Accessory of the Day: Motorola Wi-Fi home monitoring camera $99.99

Whether you want to stay connected with your pets, keep an eye on your belongings, or be alerted of temperature/sound/motion variations in your home, the Motorola Focus S66 is the best bang for your buck. You’ll be able to enjoy two-way communication thanks to the built-in microphone. Stream and record in 720p straight to your device or to the cloud with Motorola’s free Hubble app. $99.99 (Prime eligible), with four-star customer feedback, is a true value considering the safety, security, and peace of mind this little unit comes with.
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iPhone 6 and 6 Plus Go On Sale in U.S. and Canada to Huge Lines
Following launches in a number of other countries around the world earlier today, the iPhone 6 and 6 Plus have now begun going on sale in the U.S. and Canada, with 8:00 AM Apple launch times in the eastern and central portions of the countries having already occurred.
As expected, supplies of the iPhone 6 Plus have been tight in some cases, although perhaps not as low as originally thought. Apple’s own stores appear to have the strongest supplies of the iPhone 6 Plus, with carrier stores in some cases having barely a handful of units to distribute.
iPhone 6 line at Toronto’s Eaton Centre Apple store snaking through multiple levels (via @KristinaParts)
Lines at most stores, particularly Apple’s own locations, are long in most cases, despite the company having offered pre-orders for delivery this year. As of 6:00 AM, the line at Apple’s flagship Fifth Avenue store in Manhattan stretched for twelve city blocks, according to Business Insider. Other locations are obviously seeing shorter lines, but many customers are reporting lines numbering in the hundreds at their stores.
Some MacRumors forum members are updating their statuses in our iPhone 6 Launch Meetups forum while others are sharing their thoughts in our general iPhone forum as the launch continues.
For those with pre-orders going out for delivery today, our forums remain busy as users track their orders minute-by-minute. MacRumors forum members in the U.S. are generally organizing in one of a number of threads depending on where they ordered from.
– The “I just bought/ordered/shipped/received my new iPhone 6/6 Plus” thread
– iPhone 6 & 6 Plus Sprint Pre-Order Thread!
– T-Mobile.com preorder thread
– ATT Pre-order status
– VZW Order Status Thread
– Apple.com Pre-order thread
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The Future of Google Now

Google Now is one of the most innovative, useful features to be released in the last few years. It truly makes your smartphone a smart phone. It provides you with information before you even ask for it. It saves you from being stuck in traffic, fumbling through your email to find your plane ticket, and even helps you remember where you parked your car. What else can Google do to make it better?
Google just applied for a patent for “active watching,” to help better pinpoint where input for a task is coming from so as to get better results in speech-to-text. What else could be in store?
I would love to see the current features be fine-tuned, and be made better. For example, currently you can search for flights right from Google Now. However, once you find one and want to book it, you have to go to the site that Google found the particular flight from and book it from there. It’d be nice if I could tell Google “Find me a flight from Phoenix to Los Angeles next Tuesday afternoon for under $200 and book it,” and it’d go ahead and do it, sending me a confirmation email afterwards. Is this the ultimate form of laziness? Maybe. But would it be cool? Absolutely! This could then tie into better usage on Android Wear devices.
Our own Scott Webster says he’d like to be able to ask “Where’s my wife?” and Google Now would show him on a map where she is (with the person’s location settings turned on for sharing). This could be useful for so many reasons, but particularly in emergencies if your loved one is lost.
AndroidGuy Mitch Montague would like to have the ability to change the phrase “Okay, Google” to anything he’d like such as “Hey Nexus.” He also wants to see the ability to change system functions, such as turning Wi-Fi on and off, exist natively in the app (considering you can currently do this by other means).
Our Cooper Le says he’d like to see offline support, to set things such as alarms or reminders without a data connection.
Rob Vanasco would like to see better natural conversation, such as Google Now asking for clarification to a question it doesn’t understand, or ask for more details to give you a better result.
Jason Lund loves Google Now, but feels he doesn’t think about it enough to use it. Some way for Google to prompt him to use it would be good.
Henry Wiygul wants inter-app communication, so that if you find a great article while in Chrome, you can ask Google to “Share this on Twitter” without leaving Chrome, similar to what Project Hera is.
What features would you like to see? Do you use Google Now on a regular basis?
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Apple Utilizing Own Content Delivery Network to Help Deliver iOS 8 Update [iOS Blog]
According to data from internet research firm DeepField, Apple relied on its content delivery network along with Akamai and Limelight to handle the rollout of iOS 8 publicly this week (via The Wall Street Journal). The release of iOS 8 caused web traffic to more than double in some areas as millions of iOS users rushed to update their iOS devices.

“It really was a significant coming out party for the Apple CDN,” DeepField Chief Executive Craig Labovitz said. “This is definitely a realization that Apple is not just a software player. They’re not just a maker of PCs. They have an Internet backbone and an international Internet presence.”
Apple has not commented publicly on its content delivery network, but the company reportedly has been working on the network for several years. The CDN was believed to have gone live in the US and Europe in July of this year when Apple used the network to deliver smaller OS X updates.
In the future, the CDN likely will be used to delivery software updates, such as the upcoming OS X Yosemite release, to customers worldwide. Apple also is expected to gradually migrate its iTunes and App Store away from Akamai and other Level 3 CDNs as it strives to deliver data reliably to its customers by bringing this content delivery under its direct control.
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France passes its anti-Uber law
Remember the French law that, if passed, would make life impossible for companies like Uber, LeCab and Allocab? Last night the country’s national assembly gave a Gallic thumbs-up to the rule. The biggest change is that drivers are now banned from sharing their GPS location, preventing customers from being able to hail the nearest cab from their phone. If there is an upside, however, it’s that the late amendment that required Uber drivers to return “home” after each trip was shot down at the last minute. We won’t bore you with the more minor details, but the TL;DR version is that the balance of power is back with France’s entrenched Taxi monopoly. If we were in the mood, we’d make some sort of joke about a country with such a history of revolution is now slavishly enforcing the status-quo…
Filed under: Transportation
Via: Rude Baguette
Source: National Assembly (Translated)
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Starbucks’ shake-to-pay and tips now work on Android too
Love Starbucks but hate feeling left out of the shake-to-pay fun because the device in your pocket is running Android instead of iOS? Those days are over, my caffeine-craving friend. An updated version of the titular app has hit Google Play and it’s packing the aforementioned payment option as well as digital tipping. The coffee juggernaut’s rewards system is now on the payment screen too — all in time for the Seattle outfit’s declaration that autumn is officially here.

Filed under: Cellphones, Wireless, Mobile, Google
Via: Android Community
Source: Google Play
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Samsung’s Galaxy Note 4 coming to the UK on October 10th
Not bothered about the new iPhones? After something with a big screen and Android at its heart? Well, that’s what Samsung’s Galaxy Note family is all about, and the company has announced the latest member of the clan will be hitting the UK October 10th, a week before the US. The super-sized Galaxy Note 4, with its 5.7-inch Quad HD display and high-end specs all around, is now up for preorder, but only at Samsung’s “Experience” stores. Carriers and retailers will be able to open up reservations from September 26th, with Samsung specifically naming Three and Carphone Warehouse as guaranteed partners. We haven’t got any juicy pricing information to share with you just yet, but should be able to let you know where the best deals lie nearer the time. Spoiler: it’s unlikely to be at Phones4u.
Filed under: Cellphones, Mobile, Samsung
Via: Android Central
Source: Samsung
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The portable pop-up gaming room is here
Privacy. Sometimes we all crave a little. ‘Bocchi tent’: a 1.3 meter by 1.3 meter soft-cornered cube that makers Bibi Lab reckons offers the “ultimate gaming space”. With a slender gossamer wall between you and the rest of humanity, there’s a degree of sensorial blockage, but we could — obviously still hear the din of the Tokyo Game Show floors — headphones will be necessary if you’re looking to block out Other People. (The computer inside didn’t even have any games! What a waste.)
With all the space-age science of a popup tent, open up the storage pouch and the temporary gaming den makes itself – you’ll just have to add the furniture (and well, gaming hardware), yourself. The tent is set to retails for 5000 yen in Japan – and if you’re particularly taken with the idea of your own flatpack Internet Cafe, at least it should fit in your suitcase.

Filed under: Gaming
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MapMyFitness for iPhone lets you see all your activity in one place
The best thing about iOS 8 isn’t continuity texting or a liberated keyboard — it’s that it’ll give you rock hard abs. Which is exactly what you need if you’re going to pull off any of Under Armour’s skin-tight clothing. The sports brand wants to help you along with that, and has just updated its suite of apps (the popular MapMy… franchise it bought) to include unified activity tracking. This means if you have compatible hardware (like Jawbone’s UP, or a Withings Pulse) or an iPhone with an M7/M8 chip in it, you can fold all your activity data into the one MapMyFitness app. This also means you won’t get dupes any more if you were already tracking with the app and a tracker separately. Already working on those biceps by lifting your fancy new iPhone 6 Plus? Good, because the apps have also been given a digital nip and tuck to look extra buff on the new larger displays.
Filed under: Cellphones, Mobile, Apple
Source: iTunes
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Pebble now displays emojis and lets you dismiss alerts from your watch
Do you hate emojis? Too bad, because they’re everywhere: they’ve even arrived on Pebble and Pebble Steel via the smartwatches’ latest firmware. The software upgrade allows emoticons to show up on Pebble’s monochrome screen — sure, they’re not yellow or animated, but they’re better than those blank boxes that typically take their place. More importantly for Apple users, though, this firmware brings iOS 8 compatibility and a really neat notification management feature to their watches. Now, when they dismiss an alert from their Pebbles, it also disappears from their phones’ notification centers. (Hey, Android users, the company says it’s working on a version for your devices, as well!) Other than these, the firmware also enables the watch’s built-in compass and adds a fun Domo-kun watchface to your collection.

Hey @Pebble , we need Emoji’s STAT @aarontamachi pic.twitter.com/Kx1QaYTNO8
– Elric Truridge (@Elric77) July 4, 2013
Filed under: Wearables, Mobile
Source: Pebble
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