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28
Apr

Apple iPhone 7 Pro: Schematics leak shows phone design with dual cameras


Apple might have three phones to unveil this autumn, including a Pro edition of the iPhone 7 with a dual-lens camera setup and no headphone jack, according to recently-leaked design schematics.

Last month, an image surfaced showing a new 5.5-inch flagship device from Apple. It’s thought to be called iPhone 7 Pro and will presumably sit above both the iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus. Judging by the image leak, its stand-out feature could be a dual-lens camera setup. Now, Japan-based Mac Fan has attained detailed schematics of this mystery handset.

The schematics reveal the device is the same size as the iPhone 6S Plus. It is 7.3mm thick, which is the exact same as the iPhone 6S Plus but thicker than the 7.1mm-thick iPhone 6 Plus. It’s been widely rumoured that Apple wants to ditch the 3.5mm headphone jack in favour of a thinner design, and although the iPhone 7 Pro hasn’t lost any thickness, it does indeed lack a headphone jack. Interestingly though, it has dual iSight cameras on the back.

Mac Fan

These dual cameras could explain why the new iPhone isn’t thinner than the iPhone 6S Plus. If the phone does have this sensor setup, it’s unclear how it will work. It could be for switching between different focal lengths or maybe as a way of bringing Live Photos to the next level with simultaneous recording of stills and videos. It’s hard to say.

Lastly, the schematics show a Smart Connector, which is currently only found on the iPad Pro line of slates, and it seems to justify why the “Pro” moniker was given to this iPhone. With a Smart Connector, you can transfer both data and power at the same time, and you can hook up iPad Pro-like accessories, like external keyboards without batteries.

The last thing to mention here is that the iPhone 7 Pro appears to have the same design as the iPhone 6, iPhone 6S, iPhone 6 Plus, and iPhone 6S Plus. That’s kind of boring, but maybe Apple is waiting to overhaul the iPhone in 2017, when the phone will be celebrating its tenth anniversary.

MacRumours / Bastille Post

28
Apr

HTC likely making Google’s next Nexus devices, M1 (Marlin) and S1 (Sailfish)


We now know which company might be making Google’s next Android N devices and what they’re internally called, thanks to two new reports.

Evan Blass, who often writes for Venture Beat and is a well-known leakster, has claimed that Google’s next Nexus devices will be made by HTC. The Taiwanese manufacturer is actually building a pair of Android N devices, and they are internally dubbed M1 and S1. Android Police has followed-up this report with its own news about the phones’ codenames.

Google is reportedly calling the upcoming phones Marlin and Sailfish. M1 is for Marlin and S1 is for Sailfish, apparently. The Mountain View-based company tends to name Nexus devices after aquatic life, with past devices going as Bullhead, Angler, Shamu, Hammerhead, etc. Of course, all of those devices were renamed before being unveiled to the public.

HTC is building a pair of Android N devices for Google internally dubbed M1 and S1 #nexus

— Evan Blass (@evleaks) April 27, 2016

There are currently two Nexus phones: the Nexus 5X, which is the cheaper and smaller of the two available and manufactured by LG, and the Nexus 6P, which is the larger and more premium device made by Huawei. Both debuted in September 2015, so expect a similar timeframe for 2016’s Nexus devices.

Check out Pocket-lint’s round-up for more details about the next Nexus devices. Apart from who is making them and what they’re called internally, there are reports about the design and hardware specs for both devices. Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 820, for instance, is rumoured to make an appearance in at least one device.

28
Apr

Facebook is killing it: 1.5 billion monthly active users log on from mobile devices


Facebook has posted its first-quarter results for 2016, and it’s clear from the report that the company is absolutely killing it.

Revenues for the period that ended on 31 March hit $5.4 billion, up 57 per cent from the year-ago quarter, when Facebook reported just $3.3 billion. It’s also about 10 per cent more than what Wall Street forecasted. It also made $1.51 billion in net income during Q1, a massive spike from the $512 million it made during the year-ago quarter.

Beyond the financial stuff however, Facebook reported some impressive stats in terms of user growth. Monthly active users were 1.65 billion, a 15 per cent year-over-year increase, while mobile monthly active users, which are users who are actively logging on from mobile devices every month, were 1.51 billion, an increase of 21 per cent year-over-year.

For comparison, Twitter added only 5 million users this quarter. Facebook also said that Messenger now has 900 million users and Instagram has 400 million, and that users of these apps spend an average of 50 minutes per day on them.

These strong results drove Facebook’s stock up more than 9 per cent in after-hours trading. Tune into Facebook’s conference call at 5 pm EST to hear comments from the company’s CEO, Mark Zuckerberg.

28
Apr

Build the next Instagram or Uber with The Complete Android Developer Course


If you have an idea for a great new app or simply a desire to learn to code, Android is a great place to start.

Android developers are some of the most highly in-demand programmers out there, and The Complete Android Developer Course will get you started. You’ll not only learn how to make the app of your dreams from top-rated instructors, but how to sell it on Google Play.

At 91 per cent off from Pocket-lint Deals, your launchpad to Android expertise is refreshingly inexpensive. 

With more than 80% market share and over 1 billion devices sold last year alone, Android is the biggest mobile platform in the world by a large margin. Learn to master its newest, most powerful version, Android M, with 31+ hours of training and 14 hands-on app building projects.

You’ll start by downloading Android Studio and building a simple Currency Converter app. Soon you’ll work your way up to full clones of Uber and Instagram to put your newly acquired expertise to work!

You’ll also gain key insights on submitting your apps to Google Play, and marketing tips to promote your apps and generate revenue with Google Ads. Once you’ve achieved fluency in features such as App Permissions and Android Pay, you’ll begin to explore the possibilities of Android Wear – the future of wearable computing.

With a certificate of completion available at course’s end, the Complete Android Developer Course is a well-rounded tutorial for any aspiring developer. Pick it up today for just £11.80 ($17) on Pocket-lint Deals.

28
Apr

Samsung’s 360-degree camera will arrive on April 29th


Samsung unveiled its 360-degree camera, aptly called the Gear 360, earlier this year at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona. Today, the company announced its ship date. The tiny ball-shaped camera will be available for purchase on April 29th this year. As a reminder, the Gear 360 packs in two F/2.0 fish-eye lenses, with a 15-megapixel sensor on each. It’ll capture 3,840 x 1,920 video at 30 frames per second and still images at a rather large 7,776 x 3,888 resolution (that’s 30 megapixels). It doesn’t have on-board storage, but there is a microSD card slot that can accommodate up to 128GB of storage.

The Gear 360 is just the latest in Samsung’s VR efforts. Its Gear VR headset has been very popular and the company gave a hint at its developer’s conference that a standalone headset (usable without a phone) is also in the works. “VR is amazing, but the industry is still in infancy,” said Injong Rhee, Samsung’s executive VP for Research and Development, adding that the camera is for consumers in addition to professionals. “We’re enabling more people to create more VR content.”

Update: We’ve learned that the Gear 360 will be available only to select regions, including Korea, where it’ll be available for 399,000 won (that’s around $347 USD). US pricing and availability is still to be determined.

28
Apr

‘Electronic Voyager’ to document the life of synth pioneer Bob Moog


The synthesizer documentary I Dream of Wires debuted on Nextflix back in August, offering a look at the history of the instruments and their influence across genres of music. The director/producer duo film are at it again, and this time the story is the legacy of a synth pioneer. Electronic Voyager: Retracing Bob Moog’s Sonic Journey will chronicle the life of a key figure in music history by following his daughter as she visits the people and places that influenced her late father.

Filmakers Robert Fantinatto and Jason Amm are teaming up with with Bob Moog’s daughter, Michelle Moog-Koussa, and the Moog Foundation to make the documentary. According to the Kickstarter page for the film, the duo have been given “exclusive access to unseen family photos and rare historical artifacts from the Bob Moog Foundation archives.” What’s more, a number of iconic musicians and fellow pioneers have expressed interest in contributing to the project. That list includes Rick Wakeman (Yes), Gary Numan, Roger Powell (Utopia), Steve Porcaro (Toto), Herb Deutsch and Moby.

If you’re looking to support the film, the Kickstarter campaign for Electronic Voyager is live. With a pledge of $25 or more, you’ll receive a digital download of the documentary that’s expected to debut in spring 2017.

Via: Fact Magazine

Source: Kickstarter

28
Apr

Otto is Samsung’s cute personal assistant robot


Samsung unveiled a big new push into Internet of Things at its developer conference today, and it’s using a cute little robot to demonstrate it. It’s called the Otto, a reference design for what is essentially an Amazon Echo clone. It has microphones and speakers so it can answer questions like “What’s the weather?,” plus you can use it to control various connected gadgets in your home like light switches and refrigerators.

Unlike the Echo though, it also has an HD camera on the face of it that can recognize faces or act as a security camera. There’s also a small screen on it that displays a semblance of a face, plus it shows a variety of animations as well. If the weather is “rain,” it’ll show animations of rain drops, for example. As you can see in the video demo here, it can also “sing” and “dance” by bobbing its head around.

Otto isn’t a real product just yet; it’s just a prototype at the moment. It’s being shown off at Samsung’s developer conference to demo Samsung’s ARTIK Internet of Things platform, which got the official nod from the company today as developers are now encouraged to create apps and devices to support it. Part of the effort is the introduction of the ARTIK Cloud, which stores a lot of the data that could be useful to run devices like the Otto.

28
Apr

Stanford’s humanoid robot diver explores its first shipwreck


A group of underwater archaeologists exploring the sunken remains of King Louis XIV’s flagship La Lune added a very special member to their dive team recently. OceanOne, a Stanford-developed humanoid diving robot with “human vision, haptic force feedback and an artificial brain,” made its maiden voyage alongside human divers to recover 17th-century treasures from bottom of the Mediterranean.

Stanford’s five-foot “virtual diver” was originally built for studying coral reefs in the Red Sea where a delicate touch is necessary, but the depths go well beyond the range of meat-based divers. The “tail” section contains the merbot’s onboard batteries, computers and array of eight thrusters, but it is the front half that looks distinctly humanoid with two eyes for stereoscopic vision and two nimble, articulated arms.

Those arms are what make OceanOne ideal for fragile reef environments or priceless shipwrecks like La Lune, which sank off the coast of France over 350 years ago and hasn’t been touched until now. Force sensors in each wrist transmit haptic feedback to the pilot, allowing them to feel the object’s weight while staying high and dry on a dive ship. The robot’s “brain” works with the tactile sensors to ensure the hands don’t crush fragile objects, while the navigation system can automatically keep the body steady in turbulent seas.

With such a nimble platform, OceanOne will also prove useful in dangerous undersea environments like the Fukushima Daichi site that claimed five other robot divers. Suddenly, the imploded ghost of Nereus is looking downright clunky.

28
Apr

Comcast bumps its trial data caps to 1TB


The frustration with Comcast’s trial data caps doesn’t just center around their existence — it’s that they’re too low for many users. A 300GB monthly limit isn’t much in an era where even software updates can chew up a few gigabytes, let alone 4K videos or downloadable games. However, Comcast is tackling some of those complaints. It’s increasing the cap in all its trial regions to 1TB by June 1st, regardless of what tier you’re using. That’s still not ideal, but it reduces the chances that you’ll have to choose between watching Netflix and backing up your photos.

The caveat? If you’re part of that smaller group that does use more than 1TB in a month, it could be more expensive. Trial customers can still buy 50GB blocks of data at $10 each, but it now costs $50 per month to go unlimited versus the $30 from earlier. You may be less likely to hit the ceiling, but it’ll be pricey if you need more headroom.

Comcast only explains the move as a response to feedback and an acknowledgment that the internet “evolves.” However, it might also be an attempt to head off net neutrality complaints before they grow too numerous. Customers are concerned that data caps are less about congestion and more about steering you toward more profitable in-house services that conveniently don’t count toward your cap. The 1TB limit reduces the likelihood that you’ll be forced to make that choice or file a complaint. That’s still better than before, but it won’t satisfy those who believe that unlimited service is the only way to treat all services fairly.

Source: Comcast

28
Apr

‘Minecraft’ arrives on Samsung’s Gear VR headset


Last month, during GDC 2016 in San Francisco, we learned about Microsoft’s plans to release Minecraft for Gear VR. Still, details such as pricing and availability were unknown at the time. But that’s changing today: Oculus has announced that the open-world hit is now available on Samsung’s virtual reality headset. Officially dubbed Minecraft: Gear VR Edition, the game is said to support the same features as the Pocket Edition, including its creative, survival and multiplayer modes, as well as the character skins your familiar with.

In addition to that, Minecraft: Gear VR Edition will let you pick between a first-person or theater view (which is the default), depending on how hardcore you feel when you’re about to start building and exploring in virtual reality. Oculus CTO John Carmack, who last year revealed that this version was in the works, said in a blog post, “My strongest memories of being inside VR are from the time I’ve spent exploring Minecraft on Gear VR. Experiencing it in virtual reality changes it from an abstract activity to a visceral one.”

If you have a Gear VR, Minecraft can be yours from the Oculus Store for $7.

Source: Oculus