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18
Mar

Autodesk’s new app lets kids design their own toys


3D printers can build anything from prosthetics and musical instruments to Hershey chocolates. But, even as the technology continues to make strides with materials (metal, concrete, etc.) and takes on full-fledged architectural projects, it seems to move further away from the reach of children. Tinkerplay, a new kid-friendly 3D printing app, makes it quick and easy for all age groups to design and experiment with minimal assistance.

The app is the brainchild of Autodesk, the company best known for its flagship AutoCAD design software. It’s an evolution of Autodesk-acquired Modio, an iPad app that worked with desktop 3D printers. Like its predecessor, Tinkerplay eliminates the need for additional rafts and support materials which tend to complicate the process for at-home designs. But new features and functions allow kids (and older humans) to choose from the pre-loaded character templates or create their own versions from modifiable parts. Users can drag and drop parts to create characters or create their own complex little parts with customizable textures and colors for a new design. For the latter, connectors available with the larger Tinkercad family can be employed. In the end, the printer processes similar color parts that can be snapped up together for a ready-to-pose figurine.

The app, available on iOS, Android and Windows, is an addition to a growing list of 3D printing tools that encourage at-home experimentation. But it also engages a more pertinent audience — a generation that learns to swipe screens and tinker with gadgets before they can walk.

[Image credit: Tinkerplay]

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Source: Tinkerplay

18
Mar

Beta Channel Update to 42.0.2311.41 for Chrome OS


Most Chrome OS devices are currently due a Beta channel update that is rife with bug fixes and security updates. The update is available for most devices, excluding the Pixel, LG Chromebase, Asus Chromebox, and a few other Chromebooks.

The major changes include an updated calculator app, a Material Design visual upgrade for the files app, password-protected zip files support, and the ability to pin favorite apps to their shelf. There were some bug fixes and security fixes as well.

As always, this is a Beta, so there will be bugs. It’s best to report whatever bugs you see, in order to best help the developers get the OS to 100% functionality. If you find a bug, report it here. Once you’ve tried out the update, leave a comment below or post in our forums and let us know how it works!

Source: Chrome Releases

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18
Mar

Humble PC and Android Bundle 12 brings cross title gaming action for a low price


The Humble Bundle deals are always something magical. you get a slew of games, usually aimed at one particular system, for a small donation that goes to foundations and the games developers. As the payments roll in other titles get added to the mix and if you beat the average when you made the donation […]

The post Humble PC and Android Bundle 12 brings cross title gaming action for a low price appeared first on AndroidSPIN.

18
Mar

HTC planning ‘Special Announcement’ for the U.S. on Wednesday March 18th


Tomorrow, March 18th, HTC will be live streaming a “Special Announcement” that will be broadcast on HTCAmerica’s YouTube channel. The channel went live with a countdown timer earlier this evening that leads up to the event which will start at 10 a.m. Eastern time, 7 a.m. Pacific. Jason Mackenzie, HTC America President, pushed out a […]

The post HTC planning ‘Special Announcement’ for the U.S. on Wednesday March 18th appeared first on AndroidSPIN.

18
Mar

Lenovo’s first Windows Phone is launching mid-2015


Microsoft’s blog post detailing the launch information of Windows 10 has details regarding a strategic partnership with Lenovo that will see the Chinese manufacturer launching its first Windows Phone later this year via China Mobile.

18
Mar

You’ll soon be able to order a $2500 gold-plated Samsung Galaxy S6 and S6 Edge


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We’ve seen companies apply gold plating to smartphones in the past, but one company that stands out above the rest is Goldgenie. The company has applied its gold and platinum plating to devices like the HTC One M7, M8, Apple iPhone 6 and even a number of different BlackBerry devices. Next up on Goldgenie’s list is the Samsung Galaxy S6 and S6 Edge.

Samsung’s two newest devices, announced at MWC a few weeks ago, feature aluminum edges and shiny backplates made out of glass. Both devices are already being offered in Gold Platinum (among other colors), but if you’d prefer something a tad more luxurious, Goldgenie is offering up each device in 24K Gold, Rose Gold, or Platinum finishes. The company says your new smartphone will be at your doorstep around 14 to 21 days after the device’s April 10th global launch date.

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Pre-orders will be held through Goldgenie from March 20th until April 7th, and each device will run you a hefty £1,664 (~$2,453 US). Also, don’t expect your new investment to be shipped to your doorstep in its original box. Goldgenie will present the device to you in its own luxury cherry oak display case.

One thing to note: if you’re seriously thinking about purchasing one of these, you should know that Goldgenie plates each device in metal. We’re not sure how the metal plating will affect wireless charging on the device, but we’re sure folks who spend $2,500 on a gold-plated smartphone aren’t buying it for the features.

If you’re interested in finding out more on these devices, head to the source link below.



18
Mar

What is the Internet of Things? 


The Internet as we know it is going to change. Today it is a global network which connects people. We use desktops, laptops, tablets, and phones to communicate with each other. Often the information we send around goes via servers which run web sites, email software, etc. Broadly speaking this means that the Internet is made up of people, client devices, and servers.

A whole new category of actors is being added to the Internet. These new participants aren’t people and have been unglamorously named as “things,” hence the term “Internet of Things.”

But a whole new category of actors is being added to the Internet. These new participants aren’t people and have been unglamorously named as “things,” hence the term “Internet of Things.” A “thing” can be almost any object with at least one sensor and a way to transmit data. Examples of such sensors include temperature sensors, traffic sensors, flow-rate monitors, energy usage monitors, and so on. A temperature sensor can be placed in a smart thermostat, a smart electricity usage meter can be wired into a house, or a traffic monitor can be placed into a traffic signal. These things then send that data further up the chain until either a person or a piece of computer software makes some decision based on that data.

It won’t be long, and it may have already happened, but there will be more things on the Internet sending data around than actual people using Internet enabled devices. The cell phone, the Internet, email, social media, and smartphones have all changed the way we do things, both at a personal level and at a business level. Clearly the Internet of Things will also affect our personal and professional lives, how exactly hasn’t yet been fully understood, but affect us it will.

Challenges

There are several big challenges ahead for the embryonic Internet of Things. There are technological challenges in terms of the actual devices that collect and send data, these challenges include both hardware and software issues like battery life, maintenance, interoperability, and compatibility. There are big data issues around building systems that can process all of this data and use it to achieve meaningful tasks. There are also security and privacy problems, who wants to have a smart home that can be hacked? Or worse still a smart hospital that can be breached remotely. As we move from individual smart homes to smart cities, which have smart transport systems and smart infrastructure, then all these issues become more complex and more difficult to solve correctly.

The reality of the Internet of things from a consumer point-of-view took a giant leap forward this year when Samsung’s co-CEO took to the stage at CES 2015 to declare that all Samsung’s products will be Internet-of-Things (IoT) enabled within five years. If 2020 sounds like a long way off to you, he also said that 90% of Samsung products would be able to connect to the web by 2017. Samsung’s plans are for every washing machine, air conditioning unit, and microwave oven to be IoT enabled. Yoon said in his speech, “five years from now, every single piece of Samsung hardware will be an IoT device, whether it is an air purifier or an oven.”

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In his speech the co-CEO also highlighted that the IoT experience needs to be seamless for the consumer. “We have to create an open IoT ecosystem,” said Yoon. “The IoT experience needs to be seamless.” To that end Yoon promised that all of Samsung’s products would be built on open platforms. “Our IoT components and devices will be open. We will ensure that others can easily connect to our devices,” Yoon said during his keynote. “Without this kind of openness, there won’t be an Internet-of-Things.”

ARM

I predict that this road to a “seamless experience” will be quite bumpy, but companies like ARM are trying hard to make the journey as smooth as possible. Towards the end of 2014, ARM announced a new operating system to boost the development of IoT devices. Called ‘mbed OS’, it is a free operating system for ARM’s Cortex-M range of microcontrollers. One of the key points about mbed OS is that it supports the important IoT protocols, and allows anyone from a hobbyist developer to a multiple-million dollar corporation to prototype and develop IoT devices. mbed OS will include all the functionality needed to create an IoT device and to transmit that data to the cloud. It supports lots of different communication stacks including IPv4, IPv6, 6LoWPAN, Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, 2G GSM, and 3G.

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mbed OS is also interesting in that it falls into a special class of operating system. When talking about Internet enabled devices, there are four main categories of operating system. In a smartphone you get an OS like Android, which is itself built on Linux. That is what we call a multi-tasking OS. But a multi-tasking OS requires relatively lots of resources. A modern smartphone has a quad-core or octa-core CPU, a GPU, at least 1GB of memory and so on.

A typical IoT device will use an ARM Cortex-M processor running at less than 100MHz. That is quite different to the 1.5 to 2.5GHz processors that are found in smartphones. Likewise they will only have a maximum of 256KB of RAM, often much less. Again this is quite different to the RAM on a smartphone.

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So, for embedded applications there are three further classes of OS. Next is an RTOS, a Real Time Operating System. These are designed to run on resource limited processors and their key functionality is that the OS has a predictable scheduler. This means that different tasks are guaranteed to run in a certain order and within certain timing constraints. This class of OS is very important for the computer systems in cars, airplanes and industrial systems. However they aren’t very power efficient, something that is essential for IoT devices.

The next class of operating system isn’t really an OS. Known as the bare metal approach, it means the device software runs in an infinite loop and access to the hardware is handled by some drivers supplied by the board makers. This is the simplest way of programming an embedded device and probably something that people who have used an Arduino are familiar with.

The last class is the low-power operating system. mbed OS is an example of a low-power operating system. Its primary concern is with saving power (i.e. battery life). The OS is designed in such a way that it doesn’t wake from its sleep state unnecessarily, and it responds to events rather than continuously running and polling.

Low-power operating systems are perfect for IoT devices that need to have long battery lives, and remain deployed for long periods of time.

Structure

So what does the Internet of Things look like in terms of its structure? It is quite simple. At the “Thing” end you have small devices which monitor something, a door or window sensor, a heart-rate monitor, a temperature monitor, and so on. These devices transmit that data to another, more complex device. It could be a smartphone; it could be a control unit of some kind, like a smart thermostat, or it could be to a dedicated device that acts as a gateway to the Internet. This last category of device is known as an IoT Gateway. They are important because the sensors often don’t have a direct Internet connection. They probably only have Bluetooth or some other low power connectivity like ZigBee. Once the IoT gateway has received the data from the sensor it can be sent into the cloud.

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Part of ARM’s strategy can be seen in its mbed OS Device Server. While a web server would accept connections from web browsers running on PCs or smartphones, the mbed OS Device Server handles the connections from IoT devices. It uses open source protocols including HTTP for data communication and device management. The mbed OS Device Server would sit behind an IoT gateway and would use the gateway to talk to the IoT devices. It can also send the collected data higher up into the cloud.

Imagine you wanted to control the temperature in your house. Your air conditioning unit will be monitoring the temperature, and either keeping it at a certain level or programmed to come on at a set hour. This data is collected and sent up to the cloud for you to monitor via the web or on your smartphone. If you manage to get out of work early you might want to switch on the air conditioning unit earlier so that the house is nice and cool when you arrive. You can send that command via your smartphone and it will be relayed back to the unit. Related smart city scenarios can be imagined with regards to traffic control, street lighting, and so on.

Security

This all sounds very Utopian, but of course there are dangers. With all these devices sending data and receiving commands it won’t be long before the hackers are drawn in. A recent security report from Intel’s McAfee Labs singled-out IoT as a potential area for security problems. The report says that IoT related attacks will increase rapidly due to the predicted fast growth in the number of connected objects, many of which will have poor levels of security.

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At a white-hat hackers conference in 2013, researchers demonstrated how easily some Internet-connected security cameras can be hacked. Once breached the hackers can steal the video feed from the camera and gain entry to the camera’s network. During 2014 there have been several cases of attackers who have hijacked baby monitors and spied-on or even screamed at babies in their bedrooms. The BBC recently published an article about a website dedicated to streaming live feeds of hacked baby monitors and webcams. All this is both creepy and disturbing.

M2M

Another important concept for the Internet of Things is M2M, or Machine to Machine. At one level M2M is what it says it is, a way for one machine to talk with another machine. However in this context it means how a connected device talks to the cloud. It also includes how these devices are managed. M2M isn’t new in the sense that we are all used to one device talking to another device. File transfers over Bluetooth, app updates over Wi-Fi, even emails are examples of how one machine talks to another to achieve a task. However the special thing about M2M in terms of IoT is that these connected devices a) have a low-power usage, b) aren’t always “on”, and c) are limited in terms of resources (e.g. processing power, memory, and so on).

coap-web-of-things-protocol

 

ARM’s mbed OS will support several different M2M protocols including CoAP. The Constrained Application Protocol (CoAP) is a specialized web transfer protocol for use within the Internet of Things. CoAP uses URLs along with the HTTP methods like GET, PUT, POST, or DELETE. This means that obtaining a value from a sensor is not much different than obtaining a value via a Web API.

Conclusion

All this technology sounds great for the consumer, but probably the big money is to be made on larger scale projects. Smart buildings, smart cities, and IoT enabled businesses are where the large contracts will be. Whole infrastructures enabled for IoT or end-to-end business processes using IoT at every step. Everything from garbage to electricity, from trams to taxis, and from parcels to productions lines can be built to use IoT. The initial investment will be high for businesses, however the benefits will likely save money in the long term.

The IoT revolution is really only just beginning and there will be lots of advancements over the next few years. How we arrive at the seamless IoT experience will be interesting to watch, and on the way I am sure we are going to see some great innovation from some surprising sources.



18
Mar

ZTE Nubia Z9 leaks in photos showing fingerprint scanner and all-metal body


zte nubia z9 3ZTE’s latest Zubia Z9 has appeared in some photos online, showcasing the general design of the device. The Z9 is supposed to use a 5+ inch screen, and it’s pretty clear that this is going to be a very large device when you see it next to an iPhone 6.

Aside from screen size, we can see the phone sports smoothed, rounded edges and an all-metal body. It looks very, very thin, too, which makes sense for a flagship device in 2015.

The back of the phone houses the camera and what will likely end up being the fingerprint scanner, plus an LED flash and speakers at the bottom of the device. It does have capacative buttons, not on-screen buttons, which could be a deal breaker for some. That ultra thin bezel might change some minds, though.

source: Gizmochina

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18
Mar

DeNA gets in with Nintendo to bring original games to mobile in the future along with membership service


Just about every Android user I have known has one, if not two, emulators installed to their device. The original Nintendo emulator and the original Playstation are probably the two most prolific. While they work out pretty well most of the time, that doesn’t mean we don’t long for titles to be directly available. Sega […]

The post DeNA gets in with Nintendo to bring original games to mobile in the future along with membership service appeared first on AndroidSPIN.

18
Mar

Windows 10 launches this summer in 190 countries


Microsoft’s leaner, meaner, latest iteration of Windows is coming in just a few months, and it’s launching in 170 countries, in 111 languages. Don’t forget: Windows 10 is a free upgrade if you’re already using Windows 7 or 8. Hiding in its imposing shadow, and launching at the same time, the company will release special free version of its OS for Internet of Things devices, which Microsoft’s Terry Myerson reckons could well find its way into ATMs and ultrasound machines.

Filed under: Desktops, Laptops, Microsoft

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Source: Windows Blog