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Mark's rating: 0

Smart hat monitors brain waves to watch fatigue levels

I just read an interesting article in Gizmag, an online technology newsletter, about an unreleased product called the SmartCap from Australian company EdanSafe. The SmartCap is worn as a cap and analyzes brainwaves to ascertain fatigue levels, one obvious use case being to monitor commercial drivers to reduce road accidents.

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Mark's rating: 5

AirPrint to almost any printer

If your printer doesn't support the Apple iOS AirPrint, the Lantronix xPrintServer may well be a cheaper and more useful alternative to buying a new printer

Back when I was young printing was complicated. Printer drivers were a nightmare of options and standards were rare. Now there are all sorts of standards for printing but the nightmare still continues. Even printers that sell for $50 have multiple drivers, often support various printing protocols, have multiple driver updates, and then there is the printer installation software.

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Mark's rating: 5

A tablet for under a Benjamin?

Product names are tricky, there's no doubt about it. If you're not going to use a meaningless string of characters such as "X77-P73" then you've got your work cut out for you because it's hard to find a good name that isn't already taken by some other company. Even internal project names have to be researched, checked that they are OK to use and vetted by lawyers for liability.

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Mark's rating: 5

Gmail Backup, a recipe for happiness

Before I get to this week's main topic I must give a big thumbs-up to a book that all of you who like to cook will thoroughly enjoy: "Cooking for Geeks: Real Science, Great Hacks, and Good Food" by Jeff Potter (pub. O'Reilly).

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Mark's rating: 5

The amazing shrinking computer

The quest for smaller and smaller computing devices usually involves a tradeoff between processor power, battery life, communications features, memory and storage. While the product I'm looking at today is in some respects the result of the intersection of a vision with compromises, the WIMM One from WIMM Labs is one of the slickest miniature computing devices I've seen to date.

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Mark's rating: 0

Cracking MD5 ... with Google?!

The MD5 algorithm has a new vulnerability: Google!

Here's a piece of news that will worry anyone interested in security (which should be pretty much everyone who reads Network World): A programmer by the name of Juuso Salonen has created a Ruby script called BozoCrack that cracks MD5 hashed passwords with remarkable success and with very little effort.

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Mark's rating: 5

Finding yourself ... more iOS maps

A while ago I got over-excited about maps on the iPad and promised more of the same in the future and now, the future has arrived.

This week I have two iOS map apps that I think are really good. The first is Navigon North America published by Navigon AG which works on the iPad, iPhone and iPod Touch.

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Mark's rating: 5

Grazing: Better browsing under iOS

If you use an iPad or an iPhone and you're at all technical you'll probably have a love-hate relationship with the default Safari browser. The problem is that Safari does the job but it just seems so, well, simplistic and lacks a certain desirable "nerdiness." You can do all sorts of cool stuff with other browsers on other operating systems, but Safari on iOS? Yawn. But I have an answer!

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Mark's rating: 4

Programming in Lua

I haven't talked about programming languages for a while so here goes: We start this week with the free, open source (MIT License) Lua language.

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Mark's rating: 4.5

iPad improvement: A great keyboard and network app

I have written several times about my ongoing love affair with the iPad and, surprise, a wave of iPad-related products has been appearing in the Gibbs Universal Secret Underground Bunker.

While a number of these are, well, meh, there are a few that are truly outstanding. One of these winners is the Logitech Fold-Up Keyboard for iPad.

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Mark Gibbs (complete bio) is an author, journalist, and man of mystery. He writes columns and a newsletter for Network World and is widely considered to be vastly underpaid.

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