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25
Jun

Sonic Runners is out worldwide in the Play Store


SONIC-RUNNERS-iconSega has a new side-scrolling Sonic game out in the Play Store today. It has been available in select areas, but is officially released worldwide June 25th (today).

Like most other Sonic games it’s a classic 2D runner that still has everyone’s favorite characters. Prepare yourself for fast speeds, big loops, and lots of Bosses such as the infamous Dr. Eggman. The objective is still the same as previous games. Collect as many rings as you can while going as fast as you can. Your goal is to level up quickly, but you will need to decide who is the best character to use for each level.

The game is free to download, but does have in app purchases.

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Play Store Download Link

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Come comment on this article: Sonic Runners is out worldwide in the Play Store

25
Jun

OnePlus 2 is coming on July 27th


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Every year, a company announces its new product via a keynote in the presence of a physical audience, but OnePlus is here to try something new. OnePlus wants to invite the whole world to its next smartphone launch. OnePlus will be unveiling the OnePlus 2 to the world completely in virtual reality (VR). Starting July 27 at 7:00pm PT, everyone around the world can stream the launch of the OnePlus 2.

We’re excited for the future. As a tech startup, our goal is to push the envelope, look for new opportunities, and strive to perfect them. Virtual reality holds a monumental amount of potential. With cutting-edge technology, we can explore corners of the world like never before. We already know that VR will change the face of the entertainment industry, but we’re here to try something new

Carl Pei, Oneplus

According to OnePlus, this unique launch method with VR will allow you to stand right next to their team as they unveil their new “flagship killer”. You’ll be able to look around as you check out the phone in a new way, and maybe even find a few hidden Easter eggs. OnePlus also made their own Google’s cardboard style VR headset to be used to stream the whole keynote. The VR headset is not available yet, but you can always check OnePlus cardboard page later.

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The post OnePlus 2 is coming on July 27th appeared first on AndroidGuys.

25
Jun

Make your Galaxy S6 or Galaxy S6 Edge look like stock Android


The Samsung Galaxy S6 and Galaxy S6 Edge are undeniably fantastic phones, supported by the impressive sales estimates by a number of analysts. However, as with all Samsung phones, there is that elephant in the room that you have to deal with – TouchWiz.

That’s all about to change as Samsung have just approved the first Material Design theme to their new Theme Store on the Galaxy S6 and Galaxy S6 Edge.

The near stock Android theme is created by Samer Zayer and skins most elements of the operating system to look as close to the Material Design appearance on Nexus devices, without infringing copyright. It doesn’t require root or any customisation, only applying the theme through the official Samsung Theme Store.

Check out MKBHD’s run down of the new theme and how to apply it below:

Now you can enjoy all the great features of the Galaxy S6 and S6 Edge without the TouchWiz theme. Let us know what you think of the new Material Design theme in the comments below.

The post Make your Galaxy S6 or Galaxy S6 Edge look like stock Android appeared first on AndroidGuys.

25
Jun

UK spy agency found to be conducting unauthorized surveillance… on itself


Businessman searching  office buildings with binoculars.

We’re still learning about all the different surveillance tactics and targets of the UK’s GCHQ spy agency, but the latest organization found to have been snooped on unnecessarily may surprise you. When it’s not spying on civil rights groups, looking for flaws in security software or amassing data on us, the GCHQ is apparently gathering too much intelligence… on itself. The anecdote comes from the annual report of the Intelligence Services Commissioner, who’s job it is to make sure all British intelligence agencies are collecting information in a lawful and justified manner. The report doesn’t come to any dramatic conclusions — the commissioner is satisfied they’re all behaving appropriately — but it does note an “administrative error” that resulted in the GCHQ “capturing more information [on its employees] than it was authorised to.”

GCHQ made the commissioner aware of the error last year, when a system set up to monitor “some staff communications” was found to be recording more data than it was supposed to. According to the report, it “was a technical error and not deliberate,” with the team involved putting it down to “a lack of understanding of the systems’ full capability.” Since the mistake was first caught, all surplus data has been erased and the monitoring system has been “reconfigured” so it only sucks up as much data as it’s meant to, though the commissioner’s keeping an keen eye on the project. So, the next time you worry British spies might know of the skeletons in your closet, remember they might not be as competent as you fear they are.

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Via: Wired

Source: Intelligence Services Commissioner (pdf)

25
Jun

Google’s unique self-driving cars hit the streets of Mountain View


Google has been testing self-driving cars on the roads of Mountain View for a while, but now the company’s own models are hitting the streets. Last month, Google announced that its rather unique vehicles that were built specifically to drive themselves would begin testing on public roads this summer and now they’re logging miles. During the trials, speeds are capped at 25 MPH and all of controls you’d usually find in a car (steering wheel, accelerator and brake pedal) are on-board in case the driver passenger needs to take over. However, these cars were designed to not have all of that stuff, so perhaps we’ll see testing sans controls soon enough — if the state of California allows, of course. The software that handles the navigating is the same tech that powered the company’s fleet of Lexus SUVs outfitted to drive themselves. If you’ll recall, that stable of vehicles tallied over a million miles, so the technology has quite a bit of road experience already.

Google’s also looking for local artists to submit work to be featured on the cars, because let’s face it, the paint scheme could use some pizazz. This fall, artists selected as part of the Paint the Town project will not only get their work displayed on the vehicles, but will have a chance to take a ride for themselves.

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Source: Google Self-Driving Car Project (Google+)

25
Jun

Vertu’s latest ‘basic’ luxury phone goes well with your Bentley


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So you just bought a fresh Bentley, but you’re worried that it clashes with the look of your basic cellphone? Never fear, as Vertu is coming to your (totally unnecessary) rescue. The luxury phone maker has unveiled its second Bentley-inspired handset, and this one is all about matching the look of your car without having to join the smartphone era. Buy the Signature for Bentley and you’ll get the same carbon fiber weave and calf leather as the automaker’s Mulsanne Speed sedan, but none of the technological sophistication — you can call and text, but you won’t be getting Google Maps directions to your beach home. The focus is instead on loads of creature comforts, such as buttons that sit on ruby (because they offer a nicer click, naturally) and concierge services. While this simple-yet-upscale phone will cost an a steep £14,500 (about $22,800) when it arrives on September 18th, we suspect that you won’t mind the astronomical price tag if you can afford a Bentley in the first place.

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Via: Pocket-lint

Source: Vertu

25
Jun

‘Sailor Moon’ in a post-apocalyptic pigeon-dating simulator


Hatoful Boyfriend is a pigeon-dating simulator. You read that correctly and, yes, it means exactly what it sounds like. However, Hatoful Boyfriend is also much more than a pigeon-dating simulator: It’s a dark tale of science experiments gone awry and a formerly human world now run by birds. In Hatoful Boyfriend — released on Steam in September and on its way to PlayStation 4 and Vita this year — you play as a young (human) woman and uncover truly terrifying things about this strange new avian world. Hatoful Boyfriend: Holiday Star is a new game in the same pigeon-dating universe, due to hit PS4, Vita and PC this fall. As Mediatonic Producer Luke Borrett explains direct from E3 2015, Holiday Star features even wackier stories, including scenes reminiscent of Sailor Moon, a trip to a manga convention and birds in tanks. Watch a portion of our interview with Borrett below.

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25
Jun

How Intel’s Ayse Ildeniz got fashion designers and engineers to play nice


http://www.engadget.com/2015/06/25/lessons-learned/how-intels-ayse-ildeniz-took-got-fashion-designers-and-engineers-to-play-nic/

By Sarah Lawson, Fast Company

When Intel unveiled the MICA smart bracelet designed with fashion house Opening Ceremony last fall, the news came amid a flood of other, similar announcements. Buzz surrounding the Apple Watch’s high-end accessories had become deafening; Will.i.am announced plans for his own smartwatch.

But MICA (My Intelligent Communication Accessory) didn’t just boast a luxe sapphire display (and a $500 price tag). It marked the microprocessor giant’s first-ever foray into the fashion world and was the result of months of collaboration between Intel, Opening Ceremony, Barneys, and the Council of Fashion Designers of America (CFDA).

As long as it was within the rules of physics, we would try to facilitate whatever we thought the end user wanted.

Blending those supremely established worlds of fashion and tech manufacturing would mean Intel’s vice president of new devices, Ayse Ildeniz, would have to to play mediator between hard-nosed hardware engineers and fashion designers for the better part of a year.

“The fashion industry should be at the driver’s seat, not technology,” Ildeniz says she told her team in early 2014 at the outset of the project. And armed with that mantra and the simple goal that the finished product be beautiful and not “geeky,” Ildeniz and her team set off to prove the world’s largest microchip producer could also be fashion-forward.

Ayse Ildeniz

The Gap

Early on in the project, Ildeniz said it was clear that the fashion industry didn’t understand the tech world (and vice versa). Once a design for an Intel product is buttoned up, she said it remains largely untouched as it goes into production, which can take 12 to 18 months to build. But in fashion, plans can change by the day as color and material trends are in constant flux. “The [Opening Ceremony] designers wanted to make a bunch of changes, and we were like, ‘Well, the more you change, the more there’s a time lag to market,’” Ildeniz says.

The initial head-butting didn’t end there.

One of Intel’s initial designs for the bracelet was rectangular. “The first time our friends at Opening Ceremony saw that, they said ‘No, no, no-we need it much more round and circular. And we need it much thinner and lighter.’ That’s been almost a continuous discussion between us as to how circular can we make it and how thin and how light could we actually make this bracelet,” Ildeniz says.

Changing the shape was one thing, but the constant pressure for a thinner band grated on Intel’s engineers, who needed to fit a battery, modem, and other electronic components inside the bracelet’s sleek shell. The engineers were used to building things on a flat surface, which tends to allow for more features to be squeezed in. A thin, circular smart bracelet would be challenging.

Conversely, when Intel’s engineering team first saw Opening Ceremony’s designs for MICA, Ildeniz says they were distressed. Early mock-ups had the bracelet constructed almost entirely from metal. “If you actually want to have a radio inside a bracelet, that would not be possible because the radio doesn’t emit signals through metal,” Ildeniz says. So Intel’s industrial design team had to re-create the look of metal with minimal use of the material itself.

Then there were the issues of the bracelet’s USB port, which allows the device to receive a charge and connect to other devices, and the display screen for MICA’s notifications. Intel originally proposed two displays: one outward-facing screen with the positioning of a watch face that would show generic information like the time and date, and another screen on the inner wrist that would be reserved for more personal information. When Intel demoed the concept to Opening Ceremony, they were unimpressed, prodding the engineers to hide the screen and the USB port altogether. “We said, ‘Well, what do you mean? Then people won’t know it’s a smart bracelet,’” Ildeniz says. The designers’ feedback: exactly.

The Bridge

In the months leading up to MICA’s release, both Opening Ceremony and Ildeniz’s team were able to sidestep potential pitfalls that can come with cross-sector collaboration by developing a clear profile for the bracelet’s end user. Every other month, Ildeniz says the teams held closed-door meetings with CFDA and an assemblage of “top fashion intelligentsia” to brainstorm how high-end fashion and tech could mesh best. Then Intel performed surveys of millennials, probing their usage patterns for wearables. Opening Ceremony did the same with their own customer base. Then the two factions came together often to pore over the data.

Through that mediation, the design teams ultimately decided that the MICA user wouldn’t want others to know the bracelet was connected. “The women that we want to sell these to do not want anyone to know that they’re actually using a technical device,” Ildeniz says. “They want it to look like a perfect bracelet, no connectivity, no smartness elements in it.” So the dual screens were nixed in favor of a single inward-facing sapphire touch display. Likewise the USB port was artfully concealed inside the bracelet’s clasp.

Another problem loomed, however-the laws of physics.

While the constant communication between Opening Ceremony and Intel allowed for important compromises, Ildeniz says physical reality kept compromises in check. “I always try to mediate and find the workable solution that would cater the right product,” Ildeniz says. “But it also has to be physically possible. As long as it was within the rules of physics, we would try to facilitate whatever we thought the end user wanted.” Being physically limited in some aspects kept her from over-promising features to Opening Ceremony and staying honest in what she could deliver. Eventually, the teams compromised on a thick-set round bracelet with angular edges to accommodate all of Intel’s technical features. Polycarbonate and gold plating give it a metallic feel while allowing MICA’s radio technology to work uninhibited.

A Fashion-Forward Future

In the wake of its successful fashion debut, Intel now has partnerships on the horizon with Tag Heuer for the first-ever Swiss smartwatch as well as Oakley and its parent company Luxottica for a new smart-glasses concept. The watch will be out later this year, and the smart-glasses project is slated to launch in 2016.


Ayse Ildeniz is one of Fast Company’s Most Creative People in Business 2015. Click here for more insight from this year’s list.

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25
Jun

OS X El Capitan Code Hints at 4K 21.5-inch Retina iMac


Apple’s newest OS X El Capitan beta, released on Tuesday, contains code that may hint at some upcoming Apple product updates. Shared by 9to5Mac, the code references a Retina display with a 4096 x 2304 resolution, potentially referring to a future 21.5-inch Retina iMac with a 4K resolution.

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There’s also a mention of Intel Iris Pro Graphics 6200, the graphics chipset that accompanies Intel’s newest line of Broadwell processors. Intel Iris Pro Graphics 6200 and a Broadwell/Skylake processor could potentially be destined for a 4K 21.5-inch Retina iMac, but the chipset is also suitable for a number of notebooks. There’s a further mention of AMD Radeon M380 – M395X graphics, which could be used in high-end iMac models.

Apple has updated its 27-inch iMac with a 5K Retina resolution, but the 21.5-inch iMac has thus far remained untouched as Apple has had to wait on appropriate chips for the machine. Apple’s plans for the 21.5-inch iMac remain unclear, as Intel has only released two desktop-class Broadwell chips and does not plan to release additional desktop chips. For that reason, a 21.5-inch Retina iMac update could still be months off should Apple opt to wait for Broadwell’s successor, Skylake.

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In addition to pointing towards a potential 21.5-inch iMac upgrade, code in the latest El Capitan beta also hints at a revamped Remote with a multi-touch trackpad that supports scrolling, a dedicated Bluetooth chip, and audio support, potentially for Siri commands. Details on the remote, which will likely accompany the upcoming Apple TV, were first shared in May.




25
Jun

The OnePlus 2 will be officially unveiled on July 27th in virtual reality


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Although OnePlus is continuing to unveil its next major flagship in slow motion, we now have a definitive date as to when we can see the complete device. On Monday, July 27th at 7PM PT, OnePlus will officially unveil the OnePlus 2… in virtual reality. Yes, really. The company will stream the launch event in VR so folks around the world can tune in with their OnePlus-branded Cardboard viewers.

The Cardboard headsets that OnePlus will be giving out should be easier to assemble than Google’s standard Cardboard viewers. This is certainly an interesting way to unveil a product, and we imagine many folks will be on board with the idea. From OnePlus:

A VR launch lets you stand right next to our team and our fans as we unveil our new flagship. You’ll be able to look around as you check out the phone in a new way and maybe even find a few hidden Easter eggs. It’s a new way of thinking about a product launch. We aren’t talking at you; we are talking with you.

If you’d like some more information on how to get your very own Cardboard viewer from OnePlus, be sure to keep an eye on this webpage in the near future. We’re not sure how many units the company will be giving out, but we can assume it’s a lot. And be sure to stay tuned with Android Authority for more coverage on the upcoming OnePlus 2!