Saturday 27 September 2014

Flexy, Wrist-Worn Concept Phone: A Real Life Buzz Lightyear Communicator



Flexy, Wrist-Worn Concept Phone: A Real Life Buzz Lightyear Communicator

Indiegogo concepts are always a bit out there, and this one's no exception: Portal, a six-inch Android-powered smartphone that's impressively capable, waterproof, and flexible enough to wear on your wrist like Buzz Lightyear's communicator. Forget smartwatches, this baby's a goddamned gauntlet.
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Secret's developers launch Ping, a simple app that keeps you up to date




The creators of controversial app Secret have just launched a new product, but this time, it has nothing to do with airing your dirty laundry anonymously. They call their new application Ping, a simple software that displays a list of topics (such as... read more

Formation Of C-17s Light Up The Night Sky Like You've Never Seen



Formation Of C-17s Light Up The Night Sky Like You've Never Seen

Just because low-flying C-17s can drop their cargo under the cover of night does not mean they won't come under attack from heat-seeking missiles. Being one of most highly defended aircraft in the world, its defenses can include popping flares and clouds of infrared energy. It can even shoot lasers directly at the incoming missile. And holy crap is it pretty!
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Friday 26 September 2014

How An Octagenarian Preserved An Endangered Native American Language



How An Octagenarian Preserved An Endangered Native American Language

It's easy to take translations for granted when Google can swap between Albanian and Zulu with the click of a button, but even that tech has real world limitations. Marie Wilcox is the last fluent speaker of Wukchumni, one of 130 different endangered Native American languages in the United States that don't have any kind of digital—or analog—legacy.
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Wearable artificial kidney hopes to gain FDA approval soon




As neat as your smartwatch is, there are other existing wearables which, you know, can actually make the world a world a better place -- though that's not to say whatever you have on your wrist now is useless and for pure vanity purposes. Aptly named... read more

Apple's new iOS 8 update is ready to download




It's take two for Apple's first update to iOS 8. After the company released a version yesterday that cut off cellular connections and TouchID for the iPhone 6 family, there's a new one available now. 8.0.2 also carries the fixes we were expecting... read more

Ingress' user-created missions give added meaning to your walking tours




Ingress certainly has a following among augmented reality gamers, but its relative lack of direction can be intimidating -- especially if you're a newcomer. Where do you go first? As of today, you'll (usually) have an easy answer. Google's Niantic... read more...

Inside the building where Apple tortures the iPhone 6




A few blocks away from Apple's bustling campus in Cupertino is a rather nondescript building. Inside is absolutely the last place on earth you'd want to be if you were an iPhone. It's here where Apple subjects its newest models to the kinds of things they might run into in the real world: drops, pressure, twisting, tapping. Basically all the things that could turn your shiny gadget into a small pile of metal and glass.
“We’ve designed the product to be incredibly reliable throughout all your...
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This could be the beginning of a new Steven Spielberg movie



This could be the beginning of a new Steven Spielberg movie

Cute kid: Check. Handsome older brother: Check. Charming dog: Check. Long(ish) take of a mysterious corn field: Check. Lost alien that looks evil but it's actually friendly: Check. Merciless military trying to hunt it down: Check. It feels like 1980s Spielberg published this short film using a time machine.
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Monday 22 September 2014

iPhone 6 soaked in liquid-nitrogen shatters like a Terminator T-1000



iPhone 6 soaked in liquid-nitrogen shatters like a Terminator T-1000

RatedRR bought six iPhone 6 to torture them in every way imaginable. Their first test was to submerge one in liquid nitrogen and then use a hammer to smash it. Like the T-1000 in Terminator 2, the phone shatters in a billion pieces. Their drop test also shows their new glass shatters just like any glass.
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Researchers create a headset to turn your jaw into a tiny power plant




We're no strangers to projects that try to capture the power of the human body, but here's one with a peculiar twist. A pair of researchers from Montreal's École de Technologie Supérieure have cooked up a headset that, while extremely... read more

EE scoops up 58 Phones4u stores




When Phones4u entered administration, it immediately shut all of its doors and put thousands of employees on notice. It didn't take long for Dixons Carphone to secure 800 positions, with Vodafone sweeping in shortly after to buy 140 Phones4u stores... read more

Sunday 21 September 2014

The Only iPhone 6 Unboxing Video You'll Actually Want to See





What is it with unboxing videos? At best, they're poorly-focused movies of disembodied hands fumbling with packaging. At worst, they're a platform for some jerk to brag about his new gadget. Trust me—this is the only iPhone 6 unboxing video that won't make you retch.
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Pebble update adds emoji, compass, and better notifications for iOS




2014 is the year of the emoji. Within the last year we've seen an emoji social networkemoji on Twitteremoji music videos, and even an emoji city. And now, emoji is on your Pebble smartwatch. The feature comes as part of firmware 2.5,which you can install today. The new firmware also includes iOS 8 compatibility and a compass feature that lets developers create navigation apps of their own. In fact, there are already a couple to try, like Compass By Pebble and Where To? for iOS.
Last, but certainly not least, firmware 2.5 brings better notifications support for iOS users. Now, when you dismiss a notification on Pebble, it will also disappear from your iPhone or iPad's notification center. It's a huge addition that instantly makes...
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Microsoft will double your free OneDrive storage if you auto-upload photos




Microsoft has been rather generous with free OneDrive storage lately, and that doesn't seem to be changing anytime soon. Now Redmond is bumping the previous gratis 15GB up by 100 percent, to 30GB. What's the catch? There isn't much of one, really.... read more

Getty Images releases free iOS app for browsing and sharing millions of images




Six months after shifting its business model to embeddable photos, Getty Images has released an iOS app designed to help you browse and share its massive collection. The app, called Stream, lets you search Getty's archives to find images that you can legally share and embed for non-commercial purposes on blogs and social media. Or you can browse photo streams created by Getty editors in categories like news, sports, entertainment and "archival," which highlights photos of historical significance.
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Saturday 20 September 2014

Oculus Execs Believe Controllers Are The Missing Link In Virtual Reality


Future of VR panel_2

When you put a child in virtual reality, they instinctively raise their hands hoping to see them, says Oculus CTO John Carmack. Yet Oculus doesn’t have its own gloves or handheld controllers, despite rumors amongst the VR community that Oculus would reveal a controller today at its Oculus Connect conference. Carmack concluded “The missing link in VR is controllers”. But… Read More

Wednesday 17 September 2014

NASA Partners With Boeing And SpaceX To Send Astronauts Up In Space Taxis


NASA1

NASA has announced a deal with SpaceX and Boeing to build space taxis to shuttle astronauts to the International Space Station. This deal will end NASA’s reliance on expensive Russian crew transport by 2017. The cost was a whopping $71 million per seat. However, the rising tensions in Ukraine may have also been a factor in the push for U.S. contracts. Read More

You can now attach your iPad directly to your face to experience virtual reality




It was only a matter of time. The iPad has been adapted for all sorts of intriguing and surprising purposes over the years (including, recently, a sex toy). Meanwhile, a number of enterprising organizations and individuals have sought to create makeshift virtual reality goggles out of people's readily available mobile devices (e.g. Google Cardboard). Now the two trends have converged: AirVR is a Kickstarter project from Toronto design firm Metatecture that seeks $20,000 in funding from backers to create an inexpensive headset for converting your iPad Mini (Retina) or soon-to-be-delivered iPhone 6 Plus into a portable virtual reality viewer.
It works as you might expect: slide the iPad Mini or iPhone 6 Plus into a bulky headset with two...
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Samsung's next big budget phone is made for selfies




Companies like Microsoft and Sony know that you don't necessarily want to buy a high-end smartphone just to take selfies, and it now appears that Samsung knows this, too. In the wake of store listings and government filings, Thegioididong has managed... read more

Tuesday 16 September 2014

iCloud's Two-Step Authentication Is Back and Now Covers Backups



iCloud's Two-Step Authentication Is Back and Now Covers Backups

Good news after a harrowing week: Your iCloud account is now (a little) more secure. After popping up briefly and then disappearing—and a highly publicized, unfortunately timed security breach —iCloud's two-step authentication has returned for good, with several important improvements, according to Ars Technica.
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Google's Android Silver program may have hit an iron wall


Google's Android Silver program may have hit an iron wall

Google was going to have it all in the mobile world: an ubiquitous operating system, a strong grip on the low-end and mid-range phone hardware markets, and, with Android Silver, a concrete way to potentially dominate the high end.
But no more - or at least not anytime soon, according to The Information, whose sources say Google's Android Silver initiative "is on hold."
The program, which would have reportedly seen Google partnering with multiple device makers to craft more curated high-end Android experiences than what's currently available, stalled in part due to the July departure of former Google Senior Vice President and Chief Business Officer Nikesh Arora, the site says.
Arora was reportedly one of Android Silver's "chief architects," and it seems the program lost steam without him.

Silver and cold

In addition the site says Google was having trouble getting enough interest from device makers, causing doubt internally at Google whether Silver could catch on.
Rumors about Android Silver suggested that Google would partner with companies like HTC, LG and others, prioritizing Silver-branded handsets in updates and at retail, so support from these companies was crucial.
Android Silver may have even replaced Google's Nexus branding, but instead Google will reportedly focus on the opposite end of the spectrum, funneling all its energies into the budget-centricAndroid One program.
With Android One Google is launching affordable phones in emerging markets like India, and it seems the search giant may yet be content to let Apple maintain its tighter grip on the high end for now.