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7
Mar

Ditch the cart and surf your way around the green with the GolfBoard


Why it matters to you

The makers of the Golfboard aim to bring younger players to the links with the modified electric skateboard.

When spending a day golfing, the enjoyment comes from each swing, not from the traveling between strokes. Using a golf cart speeds things up, but it’s still just about getting between two points. The GolfBoard makes traveling around the green much more entertaining.

The technology began as the brainchild of professional surfer Laird Hamilton. His goal was to create a way to surf on land the way we do on the water. What began as a modification of an electric skateboard has grown into the product that’s now available.

More: Mercedes’ luxurious golf cart has a built-in fridge, touchscreen, leather trim

After stepping up onto the board, operating it is fairly intuitive. Controlling the GolfBoard can be done wirelessly with a handheld controller or with the onboard thumb throttle. Both control methods only handle acceleration and brakes. Riders simply lean from side to side to turn as they would with a skateboard. To keep the GolfBoard running from shot to shot quickly, it uses four-wheel-drive powered by an advanced lithium-ion battery.

For inexperienced riders, there is a stability handle that doubles as a bag mount. If riders are feeling more adventurous, the stability handle can be removed so they can really surf around the golf course. If the idea of carrying around a golf bag all day doesn’t appeal to you, the GolfBoard supports the new movement toward a single club with an adjustable head.

The GolfBoard team understands that zipping around the golf course isn’t for everyone. In fact, its aim is more focused on bringing younger golfers to the game. It was conceived as an alternative to traditional golf carts. With its smaller form factor, riders can be sure they are having less of a negative impact on the course itself.

The GolfBoard is made in the United States, start at $6,500, and can be purchased directly from its website.

7
Mar

Microsoft shows you how to build a Terminator heads-up display using HoloLens


Why it matters to you

If you’ve ever wanted to see like a Terminator, then you will appreciate this new Microsoft HoloLens tutorial.

If you’ve watched any movies about killer robots, then you have seen the stereotypical Terminator-like heads-up display. It’s usually oddly colored to connote non-human vision and it flashes various threat assessments and other information across the robot’s field of view.

Setting aside the question of why a walking computer would require a visual display of the very same information that is already contained in its memory, the Terminator HUD is a staple of science fiction movies and TV. Now, Microsoft has posted a tutorial on how to create your own using HoloLens.

More: Microsoft is reportedly shaking up its HoloLens development roadmap

This is no mere graphical representation of a HUD, however. Not only does HoloLens make for a realistic augmented reality (AR) mockup of the T-800 Terminator’s visual field, but the interface can be hooked up to Microsoft Cognitive Services to analyze objects in the physical space — including face detection and limited optical character- recognition (OCR). In other words, it’s not just a gimmick. It’s actually (kinda) functional.

Microsoft has put the HUD together as more than just an entertaining exercise. The company is exploring how new technologies are moving beyond the 2D interfaces that have dominated our computing for so long. Input devices, displays, office spaces, and furniture have all been focused on 2D, while modern technology is moving toward 3D and even one-dimensional (1D) interfaces.

The Terminator HUD project combines 3D and 1D to create a “new type of experience that may one day lead to virtual personal assistants that will help us to navigate our world and our lives.” Heady stuff, for sure.

If you have access to a HoloLens and a variety of development tools, including Unity and the Holo Toolkit unity package, then you can follow along and create your own robotic vision of the world. Specifically, you will be putting together a recreation of the T-800 thermal HUD display — but note that Microsoft did not testify as to its effectiveness in searching out Sarah Connor and ensuring the future existence of Skynet.

7
Mar

AMD’s latest Radeon GPU driver boosts performance of ‘Ghost Recon Wildlands’


Why it matters to you

Updating the graphics driver is always a good idea for PC gamers, especially when the driver is optimized for a specific PC game and fixes several others.

AMD on Monday released a new driver for its Radeon graphics cards, bringing Radeon Software Crimson ReLive Edition up to version 17.3.1. The new driver is optimized for Tom Clancy’s Ghost Recon Wildlands, promising up to 6 percent better performance than driver version 17.2.1 (on a Radeon RX 480 card). The driver also provides a multi-GPU profile for the game running on DirectX 11.

As with the previous driver, AMD is not supporting the 32-bit version of Windows 8.1 with this release. But don’t fret: AMD hasn’t abandoned all 32-bit platforms. The company offers a driver for the 32-bit versions of Windows 10 And Windows 7. AMD reportedly pulled support for Windows 8.1 32-bit because the download numbers were too low to continue supporting the platform.

The driver also provides a batch of fixes for specific PC games. Here they are:

Battlefield 1:
After returning from performing a task switch, users experienced flickering textures or terrain.
For Honor:
In the menus, players saw flickering or corruption when highlighting character models.
For Honor:
Systems with multiple GPUs saw texture flickering.
Counter-Strike Global Offensive:
Radeon Chill caused stuttering.
DOTA 2:
Radeon ReLive caused stuttering on some system configurations.

Outside the game-specific fixes, the new driver provides solutions for previous problems ranging from Radeon WattMan to Radeon Settings to Radeon ReLive. Here they are:

Radeon Settings:
User accounts that contained spaces caused the latest graphics driver to not install.
Radeon WattMan:
Application hangs or display flickering appeared when adjusting WattMan settings on Radeon R9 300 series-based systems.
Radeon WattMan:
Custom WattMan settings occasionally wouldn’t stay saved when the PC went into hibernation or sleep.
Radeon ReLive:
This feature couldn’t be used on Windows machines with Hyper-V enabled.
AMD FreeSync:
Some multiscreen setups caused stuttering or flickering with both FreeSync and borderless fullscreen mode enabled.
General:
Radeon RX 400 Series cards caused mouse cursor corruption.
General:
Custom Radeon Software installs prevented systems from rebooting when clicking on the “Restart Now” option.

That’s it for fixes. AMD’s release notes for driver version 17.3.1 also lists nine known issues that still need to be addressed, and seven more outstanding issues tied to the company’s new Radeon ReLive feature. Still hanging around is the conflict with Microsoft’s Xbox DVR service, installation failure on systems with APUs, application hangs when Vulkan is in use, no low storage warnings, and more.

More: Ryzen proves the PC industry can no longer ignore AMD’s comeback

As for that performance increase in Ghost Recon Wildlands, AMD determined its results based on a system with an Intel Core i7-5960X processor, the Radeon RX 480, 16GB of DDR4 system memory clocked at 2,666MHz, and the 64-bit version of Windows 10. With the game running at a 2,560 x 1,440 resolution, driver version 17.3.1 produced an average rate of 44.79 frames per second while version 17.2.1 only produced an average of 42.1 frames per second.

To grab AMD’s new 17.3.1 driver, click on the appropriate link below:

Windows 10:
64-bit
32-bit
Windows 8.1:
64-bit

Windows 7:
64-bit
32-bit

7
Mar

Google Home has a fake news problem


Google Home isn’t always the most reliable source of information, and as more people turn to voice assistants for news, that’s a big problem.

Over the past few months, various examples of Google Home responding to inquiries with answers of questionable veracity have popped up over the internet. Here’s one such example.

And here’s what happens if you ask Google Home “is Obama planning a coup?” pic.twitter.com/MzmZqGOOal

— Rory Cellan-Jones (@ruskin147) March 5, 2017

The problem is that Google, in order to optimize for voice-based answers, is reading off the top search result of a given query — without necessarily verifying whether that source is providing truthful answers. According to The Outline, this problem will only get worse as more people invest in voice-based AI companions that take the onus off the user for obtaining knowledge:

The number of browser-less internet-connected devices is growing fast, and already voice-activated assistants like Amazon Echo and Google Home are penetrating the market. Google’s traditional list of search results does not translate well to voice — imagine Google Home reading you a list of 10 websites when you just want to know how many calories are in an orange.

google-home-mic-button-wide-counter-mari

Google can be relatively easily gamed, and with enough manipulation a particular website can rise to the top of the search results.

The issues arise when Google balances the notion that its search engine is inherently trustworthy — a majority of people say they believe the information they find on websites shown on the first page of Google — with the machine learning algorithms that help particular pieces of information rise to the top result.

The ability to read featured snippets is also the major distinguishing characteristic between Google Home and competitors like Amazon Echo and Siri, said Danny Sullivan of Search Engine Land. “Google sees that as a competitive advantage and they don’t want to turn it off,” he said. The problem is that even when they are wrong, the featured snippets bear Google’s highest endorsement. “Where is the tipping point where you get enough of these embarrassing answers that you decide to shut it off?”

This is a very difficult problem to solve. Google is utilizing its extensive Knowledge Graph to provide what it believes to be the best answer to any question, and its biggest strength — data, and using it to provide a response to practically any inquiry — is also its biggest liability. That’s because Google can be relatively easily gamed, and with enough manipulation a particular website can rise to the of the search results. Google currently doesn’t differentiate between its search engine — the text- and video-based list of results millions of people use every day — and that of its Assistant, which provides the answers to Google Home. Down the road, it may be forced to curate the results of more commonly-asked questions, or risk disseminating content that it doesn’t necessarily stand behind.

Of course, Google itself is not pretending to endorse any of these claims, nor is it verifying the veracity of the top results supplied to Home. It states that very clearly in every response by prefacing, “According to ,” to every answer. But most users, for better or worse, don’t differentiate Google the search provider from Google the trustworthy news source, and that will get the company into trouble as more of these controversial examples arise.

Our own Jerry Hildenbrand wrote about the issue of Google Home’s publicness in an earlier column:

The proper way to address this according to Google is to report the featured snippet as inappropriate. The problem is that it’s not inappropriate on a website that doesn’t read it aloud. I don’t think the search is made better by removing an interesting result featured at the top as long as a creepy female robotic voice isn’t reading it out loud to the kids. And Google Home is designed to be out in the open in front of everyone doing its thing. It’s no longer private once it comes out of the speaker.

That gets to the core of the problem: people are better able to distinguish the real from the fake when they’re shown a list of alternative results. When Google offers just a single definitive result, people are more likely to treat it as truth.

In the meantime, Google Home is about to launch in the UK, and has proven to be one of Google’s biggest hardware successes of the past few years.

Google Home

  • Google Home review
  • These services work with Google Home
  • Google Home vs. Amazon Echo
  • Join our Google Home forums!

Google Store Best Buy Target

7
Mar

Verizon finally releases Nougat for the Galaxy S7


verizon-galaxy-s7-edge-plus-sims.jpg?ito

Verizon’s update means the Big Four have all brought their Galaxy S7 into Nougat country.

The Nougat update for your Verizon Galaxy S7 and Galaxy S7 edge is available for downloading. If you haven’t received a notification about its availability yet, you can manually check through the device settings and you should be good to go. For a refresher on what to expect with Nougat on the S7, we’ve got a handy video!

Verizon reminds us that to update (the new software version is NRD90M.G930VVRU4BQA2) you’ll need to have a charged battery and you should either be connected to Wi-Fi or have a “strong connection to the Verizon network.” For more details hit the Verizon update page and have a gander.

Now we wait to see when the unlocked model gets a turn.

Samsung Galaxy S7 and S7 edge

  • Galaxy S7 review
  • Galaxy S7 edge review
  • U.S. unlocked Galaxy S7
  • Should you upgrade to the Galaxy S7?
  • Best SD cards for Galaxy S7
  • Join our Galaxy S7 forums

Unlocked
AT&T
Sprint
T-Mobile
Verizon

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7
Mar

Facebook is testing a dislike button and other reactions in Messenger


Facebook doesn’t like the idea of a dislike button, and yet, we may get it soon in Facebook Messenger.

Facebook introduced reaction buttons a year ago for statuses and photos and videos, but at the time, it didn’t include a dislike button. Now, however, Facebook is testing a thumbs-down reaction – only, it’s not for posts that show up in news feed. Instead, it’d be a feature for Facebook Messenger, according to TechCrunch, which said the company wants to add reaction emojis next to text in conversations.

To send a reaction, you’d click on a button next to text in your conversation. You’d then see a series of reactions similar to the current six available for posts. There’s even a thumbs down option, as well as a reaction counter, which would count the number of reactions on a line of text. Facebook has already confirmed it is testing all this on a small scale to see if it lets people better represent their feelings in a message.

  • You can make Facebook posts colourful now – here’s how

The most interesting part about the feature is that Facebook is considering a thumbs-down reaction. It originally chose to avoid creating one in order to avoid negativity on Facebook. TechCrunch suggested Facebook is considering this version of the thumbs-down as “more a ‘no’ button”. So, if someone in a group chat asks if everyone wants to meet up at 10 pm, you can send that in place of a “no”.

The feature isn’t available yet for all users, but the company typically performs tests on small groups of users before a wider rollout.

7
Mar

Amazon Fire tips and tricks: Making the most of your Amazon tablet


It seems like everyone owns a Fire.

Amazon’s e-reader tablets are extremely popular because they’re affordable and easy to use. It’s no wonder that everyone from your kid to your mother has one – heck, you might own one yourself. However, no matter how simple these devices appear to be, there are tonnes of hidden tips and tricks out there, which you’ve probably never used, but you should still leverage in order to maximise your experience.

In fact, we’ve rounded up a few here. We’re sure you’ll be sharing this tips and tricks guide with your mom or wife or father or brother or best friend or anyone else around you who happens to own a Fire too. But let us know in the comments if we missed something worth adding.

Fire tablet tips and tricks

Note: These tips and tricks were tested on an Amazon Fire HD 8 (2016) but should work across the latest Fire tablets.

Hard reset your tablet

If your tablet freezes or seems to crash, all you have to do is press and hold the power button for 20 seconds and the device will really shut down. Once you give it a few moments of rest, turn it back on by holding the power button. You’ll get the boot-up animation and all should be well.

Access Quick Settings and notifications

The easiest way to change settings on your Fire is via Quick Settings. Go to your home screen and swipe down from the top. You will see a menu that lets you adjust the Screen Brightness, enable Blue Shade, set the device to Do Not Disturb, or open the full Settings menu, etc. The area below the Quick Settings menu also serves as your notifications shade, where you can see and dismiss notifications.

Name your Fire

You may have several devices hooked up to your Amazon account, which can make things confusing, so it’s best to pick a specific, identifiable name for your Fire tablet. Instead of using “Joe’s 3rd Fire”, the default name, change the name of your Fire tablet. Simply pull down the notification shade from the top, and then tap Settings > Device Options > Change Your Device Name.

Set up profiles

Before sharing your Fire tablet with a spouse or child, set up individual profiles under Settings > Profiles & Family Library.

You can add two adult profiles and up to four child profiles. Doing this allows you to share tablet but your personalised content will only be accessible when you log into the Fire tablet. It’s worth noting that once you have created a child’s profile, it will appear at the bottom of Profiles & Family Library and you can tap the profile to manage the parental controls, such as daily time limits, schedule times.

With children’s profiles, you can also pick the content that’s available to them, and there are smart filters for web access. You can also review what your child has accessed or attempted to access. The profile management page also offers the options to subscribe to Amazon FreeTime Unlimited (Fire for Kids Unlimited in the UK) to get access to more than 10,000 children’s books, movies, TV shows, games, etc.

  • Go to Amazon’s Help hub for more about profiles and parental controls.

Disable adverts

You can buy Fire tablets that don’t offer “special offers” on your lock screen. But if you didn’t do that and bought the cheaper, ad-based version, you can still remove them. But it will cost you $15.

Go to Amazon in your browser and sign into your account. Click Your Account > Your Apps and Devices and choose Your Devices from the menu on the left. From there, click on Actions next to your Fire and then Manage Your Content and Devices. You’ll then need to select Your Devices. Special Offers will be listed with Subscribed next to it. Click on Edit to get the option to Unsubscribe for $15.

  • Go to Amazon’s Help hub to learn more about “special offers”.

Install apps non-Amazon Appstore apps

By default, you can only install apps from the Amazon Appstore. Obviously, there are more apps in the Play Store and other Android app stores. To get apps from other sources, you’ll need to do something known as sideloading. More specifically, you need to find the APK file and get it onto your tablet to install it. First, enable the option under Settings > Security and turn on Apps from Unknown Sources.

You can find APK files from a lot of websites, such as APK Mirror, but you be cautious of malware. You’ll also need to download an app like ES File Explorer. From there, download the APK file to your computer, plug in your tablet to transfer it (or download the file directly to your tablet via the browser), then use the file explorer to find the APK file on your Fire tablet. Once you’ve found it, tap on it to start the install.

Uninstall apps

FYap and hold on an app or piece of content to remove it from a Fire tablet. If you’re in the carousel, you will see a pop-up option to remove or uninstall whatever you’ve long pressed on, and if you’re on the home screen, you need to tap and hold on an app icon to get the Uninstall option. From there, you can tap to select multiple apps and then tap Uninstall to get remove them all at once.

You can also uninstall apps or games from Settings > Apps & Games > Manage All Applications. Then, tap on the app you want to get rid of – one by one – and then tap Uninstall in the top right.

Group your apps in collections

Don’t like seeing your apps all over your home screen. Group them into Collections (aka folders).

To create one, select an app and hold down on it. When the menu appears, tap the Add button with the plus sign in the corner and then tap To New Collection. Enter a name for your collection and then hit Next. To see your collection, go to the Apps screen, tap the menu button on the left hand side (looks like three stacked lines), and select Collections. To add it to your home screen, tap and hold the Collection, then tap Add, and select To Home. To add a new app to a collection, tap and hold an app, tap Add, select To Collections, and tap the collection.

Clean up your carousel

You can remove items from the home screen carousel. Simply press it and hold down. A giant check mark should appear in the program’s icon, along with a menu at the top of the screen. Tap Remove and then select From Carousel. That’s it.

Free up storage space

If you think you’re running out of storage space on your Fire tablet, you can check how much storage you have left under Settings > Storage. If you select on Internal Storage, you’ll get more information about what’s on your tablet. You can go into each category and choose to delete files to free up additional space. You can also offloading items you haven’t used in a while under the 1-Tap Archive option.

It’ll bring up a list of apps and other files stored on your Fire that you haven’t used in over a week. Each item will have a box with a check next to it. Check the box on anything you want to archive, and then hit Archive. These items will be cleared from your device’s memory but still be available in cloud storage. If you need to get those items back, you can tap on them to download them again from Amazon’s cloud.

  • Go to Amazon’s Drive page to learn more about the Amazon cloud.
  • Go to Amazon’s Help hub to learn more about 1-Tap Archive.

Back up photos and videos

You can automatically back photos and videos to Amazon Drive. Every Fire user gets 5GB for free, but Prime members get free unlimited photo storage. To turn on the automatic backups, go to the Photos app, tap to expand the menu via the three horizontal lines in the top left, and choose Settings. You’ll see options to enable Auto-Save, and you can choose the files you’d like to back up.

You can also specify to back up only when your Fire tablet is charging. All photos or videos that have not been backed up will have an icon of a cloud with a line through it in the bottom corner. If there’s an arrow there, it is currently uploading. And finally, all backed up photos and videos can be accessed in any browser. Just go to Amazon Cloud Drive and sign in with your Amazon account.

  • Go to Amazon’s Drive page to learn more about backing up and Prime Photo.

Encrypt your data

If you have data on your Fire that you want to keep private, you can encrypt it. You’ll then be required to enter a password in addition to any lock screen password you may have set up. Encrypting your data requires that your Fire be charged at least at 80 percent and be plugged in – and the process takes about an hour. Unfortunately, encryption will be disabled if you reset your Fire to factory settings.

So, here’s what you do: swipe down from the top of the Fire screen, then tap Settings > Security & Privacy. In the settings that appear, tap Encryption > Encrypt Tablet. And that’s it. 

Manage notifications

Notifications pop up in the notification shade, such as an incoming email or a system update. However, if you get notifications you simply don’t want to see, then you should turn them off under Settings > Sound & Notification > App Notifications. Tap on the app you want to block notifications from – or you can toggle Priority if you always want to hear from a specific app. 

Manage your e-book library

Download Calibre. It’s a well-rated e-book library management software that’s totally free. It can help you organise your books, convert files to e-reader-friendly formats, sync with your device, and more. We really like it for converting books downloaded from other sources, like Project Gutenberg, which has tonnes of free reading material in the public domain, or Humble Bundle.

E-books – even if in the MOBI format – not directly from Amazon tend to end up in the Documents section of a Fire rather than Books. But by loading the file into Calibre, highlighting it, selecting Convert Books and MOBI Output, then getting rid of the “[DOC]” tag in the “Personal Doc tag” field, and selecting “OK”, it’ll be converted and should appear in the Books section of your tablet.

Upload your personal music

You can upload your personal music collection to Amazon Cloud Drive and stream it or download it to your tablet. Follow these directions for uploading music. Keep in mind only the first 250 songs are free, then you have to get a $24.99 premium plan to add 250,000 more.

Change the wallpaper

Your Fire lets you change its wallpaper: open Settings > Display > Wallpaper, choose a wallpaper from the default set, or pick your own.

Take a screenshot

This one is easy: hold down the Power button and the volume down button at the same time. You may see an animation and hear a capture sound. To find your screenshot, go to the Photos app.

View desktop websites

The Fire uses Silk as its default web browser, and it automatically loads websites in mobile view. If you’d rather view full desktop versions on it, simply load the mobile version of a page in Silk, tap the menu icon in the upper right (looks like three dots stacked on top of each other), then select Request desktop site. It will then bring you to the full site you were just looking at in mobile view.

Close all browser tabs

Sometimes when you’re in Silk browser, you can end up with lots of tabs open. To get rid of them, press on any open tab, and in the menu that appears, tap Close All Tabs (or tap Close Other Tabs to close all tabs – except the one you’re pressed).

Disable screen rotation

You can disable and enable screen rotation by opening the notifications menu (swipe down from top of homescreen) and tapping the screen button to either lock or unlock its ability to automatically rotate.

Check battery percentage

Go to Settings > Device to see how much battery percentage you have left. You can also monitor battery usage with an app like GSam Battery Monitor, which will also conveniently show you the exact battery percentage in the notifications menu so you don’t have to dig to find it.

Set up lock screen password

Under Settings > Security, you’ll see an option to set a lock screen password so that other people cannot easily access your Fire.

Want to know more?

Here’s the link to the Fire HD help section at Amazon. It has user guides and help articles on getting started, navigating the user interface, troubleshooting, and plenty more.

7
Mar

Yahoo Captain: Is it really an assistant and how does it work?


Despite a pending sale to Verizon and an investigation into its data breaches, Yahoo had the time to make an assistant.

Called Captain, it’s one of the cooler services Yahoo has put out in recent years. It’s not a voice-activated assistant or anything like that. Instead, it is a new take on how we use artificial intelligence to manage our busy schedules. And you don’t need to download or even use a dedicated app to take advantage of its useful features. You simply talk to Captain over text. Here’s everything you need to know about it.

  • Yahoo confirms state-sponsored hack: Were you affected?

Yahoo: What is Captain?

Captain is an SMS-based digital assistant, though Yahoo has described it as “a bot assistant that streamlines family logistics through text 
without downloading any app”. It primarily combines text with group reminders and shared shopping lists in real-time.

Yahoo: So, Captain is an assistant?

Although it is considered an assistant, Captain is obviously not as powerful as Apple’s Siri or Amazon’s Alexa or Google Assistant. The neatest thing about the service is that it acts as an intermediary between you and other people in your family. The point here is to lessen some of the burden around having to manage your life, your spouse’s schedule, and your kids’ activities.

For instance, you can text Captain to remind your husband that your daughter needs to be picked up at 3pm, and it’ll also remind your daughter that her dad is coming to get her soon. Yahoo said Captain helps your family stay organized by keeping shared reminders, grocery lists, to-do lists, and more for your entire family. You can learn more from the Yahoo Captain website.

Yahoo: How does Captain work?

Getting started

Simply text “hi” to the number 773-786 to get started using Captain. You’ll then have to accept the terms, and then Captain will walk you through how to update a shared shopping list, set reminders, and add family members to the group.

Invite members

To invite family members, text “add member [name]” to 773-786. For instance, you can text “add member Stuart”, and then Captain will send you the instructions to invite Stuart to the group. You can learn more about adding family members here.

Reminders and shared lists

Your family can add, remove, and query shared lists and reminders through text messages. You can, for instance, text Captain at 776-786 to set up a timed reminder for your son to pick up the dry cleaning on Sunday. See the full list of supported commands here.

Yahoo: Where is Captain available?

Captain works with all US mobile carriers that accept SMS short codes.

Yahoo: Does Captain cost anything?

Captain is free to use. However, standard text rates apply. If you have unlimited texting, you shouldn’t see any charges for using Captain.

Yahoo: Is this safe?

Yahoo recently admitted to two massive data breaches, so you’re probably wondering if Captain is safe.

The first thing to keep in mind is that Captain is used entirely through text messaging, so there’s no Yahoo account required. Captain will also only share your list and reminders with people in your group. It does collect information that you provide to set up profiles, including names, phone numbers, and email addresses, but it only keeps “anonymised user dialogs for training models and product improvements”.

Also, although Captain doesn’t integrate with any other calendar, list, or reminder app, it does store your family’s shopping list and shared reminders. See the Security at Yahoo webpage more information about Yahoo’s various security steps.

Want to know more?

Check out Captain’s FAQ page.

7
Mar

Meet Sedric: Volkswagen’s self-driving lounge car of tomorrow


Volkswagen has introduced a new car concept that models its vision for autonomous driving.

Called Sedric (as in “self-driving car”), the vehicle is fully autonomous and has no steering wheel or pedals. Volkswagen Group AG, the parent group of Volkswagen, revealed Sedric at the Geneva Auto Show on Monday. During the unveiling, Volkswagen claimed Sedric, which can be summoned at the push of a button for ride-hailing trips, is the first vehicle to be designed for fully autonomous driving “from scratch”.

Volkswagen also said Sedric could serve as a “friend and companion” for your family, which makes us wonder if Volkswagen imagining a built-in artificial intelligence – sort of like Toyota’s Concept-i vehicle, which debuted earlier this year with the “Yui” AI. Volkswagen has suggested we should expect these features in Sedric to appear in its production-ready cars in the coming years, rather than Sedric itself.

  • Best of CES 2017 – Cars: All the major announcements from the show

VW

From Volkswagen press materials and video, it’s clear that Sedric is just a dream at this point and may never come to fruition. Both the exterior and interior are unlike anything else on the road right now. The inside appears to be a vintage lounge, with bright yellow seats and wood grain paneling and even a spot to grow potted plants.

Still, it’s neat to see what companies are envisioning for tomorrow’s cars.

7
Mar

Major League Baseball approves another wearable for in-game use


Major League Baseball began allowing players to use two wearable devices during games before the 2016 season started. The league is now adding another gadget to its approved list: the Whoop Strap. While the device has been around for awhile now, players can wear the continuous biometric monitoring wristband during games when 2017 season starts in a matter of weeks. Whoop Strap tracks strain, recovery and sleep to give athletes, coaches and trainers an overall look at a player’s health.

The Whoop wearable monitors heart rate, heart rate variability, ambient temperature, motion and sleep data and can store those stats up to 3 days. Last year, the company conducted a trial with 200 minor league players who wore the device all the time except when they were on the field for games. Whoop says this gave it a truckload of data on things like travel, recovery and more which it then presented to MLB during off-season meetings.

ESPN reports that players won’t be required to wear the device and that Whoop has no rights to any collected data. What’s more, players and teams will be given equal access to the information and any use of those stats for things like TV broadcasts must be approved by both sides. Players can also decide how much information is shared by adjusting the security settings. A couple of NBA players have tried the device during games without permission, so it will be interesting to see if the pro basketball league will make a decision to officially allow or ban the device in the near future.

The Whoop band costs $1,200 and the price includes access to the analytics dashboard. There’s also a consumer-focused Whoop Strap 2.0 that went on sale in November for $500.

Source: Whoop