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7
Nov

Google snaps up the creators of a game-focused Android emulator


You can already run Android apps on a Chromebook, but would you run games and other intensive mobile apps on it? Probably not. However, Google might be taking steps to make that practical. The creators of LeapDroid, an Android emulator that specializes in games, have revealed that they’re joining Google just months after releasing it to the public. The team isn’t discussing “specific plans,” but they’re halting both development and support for LeapDroid. You can continue running the latest version, but you won’t get anything more than that.

It’s not clear just how the deal went down, although the team suggests that this isn’t a straight-up acquisition: LeapDroid is “not affiliated” with Google despite the move. We’ve asked Google for more details and will let you know if it can shed light on what’s happening.

However it happened, the move raises a few possibilities. On a basic level, it could help with Android’s performance in non-native environments — something as fast as LeapDroid could help developers testing Android apps, or give Chrome OS devices an extra boost running mobile titles. In the long term, though, it could be important for that oft-rumored Android/Chrome union. If you’re going to merge two largely disparate platforms, you want to eliminate as many potential hiccups as possible. While there’s no certainty that you’ll see conspicuous uses of LeapDroid’s tech, it won’t be surprising if the extra talent makes Google’s vision of computing that much more realistic.

Via: LeapDroid (Twitter)

Source: LeapDroid

7
Nov

Nintendo is reviving the NES’ hint line for one weekend


When Nintendo releases the NES Classic Edition on November 11th, it won’t limit the nostalgia to the hardware you take home. The company is marking the launch by resurrecting its classic Power Line for that weekend. Call 425-885-7529 between 9AM and 10PM Eastern each day (until the night of the 13th) and you can get both hints for “several” games as well as stories from people who manned the phones on the original line back in the 1980s. The tips are pre-recorded, alas, but this could easily rekindle memories of a pre-web era when your best bets at help usually involved calling the Power Line or asking a friend. Our main question: will the phone line stick to the same tips you got as a kid, or offer a few juicy secrets?

Via: Kotaku

Source: Nintendo

7
Nov

Uber gets slapped with lawsuit over missing food delivery tips


A courier in New York who used to deliver food for Uber has filed a lawsuit against the company over unpaid tips, according to Buzzfeed News. In the lawsuit, he said that tips from customers never made it to him and other delivery personnel for UberRush and UberEats. Both services deliver food to your doorstep from nearby restaurants, but they still have their differences. Rush mainly operates through GrubHub’s delivery service whose rates typically include online gratuity, none of which (the plaintiff said) made it to couriers’ pockets.

Eats, on the other hand, doesn’t allow in-app tips at all as one of its purposes is to eliminate delivery tipping. It charges a $3 “booking fee,” but the plaintiff argues that according to the law, a company must “adequately notify the customer” that this fee they’re charging is not a gratuity in easily understood language written in “no smaller than 12-point font.” Its checkout page does have a disclaimer that says “Tips are not included in the cost of your order. Tips are neither expected nor required.” The plaintiff believes that’s not enough, so the booking fees should go to the couriers.

As for where the missing online gratuities and booking fees go, well, they typically seem to get lost somewhere along the way. Uber told BuzzFeed that it’s the restaurants’ responsibility to make sure tips reach delivery personnel and that it even redesigned the Uber-GrubHub dashboard to make the task easier. However, couriers say they get ignored when they take it up with the restaurants.

Online delivery services typically go through so many channels that losing tips somewhere down the chain isn’t that uncommon. When four Prime Now drivers in LA sued Amazon, their complaint included not getting the tips customers would pay via credit card. This also isn’t Uber’s first rodeo with tip-related lawsuits: in September this year, it agreed to pay riders $384,000 for pocketing around half of the 20 percent tip its app automatically charges passengers.

Source: BuzzFeed News

7
Nov

New Zealand carriers will block the Galaxy Note 7


If you think that Samsung’s constant software reminders to return the Galaxy Note 7 aren’t enough to make stubborn owners change their minds, you should book a trip to New Zealand. All of the country’s wireless carriers will block the discontinued smartphone on their networks as of November 18th. Essentially, they’re turning the Note 7 into a paperweight. You can use it on WiFi, but it won’t be very useful as, well, a phone. New Zealand is expected to rely on the same IMEI (hardware identifier) blocking that telecoms use to render stolen phones useless, so you’d have to jump through hoops to have any hope of restoring cellular functionality.

There aren’t many Note 7s left in the country. Its Telecommunications Forum reckons that the number of holdouts has dwindled to the “low hundreds.” Clearly, though, local providers don’t want to take chances. They’d rather not be held responsible if an owner decides to keep the device and watches it go up in flames. You won’t necessarily see other countries follow suit, but it won’t be shocking if that happens. Eventually, the only users left are likely to be those who refuse to give it back — network bans could convince them that it’s not worth the risk just to say that they have a collector’s item.

Via: 9to5Google

Source: Stuff

7
Nov

Fisker’s EMotion sports car, and more in the week that was


Tesla swept headlines this week by launching a groundbreaking solar roof tile that’s better looking and longer lasting than standard shingles. The technology could trickle down to the company’s cars too — Elon Musk hinted that the upcoming Tesla Model 3 could feature a solar roof that melts ice and snow while generating energy from the sun. Meanwhile, legendary automotive designer Henrik Fisker finally unveiled his EMotion sports car, which will be able to drive 400 miles on a single charge when it launches next year. Nissan debuted the first all-electric mobile office, which is housed in a beautifully renovated e-nv200 van. And a Chinese company is getting ready to launch the world’s fastest maglev train, which will be able to hit 373 miles per hour.

How many Gigafactories would it take to power the entire world with renewable energy? To find the answer, Leonardo DiCaprio interviewed Elon Musk in his new documentary Before the Flood, and it turns out it would take about 100. In other energy news, the largest thermal solar plant on the planet could be coming to Nevada, while the Netherlands is spending 150 million euros to turn cow poop into biogas. Voltaic pioneered the solar backpack nearly a decade ago, and now they’ve launched a powerful new line of completely redesigned bags that can charge phones, laptops and even drones. SolarAid launched the world’s most affordable solar light, which costs just $5, and designer Teresa van Dongen created an electricity-free lamp that is powered by bacteria.

Election Day is coming up next week, and designers are having a field day over Trump’s proposed border wall — one pokes fun at the plan’s “gorgeous perversity” with a massive pink wall, while another features a purple bridge that actually makes the border easier to cross. In other design news, scientists are using 3D printing technology to create more effective magnets with zero waste. MIT used plant nanobionics to create spinach leaves that detect dangerous explosives. And a new bionic eye chip brings us even closer to a device that can give sight to the blind.

7
Nov

After Math: Politics as usual


It’s been a crazy week for US politics, what with the end of the contentious 2016 election just around the corner. The New York Times announced that it would lower its paywall for the 72 hours surrounding election day while human dumpster fire Peter Thiel tried to explain away his support for Donald Trump. Security experts are also investigating why one of Trump’s servers keeps pinging a Russian bank as the FBI investigates one of its own Twitter accounts for violations of the Hatch Act. And no, you still can’t vote by phone, dummy. Numbers, because how else are you going to rig an election?

7
Nov

Ben Heck’s Atari junk keyboard, part 1


The Ben Heck Show - Episode 261 - Ben Heck's Atari Junk Keyboard Part 1: Enter the Matrix

Time for Ben and Atari to make beautiful music together — almost. The team creates an instrument inspired by the sounds you’d hear on an Atari console, using a technique called circuit bending. This means Ben gets his digital flip-flops on and creates the digital circuits from scratch, combining it with an almost full-size piano keyboard and a lot of analysis using an oscilloscope. If you’re interested in how this might sound, Felix connects variable resistors (potentiometers) with the circuit and gives it a test run. Be sure to check out the next part to find out how the build comes along, and join the element14 Community to tell us about your music hacks.

7
Nov

Samsung’s Galaxy S8 will include an AI assistant


Samsung isn’t wasting any time before it makes use of Viv’s artificial intelligence know-how. In a an indirect confirmation of rumors, the tech giant has revealed that the upcoming Galaxy S8 will include an AI assistant as one of its star attractions. It’s not offering clues as to what this virtual helper will do, but it will let developers “attach and upload services” to extend the AI’s functionality beyond what you get out of the box. That’s not much different than what Apple and Google are offering for their own assistants, but it may be what Samsung isn’t talking about that’s special — Viv can create its own programs and understand complex intent in a way many AIs can’t.

As for other features, or a release date? Samsung isn’t talking. However, a recent Wall Street Journal report claims that Samsung delayed development of the S8 by weeks to help identify the Galaxy Note 7’s battery fire problem, potentially pushing back the unveiling beyond the usual February/March window.

It’s unusual for Samsung to explicitly discuss future smartphones months in advance. At best, it makes component announcements that are not-so-subtle hints as to the direction of its hardware. However, it’s not hard to see why Samsung would want to build buzz so early. The Note 7’s premature exit didn’t help Samsung’s reputation or its balance sheet — the company both wants to move past the fiasco and reassure phone buyers that it’s worth sticking around. A strong S8 launch could make the Note 7 seem like a distant (if painful) memory and convince many that it’s back to business as usual.

Source: Reuters

7
Nov

Apple’s Logic audio editor will use the MacBook Pro Touch Bar in 2017


The new MacBook Pro’s Touch Bar might already come in handy with video editing in Final Cut Pro X, but what if you’re a musician? If you depend on Apple’s Logic Pro X, you’ll have to be patient. The company has informed an AppleInsider reader that Touch Bar support will arrive in the audio production tool “by early next year.” It’s not certain what’s prompting the longer development process, but it wouldn’t be surprising if it’s a matter of complexity. It’s not just a question of adding a timeline control and calling it a day — Apple has to account for the many, many interface elements you need to produce album-worthy tracks.

Whatever the reason, the early 2017 window is a reminder that the MacBook Pro’s functionality will take a while to become useful across a range of professional apps. Adobe, Algoriddim, Microsoft and other early partners will have Touch Bar support before 2016 is over, but it could be considerably longer before you can assume that your preferred creative software takes advantage of the new hardware.

Source: AppleInsider

7
Nov

FBI says new emails won’t change the results of its Clinton probe


Those newly uncovered Hillary Clinton emails may have stirred up a lot of last-minute electoral drama, but they won’t make much of a tangible impact. FBI director James Comey now reports that the messages (found on devices belonging to Huma Abedin and her husband Anthony Weiner) won’t change the bureau’s recommendation against pressing charges. The investigation, which went “around the clock,” combed through all the unearthed emails to see if they shed any new light on Clinton’s use of a private email server during her term as Secretary of State.

The announcement may not sway many opinions before the November 8th vote. Many people are either convinced that Clinton’s private server was an unforgivable breach of national security, or else see it as a mistake that Clinton has learned from in the years since leaving office.

However, the findings will have a very practical effect on Clinton. Whatever the outcome of the election, she won’t have to worry about the new emails leading to legal action. However, they may raise scrutiny of the FBI. Why talk about investigating new messages when it was only going to take days to decide whether or not they were relevant? The Guardian’s sources claim that the FBI disclosure was an intentional leak by FBI staffers bent on taking down Clinton, and those concerns (merited or not) are only going to grow now that the investigation has proved fruitless.

BREAKING: FBI director says conclusion reached in July in Clinton probe has not changed after review of newly-discovered emails pic.twitter.com/1VFwawB7M3

— CNBC Now (@CNBCnow) November 6, 2016

Source: CNBC Now (Twitter), New York Times