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Posts tagged ‘Google’

19
Jun

Google’s Made with Code encourages girls to embrace computer science


Less than one percent of high school girls are interested in computer science, but Google wants to alter that script with a new initiative called Made with Code. Created in conjunction with heavy hitters like the MIT Media Lab, Chelsea Clinton and the Girl Scouts of the USA, the campaign connects girls with coding resources, inspirational videos and more. The effort sprung from Google’s own research showing that kids are more likely to get excited about computer science if they try it at an early age and are shown how it can benefit their careers. It hopes the effort will help girls to not just consume technology, but also use it as a creation tool in whichever profession they choose.

One project will have girls designing 3D-printed Shapeways bracelets using Blockly visual coding and creating animated GIFs or music beats. Meanwhile, The Girl Scouts will introduce its network to Made with Code and encourage them to complete their first coding experience. There are also videos featuring high-achieving women who use programming to fight cancer, create 3D animations and design dance sets, to name a few. Google has also created resources for parents and put aside $50 million over three years to encourage female students to get into computer science. The event will kick off tonight in New York with 100 local teenage girls, who’ll try some coding first-hand and see it used by women like Danielle Feinberg from Pixar. Overall, Google’s message to girls is that coding isn’t just for engineers, but is rather a “tool that lets you write your story with technology.” Naturally, we couldn’t agree more.

Filed under: Software, Google

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Source: Google

19
Jun

‘Games of Thrones’ Season 4 hits Google Play and Amazon just days after the TV finale


The fourth series of Game of Thrones came to its conclusion just a few days ago, but HBO isn’t leaving anything to chance. Knowing that single episodes are smashing piracy records on Bittorrent, the company has quickly made the whole season available to download on both Google Play and Amazon. As it stands, Amazon is the best place to get your Lannister fix, pricing the full season at £16.99 for a standard definition copy and £23.99 for an HD download. Google, on the other hand, has it up for £18.49 and £24.49 respectively. If you’re after individual episodes, prices start at £1.89 on both services, letting you witness some of the biggest battles (like the one pictured above) the seven kingdoms have ever seen.

Update: Tesco is hitting the launch hard too, offering Game of Thrones Season 4 for £17.99 in SD and £23.99 in HD. However, it’s also throwing in 1,000 Tesco Clubcard points and a free 10″ Finest pizza with every purchase.

Filed under: Home Entertainment, Internet, Google, Amazon

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Via: Pocket-lint

Source: Game of Thrones Season 4 (Google Play), (Amazon), (Blinkbox)

19
Jun

YouTube won’t block music videos from Indie labels, but it won’t pay them either


There’s been some brouhaha about YouTube blocking a huge swathe of music videos before launching its paid Spotify rival. The truth, however, is a little more nuanced. Labels who haven’t signed up to the website’s new terms, the majority of which are independents like XL Recordings, will have their artist channels blocked in the next few days. It’s not a blanket ban, however, since clips released through Vevo will remain, as well as fan-uploaded copies of tracks from artists like Radiohead, Adele and The xx. The kicker here, unfortunately, is that labels who won’t sign up to the paid tier are also kicked out of YouTube’s ad-supported monetization scheme. So while we may still be able to find Lotus Flower on a Radiohead fan’s channel, the band itself won’t get a single penny.

Another downside of the ban is that YouTube won’t use its copyright algorithms to blacklist infringing content, leaving independent labels to hunt through the site and issue takedown requests on their own. According to a lobbyist operating on behalf of the indies, YouTube isn’t even playing fair, offering “highly unfavorable and non-negotiable terms” which undercut the fees paid to Spotify, Rdio and Deezer, as well as being less generous than the money paid to the major labels like Warner, Sony and Universal. Now, some of this is probably just the hardball tactics that accompany any big new service, but we wonder what the movie studios will do if YouTube does go ahead with its mooted Netflix rival at some point in the future.

Filed under: Home Entertainment, Internet, Google

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Source: Forbes, Billboard, AdAge

19
Jun

Amazon’s Fire phone has average looks and high aspirations (hands-on)


It was only a matter of time before Amazon launched a smartphone. In the past 10 years, the company’s extended its reach from the online realm into physical hardware, and after the addition of the Fire TV recently, the smartphone was the last major device genre it hadn’t explored. Amazon’s filled that void with the Fire phone, an AT&T-exclusive smartphone that ships in late July for just under $200. CEO Jeff Bezos spent over an hour on stage discussing the new phone’s litany of features and how its uniqueness gives it an advantage over most other handsets the Fire phone will compete with. It’s true: No other devices have six cameras and quick access to tech support, and features like Firefly and Dynamic Perspective help give the device a flavor of its own.

In a crowded smartphone industry, differentiation is critical. Devices that don’t have any stand-out features won’t get noticed amidst the rest of the noise. Fortunately, Amazon’s got nothing to worry about here, but a fancy onstage presentation doesn’t always translate into actual user experience. Let’s take a closer look at the Fire phone to see if our initial impressions match what we saw at today’s announcement.

Excepting the five cameras on the front, the Fire phone looks like an average device. In many ways, the build reminds me of the Nexus 4: Gorilla Glass adorns the front and rear, and the plastic sides reach slightly around the back. With a 4.7-inch display, I had no problem handling the phone — Bezos was adamant that this size is optimal for one-handed use, and although I prefer slightly larger devices, Amazon believes that this size is the “sweet spot” for its users; not too large, but not too small. Its 8.9mm thickness doesn’t make it too bulky, and the back is narrower than the front, so my hand wrapped around it pretty easily.

About those five cameras? Being accustomed to a single front-facing lens on the vast majority of smartphones, a lens for each corner gives the phone a weird look. If you already feel like Big Brother is watching you, the fact that five eyes are looking at you when you use the phone probably won’t ease your worries. Of course, they’re there for a reason: One of Amazon’s unique offerings is its 3D-like Dynamic Perspective feature. The cameras take on a Kinect-like role by looking at where your face is positioned, and how far away it is from the phone. Even though it only technically requires two cameras to do this job, Amazon opted for four just in case some part of your body obstructs one or two of the lenses.

It works as advertised. A lock screen showed a balloon with mountains in the background, and as I moved my head from one side of the phone to the next, I felt like I was peeking around that balloon. This will also come in handy for games: There was a game where I was a snowboarder, and my body moved in the direction that my head moved. I could also lift my head up to make my character do a jump. This could be a fun idea in theory, but it’ll take me a lot of getting used to; each time I moved my head, my hand naturally moved the phone with me, which defeated the whole purpose.

Users with motion sickness will not like the Dynamic Perspective option. It reminds me of the parallax motion on iOS 7, a feature that frustrated a fair number of iPhone and iPad users. Fortunately, Amazon will let you turn this feature off, but execs believe it’s an essential part of the experience. Rob Williams, VP of software, said that customers should be able to do what they want with their phones, but it’s such an important feature that he doesn’t know why anyone would want to use the phone if that feature is turned off.

Firefly is another critical selling point for Amazon. It’s not unlike most QR code readers out there, but it can read several types of information and give you relevant details about that info — and it ultimately stands to be Amazon’s cash cow, since many of the products you scan will give you a prompt to buy it through the retailer’s service. As Bezos claimed in his presentation, Firefly indeed does a great job of overcoming glare; I successfully scanned a CD even though the cover had so much glare that my human eyes couldn’t even figure out what it said. It also does a good job picking up movies, TV shows and music, but I was disappointed to find out that it wasn’t able to understand a song when I sang it.

Another area in which Amazon is trying to be different is its use of gestures to navigate through its three-panel design. Flick the phone to the right to pull up a list of Amazon’s services and features; flick it to the left to get something reminiscent of a notifications panel, which offers upcoming appointments, messages and other relevant information. Slight tilts in either direction trigger what Amazon calls “peek,” which lets you take a quick look at the date, time, battery life and signal. A swivel-motion gesture brings up a fast-access screen that can get you into settings and other basic tools. Granted, you can use your fingers to pull all of these menus up, but it’s handy when you absolutely have to hold the phone one-handed.

The software is Fire OS 3.5, which is a forked version of Android 4.2 Jelly Bean (or the AOSP, at least). However, Williams insists that there’s very little relation between the two, primarily because Amazon has made so many adjustments of its own that it has plenty of different features and new user interface elements on top. As could be expected, Google Play Services won’t be offered on the Fire phone, but there should be a way to sideload APKs. A press of the home button will let you switch back and forth between the app grid and the carousel. The carousel gives you the ability to look at frequently (and recently) opened apps, and each app can list off some recent notifications — for instance, the USA Today app shows breaking news stories; the email app shows recent emails; and the calendar app offers up your next appointments. As for the app grid itself, you can put apps in whatever order you want, as well as add extra content like books, websites and other specific items.

Oddly, the Fire phone won’t launch with Bluetooth LE, though Williams confirms that the hardware does support it. This likely means the phone will get updated with software support for the spec eventually, but Amazon couldn’t give me any official confirmation on when this will take place. And this is going to be a huge negative for anyone who owns (or is thinking about buying) wearables, since many of them rely on Bluetooth LE to connect to the phone. For a flagship product launching in 2014, this was a bit of a surprise.

Spec-wise, it isn’t the most impressive phone, despite commanding a $199 price tag on-contract ($650 off-contract). But it’s not horrible either — it’s simply what you’d expect from an average phone. Of course, Amazon’s focus is on what makes it unique; the gestures, imaging prowess, Dynamic Perspective and Amazon services are differentiating factors that it can boast over other smartphones. Its exclusivity with AT&T limits the number of people who will want to buy the phone, unfortunately, and Amazon isn’t interested in selling it as a WiFi-only device. “Using a phone as anything other than a phone isn’t realistic in today’s world,” Williams said. That said, he also emphasized that this is just the beginning: While he wouldn’t confirm any future products, he said that Amazon didn’t invest multiple years into these features for just one device.

Zach Honig contributed to this report.


Amazon’s Fire Phone. Will you get one?

Filed under: Cellphones, Mobile, Google, Amazon

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18
Jun

Google Hangouts v2.1.311 Update Rolling Out [APK Download]



Google hangouts Icon

It is that happy time of the week where we all expect Google to push out updates to a wide range of their apps that we all use and love. So far this morning we have seen a small bug fix and performance update go out for Google Drive and an update for Google Hangouts. The new Hangouts update moves it v2.1.311 from v2.1.224. It isn’t a milestone update with a ton of new features, at least not that I can tell. The only significant visual change that I noticed is a drop down menu to change which account you are using.

Seems to me that this used to be there before, but as you can see in the screenshots above it wasn’t present in the previous version of the app. Also the settings for your accounts has changed. Now it gives you all your accounts in one list to change the settings for each. (as seen below. New on the left, old on the right.)

I did notice one other minor change, one Emoji got a color change from orange to white. Not a big deal really.


Head to the Play Store and check and see if the update is waiting for you and pick it up. If it isn’t and you just can’t wait, then hit the link below to pick up the APK and install it on your own.

[Update] Well, that didn’t work out so well now did it. I didn’t notice the change account on the previous version that was on my other phone because I just flashed it and only signed in with one email address.

Google Hangouts v2.1.311 APK download


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18
Jun

Live from Amazon’s phone announcement in Seattle!


Look, Amazon didn’t exactly hide the fact that today’s mystery product announcement would be its long-rumored 3D phone. But with the exception of the occasional picture, the company did a decent job of keeping its new handheld device out of the public eye. Now Amazon’s ready to show off the new Kindle Fire phone (or whatever it ends up being called), and we’re here to bring you the news as it happens. Enjoy!

Hey everyone! We’re seated at the event, which is taking place in the Fremont Studios north of Seattle.

Zach Honig’s got us covered on the photos today. Send praise and hate mail to @zachhonig.

The venue seats around 200-300 people, so it’s a pretty small affair, compared to most other major product announcements. Attendees consist of press, developers and “Amazon customers.”

Obviously we’re expecting a phone today. Rumors have mentioned six cameras, 720p resolution, 4.7-inch display, 2GB RAM. We’ll see if those rumors hold up. Sounds like it could be a very mid-range phone, with the exception of 3D. Will it be another gimmick exclusive to AT&T like the HTC First? Hard to say right now, but it sure seems like it’s possible.

Zach’s taking pictures of me. I’m a little nervous.

The event is supposed to start right now, but we haven’t heard any voiceovers telling us to settle down yet.

Sadly, there’s no livestream of today’s announcement.

The music in here is pretty peppy and electronic. It’s hard to be unhappy or unexcited with music like this.

(Photog’s note: Sorry folks, there’s not much else to shoot right now. Hopefully getting started in a moment or two!)

Lights are dimming. Looks like we’re starting! Video time.

A submitted video of Jason from Issaquah who wanted to come to the event, and why. Jason just yelled “That’s me!” in the audience.

Looks like he got in…

Another customer video submission, showing off his interest in the Fire TV (and the Apple TV, which is no longer being used.)

Now we’re seeing a video of the biggest Kindle fan there is. Who knew that he would be here!

Jeff Bezos is on stage now. “We had 60,000 people apply for an invitation; 300 of you are here.”

Big applause for those who applied and got in.

Jeff’s starting with context before the announcement. Talking about Prime memberships. “We quickly had millions of members. But then something extraordinary happened.”

All of a sudden there was a huge spike in membership starting in 2011. Why? Prime Instant Video, Kindle Lending library and the Kindle Fire.

“What’s the real story? Patience, persistence and attention to the smallest of details.”

“You can fill a bucket with an eye dropper if the bucket doesn’t leak. You can fill a bucket with a fire hose, but if the bucket leaks, it’s still going to be empty tomorrow.” Deep stuff.

“Well, Prime isn’t leaking. People use the service; they use it a lot; they love it; and they renew it.”

“We’re not trying to build service for tens of millions of customers… we’re trying to build it for ONE customer.”

Jeff’s showing off tweets from users about how much they love Prime.

“The only decent life choice I’ve ever made is Amazon Prime,” says one tweet.

Now we’re on to hardware.

Same thing: obsessing over the smallest of details. “We’ve been in the device business for 10 years since we built the first Kindle.”

There was a lot of skepticism when the Kindle first came out.

Time to boast over glamorous Kindle reviews. TechCrunch, NYT, ZDnet. Still wondering if Engadget will get a shout-out.

Kindle Fire HDX and Fire TV are the latest devices.

Hooray! Engadget got a shout-out for our Fire TV review. You should read it.

“Reputation is a trailing indicator of excellence… as it should be,” Jeff says.

“I think the most important thing we’ve done over the last 20 years is earn trust with customers. We’ve worked hard to do that.”

Jeff says you don’t earn trust by asking for it.

To earn trust, you must do hard things well, and repeat.

So is the phone the next repeat?

More boasting: Amazon is #1 in the American Customer Satisfaction Index, as well as the ForeSee US Retail Experience Index.

YouGov? #1. (Kindle is #10.)

Harris Poll? Yep. You guessed it.

“One of the hard things customers have come to expect from Amazon is that we invent.”

Now he’s talking about the book he sent to the attendees. It’s his favorite children’s book. His mom, who is in attendance, read it to him hundreds of times.

“We do things differently as well.”

He always gets asked if Amazon is going to build a phone, or when the phone is coming out.

Jeff, now you’re just being a tease.

Talking about the Prime ecosystem and millions of engaged customers. “It makes sense to me that it would be a natural question. But we internally asked a different question: ‘How would it be different? Can we build a better phone for our most engaged customers?’”

Pulling something out of his pocket…

And there it is!

It’s the Fire Phone!

“This phone is gorgeous. We put a huge amount of effort into the industrial design.”

Rubberized frame, Gorilla Glass on both sides, CNC aluminum buttons. polished button chamfers. injection-molded steel connectors for a tight and precise fit.

It’s got a 4.7-inch HD display, “optimized for one-handed use.”

More on the display: 590 nits brightness. dynamic image contrast and circular polarizer.

It comes with a quad-core 2.2GHz processor, Adreno 330 GPU and 2GB RAM.

“Our phones are also our primary cameras.” 13MP rear-facing with f/2.0 lens and OIS. Nice!

Now Jeff’s showing some sample photos, as well as comparisons with the GS5 and iPhone 5s.

The Fire sample definitely looks like it has better low-light performance. (Naturally we’ll have to wait until we get our hands on it to try it out, but it’s impressive so far.)

There’s also a camera hardware key!

That’s not something you see every day anymore.

Also: free unlimited photo storage.

sound is important, too. Dual stereo speakers are in there, with Dolby Digital Plus surround sound.

Filed under: Cellphones, Wireless, Mobile, Google, Amazon

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18
Jun

Living with Google: Google Music


Google-Play-Music

In short, Google Music is one app I have found I simply can’t live without. Google Music is free for your own uploaded music (up to 20,000 songs) but to really utilize the service you want to sign up for All Access.

All Access allows you to listen to everything available on Google Music – millions of songs. Google has a vast library of music you can listen to on Android devices, iOS, and through the web page Music.Google.com. Initially there is not much going on in your library; it’s when you start to explore Google Music All Access that the app starts to become an everyday music experience.

Google Music allows you to create playlist and radio stations of what you want to listen to. Just about any type of music is available at all times as long as you have a good connection. If you know you are going to be in an area with no connection you have the option of pinning your music on your device. Users can pin anything from single songs to entire albums and playlists.

music.Need a bit of inspiration? Google also has a recommend listening feature that comes in handy if you don’t know what to listen to. Suffice it to say, there’s a smart algorithm at work here and it’s able to recommend new releases, suggest music you’ll enjoy, or just play a random selection of stuff that you’re likely to love.

To get Google Music you have to download the app on the device your using as well as any computer you use. Most new Android phones come native with the music app. The application on the computer will ask to search for music to add to you library automatically. When you have downloaded the app there will be an option to turn on All Access for a monthly fee which is well worth it. You can’t keep the music and share it for obvious reasons but you can store it on device so if you have no service or internet connection you can still listen to it uninterrupted.

There are options available like listen now which takes you to music that’s on device or music that you regularly listen to. My library which is whats only on device sorted by genres, artist, albums, and songs. Playlist which are your playlist you have created. Radio which is a list or radio stations you have created and Explore which gives you a top songs list and suggested songs and artist bases on what you listen to. There is only one strong suggestion for this app if you can organize your library on a computer do it, the app has fewer capabilities than the web application.

LIVING WITH GOOGLE is an ongoing series of articles dedicated to highlighting the many ways in which Google can help better our lives. With innumerable apps and services to choose from, our aim is to educate readers on the ways in which we use them.

See Also Living With Google: Google Now , Living With Google: Gmail

The post Living with Google: Google Music appeared first on AndroidGuys.

18
Jun

You can now push YouTube live-events to Chromecast with your mobile device


Chromecast users have been able to throw live YouTube broadcasts to Google’s streaming stick via their PCs for a bit now, but the search giant recently added a perhaps more convenient way to do that task. Now, you can use your mobile device to push as-they’re-happening videos to your flat-screen via Mountain View’s HDMI dongle. Pretty neat, right? Google tells us that while the Google+ post is the first time its spoken publicly about the new mobile feature, the functionality soft-launched “a little while ago.” The ability could come in handy if you’d like to tune into live-broadcasts via PlayStation 4 this fall, or, in the more immediate future, you can rage along to this year’s Electric Daisy Carnival live from Las Vegas. And before you ask, the answer is most definitely no, you don’t have enough glow-in-the-dark headbands for Paper Diamond’s set at the Sin City EDM festival.

Filed under: Cellphones, Home Entertainment, HD, Mobile, Google

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Source: Google Chrome (Google +)

18
Jun

Google Fiber customers could get new TV boxes soon


Google Begins Installing Ultrafast Broadband Network

Even as Google is planing to bring its Fiber internet and TV service to more areas, it’s working on making it better. Dave Zatz points out an FCC listing for what looks like a second generation version of the Fiber TV set-top box. We’re still not sure what exactly is inside but the listing mentions 802.11 ac/n WiFi, 10/100 Ethernet, MoCA, Bluetooth and HDMI 1.4 connections. He also links to source code revealing a new Bluetooth LE-connected remote, the GFRM200. Google Fiber TV has added many new features and even a few services since it launched, and it will be interesting to see what else the Sage TV team can bring to the product this time around. Brent Evans of Geektonic mentions a recent update that added channel filtering to the guide, and HDMI-CEC control from the mobile apps popped up back in May.

[Image credit: Julie Denesha/Bloomberg via Getty Images]

Filed under: Home Entertainment, Internet, HD, Google

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Source: Zatz Not Funny, FCC, Google Fiber source code

18
Jun

Google search results now let you call stores from your PC


Hangouts calling option in Google search

While it’s easy to call a store if you find it through a Google search on your phone, it’s a bit more of a hassle on your computer — you frequently have to copy the number into your voice app of choice. However, Google is removing even that minor inconvenience. The company’s search results now include a Hangouts calling option that gets you in touch with any location right through your desktop web browser; if you see a big set of digits, one click will start the conversation. As with Google’s other internet calling services, you can reach out to any American or Canadian number for free. This isn’t the biggest time-saver in the world, to be sure, but you may appreciate it the next time you’re phoning in a reservation at your favorite eatery.

Filed under: Internet, Google

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Source: Mayur Kamat (Google+)