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6
Oct

Uh-oh! A replacement Samsung Galaxy Note 7 caught fire on a plane


Samsung is facing another huge scandal with its Galaxy Note 7.

Samsung recalled the Galaxy Note 7 last month after 92 incidents of the device overheating were reported in the US. The company took a couple weeks to deliver replacement units to customers, carriers, and stores – and it made sure to brand all those replacements with various markings, which you can read about here, so that consumers would know the new units are safe. But it now seems like the replacements aren’t safe after all.

Southwest Airlines flight 944 from Louisville to Baltimore was evacuated on 5 October. Arson investigators have confirmed that the evacuation occurred due to a Galaxy Note 7 that overheated during boarding, leading to smoke in the cabin, according to WHAS-TV. The incident happened around 9:15 am. Brian Green, the phone’s owner, has already told media outlets the phone was a replacement.

Sarah Green, his wife, also told The Courier-Journal of Louisville how her husband described the incident: he said his replacement phone “made a popping noise and started smoking” and powered down. At that point, Brian threw it on the floor of the plane. According to The Verge, when Brian dropped it, he said a “thick grey-green angry smoke” poured out. The device burned through the carpet and seared the plane’s subfloor.

Following the US Consumer Product Safety Commission’s formal recall of one million faulty Galaxy Note 7 units in mid-September, the US Federal Aviation Administration banned use of the Galaxy Note 7 during flights. Although it’s not yet clear if the FAA allows replacement Galaxy Note 7 units on flights, the incident that occurred early on Wednesday happened before the Southwest plane was airborne and nobody was hurt.

Brian confirmed his Galaxy Note 7 was a replacement unit by releasing a photograph of the phone’s box, which showed the black square symbol that indicates a replacement Galaxy Note 7. Green said the phone had a green battery icon too, which also indicates a replacement device. Green said he picked up the new phone at an AT&T store on 21 September. The Louisville Fire Department’s arson unit now has it for investigation.

And Brian said he’s already replaced it with an iPhone 7.

6
Oct

Surgeons complete first uterus transplants from live donors in US


A team of surgeons at Baylor University Medical Center in Dallas have achieved something that hadn’t previously been done in the US. With the help of a Swedish surgical team, doctors performed the first uterus transplants from living donors. The experimental procedures took place between September 14th and 22nd with four total transplants. While the first three were unsuccessful, the fourth patient is showing positive results based on follow-up tests. The transplanted uteri were removed from those first three patients and they’re expected to resume normal activity soon.

For the fourth patient, tests indicate good blood flow to the uterus with no signs of rejection or infection. “We are cautiously optimistic that she could ultimately become the first uterine transplant recipient in the US to make it to the milestone of uterine functionality,” a statement from Baylor University Medical Center explained.

16 uterine transplants have been performed around the world thus far. In fact, the Swedish team that assisted doctors at Baylor are considered experts on the procedure. There have been five births following procedures they’ve completed. Following these most recent transplants, both surgical teams say they’ve gained valuable knowledge from the three unsuccessful cases that will prove beneficial to future operations. Changes will include updates to protocols and post-op management with special attention to the thickness of the uterine veins.

Back in February, the Cleveland Clinic performed the first uterus transplant in the US. In that case, the 26-year-old recipient would have needed to have the organ removed after one or two pregnancies due to medications that kept her body from rejecting it. Due to compromised blood flow caused by an infection in the weeks that followed, the transplanted uterus was removed in March.

Via: CNN

Source: Baylor University Medical Center (1), (2)

6
Oct

Replacement Note 7 starts smoking on Southwest flight (updated)


A Southwest flight was evacuated in Lousiville, Kentucky when a Samsung Galaxy Note 7 overheated and began smoking on board. Lousiville Metro Arson investigators confirmed to WAVE News 3 that a Samsung device was the cause of the incident. All passengers and crew members exited the plane safely via the main cabin door and no injuries were reported. To make matters worse, the device was a replacement following the company’s global recall of the handset over the last few weeks.

The Verge spoke to Brian Green, the owner of the Note 7, who confirmed that the phone was a replacement unit that he received at an AT&T store on September 21st. There’s a black square icon on the back of the box and Green said the device had a green battery indicator, both of which are signs Samsung said would let customers know a handset was safe to use. Green told The Verge he had powered down the device at the request of the crew and put it in his pocket when it began smoking. One of Green’s colleagues said the phone had burned through the plane’s carpet when they went back on the place to grab carry-on items.

The recent global recall of the Note 7 was bad enough for Samsung, but if there are still safety risks with the replacement devices, the whole ordeal could get a lot worse. The company has released battery-limiting updates outside of the US to prevent the phones from exploding.

Update: A Samsung spokesperson sent the following statement to Engadget:

“Until we are able to retrieve the device, we cannot confirm that this incident involves the new Note 7. We are working with the authorities and Southwest now to recover the device and confirm the cause. Once we have examined the device we will have more information to share.”

Source: WAVE News 3

6
Oct

Nike’s self-lacing Mags are hot, won’t catch fire


For Nike, yesterday was the culmination of a passion project which began in 2007. It was then that iconic designer Tinker Hatfield, who is behind the most popular Air Jordan models, took on the task of creating an innovative shoe based on the one worn by Marty McFly (Michael J. Fox) in Back to the Future Part II. Now, as demoed by Fox himself last year, the Nike Mag is finally more than a film prop, thanks to a self-lacing technology the sportswear giant calls “Adaptive Fit.”

This is the same pair Nike is giving people a chance to win through an online raffle. Tickets are $10 each and all proceedings are going to The Michal J. Fox Foundation, an organization that’s trying to find a cure for Parkinson’s disease. But, I know what you’re wondering: “Are they the real deal?” Well, I had the chance to try on a pair last night at a private Nike event in New York City and I’m happy to report they didn’t disappoint. While brief, the experience made me feel like Nike’s other self-lacing shoes, HyperAdapt 1.0, can’t come soon enough.

After being escorted into a glowing room, a Nike employee wearing white gloves brought me a Mag size 11 and very carefully placed them on the floor for me to wear. I’m actually a size 10.5, but since the company only made it in men’s 7, 9, 11 and 13, it recommends selecting the next size up. The first thing I did was admire how much more stunning they are in person (though I say that anytime I try to find an excuse to buy a sneaker), especially compared to the version from 2011. Everything on this silhouette, from the midsole to the upper, feels premium.

Once I slipped my right foot in the shoe and as soon as my heel touched the insole, the Mag’s power-lacing mechanism kicked in. At that moment you really do feel like Marty McFly — if only we had actual working hoverboards (no, not those).

A video posted by Edgar Alvarez (@edgaralvarezb) on Oct 4, 2016 at 7:19pm PDT

There are three buttons on the inside, colored red, yellow and green, which let you adjust the tightness of the laces. They’re also used to light up the LEDs across the midsole, the area that displays how much battery is left on your shoe. Surprisingly, the Nike Mag is quite comfortable. Based on its extreme high-top design, I was expecting it to be heavy and clunky, but thankfully that wasn’t the case. In fact, without looking, I wouldn’t have been able to tell the difference between the Mag and Air Jordan 1 I arrived with. That was the biggest surprise as I walked around in them.

The bad news is there’s a slim to none chance I’ll ever own the Mags. Nike is only making 89 pairs available to the public, so if you don’t win the raffle expect to see them on eBay for somewhere in the $20-$30k range. For context, the 2011 Mag, which lacked Nike’s Adaptive Fit tech, go for anywhere from $8,000 to $12,000. But, I suppose that’s the price you have to pay if you want to look like you’re from the future.

And don’t forget, you only have until October 11th to enter the contest.

6
Oct

Spotify ads briefly served malware to your PC


Some Spotify listeners got more than just free music with their ad-supported software. Multiple users report that the streaming service was serving malware-laden ads that would pop up your default web browser in a bid to compromise your system. Reportedly, some of these didn’t even require your input to do damage. And they weren’t specific to any one platform, either — Linux, Mac and Windows users all saw the same behavior, although it’s not clear that the hostile code could damage all three platforms.

In response, Spotify tells us that this was the result of an “isolated issue” with an ad, and that it has since “shut it down.” Only a “small number of users” ran into the malware, it says. You can read the full statement below. With that said, it’s bound to be slightly embarrassing when the company ran into a similar issue in 2011. It’s also a reminder of one of the smaller perks of paying for a subscription service: when you don’t get ads in the first place, you’re not at risk of receiving rogue ads.

“A small number of users have experienced a problem with questionable website pop ups in their default browsers as a result of an isolated issue with an ad on our free tier. We have now identified the source of the problem and have shut it down. We will continue to monitor the situation.”

PSA: uninstall Spotify free, their ads are plagued with malware right now. pic.twitter.com/DUOqDrnDUZ

— Volp (@VolpRS) October 5, 2016

Via: The Next Web, 9to5Mac

Source: Spotify Community, Volp (Twitter)

6
Oct

Sony releases 80-title lineup of PSVR games and apps


When we got our hands on the PlayStation VR, we confirmed two things: One, that the headset and PS4 hardware won’t match the performance of a higher-end PC and Oculus Rift or HTC Vive; And two, that’s balanced by all the content Sony has lined up. While incomplete lists of the system’s upcoming games and apps have been compiled before, Sony has released the full lineup of nearly 80 titles available at or soon after it launches on October 13th.

The list is split almost evenly between availability on opening day and Q4 2016, with the former including big releases we knew were coming like Batman: Arkham VR, EVE: Valkyrie, RIGS, and Sony’s vignette sampler PlayStation VR Worlds. Games coming out by the holiday season include Moto Racer 4, Psychonauts in the Rhombus of Ruin, and the free Star Wars Battlefront Rogue One: X-wing VR Mission. A few have been pushed back to the first quarter of next year, like Golem and the Myst-esque XING: The Land Beyond. There’s even a few non-games, like the Ethan Hawke interactive narrative Invasion!, but those are only a handful of the entire list.

While 80-odd titles is impressive, they vary in length and depth. Some, like Rise of the Tomb Raider: Blood Ties, are short VR experiences using a known franchise as a backdrop. A few, like World War Toons and XING, can be played with but don’t require PSVR. It’s still a hefty amount of content for gamers to devour. Unsure which to buy? Many of the list’s heavy-hitters are featured in the demo disc bundled with the PSVR headset.

Source: Sony

6
Oct

Personal assistants are ushering in the age of AI at home


Google Home is the latest embodiment of a virtual assistant. The voice-activated speaker can help you make a dinner reservation, remind you to catch your flight, fire up your favorite playlist and even translate words for you on the fly. While the voice interface is expected to make quotidian tasks easier, it also gives the company unprecedented access to human patterns and preferences that are crucial to the next phase of artificial intelligence.

Comparing an AI agent to a personal assistant, as most companies have been doing of late, makes for a powerful metaphor. It is one that is indicative of the human capabilities that most major technology companies want their disembodied helpers to adopt. Over the last couple of years, with improvements in speech-recognition technology, Siri, Cortana and Google Now have slowly learned to move beyond the basics of weather updates to take on more complex responsibilities like managing your calendar or answering your queries. But products that invade our personal spaces — like Amazon’s Echo and Google Home — point to a larger shift in human-device interaction that is currently underway.

Onstage demos of Google Home, which has the company’s assistant built into it, suggest a conversational capability that requires an advanced understanding of human intent and context. The device relies almost entirely on the company’s speech-recognition technology that has been in the making for almost a decade, since the early days of GOOG 411. But over the years, the basic telephone-based directory search has grown into the much more complex Google Now.

Amazon’s Echo ecosystem relies on virtual assistant Alexa to respond to voice commands.

The drastic jump in the Android assistant’s capabilities has come from neural net training and deep learning techniques that have allowed scientists to boost speech-recognition technology to a point where it is now starting to learn the nuances of human behavior through the medium of voice.

Using the voice to communicate with an outside entity makes for an intimate and innately human experience. “Speech is the most dominant way that humanity has been communicating with each other,” David Nahamoo, speech CTO at IBM Research, said over the phone. “When we communicate with the outside, we speak. But from outside to inside, we absorb information a lot better visually. It’s because of our heritage and the evolution that we have gone through. From the standpoint of efficiency, speech is quickest way to get a point across.”

“Voice changes the way people interact with their systems.” – Françoise Beaufays, Google

Devices like Echo and Google Home, for instance, are built on speech recognition that can help you stay heads-up and hands-free while you multitask around the house. So instead of spending time swiping and typing, you can tell the personal assistant what you need or what you’re looking for. It’s that kind of ease and productivity that companies dangle in front of the users to have them adopt chatbots and personal assistants in their daily communications, but talking to devices also opens the door to a new kind of relationship.

“I think voice changes the way people interact with their systems,” says Françoise Beaufays, a research scientist who works on speech recognition at Google. “For a long time when people were typing in their browsers for information, they would write something cryptic like ‘Eiffel Tower height,’ for example.” The string of seemingly random words would instantly pull up search results on google.com with pictures, details and dimensionrs of the iconic French structure. But when speech recognition started to take shape with smartphone assistants, Beaufays says there was a clear change in communication.

“As people started feeling comfortable with speech, instead of being cryptic they started saying: ‘Hey, what is the height of the Eiffel Tower?’ or ‘How tall is the Eiffel Tower?’,” she says. “We saw that switch in the way people were addressing their devices in speech first and typing next. Using your voice is bringing in more discursive type of interaction, and even though you know very well it’s a machine you behave a little more human with it.”

A still from the movie Her (2013), directed by Spike Jonze.

While a verbal exchange with a virtual assistant can make it easier to get things done, it also makes it easier for the companies to gain invaluable insight into the human world that’s filled with vocal clues to feelings and preferences. “We’re going from computing to understanding,” says James Barrat, author of Our Final Invention: Artificial Intelligence and the End of the Human Era. “It’s not just us chatting. These machines are listening to what we like and don’t like, how we speak and what we speak about. It’s greater access to how we think.”

In the world of AI, data is the currency that will set one company apart from the other. Through voice searches, millions of vocal samples become available to the companies that are fine-tuning personal assistants. The stream of information is fed back into the system to improve the accuracy of the algorithms, but it also gives the companies access to the complexities of human intent. In effect, using the voice to communicate with an AI helper only makes it smarter.

A lot can be gleaned from the vocal communication. Words and intonations start to give away user patterns, preferences and even emotions over time. That kind of insight into the mindset of the user is critical to the next wave of personalized AI that is already taking shape at companies like Google, Amazon and Facebook.

Smart talking AIs at home will fire up the ecosystem of the Internet of Things, taking it from novelty machines to necessities. With companies aspiring to make their assistants omnipresent and their machines more interconnectable, they need capable speech recognition to get the job done.

“There’s a parallel thrust,” says Vlad Sejnoha, CTO at Nuance Communications, one of the leaders in voice-recognition technologies. “You’ll interact with your smart fridge or printer in a more natural way but also see a portable personal assistant that lives in a cloud and follows you around to help you navigate a complex world.” Google Home, much like Amazon’s Echo, already comes with partnerships that are useful around the house. You can use the speaker to control your Chromecast, Nest and Philips Hue lights.

In addition to navigating the immediate physical world, an omnipresent assistant could potentially become a gateway to unfamiliar settings or foreign languages too. In the spot aired during the Google event this week, the company demonstrated that Home has the ability to tap Google Translate to respond with accurate translations from English to Spanish. But whether the machine can comprehend foreign accents and translate the reverse, remains to be seen.

“Having an AI that is your agent and helps you exist in the world better, gets you better information and services is hugely exciting.” – Vlad Sejnoha, Nuance Communications

Failing to comprehend different accents has been one of the biggest downfalls of most digital assistants on smartphones today. Scientists building these systems often talk about the lack of data as one of the biggest obstacles to understanding new accents and languages. The copious amounts of information required to make that possible calls for massive investments from the companies. Taking the technology straight to people’s homes opens up a steady stream of data that can be used for tests back in the research labs.

A lot of the building blocks are starting to fall into place for devices like Google Home to become efficient personal assistants. And even though, there’s a need to be more vigilant of the ways human-device interactions are starting to shift; most voice interface developers believe it’s a necessary change that will extend human capabilities.

“Having an AI that is your agent and helps you exist in the world better, gets you better information and services is hugely exciting,” says Sejnoha. “As with anything there are uses that can be negative, we’re all familiar with privacy and mining data. That’s something we have to be thoughtful about, but the benefits far outweigh those scenarios.”

6
Oct

‘Beyond Good and Evil’ sequel enters pre-production


Beyond Good and Evil 2 finally exists as more than just some well-meaning plans. Creator Michel Ancel has posted an Instagram teaser confirming that the sequel to the classic game has entered pre-production. In other words, his team is finally working on it. The images Ancel has offered in the run-up to the news don’t reveal much (you can expect more of the first game’s humanoid animals), but it appears that BG&E2 will take on a more realistic look than its cartoon-like predecessor, and will still be set in System 4. One thing’s for sure: given that Ancel has long had ambitious plans for a follow-up, it’ll be a while before you can sit down and play.

Endangered species – now saved – Game in pre-production – Stay tuned !

A photo posted by Michel Ancel (@michelancel) on Oct 4, 2016 at 2:19pm PDT

Via: Wired

Source: Michel Ancel (Instagram 1), (2), (3)

6
Oct

Kohl’s is the latest retailer to roll out its own mobile payments


If you like to shop at Kohl’s and need an alternative to Apple Pay, Android Pay or Samsung Pay, you’re in luck. The retailer announced today that its own mobile payments platform, Kohl’s Pay, is now available to all customers nationwide. The company revealed last month that its take on payments would complement its existing mobile wallet app that gave customers a way to store payment info, organize rewards and collect promotions in the same spot.

Unlike retail mobile payment platforms from Walmart and CVS, Kohl’s Pay doesn’t allow customers to add their credit and debit cards to the app for use in stores. Instead, you’ll have to sign up for one of the company’s own Kohl’s Charge cards. While that might seem like an odd choice, TechCrunch reports that the retailer has 25 million customers actively using its credit cards with 60 percent of in-store purchases being paid for with Kohl’s Charge. That’s a substantial number of people you could bring to the mobile platform even if they can’t add any payment method they want.

The payments system is available inside the store’s existing mobile apps for Android and iOS. The Kohl’s app also doesn’t support NFC or tap-to-pay like Apple Pay, Android Pay and Samsung Pay. Instead, it displays a QR code that’s scanned by the cashier at checkout. That code is used to not only handle payment, but to apply any savings a customer has stored in the app, too. When you combine the ability to pay to for items, organize discounts/promotions and track returns, exchanges and regular purchases, Kohl’s is giving its customers a handy shopping companion. And that’s on top of using the app to browse items, save gift cards to the mobile wallet and scan barcodes will looking around in stores.

Kohl’s still supports Apple Pay, including the ability to earn loyalty points when using that payment method on an iPhone or Apple Watch. It was the first retailer to do so and it was also the first store to allow customers to use its own credit cards with Apple’s payment platform.

Via: TechCrunch

Source: Kohl’s

6
Oct

Fire on Plane Caused by Replacement Samsung Galaxy Note 7


Over the past few weeks, Samsung has been replacing recalled Galaxy Note 7 smartphones that have faulty exploding batteries with new devices, but an incident today suggests the South Korean company’s smartphone woes aren’t over.

A Southwest flight from Louisville to Baltimore was today evacuated just before it pulled out of the gate because a Samsung Galaxy Note 7 smartphone started smoking. While no one was injured, there is a serious problem — the Galaxy Note 7 in question was a replacement device that had been deemed “safe” by Samsung.

According to The Verge, the owner of the Galaxy Note 7, Brian Green, had replaced his original Galaxy Note at an AT&T store on September 21. The smartphone had a green battery icon and box the device came in features a black square, both of which are indicators of a replacement Note 7.

Green told The Verge he had powered down the phone as requested by the flight crew and stowed it in his pocket before it started smoking.

He dropped it on the floor of the plane and a “thick grey-green angry smoke” was pouring out of the device. Green’s colleague went back onto the plane to retrieve some personal belongings and said that the phone had burned through the carpet and scorched the subfloor of the plane.

He said the phone was at around 80 percent of battery capacity when the incident occurred and that he only used a wireless charger since receiving the device.

Samsung has already replaced more than one million Galaxy Note 7 devices, and has said the new Note 7 smartphones have batteries “that are not vulnerable to overheating and catching fire.” Despite the recall, reports of overheating devices are circulating on a near-daily basis, and the company could have another disaster on its hands if replacement devices are also experiencing the same issues.

Rumors have suggested Samsung’s Note 7 problems began after the company rushed the device into production after realizing the iPhone 7 would not feature major design changes, seeing it as an opportunity to one up Apple. Suppliers were pushed to meet tighter deadlines for an earlier launch, leading to critical oversights.

Samsung America president and COO Tim Baxter apologized to customers in September. “We did not meet the standard of excellence that you expect and deserve,” he said, adding that Samsung is working to earn back customer trust.

Tag: Samsung
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