Skip to content

Archive for

3
Mar

Apple Maps Traffic Data Expands to Singapore and Malaysia


Apple Maps has been updated with new traffic data in Singapore and Malaysia, providing users with real-time updates about vehicular traffic in the neighboring southeast Asia countries. As usual, highly congested areas will have orange or red dotted lines along the roads to indicate that drivers may face delays.

Apple has yet to list Singapore or Malaysia under Apple Maps: Traffic on its iOS 9 feature availability website, but the page will likely be updated soon. Apple Maps traffic data is available in 30 other countries, including the U.S., Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Mexico, South Africa, China, and most of Europe.

Tags: Apple Maps, Malaysia, Singapore
Discuss this article in our forums

MacRumors-All?d=6W8y8wAjSf4 MacRumors-All?d=qj6IDK7rITs

3
Mar

Stop thieves getting your valuables using these smart security gadgets


As gadgets become more valuable and we carry even more of them around with us daily, theft is a big problem. But those smart gadgets, and even people, that need to be protected are starting to benefit from a growing smart security tech front-line.

From Bluetooth padlocks to movement detection home cameras, smart security is available and affordable for all.

So if you want to lock up your bike, secure your home, keep an eye on family, or even keep your new NFC wallet enabled phone safe you may need to upgrade your security.

We’ve collected the best smart security solutions here to help you feel safer knowing your gear is protected.

Master Lock

Master Lock Bluetooth Smart Padlocks

The padlock has been a staple part of a secure setup for years and more recently it’s become more intelligent. Gone are the worries of finding or losing keys as all you need now is an app.

The Master Lock example uses its Vault eLock app to unlock and secure the lock using military grade encryption. But if that’s inaccessible you can do it manually on the lock itself using a directional keypad. The indoor version is £69 while the outdoor model will cost you £89.

Off Pocket

A very modern solution has been created for a very new problem, digital theft. Now that most credit cards and even phones can pay using contactless payments, thieves are adapting. There have been a spate of thefts by people using credit card payment units tapped against people’s pockets and bags to take money from phones and cards.

The solution is already here in the form of kickstarted Off Pocket. It’s essentially a Faraday Cage phone case. You won’t get any signal but your phone will also be totally safe. On top of that nobody can track you, should you want that. Of course you could always just turn off NFC, in the case of Android, but that could get annoying after a while.

Pocket-lintLogi Circle lead

Logi Circle

Logi has created the Circle as a simple and affordable way to monitor home from anywhere. The camera is battery powered and Wi-Fi connected so it can be placed anywhere and viewed from wherever using a smartphone.

Unlike other offerings the Circle not only alerts you to movement or sounds but also creates round-up videos of the day. That way you can see everything that’s gone on at a glance in a short one-minute video.

So you can monitor the home for intruders, keep an eye on a child’s bedroom or monitor a naughty dog. Inspired and only £160.

READ: Logi Circle review

Sesame smart lock

Say goodbye to keys and hello to smart knocking. That’s right the Seasme smart lock lets you knock a special combination and it’ll unlock for you, recognising your smartphone. Or tap your phone and it’ll unlock. Or to keep it simple, open the app and tap to unlock. All without a key.

Should you want to access the smartlock from online, to open via Wi-Fi from anywhere, you’ll need the adapter. But that means you can open the door when a package arrives and you’re out, for example.

Sesame is $150 or $200 with the Wi-Fi adapter and should ship for June 2016. You will need a deadlock to attach it to and then you’re good to go.

Trax

Securing your family and pets is also something that modern gadgetry can help with. Trax is a GPS device that lets you know where your children or pets are all day.

Trax can fit in a pocket or on a collar and will transmit location data to a smartphone app. The battery lasts all day it’ll work in 30 countries worldwide. Any amount of Trax trackers can be added to the app for multiple tracking.

You can also set up geofences so if your child or pet leave that area you’ll get a notification. It’ll even tell you if the child is exceeding a speed limit, say in a car or by boarding a train. This can all be scheduled too, ideal for setting it on when in school for example.

The Trax is $200 which is about £140 and that includes two years connectivity for free.

READ: Best tech to secure your bike and prevent it being stolen

3
Mar

Sony’s 4K security camera can spot intruders in the dark


What do you give to the person who has everything? The world’s best security camera to watch over it, we guess. Sony’s latest Alpha product, the 850,000 yen ($7,500) SNC-VB770, may fit the bill. It’s a 4K mirrorless, E-mount network camera that can capture “clear color video at 30fps, even when the subject is almost invisible to the naked eye,” according to Sony. It features a full-frame 12.2-megapixel sensor that sounds a lot like the one Sony uses in its crazy Alpha A7S II mirrorless camera. As such, it can capture 4K in dark night conditions as low as .004 lux.

Sony sees a variety of low-light uses for the device, including road ice detection, rail tunnel surveillance, after-hours museum monitoring and nighttime wildlife monitoring. With all that resolution, you can also crop out specific parts of the image and display them as four separate VGA (640 x 480) images, as shown below. It can be controlled over WiFi by a smartphone and video and JPEG images can be sent directly to a LAN via an RJ-45 connector.

Thieves would be proud to be caught on the 35mm f/1.4 Zeiss lens shown above, which runs another $1,600 or so. The point is that you can add high-end glass from wide-angle to telephoto lenses to capture your target in pristine 4K. With a full-frame sensor and fast lens, you’d certainly get lovely images and bokeh, and Sony implied that the camera could even be used for production. With a razor-thin focus plane in low-light, however, we wonder if the cinematic qualities of the camera might clash with its intended use as a security device.

Source: Sony (translated)

3
Mar

UK issues new guidelines for punishing online trolls


Lawmakers in the UK are slowly coming to the realisation that online abuse can be just as damaging as its real-world equivalent. Last year, revenge porn became a specific crime, and the maximum prison sentence for internet trolls was increased from six months to two years. Acknowledging these serious cybercrimes is one thing, but it’s also important to know what exactly constitutes a punishable offence. To this end, The Crown Prosecution Service is proposing an update to its Social Media Guidelines to help criminal prosecutors bring keyboard cowards to justice.

The revised guidelines, which are effective immediately but subject to change at the end of a ten-week open consultation, include a few new and specific offences. Just for reference, revenge porn, cyberbullying and other types of online harassment, communications that violate a court order and those that infer a credible threat of violence were all covered in the previous guidelines, though these categories have been expanded to include obvious crimes like blackmail and grooming.

The updated documentation, however, now states that the creation of websites and fake online profiles may amount to an offence where the intention is to humiliate, offend, alarm or attack a victim’s reputation. “Controlling or coercive behaviour in an intimate or family relationship,” which is tantamount to online domestic abuse, has also been detailed in the new guidelines, having been formalised as a criminal offence in December last year. Online activity that falls under the category of violence against women and girls now has its own section within the guidelines, too.

With these new guidelines, criminal prosecutors have a richer crib sheet to reference when pursuing cases of online abuse. And when the wide-reaching Investigatory Powers Bill that introduces new surveillance powers inevitably makes it into law, the government promises it’ll be easier to catch offenders, too. Maybe we won’t need that cyberbullying insurance after all.

Via: The Huffington Post

Source: The Crown Prosecution Service, Revised Social Media Guidelines

3
Mar

World’s first ‘active’ sleep monitor keeps tabs on brain waves


Neurotechnology company Rythm launched both itself and its first product on Thursday, called the Dreem. The Dreem is a wearable device laden with EEG sensors. However, unlike other systems that utilize similar technology, the Dreem reportedly does more than simply record and analyze your sleep patterns. If, for example, the device recognizes the user is in a specific deep sleep pattern, it will “stimulate sound to keep the user in deep sleep for an extended period.” The $350 system will also reportedly be able to rouse users at the optimal time to avoid morning grogginess. Additionally, it will record and analyze sleep patterns with its associated iOS or Android app.

Potential buyers can sign up for early access at the Rythm website. However, given the lackluster science behind and performance of similar systems, you may want to hold onto your hard-earned cash until the initial reviews are in (or at least until the company finds those misplaced vowels).

3
Mar

Amazon debuts two smaller and cheaper Echos


Amazon has announced two new Echo-ready devices that do most of the same taks, but look completely different. The Echo Dot is a stubby version of the regular Echo while the Amazon Tap is a Bluetooth and WiFi speaker that supports voice commands.

The diminutive Echo Dot looks less like the Echo tower and more like a hockey puck. Amazon says that one of the main requests from current voice-assistant owners what the ability to plug it into a speaker. To that end the online retailer has removed the internal speakers and added an audio port.

Other than its small stature, it has all the same features as its larger sibling including the seven-microphone array, volume ring, mute and action buttons. It also works will all third-party services including a new support for thermostats from Nest, Honeywell and Insteon. For tunes on the go, or at home, Amazon is jumping into the wireless speaker market.

The Amazon Tap Bluetooth and WiFi speaker also supports Alexa voice commands, but you’ll need to press the mic button to initiate speech recognition. But because it supports voice actions it streams Spotify via your wireless network without having to sync with a smartphone. To kick out the jams, it has two speakers for omni-directional Dolby-processed sound. Plus since it’s made to be portable with nine-hours of playback time and three weeks of standby on a single charge.

The Tap sits atop a slim charging dock and has control buttons for volume and skipping forward and backwards through songs.

Both devices are available for preorder today and will be shipping later this month. The $129.99 Amazon Tap is available for anyone to purchase. The $89.99 Echo Dot on the other hand is only available for purchase via an Amazon Echo. So you have to own and Echo to buy an Echo. The company says it has limited stock on hand at launch. Plus, it’s an opportunity for Amazon to see how users interact with a Dot in a home already using an Echo.

No word on when the Dot will be available for everyone to purchase. But it’s important to note that it does work on its own without an full-size Echo.

3
Mar

Google’s ‘Moon Shot’ web series profiles Lunar Xprize hopefuls


Out of the 29 teams that joined Google’s Lunar Xprize, 16 are still in the running, working on rovers that they believe can land and operate on the moon. We’ll get the chance to know these ambitious space lovers more closely in the coming days through Google’s new web series aptly entitled Moon Shot. Mountain View has teamed up with a group of filmmakers, including J.J. Abrams and his production company Bad Robot, to create the nine-part documentary. The character-driven short films will be following some of the teams’ progress as they work on finishing their landers, less than two years before the deadline on December 31st, 2017.

Google launched Lunar Xprize in 2007 with the goal of landing a privately funded spacecraft on the moon. That rover has to be able to travel over 1,640 feet and beam back high-def videos and images. The first team that can accomplish that will take home a $20 million purse from the $30 million prize pot, while the second team will get $5 million.

The 16 remaining teams come from all over the world and from all sectors: there’s one with an existing NASA contract, one that’s backed by Audi and another that’s partly funded by Lockheed Martin. Some are comprised of friends who just happen to love space and even one that’s led by a father-and-son team. While it might take years before we find out which team(s) can reach the contest’s goal, you can watch the documentary as soon as March 15th when it debuts on Google Play. If you don’t have access to the Play Store, don’t worry — you can still see it two days later on YouTube.

Source: Google Lunar Xprize

3
Mar

ICYMI: Supersonic jetliner, the issue of sea sponge and more


Today on In Case You Missed It: NASA gave Lockheed Martin $20 million to make a preliminary design of a supersonic jetliner that will break the sound barrier without a sonic boom. Stanford students are putting a self-driving Audi through a race course to improve AI algorithms. And MIT says it has found proof that sea sponges are the first animal on earth.

Finally, Sweden’s McDonald’s has a new happy meal box that turns into a virtual reality headset. As always, please share any interesting science or tech videos, anytime! Just tweet us with the #ICYMI hashtag to @mskerryd.

3
Mar

Apple opens a Twitter account to answer your tech problems


Sometimes it’s infuriatingly difficult to get a Genius Bar appointment at your local Apple store. So if your Mac is on the fritz and you’ve got an important meeting to attend, what are your options? Ask a friend, or dive into some forums? How about asking for help on Twitter? If that last one appeals to you, good news — Apple has set up an account today to facilitate just this sort of Q&A. Why it’s taken so long to create is anyone’s guess, but it’s here now, so feel free to bombard @AppleSupport the next time everything randomly disappears from your iCloud account.

The Notes app has some awesome hidden tricks. A favorite of ours: how to turn lists into checklists. #AppleSupport pic.twitter.com/6fdzsRT1i4

— Apple Support (@AppleSupport) March 3, 2016

Via: MacRumors

Source: Apple Support (Twitter)

3
Mar

Apple Launches Support Account on Twitter With Tips, Tricks, and Customer Service


Apple today created an official Twitter support account to provide customers with tips, tricks, and customer service regarding the company’s product and services. One of the account’s first tweets shares step-by-step instructions on how to turn lists into checklists in the stock Notes app on iPhone.

Many large companies provide customer service on Twitter in 140 characters or less, and it appears that Apple will directly respond to customer tweets as well. The account is currently set to accept Direct Messages, although Apple may choose to disable that option akin to some of its other Twitter accounts.

Apple continues to lack an official company presence on the popular microblogging service, although it does have some Twitter accounts for specific products and services like the App Store, Apple Music, iTunes, and Beats 1. Tim Cook, Phil Schiller, Eddy Cue, and many other executives also have personal accounts.

The Notes app has some awesome hidden tricks. A favorite of ours: how to turn lists into checklists. #AppleSupport pic.twitter.com/6fdzsRT1i4

— Apple Support (@AppleSupport) March 3, 2016

@ItsZijZ We’re here to help! Can you please send us a DM with the details of your issue? Thanks.

— Apple Support (@AppleSupport) March 3, 2016

Follow the account on Twitter at @AppleSupport.

Tag: Twitter
Discuss this article in our forums

MacRumors-All?d=6W8y8wAjSf4 MacRumors-All?d=qj6IDK7rITs