Saturday 28 June 2014

This app can make obese people agile


If you are used to a sedentary lifestyle, this app can help you become a little active.

This smartphone-based app can produce short-term reductions in sedentary behaviour that may be effective in improving health.

More sedentary time, regardless of physical activity levels, is associated with greater risk of obesity, cardiovascular disease and mortality.

"Almost everyone knows that physical activity is important. But it's not widely recognised that someone who runs five miles in the evening but spends the rest of the day sitting at a desk can be putting their health at risk," said co-researcher Dale Bond from The Miriam Hospital, Rhode Island, in the US.

"That smartphone you use so often throughout the day could now actually help to improve your health," he added.

Bond and Graham Thomas from the same institute worked with their colleagues to develop a smartphone-based intervention to reduce the amount of time obese individuals sit or recline while awake.

The smartphone app, "B-Mobile," was tested in a study of primarily middle-aged women who were obese, although the intervention can be applied to those who are not obese.

The app automatically monitored the time participants spent being sedentary, and after an extended period with no activity, prompted participants via a tone paired with motivational messages to get up and walk around for a few minutes.

Participants received feedback providing encouragement for taking a break.

Researchers tested three different approaches to see which was best at reducing the total amount of sedentary time.

Even though all three were successful, researchers found it is better to take shorter breaks more often for better health.

"Prompting frequent, short activity breaks may be the most effective way to decrease excessive sedentary time and increase physical activity in individuals who are overweight or obese," Bond said.

Posted by www.anymobilesmartphone.co.uk

Tuesday 17 June 2014

New Apple iWatch


There is a rumour that Apple is to release an new wrist Smartphone watch called the iWatch, no one really knows if or when this new iWatch will be released but Apple may follow other watches of the nature.  

According to ex-Nike man and watch designer Scott Wilson, design guru Jony Ive took his team to visit watch factories and ordered boxes of "a sports watch" made by Nike back in the early 2000s.

That was well before Nike's Fuelband hit the mainstream, but the two companies are close. Like, really close: never mind Apple CEO Tim Cook sitting on Nike's board of directors and wearing a Fuelband day in day out, Apple has reportedly hired Ben Shaffer (previously innovation leader at Nike) and Jay Blahnik, a health and fitness instructor who consulted on the Fuelband for Nike.

So what will this iWatch do? Well it will do all that the Apple iPhone 5S can do for starters. You will be able to get all the Apple iPhone apps too.

Keep posted to this news channel to be the very first to know when this will be released.

Posted by www.anymobilesmartphone.co.uk 

Will The Amazon Smartphone Kill The Apple iPhone?

amazon smartphone

 



Amazon is holding an event on Wednesday June 18, where it is widely expected to launch its first smartphone. But can Amazon become a serious contender in the already-crowded mobile market?

Speculation has been growing for some time around the internet retailer's plans to release a smartphone. This comes in the wake of several hardware launches over the past year, including the Fire TV streaming box and new Kindle Fire tablets.

Leaked photos and details suggest that the forthcoming smartphone will have a holographic 3D interface, powered by four infrared cameras, situated in each of the four corners on the face of the phone.

These cameras are used to track the position of the user’s face and eyes in relation to the phone’s display, allowing Amazon’s software to make constant adjustments to the positioning of elements on the screen.

Earlier this month, Amazon released a teaser video depicting a series of people gasping over a hand-held device just out of shot, declaring it "super awesome," "amazing" and "very real life".
Other rumoured features include a Qualcomm Snapdragon processor, 2GB of RAM, and a heavily customised version of Google’s Android operating system, similar to the version that powers Amazon’s Kindle Fire tablets.

The phone’s display will measure 4.7 inches diagonally and have comparatively low pixel density, featuring 720p HD resolution compared to 1080p HD resolution on many rival devices.

"Let's face it. Despite the great ecosystem war with Apple or Google, Amazon is certainly not in a position to become a global player in the very competitive and maturing smartphone market," said Thomas Husson, analyst at Forrester.

"That said, with a smart bundle linked to their Prime offering and a subsidised device, Amazon could well deliver a very differentiated experience to its best customers and increase its commerce revenues."

Like for the Kindle Fire range, it is likely that Amazon will launch its new device in the US first, and then only in the UK and Germany – the biggest markets for Amazon in Europe.

Forrester analyst James McQuivey said that Amazon almost certainly has proof that getting Kindle Fire tablet into consumer hands lifts long-term purchases, and probably drives up the number of categories those consumers buy from.

"Amazon cares about phones only as a means to a digital relationship end, a way to make sure customers think of Amazon not just a few times a month, or even a few times a week, but dozens of times a day," he said.

However, analyst Sucharita Mulpuru said that launching a smartphone is unlikely to have a huge effect on Amazon's retail or media businesses.

"Maybe they'll introduce some product image recognition technology that helps you buy a similar product say, at a store, with one click on Amazon – but the truth is there's very little friction to buying on Amazon even on other mobile devices now," he said.

"Media consumption generally is reduced as screen sizes get smaller. They appear to be lumping music into Prime now and that is a media format that is nicely suited to the phone but music isn't a growing business either."

Overall, the Forrester analysts concluded that Amazon's pockets are not as deep as Google's or Apple's, nor does it have scale or own the network, making differentiation in this market difficult.

There is a lot that Amazon could potentially give away to drive adoption, such as free delivery on purchases or vouchers for books and music. However, other platforms have a head start on apps, services and trust in delivering 24x7 quality of service, so Amazon will need to do something big to get attention.

Posted by www.anymobilesmartphone.co.uk

Friday 13 June 2014

Smartphones Affect Male Sperm Count?



This is one bit of news that will get members of the male population sperming, err, squirming.

A number of health conditions have been associated with using smartphones, including cancer. However, a comparison of previous studies on the effect of cell phones on male fertility has revealed that exposure to such mobile devices "lowered sperm motility by 8%, and viability by 9%," Time reported. This is largely due to the fact that the gadgets emit low level electromagnetic radiation (EMR), which "can disturb normal cell functions and even sleep.

Previous studies suggested several ways that the magnetic fields might be wreaking havoc on sperm - they could be generating DNA damage by promoting more unstable oxygen compounds," the news source explained. "Or, because most men carry their phones in their pants pockets, the fields, which can cause up to a 2.3C temperature increase on the skin, could be raising the temperature of the testes enough to suppress and interfere with normal sperm production.

The comparative study was done by a team of researchers led by University of Exeter's Dr. Fiona Mathews. She and her group "analyzed 10 previous studies, seven of which involved the study of sperm motility, concentration and viability in the lab, and three that included male patients at fertility clinics." The research covered a total of 1,492 samples.

This study strongly suggests that being exposed to radio-frequency electromagnetic radiation from carrying mobiles in trouser pockets negatively affects sperm quality," Dr. Mathews said, as noted by The Daily Mail. "This could be particularly important for men already on the borderline of infertility, and further research is required to determine the full clinical implications for the general population.

The authors of the said study, which was featured in the journal Environment International, also warned that "cumulative" radiation from modern technology, including Internet Wi-Fi, may also have a "cumulative" impact on sperm.

"For example, recent evidence found wifi from laptops also negatively affected sperm quality. A better understanding of the collective influence of environmental factors on sperm quality and subsequent fertility, will help improve treatment, advice and support for individuals seeking fertility treatment," the paper's authors wrote.

This should get men fishing out their Apple iPhones and Samsung Galaxies from their pockets.

However, a researcher fro Sheffield University, Dr. Allan Pacey, said that he is unconvinced of this argument as the evidence is lacking. As such, he will not be one of those keeping his smartphone out of his own pocket.

"In my opinion, the studies undertaken to date have been somewhat limited in scope because they have either irradiated sperm kept in a dish or they have made assessments of men's phone habits without adequately controlling for confounding variables, such as other aspects of their lifestyle," he revealed to the BBC. "What we need are some properly designed epidemiological studies where mobile phone use is considered alongside other other lifestyle habits."

Posted by www.anymobilesmartphone.co.uk

Monday 9 June 2014

Teens using smartphone app Tinder to have sex with strangers

 

Teenagers are using a popular smartphone app called Tinder to arrange sexual encounters with strangers , it has been revealed. A 16-year-old Melbourne teenager said that app was being used by teens to find other teens who were interested in getting physical with no emotional connection.

Stuff.co.nz reported. Another 18-year-old Melbourne teenager said that she joined Tinder when she was 17 and always asked for sex via the app and a lot of teenagers used the application as a way to get sex.

La Trobe university professor Anne Mitchell said that it was quite inappropriate for 13-year-olds to have access to such an app but these things were very hard to police.

A Tinder spokeswoman said 7 per cent of Tinder users globally were 13 to 17 years old but could not provide exact figures for Australia.

Tinder is a popular app with an age restriction of 13 and above, allows users to ‘like’ or ‘pass’ on fellow users’ profiles based on their picture, with a mutual like opening the possibility to chat via the app.

Posted by www.anymobilesmartphone.co.uk

Smartphone App Might Predict Manic Episodes In Bipolar Disorder

Smartphone App Might Predict Manic Episodes In Bipolar Disorder
Smartphone App Might Predict Manic Episodes In Bipolar Disorder

There are smartphone apps for monitoring your diet, your drugs, even your heart. And now a Michigan psychiatrist is developing an app he hopes doctors will someday use to predict when a manic episode is imminent in patients with bipolar disorder.

People with the disorder alternate between crushing depression and wild manic episodes that come with the dangerous mix of uncontrollable energy and impaired judgment.
There are drugs that can prevent these episodes and allow people with bipolar disorder to live normal lives, according to Dr. Melvin McInnis, a psychiatrist at the University of Michigan Medical Center. But relapses are common.

“We want to be able to detect that well in advance,” McInnis says. “The importance of detecting that well in advance is that they reach a point where their insight is compromised, so they don’t feel themselves that anything is wrong.”
Early detection would give doctors a chance to adjust a patient’s medications and stave off full-blown manic episodes.

McInnis says researchers have known for some time that when people are experiencing a manic or depressive episode, their speech patterns change. Depressed patients tend to speak slowly, with long pauses, whereas people with a full-blown manic attack tend to speak extremely rapidly, jumping from topic to topic.

“It occurred to me a number of years ago that monitoring speech patterns would be a really powerful way to devise some kind of an approach to have the ability to predict when an episode is imminent,” says McInnis.

So he and some computer science colleagues invented a smartphone app. The idea is that doctors would give patients the app. The app would record whenever they spoke on the phone. Once a day, the phone would send the recorded speech to a computer in the doctor’s office that would analyze it for such qualities as speed, energy and inflection.

Right now the app is being tested with 12 or 15 volunteers who are participating in a longitudinal study of bipolar disorder.

McInnis and his colleagues presented preliminary results at this year’s International Conference on Acoustics, Speech and Signal Processing, and so far, things are looking encouraging. McInnis says the software is reasonably good at detecting signs of an impending manic attack. It’s not quite as good catching an oncoming depression.

For now, this app is only intended for patients with bipolar disorder, but McInnis thinks that routinely listening for changes in speech could be an important tool for early detection of a variety of diseases.

Posted by www.anymobilesmartphone.co.uk

Sunday 8 June 2014

How Smartphone Apps Can Make You More Heathy


NEW DELHI: 
Half-marathon runner Rajaraman Santhanam monitors his body closely. The Bangalore-based director of finance at chip-maker Nvidia knows how many calories he's ingested as food, the distance he has run, the route he's taking and overall fitness after his run.

It's all there on his Nexus 5 smartphone thanks to apps Map My Fitness and My Fitness Pal. Anna Mittal, a Gurgaon-based marketing consultant, goes to the gym after work every day. Her Nokia Lumia 1520 is a constant companion as she works with light weights and exercises on the treadmill.

Every few minutes, calorie burner and exercise app Adidas miCoach updates Mittal on the impact the routine is having on her body — number of steps taken, calories burnt and so on. In Mumbai, Vandana Jain, managing director of Advanced Eye Hospital & Institute, relies on her Samsung S3. She gets information on the distance run and calories burnt via an audio feed.

"The smartphone helps do continuous monitoring. This is the future," she said. "A user may not be able to interpret the ECG, but if the app tells her whether it's normal or not it will be a good start." Santhanam, Mittal and Jain are among a growing number of users relying on their smartphones and fitness trackers for an array of health-related information from calorie count to blood sugar levels, heart monitoring to checking out sleep patterns.

(A smart band can sync up with a mobile to tell users the number of hours of good, average and bad sleep they've had.) Silicon Valley entrepreneur and investor Vinod Khosla believes that in the future 80% of what doctors do will be performed by machines (smartphones and datacrunching devices).

And here the likes of the recently launched Samsung Galaxy S5 with a builtin heart monitor and Sony Xperia Z2 via its life-logging app come in handy. Bangalore-based JanaCare, a startup spun off by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, is working on diagnostic sensors that can be fitted on a mobile.

These can run checks on bodily fluids with the smartphone displaying data such as sugar levels to lipid profiles. "It's a diagnostic hardware sensor to analyse any fluid—blood, urine, sweat or sliva," said Sidhant Jena, founder and CEO, JanaCare.

"We look at the smartphone as a diagnostic tool that can replace the clinic." An ambitious goal that startups such as JanaCare and global giants like Apple are working toward. In October, Apple is set to launch the next version of iOS, the key feature being a kit to help users monitor health metrics on a daily basis.

Julie Ask, principal analyst at Forrester Research, points to three advantages that such devices have. First, they give longitudinal data. That is, they track parameters over time rather than just when you go to a hospital.

Second, these create awareness among users and third they allow remote monitoring. In the not-so-distant future, smartphones with health apps could be linked to hospital electronic patient records to update data continuously. "Smartphones can be used to monitor health of the elderly on a continuous basis," Jain said.

"In a country like India where there is a shortage of doctors, technology will help solve some of the problems. Here, smart devices will play a key role." They won't replace doctors, but help users get a better idea of their health. "These are self-assessment tools and not for clinical replacement," cautioned Varun Sood, chief information officer, Fortis Healthcare.

They function like a thermometer—tell you if you have fever or not. To interpret what infection caused it, you need to see a doctor. "The smart devices are good for physiological data (heart rate, pulse, temperature ) and not pathological data like blood sugar," said Amitabh Parti, senior consultant, internal medicine, Fortis Memorial Research Institute, Gurgaon.

"The human body is not static, but dynamic, which needs an expert to see if something goes wrong." The smartphones work with built-in sensors that detect movement, such as steps taken. An in-built GPS gives distance travelled with great accuracy. However, to monitor the heart rate or analyze blood, the gadgets rely on code (algorithms) that can give a false result.

"I have noticed 90% accuracy," said Santhanam. "Parameters like calories burnt are less accurate as the device may not have the intelligence to measure amount of sweat released during a workout session." Besides, most off-the-shelf devices are one-size-fits-all type of gear.

"Two people suffering from fever could be for vastly different reasons," Parti said. "You can't rely on gadgets for such sensitive interpretation. Besides, medical tools follow medical guidelines, like a BP (blood pressure) machine has to be calibrated every three months based on JNC-8 (a global standard for blood pressure ) guidelines.

Who will ensure that the smartphone reading is correct ?" Also, a machine doesn't have the clinical experience of a doctor who's seen 15,000 heart attack cases. "Device is not a doctor," said Parti. Device makers say they are not replacing either clinics or doctors.

"The Sony Smart Band covers the fitness and social aspects but is not a heart rate monitor," said Sachin Rai, deputy general manager, sales and marketing , Sony India. "The latter needs certain precision. Also, accuracy of readings depends on accuracy of data entered by users (like height, weight, age etc)."

Ask of Forrester Research added: "The devices may not catch the nuances but they are good for high-low-just not a million shades of grey... Ability to collect data over time is what is new with these devices . 
Posted by www.anymobilesmartphone.co.uk

Saturday 7 June 2014

Farms That Are Now controlled By Smartphones



What is this all about?
 Ideally, we'd all be able to grow our own produce.One third of American households are currently growing vegetables.As people all over the world get more heath conscious, they see the need for quality. The problem is that people lack either the time or knowledge to make it happen. Many end up frustrated or do not try at all. Niwa allows busy city dwellers grow a healthy supply of fruits and vegetables right in their living room, while managing the entire process from their smartphone.

All you have to do is set it all up first, you put up your greenhouse, plant your seeds, make sure all the pipes are in for water and feed, then the process is all done through your smartphone.

Is it easy ?
Current solutions on the market, like smart herb gardens or big hydroponic systems, areeither limited to small plants or require a fair amount of space, knowledge, and effort to maintain. niwa simplifies the process anddoes most of the hard work foryou while offering a huge flexibility in terms of what can be grown.

How much does it cost ?
Niwa comes in three different models:
Niwa mini: A smaller version of Niwa.249$/299$

Niwa (standard): The standard version of Niwa. 299$/349$
 Niwa Premium: Standard size but with a nice anodized aluminium poles, instead of the PVC
white ones of the other two versions — 349$ / 399$.

Posted by www.anymobilesmartphone.co.uk

Tuesday 3 June 2014

Smartphone app helps students with dyslexia



A central Indiana mother is using some of the latest technology to develop a new tool to help her son with dyslexia.
Eleven-year-old Sam Parmelee says any help in dealing with dyslexia is welcome.
"It's cause the letters switch on you. An 'n' might be a 'w,' a 'w' might be an 'm' and most people think it's something, like, you just can't read at all," Sam said.
"It's really an inability to process that and read fluently, like you and I can," said Sam's mother, Kris Parmelee.
When Sam's dyslexia was first identified, Kris said she feared the consequences. But now, she approaches the challenge with the same resolve Sam has in clearing the obstacles the dyslexia presents.
Among the tools helping in that fight is a smartphone app called DCODIA, which scans an unreadable word and translates it in seconds.
"So a student is reading, they come to a word that they're just stuck with and they can't get past it. This will actually help them understand what that word is, because it will dictate it aloud to them," said Mark LaFay, Sonar Studios.
Sonar Studios, an Indianapolis technology firm, has developed the app and is now working on adapting it for the wearable technology known as Google Glass.
"We believe it will be revolutionary. Absolutely," LaFay said. "Our goal isn't to validate Google Glass, but it's to use the technology, because we see it as being a valid tool for children with dyslexia."
But the effort is just beginning.
Kris Parmelee and Sonar Studios have launched a fundraising campaign to move the product into the marketplace and hopes that it will soon help the 20 percent of school-aged children diagnosed with dyslexia in the United States.
"If there's just one word you don't know, you can take a picture of that one word, it doesn't read the whole thing for you, it just reads that one word," Sam said.

Future Holographic Smartphones

In the future, virtual reality won't require strapping a bulky contraption to your head.
Instead, imagine stepping into an empty room and then suddenly seeing life-size, 3-D images of people and furniture. Or looking down at a smartwatch and seeing virtual objects float and bounce above the wrist, like the holographic Princess Leia beamed by R2-D2 in the movie "Star Wars."
A key to this future may lay in Carlsbad, Calif., where startup Ostendo Technologies Inc. has spent the past nine years quietly working on miniature projectors designed to emit crisp videos and glasses-free 3-D images for smartphones and giant screens.
Other companies have shown they can project floating images that appear to be holograms, but many involve large machines employing a system of mirrors to direct light with limited viewing angles. For instance, the lifelike image of the late rapper Tupac Shakur, which graced the Coachella music festival stage in 2012, was a combination of computer graphics and video projection that relied on visual effects first designed in the 19th century.
Ostendo's projectors, in contrast, are roughly the size of Tic Tacs, powered by a computer chip that can control the color, brightness and angle of each beam of light across one million pixels.
One chipset, small enough to fit into a smartphone, is capable of projecting video on a surface with a 48-inch diagonal. A patchwork of chips, laid together, can form far larger and more complex images. The first iteration of the chip, which is scheduled to begin shipping next year, will only project 2-D videos, but the next version, expected to follow soon after will feature holographic capability, according to Ostendo's chief executive and founder, Hussein S. El-Ghoroury.
"Display is the last frontier," said Dr. El-Ghoroury, who in 1998 sold CommQuest Technologies, a mobile chipset company, to International Business Machines Corp. for about $250 million in cash and stock. "Over the years, processing power has improved and networks have more bandwidth, but what is missing is comparable advancement in display."
The race to disrupt the screen is intensifying as both upstarts and technology giants try to find new ways to bring content to life.
Microsoft Corp. and Advanced Micro Devices Inc. are both working on their own virtual reality rooms, building a complex system of projectors and computers. Hewlett-Packard Co. recently spun out a company called Leia, that like Ostendo, is trying to bring 3-D imaging to smartphones. Meanwhile, Facebook Inc. agreed in March to spend $2 billion to buy Oculus VR Inc., maker of the Oculus Rift headset that pulls users into 360-degree virtual environments.
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg was, in part, convinced of the value of virtual reality after he accidentally tried to set down a real world object on a virtual table while testing the Oculus Rift, forgetting for a moment that the table didn't exist in the real world, according to a person with knowledge of the matter.
Ostendo, tucked away in Southern California, is little-known but has raised $90 million from venture-capital firms and Peter Thiel, Facebook's first outside investor, and has secured some $38 million in government research and development contracts. A large bulk of that has come from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, or Darpa, the government's futurist agency that worked on the predecessor to the Internet and self-driving cars.
That capital has given Dr. El-Ghoroury, an immigrant from Egypt, the luxury to work for nearly a decade undisturbed. Ostendo now employs about 115 people, including scientists suited in scrubs and goggles who handle fragile nanotechnology equipment at a high-tech semiconductor lab.
The long effort has yielded the Ostendo Quantum Photonic Imager, an appropriately sci-fi-sounding name, which fuses an image processor with a wafer containing micro light-emitting diodes, or LEDs, alongside software that helps the unit properly render images.
During a recent test reviewed by The Wall Street Journal, Ostendo showed a working prototype: a set of six chips laid together that beamed a 3-D image of green dice spinning in the air. The image and motion appeared consistent, irrespective of the position of the viewer.
According to Ramesh Raskar, an associate professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, who is working on 3-D displays for MIT's Media Lab, Ostendo's advantage and the key to its 3-D capability is its resolution. The Retina display on Apple Inc.'s iPhone, for example, has about 300 dots per inch, Ostendo's chips are at about 5,000 dots per inch.
Ostendo, which says it has several opportunities with major handset manufacturers, expects the first 2-D projector unit to be in the hands of consumers before the summer of 2015. With a lens attached, it will be less than 0.5 cubic centimeters, roughly the size of the camera in the iPhone. It also expects to begin manufacturing the second version of the chip, with 3-D capability, in the second half of 2015. The cost to the consumer should be about $30 a chip, Ostendo estimates.
Dr. El-Ghoroury said the company still needs to improve the 3-D product and is aiming to make the pixels even smaller to achieve higher resolution.
Ultimately, the larger vision is to have Ostendo's chips everywhere electronic displays are needed, whether it is a glasses-free 3-D television screen, a smartwatch, or tables that can project hologram-like images.
So what happens in a world where 3-D and virtual reality is everywhere? Dr. El-Ghoroury predicts people's relationship with technology will change and breed a wave of business opportunities, on scale with the introduction of the iPhone.
"Imagine if everything coming back to you was in 3-D--all of your shopping, all of your gaming, every way you retrieve data," he said.