Multitouch is about to get more advanced thanks to Qeexo
Multitouch input, as we know it, is mostly for scrolling, rotating plus zooming with two fingers, and you can use more to toggle various actions on supported trackpads. But if you ask Mountain View-based Qeexo, we’ve only scratched the surface of this technology. Over the past couple of years, this company had been working on a software solution dubbed TouchTools, which can let you bring up virtual tools such as a pen, an eraser, a camera, a tape measure, a ruler, a magnifying glass or even a mouse using intuitive multitouch gestures. Many of these resemble the way you’d hold the real thing which is where the challenge lies, yet TouchTools works on all existing hardware that use a standard multitouch screen controller, which should appeal to device manufacturers.

Without giving away his secret sauce, Qeexo CEO Sang Won Lee explained that TouchTools uses just multitouch data plus machine learning to tell the pose of one’s hands. “It’s not just the number of fingers on the screen; just those data will not be enough to decide which tool to use. We need to understand the orientation [of fingers] and size [of fingertips].” After going through multiple stages of evaluations earlier, the result is a lightweight software engine that claims to accommodate 99 percent of users right out of the box, and it’s now available to OEMs plus app developers.
TouchTools isn’t limited to just smartphones and tablets. Lee reckons his software will be particularly handy for large interactive whiteboards, as it’ll save users from having to stretch all the way to a virtual toolbar or fiddle with a stylus. Similarly, it can be applied to digital signage for some fun advertisements. The exec also expects car makers to implement TouchTools on the dashboard touchscreen to let the driver control, say, the temperature or audio volume using knob rotation gestures — they could be differentiated with the size of the spread. As for app developers, Qeexo is offering integration into downloadable apps as well, so you don’t have to be a manufacturer to take advantage of this software.
Even though you may not be familiar with Qeexo, you may have already used its other solutions without you realizing it. For instance, the company’s more famous product, FingerSense, is already implemented on Huawei’s P9 series, Mate 8, Mate S, P8 series, Honor V8 and Honor 7. Here it’s branded as “Knuckle Sense” and lets you take a screenshot by knocking on the screen twice (I’m a big fan of this feature on my P9 Plus), or launch an app by using your knuckle to draw a designated letter, or toggle split screen mode by using your knuckle to draw a line across the screen. Again, this is achieved by using existing hardware — just data from the touchscreen controller plus the accelerometer — in order to distinguish between a fingertip input and a knuckle input. FingerSense has been working well for me all this time, which should be a reassuring sign for the upcoming TouchTools.
Source: Qeexo
Uber is making it easier for companies to offer free rides
Uber is making it simpler for businesses to offer transportation for their customers by offering UberCENTRAL, a new dashboard that allows businesses to request, manage and pay for Uber rides for their patrons.
UberCENTRAL will work across any tablet or browser and is available today. Businesses can make multiple requests for rides from one account, and trip details are sent via SMS rather than an app, so those without smartphones can still participate in the program. Using the app, business owners will be able to track rides and locations as well as billing from one centralized hub.
The app is free to use, and it sounds as though it’s going to make things a whole lot simpler for customers who don’t actually want to sign up for Uber and use the service (or share credit card details). Ordering a ride to an attraction from a hotel or setting up cars to cruise over to the store is a lot less complicated when the business is taking care of all the specifics, especially the price.
Source: Uber
Virgin America’s app has Spotify playlists based on your trip
Virgin America revealed a major overhaul to its website back in 2014, and now it finally has an app for Android and iOS. As you might expect, the retooled mobile software has a similar look and feel to the web portal, but you can use it to book flights, manage upgrades and access boarding passes on the go. There’s a lot more playful illustration than you’ve seen in other airline apps, consistent with the approach Virgin takes to air travel. What’s more, there’s Spotify integration as well, offering an easy way to play music during your trip.
In fact, Virgin America is calling the partnership a “first-of-its kind trip soundtrack mobile feature on an airline app.” How does it work? Well, once you check in, you can stream one of Spotify’s “Mood Lists” that are inspired by cities around the world. Users will be privy to a playlist that’s based on their destination, so in theory you’ll get a new mix of songs for each leg of your journey. If that sounds familiar, the streaming service recently revealed an Out of Office playlist tool that also compiles a collection of tracks inspired by where you’re traveling that can be used in those automatic email responses. The collaboration isn’t too surprising though, since flyers can already stream music from Spotify during Virgin flights.
While the new Virgin America app isn’t ready for the masses, select Elevate members and other frequent flyers will be privy to a beta test “in the coming weeks.” If you didn’t get an invite to the test phase, you can sign up here to try and get in. Don’t mind waiting a little longer? The airline says both the Android and iOS versions of the app are slated to launch “later this summer.”
Source: Virgin America
Zagat’s new iPhone app is like the best of Yelp and Foursquare
After buying the restaurant review company Zagat back in 2011, Google helped to modernize it with a new website, mobile apps and integration within Google Maps. Today, Zagat is getting its biggest upgrade yet on the iPhone, and it’s good enough to make it your primary solution for discovering new places to eat. The app is now smart enough to recommend restaurants based on your location, as well as the time of day. That location awareness is a big part of what makes Foursquare’s recommendations useful, and it’s nice to see it finally show up in Zagat (albeit surprisingly late).
The Zagat iPhone app has also been redesigned with a cleaner, magazine-like look. When I launched it at the Engadget office, it immediately popped up with lunch recommendations, coffee spots and places to get “quick bites” nearby. It also features a neighborhood map in NYC, which is useful if you’re not familiar with the layout of the city. There’s also much a better search experience than before.
What’s most striking about the redesigned app is that it’s simply a nice experience. It combines Zagat’s editorial reviews (which are based on opinions from regular diners) and local coverage with the location features we’ve grown to expect from Foursquare and Yelp. If you’re tired of browsing through uninformed user reviews and you want more than an algorithm pointing you to food spots, it’s worth giving the Zagat app a shot.
Source: Zagat, iTunes
Adobe’s Lightroom app for Apple TV helps show off your photos
There are already ways to show of your photography skills on your television via the Apple TV, but Adobe is making those in-home exhibitions a bit easier. The company released a Lightroom app for the set-top box that allows users to pull in those snapshots quickly. Any photos that you’ve synced with Lightroom on the desktop, mobile or web are all available to display on your television. Adobe says the goal is for users to be able to share their work with anyone and anywhere, all while keeping top-notch image quality. Let’s be honest, offering a way to show images on the largest display in your house definitely fits the bill.
As you might expect, there’s a slideshow option as well as the ability to zoom in on a particular image to ogle the details. You’ll need a 4th generation Apple TV and a Creative Cloud subscription to take advantage of the app, but if you meet the requirements, the software is available at no extra cost from the App Store.
Source: Adobe
Google Play starts showing apps’ actual download sizes
Google Play now displays the actual storage space a whole app or an upgrade will take up, so you don’t accidentally download anything too big. If an update is only 2.91MB, it will show that exact figure right there in each app’s detail box. That will give you the chance to reconsider your download or to free up some space before getting a particularly large game or VR experience.
Besides displaying more accurate file sizes, Google also tweaked its Play Store algorithm to make updates even smaller. Most Android apps (98 percent of them) only download changes to their APK files when you update them, and those new files merge with the old ones. The updated algorithm will make those updates up to 50 percent smaller.
Finally, Google’s improved compression algorithms will reduce big games’ file sizes, which could be as huge as 2GB, by around 12 percent. Those with high-end phones might not get much out of these changes, but they could make a big difference for those who own more affordable devices with limited storage.

Source: Android Developers Blog
Periscope videos can now be embedded with a tweet
One key thing was missing from Periscope’s live video option: the ability to embed the video streams and archived footage in other places rather than sharing a link. Twitter’s livestreaming option is doing something about that today as Periscope videos can now be posted in a tweet. This means that so long as you’re willing to embed the tweet than contains the live video, you’ll be able to post them wherever you like. The app also got a Highlights feature, but it’s different from what Facebook’s live videos offer.
Rather than displaying a timeline of reactions, Periscope creates a short trailer-like compilation of the broadcast. The app uses “a variety of signals” to determine which parts make the cut, a process that the company says will continue to improve over time. There’s also a new Autoplay feature that will automatically start playback when you swipe over to the Watch tab and Global Feed. If you’re familiar with the Instagram video feed, you have an idea of how this works. Autoplay is only available on Android for now, but it’s coming to iOS “soon.” Those Highlights will be available in both versions of the app over the next few days though, so you won’t have to wait long to try it out.
LIVE on #Periscope: On the range with Jason Day https://t.co/0NhfLaEeNA
— PGA TOUR (@PGATOUR) July 21, 2016
Source: Periscope (Medium)
‘Candid,’ the anonymous chat app, enforces civility with AI
If Twitter, 4Chan and Reddit are any indication, people will exploit even the barest of anonymization to be complete and utter asshats online. Just look at the recent attacks against Ghostbusters star Leslie Jones, or Reddit’s self-induced purge of racist, xenophobic and bigoted chat groups. Fully anonymized social services like Whisper or Yik Yak, where unidentifiable mobs can unceasingly bully other users, are no better. An app called Candid, which launches today, is designed to fight this unacceptable online behavior with artificial intelligence.
Developed by a pair of former Google project leads, Candid (the company) has developed a natural language processing system that analyzes every piece of posted content and flags inflammatory items for removal — things like hate speech, threats and slander. Off-topic posts are moved to more appropriate sections, so you won’t have to dig through political discussions to read about NASA’s mission to Mars.
Candid (the app) is available free on both iOS and Android. Similar to Yik Yak’s location-based function, each Candid user will see a personalized feed of posts and content based on their “education, employment, interests and neighborhood,” according to the company’s press release.

Interestingly, you can even sign up using your Facebook account to seed the app’s Group suggestions. That seems counterintuitive, though Candid’s stringent privacy rules account for this. All personally identifiable data — including IP address, precise location data and Facebook contacts — are encrypted with a one-way hash before they reach the company’s servers. That hash cannot be decrypted by Candid — or anyone else, for that matter. What’s more, closing or abandoning an account permanently deletes all that encrypted data from Candid’s servers.
Oddly, though, the app also requires users to provide their phone number during the initial account setup. The app even sends a two-step authentication code to confirm that the number is real. That data are encrypted like everything else Candid collects but it feels strange and out-of-place to request that right off the bat, especially from an app that sells itself on anonymity.
Once you get through the initial setup, Candid offers a number of mechanisms to maintain the user’s privacy. For example, the app applies a new, continually randomized username like “Curious Rabbit” or “Creative Lemur” to every new post. The app also gently coerces users to be polite by awarding various badges like “Explorer,” “Giver” or “Gossip” for positive posts, but will slap a “Hater” tag on people who are consistently negative.
This process, according to Candid’s PR team, is entirely automated. A “lot of factors contribute to getting the hater badge,” a rep told me, “including the number of negative comments and posts based on sentiment analysis, number of down votes a user gets and the number of posts from the user that were taken down. Posts that are taken down by the system are reviewed by a human.”

Additionally, Candid has a system in place to first identify potentially unsubstantiated rumors through its algorithmic AI, which are then verified by a person using web and Twitter results. Any rumors deemed to be false are quickly removed, while true statements — such as news leaks — remain. Similarly, if the system sees that a poster is threatening self-harm, it will issue a push notification to him or her with the number for a local crisis helpline.
So what do you get when an AI automatically scrubs your internet forum of all offensive content? Turns out, it’s banality. The test feeds that I created during my time using the service felt like a disembodied comments section, regardless of the groups that I subscribed to. While you can add external links to posts, very few of the 600-plus beta testers appear to do so. This leaves you reading strings of random, disconnected thoughts with very little context. You won’t find inflammatory content (kudos for that) but the discussions filling that void are far from riveting. Most posts echo the same shallow hot takes you’d find on YouTube or Reddit, just without the overt xenophobia and misogyny.
What’s more, there isn’t much actual discussion going on within these posts. Granted, that may be because there are only a few hundred beta testers, but most replies to posts resemble those in a YT comment section — people talk at each other, often in non sequiturs, rather than with each other. Or perhaps it’s like The New York Times comment section: There’s plenty of civility, sure, but it’s generally devoid of real interaction. Groupthink is also an issue once you delve beyond the broadest of groups. The overarching Politics Group offers a variety of thoughts and opinions but once you get into the Republican and Democrat groups or the Sanders, Clinton and Trump groups, views expressed within them become increasingly myopic.

At a more basic level, I can’t figure out the intrinsic value or benefit this app is really supposed to provide its users. Outside divulging state secrets or posting the details of a damning business deaI — which I am willing to bet nobody reading this post has ever been in the position to do — I fail to see why one would need to go to these anonymizing lengths. If anything, this app encourages disingenuous behavior. I could go on there and make threats against the president’s life if I felt like it, with virtually no reprisal outside having the system eventually flag and delete the post. I mean, if you feel you have to shield yourself behind multiple digital walls just to toss that gem of an opinion out onto the internet, write it down in a journal instead, scream it into a pillow — or maybe just keep it to yourself.
Tinder Social is a new feature for finding friends to hang with
You already meet potential love matches on Tinder. Why not use the app for making new friends to go and hang out with? That’s what the company hopes you’ll do with the launch of Tinder Social, a new feature that lets users create groups to make connections and hang out together.
Tinder Social came about after a test in Australia that proved a glut of the app’s users have been looking for a feature to aid in planning out their night, their hangouts, and ways to meet new people for concerts and other friendly excursions aside from romantic encounters.
When using the feature, Tinder users can “unlock” Tinder Social to create a group of 1-3 friends with a sole focus, like attending a movie or hitting up a bar. The group access can be turned on or off at any time. When users swipe right on a group they like, the groups will combine and offer up a group chat for planning the event.
The feature is available in the US, UK and select other areas around the world. Need a group to go out Pokemon training with? This could become your go-to solution if you’re a hardcore Tinder user. It’s important to note, however, this isn’t the first app to allow its users to find friends rather than lovers. Dating app Bumble is attempting the same thing with its BumbleBuzz feature.
Firefox will leave Flash off by default in 2017
Add Mozilla to the ranks of web browser developers giving Flash the boot. While it previously blocked Flash over security issues, it’s phasing out regular use of Adobe’s often-criticized plugin, starting with one of its next major releases. As of August, Firefox will block some Flash content that’s “not essential to the user experience.” And in 2017, it’ll leave Flash off by default — much like what other companies are doing, you’ll have to click to activate any Flash-only material.
You’ve heard the reasons before. Mozilla explains that shutting off Flash will not only offer “enhanced security,” but improve the overall experience by getting rid of a crash-prone performance and battery hog. Web standards like HTML5 now handle media playback, 3D graphics and video chats — there’s just not much reason to rely on Flash these days.
While Mozilla says it works “closely” with Adobe to optimize for Flash when it’s running, there’s no denying that the plugin is out of favor. With Apple, Google and Microsoft also switching off Flash (Opera wasn’t big on it to start with), there will be very little incentive to keep Flash on by default. Who’s going to use it for not-so-vital tasks when the rest of the big browsers won’t handle it either? In many ways, this is one of the last nails in the coffin for Flash as a regular sight on the internet.
Via: VentureBeat
Source: Mozilla Future Releases



