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2
Jun

Valve has sold over 500,000 Steam Controllers


If you’ve been wondering how many people bought into Valve’s bid to redefine the PC gamepad, you’ve got an answer: about half a million. That’s the number Valve gave today in the Steam Controller’s June Update post. That’s a lot of controllers, but nowhere near enough to overthrow the dual-stick status quo. It is enough, however, to give Valve a diverse user base from which to harvest valuable user feedback. “With every controller that comes online we get the opportunity to get more feedback on how to make the Steam Controller even better.”

Valve says it’s been listening to that feedback, too — outlining the major improvements it’s made to the Steam Controller since its release in November of last year. Most of the update is old news for avid Steam Controller users, but welcome additions all the same: recent updates have enabled users to configure their controllers in desktop mode, added a rumble pass-through feature for games that support force feedback and enabled user-configurable “Action Sets” that can change controller mapping on the fly. Valve also says that more games are launching with Steam Controller support out of the box, citing Doom and Dark Souls III as recent examples.

Finally, to prove it’s been listening to the community, Valve confirmed another feature that’s on the way: Activators. As described, this would allow users to “assign actions to press-and-hold, double click, toggle and more.” The option isn’t available to users just yet, but you can already find activators at work in Doom’s default Steam Controller profile, where double tapping the weapon cycle button calls up a specific gun. Are these changes enough to make you brave the Steam Controller’s steep learning curve? Let us know in the comments below, or click through to the source to see Valve’s full June update.

Source: Valve

2
Jun

‘Skylanders Imaginators’ lets you create your own heroes


Just because Disney is calling it quits on Infinity doesn’t mean that the era of collectible-driven video games is over. Activision has unveiled Skylanders Imaginators, and its centerpiece is the ability to create your own hero using a wide array of body parts and gear. At last, you’re no longer limited to whatever the developers can dream up. You won’t get a real-world figurine that matches your exact character, unfortunately, but there will be “Creation Crystals” you can buy to bring your champion to other consoles.

The game mechanics revolve around this customization, too. You have to develop your character through Senseis (who are available as toys, naturally) that refine your skills, unlock content and otherwise help your personalized avatar advance.

Activision releases Imaginators on October 16th in North America, and October 14th in Europe. Importantly, this is likely to be one of the few major games reaching last-generation consoles this year. It’ll reach the PS4, Wii U and Xbox One, but it’ll also come to the PS3 and Xbox 360 — you won’t have to upgrade your kids’ console (much to their chagrin) to make sure they can play.

Source: Activision Games Blog, Skylanders

2
Jun

‘Neverwinter’ will debut on PS4 later this summer


Neverwinter, the free-to-play MMORPG that debuted on PC then made its way to Xbox One last year, is making its next stop on PlayStation 4. All aboard the Drizzt train!

The Cryptic Studios-developed role-playing adventure based on the Dungeons & Dragons universe is arriving on the console with all of the content from the original game as well as its nine expansions to play through as one of eight varied classes. Neverwinter features enemies pulled straight from Dungeons & Dragons lore, with locations from the Underdark and Icewind Dale that may be familiar to longtime D&D fans.

You won’t have to worry about ponying up for a subscription fee for the game itself, but publisher Perfect World Entertainment has announced that it won’t require you to pay for PlayStation Plus, either.

There’s no exact release date for Neverwinter just yet, but it’ll be out at some point this summer.

Source: PlayStation

2
Jun

Musk: Tesla will do ‘the obvious thing’ for Autopilot on Model 3


Tonight during an interview at the Code Conference, Elon Musk shared his thoughts on everything from The Martian to AI (he’s only worried about one unnamed tech company when it comes to AI, maybe we should Google the answer) to the current presidential race. Most notably however, he mentioned Tesla is planning another Model 3 event this year, saying it’s already notched over 400,000 preorders. Pressed for an answer by Walt Mossberg and Kara Swisher on the availability of Autopilot on the $35,000 base model, Musk would only say “we’ll do the obvious thing.” You can watch the interview below for more details on things like why SpaceX lands its rockets at sea and its launch schedule for the next few years.

Source: Recode (Facebook)

2
Jun

8 things every Pebble Time user should know – CNET


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Sarah Tew/CNET

Pebble Time is a user-friendly smartwatch with a battery that seems to never stop. At least, when compared to the single-day battery life of competing smartwatches from Apple and Google’s Android Wear.

Despite its user-friendly design, there are still some tips and tricks hiding under your sleeve.

So if you’ve recently picked up a Pebble Time or have had one for awhile, you’ll want to read through our list of eight things each Pebble Time user needs to know below.

Initial setup

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Screenshot: Jason Cipriani/CNET

Before you can begin receiving alerts from your phone on your Pebble Time watch, you’ll need to install the Pebble app on your phone. You can find the Android version here, or the iOS version here.

During initial setup, the app will walk you through creating a Pebble account and connecting your watch to your phone. You’ll also select your default language as well as installing some suggested apps, and picking your first watchface.

iOS vs. Android

There used to be some fairly significant differences in overall experience when it comes to using a Pebble Time with iOS or Android phones. After years of software updates and refinement, it seems the most notable difference rears its head when it comes to dictating responses to text messages.

For iOS users, you’ll need to be either an AT&T or Verizon Wireless customer and follow the instructions in this post to gain the option send a new message or reply to incoming messages using your voice.

As an Android user, you can click the middle button on the right side of the watch when viewing a notification to view additional actions or options you can take on the message. If “Voice” is listed, then go ahead and talk to your watch. No one will stare.

Watch apps

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Screenshot by Jason Cipriani/CNET

The Pebble Time app splits watch apps and watchfaces into two different stores. The app tab will show you currently installed apps on your watch. You can tap on the “+” button in the lower-right corner of the app to view the app store.

Some important things to keep in mind as you review app listings include:

  • Pay attention to OS compatibility. An Android robot and iOS text indicate which platform(s) the app will work on.
  • Look to see if the watch app requires a companion app on your phone. In the far-right screenshot above, you can see the Music Boss app shows that an Android app is required to use it.
  • You’ll likely find a section of curated apps “Powered by Kiezelpay.” This is a service developers can use to charge for their work, kind of like PayPal but specific to Pebble watch apps.

You can view a list of installed apps on your watch in the phone app under the Apps tab. Drag and drop various apps to the order you prefer, or tap on the Settings icon to make changes. If an app has a yellow dot next to it, that indicates you still need to set up the app.

Watchfaces

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Screenshot: Jason Cipriani/CNET

Watchfaces on Pebble Time work similar to apps, having a dedicated tab and store within the Pebble app.

When you add a watchface to your Pebble account, it will install itself on your Pebble Time watch and open any applicable settings page in the Pebble app.

You can switch between watchfaces by selecting an installed face, or customize how each one looks by tapping on the Settings gear to the left of the watchface.

Health

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Screenshot: Jason Cipriani/CNET

Pebble Health is an automatic step-, exercise- and sleep-tracking tool recently added to the Pebble Time lineup.

Before you can begin tracking your steps, you need to enable and opt-in to using Pebble Health in the app. You should have been asked during initial setup if you wanted to turn it on, but if you skipped past it like I did, you can always open the Pebble app, go to its Settings, and turn on Health.

You’ll need to enter some personal details such as height, weight and your overall fitness goals before it’s enabled.

With Health turned on, you can view your current step counts and last night’s sleep quality under the Health tab in the Pebble app or by opening the Health app on your Pebble Time watch.

Quiet Time

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Screenshot by Jason Cipriani/CNET

Sure, receiving notifications on your wrist is convenient but it can also come across as rude during a meeting or date. Thankfully, Pebble has gradually updated its software, making it possible to put the watch on what amounts to a “do not disturb” mode the company calls Quiet Time.

On the watch, click the middle button to open the app listing and scroll up to Settings > Quiet Time by pressing the middle button to select each item.

Here you can manually enable quiet time, have it automatically enable and disable itself based on your calendar entries, set times throughout the week when it should turn on or off and indicate what interruptions-if any-you want to allow.

To quickly enable or disable Quiet Time, say for an impromptu meeting, you can hold in the back button on the left side of your watch until it vibrates.

Additionally, you can view the notifications tab in the Pebble app and set specific apps not to push alerts to your wrist during the week or weekend.

Timeline

Timeline is Pebble’s interesting take on putting more information at our fingertips without forcing users to click and hunt just to launch an app to get a sports score or current weather conditions.

From the watchface of your Pebble Time, you can press the bottom button to view future pins. Pins can range from trip plans to ESPN updates. Pressing the top button will take you back in time, revealing meetings or games that have already ended.

You can interact with items in your timeline by pressing the middle button to select it. For example, clicking on an ESPN entry will give you the option to view more details about the game, including live sports scores if the game is currently underway.

More Information

Read the full CNET Review

Pebble Time Steel

The Bottom Line:
Pebble’s step-up all-steel smartwatch has added battery life and a more durable feel, but it’s basically a tiny upgrade to the less expensive Pebble Time.
Read full review

CNET Editors’ Rating

3.5 stars

Very good

Priced at
$199.95

to $249.99

Reviewed: Aug 6, 2015

Quick Launch

The standard procedure to launch an Pebble app on your watch is to press the middle button, then scroll to the app, press the middle button again, and finally interact with the app.

With Quick Launch, you can create shortcuts to two of your favorite apps. Press and hold the top button until the watch vibrates, then select an app to assign to the top button. Repeat the process for the bottom button.

To change an app assigned to Quick Launch, open the Settings app on your Pebble watch and open Quick Launch.

2
Jun

Facebook to introduce AI that understands everything you post


Facebook’s latest artificial intelligence system is known as “DeepText,” and it has some pretty serious implications as far as privacy goes. The social network is interested in implementing the system that can help analyze thousands of posts per second across 20 different languages, all with near-human accuracy.

What does that mean for you as a Facebook user? Soon, the company will be able to identify what you’re saying in posts, messages and other content available via your profile and other pages to better offer suggestions and other helpful options. For example, if you happen to post a status about needing a ride or converse with a friend about when you might need to be picked up, Facebook might suggest you hit up Uber or Lyft services via Messenger transportation integration. The key is distinguishing between slang, jargon and other intricacies of human language that can sometimes make this sort of thing difficult for artificial intelligence to understand.

Facebook is interested in bringing this kind of technology forward as a way to help format sales posts when it can tell you’re creating one, or even help pinpoint and filter out malicious, hateful or otherwise hurtful speech on the social network. According to Facebook, its AI systems already report more photos that could be found offensive than humans, so it’s going one step further to make the network a safer place. It’s understandable how the DeepText system could be a boon for users, but it also of course opens the floor to several questions about privacy that will have to be investigated as DeepText debuts and proves its worth as a recommendation engine.

Via: TechCrunch

Source: Facebook

2
Jun

Google will add special touches to Nexus phone software


For years, Google’s Nexus devices have been synonymous with stock Android. While they may be showcases for new features, they still represent the baseline for what the platform can do. That might not last for much longer, though. CEO Sundar Pichai told guests at the Code Conference that Google will “thoughtfully add more features” to Android on Nexus phones going forward. The company will also be more “opinionated” about the design, the exec said. Third-party companies will still make the hardware, but it’s evident that rumors of Google taking greater control of the Nexus program were well-founded.

You can see the Nexus-related remarks below, starting at the 20:24 mark.

The chat also saw Pichai tackle concerns about privacy, especially for Google Home. No, you won’t have to share your voice command history with Google — there will be an “off the record” mode that doesn’t send your data. The CEO also mentioned hopes for tighter control over privacy as a whole. He imagined telling Google to forget the last 4 hours of search activity, as an example.

On top of this, Pichai was adamant that Google “want[s] to be in China” and is taking a “thoughtful” approach to making it happen. Just what that means isn’t immediately apparent, although there has been talk of Google Play and a handful of Android services coming to China. The big challenge is balancing the company’s desire for profit with its historical aversion to censorship. As much as the company hates that its services aren’t available on Android phones sold in China, it also doesn’t like having to remove apps or search terms in the name of silencing political dissent.

Via: Business Insider

Source: The Verge, Recode, YouTube

2
Jun

Google Keep can autocomplete your grocery list entries


In the years since Google launched Keep, its note taking app/service has continued to slowly add new features, and today it’s rolling out a couple of new tricks. The Keep website has a lightly refreshed design that looks similar to the new Google+ web layout, while across platforms (Chrome extension, Android and iOS) it’s now able to show previews for links to websites with a picture, the page title and domain. It has a new autocomplete feature that only works on lists so far, and it can also detect duplicates as soon as they’re entered. They’re not huge changes, but they should make staying organized a little easier, or at least prettier.

Source: Google Docs (Twitter)

2
Jun

Apple Releases First Preview of Swift 3.0 for Developers


Apple yesterday released the first preview build of Swift 3.0, a major update to Apple’s open source Swift programming language. Swift 3.0’s official release is expected to come in late 2016 after proposed changes are finalized.

The Swift 3.0 preview can be downloaded from the official Swift website. There are versions of Swift 3.0 available for Xcode 7.2, Ubuntu 14.04, and Ubuntu 15.10.

Swift 3.0 is not source compatible with Swift 2.2 as it introduces source-breaking changes, but going forward, the goal is to make Swift 3.0 source compatible with future Swift language updates. To meet that goal, Swift 3.0 “focuses on getting the basics right for the long term.”

Apple will likely show off Swift 3.0 at its upcoming Worldwide Developers Conference, debuting it alongside iOS 10, OS X 10.12, and new versions of tvOS and watchOS.

Tag: Swift
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2
Jun

Early Apple Pay Reception Tepid Outside of United States


Apple Pay is seeing a lukewarm reception in many countries outside of the United States and is making just a “small dent” in the global payments market, according to a new report from Reuters.

In 2015, Apple Pay usage totaled $10.9 billion, most of which came from the United States. That figure is perhaps unsurprising as Apple Pay has been available in the United States since 2014 and only began rolling out to additional countries in 2015. Apple Pay is now available in the United States, the UK, China, Canada, Australia, and Singapore.

Though Apple Pay is in the early stages of adoption outside of the United States, it seems to be struggling to gain a foothold in the countries where it’s now available. In China, Apple Pay has to compete with established payment services Alibaba and Tencent, and according to research conducted by Reuters, Chinese users have complained that using Apple Pay is not as seamless as WeChat, Tencent’s payment service.

In Britain and Australia, contactless payment cards are in wide use, so iPhone users need to go to the trouble of adding their cards to Apple Pay. Juniper Research analyst Windsor Holden told Reuters that the prevalence of contactless cards makes it more difficult to persuade people to adopt Apple Pay.

“You have over 86 million contactless cards in circulation, you have to persuade Britons to register their cards to the (Apple Pay) service when they can already use them to make a contactless payment,” Holden said

Bendigo Bank in Australia says it is experiencing “some unforeseen technical issues” accepting Apple Pay payments at select merchant terminals, something Apple Pay vice president Jennifer Bailey told Reuters was “not representative” of the Apple Pay experience.

Apple Vice President Jennifer Bailey said such experiences were premature and not representative. “Like any set of major technology changes, it takes time,” she said. “We want to move as quickly as possible, we push it as quickly as possible.”

In addition to a lukewarm reception in the countries where it is available, Apple Pay is seeing a slow global rollout due to the need to negotiate transaction fees with multiple partners. Apple makes approximately 15 cents for every $100 spent in the United States, but has had to negotiate lower fees in some countries. Apple has also faced resistance in locations like Australia, Canada, and the UK because banks in these countries are building their own competing payment products.

Apple Pay hasn’t yet caught on globally, but Apple is “working rapidly” to expand Apple Pay to additional locations in Asia and Europe. Apple Pay is expected to debut in Hong Kong in the near future through a partnership with American Express, which will also bring the payments service to Spain later this year. Rumors and leaked documents also point towards negotiations to bring Apple Pay to France, Brazil, and Japan in the not-too-distant future.

In a recent interview with TechCrunch, Bailey said Apple considers a number of factors when deciding where to deploy Apple Pay, including the size of the Apple product market, credit and debit card penetration, and existing contactless payment coverage.

Related Roundup: Apple Pay
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