Outlook on iOS and Android gets a facelift from the Sunrise team
Microsoft’s Outlook mobile apps got a solid revamp last year, thanks to its acquisition of the email app Acompli. Now, it’s ready to integrate the spoils of another mobile acquisition: the calendar app Sunrise. The latest versions of the Outlook apps, launching on iOS today and Android in November, feature several design updates that would be familiar to Sunrise users. The calendar portion of the app now has a daily view that puts all of your activities in an easily scrollable list, and event entries now display their relevant information more clearly. On the email side of things, event invites are highlighted in your inbox, and you can even RSVP to them without opening up the message. For most users, these sorts of changes will be subtle experience upgrades, but it’s nice to see Microsoft integrate some of the design elements that made people fans of Sunrise. The new app also makes it clear what Microsoft is trying to do with Outlook on mobile: Bring all of the best design decisions from disparate apps into a single location. (One email app to rule them all, yadda yadda…)
Source: Microsoft
The Altwork Station is an expensive marvel of desk engineering

Standing desks are all the rage in modern offices these days, thanks in large part to plenty of research that claims sitting all day is detrimental to your long-term health. And you can spend a lot of money finding the right one — take the just-announced Altwork Station that goes up for pre-order today for $3,900. It’s a tremendous amount of money, but the Altwork Station is far more than your average adjustable standing desk. It’s a somewhat crazy but intriguing vision for giving users a totally customizable workstation, whether you want to sit, stand or even recline, and there’s some very impressive engineering behind all this. As a product for the average consumer, it might not make sense — but that doesn’t detract from the five years of work that went into the Altwork Station.
Source: Altwork
6 high-tech bikes that bring cycling to a new level
By Cat DiStasio
For cyclists who want to go farther, ride faster, and look cooler doing it, there are a lot of options on the market when it comes to high-end bikes. This week we’re gawking over a few of the world’s most technologically enhanced cycles. Some are electric hybrids, some transform for better ergonomics and some take the notion of a bicycle and darn-near throw it out the window. From the innovative to the chic to the out-of-this-world, here are six of the world’s most incredible (and expensive) rides on two wheels.Slideshow-335702
Android can record your mobile gaming sessions
Google doesn’t want YouTube Gaming to be populated solely with videos from consoles and PCs. It’s rolling out a feature in the Google Play Games app that lets you record 480p or 720p footage from any Android game that supports the Google Play framework. All you do is pick the game from the GPG app and start capturing — when you’re done, you can edit the clip before sending it YouTube’s way. You can have it record your on-camera reactions, too, if pure gameplay isn’t entertaining enough. Only US and UK gamers will have access to recording in the next few days, but more countries are coming “soon after.”
DisplayPort Standard with 8K Support for Notebooks and All-in-Ones Heading for Mid-2016 Launch
The Video Electronics Standards Association (VESA) yesterday announced that it has officially published the Embedded DisplayPort (eDP) Standard version 1.4b, which brings the previous 1.4a iteration into the final stages of production-ready status for future notebook and all-in-one desktop displays. This final revision of the eDP 1.4 standard includes a few “key protocol refinements and clarifications” to ensure ease-of-integration for partners supporting it and an overall lower bill of materials costs to its implementation.
The eDP 1.4 standard was announced two years ago, with an improved eDP 1.4a standard arriving earlier this year setting the stage for future 8K support on notebooks and all-in-one desktop computers.
The association promises that GPUs and CPUs that run the DisplayPort 1.3 standard for external display connectivity with 5K support will also be able to eDP 1.4b for internal uses. DisplayPort 1.3 support is, however, still only in the early stages, with Intel’s latest Skylake chips not including it.

According to Bill Lempesis, executive director at VESA, “Since its introduction in 2008, eDP has become a central system element within the mobile computing market space. The standard has continued to retain its lead in display performance, supporting embedded panels with resolutions as high as 8K. We look forward to seeing systems incorporating the finalized standard come to fruition next year, broadening the number of consumers receiving clear, crisp visual information delivered by eDP 1.4 on their laptops, tablets, all-in-one PCs and possibly even smart phones.”
Apple’s current 27-inch Retina iMac line-up uses its 5K Retina display to come in at 5120 x 2880 pixels, while the new eDP 1.4b standard could introduce an 8K monitor with a 7680 x 4320 display. The catch with the possibility of 8K is that it’s still far from being widely supported, with only a select few high-end television sets backing the ultra high-def standard. Apple itself just launched a new line of 4K 21-inch and 5K 27-inch iMacs, so 8K support from the Cupertino company is still a ways off as well.
VESA notes that while it positions eDP 1.4b as the standard for the future, current machines are just beginning to integrate with eDP 1.3 and even earlier. Still, the association predicts a mid-2016 incorporation for the first system displays with 8K support, “and the final standard should continue to increase in adoption and be used in production for several years.”
Phil Schiller Discusses Retina MacBook, Apple’s ‘Intense Collaboration’
Apple marketing chief Phil Schiller recently met with Mashable editor-at-large Lance Ulanoff for a rare interview, discussing topics ranging from the new 12-inch MacBook to Apple’s “intense collaboration” that makes such products possible.

Schiller emphasized how Apple’s process from product conception to production has greatly changed over the past few decades, as a result of “intense collaboration” between industrial design and engineering teams within the company.
“From the beginning, the Mac has been about Apple taking responsibility for the whole thing: hardware, software, how applications can work and, increasingly, Internet services. But that means something different today than it did 20 years ago,” Schiller said.
“Today, those teams are not only integrated and designing something together, they’re actually thinking of features that could only exist because of that integration and solving problems that could only be solved because of that unique advantage.”
The interview provides a closer look at the new 12-inch MacBook, ranging from its ultra-small logic board to “speaktenna” combined speaker and antenna design, as an example of what’s possible because of Apple’s collaboration.

Some like to call it the “Speaktenna.” The black strip along the back edge of the MacBook speakers is a never-before-tried combination of speakers and antennas for Wi-Fi and Bluetooth. It’s a fairly ingenious bit of space-saving technology that teardown artists ignored. […]
In the case of the speaktenna, Apple engineers did everything in their power to fit the maximum amount of technology possible into the tiny anodized aluminum chassis. This included creating new battery chemistry and forms to support a terraced battery design that marries perfectly with matching cutouts in the chassis. There’s even a deeper level of terracing cutouts in the body that aren’t for more battery power, but to cut down on the overall system weight.
Mashable‘s in-depth profile of Schiller goes into more detail about the 12-inch MacBook’s design process, how collaboration will continue at Apple’s upcoming Campus 2, the continued growth of Mac in a declining PC market and more.
Apple Stores to Start Selling Apple TV on Friday
Apple began accepting pre-orders for the Apple TV on Monday morning, but has not yet announced when the device will be available for purchase in its retail stores. Apple Retail employees that have spoken to 9to5Mac have shed some light on when we might see the new set-top box, however, suggesting it will be in stores on Friday, October 30.
Apple retail locations are set to receive shipments at the end of the week, with Apple Stores being reconfigured overnight on Thursday to focus on promoting the new Apple TV.

Friday is also the first day when pre-order customers who selected one day shipping will begin receiving their Apple TV orders. Some Apple TVs have already begun preparing for shipment and will be shipping out very soon. Best Buy is also accepting pre-orders for the new Apple TV, but isn’t allowing for in-store pickup until November 4.
The new Apple TV is available in 32 and 64GB configurations, with prices at $149 and $199, respectively. The device includes an A8 processor, a touch-based remote control that doubles as a game controller, a full App Store, universal search capabilities, and Siri integration.
Samsung finally makes the enormous Galaxy View official
Samsung has finally made the Galaxy View official, and it’s almost exactly what all of the initial rumors suggested it would be. There’s no groundbreaking hardware here, but if you’re the kind of person that just wants a big tablet to watch TV and movies on, this might just be the device for you.
The Samsung Galaxy View features an exceptionally large 18.4-inch 1080p display, making it the biggest Android device on the market, according to Samsung. The company opted for a standard 1080p resolution instead of the uber high resolutions we’ve seen on the Galaxy S flagships and the Galaxy Tab S line, but that was probably a move to keep costs down. Plus, most video content on the web is going to be 1080p, so that extra resolution would be wasted here.
Everything about this tablet is designed for watching video, including the long-lasting 5700 mAh battery, the software that puts content from different services front and center on your home screen, and the high quality stereo speakers. There’s also a kickstand built into the device so you can stand it up without having to buy any additional accessories. That’ll probably make buying a case down the line a bit of a pain, though.
Other hardware is pretty standard for a decent tablet, including 2 GB of RAM with 32 or 64 GB of storage. There’s a microSD card slot and all the standard radios you’d expect to find, including Bluetooth 4.1, WiFi connectivity, and the option to pick up an LTE-enabled version of the Galaxy View.
Overall, it looks like a pretty cool, but very niche, device that’ll appeal to a very specific set of users. Samsung hasn’t announced pricing yet, so we’ll see if that sinks the Galaxy View’s ship before it even makes it into the water.
source: Samsung Tomorrow
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Nissan’s Teatro for Dayz: A crazy name for a crazy car
It’s hard to stake a claim to silliest car concept at a show like the Tokyo Motor Show, but Nissan is probably, no definitely, the winner. What other car lets you play an RPG across almost the whole interior, or lets you splash the seats (and steering wheel) with grass, leopard skin, or adorably giant wooly patterns? There isn’t one. Teatro for Dayz is the free-spirited step-sister of Nissan’s serious, buttoned-down self-driving EV, and it’s Nissan’s hope that it’ll convince non-auto fans to, well, take an interest. Slideshow-335680
Source: Nissan
IBM is buying The Weather Company’s tech to integrate with Watson
IBM’s Watson AI has been a Jeopardy champion and a very creative chef, next up, Watson the weather man. Well, sort of. IBM just announced that it plans to acquire The Weather Company’s products and technology, which includes Weather.com and The Weather Underground, all of which will serve as the backbone of the new Watson Internet of Things unit. The Weather Channel isn’t part of the deal, but it will license data and analytics from IBM. While weather is the key word with this acquisition, the real driving force behind it is data — and lots of it. The Weather Company’s mobile apps are the fourth-most popular in the US, processing 26 billion requests daily, according to IBM. That gives Watson, and IBM’s other cloud services, a rich library of data to analyze and process. The Weather Company also built up a large platform to handle all of that juicy information, which IBM will be able to take advantage of.
Source: MarketWatch








