Home Media server from Apple [ December 29th, 2008 ] Posted in » Latest gadgets and Technology

9to5Mac reports that Apple has been working on a home media server to access your iTunes and other files anywhere you have internet access. The site compares it to HP’s just updated Media Smart Server which offers a centralized location for backup, storage and file delivery to your computers locally as well as remotely:

Your music, photos, videos and other media are part of your life — but they’re scattered over multiple computers, disk drives, CDs, DVDs, and MP3 players…. Macs and iPods too. The HP MediaSmart Server centralizes all your files, from all your home computers, in one place so you can grab them anywhere you have an internet connection and share how you want.

Apple’s take on the system would reportedly expand out Time Capsule’s functionality from being a single drive backup system into a more robust multi-drive backup server. In addition, tie ins would be made to Apple’s MobileMe services to deliver access to your files and media from anywhere on the internet.

9to5mac suggests that media could also be shared to your iPhone and iPod touch, providing full access to your media while mobile. The device could also serve media files to other computers at home as well as to your Apple TV.

Source: Macrumors.com

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“Technological Doping” at the Olympics?

This article posted a Dailytech.com is quite interesting. If you had a chance to take a look at the men’s 4×100m relay then you should have noticed it. Not to demerit the US Olympic Team victory but for sure they have something “different” compared to the rest. What was that?

——–>  TECHNOLOGY  <———–

Check this out:

Source: DailyTech.com

The 2008 Olympics have barely begun, and already eight records in swimming have tumbled. Some are not just falling, but being broken by improbable margins. In the men’s 4×100m relay, for instance, the record was smashed by an astounding four seconds. In April, at the world championships in Manchester England, eight more records were broken.

All these record-breaking swimmers had one thing in common. They were wearing Speedo’s new swimsuit, the “Fastskin” LZR Racer.

The LZR Racer breathes high tech. Speedo designed the suit with input from NASA, ran tests on more than 100 different fabrics, and conducted body scans of world-class swimmers. The ultra-thin suit material repels water, reduces muscle oscillations, and lowers hydrodynamic drag by up to 10%. The individual panels are ultrasonically welded together, rather than stitched. Speedo even claims it increases a swimmer’s oxygen efficiency. It can take 30 minutes for a swimmer to struggle into it and, once on, shoehorns the body into a more aerodynamic shape.

The first time the suit was put on in an official meet, three world records were broken.

Many would say Speedo’s breakthrough product has an undeniable benefit. But it also has its detractors. It is rumored to add buoyancy, something which would break competitive rules. It’s also very expensive — $500 apiece, and professional swimmers must replace it every 10th swim.

Worse, many teams and individual swimmers have contractual obligations which bar them from wearing the Racer. According to some, this gives an unfair competitive advantage. Alberto Castagnetti, coach of the Italian swim team — which wears a rival brand — calls the suit “technological doping”. Australian coach Forbes Carlisle has written an open letter calling for it to be banned outright.

Speedo VP Stuart Isaac says technological progress aiding to break records is a natural process. “That’s the nature of sport, whether it’s tennis rackets or golf clubs or new running shoes or the composition of running tracks”.

Kirsty Coventry of Zimbabwe, who was wearing the LZR Racer today when she broke the world record in the women’s 100-meter backstroke, says swimming must keep up with technology. “It’s a great suit. For me, putting the suit on, mentally, it’s time to go fast”. Michael Phelps, who also wears the suit, stands to win a cool $1 million from Speedo if he breaks the Olympic record of seven gold medals in swimming. He calls the suit a “rocket”.

Advances in training and new swimming pool designs are also aiding the quest to break records. But none of these bears the controversy of Speedo’s revolutionary baby. The suit was approved by FINA, the international body governing swimming, which says claims about added buoyancy are “unproven”.  Heeding calls to ban the suit now would be considered arbitrary. Allowing other racers to wear the suit despite endorsement contracts would require other manufacturers to tacitly admit their products are inferior.

Certainly no decision will be made until after the 2008 Olympics end.  Until then, expect to see those on the podium wearing the familiar shark-colored swimsuit.


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August 12th, 2008 | Leave a Comment

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