Hello from Google I/O 2015! Watch the live stream here at 9:30 am PST
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Hello and good morning to you all. I know we had some serious site issues yesterday that knocked us out entirely. Everything should be back up and running now. Currently I am sitting up in the Press Lounge at Google I/O happily waiting to make my way in for seating at the Keynote which starts at 9:30 a.m. PST. If you can hangout and catch the show, the video is below for you.
I usually do my best to get out as much concrete news and rumors leading up to I/O every year. This year I was fortunate enough to be invited to attend. I thought it would be worth while to steer clear of the chatter and come to the show and take it all in as it was being announced. While I couldn’t help but catch article titles leading to thoughts of a Chromecast 2, Android M and other expected announcements, I refused to open them and see what was being discussed. Which makes being here even more exciting as I have no expectations or preconceived notions as to what Google is doing today. So, book mark the page and be prepared for some amazing things to come.
https://events.google.com/io2015/embed?noFeed
The post Hello from Google I/O 2015! Watch the live stream here at 9:30 am PST appeared first on AndroidSPIN.
Join us for the Google I/O keynote live stream and live blog
Head of Android Sundar Pichai will take stage during the keynote
Android fans, it’s that special time of the year! Google I/O 2015 is about to start and, like every year, it starts off with a bang. The stage of the Google I/O keynote is where the Google universe reveals its trajectory for the next year, and it all goes down in just two hours.
Our Josh Vergara is on the ground at Moscone Center in San Francisco, and he will bring you his impressions later today. Back at home, we’re gearing up for an avalanche of coverage as we bring you news as it happens.
If you want to watch the Google I/O keynote live, look no further, we have the embedded stream right here.
Google I/O 2015 live stream
https://events.google.com/io2015/embed?noFeed
Google I/O 2015 live blog
Our Joe Hindy will be following the Google I/O keynote and bring you updates live as they happen. Please join him in the AA IRC channel for live comments. The widget will go live shortly!
— live widget coming soon
When does it start?
Tune in for the Google I/O keynote live stream and live blog starting at 9:30AM Pacific time. Times in other zones:
- New York 12:30PM
- London 5:30PM
- Berlin 6:30PM
- Moscow: 7:30PM
- Beijing: 12:30AM May 29
- Tokyo: 1:30AM May 29
- Sydney 2:30AM May 29
What to expect
Android M is all but confirmed to be announced at Google I/O today, but that’s just one of many announcements coming soon. Rumor has it Google will show off a new Photos service, will overhaul the Android permissions system, and launch a new Android-based IoT operating system, code named Brillo. We expect updates for Android Wear and perhaps some new smartwatches; Android Auto and Android TV are due for updates as well. And then there are the cool projects that Google’s ATAP division is working on, including Project Ara, Project Tango, and more. Expect to see chief of Android Sundar Pichai take the stage, design guru Matias Duarte, and probably even Google’s CEO and co-founder Larry Page.
Check out Simon’s Google I/O preview for an idea of what else may be coming this lovely day.
All in all, it’s going to be a very exciting time, but the fun doesn’t end with the keynote. Will bring you live streams for all the key sessions and news as they break! Stay tuned for updates!
Pebble launches official Time Watch companion app for Android
In preparation for its launch later this year, Pebble has today launched an official companion application called ‘Time Watch’ for its upcoming second-generation smartwatch. The app will enable users of the Pebble Time to access the Pebble App Store, organise their device and alter its Settings using their smartphone.
The application will also serve as a platform for any incoming over-the-air (OTA) updates for the smartwatch, including new software versions and bug fixes. It will prompt you whenever an upgrade is available and will immediately start installing it on your watch once you’ve instructed it to do so.
A full roundup of all of the app’s functions can be seen below:
- Support for Pebble Time watchapps, features, accessories, and data sources (e.g. Timeline-based apps, color watchfaces, weather/sports data, and more).
- Organize what’s on your Pebble by Watchfaces and Apps/Timeline. Dragging downloaded watchapps within the menu reorders them and syncs the changes to your Pebble (woo-hoo!).
- Toggle settings, set as active watchface, contact developer, and more by tapping any item within My Pebble.
- In My Pebble, the watchface with the green checkmark is the one currently active on your watch. Quickly change the active watchface by tapping the empty circle of another watchface in the menu.
- Supports both new Pebble Time watchapps AND all items currently available in the Pebble appstore.
If you’d like to install Time Watch on your Android smartphone or tablet, hit the link below. Alternatively, you can scan the QR code to initiate the download.
Come comment on this article: Pebble launches official Time Watch companion app for Android
Lenovo unveils its Smart Cast concept, a smartphone with a built-in laser projector
If you’ve been hankering after a smartphone with a built-in projector, Lenovo may well have you covered. At its TechWorld conference in Beijing today, the Chinese company unveiled a smartphone concept that included a built-in laser projector that can turn any flat surface into a keyboard that you can type on.
The Lenovo Smart Cast has a couple of other neat tricks up its sleeve, the first one being the ability to play a virtual musical keyboard, where you can create music in real-time with no discernible lag. You can even project the image of your favourite game on to a surface and control the game by swiping on the projected image. The smartphone recognises your gestures and converts them into commands.
The second nifty feature is that by rotating the projector and laying it flat on a table, for example, you can display your media content onto a nearby wall.
Naturally, being a concept, it’s unclear whether Lenovo will ever put the Smart Cast smartphone into production, but it is a sign that the Chinese company is attempting to think outside of the box in terms of smartphone development, much like it does with its range of laptops.
We have some a video and some more pictures for you to look at below and don’t forget you can follow our Google I/O 2015 coverage right here.
Click here to view the embedded video.
Source: Lenovo
Via: Pocket-Lint
Come comment on this article: Lenovo unveils its Smart Cast concept, a smartphone with a built-in laser projector
OnePlus is upset that Verizon is using the #NeverSettle hashtag
Have you ever used a catchphrase and then become annoyed when someone else began using it in earshot of you? Well, that’s kinda like how OnePlus is feeling at the moment, thanks to Verizon Wireless using the #NeverSettle hashtag in an advertising campaign. To make matters even more confusing, T-Mobile has also been using the same hashtag in its attempt to attract Verizon Wireless customers.
Never one to shy away from publicity, OnePlus is asking its followers to join the company in its attempt to take back the #NeverSettle mantra. OnePlus wants to send 500 tweets simultaneously via the Thunderclap app in its attempt to take back the #NeverSettle hashtag. If you decide to join the fight and reside in the U.S., you might also receive a surprise from OnePlus. All you have to do is enter your details on the form, and sign up for the Thunderclap as well.
You can follow our coverage of Google I/O 2015 right here.
Source: OnePlus
Come comment on this article: OnePlus is upset that Verizon is using the #NeverSettle hashtag
‘Batman: Arkham Knight’ is a fun distraction, but it’s not Batman
Neon green and red lights flash as Batman maneuvers the Batmobile through loop de loops in a gaudy underground racetrack. On the streets of Gotham, giant, bulbous tanks strafe around each other shooting at the speeding Bat-vehicle as it tries to escape. Onscreen, a computer-animated Alfred appears and gets snippy with master Bruce.
This is a description of the things I did in a demo of Rocksteady’s Batman: Arkham Knight, due out this June on PlayStation 4, Xbox One and PC. And if any of the above sounds a whole hell of a lot like the camp film Batman & Robin, well, that’s because it’s eerily similar. If you were a fan of that Joel Schumacher-directed 1997 nipple fest or the open-world distractions of the 2011 video game Arkham City, then that gameplay might sound pretty awesome. But for a fan of Batman: Arkham Asylum like myself, however, this sample of Arkham Knight was disconcerting.

Commissioner James Gordon remains remarkably understanding of his peers.
For its new entry in the series, Arkham Knight, developer Rocksteady chose to double down on the open-world exploration of predecessor Arkham City, giving players an expanded metropolis and a souped-up Bat-vehicle to explore it with. The face-lift that open world’s received on the new PlayStation 4 hardware is truly impressive. The streets, thugs and heroes of Arkham Knight glisten with detail and reflected light. Batman’s dank, wet world is gloriously represented even if it feels like you’ve been on these streets before. In fact, if Gotham seems overwhelmingly familiar when you start playing, that’s because the city, though significantly bigger, does indeed borrow architecture from the last game.
That familiarity isn’t a bad thing, though, as continuity between Batman’s video game adventures should enhance the fantasy that you actually are the Caped Crusader. This is his city and while it should change — especially after the middle of town was converted into a freaky prison colony in the last outing — it shouldn’t be wildly different every time.
The Batmobile, which has both destructive and acrobatic panache, lends a perspective absent from the previous games. Where most of Arkham City had players using grappling hooks to swing around and glide through the city’s rooftops, Arkham Knight keeps players grounded in the Batmobile. Unfortunately, that decision to constrain Batman to the streets also seems to have opened the door to some truly Schumacherian missions (sadly devoid of sexual innuendo) for Batman to complete while joyriding.

How does the Riddler afford all these underground racetracks?
I got to indulge in three Batmobile-centric mission types in the demo: bomb disposal, Riddler racing (seriously) and a chase sequence where I tried to catch the jetpack-rocking villain Firebug. To Rocksteady’s credit, all three were pretty entertaining.
In the first mission, the Arkham Knight (as the game’s villain is called) has sprinkled bombs throughout the city that Batman must diffuse by attaching a wire to them (with the Batmobile) and uploading a virus. He then has to defend that secured bomb from neon red-tinged robot tanks while the virus uploads. The whole thing feels more like a version of Battlezone, the 1980 arcade game, if it were made by Daft Punk. The Riddler races, meanwhile, feel like Mario Kart built by an insane person and set in a city sewer system. Which is more or less precisely what’s happened here: The Riddler has you try to beat a course time while you drive up walls and make tricky jumps underground.
Are these Batmobile-specific diversions entertaining? Sure! But when you’re riding the elevator back up from the Riddler’s subterranean fun times, it’s hard not to wonder what the hell any of that has to do with being Batman. Is Rocksteady attempting to ape the goofy Batman of the ’50s comics? If that’s the case, then why is everything all neon counterpointed with shadows and grit? Why have a tank fight at all?

The tag-team fights add a welcome spin on the series’ brawling.
The Firebug chases at least feel more true to Batman’s spirit. Those missions have players driving up to a burning building and then chasing the high-tech arsonist as he tries to escape. Trying to drive around tight city corners so you can get close enough to launch yourself out of the Batmobile, tackle Firebug and beat the crap out of him feels absolutely awesome. It’s also irritatingly open-world-game-specific, though. Since it’s a type of mission, players have to chase Firebug multiple times to complete that side story.
The Riddler races feel like Mario Kart built by an insane person and set in a city sewer system.
Therein lies the greatest problem with Arkham Knight’s shift from the tightly wound exploration of the original to the now Grand Theft Auto-esque open world: The game rarely feels momentous. Every one of these missions feels like so much filler; distractions to give you something to do as you Bat around town. The Firebug mission would be so much more exciting if it was just one specific incident; one big showdown rather than a chore that needs to be repeated over and over again. Batman: Arkham Knight‘s story may deliver the big, enunciated moments I crave, but unfortunately it was off-limits in the demo.
The series’ signature chunky fighting, at least, still feels great in Arkham Knight. Characters like Nightwing can be accessed on the fly by tapping the controller’s shoulder button. (note: Nightwing takes off after the fight, though, so these team-ups are temporary.) As in Arkham City, however, the whole of Gotham’s littered with random henchmen looking for a fight. So while you’ll always have something to do, keep in mind the brawling will be revisited ad nauseam, meaning more repetition of similar goals, as well as fewer distinctive set pieces and special places to explore.

Sadly, Uma Thurman doesn’t play Poison Ivy this time out.
It bears repeating that everything I did in this demo was fun. The races, the bomb disposal: They were perfectly entertaining. The production quality’s not what eats away at Batman’s latest video game adventure. Everything in Arkham Knight feels like it’s expertly made, but also indistinct.
I’d just rather have a flawed Arkham Asylum than a high-quality open world of distractions any day of the week.
[Images credit: WBIE]
Third-party Twitter apps will display quoted tweets properly soon
It’s been six weeks or so since Twitter revamped its “quoted tweet” function, saving users valuable characters and generally improving the experience for everyone using the site or the official apps. Now, it’s updating its API to support the changes, which will allow third-parties to properly display the quotes in their apps. To be clear, that’s all the update will allow for: displaying quotes correctly. Actually quoting tweets, according to Tweetium for Windows, is not supported by the API change, and it’s unsure if or when that’ll happen.
Filed under: Software
Source: Twitter
Amazon Prime same-day delivery is now free in 14 cities
Amazon can get you a package in an hour, but if you “only” need it the same day, delivery is now free in 14 metropolitan areas. To get the service, you’ll need to place an order of $35 or more and be an Amazon Prime subscriber at $99 per year. You’ll also need to be in specific urban centers, including San Francisco, New York City, Los Angeles, Boston and Seattle/Tacoma (check your zip code here). The move is yet another carrot for Prime subscribers and probably a blow to brick-and-mortar stores, who now rely a lot on impatient shoppers.
Via: LA Times
Source: Amazon
Watch this little robot learn to walk after taking damage
Robots are getting pretty good at carrying on after taking a knock, but what if they lose a limb? Scientists from the US and France have given a six-legged ‘bot the smarts to keep going even if two of its legs are disabled by, say, a Sarah Connor shotgun blast. The team created and then rated a number of simulations for how its robot could keep moving forward despite losing a leg or two. Once that information was programmed into the robot, it was able to rapidly evaluate the options and use the one that worked best in the real world.

Calling it “intelligent trial and error,” they described the programming as a kind of intuition for robots. “These predictions come from the simulated, undamaged robot. (However) it has to find out which of them work, not only in reality, but given the damage,” according to lead author Antoine Cully. He added that the same algorithm also lets the machines adapt to new situations and environments. The researchers think the bot could one day be useful as a rescue aid or personal assistant, and expect to see similar robots that can adapt to adversity or even fix themselves. NASA, for one, will need them for future Mars missions.
Filed under: Robots
Via: The Register
Source: University of Wyoming
Lego appears to be building a ‘Minecraft’ competitor
Lego’s new Amiibo-like Dimensions figures haven’t even hit stores yet, but already the company appears to be taking on another gaming phenomenon: Minecraft. The world’s biggest toy brand has begun including small flyers inside some of its sets advertising a new game called Lego Worlds, inviting players to “Explore. Discover. Create.” Sounds exactly like the premise of Mojang’s popular sandbox game, doesn’t it? Lego may have gotten a little ahead of itself as the dedicated website for Worlds has yet to go live, but something tells us we might learn more about this mysterious title when E3 comes around next month.
Filed under: Gaming
Via: Eurobricks
Source: Lego Worlds
















