Moto app gains customized Assist activities and places with 3.0 update
Motorola has been breaking ground with its phones the last few years, and one of the biggest ways its done this is by only adding useful features to the phone, and not messing with stock Android otherwise. With the introduction of the Moto X (2014), it placed all of these features into one app called “Moto”. That app is getting updated to version 3.0, and with it the ability to add customized Assist activities and places.
Moto Assist allows you to set automatic functions to your phone based on the time of day and your location. This includes:
Home, where you can set the phone to only bug you with important notifications, and even speak notifications out loud, Driving, which detects when your driving (based on the speed at which you’re traveling), and then do the same functions as “Home”, along with automatically playing music when a Bluetooth connection or auxiliary cord is detected, Meeting, which can automatically set your phone to quiet and auto reply to people when it detects an event in your calendar, and Sleeping, which will set your phone to quiet and keep your screen off (Moto Display included) during pre-set hours of the day/night.
Before, those options above were the only ones you could adjust or turn on. With today’s update, you can now make your own activity, or set another place to perform an action.
“Moto 3.0 adjusts to both your places and activities. It learns your home and work locations, and you can save any place and it will act appropriately there. Tell your phone to keep quiet, vibrate or talk to you depending on where you are or what you’re doing. e.g. you can save your local movie theater and choose it to automatically remain silent or vibrate while you are there.“
With the Floating Action Button (shown to the right), you can “Add Activity” or “Add your place”. Adding a new place brings up the screen to the left. Adding an activity really only sets either Meeting, Driving, or Sleeping functions, so that if you have those set already, you’ll just adjust those options.
The update is rolling out today, so be on the lookout for it in the Play Store if you have any of these devices (based on the Play Store description):
Moto X (2nd Gen.), DROID Turbo, Moto Maxx/Turbo, Moto X Pro and Moto E (2nd Gen.), Moto X (1st Gen.) and DROID Ultra.
SOURCE: Play Store
The post Moto app gains customized Assist activities and places with 3.0 update appeared first on AndroidGuys.
Engadget Live takes over the Exchange in Los Angeles this Friday!
We’re gearing up to take over Exchange LA this Friday, August 21st at 7PM for our next Engadget Live event, where we’ll bring together gadget lovers and awesome tech brands. Sound good? First, grab your free tickets and then read on to find out what you can expect at our free event in downtown Los Angeles!
If you’ve never been to an Engadget Live event before, check out the fun we had just last month in Boston, where in addition to meeting our readers and watching them go hands-on with the latest in tech, we made sure to try out drunk skateboarding.
Slideshow-306766
Thanks to our sponsor Ford, you’ll have the chance to sit inside a 2016 Ford Escape, complete with that new car smell. You can also experience the new voice-activated SYNC 3 system in the car or through standalone screens set up around the venue.

There’s a lot more to experience and get hands-on with in downtown Los Angeles during Engadget Live. Our friend Mark Setrakian (who joined us at Engadget Expand last November) made these mesmerizing Axis Robots, which will be on site for you to check out.
What else can you expect at Engadget Live Los Angeles? Here’s a handful of companies (local and national) that will be on-hand:
- Ario will demonstrate the “World’s first Healthy Lamp,” which adjusts light color and direction to support your body’s circadian rhythm.
- Braven will show off its latest Bluetooth high fidelity audio speakers (and its parent company, Incipio, will let you get hands-on with its mobile device accessories.
- Drizly will offer a free alcoholic beverage to the first 250 people in the door (21 and older, of course!)
- RYOT is a news organization that links every story to an action and empower you to become the news. Their most recent project, ‘Welcome to Aleppo,’ allows viewers to enter a war zone through virtual reality.
- Speaking of VR, we’ll have folks from UploadVR, White Elk Studios and Otherworld on hand to show off what they’ve been up to.
If this sounds like the ideal way to spend this Friday night in downtown Los Angeles, grab your free tickets here and we’ll see you on the 21st. Then, we’ll wrap up our Engadget Live series in Austin, TX on October 16th.
Filed under:
Announcements
Tags: aleppo, ario, axle, boston, braven, drizly, DTLA, engadget live, engadgetlive, escape 2016, events, ford, fordsync3, incipio, lax, los angeles, losangeles, ryot, sync 3, uploadvr, virtual reality, vr
‘Final Fantasy VII’ lands on iOS with built-in cheat codes
If you can’t find your old PSOne discs, don’t want the PC version and don’t have a PS4, there’s now one more way to play Final Fantasy VII: on your iPhone. Today Square Enix launched the classic jRPG for devices running iOS 8.0 and up. At its core, this release is a simple port of the PC version of the game, but developers have made a few minor tweaks to the title palatable on the small screen.
Leveling up won’t be an issue on the mobile version of the game, for instance: the iOS version has a “max stats” command that instantly raises your character’s levels. Your all-powerful party won’t have to deal with time-sucking random battles, either — they can be turned off. Finally, Square Enix has decided not to give the game a customized touch-friendly menu as it has with some of its other mobile Final Fantasy ports, opting to overlay the screen with a virtual joypad instead.
Final Fantasy VII for iOS launches today, but it’s on a slow rollout: at the time of this writing, it only seems to be available in New Zealand, for $19.99 NZD (which converts to about $13 in greenbacks). Check out the New Zealand product page here or hit up Square Enix’s official YouTube channel to watch the trailer.
Source:
YouTube, iTunes (1), (2)
Tags: finalfantasy, finalfantasyvii, gaming, ios, iPhone, mobilepostcross, Square-Enix, squareenix, videogames
Deal: Aukey Quick Charge 2.0 USB Car Charger for just $9.49 on Amazon after coupon code
Car chargers are a pretty decent accessory to own but depending on how long you spend in your car each day, you might not get much benefit from using one. However, if you happen to own a Quick Charge 2.0-compatible smartphone, this deal may be worth your while. Right now, you can pick up an Aukey Quick Charge 2.0 2-Port USB Car Charger for only $9.49 from Amazon.
The list price currently reads $16.99, so you’ll need to enter in coupon code ZSBP8QMP at checkout for the car charger to drop down to $9.49 the promotional price.
This car charger features two USB ports so you can charge multiple devices at once. The top Quick Charge-compatible port can charge devices up to 9V at 2A or 12V at 1.5A. The other port is meant for non-fast charging devices. This deal also includes a 3.3-foot Micro USB cable that should be plenty long enough if you’re just keeping this in the car.
We’re not sure how long this deal will last, so you might want to pick one up sooner rather than later if you’re interested. Head to the link below for more information.
Apple Seeds 7th OS X 10.11 El Capitan Beta to Developers, Re-Seeds 5th Beta to Public Testers
Apple today released the seventh beta of OS X 10.11 El Capitan to developers for testing purposes, two weeks after releasing the sixth El Capitan beta and two months after unveiling the new operating system at its 2015 Worldwide Developers Conference. Apple has also re-seeded the fifth public beta of OS X El Capitan to public beta testers.
The update is available through the software update mechanism in the Mac App Store and through the Apple Developer Center.
In recent weeks, Apple has been pushing rapid updates for OS X El Capitan, all of which have focused on under-the-hood performance improvements and bug fixes to optimize the operating system ahead of its public debut. Few design changes have been made in the most recent betas.
OS X El Capitan is designed to improve features introduced with OS X Yosemite, focusing on performance and user experience. A number of apps and processes on the Mac are much faster with El Capitan, and the introduction of Metal for Mac brings system-level graphics rendering that’s 40 percent more efficient.
As for user experience, El Capitan includes a new systemwide San Francisco font, a revamped Mission Control feature, a new Split View feature for using two full-screen apps at once, deeper functionality for Spotlight, and several new features for Safari, including Pinned Sites for housing frequently visited websites and a universal mute button that quiets all tabs.
OS X 10.11 El Capitan is available to both registered developers and public beta testers. Apple plans to release El Capitan to the public in the fall.
Samsung’s fast wireless charger is available for pre-order, sort of
When Samsung unveiled the Galaxy Note 5 and S6 Edge+, it also revealed a fast wireless charging pad that takes advantage of the smartphones’ new, speedier Qi charging spec. Well, you can now pre-order that charging pad… in a manner of speaking. The $70 peripheral is available to purchase on Samsung’s website as I write, but dropping it in your cart reveals that it’s back-ordered and doesn’t have an estimated ship date. You’ll be waiting an unspecified number of weeks before this is sitting on your desk, then. If you can afford to wait, however, it could be a good complement to Samsung’s latest supersized devices — you won’t have to wait ages to top up your phone just because you hate cables.
Filed under:
Cellphones, Peripherals, Mobile, Samsung
Via:
Android Community
Source:
Samsung
Tags: fastcharge, fastchargewirelesschargingpad, galaxynote5, galaxys6edgeplus, mobilepostcross, pad, peripherals, qi, samsung, smartphone, wirelesscharging
Project Ara delayed because its phones keep falling apart
Project Ara, the modular mobile phone from Google’s Advanced Technologies and Projects (ATAP) group, has hit some delays, and now we’re getting a hint as to what went wrong. The Projet Ara team announced on Twitter that the the “electropermanent” magnets that held the different Ara modules together are not strong enough to keep the phone from surviving falls in a drop test. Unfortunately, there’s no word on what it will be replaced with, outside of an enigmatic tweet about testing a “signature experience” for attaching and detaching modules.
No more electropermanent magnets. #ProjectAra #FailedTheDropTest
— Project Ara (@ProjectAra) August 19, 2015
This latest bit of news comes after a particularly tough week for Project Ara. First, the Project Ara group announced it was “re-routing” its planned pilot launch in Puerto Rico this fall, and then it announced that hardware was delayed entirely until 2016. Given that “not falling apart” is one of the most important features a smartphone can have, we’re thinking it’s a good thing that the Ara team went back to the drawing board on this one — even if it does mean we’ll have to keep waiting for our modular smartphone dreams to come true.
We are testing a signature experience to attach/detach modules. #ProjectAra #HopeYouLikeIt
— Project Ara (@ProjectAra) August 19, 2015
Filed under:
Cellphones, Mobile, Google
Via:
Android Police
Source:
Project Ara (Twitter, 1), (2)
Tags: atap, google, mobilepostcross, modular, ModularPhone, projectara
Exotic quantum laser could help study other planets
Scientists might soon have a much easier time discovering every last nuance of other planets. Researchers have developed a quantum cascade laser (which sounds like an amazing sci-fi weapon, by the way) that can cover a very wide range of infrared wavelengths at the same time, making short work of detecting many chemicals. Astronomers, including study backer NASA, could use it to determine the contents of a planet’s surface without touching it — important when you’d rather not risk breaking samples, or when it’s not possible to touch down on the surface in the first place.
The laser should have plenty of uses here on Earth, as well. It’s both portable and works at room temperature, which opens the door to detecting explosives and other chemicals from a distance. Security officials could spot hints of a car bomb even as it goes speeding by, for instance. It’ll be a while before the technology is ready for action, but support from NASA, the Department of Homeland Security and Naval Air Systems Command suggests that the laser will go into service sooner rather than later.
[Image credit: Lynette Cook, NASA]
Filed under:
Science
Via:
IEEE Spectrum
Source:
Optics Express
Tags: exoplanet, infrared, laser, northwesternuniversity, planet, quantum, quantumcascade, science, space, spectroscopy
Becoming a rain detective with a backyard weather station
London summers can be the most arduous of times. Since early July, we’ve had highs of 98 and lows of 48. We’ve had sun, rain and everything in between. Planning where to go or what to wear more than a few days in advance is an impossibility. I do my best, of course, combining AccuWeather‘s useful-but-often-inaccurate extended forecasts with the Dark Sky app for up-to-the-minute weather alerts. Over the past week or so, however, I’ve added a new tool to my arsenal: the BloomSky. It’s an all-in-one outdoor weather station that, for currently $169 and up, provides you with hyper-local weather information. Although it hasn’t changed my life, becoming a meteorologist has been quite a lot of fun.
A cute blob
The BloomSky is a pretty cute spherical blob stuffed full of tech. It’s fairly innocuous, although thanks to a prominent fish-eye camera that snaps the sky every few minutes, it does look a little CCTV-ish. In fact, if I were to design a friendly looking camera to monitor my dystopian empire, it’d probably look something like this:

Aside from that camera, the weather station also has temperature, pressure, UV, rain and humidity sensors. It uses this array of electronics to monitor all the vital weather conditions, while its camera captures photos of the sky every few minutes.
As you’d expect, the unit is weatherproof — something London has tested with ruthless efficiency over the past week — and will last two weeks on a charge. I also tested BloomSky with an optional solar panel (an add-on currently going for $119, or as part of a $269 bundle), which leans next to the weather station and provides a daily charge for free. This has worked pretty well even in London, so if you live somewhere less cloud-inclined, it seems like a no-brainer.
The setup
Installing the BloomSky outside was remarkably easy. You have a couple of options, depending on where you want to set it up. There’s a solid-looking bracket for attaching it to walls and posts, but as I recently gave up on life and moved to the leafy London suburbs, I actually have a yard, complete with a lawn. Thus, my setup was as follows:
- Poke stake (provided) into ground. Boop gently with a mallet (not provided) to make sure it’s in place.
- Put extension stick (also provided) on top of stake. Boop again gently just because.
- Put weather station on top of stick.
- Bask in the warm glow of a good day’s manual labor:

For all the ease of physical installation, getting the BloomSky up and running via the mobile app was a hassle. The initial setup happens via your router, and halfway through, you’re supposed to head outside to install the unit. The problem is, the first few spots I chose didn’t have a strong enough WiFi signal (despite my phone connecting to the same network just fine), meaning I had to repeat the process — and move the mounting equipment and solar panel — several times to get it up and running. Another word of warning: The weather station only supports 2.4GHz WiFi, so I needed to change the settings on my router to create a supported network, and you may have to do the same.
I also had quite a lot of stability problems after the initial installation, but since a recent software update everything has been running smoothly. Since the unit only became available for general purchase this week, there’s not much point in rehashing the issues in any detail.
Meteorologist at large

The first things you’ll notice after setting up the BloomSky are the images it captures. Every five minutes or so, it takes a photo and uploads it with an overlay of the time and temperature (mine reports in Celsius, but you can configure yours to show Fahrenheit if you don’t enjoy sensible measurements). You can share any of these pics to services such as Facebook, Instagram, Twitter or email — pretty much any iOS or Android app that can handle a JPEG file. Image quality is unfortunately fairly average: the photos are 640 x 640 squares, perfect for sharing, but not much else, although it does a good job of not over- or under-exposing things.
The app also creates a daily time-lapse video, showing you the sky from sunrise to sunset. The length of these videos seems like an oversight. Mine clock in at slightly over 20 seconds, meaning that I can’t share the entire thing to Instagram, which has a 15-second limit, or Vine, which is even shorter. It seems like it’d be a simple fix, but right now there’s no option in the app to control how long the videos run.
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Photos and videos are more of a bonus, though — a sideshow to the main event. The real BloomSky pitch is to create crowdsourced, hyper-local weather reports. The dream is that you’ll be able to check in on weather stations in your area to see what conditions are like with perfect accuracy. For now, however, there aren’t many around. There’s one around 20 miles south of me, and I’ve taken to checking in to see what’s going on there. Weather cycles typically travel from south to north in this part of the world, so if there are rain clouds there, it’s a safe bet they’re headed my way.
The station in my yard communicates with BloomSky’s servers, letting me know through its app the temperature, the humidity, the UV index (which I imagine would be handy in warmer climates) and whether or not it’s raining. The latter should be the most useful. If you’ve got other “smart” products around your home you could, for example, turn off your sprinklers remotely when you get a rain notification.
In practice, the BloomSky’s sensitivity left a lot to be desired. It’s fine at telling me when it’s really raining, but if there’s some light drizzle — the sort that would make me pull in my laundry from the clothesline outside — it doesn’t ping the app, even when a visual inspection tells me its rain sensors are wet. I’d guess this is on purpose: You don’t want a rain notification if a single drop falls from the sky, but it’s another example of how some simple settings would improve the experience.
It may have many sensors, but there’s not a lot you can do with BloomSky’s data
There are a few other things that annoy me about the BloomSky. For all of its sensors, there’s not a lot you can do with the data they gather. The standard view shows you temperature, humidity, UV Index and pressure, but doesn’t really give you any explanation for the figures. What does a “2” on the UV Index mean for my child’s skin? Is a pressure of “1017” high or low, and why should I care? Google provided the answers to both of those questions, but it wouldn’t take much for BloomSky to add this into its app.
Similarly, there’s no way for you to chart the changing weather conditions. You can’t even see what the weather was like 20 minutes ago, let alone a day or a week ago. Without context or figures for comparison, all this data seems slightly pointless. Given that the BloomSky is pushing photos to the company’s servers every five minutes or so, you’d assume that it wouldn’t take much work for them to also upload and store the data that went along with it and let you view it.
The competition (and why this is a tough sell — for now)

So, minor niggles aside, here’s my issue with BloomSky in two words: Dark Sky. The app, currently only available for iOS, lets me see precise weather conditions for the next hour, and, with decreasing accuracy, the rest of the day and beyond. It sends rain notifications, gives me a daily forecast each morning, and even uses the iPhone’s sensors to forward pressure data periodically, increasing local accuracy. Remember when I said it was raining lightly and the BloomSky app didn’t tell me? Guess how I knew. Dark Sky pinged me to say “Drizzle starting soon,” and within two minutes, rain was pitter-pattering on my windows. For the most part, Dark Sky fulfills the promise of BloomSky, but in a $4 app.
BloomSky also isn’t the first home weather station by any means. The Netatmo Weather Station offers a very similar array of sensors, and also does some novel things like CO2 and noise detection. It lacks the camera or social features of BloomSky, but it’s arguably a more useful addition to a smart home. It also has IFTTT integration, so you could set it up to turn on your air conditioning when the temperature reaches a certain level, or automate the sprinkler example I gave earlier. It also includes all the charts you could ever hope for, along with simple ways to view historical data on your computer or almost any other device you own. (BloomSky is currently limited to iOS and Android.)
Weather sleuthing has been remarkably fun
There’s something remarkably fun about having a BloomSky, though, and sleuthing around nearby units to check in on the skies above them. It’s also nice to know that I’m contributing to a network, and others can do the same detective work, using my BloomSky to triangulate the gray skies ahead. For now, at least, the time-lapse videos haven’t lost their novelty either. I’ve spent a fair amount of time checking in on some of the videos from more picturesque locations than my unkempt yard.
If you have the spare cash and are sold on the idea of a physical weather gadget for your home, you have to ask yourself this question: What do you want it for? If you’re looking for a fun weather camera with basic data that could develop into something more useful, then at $169 (or $269 with the solar panel), the BloomSky is worth considering. If you’re just looking to geek out on stats, though, or further automate your home, Netatmo’s $149 solution seems like a winner.
I’ll be keeping an eye on BloomSky’s progress. The sensors are there; they’re just not being put to much use at the moment. If the company can improve its app, and add some of Netatmo’s charting and IFTTT features, I’d be a lot more inclined to recommend it, as the photos and time-lapse videos are really fun. Until its feature set improves, though, I think a $4 app is enough for me, even if Dark Sky will never provide me with proof that sometimes, just sometimes, the sun does indeed shine on London:

Tags: bloomsky, engadgetirl, hands-on, irl, uk-feature, weather, weatherstation
Are electropermanent magnets to blame for Project Ara’s delay?
The future of Project Ara is slightly unclear but at least we know it is not going away. Even after canceling the market pilot in Puerto Rico, Google’s Advanced Technology & Projects (ATAP) group remains set on debuting the modular phone in the United States sometime in 2016. The delay to next year may have to do with the way Project Ara handles drop tests.
We are testing a signature experience to attach/detach modules. #ProjectAra #HopeYouLikeIt
— Project Ara (@ProjectAra) August 19, 2015
Project Ara uses electropermanent magnets in order to attach and detach modules; however, based on the tweets above, they are not capable of managing drops. What happens when a Project Ara phone is dropped? That hasn’t been specified. Either the modules get severely damaged or they are knocked out of place completely. So now the team has to find a way for modules to be locked into place yet easily interchangeable.
Source: Project Ara (Twitter)
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