Free mobile game ‘Fallout Shelter’ hits Android in August
Fallout Shelter is a nifty little mobile game that puts you in charge of your very own post-apocalyptic Vault in the Fallout universe. It’s your job to make sure the Vault Dwellers are as happy, healthy and protected as possible — which is sometimes trickier than it sounds. Fallout Shelter launched for iOS on June 14th directly after Bethesda’s E3 2015 conference, and now we know when it’s coming to Android devices: August 13th.
Bethesda announced Fallout Shelter during a conference dominated by big, new games, most notably Doom and Fallout 4. As a free iOS game (with in-app purchases, of course), it was a pleasant surprise for many hungry Fallout fans. Fallout Shelter wasn’t the only mobile-focused announcement to come out of that conference, either: The Pip-Boy Edition of Fallout 4 comes with a real-life Pip-Boy made to fit smartphones (well, most smartphones) loaded up with a new companion app.
Very excited for Android users to begin playing #FalloutShelter on August 13th. pic.twitter.com/FYXvyIzaAj
– BethesdaGameStudios (@BethesdaStudios) July 24, 2015
Filed under: Gaming, HD, Mobile
Source: @BethesdaStudios
Apple Launches ‘Why There’s Nothing Quite Like iPhone’ Web Campaign
Building on a series of recent ads centered around the “If it’s not an iPhone, it’s not an iPhone” tagline, Apple today rolled out a new web campaign for the iPhone under the theme of “Why there’s nothing quite like iPhone.”
The new campaign is highlighted on Apple’s main home page as well as its iPhone pages, and it includes a scrolling feature page drawing attention to a number of aspects of Apple and the iPhone that make the device stand out from its competitors.
Every iPhone we’ve made – and we mean every single one – was built on the same belief. That a phone should be more than a collection of features. That, above all, a phone should be absolutely simple, beautiful, and magical to use.
The page proceeds to highlight the iPhone’s integration of hardware and software, camera capabilities, breadth of available apps, resistance to malware, and Apple’s commitment to privacy and security with Touch ID and Apple Pay.

The campaign also highlights how Apple includes a variety of built-in apps and tools to make text, audio, and video messaging free and easy, track fitness and activity, and control devices around the home, all with accessibility features to make the iPhone’s features available to as many people as possible. Finally, Apple points to its support network, from its retail stores to AppleCare phone and chat support.
Yahoo News Digest app is now available for your Android tablets
Yahoo definitely has a great news app, and not just because I use it. It has been downloaded from the Google Play store over 1 million times and is now available for tablets. Everything is the same except it is now formatted to fit your tablet, although from the reviews I have read after the update, Yahoo may have angered their users. The glaring complaint from many users is the app is now stuck in landscape mode. When I read my news on a tablet, I definitely prefer reading in portrait mode versus landscape mode. Hopefully Yahoo can address this issue soon, but if you are okay with landscape view then check it out.
The post Yahoo News Digest app is now available for your Android tablets appeared first on AndroidGuys.
Fallout Shelter is coming to Android on August 13
We previously told you Fallout Shelter was coming to iOS, but left out Android. Well today we learn that on August 13 that won’t be the case anymore. Bethesda Game Studios announced on their Twitter that they are excited to finally bring the game to Android.
They also included a picture of some game play.
Source: Bethesda
Come comment on this article: Fallout Shelter is coming to Android on August 13
NASA’s latest Pluto discoveries include hazy skies and flowing ice
Ready for another dose of Pluto news? Of course you are! During an event today, NASA shared its latest discoveries in regards to the icy dwarf planet. First, detailed imagery from New Horizon’s Long-Range Reconnaissance Imager (LORRI) shows “geologic activity” on the surface that includes flowing ice on a plain known as Sputnik Planum. That area lies in the western part of that massive heart-shaped region you’ve likely noticed in photos. NASA says the ice there flowed, and may still be flowing now, in a way that resembles the movement of glaciers on Earth. In the southern portion of Sputnik Planum, researchers discovered a range of icy mountains that rise about a mile and can be compared to the Appalachian Mountains here in the States. In fact, the peaks have been informally named Hillary Montes and are located near another range named Norgay Montes. The names are in honor of Sir Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay — explorers who first reached the summit of Mount Everest in the 1950s.
The still image you see above was taken by New Horizons after it finished its flyby of Pluto. Thanks to some help from the sun, the backlit photo shows two layers of atmospheric haze positioned at about 31 and 52 miles above the surface. What’s causing the haze? Well, current models suggest that when ultraviolet light from the sun breaks apart methane, it causes hydrocarbon gases like ethylene and acetylene to build up. When those hydrocarbon gases fall toward the surface and condense, they form the haze. The haze is also the cause for some of the dark spots on the surface of Pluto that have appeared in the captured imagery.
Pluto’s atmospheric pressure is actually lower than previous calculations indicated. Thanks to New Horizons’ REX radio instrument, scientists now have “ground truth” to begin analysis of whether or not the planet is in the midst of “long-anticipated global change.” While the early numbers are indeed helpful, the REX gear will be used to gather more info in the weeks to come. NASA also mentioned that the initial bevy of visuals would begin to slow down until September when we should see another set of new images arrive.
Filed under: Science
Cat Shake gives you an endless stream of OMG KITTIES
Few things in life are better than videos and GIFs about cats — they bring joy to people. If you feel that way, then you’ll probably want to download this new iOS app called Cat Shake. As its name suggests, the application requires you to, well, shake your device to fulfill its purpose. Once you do so, your reward will be too-cute-to-handle cat videos, “classic” cat GIFs and, because why not, adorable cat sounds. For those of you who don’t have an iPhone or iPad, don’t worry — you can always go to Tumblr TV, type in what cat you’re in the mood for (we’d recommend “funny cat”) and problem solved. Or, you know, there’s YouTube too.
Download it right meow and let us know if it’s everything you’d hoped for.
[Image credit: khanb1/Flickr]
Filed under: Internet
Via: The Creators Project
Source: App Store
Computer slips into diva mode to sing sappy ’90s ballads
Computers can sing. There’s no Mariah Carey of machines just yet. But there is a fully automated machine that can sing like a diva. Martin Backes, a German visual and sound artist, has a new installation called „What Do Machines Sing Of?” He’s programmed a machine with SuperCollider, an open-source algorithmic composition tool used by musicians and scientists who work with sound, to sing ballads from the heartbreak-music era of the ’90s.
The machine isn’t pulling a HAL 9000 with a rendition of Daisy Bell. Instead it belts out Whitney Houston’s version of “I Will Always Love You” and Celine Dion’s “My Heart Will Go On” — songs that are instantly recognizable, painful and powerful. “As the computer program performs these emotionally loaded songs, it attempts to apply the appropriate human sentiments,” the artist states on his site. “This behavior of the device seems to reflect a desire, on the part of the machine, to become sophisticated enough to have its very own personality.”
https://player.vimeo.com/video/133428328
[Image credit: Martin Backes]
PotBotics: better cannabis recommendations through science
Medical cannabis, recreational cannabis; it’s getting hard to tell the two apart — even in states where only the former is allowed. Just look at your local dispensary. If it’s anything like my local weed shop, your cannabis choices are governed more by the brand name and relative THC content than they are the other active cannabinoids — you know, the ones with the actual medical benefits. This is great for your average stoner recuperating from a backiatomy, but for patients who really do need these complementary cannabinoid effects, guessing whether Blue Dream or Vallejo Sour Diesel will best help alleviate the effects of their chemo simply won’t do. That’s why the Bay Area startup PotBotics is working to put some real science — from a curation of existing scholarly articles and independent studies — behind cannabis recommendations.

PotBotics is developing a trio of products. There’s PotBot (above), a cannabis-recommendation engine launching in September that makes its selections based not on the strain, but on the relative cannabinoid levels that it contains. The BrainBot EEG device — aka an electroencephalogram, a device that measures your brain’s electrical activity through the scalp — serves as the back end of the recommendation system, giving medical professionals insight into how each cannabinoid affects the brain. And finally there’s NanoPot, an ambitious project that aims to analyze cannabis seed DNA to promote better cultivation.
In addition to its own EEG-based research, the company is working with Israel’s Hebrew University to gather data from large-scale clinical studies while avoiding the strict testing and research restrictions here in America. Cannabis’ status as a Schedule I drug has long hamstrung research efforts. Schedule I refers to weed’s ranking according to the Controlled Substances Act of 1970. Such drugs, including cannabis, heroin, peyote and MDMA, are all considered to have “a high potential for abuse,” “no currently accepted medical use in treatment in the United States” and “a lack of accepted safety for use of the drug or other substance under medical supervision.” This not only makes cannabis illegal to use or possess under federal law, but also made any sort of research on it over the past 45 years nearly impossible.
The BrainBot EEG system, which is slated for release by the end of the year, is designed for in-office use by a general practitioner or neurologist for epilepsy and concussions, though David Goldstein, PotBotics co-founder and director of communications, says his team has also begun investigating its use in anxiety and PTSD. Ideally, he says, doctors will use the BrainBot’s FDA-approved differentiated EEG with a disposable head cap and a precisely measured, aerosolized cannabinoid mixture for the patient to inhale. By monitoring how the EEG’s differ before and after inhaling, doctors will be able to tell which cannabinoids the patient best responds to.
Ultimately, Goldstein hopes to find indicators of relief on those EEGs, specifically among what he describes as epileptic spikes. “An epileptic spike is very clearly defined in science,” he said. “It’s a spike in the alpha brainwaves. We’re working with those patients on [building] an EEG history — we can start looking at what cannabinoids levels really offer the best relief possible.” So, with epileptic patients, for example, Goldstein’s team is looking for a reduction in the magnitude of these alpha spikes, which would mean less frequent epileptic episodes.
In addition, the EEG would be used to monitor states of relaxation versus anxiety. “For anxiety, we’d be looking at the state of beta brainwaves,” Goldstein explained. “Betas generally indicate the relative state of relaxation for a patient, but appear ‘dim’ (and I know that’s not the scientific term for that) when a person feels anxiety.”
The company hopes to have patients first complete a baseline EEG, then another while “activating” their ailment. For arthritis, as an example, the patient would squeeze a tennis ball while being monitored. The differences between the two readings should provide clues as to how the ailment is affecting their alpha and beta brainwaves.
We’re working with those patients on [building] an EEG history — we can start looking at what cannabinoids levels really offer the best relief possible. – PotBotics CEO David Goldstein
“A lower alpha wave spike (though it’s different from an epileptic spike) with a rise in beta waves indicates a deconcentration on that pain,” Goldstein continued. “So if you follow up with a cannabinoid dosage and see that pattern, you know it’s working.” From there, the company can build a quantifiable relief model based directly on specific cannabinoid molecules.
While this all sounds straightforward on paper, the actual process may not be so simple. Epilepsy isn’t a one-size-fits-all genetic disorder. There are more variations of the disease and its symptoms than there are Baskin Robbins flavors, Dr. Daniel Friedman, assistant professor of neurology at NYU Langone Medical Center’s Comprehensive Epilepsy Center, explains.
Generally, EEGs are used as secondary measures of a drug’s success (following whether or not the patient’s outward symptoms actually improve), Friedman told Engadget. However, for some studies involving photopath epilepsy — the kind that causes discharges when the patient looks at a strobe light — EEGs may be used as the primary measure of success. “There are well-validated studies that show if an EEG improves in response to a new medication in this population of patients, it will likely also be associated with a reduction of seizures down the line,” he said.
I think the jury is still out. We certainly don’t have any solid proof that this treatment is effective and safe – Dr. Daniel Friedman, NYU
What’s more, for focal epilepsies (wherein the seizures originate in a single, specific part of the brain), EEG readings may not necessarily correlate with the frequency or severity of clinical seizures, or the patient’s response to new medications and treatments. “Some treatments for this kind of epilepsy actually increase the rates of interictal spikes [the smaller discharges that often precede a full-on seizure] even though they reduce the number of seizures,” Friedman concluded. “So I think it turns out that some of these features aren’t great markers for seizure risk.”
In fact, he goes on to say that many of the miraculous healing stories that make headlines and go viral on social media may suffer from bias. “There are people who have benefitted from CBD [Cannabidiol] just like any other medication,” he said. “I have some patients that will respond positively to a medication and others who will either not respond or actually worsen. And I think that’s the same situation with CBD. The problem is that when someone tries it and it doesn’t work, they won’t post a testimonial about it on social media. You don’t ever hear about the unsuccessful tries.” CBD is the second most prevalent of the 85 cannabinoids identified in weed, behind THC. It exhibits antioxidant and anti-inflammatory effects, plus it’s not psychoactive (i.e., it won’t get you high). CBD is marketed as a treatment for Dravet syndrome, a debilitating and severe form of childhood epilepsy, under the brand name Epidiolex.
Dr. Kimford Meador, professor of neurology and neurological sciences and director of the Epilepsy Monitoring Unit at Stanford University, was similarly skeptical in his assessment of PotBotics’ description of its technology. “They go into this thing about the different types of brainwaves,” Dr. Meador said. “I don’t even know what the hell they’re talking about with ‘alpha spikes.’ That’s a very odd term. … That’s not what an epileptic spike is. An epileptic spike is not a spike in the alpha brainwaves.”

Normal EEG readings look much like the gentle swells of the ocean — a sine wave, basically. The alpha waves hum along at 8Hz to 12Hz when the brain is at rest, and sometimes other brainwaves like beta or theta will lie on top of the larger alpha. “An epileptic spike is when something sticks out like a shark fin or a submarine periscope,” Meador explained.
Meador also took umbrage with PotBotics’ definition of beta waves: “They go down and talk about anxiety and beta waves being related to a state of relaxation and I don’t think there’s good evidence for that, frankly. Beta waves tend to be seen more when someone is focused. Also beta waves can be generated by certain kinds of drugs.” Drugs such as Valium or phenobarbital can artificially generate beta waves, though Meador does not believe these “induced-effect waves” to be valid indicators of a state of relaxation. “I don’t think the science of that is very good,” Meador said. “So in all, I’m not very impressed with what they’re trying to do.”
PotBotics then quickly backtracked in the face of the doctor’s concerns. “After reviewing Dr. Kimford Meador[‘s] comments it became evident that there were a couple of miscommunications,” Goldstein wrote to Engadget via email. “The two primary misunderstandings were the terms ‘alpha spikes’ and the mix up of beta with theta brain waves. I should have kept neurological descriptions to the medical professionals, as I am not in a position to comment/describe QEEG [Quantitative EEG] analysis.” In that case, I guess we’ll have to wait until the device actually hits market to see if it works as advertised.

That said, how much faith should people be putting into CBD as an epileptic cure-all in the first place? “I think the jury is still out,” Friedman continued. “We certainly don’t have any solid proof that this treatment is effective and safe (and, in addition, any more effective or safe than existing treatments). And that is exactly why we need placebo-controlled [double blind] studies to see if this treatment is actually viable.”
The same skepticism should also be applied to emerging cannabis-based treatments and their diagnostics. We’ve only just begun to study the medical applications for cannabis in earnest and, at this point, it remains unclear if novel techniques like those employed by the BrainBot will be effective. That’s not to say they won’t be or shouldn’t be attempted, of course. However until the medical community has a more robust knowledge of cannabis’ active ingredients, new treatments like PotBotics’ EEG should be viewed with a healthy dose of skepticism.
[CBD Image Credit: Associated Press]
Filed under: Science










