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22
Oct

Pandora lets artists know just how well their music is doing


Pandora Radio on its IPO day

Many musicians put their tunes on Pandora in the hopes that they’ll build an audience, but how are they supposed to know it’s working? That’s what the streaming service’s new Artist Marketing Platform (AMP) aims to solve. The initiative gives performers data on not just how many plays and thumbs-up ratings their songs get, but the demographics of who’s listening and where the music is taking off — very handy for planning a national tour. It won’t guarantee that your indie band catches a big break, but it could help you focus your musical talents where they matter the most.

[Image credit: Spencer Platt/Getty Images]

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Source: Pandora (1), (2)

22
Oct

Barnes & Noble Samsung Galaxy Tab 4 Nook 10.1 now available for $299.99



Earlier this year Barns & Noble teamed up with Samsung to release the Galaxy Tab 4 Nook 7. It was a bump up from the tablet e-readers that B&N attempted to make in past years. The Tab4 Nook is still a thing and is currently being sold through Barnes & Noble for $169.99 after a $30 instant rebate. However, today they have brought the larger Tab variant to the store front with the Galaxy Tab 4 Nook 10.1.

Samsung Galaxy Tab 4 Nook 10.1


 

From a hardware standpoint you are getting a 1.2GHz Qualcomm processor, 1.5GB of RAM, 16GB on-board storage, micro SD slot, 3MP rear camera, 1.3MP front camera and a 6,800 mAh battery. They have the larger tablet variant priced at $299.99 after a $50 instant rebate. Which isn’t much of a difference when the safe non Nook branded tablet is still $299.99. B&N does go above and beyond though. If you do purchase the Tab 4 Nook 10.1, or the 7, you will receive over $200 worth of best selling books, magazines, apps and TV shows for free, plus a $5 starter credit.

Source: B&N Blog


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The post Barnes & Noble Samsung Galaxy Tab 4 Nook 10.1 now available for $299.99 appeared first on AndroidSPIN.

22
Oct

Second Gen Chromecast confirmed by Mario Queiroz, won’t offer up details Though



Love it or hate it, the Google Chromecast $35, or less, media stick is a powerful and practical device. It has paved the way for a slew of new apps to easily share content to the big screen with a few simple taps. It is the sole device that my wife and I use in our bedroom for media consumption and I wouldn’t have it any other way. Not to long ago I caught some talk about a new Chromecast that had passed through the FCC. There was a variety of discussion online about it. The only real change that was listed in the filing was 5GHz Wi-Fi compatibility.

Chromecast Apps

In a recent interview with GigaOM, Google VP of product management, Mario Queiroz, shared a lot of numbers out there about Chromecast and Google Cast. For instance, at Google I/O they reported that users tapped the Cast button 400 million times. That is the number of times the button was pressed, not the number of shows, tracks or photos displayed since many apps, like Netflix, will now automatically start the next episode, that wouldn’t be counted as a tap. Since then another 250 million taps have been recorded. That brings the total to 650 million times since it launched 15 months ago. He also shares that over 6.000 developers are creating cast apps and more than 10,000 apps have been built.

On the Google Cast front he talks, indirectly, why the name changed. Surprise, it is exactly what we all thought. The service name changed because there will be multiple end points for the service. ie. Chromecast and Android TV.


While all of that information is good, the real reason you clicked in was to find out about a second gen Chromecast. The interview is on video and if you bounce to 11:45 in the video the question comes up on if there will be a second version of Chromecast. Mario simply says “Yes, there will be a second version of Chromecast in the future.” That is all we get unfortunately as Mario wouldn’t get into any feature sets. Towards the end of the interview a question was asked about game streaming to Chromecast. Mario comes back saying that game streaming can be an important use case for the Chromecast, but are currently very focused on video, audio and images. However, if they can get to the right latency it is very possible. Take a quick watch if you would like.

http://new.livestream.com/accounts/74987/events/3418509/videos/65659389/player?autoPlay=false&height=360&mute=false&width=640It is nice to know that a second gen Chromecast is really in the works and that Google isn’t dropping it for the Android TV devices. While I am sure I will be picking up a Nexus Player myself, that will be a living room item. I am not all that interested in having another remote in my bedroom to lose.

What would you like to see in the next-gen Chromecast?

Source: GigaOM via 9to5Google


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The post Second Gen Chromecast confirmed by Mario Queiroz, won’t offer up details Though appeared first on AndroidSPIN.

22
Oct

Google introduces ‘Inbox’, an alternative to Gmail that works for you


Google_INbox_App_Large_Icon

Google just unveiled “Inbox,” which sounds a lot like our earlier story on Bigtop. It’s a completely separate app from Gmail, which aims to be a better alternative for those that find they are overburdened with email. When Email started, it was a simple way to pass messages, and it made you more efficient. However, as email as grown over the years, it’s gotten so distracting that it sometimes is hard to actually get things done. One could argue that it no longer makes us efficient.

According to Google, Inbox works for you and helps you get to the important information quicker. This is all done by new features such as Bundles, Highlights, Reminders, Assists, and Snoozing.

Bundles groups similar emails together just like the categories feature that was introduced last year. So now all your purchase receipts and bank statements will be grouped together for quick review. Want certain emails grouped together? Inbox will learn from your habits.

Highlights makes it easier to spot those important emails, which could be for events or emails that include photos or documents. Inbox is also smart enough to display any other important information from the web that might not even be in the original email. That could include flight status information or even package tracking information.

Google_Inbox_App_Screenshot_01Google_Inbox_App_Screenshot_02

Inbox also lets you set Reminders such as picking up milk on the way home or giving someone a call. Assists will add information to both reminders and emails. So for example, let’s say you set a reminder to stop at Target. Assist will provide you the phone number and even tell you if the store is even open. Let’s say you booked a reservation at a restaurant. Assist will add a map to the confirmation email. The last feature we need to mention will come in handy for those times you see an email, and say to yourself, “I will deal with that later.”  You know what happens then right? You completely forget about it. Instead of leaving it in your inbox, only to move down lower and lower, you can just Snooze it. It will come back to the top when you want it to so you can take care of it and not forget about it. Of course, Snoozing works with Reminders as well.

Google_Inbox_App_Screenshot_04Google_Inbox_App_Screenshot_05

You can check out this short video showing some of the features…..

Click here to view the embedded video.

So when can you try Inbox? Well a little bit of bad news. Right now it’s invite only, with the first round of invitations going out today. The good news is that new users will be able to invite their friends, and you can request an invite by sending an email to inbox@google.com. That should get you on their radar a little more effectively than sitting around waiting for one.

As I mentioned, Inbox is completely separate from Gmail. Those that want to continue using Gmail as it is today can continue to do so.

source: Gmail Blog

Come comment on this article: Google introduces ‘Inbox’, an alternative to Gmail that works for you

22
Oct

Choose Your Own Android Giveaway (Updated): Win a free, top of the line, phone of your choice [Deal of the Day]


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UPDATE: The Nexus 6 has been added to the choices of handsets available to the winner!

Ready for a new handset but aren’t prepared to shell out the clams for an upgrade? Today just might be your day. We’re giving away a top-tier handset of your choice to ONE lucky winner in the Choose Your Own Android Giveaway!

The winner will choose between a Samsung Galaxy Note 4, Nexus 6, Motorola Moto X, HTC One M8, LG G3, or Samsung Galaxy Note Edge. Brand new and ready to use! One of these may have your name written all over it.There’s no purchase necessary and no complicated forms to fill out. All you’ll have to do is visit our contest page, click ENTER NOW, and submit your email address. It’s as easy as that. Sharing via social media gains you more entries. Good luck!

Check this deal out, and many others at deals.androidguys.com!


 

The post Choose Your Own Android Giveaway (Updated): Win a free, top of the line, phone of your choice [Deal of the Day] appeared first on AndroidGuys.

22
Oct

Barnes & Noble announces 10.1-inch Samsung Galaxy Tab 4 NOOK 10.1


samsung galaxy tab 4 nook

Earlier this year Barnes & Noble released the Samsung Galaxy Tab 4 Nook 7.0, a collaboration effort with Samsung to provide the functionality of a normal tablet and the benefits of an eReader. Well, on Wednesday they announced another tablet, the Samsung Galaxy Tab 4 Nook 10.1.

Despite the long name, B&N looks to provide more options to consumers when it comes to the eReader tablet market, with the option to choose between a 7-inch model, and now a 10.1-inch model. What’s great about this is you can get a Samsung Galaxy Tab 4 for $300, and included is over $200 worth of free content from the Nook store. I don’t care who you are, that’s a good deal.

The tablet will be available at B&N bookstores nationwide, as well as on bn.com and nook.com immediately. Evidently you’ll get a refreshed version of the Nook interface as an over-the-air update once you purchase it that will have a refreshed look, more content searching tools, and more.

Would you get this tablet? Even if just for the Samsung Galaxy Tab 4 10.1″ for cheap?

via Business Wire


 

The post Barnes & Noble announces 10.1-inch Samsung Galaxy Tab 4 NOOK 10.1 appeared first on AndroidGuys.

22
Oct

‘Dorothy’ lets you click your heels to hail a cab


istrategylabs dorothy

What if you could click your red heels to get home, like Dorothy from The Wizard of Oz? A new wearable concept — aptly dubbed “Dorothy” — might let you do just that. It consists of a small clip called “Ruby” that attaches to your shoe and communicates with your phone via Bluetooth. The clip has an accelerometer and, when you tap your heels together three times, it sends an alert to the companion app. What the app does with that alert is up to you, but the company behind Dorothy, iStrategyLabs, is working to integrate the Uber API to automatically call an Uber to your location.

For now, Dorothy is just a prototype. It’s a little too bulky to comfortably fit in a shoe, but iStrategyLabs says it’s “exploring” smaller models that could potentially fit within an insole. It’s also asking for ideas about what actions clicking your heels together could trigger. Now repeat after me: There’s no place like home. There’s no place like home. There’s no place like…

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Source: iStrategyLabs

22
Oct

Offended by the ‘Hatred’ trailer? You’re a hypocrite (and that’s a good thing)


This week, a game about a genocidal maniac was announced. There’s a video trailer for the game that depicts ultraviolent bedlam: a murder spree of innocent victims, many begging for their lives. So it’s basically another week in video games, then? Not quite.

Okay, okay — let’s rewind and unpack. An unknown development studio from Poland (Destructive Creations) released an announcement trailer (with extremely violent gameplay and sociopathic dialog) for its upcoming PC game, Hatred. The video’s around 90 seconds long and, if you’re like me, you’ll likely find it difficult to sit through. Before the very, very angry main character begins his murder spree, he declares, “My genocide crusade begins here.” He’s a tall, muscular, white guy with long black hair — he sort of looks like Glenn Danzig — and he’s about to kill a lot of people. But isn’t that what you do in loads of other games? Yes! But also no.

This is not a piece about Hatred (the game). What we’ve seen of it thus far is a single trailer (above) that’s by most standards offensive and, more importantly, bland looking. I want to address the difference between Hatred‘s brand of violence and, say, Grand Theft Auto‘s.

In both games, you’re given free rein to murder innocent civilians. I’ve personally spent many hours careening down the sidewalks of Liberty City, or Vice City, or San Andreas, mowing down pedestrians to accrue police stars and play the game of “survive as a mass murderer.” It’s a game that Grand Theft Auto‘s worlds allow — even enable — but it’s not “the point.” And it certainly feels a lot different than what Hatred‘s trailer portrays. But why? And does “the point” matter when you’re acting virtually sociopathic?

THE THIN VEIL OF HYPOCRISY

There are loads of ultraviolent games. Remember Manhunt? How about Gears of War: Judgment? Adrian Chmielarz helped create that one, as well as critically acclaimed Bulletstorm. Chmielarz was creative director overseeing both titles, and he’s been the guy on the receiving end of flak for his violent game. He likens his work to a form of catharsis. “Stories — told by books, movies or experiences through video games — allow for catharsis that satisfies our primal side without any discernible harm to anyone,” Chmielarz told me via email this week. He’s a longtime game developer with some seriously gruesome work on his resume, including the just-released The Vanishing of Ethan Carter.

“Some creators achieve that [catharsis] through empathy, but in video games we mostly achieve that through hypocrisy,” he said. “You kill, torture, dominate, humiliate and sin without consequences, but game designers always offer a thin veil of an excuse.” He offered up Bulletstorm as an example, a game where “you are rewarded for creative kills.” The “excuse” in Bulletstorm? Enemies are “clearly evil, bloodthirsty thugs, the worst scum in the known universe,” and the kills are cartoonish. “You impale enemies on gargantuan cacti with a super-kick, for example. Reasonably hard to confuse that with real life.”

It is reasonably hard to confuse that with real life, but it also remains a “thin veil of an excuse” — you are still murdering, like, thousands of dudes in Bulletstorm. And that’s why I’m having a hard time being outright offended at Hatred‘s trailer, despite feeling pretty thoroughly offended. The wrapping is certainly intended to stir emotion: a soliloquy to hatred and violence by a man arming himself to the teeth, followed by a spree of extreme violence perpetrated on people screaming for mercy. His goal — your goal, as the player — is annihilation. No, “Those are the bad guys! Get them before they get you!” Just genocide.

As Chmielarz put it, Hatred (at least that trailer) doesn’t allow me to be the hypocrite I want to be.

GTA says, “You’re a criminal fighting for your life, so it’s okay to murder those people.” Uncharted says, “Those bad guys are trying to kill you. Kill them first!” Call of Duty says, “Those guys are terrorists trying to destroy the world! Stop them!” They allow me the pretend that my mass-murdering isn’t cold-blooded. And that’s a good thing!

“A hypocrite knows right from wrong; they know they sin when they sin,” Chmielarz said. “They find excuses for these sins just like we find excuses to mow down another hundred enemies in a video game. And even though they don’t follow it, deep down they know which way the moral compass is pointing. Hatred takes the excuses away from us and asks us to enjoy the sin out there in the open.”

HATRED FOCUSES ON VIOLENCE AND MURDER AS THE POINT. IN MOST VIOLENT GAMES, MURDER IS THE MEANS, NOT THE OBJECTIVE.

Hatred‘s development studio Destructive Creations is led by CEO Jaroslaw Zielinski. He told me in an email interview this week why he thinks people are finding offense with the announcement trailer. He said the following when I asked why myself and others have a hard time watching it:

  1. “Because all women die the same ways as men and there’s no mercy for anyone.”
  2. “Because all those executions are pretty suggestively done, with no cartoonish moves. And peoples’ reaction to them is pretty flattering for me as an animator.”

While he’s right about the “no mercy for anyone” bit, I don’t think the extreme violence is actually what I’m having a hard time with (though I can’t speak for others). For me, it’s context. Without the (admittedly thin) excuse of being in a virtual war, or being a virtual assassin, or whatever else, I find senseless virtual killing to be…well, senseless. And if anything, I find it pretty reprehensible. Which, yes, I realize makes me a hypocrite. I’m okay with that.

From what the trailer for Hatred shows, the game isn’t making a statement about violent games. It’s not saying, “We’ve removed your thin excuse to show you what you’re really doing in these games.” It’s violence for violence’s sake. Zielinski explained what Hatred‘s trying to convey as follows:

“By the game? That we should not bend under political correctness propaganda which we can see everywhere right now. We live in the free world, with freedom of speech and artistic expression and we should use it in any way we want, otherwise we’ll be falling under SJWs [Social Justice Warriors] regime. Some reactions for this trailer are a great example of this. Fortunately there are many people who understand us and are standing on our side.”

Hatred may be intended as an expression of free speech in its most potentially offensive form, and I’m certainly not calling for it to be censored. As someone who supports social justice, I think the statement about “SJWs” is ridiculous, but that’s a whole other conversation. What doesn’t square here is the fantasy aspect: There’s nothing to excuse away the violence in Hatred. I can get behind people (myself included) virtually killing other virtual beings as long as there’s some remnant of an excuse. Hatred strips that, which both makes me not want to play it and worries me about those who do. Chmielarz puts it as such:

Hatred takes the excuses away from us and asks us to enjoy the sin out there in the open. We will not do it.

A request to bare our animal souls in front of ourselves is a step too far. The fact we cannot do it is a gift, one that allows us the realization that we’re not as corrupt and empty as we subconsciously feared we were. And thus a lot of people will not buy and play Hatred, feeling disgust just looking at the game’s title. However, and I guess that is the key here, I don’t think it is Hatred we really despise.

It’s the realization that we are surrounded by people who do not have enough basic decency to be hypocrites. People who have no moral compass, no empathy, who refuse to acknowledge that no, it’s not ‘just a game.’ With their cold realism, motion-captured animations and hair-raising screams, the creators of Hatred go all the way to make sure it’s not just a game, but an experience.

We don’t want to acknowledge the ugly truth that there are people out there whose idea of fun is to press the shotgun barrel against the face of a terrified woman — and pull the trigger.”

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22
Oct

Daimler sells its stake in Tesla as its EV partner grows up


Tesla Model S P85D

They grow up so fast, don’t they? It seems like just yesterday (well, 2009) that Daimler bought a stake in Tesla to give it a boost and secure a partner for electric car development, and the German automaker is now selling that stake a mere five years later. According to the company, an investment is simply “not necessary” any more — Daimler can cooperate with Tesla on EVs without needing a say in its finances. The sale is theoretically a win for both companies. Daimler will pocket about $780 million, while Tesla can attract a wider range of investors.

The sell-off is partly a reflection of Tesla’s health, since it’s no longer a scrappy little startup that could easily run into trouble and jeopardize others’ plans. However, it also lets Daimler reduce its involvement in a company which is quickly becoming a rival. The Model S is widely considered a threat to Daimler’s higher-end Mercedes cars, and the competition is only going get fiercer with the Model S P85D, Model X and Model 3 likely to encroach on the brand’s turf. While Daimler says that everything remains friendly, this move will let it quickly cut ties if things ever go sour.

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Via: Bloomberg

Source: Daimler

22
Oct

New Sky+ app pushes pictures from your mobile devices to the big screen


For anyone with a Sky+HD box, the Sky+ app for Android and iOS gives you a handy way to manage recordings while away from home, and lets you use mobile devices as substitute remotes when you’re plonked in front of the TV. Now, with an updated version of the app released today, you can also use it to push your summer holiday snaps to the biggest display in your living room. As long as the smartphone or tablet running the Sky+ app is connected to the same WiFi network as your set-top box, tap the new camera icon in the app’s navigation bar and you’ll be able to send any images stored on the device to your TV screen, or set a slideshow running.

The update also tweaks the app’s UI to make it look more like the new Sky+ homepage. As such, you now have access to the “New & Recommended” content category, as well as a shortcut to all the sports channels and details of upcoming live events. The app now works with Sky’s Smart Series Link feature, too, which automatically records the next season of a show you’ve instructed it to record previously. Furthermore, Sky teamed up with the Royal National Institute of Blind People (RNIB) to make the new version of the app more accessible. It now works with the voice-over features built into Android and iOS, so it’s able to talk blind and partially sighted users through any information displayed on-screen, while also letting them navigate around the app using a series of gestures.

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Source: Sky (1), (2)