Yahoo’s redesigned mobile search looks a lot like Google’s
Yahoo has been pushing hard to be people’s default search engine on every device. Before it can make that happen, though, the company knows its product must be improved drastically. As part of these efforts, Yahoo Search is getting an overhaul on mobile, designed to put relevant results information front and center. For example, if you’re looking for sushi in Seattle, you now have the option to get directions to any restaurant, as well as read reviews and make reservations — so long as you’re in the US. It’s obvious that Yahoo took a cue from Google with these features, and that’s not necessarily a bad thing. After all, imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, right?

Source: Yahoo
All-in-one camera ball scouts dangerous locations
Imagine how much easier it would be if first responders could search inside collapsed buildings, or if police could scope out a suspect’s room for danger before breaking in. That’s the driving force behind the Explorer, a tactical ball equipped with cameras, LED lights and sensors designed to do exactly that. The idea here is that you could simply roll the ball into a room and the six built-in cameras would snap a slew of photos. The software then quickly and intelligently stitches them together in a panorama and, thanks to a built-in wireless hotspot, transmits the image back to your phone, potentially warning you of trapped survivors or dangerous gunmen.
The company behind it is Bounce Imaging, a startup founded by MIT alumnus Francisco Aguilar. He first came up with the idea five years ago in the days following the Haiti earthquake, as search and rescue efforts were hampered by difficult and expensive fiberoptic cameras. The Explorer, on the other hand, is priced to be much more affordable, plus it’s coated in a thick rubber shell so it’s more durable too. Ball cameras have been around for awhile now, but this is one of a few that’s designed specifically for rescue and police work. Indeed, Bounce Imaging has already announced that it’ll be sending out a hundred of these Explorers to police departments across the country. As for what’s next, well, Aguilar says that it might look into optioning that smart image-stitching tech for drones, movies or even your next smartphone.
Filed under: Science
Source: MIT News
Samsung PCs will unblock Windows Update ‘in a few days’
Looks like Samsung is finally getting around to patching the SW Update software that has been disabling Windows Update. The company has issued a statement on the issue, which was initially discovered earlier this week, and vowed to correct the problem “in the coming days.”
Samsung:
Samsung has a commitment to security and we continue to value our partnership with Microsoft. We will be issuing a patch through the Samsung Software Update notification process to revert back to the recommended automatic Windows Update settings within a few days. Samsung remains committed to providing a trustworthy user experience and we encourage customers with product questions or concerns to contact us directly at 1-800-SAMSUNG.
Filed under: Laptops, Samsung, Microsoft
Source: Venture Beat
‘Shenmue 3’ creator Yu Suzuki is taking questions live on Twitch
Whether you’ve already eagerly thrown money at the Shenmue 3 Kickstarter or are skeptically viewing the explanations, you can hear more directly from the man in charge tonight. Shenmue creator Yu Suzuki will hop on Twitch live at 10PM ET to talk about the upcoming PC and PS4 game in a Q&A. While you wait, the project recently revealed its list of stretch goals, which to this point are already filled to the tune of $3.6 million. Suzuki and Sony’s plan is either a fantastic way to breathe life into a long-dormant franchise, or everything that’s wrong with big companies using crowdfunding for publicity, but if you’re a fan of the series, we’ll see you back here in about half an hour.
http://www.twitch.tv/swflibs/TwitchPlayer.swf
Watch live video from Shenmue3Official on Twitch
Talking Shenmue 3 on Twitch at 7:00PM PDT (2:00AM GMT). http://t.co/AJcKdaxUAS #SaveShenmue #Shenmue3
– Shenmue 3 (@Shenmue_3) June 26, 2015
Source: Twitch, Kickstarter
Self-assembling gauss gun idea would heal patients from the inside
A research team from the University of Houston and Boston Children’s Hospital debuted a novel new approach to internal medicine: using a swarm of tiny, noninvasive robots as a gauss gun to shoot medicine or clot-busting needles directly at the afflicted tissue. Much like rail guns, gauss guns rely on a series of magnets to accelerate objects — the difference being that these guns transfer force through the magnets themselves, converting the stored magnetic energy into kinetic.
In this application, the swarm of tiny steel “millibots” act as the gun. They would be injected into the patient and individually “steered” into position using an MRI machine whose powerful magnetic field also magnetizes each one. An activator millibot is sent in last and, when it hits the next robot in line, the gun “fires.” Each subsequent robot imparts a small amount of additional energy to the cascade effect. When all this energy reaches the front of the line, it can be used to do a variety of tasks like “puncturing a membrane to release trapped fluid, opening a blocked passageway or delivering a drug to a tissue location several centimeters from a fluid-filled space,” according to the researchers.

The team’s initial proof-of-concept test has shown that the technique does work, as you can see in the video below. Up next, the team will work to miniaturize the robots, getting them small enough to actually fit in your bloodstream, before beginning clinical trials. “Future work,” the authors wrote, “should investigate how the design can be optimized for clinical use cases and implement closed-loop control of the components.” Unfortunately, there’s no word on how much time that’s going to take.
[Image credit: Shutterstock]
Filed under: Science
Via: Popular Science
Source: IEEE
BBM’s $1 privacy add-on offers private chat, message editing
BlackBerry’s introducing a $1 privacy subscription for folks who continue to use Messenger on iOS, Android and its own platform. It will totally replace the old “timed and retracted messages” option, with “private chat” feature as its main draw. Private chats strip everyone’s name and icon in that window and automatically disappear after a certain period of inactivity to protect people from busybodies who love going through someone else’s phone and — hurts to admit they exist, but they do — backstabbers. In addition to private chat, the subscription also gives users the power to edit messages and includes the old timed and retracted messaging features.
The Android app gets a material design-inspired overhaul, as well, while the iOS version’s font size now depends on the user’s settings. BlackBerry and Android users should be able to download the update and pay for the subscription right now, but iOS devotees still have to wait for it pop up on iTunes.
Non-private chat:

Filed under: Misc, Mobile, Blackberry
Via: VentureBeat, PhoneArena
Source: BlackBerry
Microsoft plugs OneDrive storage into your Chromecast
In case you needed another way to beam photos and videos to your Chromecast, the Android OneDrive app has you covered. The latest update for Microsoft’s cloud-storage service will take all those gorgeously arranged images from your device running Google’s mobile OS and put ’em on your TV via Mountain VIew’s HDMI wunderstick. Pretty handy, right? Your Galaxy S6 (or any other Android device with the app installed) should see the update shortly if it already hasn’t downloaded. As for iOS users, they’ll likely have to wait a bit longer — the last update only mentions bug fixes and stability improvements.
Filed under: Cellphones, Home Entertainment, Software, HD, Mobile, Microsoft, Google
Source: Google Play
#ICYMI: A flying roto-car, HoloLens in space and more
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Today on In Case You Missed It: Our Jetson’s dreams (kinda) came true with the invention of this flying single-seater; Astronauts at the International Space Station are about to receive Microsoft’s HoloLens for AR projects and general bragging-rights (take that kids, Poppa got one way before you) and Stanford scientists managed to make hydrogen gas in an entirely new way that’s cheaper and more efficient. Fuel for flying cars, perhaps?
From the cutting room floor: If you haven’t seen the riot video from France where taxi drivers’ protested Uber, it’s well worth your time.
Let the team at Engadget know about any interesting stories or videos you stumble across by using the #ICYMI hashtag @engadget or @mskerryd.
Filed under: Displays, Misc, Peripherals, Transportation, Wearables, Wireless, Science, Internet, Microsoft
Recommended Reading: Roku’s plan to take on Apple, Amazon and Google
Recommended Reading highlights the best long-form writing on technology and more in print and on the web. Some weeks, you’ll also find short reviews of books that we think are worth your time. We hope you enjoy the read.
TV Wars: Inside Roku’s Plan to Beat Apple, Amazon and Google
by Jared Newman
Fast Company
Ever wonder how a smaller company like Roku can keep pace in the streaming war against the likes of Amazon, Apple and Google? Fast Company takes a look at all the ways Roku is keeping pace, what makes its version of streaming video unique and why the company’s survival is important.
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The First Big Game that Brought Mods to Consoles With the recent news that Fallout 4 will allow gamers to bring mods from PCs to consoles, now’s a good time to look back at another title that tried to do the same: Unreal Tournament 3. |
Inside Obama’s Stealth Startup President Barack Obama quietly recruited top talent from the tech industry to move to Washington DC with the goal of fixing how the US government works. This piece offers a look at those folks and how the effort is as much about hacking bureaucracy as it is about hacking technology. |
[Image credit: James Looker/T3 Magazine via Getty Images]
The photos you (probably) won’t find on Instagram
Photography reached the mainstream early on; Kodak’s Brownie made daily snapshots accessible and Polaroid’s pioneering cameras provided instant gratification. Now we can capture and share moments on a whim with smartphones packing high-resolution optics. Over the years, though, we’ve been treated to some incredible imaging hacks that’ve allowed our eyes to travel into the exotic — far beyond what you had for dinner last night. Technological leaps in the field have been spurred by bets, accidents and imagination, providing both scientific insight and artistic experimentation. Our eyes have been opened wider than ever before and we’ve collected just a few moments in imaging’s history to help grasp the bigger picture.
[Image: Google Research]











