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17
Aug

Moto 360 smartwatch listed at BestBuy


moto 360 bestbuy_1

Motorola’s long-awaited smartwatch seems to be close to release. Motorola announced their press event will take place at IFA on September 4th by teasing Moto G, Moto X and Moto 360 along what seems to be some sort of bluetooth headset or something. Surprisingly, Moto 360 has been listed at BestBuy today. The biggest surprise… Read more »

The post Moto 360 smartwatch listed at BestBuy appeared first on AndroidGuys.

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17
Aug

​This Bluetooth bangle lights up to match your outfit, tells you when you miss a call


Need to have notifications on your wrist, but worried that a standard smartwatch will clash with your personal sense of style? Have you tried a smart bangle? There’s one on Kickstarter if it suits your needs. Elemoon is a large, LED-laden bracelet that connects to your phone via Bluetooth – it’s designed to straddle the line between fashionable and functional, with a heavy lean on the former. The device doesn’t have a display as such, but can use a small grid of multicolored LEDs to display custom, low resolution notification icons. If the wearable’s Kickstarter pledges are anything to go by, however, it’s a little expensive for what it does.

A pledge of $200 buys a single Elemoon bracelet, but the device’s function doesn’t seem particularly robust. Aside from icon-based call and message notifications, the bangle can be used to find your phone (rubbing it causes the device to ring) and, well, match your clothes. Using the accessory’s companion app, users can configure the bracelet’s LED to match a photographed image — that’s neat, but the LEDs are only visible on the top of the wearable. Considering an Android Wear smartwatch can be had for a mere $30 more, Elemoon probably isn’t the best value on the wearables market …but nobody ever said being fashionable was cheap.

Filed under: Misc

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Source: Kickstarter

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17
Aug

Motorola’s Moto 360 smartwatch pops up at Best Buy two weeks early


A pair of Moto 360 smartwatches

You don’t have to wait until Motorola’s September 4th event to get more details regarding the Moto 360 smartwatch, it seems — Best Buy appears to have the scoop over two weeks early. The big-box retailer has posted a product listing for the timepiece that appears to reveal many (though not all) of the specifications. Reportedly, the device’s signature not-quite-circular display is a 1.5-inch, 320 x 290 LCD. You’ll also find a heart rate sensor and a pedometer, so the 360 may be a good fit if you’re an amateur athlete.

Best Buy isn’t saying just when the gadget will ship, although it’s listing the same $249 price that we saw a couple of months ago in a contest. That’s a good deal for what’s arguably much nicer-looking wristwear than either the G Watch or Gear Live. However, it’s probably wise to take the pricing (and possibly the specs) with a grain of salt. Motorola warned us back in June that pricing wasn’t set in stone, and the mention of 802.11n WiFi is odd when existing Android Wear devices only use Bluetooth to communicate with your phone. As such, it won’t be alarming if there are at least a few surprises left when the Moto 360 makes its official debut next month.

Moto 360 at Best Buy

Filed under: Wearables, Google, Lenovo

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Via: Droid-Life

Source: Best Buy

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17
Aug

Moto 360 Shows Up Online Via Best Buy



Moto 360 Bestbuy

Well, we all know Android Wear watches are the newest thing now. Everyone is talking about the Samsung’s Gear Live and LG’s G Watch but for me I don’t care about both of those. I am waiting for the Moto 360. Well, thanks to a fellow G pulsar by the name of Richard Colon we finally have a price and have also received exact specifications regarding the elusive Moto 360.


Moto 360 Features Best Buy

As you can see from the image above, Best Buy has a page up which provides a price point for the Moto 360 along with specifications. According to this page the Moto 360 will retail for $250 which is perfect in my opinion as it falls right in line with the current pricing of the Android Wear watches out now. It also has quite an extensive list of features including a built in heart rate monitor, pedometer, and of course a waterproof rating (3.3′ for up to 30 mintues). This Best Buy posting just gives me more reasons as to why my first Android Wear watch will be the Moto 360. How about you? If you already have a G Watch or Gear Live will you be switching to the Moto 360 or are you happy with what the current watches offer now? Let me know in the comments below.

H/T Richard Colon


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The post Moto 360 Shows Up Online Via Best Buy appeared first on AndroidSPIN.

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17
Aug

AllCast will let you mirror any Android phone’s screen on your PC


AllCast icon on a Nexus 5

AllCast has let almost any Android device send photos and videos to the Chrome desktop browser for a while, but mirroring your screen has been a pain; if you didn’t have a Nexus 5, you were out of luck. That clever feature is about to get a lot more useful, though. Koushik Dutta has reworked the app’s mirroring code so that it now uses a common video format (H.264), letting you mirror the screen of any halfway modern phone on your PC; if you can run AllCast in the first place, you’re probably fine. There’s significant lag, but it should be enough to show your friends a hot new app without having to buy a Chromecast (or a TV, for that matter). The upgrade should arrive soon, so swing by Google Play if you’d like to use your computer as a second screen.

Filed under: Cellphones, Tablets, Mobile

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Source: Koushik Dutta (Google+), Google Play

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17
Aug

Inhabitat’s Week in Green: dinosaur bicycle, 3D-printed shoes and a lightning-proof dress


Each week our friends at Inhabitat recap the week’s most interesting green developments and clean tech news for us — it’s the Week in Green.

Energy and clean water are two essential resources that we’re running critically low on in the 21st century — fortunately, a 17-year-old girl from Australia has invented a device that could solve both of these challenges. Cynthia Sin Nga Lam, a finalist in this year’s Google Science Fair, has created a machine that purifies wastewater and produces electricity from hydrogen. In other green innovation news, workers just finished building a rainwater-harvesting soccer and volleyball stadium at a school in Kenya that can store more than 1.5 million liters of fresh water. The field is part of a larger trend of “waterbanking” structures that harvest and store rainwater.

At this year’s Shell-Eco Marathon, a Swedish team developed a car that set a new fuel-efficiency record by traveling 98 miles on just 15 cents worth of electricity. Norwegian artist Markus Moestue created one of the most amazing trikes we’ve ever seen — it’s shaped like a dinosaur! Germany shattered its own record by producing 31 percent of its electricity from renewables in the first half of 2014. And this week, Inhabitat caught up with Yves Béhar, the designer behind the One Laptop Per Child Project, the NYC Condom, Jawbone Up and the SodaStream Source. In the wide-ranging interview, Béhar discussed everything from his first architecture contract to the notion of data overload.

California dipped its toe in the Tesla Gigafactory sweepstakes this week — however the state might waive environmental laws to win the project. The proposed Gigafactory would build the long-range lithium-ion batteries needed to construct Tesla’s Model III range of vehicles. Elsewhere in the Golden State, researchers at Stanford presented a “roadmap” for powering the entire state with renewable energy by 2050. The plan calls for developing a broad mix of hydro, wind and solar energy. In the quest to charge mobile devices on the fly, scientists from Nokia and Queen Mary University of London have figured out a way to harvest the power of sound, converting sonic vibrations into electricity. But until that technology hits the mainstream, we’ll have to settle for more conventional charging methods. In New York City, for example, a new solar-powered charging station called CityCharge recently popped up at Bryant Park, enabling New Yorkers to power up from a small cafe table.

Architect Santiago Calatrava has come under fire in recent years for cost overruns and leaks in some of his sculptural buildings, but the early returns are good on the starchitect’s new Innovation, Science and Technology Building at Florida Polytechnic University. The elegant day-lit building is wrapped with a lightweight aluminum trellis that cuts solar gain by 30 percent (and it makes it look like a futuristic spaceship). In Singapore, construction recently wrapped on Lucasfilms’ new headquarters, which looks like a big glassy Sandcrawler. In Kunshan City, China, a restaurant that is staffed by 15 small, humanoid robots recently opened. The robots cook, take orders, serve meals and greet customers as they arrive. Hospital food is usually tough to choke down, but the Eskenazi Health Hospital in Indianapolis decided to flip the script. The hospital features a large vegetable garden on its roof, providing patients, hospital staff and the community with a space to engage with nature and food. Meanwhile, the latest project from Thai architecture firm Onion will bring out the kid in all of us: a home inspired by Tom and Jerry cartoons complete with curved passageways reminiscent of mouseholes.

The realms of 3D printing and fashion continue to overlap: Continuum Fashion founder Mary Huang recently created “Myth,” the world’s first ready-to-wear 3D-printed shoe collection. In other fashion news, Dutch designer Anouk Wipprecht has produced what she calls the “Faraday Cage” dress, which is made from metal plates, chain mail and a spiky grilled helmet. The coolest thing about Wipprecht’s suit of armor: Its wearer can get zapped by lighting, and the suit will distribute the charge while keeping you safe. Designer Naomi Kizhner unveiled a line of truly unusual “invasive” jewelry that turns involuntary physical movements like blinking into electricity. And for underwater speed demons, Speedo recently unveiled a new pair of flippers that are modeled after a humpback whale’s fins — and they look pretty neat, too.

Filed under: Misc, Internet

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17
Aug

3D-printed wind turbine puts 300W of power in your backpack


Omni3D's AirEnergy 3D wind turbine prototype

For the most part, portable energy generators are intended for modest uses. They can charge your phone, but they won’t drive high-powered laptops or small appliances. That might change if Omni3D gets its crowdfunded AirEnergy 3D off the ground. The 3D-printed wind turbine should fit into a backpack, yet produce up to 300W of power — enough that you can keep a whole slew of devices running, including those that wouldn’t run at all on solar or thermoelectric systems. It will be open source, too, since part of the goal is to let those in Africa and other developing regions create their own reliable, renewable power sources.

If you want to help out and get one of the first AirEnergy 3D models when it arrives in February, you’ll need to act fast. Omni3D is only offering a handful of early units to those who pledge £290 ($484) or more. Take heart if you’re not part of the first wave, though. The team expects to bring the cost of a basic production model down to $350, which is just cheap enough that it could either supplement your home power or keep your gadgets alive during long camping trips.

Filed under: Household

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Source: Kickstarter

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17
Aug

Another Image of New Lightning Cable with Reversible USB Connector Surfaces


Earlier this week, photos claiming to be of a new Lightning cable with a reversible USB connector surfaced. The images were said to be sourced from Apple supplier Foxconn, and were shown in a production stage. Now, frequent iOS device part leaker Sonny Dickson shares a new photo of the accessory, further indicating that a new Lightning cable with a reversible USB connector may be on the horizon:

new_lightning_cable_sd The current Lightning cable (left) compared to new Lightning cable (right)
While the USB connector on the current Lightning cable is attached to the bottom of its metal housing, the connector of the supposedly newer cable is attached to the center. The structure of the newer cable was also spotted in previous photos, and likely indicates that this is a reversible USB connector. It is also therefore possible that the new Lightning cable could utilize USB 3.0 technology, as current Lightning cables support only USB 2.0.

Apple could start shipping new cables alongside forthcoming iOS devices starting with the iPhone 6. In addition to a reversible connector, the new Lightning cable could also feature support for high-definition audio playback on Made for iPhone accessories as rumored by Mac Otakara earlier this year. That report further claimed that Apple was preparing a new version of its In-Ear Headphones, which have not been updated since 2008.

Apple also introduced Lightning Cable MFi specifications for headphones in June, paving the way for manufacturers to create products that connect directly to iOS devices via their Lightning port rather than through a regular 3.5mm headphone jack. Those products could also see integration with revamped Lightning cables.




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17
Aug

Here’s another ‘PlayStation Phone’ that Sony could have made


Sony may have given up on its Xperia Play, but Chinese gaming companies 78point and Much think there’s still a demand for Android phones with built-in gaming buttons and joysticks. Funnily enough, both brands ended up sourcing their hardware from the same OEM, which is why 78point’s P01 and Much’s W1 are technically identical, with the exception of their Android 4.2 skins. This dual-SIM (WCDMA/GSM) device is essentially a typical Chinese mid-ranger, for it features a 5-inch 720p IPS display plus MediaTek’s 1.7GHz octa-core MT6592 SoC (with 2GB of RAM and Mali-450 MP4 graphics). You also get 16GB of internal storage, microSD expansion of up to 64GB, 8MP/2MP cameras and a generous 3,000mAh battery.

With the dedicated gaming buttons, CN¥1,999 (about $330) is a pretty competitive price for this package, as long as you don’t mind the 213.8g weight — about the same as the refreshed PS Vita’s 219g — and the chunkier body. The 78point P01 even appears to come with a multi-platform emulator (MAME, PSP, Dreamcast, NDS, GBA, NES, SNES, N64 and more), whereas Much plays it safe by recommending emulators instead. Folks in China can now pre-order the P01 on JD.com ahead of its August 20th launch, or they can nab a W1 from Chinese operator Snail Mobile.

[Image credit: 78point; Much]

Filed under: Cellphones, Gaming, Mobile

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Source: JD, Snail Mobile

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17
Aug

Daimler’s solution for annoying out-of-office email: delete it


A concerned man checking his laptop on the beach

Sure, you can set an out-of-office auto-reply to let others know they shouldn’t email you, but that doesn’t usually stop the messages; you may still have to handle those urgent-but-not-really requests while you’re on vacation. That’s not a problem if you work at Daimler, though. The German automaker recently installed software that not only auto-replies to email sent while staff is away, but deletes it outright. If there’s a meltdown at the workplace, you may not have to deal with it at all. The move affects about 100,000 employees, so it’s clearly going to make an impact.

The cut-off reflects a broader European rebellion against after-hours communication. Daimler believes that people on break actually deserve a break, and that managers shouldn’t try to wring out a few extra hours of work that likely aren’t necessary. It might have a point: studies even suggest that Germany, France and other countries that discourage overtime are very productive. There’s no telling whether or not large US companies will follow suit, but it’s doubtful that many Americans would object to less stress in their lives.

[Image credit: Alamy]

Filed under: Internet

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Source: Time

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