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12
Jan

All electric trains in the Netherlands now run on wind energy


The Netherlands has been harnessing the power of the wind to drain bodies of water, saw timber and to produce oil for centuries. Now, the country is also using it to run all its electric trains. The Dutch railways network (NS) started using wind energy generated by the turbines owned by electric company Eneco two years ago when they signed a ten-year agreement. They planned to power all of the country’s electric trains with wind-generated energy by 2018, but they’re clearly a shining example of Dutch efficiency and reached their goal a year earlier than planned.

According to Brightvibes, the country’s electric trains shuttle 600,000 people to their destinations in around 5,500 train trips per day. Those trips use up 1.2 billion kWh of energy per year, which can power all households in Amsterdam for the same time period. At this point in time, it takes an hour for a wind turbine to generate enough power to run a train for 120 miles. However, NS is looking for ways to lower their machines’ consumption by 35 percent before 2020, so they can go farther for smaller amounts of energy.

Netherlands take e-mobility to next level: 100% of country’s trains are powered by #wind: https://t.co/U1oDry30ll pic.twitter.com/c0vrXxrDZl

— UN Climate Action (@UNFCCC) January 10, 2017

Source: The Guardian, Brightvibes

12
Jan

Bosch 800 Series Release Date, Price and Specs – CNET


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This built-in coffee maker is one of the Bosch products that will be Wi-Fi-enabled and work with the brand’s Home Connect line.

Tyler Lizenby/CNET

Bosch has spent the past few years adding Wi-Fi connection to some of its European appliances. Now, the German appliance maker will bring products you can control through your phone to the US.

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You’ll control your Bosch connected appliances through the Home Connect app, which is available on Android and iOS.

Tyler Lizenby/CNET

This year, Bosch will release a line of Wi-Fi-enabled appliances that include a fridge-freezer, wall oven, dishwasher, washing machine and dryer, the company announced at the Kitchen and Bath Industry Show (KBIS) Tuesday in Orlando.

The company started selling a $3,100 connected, built-in coffee maker in the US late last year. Bosch reps said it will release pricing information as it makes the appliances available throughout the year. You’ll control all the appliances through Bosch’s Home Connect app, available for Android and iOS.

Bosch’s connected appliances will also work with some big names in the smart home field. The connected oven and coffee maker will work with Alexa, Amazon’s voice-controlled digital assistant, so you can ask your smart speaker to make a latte or preheat the oven. The oven will also work with the Nest Learning Thermostat, which will ask you if it should turn the oven off if it detects you’re away while the oven’s still on. (We’ve seen a feature like this on Whirlpool ranges.)

The connected dishwasher will work with Amazon Dash Replenishment Services. Here’s how that will work: If you use dishwasher tabs, you use the Home Connect app to input the number of tabs that are in your box. The app will count down the number of tabs you have with each cleaning cycle. If you’ve opted in to Amazon Replenishment Services, the app will automatically put in an order for more dishwasher tabs when you’re almost out.

12
Jan

‘Shovel Knight’ is coming to the Nintendo Switch


If you still can’t get enough of Shovel Knight, don’t fret because even more is on its way. And for a new platform — the Nintendo Switch. There’s a bunch of other news from Yacht Club Games as well.

First up: Shovel Knight is getting renamed to Shovel Knight: Treasure Trove. The swap in nomenclature represents everything that’s changed about the game since its launch, like adding new campaigns, two player co-op (coming to all consoles aside from 3DS and Vita) and a few other new features. Beyond that, when Treasure Trove launches, you’ll be able to start each campaign independent from finishing the main game. Previously, you had to beat the first game to unlock access to the expansions.

What’s more, the base game has been renamed to Shovel Knight: Shovel of Hope to bring a bit of uniformity to how all the campaigns are named. Beyond that is the news that this year will see a story featuring King Knight and Battle Mode. Yacht Club promises that the update process will be a smooth one for existing owners and that all the new stuff will be added free of charge via software updates.

And speaking of cost, this spring Shovel Knight will go up in price. Yacht Club didn’t elaborate how much, however, but teased that picking up individual expansion packs might be cheaper than buying the game outright. Hrm. For any other questions, the studio says to ask away and it’ll try answering them on this FAQ page.

Source: Yacht Club Games (1), (2)

12
Jan

The moon may have formed from a group of smaller moonlets


A study published in the journal Nature Geoscience this week suggests an alternate history for Earth’s celestial companion. According to the researchers behind the study, the moon isn’t just one large space rock, but 20 or so smaller “moonlets” made of matter that was blasted away from Earth in a series of impacts and merged together over time into the moon we have now.

As the Washington Post reports, the new study by planetary scientists from the Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel is a big departure from the previously accepted “giant impact model.” That model claims a hypothetical protoplanet called Theia smashed into the earth some 4.4 billion years ago, sending dust and debris into space that eventually formed the moon. That theory has fallen out of favor with scientists in recent years as researchers studying lunar samples from the Apollo missions have noticed they are remarkably similar to Earth’s chemical makeup. If a giant object did smash into the Earth, there should be some trace of it left in the moon, and as scientists try to account for the similarities, the model starts to become less plausible. Those same Apollo samples also put the moon’s age slightly older at 4.51 billion years old.

“Our model suggests that the ancient Earth once hosted a series of moons, each one formed from a different collision with the proto-Earth,” study co-author Hagai Perets told Smithsonian Magazine. “It’s likely that such moonlets were later ejected, or collided with Earth or with each other to form bigger moons.”

The moonlets theory has actually been around since the 1980s, but Perets and his colleagues are the first to create a working model and perform the 1,000 simulations necessary to demonstrate its possibility. As co-author Raluca Rufu told the Guardian, “with 20 impactors, it would take about 100 million years to build the moon.”

On the other hand, the study doesn’t explain how the moonlets came together to form one supermoon. The giant impact model also helps explain how the Earth got its tilted axis, which the new theory doesn’t account for. That said, the study’s authors believe more lunar samples could help clear up some of the mystery and expect to have more information once China starts exploring the dark side next year.

Via: Washington Post

Source: Nature Geoscience

12
Jan

Adobe wants you to Photoshop your future selfies using just your voice


Imagine a world where you ask your device to make you look 10 pounds skinner in some photo… and it can just do it.

We’ve all wished we could say our essays aloud and have them be written out in a document on our computer – no physical typing required from us. And while early versions of such software does exist, it’s not exactly perfect. Otherwise, we’d be writing this article right now with our voice. So, it’s no wonder many of us haven’t even begun to imagine what else we could do with our voice.

Currently, you can cue up a song on Amazon Alexa, find a place to eat on Google Home, and that’s about it. But what about editing that selfie you took earlier this morning or that unflattering family portrait from last Christmas? Well, Adobe Researchers have wondered the same thing. A digital assistant that can easily edit all your photos would be an absolute game changer for all the Kim Ks out there.

On Wednesday, Adobe Research unveiled (via a video posted to YouTube) a new project that the software company is developing. The video shows a version of an Adobe photo app equipped with a microphone button. Pressing the button appears to activate a digital assistant that can interact with the user and perform several editing functions, such as crop and reframe, all through voice commands.

Adobe has confirmed it’s exploring digital assistant photo-editing:

“To envision this, we combined the emerging science of voice interaction with a deep understanding of both creative workflows and the creative aspirations of our customers. Our speech recognition system is able to directly accept natural user voice instructions for image editing either locally through on-device computing or through a cloud-based Natural Language understanding service.  This is a first step towards a robust multimodal voice-based interface which allows our creative customers to search and edit images in an easy and engaging way using Adobe mobile applications.”

The video is only a proof of concept at this point, but based on the recent success (and expansion) of Amazon’s Alexa voice service, an Adobe assistant certainly seems plausible/realistic.

12
Jan

FBI allegedly paid Geek Squad for evidence


Last May, the defense in a child pornography trial alleged that the FBI used a member of electronics retailer Best Buy’s tech support team, Geek Squad, to peer into the accused’s computer on the hunt for evidence of child pornography. Since then, the defense’s lawyers revealed that the FBI had cultivated at least eight of the company’s IT handyfolk over a four-year period to serve as confidential informants, who all received some payment for turning over data. Obviously, this raises serious questions about whether sending devices into the repair shop forfeits a person’s right to privacy or unreasonable search and seizure.

The eight Geek Squad members in question worked in the tech support branch’s repair center in Brooks, Kentucky, servicing items sent in from all over the country. Technically, users sign consent to search over to Best Buy when they hand their devices over to get fixed. This includes fine print indicating that any evidence of child pornography would require the company to hand the device over to authorities.

But if the FBI paid each of its informants to pass along evidence they’d acquired in the course of their normal job, and plan to keep doing so in future cases, wouldn’t that make Best Buy’s employees functional agents of the bureau? A federal judge is allowing the case’s defense attorneys to explore that relationship between company and government which functionally allowed the FBI to bypass the need for a warrant or acquire specific consent to search. On the first day of the inquiry, an FBI agent’s testimony cast doubt on whether the initial image found by the Geek Squad member and informant technically qualified as child pornography to warrant bureau action.

Best Buy released a statement commenting on company policy and the case at hand:

“Best Buy and Geek Squad have no relationship with the FBI. From time to time, our repair agents discover material that may be child pornography, and we have a legal and moral obligation to turn that material over to law enforcement. We are proud of our policy and share it with our customers before we begin any repair.

“Any circumstances in which an employee received payment from the FBI is the result of extremely poor individual judgment, is not something we tolerate and is certainly not a part of our normal business behavior.

“To be clear, our agents unintentionally find child pornography as they try to make the repairs the customer is paying for. They are not looking for it. Our policies prohibit agents from doing anything other than what is necessary to solve the customer’s problem so that we can maintain their privacy and keep up with the volume of repairs.”

Via: BBC

Source: The Washington Post

12
Jan

PC shipments were still in the pits this holiday


So much for the PC world recovering from 2015’s holiday disaster. Both Gartner and IDC estimate that worldwide computer shipments were down year-over-year in the fourth quarter of 2016. The decline wasn’t nearly as bad as it was a year ago (1.5 percent with IDC’s methodology, 3.7 percent with Gartner’s), but that’s not saying much — it just means that the industry didn’t stay in freefall for long. Just why things turned out so glum varies depending on who you ask, though.

IDC is optimistic, and sees this as a sign that the computer business is catching a break now that growth in smartphone and tablet sales is slowing down. Gartner, however, isn’t quite so cheerful. It sees the drop as evidence of “stagnation” and the shift in just how people buy PCs. While there’s fast growth among enthusiasts (think gamers and power users), that’s more than offset by the majority of ‘casual’ buyers who are holding off as they spend more time on their phones. If you only occasionally use your PC, you’re more likely to wait longer before replacing it.

There has been a bit of a shakeup among the leaders. While Lenovo, HP and Dell are still atop the ranks and gaining share, Apple appears to have made a slight recovery thanks to pent-up demand for a new MacBook Pro. The biggest losers were Acer, ASUS and a slew of smaller manufacturers.

The estimates also represent a milestone that the PC world would likely rather forget. It’s the fifth year in a row that shipments are down overall, at roughly 6 percent for both Gartner and IDC. Although there are signs that the market is leveling off, the data casts doubt on previous claims that the computer business is just facing an extended rough patch due to smartphones and slow-to-upgrade corporate customers. This sluggishness increasingly looks like the new normal, and there’s no obvious point at which demand is likely to bounce back.

Source: Gartner, IDC

12
Jan

Galaxy S7 dominates holiday sales, but Android loses ground to iOS in the U.S.


The iPhone is quickly on the way to dethroning Android’s dominance in the U.S., though the platform continues to thrive overseas.

Via Recode, Kantar WorldPanel released data that shows the iPhone 7, iPhone 7 Plus, and the iPhone 6S accounted for about 31 percent of smartphone sales since Apple’s flagship launched in September 2016.

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Samsung’s Galaxy S7 and S7 Edge were up next with 28.9 percent of sales, while Google’s Pixel managed a meager 1.3 percent. KantarWorld Panel refers to the Pixel’s numbers as “strong gains,” but it’s a wonder if it would have sold better had Verizon not confused consumers about its exclusivity.

It’s worth noting that Big Red also made some gains over the holiday:

“Verizon booked nearly a quarter of all US smartphone sales during the Black Friday period, playing a vital role for all brands, including Apple and Samsung.”

Despite the impressive sales of Samsung and Google’s devices, Android’s market share is slowly falling in the U.S. The platform has been on a consistent downturn for the past six quarters. It lost about five percent market share in the last year, though it still makes up about 55 percent of all U.S. smartphone sales.

Not surprisingly, Android is maintaining a strong presence in overseas markets, such as China. Chinese iPhone sales dipped below 20 percent during the same period, about five percent less compared to 2015. Kantar WorldPanel reports:

“Nearly 80% of all smartphones sold in Urban China during the three months ending November 2016 were Android, as local brands continued to dominate the market.”

Huawei represented about 25 percent of all Android smartphone sales in China, though the iPhone 7 was the best-selling device in Urban China, dethroning the Oppo R9.

12
Jan

How to get the Huawei Mate 9 at the best price using Jet.com


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Jet.com is a website with tons of products and their goal is simple: saving you money. By opting out of certain online “luxuries”, you can end up spending less on your purchases.

Save money on the best big Android phone See more

The Huawei Mate 9 is the best big Android phone money can buy, and if you’re in the market for Huawei’s next flagship, why not save a little cash in process? Here’s how!

How to get the best price on the Huawei Mate 9 with Jet.com

Saving on the Mate 9 is simple; you just have to forego free returns and have your debit card handy.

Add the Huawei Mate 9 to your cart. Then the savings start.
Pay by debit card.
Click to opt out of free returns. Don’t worry, you can still return the phone — you’ll just have to pay $5.99 plus 5% of the price of the phone.
Click the option to do both for the most savings!

How does that save me money?

The way Jet.com explains it is that free returns are actually built into the price of the item, so the return isn’t, in essence, “free”. You can still make a return, but you’ll have to pay $5.99 plus 5% of the phone price.

Get the best price on the Huawei Mate 9 See more

As for paying with your debit card, companies have to pay a certain fee per credit card transaction — there is no fee when debit is used. So, no free returns and no credit card transaction fee means you save money on the best big Android phone around.

Get saving

Check out the Huawei Mate 9 on Jet.com for the best price on the best big’un!

12
Jan

Google reveals when Android Wear 2.0 will arrive – and it’s soon


You’ll soon have new Android Wear software goodies to keep you busy.

It’s been eight months since Google announced the Android Wear 2.0 update for Android Wear devices, and a few months since it confirmed the software was delayed but would arrive by early 2017. Now, thanks to an email sent to developers, we know when it will release.

Android Police obtained an email sent to Android developers from Google. It specifically noted Android Wear 2.0 would launch “in early February 2017”, before listing items developers should know prior to updating their existing apps for the update. A screenshot of the email is available here. We’ve reached out to Google for a comment, but it’s already confirmed to ZDNet that the email is legit.

In other words, Android Wear 2.0 will definitely launch in early February, bringing a built-in Play Store, the ability for apps to connect to the internet through Wi-Fi (sans a nearby smartphone), new app launcher, support for complications on watch faces, and more. You can learn more about these features and everything else that will be new in Pocket-lint’s guide on the upcoming update.

  • Google to launch two Android Wear watches in 2017, others also expected

Keep in mind several watch makers recently unveiled new Android Wear watches at CES 2017 in Las Vegas, so it makes sense that Google would hurry the release, as there hasn’t been any new devices to showcase the software until now.