ATMOS Magazine - Edition #1 - Note 7, iPhone 7, hackers and a patch that sees under your skin

- The tech loving shark

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Hello and good evening, good night or good morning, depending on your time zone!

I lovely introduce to you the first edition of ATMOS Magazine - bringing to you the news from the world of smartphones, computers, apps, new devices and gadgets, future technologies and others. Its goal is to keep you updated, informed and to answer your questions about tech.

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Getting right to the business, here is this week's featured headlines:

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Hackers Have Just Cracked The Internet’s Most Common Security Protocol, Here’s How To Protect Yourself

HTTPS is everywhere you look. Most social media sites use it, YouTube uses it, it’s a basic protocol for secure mail, and any website that takes a credit card uses it as a bare minimum. And unfortunately, researchers have just breached it in a method so simple that any idiot can do it. Read more on the original article here

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Flashy wearable patch see under your skin with no batteries and no wires

Developed by Jeonghyun Kim and colleagues, this stretchy, removable circuit affixes to the skin and sends readings to a smart device. The patch monitors heart rate, blood oxygen level and UV radiation exposure, without a battery or wires. Read more on the original article here

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This levitating phone charger can power your iPhone in mid air

Your phone isn't doing anything interesting while its charging, but a Canadian design company called AR Design wants to change that by making your phone float and spin in the air while it charges. Read more on the original article here

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Banner Health nailed by huge cyberattack that compromised personal data of 3.7 million people

Attackers reportedly gained access through payment processing systems for food and beverage purchases at the Phoenix-based health system. Read more on the original article here

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This may be our first good look at what the new iPhone 7 Plus (or Pro) will look like

As we start nearing the Fall, when Apple is expected to release the iPhone 7, rumors start having a lot of overlap. This video is no exception. Watch the video here

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Samsung’s new Galaxy Note has cemented a big change for Android phones

This week, the new Samsung Galaxy Note 7 has arrived with new specs and some top features. Read more here

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1980s toy robot arm converted to steam and other explorations

The video in question was of [The 8-bit Guy] doing a small restoration of a 1984 Radio Shack Armatron toy. Expecting a mess of wiring we were absolutely surprised to discover that the internals of the arm were all mechanical with only a single electric motor. Perhaps the motors were more expensive back then? Read the original article here

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The Mr. Robot Hack Report: Hacking Android phones with a rogue femtocell

Mr. Robot is a show built on hacks. The mother of all hacks serves as the big cliffhanger at the end of the show's first season, and nearly every plot development leading up to it was nudged along by some kind of exploit. It’s rare to get through an episode without at least one digital intrusion, often drawn from real life. Each week, we'll be running through Mr. Robot's C Y B E R activities — who got hacked, why, and how much magic would be required to make them actually work. Read more here

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STEEMIT TIPS:

Patronage and Profit: How to Get the Most out of Your Curation Time - Read here

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Keep your article up in the active section - When someone comments or when you edit your article, this show interest and you article would be in the active section, somewhere on top for a short period of time.

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THANKS and see you next week!

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If you have articles that you think are suitable for ATMOS Magazine, find @gaitan on Steemit Chat. ATMOS tries to keep its readers on this platform as much as it can. Also, if you find interesting articles, ATMOS would love to know.


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