VR is better when virtual objects feel real

For all the amazing experiences virtual reality enables (the illusion of flight, the exhaustion of exercise and even the emotional fatigue of trauma), it still has one major flaw: Virtual objects are intangible and have no physicality. If you want to walk through a wall, the game can’t stop you. If you try to lean on a table, you’ll probably fall down. It’s a limitation of first-generation VR technology I’d grown to accept — at least until I played Survios’ Raw Data, a game that tricked me into pretending its completely virtual objects were real.
In Raw Data, two players use an assortment of weapons to protect a shared VR play space from an oncoming horde of killer robots. At first blush, this feels a lot like any other motion-controlled first-person VR action game: aiming with virtual guns, fanatically shooting in all directions and generally feeling like an action hero while doing it — but when I swung the game’s laser sword at another blade, something weird happened. It stopped. And, despite there being absolutely no physical force present to stop me, my arms stopped too.

Stopping my arms felt natural, but I had no idea why I did it. By all rights, I should have followed through on the swing. I asked James Iliff, Survios’ co-founder and chief creative officer, for his thoughts as I pulled off my VR headset. “There’s this trigger mechanism in the brain about mimicry,” he told me. “Like, as kids we were playing around in the yard with sticks, or doing air guitar. We mimicked those actions. When a game gives you 100 percent feedback visually, auditorily and haptically that you’ve stopped, a lot of times the user will play along and they won’t even realize it.” In other words, the game feels more realistic if you pretend it’s real. When the swords stopped in game, clanged on impact and sent a sharp vibration to my motion controller, it was using visual, audio and haptic cues to coax me into playing make-believe.
The trick worked on me, but only because I decided to play along. Not everybody will follow the rules, Iliff told me. “We call it contextual physics feedback,” he said, explaining the system further. “The system decides, based on context, when not to enable physics feedback.” While this system encourages playing by the rules, it seems to favor keeping in-game action consistent with player movement over abiding by VR physics — if I had followed through on my slice, the swords would have slid past each other. “But if you do stop, it continues to play along with you,” Iliff reiterated. “That essentially gives you the sensation of real feedback.”

This contextual physics feedback system is one of the “big problems” Survios is trying to solve. Having collision that makes sense is essential to enabling the kind of social multiplayer Raw Data is built around. The team is also working on a contextual gaze system to simulate eye contact with other VR players, and a phonic detection system is poised to animate character mouths in tune with voice chat. To top it all off, Raw Data features a cinematic spectating system that broadcasts VR game play from “dynamically generated camera angles” to services like Twitch.
That, Iliff says, could be the key to helping the masses understand virtual reality. “If we can make this easy in all our apps, for users to broadcast to their friends … that’s the fastest way to get everybody talking about VR.”
Coming soon to Engadget: ‘On the Brink of Greatness’ with Steve Goldbloom
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International bon vivant and Silicon Valley playboy Steve Goldbloom explores the cut-throat world of startup culture in Engadget’s first (maybe only) mockumentary, On the Brink of Greatness. The 12-episode series debuts Thursday, February 18th, but you can see inside the mind of the best thing to happen to the tech industry since the Palm Pre in the trailer above.
Unlock your smartphone quick and easy with doctorSIM
Even folks who are not tech-savy may have heard about phone unlocking in some form or another. This is especially likely if you’ve questioned using your phone on an international trip. A locked phone isn’t a complicated concept; it is merely a result of carrier exclusivity. The U.S. carriers often tune phones for their own network’s specs, and part of that process is not allowing that phone to go any other carrier (hence the term “locked”).

But a locked phone can be unlocked and regain the freedom that it’s born with. It’s software-based. However, that may be a painful process to go through. Carriers don’t like when you leave them, so there may be hoops to jump through to get the phone-locking software disabled.
Fortunately, there is another way than pestering the carrier about it. DoctorSIM is a service created to git ‘r done as painlessly as possible. Let’s run through the process and see how easy it can be.
Easy as 1… 2… 3
DoctorSIM says that there’s three simple steps in its service to you to phone freedom.

Essentially, you give them your phone information and they do the background work to obtaining the unlock code. Getting that unlock code is the key. Once you have it, you simply type it into your phone and voila.
To start, tell doctorSIM the make of your phone, the country, and the carrier. It’s important to know that not every combination of phone make and carrier is gonna be a go. Particularly, CDMA carriers (Verizon and Sprint) don’t play the game well. I don’t even see that doctorSIM can do Sprint phone unlocking (I always get a “We are sorry, service not available at this time” message when I try).

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However, because Verizon does phones with “Global” GSM access these days, the service can be available for it. When you do get a suitable match, you’ll be presented with service options.
What’s the difference?
I was initially confused as to why there’s tiers to the service. Isn’t it you either unlock or don’t? Well, because the level of difficulty in obtaining the unlock code is situational, doctorSIM offers Standard and Premium services. Standard looks for the code locally and Premium looks for it on a worldwide scale (doctorSIM is a global company). It is very well possible that the local database can fail to turn up the code, so choosing the Premium service would give you higher success rate.
Generously, if you go with the Standard service and fail, doctorSIM will fully refund you. So it’s nice that you have nothing to lose. The Premium Express service is as implied, it searches for the unlock code worldwide and promises to get it to you much more quickly (if you’re in a hurry).
Once you decide on a service, you just have to tell doctorSIM what your phone’s IMEI is (your phone’s unique identifier number).

This is what doctorSIM needs to track down your specific phone’s unlock code. From here, submit your payment and doctorSIM will take it from there. You’ll be emailed the unlock code when it is retrieved.
Go Get It!
If you’re interested in freeing your phone to use on a different carrier, but don’t want to deal with the annoying process, you should check doctorSIM out (hit up the link below). Most of us like to keep using our device when we travel, so give unlocking a thought if utilizing an international carrier sounds really beneficial.
http://d2cxjzfpc4mlyb.cloudfront.net/unlock/new_main_200_us.html?pc=f2b1519e42ce8515f223c016fd6f8d03
Source: doctorSIM
The post Unlock your smartphone quick and easy with doctorSIM appeared first on AndroidGuys.
Sprint serves up $150 Unlimited 4-line family plan
Limited-time promotion is like having a fourth line for free
Sprint today introduced a new, limited-time deal for families of up to four users in need of lots of mobile data. Available starting from February 12, Sprint will offer a plan of four lines of service with unlimited talk, text, and data for $150 per month. Moreover, accounts also receive 3GB of mobile hotspot and Sprint Global Roaming with unlimited 2G data and text messaging in select countries.

Akin to getting the fourth line for free, the price of the plan is the same for three lines. Customers who want a two-line unlimited plan can do so for $120 per month. A single line option is $75 per month.
In addition to the new rate plan, Sprint has extended its 50% promotion aimed at luring AT&T, T-Mobile, and Verizon customers. The new expiration date is March 31.
The post Sprint serves up $150 Unlimited 4-line family plan appeared first on AndroidGuys.
[TA Deals] Get started with an essential JavaScript coding bundle
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The dark side of encryption is also the light side

Generally speaking, we typically think of encryption as a good thing. It protects our data even if our device is lost or stolen, keeps hackers out of our private information and arguably adds a bit of mobile peace of mind to our electronic lives. But a couple of recent events have uncovered the darker side of encryption, and the uphill battle it faces to become the norm.
See also: Study finds 87% of Android devices are insecure due to lack of security updates
The San Bernadino terrorist attack in California in late 2015 has recently been in the headlines again because the FBI is reportedly still unable to decrypt one of the attackers’ cell phones. FBI Director James Comey is once again using the failure to publicly deride encryption as a law-enforcement foil, claiming the encrypted data could reveal possible co-conspirators or explanations for the bag of home-made pipe bombs left behind by one of the attackers.
The FBI’s failure to decrypt terrorist communications, even after their capture or death, is becoming an increasingly high-profile political hot potato. As Comey stated, “encrypted cellphones and text messaging apps have made it harder for investigators and intelligence services to track suspected plots in real time, or trace locations and connections once they acquire a suspect’s device”.

While this is undoubtedly true, online commenters are claiming these incidents are just being used as highly-charged political pawns to get encryption banned. While Edward Snowden’s revelations back in 2013 demonstrated just how adept the NSA was at cracking online encryption, end-to-end encryption in messaging apps like Telegram and full disk encryption on devices are proving to be more difficult. And it’s not only the FBI that isn’t happy.
PRIVACY AND SECURITY IN ANDROID:
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When two state bills, one introduced by a Republican in New York and the other by a Democrat in California, showed identical wording recently, they very quickly got noticed. The bills aim to ban the sale of encrypted devices in both states, except for those that could be unlocked by the manufacturer, with hefty fines for OEMs that failed to comply. This is almost exactly what the FBI Director has been calling for.

In response, a new bi-partisan bill has been introduced in the House of Representatives that aims to smother the state-level bills in their cribs. The Ensuring National Constitutional Rights of Your Private Telecommunications Act of 2016 (or ENCRYPT) aims to override the state level bills, with its bi-partisan creators saying they are deeply concerned about the implications of enforcing a ban on the sale of encrypted devices in certain U.S. states.
Whether the state level bills – or another apparently in the Senate pipelines that sound a lot like them – are secretly being orchestrated by the NSA, FBI or CIA to assist in unmasking terrorist activities or are simply designed to maintain unfettered access in the pursuit of complete surveillance, we’re unlikely to ever find out. But it seems that for every opponent of encryption there is an equally strong champion.
Tech companies that have been courted by the government have steadfastly refused to provide back doors to their encryption. Deciding whether the prospect of tracking a fraction of nefarious actors warrants the exposure of an entire population is set to be a critical debate this year. One that is only going to intensify as high-profile incidents continue to be used as political punching bags, casting one side as in the public’s best interest when it perhaps is not and the other as protecting terrorists while it simultaneously protects the innocent.
The encryption debate is shaping up to a David and Goliath confrontation, with the American public on one side and the American government on the other, with the tech industry wedged firmly in the middle. The right to privacy versus the duty to protect. End-to-end encryption versus court ordered back doors. Online security versus national security. The lines are clear but neither side is backing down.
Which side do you fall on? Who do you think will win in the end?
Up next: AT&T CEO wants Silicon Valley to leave encryption regulation to politicians
Qualcomm unveils first gigabit LTE modem and three new mid-range SoCs

Qualcomm has had quite the busy day today. After unveiling its new Snapdragon Wear 2100 chipset built with Android Wear devices in mind, the company has now taken the wraps off four new products that are likely to make a splash in the mobile industry.
First, Qualcomm announced three new additions to the mid- and low-end Snapdragon lineup, the Snapdragon 625, 435 and 425. Unsurprisingly, the Snapdragon 625 is the highest-end out of the bunch. As the successor to the 617, the 625 features two quad-core clusters of Cortex A53’s and is clocked at 2GHz, up from its predecessor’s 1.5GHz clock speed. It also comes with an Adreno 506 graphics processor.
The Snapdragon 435 is next up on the list. This one replaces the Snapdragon 430, which was only unveiled a few months ago alongside the 617. The new 435 is an octa-core Cortex-A53 CPU and is the first in its class to integrate the X8 LTE modem, which supports 4G+, and 2x20MHz carrier aggregation for faster downlink and uplink LTE speeds. It’s clocked at 1.4GHz and comes with the Adreno 505 GPU. The Snapdragon 425 is a quad-core Cortex A53 CPU clocked at 1.4GHz and featuring an Adreno 308 GPU. This lower-end processor is aimed at replacing the Snapdragon 410 and 412.
For more detailed information on these three new SoCs, take a look at the press release in the source link below.
Qualcomm has also announced the mobile industry’s first Gigabit Class LTE modem, the Snapdragon X16 LTE. The X16 LTE modem is built on a 14nm FinFET process, and is designed to produce fiber-like LTE Category 16 download speeds of up to 1 Gbps, supporting up to 4x20MHz downlink across FDD and TDD spectrum with 256-QAM, and 2x20MHz uplink and 64-QAM for speeds up to 150Mbps. It’s important to note that the X16 LTE is ahead of its time, and the mobile network providers we have today don’t even come close to offering speeds of 1 Gbps. Qualcomm says with Gigabit Class LTE speeds, users will be able to take advantage of features such as live streaming 360-degree VR content and faster access to cloud-based apps and services.
New Android ‘People API’ seeks to make managing contact data a snap for devs

This week on their official blog, Android developers announced the introduction of the People API, which will seek to replace the current Contacts API. This new system, which drops the GData protocol in favor of some new ones that should make it easier for users to grant and restrict access to their personal information on an individual or categorical basis.
See also: Android N doing away with Oracle’s Java APIs, OpenJDK to be the new standard
Laurence Moroney, Developer Advocate for Android, sums it up like this:
For example, if your user has contacts in her private contact list, a call to the API (if she provides consent to do so) will retrieve a list containing the contacts merged with any linked profiles. If the user grants the relevant scopes, the results are returned as a people.connections.list object. Each person object in this list will have a resourceName property, which can be used to get additional data about that person with a call to people.get.
This basically streamlines the gathering of contact data, trimming the previous method that required tapping two different APIs, Google+ and Contacts. People API also exposes new data that apps weren’t able to access before, such as phone numbers, e-mail addresses, physical addresses, and even birthdays. The user, of course, will have to have given permission for this information to be accessed.
Google hopes that Android developers will be eager to take advantage of the new capabilities this API offers and be inspired to come up with new and creative uses for it. If you’d like to read more about this new release, check out the blog post here. In the meantime, what are your thoughts regarding this new API? A long-awaited boon to the dev community, or just business as usual? Let us know what you think in the comments below!
Next: Top Android performance problems faced by app developers
Samsung launching Korean LTE network for public safety

Anyone who has been near a national disaster – or even just a massive sporting event – knows the frustration of clogged cellular service. This phenomenon is known as ‘the nightclub problem,’ a term I just invented on the spot because the situation is a lot like trying to communicate in a crowded club. Once everyone gets excited and confused, they start shouting, and because everyone is shouting, nobody can hear anything, so of course one must shout louder to be heard, thus contributing further to the noise. There is no time when it is more essential to be able to communicate clearly than in emergency situations, which is why Samsung is rolling out the “first live PS-LTE network in the world using the 3GPP telecommunications standard.”
See also: 5G, one wireless technology to rule them all?
Our techno-savvy world has something of an achilles heel. We have become so reliant on instant information and communication that when we’re stripped of it, we often don’t know what to do. This Public Service LTE network will serve as a kind of failsafe, allowing smartphone users to stay in contact with each other even when national calamity is at hand, potentially saving lives.
Samsung’s network will arrive first in Seoul, where the network’s main control center is housed. Over the next few months, the network will spread to encompass the full city, then the province of Gangwon, and ultimately all of South Korea. Samsung believes they should be able to provide nationwide emergency coverage sometime in 2017.
What are your thoughts regarding Samsung’s public safety network? Will these kinds of redundant networks become standard, or will it be more important to push for the development of 5G networks capable of supporting national communication even in the event of crises? Let us know your opinion in the comments below!
Instagram wants you to know how many people watch your videos
Until now, judging the merits of your Instagram videos was based solely on likes. Soon, you’ll know exactly how many folks have watched your footage. The photo-driven social network is replacing likes with view counts at the bottom of a video. If someone watches at least 3 seconds for your video, it counts as a view. Don’t worry, you can still see your likes, too. You just have to tap on the view count in order to do so. There’s no definitive arrival date for when the counts will hit in your timeline, but you should be seeing the change “over the next few weeks.”

Source: Instagram






