fact that visible light cannot travel through walls, an essential factor which gives old-school Wi-Fi a huge advantage. This line-of-sight limitation does make the system more secure and gives better control over emissions, but it’s unclear what the minimum distance for signal reception would be if clear line-of-sight is achieved. With that in mind, it is easy to imagine the signal being intercepted by someone with a telephoto lens and an optical sensor tuned appropriately. While Li-Fi was touted as a possible channel for wireless communications on airplanes, widespread adoption of onboard Wi-Fi on most US airlines makes this use case less and less pertinent.

LED lightbulbs that use the technology don’t appear visually different – information is encoded in pulses of light that are small and rapid enough perturbations to be undetectable to the naked eye. While it’s attractive to envision a network of connected lightbulbs all being used to transmit data between nodes, it’s not clear if the benefits of faster wireless communication will outweigh the costs of constantly-on LED lights, as well as the cost of optical detectors requiring clear line-of-sight.
There certainly is room for Li-Fi and other visible light-based communication systems to grow in niche areas, but router manufacturers can rest easy for a while. Wi-Fi isn’t going anywhere soon, and neither is that router you bought on Black Friday and offers “piddly” 1300 mbps speeds with all the benefits of RF.

Anti-Malaria Mosquitoes!!


Despite decades of work controlling the spread of malaria, the disease still claims more than 400,000 lives each year. Researchers from the University of California Irvine have developed a tool that might put a big dent in that number. Using a technology called gene drive, scientists have created a genetically modified type of mosquito that is incapable of transmitting malaria to humans and can convert wild populations in just a few generations.
Gene drive is a term that describes pushing specific modifications across a population of organisms. The team used a genetic editing procedure called Crispr-Cas9 to add a gene for malaria antibodies to the eggs of Anopheles stephensi mosquitoes. These insects are one of the primary carriers of malaria, but they won’t transmit it to humans when they bite if their DNA causes them to produce an antibody for malaria parasites. This is particularly cool as insects don’t actually have any antibodies of their own.
The revolutionary part of gene drive comes from the way Crispr-Cas9 adds genes to DNA. A single modified gene in a germline cell has a 50% chance of being passed down to offspring — you get half your genes from your father and half from your mother. This technique is able to add two copies of the gene, resulting in a much higher chance of inheritance. In testing the modified mosquitos in the lab, the team found 99.5% of the offspring had the modified gene. They also added a handy marker gene that causes the insect to have fluorescent red eyes.

It’s important to note, these insects are confined to a lab and aren’t considered ready for use in the real world. The goal of gene drive is to aggressively convert wild type populations to the new genotype, so you want to make sure there are no unintended consequences from your genetic modifications. A number of scientists published a letter in the journal Science recently to urge caution in the development of these organisms. They will need to be extensively tested in controlled environments before they could ever be released.
As mosquitoes continue to adapt to insecticides, going after their genes might be the best way to save lives. Everyone agrees it’s worth pursuing, so long as we’re careful.


Saturday, 28 November 2015

NOW OR NEVER!

One of the dilemmas that I have frequently faced is in trying to determine whether procrastination is justified or not. Sometimes you need to be patient and wait and other times call for immediate action. What often ends up happening is the events you put off until later you never actually get to. Now never seems like a good time, so you comfortably push events off into the future.
How can you determine whether you are putting something off because of legitimate reasons or are just procrastinating until the fourth of never? Since our own fears and emotions are often carefully disguised through logic and rationality, it can be difficult to make intelligent decisions about whether that procrastination is actually justified.
This dilemma has forced many self-help experts to tout that the answer always lies in doing things now as opposed to never. Although this remedy certainly works in a lot of cases, most of my intelligent readers realize that it may not always be the best solution.
What if your dream was to start a business, but you’ve just found yourself in serious debt? Perhaps the answer here is to put off taking action and rebuild your funds before starting fresh. Similarly, what if it is impossible to act now and procrastination is a must. Let’s say you are going to ask your boss for a raise, but she is out on a two week business trip. How will you know you simply won’t procrastinate more when she comes back?
Initially I found this situation very difficult to deal with. Although many times I correctly procrastinated for legitimate reasons, too many times I ended up procrastinating until the threat of a consequence forced me to take action. If it was foolish or impossible to act immediately in all cases, how could I determine which ones were legitimate and which were just attempts to needlessly procrastinate? More importantly, when faced with these attempts at procrastination, how could I stop them?

Fast Forward to the Future

One of the problems that occurs when procrastinating is that it is very comfortable to push a deadline into the future, but eventually that future date must come. You can never do something in the future, only in the now. So all those events you’ve put off, eventually must come into the present.
This at first glance seems obvious, but it is an important point that seems to be missed by the subconscious when you are trying to procrastinate. Whatever you plan for in the future you eventually have to do, and when you do it, it will be in the present moment. Because much of procrastination stems from fear, your brain feels relieved thinking the threat is gone, even though it is just delayed.
The way to determine whether your reasons are legitimate is to do a little mental exercise. Sit back and close your eyes and visualize what it is that you need to do. Make the visualization as vivid as possible, and make no attempts to censor your inner emotions. If it feels lousy, scary or painful to do this activity, then visualize that too.
What you are trying to do is determine what it would feel like to be in the position of your future self doing the very thing you are putting off. Although it only exists in your head, you are imagining that instead of procrastinating, you are actually doing it.
Now I want you to notice what you feel when you are in that situation. Chances are it will be negative emotions and feelings. If you are imagining doing a boring, long-winded chore you might feel drudgery. If you are imagining doing something fearful you will probably feel scared. Look carefully, since your imaginations can never fully capture the true intensity of the emotions that you will be feeling.
Whenever you notice negative feelings and emotions during your visualization, that is your signal to put a red-flag on this activity because it is very likely going to be the target of procrastination. If you’ve built up enough inner emotional mastery and discipline, you may be able to overcome these roadblocks, but negative feelings mean you are far more likely to put it off.
When you come to this point you have a couple options. First, if possible, do the thing right now. Even though you may have wanted to put off the event to a later space in time, procrastination feeds upon itself, and any delay will make it harder to overcome. This is the easiest route to break free of the cycle of procrastination.
Since it may be impossible to take action right now, either because of a real, physical limitation or simply an emotional block that your willpower can’t overcome, you need to take steps to ensure that when the future date arrives, you won’t procrastinate further.
A good way to look at your problem is like a roadblock is stopping your path. Some of these roadblocks will be physical limitations (you can’t ask your boss for a raise because she isn’t there). Other times your roadblocks will be mental (I should start working on my project now, but you know the weather is just so bad right now…)
If you currently lack the willpower to jump over your roadblock, your next step is to try and reduce the size of the roadblocks so they don’t impede your success. Physical roadblocks can’t be removed, but most of your mental roadblocks can be.

Breaking Down Negative Expectations

The first way to break down those mental roadblocks is to go back to your visualization. Look at any negative expectations you have and the emotions you associate with them. These are your mental roadblocks. You know you are free of mental roadblocks if looking back at your visualization is free of negative feelings.
Look at these negative expectations and ask yourself how you can reduce them. If you think working on a project will be boring, why not add music? If asking your boss for a raise might be scary, why not prepare exactly how you are going to ask her? Come up with as many ways as you can to possibly reduce the negative impact of your visualization.
Depending on your creativity and experience using this technique, you may end up reducing most of your mental roadblocks, but inevitably some will still exist. Unless your willpower is significantly high to overcome these roadblocks, when the time comes to act you will end up putting it off again. Worse you are more likely to rationalize your procrastination off forever, never taking action.
The final solution if you can’t reduce negative expectations is to force yourself over them. Getting leverage is a powerful way to stay committed to something even when natural obstacles stand in your way. So if you can’t seem to build the willpower to overcome those last few obstacles, you need to build enough momentum behind yourself to push yourself over them.
There are many ways you can get leverage on yourself from making a public commitment, writing your goal down and even so-called “burning the ships” where you physically cut off any option for retreat like a conquering army burning the ships to prevent retreat. With enough leverage you can overcome strong mental roadblocks.

When to Act — Is it Really Now or Never?

By continually repeating the process of visualizing the future event, and systematically breaking down your negative expectation, you can remove many of the mental roadblocks that prevent success. When you can’t shrink the roadblocks any further, creating leverage can give you the final push over those obstacles.
This brings us back to our original question, when emotions are involved, how can you know when procrastination is justified? It is so easy to rationalize that it can be difficult to tell when those rationalizations are based off of emotional pictures rather than sound reasoning.
In some cases, such as the absent boss make an obvious need for putting the event off. Other cases such as the poor potential business owner can be a little more vague. Although it isn’t by any means a perfect strategy, this is a simply way to determine whether you should act or create a purposeful delay.
My basic reasoning is simply this. The larger the negative emotional burden you have attached with the possible outcome, the greater the risk of procrastinating. Even if it isn’t a perfect time, if the situation has enough negativity associated, it is probably best to do it now. If through visualization and systemic reduction of roadblocks, you can make the event neutral or positive, then it is more likely that your reasons for delay are justified.
If you feel strongly that there are legitimate reasons to delay, but you still feel a very strong negative burden, it is time to once again use leverage. Create a high amount of consequences that will happen if you fail to act by the given date, no matter what. Although acting now is probably your best bet, if this is impossible, creating leverage can do the trick.
To summarize, this is what you are going to do the next time you are thinking of procrastinating (especially if it is something big):
  • Visualize the future event and try to detect any negative emotions or expectations.
  • If the amount of negative expectations is large and it is possible to do it now, do it now.
  • If you can’t do it now (real or imagined roadblocks)
    • Finding creative solutions to reduce the roadblocks
    • …or get enough leverage to force you over them.
There are going to be a lot of things you aren’t going to want to do but need to. Some of these may be boring and long. Some of them might be painful and hard. Some will be terrifying. Remove the disguises procrastination uses and take action. Life isn’t going to wait, why should you?
See, if you can't feel the need to do something, you will do it halfheartedly, and the consequence would not be as you expected. So pull up your socks and get going!! If something seems difficult, just say these words to you-" I know I can and I will!!". You will feel the difference and an inner force will get you through.

You Suck. Get Over It!


Life isn’t a steady escalator. Sometimes getting better requires that you first get a lot worse. If you can’t admit to yourself that you suck at something, chances are it will hold you back from future improvements.
Pride, ego, fear of rejection, call it what you will. The result is the same. Part of you likes your temporary holdout in life. It isn’t the work that scares you, or even the unknown. It’s the fact that in order to move forward you have to get your hands dirty.

Examples of “I Suck” Moments Creating Progress

I’d like to argue that “I Suck” moments aren’t the rarity. Letting go of what you already have is a crucial part of many improvements. Here’s just a few examples of how failing to utilize “I Suck” moments could hold you back:

The Dead-End Job

You want to start a business. But you don’t know anything about business. In fact, you’re pretty sure it can’t compete with the salary you are already earning. Your job is comfortable, but it doesn’t make you want to leap out of bed each morning. Your choice is either to face the inevitable “I Suck” moment, ignore your pride and get started with your business. Or go back to working the job that will eventually suffocate you.

The Dull Relationship

You’ve been together for months but the passion isn’t there any more. But you haven’t been dating in awhile and you’re worried you can’t do any better. Your choice is either to stick with someone who isn’t right for you or admit you suck at dating but go through with it anyways.

The Out-of-Shape Body

It’s been years since you’ve hit the gym. Now you want to get back in shape, but it will mean departing from your days of youthful fitness. Your choice is to either admit you suck at exercising and struggle out with the basics of fitness and willpower others have mastered – or continue to live an unhealthy life.
The examples of “I Suck” moments being the deciding factor are numerous.

How to Push Past the “I Suck” Moments

Nobody wants to be bad at something. Nobody wants to take a step backwards. Nobody wants to move from a comfort zone where you already kick-ass to one where you feel out of place. But sometimes it needs to be done.
Here’s just a few ideas I’ve found helpful for pushing past “I Suck” until you can eventually say “I’m Great!”
  • Cut Denial – The hardest step is admitting you have a problem. Admitting that an area of your life isn’t as great as you want it to be. Or facing the truth that your current direction, while comfortable, isn’t taking you anywhere.
  • Face Your Pain – Don’t fight it. If you feel crappy, search through it. Don’t dilute your depressed or uncomfortable feelings about a bad area of your life. Write out your thoughts and feeling. Admit “I Suck” liberally. It will substitute a chronic pain for an acute one. But facing those thoughts is the only way through them.
  • Start at the Bottom – Push through your pride and start back at the bottom. If quitting your boring job to pursue your dreams means a cut in salary, you might have to take it. Losing one relationship may mean you need to stumble in your dating life.
  • Find an Anchor – Find something that gives you self-worth. Anchor yourself in something more permanent so your self-esteem doesn’t crash when you face the “I Suck” moment. This could be family, spiritual beliefs, knowledge, close friends, skills or even the present.

You Don’t Really Suck

“I Suck” moments are an illusion in themselves. As painful as they are, once you go to the other side, you can’t imagine not having done it sooner. Although it may appear to be a dip in quality of life, the opposite often occurs. Looking back, the “I Suck” was more brief than it had first appeared.
P.S.-Words shouldn't be taken with literal meanings.
Hope u guys feel a little better about your own self after reading it.Peace!

Samsung Gear VR review: A Mobile Virtual Reality Console Thats Much More Than A Tech...



In just three years, virtual reality has gone from a curiosity (sparked by a crowdfunding indie startup called Oculus VR) to a new category of consumer product that many consider to be "the next big thing." Never one to shy away from such things, Samsung has partnered with Oculus to launch the first consumer VR headset that matters. Meet the groundbreaking Gear VR.
Before virtual reality became a media buzzword and topic of conversation in techie circles, there was the magic. It was that magic that made gaming legend John Carmack publicly endorse Oculus before the company had even raised a penny on Kickstarter, and it was that same magic that caught our attention during our first test drive of the Rift at CES 2013. Beyond the dollars, hype and lofty expectations that surround it today, that magic is still at the core of the great VR experiences. It's why we still care about it.
It's the magic of strapping on a pair of goggles and suddenly feeling like you're somewhere else. Though you know you're really sitting in a chair with a controller in your hand playing a game, just enough of your brain is tricked that it feels like you've stepped into a teleporting machine. Virtual reality doesn't physically send you somewhere else, but it does give you experiences that, on a perception level, aren't too far away from that.Magic.
If you were a brave early adopter, you may have been using VR in various forms – including Rift developer kitsGoogle Cardboard and Gear VR Innovator Editions – for the last year or two. They captured that magic with varying degrees of success, but the technology was still front and center. "Wow, I feel like I'm creeping through this dungeon, hiding from vicious beasts and – oh, look at that, my headset has overheated and needs to shut down."
But this Gear VR, the new version that's available now, is the first big-ticket headset that's a full-blown consumer product. There's an extra level of consumer-friendly polish and barely any layers of tech stuff staring you in the face. It's your most direct portal to that magic yet.
Some apps, games and experiences are more magical than others. Like any platform, some games don't elicit much interest from us and we stop playing after five minutes or so. But then there are titles like Land's EndEve GunjackHeroboundThe Night Cafe,Dreadhalls and Viral that give us wonderful glimpses into what VR can be. The novelty of VR can only mask mediocre game design for so long; but take a great game – one made with thought, care and attention to detail, that would hold up on other platforms – and place it in this new medium, and your jaw may literally drop. Mine certainly has for much of the time I've been using the Gear VR, and I've been using VR headsets for a couple of years already.

While the basic VR experience is nearly identical to what we got from Samsung's two Innovator Editions (developer kits that early adopter consumers could also buy), overheating is no longer a concern. We were impressed with the early 2015 Innovator Edition's improvements in this respect, but before writing this I just played a bunch of games for an hour and a half straight in the consumer version and stopped on my own accord without any overheating slowdowns or shutdowns (and without any fans pointed at my head). The longest I went with the previous version was one hour, and the original Innovator Edition rarely lasted longer than 30 minutes.
Quick tip: we did run into heating problems when downloading and installing games while wearing the headset, so if you want a lengthier session, be sure to get your content onto the phone (with a cool-down period in between) before you start playing.
Speaking of phones, you'll still need a Samsung phone to use the Gear VR. This is both the coolest thing about the headset, and its most obvious limitation. If you already own one of Samsung's 2015 flagships – the Galaxy S6Galaxy S6 edgeGalaxy Note 5 orGalaxy S6 edge+ – then US$99 is nothing short of an amazing price to turn your phone into a badass VR console. And these are easily four of the best phones of the year, so it's not like you're being asked to lug around some watered-down shit-phone just to get in on the fun.
At the same time, though, not everyone wants to use a Samsung phone, so owners of other smartphones are left to either consider the slightly crazy proposition of buying a new handset just to get this awesome VR headset or wait for the PC- and console-based stuff that arrives in a few months. If you don't have any interest in using a Samsung phone, then just wait for the Rift – it won't be long. But if, VR aside, you're already torn 50/50 between one of those Galaxy flagships and something else, then there's no harm in letting the Gear VR tilt the scales towards the Samsung phone. It's awesome enough to do that.

While the basic VR experience is nearly identical to what we got from Samsung's two Innovator Editions (developer kits that early adopter consumers could also buy), overheating is no longer a concern. We were impressed with the early 2015 Innovator Edition's improvements in this respect, but before writing this I just played a bunch of games for an hour and a half straight in the consumer version and stopped on my own accord without any overheating slowdowns or shutdowns (and without any fans pointed at my head). The longest I went with the previous version was one hour, and the original Innovator Edition rarely lasted longer than 30 minutes.
Quick tip: we did run into heating problems when downloading and installing games while wearing the headset, so if you want a lengthier session, be sure to get your content onto the phone (with a cool-down period in between) before you start playing.
Speaking of phones, you'll still need a Samsung phone to use the Gear VR. This is both the coolest thing about the headset, and its most obvious limitation. If you already own one of Samsung's 2015 flagships – the Galaxy S6Galaxy S6 edgeGalaxy Note 5 orGalaxy S6 edge+ – then US$99 is nothing short of an amazing price to turn your phone into a badass VR console. And these are easily four of the best phones of the year, so it's not like you're being asked to lug around some watered-down shit-phone just to get in on the fun.
At the same time, though, not everyone wants to use a Samsung phone, so owners of other smartphones are left to either consider the slightly crazy proposition of buying a new handset just to get this awesome VR headset or wait for the PC- and console-based stuff that arrives in a few months. If you don't have any interest in using a Samsung phone, then just wait for the Rift – it won't be long. But if, VR aside, you're already torn 50/50 between one of those Galaxy flagships and something else, then there's no harm in letting the Gear VR tilt the scales towards the Samsung phone. It's awesome enough to do that.
As for which phone, we think the two 5.7-inch phablets (Note 5 and S6 edge+, above) provide the better Gear VR experience. This is actually contradictory to what we've said before – we never thought the smaller 5.1-inch GS6 and GS6 edge were much different inside the headset, but that changed recently when we used one immediately after the other. The experience of using the smaller phones isn't a huge difference visually, but there's a slight cut-off on the edges giving them a lower effective field of view – it's just significant enough to slightly diminish the sense of what Oculus calls "presence" (the sensation of being someplace else). With the GS6 inside the Gear VR, my reaction is something like "this is some really cool mobile VR; I can't wait for the Rift." But when I switched to the larger Galaxy S6 edge+ inside of the Gear, I had more of the kinds of jaw-hanging-wide-open experiences that VR is capable of.
Again, though, the visual difference is very small. It's more about the subconscious reaction (or at least mine) to the minor FOV increase with the larger phones.
Until VR headset makers start putting some kind of wonder chemical on their lenses that makes lens fog impossible, it's going to be something we'll all have to deal with. Until you get "up to temp" (when the temperature difference between the phone and the glass of the lenses gets closer) there's going to be fogging on the lenses, so it's something you'll want to be proactive with.
The best solution we found were chemicals designed for scuba masks (never use anti-fog agents made for car windshields ... we hope the reasons go without saying). A product called Clarity Defog It wipes work just fine and aren't messy at all, but they're very expensive. Our (slightly more messy) recommendation is called Jaws Quick Spit. Spray a little of the solution on your fingers and then massage it into the lenses. Wipe off the excess with a microfiber cloth and you should be fog-free for several VR sessions. It runs around $6 a bottle on Amazon and lasts for a while, so your money goes pretty far.
The headset itself is lighter and more comfortable in this consumer version. The Innovator Editions had a cheaper-feeling foam padding lining the front (the part that presses against your face) but the consumer Gear VR has a thicker, more substantial-feeling fabric(?) material in its place. It's less Nerf-y, more pillow-y.
The Gear's touchpad (used in some apps in place of a Bluetooth controller for navigation) is also better, with an indented cross pattern on it that makes it easier to find while fumbling around in the virtual dark. You'll still want to pick up a quality Android-compatible gamepad (we've been using the terrific Steelseries Stratus XL) to get the most out of the headset.
The Gear VR provides an often-magical virtual reality experience; we recommend any owner of a 2015 Samsung flagship who's even mildly curious about VR to pay $99 for it. The Oculus Rift will crank the graphical prowess and sense of presence up a few notches, but the Gear VR is following closer behind than you may expect. Google Cardboard makes for a cool enough tech demo and there's lots of other fun stuff coming in 2016, but right now the Gear VR is the only real virtual reality platform. It's mobile VR, but infinitely more mesmerizing than mobile games you'd play on your phone without a headset.
The consumer Gear VR is available now from SamsungAmazon and Best Buy, though currently backordered at Samsung and out of stock at the latter two. Keep your eyes peeled for inventory reloads or hit up eBay if you want one before the holidays.
Article By:Will Shanklin