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Stars Most Stylish Selfie of the Week

Stars Most Stylish Selfie of the Week

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5-Minute Outfit Idea

5-Minute Outfit Idea: An Effortless, Polished Look to Try This Weekend.

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Facebook suffers outage affecting users worldwide!! .

Wednesday, 8 October 2014

Prosthetic Hand Restores Touch, Heals Phantom Pain

Prosthetic Hand Restores Touch, Heals Phantom Pain

By Tanya Lewis, Staff Writer
LiveScience


The sensations that many people take for granted — the featherweight feel of a piece of fruit, that lets you hold a cherry without crushing it, or the soft touch of a loved one's hand — are beyond the reach of many amputees. But a new kind of prosthetic could restore sensation for people who have lost a limb, as well as relieve their pain, researchers say.
One patient who tried the new prosthetic said he can now feel textures such as cotton balls and sandpaper again. Igor Spetic lost his right hand in an industrial accident four years ago, but when he wears the prosthetic hand, the device stimulates the nerves in his upper arm, allowing him to feel.
What's more, after he began using the prosthetic, Spetic no longer felt the phantom limb pain he had suffered since his injury.
A second patient who lost his right hand and forearm in an accident, Keith Vonderhuevel, also said that most of his phantom limb pain disappeared after he began using the new prosthetic, according to the study, published today (Oct. 8) in the journal Science Translational Medicine. [See Video of "Feeling" Prosthetic Hand]
It's not the first prosthetic to restore touch to an amputee, but it may provide a more "natural" sensation than earlier devices, said head researcher Dustin Tyler, a biomedical engineer at Case Western Reserve in Cleveland, Ohio. The device's system has now been in testing for more than two years.

It's electrifying
When Spetic and Vonderhuevel lost their arms, the connections to the muscles and the nerves in their hands were severed. The new prosthetic is covered in pressure sensors, and it works by sending electrical signals from these sensors to the intact nerves in what remains of the patient's arm. The brain interprets these signals to mean the patient has a hand that is touching something.
In the study, a team of surgeons implanted three electrode cuffs around the nerves in Spetic's forearm and two cuffs in Vonderhuevel's arm, and connected the cuffs to the prosthetic arm by wires through the skin.
The cuffs allowed Spetic and Vonderhuevel to feel 19 and 16 distinct points on their prosthetic hands, respectively. For example, one sensation point might correspond to the index finger.

All natural
Often when a nerve is stimulated using electrodes, patients report that the sensation feels tingly or prickly, a bit like having pins and needles, Tyler said. But in the new device the engineers varied the pattern and intensity of the stimulation — a technique that hadn't been used before — and found the system was able to deliver sensation that felt much more natural, he said.
"When we first turned the stimulation on, the subject reported that it was the first time he had felt his hand since the accident," Tyler said.
After that first time, the researchers continued to fine-tune the stimulation, to allow the patients to feel different textures. "We don't believe the way we're stimulating the nerves is exactly natural," Tyler said. "But if there's something close, the brain likes to interpret it as something it knows."
They developed the device to the point at which Spetic, while blindfolded, could tell the difference between sandpaper, a smooth surface and a ridged surface with his touch-sensitive prosthetic hand. He could even distinguish between two different textures on different parts of the hand at the same time, the researchers said.
Vonderhuevel tried holding grapes or a cherry in his prosthetic hand without dropping or breaking them, both with and without the electrical stimulation."When the sensation's on, it's not too hard," he said in a statement. "When it's off, you make a lot of grape juice."

No pain, all gain
Both patients suffered from phantom limb pain, a sensation that seems to emanate from the missing limb (Spetic described his pain as a vice crushing his fist). Yet unexpectedly, both Spetic and Vonderhuevel reported that their pain has almost totally disappeared since they started using the new prosthetic, even when the stimulation is turned off.
"We don't know if it's because now that they're getting natural feedback, the brain is reincorporating the [prosthetic] hand, or because of other mechanisms," Tyler said, but "it doesn't appear related to the stimulation directly."
The prosthetic has been working for two-and-a-half years for Spetic and one-and-a-half for Vonderhuevel, while other devices that aim to do the same thing have been used by patients for a month or less.
To date, the patients have only used the device in the lab, but in the future, the researchers would like to develop a fully implantable system, like a pacemaker, which patients could use in their own homes. Tyler also hopes that more sophisticated sensors will be developed that can detect what the prosthetic hand is touching.
While the technology still has to clear regulatory hurdles before it makes it to market, it could be available within five to 10 years, Tyler said.

Is this Apple's next iPad Air?

Is this Apple's next iPad Air?

David Pierce
The Verge 


Apple's October event, traditionally the day the company announces the next generation of iPads, appears to be set for October 16th. That means leaks should start coming fast and furious — and Tinhte.vn may have one of the best yet. The Vietnamese site published a set of pictures purporting to be the next iPad Air, featuring basically all of the upgrades we've been expecting from the next generation of Apple's tablets.


Most obvious is just how thin these tablets are — reportedly just 7mm, about the same as the new iPhone 6 and 6 Plus. (The photos basically show a blown-up iPhone 6, which seems safe to assume the Air will be.) There's what appears to be a Touch ID sensor on the front, redesigned volume buttons, and very little else that appears new.


There's no mute switch / rotation lock on this model, but there are any number of reasons for that. Tinhte.vn guesses that it's been removed for the sake of thinness, but since the same switch fits fine on the iPhone 6 that explanation doesn't quite hold up. There's also an odd, out-of-place hole on the side, and some unpolished, rough metal on the bottom, so it's clear this isn't a finished device, and may just be missing a few final touches.

There are plenty of other rumors about the iPad Air, but whether or not Tinhte.vn's photos are of the new model or not they depict essentially the device we expect to see next week. Thinner, lighter, Touch ID, some improved specs, maybe an anti-reflective screen, but the same iPad Air as ever. We'll be there next week to see the new models in person, and to find out if Apple has anything truly surprising in store.

HTC Focuses on Images with Desire Eye Phone and Re Camera

HTC Focuses on Images with Desire Eye Phone and Re Camera

Nathan Olivarez-Giles
The Wall Street Journal.


HTC is hoping that a focus on photos and video will lure in consumers this holiday season. On Wednesday, HTC introduced the Desire Eye, a smartphone with a 13-megapixel front-facing camera for high-quality selfies, and the Re, a camera built to compete with GoPro's popular Hero cameras.

ReThe Re—whose name makes us think of email subject lines—is HTC's first full-on camera. It's a unique device, shaped like a periscope. There's no view finder, and there isn't even a power button.

The only control is a big chrome shutter button right behind the wide 146-degree angle lens. Nigel Newby-House, HTC's executive director of product planning, argues that this sort of lens, paired with a 16-megapixel sensor, makes it ideal for parties and family events.

When you pick up the Re, its internal sensors switch it to standby mode. As long as the battery is charged, the camera will be ready to shoot. Tap the shutter button for a still shot. A longer press tells the Re to shoot 1080p HD video. There's also a time-lapse mode built in.

It's pretty small, measuring four inches long and an inch in diameter. Battery life comes in at about an hour and a half of continuous use, Newby-House said. Not quite as seafaring as a GoPro, it's at least swimming-pool friendly, waterproof down to a meter for as long as 50 minutes.

"What GoPro has done for the adrenaline junkie is fantastic," he said. "But Re is built for birthday parties, for BBQs, concerts. This is viewfinder-less imaging for the rest of us." The everyday use is what informed the Re's shape, Newby-House said. "The form factor makes it easy to know where the button is at," he said. "We didn't want you to have to worry about dropping this as you're running around."

Because it has no viewfinder, HTC will provide an app for Android and iOS, that will serve as look through its lens, a remote control, and a way to move photos and video to Dropbox and Google Drive.

The $200 Re will hit HTC's website and Best Buy later this month in three colors: navy blue, coral orange and white. The Re will ship with an 8GB microSD card. AT&T, T-Mobile and Verizon will start selling the Re in November, in time for the holidays.

Desire Eye

The Desire Eye has two cameras, both 13 megapixels. The difference is that the front facing camera has a 22mm lens, which Newby-House says is better for group selfies, while the rear camera uses a 28mm lens. There's a dual-LED flash on both the front and back.

In the past, HTC's Desire line has always been a step below the flagship One devices, with lesser specs and pricing. But the new Desire Eye features much of the same guts as the HTC One (M8), the company's current top-of-the-line phone: Inside there's a quad-core Qualcomm Snapdragon processor, 2GB of RAM, and MicroSD card slot. The Desire Eye's 5.2-inch 1080p display is actually larger than the One's 5-inch screen.

The Desire Eye will be exclusive to AT&T in the U.S., and it'll go on sale sometime later this year. Newby-House said that AT&T will announce when and how much in the coming weeks, so we don't yet know whether it'll cost the same, or more, or less than the One.

The Re and Desire Eye arrive at a crucial time for HTC. After years of struggling to compete with Samsung and Apple, it's finally found profitability in its last two quarters, but sales are still declining, and market share is still shrinking. Meanwhile, threats from upstart Chinese phone makers loom. The focus on imaging show HTC's willingness to take risks with the Re and Desire Eye. Another upcoming risk: The company is expected to launch a new Nexus tablet with Google. (The last time HTC made a tablet, 2011's Flyer, it was a dud.)

Whether or not consumers will respond to the company's new products—or will even get the message through the marketing noise made by Apple and Samsung going into the holiday season—is another matter.

Apple is now the fifth-largest PC maker in the world, if you ask IDC

Apple is now the fifth-largest PC maker in the world, if you ask IDC

Jon Fingas
Engadget


Apple is historically a small player in the PC world compared to many of its peers, but it may have just entered the big leagues. IDC estimates that the company jumped to 6.3 percent market share in the third quarter of the year, making it the fifth-largest PC builder worldwide -- a feat it hasn't managed in decades. It's still no major threat to heavy-hitters such as Lenovo (20 percent), HP (18.8 percent) and Dell (13.3 percent), but IDC believes that a combination of slight price cuts and improved demand in "mature" markets like North America have helped it grow in a computer market that's still shrinking.

With that said, the crew in Cupertino probably isn't breaking out the party streamers right away. Gartner contends that ASUS claimed the fifth-place spot with 7.3 percent, and that Apple only sits in the top five in its native US. So what gives? In short, it's a difference in methodology; Gartner and IDC don't have official shipping numbers from everyone, and there's enough wiggle room in their estimates that it wouldn't take much for the rankings to change. As precise as these figures may be,
you'll get a better sense of how Apple fared when it posts its fiscal results (and real shipping numbers) in a couple of weeks.


Source: IDC, Gartner

New iPads, Mac system expected at Oct. 16 event

New iPads, Mac system expected at Oct. 16 event

Associated Press 




SAN FRANCISCO — Apple has sent invites to an Oct. 16 event during which it's expected to show off new iPad models and an update to its Mac OS system.

The company may also use the event to launch its new digital payment service, Apple Pay. The new iPhones released last month came with a wireless chip capable of making such payments.

In keeping with its usual practice, the company isn't saying what it plans to announce. Instead, it sent a cryptic invitation to reporters and analysts. This one has the headline: "It's been way too long."
Apple used its October event last year to announce a thinner full-size tablet, the iPad Air, and the

"Mavericks" update to Mac OS. The "Yosemite" Mac update is due out soon.
Next week's event will be held at the iconic tech company's headquarters in Cupertino, California

Selena Has a Slumber Party with Her Girls!

Selena Has a Slumber Party with Her Girls!

Instagram
Selena Gomez relationship with Justin Bieber is permanently rocky, so it makes sense that Sel would want to take some time off all the drama and just hang with her girls.
She did just that the other night when she and some friends stayed in, put on their matching owl onesie pajamas, and got silly at home. “slumber party x out takes,” Selena captioned the pic.
The girls look like they had a blast just relaxing and playing around. We hope it was the break Selena needed!

Pics That Prove Taylor Swift Even Looks Flawless in the Rain

Pics That Prove Taylor Swift Even Looks Flawless in the Rain

Credit: Tumblr


While Taylor shows off her supermodel strut, we would be slipping on this slick sidewalk.

Credit: Splash News


This pic from Taylor's rainy day stroll looks like it could be a scene from a movie!
Credit: GC Images


She totally rocks this classic trenchcoat.
Credit: GC Images

NO ONE CAN LOOK MORE STUNNING THAN TAYLOR IN THAT DRESS

Credit: Neil Mockford/Alex Huckle/GC Images)

We have never looked anywhere near as glamorous holding an umbrella.

Credit: WireImage


Her flawless NYC street style simply cannot be dampened by a drizzle.


Credit: Splash News

Even with the obviously cold winds and pouring rain, Tay looks camera-ready.
Credit: Splash News

Happy Birthday: See Pics of Bella Thorne's Total Style Evolution

Happy Birthday: See Pics of Bella Thorne's Total Style Evolution

OCT 8, 2014


Today's a very exciting day for Bella Thorne: she's celebrating her 17th birthday! Recently, Bella has been showing off her incredible sense of style at high-fashion events like Milan and New York Fashion Weeks, but she has always impressed us with her bold red carpet statements ... even when she was a kid!
In honor of her big day, we've rounded up  stylish pics to show how Bella's style has transformed from girly and trendy to totally cool!
Credit: Getty


Credit: FilmMagic

Credit: Getty

Credit: FilmMagic

Credit: FilmMagic

Credit:WireImage



Credit: FilmMagic

iOS 8 Adoption Stalls At 47% Of Users After Three Weeks

iOS 8 Adoption Stalls At 47% Of Users After Three Weeks

Natasha Lomas
TechCrunch


Three weeks after Apple released the latest flavor of its mobile operating system, adoption of iOS 8 has stalled at 47% of users — creeping up only one percentage point since September 21, the last time Cupertino reported the stat on its App Store Distribution page.

The latest figures, which measure adoption on October 5, report 47% of users using the prior iOS 7 flavor (vs 49% when Apple last reported this), and 6% on an earlier iteration of its mobile OS (vs 5% when last reported).

iOS 8 starting to roll out to users on September 17 but a series of bugs have dogged the release thus far, which may explain why adoption rates are no longer moving the needle.

Just prior to releasing iOS 8 Apple had also pulled its flagship HealthKit feature, which had been due to be there from launch, burning developers who had added HealthKit integration in the process because Apple also yanked their apps from the App Store at the last minute.

An early update to iOS 8 — 8.0.1 — was rushed out, touted as a fix for HealthKit, as well as various other bugs including a glitchy implementation of third party keyboards.
However this update ran into trouble, with some users complaining that 8.0.1 knocked out their cell service. Apple was forced to pull the update and provide instructions for users who had updated on how to roll back to iOS 8 so they could restore their phone signal.

Another quick fix followed — 8.0.2 — to patch the issues 8.0.1 was supposed to have addressed but do so without zapping cellular reception on iPhone 6 and 6 Plus devices.

Given the various bugs and buggy patches it’s perhaps not surprising that additional users have not exactly been rushing to update to iOS 8. Waiting til the kinks are ironed out may look like a more sensible option to many.

iOS 8 also requires a large amount of free space on a device if the user wants to update wirelessly. (Plugging into a Mac or PC to do the update removes this requirement but is obviously less convenient. It also requires the user to own a computer — not a given in these mobile centric, ‘post-PC’ times.)

MacRumours, which noted Apple had updated its official iOS 8 adoption figures earlier, points out that Apple’s officially reported rate of adoption is similar to adoption data from Mixpanel. Adoption of iOS 8 vs iOS 7 also looks far slower, with Mixpanel recording the rate of adoption of last year’s flavor of iOS at almost 70% 20 days after release vs less than 50% for iOS 8.

Mercedes built a self-driving truck that could save thousands of lives every year

Mercedes built a self-driving truck that could save thousands of lives every year

Chris Welch
The Verge

Mercedes-Benz believes it's built a self-driving semi-truck that could eventually help cut down on highway tragedies that kill thousands of drivers each year. The Future Truck 2025 can't navigate city streets autonomously like Google's fleet of cars, but is perfectly capable of holding its own on the open road — and that's where sleep-deprived truck drivers most often pose a threat to people driving smaller passenger vehicles. Using a combination of advanced dual cameras, radar sensors, and the latest blind-spot technology (Mercedes refers to the system as "Highway Pilot"), the Future Truck 2025 analyzes the road to get a sense of surrounding traffic and terrain. The "highway" part of that is critical; a driver is still required to get the truck onto the interstate and successfully merge into traffic.
But once that's done, a driver can sit back and relax in the Future Truck — with Samsung tablet in hand, according to Mercedes renderings — even swiveling his or her seat away from the steering wheel to reach a more comfortable resting position. It's hard to envision an interior that's more premium than what Mercedes has here, with various touch panels throughout, wood floors, ambient lighting, and plenty of space to kick back. On the outside, it's not quite as aerodynamic or attention-grabbing as Walmart's truck of the future, but it still stands out when compared to your everyday semi
When the truck is driving itself down highways at 50mph, its striking front LED grid changes from white to a pulsing blue color. That's a clever visual cue for nearby drivers, but as Wired notes it's also one that could run into trouble with highway and road regulations. That said, Mercedes has some time to work those things out and get the legislation signed that would allow these on the road; after all, it's called the Future Truck 2025 because the automaker doesn't expect this concept to become a commercially viable truck for at least a decade. But if it does, it could make those long slogs and the entire profession more appealing to newcomers — and truck drivers could use the help.

you'll Never Believe How Fans Violated Zayn Malik's Privacy

You'll Never Believe How Fans Violated Zayn Malik's Privacy

GETTY IMAGES

Although One Direction's Where We Are tour ended without much controversy (except from fans bummed that the awesomeness of their tour was over), Zayn Malik's name has been dragged into a lot of craziness lately. After rumors that he finally married Perrie Edwards turned out to be false, Directioners are furious that two fans stole the singer's bag!
According to the Twitter account PeruInLuvWith1d, two girls from Argentina went to the airport to see the band. Their hair stylist Lou Teasdale got swarmed with a bunch of people, and then the chaos started.
"One of them or Lou — I don't remember — had that bag with them but dropped it in front of these girls. They took it and they said they tried to give it back but everyone was gone," the source said.
"They thought it would be full of Lou's make-up so they opened it and saw clothes that Zayn used while he was in Peru, like the Bob Marley shirt. The book with his drawings is from a menu at one of the hotels the boys stayed at."
Instead of trying to contact their management and return the bag, the girls made a video detailing its contents, and screenshots have been appearing online. Directioners immediately freaked out, dissing the girls for violating Zayn's privacy, and even causing #ZaynDeservesPrivacy to trend on Twitter. While we hope we gets his bag back, it's still so crazy that they managed to grab it without anyone noticing!

Taylor Swift Complimented Lorde's Hair in the Cutest Way Possible

Taylor Swift Complimented Lorde's Hair in the Cutest Way Possible



If there's anything more amazing than both 
Taylor Swift and Lorde's curly hairstyles, it's their incredible friendship. We couldn't stop gushing when we saw Taylor's latest tweet, where she complimented her BFF's spiral curls! Tay actually used Lorde's real name – Ella Marija Lani Yelich-O'Connor – to make a fun joke out of the lines of her new song, Shake It Off.


The tweet leads to Lorde's latest Instagram pic, which is a glam Polaroid taken at Taylor's show!

Her hair does look pretty amazing, and it's a perfect line from Taylor's catchy new hit!