5 SECONDS OF SUMMER

Michael Clifford Fires Back at Abigail Breslin's Diss Track

Stars Most Stylish Selfie of the Week

Stars Most Stylish Selfie of the Week

GMAIL BLOCKED IN CHINA

5-Minute Outfit Idea

5-Minute Outfit Idea: An Effortless, Polished Look to Try This Weekend.

Facebook suffers outage

Facebook suffers outage affecting users worldwide!! .

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Showing posts sorted by date for query Technology. Sort by relevance Show all posts

Monday 26 December 2016

AI, self-driving cars and cyberwar – the tech trends to watch for in 2017

 AI, self-driving cars and cyberwar – the tech trends to watch for in 2017



In some ways, tech in 2017 will be a steady progression from what came before it. Time marches on, and so too does the advance of technology. In other ways, though, it will be just as upended as the rest of the world by the unprecedented disruption that 2016 has left in its wake.
ere are the trends to watch out for in the coming year:

More AI, less data

The artificial intelligence revolution is well and truly upon us, but so far, the biggest players are venerable Silicon Valley titans such as Google, Amazon and Apple. That’s partially because they have the money to hire teams full of PhDs at seven-figure salaries, but it’s also because they have the data.
That could change. One of the key areas of research for 2017 is data efficiency: the problem of trying to teach machine-learning systems how
to do more, with less. Think about how many times your average three-year-old needs to see a particular animal before they can correctly identify it, compared with the thousands of images a neural network needs to ingest to perform the same basic task.
Solving the problem of data efficiency could dramatically open up the industry, letting new startups compete on a level playing field with those who have access to petabytes of customer data. And it could also change what an AI can do for you, letting an assistant become far more sensitive to your personal quirks and foibles, or a photo-tagging service recognise specific locations, objects, or situations.

Mostly-self-driving cars

Self-driving cars exist on a scale. At one end, you’ll find technologies that are barely more than fancy cruise control: lane-assist features ensure your car doesn’t drift out of lane, while adaptive cruise control will maintain a steady distance from the car in front. At the other end is full automation: a car that can drive from a parking space outside your house to a parking space outside your office with no-one touching the steering wheel, or even sitting in the car at all.
The story of 2017 will be car companies racing almost all the way to that final hurdle, but just stopping short. Not only the tech companies, either (although expect Tesla’s own models to lead the way, closely followed by Google’s sister company Waymo’s alliance with Fiat Chrysler). Conventional manufacturers the likes of Nissan and BMW are jumping into the field with both feet, and their systems will only get smarter. And who knows what Apple’s plans are?
But don’t expect anyone to make the difficult jump to full self-driving capability any time soon. Not only are the regulatory and liability hurdles immense, but the tech just isn’t there for the vast majority of journeys. There’s a reason Google tested its first ever fully automatic trip in Texas, land of wide lanes, huge highways, and car-centric development. Drop that car in the middle of a busy London backstreet and it won’t do so well.
The big question is whether all this automation will actually make things safer. On the one hand, cars don’t get distracted, drunk, or tired, all of which lie at the root of most fatalities on the road. On the other hand, if people are told to supervise a car which mostly drives itself, they tend not to be prepared to take over if it actually does need assistance – a problem that lay behind the first self-driving fatality in May.

Cyberwar

Let’s not mince words: cyberwar has already begun. If it didn’t start in 2008, when (probably) the Israeli and US intelligence services used the Stuxnet virus to destroy Iranian nuclear centrifuges, and it didn’t start in 2015, when the US Office of Personnel Management was hacked by (probably) China, stealing the personal details of millions of government employees, then it certainly started in 2016, when (probably) Russia hacked in to the Democratic National Congress, exflitrating emails which were released with the intention of altering the outcome of an election.
Those “probably”s expose part of the appeal of cyberwar for nation states: attribution is hard, and rock-solid attribution to not just a nation but a chain of command is almost impossible. The incoming US administration is already making aggressive overtures about its desire to get on the attack, which will inevitably also make it a bigger target, according to security expert Hitesh Sheth, head of cybersecurity firm Vectra.
“US businesses and the US government should expect an increase in the number and severity of cyber-attacks, led by select nation states and organised political and criminal entities,” he says.

The ghost of Christmas data breaches past

It feels like data breaches are everywhere. But that’s often not the case; while companies are indeed compromised on a regular basis, modern security practices usually ensure that not much is stolen, and what does get taken isn’t easy to exploit.
Instead, the more dangerous trend is old breaches surfacing, like an unexploded second-world-war bomb, to wreak havoc on the present. That’s what happened to Yahoo, twice in one year, when data breaches from 2013 and 2014 resurfaced. The breaches were huge, containing a billion and half a billion accounts respectively, and the information within them was barely secured. Passwords were obfuscated with a standard which has been known to be insecure since 2005, while other info, including security questions, was in plain text.
Because data breaches can happen undetected, fixing your cybersecurity in 2016 isn’t just locking the stable door after the horse has bolted; it’s locking the stable door without even realising the horse made its escape years ago.
The information in historical breaches has often been traded on the darknet for some time before their existence surfaces, meaning the damage comes in two waves: first, slowly, and then all at once.

Meet eSports, the new sports

Competitive video gaming is a huge business. In 2016, investment bank GP Bullhound estimated it hit a global audience of over 250 million people, and amassed a total annual revenue of $493m – and in 2017, that’s predicted to more than double, making eSports a billion-dollar sector.
The scale of the eSports industry is down to a number of factors, from increased broadband penetration making online multiplayer gaming accessible to most of the world to online streaming allowing budding eSports stars to skip conventional media and go straight to their fans.
But it’s now big enough to warp the very industry that spawned it, with major games publishers courting the eSports community from the inception of their latest releases. Blizzard, a Californian company best-known for its online game World of Warcraft, has been one of the leaders in the field, with games including Heroes of the Storm, Overwatch and Hearthstone all having online viewerships in the millions, but the standout success is Riot Games, whose sole title League of Legends had more viewers in its 2015 world championship than the final game of 2016’s NBA Finals.
GP Bullhound says the next big wave is going to come from mobile, with games like Clash Royale and Vainglory representing the fastest growing segment of the global $37bn games market. Of course, this might all pass you by: over half of eSports fans are millennials, by far the youngest skew of any group of sports supporters.

The great privacy divide

The world’s most advanced surveillance operation will shortly be under the direct control of a far-right demagogue who routinely attacks critics on social media and uses the office of US president-elect to bolster his commercial interests. That has left some people worried.
As a result, many are re-examining their online privacy, switching to encrypted messaging services, locking down social media accounts, and limiting the amount of information they put online. Signal, an encrypted messaging app recommended by Edward Snowden, saw a huge spike in downloads following Donald Trump’s election, while hundreds of tech workers signed a pledge to never implement the president-elect’s proposed registry of Muslims.
At the same time, though, trends in AI and online monetisation have pushed other tech firms to slowly chip away at the amount of privacy their users have, data-mining ever more aspects of their online lives in an effort to offer better services and create smarter software. Google, for instance, will now train a machine-learning system on your photos, read your emails to find useful information to add to your calendar, and save everything you say to it to improve its voice recognition.
Over 2017, this divide will only increase: companies like Apple and Signal on the one side, and Facebook and Google on the other. In the end, the market will decide. Are people willing to give up the latest and greatest fruits of machine-learning to limit their exposure to surveillance, or do they not really care about online privacy and want everything as soon as it’s technologically possible?

Chinese tech goes west

The likes of Foxconn may build the world’s most premium tech, but in the west, Chinese brands are still largely associated with cheap electronics: no-name flat panels and cheap smartphones that spy on you. As for software, the entire country can feel as if it’s seen through analogues to Silicon Valley, from “China’s Google” (Baidu) to “China’s Twitter” (Sina Weibo).
But an increasing number of Chinese companies have their eyes set on the richer markets of Europe and America, without giving up on the customer base in their own country. Shenzhen-based OnePlus, for instance, has slowly carved out a niche for itself with its high-quality, low-price range of smartphones, which aim to match the flagships from Apple and Samsung while offering price-sensitive users savings of hundreds of pounds. Huawei, already a fairly well-known brand in the west, is pushing its Honor brand as a way to drop the budget image for a new demographic.
And software firms are getting in the game too. Tencent, makers of WeChat (that’s “China’s WhatsApp”, for those playing along at home), is pushing hard into the west, taking on Facebook at its own game. The service is currently most popular with Chinese expats, but it’s clear that Facebook is watching closely: a number of features in Messenger are ripped wholesale from the hugely influential service.

Wednesday 18 March 2015

Autodesk's new app lets kids design their own toys

Autodesk's new app lets kids design their own toys


3D printers can build anything from prosthetics and musical instruments to Hershey chocolates. But, even as the technology continues to make strides with materials (metal, concrete, etc.) and takes on full-fledged architectural projects, it seems to move further away from the reach of children. Tinkerplay, a new kid-friendly 3D printing app, makes it quick and easy for all age groups to design and experiment with minimal assistance.
The app is the brainchild of Autodesk, the company best known for its flagship AutoCAD design software. It's an evolution of Autodesk-acquired Modio, an iPad app that worked with desktop 3D printers. Like its predecessor, Tinkerplay eliminates the need for additional rafts and support materials which tend to complicate the process for at-home designs. But new features and functions allow kids (and older humans) to choose from the pre-loaded character templates or create their own versions from modifiable parts. Users can drag and drop parts to create characters or create their own complex little parts with customizable textures and colors for a new design. For the latter, connectors available with the larger Tinkercad family can be employed. In the end, the printer processes similar color parts that can be snapped up together for a ready-to-pose figurine.
Engadget

The app, available on iOS, Android and Windows, is an addition to a growing list of 3D printing tools that encourage at-home experimentation. But it also engages a more pertinent audience –– a generation that learns to swipe screens and tinker with gadgets before they can walk.
[Image credit: Tinkerplay]





Tuesday 17 March 2015

Drones will soon detect unexploded bombs in Laos

Drones will soon detect unexploded bombs in Laos


Drones are more than just flying robots designed for commercial deliveries and buying Crocs. Despite some lingering suspicion from consumers, unmanned aircrafts have been deployed for social good too. They can aid rescue missions, navigate tough regions and even put out fires. Now, Austin-based ArchAerial's new drone mission could potentially save lives in war-torn regions that are prone to accidents and fatalities from unexploded bombs.
An aerial imaging firm, ArchAerial, already employs multi-rotor aircrafts for agricultural mapping, academic research and archeological surveys. Over the weekend at SXSW, Ryan Baker, the company's CEO, announced that his firm plans to deploy a prototype that will map minefields and locate unexploded bombs in areas historically ravaged by war. The humanitarian drone, essentially an Octocopter, will be loaded with LIDAR, a remote sensing technology that 3D maps the surface of the Earth with immaculate precision. If the mission goes as planned, it will keep surveyors from ever having to set foot on the ground in search of minefields.

ArchAerial's first minefield-locating mission will be in Laos, a country quite literally scarred from the Vietnam War. The US dropped about two million tons of explosives within a span of nine years, making Laos, a small Southeast Asian country the most bombed area in the world. Half a century later, an estimated 80 million baseball-sized bombs scattered across the country continue to threaten civilian lives.

[Image credit: ArchAerial]The Stack

Mona Lalwani
Engadget 





Friday 13 March 2015

Google Code is shutting down because everyone loves GitHub

Google Code is shutting down because everyone loves GitHub


Goodbye, Google Code. The technology giant has decided to close its project hosting and code collaboration site because, well, there are simply better alternatives on the web. Google says it launched the platform back in 2006 because it was unhappy with the "limited" options available to the open source community. Since then, the likes of GitHub and Bitbucket have risen to prominence, superseding Google Code's feature set and encouraging developers to transfer their projects. As such, Google's offering has become increasingly filled with spam and abuse, leading to the company's decision to pull the plug. Yesterday it stopped accepting new projects, and on August 24th the site will become read-only. Google Code will eventually be shuttered next January, although tarballs of project source, issues and wikis will continue to be available throughout 2016. If you need to transfer a project, head here for the relevant GitHub and Bitbucket migration tools.
[Image credit: AP Photo/John Cogill]
Google

Nick Summers
Engadget





Friday 30 January 2015

Google's 3D-sensing Project Tango is no longer an experiment

Google's 3D-sensing Project Tango is no longer an experiment


Yet another project is graduating from experiment to proper part of Google. Only two weeks ago, Glass left the confines of the Skunk Works-like Google X and became its own division headed up by Nest co-founder Tony Fadell. Now Project Tango, the 3D-sensing and -mapping concept, is moving on from the ATAP (Advanced Technology and Projects) labs to become a part of the company proper. Unfortunately what that means for the technology or what products it might eventually end up in isn't exactly clear. Will the next Nexus sport a depth-sensing IR camera? Maybe. Or perhaps they'll be used to build more advanced home automation and home monitoring tools for Nest. All we do know is that Tango will live on, even if the name "Project Tango" eventually fades away.
Google ATAP (Google+)

Terrence O'Brien
Engadget 





Saturday 17 January 2015

HTC's next flagship phone to be unveiled on March 1st

HTC's next flagship phone to be unveiled on March 1st


we're still in the middle of January, some of us are already hearing bits about the upcoming MWC. One e-mail that caught our attention comes from none other than HTC, who is already teasing its very own Barcelona event on March 1st -- the day before MWC kicks off. We understand that this will be the launch of the company's next flagship device, which sounds about right; the One (M8) was unveiled back in March 25th and went to market soon afterwards.
The invitation itself doesn't show much other than a "utopia in progress" line over a cosmic background (full image attached after the break), though the latter may be teasing some breakthrough camera technology, as we once heard a little while back. As always, we'll be at Barcelona to find out what HTC and others got up their sleeves, so stay tuned.

Richard Lai
Engadget





Tuesday 30 December 2014

Most Popular Words Used In 2014:

Most Popular Words Used In 2014:


It turns out that the most popular word of 2014 wasn't actually a word at all.
The heart emoji was used billions of times a day around the globe. It was the first time in the ranking's 15-year history that a symbol earned the top honors. 
"Hashtag" came in second, and "vape" was third


1. The Heart ♥ Emoji (for love) — People usually use the heart emoji to express love or warm feelings.

2. Hashtag  A repurposed pound sign, still powerful thanks to Twitter and Instagram.

3. Vape — Short for vaporize, or vaping, the act of smoking an electronic or e-cigarette.

4. Blood Moon — Four total eclipses of the moon in an eighteen-month span. Some Christians see it as presaging a lunar apocalypse.

5. Nano — From Greek for dwarf, small; now 1 billionth of a meter. It's used in any number of words surrounding nano technology.

6. Photobomb —  Breaking into a photograph without permission.  

7. Caliphate — A land ruled by an Islamic Caliph, typically governed under Sharia Law.

8. Privilege — The alleged advantages of having lighter colored skin in a diverse society.

9. Bae — A millennial's term of endearment.

10. "Bash" Tag —  Co-opting a brand's hashtag to undermine it.

11. Transparency — A state of openness, usually used in reference to the government.

12. Sustainable — Environmentally conscious lifestyle choices.

13. Clickbait — A link structured so that you just have to click on it.

14. Quindecennial — Fifteen-year anniversary of an event.

15. Comet — Comet 67p had a visitor from the Rosetta Spacecraft this fall.





Monday 29 December 2014

The Most Shocking Confessions From Your Favorite Stars

Top Most Shocking Confessions From Your Favorite Star








Shailene doesn't own a cellphone!

"I'm not a big technology person. I don't even have a smart phone. I don't even have a cell phone!" she told The Daily Beast "If I were to have one, it would be a flip phone."





Liam used to wear his sisters' heels.

“My sisters used to dress me,” Liam revealed. “They used to try to influence my fashion a bit. Which you know… may have involved a heel or two.”








Jennifer doesn't think she's a good actress.

"I watch my performance and I think, 'Yeah, it's sort of alright', but when I read the reviews I don't quite get what the big deal is, I really don't," she has said.
"When I get good reviews I think 'Alright - got away with another one.'"


Most of Ariana's hair is fake.


Harry regrets getting some of his tattoos.

"I regret this one on my wrist here," Harry said pointing to the one Ed Sheeran did for him. "I regret this. I mean, these are just crap. There are some that my friends have done and some that are just awful."





Selena wanted to quit music.

"Initially I wanted to quit music, but that probably isn't ever going to happen. I think I need to do more acting," she has said.
"I'm not super-confident in it, but acting is my first love."










Zayn would rather read than go on tour.

"If I wasn't doing this, I'd be at uni. I wanted to, and still quite want to, do an English degree. It's frustrating because I don't get any time to read on tour," he said.





Friday 26 December 2014

Toyota reportedly working on a flagship, hydrogen-fueled Lexus limousine

Toyota reportedly working on a flagship, hydrogen-fueled Lexus limousine


Toyota's first hydrogen car hasn't even gone on sale yet here in the US, and already we're hearing rumors about a follow-up vehicle. According to the Australian website Motoring, the Japanese auto giant is planning on taking the same fuel cell system it used in its mid-range Mirai sedan, and putting it into a higher-end Lexus LS limousine. For the most part, then, the new vehicle will make use of the same technology, though Toyota will apparently have to do some retro-fitting in order to make it work inside the current Lexus LS. (Unlike the LS, the Mirai was built from scratch as a hydrogen car.) If Motoring's report is correct, the new Lexus will have a fuel cell under the front seat, with the hydrogen tanks located behind the rear seat. Also, despite the fact that the LS wasn't originally designed as a hydrogen vehicle, it will reportedly offer nearly the same range as Toyota's existing FCEV: 239 miles, versus 300 on the Mirai. No word yet on price or whether this report is even true. And we suspect it could be a while before anyone sets the record straight -- the hydrogen-fueled Lexus LS is rumored to launch "by 2017," up to two years from now.
Motoring

Dana Wollman
Engadget





Tuesday 23 December 2014

Software upgrades re-create old-school toys as smart playthings

 Software upgrades re-create old-school toys as smart playthings





LOS ANGELES — Balls. Dolls. Race cars. So dull.
How can good old-fashioned toys like these compete for children's attention when kids seem umbilically connected to their iPads?
 How about software-upgradable balls, dolls and race cars?

Established toy makers and entrepreneurs from outside the toy industry are creating a new generation of connected toys. Just as software updates pulse new life into years-old smartphones and tablets, so too for kids' playthings. Equipped with Wi-Fi or Bluetooth, the toys can be customized, personalized and improved through the Internet to make them just as dynamic as tablets.
"The world of imagination coupled with your phone is the new reality for toys," said Adam Wilson, chief software architect at connected-toy maker Sphero. "Playing with plastic is just not enough today."

Sphero's pitch to parents is simple. No kid will be chasing after his or her iPad or tossing it like a Frisbee (well, hopefully). To get children to move more than their fingers and to hang out with friends, Sphero is offering toys juiced with software.
Sphero sells cylindrical and spherical polycarbonate toys controlled by smartphone and tablet apps that kids can race, light up, toss as a fetch toy or roll down the living room like a bowling ball. They start at $99.

If imagination alone doesn't lead to a cool use, Sphero provides more than 30 apps that interact with its products. One app turns Sphero into a measuring tape. Another, a digital hot potato. In games, the gadgets become controllers to be tilted and turned similar to waving a Nintendo Wii remote. Players also have the option of writing their own code and apps.

"We're at stage 1 of 150 stages to make a whole new experience for people," Wilson said.
Four years ago, he and fellow Sphero co-founder Ian Bernstein came together to develop software for robots. But the robots were too clunky to do anything fun with. Wilson and Bernstein branched into hardware development and produced a robot that was no more than a ball.

"It's a minimally viable robot, but it's a dot that can become anything," Wilson said.
In line with most of today's connected toys, new apps and software updates for Sphero are free. Consumers pay a higher price for the toy itself. But toy makers say the premium pays off since children so far have held on to them longer than traditional products.

Toys have been going high-tech in spurts for two decades as the cost of the latest consumer technology drops to a point where it can be included in typically inexpensive children's toys. But the latest wave is notable for two reasons: It's aimed at parents who fret about the downsides of iPad fixation, while leveraging some of the same technology inside smartphones and tablets to encourage more active play.

"The toy industry always reflects the culture at large," said industry analyst Chris Byrne. "We turn to technology a great deal for entertainment as adults, so it would make sense children would too."
Pramod Sharma, who as an engineer at Google developed a machine to scan copies of books, watched his preschool-age daughter Saanvi spend hours at a time on an iPad unless he stepped in.
Growing up, Sharma, 34, joined friends in building sandcastles and toy-block structures along the rivers of northern India. To give his daughter an opportunity to find similar camaraderie, he returned to his expertise in helping computers "see."

Sharma and a fellow former Google engineer developed an $80 play set called Osmo. Children place the iPad on a stand and affix a small mirror to the iPad so the camera can pick up on what's lying in front of the stand. One of three initial games revolves around tiny squares stamped with letters. Children must arrange letters to form the word for an on-screen image, and the screen lights up when the arrangement is correct.
Osmo's "computer vision" technology also has the smarts to recognize hand drawings and block shapes, with more to come, Sharma said. Since the software comes from the Web, it can be updated continually.

"I'm being careful not to discard anything that's been around," Sharma said of his Palo Alto startup's strategy. "We want to extend the iPad to make it more tactile and social."
In October, Sharma's company, Tangible Play, announced it had raised $12 million in venture capital. Two days earlier, Culver City toy maker Cartwheel Kids acquired Colorado startup Smart Toy.
"We really felt this groundswell of change happening in the toy industry," said Carly Gloge, who had been a Web designer before founding Smart Toy with her husband. "And we wanted to bring together a little tech company all built on software and one big company built on traditional toys with licensing."

Gloge and her husband, Isaac Squires, didn't have children of their own, but they still gravitated to the toy aisle at Target during every grocery trip. The couple, who built a video game on their first date, thought they could deliver more interactive toys.
They began with a stuffed animal, called an Ubooly, that parents could stuff a smartphone or tablet into. Powered by an app, the Ubooly becomes an imaginary friend that kids can touch and hold a conversation with. More than 20,000 people play with an Ubooly at least once a month, according to the company.

The next version, arriving in fall 2015, has computer technology built in because the cost of the parts fell 50 percent during the last year, Gloge said. The toy can speak to children and even help them learn new languages without a Wi-Fi connection, but the Internet connection allows the toy's vocabulary to be updated every so often. The goal is to personalize the toys to match a kid's obsession.

"If a girl really loves unicorns, you can incorporate that by helping her save unicorns through learning math," Gloge said.
Wonder Workshop's Dash & Dot robots, Anki Drive race cars, Lego Fusion, Tiggly Counts and Crayola's Virtual Design Pro sets are among other hot connected toys, according to industry experts.
The potential for the market to take off is there. Activision Blizzard's Skylanders franchise exceeded $1 billion in sales in 2013. Skylanders action figures act as wireless hard drives for data about characters in a video game when attached to a special base station. On their own, the action figures are whatever a kid imagines.

Skylanders is a favorite of mostly boys, though. Next summer, Flairgameworld plans to release the first 16 inexpensive, small felt creatures that it thinks should appeal to the caring side of girls. When synced to a mobile app, the toys will let girls experience cultures across the world.

"It's a discovery product beyond just launching Google Maps," said Flairgameworld principal Christina Sfakianos. "Kids want to relate to something, and you can't create that emotional attachment with just an app."

Paresh Dave
 Los Angeles Times





Amazon Fire Phone Update: Too Little Too Late?

 Amazon Fire Phone Update: Too Little Too Late?

Amazon has already admitted that its first iteration of the Fire Phone was a flop, but the e-commerce company is not giving up on its smartphone. The Fire Phone has gotten a software update that packs a host of new features. Is it enough to spark interest in a device that has failed to catch on with consumers in the nearly five months it’s been on the market?

Amazon released major new updates for both models of the Fire Phone Sunday; the AT&T version will receive Fire OS 3.6.5 and the unlocked GSM version gets Fire OS 3.6.8. Both models receive the same new features and enhancements, such as over 2,000 famous pieces of art added to the Fire Phone’s optical recognition system and its text translation engine now supports English, French, German, Italian and Spanish.

Despite the update, Amazon may still struggle to capture consumer interest, primarily because the Android-based Fire OS differs so significantly from Google’s stock Android, said Gartner analyst Ken Dulaney.

“Consumers like to play it safe in terms of knowing that the applications that they want are going to be on the platform,” Dulaney said. Google’s Android and Apple’s iOS rule the smartphone market. With these two on top, other software ecosystems, like Windows and BlackBerry, in addition to Amazon, have failed to capture any significant share at all. Moreover, Amazon’s App Store struggles to keep up with Google Play and the Apple App store with fewer developers creating Amazon versions of popular applications.

Things went downhill quickly for the Amazon Fire Phone ever since its July, 2014 launch. The device was expected to be an affordable option for customers, but it debuted with a premium price of $649 unlocked and $199.99 with a two-year contract. After several price cuts, Amazon executives were forced to concede that the company made missteps with the Fire Phone, first being its price and second being its carrier exclusivity on AT&T. The device simply didn’t have the cross-carrier availability it needed for a successful launch.

The Fire Phone has reportedly sold only about 35,000 units since launch. Not only has Amazon taken a $170 million loss on the device, finance chief Thomas Szkutak said at the end of the third quarter there was about $83 million worth of unsold Fire phone inventory.

Amazon insists it's not giving up. The company’s vice president of devices, Jorrit Van der Meulen, noted to the Guardian in November that the first model of its Kindle e-reader was also not well received. The company plans to continue with a second iteration of the Fire Phone, which may release sometime in 2016, according to Venture Beat.

Moving forward, Amazon will have to remember that it is not inventing a new market as it did with its Kindle e-readers but rather is competing in a highly saturated space. Its primary aim should be hawking future Fire Phones at unsubsidized prices of under $200, according to Gartner’s Dulaney. Another option would be getting rid of gimmicky features like its Dynamic Perspective" 3D Technology, which is the mainstay of the Fire Phone, but has not done much to entice consumers.
“A lot of buyers today, when they buy high-end phones a lot of the stuff is just eye-candy, they can’t do anything with it after a while and it goes into disuse,” Dulaney said. “Does it take good pictures? Is it a good value for the money? Are the apps I’m going to want going to be there?  That’s basically what people want.”


Fionna Agomuoh
 International Business Times





Apple pushes first ever automated security update to Mac users

 Apple pushes first ever automated security update to Mac users
Apple Inc (AAPL.O) has pushed out its first-ever automated security update to Macintosh computers to help defend against newly identified bugs that security researchers have warned could enable hackers to gain remote control of machines.
The company pushed out the software on Monday to fix critical security vulnerabilities in a component of its OS X operating system called the network time protocol, or NTP, according to Apple spokesman Bill Evans. NTP is used for synchronizing clocks on computer systems.
The bugs were made public in security bulletins on Friday by the Department of Homeland Security and the Carnegie Mellon University Software Engineering Institute. Carnegie Mellon identified dozens of technology companies, including Apple, whose products might be vulnerable.
When Apple has released previous security patches, it has done so through its regular software update system, which typically requires user intervention.
The company decided to deliver the NTP bug fixes with its technology for automatically pushing out security updates, which Apple introduced two years ago but had never previously used, because it wanted to protect customers as quickly as possible due to the severity of the vulnerabilities, Evans said.
"The update is seamless," he said. "It doesn’t even require a restart."
Apple does not know of any cases where vulnerable Mac computers were targeted by hackers looking to exploit the bugs, he added.
(Reporting by Jim Finkle; Editing by Jeremy Laurence)
Reuters





Friday 19 December 2014

Scientists develop lens-free microscope that borrows tech from cellphones

Scientists develop lens-free microscope that borrows tech from cellphones


LOS ANGELES — Scientists at the University of California, Los Angeles, have created a lens-free microscope that relies on a silicon chip found in smartphones and digital cameras. You can't use it to snap a selfie, but it could help scientists detect cancer.
In a paper published this week in Science Translational Medicine, the research team shows that images taken with the lens-free microscope were just as capable of revealing cellular abnormalities in tissue samples as more traditional, and more expensive light microscopes.
"Our microscope provides the same level of quality as a state-of-the-art optical light microscope, and it has a significantly larger field of view, a simpler design, and it is more cost-effective," said Aydogan Ozcan, a professor of electrical engineering at UCLA and the senior author on the paper, published Wednesday.

Ozcan's lab specializes in creating computer codes that simplify the design of microscopes, nanoscopes and other instruments, and improve their performance.
His team recently created a device that turns a smartphone into a high-powered microscope capable of imaging individual DNA molecules. Another project turned Google Glass into a tool that can perform diagnostic tests on blood and tissue samples.
Like much of Ozcan's work, the design of the lens-free microscope borrows from existing technology.

"The bread and butter of this project is a CCD or CMOS imager, which is the same thin chip you find in every digital camera, whether it's a high-end SLR or a cellphone camera," he said.
The setup also requires a light source and a sample holder that keeps the slide hovering just a little above the chip. When the light shines down on the sample slide, the slide casts a shadow of the sample tissue onto the imaging chip.

You can get an idea of how this works by holding your hand above your desk and under a light source. The closer to the desk you put your hand, the more defined the shadow becomes. The shadow of your hand is solid, but because cells are translucent, their shadows are more detailed.

The shadow image the chip collects is a murky-looking holograph that bears little resemblance to what you would see if you looked at the same slide through a light microscope. After the image is captured, it is reconstructed with software developed by Ozcan's team that converts the messy patterns into an image that is at least as clear as what you would see through a traditional microscope.
"The hardest part was creating the computational transformation that takes those nasty-looking shadowy patterns and give you the truth of what is happening," Ozcan said. "That was the computational puzzle."

Ozcan and his team tested the accuracy of their microscope by showing a board-certified pathologist 150 images of breast cancer tissue — some taken with a light microscope, others taken with the lens-free microscope. The pathologist was asked to analyze the images and note if the samples showed benign cells, atypical cells or invasive carcinoma.

The pathologist had 99 percent accuracy using images acquired by the lens-free microscope, and 100 percent accuracy with images from the light microscope.

Still, the lens-free microscope is not ready for prime time, Ozcan said. Most importantly, the computer software that lets a user look at the digitally constructed image on a computer screen needs to be more user-friendly.
"You can think of our interface as a very early version of the personal computer, where you have to write code to do anything," said Ozcan. "For other people to use it, it needs to be like Windows."
Eventually, however, the team would like to see the microscope used in parts of the world where access to medical infrastructure is limited.

"A small nurse's office that doesn't have a pathologist on staff could transmit digital images created by our microscope to an expert in another city, or another country," he said. "Mobile health and global health is where I would like to channel the things we create."

Deborah Netburn
Los Angeles Times 





Friday 12 December 2014

Seagate starts shipping 8TB hard drives that cost only $260

Seagate starts shipping 8TB hard drives that cost only $260


Here's something you can get for yourself these holidays : a 3.5-inch 8TB drive from Seagate that costs only $260 -- we didn't forget an extra number in that figure, promise. That's a lot cheaper than HGST's helium-filled 8TB disk drive, which is listed for $1,000 on newegg and just a bit more on Amazon. And, it's significantly more affordable than OCZ's 1TB SSD released only five years ago (remember when 1TB drives excited you?) for $2,200. This product is part of the brand's new Archive HDD line launched a few months ago, which uses Shingled Magnetic Recording (SMR) technology that can fit more data on a platter than the typical drive. The line also includes 6TB and 5TB options, if 8TB is already excessive.
It is slower than many recent SSDs (it has a read speed of 150MB/s, whereas the SSDs in this list of best models for 2014 have an average speed of 550MB/s), so it's probably best to pair it up with one. Still, at 3 cents a gig, that's not such a bad deal. According to Extremetech, Seagate has just started shipping out units to retailers, so if you want one as a stocking stuffer, your best bet is to look around. Amazon only has a 20-pack bundle for sale right now, and it won't be sent your way until January 2015.
Seagate

Mariella Moon
Engadget 





Wednesday 10 December 2014

McDonald's is bringing touchscreen ordering to the US

McDonald's is bringing touchscreen ordering to the US


It turns out that people aren't eating as many McHamburgers as they used to, which is a big problem if your business is all about slinging meat. So McDonald's is hoping the novelty of its "Create Your Taste" ordering kiosks will lure some customers back in. The machines will be installed in 2,000 of its US outlets by the end of 2015. Instead of just walking up to the counter and ordering, users will be given the option to McCustomize their McMeal on a touchscreen. That includes everything from choosing chicken over beef, skipping the fatty mayo or picking sweet potato fries. Unfortunately, the privilege of being able to order a Big Mac minus special sauce on a ciabatta without getting the stink eye will cost you a premium, both in terms of prep time and cash.
But don't fret for the underpaid cashiers -- they'll now be underpaid pseudo waiters that deliver your food to your table (like a real restaurant). It's hoped that this blending of not-so-fast food, technology and choice will be enough to win back younger, more health-conscious customers and rouse the company out of its slump. As Bob Nibeel, a McDonald's franchise owner told USA Today (with a twinge of sadness in his voice), "most millennials would rather deal with a computer, iPad, iPhone than actually have interaction with another human being." Leave it to McDonald's to offer the most depressing of observations about our society.
USA Today

Daniel Cooper
Engadget





Monday 8 December 2014

Wireless charging for tablets is finally coming next year

Wireless charging for tablets is finally coming next year


We're still waiting for the Rezence standard to bring wireless charging to laptops, but Freescale is taking a big step towards making that a reality. It just announced a new wireless product that's powerful enough to recharge tablets, portable medical devices, and other large gadgets. The 15-watt system, which should hit the market early next year, offers three times as much electrical power as Freescale's phone charging solution. It also plays nicely with other standards like the Wireless Power Consortium's Qi technology, VentureBeat reports (though we don't know if existing Qi devices can take advantage of the full 15 watts). If you've ever used a USB battery pack to recharge your gadgets, you've probably noticed that tablets typically need to be plugged into higher wattage USB ports to get juiced up. The same basic idea applies here. Increased power could also mean that tossing your phone on a wireless charger before you run out the door could actually be useful. After all, when charging your phone over a USB cable is three times faster, the minor convenience of wireless is a lot less compelling.
[Photo: A Lumia phone on a Nokia wireless charging pad.]
Freescale

Devindra Hardawar
Engadget





Vimeo will let you download (but not stream) 4K videos

Vimeo will let you download (but not stream) 4K videos


YouTube embraced 4K video a long time ago, but Vimeo is at last catching up... well, more or less. The internet media hub now lets you download 4K clips from both Vimeo Pro members and Video On Demand providers. If you just snagged a Retina iMac or a lower-cost 4K display, you now have one more source that will do justice to your extra-sharp screen. However, there's no streaming here. As Vimeo explains, it's waiting for the technology to make this technology work -- not many people have 4K-capable displays, and internet connections typically aren't speedy enough to deliver that many pixels in real time. Even so, it's an important upgrade if you've been meaning to watch Video Game High School and other online productions in the highest resolution possible.
Vimeo Staff Blog

Jon Fingas
Engadget





BlackBerry, NantHealth launch cancer genome browser

BlackBerry, NantHealth launch cancer genome browser


BlackBerry Ltd and NantHealth, a healthcare-focused data provider, launched a secure cancer genome browser on Sunday, giving doctors the ability to access patients' genetic data on the BlackBerry Passport smartphone.

Earlier this year, BlackBerry bought a minority stake in privately held NantHealth. The mobile technology company sees healthcare as one of the niche sectors in which it has an advantage, due to the heightened focus on patient privacy and BlackBerry's vast networks that can manage and secure data on mobile devices.

The company said the cancer genome browser on the BlackBerry Passport enables deep, interactive reporting on genomics data for physicians. It gives oncologists a tool to view individual genetic alternations in a disease and allows them to highlight relevant treatment options.
BlackBerry launched the square-screened Passport device in September, the oddly shaped device was fashioned in a sense to tailor to the needs of the physicians, with a wider screen that allows for better viewing of X-rays, scans and documents.

"Our partnership with BlackBerry has really been able to create a scalable super-computer in the palm of the hands of the doctor," said Patrick Soon-Shiong, chief executive of NantHealth.
BlackBerry Chief Executive John Chen said he expects this roll-out to get healthcare professionals interested in the Passport‎.

The genome browser is fully encrypted to allow deployment to enable clinicians to securely access patient data as soon as it is available, wherever they are.

The browser will be demonstrated at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas in January and it will be pre-loaded on BlackBerry Passport devices and available to the professional community in early 2015. The browser will also be available on certain other devices running on rival platforms, but secured by BlackBerry's network.

California-based NantHealth, whose cloud-based platform already connects thousands of medical devices in hospitals, was founded by Soon-Shiong, a surgeon and businessman, who made billions of dollars selling his two former companies, American Pharmaceutical Partners and Abraxis BioScience.

Soon-Shiong said the BlackBerry and NantHealth will continue to collaborate on software and hardware, and he said that the two are already working on a new device that will revolutionize the transport of big data sets. Details on this will be outlined early next year.
(Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman)

By Euan Rocha
Reuters





Wednesday 3 December 2014

Cable-free elevator moves you in any direction

Cable-free elevator moves you in any direction


















Elevators are absolutely vital in tall buildings, but they have their limits -- they can only move so quickly, and they can't usually move sideways to fetch you from the far side of a building. Both of those problems should be solved at once if German design firm ThyssenKrupp has its way. Its new Multi elevators ditch cables in favor of magnetic linear motor technology (also used in maglev trains) to move both horizontally and vertically, letting them service very wide or unusually shaped buildings. They can operate in loops and aren't limited by heights, either, so it's easy to put multiple elevator cars in one shaft. You'll ideally never wait longer than 30 seconds for a lift, and the space-saving design lets building owners offer more (or at least larger) apartments and offices.
Multi isn't the first cable-free, horizontal elevator; MagneMotion already has a system in use onboard an aircraft carrier for delivering weapons. However, this may be the first that you'll actually get to use. ThyssenKrupp plans real-world tests for its elevator in a trial tower around 2016, and the hardware is intended for civilian buildings. If all goes well, you won't have to spend ages waiting to get to your intended floor in the future... even if it's at the very top of a skyscraper.
ThyssenKrupp

Jon Fingas
Engadget