Showing posts with label wireless. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wireless. Show all posts

Thursday, April 9, 2009

An expensive problem, a cheap solution

I saw this while watching the news yesterday (CP24 in case anyone's wondering)

Vaughan mayor's counter surveillance-measures cost taxpayers nearly $3,000

Linda Jackson, the besieged mayor of the city of Vaughan, is coming under scrutiny again after it was found that she spent nearly $3,000 to sweep her office for spying devices, a published report says.

Gino and Mary Ruffolo -- two Vaughan residents -- discovered that the mayor's office paid Protech Consult Services $2,730 for "manual and electronic counter surveillance," the Toronto Star reports.

The Ruffolos uncovered the information through a Freedom of Information request. The newspaper also reports that having the mayor's office swept for bugs was a practice used by Jackson's predecessor, Michael Di Biase, as well.

But it appears Vaughan is on its own when it comes to having the mayor's office checked for bugs. The mayors of Toronto, Brampton and Mississauga, among others, told the Star that they have not had similar checks, and they didn't even think about it.

Reports also say the company that performed the security check has links to a company cited for a possible conflict of interest due to links to a city staffer.

Mayor Jackson sent an email to the Star where she acknowledged that her office was checked for bugs, but she wouldn't say why.

Well, While I was flipping through The Star this morning, I came across this article....

$50 solves Vaughan mayor's 'bug' worry


http://doubledoublethoughts.blogspot.com - Ursula Lebana, owner of Spy Tech, holds a radio frequency bug detector Ursula Lebana has a $50 solution to Vaughan Mayor Linda Jackson's political problems – and 2 cents worth of advice.

"People never believe it, but 90 per cent of the time, it's the person you trust the most," says Lebana, who opened Canada's first "spy shop" back in 1991 and can attest to the fact that Cold Wars are still being waged in offices, marriages and even babies' bedrooms around the world.

And for $50, the embattled Jackson, who spent $3,000 in taxpayers' money last year to have her office swept for listening devices, could have rented one of Lebana's do-it-yourself bug detectors.

Lebana has armed everyone from entrepreneurs to parents with electronic surveillance gadgets since she hung a few Bond posters on the walls of her Yonge St. Spy Tech store and created the first Teddy cam to help parents keep an eye on their child's nanny.

But she's never been asked to sweep for bugs in a mayor's office.

"That's strange, now that I think about it," says Lebana, her thick German accent dropping to a perplexed whisper. "Maybe it's because they're only around for four years and then they're gone."



The revelation about Jackson is bound to be good for business at Lebana's shop, where stories of stalkings, break-ins or bad caregivers always seem to fuel paranoia that translates into the sales of more spy paraphernalia.

In fact, one of her most popular items – next to the $59 CheckMate Infidelity Test Kit – are DIY bug detectors, ideal for almost any office, which sell for $500 or rent for $50 a day.

Even in bad times, business is booming in the surveillance business, as a steady stream of customers line Spy Tech's two glass-enclosed display cases, trying out everything from pen recorders ($99 plus taxes) to baseball caps with hidden cameras ($295 plus the cost of a tiny video recorder).

Surprisingly, only one guy is wearing a trench coat. (let's hope that's not all he's wearing?.. just saying it all...don't tell me you weren't just thinking that!)

Lebana takes the business of spying seriously – well, seriously enough that the door of her cluttered office features two-way glass. Her son Hans, who manages the Ottawa store, walks in wearing Men in Black sunglasses, even on a grey day.

On the other side of the office door, things get decidedly more high-tech, with steady demands for the latest digital devices from business owners looking to crack down on employee theft or spouses launching sting operations against husbands or wives they suspect of cheating.

There's also a fairly constant stream of people seeking hidden cameras that let them keep an eye, right from their office computers, on how their children or elderly parents are being cared for when they aren't around.

When the big boys call – i.e. the banks – Lebana has a secret weapon, retired RCMP security expert Doug Ralph, a good-natured guy with more than $250,000 worth of counter surveillance equipment. The latest is a $38,000 gadget that can sweep a bookshelf-lined room in under 20 minutes and detect a bug hidden in a binding. He admits he's made that rare find just "a few times."

Ralph has seen both sides of bugs, having planted them for the RCMP as part of organized-crime cases, and now hunting for them when corporations suspect competitors of trying to crack into their phone lines or computers.

"I try to stay away from the domestic issues. They can get pretty messy."

But sometimes trouble just finds him, like when he was driving downtown recently. His monitoring devices picked up voices coming from a Bay Street bank.

"It was a financial planner talking to clients, discussing their assets and where to direct (investments), their names, phone numbers and all this other information. I made sure that what I overheard got back to the director of security so that he would know that one of his employees was using a wireless (headset) so he wouldn't have to stay saddled to his desk – and I was hearing it a block away with my equipment."

(Note: When you use a wireless headset, the base keeps transmitting even when you're not using the phone. Ralph drove by City Hall late one night and could hear a cleaner vacuuming an office.)

Lebana considers what she does "regular things for regular people," and laughs that her German accent – she was born in East Germany but grew up near Frankfurt – is always a big hit with first-time visitors to the shop.

"A lot of them joke that I'm KGB or Mossad, because of the accent."

About 50 per cent of the time, when people think they are being spied on, they really are, Lebana contends. And almost always it's by the person they least suspect.

She's got lots of stories to prove her point, the most telling about a women who was terrified after months of stalking and scratching at her apartment door that escalated into death threats. The frightened woman took her brother-in-law to Spy Tech and he helped her install a peephole camera that turned up no suspects, although the harassment continued.

It was only when Lebana's staff installed a tiny surveillance camera in an exit sign down the hallway that the culprit was outed.

It was the brother-in-law. Seemed he quite liked getting her panicked calls for help and rushing in like a white knight.


in case any of you were curious or wondering, Spy Tech is located at:

Spy Tech
2005 Yonge St
Toronto, ON M4S 1Z8
(416) 482-8588
Get Directions from where you are


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Sunday, February 1, 2009

PlanOn introduces the world’s SMALLEST full-page printer

PlanOn, the makers of the award-winning Docupen portable scanner pen, have just announced the availability of its PS910 PrintStik ($299.99), billed as the world’s smallest full-page printer.

http://doubledoublethoughts.blogspot.com PlanOn's PS910 PrintStik is a full-page printer despite its teeny dimensions at just 1-inch (height) x 10.75-inches (width) x 1.9-inches (deep).

While a USB 2.0 port is available, this 1.5-pound mobile printer also supports Bluetooth connectivity to wirelessly print from devices such as BlackBerry smartphones and laptop computers. A built-in rechargeable Lithium-Ion battery (included) powers the printer.

Whether you’re in your car, at the airport or in a hotel room, on-the-go types can now print emails, documents and images on-the-spot. PrintStik uses Planon’s Advanced Thermal Technology, and can print up to 3 smudge-free pages per minute on thermal paper (a 20-page self-contained thermal paper cartridge is included).

But supplies can be pricey. Replacement thermal paper rolls cost $24.99 for a 3-pack. Full technical specs and photos are available at the company's website.


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Wednesday, January 28, 2009

New gloves for touch-based smartphones

Cold climate smartphone owners forced to wear gloves this time of year know it can be tough –- if not impossible -– to use the touch-based screens unless you take off the glove to use a fingertip. A new product aims to solve this familiar Canadian dilemma.
http://doubledoublethoughts.blogspot.com - Smartphone owners forced to wear gloves this time of year know it can be tough to use the touch-based screens unless you take off the glove to use a fingertip in the cold weather. A new product aims to solve this dilemma.border= This common problem -- especially this time of year -- is solved with the new Tävo Gloves ($39.99; tavoproducts.com), designed for use with phones such as the Apple iPhone and BlackBerry Storm.

The insulation in regular gloves usually prevents touch-screen navigation.
But these gloves have an electrically conductive overlay of nylon strips and silver sheen on the index finger and thumb, which Tävo calls “PlayPoint” technology.

Reviews of the product have found them to be comfortable, relatively warm and effective in controlling iPods and iPhones. What people reviewing them have said is that they also liked the silicon material on the palm and fingers "for an increased grip".


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Friday, January 9, 2009

LG announces cell phone watch

Eat your heart out Dick Tracy!

Announced at last year’s CES, LG Electronics today will show off the world’s first 3G cell phone watch, dubbed the GD910, at the 42nd annual Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas.

The wrist-mounted phone houses a 1.4-inch touch-screen which can be used to dial a number, in case you don’t want to use the voice-dialing option. The GD910 also features Bluetooth connectivity (so it’ll work with your wireless headset), a speakerphone, text-to-speech technology (hear your text messages read to you) and a built-in MP3 player.


It also makes video calls, thanks to a small camera in the top right corner of the screen.


The WCDMA (wideband code division multiple access) phone supports the latest 7.2Mbps (megabits per second) HSPA (high-speed packet access) data system, so file downloads should be super fast.

Want to be accessible while going for a swim? LG says the GD910 is also waterproof.

Without reading any specs, we’re curious as to the size of this watch -- but you can be rest assured it’ll be on the bulky side, which might be a turnoff for some sci-fi lovers itching to wear this thing.

The price for the GD910 hasn't been announced yet, nor are there any carriers publicly committed to the product, but it’s expected to go on sale in Asia and Europe sometime by mid-2009.