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22
Aug

DribbleUp’s smart soccer ball uses augmented reality to level up your game


Why it matters to you

DribbleUp’s new affordable smart soccer ball uses augmented reality to help make you a better player.

Soccer in the United States may not be quite as big as it is virtually everywhere else on the planet, but it is still a sport that is enjoyed by millions. It’s this audience that a new Kickstarter campaign is trying to appeal to — with a new smart soccer ball and app combo that promises to take your game to the next level. And for a whole lot less than other smart soccer balls on the market!

Having previously created the DribbleUp smart basketball — which we gave a solid recommend to — the makers of the DribbleUp smart soccer ball hope to carry that same combination of high-tech features and affordability over to a new sport. They claim that this is the first soccer ball with augmented reality to launch on Kickstarter. Using your smartphone’s camera, the DribbleUp app follows the soccer ball in real time and synthesizes thousands of data points into real-time training feedback. When you are using the app, you will be guided through a variety of drills and then given feedback and grades at the end of each one.

“We’ve reinvented the soccer ball for the digital generation,” Eric Forkosh, CEO of DribbleUp, told Digital Trends. “Our ball connects to an augmented reality app on your phone so you can train anytime and anywhere — in your home, on the field, wherever. The virtual trainer on the app guides through interactive drills with live audio feedback and gives you a drill-by-drill graded breakdown so you know what you need to improve. Even when it’s raining or too dark outside, you can always practice in your room with the virtual trainer and take your game to the next level. Most importantly, our match-ball quality soccer ball has no batteries, so you never need to charge it and costs less than a standard match ball. Why buy a dumb ball when you can get a smart ball for the same price?”

It’s a fair question to ask, and if the company’s previous products are anything to go by, you can expect a high-quality ball for your money — even without taking the tech into account. Forkosh says the product is best aimed at youth players and their coaches, although its clever adaptive system means that it can challenge everyone from young kids up to pro players.

If you want to get hold of a DribbleUp soccer ball, you can currently pre-order one on Kickstarter. Prices start at $49, which includes the ball, a smartphone stand, app, and access to the video content library. Shipping takes place in October.




22
Aug

DribbleUp’s smart soccer ball uses augmented reality to level up your game


Why it matters to you

DribbleUp’s new affordable smart soccer ball uses augmented reality to help make you a better player.

Soccer in the United States may not be quite as big as it is virtually everywhere else on the planet, but it is still a sport that is enjoyed by millions. It’s this audience that a new Kickstarter campaign is trying to appeal to — with a new smart soccer ball and app combo that promises to take your game to the next level. And for a whole lot less than other smart soccer balls on the market!

Having previously created the DribbleUp smart basketball — which we gave a solid recommend to — the makers of the DribbleUp smart soccer ball hope to carry that same combination of high-tech features and affordability over to a new sport. They claim that this is the first soccer ball with augmented reality to launch on Kickstarter. Using your smartphone’s camera, the DribbleUp app follows the soccer ball in real time and synthesizes thousands of data points into real-time training feedback. When you are using the app, you will be guided through a variety of drills and then given feedback and grades at the end of each one.

“We’ve reinvented the soccer ball for the digital generation,” Eric Forkosh, CEO of DribbleUp, told Digital Trends. “Our ball connects to an augmented reality app on your phone so you can train anytime and anywhere — in your home, on the field, wherever. The virtual trainer on the app guides through interactive drills with live audio feedback and gives you a drill-by-drill graded breakdown so you know what you need to improve. Even when it’s raining or too dark outside, you can always practice in your room with the virtual trainer and take your game to the next level. Most importantly, our match-ball quality soccer ball has no batteries, so you never need to charge it and costs less than a standard match ball. Why buy a dumb ball when you can get a smart ball for the same price?”

It’s a fair question to ask, and if the company’s previous products are anything to go by, you can expect a high-quality ball for your money — even without taking the tech into account. Forkosh says the product is best aimed at youth players and their coaches, although its clever adaptive system means that it can challenge everyone from young kids up to pro players.

If you want to get hold of a DribbleUp soccer ball, you can currently pre-order one on Kickstarter. Prices start at $49, which includes the ball, a smartphone stand, app, and access to the video content library. Shipping takes place in October.




22
Aug

Check out these stunning photos of today’s total solar eclipse


Why it matters to you

Lots of people took off from work to enjoy today’s solar eclipse. If you weren’t one of those lucky people, don’t worry — we’ve collected some of the best photos for you.

In case you’ve been living under a rock — actually, no, even stone-dwellers must have heard about Monday’s solar eclipse. At about 11:19 a.m. PT, the moon fully eclipsed the sun, an event that many Americans celebrated by, uh, taking a week off of work and driving out to the middle of nowhere to experience an rare occurrence that lasted for about half an hour.

Those within the eclipse’s ominous-sounding “path of totality” had a front-row seat (assuming they had a pair of eclipse glasses, or certain welding goggles, or some sort of home-brewed device), but the vast majority of us settled for a few minutes of weirdly dim daylight. Luckily, images are popping up everywhere, from generous Flickr users and NASA photographers alike. We’ve put together an assortment of the best solar eclipse photos, just for you. Enjoy!

If you can’t get enough eclipse coverage, NASA has a huge webpage dedicated to the topic. For the solar eclipse this morning, there’s a specific landing page you can head to. If you’re a big fan of the final frontier, we’ve got a comprehensive list of all the celestial events taking place in 2017, as well as a regularly updated list of awesome space photos.

The next total solar eclipse viewable from the United States will take place on April 8, 2024, according to NASA. That eclipse’s “path of totality” will cut a different swath, with the shadow entering North America via the western coast of Mexico and traveling northeast. The shadow will pass through Texas and eclipse both Lake Erie and Lake Ontario entirely before crossing Canada’s east coast and passing over Newfoundland.

If that’s not enough info for you, check out this awesome map (courtesy of GreatAmericanEclipse.com) depicting the path of every solar eclipse we can expect to occur during the 21st century. Those who miss an opportunity to see the 2024 eclipse will need to wait another 21 years until August 21, 2045, when the path of totality will run southeast, from northern California through central Florida. If you miss your opportunity at that eclipse, well… your chances of seeing the next one depend largely on advances in medicine.




22
Aug

The best iPhone camera accessories money can buy


More so now than ever, the iPhone is as much a camera as it is an actual telephone. As the camera has improved over the years, so have the third-party gadgets designed to improve your iPhoneography. To help save you the time of searching, we’ve rounded up nine of the best iPhone camera accessories and brought them together in a convenient list, with an emphasis on the latest iPhone 7 and 7 Plus.

Battery Pack — $15+

Taking photos and videos on your iPhone can be taxing on its battery. To make sure you have enough juice to capture everything you want, you’re going to want an external battery pack. To save you time, we’ve rounded up 25 of the best battery packs on the market for you to choose from. These range from small, pocket-sized options to ones large enough to restart your car battery in the event it gives up.

Moment Lenses — $35+

One of the most effective ways to improve your smartphone photography is to purchase add-on lens attachments. While there are plenty of cheaper options on the market, none are made to the build quality of Moment Lenses. Constructed of high-quality glass within a metal frame, Moment Lenses let you capture telephoto, wide-angle, and fisheye perspectives.

Zeiss ExoLens — $200

Another add-on lens option: Zeiss is known for its lenses for DSLR and mirrorless cameras. But now you can get yourself a piece of the iconic glass for your iPhone thanks to Zeiss’ new ExoLens PRO setup. Much like the Moment lenses, Zeiss’ lenses attach to the front of your iPhone’s camera using a dedicated mounting point. Zeiss currently offers wide angle, telephoto, and macro lenses for giving your iPhone photography a little optical boost.

Manfrotto Pixi Mini Tripod — $22

Manfrotto knows a thing or two about making tripods, and its mobile lineup is no exception. The Manfrotto Pixi Mini Tripod is designed in Italy like its larger siblings, and offers the same type of build quality you’d come to expect from Manfrotto. Included with the tripod is a dedicated smartphone mount that fits even the largest of iPhones (without a case, that is).

Olloclip Core Lens Set — $100

Like the Moment and Zeiss lenses, Olloclip is another solution for making the most of your iPhone’s camera(s) through additional lenses. Olloclip’s Core Lens Set is its latest offering. It includes a dedicated lens mounting clip and three interchangeable lenses: A fisheye, a super-wide angle, and a 15x macro lens. Unlike the aforementioned lenses, Olloclip’s is more affordable.

DJI Osmo Mobile — $300

If video is more your thing, you’ll be hard-pressed to find an iPhone accessory more valuable (and expensive) than the DJI Osmo Mobile. The DJI Osmo Mobile is a multi-axis gimbal nearly identical to the system used by DJI’s 4K handheld camera. It is designed to be used alongside a dedicated smartphone app, and offers a slew of clever features to ensure you never miss a moment and capture it all as smoothly as possible.

Manfrotto Lumimuse LED Light — $45

The LED lights integrated into smartphones are adequate for a handful of situations. But they’re far from perfect. If you need more light in your scene, be it a photo or video, Manfrotto’s Lumimuse is your solution. It’s a small, credit card-sized light designed to boost low-light images or add a little more creative control.

Selfy Case — $20

Selfies are fairly straightforward. However, they’re not always the easiest to capture, especially when you want to put some distance between yourself and the camera. Enter the Selfy Case, an iPhone case with a built-in Bluetooth remote for wirelessly taking a photo. No longer do you have to be tethered to your phone to take a photo. As a bonus, this also works great for starting and stopping long exposure and time-lapse photographs.

Fujifilm Instax Share SP-2 — $200

Sometimes it’s nice move your photos off the screen and onto a piece of paper. Now, you can do so in a heartbeat with Fujifilm’s Instax Share SP-2 instant printer. Using Fujifilm’s Instax film cartridges, you can now send photos directly to the printer and have them turned into Polaroid-like photos to hand out to friends and family. The best part is, it comes in both gold and silver, so you can match it to your iPhone (sorry, black and rose gold iPhone owners).

Hitcase Pro 2.0 — $130

Your iPhone might never be a GoPro, but the Hitcase Pro will get it darn near close. Hitcase Pro 2.0 is a waterproof, shockproof, and mountable case for your iPhone that effectively turns it into a rugged action cam. As you’d expect from an action cam, it features the same mounting system as the GoPro, meaning it shouldn’t be too hard to find accessories and mounting plates for every possible situation. There are even add-on lenses to extend the imaging capabilities of your iPhone. Currently, the Hitcase Pro 2.0 is available for pre-order.




22
Aug

Google to revamp Chromebook Pixel lineup with new convertible this year


Google will likely announce the next Chromebook Pixel at the same time as this year’s Pixel phones.

While there are plenty of great Chromebooks out there from third-party partners, Google looks to be gearing up to release another Chromebook Pixel. The first Chromebook Pixel was released in 2013, refreshed in 2015, then put on hold earlier this year. It seems the line is no longer on hold, because a new Chromebook Pixel may be just around the corner.

chromebook-pixel-2.jpg?itok=_WMP0xDU

Android Police reports that Google will be announcing another first party Pixel laptop at the same time as the next Pixel phones. The device might be related to Google’s earlier Project Bison, which allegedly featured a 32GB or 128GB of internal storage, 8GB or 16GB of RAM, a 12.3-inch screen, and a Wacom stylus.

The laptop may also feature the wacky keyboard that showed up in recent patents. Those patents showed a second hinge for the keyboard area, so there would be a smooth surface when you first open the laptop. The patents didn’t suggest what the smooth area would be used for, but it could be used as somewhere for the user to grip when the device is in tablet mode.

The device may also be related (or, the same device as) the “Eve” device that ChromeUnboxed has been tracking for the better part of this year. That model is said to feature a new keyboard layout and the first fingerprint sensor on a Chromebook. Given these are pretty big changes for the Chrome market, it makes sense Google would want to showcase them on a first party device.

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Android Police specifically notes the upcoming laptop will run Chrome, not Andromeda, the rumored OS that was going to be a hybrid of Android and Chrome. Given that newer Chrome devices already run Android applications, there’s not much benefit to a full combining of both operating systems. While there may be a point in the future where it does make sense for Chrome and Android to combine, for now they be the separate and wonderful operating systems we’ve come to know and love.

Android Police also noted Google would release a smaller Google Home, similar in concept to Amazon’s Echo Dot. At $130 each, outfitting your entire house in Google Home’s can get expensive quickly, so it will be great for buyers to have a less expensive option. The smaller Google Home’s would be similar to the NVIDIA Spot, a small microphone that would connect to a NVIDIA SHIELD TV and let users tap into Google Assistant. The Spot was supposed to cost $49 each, the same price as the Echo Dot. Since being announced at CES this year, we still haven’t heard anything about the Spot’s availability.

Would you be interested in another Chromebook Pixel? Let us know down below!

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22
Aug

Google may release its own headphones with Assistant built-in


A recent teardown of the Google app suggests the company on its own wireless headset.

While a lot of headphones have the ability to activate Google Assistant, what this really does is activated Assistant on the phone. While that’s all well and good, being able to process commands on the headphones would also be useful. According to 9to5Google, some Assistant headphones may be on their way.

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9to5Google decompiled the APK file of the most recent version of the Google app. In it, they found references to the ability for the user to hear and reply to notifications, how to app will handle the Assistant button on the headphones being toggled, and the ability for the headphones to receive firmware updates.

Given that the next Pixel phones won’t include a 3.5mm headphone jack, it’s safe to assume the headphones would connect wirelessly via Bluetooth. Other than the inclusion of Assistant, there’s not much that would separate Google’s headphones from more established devices like the Bose QC-35’s or the Sony MDR-1000X.

Would you buy a pair of headphones if it included Google Assistant! Let us know down below?

Learn more about Google Assistant!

22
Aug

Google might launch a reborn Chromebook Pixel and smaller Home


Do you still have a Chromebook Pixel-shaped hole in your heart months after Google pulled the plug? Good news — Google might be bringing it back. A source speaking to Android Police claims that a “Pixel-branded Chromebook” will launch alongside the next Pixel phones at an event this fall. Details are scarce, including whether or not this is the fabled laptop that would run Andromeda, the long-rumored cross between Android and Chrome OS. That system was supposed to be a convertible PC with a tablet mode, a 12.3-inch display and an optional Wacom stylus, but there’s no certainty that this design is the one that launches. We certainly wouldn’t count on the originally planned $799 pricing.

This wouldn’t be the only hardware bonus in store. Reportedly, there would also be a smaller version of the Home smart speaker. Although there isn’t much to say about that, either, it stands to reason that this would be a competitor to Amazon’s Echo Dot, which ditched all but the most basic of built-in audio in the name of price.

Android Police’s sources tend to be accurate, but we’d take this scoop with a grain of salt as there’s a lot that could change. However, it would make sense for Google to launch both products. Now that Microsoft’s Surface Laptop and Windows 10 S are gunning after Chrome OS, Google might want a riposte that gives Surface buyers a reason to think twice. Likewise, Google may want to expand its smart speaker roster before Amazon conquers the space with its rapidly growing lineup. One thing’s for sure: if any of this is true, Google is going to be very, very busy toward the end of the year.

Source: Android Police

22
Aug

CNN is the latest to make a daily news show for Snapchat


NBC isn’t the only major US broadcaster hopping on the Snapchat daily news show bandwagon. CNN has launched The Update, a survey of events that will run in the Shows section of Snapchat’s Stories at 6PM Eastern. Each regular episode will cover five or more stories in a quick, just-the-facts format. Logically, there will be out-of-cycle updates for breaking news. CNN’s Snapchat news output has so far been limited to infographics and story links, so this is a much more concerted effort to court the mobile crowd.

CNN isn’t shy about why it’s making this move: it wants to tap into a “young audience” and start “speaking their language.” To put it another way, the outlet is concerned that it might miss out on a generation that depends on its phones and rarely if ever watches TV to get their news. The Update isn’t about to become a primary source of news, but it may keep CNN in people’s minds at a time when viewing habits are changing rapidly.

This could be a big deal for Snapchat, too — it’s struggling to add more users as Facebook imitates many of its core features. If you’re interested enough in news to keep returning to Snapchat on a regular basis, you may stick around for more of its content and, of course, the messaging that defined Snapchat in the first place.

Source: CNN

22
Aug

Swiftly-falling snowstorms may fall at night on Mars


Certain areas of Mars develop clouds at night that drop icy rain rather quickly — and in some areas, perhaps snow. While neither have been strictly observed, researchers have developed new computer models that forecast frozen precipitation on the red planet, which might lead to snowy drifts. And while science had previously theorized that Martian precipitation in these storms took hours to descend one mile, the new predictions shave that down to minutes under certain conditions.

In short, faster-falling snowstorms could affect how particles, like dust and chemicals, mix in the air. The new findings, as outlined in a study in Nature’s Geoscience, might even push scientists to update Mars’ climate models.

“We need to investigate what would be the impact of those phenomena on the global cycle of dust and water on Mars,” Aymeric Spiga, planetary researcher at Université Pierre et Marie Curie and lead author of the study, told The Verge.

We’d known Mars had snow since shortly after the Phoenix probe landed on the planet in 2008 and reported both icy precipitation and, well, ice. Spiga and his fellow researchers used data collected by the Mars Global Surveyor and the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, both of which hang out in orbit around the planet. They found that the nocturnal conditions can make the thin layer of clouds cold enough to destabilize, which can lead them to create swift winds that carry ice quickly down to the surface. Or, at least, relatively quickly: Prior models predicted that it took hours for icy particles to drop a mile, while these storms can send them dropping the same distance in five to ten minutes according to Spiga’s and his peers’ data.

This suggests to Spiga’s group that the winds, not gravity pulling ice particles planetward, is responsible for the swift descent. It bears further scrutiny — something that could be investigated further by another lander. That can be a perilous endeavor, as the European Space Agency learned when its ExoMars Schiaparelli craft lost contact with Earth and plummeted toward Mars last fall.

Via: The Verge

Source: Nature Geoscience

22
Aug

Disney Research taught AI how to judge short stories


Disney researchers have been coming up with some striking new technology lately, including a method for real-time speech animation, shared augmented reality and some creepy face-projection tech for live performances. Now, researchers at Disney and the University of Massachusetts Boston have been working on neural networks that can evaluate short stories. While these AIs don’t (yet) analyze story like a professional literary critic, the software tries to predict which stories will be most popular. “Our neural networks had some success in predicting the popularity of stories,” said Disney Research scientist Boyang “Albert” Li in a statement. “You can’t yet use them to pick out winners for your local writing competition, but they can be used to guide future research.”

The researchers used social question and answer site Quora for a large database to feed into its AI algorithms. Many of the answers on Quora come in the form of stories, so reader upvotes can be used as a measure of popularity, and as “a proxy for narrative quality.” The team gathered almost 55,000 answers and classified more than 28,000 of them as stories, each with an average of 369 words. Then they developed a couple of different neural networks — one to look at different sections of each story and one to take a more holistic view of a story’s meaning. Each AI made predictions about the relative popularity of a given story. Both neural nets were better at choosing a story’s popularity over a baseline text evaluation, but the holistic network showed an 18 percent improvement over the one that focused on sections.

It’s not hard to imagine a movie studio, for example, using a future version of this type of technology to choose scripts for production, of course, but the tech is still in its infancy. Let’s just hope that researchers find a way to filter stories for quality, and not just popularity. No one needs another Transformers movie.

Source: Disney Research