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9
Jun

This smart hoodie lets you message friends on the sly


Alina balean's smart hoodie up close

You don’t have to be a forward-thinking fashion designer or scientist to produce tech-savvy clothing. Need evidence? Just look at the smart hoodie developed by New York University grad students Alina Balean and Rucha Patwardhan. They’ve integrated a cellular-equipped Arduino board and switches into the wearable, letting you send messages through discreet movements; you can cover your head to text your mom, or roll up your sleeve to post on Facebook.

Balean adds that the hoodie could be useful in almost any situation where you’d rather not broadcast your intentions. You could let friends know that you’re threatened without tipping off a would-be assailant, for instance. While you’re not going to see this intelligent street wear at the local clothes shop, you might not have to wait that long — since it’s using off-the-shelf parts, there’s a good possibility that you can make it yourself.

Filed under: Wearables

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Via: The Verge

Source: Alina Balean

9
Jun

How would you change Intel’s Next Unit of Computing?


What is Intel’s Next Unit of Computing? It’s far too bulky to be an Intel-hewn alternative to the Raspberry Pi or Arduino, nor is it powerful enough to be designed to replace a low-powered desktop. Sitting awkwardly between the two, we imagine that plenty of you bought one of these for curiosity’s sake, but have you used it? What projects did it fit into, and how easy was it to use? Share your experiences of this over at our forums, you never know, some Intel engineers might even be listening.

Filed under: Desktops, Intel

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Source: Engadget Product Forums

9
Jun

Feedback Loop: must-play video games, Netflix woes and more


June is here! Let’s get this summer started with a fresh edition of Feedback Loop. Kris finds a list of video games we must play before we die; Netflix tries to shame ISPs; Tetris hits the big three-zero and we discuss whether everything announced at WWDC was innovative enough. All that and more past the break!

Must-play video games

Quick, think of a classic video game that someone needs to play at some point in their life. You probably thought of something like Super Mario Bros., Pac-Man or even Tetris. Kris recently found a fun book that listed 1,001 Video Games You Must Play Before You Die. There are some classics in there, as well as more obscure stuff. She went through the list and found she’s played 120 of them. Head over to the forums to take a gander and then share how many of the games you’ve played.

Netflix streaming woes

Net neutrality is a complex subject and sometimes it’s hard to know which side we should be rooting for. Earlier this year, Netflix signed a deal with Comcast to get more bandwidth. This week, Netflix is publicly shaming Verizon. It’s getting messy out there! Have you seen a message from Netflix pinning poorly streamed videos on your ISP?

‘Tetris’ turns 30!

Speaking of classic games, Tetris hit a crazy milestone as it celebrated its 30th birthday! Have we been meticulously organizing falling blocks that long? John talks about his earliest Tetris memories. I remember sitting in the back of class playing Tetris on my TI-82. What are yours?

Thoughts on WWDC

On Monday, Apple kicked off its World Wide Developers Conference by showing off iOS 8 and OS X Yosemite. We discussed some of the newly announced features and talked about whether or not they were interesting, innovative or uninspiring. What did you think of the announcements?

That’s all this week! Do you want to talk about your favorite gadget or have a burning question about technology? Register for an Engadget account today, visit the Engadget forums and start a new discussion!

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9
Jun

Poet explains why he spammed Twitter with every word in the English language


Approximately 109,150 tweets. Spread across seven years. Posted automatically by a bot which, each time, simply grabbed a single word from an already published (and inevitably outdated) canon of the English language and threw it out onto the social network. The bot was the brainchild of a poet, Adam Parrish (aka @everyword), whose original intention was simply to the “satirize the brevity of Twitter,” but who gradually came to see the project as a “magical writing experiment.” He learned, for example, that his 95,000 followers had a penchant for words that felt like they told a story, even when they weren’t expressed as part of sentence: words like “sex,” “weed” and “vagina,” which each got around 2,000 retweets. If you read The Guardian‘s interview with @everyword, you’ll see that his other big discovery was about how people imputed meanings to words that were entirely personal or based purely on coincidences in their Twitter feeds — like how a tweet of the word “zealots” apparently became tangled up in the chatter of Apple fans in the midst of WWDC.

Filed under: Misc, Internet

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Via: Techmeme

Source: The Guardian

9
Jun

Your smart TV can be hacked over the air, but it’s not likely


Samsung's 85-inch 4K curved TV

It only makes sense that putting a TV online theoretically exposes it to hackers, but it’s now clear that those hacks don’t have to go through conventional internet pipelines. A team of Columbia University researchers has published details of a vulnerability in an interactive TV standard (HbbTV) that lets evildoers hijack your smart TV and other devices in your home network so long as you tune into a specific over-the-air digital channel. Attacks can run undetected in the background, and the nature of the broadcasts makes it difficult or impossible to trace the culprit. Reportedly, the only surefire remedies are to cut off broadcast-based web content altogether, monitor for unusual spikes in network activity or notify users when apps launch.

However, you shouldn’t fret about someone stealing your data just because you tuned into the Home Shopping Network. If you only watch shows over cable or satellite, this issue won’t affect you; as it stands, HbbTV hasn’t yet reached North America. It’s also difficult for would-be hackers to reach many people without signal amplifiers. Still, the security hole isn’t going to be very comforting to cord cutters who still want the benefits of an internet-connected TV set.

Filed under: Home Entertainment, HD

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Via: Forbes

Source: Yossi Oren

9
Jun

What it’s like to drive a Tesla Model S in the UK


In a nutshell: more fun and more practical than you might expect, despite the high upfront cost. The right-hand drive model of the Tesla Model S has just arrived in the UK and it instantly transforms the story of electric cars in this country. Instead of being a glossy, distant, sometimes Hollywood-ised drama taking place along the West Coast of America, I find myself looking at a sleek, relatively unostentatious saloon parked up in the grey drizzle of Canning Town, East London. And I’m holding the keys.

I mess about with the pop-out doorhandles; I take photos of the double helping of front-and-back boot space; then I quickly slump into the driver’s seat before anyone asks to see the license that I forgot to bring to the test drive.

There’s a huge amount of technology in this £98K ultra-spec version, which costs twice as much as the lower-performance base model. It’s dizzying at first: a primary split-screen LCD panel in the centre of the dashboard, with a smaller section at the bottom for climate and car controls, plus another LCD dash behind the wheel that replicates some of the same information from the main unit. This includes a small-screen view of the GPS, which you can just about make out through the gap in the steering wheel.

The dash system on the top-spec Tesla S

It’s a lot to take in, so better to ignore it, at least for now. I push (or rather “click”) out of neutral using an implement that would, in a normal British car, have triggered the windscreen wipers. Then I pull out of the parking slot, keen to get out onto the stilted sequence of bus lanes and CCTV cameras that is otherwise known as a London public highway.

The hi-vis men at the gate have their backs to me and don’t hear me coming, even when my front bumper is almost nudging against their heels. Window down: “Hello gents, would you mind?” Startled, they clear the way and I press the metal for the first time.

Woah! I find myself apologising to the Tesla representative sitting next to me. “Sorry, I didn’t realise it’d be quite so…”

In a fossil fuel car, even a sporty one, it can take a couple of explosions from the transmission before you really feel the horsepower. And by then you’re half-way to the local magistrate’s court. It’s different with the Model S: The accelerative high is legal, clean and delivered in an instant-action pill with no side effects, regardless of how fast or slow you were travelling before you swallowed it.

A silent punch of g-force, then you simply level out when you hit the speed limit and act as if nothing naughty just happened. Once you’ve completed overtaking, or joined the A-road, all you can hear is tyre noise and your own breathing. It’s like abruptly losing your wanted level in Grand Theft Auto.

Tesla S car controls

Aside from the acceleration, the car feels familiar and European. It’s a matter of minutes before I’m dangling my elbow out of the window and enjoying a sight-seeing tour of the postmillennial architecture around the A13. I’m told that Britain is over-represented on the team of engineers that designed this vehicle, and I can believe it.

The dash is starting to make sense by now. The upper panel has six different screens to choose from, ranging from media to the Bluetooth phone interface. The lower panel is showing a large view of the map. But then the Tesla rep switches this to a view of the car controls and finally merges the two panels into one big one. A paradise of customization.

I experiment with the “Sport” mode, which toughens up the steering, while the “Comfort” mode makes everything light and easy. The “Creep” mode mimics the gentle tug of a regular engine when you touch biting point at the traffic lights. Speed bumps feel fine with suspension on “Standard” — or at least no worse than you’d expect given the big alloys. Meanwhile, switching the regenerative braking mode from “Standard” to “Reduced” hardly feels any different — just a tad more deceleration when you lift off the power — so I keep it as it is and enjoy the feeling of creating energy instead of consuming it.

Based on five miles of driving, which was broadly representative of the stopping and starting in London, my average projected range is 316 miles on a charge. That’s a figure I only ever see on the dash of my Audi after spending £60 at the petrol station, snacks not included. With a Tesla S, an overnight charge from the mains probably costs less than a fiver (rough guess). Or it’s free for life from your nearest Supercharger. I’d probably only need to re-charge once every couple of weeks, as I’m told the car holds its energy very well when it’s parked up overnight, unlike Tesla’s old Roadster.

Tesla S predicted range after London test drive

But then you have to think about the purchase price: £98k for the top-spec luxury model, £70k for the luxury model without extras, and £50k for the entry-level option. Even Tesla’s CEO, Elon Musk, admits that’s “more expensive than we’d like.” When I meet him, I think he looks a bit like a car salesman. I suppose that’s what he is, at this precise moment, but he also has the confident demeanour of a man who has amply proved his point. A man who has lapped Ford.

I ask him how long it’ll be before I can afford one of his cars, given that I could only stretch to £15,000 if I sell my Audi and push my credit to the max. “Three years from now,” he says. “Our third generation will cost £25,000, and when you factor in the free fuel and tax savings, your budget should cover it.”

Elon Musk

I’m convinced he’s right. In three years I’ll be driving an EV of some sort. Many of us will. Musk is a man who delivers; and he’ll deliver a Tesla S to your house within four months if you place an order in the UK today. By which point, he says, you’ll be able to traverse the entirety of “southern England” thanks to the rapidly expanding network of Superchargers along major corridors.

For now though, I’m still in Canning Town, enjoying a taste of my future and someone else’s present. About to use my wife’s Travelcard to get home. Gotta love the Jubilee line.

Filed under: Transportation

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8
Jun

Supercomputer passes the Turing test by mimicking a teenager


Alan Turing

After 64 long years, it looks like a machine has finally passed the Turing test for artificial intelligence. A supercomputer in a chat-based challenge fooled 33 percent of judges into thinking that it was Eugene Goostman, a fictional 13 year old boy; that’s just above the test’s 30 percent threshold. Developers Vladimir Veselov and Eugene Demchenko say that the key ingredients were both a plausible personality (a teen who thinks he knows more than he does) and a dialog system adept at handling more than direct questions.

You’d have good reason to be skeptical about such bold claims. Others have touted success in the Turing test, only to be shot down later; even then, 33 percent isn’t exactly a decisive margin of victory. However, Eugene’s creators argue that theirs was a true test, where there were no topics deemed off-limits. They also had independent verification for the results.

AI like Eugene is still far from being truly persuasive, let alone sentient. Still, this could be a significant milestone in building computers that mimic the subtleties of human conversation. The timing is also exceptionally fitting — it came both on the 60th anniversary of Alan Turing’s death, and just months after the computing legend received a pardon that put the spotlight back on his achievements.

Filed under: Science

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Via: The Telegraph

Source: University of Reading

8
Jun

Android can now wake you up when you’re close to your bus stop


Sleeping on the subway

If you’ve ever taken the bus or subway home after drinking too much at a party, you know how tough it can be to get off at the right stop — you may fall asleep well before then. That shouldn’t be an issue if you’re using a recent Android phone, however. Android Police has noticed that the latest version of Google Now on Android lets you set an alarm that wakes you up shortly before a favorite destination comes up; you can safely catch some shut-eye knowing that you’ll still be home on time. There are third-party apps that offer similar reminders, but it’s good to have a built-in safety net when you’re not entirely sober.

[Image credit: Jose Antonio Navas, Flickr]

Filed under: Cellphones, Transportation, Internet, Mobile, Google

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Source: Android Police

8
Jun

Customize the Daydream feature in Android with Daydream Widgets


Daydream Widget

Like most of us, are you trying to make your Daydream feature in Android a little more useful? Daydream Widgets is the missing link in making one of the most underused features in Android actually useful.

Added in Android 4.2 Daydream is a feature that Android added that is more or less a screensaver for your device while idle or docked. The feature will allow the Daydream screensaver to display an array of visually appealing colors, photo frame, photo table, and more to entertain you while your device is docked. Some apps have built in Daydream plugins to display information relevant to the app, but most are not very customizable.

Daydream Widgets takes this bland Android feature a step further by allowing you to put almost any widget you want on the Daydream screen. You can pick a couple widgets and even personalize the background color of the Daydream. Imagine having your weather widget displaying by your email and your calendar while your device is docked. The widgets will cycle and show up one right next to each other or one after another depending on how you have it configured. The goal is to personalize the Daydream to your specific needs so that it will be most useful for you.

This app is an extremely easy to use and fully customizable solution developed specifically to make Daydream full of useful information, information that you want.

Daydream Widgets is a free app that you can download in the Google Play Store.


The post Customize the Daydream feature in Android with Daydream Widgets appeared first on AndroidGuys.

8
Jun

Alleged iPhone 6 Rear Shell Shown From Multiple Angles in New Photos


Back in late May, a single photo of an alleged rear shell from the iPhone 6 surfaced, showing what appeared to be a thin metal part with cutouts on the rear for not only the camera, microphone, and flash, but also the iconic Apple logo.

A new photo set shared by Nowhereelse.fr [Google Translate] now shows a similar part from various angles, with its apparent high quality bolstering speculation that this may indeed be a genuine iPhone 6 shell.

iphone_6_shell_front_rearInterior (left) and exterior (right) of alleged iPhone 6 rear shell
Side views of the shell show the now familiar cutouts expected for the iPhone 6, including the standard mute switch and elongated volume buttons along the left side. The right side features a SIM tray toward the middle and what has been reported to be a relocated power button, with Apple perhaps moving the button from the top edge to the side to make it more accessible on the larger device.

iphone_6_shell_sidesLeft and right sides of alleged iPhone 6 rear shell
The report mentions that the cutout for the Apple logo points to the possibility of a lighted logo that could be used for notifications, but we believe this to be unlikely. Shell cutouts for the Apple logo are not uncommon for iOS devices, although they have not been seen on the iPhone before. But for iPad models, Apple has traditionally preferred to use a shell cutout with an embedded Apple logo rather than printing the Apple logo on the shell, in some cases such as in the original iPad placing antennas in the region to help overcome the shielding effects of the metal casing.

For the iPad mini, the Apple logo was printed on the first-generation models, but for the current generation the company has shifted to an embedded logo. As a result, we expect an embedded iPhone 6 logo to similarly be for aesthetic or perhaps antenna reasons rather than for illuminating the logo itself.

The iPhone 6 is expected to debut around the September timeframe, perhaps initially with the rumored 4.7-inch model while an even larger 5.5-inch model arrives up to several months later. Apple should also be releasing iOS 8 to the public at around the same time based on past patterns, and Apple’s iWatch is tentatively targeted for an October unveiling.