Asus Zenwatch 3 revealed in leaked hands-on pics ahead of IFA 2016
After originally being spotted on a posting by the Federal Communications Commission, the new, round Asus Zenwatch 3 has broken further cover in a collection of hands-on pictures leaked online.
The FCC filing suggested that the forthcoming smartwatch, expected to launch at IFA 2016 in Berlin at the end of August, will be round. The leaked images suggest the same.
As well as its shape, other things that can be gleaned from the pictures include confirmation that the Zenwatch 3 will not have contactless charging. There are two golden contacts on the rear that suggest it will need to be connected to a charging ring.
- Asus ZenWatch 3 is round, likely to launch at IFA 2016
It will support fast charging though, with 5V/2A charging revealed in the earlier leak. That also stated it will have Bluetooth 4.2 and Wi-Fi built into the device.
Apart from those nuggets, the rest is purely visual.
This particular variant has a gold circular band and the presence of three buttons suggests that it will not swivel to access functions, unlike the Samsung Gear S2.
It is also rather beefy, much like former Huawei or Motorola devices. We’re not yet sure what it looks like when switched on, and whether it will have a complete round display or if it will adopt the flat tire-style of the Moto 360.
We should find out more in the coming weeks as IFA looms.
Spotify Gaming puts your favorite soundtracks in one place
Video game soundtracks hold a pretty special place in the Engadget Gaming crew’s heart. Whether it’s a collection of painstakingly curated licensed tracks a la Hotline Miami or wholly original compositions from Austin Wintory or Jesper Kyd, the right music can make a good game great and an excellent one even better. Spotify recognizes this too and is launching a new subsection dedicated to gaming music. The new collection brings everything under one category now (finding gaming stuff was a bit messy before), works across pretty much every platform and even includes chiptune stuff from the ’80s.

In addition to original music, Spotify is also featuring curated guest playlists including one put together by Engadget senior reporter Jessica Conditt and yours truly. Jess’ tracks are upbeat indie tunes and K-pop from the likes of Regina Spektor, Janelle Monáe, Lily Allen, Girls’ Generation and Amanda Palmer. Her games of choice for those? League of Legends and Pokemon Go. Walking around the park with “Mr.Mr.” in your ear is going to make chasing the ever-elusive pikachu an awful lot more fun.
My tracks will hopefully get you pumped while playing Overwatch, Rocket League or anything competitive. How’s that? Well, because they’re all metal, all the time, with Slayer, Urfaust, Abbath, High on Fire and Bolt Thrower making appearances. Our picks have been blended together into one 43-song playlist that should get you through at least one session without hearing the same track twice. For even more, head over to Spotify.com/gaming and let us know what you find in the comments below.
Source: Spotify
Squid protein makes textiles self-healing
You might be able to repair your ripped jeans one day just be adding water, thanks to a breakthrough from Penn State researchers. Based on its earlier research on self-healing plastics, the team turned squid teeth proteins (yep) into a liquid form using yeast and bacteria, then used it to coat cotton, wool and other fabrics. If the material is torn, you just need to put the edges together, apply warm water and it magically “heals,” as flexible and strong as before — even after being laundered.
“Fashion designers use natural fibers made of proteins like wool or silk that are expensive and they are not self-healing,” said Penn State Professor Melik C. Demirel. “We were looking for a way to make fabrics self-healing using conventional textiles. So we came up with this coating technology.”
The proteins can be used to fix regular, non-coated fabrics by adding water, or applied to threads before the material is even made. The technique isn’t perfect — there are visible seams — but it’s still better, stronger and easier than any sew job I’d attempt. As the garments can be self-healed by water, throwing them in the wash would also fix small tears or other defects.
It sounds great for klutzy clothes owners, but the research, supported by the US Army and Navy research arms, isn’t just aimed at consumers. Dermirel thinks the substance could be adapted to create clothing that protects soldiers, farmers or industrial workers by neutralizing toxic chemicals. “If you need to use enzymes for biological or chemical effects, you can have an encapsulated enzyme with self-healing properties degrade the toxin before it reaches the skin,” he said. By adding anti-bacterial properties, it could also be used in medical dressings or mesh clothing to reduce infection risks.
The team now needs to figure out how to create the proteins without using actual squid or their teeth, and plans to further torture-test the repaired materials. “The next step would be to see if clothes can self-repair when we pour the liquid into a washing machine, like you would a detergent, and apply water and heat,” Demirel tells CNN.
Via: Gizmodo
Source: Penn State
Sky will stream tomorrow’s Soccer Saturday on Facebook and YouTube
When broadcasters put down billions of pounds to secure rights to the world’s biggest sporting competitions, consumers who aren’t able to afford or don’t want pay-TV subscriptions often miss out. In the past, companies like Sky and BT have laid on a free day or weekend of access to show people what they’re missing, but more recently, online video services have proved to be popular alternatives. With the Premier League season kicking off tomorrow, Sky has confirmed it will stream its Soccer Saturday show completely free of charge on Facebook and YouTube.
Sky says that in addition to its normal broadcast on Sky Sports New HQ and Sky Sports 1, Soccer Saturday will be available live on Sky 1, SkySports.com and on the channel’s official Facebook and YouTube pages. It’ll build on Sky’s commitment to share goals and other important match events directly on Twitter and in its official apps.
Although Sky has a record number of live matches this season — including the first Friday night games — the company is keen to show that its programming isn’t all just cameras at the ground. Soccer Saturday already has solid support, but opening it up to a wider online audience may tempt indecisive viewers to pay up for a proper Sky Sports subscription.
Source: Sky
Volkswagen Touran review: Peak practicality
The world might have gone SUV and crossover mad, but if you’ve a brood of three (or more) to cart around then a mid-sized crossover like the Nissan Qashqai doesn’t actually cut it. That’s why – despite their perceived lack of sexiness – MPVs like the Volkswagen Touran continue to prevail.
If you need five or seven seats, want more than two isofix child seat fixing points and, frankly, aren’t looking to spend oodles of cash on a car, then a mid-sized MPV such as this really is your best bet when buying new.
Handy, then, that Volkswagen has just refreshed the Touran as part of its on-going range renewal. Based on the underpinning of a Golf (the MQB platform), the Touran comes with seven seats as standard and starts from £22,270 in the UK. Is this the family “Wagen” to go for?
Volkswagen Touran review: Petrol heads
You can choose from two petrols and three diesel engine options in the Touran. You’ll have read a lot about diesels recently – not least in regard to Volkswagen. The company’s new-generation engines, fitted to the Touran in 1.6-litre (110hp) and 2.0-litre (150 or 190hp) are modern units which use ad-blue technology to reduce NOx emissions, and are highly efficient. But they cost more to buy and will still produce higher NOx and particulate levels than a petrol engine.
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Given that many cars like this will be put to use on the school run, working at low speed and covering comparatively low mileages, we’d therefore reckon many buyers would do well to try a petrol engine. And with Volkswagen’s new turbo petrols being some of the best, we chose to test the 1.2 TSi 110hp engine in this car. It’s the lowliest powered Touran you can buy, and this isn’t a small car – so we were interested to find out if a small capacity petrol unit felt right here.
Start up a modern direct-injection petrol like this, and beyond a slightly audible injector tick from the engine, one of its most pleasant attributes is quietness. The Touran’s unit is a winner in this regard – it’s refined, yet set out along the road and it’s eager too. It revs happily, doesn’t feel as slow as you might imagine and is generally a pleasant thing to drive.
The engine is aided by light yet precise controls and a nice, positive action gearshift – just as we’ve come to expect from the Volkswagen group. The ride is pliant and clam, helped by this model’s small wheels, and the handling is tidy and neat. The Touran doesn’t drive like a van, in fact it feels more car like than many crossovers.
The real surprise though is that it returned 47mpg during our test route. Whether you’d get those kind of figures just driving the Touran around town, we’re unable to verify. But taken at face value, the smallest petrol version of the car is frugal enough to make you think twice about going diesel – which will cost you £1,600 more in list-price terms.
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Just be careful if your driving involves a lot of high-speed, out of town work, or if you’re regularly loaded up with a full cargo – because then you need to work the engine harder and it can occasionally feel lacking in power. But it never gets too noisy and harsh. It’s just if we were using our Touran that way, we’d be swayed towards the diesel – or the more powerful 1.4 TSi petrol.
Volkswagen Touran review: People power
Where MPVs come into their own is inside. And here, Volkswagen truly raises the bar in the Touran. Everything feels incredibly high quality and works with a high level of precision. Perhaps most importantly, the Touran is stuffed full of clever storage spaces, compartments, nets and bins that make family life in the car just so much easier. Volkswagen says you can specify up to 47 of them in total.
The ones that we would “drawer” your attention to (sorry, couldn’t resist) that came with our SE-spec car were the four bins/slots on the dashboard (two to the right side of the driver, one on top of the dash, one in front of the passenger) – plus the glovebox. The net on the passenger side footwell, huge (lined) door bins which can store 1.5-litre bottles in each front door, and an overhead drop down console which will store two pairs of sunglasses. In the back, we got airline-style fold up tables, another roof-mounted sunglasses holder and storage units for the third row passengers. Be warned, you’ll lose stuff in your Touran. But at least it’ll stay tidy.
Pocket-lint
Storage for things is one skill, but seating seven can be a headache. Yet here, too, the Touran seems to have things licked. Each chair feels chunky, sturdy and high quality. They’re well trimmed with no odd sharp edges to catch unsuspecting hands, and high quality fabric. Parents will be interested to hear that every single rear seat (including the middle perch and the very rear-most third row seats) have isofix attachments. Middle row leg room is great for 6-foot adults. And the rear seats can cope with adults for a short journey. Kids and teenagers are likely to be happy for longer runs.
But the bug bear of this type of car has always been accessing that rear row of seats, and folding seats quickly to transport more load and less people. Handily, a new fold-flat system means that the rear-most seats fold flat into the floor with a single tug of a lever. When they do this, there are no odd gaps in the floor either, so the Touran should be easy to keep clean. The middle row all topple to fold flat too. And unlike many cars, the front passenger seat can be folded forwarded – meaning the Touran makes a great impromptu IKEA / DIY van.
There’s other clever stuff too. The outer rear seats feature a simple pull-and-lift mechanism to allow reasonable access to the back row, and the rear parcel shelf stores below the boot floor when it’s not being used. When this is in place, a simple tap gets it to retract half way back into the boot, creating easy access to stuff.
Pocket-lint
Many cars of this ilk get this stuff wrong – and having a young family ourselves, we appreciated the fact that the Touran has clearly been designed by a sympathetic, smart team that’s clearly used to the trials of shepherding a herd of young people (and their paraphernalia) around.
If we’re being picky, though, it’s all terribly dull. There’s no flash, and a lot of black and grey to go with this review car’s brown exterior. Oh, and the boot lid is heavy to pull down, as it isn’t powered (that’s a £335 option).
Volkswagen Touran review: Technical spectacle
The Touran comes in five spec levels. Our SE-grade car is an obvious choice over the base S car, because it comes with alloy wheels, a USB port, lots more of the storage cubbies (and the folding front passenger seat), rear tinted glass and parking sensors.
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Higher spec models – there’s the SEL “luxury” and R-Line “performance” cars – get bigger wheels, more storage, nicer upholstery and bigger, better tech (CarPlay / Android Auto is standard from next-step up SEL grade). However, nothing that jumps out as a must have.
But our pick of the specs is SE Family which adds a sat nav system, VW’s Car-Net “Guide and inform” online data system, a panoramic sunroof, rear door sunblinds and adaptive cruise control. There’s even a system which amplifies the driver’s voice around the car so those in the back can hear (it’s £95 in the other models, included in the SE Family). It’s a £1,485 jump from SE to SE Family.
Like most new cars, you can add (at cost) a raft of advanced driver support and safety systems like lane keep assist, high beam assist, a driver concentration alert system and park assist (which steers into parallel park bays for you and is a reasonably priced £190 option on all models about S spec).
Pocket-lint
All models allow Bluetooth streaming of music, have a DAB radio and come with a number of 12-volt sockets. What we’d like to see is a few more USB sockets dotted around the cabin, given how tech-focused modern families are.
Volkswagen Touran review: A van with windows
If only the exterior looked as good as the interior, eh?
Ultimately the Touran’s exterior finish follows the same functionally-led approach as the car’s inside, meaning it puts function over form. And all of that boxy interior space can’t be magic-ed from nowhere, as reflected on the outside.
Pocket-lint
But we still wish the Touran didn’t subscribe quite so closely to the “van-with-windows” formula of MPV design. Perhaps that’s unfair – it does have some neat design details here and there.
But in silhouette, a Citroen Grand Picasso easily out-styles it, and Renault’s forthcoming Scenic is about to set the cat amongst the pigeons in this class, with its crossover-like design, and standard 20-inch wheels laying on the style with a trowel.
Verdict
The Volkswagen Touran is a sleeper car among a vehicle fleet of look-at-me crossovers. It wears its practicality on its sleeve and that creates a boxy-looking car, which – particularly when rendered in the brown of our test model – isn’t what you’d describe as a looker. But you already knew that from our pictures.
Still, if you really need the space – for stuff and people – then the Touran does an admirable and impressive job. It never wows, as such, but just constantly supports your life and impresses with it ability to cope with almost anything you throw at it. The interior space, storage and seat design makes it a go-to model for anyone with three or more children.
Add that it’s good value, a decent drive for this type of vehicle, highly refined and well built, and the Touran is a car that has truly surprised us with its blend of abilities. And with its range of engines and specs, there’s a Touran to suit most budgets and most needs.
It might not be all the car you’ll ever desire – but for a young or growing family crowd, it is arguably more than all the car you could ever need.
New iPhone 7 leaks show off dual-camera setup and new home button
Apple is likely getting ready to unveil new iPhone models in just a few weeks, so it’s no surprise to see more sets of photos leak out, purportedly revealing the upcoming devices and what they might feature.
Rumours claim Apple might offer up to three different models of the iPhone 7 this year, including a “Pro” model that would bring major features such as a dual-camera setup. That said, the most recent leak (from LSA) seems to only reveal a pair of phones, though one of them appears to feature the dual camera. There are no metal connectors on the back, however, which conflicts with previous reports about the Pro model.
Keep in mind these pictures, which supposedly show the exterior of the iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus, could simply depict dummy units.
As for that other set of leaked photos (via MacRumours), which show the screen assembly for the iPhone 7, they seem to be missing the cutout for a traditional home button, coinciding with previous rumours about Apple using Force Touch-like technology in conjunction with a Touch ID fingerprint sensor. In other words, the next iPhone might have a pressure-sensitive home button.
Check out Pocket-lint’s rumour round-up for more details about the the next iPhone models, which will presumably sport the iPhone 7 brand. They are expected to be an interim update ahead of a 2017 overhaul in honour of the iPhone’s tenth anniversary.
The gallery above has all the new leaks.
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Rogue One trailer shows Star Wars prequels can work after all
To be completely honest, we’ve not been as excited on the build up to Rogue One: A Star Wars Story as much as we were ahead of Force Awakens. After all, the track history of Star Wars prequels hasn’t been great.
But this new trailer changes everything.
Director Gareth Edwards seems to have not only grasped the concept of a Star Wars movie, he adds his own rapidly improving flair. For example, the scene where the tie-fighter rises to directly face Rebel spy Jyn Erso (Felicity Jones) is glorious. And the brief glimpse of Darth Vader? Consider our spines thoroughly shivered.
Check out the trailer for yourself below. It’s more than two minutes of Star Wars goodness for sure.
Rogue One: A Star Wars Story hits UK and US cinemas on 16 December, although some nations, including France and the Netherlands, get it a couple of days earlier, the lucky beggers.
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It will set the stall for the next chapter in the new trilogy, planned for Christmas 2017, with talk that even though it leads up to the events of Star Wars: Episode IV – A New Hope, Rogue One contains information that could be important to the sequel movies too.
We’ll see you in the queue outside.
CVS launches its own mobile payment system
CVS, which has yet to adopt Apple Pay and other NFC-based payment services, has launched a mobile payment solution of its own. It’s aptly called CVS Pay, and it shows a barcode on the phone screen that the pharmacy can then scan to ring up your purchases, so long as you link a credit or a debit card to it. You can also present the barcode to pick up prescriptions that you can refill and manage in-app, as well as to rack up loyalty points. No need to present your physical rewards card at the counter anymore.
You also don’t have to physically hand over your phone for a drive-through pick-up, since the service generates a five-digit code you can tell the personnel. CVS Pay lives within the company’s Pharmacy app. If you’re in New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Delaware, you either have to download the app or update it to start using the payment service. You’ll still get access to the feature even if you don’t live in any of those locations, though you might have to wait a few months, as it’s not scheduled for a nationwide rollout until later this year.
Via: TechCrunch



