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Set top boxes aren ;t exactly mobile tech, but Samsung has unveiled its new one at this year Mobile World Congress. The HomeSync aims to work with your mobile devices and serve has a hefty little Android-powered box for all your media. A 1TB box. Running Android Jelly Bean version unspecified the HomeSync will let users push apps, games, and other media to the an HDTV. No one actually saying Google TV here, but the box will have access to the Google Play store, and can push all that goodness through to your TV at 1080p through its HDMI 1.4 connection. Inside, the HomeSync has an 8GB SSD for OS and basic storage and a gig of RAM, but behind that sits a massive 1TB hard drive that should be enough to satisfy even the most ardent digital pack-rats. Samsung has no illuisions that one person would endeavor to fill that space or should endeavor , so the HomeSync can support up to 8 different accounts, each of which gets its own little slice, separate from the others, complete with encryption if you want. The HomeSync will be
stanley flask available in the US sometime April 2013, but there no world on how much it ;ll cost, or whether or not it can
stanley italia handle streaming protocols like Miricast, so don ;t lay down all your judgement quite yet. But if nothing else, it bound to be the spiffiest 1TB hard drive out there. [CNET]
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Ever wonder what it would be like to have a bunch of people staring at you while you try to do your job Scientists have, and they ;ve come to some interesting conclusions. Fans usually catch all the screw ups of any given show. But perhaps the screw ups are there because of the fans. How well would you do your job if a large group of people sat there a
stanley mugs nd watched you do it Some of you are actors or announcers, and so would reply, Very well, thank you, but to be fair, you have probably had practice doing your job. The effect of a large group of people watching, especially watching the unprepared, has b
stanley cup een studied since the 1930s. Psychologists wondered how an audience that did nothing but passively watch would cause people to act. They found that an audience pushed behavior to extremes. Those who were asked to do simple jobs, or jobs that they had done so often that they could perform them confidently, did even better with an audience watching. They were more focused, and had more of an incentive not to screw up. If a person were asked to do something difficult or unfamiliar, they tripped all over themselves. People who might have done something competently, if more slowly, were making mistakes and second-guessing themselves. Pressure only works when the subject is able to get results. When a show, book, or m
stanley cup ovie acquires a fan following, it not long before there a fan exodus. Fans say it isn ;t as good as it once was, or that it ha