Microsoft releases first update for Windows Holographic
It’s taken a long time to get real Windows 10 applications up and running on Hololens. The headset finally shipped to developers last March, and now the Windows Holographic dev kit has received its first update, adding several features like multitasking and the ability to rotate 3D models. These are the kind of interaction options that are important to the platform’s survival.
Some of the features are straightforward, like keeping up to three apps running at once and adding Bluetooth mouse support. But most of the update fleshes out the user’s ability to interact with apps, like being able to rotate holograms, adding new voice commands and resizing flat app windows. The rest are small additions and bug fixes, but as Microsoft’s update announcement video notes, some of the features were added based on feedback.
Via: VentureBeat
Source: Microsoft Devices blog
BMO, Scotiabank, and TD Launching Apple Pay in Canada on Wednesday
BMO, Scotiabank, and TD Canada Trust, which make up three of the five largest banks in Canada, will roll out Apple Pay support on June 1, according to The Toronto Star. The launch will likely take place between 5:30 a.m. and 8:30 a.m. Eastern Time, at which time cardholders should be able to add eligible debit and credit cards.
Apple Pay is expected to work with MasterCard and Interac at BMO, Visa and Interac at Scotiabank, and Visa, MasterCard, and Interac at TD Canada Trust. Eligible cards can be scanned or added manually to Apple Pay by tapping the “Add Credit or Debit Card” option in the Wallet app on iOS 8.1 or later once support goes live.
All three banks have been listed as “coming soon” on the Apple Pay website in Canada since May. ATB Financial and Canadian Tire Bank will also reportedly add support for in-app purchases with Apple Pay on compatible iPhone and iPad models, expanding upon their existing support for in-store payments.
Apple Pay will now be available at all of Canada’s “Big Five” banks, which collectively cover more than 90 percent of Canadian banking customers, after CIBC and RBC began supporting the iPhone-based mobile payments service three weeks ago. All three banks serve over 50 million customers collectively worldwide.
It remains unclear if Scotiabank direct banking subsidiary Tangerine will also support Apple Pay starting Wednesday.
The next largest Canadian banks and credit unions that would be suitable Apple Pay candidates in the future include Desjardins and National Bank of Canada, the two largest financial institutions in Québec, along with Vancity and Meridian. None are currently listed as “coming soon” on the Apple Canada website.
Apple Pay can be used virtually anywhere contactless payments are already accepted in Canada, including at Apple Stores, Canadian Tire, Chapters, Coles, Indigo, London Drugs, Mark’s, McDonald’s, On The Go, Petro-Canada, Pizza Hut, Staples, Tim Hortons, and hundreds of other merchants nationwide.
Apple Pay support is also coming soon to Air Canada, Aldo, Domino’s, Pizza Pizza, Zulily, and the TTC transit system in Toronto. Additionally, the payments service can be used in apps such as Apple, Delta, Etsy, Fancy, Groupon, Kickstarter, Priceline, Starbucks, Ticketmaster, Uber, and Zara starting in June.
Apple Pay is compatible with iPhone 6s, iPhone 6s Plus, iPhone 6, iPhone 6 Plus, and iPhone SE, in addition to the Apple Watch when paired with an iPhone 5 or later, for in-store payments, while the iPad Pro, iPad Air 2, iPad mini 4, and iPad mini 3 support Apple Pay for in-app purchases only.
Apple Pay has also been available for non-bank-issued American Express cardholders in Canada since last November.
Apple Pay launched in the U.S. in October 2014 and expanded to the U.K. in July 2015. The service is also available in Australia, China, and Singapore. Apple is “working rapidly” to expand Apple Pay to additional regions, including Hong Kong and Spain and possibly France, Brazil, Japan, and elsewhere in Asia and Europe.
Related Roundup: Apple Pay
Tags: Canada, TD Canada Trust, Scotiabank, BMO
Discuss this article in our forums
Amazon Wants ‘Acceptable Business Terms’ to Offer Prime Video on Apple TV
At Recode’s Code Conference today, Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos was asked why the online retailer does not sell either the Apple TV or Google Chromecast. Bezos reiterated that Amazon chooses not to sell video streaming devices that do not include Prime Video capability and that the company wants “acceptable business terms” before bringing the the app to devices.
We sell Roku, we sell Xbox, we sell PlayStation. We’re happy to sell competitive products on Amazon and we do it all day. We sell Nest thermostats. When we sell those devices, we want our Prime Video player to be on the device and we want it to be on the device with acceptable business terms. We can always get the player on the device, the question is whether you can get it on with acceptable business terms. And if you can’t, we don’t want to sell it to our customers because they’re going to be buying it thinking you can watch Prime Video and then they’re going to be disappointed and then they’re going to return it.
When pressed by The Verge’s Nilay Patel on whether “acceptable business terms” meant paying Apple’s 30 percent cut on in-app purchases and subscriptions, Bezos declined to answer, only stating that he wanted to keep private business discussions private.
Amazon ceased selling the Apple TV and Google Chromecast last October, saying that it was important for Prime Video to interact with streaming devices it sells to avoid customer confusion. In November, Amazon confirmed to engineer Dan Bostonweeks that a Prime Video app was in development, with the company saying that it hoped to launch the app by the end of 2015.
While the app didn’t launch for Apple TV, Amazon did debut a standalone Prime Video streaming service for $8.99 a month, allowing users to subscribe to the service without signing up for the annual $99 Amazon Prime bundle, which includes free shipping from the company’s retail store, unlimited streaming music and more.
Amazon Prime Video for iOS is available in the App Store for free and accessible by Amazon Prime members. The service is also available on Android, Fire OS, Amazon Fire TV, PlayStation 3, PlayStation 4, Xbox 360, Xbox One, Wii, Wii U, the web and select TVs and Blu-ray players from LG, Panasonic, Samsung, Sony and Vizio.
Related Roundup: Apple TV
Tags: App Store, Amazon, Amazon Prime Video
Buyer’s Guide: Apple TV (Neutral)
Discuss this article in our forums
How to defend your home from bugs this summer – CNET
With the buzz about the Zika virus, West Nile virus and other diseases that can be transmitted through bugs, summer can be a scary thought. You don’t want to get bitten, but you probably don’t want to spray bug poisons around your house, either. Luckily, there are some high-tech and not so high-tech ways to keep your home bug-free.
Make your porch a defense area

ZapLight turns any light into a bug zapper.
ZapLight
I avoid turning on my porch light at night because it attracts bugs that eventually fly into my home when the door is opened. You can turn this insect hangout into a no-fly zone by installing a bulb that zaps bugs dead. The ZappLight is a 920 lumen LED light that uses only 9-watts of electricity to attract and kill bugs for up to 500 square feet of space. It turns your porch light, or any light, into a bug zapper.
Trap them
Did a couple of mosquitoes or flies make it inside of the house and you can’t seem to kill them? Make a trap. Take a plastic soda bottle and cut it in half. Fill the lower half about 1/3 of the way with sugar water for flies or beer for mosquitoes and put the spout of the bottle up-side down inside of the lower half. The bugs will fly inside to get the yummy liquid, but won’t be able to fly back out.
Sprinkle and squirt to advert the hoard
Ants tend to find their way indoors during the summer. The best way to fend them off is by finding their entry point and sprinkling it with ground cinnamon. The strong smell drives them away.
Don’t have cinnamon handy? Anything with a strong smell will work.
Try:
- Dry coffee grounds
- Mint
- Chili pepper
- Garlic
If that doesn’t work, put a line of dish soap around the area where the ants are coming in. They will get stuck in the dish soap and die. Once the rest of the colony realizes the entryway is a no-go, they will stop coming to it.
Fend off the fruit flies
Fruit flies typically make their way into your home as eggs. Yup, that bunch of bananas you brought home from the store for a summertime smoothie is probably covered in eggs. So, as soon as you get your produce home, make sure to rinse them off to get rid of any eggs before they have a chance to hatch.
Already have a swarm? Place a slice of fruit inside of a glass jar. Then, make a paper funnel and place in the mouth of the jar so that the small end of the funnel is inside the jar. Tape the mouth of the jar to the funnel. Fruit flies will fly in to eat the fruit but won’t be able to figure a way out. This one took about 30 minutes to work, but it did.

Fruit flies will fly in, but won’t be able to get out of this trap.
Alina Bradford
Things I wish knew before shooting 360 video – CNET
Forget your standard video rules, when shooting in 360 degrees convenience may trump quality. 360 video — that VR-like format that lets you look up, down, left, right, and behind — is all the rage right now. But to get those wraparound views, you’ll need a special camera (or multiple camera setup) and a large dose of patience.
I learned this the hard way during my month-long crash course comparing three different devices: the 360 Freedom (holding six GoPro Hero4 cameras), a Kodak Pixpro SP360 4K Dual Pack Pro (holding two Kodak Pixpro cameras) and the Ricoh Theta S (an single-camera all-in-one solution).
Not all 360 cameras are created equal
The first challenge was trying to figure out which cameras to include in our shoot-out. A quick Google search of 360 cameras will show you can spend anywhere from $200 (for the LG 360 Cam) to $60,000 (for Nokia’s Ozo camera).
You also need to factor in the viewing angle. Even cameras that have 360 in the name won’t produce shoot the entire 360 degree angle. The 360Fly and Kodak’s Pixpro SP360 are two examples of cameras that only have a viewing range of 240 degrees vertically. To get a full spherical image, you can fill in the missing angle with graphics as in the case of the 360Fly, or set up two cameras back to back as in the case of the Pixpro.
To produce a full 360 shot with a GoPro you’ll need at least 6 of them mounted on a third party rig or wait for GoPro’s Omni, a fully integrated solution that incorporates the six cameras into one casing and syncs them all automatically.
The simple explanation for the vast difference in price is quality: the cheaper the camera, the lower the resolution. But there’s more to it than that. Only the cameras at the high end of the price spectrum, like the Ozo, are capable of shooting stereoscopic video for VR.
There are two types of 360 videos
Monoscopic is the most common type of 360 image found on Google’s Street View or in 360 players like Youtube 360 and Facebook. These are flat renderings 360 degree renderings of a shot which can be viewed on any screen or in a headset. You can move around the space, but you have no real depth perception.
Stereoscopic video amps up the virtual reality element by creating a 3D rendering of a 360 degree shot using a separate input for each eye. This type of immersive content is usually shot with two lenses (one per field of vision) and can be viewed in 360 with a VR headset.
There are different degrees of difficulty
For the purpose of our comparison we decided to test out only monoscopic 360 cameras at three levels: beginner, advanced, and prosumer.
Beginner: The Theta S is Ricoh’s the second version of Ricoh’s 360 camera and costs around $350. Point and shoot and you’re ready to go. The stitching is done on the fly so you can share your shot right away without editing. Others in this category include the Samsung Gear 360 and the LG 360 Cam.
Advanced: The Kodak Pixpro SP360 4K Dual Pack Pro costs $900 and consists of two Pixpros mounted on a cage. Because you’re getting video from two different sources, you’ll need to stitch them together in post production. Nikon’s KeyMission will have a similar quality, but will record all the shots in one device.
Prosumer: We tested out a Freedom360 rig, a third-party enclosure using six GoPro Hero4s. The rig requires you to press all six capture buttons at once and sync the videos manually with a special editing software. The entire setup may end up costing over $3,000 ($500 for the Freedom360 rig plus the six cameras and the software).
Convenience is king
Only the Theta was compact enough to fit comfortably in my pocket during a weekend excursion. Both the Freedom360 rig and the Pixpro require some planning and setup time so don’t expect to take a spontaneous hiking shot next.
The Theta is also the only one that does not require an SD card — it comes with 8 gigs of storage on board and a built in battery. With the other two options I had multiple SD cards to keep track of and multiple batteries to charge.
Objects in 360 are not always as they seem
It’s hard to know what your shot will look like in 360 when you’re getting ready to shoot. Everything in plain sight of the camera is fair game when shooting in 360, but you don’t know at what distance it will apear, what the lighting looks like or when you’re standing on a stitch line.
A stitch line, I learned, is the point at which the video from each lense meets the other to create the full sphere.
Because the Theta does all the stitching internally in real time, it allows you to use your phone as a view finder with the mobile app if you want to preview. The stitch itself is relatively seamless and even stitches the actual camera out of the shot.
The stitch is a b#&ch
Dealing with a multiple camera setup like the Pixpro and the Freedom360 rig means you’ll have to go in and manually stitch all your footage from each individual source.
Kodak offers a free stitching software for Mac or PC that uses the audio as a base to match the clips with a click of a button. The process is pretty straightforward, but objects and people seemed to disappear right around the stitch line. The program lets you tweak this manually, but the editing software is limited to the basics.
GoPro bought Kolor, a company that specializes in stitching software for 360 video which you can use to put together the footage from the rig. It gives you way more control over the stitch and quality of the video, but it’s not cheap. The Pro version we used for our test runs around $650 on the Kolor website.
Resolution is not as good in 360
Most 360 cameras will advertise the maximum resolution at which they can shoot a flat RAW image, but once it’s rendered into 360, the resolution is considerably worse. The Theta, for example, boasts a 1080P resolution (1,920 x 1,080), but in “headset mode” it looks more like 480P (852 x 480) and starts to get blurry around the edges.
Same goes for the other two, which shoot in 4K (3,840 x 2,160) flat. The Kodak looks sharp head on, but is not consistent as you move around the image once you’re in 360.
The GoPro footage was the most consistent with a high definition output even in 360 headset mode, but the RAW footage looked muted, and I had to go in and color correct manually to get the same vibrance as the Pixpro.
Be prepared to sacrifice video quality when sharing
Most 360 players like Youtube and Facebook compress the video file when you upload. The higher the starting resolution, the better it will look on each site, but it was still significantly worse than the version I had exported onto my desktop and phone.
The Theta videos were the easiest to upload (right from the app), but they also took the biggest hit in terms of picture quality.
Max out the viewing quality on Youtube and Facebook
One rookie mistake I made when I first played the videos on these sites was to rely on the default resolution which made them look terrible. Click on the settings icon on Youtube to max out the resolution to 4K if it allows. On Facebook make sure to select the HD option. It makes a huge difference.
Accept the imperfections as part of the journey
Even if you do everything right things are bound to go wrong when shooting in 360. I learned the most valuable lessons from trial and error during our shoot: avoiding the stitch line, remembering to take the lense cap off, erasing SD cards, and realizing I was being filmed no matter where I stood in 360.
Remember that this is early days
It seems like everyone from the camera makers to the content creators are still trying to figure out new frontier and you may be better off waiting a few months if you want to get your feet wet in 360. By the end of the year expect the products and the footage to improve significantly.
With contribution from John Falcone.
SodaStream Beer Bar Release Date, Price and Specs – CNET

SodaStream
Just add water, and you can brew beer using SodaStream’s Beer Bar. The latest beverage machine from SodaStream, the makers of popular countertop carbonators, aims at an adult crowd. Mix concentrate with freshly carbonated water, and you’ll have a glass of beer to drink in seconds.
The Beer Bar is only available in Germany and Switzerland for now, but SodaStream expects to launch it in other markets by the end of this year and early next. It ships with a 1-liter bottle of concentrate for a light beer called Blondie that yields 3 liters beer that is 4.5% alcohol by volume.
Of course, saying that you’re brewing beer by adding sparkling water to concentrate equates to cooking by microwaving a frozen dinner. I’m highly skeptical that a beer made by the Beer Bar would actually be something I’d enjoy drinking, but I’ve been wrong about beer devices before.
I thought Fizzics — which claimed to make bottled beer taste more like it came from the tap with sound waves — would be a bust, but it was surprisingly effective. Pat’s Backcounty Beverages has sold beer from concentrate for awhile now and has garnered some positive feedback. Sparkling Drink Systems — a SodaStream competitor — has a similar beer making device that uses Pat’s mixture.
Beer machines that actually brew beer
- Brewie
- ArtBrew
- PicoBrew Pico
If you want help automating a more authentic beer making process, check out the PicoBrew Zymatic, or the upcoming PicoBrew Pico, Brewie or ArtBrew. Whirlpool is even getting into the beer brewing game with a machine that helps you ferment beer called Vessi.
All of the above machines still require some effort and input on your part, so if you want to just push a button and be done with it, the Beer Bar from SodaStream could be for you. Just be sure to drink the results responsibly, and cautiously.
Your big-name PC may have a security flaw in its update software
Those problems with security holes in big PC makers’ software bundles? They might not be over yet. Duo Security says it found vulnerabilities in the update software for Acer, ASUS, Dell, HP and Lenovo. Some vendors were more secure than others in Duo’s testing, but all of them were insecure enough that you could launch a man-in-the-middle attack and run your own code. In the worst cases, they’d send update data without any encryption or validation.
Also, don’t think that you’re safe by springing for one of Microsoft’s cleaner Signature Edition versions of these PCs. Duo says that some of these models still have vendor update software, so you might be in the same boat as someone who bought the garden variety PC.
We’ve asked all five companies for comment, and we’ll let you know what they say. However, Duo adds that the research took place between last October and this April, which suggests that some of the holes might have already been patched up. Dell already said that it would tackle the eDellroot flaw that created a minor panic last year, for example. Even if there’s more fuss than necessary, though, this is a reminder that your PC’s operating system is only part of the security puzzle — you have to be mindful of third-party apps, too.
Via: International Business Times
Source: Duo Security
T-Mobile creates service plan for visitors to the US
Tech-savvy travelers heading out from the US know how to make their (unlocked) smartphones work abroad: buy a pre-paid local SIM and add credits as needed. Sure actual international plans exist, but they’re usually more expensive than they’re worth. Today, however, T-Mobile’s flipping the script by offering a Tourist Plan for visitors to the US. The service, which goes live June 12th, costs $30 and lasts for three weeks, giving visitors unlimited data (LTE up to 2GB, though!), domestic and international texting and 1,000 voice minutes for domestic calls. What’s more, T-Mobile’s not charging for the SIM card or activation. In all, it’s a pretty good deal and cheaper than the company’s other prepaid options. So if you were hoping to stay connected and share the minutiae of your US adventures with your followers back home, now you’ve got a solid option.
Via: Cnet
Source: T-Mobile
Bayer to use satellite imaging to modernize farming efforts
You probably know Bayer for its aspirin. But the multinational pharmaceutical company has its fingers in more pies that that — it’s also keen to become a force in agriculture. As part of a push to focus on its Crop Science division, the company’s partnered with Planetary Resources, an aerospace tech company, to create products and services using data obtained from satellite imagery. The goal? To sell services and tools to farmers that will make agriculture more efficient and environmentally adaptable. Though the collaboration has just been announced and, therefore, no services have yet been created, Bayer’s indicated a few key areas where satellite data could be beneficial: water conservation through more ideally timed irrigation; recommendations on timing for crop planting; and the ability to determine what soil will hold water best.
It’s worth noting this is the same company that, in 2006, was found by the Department of Agriculture to have contaminated over 30 percent of US ricelands with its genetically-modified strain. Bayer eventually settled and paid out $750 million to farmers that were economically impacted by export trade bans. But still it serves as a reminder that big business does nothing for the sake of the greater good… just in the name of it. So take the announcement of this partnership with a grain of non-GMO rice.
Source: Bayer
USPS debuts stamps with New Horizons’ view of Pluto
To honor NASA’s discoveries, the USPS is debuting new stamps today with images from outer space. The “Views of Our Planets” series will get new images of Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune and the iconic “blue marble” view of Earth. Thanks to the New Horizons mission to Pluto, there’s a special set of two stamps with a snapshot from July’s flyby and the spacecraft itself. The eight new planet stamps are available at post offices and online, but the Pluto stamps will be sold only on the web. If you’re looking to add a few to your collection, the entire set is available starting today.
Source: NASA



