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Posts tagged ‘Microsoft’

8
Dec

Age of Empires: World Domination out now on Android devices


Roughly two years ago, Microsoft revealed their plans for bringing the classic RTS franchise Age of Empires to mobile devices. About a year back, the software giant announced that game development company KLab Global is working on the AoE:World Domination for three mobile platforms – Android, iOS, and Windows Phone.

Today marks the release of Age of Empires: World Domination for Android devices, along with a soft launch of the iOS version of the game, with absolutely no mention of the Windows Phone version. The mobile-only title features a real-time battle system, just like in the original AoE titles. Based on the free-to-play revenue model, this mobile strategy game offers real-time battles, lets you recreate historical empires through advancements in technology, and pick from over 100 legendary heroes including Joan of Arc, King Arthur, Oda Nobunaga, Cao Cao, Knut the Great and many more.


best new android gamesSee also: 10 best new Android games of November 201512

Just like in previous AoE games, players will have to explore the map to find enemies that are hidden in the fog-of-war. In AoE: World Domination, players can team up heroes and distinct troop types to create the ultimate battle unit. The game offers extensive customisation of an empire, allowing players to build their empire by picking structures from history’s greatest civilizations, all the while building their own devastating army.

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Age of Empires: Word Domination is available as a free download supported by in-app purchases on the Google Play Store. The game is said to be available only in select countries as of now, but we’re sure that plans for the game’s global rollout are already in motion.

Download AoE: World Domination from the Play Store

8
Dec

You can now use your Xbox One to try on clothes at home


High-tech fitting rooms have been around for quite some time, but most of the gear stays inside a retail location. However, Xbox One owners can now have a personal setup in the comforts of their living room. Thanks to a new shopping app called The Mall, the console’s Kinect motion-tracking camera and the software’s virtual wardrobe tech drives the in-home fittings. Launching with the help of Von Bismark, a Dublin-based television e-commerce company and veteran of Microsoft Ventures, the shopping platform allows Xbox users to browse for new clothes before standing in front of their TV to try them on in real time.

When you find something you like, you can make the purchase using the PowaTag app. The payments system scans an on-screen (or physical) QR code tag to complete the shopping experience. The Android and iOS software stores your payment and shipping details so you don’t have to worry about struggling to enter all of your info with an Xbox controller. The Mall is launching in the States today, with selections from brands like SoccerPro, Style PB, Grayers and Go2Games. Those names are said to be just the beginning as you can expect more variety in the future.

8
Dec

Age of Empires: World Domination launches on the Play Store in select countries


age of empires logoMicrosoft’s Age of Empires: World Domination is finally seeing a launch on Google’s Play Store, although only in a few countries at first. The app is free to play and has many real time strategy elements, much like the original AoE installments.

World Domination was developed by KLab Games and has a ton of features in tow, including limitless customization, over 100 heroes, and what’s supposedly a well-designed interface and control scheme to take advantage of touch screens. That last part is important, as I can’t really imagine that playing an older Age of Empires game would be fun on a 5-inch touchscreen.

The description for the game makes it seem like it’s going back to what started Age of Empires’ timeless real time strategy experience, as opposed to the newer Clash of Clans style strategy game that’s so popular now. Unfortunately for most of us, it’ll be awhile before we can actually find out, since the game is only launching in select countries at first. I’ve personally been unable to download the game on any of my Android devices in the US, but hopefully that changes sooner rather than later.

Hit the link below to check out some screenshots and video of the game, and a link to see if you’re able to download it yet.

Play Store Download Link

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Click here to view the embedded video.

Come comment on this article: Age of Empires: World Domination launches on the Play Store in select countries

7
Dec

‘Minecraft’ is coming to the Wii U on December 17th


While it might feel like Minecraft is available everywhere, gamers have had to look on as the popular franchise launched on every other company’s platforms bar Nintendo’s. Today, however, we have some good news: after months, nay years, of waiting, the Japanese game maker confirmed the sandbox game is finally coming to the Wii U on December 17th. As expected, Minecraft will come with a multitude of add-on packs, giving budding builders the chance to get festive ahead of Christmas or play with characters from popular movies and TV shows like Star Wars, The Simpsons and Dr Who.

Source: Nintendo (BusinessWire)

6
Dec

Microsoft wants to make your dream HoloLens app


Think you have a really good idea for a HoloLens app? Microsoft might just help you build it. The tech giant has launched a Share Your Idea challenge that asks developers to submit their holographic app concepts by January 11th. It’ll put the three most “viable” (that is, both good and realistic) ideas to a vote on Twitter, and will build the winner itself. You’ll still have to devote some time to the app afterwards if you’re successful — you’ll sit in for code reviews and Q&A sessions — but this should be much easier than writing augmented reality software from scratch.

Via: VRFocus

Source: Microsoft

4
Dec

FBI, Microsoft help take down massive global botnet


At long last, a global task force consisting of the FBI, Microsoft and various law enforcement agencies, have finally cracked down on a botnet with a ring of over 100,000 computers worldwide. Known as Dorkbot (not to be confused with the electronic art collective of the same name), the botnet is created by infecting computers with malware which then lets hackers use them for a variety of nefarious activities like sending spam or stealing personal info — login info for sites like Facebook, Netflix, Gmail, Paypal and Twitter were particularly targeted. Researchers discovered that the Dorkbot botnet, which has eluded enforcement since April 2011, has affected well over a million Windows PCs in around 190 countries in the last year alone.

[Image credit: Getty Images]

Source: The Hill

4
Dec

Microsoft’s Build 2016 conference kicks off on March 30


Microsoft’s last Build developer conference was a doozy, since it was the company’s final shot at convincing developers that Windows 10 was worth their time. For its next conference, Microsoft is returning to SF’s Moscone Center between March 29 and April 1, according to chief developer evangelist Steven Guggenheimer. Now that Windows 10 is in the wild, the company will likely focus on how it’ll be improving the platform in 2016. I wouldn’t expect anything huge from the conference, but it’ll still be a good chance for Microsoft to directly address developer concerns (and maybe convince them to take its phones more seriously). Hopefully, we’ll also learn more about how Microsoft plans to fit HoloLens into the Windows 10 ecosystem (last year we got a chance to build HoloLens apps).

Source: Steven Guggenheimer (Twitter)

4
Dec

Mini review video: Our verdict on the Lumia 950 in about a minute


Lumia 950: Mini Review

Engadget’s review of Microsoft’s Lumia 950 was so controversial that a few of you sent hateful Twitter DMs to our author (tsk, tsk, guys). Still, as much as we hate to disappoint our readers, we need to stand our ground on this one: While Windows 10 Mobile has promise as a platform, the 950 itself isn’t exactly what we’d call flagship-grade hardware. The design lacks the charm and polish of earlier Lumia handsets, and the battery life was mediocre at best. Also, our reviewer encountered enough sluggishness and random crashes to conclude the OS still needs polish.

3
Dec

Steve Ballmer: Windows phones need “to run Android apps”


At Microsoft’s annual shareholder’s meeting held earlier today in Bellevue, Washington, the company’s former CEO, Steve Ballmer, had a rather critical take on the business at hand: “bullshit.” The terse tiding was triggered due to the fact MS is not revealing profit margins and sales for its cloud and hardware units, instead reporting annualized revenue run rate. Mr. Ballmer also found contentious another issue: the fact that Windows phones don’t run Android apps.

As Bloomberg explains it:

Ballmer also criticized [current CEO Satya] Nadella’s answer to an audience member questioning the lack of key apps, like one for Starbucks, on the company’s Windows Phone. Nadella responded by citing the company’s plan to appeal to Windows developers by allowing them to write universal applications that work on computers, phones and tablets, targeting a larger array of devices than just Microsoft’s handsets that have just a single-digit share of the mobile market.

“That won’t work,” Ballmer commented as Nadella spoke. Instead, the company needs to enable Windows Phones “to run Android apps,” he said.

Those that follow the Windows mobile scene may be aware that Microsoft had announced Project Astoria this past April. The aim was, simply put, to allow Android applications to run on Windows Phone. In recent weeks however, it has been reported that the project has been delayed, with some speculating it has been canceled outright.

Windows 10 product family

This coming February will mark the second anniversary of Mr. Ballmer’s retirement, though based on his strong feeling about support for Android apps, it’s clear he is not so pleased with the way things are going. At the very least it might add to support for the belief that his retirement was forced. Clearly he is not under the impression that universal applications, fostered by Windows 10’s Continuum, will solve the problem at hand.

Waxing on Windows

Some years ago, it appeared as if Microsoft had gained a legitimate point of leverage in the mobile phone marketplace. In the post-Windows Mobile 6.X era, it was perhaps the company’s partnership with Nokia – once the world’s largest mobile phone vendor – that made people take notice. The fact that Samsung, HTC, LG, and various other OEMs were making Windows Phone 7 devices was good, but having Espoo seemed as good as gold.

By the time Windows Phone 8 was in full swing, most OEMs had abandoned Microsoft, though HTC did make a breif but notable return when it released a variant of its One M8 late last year. Now that Nokia’s mobile division is no more and Microsoft is virtually the only one supporting Windows Phone at the moment, the challenges faced are even greater.

While the platform did see some growth in the third quarter of this year, the global market share is at just 1.6% during the same period.

Market Share Q3 2015 Kantar WorldPanel (via GSM Arena)

Citing preliminary results from the International Data Corporation (IDC) Worldwide Quarterly Mobile Phone Tracker, wmpoweruser.com reported that:

Windows Phones however…[is] seeing their lowest shipments since 2012, only hitting 5.8 million, and not enough to deserve a mention by the IDC.

Microsoft has said this was in line with their expectations and strategy, but at only 1.6% market share it is clear Windows phones will now only succeed or fail as part of the Windows 10 universal app ecosystem, as such low numbers are not attractive enough to sustain an independent application market.

The following table from IDC highlights the issue at hand:

smartphone sales Q3 2015

MIA: Windows Phone (Microsoft) is nowhere to be seen in the latest data from IDC.

Huawei, which sits at the third spot on the above list, has been quite open about its feelings towards Windows Phone.

Forward to the future

To be fair, that Windows Phone market share is lower than ever may very well have to do with the fact that, as of Q3 2015, no phones running Windows Phone 10 had yet been released. Given the hardware requirements necessary to run Continuum, as well as the fact it requires Windows 10 to begin with, it’s possible that interested users were simply holding off purchases until the time came.

Windows 10 Xiaomi Mi 4

The time, arguably, is now, as Microsoft has released the Lumia 950 and 950 XL and with them, Windows Phone 10. The idea that users will be able to run Windows 10 applications across all Microsoft platforms including Xbox One, is likely to appeal to a tangible segment of the population, be it for business use or home. Still, given the shortage of new hardware – and the fact that the Lumia 950 is quite an expensive proposition – there are still limited opportunities for immediate and explosive growth.

Likewise, in China, Xiaomi has taken an interest in Windows Phone 10, and so too has Japan, where three companies are now have or are going to be manufacturing hardware. Japan in particular is a curious consideration given that just one Windows Phone 7 device released, and until this past June, not a single Windows Phone 8 product had. Even then, the sole WP8.1 device was released factory unlocked and therefore not even a carrier offering despite last year’s FX0, a Firefox OS phone made by LG.

While the software situation has improved over the years, the fact that apps from companies like Starbucks are missing means that convenience still comes at a cost.

At the moment, the more pressing issue is that which Mr. Ballmer himself found to be upsetting: the lack of apps. Windows Phone has consistently been chastised for its lack of apps, and while the situation has improved over the years, the fact that software like Starbucks’s mobile app is missing means that convenience still comes at a cost. It now remains to be seen as to how fast the mobile situation can improve for Microsoft, especially as competition from Android and low price hardware has never been keener and even BlackBerry has entered the Android market.

Wrap Up

It will be quite interesting to see how Windows Phone 10 fares in the next few quarters, either with or without Android app support. One thing that is not likely to happen though, is a major point for profit given that Apple all but has 95% of them. Support for Android however, could ultimately help businesses and app developers who would get access to a new platform and its customers.

We want to hear what you think. Are you a Windows fan? Are you upset by the lack of Android apps, or does the future look fantastic with the promise of cross-platform continuum? Feel free to leave your comments below and share your opinion.

2
Dec

Hololens (briefly) shown streaming ‘Halo 5’ and Netflix


We’ve known for awhile that you can beam practically anything to Microsoft’s augmented reality headset, Hololens, but seeing someone playing Halo 5 on a TV that seemingly appears out of thin air is still pretty damned neat. And it’s not just Microsoft’s disappointing first-person shooter that’s getting the augmented-reality treatment: Candy Crush and a Netflix stream by way of an Edge browser window are on display as well. The clips below are brief and look pretty impressive, but based on firsthand experience with the device, these videos don’t quite line up with the actual user experience.

Via: Thurrott

Source: Varun Mani (YouTube)