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20
Oct

‘Gilmore Girls’ is reportedly the latest series to be revived by Netflix


In case it wasn’t obvious already, Netflix is the knight in shining armor for fans of shows that ended before their time. Gilmore Girls appears to be the latest show to come back to life after a long time dead and buried: According to TVLine, Warner Bros. has reached a deal with Netflix, series creator Amy Sherman-Palladino and executive producer Daniel Palladino to bring Gilmore Girls back to Netflix as a series of four 90-minute mini-movies. Negotiations have only just begun, but major series participants Lauren Graham, Alexis Bledel, Kelly Bishop and Scott Patterson are all said to be on board.

While the show originally had a seven-series run, fans were disappointed when the Palladinos were unable to come to a deal with the show’s network after the sixth season. That led to a seventh season under entirely different writers and show-runners, and it meant that Amy Sherman-Palladino was unable to give her characters the sendoff she always imagined. Now, it seems like she’ll get another chance, though it’ll likely be far different than she envisioned — the show ended in 2007, which means main characters Lorelai and Rory will likely be quite a bit older than they were last time the show aired.

If this all comes to pass, Gilmore Girls will join Arrested Development, The Killing and Longmire as continuations of shows that, for one reason or another, were killed and then brought back to life by Netflix. For the sake of long-suffering Gilmore Girls fans everywhere, we’re hoping Netflix and the show’s creators are able to bring it back, tell some new stories, and give the characters a good sendoff.

Via: @chillmage

Source: TV Line

20
Oct

Sprint reveals three smartphone additions coming to Boost Mobile and Virgin Mobile


motorola_moto_g_2015_multitasking_TA

Sprint has announced a handful of new smartphones for its subsidiaries Boost Mobile and Virgin Mobile. Out of the three smartphone additions announced, only one will be making its way to Boost Mobile.

First up is the HTC Desire 626s, which will be available on Boost Mobile and Virgin Mobile for $129.99. Coming to Virgin Mobile is the HTC Union for $79.99 along with the much more impressive Motorola Moto G (2015) for $149.99.

As per the norm, plans start at $30 on Virgin Mobile, which gets you 300 minutes of talk, unlimited text, and 3GB of data. Boost Mobile offers much the same, however, $30 will only get you 2GB of data. However, if you make 18 on-time payments, Boost Mobile will bump that up to 5GB per month (500MB of free data every 3 months of on-time payments).

Anyone plan on picking up one of these devices on Boost or Virgin in the near future?

source: Sprint

Come comment on this article: Sprint reveals three smartphone additions coming to Boost Mobile and Virgin Mobile

20
Oct

OnePlus One Cyanogen security update arriving by way of OTA


OnePlus-One

A new CyanogenOS update is on its way to the OnePlus One, aimed at solving a few bugs along with fixing security holes. If you haven’t received the OTA yet and want to get it as soon as possible, there’re manual updates available for the device.

The OTA zip file is a meager 18MB in size, however, some OnePlus One owners are saying that it’s failing for some reason. In that case, you can download and install the full 600MB ROM and Fastboot zip.

The update is surprising considering the current company relationships between OnePlus and Cyanogen. However, it’s nice to see that the users aren’t getting punished for the small feud between the two. OnePlus is still hard at work on its Oxygen OS for the OnePlus One, but it still isn’t ready for prime time just yet.

Has anyone gotten the update yet? Any noticeable changes?

source: OnePlus Forums
via: Android Police

Come comment on this article: OnePlus One Cyanogen security update arriving by way of OTA

20
Oct

Google offering up incentives to entice business customers to switch to Google for Work


google new logoGoogle for Work is one of the search engine’s highest priorities, especially in against Microsoft’s fiercely competitive Office suite. And while Google’s office platform is fantastic on its own, sometimes it can be tricky to get business customers to switch over to a different set of apps because of licensing, contracts, or the cost of deploying new equipment.

To fight that, Google has announced some new incentives to try and sway business customers over to Google’s side of the fence. For customers that are currently locked in an enterprise agreement, Google will foot the bill for the remainder of the agreement if they switch over to Google’s enterprise applications. They’ll also put in for some of the cost of deploying Google for Work to replace the current setup.

Once that agreement runs out, Google says they’ll be offering simple, straightforward agreements with customers, which will reportedly be up to 70% cheaper in some cases. With that kind of offer, it’d be hard to see many businesses passing up the opportunity to at least try out Google’s solution to see if it would be a better fit than what some competitors offer.

source: Google for Work

Come comment on this article: Google offering up incentives to entice business customers to switch to Google for Work

20
Oct

Nokia’s HERE Maps for Android gets route sharing feature


nokia_HERE_072215Nokia has introduced a new standout feature of its HERE Maps app on Android that should appeal to anyone who likes to take trips with their friends and family. Now if you’re using HERE Maps you’ll be able to quickly share your route with someone through text message, email, or any other app that supports Android’s share menu. That can also be pretty useful for giving directions to someone without having to type out a list of twist and turns in a Facebook message.

Nokia’s also bringing back their Surfer Dude voice navigation assistant. That should help spark some interest back into your road trips.

Hit the link below to grab the update.

Play Store Download Link

Come comment on this article: Nokia’s HERE Maps for Android gets route sharing feature

20
Oct

Google is giving out ‘instant’ Project Fi invitations for one day


The Nexus 5X en repose

If you’ve been jonesing to ditch your existing phone carrier and try Google’s invitation-only Project Fi service, now’s the time to act. Google is marking the launches of the Nexus 5X and 6P by giving away “instant” Project Fi invitations over the course of 24 hours — if you want to sign up, you’re in. You’ll still need to use the right phone (either of the new Nexus models, or the Nexus 6) and live in an area where either Sprint or T-Mobile provides coverage. So long as those aren’t hurdles, though, this is your best chance yet at seeing how Google’s simple, multi-network cellular access works in practice.

Via: Project Fi (Twitter)

Source: Project Fi

20
Oct

Qwerkywriter’s retro iPad keyboard is a flawed masterpiece


The internet has made our culture impermanent, and in its confusion, humanity mistook nostalgia for authenticity. Our cameras take images in unprecedented detail, but we only share them if they look like Polaroids from more than half a century ago. The hipsters of today dress like they’re about to teach a physics class in a Midwestern public school, circa 1954. That’s why the Qwerkywriter feels like such a product of its time: a $399 84-key Bluetooth keyboard that’s been styled to look like the love child of an Olivetti Studio 42 and an Underwood No. 5. A gleaming exhibit of the future designed to seem as if it’s been in the back of a junk shop for the last hundred years. It was a Kickstarter success, but can the product vault the hurdle between nostalgia and authenticity to become an actual product? Slideshow-331139

Hardware

The first thing you’ll notice about the Qwerkywriter is that it’s strikingly beautiful — so much so that all of the people who have visited my home have made a beeline for it. It’s also pleasingly heavy, weighing in at 1,253 grams (2.8 pounds) and made from solid aluminum that’s covered in a matte black powder paint. These things combine to give you a feeling of old-timey rigidity that’s hard not to like. It’s sufficiently heavy that it should discourage you from taking this down to your local coffee shop, although if you spot someone in your Starbucks with one of these, give ’em a hostile glare from me, K?

In the original pitch, Qwerkywriter was to come with USB and Bluetooth connections, but only the latter made it into the final version. As such, the micro-USB port that’s tucked ’round back is now just used to charge the battery, which has a promised life of between one and three months of heavy use. At the back of the device is a fake paper table that’s used as a stand for smartphones and tablets, letting you turn this into an ersatz word processor for term papers and, yes, your screenplay.

As a tablet dock

Remember when I said that you could use the Qwerkywriter as an ersatz word processor? About that. The design of the built-in tablet stand makes it difficult, if not impossible, to use it as a Bluetooth keyboard. As much as the stand makes you feel like a modern-day Stephen J. Cannell, the angle is actually too steep for you to use a tablet comfortably. As I write this on my iPad, I’m having to push the keyboard half a foot farther away and slouch just to get a half-decent line of sight on the display.

The other big annoyance is that the paper tray will obscure your tablet’s home button, and there’s no dedicated hardware key to replace it on the keyboard. On the iPad, there’s a way around this, which is to activate Voice Over — that lets you use CTRL+CMD+H in place of the home button. For some reason, that isn’t working on the Qwerkywriter, although I managed to get Shift+CMD+H to do the same job after some trial and error. I’m told that the final version will have a foam lining in the tray to push the home button high enough to use — but considering how much of the promo shots of the device show it as a companion to the iPad, this is a massive, horrible oversight.

Keys

Did you know that there’s currently a global shortage of Cherry MX keyboard switches? That’s what prompted the Qwerkywriter team to opt for Kailh Blue mechanical switches. Much like the Cherries, each key is wonderfully loud and satisfyingly clicky, and since each is mounted on a pillar, there are acres of travel. The keycaps, meanwhile, are spaced 0.5mm farther away from each other than you’d see on an average chiclet keyboard. The raised chrome edges that encircle each keycap make them feel closer together, so be prepared for a learning curve in your first few days of typing. One other thing is that the Windows/OS X Command keys have both been ditched in favor of a custom “Qwerky” key with a fancy atom-age logo. There’s one problem with this, and that there’s so much space on either side of it that it’s actually a chore to find it if you’re used to standard Windows or Mac keyboards.

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If there’s one flourish that’s worth discussing in isolation, it’s the addition of a return bar, a mainstay of traditional typewriters that does the same job as the enter key. Pull it in from the left and it’ll carriage return down to the next line, although the switch can also be mapped to other commands, if you want to. It’s nowhere near as efficient as just hitting the enter key, but there’s something immeasurably satisfying about celebrating the completion of a paragraph by giving the bar a good slap.

Conclusions

Before the Qwerkywriter landed on my doorstep, I knew I was going to either love it or hate it. The surface indications were that it would occupy the same lame pantheon as Native Union’s old-timey iPhone handsets. The irony of it would be the key selling point, the message being, “Look at me; aren’t I eccentric,” as you carried your ridiculous iPad stand from one coffee shop to another. It turns out that I was wrong.

Qwerkywriter has been created with some measure of love, clearly. It’s weighty, well-built and beautiful to look at. To use one, after the first few minutes, is a delight, and it’s so different from traditional keyboards that you feel the need to play with it as soon as you see it. You can see where every penny of that $399 cost went, even if it is a little too steep for most people. But the $329 pre-order price should soften that blow, at least a little.

What I would say is that if you’re just in the market for a decent mechanical keyboard, don’t buy this, because for around $150, you can get a solid unit from plenty of companies. Matias’ One, Razer’s BlackWidow or Das Keyboard’s 4 Professional are all fine options that come with none of the fuss or price that are available here. Then there’s the fact that the Qwerkywriter is a little muddled in its execution, neither portable enough to be a tablet stand, nor grand enough to be useful for daily desktop use.

But if you’re looking for something that’s beyond the run-of-the-mill peripheral, that’s beautiful despite some of its compromises, then it’s a different story. If you have this sort of cash lying around and want to type with a device that has been lovingly crafted, then you need to give this a try. Yes, there is a little bit of “look at me” ostentatiousness that’ll draw envious eyes, but sometimes you just need to tolerate the jealousy of others. In spite of its flaws, some of which are maddening, I love this product and I think you might too.

Source: Qwerky Toys

20
Oct

Adidas’ Fit Smart wearable now tracks more of your fitness data


Software updates can breathe new life into existing hardware, and that’s what’s happening today with the Fit Smart. Introduced last year, this wrist-worn wearable has been able to measure burned calories, heart rate, distance covered, pace and steps since day one. But now Adidas will let you keep track of all those fitness stats using the Train and Run app, which is available for iOS and Android. Previously, Fit Smart and its companion application focused on coaching for workouts, training plans and monitoring your heart rate. By adding these features, people who own the device can start tracking data to set daily and weekly goals — similar to Nike’s FuelBand SE or Jawbone’s Up3. We’re not sure why it took Adidas over a year to bring such useful functionality to the Fit Smart, but at least it’s finally here.

Source: Adidas

20
Oct

Microsoft built Halo 5’s weapons ‘from scratch’ for Xbox One


Halo 5: Guardians soundtrack isn’t the only aspect of the game’s audio that got an overhaul — the developers at 343 Industries had to reimagine what the Xbox One exclusive’s weapons sound like, too. Because of the sheer amount of sounds happening at once during firefights, 343 had to figure out some creative ways to keep the aural calamity in check. It’s quite a bit different in scale from 343’s last outing, 2012’s Halo 4, where there was had a handful of characters on screen simultaneously, as opposed to 40 or 50 in the forthcoming sequel. “We have many more sounds and the mixing is a very challenging situation,” 343 Industries audio director Sotaro Tojima said in a recent interview. “We’re establishing pretty much all the weapon sounds from scratch again for Xbox One.”

He said that besides keeping the sounds of 20 different weapons firing and their 20 different bullet impacts during a firefight, the team also has to prevent the ambient sounds and the game’s score from being drowned out. Making sure everything stayed crisp and clear throughout wasn’t easy. “We tried to make [the weapon sounds] more solid and shorter, but still have enough detail,” he said of keeping the weapons audible. “It’s a totally different kind of mixing approach.”

Has it paid off? Not exactly. Based on my time with the game, they sound much less powerful and aggressive — especially compared to their Halo 4 counterparts. It’s something that the fans noticed after last fall’s multiplayer beta, and I’m sad to report that the beloved assault rifle, and rocket launcher sound like peashooters here. They stick out from the rest of the audio, but aren’t very distinctive at all, sounding more like generic weapons from any other game than firearms from the Halo universe.

For more on Halo 5‘s music and a chance to hear the game’s soundtrack before October 27th, check out the full interview with Tojima and Halo 5‘s audio team.

19
Oct

Google opens up Project Fi invites to all for 24 hour period


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Google is currently offering open invitations to its Project Fi wireless service, but only for a limited time. Indeed, Google is celebrating the launch of the Nexus 5X and Nexus 6P with instant invitations to its upstart experience. You’ll have to act fast, though, it’s only open for 24 hours and the clock has been ticking.

Prior to today, those who were interested in signing up for Project Fi first had to signal their interest and wait for an invitation. Said invitations could take a few weeks or so, sometimes longer. Today, however, you can skip the line and get right in.

Project Fi launched in April and acts as a mobile virtual network operator that utilizes Sprint, T-Mobile, and Wi-Fi networks. Previously, the only supported smartphone was the Motorola-made Nexus 6. Both the new Nexus 5X and Nexus 6P are designed with Project Fi capability.

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