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30
Jun

Sprint begins rolling out Android 5.1 to the Galaxy S6 and S6 Edge






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The last 24 hours has been loaded with devices updating, or soon to be updating, to some variant of Android 5.0 Lollipop. Yesterday we heard from Mo Versi that the Sprint HTC One M9 will be seeing its Lollipop update on July 1st. Those of you on the Now Network sporting a Samsung Galaxy S6 or S6 Edge don’t have to wait until tomorrow though, as your Android 5.1 update has supposedly already begun.

Android 5.1 Galaxy S6 S6 Edge Aprint

I am seeing reports across the internet on various blogs that some owners of the device have been greeted with the update this morning. It weighs in at 563.18MB’s and brings in all the usual enhancements like Factory Data Reset Protection, bug fixes, stability improvements and more. The Galaxy S6 is getting software version G920PVPU2B0F7 and the S6 Edge is seeing G925PVPU2B0F7. Sprint’s support page for each device is rather lacking in any other additional details, simply listing Android 5.1 and bug fixes.


Galaxy S6 Sprint Android 5.1

If you are sporting one of those Samsung flagship devices with Sprint, be on the lookout for the update. You can head to Settings > About Device > Software Update to see if you can get your hands on it now. If you do see it, make sure you have well over 50% battery life, a solid Wi-Fi connection and some time to kill for it to download and install. Enjoy!

Source: Sprint Galaxy S6 | Sprint Galaxy S6 Edge Via Droid-Life

The post Sprint begins rolling out Android 5.1 to the Galaxy S6 and S6 Edge appeared first on AndroidSPIN.

30
Jun

Deal: ZeroLemon 3500 mAh Galaxy S6 and S6 Edge Slim Battery Case for $29






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Battery life on our devices are a big deal. While most, including myself, get through a single day fairly easily, others of us have an issue getting through the first 8 hours. When you are out and about for 12+ hours a day, it is even more critical that your device can keep up with you. The Samsung Galaxy S6 ans Galaxy S6 Edge are, arguably, the best two devices on the market, but the battery life is somewhat less desirable at time. Luckily the device can charge wirelessly and with fast charging so getting through a day isn’t all that difficult. What if you don’t have access to power often though? That is where one accessory manufacturer has constantly brought outstanding product to our devices, ZeroLemon. Right now you can pick up one of their Slim Battery Cases for your Galaxy S6 or Galaxy S6 Edge for 27%/28% off retail price.


The case in question brings some protection to your device along with a built-in 3500mAh battery. That equated to 125% battery life. If you routinely get 8 hours of battery life, then you should easily expect 16 hours+. It always depends on your usage of course. If you think because you have more power and turn up the brightness and watch 4 more hours of movies, well, expect less. No matter what you do though, the added power supply to your device will turn out to be a welcomed addition to your device. Hit the sales page below and get one, or five, ordered before the sale ends.

https://stacksocial.com/300250/samsung-galaxy-s6-3500mah-slim-battery-case?aid=a-gqkkhrjm https://stacksocial.com/300250/samsung-galaxy-s6-edge-3500mah-slim-battery-case?aid=a-gqkkhrjm

The post Deal: ZeroLemon 3500 mAh Galaxy S6 and S6 Edge Slim Battery Case for $29 appeared first on AndroidSPIN.

30
Jun

AMC’s ‘Humans’ is an android story that’s really about us


AMC, Humans

Early on in AMC’s newest sci-fi show, Humans, a teenager wonders aloud if there’s any point in going to college and spending years training to be a neurosurgeon. After all, why invest all that time and work when an advanced android, which are commonplace in the show’s world, can be programmed with those skills almost instantly. Call it the death of human expertise. Meanwhile, her mother is worried that her family’s new “synth” (the show’s term for androids) might replace her; her father hopes it can bring her family back together; and her teenaged brother is having sexually confused feelings about their attractive new robot helper. In Humans, the problems of the near future are practically indistinguishable from the issues we’re facing today. And that’s a big part of why the show works so well.

Would You Own a Synth?: HUMANS

A co-production between AMC and the UK’s Channel 4 (and a remake of the Swedish series Real Humans), Humans is technically set during an “alternate present.” It’s a world that looks pretty much like ours today, except for the fact that synths are as commonplace as smartphones. While they have a high level of intelligence, synths are basically just domestic servants, taking on the drudgery of things like cleaning, cooking and caretaking so that the real humans can have a break. At least, that’s the ideal. In the first two episodes we also see how society is pushing back against synths because they’re also replacing people in skilled jobs (something we’re already seeing today with machines in factories). And, of course, synths end up in the most human of industries: sex work.

The show covers plenty of familiar sci-fi territory, but the way it juggles those elements feels refreshing. By focusing on the aforementioned Hawkins family, we get a sense of how a normal household might welcome (or not) a robotic alien. When Joe, the patriarch (played by Tom Goodman-Hill), takes his grade-school daughter to pick up their first synth, it’s as if he’s just perusing the Apple Store to pick up the latest gadget. He settles on an attractive synth named Anita (Gemma Chan), somewhat oblivious to how that could affect his wife Laura (played by Katherine Parkinson of The IT Crowd and The Honourable Woman), a lawyer who seems particularly disturbed by the widespread adoption of synths.

Will Tudor as Odi and William Hurt as George  - Humans _ Season 1, Episode 6 - Photo Credit: Des Willie/Kudos/AMC/C4

It’s not too long before Laura starts to feel threatened by Anita, a perfect-looking synth that can do everything a “good mother and wife” should without ever getting frustrated or tired. Their teenage daughter Mattie, meanwhile, wants nothing to do with Anita and seems to be going through an existential crisis about what synths will mean for her future. While today’s generation of college graduates are dealing with crippling debt and an unstable financial market, young adults of tomorrow might have to face a world where their skill set will be practically obsolete by the time they enter the work force.

Once we have robots that look remarkably human in our homes, will we treat them as mere tools or family?

We also get a glimpse at the synth perspective: Anita appears to be a typical domestic android on the surface, but she also has instances where her behavior seems erratic and almost human. There’s a group of synths on the verge of achieving true consciousness, and, naturally, there’s a shadowy organization trying to round them up and study them. Synths working in brothels get treated just as badly (and likely even worse) as human prostitutes.

Like any good piece of thoughtful science fiction, Humans is strongest when it’s saying something about our current society and where we’re headed. The issues the Hawkins clan deals with when Anita moves in wouldn’t be out of place when a new person enters your home. But we also see how Anita’s presence changes the way they live, something show creators Jonathan Brackley and Sam Vincent noticed as we reshaped our lives around smartphones and tablets. William Hurt (who notably played the artificial intelligence inventor in Steven Spielberg’s A.I.) plays a scientist who helped bring synths into the world, and yet is having a hard time parting with his malfunctioning synth helper, who also stores memories about his wife. Once we have robots that look remarkably human in our homes, will we treat them as mere tools or family?

Synth store  - Humans _ Season 1, Episode 1 - Photo Credit: Des Willie/Kudos/AMC/C4

Much like Battlestar Galactica before it, Humans works as an allegory about how we all treat each other. We can all agree that slavery is wrong today, but how will we feel once we can easily buy robotic humanoids? And at what point do we start considering their civil rights?

Humans comes at a particularly vibrant time for AI and robots in pop culture. We’re far beyond the doomsday Terminator scenarios from the last few decades (yet another reason why the upcoming Terminator: Genisys feels like a film out of place in time). Now, it’s as if we’re preparing ourselves for the inevitability of true artificial intelligence and robot helpers. Alex Garland’s Ex Machina explored how we might end up testing AI, and one of the best episodes of Black Mirror, “Be Right Back,” focused on the emotional toll of using AI and androids to recreate our loved ones. We’re still facing our fears and anxieties of this new tech through science fiction, but now it’s on a much smaller and more intimate scale.

Filed under: Misc, Home Entertainment, Robots, Science, HD

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30
Jun

Arrested Uber France executives will stand trial on September 30th


Taxis Demonstrate Against UberPOP In Paris

The two Uber executives who were arrested yesterday will stand trial on September 30th, according to Reuters. Uber France CEO Thibaud Simphal and European GM Pierre-Dimitri Gore-Coty stand accused of running an illegal ride-sharing service, as well as “concealing digital documents” from the authorities. The service in question is UberPOP, which connects passengers to amateur drivers, something that’s angered the nation’s professional taxi drivers.

There’s been a long-standing fight between France and the company and after pressure from licensed taxi drivers, the service was made illegal in January. However, a constitutional court gave the company a stay of execution while the decision was referred higher up the judicial chain. In the meantime, more violent protests have erupted and, last week, authorities decided to commence seizing UberPOP vehicles. It’s not the only place in Europe where Uber is a dirty word, with the company facing plenty of anger in both the UK and Germany.

[Image Credit: Getty]

Filed under: Transportation

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Source: Reuters

30
Jun

Apple to pay $450 million in e-book price-fixing suit


Apple conspired with publishers to artificially raise the price of e-books, the Second US Circuit Court of Appeals in Manhattan ruled today, upholding a verdict from 2013. Now that the company has lost its appeal, Apple is expected to pay $450 million, most of it to e-book customers. Apple agreed to a $450 million settlement in 2014 as part of the appeals process: If Apple had won in today’s ruling, it would have had to pay just $70 million ($50 million of that to customers) or it could have been off the hook entirely.

Nearly half a billion dollars is still less than the $840 million plaintiffs sought in the civil antitrust case. For perspective, $450 million is 3 percent of Apple’s profit for the quarter ending in December, The Wall Street Journal reports.

“We conclude that the district court correctly decided that Apple orchestrated a conspiracy among the publishers to raise e-book prices,” Second Circuit Judge Debra Ann Livingston wrote today.

[Photo credit: Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images]

Filed under: Handhelds, HD, Apple

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Source: The Wall Street Journal

30
Jun

Giant American robot wants to lay the smackdown on Japanese rival


Two giant robots with blazing guns is what apocalyptic nightmares and Michael Bay films are made of. While those autonomous machines continue to live in the fictional world, a breed of towering rideable robots is becoming a reality. One such machine is the MegaBot, a 15-foot tall bot large enough to seat two pilots. Unlike Hollywood’s gun-wielding destructive machines, this one is armed with a paintball gun and is now ready to use it. But, of course, the Megabot needs someone its own size to pick on. So the aviator-wearing co-creators of this behemoth, draped in American flags, have thrown down the gauntlet and challenged the 12-foot tall Japanese KURATAS robot to a duel.

The MegaBot isn’t designed to further medicine, assist the military or shoot aliens Ellen Ripley-style. It stands for something entirely different. “We’re bringing video games and science fiction to life in the form of internally piloted giant fighting robots,” Gui Cavalcanti, co-founder of MegoBots, Inc. told Engadget. “This is the kind of live entertainment we’ve all been promised for dozens of years, and it’s the kind of entertainment that’s finally possible with current robotics technology.”

This vision was first introduced when the MegaBot made its Kickstarter debut late last year. The massive bot didn’t meet its $1.8 million target. But the team went on to complete their prototype, the Mk.II, with the help of Autodesk this year. The KURATAS, on the other hand, has been around for almost three years. It’s also been available on Amazon for $1 million since the beginning of the year. If team Japan accepts the challenge, the bots will be prepped and modified for the battle, which will take place a year from now.

The battle screams robot apocalypse. But, the implications of arming a robot aren’t lost on the builders of the MegaBot. “Technically, yes, the weapons could be switched out for actual guns,” says Cavalcanti. “But then you’d be left with a machine that’s slower and less maneuverable than a tank, that’s a larger target than a tank, that’s weaker than a tank and that could fall over if it gets hit hard enough….These kinds of giant humanoid robots don’t make any sense for actual warfare scenarios, but it turns out they’re still awesome. And perfect for dueling in ludicrous fashion.”

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30
Jun

Pushbullet’s share-everything app gets true messaging


Pushbullet

Pushbullet is already a secret weapon for getting content from one device (or one person) to another — you can relay your links, notifications, photos and SMS messages with a common app. Today, though, it’s getting considerably more powerful. As part of a revamp, Pushbullet’s desktop, mobile and web apps are turning into true messaging apps, with easy replies and a quick way to find “pushes” (chats and shared content) from your friends. On Windows, it’ll even give you Facebook-style chat heads that keep conversations close at hand. Effectively, Pushbullet is blurring the lines between sharing and messaging — you don’t have to switch apps to talk to a friend after you’re done sending a photo to your phone. All of the updates are available now, so you can give this all-encompassing app a shot right away.

Filed under: Cellphones, Internet, Software, Mobile

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Via: The Next Web, The Verge

Source: Pushbullet Blog

30
Jun

Top Googler leaves to set up new cybersecurity agency


One of Google’s most well-regarded security researchers is leaving the company, reportedly to help the government beef up its cybersecuity. Re/code is reporting that Peiter “Mudge” Zatko will be building a new agency that examines electronic threats in a similar manner as the famous Underwriters Laboratories does for safety research. This “Cyber UL” will apparently cook-up standardized methods to test software for holes in the hope of making America’s digital frontiers less prone to hacks. Given the spate of recent high-profile attacks on branches of the government, as well as large corporations, the move is long overdue.

It’s not clear how Zatko’s relationship with the government has been established, since the man himself said on Twitter that his new “gig is not in the Whitehouse” (sic). If Zatko sets up a non-profit security research institution, Re/code believes that it’ll be the recipient of some government funds if it turns out to be successful. Zatko’s probably the ideal person to lead the time, since his colleagues at the Lopht think tank pitched the project all the way back in 1998. In fact, you can even watch the man himself testifying in front of the Senate by clicking the video link below and hoping that fashion never, ever, draws inspiration from this period in history.

Filed under: Internet, Google

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Via: Re/code

Source: Mudge (Twitter)

30
Jun

Apple Releases OS X 10.10.4 With ‘Discoveryd’ Process Removal [Mac Blog]


os_x_yosemite_round_iconApple today released OS X Yosemite 10.10.4, an under-the-hood update that introduces several bug fixes and performance improvements. Most notably, 10.10.4 includes the removal of the problematic Discoveryd process, which has caused multiple networking issues for some users in OS X Yosemite.

The OS X 10.10.4 update can be downloaded through the Software Update mechanism in the Mac App Store.

Unlike 10.10.3, which brought Yosemite’s first outward-facing changes including the Photos for OS X app and new emoji features, OS X 10.10.4 is a behind-the-scenes update that focuses primarily on fixing bugs and introducing better performance through stability improvements.

The OS X Yosemite v10.10.4 update improves the stability, compatibility, and security of your Mac.

This update:

– Improves networking reliability
– Improves Migration Assistant reliability
– Addresses an issue that prevented some external displays from functioning properly
– Improves the reliability of upgrading iPhoto and Aperture libraries to Photos
– Improves reliability when syncing photos and videos to iCloud Photo Library
– Addresses an issue that could cause Photos to unexpectedly quit after importing some Lecia DNG files
– Resolves an issue that could delay outgoing email messages in Mail
– Fixes an issue where a website could prevent the user from navigating away by presenting repeated JavaScript alerts in Safari

The biggest change in OS X 10.10.4 is the elimination of the discoveryd process that’s been accused of being responsible for some significant networking and WiFi bugs within Yosemite. Discoveryd is a networking process that was introduced in Yosemite to replace mDNSresponder, but it caused problems like slow wake from sleep, failures to resolve DNS names, duplicate machine names, WiFi disconnects, excessive CPU usage, battery drain, and more. In 10.10.4, discoveryd has been replaced with the older mDNSresponder process.

OS X 10.10.4 was in testing for approximately two months before seeing a public release, having been seeded to developers in mid-April. It’s likely we’ll see at least one more update to OS X Yosemite in the months preceding the public launch of OS X 10.11 El Capitan, Apple’s next-generation Mac operating system that’s also in the works.


30
Jun

Getting Started With Apple Music and Beats 1 on iOS, Mac and PC [iOS Blog]


Apple Music Black BannerToday marks the official worldwide launch of Apple Music, a subscription-based streaming music service and Spotify rival for iPhone, iPad, iPod touch, Mac, PC and, later this year, Apple TV and Android.

Apple Music, arguably the company’s biggest music initiative since opening the iTunes Store in 2003, requires updating to iOS 8.4 on iPhone, iPad and iPod touch or downloading iTunes 12.2 for Mac and PC.

Apple Music

Apple Music is an all-in-one streaming music service, live global radio station and social platform for artists to connect with fans. The service costs $9.99 per month, the same price as virtually all streaming music competitors, although Apple is offering a free three-month trial period to encourage customers to try it out. Apple Music is available in over 100 countries, including the United States.

Apple Music provides unlimited streaming of almost the entire iTunes Store catalog of music without needing to purchase songs or albums individually. Instead of paying $1.29 per song download, for example, subscribers have millions of songs at their fingertips for essentially the cost of an album. A family plan through iTunes Sharing for up to six members is also available for $14.99 per month.

applemusicscreenshots
Built into the stock Music app on iOS 8.4 and iTunes on Mac and PC, Apple Music provides side-by-side access to both your downloaded iTunes songs and albums and streaming music library, which should prove to be a more convenient option than third-party apps such as Spotify, Google Play Music and Rdio for most Apple users. Apple succinctly describes it as “the best ways to enjoy music — all in one place.”

Apple Music is largely based upon Beats Music, which Apple acquired alongside Beats Electronics for $3 billion last year. For example, the app features human curated playlists and recommendations from artists and music experts for improved personalization over algorithmically created playlists.

While customers do not own their Apple Music collection, the service offers unlimited online streaming over Wi-Fi or a cellular data connection, and the option to download songs or albums for offline playback. As long as a customer continues paying for their monthly subscription, they retain on-demand access to the iTunes Store catalog and their personal playlists.

Just like iTunes Match, Apple Music can scan your iTunes music library and upload any tracks not already included in Apple Music, making them seamlessly available to stream on all of your devices. iTunes Match will remain available as a standalone service priced at $25 per year for those who don’t want to subscribe to Apple Music, but Apple Music users won’t need to pay for both services.

Right now, Apple Music and iTunes Match can only handle iTunes libraries of up to 25,000 tracks (songs purchased from the iTunes Store don’t count toward the limit), although Eddy Cue has said Apple is working to increase the limit to 100,000 tracks later this year as part of iOS 9.

Apple has existing deals with major record labels, including Universal Music Group, Sony Music Entertainment and Warner Music Group, and has also reached agreements with over 20,000 indie labels through Beggars Group and Merlin, meaning that Apple Music should have in the range of 37 million tracks available right now. Comparatively, market leader Spotify has some 30 million tracks available.

Pharrell Williams Twitter
Apple has partnered with artists to offer exclusive content through Apple Music, in an attempt to differentiate the service from competitors. The company kickstarted those efforts by making Pharrell’s new single “Freedom” and Dr. Dre’s album “Chronic” exclusive to Apple Music, while pop artist Taylor Swift’s most recent best-selling “1989” album has landed on Apple Music before any other streaming service. Read more »