Deal: Pick up a Nexus 6 from T-Mobile for just $550 ($100 off)

The Nexus 6 may not be everyone’s cup of tea, but there’s no denying that it’s a powerful piece of hardware. Normally the phone costs somewhere around $649 for the 32GB model, which is understandably too expensive for many users. But if you’ve been waiting to get your hands on the device for a cheaper price, now’s your chance. Right now, T-Mobile is offering the 32GB Nexus 6 in Midnight Blue for just $549.84… that’s $100 off the normal retail price! If you’d like to spring for the 64GB option, that will run you $599.76.
If you’d rather purchase the phone on a payment plan, you’ll need to pay $22.91 per month for 24 months for the 32GB model, or $24.99 per month for the 64GB variant. If you don’t want T-Mobile’s service but want to get your hands on the device, you can buy it from T-Mobile and activate on any carrier you’d like.
More on the Nexus 6
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If you need a refresher, the Nexus 6 comes with a 5.96-inch Quad HD AMOLED display, a 2.7GHz quad-core Snapdragon 805 CPU, 3GB of RAM, a big 3220mAh battery, a 13MP rear-facing camera and a 2MP front-facing camera. If you’d like a closer look at the handset, be sure to check out our full review.
Considering this is the cheapest we’ve seen the device since its launch, this is a pretty great deal. Head to the link below to pick one up for yourself.
Deal: Get the HTC One M8 for $299 with no contracts
If you’re looking to pick up a One M8, HTC’s flagship for 2014, for $199.99 on a new two-year contract, you might want to consider purchasing your new device from Best Buy. The company is offering an excellent deal on the device on its Deal of the Day page.
For an extra $100, bringing the device up to $299.99, Best Buy is offering it to customers outright with no strings attached. There are no contracts or payment plans—the device will be entirely yours. This deal applies to AT&T, Verizon Wireless, and Sprint models.
Still not sure on springing for the HTC One M8? It’s a hard decision, especially with all of the different devices out there that are all so good. Be sure to check out our review on the HTC One M8 and see what you think. It’s a fascinating option.
If you want this device for $299.99, you better act fast, as Best Buy has a limited supply.
source: Best Buy
Come comment on this article: Deal: Get the HTC One M8 for $299 with no contracts
Is Netflix seriously going to revive ‘Top Gear’ as ‘House of Cars?’
Ever since Jeremy Clarkson punched a producer in a row over steak, the future of Top Gear has been completely up in the air. The BBC appears to have distanced itself completely, leaving Clarkson and his co-presenters James May and Richard Hammond to speak to other broadcasters about creating a brand new motoring show. Over the past few weeks, it’s been suggested that streaming giant Netflix is the favourite to pick up the trio, and today The Mirror has added more fuel to the fire after it reported that the new show already has a name: House of Cars.
You’d be forgiven if you did a double take. Yes, it’s a car-related spin on the award-winning political drama House of Cards, starring Kevin Spacey. Netflix wouldn’t be able to to use the BBC’s Top Gear trademark, so it’d need something unique if it really is going to film a new series. It doesn’t help that there’s already a Spanish-language car show called House of Cars, of course. However, the company’s involvement hasn’t yet been confirmed, so we’re still firmly in the rumor and speculation stage. That said, if it was true, we do wonder whether Netflix could utilize some of its other popular Originals for more pun fun. Here’s the best we could do with two editors and a 15-minute deadline:
- Marco Polo — Marco VW Polo
- Better Call Saul — Better Call AA/AAA
- Orange Is The New Black — Orange Is The New Black Leather Interior
- Hemlock Grove — Gridlock Grove
- Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt — Un-brake-able Jimmy Schmidt
- BoJack Horseman — Hatchback Horseman/BoJack Horsepower
- Grace and Frankie — Race and Frankie
Think you can do better? Drop it in the comments.
Filed under: Home Entertainment, Transportation, Internet, HD
Source: The Mirror
What Instagram did for brunch, MassRoots hopes to do for weed

Cannabis or “weed” is, in practical terms, going mainstream. It’s no longer exclusively sold from basements and back alleys; in 23 states and Washington D.C., it’s sold from licensed and bonded shops. The cannabis movement has done a lot of growing up over the past couple of years as its public acceptance has skyrocketed across the US. Cannabis itself has gone from a black market “gateway” drug that funded the atrocities of Mexican cartels to a potential super-medicine drawing the attention of Wall Street’s most powerful investors and all seemingly overnight.
But is cannabis culture really ready for this sea change of support? Can users get over their self-perpetuating stereotypes and celebrate this pastime as coffee and cocktail enthusiasts do — by spamming their Instagram followers with inane pictures of what they’re about to consume? If the MassRoots photo-sharing app, billed as the “Instagram for weed,” is any indication, probably not.
I should first point out that I grew up in San Francisco. I smoked cannabis regularly for years before taking a drag of my first cigarette or even a sip of beer. Cannabis use wasn’t just normalized when I was a teenager; it was blasé. Everybody from my bus drivers to my public school teachers — heck, even my old scoutmaster — got lit on the regular and with surprisingly little pomp or circumstance. As such, much of the “cannabis pop culture” that many people relish has always come across as comical and amateurish to me. I mean, who actually wants to be that stereotypical, “Whoa look at my hands, THEY’RE HUGE!” kind of stoner? Who wants to be that one asshole who reeks of patchouli oil and can’t stop talking about how hash rips cured his gout?

As cannabis transitions from the counterculture to the mainstream, people are beginning to treat it like our other two favorite low-level intoxicants: coffee and beer. This includes not only obsessing over the origins, production methods, flavor and preparation of the product itself, but also over the ever-more intricate apparatus needed to consume them. Just as freeze-dried Folgers in a percolator coffee maker has been supplanted by Keurig K-cups, apples and proto-pipes have been replaced by dab sticks and vapor pens. And just as craft beer makers obsess over the quality over every hop, so too do stoners over the appearance and potency of their favorite strains.
As cannabis transitions from the counterculture to the mainstream, people are beginning to treat it like coffee and beer.
And just as people obsessively snap pictures of what they’re eating and drinking to post to Instagram, so too do many stoners with what they’re smoking. But that’s where the trouble starts. While getting shitfaced at 10 AM on a Sunday (aka “brunch”) is a perfectly acceptable use of Instagram, the site’s Community Guidelines specifically prohibit users from posting pictures of cannabis and other intoxicants. It specifically states, “Promoting recreational drug use is also not allowed.” There’s also the issue of police trawling through the app looking for people to arrest and the fact that cannabis is (for the time being) still a federally prohibited Schedule I drug.
And that’s where the MassRoots app comes in. The so-called Instagram of weed reportedly offers its users the ability to share their cannabis-related photos freely, safely and without any fear of violating their terms of service or running afoul of state medical marijuana laws. This is supposedly because the app is only made available to users in states that allow medical marijuana. During the initial setup, however, the only “verification” the iOS and Android app performed was to have me pick a state out of a list of 23 where medical cannabis is legal. I wasn’t required to disclose my patient ID number nor upload a scan of my doctor’s recommendation — nothing. It’d be no harder for a person from a non-MMJ state to game the app’s security than it would be for a 12-year-old to figure out how to subtract 18 from the current calendar year to get into a porn site. What’s more, even picking an MMJ state from this app’s list still isn’t going to protect you from either the DEA or overzealous local law enforcement.

Security concerns aside, the app itself functions uncannily like Instagram. Users can upload and share photos, like and comment on the pictures of others and follow other users’ streams. It’s really just like Instagram except the pictures are of glassware (e.g., hash pipes and bongs), nuggets of cannabis and flowering grow houses instead of fancy cocktails, tapas and your cat. Rap group Cypress Hill’s B Real is a member of the site and users like Valleyrec420, NativeRoots and MassGlass all offer professional-looking photo streams as well. Surprisingly, marquee cannabis groups like Stoned Society, High Times and NORML were nowhere to be found.
It’s just like Instagram except the pictures are of glassware, nuggets of cannabis and flowering grow houses instead of fancy cocktails, tapas and your cat.
I was also amazed by the lack of dispensaries using the app. It seems the perfect platform to connect with potential customers and yet I couldn’t find a single shop in San Francisco that used MassRoots. There are also no fewer than 48 people impersonating Snoop Dogg on the site so good luck trying to follow him. In short, with a significant portion of the content on this app being recycled from other sources — be it Tumblr or Reddit’s r/trees — it’s really difficult to know who’s worth following.
Unfortunately, the majority of MassRoots’ users are not gifted photographers (being stoned clearly doesn’t help matters either) so images are not typically of the best quality… or even in focus all that often. That’s not to say you can’t find great accounts; you’re just going to need to wade through a significant number of people snapping overexposed shots of pipes, Bic lighters and their hazy college dorm rooms to find the good stuff.

MassRoots, despite clearly being modeled after Instagram, does lack some of the more popular apps functionality. Direct messages, for example, are nonexistent. But for what MassRoots lacks in a large user base, it makes up for in user interaction. I posted a single picture to MassRoots and have already garnered more followers than I have on Instagram. Plus, looking through the feeds you see that virtually every single comment on posts is positive and supportive.
Overall, trawling through MassRoots is a lot like walking through a Cannabis Cup: equal parts enthusiasm and self-parody. It’s great to see people publicly embracing an American pastime that, 20 years ago, would have landed you in federal prison. But, seriously, how many goddamn times do I need to read the phrase, “Looooool I’m high AF” in a three-minute period? How many macro shots of generic nugs and sheets of wax do I have to see before they all blend into an eye-glazing morass? Turns out, about 45 of them.
Maybe my disappointment with MassRoots isn’t with the site itself or its largely millennial user base. Maybe the problem is me. It might be because I’ve been so inundated with the idea that cannabis is equivalent to alcohol that photos of people wearing hemp cowboy hats and fan-leaf leis makes me cringe. Or maybe it’s just as Lethal Weapon’s Roger Murtaugh once said: “I’m getting too old for this shit.”
[Image credits: Blaine Harrington III / Alamy (top image); MassRoots (screenshots)]
Filed under: Internet
The Nikonos Project shares classic cameras and stunning photos
Brandon Jennings has a deep affection for Nikonos, the renowned film camera series born from Jacques Cousteau’s famous Calypso underwater camera. The Nikonos Project is the vessel through which Jennings shares his passion with the world. It’s a simple idea: He owns hundreds of underwater cameras, and anyone can borrow one, free of charge. You just have to share the pictures you take.
The birth of The Nikonos Project was almost an accident. Jennings’ proximity to the ocean — he lives in San Clemente, California — meant his interest in photography soon led him to the water. After buying various digital options, he decided to try out a Nikonos, and so began an extreme love affair. “To me, it’s the best and really only option for 35mm in the water,” he says. Jennings isn’t alone in this opinion; there’s a wide-held romanticism for Nikonos cameras. They were in production for four decades, allowing anyone to easily photograph underwater subjects long before you could pick up a $200 underwater point-and-shoot or a GoPro.
The fact remains that these things do exist now, though, as do underwater housings for high-end DSLRs. Jennings’ answer to “Why Nikonos?” when more modern options exist is perhaps predictable — it’s an opinion you’ll hear from a subset of photographers time and time again. “Whenever I talk to people about the project, I almost romanticize [film],” he says. “An image captured on film is art; it’s organic; there is something there. … Digital is great. Digital has made everyone a photographer, which is wonderful. But to me it’s just not the same.” Besides, although you can find housings for SLRs and DSLRs alike, Jennings says they’re “such a hassle — the Nikonos is quick and easy.”
Jennings doesn’t seem to acknowledge that there’s anything unusual about this endeavor.
After falling for film, Jennings sold “a mountain” of digital equipment he no longer needed, bought a number of Nikonos, and asked friends on Instagram if they wanted to start shooting with them. He doesn’t seem to acknowledge that there’s anything unusual about this endeavor. Lots of people love film cameras, but none have had the urge to spend hundreds or thousands of dollars on a collection and start handing them out to people around the world.
The reaction to his idea was huge. “Fifty people wanted to shoot eight cameras,” he says. After shipping out the first eight Nikonos, he immediately started scouring eBay for more. While the project was initially funded entirely by Jennings selling off unwanted digital gear, it now relies on camera donations and print sales (a select few shots from the project are available to purchase at very reasonable rates) to stay afloat.
The waiting list for cameras now stands at roughly 2,500.
There are no fees, and very few strings attached to joining the project. Photographers are simply asked to pay to send their Nikonos along to the next in line once they’re done and, of course, to share their images with the world. After Jennings sends a camera out, it’s unlikely to come back to him for a long time, unless there are any technical issues. This makes the project almost self-sustaining: The only costs are sending out cameras in the first place, upkeep and, when the budget allows it, buying even more Nikonos.
The Nikonos Project is altruistic at its heart, and so its rapid growth should be no surprise. It’s only been a couple of years since Jennings first put the wheels in motion, and he’s already amassed over 250 cameras. Over a hundred photos pour in every month, and that waiting list now stands at roughly 2,500.
As you can see from the photos peppering this article, people are doing some pretty fantastic things with these cameras. You can try to get Jennings to choose favorites, but he refuses to be specific. That shouldn’t be such a surprise; his positive nature should be apparent from the project itself, and choosing one photo could be seen as negatively judging the others.
Thanks to Jennings, there are hundreds of Nikonos in photographers’ hands all around the world, and there are a few ways of keeping up with the photos that they’re taking. The official site has a neatly organized contributors page, a blog, the aforementioned print shop and a place where you can request a spot on the waiting list. Perhaps the best way to keep tabs on the project is through its Instagram account. Around five photos a week get posted there, and Jennings also occasionally shares news and questions — like this image, which served as interview prep for the article you’re reading.
There’s an obvious irony that Instagram, a platform obsessed with nostalgia, overrun by filters and faux Polaroid overlays, plays a part in this. The project celebrates analog, but it came about and continues to grow thanks to modern technologies. As more people get into creative photography through things like Instagram, so too the pool of potential contributors to the project will grow. You can prefer analog over digital, sure, but there’s a symbiosis between the two now. When was the last time you discovered something without the help of technology?
The project celebrates analog, but succeeds thanks to modern technologies.
Despite the obvious parallels with the success of Instagram, it’s a struggle to define what the Nikonos Project is. It’s part artistic endeavor, part charity. It’s a loose real-life social network, facilitated by the internet. It’s almost aimless, but has yielded fantastic results and built a strong and growing community. So what’s Jennings’ endgame? There isn’t one. “I mean, clearly I wish that we had more cameras in the arsenal so more people could be shooting with them, but I’m not planning on getting rich off this project,” he says. There are some ideas for the future, though: Jennings has plans to get “a few shows going,” and wants to facilitate participants “nerding out together as Nikonos shooters” through real-world meetups. He’s also working on a book (“or a few books”) highlighting each participant’s work.
Mostly, he’s just stoked at the reaction to the project, and what it’s meant for his life. “I’ve met some awesome people, and I’m certain there are more amazing people to meet,” he says. “Everything doesn’t have to have a destination in mind, right?”
[Image credits: Tom Squires (lead image); Bryan Timm (black-and-white silhouette of surfer); Josh Anderson (surfers in sunlight); Keoki Saguibo (child submerged in water); Vince Cavataio (Instagram of surfer)]
Filed under: Cameras
Source: The Nikonos Project
Apple and A123 Systems Nearing Settlement in Battery Engineer Poaching Lawsuit
Apple and A123 Systems are close to reaching a settlement in an ongoing battery engineer poaching lawsuit between the two companies, according to The Boston Globe. A123 Systems, an advanced battery manufacturer, originally filed suit against Apple in February for poaching key battery engineering employees to join its own automative team, including former chief technology officer Mujeeb Ijaz.
“On Tuesday, a federal judge granted A123 more time to finalize the settlement with Apple,” reports The Boston Globe. “In a court filing, the two sides reported that they ‘have reached an agreement, signed a term sheet, and are in the process of drafting a final settlement agreement.’”
Apple’s much-rumored automotive team reportedly consists of hundreds of employees, including several former Tesla, Ford and GM employees and other talent from smaller firms such as A123 Systems, MIT Motorsports, Ogin, Autoliv, Concept Systems and General Dynamics. The team is believed to be working on an auto-related project, possibly involving an electric and potentially autonomous vehicle.

It was reported in late February that Apple is also looking to hire Samsung employees with expertise in battery technology, confirmed by a Samsung official that said some personnel have been hired by the iPhone maker. Apple reportedly has a “top-secret research lab” located near its Cupertino-based headquarters for its automotive project, but likely remains in the early stages of research and development.
Rumors about the so-called “Apple car” have gained momentum since camera-equipped Dodge Caravans leased to Apple started appearing in California earlier this year. The first sighting of the vans were actually in New York last summer, with vehicles spotted in Manhattan and Brooklyn in August and September respectively. The vans have since been spotted in at least six other states.
MacRumors has been tracking the Apple vans, which are likely being used for an unrelated Street View-like mapping project, for the past several months. We have created an interactive Google Maps tracker of the van sightings featuring pins that can be clicked on to view a photo or video of each van. To date, there have been over 30 sightings spanning Arizona, California, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Nevada, New York and Texas.
Collective $328 million to be paid out by four major US mobile networks for mobile cramming
Each of the four major mobile carriers has been ordered to pay
As ordered by the FCC and the FTC, Verizon and Sprint will soon be paying out a collective 158 million dollars due to mobile cramming. If you haven’t been following the story, mobile cramming is described by the FTC as “a long-time scam in which consumers’ phone bills are used as a vehicle for unauthorized charges placed by third parties.” This basically means that some mobile phone companies have been adding small extra charges, usually ambiguously named so as to avoid questions, by allowing spam texts that charge upwards of 100 times the cost of a regular text (around $10). Some of the money from these spam texts would then go to the mobile companies themselves.
The FTC (Federal Trade Commission) and the FCC (Federal Communications Commission) have partnered in their common goal of righting the wrongs of the four major mobile networks and issuing refunds to customers. There are a lot of numbers floating around, but it seems like Verizon, Sprint, AT&T and T-Mobile will be paying out amounts of $90 million, $68 million, $80 million and $90 million respectively to customers and to the US government based on the FTC Mobile Cramming site and this FCC mobile cramming document
The post Collective $328 million to be paid out by four major US mobile networks for mobile cramming appeared first on AndroidGuys.
Android 5.1 heading to the Galaxy S6 and S6 edge this June
Awhile back, a lucky T-Mobile Galaxy S6 edge user some how received a premature Android 5.1.1 update. As it turns out, it was completely legitimate, so you know for a fact that it is nearing certification and deployment. The latest information suggests that it could hit the airwaves as soon as early June.
According to the Canadian carrier Rogers, their Galaxy S6 and S6 edge will get the Android 5.1 update in June, with no specific dates given. If you’re curious as to what it will bring to your S6, it will bring the Guest Mode normally enabled on stock Android 5.0, the ability to shoot images in RAW format, and multiple enhancements to performance and memory management.
If a smaller Canadian carrier such as Rogers is expecting to receive the highly-anticipated Android 5.1 update for their Galaxy S6 and S6 edge, it is more likely that American carriers such as Sprint, Verizon, AT&T, and T-Mobile will get it sooner. Especially with the latter due to their closer relationships to Samsung.
We’ll keep our eyes peeled and our ears to the ground as to when the Android 5.1 update actually gets announced by either American carriers or Samsung. We’ll be sure to update you guys as well as when the OTA gets deployed.
The post Android 5.1 heading to the Galaxy S6 and S6 edge this June appeared first on AndroidGuys.
Deal: HTC One M8 (no-contract) for $299 on BestBuy.com and eBay

The One M9 may be newer and slightly flashier, but there really is no reason why you shouldn’t consider last year’s One M8 as an alternative, especially at a discounted price. And that’s exactly what Best Buy is offering on its website and through its eBay outlet.
Best Buy is offering a brand new, no-contract HTC One M8 (32GB) for AT&T, Sprint, or Verizon for $299. That’s a great deal for a device that still sells for around $600 without a service plan on Amazon. Note that these are carrier versions, so you will need to activate and use them on the respective networks.
Check out the deal links on eBay:
- HTC – One (M8) 4G LTE Cell Phone with 32GB Memory – Gunmetal (AT&T)
- HTC – One (M8) 4G LTE Cell Phone with 32GB Memory – Gunmetal (Sprint)
- HTC One (M8) 4G LTE Cell Phone w/ 32GB Memory Amber Gold (Verizon Wireless)
Or BestBuy.com:
- HTC – One (M8) 4G LTE Cell Phone with 32GB Memory – Gunmetal (AT&T)
- HTC – One (M8) 4G LTE Cell Phone with 32GB Memory – Gunmetal (Sprint)
- HTC One (M8) 4G LTE Cell Phone with 32GB Memory – Amber Gold (Verizon Wireless)
All versions come with one-year manufacturer warranty. The One M8 offers a 5-inch Full HD display, a Qualcomm Snapdragon 801 processor, 2GB of RAM, 32GB of storage (expandable), a 4 UltraPixels Duo Camera, a 5MP front shooter and stereo BoomSound speakers. Even if it’s a year-old, at $300 the M8 is an excellent choice for anyone looking for a stylish, capable, and affordable Android smartphone.
Check out our full review of the One M8 for more details and let us know what you think of the deal in the comments.
New Samsung ARTIK platform aims to accelerate IoT development

At yesterday’s Internet of Things World conference taking place in San Francisco, Samsung introduced its new range of chips designed specifically for IoT environments. The ARTIK family consists of three new chips, ranging from a tiny low power 12x12mm form factor up to a larger octa-core chip complete with a 6 core GPU. Each is designed around catering for more or less computationally demanding applications.
Starting with the biggest chip, the ARTIK 10 features eight ARM cores in a big.LITTLE arrangement that smartphone users will be familiar with. There are four Cortex-A15 cores at 1.3GHz stacked alongside four Cortex-A7 cores at 1GHz. This configuration is accompanied be 2GB of LPDDR3 RAM, 16GB of eMMC storage and an ARM Mali T628 MP6 GPU, which allows for 1080p@120fps H.263/H.264/ MPEG-4/VP8 video encode and decode.

The ARTIK 5 is a slightly smaller chip, which features a dual-core 1GHz ARM-A7 CPU setup alongside a Mali 400 MP2 GPU. The chip also features 512MB of LPDDR3 RAM and 4GB of eMMC storage, as well as H.263/H264/MPEG-4/VP8 (720p) @30fps video encode and decode.
By far the smallest chip is the ARTIK 1. However, it is not powered by ARM technology, but instead contains an Imagination Technologies dual-core MIPS microAptiv CPU setup. The asymmetrical dual-core design features a microAptiv UP core for embedded systems that run rich operating systems and a microAptiv UC for fast execution of real-time operating systems, with each core clocked at 250MHz and 80MHz respectively. The tiny 12mmx12mm chip also houses a small 1MB on-chip and 4 MB SPI flash memory along with a 9 axis motion sensor. It is designed for low power wearables and IoT end nodes and can offer up to 3 weeks of battery life without recharging.
The ARTIK 1 features 5 buck converters and 25 low-dropout regulators for powering complementary components, while the larger ARTIK 5 and 10 feature additional general purpose I/O and ADC pins, along with connections for common UART, I2C, SPI and I2S communication standards, to support a wide range of embedded applications. All three platforms are full compatible with the popular Arduino IDE, as well as the Samsung SDK.
As you would expect from IoT designed packages, all three come with Bluetooth connectivity as a minimum, with the ARTIK 5 and 10 both sporting 802.11 b/g/n WiFi as well. There’s a cryptographic Samsung Secure Element on all of the chips, designed to protect them from tampering, and the larger ARM models also support ARM’s TEE (TrustZone) to fully separate the operating system from any potential rogue code.
Samsung ARTIK is currently taking applications for its alpha program, which will close on May 31st. If you’re interested in working on some IoT implementations, you can apply for an Alpha Development Kit though this link.











