Wednesday, September 16, 2015

SanDisk’s Connect Wireless Stick Is A Storage Problem Solver

One of the main issues I often encounter with mobile devices, is how delicate the storage can be. Smartphones and tablets constantly come with larger storage capacities as well as microSD card slots to offer more options for storage. However, it can still be an issue. Of course, there is always cloud storage, but then you always need a connection to the internet, there is the issue with data allowances and not forgetting data speeds.

Over the last couple of weeks, I've been using the SanDisk Connect Wireless Stick and it has solved a number of my more major storage issues. In basic terms, this is simply a flash drive. However, this is no ordinary flash drive and instead is a good example of where the tech will likely be going in the next few years. The SanDisk Connect Wireless Stick allows the ability to wirelessly connect to your data and stored files, music and videos and will change how you view flash drives.

Sandisk AH-6

For context, right now on my desk is a OnePlus One, Moto X Play, Honor 7, Samsung Galaxy S6 Edge and Galaxy Note 5. Now, all of these devices I have to spend some time with to be able to write about them. See how they hold up when at the gym, test what battery life I am getting and generally get a more hand-on feel for them. The problem is that they do not have my data on them. If I take the Galaxy Note 5 to the gym today, all my music is stored locally on my daily driver so I have noting to listen to. Well, this is where I have found the biggest use for the SanDisk Connect Wireless Stick. Any files you send to this stick can be accessed by any and all devices that you have. So I can literally pick up anyone of the smartphones, throw the SanDisk Connect Wireless Stick in my gym bag and I can listen to all my music without even actually touching the SanDisk Connect Wireless Stick. Simply turn it on, connect to the SanDisk Connect Wireless Stick's own WiFi signal and listen away. Even if there is no connection to the internet in general, as the SanDisk Connect Wireless Stick broadcasts its own signal locally, all files are accessible from any device.

Sandisk AH-13

The gym scenario is just one aspect. For instance, while reviewing these smartphones, I'll be taking screenshots of all the devices, as well as images of all of the devices and also camera samples of them all. With so many different device at the same time, it can be difficult to keep track of everything. Well, again, this is where the SanDisk Connect Wireless Stick has changed things for me personally. Now, once I have taken all the screenshots or camera samples that I need, using the android app, I just send them all straight to the SanDisk Connect Wireless Stick. Again, this works for any device and allows access to all the images from any device.

sandisk

Then when i get back to my desktop, everything is there again, in one central position. All the images, from all the different devices, centrally located and accessible from any of my devices at any time and even without a connection. For me personally, this is the biggest benefit I have seen with the Connect Wireless Stick.

However, it is also quite useful for non-work items too. Any videos I store on the Stick can be instantly sent to TV. Not to mention, if I am at a friend's house, I can grant them access to and send to their TV's or devices. So if you don't have to worry about a bunch of different smartphones, the SanDisk Connect Wireless Stick works the same way for any device that you have. If you are at home, you can access any files on the SanDisk Connect Wireless Stick from your computer, tablet, smartphone or smartwatch. It does not matter what devices you have, what matters is that it can be accessed by any of them. A central wirefree point for all your storage. It is certainly worth checking out. Not to mention, actually using the connect stick, could not be easier. You can either connect to the contents though the Android app or simply open your WiFi signal on any device and connect to the Stick's WiFi signal. Once connected, head to sandisk.com and you are instantly redirected to all the content of the stick. It is that easy. I've been using the standard 32GB version, however, if you need bigger (or smaller) limits, the SanDisk Connect Wireless Stick is available in 16, 32, 64 & 128 GB variants and starting from only $29.99. However, SanDisk currently has a promotion where you can save 30% off the cost of the 64GB version.

Sandisk WIRELESS STICK 1.0 Sandisk WIRELESS STICK 1.1 Sandisk WIRELESS STICK 1.2 Sandisk WIRELESS STICK 1.3 Sandisk WIRELESS STICK 1.4 Sandisk WIRELESS STICK 1.5 Sandisk WIRELESS STICK 1.6

This is a sponsored conversation written by me on behalf of SanDisk . The opinions and text are all mine.


Source: SanDisk's Connect Wireless Stick Is A Storage Problem Solver

Sunday, September 13, 2015

Latest NVIDIA SHIELD Tablet software upgrade includes Stagefright security patch

R Padla

After putting the NVIDIA SHIELD Android TV console available at the Play Store and bringing SHIELD Android TV compatibility to several games, NVIDIA has recently released a software upgrade for the SHIELD Tablet.

The NVIDIA SHIELD Tablet software upgrade 3.1.1 is now available for download. It contains important bug fixes and enhancements including a security patch for that Stagefright vulnerability that puts Android devices at risk and some performance and stability improvements. NVIDIA also included fixes on Netflix playback and battery efficiency plus system wide optimizations are expected to greatly improve device performance.

This particular release also includes the SHIELD Wireless Controller Firmware update so both the tablet and the controller will work smoothly and without any problem.

Perhaps the most important feature of the SHIELD Tablet Software Upgrade 3.1.1 is the security patch for Stagefright. While Stagefright still has no specific victims yet (thank heavens!), nearly one billion Android device users are at risk from hackers being the worst exploit the platform has seen in recent years. This was discovered early in July. Because of this, Google and several phone makers have promised to release monthly updates to fight off Stagefright and future security flaws. This could be just NVIDIA's first release but we'll expect more in the near future...to be sure.

SOURCE: NVIDIA


Source: Latest NVIDIA SHIELD Tablet software upgrade includes Stagefright security patch

Saturday, September 12, 2015

Android Headliner: Why Can’t Anyone but Microsoft Make a Compelling Tablet?

Earlier this year, I had the opportunity to review the Xperia Z4 Tablet (pictured above) and I found it to be one of the best Android tablets on the market. You know the problem with that, though? That's not saying much. For a long time now, Google has done close to nothing to make Android a compelling tablet operating system. Oh sure, if you want to play games, read magazines, watch Netflix and movies then Android tablets are fairly decent pieces of hardware. More than that however, and it becomes clear that these are just giant phones with a few gimmicks and oddities here and there. This week, we saw Apple unveil the iPad Pro, and the out-of-touch "bigger is better" approach from Apple this week shows that not even they know what to do with the tablet.

Both that last statement and the title of this piece might come as a shock to some of you, but without Apple we wouldn't have Android tablets. The iPad, whether we like it or not, made tablets consumer objects, something to be desired and suddenly something that we all needed. The Nexus 7 showed us that these items do not need to be expensive and they can come in all sizes, the problem for Google however is that they don't know how to do anything but the Nexus 7. Microsoft however, have the Surface. The Surface is not cheap and for a lot of people it's too big, but the Surface 3 (not the Pro 3) that launched this year is a full-blown PC that's tablet first, laptop second. It's an x86 processor that's quicker than many of the CPUs you'd find in a Chromebook and yet as it runs full Windows it's quite a lot more useful, and Microsofts own offerings have gotten a lot better now as well.

The iPad Pro is not new, not only did Apple not invent the pencil, but Samsung have been shipping large tablets with excellent pen-input for a long time now. Sure, it's powerful – find me an Android tablet that can edit three streams of 4K video on set – but it's basically just bigger. Of course, people who buy Apple will always buy Apple, but for the industry the iPad Pro is a misstep. It brings nothing new to the table, and it won't save a tablet market that seems to be on pause.

Microsoft seem to be the only company that genuinely offers up a tablet experience that can actually replace your laptop. The iPad Pro runs iOS, not Mac OS X and Android tablets, well. The Nexus 9, Google's flagship and blueprint for its partners, runs a phone operating system. Sure, this means that Android is consistent across all screen sizes, which is great, but could Google really not offer up something – beyond mouse and keyboard support – that makes an Android tablet feel like more than just a bigger phone? Even first-party apps of Google's feel like they forgot the tablet exists. Gmail is my favorite experience on the Nexus 9 and the only app I care about that genuinely makes use of the larger display, and that's a pretty sad statement for myself and Google.

It's not as if Google don't have the tools to make something better, either. Imagine a tablet that, when docked, ran  Chrome OS? This wouldn't be a productive environment for everyone, but Chrome OS is very much a desktop operating system and it's developed on the same campus that Android is. I would rather use Chrome OS with a keyboard and mouse than the stunted version of Chrome Google puts out for Android. Years ago, when tablets ran the hobbled Honeycomb version of Android, tablets like the Motorola Xoom had a quasi-desktop feel to them with a different layout of buttons, but Google threw that out the window with Android 4.2 Jelly Bean. Now, only Microsoft make a tablet that actually could replace your laptop, and it seems as if Google and partners have given up trying, which is a real shame. Signing in with the same password and getting the same apps and content as my phone makes an Android tablet a great option, but it's just the exact same thing, just bigger. B igger is not always better and there's a reason people across the world are buying larger and larger Android phones, as they get the best of both worlds in one device.

Considering the amount that we use our smartphones for these days, it's no surprise that a lot of "millennials" and younger users don't see the need for a laptop anymore, but these users aren't taking a Nexus 9 or Galaxy Tab to class, to work or on holiday; they're taking iPads and Surfaces.


Source: Android Headliner: Why Can't Anyone but Microsoft Make a Compelling Tablet?

Friday, September 11, 2015

HandyCase adds touch controls to the back of your iPhone or iPad

It can be tough playing games on a tablet, since you can't hold 'em up comfortably like a controller or a phone. Silicon Valley startup HandScape believes their iPhone and iPad "HandyCase" is the answer to that problem. HandyCase might look just like any other protective shell, you see, but it actually adds touch capability to the back of your device. Plus, it animates your fingers as you move them from behind, making the phone or tablet seem transparent. You can even choose what kind of fingers you see on screen: the ordinary/boring kind, robotic digits or x-ray hands.

Since the startup is still in the midst of crowdfunding $100,000 to kick its project into production, don't expect to be able to buy and get one shipped overnight. That said, the HandyCase is available for the iPhone 6, 6 Plus, 6S, 6S Plus, as well as for the iPad Air, mini and Pro. The amount you'd have to pledge varies depending on the device, but it looks like the company won't be shipping out any unit until April 2016.


Source: HandyCase adds touch controls to the back of your iPhone or iPad

Thursday, September 10, 2015

iPad Pro vs. Surface Pro 3: One's a fancy tablet, the other's a pared-down PC

Apple took a major step in the evolution of its iPad lineup Wednesday when it announced the iPad Pro, a new tablet with a 12.9-inch display that packs a serious punch when it comes to processing power.

The comparisons between Apple's new device and Microsoft's Surface Pro 3 are easy: both can be used with a cover that doubles as a keyboard, along with a pressure sensitive stylus. And they obviously both have "Pro" in their respective names. But ultimately, they seem to be aimed at solving different problems. 

Right off the bat, the biggest difference between the two tablets has to do with their respective operating systems. The Surface Pro 3 runs the full version of Windows 10, which means users can interact with apps built for a Windows desktop environment, even when the tablet doesn't have its Type Cover accessory attached. 

The iPad Pro, meanwhile, only runs iOS. While the app catalog for Apple's mobile operating system is much deeper than the apps only available through Microsoft's Windows Store, that decision still limits users to running apps that are built for the iPad, or using tools like Amazon's WorkSpaces virtual desktop client.

While iOS 9 includes a number of features that make the iPad more useful as a laptop replacement, like improved support for external keyboards and the ability to use the on-screen keyboard as a trackpad, it's still missing the customizability and functionality of a full-blown Mac. I'd argue that's intentional, since Apple has its ultraportable MacBook available for people who want a lightweight computer.

A Surface Pro 3 running Windows 10Blair Hanley Frank

A Surface Pro 3 running Windows 10

The Surface Pro 3 is really a slimmed-down laptop that has a detachable keyboard, complete with fans and a processor that's also found in in other portable computers. It's thicker and heavier than an iPad Pro -- both concessions that likely came as a result of the hardware packed into its case. It boasts some additional benefits like a built-in kickstand, unlike Apple's iPads, which still require a case or cover to stand up independently. 

Meanwhile, it seems as though Apple wants to make the iPad Pro the best way to get work done on an iPad, but doesn't want to compromise and actually allow it to run a desktop-oriented operating system.

That's not to say it's the wrong move, it's just a fundamentally different tack than Microsoft is taking. It will be, however, interesting to see if Apple's commitment to iOS for the iPad Pro makes it less appealing to businesses that have desktop applications they still want to give workers access to.

Apple's announcement comes at a tough time for its iPad business and the tablet market in general. While CEO Tim Cook has said that he remains confident about the future of selling tablets, sales of the iPad aren't growing like they used to, while the tablet market at large has stagnated. Time will tell whether the iPad Pro will be a shot in the arm that differentiates Apple's tablet offering at a premium price, or if it's still not enough to drive growth.


Source: iPad Pro vs. Surface Pro 3: One's a fancy tablet, the other's a pared-down PC

Wednesday, September 9, 2015

Amazon may be cooking up a $50 tablet

This article, Amazon may be cooking up a $50 tablet, originally appeared on CNET.com.

You may feel bombarded with reports about the gadgets Apple will soon release. But if you're looking for a bargain, it seems Amazon may have the tablet for you.

In this CNET Update tech roundup, learn about the reports about Amazon's $50 tablet and the company's latest Prime Now perk: restaurant food delivery service. Also in mobile news, Verizon launches a free mobile video service called Go90, and will soon begin testing 5G wireless speeds for a possible launch in 2017:

CNET Update delivers the tech news you need in under three minutes. Watch Bridget Carey every afternoon for a breakdown of the big stories, hot devices , new apps, and what's ahead. Subscribe to the podcast via the links below.

Subscribe:

iTunes (HD) | iTunes (SD) | iTunes (HQ) | iTunes (MP3)

RSS (HD) | RSS (SD) | RSS (HQ)| RSS (MP3)

Download the audio version of today's episode:

Also from CNET:

  • These tech-savvy military dogs will kill you with cuteness
  • The problem with hoarding photos on your phone
  • The perfect password? You've put your finger on it
  • Professional Services
  • Handheld & Connected Devices

  • Source: Amazon may be cooking up a $50 tablet

    Tuesday, September 8, 2015

    Are diabetics being given diet advice that just makes their problems WORSE?

  • Each day, 400 people in Britain are given a diagnosis of type 2 diabetes
  • Research indicates weight loss may be incredibly effective
  • Yet many are not getting the lifestyle guidance they need
  • Encouraged to eat balanced diet 'applicable to the general population'
  • 'Some carbs rapidly turn into glucose in your blood and should be avoided'
  • 94

    View comments

    There are more than three million people in this country living with type 2 diabetes and a further five million thought to be at risk of developing the disease. Diabetes UK has warned that the cost of treating patients 'could bankrupt the NHS'. In the second part of our series, we reveal the latest thinking on managing the complex condition.

    When mother of three Sarah Gibbs was diagnosed with type 2 diabetes in May 2014, a nurse told her that her blood sugar levels were too high, gave her a prescription for medication to help reduce them - 'and that was it'.

    Sarah, 42, from Newport, Gwent, went home, read about the complications she was likely to suffer if she couldn't control her blood sugar and panicked. 'I felt my life was finished,' she says.

    Increasingly research indicates that the most effective way for people to hold type 2 diabetes in check is for them to lose weight by changing their diet and becoming more active

    Each day, 400 people in Britain such as Sarah are given a diagnosis of type 2 diabetes - a disorder where blood sugar levels can become dangerously high unless they are managed effectively.

    For the 3.3 million people in this country diagnosed with diabetes, working out how to lead your life with the condition can be bewildering and, as Sarah recognised, getting it wrong can have disastrous implications.

    Two out of every three people diagnosed with type 2 diabetes do not manage to keep their blood glucose levels within healthy limits, according to statistics published by the charity Diabetes UK last month. It's as a direct result of this that 200,000 people every year develop severe diabetes-related complications: kidney and heart failure, nerve damage, blindness, heart attacks and strokes.

    Yet how do you get that blood sugar control and why are so many people getting it wrong?

    Medication can help, but increasingly research indicates that the most effective way for people to hold this disorder in check is for them to lose weight by changing their diet and becoming more active. Yet, as Sarah discovered, many are not getting the lifestyle guidance they need. The urgent need for this is underlined by new statistics from Public Health England showing that eight out of ten people with type 2 diabetes in England are both obese (ie with a BMI of 30 or more) and have unhealthy levels of inactivity.

    Furthermore, there is evidence that, far from helping, the advice most frequently offered about diet may actually be making it harder for type 2 diabetics to keep their condition in check.

    Type 2 diabetes normally occurs when fat clogs the liver, which regu lates the supply of glucose to feed the body, and the pancreas, the tiny gland behind the stomach that produces the hormone insulin that takes glucose out of the blood stream and into cells.

    But this fat can be eliminated, enabling normal insulin production to resume, by losing around 15 per cent of body weight (on average 2½ st). This means blood glucose levels return to normal immediately, an effect that lasts at least two years.

    'We now know that once people with type 2 diabetes successfully lose weight and go below their personal fat threshold, the diabetes will disappear,' explains Professor Roy Taylor of Newcastle University.

    'This knowledge is gold dust to many folk with type 2 diabetes. If I had the disorder, I would do this,' he says.

    Guidelines from the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (Nice), the NHS watchdog, recommend loss of up to 10 per cent of body weight. But the dietary advice on how to get there may do more harm than good, say some experts. According to Nice, anyone with type 2 diabetes should be encouraged to eat 'a healthy, balanced diet that's applicable to the general population' - in other words, meals containing a balance of protein, vegetables and, crucially, plenty of starchy carbohydrates including bread, rice and pasta.

    However, some experts now insist that such a diet can actually contribute to type 2 diabetes.

    'We know that type 2 diabetes develops when blood glucose rises above a certain level - and whether it's sugar, rice, bread or potatoes, these carbohydrates rapidly turn into glucose in your bloodstream and so should be avoided,' says Dr David Cavan, formerly a consultant physician at Bournemouth Diabetes and Endocrine Centre and now Director of Policy and Programmes at the International Diabetes Federation and author of Reverse Your Diabetes.

    It's not just Nice which says type 2 diabetics can continue to eat carbo- hydrates or sugary foods. The charity Diabetes UK reassures visitors to its website (diabetes.org.uk) that having diabetes 'doesn't mean you have to cut sugar out of your diet completely. We all enjoy eating sugary foods occasionally, and there's no problem including them as a treat in a healthy balanced diet'.

    Sugar, rice, bread, potatoes.. these carbohydrates rapidly turn into glucose in your bloodstream and so should be avoided

    However, Dr Aseem Malhotra, consultant clinical associate to the Academy of Royal Colleges, last month challenged the charity to explain why it continues to recommend 'carbo- hydrates known to promote fat storage and hunger' to a group of people most of whom urgently need to lose weight.

    He said: 'Given that type 2 diabetes is a condition related to an intolerance to metabolise carbohydrates, it is puzzling why Diabetes UK recommends as part of a "healthy balanced diet" the consumption of plenty of starchy carbohydrates and modest amounts of sugary food and drinks including cakes and biscuits.'

    The best long-term intervention for type 2 diabetes, says Dr Cavan, is to restrict carbohydrates by cutting back on sugar and starch and replacing it with non-starchy (green) veg, with some fatty foods such as cheese and full-fat, unsweetened yogurt along with calorie-dense p rotein.

    Nigel Fowler is a living testament of the benefits of this approach. Now 44, he was diagnosed with type 2 diabetes in November 2014 and his blood sugar levels were so high that he needed six injections of insulin a day. Even this didn't stop his blood glucose from swinging chaotically, yet he says: 'I got no advice on diet from the nurse who started me on the injections except that I should continue as normal.

    Nigel Fowler, 44, he was diagnosed with type 2 diabetes but got no advice on diet

    'In my case, that meant four Weetabix for breakfast, several sandwiches during the day and usually a Bakewell tart in the evening.'

    Rather than advising him to change his diet, the nurse put the cake into the calculation to decide how much insulin he'd need.

    'That effectively meant that I had to eat it - or I risked having a hypo (when blood sugar becomes dangerously low). It was like hitting my head with a hammer and then taking painkillers for the pain.'

    In March this year, property manager Nigel, from Norden near Rochdale, read an article discussing new evidence of the health benefits of low-carb, high-fat diets and decided to reduce the amount of starchy and sugary food in his diet - cutting out bread and cakes and replacing his breakfast cereal with berries and double cream to fill him up for the morning.

    I've lost the bit of fat around my middle and just feel fitter and generally happier

    'Wow! What a difference,' he says. He has lost a stone since March - but says the real difference is 'the calming of the yo-yo effect on my blood glucose. I've lost the bit of fat around my middle and just feel fitter and generally happier.'

    It's an approach that's gaining in popularity. Around 280,000 people now swap tips on the online forum diabetes.co.uk about controlling diabetes with a low-carbohydrate diet. Reading their stories led David Unwin, a Southport GP, to fundamentally change the way he approached diabetes with his patients.

    Last year, the journal Diabetologia published a study of 19 patients with type 2 diabetes at Dr Unwin's surgery, who lost an average of 8.65kg (19lb) over seven months on a low-carb, high-fat diet, reducing their blood glucose levels by nearly a quarter.

    Later this year, Dr Unwin is set to publish a further study of 69 patients with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, a precursor of type 2 diabetes as well as heart disease, showing a 46 per cent improvement in liver blood tests, and therefore a reduced risk of high blood glucose levels after an average of 13 months on a low-carb high-fat diet.

    The property manager decided to reduce the amount of starchy and sugary food in his diet

    Another alternative is a very low calorie diet (VLCD). This was tested in a ground-breaking study carried out by scientists at Newcastle University and published in 2011 in the journal, Diebetologia. All 11 patients in the study reversed type 2 diabetes after an eight-week diet of 600-calorie-per-day liquid sachets of soups and shakes containing essential vitamins and minerals.

    As yet it's not available on the NHS, pending a five-year ongoing study, funded by Diabetes UK, to test whether people can un dergo such a diet under the supervision of their GP safely and effectively. A key factor is that dieters must stop their diabetic medication before they begin the VLCD, because the combination of drugs and diet could cause their blood glucose levels to plummet to dangerously low levels.

    Despite the clear importance of diet to type 2 diabetics, anyone who feels they need weight and lifestyle advice should ask for it - don't presume it will be offered. While some GPs and their specialist diabetes nurses are very good at discussing this with patients, Dr Unwin says others can feel that mentioning weight problems, even obesity, is too personal, even rude.

    'Until fairly recently, I was typical of the conventional approach to managing a patient newly diagnosed with type 2 diabetes,' he says. 'I'd warn patients that if they couldn't control their blood sugar with diet, they would have to go on drugs. As to how to lose weight , that wasn't my field so I'd send them to a dietitian.

    'Yet I believe a well-informed, motivated doctor can really help people to manage their weight and turn their lives round.'

    Why NHS drugs may not work 

    When the condition cannot be controlled by lifestyle changes alone, the first drug someone with type 2 diabetes is normally offered is metformin. These tablets reduce the amount of glucose released by the liver and make the body's cells more sensitive to insulin.

    Yet some people find the drug does not work or they cannot tolerate it, and they need additional or different medication to help keep their blood sugar stable.

    There are some effective alternatives that prevent hypos (when blood sugar dips too low) and weight gain. Together, these measures improve diabetes control and the risk of long-term complications, says Tony Barnett, emeritus professor of medicine at the University of Birmingham and Heart of England NHS Foundation Trust.

    The first drug someone with type 2 diabetes is normally offered is metformin

    Recently published data found that the injectable drug liraglutide, which increases the amount of insulin produced by the body, can help people with type 2 diabetes to lose an average of 6 per cent of their body weight over 56 weeks - as well as controlling glucose levels and reducing the risk of hypos.

    Yet guidelines from the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence still recommend older drugs such as sulphonylureas, repaglinide and pioglitazone - which can cause weight gain, hypos and other unpleasant side-effects.

    'The cost of these older drugs is between £1 and £3 per month compared to £30 to £35 a month for the newer drugs,' says Professor Roger Gadsby of Warwick Medical School.

    'If doctors prescribe the new drugs to every new diabetes patient, the drugs bill for diabetes could increase by around £250 million annually.'

    DIY kit that got me back on track

    A glucometer is a device you can use to check your blood sugar as often as you want. There are several types costing less than £20 available from chemists.

    You test a small drop of blood obtained by pricking the skin with a lancet (sharp blade) and placing it on a disposable strip, which is then inserted into the meter.

    Measuring blood sugar levels yourself is 'one of the key skills of successful diabetes management', according to the online diabetes community, diabetes.co.uk. It wasn't until she started to use a glucometer that Marie Nimmo, 50, a healthcare worker and mother of two from Galston, Ayrshire, was able to achieve healthy blood sugar levels and overcome her symptoms of fatigue and confusion.

    Maria Nimmo bought a meter and testing strips and started to test her blood glucose

    Diagnosed in April 2013, she felt 'rotten' - until three months after the diagnosis when she discovered the diabetes.co.uk forum and found 'most members monitored the impact of high carbohydrate meals and activity on their glucose levels on a daily basis'.

    She bought a meter and testing strips and started to test her blood glucose before and after meals. 'It gave me a clear idea of the impact of what I ate and different types of activity,' she says.

    As a result, she cut down on bread, pasta, potatoes and rice, bought a second- hand exercise bike and lost 2 st (she's now 11 st and 5 ft 7 in).

    'Most importantly, my blood glucose levels are normal. I'm not a saint - I'll have treats like everyone else. If I have two slices of cake, as I did for my 50th last week, I'll work off the excess glucose rather than becoming sweaty and irritable because my poor pancreas is having to work too hard,' she says. 

    Could standing up do more good than hitting the gym? 

    Dietary change is key to controlling or reversing type 2 diabetes - but it won't work for anyone who continues with a couch potato lifestyle.

    And that includes people who exercise vigorously before flopping in front of the computer or TV.

    A review of 47 studies, published in the Annals of Internal Medicine this year, revealed that sitting still for more than eight hours in a day raises the risk of type 2 diabetes by 90 per cent. And while there is some benefit in vigorous exercise, it's not enough to cancel out the risks of sitting down for hours on end.

    'We need to do something when we're not exercising. We need to find excuses to stand up and move around,' says Dr Aviroop Biswas of the Toronto Rehabilitation Institute in Canada, who carried out the review.

    He says take the stairs, not the lift; walk to the shops instead of driving; and carry groceries rather than using a trolley.

     


    Source: Are diabetics being given diet advice that just makes their problems WORSE?