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11
Aug

Now TV launches weekly Sky Sports passes for £10.99


Good news, sports fans: Sky’s finally decided to do something about the prohibitive cost of streaming your favourite sporting events on Now TV. Where before 24-hour access to Sky Sports would set you back a whopping £9.99, the company’s new Sky Sports Week Pass offers access to all seven of its sports channels (including the new Sky Sports 5) over seven days for just for just a quid extra (£10.99) for a limited time. Launching on Thursday, it’ll come just two days before the Premiership season kicks off, giving those without a Sky Sports subscription the chance to get their fill of sport. BT, of course, still offers access to its Premiership coverage for free (if you’re a BT Broadband or Virgin Media subscriber), but with domestic football, access to extended European matches and the Ryder Cup building up its listings, Sky’s new weekly pass is significantly better value, at least right now. The same can be said for the daily pass, which’ll now cost you £6.99 (a saving of £3) until Sky decides to ramp up the price again.

Filed under: Home Entertainment, Internet, HD

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Source: Sky

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11
Aug

The Shower Speaker lets you rave while you rinse


One of the things that we love more than anything else is belting out Art of Fighters hits while we’re in the shower. A showerhead that’s been cross-bred with a Bluetooth speaker, like the Kohler Moxie, is perfect for sharing our talent with the neighbors. The only thing that the hardware doesn’t offer, however, is the stage lighting that’d really make us feel like we’re on stage, helping to make us forget that we’re standing naked under a tap. That’s where the Shower Speaker, from, er, Shower Speaker LLC, comes in.

Unlike its rivals, the Shower Speaker has a ring of color-changing LEDs that switch hues depending on the temperature of the water. At the center, is a 3W Bluetooth 3.0 + EDR speaker that the company promises will last around 16 hours on a single charge. Once used up, you can remove it from the housing with a twist and recharge it with the bundled USB cable. According to its creators, the hardware has been designed to be both aesthetically pleasing and with due reverence to ensuring that the audio sounds great even with water in your ears and face. If you’re interested in picking one up, it’s available to order on — audible sighIndiegogo, priced at $80, and are expected to ship in early 2015.

Filed under: Misc

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11
Aug

Can littleBits’ Lego-like kits democratize DIY engineering?


What happens when you look to get more out of your engineering knowledge? For littleBits CEO Ayah Bdier, that meant making electronics and programming accessible to everyone, regardless of skill level. The company’s Lego-like smart toys can be used to build any number of things: from a simple blinking LED to a custom-built synthesizer or smart thermostat. And, as we found out, the company plans for its DIY modules to get even smarter. With those endless possibilities in mind, we caught up with the littleBits’ founder to chat “making” made easy, why gender has no role in tech and the future, DIY-connected household.

Before littleBits, you worked as an engineer. So I’m wondering how the idea of the Lego-like kits came about?

I’m an engineer. I have a background in computer engineering and then did my masters at MIT at the Media Lab, but I always wanted more out of engineering. I wanted to use it for creative purposes, to be able to make art or design, invent new products or the next big innovation. So I started to use electronics as a material, and wanted to make it accessible to other people to use the material in the same way, without having to become engineers or programmers themselves.

littleBits is really inspired by other mixed technologies that have started in the hands of experts, but then somebody came along and democratized them and they became accessible. Like 3D printing, for example, democratized manufacturing or object-oriented programming democratized software and game development. I wanted to do the same thing with hardware.

Bdier speaking at Engadget Expand last November

With littleBits, you don’t need any knowledge of building, hacking or programming, and you can make something that works in a matter of minutes. Is that ease of use something that has been a goal from the start, and has that been something you keep in mind as you develop new additions to the littleBits line?

Yeah, absolutely. The goal has always been to make the barrier to entry very, very low, so that it’s really easy to get started. It literally takes you seconds to get started and you can start building simple stuff like a blinking LED or a moving motor. Or very complex stuff like a wireless transmission or a radio frequency or make something programmable[.] But at the same time, after we built up the foundation of the library — the lights and sounds and sensors and motors and stuff — we started to raise the ceiling so that you can make complex things that are really intelligent that have timing and logic and hardware and software relationships. So the newest bit that we launched, the cloudBit, is a very powerful bit — it’s a little computer. And it lets you make anything internet-connected.

What was the spark that led to a collaboration with Korg for a music-making kit?

Since we started the company, we always wanted to make synthesizer bits. … We’ve always wanted to do it, but never got around to it. Then in 2012, I met Reggie Watts for the first time, and showed him littleBits, and he said it would be amazing if you could make little music synthesizer bits that people can make instruments and perform with. We were like: Well, we’ve always wanted to do that; we’ll get in touch with you if we ever do. And then a few months later, also incidentally, Korg emailed us and said we love what you’re doing and we’re huge fans, and we want to make a synthesizer kit with you. So we set up a sort or three-way partnership between us, Reggie Watts and Korg and put the synth kit together.

You’ve already touched on the cloudBit, but with that new addition, makers can build their own connected devices or even add internet to non-connected devices. How will that ability to “just add internet” change what littleBits are already capable of?

It means that you can recreate some of the most popular devices. For example, you can make your own Nest, Sonos or SMS-activated door lock. But this means also that you can create things that have never existed before, so you can make the next big idea. We’ve seen people make pet feeders and remote-controlled doorbells, and be able to build prototypes for an invention. We have an ego meter that someone made to display every time you get a like on your Instagram, so you can visualize your ego getting bigger. We see all kinds of things; some that are functional around the home and some that are just playful and inventive.

There are ways for teachers to get their students making things in the classroom. Could you elaborate a bit on how that specific initiative got started?

We have over 2,000 schools that are using littleBits, and to be honest, a lot of it was organic. We didn’t even have an education team. They just started purchasing them and using them as we started seeing it online. They used them in science classes to teach gravity or in math classes, arts and crafts … They used them in problem-solving and design-thinking classes — all sorts of things; it’s really all over the place.

We have these products that are made specifically for teachers. One is called the Workshop Set, which has 100 modules and it’s specifically optimized for running your own workshop with large groups of kids. We also have a Pro Library, which is a wall unit full of electronics that’s perfect for prototyping and workshops. They have it at places like Google X, Techstars, IDEO and a bunch of after-school programs and museums.

A cloudBit-enabled smart thermostat

Last fall, Google announced that they had teamed up with MIT, the Girl Scouts and others for the Made with Code program to inspire more young ladies to code at an early age. With you already lending a hand in the classroom, what’s your advice for young ladies looking to dive into making and programming?

I’m one of the mentors of the program and we did a video series that I was in. My advice really is to never look at any technology or any skill as being gendered. There is no “engineering is for boys and art is for girls.” That’s an obsolete, outdated and wrong statement. Really, I don’t believe that there are gender lines. I believe that everyone is different. Some people like art; some people like math; and some people like both. And disciplines are really dead. It’s really about looking at the intersection of disciplines.

“My advice really is to never look at any technology or any skill as being gendered. There is no ‘engineering is for boys and art is for girls.’”

My advice for young girls that are either afraid or not ready to get into it is just give it a shot. Just give it a shot and you’ll see how quickly you’ll be engaged. With littleBits, you can snap bits together in seconds and suddenly you get a flurry of ideas that come to you and you can’t help but be inspired. There are other tools out there like that as well and it becomes really the beginning of long journey of being creative and inventive.

littleBits aren’t just for the younger folks either. What would you say is a good first project for someone who is a bit older to start with?

There’s a portion of our demographic that’s kids and education, and there’s a large portion that’s adults and professional engineers — people that are using it for prototyping and making their own solutions for their homes. One of the newest, very popular projects that someone came up with using the cloudBit is a remote-controlled feeder for your pet. And another that’s a way to find out whether your cat came through the door or not, things like that. There’s a whole series of pet projects that are fun. And there are also things that are more solutions, like an SMS doorbell, which is popular with people that sometimes work in the garage or sometimes wear headphones. They make a doorbell so when the button is pressed, they receive a text message.

What would you say is the most creative use of littleBits that you’ve seen someone create? Not necessarily someone who works for the company, but maybe that a user has made.

The most creative is difficult to say because new ones are always being made. But recently, there was one that I really loved that was actually something that everybody wanted to make and never did. It’s a notifier that reminds you to take your umbrella. One of our community members, Jeremy Blum, he’s a hacker and a maker, used the cloudBit to make this umbrella stand that connects to IFTTT and listens to the weather to see if it’s raining. At the same time, it detects you’ve left your home, sending you a text message reminding you to take the umbrella with you.

The existing littleBits have touched on elements of space, music making, programming and, most recently, internet connectivity. Is there any chance you could tell us maybe a little bit of what we might see next?

The next thing is gonna be really big, so I’m not quite ready to talk about it yet. It’s definitely worth holding for.

This interview has been condensed and edited.

[Image credit: Craig Barritt/Getty Images (Ayah Bdier); littleBits (fish feeder, littleBits Korg, smart thermostat)]

Filed under: Misc

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11
Aug

Amazon wants you to ask Hachette’s CEO for lower e-book prices


Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos at the Kindle Paperwhite introduction

Amazon’s fight with Hachette over e-book pricing just got extra-personal. Hot on the heels of writers attacking Jeff Bezos’ “retaliation,” the Amazon Books Team has posted a Readers United site that calls on you to email Hachette CEO Michael Pietsch and ask him to lower the costs of e-books. The online retailer doesn’t want you to mince words, either — it wants you to bring up his “illegal collusion” and claim that he’s using authors as “leverage.” Some writers aren’t on his side, Amazon says.

Whether or not you think flooding someone’s inbox is an effective advocacy tactic, Amazon may not have used the best evidence to criticize writers that back Hachette’s position. It cites 1984 creator George Orwell as saying that publishers should conspire together to keep costs artificially high. Well, that’s not really true. As the New York Times notes, Amazon is quoting Orwell out of context — he was in favor of cheaper books (like paperbacks), but contended that they would still hurt the industry’s income. He also disputed the notion that lower prices will lead to people buying more books, as Amazon argues. Orwell believed that customers would simply roll the savings into other forms of entertainment, like movies; that’s good for both readers and multi-talented media giants like Amazon, but not authors and publishers. While he wasn’t completely right about pricing — paperbacks did spark a literary renaissance, after all — the issue isn’t necessarily as clear-cut as Amazon makes it out to be.

[Image credit: David McNew/Getty Images]

Filed under: Internet, Amazon

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Via: New York Times

Source: Readers United

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11
Aug

IRL: Could a custom laptop bag be worth the splurge?


I’ve always thought it’s better to spend more on something once than to buy cheap and replace time and again. Because of this, I’ve owned exactly two bags in the last nine years: a Wenger Soho backpack and now a custom, $184 Timbuk2 Laptop Messenger. Last spring I decided it was time to retire the trusty Wenger that got me through college and my first three E3s for something a little more modern.

What pushed me toward Timbuk2 was the number of pockets and compartments inside — its bags aren’t just buckets with a strap. Moreover, in addition to getting a bag that looked exactly how I wanted, by going custom I was also giving a job to one of Timbuk2‘s San Francisco bag-makers, and I’m all about supporting domestic manufacturing whenever possible.

I wasn’t sure a medium would be big enough after scoping its dimensions online, but when my bag arrived just over a week later, I was happily proven wrong. My current haul is a five-subject notebook, a 2-inch three-ring binder, hardcover versions of Jurassic Park and Blood Meridian, a Moleskine, my 13-inch MacBook Air and PS Vita. That’s not the half of it, though, because I’m also schlepping all kinds of wall adapters and charging cables, a smattering of writing instruments, business cards, two voice recorders, a few paperback novels, two notepads and a travel mug. Heavy? A bit. Disorganized? No way.

I’m horribly scatterbrained, but I have absolutely zero problems finding anything at a moment’s notice in this bag. The pouch inside a pocket that resides inside yet another compartment isn’t just a feature that’d make Xzibit smile; it’s something I use constantly. The pack has a safe and secure place for everything I’d want to carry with me and more compartments than I’ll probably ever take advantage of. For me, that’s priceless.

Filed under: Peripherals

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11
Aug

CBS is making shows that you won’t see on conventional TV


CBS chief Les Moonves

CBS might not have embraced internet video with open arms in the past, but it’s certainly warming up to the concept this year. CEO Les Moonves has revealed that the broadcaster is producing shows for “major streaming companies” (think Amazon, Hulu and Netflix) as well as “other emerging distributors.” While the exec isn’t dishing out details just yet, he added that CBS will announce its collaborations “shortly.”

This isn’t a completely novel approach for CBS, which toyed with the prospect of making a Netflix show back in 2012. However, it still means that the company is creating shows that most likely won’t air on its own TV channels — a big step when many rivals are still reluctant to give online services their latest conventional programming, let alone an incentive for people to drop their cable subscriptions. Mind you, it’s not hard to see the financial motivations involved. Netflix just recently overtook HBO in revenue, based in part on exclusive shows like House of Cards; while it still has a long way to go on profit, there’s now a lot of money on the table for studios that make internet-only hits.

[Image credit: Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP]

Filed under: Home Entertainment, Internet, HD

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Via: Recode

Source: Seeking Alpha

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11
Aug

Check out this HD footage of NASA’s flying saucer in action


We’ve been following NASA’s Low-Density Supersonic Decelerator (LDSD) program for awhile now, and finally have some HD video of it to share. The footage chronicles the LDSD’s recent balloon-and-parachute-enabled test-flight and was captured with a number of high-def and high-speed cameras placed on and around the spacecraft. While it isn’t a full, unedited clip, this two-minute video gives us the best look at how the contraption actually works and a different perspective of Earth from outer space. The aeronautics outfit says that the test flight provided it with valuable new datasets that can be applied to next year’s hypersonic dry-runs ahead of the LDSD’s trip to Mars.

[Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech]

Filed under: Transportation, Science, Alt

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Source: NASA (Twitter), YouTube

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11
Aug

Feedback Loop: Digital note-taking, digital picture frame hacking and more!


Happy Saturday! Here’s a fresh edition of Feedback Loop for your reading pleasure. We have some great discussions this week including help with converting digital notes, hacking old digital photo frames and suggestions for AirPrint-compatible printers.

Best way to convert digital notes?

There’s no shortage of tools for getting your notes digitized, and joberti is looking for the best solution. Some of his requirements are cursive recognition, syncing with OneNote and support for Windows and Android. He’s open to using app scanners, smartpens or just sticking with a laptop. If you’ve made the transition, head here to help him make a decision.

Making use of old digital photo frames

Engadget’s own community manager, Dave, was one of the many people who picked up a digital photo frame when they were all the rage. He wants to turn it into something more useful, like Status Board, and is looking for the best way to do it. With Android tablets being affordable, and the chance of photo frames having WiFi so low, is it even worth Dave’s time? Let him know!

Google Print/AirPrint all-in-ones suggestions

samtramontana currently has a Canon printer with Google Print, but is shopping for a new one. Since they’ll be printing from Chrome OS and iOS devices, they’re hoping to find a laser all-in-one with support for both Google Print and AirPrint under $200. Does such a thing exist? Sound off in the forums!

Would you buy a mechanical smartwatch?

By no means am I a watch collector, but I do appreciate the finer details and precision of mechanical watches as well as their looks. It’s a big reason I’ve been apprehensive about smartwatches in the past. However, the Kairos might change my mind as it blends mechanical precision with smartwatch technology. For the avid watch fans out there, is it something you would consider buying? Share your thoughts on smartwatches!

Other discussions you may also like:

That’s all this week! 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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11
Aug

Uber’s legal struggles, the culture of leaks and other stories you might’ve missed


Weekends with Engadget

This week, we learned about Uber’s legal struggles, visited a plane without any TVs, investigated the culture of leaks, caught some football action with NFL Now and more! Read on for Engadget’s news highlights from the last seven days. Oh, and be sure to subscribe to our Flipboard magazine!

Filed under: Misc, Internet

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11
Aug

Windows Phone has nearly twice as many apps as it did a year ago


Windows Phone Store on the Lumia 1020

Windows Phone’s app catalog may not be as extensive as what you’ll find on Android or iOS, but you won’t be hurting for choices any time soon. Microsoft has quietly revealed that the Windows Phone Store racked up over 300,000 apps as of this past June, or nearly twice what it had a year earlier. It had 200,000 apps as of December, so the rate is clearly accelerating — half of its library appeared in the past several months. There are also 50 percent more developers, Microsoft adds, which means that many of the new titles are from first-timers.

The expansion will definitely help if you’re considering a Windows Phone, especially since it includes big-name titles like Instagram and Vine. With that said, there’s still a long way to go before Microsoft fills in all the gaps. A quick look at the store shows that many top apps either come from Microsoft or are unofficial replacements for missing software, like Snapchat and YouTube. The quantity helps, but quality is still an issue — it’s hard to switch from rival platforms when you may have to give up a favorite service or utility.

Filed under: Cellphones, Mobile, Microsoft

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Via: The Next Web, Engadget Chinese (translated)

Source: Microsoft

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