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9
Jul

Project Fi’s Nexus 6 will get Android 5.1.1 soon


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The official Twitter account for Project Fi gave an update on the status of Android 5.1.1 for its Nexus 6. There, it was specified that owners of the Nexus 6 with Google’s wireless service can expect to see the software update arrive “over the next few days.”

Don’t have an invite just yet? The wait is almost over. All invites are said to be sent out by mid-summer and Project Fi currently allows you to check the status of your own invite. For me, I was told about ten days ago that my wait was 3-4 weeks but received it earlier this week. So it looks like Google has been able to get invites pushed out at an increased pace.

Source: Project Fi (Twitter)

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9
Jul

Facebook News Feed update to restore tiny bit of control to users


Facebook logo

Savvy Facebook users are aware that the social media giant has been working to control how the News Feed appears to end users for some time now. For users who are not happy with how Facebook decides to curate the News Feed, tweaking it to their own liking has been a frustrating experience. However, acknowledging that “you’re the only one who truly knows what is most meaningful to you” Facebook has announced some new ways to control the News Feed.

All of the changes come out of the News Feed Preferences setting, and the first and probably most significant change has to do with the the ability to prioritize users or pages that appear in the feed. Users will now be able to “star” users or pages which will cause any new posts from them since the last time a user visited Facebook to appear at the top of the News Feed. The normal News Feed items will then appear after these “starred” users. The interface of the News Feed will be tweaked slightly to include a small blue star to help users identify posts that are appearing at the top of the News Feed due to this selection.

Facebook is also providing a new way to discover new Pages. Based on a review of Pages that a user has liked in the Past, Facebook will generate a list of Pages a user may be interested in connecting with.

Facebook is also tweaking the interfaces for selecting who to follow and unfollow. The new interface will list users, pages and groups in order of most views and give users the ability to unfollow any that they do not want to see posts from. Likewise, if a user has previously unfollowed a person, page or group, they can easily add them back into the mix.

Facebook says the new features will be available starting today on iOS. However, the update for Android devices and on the desktop will not be released for a few more weeks.

Click here to view the embedded video.

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source: Facebook

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9
Jul

Two key engineering executives are heading to Cyanogen


Cyanogen_New_Logo_February_2015

Cyanogen Inc. announced today that it has hired Stephen Lawler who was Amazon’s engineering leader as Senior Vice President of Engineering. Also Karthick Iyer who was Qualcomm’s Android engineering lead as Vice President of Global Systems. Their plan is to have Lawler oversee engineering for the company worldwide while Iyer will lead systems engineering.

Before Amazon Stephen Lawler spent 15 years at Microsoft in senior roles including CTO of Bing Maps, GM of Software Development for Bing Maps, Bing Mobile, Local Search, MSN and Virtual Earth.

Karthick Iyer has been working at Qualcomm Inc. for the past 18 years where he recently led a global team that designed, developed and commercialized Android solutions at the chipset level.

Kirt McMaster, Co-founder and CEO of Cyanogen Inc. said

“Signals, services and systems are at the heart of building an evolved computing platform. Both Lawler and Iyer respectively are world class leaders in these areas, each having scaled some of the most successful computing and services platforms. Lawler brings a wealth of technical leadership in mobile, mapping, location, search, and cloud services. Iyer has deep expertise in end-to-end Android development. Both understand how to optimally scale engineering organizations.”

Cyanogen Inc. has offices in Palo Alto, Seattle and Lisbon, but plans on opening offices in China, India and Europe. CyanogenMod is open source and commercial distribution of Cyanogen OS have allowed them to be in 190 countries worldwide.

Source: Cyanogen Inc.

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9
Jul

ZTE launches mobile hotspot cum Android-powered projector on Verizon


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ZTE’s unique Android-power projector that doubles up as a mobile hotspot too is now available on Verizon. The ZTE Spro 2 is capable of projecting images up to 120 inches in size and connecting up to 10 devices to Verizon’s LTE network, making it quite a catch for those who are constantly travelling for business presentations.

 

Running on Android 4.4 Lollipop, the device features a 5-inch HD display, Snapdragon 800 SoC, 2GB of RAM, 16GB of expandable storage and a 6,300 mAh battery.

Launched sometime earlier this year, the ZTE Spro 2 is available at Verizon for $499 with a two-year contract or $599 without a contract.

To celebrate the device’s launch at Verizon, ZTE is holding an interesting contest – “Ugliest Conference Room Makeover.” The contestants are required to send pictures and videos of their ugly conference rooms to http://www.makeover.zteusa.com in order to win a conference room makeover worth $50,000.

Source: ZTE USA

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9
Jul

Microsoft Xbox Music update brings offline playback and free music streaming


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Microsoft has just released an update for its Xbox Music app for Android. The app allows you to stream music from the OneDrive cloud storage and the update now lets you load music for offline playback, and lets you use the app without having an Xbox Music Pass.

Moreover, the update now lets you download playlists or individual songs and albums for offline use. The app also will filter your music to see which songs are available offline. The app update also came with various bug fixes for smoother performance, however, it is still in beta mode so crashes and bugs are still common while using the app.

The app is free to download from the Google Play Store via the QR code and link below.

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Play Store Download Link

 

Via: Android Central

 

 

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9
Jul

Google patent uses finger frames to snap pics with Glass-like devices


If you thought wearing a Google Glass headset was awkward, things could get even weirder. The Mountain View company was awarded a patent this week for tech that enables a Glass-like head-mounted display to automatically take pictures when it recognizes your fingers. Specifically, it snaps a pic when you make one of those finger frames like you’ve seen movie directors use. The patent document also explains that the device can change the orientation of the image based on the positioning of your hands. For example, if you made a circular “O” shape with one hand, you’d end up with a round picture. And the same goes for using two hands to frame a rectangular portrait.

Based on the area that you point out, the device is also capable of making any additional cropping, white balance and exposure adjustments. As is the case with documents like this, there’s no guarantee that the tech will end up in a new version of Glass or any other device. However, reports indicate that Google is hard a work on a new model, so perhaps we’ll find out soon enough how much you’ll need to employ your arms to document your next vacation.

Filed under: Wearables, Google

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Via: Quartz

Source: USPTO

9
Jul

Filmmaker wants to Kickstart more old-school ‘Thunderbirds’


If you’ve seen the CGI remake of Thunderbirds, you might feel as if the glossy images have lost some of the charm of the puppet-fronted original. Filmmaker Stephen La Riviére agrees with you, which is why he’s asking for our cash to produce an old-school revival of the classic action-adventure series. Thunderbirds: 1965 has a goal of producing between one and three episodes of the show, complete with puppets and models, as before. Rather than “new” material, the team will produce visuals to accompany three audio-only episodes that were recorded by the original cast as a tie-in during the original run.

If you’re unfamiliar, Thunderbirds was one of several “Supermarionation” shows created by Gerry Anderson in the ’60s. Each show featured puppets piloting futuristic vehicles, and served as the inspiration for plenty of imitators through the years — most notably serving as the template for Team America: World Police’s visuals. In the story, the Tracy brothers, sons of a widowed aerospace magnate, pilot five vehicles that are uniquely designed to rescue people from catastrophes. The project is asking for £75,000 ($115,500) to produce the first episode, with backers getting a Blu-ray of the episode if they kick in £30 ($46).

https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1558089494/thunderbirds-1965-new-episodes-from-1960s-recordin/widget/video.html

Filed under: Home Entertainment, HD

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Source: Kickstarter

9
Jul

Office for Mac 2016 exits preview, bridges the gap with Windows


Office for Mac 2016 exits preview, bridges the gap with Windows

The last time a new version of Office for Mac came out, the year was 2010. Microsoft had recently released the Kin; our favorite e-reader had a QWERTY keyboard; and people were still snickering at some awkwardly named gadget called the iPad. A lot has changed since then: OS X looks a little different; Windows looks a lot different; and believe it or not, people actually want to use Office on that weird iPad thing. Until recently, though, Mac for Office looked the same as it did when it first came out on OS X Snow Leopard. Finally, earlier this year, Microsoft released a preview of Office for Mac 2016, which brings feature parity with the Windows version (Office 2013) and also better matches OS X’s current aesthetic. The final version is out today, and you can download it now for free — with an Office 365 subscription, or if you’re a student. What’s that, you say? You’d rather use Google Docs or OneDrive? You prefer Pages?! You can have a peek anyway at the screenshot gallery below, and then read on for a summary of what’s new.

Microsoft likes to say that its new Mac software is “unmistakably Office.” This is true: Office for Mac keeps the trademark Ribbon stretching across the top of the screen, except this time, it’s been reimagined to match the layout of Office for iPad. That means a generally flatter aesthetic, with a launch page for each app that lets you create a new document, open a local file or pick from a list of stuff you’ve worked on recently. For the first time on a Mac too, Office is integrated with Microsoft’s own cloud services (who’da thunk?), which means you can also open files stored on either OneDrive or a SharePoint site. Windows users have been able to do this since Office 2013 came out. Throughout, Microsoft also redesigned the various Office apps so that they’re optimized for Retina displays. As on Office for Mac 2011, you can use the apps at full-screen, except Microsoft switched to a different set of APIs, which — long story short — should make these transitions feel smoother than they used to.

As on Office for iPad, you can choose a colorful theme that has — you guessed it — a brightly colored menu bar for each app (e.g., blue for Word, green for Excel, red for PowerPoint). If you prefer, you can also opt for a so-called Classic theme, whose gray menu bar is more in line with the minimal design of OS X Yosemite and El Capitan. That said, if you have lots of windows open at once, you might like the option of being able to find each one at a glance just based on the color scheme.

A couple other new features permeate the new apps. When you make comments in Word or PowerPoint, they now appear as threaded discussions, instead of there being a chat bubble for each person’s contribution. This, too, has been around on the Windows side since Office 2013. Speaking of catch-up features, Office for Mac is also getting real-time co-authoring in Word and PowerPoint, which means you and someone else can be editing the same document at the same time. The only limitation is that there’s a paragraph lock keeping two people from editing the same paragraph at the same time. The winner? Whoever was there first.

It’s a similar story with each of the individual apps: There isn’t a single feature here that you haven’t already seen on Office 2013 or even Office for iPad. In Word, you get a “Design” tab in the Ribbon, along with a navigation pane on the left and a style pane on the right. In Excel, a “Recommended charts” feature suggests a chart format for your particular data set. The idea there is that there are so many chart types, but users don’t always know what’s best for their data. Moving on, most keyboard shortcuts will now work across both Macs and PCs, which is to say you can lead with the Ctrl key if you prefer. That said, Mac diehards can also stick with the Command button if that feels more natural.

Other enhancements in Excel include “slicers” to re-pivot data, a print-to-PDF feature, a full formula builder and improvements to autocomplete (i.e., entering data into cells). PowerPoint, meanwhile, gets a redesigned Presenter view that displays notes alongside each slide, and that’s consistent with the iPad and Windows versions. True story: Presenter view actually originated on the Mac, but was last improved on the Windows side. So we’re coming full circle here. In addition to that, Microsoft also added new slide transitions, as one does with a new version of PowerPoint, and also added a special viewing option that lets you see an overview of all the animations in your slide deck. There’s also a new conflict-resolution feature — a handy thing, given the new co-authoring tools.

There isn’t a single feature here that you haven’t already seen on Office 2013.

That covers the three biggies — Word, Excel and PowerPoint — but you also get Outlook for email as well as OneNote, which was not previously included as part of the Mac Office package. In Outlook, you can now propose a new time in the event you’re sent a meeting invite (previously, you could just accept or decline, which perhaps wasn’t the most helpful setup). Other long-overdue amenities include a unified inbox, conversation view, message preview and the ability to sync categories back to an Exchange server so that they’re not limited to your local machine. You can also see your calendar side by side with your inbox (this, too, comes in handy when someone sends you a meeting invite). As for OneNote, the new app comes on the heels of Apple unveiling its own revamped Notes app for OS X. The big update here, in Microsoft’s offering, is the ability to record audio notes, complete not just with timestamps, but also text markers, so you have a better idea of where to jump in.

Office 2016 for Mac is available today for Office 365 subscribers. If you’re a student, you can also go here to see if you qualify for either a free or a steeply discounted four-year subscription (it depends on what school you attend). Later in the year, Microsoft says it will offer traditional copies of Office, where you purchase it once instead of subscribe.

Filed under: Software, Microsoft

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9
Jul

‘The Iron Giant’ returns to theaters this fall with new scenes


If you’re still reeling from the disappointment of Tomorrowland, you’ll be able to rekindle your faith in director Brad Bird this September when his debut feature returns to cinemas. The Iron Giant: Signature Edition will play in select theaters on September 30 in partnership with Fathom Events, Warner Bros announced yesterday. And if you can’t make that, there’ll be an encore showing on October 4. The film centers on a boy who befriends a giant robot (voiced by Vin Diesel) and has to protect him from government agents — you know, typical kid stuff. WB is finally giving the film a full high-definition restoration for the rerelease, which will also be available for purchase from digital retailers at some point. We just hope this means there will be an Iron Giant Blu-ray eventually. Bird has been fighting for a feature-packed Blu-ray release, but he says WB is has been pushing for a bare bones disc (that is, one with just the film).

Filed under: Robots, HD

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Via: /Film

9
Jul

Federal law would block FDA reviews on e-cigarettes


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No, this is not a repeat from 1964. Congress has blocked a funding bill amendment that would have allowed the FDA to review and approve electronic cigarette brands before they hit market. Republican Andy Harris said, “I think most people realize that they are less dangerous than cigarettes, and yet we’re subjecting them to a higher level of regulation.” However, the World Health Organization (WHO) is now set against e-cigarettes and early research has shown that vaping may have a toxic effect on lung cells. Democrat Rep. Nita Lowey, who introduced the original amendment, said she was “shocked” by the “objectionable” decision to kill FDA pre-market reviews, adding “many of these products are aimed at children.”

Her legislation would have made e-cigarettes “substantially equivalent” to regular tobacco products, as the FDA had requested. It also let the FDA to review e-cigs that have been in the market since February 15, 2007. However, Republicans and the said that FDA pre-market reviews would drive companies out of the business and possibly harm consumers using vaping as an aid to quit smoking. Rep. Robert Aderholt added that the revised bill would still let the FDA control electronic cigarettes, and wouldn’t affect another FDA proposal to ban sales to minors.

But Democrats think that the bill would reduce regulation on e-cigarettes at a time when usage is skyrocketing. Rep. Lowey put it in stronger terms, saying the modified legislation “is nothing short of a giveaway to the tobacco industry.” The rider passed a U.S. House Appropriations committee vote, and is now headed for the House floor. If it goes through there, the industry will remain largely unregulated.

Filed under: Misc

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Source: The Hill