Amazon offering unlimited Cloud Drive storage for photos to all Prime members

Amazon recently began offering unlimited Cloud Drive storage for its Prime users who want to store photos. Previously relegated only those who were Fire Phone owners, it’s yet another really great value included in the annual Prime membership.
With Prime Photos, Android and iOS handset and tablet owners can upload, access, and share their photos. Additionally, users can do all of this from the web, via Fire TV, Fire HD tablets, and more.
Amazon Cloud Drive : Prime Photos.
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AT&T adds Next 24 option to further stretch out equipment costs

AT&T on Tuesday announced a new payment option for customers looking to spread out the cost of their devices. Called Next 24, it allows for equipment installation over 30 months, bringing the costs down a smidge.
“Customer response to AT&T Next has been great. With a variety of payment options, they can choose the device and plan that fits their budge… AT&T Next gives customers flexible pricing options at an incredible value on a reliable network that keeps them connected.”
The AT&T Next 24 option goes into effect on November 9.
via AT&T Gives Wireless Customers One More Way to Save with AT&T Next 24 | AT&T.
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How and where to buy: Nexus 6

The Nexus 6 is one of the most anticipated phones of the year. As of now only the U.S. market is confirmed to have the Nexus 6 available for pre-order. AndroidGuys will keep you up to date on pricing and availability of this device as soon as we find out more.
U.S. Market
- Types: Cloud White 32GB and 64GB, Midnight Blue 32GB and 64GB
- When: Pre-Order starts Oct. 29th on Google Play (Sold Out)
Pre-Order for AT&T, Verizon, Sprint, Cellular South (Soon, not yet announced)
For sale sometime in november at participating carrier stores including Best Buy
Estimated Release date Nov. 3rd ( Based on Nexus 9 release date)
- Cost: $649.00 for 32GB. $699.00 for 64GB
AT&T $50.00 for 2-year agreement.”rumor due to leak”
All carriers may offer finance plans for 18 or 24 months.
Europe
- Types: Cloud White 32GB and 64GB, Midnight Blue 32GB and 64GB
- When: Pre-Order was expected November 3rd recent reports push it to November 18th
Estimated availability some time in December.
- Cost: Rumor price all over the place. Cost should be close to U.S. market
Nexus 6 AT&T, Nexus 6 T-Mobile, Nexus 6 Sprint, Google Play Nexus 6
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AT&T to carry HTC Desire Eye, Re Camera on November 7

AT&T announced yesterday that it will soon offer the selfie-centered HTC Desire Eye starting later this week. Arriving on November 7, the Coral Reef (white) colored Android handset features a pair of 13-megapixel rear cameras, a 5.2-inch display, and a host of upper-end hardware. Internally you’ll find a 2.3GHz quad-core processor, 16GB storage (microSD expansion up to 128GB), and a 2400mAh battery.
The Desire Eye will sell for $149.99 with a two-year service agreement or $549.99 outright. Qualified customers can purchase the device on an AT&T Next plan. Two options include $0 down $22.92/month on Next 18 or $27.50/month on Next 12.
Also joining the carrier’s lineup that day is HTC’s standalone, waterproof camera. The Re Camera will retail for $199 by itself however AT&T is offering a discount if purchased with the Desire Eye. Purchase the smartphone on a Next plan or two-year contract and you can save $50 on the handheld camera.
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Accessory of the Day: Anker 5-port USB charger, $25.99

Need some extra slots for all of those USB devices? This Anker 5-port USB Charger boasts excellent charging speeds from a safe and reliable unit. With sky-high ratings, this is an ideal buy at just $25.99 (Prime eligible).
Join Prime and get this deal with FREE two-day shipping!
Also worth checking out:
- Samsung Galaxy SIII [White] (Unlocked) – $157.47
- Motorola Moto G [Black] (Unlocked) – $199.99
- Western Digital 1TB USB 3.0 Hard Drive – $59.99
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The last Pirate Bay founder has finally been caught and arrested
It was only a matter of time. The last of The Pirate Bay’s three co-founders was arrested yesterday on the border between Laos and Thailand, signalling the end of a drawn-out manhunt for the site’s infamous creators. Fredrik Neij’s apprehension follows an arrest in June for fellow co-founder Peter Sunde, as well as a three-and-a-half year prison sentence handed down to compatriot Gottfrid Warg last month.
Neij moved to Laos some years ago and has been living there with his wife and children; TorrentFreak reports that he’s crossed the border into Thailand plenty of times before, but once had to appeal a decision by the Embassy of Sweden in Bangkok to revoke his passport. Now, it seems Neij’s luck has finally run out. After his arrest, officials held a largely symbolic press conference and took photos with a small battalion of officers. The Pirate Bay is of course still alive after countless domain changes and the handing over of command. While its founders now face the full might of the law (again), their arrests have done little to pull the cloud-based ship and its database of torrent links off course.
[Image credit: TorrentFreak]
Filed under: Internet
Source: TorrentFreak
Microsoft is slowly prepping OneDrive for music storage
You know all that OneDrive storage Microsoft’s been giving away lately? Turns out there could be a new way to put it to use soon: music storage. A tipster to Windows Central points out that going to this link will automatically create a folder for your tunes in Redmond’s cloud ecosystem, and when the feature officially hits it’ll apparently bring an additional 20GB of free storage with it too. A few graphics indicate that there’ll be a web version, as well. We’ve embedded one from Windows Central after the break. Oh, the service supposedly won’t cost anything (much like Google’s music locker) and your music will be accessible across a range of devices including Windows 8.1 computers, phones and tablets; browsers and, of course, Xboxes. Not that the Xbox One actually needs any extra media options mind you, but more are always welcome.

Filed under: Gaming, Home Entertainment, HD, Mobile, Microsoft
Via: Neowin
Source: Windows Central
Push band offers wearable insight for your strength training regimen

There are plenty of activity trackers on the market that measure things like steps, distance and more. But what about offering useful feedback for those gym sessions? That’s what Push aims to do with its wearable. The gadget measures power and velocity in order to gauge just how well you’re doing with bench press, squats and more during each rep. Those metrics are used to determine where intensity or weight could be increased, beaming the collected data to a companion app. From there, you can monitor progress, set goals and get recommendations for improving — on top of sending your numbers to a coach or personal trainer. Push is also continually adding new exercises for the tracker to keep the stats collection as complete as possible. And athletes have already taken notice. Strength and conditioning coaches for the Dallas Stars, St. Louis Cardinals, East Tennessee State University and others have used the wearable to gauge weight room performance. After a successful crowdfunding campaign and nabbing 2,000 pre-orders, the Push band is on sale now for $189.
Filed under: Wearables
Source: Push
HP’s slim ‘Omen’ gaming laptop conjures up Voodoo memories
Remember that gaming laptop HP was rumored to be building, the one @evleaks said would rival Alienware’s rigs? Well, it’s here — and it’s not quite what the retired leaker expected. Instead of a thick, meaty machine to match the Alienware 14 and 17, HP is putting out the Omen, a 15-inch gaming notebook that measures only 0.78-inches at its thickest point. Don’t let it’s svelte chassis fool you, though, there’s more than enough under the Omen’s hood to compete in today’s laptop market.
Like the Razer Blade before it, HP’s Omen seems bent on packing as much power as possible into its tiny frame. The $1,500 notebook comes with a 15.6-inch touchscreen, 8GB DDR3 RAM, NVIDIA GTX 860M graphics with 2GB of video memory and a 2.5GHz Intel Core i7-4710HQ CPU at it’s heart. The base configuration has a 128GB SSD, but HP will double that for an additional $100. The storage space is expandable up to 512GB, and particularly power-hungry users can double the the RAM and video memory as well.
The Omen is available for order right now, and should ship this month. Oh, and don’t worry if that name sounds a little /too/ familiar to you: it’s a reference to Voodoo — a gaming-focused subsidiary the company acquired way back in 2006. Curious about that history? Feel free to click right here.
Why Samaritans’ app to spot depressed tweets does more harm than good
Last week, counselling charity Samaritans launched Radar, a new social media service that remotely listens in on Twitter conversations and warns you when someone you follow might need emotional support. Radar is already tracking over a million Twitter accounts, and while the idea is a virtuous one, the service has sparked a huge online backlash, with many calling for it to be shut down. But why?
Radar scans chosen Twitter feeds for key words and phrases — like “depressed,” “help me” and “hate myself” — and sends an email to the user if it identifies any red flags. Samaritans argues that because a person’s tweets are already public, the service is merely catching something you may have missed. However, because Radar doesn’t require the person being monitored to give permission, it can also serve as the perfect tool for online trolls to stealthily catch people when they are at a particularly low point.
Samaritans is consistently lauded for its telephone hotlines, which allow callers to speak to a real person when they might have something on their mind. Additionally, friends may call on behalf of a friend or family member for advice. Unfortunately, Radar assumes that you are a well-meaning person with nothing but good intentions, which doesn’t translate well on Twitter. As the GamerGate controversy has highlighted many times over, social media can also serve as a platform to spread hate messages and harass other users. Radar’s auto-pilot mode can effectively tell an ill-meaning follower when the best time is to pounce.
Radar isn’t simply reading tweets on your behalf: it indexes each individual message
Then there’s the question of privacy. We already know that Samaritans views personal tweets available in the public domain as fair game, but Radar is a lot more complex than that. As The Register points out, Radar isn’t simply reading tweets on your behalf: it indexes each individual message, pushes it to a third-party server in order to process keywords and then stores it for future matching.
UK and European data protection laws already protect citizens from services that interfere with people’s rights, but Samaritans believes the app’s approach doesn’t contravene regulations. “Samaritans Radar has been in development for over a year and has been tested with several different user groups who have contributed to its creation, as have academic experts on suicide through their research,” the charity said in a recent statement. “In developing the App we have rigorously checked the functionality and approach taken, including an impact assessment against data protection and data processing principles.” It also notes that it is continuing to work with regulators and “will take action as needed to address these concerns appropriately going forward.”
When machines are doing all the work, expect false positives. Tweets containing lyrics from a sad song or a movie quote can potentially trigger Radar’s filter. Not only does this prove wasteful for people signing up for the alerts, too many erroneous emails could mask a real issue when one arises.
I’m so against #SamaritansRadar pic.twitter.com/G4FTHExbNX
– The ⬆️&⬇️ of bipolar (@BipolarSadness) November 4, 2014
As of November 2nd, 3,000 people had activated the Samaritans Radar app, which is reportedly tracking now tracking over 1.64 million Twitter accounts. The people behind these accounts now have invisible crosshairs on their backs, and the only way for them to rid themselves of potential targeting is to manually opt out by having Samaritans add their name to a whitelist.
It was enough for information policy activist Adrian Short to call on Twitter to take action. He’s created a Change.org petition to ask the company to bar the charity from accessing Twitter users’ data for breaching people’s privacy, making people more vulnerable online and “making Twitter a less comfortable and useful place for people with emotional and mental health problems.”
Samaritans has yet to fully address the individual concerns leveled at Radar, choosing instead to potentially incorporate changes further down the line. If the campaign to have it taken down continues to gather steam, however, it won’t be able to stay quiet for long.
Filed under: Internet







