Samsung will finally sell its cutesy 360-degree camera in the US
It’s been half a year since we first met Samsung’s charming 360-degree camera, and they’re still a little tough to come by. They’ve available in Korea and Singapore and Samsung sold them briefly at this year’s VidCon to web video fanatics, but that’s it… for a little longer, anyway. As with all the other new Samsung gear announced today, the Gear 360 will go on sale (online at least) starting on August 19th.
Need a quick refresher? The Gear 360 features F/2.0 fish-eye lenses, with a 15-megapixel sensor nestled behind each of them. Each of those cameras can capture of 195 degrees worth of stuff in front of them, which can then be stitched together into a single, immersive video (at up to 3,840 x 1,920 at 30 frames per second) and shared to the furthest corners of the internet. This adorable little ball-cam can also shoot roughly 30-megapixel stills, if that’s more your speed.
The caveat (you knew there had to be one) is that video editing and sharing only work well with recent Samsung smartphones. Unless you own a Galaxy Note 5, Note 7 or any of the GS6 or GS7 models, you’re sort of out of luck. Though the camera comes with an activation code for a Windows editing app, it’s a decidedly less elegant way of doing things. Oh, and be sure to keep a microSD card handy: There’s no internal storage here at all.
Apple Pay Now Supports Tangerine and PC Financial in Canada
Canadian bank Tangerine has updated its Mobile Banking app today to enable Apple Pay support for its Tangerine Money-Back MasterCard credit card.
Tangerine, a direct banking subsidiary of Scotiabank, is the seventh-largest bank in Canada with approximately 2 million customers as of last month.
Tangerine credit cards — no debit yet — can be added to Apple Pay by tapping the “Add Credit or Debit Card” option in the Wallet app on iPhone 5 and later running iOS 8.1 or newer. Verification can be completed with the updated Tangerine Mobile Banking app, available now on the App Store [Direct Link] for iPhone, iPad, and Apple Watch.
Apple Pay can be used virtually anywhere contactless payments are already accepted in Canada, including at Aldo, Apple Stores, Canadian Tire, Chapters, Coles, Giant Tiger, Indigo, London Drugs, Mark’s, McDonald’s, On The Go, Petro-Canada, Pizza Hut, Rona, Staples, Tim Hortons, and hundreds of other merchants nationwide.
Apple Pay expanded to Canada’s five largest banks in May and June, including BMO, CIBC, RBC, Scotiabank, and TD Canada Trust. The iPhone-based tap-to-pay service is also available to ATB Financial, Canadian Tire Bank, and non-bank-issued American Express cardholders.
Update: PC Financial MasterCards can also be added to Apple Pay starting today.
Related Roundup: Apple Pay
Tags: Canada, MasterCard
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Twitter Extends Functionality of ‘Moments’ for Users to Easily Follow Olympics
Twitter today revealed a change in how its “Moments” feature will work during the weeks of the Summer Olympic Games being held in Rio de Janeiro beginning August 5. A new tab for the Rio Olympics will be added to Moments — and every platform the Twitter feature is available for — but now users will be able to pipe news from the tab and into their own timeline for the entirety of the Olympic Games, which run until August 21.
Previously, Moments would only fill up a user’s timeline with news from any particular channel for a couple of hours, sometimes as long as a few days, but the Rio Olympics mark the first time the feature has been extended to nearly a month (via TechCrunch). Like with traditional Moments, when the event is over, the tweets and news disappear from your timeline completely.
Twitter hopes that this will allow those interested in the Olympics to follow along with news and updates coming out of the ceremony with minimal hassle, since they won’t need to go in and specifically follow individual news personalities, media companies, and olympians — whom they might just end up unfollowing when it’s all over anyway.
You’ll see the option to follow country specific Moments, which will last throughout the Games, so the best of what’s happening with your team will appear in your timeline for the entirety of the Olympics. You can also just opt to follow your favorite sports and events to see these Tweets in your timeline, or catch up on what you missed every day with recap Moments that will highlight results, medal counts and more. Of course, when a Moment that you follow ends, so do the Tweets, leaving your timeline the way it was before.
The following mechanic in Moments isn’t restricted to blanketed “Olympics” coverage either, since users will be able to temporarily subscribe to “their favorite sports and events,” like coverage of a specific country’s results or news out of the Gymnastics finals. In addition, when users visit Moments during the Olympic Games, each day it will be updated to include recaps of event results, medal wins, “and other notable newsworthy items.”
The Moments tab is currently available in Australia, Brazil, Canada, Mexico, United Kingdom and the United States. These countries, in addition to Germany, France, and Japan, will also get “country specific Moments” during the Rio Olympics this year. The bolstered Olympics tab in Moments will begin rolling out “in the coming days,” but users can already prepare for the Olympics by reading its dedicated tab in Twitter’s lightning bolt Moments menu right now.
In order to take advantage of the massive influx of tweets and users during the Olympics, and battle some recent negative growth statistics, Twitter is also preparing 207 team emojis for the social network, activated when users tweet with the appropriate hashtag of their favorite country. Of course, the company’s own Periscope and Vine apps will have featured Rio-related channels and content to keep fans engaged throughout the month of August.
Twitter can be downloaded from the iOS App Store for free. [Direct Link]
Tag: Twitter
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Instagram Just Became Snapchat With ‘Stories’ That Disappear After 24 Hours
Instagram today announced the launch of a new feature called “Instagram Stories,” which lets its users post customized images and videos onto their profile, abiding by the ephemeral rule of rival service Snapchat: every post disappears completely within 24 hours. The company said that this lets users not have to “worry about overposting” and clogging up their profile in the process.
Stories will appear in a bar at the top of each user’s normal Instagram feed, updating with new posts of all the same friends, family members, and popular accounts they follow. Each time someone posts a new picture or video within their Story, a colorful ring circles their profile picture. Jumping into Stories is as easy as tapping on one of those profile photos, and swiping to move back and forward through each user slideshow.
Today, we’re introducing Instagram Stories, a new feature that lets you share all the moments of your day, not just the ones you want to keep on your profile. As you share multiple photos and videos, they appear together in a slideshow format: your story.
With Instagram Stories, you don’t have to worry about overposting. Instead, you can share as much as you want throughout the day — with as much creativity as you want. You can bring your story to life in new ways with text and drawing tools. The photos and videos will disappear after 24 hours and won’t appear on your profile grid or in feed.
Comments are allowed on Stories, but are only able to be sent through Instagram’s direct message feature, because “unlike regular posts, there are no likes or public comments.” Keeping in the vein of Snapchat, you can swipe up on your own story to see every Instagram member who has viewed the post so far. To add a bit of flair to a profile, users can also post specific Stories to their page if they decide they want to keep the photo or video longer than 24 hours.
Some users are reporting that the Instagram Stories update has already been added to their device via an update that describes only “Bug fixes and performance improvements,” but the company itself mentioned that the update should begin rolling out to iOS and Android devices “over the next few weeks.” You can download the Instagram app for free on the App Store. [Direct Link]
Tag: Instagram
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Windows 10 Anniversary Update: How does Action Center work?
The Action Center is a much more important area with the Anniversary Update. You can now edit the way you receive rich notifications, and so you will find yourself checking it more often and not just clearing your notifications.
Thanks to upgrades in other apps and features, the Action Center’s notifications are much more useful. The new Skype app gives rich notifications, showing you the message you received. Facebook and many other apps do this as well. Visiting a website on Microsoft Edge allows this, too, as long as you have it open, though it doesn’t need to be in view.
Notifications are not the only reason to use the Action Center. You can also find the Quick actions area here, giving you multiple options for fast and easy computer use. Here’s what the Action Center can do now.
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Notifications
You can edit the notifications you receive by prioritizing the level of importance of each app and website. For example, Facebook messages may be more important than Skype notifications, so you you can raise the priority of notifications for Facebook. You can choose from: Normal, which each is already set to; high, which shows above normal priority; and top, which automatically moves the notifications to the top of the Action Center.
You can also change the number of notifications for a certain app, the default being three, but options range from one all the way to 20. To change your notification options, go to Settings > System > Notifications and Actions, and then choose which app you would like to edit.
Due to Cortana’s upgrades, you can also receive updates from your mobile device – whether it is Microsoft or not. This feature allows for text message notifications to be sent and displayed in your Action Center, with the ability to also answer those messages. You also receive notifications if the battery on your cell phone is running low. To allow this, you need to download the Cortana app on your mobile device and sign in with the same Microsoft account. As a sports fan, you can also receive your choice of updates on your favourite teams, along with weather, travel, shopping, and numerous other options to choose from.
To edit what notifications you want to receive from Cortana, which by default appear at the top of the Action Center, click on the Cortana button next to the Windows button, and then just under the home button is the notebook, which has options of what you like. To select your favourite sports teams, scroll down to sports. Once in this window, there will be an option at the bottom to add teams to your favourites list. Typing in a city, such as Denver, will instantly serve up teams like the Denver Broncos, NFL and Denver Nuggets, NBA.
Developers can create rich notifications for their apps now. Like we said, the new Skype’s notifications are an example of rich ones, and so aren’t Cortana’s/Reminders. Also, Microsoft made it so Windows Store notifications will now appear in the Action Center to alert you of app updates.
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Quick actions
The expanded Quick actions area gives you an easier way to take notes, turn certain features on and off, change brightness, and more.
Windows 8 introduced the metro-style, which most users didn’t like. Windows 10 removed this for the most part, only leaving a small aspect of metro in the Start menu. The Quick actions menu gives the users who liked that feature the chance to bring it back by turning on tablet mode. By opening the Action Center, tablet mode will be one of the selections to choose from at the bottom. By clicking on the button, it will change your layout, though it will be tough to notice until you exit the menu. To turn it off, go back and click the button again.
Click the expand button at bottom of Action Center to access Quick actions area, which is now customisable. The Anniversary Update gives you the option to change the position of each of the tiles in the Quick action area, including the ability remove and add them. To edit how they are ordered and which ones you see, go to Settings > System > and Notifications and Actions.
Some of the other Quick action options include OneNote for notes (which will gives you reminders in the Action Center), as well as the ability to change the brightness on your screen, toggle airplane mode and quiet hours, open the menus for VPN, project viewer, and connect (so you can connect to other devices).
Apple won’t have to pay a patent troll $625 million after all
Patent troll VirnetX has won multiple patent lawsuits against Apple, including a recent $625 million judgement over FaceTime and VPN tech. However, it appears it overplayed its past success during that trial. After Apple appealed, federal Judge Robert Schroeder threw out the judgement and demanded a retrial. The reason? VirnetX inappropriately mentioned the previous verdict, possibly prejudicing the jury against Apple.
VirnetX did have the right to bring up the November, 2012 case in an effort to prove that Apple willfully infringed its patents. However, the judge said the company brought it up when it shouldn’t have. He cited one example: “At [the November 2012] trial Apple said those same remarks about not using the patent. And you know, the jury didn’t believe them and agreed with us,” VirnetX’s lawyer said. That comment, the judge felt, may have been prejudicial. “Under the circumstances here, the repeated references to the prior jury verdict in the consolidated case resulted in an unfair trial.”
Under the circumstances here, the repeated references to the prior jury verdict in the consolidated case resulted in an unfair trial.
Schroeder also felt that that combining two lawsuits (one over FaceTime and the other over VPN technology) into one trial created the “potential for juror confusion.” As a result, he threw out the judgement and ordered two new trials, with the first starting on September 26th, 2016.
VirnetX fits the definition of a patent troll, as it uses its patent portfolio to sue successful firms and rarely develops its own products. Following the judgement, the company’s shares fell 44.6 percent. “We are disappointed by the court’s decision to vacate its prior ruling on consolidation and ordering the parties to retry the cases as two separate matters,” said VirnetX CEO and President Kendall Larsen.
Via: Ars Technica
Source: Court Order (via Ars Technica), VirnetX
Barclays swaps passwords for voice IDs for telephone banking
Just as fingerprint sensors have made smartphones more useful and secure, voice-authentication tech is making the dreaded call to customer services that bit more convenient. Following TalkTalk and fellow bank HSBC’s example, Barclays has also introduced voice identification to its telephone banking service in the UK. No stranger to biometrics, Barclays has been trialing voice recognition among a subset of customers for several years, only now making it available to anyone with a personal account.
Naturally, Barclays is using Nuance’s crème de la crème voice-verification tech, which can recognise more than 100 unique identifiers in speech. These include speed, emphasis and pronunciation, as well as vocal tract, nasal passage and larynx shape. Customers don’t have to do anything to enable the new security measure, as such. Over the course of two or three calls, Barclays will capture your individual voiceprint and use it to verify you’re you thereafter.
You can choose to opt out of the program if you want, of course; but that would mean you can’t tear up that almost illegible, dog-eared Post-it note of passwords and security questions once and for all.
Via: BBC
Source: Barclays
Xbox One S review: A worthy successor — to the Xbox 360
Microsoft is making a lot of assumptions with the Xbox One S. It’s a 40 percent smaller, 100 percent whiter version of the Xbox One that launched nearly three years ago, albeit with a few key differences. First is the built-in 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray player and compatibility with high dynamic range video for increased contrast and a wider color gamut. Then there’s support for Ultra HD streaming from apps like Netflix and Amazon Prime Video. As for the rest of the system? For better and worse, it’s basically the same.
The benefits of upgrading from 2005’s launch Xbox 360 to the Xbox 360 S in 2010 were pretty clear-cut. That isn’t the case this time around, though: Microsoft didn’t have to fix a loud console with an incredibly high failure rate. No, thanks to a slew of software updates, the Xbox One’s most serious issues have already been mostly addressed. And that makes the Xbox One S’ value proposition tricky.
Let’s say you have a 4K TV or plan on buying one in the relatively near future. Should you shell out $400 for the One S? What if you don’t plan on upgrading your TV any time soon and don’t see the appeal in collecting even more “perfect-er” Blu-rays? After spending a weekend testing the system in each of the above situations, the answer remains clear.
Hardware
Though they share a similar name, you’re not likely to confuse the Xbox One for the One S. The S measures 9.125 x 11.7 x 2.5 inches, versus the original’s 13.1 x 10.8 x 3.1 inches, and “floats” on a half-inch-thick slab of black plastic that’s flush with the back panel, but inset a quarter of an inch everywhere else. Microsoft boasts that the console is almost half the size of its predecessor.
That sounds impressive enough on paper, but the difference is even more striking in person, when you place the two consoles side by side. Every time I glance at them sitting next to each other I’m in disbelief that Microsoft managed to cram the same hardware and a power supply into a dramatically smaller package. Thanks to all this, putting the console in a backpack or messenger bag to use away from home is actually feasible — especially given the drop in weight, from 7.8 to 6.4 pounds.

The 2TB launch model sports a “robot white” chassis with black accents, whereas the original was a mix of glossy and matte black with chrome accents. After the Xbox 360’s overheating epidemic, Microsoft made a concerted effort to cover the Xbox One with vents. They’re here on the One S too, but they look different. Diagonal slats have given way to circular perforations throughout, with a 5-inch fan opening on the broadest panel. In seven consecutive hours of gaming, Ultra HD Blu-rays and streaming in 4K, I really didn’t hear it turn on — and if it did, the fan was extremely quiet.
Up front, the USB 3.0 port that was awkwardly stuck on the left side of the Xbox One has been moved to the lower left corner of the front face, below the slot-loading Ultra HD Blu-ray drive. Now there’s a small circular eject button sitting in the middle of the front side, while a push-button Xbox jewel near the right edge powers the system on and off. Immediately below that is the most important addition to the console: an IR blaster. Navigating the system dashboard and controlling streaming apps with a universal remote no longer requires Microsoft’s do-all Kinect sensor, because the One S itself can take commands from a remote. That’s your not-so-subtle hint that the Kinect is basically dead.

That take-it-or-leave-it approach to Kinect is obvious from the backside too. Whereas the Xbox 360 S added a dedicated port for the camera/mic gizmo, the One S strips it away entirely. If you still want to use the device for Cortana voice commands, for example, you can order a USB adapter from the Xbox website, free of charge. What finally doesn’t require an additional dongle, though, is the power supply. Since 2005, every Xbox has needed a bulky external power brick. That’s thankfully no longer the case: The One S uses a power cable similar to what’s included with many other modern devices.
The rest of the back panel remains unchanged. Microsoft may have given up on Kinect, but it hasn’t abandoned the HDMI input for connecting your cable box to the system. An HDMI-out socket, a pair of USB 3.0 connections, IR output, optical audio and an Ethernet jack round out the rest of the ports. Oh! And with the One S, there’s an included stand you can use to position the console vertically. It snaps into place easily, but I’m not sure how many people will actually situate their console that way.
Gamepad
I didn’t like the gamepad that came packed in with the 2013 Xbox One. It felt unfinished, with sharp edges and stiff shoulder buttons. Thankfully, the controller included with the One S represents the revisions Microsoft has made since then. The device now has rounded seams with satisfyingly clicky shoulder buttons and a 3.5mm headphone jack directly below the D-pad. This joypad will work as a Bluetooth controller for your gaming PC, and Microsoft says it has better range too. The subtle texture on the underbelly adds a fair amount of grip and reminds me a lot of the PlayStation 4 gamepad’s bottom side. All of those refinements make this controller a joy to use for extended sessions.
Thanks to these changes, the $150 Xbox One Elite controller is a lot less necessary now. The custom key bindings and swappable thumbsticks are still great, but spending that much feels even more like overkill now than it did last year.

Software
Without the Windows Anniversary update, there’s nothing different about the Xbox One S. Over the weekend, Microsoft started rolling out the patch that unlocks 4K UHD streaming, Ultra HD Blu-ray playback and support for HDR video. That’s right, none of the headlining features of the console are usable out of the box without a large software update. Again. In 2013, this was kind of understandable: Following a controversial E3 keynote five months before launch, Microsoft had to drastically retool the system software.
This time should have been different, though. The company has presumably been working on the Xbox One S for a while. And yet, the device’s headline features aren’t available in the box. Similar to what happened with the original Xbox One launch, if you wanted to pull the One S out of the box and start watching The Revenant or streaming Man in the High Castle you’ll have to sit through a lengthy update. On my modest 90 Mbps connection, it took me about 45 minutes from unboxing to actually using the console. I cannot stress how ridiculous it is that this is still a thing. More than that, the Blu-ray player app doesn’t come pre-installed either.
Once that’s out of the way, though, it’s smooth sailing. The recent Anniversary Update makes the console feels complete. You can listen to music from any source while you’re playing games or just navigating the dashboard now, and accessing your games and apps is a lot easier with a handy shortcut button in the home screen’s upper-right corner. This officially marks the debut of Cortana on the Xbox platform as well.
4K UHD
For all the external changes, it’s what’s inside the Xbox One S that matters most. Support for 4K Ultra HD video is the console’s headline feature. Good thing, then, that it handles 2160p playback without a hitch. Not all movies and TV shows are created equal, though. Sure, Netflix has a raft of UHD programming on offer, but not everything looks nearly as good as House of Cards or Stranger Things in 4K. That’s partly because not everything uses high-dynamic range video for improved contrast and color saturation.

Same goes for movies, like last year’s The Revenant. Each scene carries a tremendous amount of depth and detail; the picture quality and award-winning cinematography makes the movie feel like a BBC nature documentary on steroids. Truthfully, though, the film is going to look amazing on any UHD Blu-ray player regardless of the manufacturer. It’s a testament of the talent involved, not who made the playback device.
The Xbox One will also play HDR-enabled games. However, none of them will be available until this fall when the Microsoft-developed Gears of War 4 and Forza Horizon 3 come out. Working with HDR is going to be expensive for developers to implement, though, so don’t expect many games aside from Microsoft’s own to actually use it. Is there a difference playing normal games like Forza Horizon 2 or last year’s Rise of the Tomb Raider in 4K versus 1080p? Not that I could tell. The Xbox One S upscales those games’ 1080p resolution to 2160p, matching the UHD display it’s connected to, but I otherwise couldn’t spot any differences.
The Competition
Ultra-HD Blu-ray players from Samsung and Philips cost around $300 and have built-in streaming apps, but you can’t play Madden or Halo on those. That’s the value proposition here: You can rely on your TV or Ultra-HD Blu-ray player to access the programming that’ll make the most of all those pixels on your new display, but you can’t play Xbox games on those. The PlayStation 4 still only plays 1080p Blu-rays and despite Sony’s claims that the console can output 4K video, we haven’t seen it happen yet. Sony has teased a higher-spec PS4 too (codenamed “Neo”), but the company hasn’t said anything about UHD Blu-ray playback.
Really, the Xbox One S’ biggest competition comes from Microsoft itself. The company may have kicked off its E3 keynote by unveiling the Xbox One S, but it wrapped the event with news of “Project Scorpio.” It’s a high-spec Xbox One that the company claims will play games at a native 4K resolution and also in virtual reality. It’s slated to arrive late next year. Microsoft so far hasn’t said anything about price, but given its specs, it’s safe to say it won’t be cheap.
In terms of money, the One S is in direct competition with the original Xbox One. The $300 One S’ with 500GB of storage doesn’t come out until later this month. Meanwhile, you can buy the original Xbox One with 500GB for just $250 — half of what it cost three years ago. This fire sale is indicative of Microsoft’s future plans for the One S: It’ll become the default, with Project Scorpio aimed at more serious gamers (or those with deeper pockets).

Wrap-up
Unless you own a fancy new display or have one earmarked for the future, there’s no reason to upgrade from your existing Xbox One. The only benefit you’ll see is the increased internal storage space and, even then there are existing Xbox One models with 2TB of room for games and apps. That said, there’s a lot to like about the system, especially if your TV can support all the super high-resolution bells and whistles on offer. There isn’t one distinct reason to buy one today, but if you don’t already own an Ultra HD Blu-ray player, you won’t be disappointed if you decide to pick one up. The S is the Xbox One you know, but tailored for the future.
New littleBits kit gives kids the power to rule their rooms
Remember when you were a kid and couldn’t keep your mom and your rowdiest sibling out of your room? You’d probably have loved littleBits’ latest kit. It provides young makers and inventors a fun way to set up alarms and (harmless) booby traps to keep piggy banks safe, or to keep diaries and other secrets away from prying eyes. Since these kits contain small, Lego-like electronic components (called “bits”), including the Makey Makey Bit that turns almost anything into a touch controller, kids can also use it to make whatever they want. They can turn a fruit into a game controller or even make an interactive Gabby Douglas poster. Seriously, check out the video below the fold.
Best thing about the “Rule Your Room” kit, though, is that it’s cheaper than the company’s other packs at $100 and already comes with Makey Makey Bit, which is typically sold separately. Of course, the more expensive kits also have more components, but this is a good starting point for those who want to see what a littleBits bundle can do. It’s now available for pre-order on the company’s website and will officially be available on August 15th.
Source: littleBits
ICYMI: Some robots independently sing, others help babies

Today on In Case You Missed It: A new neural network robot in Japan can independently sing and move whenever it wants to. Researchers developed a robotic onesie for babies who may have cerebral palsy that helps make motor skills connections in the brain, giving them a boost in learning to crawl and walk. And Disney and ETH Zurich teamed up to engineer a new way to create 3D prints by thermoforming them one at a time.
Finally make sure you watch the video of a gold-plated record playing all the way up to space and back down to earth, on a space-proof turntable. As always, please share any interesting tech or science videos you find by using the #ICYMI hashtag on Twitter for @mskerryd.



