Badland 2 is coming soon to Android
It’s been a little over two years since the Finland-based developer Frogmind brought its extremely popular Badland game to the Google Play Store, and now it looks like we’re getting a sequel sometime very soon. Badland 2 just launched on iOS a few days ago, which means a release on Android is imminent. According to a few responses on the developer’s various social networking pages, Frogmind is working hard on the Android release, and it should be on its way soon.
So what does Badland 2 bring to the table? It’ll likely be very similar to the original Badland. You’ll still get to control the cute little forest dwellers on a mission to find out what’s happened to their home. You’ll run into various traps and obstacles along the way, too. Even though this may not be the description that’ll be posted on the Play Store, take a look at the official description for Badland 2 on the Appstore:
Witness the award-winning world of BADLAND in even more stunning beauty with levels that extend and scroll to all directions. Survive through new elements such as liquids, flamethrowers, frost, magma, water and volumetric burning light. Fall down deadly rifts, fly to any direction and race & jump along the surfaces as a rolling character on your way to safety. Challenge your friends and strangers in constantly updating global online events. Race against their best performances and rise in the global rankings.
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Basically we can expect a title that’s very similar to the original, and that’s not a bad thing in the slightest. Badland is still one of my favorite games that’s ever launched on Android, and I can’t wait to see what Badland 2 has to offer.
We’re not sure of a specific release date at this time, but we imagine it won’t be too far off. Are you excited to play Badland 2?
Download Badland from Google Play
Next: 70 best Android games
DJI’s first store is a drone paradise

To mark its status as an $8 billion company, drone-maker DJI has just opened its first flagship store in China. The dramatic 8,600 square foot glass-and-metal building is located on the harbor in DJI’s home town of Shenzhen, and features a theater, lounge and high-ceiling test area. Naturally, the company has display area for its various drones, including the Phantom 3, Inspire 1 and Matrice 100, and will also demo its Ronin handheld gimbal and 4K Osmo camera. If you’re hoping to fly one yourself, however, DJI’s own pilots — not the public — will take the controls. Slideshow-350037
With $500 million in reported sales in 2014, DJI sits at the top of an industry that shows no signs of slowing down. Now that the US FAA has opened up drones more for industry, DJI has launched a pesticide-spraying model along with a FLIR infrared camera. We may see commercial drone deliveries arriving soon as well, though many folks see that as unrealistic. At any rate, DJI has built the ultimate shrine for the flying robots, so you can visit it if you happen to be in Shenzhen — you might want to bring earplugs, though.
Pirate Bay co-founder builds a perpetual piracy machine

Pirate Pay co-founder Peter Sunde has created a device that’ll duplicate a single MP3 in perpetuity, as long as it’s plugged in. Sunde, who spent five months in jail for his involvement with the torrenting site, has built Kopimashin, a Raspberry Pi with a screen that creates 100 copies of Crazy by Gnarls Barkley every second. As well as the number of duplications, the gadget also records the theoretical loss that’s been incurred by the record labels as a consequence. The device itself doesn’t save its efforts, it just wipes them after duplication, but Sunde is hoping to prove the point that digital copies do not have any inherent value.
https://player.vimeo.com/video/148955816
KH000//Kopimashin from Peter on Vimeo.
In an interview with TorrentFreak, Sunde explains that the device was created for Konsthack, a Swedish art exhibit covering the digital space. He intends to create more to show elsewhere, and even sell a few to help earn some cash which might go on paying back the millions in fees he still owes to the content industry. Sunde believes that the record labels aren’t expecting him to pay back the cash he’s on the hook for, but instead it’s “to scare people into silence and obedience.” “I want to show the absurdity on the process of putting a value to a copy,” he added, although we’re sure that the folks from Warner Bros. would have an army of lawyers ready to argue that point in a heartbeat.
Via: Motherboard
Source: Konsthack, TorrentFreak
Boingo’s faster airport WiFi makes you feel more at home

Many airports have WiFi, but that doesn’t mean it’s good WiFi — just ask anyone who’s tried to stream video or upload photos during a layover. However, Boingo thinks it can help. It’s launching a tiered system that includes both a free basic tier and a speedier paid tier. The company is hyperbolic when it claims that the 20Mbps offering is “blazing-fast,” but it’s good enough that you could get some serious work done (or goof off like at home) before your boarding call. And of course, the free tier is a big deal as well — gone are the days of Boingo-only terminals where you have to fork over a credit card just to check your email.
At the moment, the big catch is simply availability. The faster service is currently available in just a handful of airports serving Baltimore, Boston, Chicago and New York City. Don’t count on watching 1080p Netflix movies while you’re traveling this holiday, then. Eventually, though, you may not have to suffer with a barely usable connection when you’re stuck waiting for hours on end.
[Image credit: Robert Alexander/Getty Images]
Source: Boingo (BusinessWire)
Apple and Ericsson Settle Litigation With Global Patent License Agreement
Ericsson announced today that it has reached a seven-year global patent cross licensing agreement with Apple for standard-essential technologies, including GSM, UMTS and LTE cellular standards, thereby settling all litigation between the two technology companies.
Apple will make an upfront payment to Ericsson and continue paying royalties on an ongoing basis. The terms of the agreement are confidential, but investment bank ABG Sundal Collier believes Apple could be charged around 0.5% of iPhone and iPad revenue, per Reuters.
The licensing agreement applies to several technology areas, including 5G development, video network traffic management and wireless network optimization, and grants certain other undisclosed patent rights. The deal ends all litigation before the U.S. International Trade Commission, U.S. District Courts and European courts.
“We are pleased with this new agreement with Apple, which clears the way for both companies to continue to focus on bringing new technology to the global market, and opens up for more joint business opportunities in the future,” said Kasim Alfalahi, Chief Intellectual Property Officer at Ericsson.
Apple originally filed suit against Ericsson in January 2015, arguing that it was demanding excessive royalties for patents not essential to LTE standards. Ericsson countersued in a Texas courtroom just hours later, seeking an estimated $250 to $750 million in annual royalties for Apple to continue licensing its patented wireless technologies. Apple declined to honor those demands.
Ericsson subsequently sued Apple again in February 2015 for allegedly infringing 41 wireless-related patents that it believed to be critical to the functionality of products such as the iPhone and iPad. At the time, Ericsson filed two complaints with the U.S. ITC in an effort to secure a U.S. sales ban on infringing products, in addition to filing seven complaints with the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas.
The U.S. ITC agreed to launch an investigation into the Apple-Ericsson patent infringement claims in March 2015, and Ericsson extended the lawsuit to Germany, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom in May 2015, but today’s agreement precedes any courtroom rulings.
Ericsson is the world’s largest provider of mobile network equipment and holds over 35,000 patents related to 2G, 3G and 4G wireless technologies. Ericsson’s cellular technology patents are considered essential and are subject to fair, reasonable, and non-discriminatory terms (FRAND).
Apple’s previous licensing deal with Ericsson signed in 2008 expired in January 2015.
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LG will show off a vacuum with augmented reality features at CES 2016, for some reason
You know what would make vacuum cleaners cooler? Augmented reality. That’s what LG thinks, anyway, as they’ll be showing off a new version of their Cordzero vacuum at CES 2016 that has some AR features baked in, called the Home-Bot Turbo+. Yep.
It’s not quite as dumb as it sounds, as the vacuum will be able to take orders from someone with a smartphone in a new feature called Home-Joy. You’ll simply point towards which areas need cleaning with your smartphone camera, and voila; the Home-Bot vacuum will go clean that specific area.
Thanks to several cameras on the vacuum, it will also record where it has and hasn’t cleaned. The cameras onboard are also used for some security features, including Home-View, which allows you to stream live video of its cameras to your smartphone, and Home-Guard, which sends a photo of your house to your smartphone whenever the device detects movement. It’s officially the most talented vacuum cleaner in the world.
If you’re interested in Skynet’s first home appliance LG’s ridiculously fancy vacuum cleaner, you’ll be able to see more of it at CES in a few months.
source: LG
Come comment on this article: LG will show off a vacuum with augmented reality features at CES 2016, for some reason
A video game journey through America’s original remix culture

Long after Deadmau5 finished his closing set at The Game Awards, one new trailer stayed with me. It was understated and soothing, featuring a hand-painted desert landscape, a rolling train and a hint of fantasy, all backed by a melancholic American folk song. It was a teaser for Where the Water Tastes Like Wine from Dim Bulb Games. I noticed the trailer because of its visuals, but I remembered it because of the song.
“[Music is] a form of art that has amazing appeal and power, and its impact is huge,” Dim Bulb founder Johnnemann Nordhagen tells me. “Look at any group of music fans and watch how passionate they are. … In the context of a game, especially a game like this, music helps set the tone for the world and the experience, bringing players to a particular time and place and mood.”
The music behind Where the Water Tastes Like Wine mirrors the game itself. Players embark on a journey across dusty American landscapes, meeting strangers, hearing stories and telling their own tales. It’s a throwback to the classic “American road” story, like John Steinbeck’s The Grapes of Wrath or Jack Kerouac’s On the Road, but with interactive twists.
This hits at the heart of American folk music, which started with travelers sharing stories and adding their own lyrics or musicality to a song, until it became the story of a place, an era or a people. Some may recognize the lyrics, “where the water tastes like wine,” from a Woodstock-era song by Canned Heat, but the roots of that line travel far deeper than 1969.
“The title comes from a song, but really it comes from a whole tradition of songs,” Nordhagen says. “The earliest known version of the song was recorded in 1924, and doesn’t include the ‘where the water tastes like wine’ lyric. Other musicians added that later, as they took the song and changed it or molded it into new forms. And that’s one of the major themes of the game — this history of folk culture, of sharing ideas and adding your own take. It’s hard to understand, in our current copyright regime, what sharing music and stories used to look like.”
The game’s composer, Ryan Ike, understands American folk music just fine. He was hesitant to dive into the genre at first, since it was new for him, but the more he learned about folk, the more comfortable he became.
“I think the reason I’m not super intimidated is because this style of music has always been about including people,” Ike says. “When blues and roots stuff started, it was a response to what was mainstream at the time. When people felt musically displaced or alone, these were the styles of music they turned to. Anyone could pick up an instrument and join in, and if you didn’t have one, humming or clapping was totally cool, too. That’s what I love about it; I feel like it’s very personal, but also very welcoming, unlike a lot of other genres that are a bit more exclusive.”
Where the Water Tastes Like Wine is a game about the American Dream, the centuries-old mythos that if you work hard in the United States, you can live well and fulfill your life’s passions. However, Nordhagen says, that dream is drenched in violence and packed with caveats. Alongside Kerouac and Steinbeck, Nordhagen notes Hunter S. Thompson’s Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas and Fear and Loathing on the Campaign Trail ’72 as inspirations for the game.

“There were lots and lots of folks throughout American history who didn’t have access to that dream, or whose dreams were simply to rise out of the oppression that America created,” he says. “And we’re bad at acknowledging that our dreams impact others — that the entire formation of the United States as a country was built on wiping out the previous inhabitants of this land. Manifest Destiny was all about pushing that domination further, and for centuries the whole country was supported on the back of slave labor, and still exists on a foundation of oppression.”
Where the Water Tastes Like Wine emerges from a broad pool of inspiration, stretching from post-Revolutionary America to the 1970s Las Vegas strip. Folk music is the bow tying these disparate eras together.
The soundtrack helps tell the game’s story, pulling in lyrics about historical events, as in murder ballads or protest songs. And, folk music doesn’t stray far from folklore — in the trailer shown just before The Game Awards, a lonely man sitting in front of a campfire transforms into a giant bird. These mystical, magical aspects are also entrenched in the game and its music.

To get the sound right in Where the Water Tastes Like Wine, Ike pressed Nordhagen for every detail about the game that he could. Then, he studied the American folk genre itself, from African-American spirituals of the 1800s, to modern groups like The Wild Reeds. He also listened closely to other game composers who delved into folk, including Bastion‘s Darren Korb and BioShock Infinite‘s Garry Schyman.
“Folk music changes throughout time on a really personal level,” Ike says. “One performer tries something new, another one hears that and iterates on it. A third person might take that idea and put it in a new context and so on. I want the soundtrack for this game to do the same thing.”
Man sues Bethesda over his ‘Fallout 4’ addiction

There’s little doubt that Fallout 4‘s gameplay is involving when you can spend dozens of hours on the main storyline alone. However, one Russian man is convinced that it’s too involving. RT says that he’s suing Bethesda for 500,000 rubles ($7,030) for failing to warn that Fallout 4 would “become so addictive.” Supposedly, the man went on a 3-week gaming marathon that cost him his health, job and wife. Had he known how alluring it was, he says, he would have either waited until the holidays to buy the game or avoided it entirely. We’ve reached out to Bethesda to both confirm the lawsuit and get its take on the claims.
There is a history of these cases, and they can even be successful: one American got compensation from NCSoft after he got hooked on Lineage II. There’s also evidence to suggest that certain kinds of gameplay can promote addictive behavior. With that said, there are many Fallout 4 players who’ve played extensively without ruining their personal and professional lives. This man will have to convince the court that he was genuinely addicted, not just lacking in self-discipline.
Via: VentureBeat
Source: RT
BT’s Ultra HD box can now stream Netflix in 4K

BT beat its UK TV rivals to the punch earlier this year, launching an Ultra HD channel and a 4K set-top box to watch it on. After turkey, all the trimmings and one too many sherbets, though, it’s unlikely whatever sports-related programming BT’s showing will entertain every member of the extended family, even if it is in jaw-dropping definition. Well not to worry, because just in time for Christmas, you can now watch Netflix’s 4K catalogue on BT’s Ultra HD box.
Today’s announcement from BT and YouView is hardly out of the blue, as enabling 4K streaming on the existing Netflix app has been in the works for at least several months. It’s not just good news for videophiles, but for Netflix too, since you’ll need the top-tier £9 per month subscription to get at its Ultra HD TV shows and documentaries. There isn’t the greatest variety of 4K content available on the streaming service yet, but nothing says Christmas like binge-watching Breaking Bad, right? Anyway, just remember not to give the Netflix socks to anyone that’s had a second helping of pud.
[Deal] You don’t want to miss this deal for the Nexus 6
Early on Black Friday, Motorola surprised everyone with an incredible sale where you get the 32GB Nexus 6 for only $250. Well that deal is back on and you can head over to Amazon and grab the 32GB Nexus 6 in either Cloud White or Midnight Blue.
The Nexus 6 has seen quite a fluctuation in pricing even before the release of this years Nexus devices, the Huawei Nexus 6P and the LG Nexus 5X. However, at $250 for a brand new device, this is by far the best deal we’ve seen for the Nexus 6.
You’ll want to act fast because at the time of this writing the 64GB variants have already sold out, but both the Cloud White and Midnight Blue are still available in 32GB. If you want a device to test drive Marshmallow and all the new features coming out for Android, but you don’t want to break the bank, then this is a deal you simply cannot pass up on.
With its 6″ display, huge 3220mAh battery, and timely updates, the Nexus 6 is still the perfect device for that Android lover that you know. We can also count on the Nexus 6 having continued support from the rooting community, even after the updates from Google stop rolling in.
It’s also worth noting that this deal is for the Unlocked variant of the Nexus 6, meaning that it will work on any GSM carrier, and will even work with those on Verizon. Additionally, this deal comes with a one year warranty directly from Motorola, so you’ll have some help if you have any issues with your device.
Drop us a line and let us know whether you were able to jump on this great deal, or if you were able to grab one during the last round of price cuts.
Amazon: Motorola Nexus 6
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