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20
Jul

Razer will launch its own Pokémon Go chat app


Razer, a company best known for its gaming-focused PC peripherals, will be getting into the Pokémon Go business with a new chat app. Known as RazerGo, the app will allow Pokémon Go players to chat with other players nearby.

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From The Verge:

Like Pokémon Go itself, RazerGo is location-aware — users can find and talk to other players within a radius of 3, 60, or 600 miles, although it’s probably going to be most useful at close range. Likewise, they’ll be able to either join public chat, talk only to members of the same team, or privately talk to each other. Razer is also planning a feature that will let users drop “Beacons” to open a chat room that’s only available near them.

The app will be available for iOS, Android, and on the web, with the web component set to debut around 10 p.m. ET tonight, July 20. The mobile apps should follow soon, with Razer apparently hoping to launch around July 25.

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20
Jul

Argos will stock Anywhere SIM cards that let you ‘hop’ between networks


Argos and Anywhere SIM have teamed up to start selling SIM cards through the retailer in the UK. These SIM cards are unique by the fact they switch between O2, Vodafone and EE depending on which offers the strongest signal. The company plans to work hard at eliminating so-called “black spots” — locations where signal is hard to come by on specific networks. Should you travel to locations where it’s difficult to enjoy a stable connection with your chosen UK network provider, you may wish to take a look at the Anywhere offering.

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As reported by Engadget:

“It’s handled by a clever bit of business and partnership engineering: the company is working with Manx Telecom, an operator based on the Isle of Man, and has a mobile virtual network operator (MVNO) agreement with O2 in the UK. That deal is what allows you to have a UK mobile number. The other two networks — as well as countless others scattered across Europe — are handled with international roaming agreements. So apart from O2, you’re always being treated like a holidaymaker abroad.”

Once you’ve purchased an Anywhere SIM and are ready to rock and roll, the company will offer three different PAYG (Pay As You Go) plans. On Home you’ll be able to place calls on O2, but are able to receive calls from all other networks (works just like you’re with O2 itself). The UK plan will unlock access to Vodafone and EE to place calls, though the price of both a call and MB of data is 10p. Finally there’s EU, which offers all roaming agreements signed by Anywhere, but bumps the price of calls up by a further 2p per minute.

4G, monthly plans and access to Three’s network are in the pipeline. Even with these additions yet to be added to the company’s solution, it’s still worth the consideration. Be sure to be on the lookout for Anywhere SIM cards at your local Argos outlet or online.

20
Jul

Moto X Pure Edition now receiving its May security patch


Motorola is now pushing out the May security update to the Moto X Pure Edition. The phone has not received an update since around February, so while this isn’t the newest patch available, it is still great to see it get more secure. As for the release notes, Motorola only mentions the Android Security update, though it is likely that a few bugs have been squashed, or the performance of certain things will improve.

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If you haven’t already received a notification for the update, you can check manually for it now. To do so, head into Settings, About phone and finally check for update. Once you’ve installed the update, be sure to hop in the forums and let us know how it is working out for you.

Discuss the update in the forums

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20
Jul

7 things to know about the Sony Xperia X Performance


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Get to know the latest high-end phone from Sony.

The Sony Xperia X Performance isn’t exactly blowing everyone away with its amazing quality or value, but every time a Sony phone comes to the U.S. it’s at least an intriguing proposition. This time we’re looking at a whole group of Xperia X phones, with the X Performance leading the pack as the super-high-end version, with a price to match.

And while the Xperia X Performance can be better described as a mixed bag than a smash hit, it’s still one that people are looking at and trying to learn more about. If you’re in that camp, you’ll want to see these 7 things to know about the phone. Read on.

Small, but powerful

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Most high-end phones nowadays are rather large, but the Xperia X Performance most definitely is not. Coming in at 143 x 70.5 x 8.6 mm and 164 grams with just a 5-inch display, it’s downright compact, almost the exact same size as the Galaxy S7.

That doesn’t mean that it’s come up short in terms of specs, though — you still get a Snapdragon 820 processor, 3GB of RAM and 32GB of storage (plus an SD card slot) inside that nice metal and glass body.

No fingerprint sensor in the U.S.

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For some reason we’ve yet to figure out, Sony has decided to remove the one-touch fingerprint sensor from the Xperia X Performance it’s selling in the U.S. Models sold elsewhere around the world have the sensor integrated into the large power button, and even though the power button has kept the same size and placement in the U.S., you’ll have to stick to a PIN or pattern on your phone for security.

This is a bit of a throwback, but you’ll also want to consider using Smart Lock to keep your phone unlocked when in range of known Bluetooth devices and locations … otherwise it’ll be quite a shock to go back to a phone without a fingerprint sensor if you used one before.

Water resistant

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Sony didn’t necessarily make as big a deal about it as some other manufacturers, but the Xperia X Performance is actually dust and water resistant. Sony says you can get it dirty and even wash it off in a sink, so long as you don’t fully submerge it in water. So whether you happen to have your phone out when a drink is spilled on the table or it takes a splash by the pool, you don’t have to worry about it.

And as is the case on most modern phones with water-resistant coatings, there aren’t any annoying flaps or covers on the ports here — you get full access to everything, and it still keeps its water resistance.

Small battery, but good battery life

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When you first see that the Xperia X Performance has just a 2700 mAh battery it’s understandable to be worried about battery life. But fortunately for any possible buyers, the battery life on the phone is actually surprisingly good even with its high-end specs and great display. Sony still offers great performance on the Xperia X Performance, and that’ll also last you through the day with double-digit percentage of your battery left.

Now this isn’t a “two-day device” like Sony often claims with its phones (any phone can last that long if you … don’t use it), but that’s not really an expectation most people have — the important thing is the Xperia X Performance can handle a full day until it hits the charger at night. Speaking of chargers, that small battery gets topped up very quickly thanks to Qualcomm Quick Charge 2.0 speeds with the included charger.

The NFC antenna is… on the front

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This is more of a warning for anyone who happens to buy or use an Xperia X Performance: because of the all-metal back, the NFC antenna is actually on the front of the phone instead of the traditional placement around back. The antenna is placed to the left of the front-facing camera above the screen, which makes things a little awkward when you want to tap to someone else’s phone for a file transfer, and is particularly odd for using Android Pay.

Either way, you’ll get used it — just save yourself the frustration of trying to put the back of the phone on things to use NFC.

Unlocked and good for U.S. GSM networks

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If you do want to pull the trigger and buy an unlocked Xperia X Performance in the U.S., you can know that it’s ready to go with the right radio bands for the popular GSM networks here. So while Verizon and Sprint are out, you’ll be able to use AT&T or T-Mobile, as well as most of the popular prepaid carriers out there, without any extra hoops to jump through. If you’re curious, here’s the full list of network bands:

  • LTE: Band 1/2/3/4/5/7/8/12/13/17/19/20/26/28/29/38/39/40/41
  • HSPA+: 800/850/900/1700/1900/2100 MHz
  • GSM: 850/900/1800/1900 MHz

The one thing you miss out on, which should come as no surprise to unlocked phone users, is advanced carrier features like Voice over LTE (VoLTE) and Wi-Fi calling. You just get the regular setup of features, without the extras from the carrier.

Expensive

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Get ready for some sticker shock: Sony is charging $699 for the Xperia X Performance, which will immediately be cause for a double take for most people. Even if you’re used to buying unlocked phones, you may not be up for spending over $700 after tax for a Sony Xperia X Performance. Be sure to read our review first, and see how it stacks up against other high-end phones, before making a decision.

If you like the Sony look and software from the Xperia X Performance but can’t swallow the price, you can also consider the lower-end models in the line … the Xperia X is a solid step down by a couple hundred dollars, and the XA and XA Ultra are further below that as well.

More: Where to buy the Sony Xperia X series in the U.S.

20
Jul

Walmart launches new online shopping app for Canadian customers


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Walmart has launched a new online shopping app for Canadian customers. The Walmart Canada Online Shopping app allows you to buy what you need wherever you are, and you’re able to save your favorite products, get alerts when items are on Rollback, and more.

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Here’s what you’ll get with Walmart’s new shopping app:

  • Shop online: The easiest and fastest way to shop Walmart.ca
  • Rollback Alerts: Get notifications when your favourite products are on Rollback
  • Your favourites: Save time with quick access to your favourite products
  • Scan: Quickly scan items for prices, ratings, and reviews
  • Grocery PickUp: Order your fresh and frozen essentials and choose when to pickup
  • Flyer features: Check out our weekly flyer items available online

You can grab Walmart’s online shopping app from the Google Play Store now.

20
Jul

Swiftmoji: The new predictive emoji keyboard from SwiftKey


Keyboard app maker SwiftKey has released a new predictive keyboard for Android and iOS that will predict which emoji are best used to “pepper up” your emails or messages.

Available from today, the new keyboard, called Swiftmoji, works in conjunction with your current keyboard offering, but like the original keyboard product from the company did with words, will predict the best emoji to use.

“With over 1,800 emoji to choose from on your phone and more added regularly, it becomes increasingly difficult to find the right emoji,” explains the company. “Swiftmoji removes the frustration of playing hunt-the-emoji – and helps you discover new emoji you may have never even seen before – with its spot-on predictions.”

Emoji, which are becoming more and more popular, are also becoming more and more harder to remember given the huge number of them now available. 

‪The app works by using the context of what you’re typing coupled with worldwide emoji trends to give you the best and most topical emoji predictions so you don’t have to remember each and every one of them.

“The emoji predictions are designed to help find a specific emoji you’re after, or give you some ideas if you’re short of inspiration. The second use case is interesting as we found that most people just continually use the same small subset of emoji and don’t know about many of the 1,800 that exist,” a spokesman for the company told Pocket-lint.

Rather than just suggest you add a football when you’ve typed the word football, it could suggest a number of other possibilities around the game. 

Emoji keyboards are all the rage at the moment with even Apple confirming it will offer an auto-suggesting emoji feature on its keyboard in iOS 10.

Pocket-lint

Where the new keyboard differs from Apple’s new auto suggesting emoji tech in iOS 10 though is that rather than automatically offer to highlight and replace based on specific words, it will recommend a number of suggestions. You will also have to switch keyboards for the effects to take place when using the Swiftmoji keyboard on Apple devices. 

A quick play of the app on the iPhone ahead of the official launch shows that the implementation suffers from the same problems many keyboards do on iOS; you have to switch between keyboards to get the emoji predictions.

If you are happy to do that the predictions are spot on though, as long as there is text to analyse.

That might force people to either forget they have the keyboard installed or find it frustrating to have to go in after the fact. Android users should find switching to the new SwiftKey powered keyboard a lot easier. 

In comparison, Apple’s iOS 10 emoji keyboard interplay is much more intuitive and flowing.

One feature we do like however is the ability to “emoji bomb”. The feature allows you to ado up to 18 related emoji in by pressing a single button.

Swiftmoji is currently only available in English on both iOS and Android devices. However Swiftmoji on iOS is an emoji keyboard, whereas Swiftmoji on Android is a full keyboard replacement.‬ ‬

20
Jul

ICYMI: Mercedes makes a self-driving bus for the masses


ICYMI: Mercedes makes a self-driving bus for the masses

Today on In Case You Missed It: Mercedes made a new class of vehicle to take on mass transit systems by autonomously navigating city streets with GPS, radar, dozens of cameras and data links to local networks. It was tested outside Amsterdam; no word yet on when they will roll out for real.

Some Michigan engineering students are creating a huge and playable Rubik’s Cube, that video is here. As always, please share any interesting tech or science videos you find by using the #ICYMI hashtag on Twitter for @mskerryd.

20
Jul

The birth of a spaceport


The government may have ceded the development of rockets to companies, but Cape Canaveral Air Force Station remains a key site for space exploration. Together with the neighboring Kennedy Space Center, Cape Canaveral played an integral part in the space race, and continues to host launches to this day.

The site, situated on the east coast of Florida, saw its first rocket launch 66 years ago this week, and over the past six decades, it’s hosted many, many more, from the launch of Explorer 1, the first US satellite, right up to SpaceX’s Falcon 9 launches over the past six years. One thing it didn’t host was the Apollo program itself — those launches were at Kennedy Space Center. Nonetheless, events like the moon landing, whose anniversary falls today, would’ve been impossible without the tests carried out at Cape Canavarel. It was the launch of Saturn I from the Air Force Station that paved the way for the Saturn V rocket which sent Apollo 11 to the moon.

Various launch complexes are still in use, some leased to BlueOrigin, SpaceX and other companies. But it all began on July 24th, 1950, with the launch of the Bumper 8. NASA didn’t yet exist — the General Electric Company had responsibility for the project. After six failed tests at White Sands, New Mexico, the decision was taken (for unrelated reasons) to move the program’s launches to Cape Canaveral, then named the “Long Range Proving Ground Base.” The first test was a success, and it paved the way for countless others.

The Big Picture is a recurring feature highlighting beautiful images that tell big stories. We explore topics as large as our planet, or as small as a single life, as affected by or seen through the lens of technology.

20
Jul

Google used DeepMind AI to cut its power bill


Google’s grand experiment in using artificial intelligence to save power is paying off. The search firm’s Demis Hassabis tells Bloomberg that the DeepMind AI has cut electricity use at Google data centers by “several percentage points” thanks to its extra-efficient use of equipment, such as cooling systems and windows. It’s not certain just how much energy the smart code is saving, but Google used slightly over 4.4 gigawatt-hours in 2014 alone — even a small dent in that consumption could easily save hundreds of millions of dollars. That pricey DeepMind acquisition is likely paying for itself.

The company sees more savings ahead, too. The AI now knows where there are gaps in its coverage, and it may tell Google to install more sensors to improve its effectiveness. Software can only do so much to lower the tech giant’s power consumption. However, it’s a relatively small investment that can pay big dividends, and not just for Google’s bottom line — combined with investments in renewable energy, it could do a lot to help the environment.

Source: Bloomberg

20
Jul

Brush up on hundreds of topics with the Tinycards app


Plenty of people have turned to the popular language-learning app Duolingo to become well-versed in a different tongue. The company knows how to hammer knowledge into your brain. That’s why it’s bringing us Tinycards, a special app meant for learning a lot more than language.

Using a similar system to Duolingo, Tinycards aids you in learning things like inventions, countries or even facts about the Solar System. If the topics included with the app aren’t intriguing to you, you can even create your own and eventually share them with other users. Using Tinycards is simple: You’ll look at a card, memorize pieces of information, and recall them later.

Each lesson only takes a few minutes of your time, so it’s perfect for quick learning on the go. For new Pokemon trainers out there with the wake of Pokemon Go, there’s even a Pokemon name lesson for you to get up to speed with so you can stop asking what that “bat thing” is called or if a Raichu is a Pikachu.

Tinycards is available for free for iOS users now, and there are more topics coming down the line.

Via: Lifehacker