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16
Dec

Google Maps now tells you when to get off at your bus stop


Never miss your stop again.

Trains and buses are how a lot of people make their daily commutes each and every day, and although Google Maps has already been able to show arrival times for this way of transportation, it’s now getting a big upgrade with the new ability to tell you how much more time you have before you’re at your destination.

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When you’re on a train or bus, you’ll be able to look at Google Maps to see how many more stops you have until you get to where you want to go. A notification will show up on your lock screen telling you what stop to get off at and how many minutes until you get there, and this is also accompanied by a progress bar for your bus/train that moves in real-time.

In addition to this, Maps can also now give you turn-by-turn directions so you know exactly where to go to hop on your next ride.

I hardly ever use the bus or train since I live in a pretty rural area, but for my fellow city-dwellers, this sounds like something of a godsend. Enjoy!

Google Search and Maps will soon show restaurant wait times

16
Dec

Inbox now recommends unsubscribing to certain newsletters


Time to declutter your inbox.

It’s hard to believe that Inbox by Gmail has been around for over three years now, and since its initial debut, the service has picked up quite a few tricks along the way that help it continue to feel fresh and modern. Now, it looks like Inbox’s latest feature is suggesting newsletters that you should unsubscribe to.

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Android Police has received multiple tips about this new feature, and when Inbox detects that you haven’t opened emails from a certain sender within the past month, it’ll reveal a card above all of your emails asking if you’d like to unsubscribe from any future messages from them.

There are two buttons to choose from on the card – “unsubscribe and “no thanks” – and tapping “unsubscribe” will have Inbox unenroll you from whatever newsletter or mailing list you’ve been ignoring.

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Image via Android Police.

This feature appears to be rolling out to Inbox’s Android app as well as its desktop site, and although I’m not seeing it on my end just yet, there are numerous users who already appear to have access to it.

Google Maps now tells you when to get off at your bus stop

16
Dec

Huawei Watch 2 Classic giveaway! Enter for a chance to win at Android Central!


If you’re looking for a high-end Android Wear watch, the Huawei Watch 2 Classic is your best bet, and we’re giving one away!

We have found the Huawei Watch 2 Classic to be extremely easy to wear, and quite enjoyable to use. The Classic is equipped with a bunch of top-notch specs for a modern smartwatch, including a super-sharp 1.2-inch OLED panel at 390×390 pixels, a Snapdragon 2100 processor, 768MB of RAM and 4GB of storage (which can be used to store and play music offline), a heart rate sensor, a GPS radio, IP68 water resistance, and a 420mAh battery that’s quoted for two days.

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You can check out our full review, then come back and enter to win the watch for yourself! Keep reading to enter!

THE PRIZE: One Android Central reader will win a Huawei Watch 2 Classic!

TO ENTER To enter, use the widget at the bottom of this page. Keep in mind that all winning entries are verified and if the task was not completed or cannot be verified, a new winner will be chosen.

We will keep the giveaway open until December 31, 2017, and the winner will be announced right here after the closing date. Good luck!

Enter for a chance to win a Huawei Watch 2 Classic!

Don’t miss this giveaway too! You could win an Honor 7X!

16
Dec

ARCore v1.0 release in ‘the coming months’, Project Tango support ending


Developer Preview 2 for ARCore is also here.

Google first launched ARCore this past August as its first widely available augmented reality platform following its dabblings with Project Tango, and although we’ve yet to see the true potential of the platform, things like the recently released AR Stickers give a promising glimpse into ARCore’s future.

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The second Developer Preview for ARCore doesn’t introduce any radical changes, but there are three main improvements that are the focus of this latest update, including:

  • A new C API for use with the Android NDK that complements our existing Java, Unity, and Unreal SDKs
  • Functionality that lets AR apps pause and resume AR sessions, for example to let a user return to an AR app after taking a phone call
  • Improved accuracy and runtime efficiency across our anchor, plane finding, and point cloud APIs

Along with the second Developer Preview, Google also announced that it’s officially ending support of Project Tango and that a public launch of ARCore (dubbed ARCore v1.0) will be available “in the coming months.”

When this happens, Google says that it’ll support more than 100 million devices with numerous ARCore apps scheduled to launch in the Play Store at the same time.

The Pixel’s AR Stickers are the most fun you can have with a camera

16
Dec

Deal: Misfit Vapor smartwatch now available on Amazon for just $140


The Misfit Vapor is finally available to purchase on Amazon, and at a discount of $60!

The Misfit Vapor has been available for purchase through Misfit’s website since October 31, but if you’ve been wanting to buy the watch through Amazon, that’s been a different story. Some customers were able to buy the Vapor on Amazon when it was initially listed, but it was quickly removed and shipments never went out.

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Misfit issued a statement in November saying that it’d be sending units to Amazon in December, and now that we’re halfway through the month, it looks like Misfit followed through.

You can now purchase the Misfit Vapor on Amazon, but rather than selling for its regular price of $199, you can pick it up for just $140. It’s unclear how long this discount will be available for, but $140 is not a bad deal at all.

You won’t find any features like NFC or GPS on the Vapor, but what it does offer is Android Wear 2.0, a 1.39-inch AMOLED display, Snapdragon Wear 2100 processor, and even water resistance that protects the watch for up to 50-meters of submersion.

See at Amazon

16
Dec

Apple signs ‘Battlestar Galactica’ developer for new space drama


Apple has ordered yet another TV series to add to its growing list of star-backed original productions. The company signed network sci-fi luminary Ronald D. Moore, veteran of several Star Trek series and developer of the Battlestar Galactica reboot, to create a completely new space drama. The show will explore what would have happened if the space race between the United States, Soviet Russia and the rest of the world hadn’t ended.

Fargo co-executive producers Matt Wolpert and Ben Nedivi will join Moore on the project, which does not yet have a title. It’s the third series ordered by Apple’s worldwide video programming division, which is headed by former Sony execs Jamie Erlicht & Zack Van Amburg. The tech giant had previously hired Steven Spielberg to produce a new version of the old Amazing Stories anthology series, as well as buying a TV drama created by and starring Jennifer Aniston and Reese Witherspoon.

There’s no news on when Moore’s show will be released, but his experience is reason enough to get excited. He started as a writer and eventual producer on Star Trek: The Next Generation before moving on to Star Trek: Deep Space Nine and a stint on Star Trek: Voyager. He became a showrunner on HBO’s Carnivale before developing the rebooted Battlestar Galactica and later Starz’s Outlander series adapting the books of the same name. Moore also co-developed Amazon’s upcoming sci-fi anthology series, Philip K. Dick’s Electric Dreams.

Source: Deadline

16
Dec

Eve V review: The wisdom of the crowd mostly pays off


If you’ve never heard of Eve, I like to think of it as the OnePlus of computers: By ditching middlemen, this 11-person startup found a way to build and sell premium computers at a significant discount. The difference is, the people in charge didn’t draw up a list of specs and start churning out machines. Instead, they left just about every important design and component decision to a coalition of over a thousand community members. When I first heard about the project earlier this year, I was skeptical — how good can a crowd-sourced computer be when this many people are involved?

Well, it’s time for me to eat crow. Though it’s not perfect, the Eve V is a surprisingly worthy Surface Pro competitor, especially for a first-gen product.

To really get a feel for what the Eve V has to offer, we need to look at the available configurations. The most basic model costs $799 and pairs an Intel Core m3 chipset with a 128GB SSD and 8GB of RAM. Microsoft’s entry-level Surface Pro costs just as much and also has a Core m3 CPU, but only ships with 4GB of RAM. To further sweeten the deal, every Eve V comes with an active pen and keyboard cover. In the case of the Surface Pro, extras like these add an extra $260 to the bottom line.

The difference in value becomes more pronounced the more you spend. While the top-tier Surface Pro packs one of Intel’s dual-core Core i7-7660U chips, a fully tricked-out V uses a slightly slower Core i7-7Y75. Both machines come with 16GB of RAM and a 1TB SSD, though, and while the V can’t win in terms of sheer power, it’ll cost you a full $500 less than the highest-end Surface Pro. For Eve and its community, it’s all about getting more for less.

The machine I’ve been testing sits one notch below Eve’s most premium offering, and the only difference is it ships with a 512GB SSD. (It, too, costs about $500 less than the comparable Surface Pro.) Consider me impressed. The dark aluminum chassis has been a bit of a fingerprint magnet, but the build quality is reassuringly sturdy. The V’s body is a little heavier than you might expect since the community lobbied for a bigger battery, but it was never uncomfortable to lug around and slip into a backpack.

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Chris Velazco/Engadget

I also have the community to thank for the plethora of ports found: two full-size USB 3.0 connections, one USB 3.0 Type C socket and a Thunderbolt Type C port, as well as a microSD slot for good measure. Why the new Surface Pro still only has one USB port is beyond me, and I’m glad Eve took the path that it did — it allowed me to hook up a mouse and full-size keyboard for office work and charge my Android phone at the same time.

The real star of the show is the display: a 12.3-inch IGZO LCD screen with a resolution of 2,880 x 1,920. It’s one of the brightest I’ve ever seen on a convertible machine, and even though a batch of defective screens caused a production delay, I think the longer wait time was worth it. Text is crisp and colors pop compared to the Surface Pro. The bezels around the screen are a bit thicker than I’d like, but considering the price, I don’t think they’re a big deal.

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Chris Velazco/Engadget

I also appreciate the level of power packed into the V, even if it’s not quite as fast as some of its competitors. My daily routine consists of a lot of writing (duh), image editing, Spotify sessions and YouTube binges. Those use cases don’t require the sort of horsepower that a U-series Core i7 chip brings to the table and so I never felt like I was missing out. And, while the V isn’t meant to be a full-on gaming machine, it manages to run titles like Metal Gear Solid V and Overwatch (at lower graphical settings, naturally) without too many hiccups.

With the built-in 48Wh battery, I’ve been able to use the Eve V for between 10 and 11 hours of work before needing a recharge. Your mileage will depend on your usage habits, but I appreciated being able to plop down and work nonstop before having to worry about plugging in. To be clear, that’s about an hour less runtime compared to the most recent Surface Pro. That said, the Eve V’s battery life is still in line with other ultraportable machines we’ve tested this year. If nothing else, it absolutely blows away my daily driver (a 15-inch, Touch Bar MacBook Pro), and for that I’m grateful.

As you’d expect from a small startup little experience building this kind of hardware, Eve didn’t get everything right. The thing is, it’s sometimes difficult to figure out where the blame lies. Consider the active pen included in the box — it doesn’t support as many levels of pressure sensitivity as Microsoft’s Surface Pen, and occasionally feels sluggish compared to the competition. It’s perfectly adequate for occasional note-taking, but I wouldn’t trust it for much more beyond that. Then again, this was a concession the Eve community eventually decided on in order to keep costs down, and so I don’t imagine them complaining much about this. There didn’t seem to be as much conversation about the Eve V’s speakers, and it shows: They get decently loud, but the audio is decidedly toothless.

Then there’s the keyboard, which I’m generally fond of. After using a 2016 MacBook Pro, with its flat key switches, the Eve keyboard’s key travel feels like a return to sanity. There are a few novel flourishes here, too, including a backspace key that says “oops” and the ability to toggle between seven different backlight colors for the keys. The trackpad is a little small for my liking, but it gets the job done. The whole thing is coated in Alcantara fabric, too, though it’s much plusher than the kind Microsoft uses for its Surface keyboards. It’s softer, which is nice, but the material also makes the keyboard more prone to catching crumbs, lint and dust. Learn from my mistakes and don’t eat your lunch over it.

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Chris Velazco/Engadget

Ultimately, it’s the keyboard’s most ambitious feature that disappoints the most. The keyboard itself is thicker than one of Microsoft’s because there’s a battery and Bluetooth module inside, allowing you to detach the keyboard from the V’s magnetic connector and peck out emails from a distance. Unfortunately, the setup process is more confusing than it should be, and I noticed some latency once I carried the keyboard more than a foot or so away from the machine. That is, when you can you get the connection to work at all. On a few occasions, I couldn’t get the keyboard to wake up after disconnecting it from the V, for reasons that remain unclear.

In its current form the Eve V might not be for you, and that’s understandable. The company behind it obviously didn’t get everything right, and there are some features that I would’ve preferred didn’t make the cut because I didn’t lobby for them in the design process. And yet, after testing the V, I still find myself inexorably drawn to Eve’s mission: the idea of a low-cost, premium machine designed by the masses for the masses. I don’t think the Eve V’s missteps are due to bad community decisions — they seem like the sort of shortcomings you’d expect from a company that’s new to precision production.

Even now, Eve’s devotees are trying to jointly design a desktop docking system to give the V extra ports and video outputs. At this point, my lingering concerns mostly lie with Eve itself. What remains to be seen is how well this young company will scale to meet the needs of its growing fan base. For now, though, Eve has proven that design by community — even really big ones — can be fruitful when the people involved all care about building something special. Here’s hoping Eve and its fans can make the next one even better.

16
Dec

BlackBerry will shutter its app store on December 31st, 2019


While there’s little doubt that BlackBerry’s in-house mobile platforms are finished (the last BB10 device shipped over 2 years ago), it’s now giving holdouts some not-so-subtle hints that it’s time to move on. The company has announced that it’s shutting down BlackBerry 10 and BlackBerry OS services over the next couple of years. The closures will start with relatively little-used services like the BlackBerry Travel site (February 2018) and Playbook video calling (March 2018), but it will culminate with the shutdown of the BlackBerry World app store on December 31st, 2019. When 2020 rolls around, your Classic or Passport won’t have an official avenue for downloading software.

It’s not all dire news. BlackBerry is promising “at least” two years of BB10 support, and vintage BBOS devices will have a minimum two years of access to the company’s network. If you need to hang on to a phone for work or just want to reminisce about old times, you have time to transition to newer hardware.

The timeline isn’t exactly a shock when it’s patently clear that BlackBerry sees TCL-made Android phones like the KEYone and Motion as its future. It doesn’t want to keep running services that support a rapidly shrinking portion of its user base. Nonetheless, it’s a sad moment for longstanding BlackBerry fans. The crew in Waterloo has basically given a death date for its legacy technology: no matter how attached you might be, you’ll have to let go within a couple of years.

Via: VentureBeat

Source: Inside BlackBerry

16
Dec

As online ads fail, sites mine cryptocurrency


Between the incessant headlines and chatter on social media, it feels like everywhere we go some libertarian evangelist appears asking us if we have a second to talk about the blockchain — like a religious wingnut lurking outside the grocery store.

The fever for a magic internet money no one actually understands is definitely something akin to religious fervor right now.

In the biggest example of blind faith yet, people are apparently mortgaging their homes to buy Bitcoin as it soars to previously unimagined value. At the time of publishing, one Bitcoin is worth over $16,000 — far above its worth this time last year when it was $807. But good luck finding places to spend it: Bitcoin is getting mainstream adoption, but you still can’t pay your credit card bill with it. The whole thing has a vibe that portends disaster, or at the very least, the beginning of a lot of stories about scammers making bank while normal people get hoodwinked.

So it’s no wonder that the always-sketchy, ever-scammy, and terminally exploitative online ad industry is starting to get replaced in favor of cryptocurrency mining — the nonconsensual use of a website visitor’s computer to make more imaginary coins.

The trend emerged in September, yet it’s making news this week thanks to Twitter user Noah Dinkin spotting a Starbucks location overtaxing its customers’ machines to mine for the cryptocurrency Monero (without their knowledge). The Starbucks reward site for Argentina was using its portal to run Coinhive’s code (by way of injecting scripts, like a malware attack) to farm Monero coins on Starbucks customers who were using the coffee giant’s wifi. Starbucks still hasn’t responded to public inquiries about the cryptocurrency miner, causing speculation that the company may be purposely doing the illicit mining.

Bit Coin Exchange in Seoul

The wider public started to really hear about Coinhive in early September, with the Pirate Bay’s attempt to run a cryptocurrency miner off its website. Pirate Bay angered its visitors with the experiment, who at first suspected foul play, with Coinhive’s non-consensual use of computer resources to farm magic internet money. There was a backlash, and Pirate Bay abandoned its Coinhive experiment.

Coinhive and Monero popped up in headlines again just a few weeks after that, at the end of September, when it was found in TV channel Showtime’s websites. The company never commented on the Coinhive issue, but speculation was that it was testing the new trend of supplementing advertising with cryptocurrency mining.

Soon after that, a new problem emerged with the rush to cash in on crypto coins: vulnerable IoT devices. Because of course if there’s anything else that can go wrong with your connected toaster and security-challenged baby monitor, it will. Now, these dumb devices are letting jerks creep into our homes to drain electricity and device resources to mine Monero. (And it takes a lot of electricity to mine these bubblelicious tokens of maybe-money.)

In October TrendMicro started documenting the rising trend of cryptocurrency mining malware and its use of smart home devices like “home routers, IP cameras, and even smartphones.” The company warned that “it takes a huge amount of power and resources to mine cryptocurrency, and the rising value will only motivate attackers to pursue it directly using more aggressive means.”

Monero is one of an infinite number of ridiculously named cryptocurrencies in circulation right now. Are they worth anything? Maybe! Let me consult some runes and get back to you.

Everyone knows Bitcoin, and other coins of similarly volatile, fluctuating value go by names such as Etherium, Litecoin, Ripple, Monero, Zcash, Populous, TRON, Einsteinium … and so on. Monero bills itself as “a secure, private, untraceable cryptocurrency based on the CryptoNote protocol.” As of this writing, one Monero is worth $327.82. But good luck finding places to spend it.

Come back pop-up ads, all is forgiven

Coinhive and its method of farming is much more ubiquitous. Coinhive is a JavaScript library that mines Monero by using the CPU resources of users visiting websites. Coinhive’s shady website, which is blocked by most ad blockers, entices users to “Monetize Your Business With Your Users’ CPU Power” and “Run your site without ads.”

Which is exactly what some businesses have started doing. So have malicious hackers who are popping open websites and inserting the Coinhive code to run it without anyone knowing. Security blog BleepingComputer noted that “Coinhive has been recently adopted by a large number of malware operations, such as malvertisers, adware developers, rogue Chrome extensions, and website hackers, who secretly load the code in a page’s background and make money off unsuspecting users.”

Monero Cloner Smartphone

Like with online advertising, which is generally considered unwanted, unsafe and prone to infectious malvertising, security-minded companies and ad blockers are lining up against the use of things like Coinhive. Ad blocker AdGuard calls it “crypto-jacking” and this week posted that the practice “has soared to even greater heights,” calling out four popular streaming sites for using it. Those sites are Openload, Streamango, Rapid Video, and OnlineVideoConverter.

In October Malwarebytes joined ad-block plugins in preventing Coinhive’s JavaScript from running in web pages, because “there are site owners who do not ask for their users’ permission to start running CPU-gorging applications on their systems” and saying Coinhive was the second most-frequently blocked website for its customers. More ad blockers are taking up the charge by protecting unsuspecting users from Coinhive, such as uBlock Origin.

The miners are now considered malware. Popular anti-DDoS service Cloudflare, which is busy trying to figure out how to let neo-Nazi sites back on their platform, took a more drastic step to block Coinhive scripts and sites that use them.

These security companies aren’t psychic: It’s crystal-clear that this kind of exploitation isn’t going away. It’s only going to get worse as blockchain’s fervor continues to mystify the wider public and consume the greedy and desperate with its lure of a quick buck. Which is pretty much the story of how everything on the internet sucks right now. I mean, it’s really neat to be subjected to the exploitation of another Libertarian fantasy wealth experiment gone wrong.

In other words, it’s time for less trust and more self-defense. Avoiding cryptocurrency miners isn’t going to be easy, but using products like uBlock Origin who are taking an early stand is a good place to start. So is blocking Javascript (in browser settings).

Avoiding the blockchain version of Hare Krishnas, on the other hand, is going to be trickier. But totally worth it.

Images: NurPhoto via Getty Images (Bitcash); Getty (Monero logo).

16
Dec

Buy an Xbox One X and get ‘PUBG’ free for a limited time


From December 17th through the 31st, Microsoft will give everyone who purchases an Xbox One X a copy of PlayerUnknown’s Battlegrounds. A post on Xbox Wire says that over a million people played the battle royale game within 48 hours of being available. Not bad for a game that hasn’t even hit 1.0 yet. The move makes a lot of sense; the folks who’ve play PUBG in Early Access for almost a year are exactly the type of audience Microsoft has been targeting with its “most powerful console ever” One X marketing campaign. That said, the appeal lovably clunky game might be lost on the folks who are buying the $500 console just to show off their new 4K TV.

Source: Xbox Wire