Can you brag about a dolphin saving your phone? This Miami Heat cheerleader can!

I definitely say dunking your hand into the toilet to retrieve a smartphone is a much more exciting feat, but I guess getting some help from a dolphin is pretty cool too! This is exactly what happened to Miami Heat cheerleader Teressa Cee.
After taking a trip to the Bahamas to “swim & shake” with dolphins, Cee’s phone managed to end up deep inside the dolphins’ residence (inside the water). The trainer then asked the dolphin to retrieve it, a request to which Cacique (the dolphin) was happy to oblige.
Truly, it’s fascinating to see, but a geek will do much more than just witness the beauty that these creatures are. Did you notice that was an iPhone? It surely didn’t survive the few seconds underwater! Even Teressa said: “Oh my god! So cute… thanks! It’s never gonna work again, but thanks!”.
Sure enough, the phone seems to have been deemed unusable, something that wouldn’t be the case if she had one of those awesome waterproof phones we find more often in the Android side of things. Someone has to go tell this girl about them Sony Xperia smartphones! Especially if she will continue playing around in the water. And seeing that these are Miami Heat cheerleaders we are talking about, this is very likely.
Here are some devices that are waterproof:
- Sony Xperia Z5
- Sony Xperia Z4
- Sony Xperia Z3+
- Kyocera Hydro Elite
- HTC Desire Eye
- Samsung Galaxy S5
- Samsung Galaxy S6 Active
And just in case you are curious, here is a video of everything that went on during this trip to the Bahamas!
AutoDash app optimizes your smartphone experience for the road

Unless you have purchased a new car with Android Auto (or an alternative infotainment system), chances are your driving experience is pretty limited in terms of connectivity. Of course, you could continue to use your phone the way you always do, but that creates a plethora of distractions that could result in an accident. We don’t want that happening, and neither do the guys at Automatic, so they made it their mission to create a dashboard app that really tackles the issues you care about.
Automatic’s in-house developers have created AutoDash, which pretty much customizes your experience for the road. It’s simple and intuitive. In essence, setting it up is pretty much like creating another one of your home screens. Except the UI will have your apps and widgets much more readily available. In addition, the app showcases a map on top, giving you a quick look at your current location and super easy navigation commands.
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There’s not much to it, but that’s what makes it great! The whole point here is to make your driving much safer and keep your eyes on the road as much as possible. But what good is this service if you are like me and keep forgetting to activate it whenever you hit the road? Automatic has thought of this, and this is why some of you will be able to have AutoDash automatically initiated once the car is turned on.
This feature will work with any car rocking a 2nd generation Automatic adapter. This handy tool gives you stats on your driving habits and car’s status. In addition, it offers plenty of services through its official app, AutoDash being the most recent one.

AutoDash will still work the same without Automatic’s $99.95 adapter, though. The only difference is you have to remember to activate the service every time you hop on the car. Just go ahead and hit the Google Play Store to download AutoDash and give it a try. It is free, so you have nothing to lose! And don’t forget to hit the comments and tell us what you think of it. Also, do you guys use any alternative services?
Google owns Alphabet…the full domain and all!
Mountain View surprised the world when it announced the creation of and restructuring into Alphabet, a holdings company of which Google is now but a part of. Indeed the name seemed both amusing and surprisingly logical, and as of last week it’s also official. Nonetheless, the mission doesn’t end there, as protecting vested interests are a vital component of modern online businesses.
Obviously abc.xyz was insufficient, as according to re/code, Google has fittingly purchased the domain for the entire alphabet. That is to say, www.abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz.com Sadly the link doesn’t actually go anywhere: according to a Google spokesman, “We realized we missed a few letters in abc.xyz, so we’re just being thorough.”
Fit as a fiddle for even Mary Poppins’ own supercalifragilistic kit and kaboodle, Alphabet has purchased the most appropriate domain ever: its own namesake.
It will be interesting to see what Google Alphabet does with the looooooong domain, though given that anyone who manually keys it in has 27 different chances to make a type-o, chances are it will just be a placeholder. Who knows though, sometimes even the most unassuming little detail can become an entire experience.
Dell’s latest XPS 12 looks like a Surface rival, feels like a step backward
We first reviewed the Dell XPS 12 back in 2012, when Windows 8 had just come out and touchscreens on PCs weren’t yet standard. It had a weird design, but it worked: a screen that flipped around inside its frame, allowing you to convert the 12-inch laptop into a 12-inch tablet. No, it wasn’t as versatile as the now-ubiquitous Yoga, but it was a well-built, fast machine that could serve multiple purposes, and whose comfortable keyboard made it a dream to use in regular notebook mode. Now Dell has re-released the XPS 12 with a new design — a 2-in-1 detachable that takes after the Surface Pro. Unfortunately, though, it’s a poor imitation, and ultimately feels like a step backward.Slideshow-326756
But first, the good news. For a starting price of $999, the XPS 12 comes with a keyboard dock in the box. And it’s an excellent keyboard too — I know because I tried it. The backlit buttons here are well-spaced and springy, with a pleasant soft-touch finish that feels great beneath the fingertips. Also, the display is a delight: 1080p resolution to start, with an optional 4K panel that Dell says meets 100 percent of the color gamut, depending on your screen brightness and what you’re looking at. Also, the tablet is easy to remove from its dock with one hand, although the magnetic connection otherwise seems strong.
That said, I see a few potential problems. One is that because the tablet uses a hingeless keyboard dock instead of a kickstand, the screen angle is not adjustable the way it is on the Surface and other 2-in-1s. What’s more, because of that fixed angle, it isn’t possible to insert the screen facing away from the keyboard, the way you can on other convertibles, and like you could on the old XPS 12. We might be more forgiving if the 12 was primarily meant to be used as a tablet, but a Dell spokesperson actually described it to me as a “laptop first.” To not have an adjustable screen immediately puts it at a disadvantage against proper notebooks, especially when it comes to using it in one’s lap.
Problem number two: In the interest of making the device as lightweight as possible (2.8 pounds, or 1.75 pounds for the tablet only), Dell went with one of Intel’s lower-powered Core M processors this time instead of something from Intel’s Core i3/i5/i7 family. As we’ve seen already in our own testing, Core M takes a performance hit, but doesn’t offer significantly better battery life in exchange. To be fair, HP also this week announced a skinny Surface-like 2-in-1 with a Core M chip, and the base-model Surface Pro 4 will have an even slower Core M chip plus half the RAM. So it’s not like Dell is the only one compromising on performance. But because the XPS 12 used to have more robust Core chips — and fast performance to go with it — this feels like a move in the wrong direction.

Problem number three: The XPS 12’s pressure-sensitive pen doesn’t actually come in the box, the way it does on the Surface and other rival devices. But that’s not nearly as outrageous as the Surface being sold without a keyboard.
The XPS 12 ships in November starting at $999, keyboard included. For that price, you get a Core m5 CPU, 8GB of RAM, 128GB of storage and a 1080p screen. There will also be a $1,299 configuration that steps up to a 256GB SSD and that 4K screen I mentioned. Either way, the processor and memory allotment is the same.Slideshow-326761
Dell’s redesigned XPS 15 is a bigger version of our favorite Windows laptop
Whenever people ask what my favorite Windows laptop is, I’m always quick to say the Dell XPS 13. It has very few flaws to speak of, with a stylish design, comfy keyboard, vibrant screen and fast performance. It’s no surprise, then, that when Dell got to work redesigning the bigger XPS 15, it rebuilt it in the 13’s image. The updated notebook, which goes on sale today, inherits many of the features we loved in its smaller sibling, including a carbon fiber weave and a nearly bezel-less display that allows the notebook to have a compact footprint. All told, the 15’s weight starts at 3.9 pounds, with Dell claiming that it’s the world’s smallest 15-inch laptop and the lightest “performance-class” machine of this size.Slideshow-326757
And performance-class it is indeed. In fact, the XPS 15 was always intended to be a machine creative pros could use to get work done. It still is, at least if you shell out for one of the higher-specced models. At its best, it has a color-accurate 4K screen, quad-core sixth-generation Core i7 CPU, 16GB of RAM, a 2GB NVIDIA 960M GPU and either a 1TB hard drive or a 1TB PCIe SSD. Battery life is rated at up to 17 hours, but that’s if you get a model with the 1,920 x 1,080 display, SSD and the larger 84WHr battery (instead of the 56WHr option). Even with a tricked-out 4K configuration, though, Dell is promising around 11 hours on a charge.
All told, it should give Windows users a solid alternative to the 15-inch Retina display MacBook Pro. Some might also argue it competes with Microsoft’s just-announced Surface Book. And it does, at least in terms of performance: The 13.5-inch Surface weighs a similar 3.48 pounds, and will also be offered with an NVIDIA GPU, up to 16GB of RAM and a comparably high-res display. At their best, then, they cater to a similar user, offering similar specs in a similar price range. I would guess, though, that anyone who covets the Surface Book is taken with its distinctive hinge that allows users to flip the screen back into tablet mode or detach it altogether. The XPS 15 does none of that; it’s a traditional clamshell laptop with a fixed screen. If you want a convertible, Dell’s latest is not for you, and if you think Microsoft’s design feat is a gimmick, the Surface Book doesn’t have a leg up after all.

Wrapping up, Dell’s smaller XPS 13, the machine that inspired the new XPS 15’s look and feel, has also been refreshed. Nothing major, mind you: just fresh sixth-gen Intel Core processors and a bigger battery with runtime now rated at up to 18 hours on the lower-res 1080p model. It will now also be sold with more RAM and storage options, including a 16GB upgrade and a 1TB PCIe SSD.
Both the updated XPS 13 and the new XPS 15 are available today, with the 13 starting at $799 and the 15 starting at $999. Just keep in mind that in the case of the 15 in particular, that starting price includes modest specs, including a Core i3 processor, 500GB hard drive, integrated graphics and a relatively lower-res 1080p non-touch screen. For discrete graphics, you can expect to pay at least $1,199, with 4K models starting at a lofty $1,599.Slideshow-326758
PlayStation 4 drops to $350 in the US
Sony is cutting the base price of its PlayStation 4 from $399.99 to $349.99 including a game. The drop has been heavily rumored following a similar cut in Japan last month. The new prices come into force tomorrow with the release of Uncharted: The Nathan Drake Collection, as you’ll be able to pick up a PS4 bundled with the game. Following that, the next scheduled $349.99 bundle drops in mid-November with Star Wars Battlefront. The cut also applies in Canada with prices starting from CAD429.99, as the chart below illustrates.
Here’s a cheat sheet for the new PS4 prices in the North America starting tomorrow 😀 http://t.co/lNEeKf8eOB pic.twitter.com/5y0kGtNibn
— Shuhei Yoshida (@yosp) October 8, 2015
Source: Sony
Facebook tests ‘Reactions,’ a Like button with more emotions
How you “like” things on Facebook is about to change. Engadget has learned that the site is about to launch a “Reactions” feature that expresses multiple emotions, instead of the long-serving, lonely “like” (and long rumoured “dislike“). Our sources advise that Facebook will start testing the feature on users in Ireland and Spain as soon as tomorrow (Friday).
The change is just another way to express your feelings about what friends or family post, but a welcome one, given that not everything shared on the social network is appropriate for a “like”. This means even life’s less glossy moments can finally have a more suitable response. Good old like remains, of course, but along with icons that show love, laughter, cheeky smiles, shock anger and, well, we’re sure there’ll be an extensive/ever growing list of options. The new reactions will apply to user posts and those from “pages” alike, with a breakdown of which responses each missive received. Although in Ad Manager, all reactions will still be considered as a “like” for now.
There are no details about when this might start showing up in other regions, but Facebook is well known for testing new features on smaller sections of its audience before rolling them out wholesale.

Via: Engadget (Spanish)
Sony’s working on a stability update for the Xperia E4 and E4 Dual
If you’re the proud owner of either an Xperia E4 or E4 Dual, you may want to pin your ears back as we have some pretty exciting news to impart to you. Sony is in the final stages of testing a long-awaited stability update for the handset, which should start rolling out later this month.
Sadly, we don’t have a comprehensive changelog for the upgrade, but it should include a fix for the overheating issue many customers have been complaining about recently and a patch for the ever-so-scary Stagefright security vulnerability.
Stay tuned for more information.
Source: Xperia Blog
Come comment on this article: Sony’s working on a stability update for the Xperia E4 and E4 Dual
Carrying the new Nexus: Japan’s local telecoms will sell them, too

In the world at large, the new Nexi are only being sold directly through Google for the time being. In North America in particular, some have suggested this may be a strategic move to increase Project Fi usage. In Japan however, there is a very different situation going on, as here we are given no less than four formal options: one the direct through-Google approach, and the other three via local telecoms, though unfortunately no one carrier will sell both devices.
While the Google Store was the first to offer them up for pre-order after the launch event went live last week, carrier NTT docomo subsequently announced its new lineup and included the Nexus 5X among it. Only the 32GB storage configuration will be sold:
NTT docomo’s Nexus 5X product preview page.
Just a little over two hours ago, Softbank announced the Nexus 6P, as part of its new Fall 2015/Winter 2016 line-up. This makes the carrier – which currently owns Sprint – the only one in Japan to offer the device. Interestingly enough the Gold color variant is available for pre-order, however only in a 64GB storage configuration.
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- Softbank’s Nexus 6P preview page.
- Softbank’s Nexus 6P product page
Pricing is currently unknown for the phablet, however it will likely cost the same as through Google if not more so given the fees associated with carriers, such as one to change devices or to sign a new contract. Given that Softbank is not offering the full range of storage options for all the the Nexus 6P variants, it is also too early to make a definitive conclusion as to if Google itself will offer the Gold variant in either 32GB or 128GB configurations. Softbank meanwhile, will not offer any of the colors in 128GB.
Google Japan’s portal for the Nexus 6P Special Edition does not detail any storage configurations or pricing information.
Y!mobile, which is owned by Softbank, has also updated its website to reflect a refreshed product line-up. Included is the Nexus 5X:
Y!Mobile’s Nexus 5X preview page.
Interestingly enough, whereas NTT docomo is only offering the 5X in either Quartz or Carbon color options, Y!mobile will sell the Ice variant as well. Pricing is currently unknown with a vague “end of October” release date given.
Why Japan? Why?
Suffice to say why it is Japan stands as the only country-to-date with carriers offering Google’s latest Nexus devices is a curious consideration at best. Four possible theories can be suggested:
- In light of Samsung’s apparent decision not to release either the Galaxy Note 5 or the Galaxy S6 Edge+ in Japan, carriers have a proverbial hole in their new Android line-ups.
- The devices are quite expensive overseas, and given the lack of Google-provided financing options here, carriers may be seen as a major way to ease the financial burden.
- The whole “SIM free” issue may be still rather new and unfamiliar to many customers in Japan, thus inherently limiting the potential of Google’s new products.
- The Nexus 6, which was sold by Y!mobile last year, may have done relatively well, prompting either Google or carriers themselves to express an interest in selling this year’s offerings.
Whatever the case may be, the fact that customers in Japan will have multiple options to purchase the new pair of Nexus devices is definitely a good thing. Google may have its own reasons for not currently offering them through carriers in the USA, though at the very least Japan’s curious case means things could change down the line, or that other countries may also offer them through alternative sales channels as well.
Wrap up
With these new announcements comes some major excitement for customers living here in the Land of the Rising Sun, but also brings some interesting questions as well: just how much will the devices cost? When will they be available exactly? And, perhaps the most important one for some: which of the three carriers, if any, will lock-down the devices to their own network? Only time will tell.
Perhaps the larger issue though, is just what will happen overseas: Will the Nexus devices be announced in new markets and/or through carriers in addition to Google’s own store? It will be very interesting to see what unfolds from this perspective.
We want to hear your thoughts on this story! Would you prefer carriers in your country to offer the Nexus devices as well? Is buying from Google best? Leave us a comment below!
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Android founder says next major wave of computing will be AI
In a talk at Code/Mobile, Android founder Andy Rubin said that he believes the next major wave of computing will be in the realm of artificial intelligence. Rubin, who left Google to start a hardware startup incubator called Playground, said that after spending some time in robotics at Google, he believes the next big frontier is in devices that don’t have screens like traffic lights or your dishwasher. “Robotics and automation are going to permeate our lives,” he said, adding that intelligence from the cloud will be the new thing. Seeing as Playground has invested in companies like castAR, which makes projected augmented reality glasses, and Connected Yard, which provides detailed chemical analysis of swimming pools, it appears he’s putting his money where his mouth is.
Of course, he hasn’t forgotten about mobile either. Indeed, he’s particularly proud that his team at Google decided to make Android an open operating system and didn’t put any restriction on screen sizes, because that allowed for greater consumer choice (he isn’t a fan of the word “fragmentation” because it has a negative connotation). Now, in a world where Android and iOS are the two major phone operating systems, he says there’s a danger in sticking to a duopoly especially if their announcements are parallel and are in lockstep.
“The worst thing that could happen from a product perspective would be slowing down innovation,” he said. He did add that he thinks Windows 10 is doing a fine job — “They’ve been phenomenal in changing user perception” — and praises Microsoft’s willingness to have Office products on Android and iOS as well, because it shows the company is open-minded.
Lastly, he thinks a huge innovation in the past decade is that US carriers no longer have the stranglehold on consumers as they once did. Before, 2-year contracts were practically mandatory if you wanted to be able to afford a phone. Now, with payments plans like T-Mobile’s Jump, AT&T’s Next and now Apple’s own upgrade plan, you can get an unlocked phone relatively affordably. This, he says, makes US closer to China, where 80 percent of the phones sold are in the open market. “This is the biggest change in the last 10 years in mobile,” he said. “It’s huge.”
“I’m an optimist on technology,” he said about the future of mobile and consumer choice. “I think there’s unsatisfied consumer desire and it needs to be satisfied.”
















