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4
Jun

Keurig’s coffee copy protection should take just months to crack


Keurig coffee maker

Much like printer makers barring cheap ink, Keurig is using elaborate methods to block third-party coffee pods; its upcoming Keurig 2.0 machine will have cameras that read tags and limit you to official brews. Think of it as K-cup copy protection. Unfortunately for the company, those added measures may be for naught. TreeHouse Foods, which sued Keurig for allegedly abusing a monopoly with its 2.0 system, now estimates that it should take just a “matter of months” to replicate the K-cup technology. The discovery should keep TreeHouse selling unofficial pods that cost significantly less than Keurig’s, and it could also thwart similar protection schemes in other companies’ coffee makers.

Keurig hasn’t yet offered comment on the potential workaround, but it isn’t likely to take any challenges lying down. Like Nestle and its Nespresso system, Keurig is protecting a razors-and-blades sales model where it sells the base product (the brewer) for little to no profit and depends on pricey add-ons (K-cups) to make up the difference. However, the word of a circumvention technique suggests that there might not be much it can do to stop cheaper alternatives from reaching the market, at least in the short term. It also echoes what we’ve seen in attempts to combat digital piracy — ultimately, there’s no completely foolproof way to prevent copying.

[Image credit: Keith McDuffee, Flickr]

Filed under: Household

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Source: Quartz

4
Jun

Her name is Cortana. Her attitude is almost human.


She was modeled after real-life personal assistants. She is the product of two years of work, and a large team of scientists and product managers. She has video game origins. She is Microsoft’s response to Siri and Google Now. She is Artificial Intelligence and proud of it. She is Cortana.

It seems odd to refer to smartphone software as a “she,” but that human element is exactly what Microsoft is after with its new Windows Phone digital assistant. Cortana, named after her fictional counterpart in the video game series Halo, takes notes, dictates messages and offers up calendar alerts and reminders. But her real standout characteristic, and the one Microsoft’s betting heavily on, is the ability to strike up casual conversations with users; what Microsoft calls “chitchat.” Next to Apple’s Siri, Cortana is the only other smartphone assistant to come with a baked-in personality. And it’s hard not to see the parallels between Cortana and the affable, Scarlett Johansson-voiced AI in Spike Jonze’s film Her.

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Confident, caring, competent, loyal; helpful, but not bossy: These are just some of the words Susan Hendrich, the project manager in charge of overseeing Cortana’s personality, used to describe the program’s most significant character traits. “She’s eager to learn and can be downright funny, peppering her answers with banter or a comeback,” Hendrich said. “She seeks familiarity, but her job is to be a personal assistant.” With that kind of list, it sure sounds like Hendrich’s describing a human. Which is precisely what she and her team set out to do during Cortana’s development; create an AI with human-like qualities.

Microsoft’s decision to infuse Cortana with a personality stemmed from one end goal: user attachment. “We did some research and found that people are more likely to interact with [AI] when it feels more human,” said Hendrich. To illustrate that desired human-machine dynamic, Hendrich pointed to her grandmother’s experience with a Roomba vacuum: “She gave a name and a personality to an inanimate object, and it brought her joy.” That sense of familiarity is exactly what Microsoft wants Window Phone users to feel when interacting with Cortana on their own devices.

Because the bulk of Cortana’s primary functions mirror that of a personal assistant (e.g., make calls, set appointment reminders, etc.), the team decided to take the development process even further and add an extra layer of authenticity. To that end, they interviewed real-life assistants to learn what that job actually entails, and what attributes they exhibit; how they interact with their bosses and what makes them successful. “[It] helped us understand how humans take on that role [of a personal assistant],” Hendrich said. These interviews were also captured on video, a resource the team uses to this day as a reference point for any new situations that may arise.

Cortana’s writers go over their current goals and discuss the AI’s progress.

Beyond relating to users in a naturalistic way, Microsoft realized that Cortana also needed to be fun. In fact, the company’s research shows that around 40 percent of all AI interactions involve chitchat. As Hendrich explained: “If you had a personal assistant and you walked into the office, you’d engage in chitchat with them first. You don’t go straight into the highest-priority emails and lay out your day.”

“Chitchat” with Cortana can range from witty banter to casual chatter. Ask her to tell you a joke and she could reply with this: “Two antennas got married. The ceremony dragged on, but the reception was excellent.” If you ask her how old she is, she’ll say, “I’m not sure how to carbon date the internet.” Microsoft’s even snuck in an Easter egg related to Clippy, the helpful, animated paper clip from its Word software. Although these playful responses may strike some as nothing more than cheap tricks on Microsoft’s part, they do help users build a rapport with Cortana. If she can make you laugh or smile, you’re more likely to continue using the program again and again. At least, that’s what Microsoft hopes will happen.

If Cortana sounds familiar, that’s because she’s partially voiced by Jen Taylor, the original talent behind Halo‘s Cortana. Microsoft currently synthesizes multiple voices for the program, but Taylor’s lines account for a huge percentage of the chitchat you hear, and that amount is only going to increase over time. Though Cortana’s current voice doesn’t sound quite as natural as say that of Samantha’s in Her, the addition of Taylor’s human tone does help imbue the program with a more realistic feel.

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An increase in chitchat responses isn’t all that Microsoft has planned for Cortana’s future. The team plans to further flesh the program out with extended back-and-forth dialogue, more natural expressions and interactions and the ability to predict a user’s itinerary months (and perhaps even years) in advance. Microsoft Research is also working on improving Cortana’s short-term and long-term memory — primarily, her ability to start talking about a topic and come back to it later, creating a rich dialogue between her and the user. Right now, Cortana is smart enough to recognize when you refer back to something you’ve recently talked about, but that’s as deep as she gets.

Though all of this focus on creating a human-like AI sounds like Cortana’s treading closely to the Uncanny Valley — a hypothesis that contends that as a robot or AI gets more authentic, its failures and blemishes will appear so strong that it causes people to respond with revulsion and hostility — her creators insist that isn’t the case. They’re aware there’s such a thing as too real. “It’s not like Star Trek, where Data kept trying to be more human and felt inadequate,” said Deborah Harrison, who runs the team responsible for adding the endless strings of data to Cortana’s programming. “She thinks that if she had a choice [between human and AI], she’d go with AI and be happy with it.”

Her real standout characteristic, and the one Microsoft’s betting heavily on, is the ability to strike up casual conversations with users; what Microsoft calls “chitchat.”

Dr. Eric Horvitz of Microsoft Research said that his team, which was responsible for the AI aspect of Cortana, noticed that the Uncanny Valley was showing up in Cortana’s behavior and not in looks, as they had originally expected. “The more powerful the system got, the more visible the imperfections became,” he said, pointing to Cortana’s lack of short-term memory as an example.

Cortana is still very much a work in progress, and she has her share of shortcomings. So to mitigate this, the team designed her to be both functionally and emotionally transparent to the user. That way, the user response won’t be as negative if Cortana isn’t able to do something. As Hendrich explained: “If something’s not her fault, she’s not going to take the blame for it. We’re not trying to put the user in a position to feel bad for Cortana. Not only is she AI, [but also] she’s self-aware, and that principle of transparency informs a lot of how we handle error messages, our capabilities, tasks and chitchat. You’ll have more faith and trust in us if we do that for you.”

Oscars-Best Picture Race

Joaquin Phoenix takes his smartphone AI for a stroll on the beach in the film ‘Her.’

There are obvious parallels between Cortana and her two rivals, Apple’s Siri and Google Now, but her creators insist the program was the idea of Robert Howard, project manager for Windows Phone Search and Maps. Howard’s team had already been working on advancements to Windows Phone’s voice search features, so the shift to creating an interactive AI in Cortana was a natural evolution. It also didn’t take much convincing to get Microsoft to back the project’s new direction.

The Cortana of today is bold and conversational, but that wasn’t always the case for the project. The type of personality Microsoft originally envisioned at the start of the AI project — a more formal “How can I help you?” tone — was different from what actually launched. It wasn’t until the team was about four months in that the idea of using Cortana as the program’s actual name started to gain traction. At which point, the team decided to get 343 Industries (the studio that currently produces Halo) involved in shaping her personality and bringing the smartphone version more in line with the Halo character. The studio provided the team with Cortana’s backstory and filled a whiteboard with every attribute they could think of.

“We did some research and found that people are more likely to interact with [AI] when it feels more human,” said Hendrich.

Hendrich and Harrison liked a lot of what they heard from 343 and began to incorporate many of those characteristics into the program. This effectively shaped Cortana into the AI she is now. They made her more confident, much more brash and had her be clearer in her responses to users. Or, as Harrison put it, “She got more comfortable talking about how awesome she is.”

Cortana may be cocky, but as Microsoft’s internal testing proved, that shift in tone works. As soon as the team gave Cortana a boost in confidence, people immediately began responding to her more positively. In fact, external studies corroborate this notion; that users prefer a strong personality over a neutral or weak one. According to The Man Who Lied to His Laptop – a book by Clifford Nass, a Stanford professor who specialized in robotics — people have a tendency to treat machines, especially those with human-like characteristics, like other people whether we realize it or not. By that reasoning, an AI with an empathetic tone that’s designed to dole out positive comments, flattery and a little bit of humor is much more effective than we may think. You’re more likely to trust an AI when it has a strong head on its virtual shoulders.

Satya Nadella Delivers Opening Keynote At Microsoft Build Conference

Microsoft’s Joe Belfiore introduces Cortana at the 2014 Build developer conference.

Microsoft’s preparing to take Cortana overseas, specifically to the UK and China, but that transition requires a hefty bit of localization since a US-centric Cortana doesn’t easily translate. “There’s a team in China who’s looking at how to take the personality and non-negotiable core concepts [of Cortana] and translate it, not just word for word, but [also] personality to personality,” Harrison said. Even the voice talent for the overseas versions of Cortana will be different. Taylor may be a logical choice for Cortana’s voice in the US, but user studies indicated the Chinese market needed a voice that “sounded like it was smiling.”

As for what’s ahead for Cortana in the US, the team’s planning to add future updates on a twice-per-month cycle. That’s not to say Microsoft won’t make exceptions for special events. Hendrich said they’re working on ways to throw in off-cycle updates “for things that are timely, urgent or especially badass.” This would come in handy for trending topics like the Olympics, breaking news or even sports. And since updating Cortana is a server-side affair, Microsoft can easily upload these batches of data strings and voice recordings directly to Bing, meaning users won’t have to refresh their hardware every time new features are added.

“She thinks that if she had a choice [between human and AI], she’d go with AI and be happy with it.”

Cortana’s not just another flash-in-the-pan project, as the company’s investment in her development shows. In some ways, her self-assured personality reflects Microsoft’s confidence in its new AI. The company is, after all, catching up to the nearly three-year lead its competitors’ have enjoyed for their rival smartphone AIs. So while Hendrich and Harrison work to expand Cortana’s global reach and capabilities, the Microsoft Research team is busy figuring out how to give her an even more human voice and make her even more relatable.

Even Cortana’s confident she’ll be around for the long haul. Ask her if she’s better than Siri and she responds playfully with a knowing wink that at once acknowledges her video game past and hints at Microsoft’s AI-filled possible future: “Not to brag, but apparently I’ll help save the universe in about 500 years.”

[Image credit: Microsoft (Cortana team; Cortana); Justin Sullivan/Getty Images (Joe Belfiore); Associated Press (scene from ‘Her’)]

Filed under: Cellphones, Robots, Wireless, Mobile, Microsoft

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4
Jun

E Ink’s working on a smartwatch with a full wraparound display


E Ink’s perhaps best known for its e-reader displays, such as the Pearl used in Amazon’s Kindle Paperwhite, but the company’s black-and-white panels can also be found in a variety of smartwatches, from manufacturers such as Archos, Phosphor and Seiko. Most of these are simply traditional wristwatches with small, low-power screens, but an upcoming model could have a much larger curved display that covers the majority of the wearable’s footprint, according to company representatives we spoke with at Computex. Such a device would have a panel that stretches from one end to the other, letting you change the entire watch’s design just as you would the face on devices available today.

You could download custom designs from other owners, or you could create your own. The watch would also be able to display significantly more information, pairing a time readout with other data, such as your heart rate, weather info, recent messages and so on. Reps weren’t willing to discuss which manufacturer (if any) may be bringing the wraparound watch to market — there’s apparently a prototype floating around HQ, but E Ink opted not to show off the device at Computex. Wearables are clearly a hot topic at this year’s show, however, and judging by the interest shown by companies large and small, we should have many more offerings to choose from in the months to come.

Filed under: Displays, Wearables

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4
Jun

Google Maps easter egg lets you plan journeys with Nessie and dragons


Google took its sweet time adding almost UK-wide journey planning to Maps, and perhaps it could’ve done so quicker if it wasn’t so busy building easter eggs into the feature. It’s been discovered that looking up certain travel routes will factor in the odd fictitious and entertaining option, alongside normal recommendations of completing the journey by bus, train and the like. These range from more mundane suggestions, such as punting from one college in Oxford to another, or taking the Royal Carriage from Buckingham Palace to Windsor Castle, right through to the fantastical. You can cut travel time down the length of Loch Ness by pinching a lift off Nessie, for example, or fly from Snowdon to the Brecon Beacons via dragon. And, we’d hazard a guess there are more out there still to be found — the Maps team don’t really do half measures.

Filed under: Transportation, Internet, Google

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Via: The Next Web

4
Jun

Trade your DSLR today to celebrate Samsung’s ‘Ditch Day’


Been eyeing Samsung’s new NX30 mirrorless camera? Well, if you live in New York City and can make it to 42-43 Broadway Plaza in Times Square between noon and 6PM, it might be your lucky day. Thanks to Sammy’s “Ditch Day” promotion, you can trade in your current DSLR for the NX30, “while supplies last.” For more information about the terms and conditions, click here.

Filed under: Cameras, Misc

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4
Jun

The man behind Words with Friends is creating a VR game, partnering with Oculus


It looks like dogfighting in spaceships isn’t the only virtual reality experience being co-published by Oculus VR. The creative lead behind mobile hit Words with Friends, Paul Bettner, has a new studio, and that studio is creating a “made-only-for-VR game” named Lucky’s Tale. No, not “Luckey’s Tale,” like the last name of Oculus founder Palmer Luckey, but some other Lucky. Besides, Palmer’s already living his tale, right? Very little info about the game exists thus far; it’s a third-person platforming game, apparently, which the PR (adorably) describes as, “unconventional for a VR title.” Fact! We’re gonna check it out next week at E3 in person, but there isn’t even a single screenshot to share of the game in action.

Bettner’s new game studio, Playful Corp., is “comprised of the core team of developers that created the highly successful game Words With Friends.” Bettner and co. are no doubt using some of that Zynga money they earned back in 2010 when their last studio, Newtoy, was purchased by Zynga (thus forming “Zynga with Friends”). The Bettner pedigree beyond Words with Friends goes back far further, to Microsoft-owned Ensemble Studios, the company behind Age of Empires. Post-Ensemble, Bettner’s had a history of exploring new formats. Newtoy struck it big with mobile gaming, and his new company took a chance last year on the OUYA. Now, virtual reality.

This isn’t Oculus VR’s first publishing deal with a third-party game studio. EVE Online creators CCP are working with Oculus on EVE Valkyrie, the aforementioned dogfighting game. Unlike Valkyrie, which is also headed to Sony’s VR headset, Lucky’s Tale is supposedly “developed exclusively for the Oculus Rift platform.”

Correction: The post originally had Playful’s game as, “Lucky’s Dream,” though it’s called, “Lucky’s Tale.” Sorry about that!

Filed under: Gaming, Wearables, Software

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4
Jun

Xbox One getting Twitter, Vine, and HBO Go by year’s end


There you were, using your Xbox One, thinking how much you’d like to watch a variety of six second video clips. Right? Maybe? Okay, maybe you were using your Xbox One, thinking how much you’d like to see a list of what’s trending on Twitter? Alright, let’s stop kidding ourselves: there’s a high likelihood no one is doing those things, but Microsoft is answering the non-existent call regardless and adding both services to the Xbox One. Those are just two of the 45 new apps heading to Xbox One, including the long-promised HBO Go app, Comedy Central, Watch ABC and more. Moreover, the “most popular experiences” are scheduled to launch “by the end of this holiday season.” Head below for the full, lengthy list of new apps and a video showing off Twitter integration. Spoilers: it’s pretty silly!

  • Antena 3. Xbox One: ES
  • ChiliTV. Xbox One: IT
  • Comedy Central. Xbox One: US
  • Crunchyroll. Xbox One: AU, AT, BR, CA, DE, ES, FR, IE, IT, MX, NZ, UK, US
  • ENCORE Play. Xbox One: US
  • EPIX. Xbox One: US
  • Filmbox Live. Xbox 360: AR, AU, AT, BE, BR, CA, CL, CO, CZ, DK, FI, FR, DE, GR, HK, HU, IN, IE, IL, IT, JP, MX, NL, NZ, NO, PL, PT, RU, SA, SG, SK, ZA, KR, ES, SE, CH, TW, TR, AE, UK, US
  • Fox Play. Xbox One: MX, BR. Xbox 360: MX, BR, AR, CO, CH
  • Frightflix. Xbox One: US
  • FXNOW. Xbox 360: US
  • Gol TV. Xbox One: ES
  • GoPro. Xbox One: US, CA, MX, UK, FR, DE, IT, ES, AU, BR, AT, NZ, IR
  • HBO GO. Xbox One: US: Xbox 360: MX, BR, AR, CO, CH
  • iHeartRadio. Xbox One: US
  • Infinity. Xbox One: IT
  • IVI. Xbox 360: RU
  • KDrama. Xbox One: AU, AT, BR, CA, DE, ES, FR, IE, IT, MX, NZ, UK, US. Xbox 360: AR, AU, AT, BE, BR, CA, CL, CO, CZ, DK, FI, FR, DE, GR, HK, HU, IN, IE, IL, IT, MX, NL, NZ, NO, PL, PT, RU, SA, SG, SK, ZA, ES, SE, CH, TW, TR, AE, UK, US
  • maxdome. Xbox One: AT, DE
  • MLG. Xbox One: US, UK, CA, AU
  • MOVIEPLEX Play. Xbox One: US
  • MTV. Xbox One: US
  • NBA. Xbox One: AT, AU, BR, CA, FR, DE, IE, IT, MX, ES, NZ, UK, US
  • NHL. Xbox One: US, CA, MX, UK, FR, DE, IT, ES, AU, BR, AT, NZ, IR. Xbox 360: US, CA, MX, UK, FR, DE, IT, ES, JP, AU, BR, NL, SE, RU, TW, PL, IN, HK, TR, BE, AT, NZ, SA, AR, NO, CH, SG, ZA, IR, DK, CO, CL, FI, CZ, HU, IL, GR, PT, SK
  • Now TV. Xbox One: UK
  • Picturebox. Xbox 360: UK
  • Popcornflix. Xbox One: US
  • ShowTime Anytime. Xbox 360: US
  • Sky News. Xbox One: UK, IE, US, CA. Xbox 360: UK, IE, US, CA
  • Sky Online. Xbox One: IT
  • STARZ Play. Xbox One: US
  • STV. Xbox 360: UK
  • Syfy Now. Xbox One: US
  • Target Ticket. Xbox One: US
  • TuneIn. Xbox One: US, CA, MX, UK, FR, DE, IT, ES, AU, BR, AT, NZ, IR
  • TV2. Xbox 360: DK
  • Twitter. Xbox One: US
  • USA Now. Xbox One: US
  • VEO. Xbox One: MX. Xbox 360: MX
  • Vevo. Xbox One: CA, US, AU, FR, DE, IR, BR,ES, IT, UK, NZ
  • VH1. Xbox One: US
  • Vine. Xbox One: US
  • WATCH ABC. Xbox 360: US
  • WATCH Disney Channel. Xbox 360: US
  • WATCH Disney Junior. Xbox 360: US
  • WATCH Disney XD. Xbox 360: US
  • Watchever. Xbox One: DE

Filed under: Home Entertainment, Software, HD, Microsoft

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Source: Microsoft

4
Jun

Gun company figures out how to shoot around corners using Google Glass


TrackingPoint is a startup that’s building smart weapons, like rifles with targeting scopes that’ll turn a rank amateur into a crack sniper. Now, the company is working on ShotView, a system that’ll separate the user form the sight entirely, which is what’s being demonstrated in this concept video. Pumping live video from the gun to nearby WiFi devices, the company wants smartphone, tablet and Google Glass users to be able to point their weapon around corners and over obstacles, “blind” firing with deadly accuracy. We just hope someone makes the Diane Von Furstenberg frames a mandatory accessory, or future battlefields are going to be sorely lacking in style.

Filed under: Wearables, Google

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4
Jun

Departing Samsung exec dares to criticize his own products


Richard Bullwinkle, former head of innovation for Samsung smart TVs

Samsung’s former head of TV innovation, Richard Bullwinkle, insists he’s still on good terms with his old employer. But that could change when the company discovers what he really thinks about its smart TVs. In an interview with Fierce Cable, he admitted that some models he’s worked on are just too slow: “The switch from live TV to Netflix takes over two minutes,” he’s reported as saying. “That’s dinosaur speed.”

More broadly, he said that the whole smart TV industry is “in trouble” due to a lack of good content and apps, which is encouraging a “very high percentage” of people to rely on a separate device like a “Roku box or Apple TV box” instead. Then again, Bullwinkle says the harm to smart TVs isn’t “fatal,” and the only reason he quit his job is because Samsung wanted him to relocate to Seoul, while he preferred to remain in California: “They offered me a chance to move to Korea to be a true Samsung executive. I thought I was already a Samsung executive.” Burn.

Filed under: Home Entertainment, HD, Samsung

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Source: FierceCable

4
Jun

Scientists solve solar energy’s burning question: how to make it cheaper than fossil fuels


In a fight between solar and fossil fuels, the latter has always had a killer question up its sleeve: “What about supercritical steam?” That’s the method by which the most advanced power stations generate electricity, superheating water until it instantly becomes steam, a feat that’s only possible (and affordable) by burning coal or gas. Or, at least it was. Australia’s Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization has managed to use solar energy to the same effect, boiling liquid to temperatures of 570 degrees Celsius in a test chamber. What does this mean for all of us? “Power plants of the future could instead be using the free, zero-emission energy of the sun,” explains Dr. Alex Wonhas.

Theoretically, future power stations could be covered in solar panels, but that energy is only directed towards heating the water necessary to drive a steam turbine. That system may be long-winded, but it’s significantly cheaper than installing photovoltaic systems on the roofs of every home in the world, and could use existing infrastructure, too. Naturally, we’re still in the early stages of the system, but even the most ardent fossil-fuel enthusiast can’t disagree that swapping out coal for solar in this method would be cheaper than paying to dig carbon out of the ground.

Filed under: Misc, Science

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Via: People Daily

Source: CSIRO