Skeegle is like Meerkat or Periscope, but for private groups
Broadcasting live video from your smartphone has quickly become all the rage. The most popular enablers of this craze are Meerkat and Periscope, both of which aim to create a global community of streamers and voyeurs that find each other’s feeds through open social networks. New player Skeegle, however, wants to do things a little differently, by making mobile live-streaming a more private affair. The premise is simple: you choose exactly who you want to broadcast to. Once you’ve downloaded the app, logged in with a Facebook account and associated your phone number with it (WhatsApp-style), you can start building groups from your phone’s contact list (think “friends,” “family,” etcetera). When you stumble upon something worth streaming, you simply select the groups you’d like to be notified of your activity, start broadcasting, and that’s it.
Those who you’ve decided to share that moment with will be alerted you’re on air (by SMS or Skeegle notification), and can either watch the stream through the app, or in a browser window if they’re not signed up. All broadcasts are also archived in the cloud so you and select chums can revisit them at a later date. Anyone that’s able to receive an SMS can watch a stream, but for now, broadcasting is reserved only for those with a UK mobile number.
Skeegle was funded and is effectively owned by EE, but it’s available to everyone regardless of their chosen carrier. Usually masters of PR, EE’s let Skeegle slip into Android and iOS app stores without so much as a whisper. In fact, EE isn’t planning to promote the app at all; it’s not branded in any way, and the carrier expects the Skeegle user base to grow organically (as in, without a publicity campaign). According to EE, the app’s been in the works for the past year, long before Meerkat and Periscope found popularity. Rather than develop it internally, the network provider drafted in an external consultant to create a kind of in-house start-up that could operate outside the EE corporate machine. But why go to all the trouble if there’s no tangible benefit to the company? EE’s answer is simply that anything demonstrating the type of new experiences 4G affords can only be a good thing.
Filed under: Cellphones, Internet, Mobile
Source: Skeegle
YouTube montage celebrates 10 years of wasting your time
From screaming goats to Russian meteorites, YouTube has been making us unproductive since 2005. What better way to celebrate than with an artsy montage (below) featuring categories like “fails,” “memes,” and “animals” from YouTube’s own Spotlight channel? It’s set to Alpha Aerobics by Blackalicious, and will take you back to the day with Nyan Cat, Charlie the Unicorn and — who could forget — Kicked in the Head by a Train. Best of all, there’s a full list of all 76 videos, which by my reckoning should let you blow a whole other day.
Source: YouTube
Google plans regular updates to Android M preview, the first coming in a month

Google is looking to instill some predictability into its Android calendar, and that includes a switch to yearly releases, but also more regular updates for developer previews.
For the Android M preview release, Google plans to release monthly updates based on the feedback it receives from developers. That means things could change a lot between now and the final release expected this fall, and hopefully that will lead to a more stable and polished operating system.
Google’s Chet Haase confirmed the regular updates during his “What’s new in Android” session yesterday. According to Haase, the goal is to release the next update for Android M developer preview at the end of June, followed by new updates every month until the full launch in Q3.
This new approach contrasts to what happened last year with Lollipop, when there were very few changes between the late June release of Android L preview and the November launch of Lollipop.
For a look at what Android M brings to the table, check out our video impressions and the new features roundup. Stay tuned for more Google I/O news throughout the day!
Don’t miss our videos: Android M, Now on Tap, new Photos, event rundown, and more

Android M is here and everyone wants to know what’s new and exciting. We’ve spent the better part of the past 24 hours bringing you that (and we’re not done), but if you just want all the important stuff, boiled down and put in video form, our videos are a must see.
Android M first look and impressions
Google Photos first look
Google Now on Tap demo
New Android Wear features
New Google Cardboard VR
Google I/O keynote rundown
For a deeper dive into Android M and all things new from Google I/O, here are some starting points:
- Watch the full Google I/O keynote
- A look at the new Google Photos app
- Announcement roundup: all the big news in one place
- Android M developers preview images
- Android M: everything you need to know
Keep it tuned for more.
Rumors of Milkshake name are “exaggerated,” says Google’s head of engineering

It was the perfect viral story. A Google bigwig casually sporting a Milkshake watchface on his smartwatch during the Google I/O keynote. Milkshake name for Android M confirmed!
Well, not so fast. Dave Burke, who introduced most of the core features of Android M on stage at Google I/O yesterday, admitted that his Huawei Watch happened to display a milkshake during the event. But it wasn’t the only M-named dessert on his device.

So there you have it. The M-ystery lives to see another day. What about you? What dessert name you’d like to use come this fall?
Google launches password manager that can log you automatically into apps

One of the new features coming along Android M that Google chose not to highlight during the keynote yesterday is a password manager called Smart Lock for Passwords.
Here’s how it works. When you first sign into an app that supports Smart Lock for Passwords, your device will ask if you want to save the credentials into Smart Lock. If you chose yes, the credentials will be stored online and the next time you need to log into the respective app, you will be logged in automatically with zero effort on your side. And that goes for any device on which you are signed in with your Google account.
Log into Netflix one time on your smartphone and then never have to type a password again on your tablet or Android TV. And this works with Chrome as well, so saving your credentials in the desktop browser will make them available for apps on your mobile device, and vice versa.

Speaking of Netflix, the video service is one of the handful of apps that already integrate the feature, along with The New York Times, Instacart, Orbitz, and Eventbrite.
Smart Lock won’t work with any app, the way LastPass attempts to do. Developers will have to integrate the feature into their app using Google’s Credential API. That looks like a fairly simple process, however, and we can see this feature really taking off in the future.
Of course, not everyone will be happy to hand Google the keys to their digital kingdoms. The Mountain View giant already has profound insight into our lives and storing passwords with Google means a user’s entire online presence could be compromised should someone gain access to their account. But, provided there are proper security measures in place, the convenience benefits may outweigh the privacy risks, though that’s entirely up to you to decide. The feature is entirely optional.
Smart Lock for Passwords is part of Google Play services 7.5, rolling out now. That means the feature will not depend on Android M, and users on older versions should be able to enjoy it.
Let us know your thoughts.
Lenovo’s Windows 10 devices will get unique Cortana features
Microsoft’s chatty Cortana is one of the more well-liked parts of Windows Phone, and Lenovo is making it more versatile on its own PCs with ReachIt. It exploits the voice assistant to find your own photos, documents and email across multiple Lenovo Windows 10 PCs, tablets, and even cloud services like OneDrive or Dropbox. The app is personalized with a user-specific Lenovo ID, letting you search for content on, say, your Lenovo laptop remotely from a ThinkPad tablet. It also uses location services, helping you locate a file by making a vague request like “Cortana, find the picture I worked on at Starbucks last week,” according to Lenovo.
Microsoft’s Cortana search will also arrive to any PC once Windows 10 comes out. However, Lenovo has extended its capability a bit with ReachIt, letting it search your personal info across several devices; provided they’re from Lenovo, we’d assume. We’re wondering if Microsoft might do something similar — the ability to search your PC from Cortana using an Android and iOS device would be pretty handy.
Filed under: Desktops, Laptops, Lenovo
Source: Lenovo
Asteroid mining might compromise telecom and defense satellites
Asteroid mining might provide a lot of jobs and new sources of gold, titanium, platinum and other metals, as well as hydrogen and ammonia in the future. But it could also spell disaster for telecom satellites orbiting the Earth if it’s not managed properly. You see, some companies planning to mine the celestial objects are looking for ways to ferry them closer to home. Remember how NASA aims to take a chunk from an asteroid and drag it to the moon’s orbit using a spacecraft? Something like that, but likely on a much bigger scale. Unfortunately, asteroids have weak gravity and could yield huge amounts of debris, which might end up polluting the geosynchronous orbit. That’s where most telecom and defense satellites are stationed.
According to Casey Handmer of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena and Javier Roa of the Technical University of Madrid in Spain, around five percent of debris from transplanted asteroids will end up crossing satellites’ paths. The first few asteroids will likely not cause issues, but their numbers can only grow if the industry flourishes. Big chunks of rock will be especially disastrous, as they can damage satellites severely, especially during high-speed collisions. Thankfully, at least one aspiring space miner is already thinking of solutions. Speaking to New Scientist, Meagan Crawford of Deep Space Industries said her company is planning to “bag” an asteroid before mining it, shrouding it in some kind of material that will prevent debris from escaping.
[Image credit: Getty Images/Science Photo Library RF]
Filed under: Science
Source: New Scientist
Intel and Rockchip: Anatomy of a chip deal

If you can’t beat them, join them. That seems to be the bottom line in Intel’s strategic partnership with Fuzhou Rockchip Electronics Co. Ltd. It’s a tectonic shift on Intel’s part; the venerable silicon powerhouse has traditionally been focusing on premium computing devices that require the performance levels consistent with the Intel architecture.
Intel, which had kept the SoC development in-house so far, announced in May 2014 that it would join hands with Rockchip to co-develop low-cost system-on-chips (SoCs) for sub-$150 tablets. The Santa Clara, California–based chipmaker, stopping short of licensing its IP, would allow Rockchip to modify design around its x86 Atom core. The partnership doesn’t prevent Rockchip from using ARM processor cores, and there is no financial investment from Intel in Rockchip.
Still, there were more questions than answers, and soon the chip deal became a matter of intense speculation among technology business circles. There has been a lot of ambiguity surrounding this technology alliance, mostly because both Intel and Rockchip aren’t giving away much information except some minor product details.
So Android Authority takes a closer look at the tie-up between Intel and Rockchip from both sides of the fence and attempts to unwind the mystery around this technology liaison. What does this tech relationship stand for? What are the stakes for Intel and Rockchip, respectively? What is the end game? Android Authority sifts through the nitty gritty of this innovative setup in an attempt to find some of the answers.
What Intel Wants?
Intel, which has a history of setbacks in the mobile market, has adopted a novel strategy to break the deadlock and finally make some traction in the mobile industry. Rockchip, which shipped 40 million app processors for tablets in 2013, would bring Intel a better cost base and local ecosystem contacts. The middle-aged Intel would get deeper access to China’s high-volume tablet and smartphone manufacturers and design house through its Rockchip connection.
Another basic consideration for the top U.S. chip vendor is the proliferation of its x86 mobile ecosystem. Intel CEO Brian Krzanich believes that his new semiconductor partners in China—Rockchip and Spreadtrum Communications—lack resources to simultaneously build x86- and ARM-based SoCs. So, eventually, they could transition away from ARM ecosystem and switch to x86 SoC design platform. That sounds a bit optimistic given ARM’s near-ubiquitous presence in China’s silicon landscape and the role that ARM processor cores have played in enabling local chipmakers to create low-cost SoCs.
However, Intel has got a foot in the door, and by merely doing that, it has created the biggest challenge to ARM’s mobile ecosystem yet. The deal would allow Intel to have a large number of engineers in China work on mobile x86 designs. Intel’s Atom SoCs, which have largely overcome the traditional power consumption challenges, still lack the ecosystem muscle of ARM. The pact with Rockchip could potentially help Intel build an ARM-like family of partners and take the platform to new markets.
The view from Rockchip
Rockchip became famous by supplying cheap application processors to China’s white-box tablet market. Eventually, it began to serve budget SoCs to larger tablet brands in China and Taiwan. Then, in 2013, MediaTek entered the white-box market for tablets, and unlike Rockchip, which merely supplied application processors, MediaTek SoCs came integrated with baseband sockets. The follwing year, Rockchip joined hands with Intel to develop mobile SoCs using Intel’s Atom processor core and baseband technology.
ARM has made application processor design relatively straightforward, but a cellular radio connectivity stack—also known as modem or baseband chip—is costly and hard to design. Rockchip has collaborated with the U.S. chip giant to develop an entry-level SoC—labeled as X3-C3230-RK—which comprises of a quad-core Atom application processor, Mali 400 MP4 graphics, and Intel’s 2G/3G/HSPA+ baseband. Apparently, access to 3G modem technology would significantly improve Rockchip’s competitiveness.

For a start, it has allowed Rockchip to make a foray into the high-volume smartphone business and has provided Intel with an ally in smartphone wars. Rockchip unveiled smartphones and tablets using Intel processors at the Hong Kong Electronics Fair being held on April 13-16, 2015. However, a closer look at this tie-up shows that Rockchip’s baseband project is merely a sweetener in the deal.
In the long run, what matters more to Rockchip is access to Intel’s prized IP, a rare commodity among China chipmakers. The tablets based on Rockchip SoCs generally have buggy software and quality issues. The example of successful smartphones likes Samsung Galaxy shows that user experience is crucial in a mobile product’s success. Apparently, Rockchip has realized the critical importance of user interface and other software features for its customized and turnkey SoC solutions.
Intel is also the only processor architecture company with its own fab. Rockchip might want to seize the initiative of working with Intel’s engineers and streamline its hardware, software and UI workflows with whatever access it gets to Intel’s cutting-edge chip technology. Intel is already providing technical support to design-houses such as Emdoor, Hampoo and Techvision, which are all Rockchip partners.
The end game
The common perception about Intel’s tie-up with Rockchip is that it’s a marriage of convenience, and before long, they could be facing each other as competitors. However, the scope of Intel’s liaison with China’s budget SoC maker could be deeper than jointly developing low-cost chips for tablets. The association between Intel and Rockchip has already transcended from tablets to smartphones.
The tricky Internet of Things (IoT) business could well be the next frontier, where Intel’s Quark processor is ready for the limelight with a complete ecosystem that spans from the edge to the data center. Then, there are partners like McAfee and Wind River, who could help Intel offer an interoperable, secure and scalable IoT platforms.
Intel lured chipmakers from China with a range of IoT-centric products and technologies at the Intel Developers Forum (IDF) held in Shenzhen, China in April this year. More importantly, Intel announced that the partnership with Rockchip will expand to IoT versions of x3 Atom SoCs. The mobile SoC business is all about volume and Rockchip has proven its volume merits in the tablet business. So Intel would most likely stick it out with Rockchip while eyeing China’s nascent IoT and wearable markets.

And that’s the embodiment of Rockchip’s unconventional hook-up with the world’s largest chipmaker. The Fuzhou–based SoC house would cultivate x86 designs in China’s vast electronics market while providing Intel access to its local network of device manufacturers and design houses. In return, Intel would give Rockchip a calibrated and calculated access to its IP and help China’s budget SoC supplier improve the quality of its chip designs.
Intel’s Senior Vice President Kirk Skaugen pointed out during his keynote at the IDF in Shenzhen how the multinational firms like General Motors and Volkswagen prospered by working with local partners in China. Apparently, Intel is in it for the long-haul, and its China-friendly image could favor it at a time when Qualcomm is at odds with the country’s technology establishment. Chipmakers in China are now more inclined toward innovation and Rochchip’s tie-up with the world’s largest silicon firm embodies China’s desire to nurture local technology industry.
Google debuts Android M, focuses on ‘polish and quality’
With the dust settling on the announcements yesterday at Google I/O 2015, one of the more prominent and expected announcements was that of Android M.
We don’t yet know what the ‘M’ stands for, but some guesses so far include Muffin and Milkshake, but what we do know is that the next major release of Android is looking pretty slick. The new Android M version focuses on polish and design, taking Material Design that was introduced in Android 5.0 Lollipop and enhancing it.
““For [Android] M, we’ve gone back to the basics,” said Google SVP Sundar Pichai. “We’ve really focused on polish and quality; we’ve literally solved thousands of bugs.”“
There’s no release date yet for Android M, but the Developer Preview is available now for a select few devices.
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