Posts Tagged ‘university’

Drivers on Cell Phones Are as Bad as Drunks – University of Utah …

A student talks on a hands-free cell phone while operating a high-tech driving simulator. The simulator was used during a University of Utah study that found motorists who talk on cell phones while driving are as …

Drivers on Cell Phones Clog Traffic – University of Utah News …

Joel Cooper, a University of Utah doctoral student in psychology, demonstrates how subjects in a new study talked on a cell phone while operating a driving simulator. The new Utah study found that motorists on cell …

When will AT&T allow upgrades to Android OS based phones?

I’m curious when customers can upgrade there Android OS to the latest version to protect againts known vulnerbilites like below.   http://isc.sans.org/diary.html?n&storyid=10891   A few days ago, a group of researchers from the University of Ulm in Germany published details about a security “vulnerability” in Android operating systems version 2.3.3 or lower. This is not really a vulnerability but the way that Android apps use the ClientLogin authentication protocol in order to access various Google’s services. As you can probably guess by now – the problem here is that ClientLogin sends authentication data over plain text HTTP connections. The Authorization: header, which is used (as the name implies) for authorization is sent as part of a GET request in plain text so any attacker who can see this traffic can easily extract this header and impersonate the victim. Depending on what you use, the token can give the attacker access to the Calendar and Contact Google applications. What’s even worse, the token is valid for 14 (!!!) days, so once it has been acquired by the attacker it can be easily used in the future. This issue is not limited only to Android – any other application that uses the ClientLogin protocol over plain text HTTP is subject to similar attacks, however since Android is so wide spread it looks as the most critical target for a potential attacker. How could an attacker exploit this? First of all, if you are connecting with your Android on any open wireless networks (i.e. Starbucks or similar), the attacker can easily sniff your traffic and collect all authentication tokens. Similarly, the attacker could setup a fake access point with a familiar name to get victims to connect to it – if the attacker is just forwarding traffic (and extracting authentication tokens), the victim will never even know what happens. Finally, attacks such as ARP poisoning are possible even on encrypted wireless networks (if the attacker can connect to it). What can you do? If possible, update Android to at least version 2.3.4 on your phones since that version uses HTTPS for authentication. In today’s world, there is absolutely no reason not to use SSL to encrypt everything.

Phone Oximeter saves lives, puts Journey’s lawyers on red alert (video)

We’ll be honest with you, we don’t know a lot about marketing healthcare devices to everyday people, so perhaps posting a goofy YouTube video with some re-written classic rock songs is standard practice in the industry. Whatever the case, the University of British Columbia’s Electrical & Computer Engineering in Medicine team managed to bring its Phone Oximeter to our attention, and all said, this could be a handy little device for monitoring vitals outside a hospital setting. The meter hooks up to a smartphone — an iPhone for trials, but we’re told it works with Android, Windows, and others — displaying the wearer’s blood oxygen level and heart and respiratory rates, and transmitting the readings to the hospital. The department has already done some field testing with the system, trying it out at the Vancouver General Hospital and bringing it to Uganda, where low cost medical devices and Journey spoofs are in high demand. Video probably only meant for its creators’ friends and family after the break. [Thanks, Walter] Continue reading Phone Oximeter saves lives, puts Journey’s lawyers on red alert (video) Phone Oximeter saves lives, puts Journey’s lawyers on red alert (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 19 May 2011 13:44:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

Charging cell phones with dirt power | Smartplanet

Phone battery running low? Well get lower, down to the ground. Harvard University researchers have created a microbial fuel cell for off-grid, Sub-Sah.

Charging cell phones with dirt power | Smartplanet

Phone battery running low? Well get lower, down to the ground. Harvard University researchers have created a microbial fuel cell for off-grid, Sub-Sah.

Above Average Jane: Cell Phone Ban Passes PA House

Moreover, studies from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, Virginia Tech, Carnegie Mellon and the University of Utah have all shown that drivers who talk or text on their hand-held cell phones are three to four times …

Flexible PaperPhone wants to get bent out of shape (video)

We love our smartphones (in part) because they’re flexible, in the sense that they are mighty multitasking machines. Researchers from Queen’s University in Ontario Canada, however, want flexible phones in a literal sense — less five-tool player , and more master contortionist . Using a ductile e-ink display and elastic electronic underpinnings, they created a device called the PaperPhone that literally bends to its user’s will. Curling the corners of the device isn’t just for show, either, as folding the phone is how users navigate menus and make calls. We aren’t completely sold on the idea of a bend-based UI, but we’re definitely digging the lithe and lightweight phone form factor. Video of the new flexi-phone is after the break. Continue reading Flexible PaperPhone wants to get bent out of shape (video) Flexible PaperPhone wants to get bent out of shape (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 04 May 2011 16:03:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

Moorhead students on the dangers of cell-phone indiscretion | On …

Three Minnesota State University – Moorhead students have won a $500 prize for making the video (above) on the dangers of sending risque cell – phone photos. Now can they make one about the dangers and distractions of texting in class? …

New cellphone brain impact study has expert advising users to take …

Use the phones but be smart about the risks involved, says a University of Alabama in Huntsville professor.