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Posts tagged ‘mobile’

3
Jun

Facebook kills its little-known Notify app


Remember Facebook’s Notify app? No? Well then, it has gone into the ether before you even knew it. The social network is shutting it down after launching it merely seven months ago. Notify was designed to send notifications from a curated list of news sources — you could pick from its content partners, including Bloomberg Business, CNN and The New York Times — to your lock screen. You could even follow specific parts of a publication, such as the sports section, instead of the whole thing. In a statement the social network sent out, it said that it’ll begin integrating Notify’s features into other products like Messenger on Wednesday. It will also pull Notify from the App Store.

We’re guessing the company is talking about using Messenger’s chatbots to deliver the latest updates to users. Some pubs like CNN and The Wall Street Journal are already running their own bots, and more companies will surely follow. Unlike Notify, chatbots don’t need a standalone app, so all Facebook users can access them anytime.

Here are the full statement Facebook sent TechCrunch and the notice it blasted to subscribers’ phones earlier:

“Starting on Wednesday, we will begin integrating Notify functionality into other Facebook products, like Messenger, and will be removing Notify from the App Store. Since launching Notify, we’ve learned a lot about how to make notifications as timely and relevant as possible and we heard from people using the app that Notify helped them stay informed about things they cared about throughout the day.

With more than 900 million people using Messenger each month, we think there is a great opportunity for publishers to reach even more people interested in real-time updates from their favorite sources.”

Via: The Verge, TechCrunch

3
Jun

Adidas brings its Yeezy reservation app to some European cities


It’s Yeezy Season yet again. Today, following weeks of speculation, Adidas made the release date for Kanye West’s new sneaker official: June 11th. In preparation for that, the company has updated its Confirmed app with a new look and, most importantly, expanded availability. The application, which lets iOS and Android users reserve Yeezys for in-store pick up, will work in Europe for the first time, starting with Berlin, Milan and London.

Additionally, there’s now support for more US regions, including Atlanta, Houston, Las Vegas, Long Island, Miami, North New Jersey, Orange County, Philadelphia and San Francisco. Previously the Confirmed app only worked in Chicago, Los Angeles and New York City. If you’re hoping to get a pair, this might be your best chance — assuming the app doesn’t crash under pressure, as it has for many people in the past.

Just make sure you’re ready to go once Adidas opens reservations (you’ll get a push notification), otherwise your best bet will be trying to buy the shoes from a reseller. And that won’t be cheap.

Source: Adidas Originals (Twitter)

3
Jun

With the Gear Fit 2, Samsung tries again at workout wristbands


Samsung’s original Gear Fit was as flawed as it was ambitious, but the market for fitness gadgets is still growing. Of course Samsung was going to try again! That’s where the new $179 Gear Fit 2 comes in: Samsung took the fitness formula it developed two years ago, polished it up a bit and added a few features that have become de rigueur for higher-end workout wearables. You’ll be able to pre-order one starting June 3rd, but join us here for a first look.

First, the broad strokes. The Gear Fit 2 is nearly the same size as the model that came out two years ago; it’s just a little longer and a little wider to accommodate the updated display. That would be the 1.5-inch curved AMOLED screen, which is almost twice as wide as the original to better display your stats. An added bonus of this tweaked design is that the Gear Fit 2 is so, so much more comfortable to wear than its predecessor. Seriously, it’s a night-and-day difference — no small thing on a device you’re supposed to wear 24/7.

There’s a heart rate sensor here too, just like last time, and even in my brief time testing it, the readout seemed a bit more accurate than before. Throw in a dual-core 1GHz Exynos 3250 chipset, 512MB of RAM and a 200mAh battery (rated for three or four days of mixed use) and you have got the foundation for potentially great device.

Meanwhile, the addition of GPS and the ability to automatically recognize and track certain exercises help the Tizen-powered wristband go toe to toe with rivals like the Fitbit Blaze. For those who need some tunes to get them through runs, there’s 4GB of storage inside the band, allowing you to stream saved music to your Bluetooth headphones. Curiously, Samsung inked a deal with Spotify to provide playlists and music curated by athletes because… why not? And if you’re the sort who brags, you can easily share tracked runs to Facebook. Sharing, as it turns out, is a big part of the new Gear Fit experience. Friends and phones contacts who use Samsung’s S Health platform can issue challenges to each other and keep tabs on their progress.

Then there are the plain usability updates. If you ever used the original Gear Fit, you’ll surely remember that sometimes information was displayed vertically on your wrist, and sometimes horizontally. No more of that: The UI is strictly vertical this time around, and while that doesn’t sound like a huge change, it goes a long way in making the Gear Fit 2 feel more refined.

Indeed, refinement is the overarching theme here. Samsung had high hopes for the original Gear Fit but didn’t (or couldn’t) build a device that adequately ticked off all the boxes they laid out. After making wearables like the Gear S2, the company is better prepared to build high-quality Tizen devices. If we’re lucky, that experience will make the Gear Fit 2 more than just a pretty bauble when it launches on June 10th.

2
Jun

T-Mobile leads the big four in customer satisfaction survey


T-Mobile has outranked the rest of the big four carriers in the latest American Customer Satisfaction Index (ACSI), knocking Verizon off its throne. While prepaid company TracFone Wireless remains at the top of the wireless provider list, it only got a point higher than T-Mo, which has scored 74 out of 100. That’s six percent higher than its result last year, though Sprint has shown the most growth with an eight percent increase. T-Mobile became the third largest (un)carrier in mid-2015 and even gained 2.2 million new customers in the first quarter of this year. It has launched new no-contract options in recent years and expanded the features of its controversial Binge On offering.

AT&T and Verizon didn’t do poorly — the former got 71 percent, up from 70 last year, while Big Red got 71 percent like it did in 2015. However, it was Sprint’s and T-Mo’s scores that brought the average wireless provider satisfaction up by 1.4 percent from last year. When it comes to phone manufacturers, Apple is now at the top of the pile with 81 percent after spending a year tied with Samsung. The Korean company now comes in at a close second (80 percent). They’re followed by Motorola with 77 percent, HTC with 75 and LG and Microsoft, both with 74 percent.

ACSI also tracked cable TV companies and ISPs, as you’ll see in its report. But in all, wireless providers did a lot better than any of them. Despite getting higher scores than last year, for instance, Comcast and Time Warner Cable are still among the companies with the lowest customer satisfaction ratings.

Via: Ars Technica

Source: American Customer Satisfaction Index

2
Jun

Intel’s new consumer head dreams of building JARVIS


Intel is in the midst of its biggest business transition ever. Just a few months ago, the chip giant announced that it would be laying off 11,000 workers and taking a step away from the PC market. Instead, it’ll be focusing on wearables and IoT devices. Coinciding with those announcements was an executive shuffle that put Navin Shenoy, its Mobile Client VP, in charge of its wider Client Computing Group (which covers all consumer devices). At Computex this week, we had a chance to pick Shenoy’s brain about Intel’s path forward.

Taiwan Computex

What do you envision being the next major breakthrough for PC form factor?

We’re working on lots of things that are mind-blowing. To me, we have to figure out how to get to J.A.R.V.I.S. [Iron Man’s trusty AI, not Intel’s vaporware earpiece]. The ability to manipulate things wherever you are, look at things wherever you are, talk to things in a more natural way. That’s the next big breakthrough in computing. And it will be in so many domains, it won’t just be PCs. It’ll be phones, tablets and also new types of things we haven’t conceived of yet.

I’m a fan and believer in the notion of ambient computing… Today you have “destination computing,” where you go and sit down with something like an all-in-one. You have “carry with you” computing, like a notebook. And you have “pocket computing,” your phone. But really, what computing needs to evolve to is ambient computing, where it’s just around you and it just sort of disappears. I don’t know if it’s a form factor or not. I think the form factor becomes less relevant when it’s just sort of around you.

How is Intel getting there?

We’ve spent a lot of time thinking about decompressing the technology problems associated with ambient computing. There are several: there’s low-power, high-performance computing that you need almost always, in whatever device you have. Not everything will happen in the cloud. There will be some form of distributed computing, where some happens in the cloud, some will happen locally, it all just depends on the particular workload being done.

That’s one aspect. [There’s also] far-field microphone arrays, how do you optimize the mic the solution? What are the right algorithms to use? How do you apply those algorithms into either an audio DSP on the platform, or some other technology on the platform itself. How do you combine that with other devices that might sit in the home, like a home gateway? How do you optimize the WiFi connectivity between the gateway and your device? How do you do end-to-end workloads from the cloud and to the end gateway and client device?

There are so many technology problems to be solved. We’re going to do what we usually do, and find the ones that nobody else is solving, or that we’re uniquely positioned to solve. And we’ll partner with the software ecosystem that maybe does other things, like the AI engines and the actual user interface.

I’m wondering how Intel will do that. These are things running on mobile processors… Where along the chain does Intel come in?

Well, they won’t necessarily always run on mobile processors. And today even, they don’t just run on mobile processors. I think you’re going to see far-field in the PC domain, in all in ones, in all sorts of things. Some of them you’ll see today, some you’ll see in the future.

While today there are some examples that use mobile processors, like any other domain, computing is going to be this sort of spectrum. Some things that are extraordinarily form factor constrained may have mobile CPUs. And things less constrained will have higher performance CPUs. And so we’ll participate wherever we can.

With mobile processors, Intel has admitted it missed out. What’s happening with them now?

We’re just really taking a much broader view, and thinking about where the world is going, not necessarily where it’s been or where it is now. And if you kind of think about what we think about today, there’s just a much broader way to think about connected devices. We’re not thinking about a PC only. Or a phone only, or a tablet only. We really are thinking about this broad array of connected things … and figuring out where are the optimal places for us to add value.

So that being said, you will see us participating in phones in some way shape or form. Our modem technology is going to be used on many networks around the world. Even on 4G, we think we have an opportunity with our modem.

We think as we go to 5G, there’s going to be just a completely different way of thinking about the network. From narrowband IoT for things like a parking meter with very low bandwidth and low power, to sub-6GHz kind of things that pump very high data rates over a mobile device, to 28GHz with millimeter wave, to 39GHz to 60GHz. We already have Wi-Gi 60GHz in the market today. We just have a much broader spectrum, and a much broader way of thinking about how we can participate. Some of that will be medium to long-term. And some will be sooner.

An array of devices powered by Intel’s SoFIA chip.

It’s sad to hear about SoFIA (Intel’s now defunct smartphone processor). Now you’re talking about datacenters and AI. But the connection is the key there, how are you going to resolve that missing piece of the puzzle?

The place where we chose to exit is in the low-end of the smartphone market, with SoFIA. Quite honestly we didn’t see an opportunity to offer our customers something they thought was differentiated or different. Or on our side, we didn’t think we could make sufficient money. So we’re optimizing for profitability. But we’re continuing to look for opportunities to do something different.

When you think about the future, is the smartphone really done as a device like that, or will it continue to evolve? Of course it’s going to evolve. There will be converged mobility. If you think about what we did with the 2-in-1… We said we have the PC, we have the tablet, can we converge usage in some rational fashion? The first 2-in-1s weren’t the best, but over two or three years we’ve seen them get better and better. Could we do the same thing with something even smaller? Perhaps we could.

All I’ll say is we’re not done experimenting and looking for opportunities to do something different. But we’re going to be smart about how we do that.

The modem, we think, is going to be crucial. 4G and 5G modems are going to get increasingly complex, and there’s going to be fewer and fewer companies in the world that can do it. You’ve seen companies like Broadcom, Marvell and NVIDIA get out of the modem. We’re to the point now where it’s a very scarce asset, and an increasingly valuable one.

Are you also actively working in the AI space? We’re hearing more about it from your competitors, like Qualcomm.

I’m not sure about all these buzzwords and what people even mean by AI anymore. … Right now, to put it in perspective, machine learning is really only 1 percent of the workload today. But it’s growing really fast and we’re super excited about it. On the training side, and on the actual recognition side, we’re doing quite a bit of work to optimize the data center solutions we have. On the device side, that’s where you get into things like computer vision, cognitive computing. And there’s a number of things that we’re looking at, we haven’t talked a lot about this. I’m sort of in the “talk less, do more” space. But suffice to say, there are a number of really interesting things we can think about doing with various solutions.

You can imagine taking FPGA [Field Programmable Array chips, which can be reprogrammed on the fly], graphics, or CPU core technology and combining them in interesting ways. You can imagine taking things like RealSense and using it to capture the world in a different way, and do some interesting things. Stay tuned, you’ll hear more from us.

You mentioned FPGA, that’s something that could be hugely transformative. Are there any updates in terms of what Intel plans to do with that maybe on the desktop side?

I’m not the expert on FPGA. … Most of the effort on FPGA with Altera [which Intel acquired last year] will be on the data center side, and to some extent IoT. There are some IoT applications that would take a datacenter Xeon and FPGA and will combine them to do interesting things. We’re exploring in my business on the client side whether there are opportunities, but for now most of our energy and emphasis in FPGA are on IoT and datacenter.

The idea of FPGA in a desktop processor is really intriguing, especially with something like Viv coming along, the AI platform which basically writes itself. Is that something you’re thinking about?

There’s new domains that are emerging, like autonomous driving. It will utilize a lot of interesting PC technologies, a lot of interesting datacenter tech, it’ll have all sorts of machine learning. The datacenter might do the learning part. But the training part, taking all the algorithms and teaching the system what all these things are, creating a big database, and then pushing that information out, [happens] on the car itself. And the car will have to recognize “Is that a cat, or a leaf?” and do that in real-time. So there are places where we are looking at [FPGA]. Whether that makes it into a PC or not, maybe someday it would.

Is there anything close to a consumer product using Curie [Intel’s tiny wearable chip] at this point?

It’s one of these things where we want to tap into the maker creativity. We will never be able to conceive, sitting inside of the walls of Intel, what people could do with something like Curie. We have some ideas. We think it’s kind of cool to apply within sports. We think it’s cool to apply to entertainment and music — Lady Gaga integrated Curie in her Grammy performance. We’re experimenting with it. But the whole reason we did the America’s Maker show [a competition where inventors were tasked with using Curie in their projects] to just tap into the imagination of hundreds of thousands of makers out there.

You mentioned a home gateway during the keynote, could you talk more about that?

What we announced was the home gateway system-on-a-chip (SoC), combined with a MU-MIMO WiFi chip. We’re offering both of those in combination in a reference design, which companies like ASUS and Arris can take to market as retail gateways.

So what are those, exactly?

The way to think about a gateway is, on the one hand it brings in whatever access you have to the internet. It might be fiber, it might be DSL, or it even might be a wireless 4G backhaul. We have an SoC that combines any access method, so the service providers love that. They can be agnostic, since their box can support anything. And once that signal comes into the home, the WiFi chip becomes the means by which the content can be reattributed into the home. And we can do interesting tricks where the WiFi we have on the client side on the PC can be optimized to work with the WiFi in the gateway.

The gateway itself, as the OEM configures it, can be more than just a router. It can be a place where things are actually stored. It could be like a NAS [network attached storage], it can be a modem and a gateway. There’s all sorts of combinations being rethought now. This is going to evolve dramatically over the next three or four years.

The central datacenter sitting in Seattle or Virginia or something, will not be sufficient to redistribute content to the consumer as the world moves from full HD to 4K to 8K. Or as the world moves from normal flat content to VR. You will have to sort of take the network and redistribute it out closer to the user. And we believe that gateway can be an interesting access point into the home, where various combinations of compute will be reconfigured.

More compute will move into that device, as well as more storage and networking. Things will start to get queued, where you’ll do progressive downloads of various things based on user profiles. You’ll have various content sort of on demand there locally in your home. All those kinds of things are going to happen over the next several years. Our vision for this thing is pretty expansive and broad if you think about it.

Is this something Intel has done before?

We were in the cable modem area of the home gateway. About a year ago we acquired a company called Lantiq, which brought us a number of other technologies like DSL, 4G and fiber. So now we have all the various means by which you will connect to the internet inside of a single SoC. And we basically leverage Atom for the horsepower, along with those other IPs we’ve acquired from Lantiq.

The 10-core i7 processor is really interesting, will anything trickle down to the 7th generation Core chips, like Turbo Boost Max 3.0?

We’ll see. (Laughs) Turbo Boost Max is really interesting technology. Let’s say you’ve got 10 cores running, let’s find the most favored core that’s running. There’s a distribution curve in our manufacturing profile, so one core may run slightly faster than the others. Historically we would just say, we’ll run all the cores at the frequency of the weakest link. Now we’re able to, on a 10-core processor, say one core is faster than the other nine, and we can dedicate single-threaded workload to that core so you can get faster speeds. It’s a really innovative idea. It tends to be more applicable to higher core count CPUs.

Some of our commenters don’t think it’s that expensive, for what you get.

(Laughs) I love those guys and gals. They’re just amazing.

At our Intel Extreme Masters events, you go to a sports stadium and there are professional gamers there. And there’s 20,000 to 30,000 people there, watching other people play games, they’re fanatics. And then online on Twitch, there’s a million people watching those people watch other people play games. It’s the most mind-blowing thing.

All they want is the best. If we could give them a 20-core processor, they’d buy it. If we could give them something slightly higher, they’d buy it. I love people with insatiable demand for compute.

Richard Lai contributed to this report.

(Navin Shenoy wearing HTC Vive, AP/Chiang Ying-ying)

2
Jun

Facepalm, selfie and shrug emoji are on the way


The annual additions to Unicode emoji library have been approved, which means 72 new tiny pictures are headed to your phone. When version 9.0 is released in June, selfie, shrug, facepalm, bacon, cucumber, avocado and dozens more new emoji will make the cut. Just in time for the Rio Olympics this summer, a smattering of event-related options and medals will also join the thousands of images that already exist. Even though the new additions will be included in Unicode this month, you’ll still have to wait until companies include them in their mobile software. The good news is new versions of Android and iOS are both due this fall.

Via: The Telegraph

Source: Unicode

2
Jun

Tinder is helping Brits understand the EU referendum


Nothing gets a Tinder match swooning like a well-informed political debate. Quite fitting, then, that the dating app has added a new, temporary feature for UK users to help them to brush up on EU referendum issues when they’ve exhausted their daily Super Like allowance. In collaboration with non-profit Bite the Ballot, Tinder has created a true-or-false quiz covering key topics such as benefits and human rights — with the idea being you swipe your way to a better understanding of the key issues ahead of the referendum vote on June 23rd.

Once you’ve completed the quiz and have been labelled a commoner or crowned a King based on your score, you can get more info on the topics covered and even register to vote via the app. The new politically powered feature follows a similar experiment that debuted in the US a few months back, where users were matched with presidential candidates based on their stances towards various points of debate. So… are you in or are you out?

Via: Wired

Source: Tinder

2
Jun

NYPD’s smartphone program is shortening crime response times


The NYPD Mobility Initiative is paying off in spades for Gotham’s police. The force’s Deputy Commissioner for Information Technology Jessica Tisch recently revealed that thanks to the initiative that puts smartphones and tablets in police hands, response times to crimes in progress are down 12.6 percent. Gotham’s 36,000 officers are able to arrive at crimes in progress within 4 minutes and 26 seconds. According to a report by the New York Daily News, that’s the lowest the responses have been in more than half a decade. That expediency extends to 911 call responses as well. With a dedicated app, the police are able to start moving toward a crime scene before a dispatcher even contacts them.

In fact, Tuesday alone saw around 7,000 officers clicking on 29,000 emergency 911 alerts and performing 26,000 investigative queries, according to the News. Combined with the Hudson Yards neighborhood, upgrades to public WiFi and parking meters, America’s first city is becoming one of the country’s smartest

Source: New York Daily News

2
Jun

Samsung adds ‘Just Dance Now’ to its smart TV hub


It’s not that hard to start playing Just Dance Now — you only have to download and install the app. Samsung, however, is making it easier to access on its smart TVs by adding the app to its new Smart Hub interface. The Smart Hub gives you quick access to content from different sources like Netflix, YouTube, Hulu and Amazon Prime Videos, eliminating the need to jump from one application to another. You’ll be able to access Just Dance Now under games, and you can even pay for a subscription through Samsung’s billing system.

In case you haven’t tried it yet, Just Dance Now is the mobile, online multiplayer version of the popular franchise. It uses your phone as a motion controller, so you need to hold it while you’re following the steps shown on your desktop, laptop or television. You’ll be able to access it through Samsung’s Smart Hub in 50 countries, so long as you have a 2015 or a 2016 smart TV model.

Source: Samsung

2
Jun

Google will add special touches to Nexus phone software


For years, Google’s Nexus devices have been synonymous with stock Android. While they may be showcases for new features, they still represent the baseline for what the platform can do. That might not last for much longer, though. CEO Sundar Pichai told guests at the Code Conference that Google will “thoughtfully add more features” to Android on Nexus phones going forward. The company will also be more “opinionated” about the design, the exec said. Third-party companies will still make the hardware, but it’s evident that rumors of Google taking greater control of the Nexus program were well-founded.

You can see the Nexus-related remarks below, starting at the 20:24 mark.

The chat also saw Pichai tackle concerns about privacy, especially for Google Home. No, you won’t have to share your voice command history with Google — there will be an “off the record” mode that doesn’t send your data. The CEO also mentioned hopes for tighter control over privacy as a whole. He imagined telling Google to forget the last 4 hours of search activity, as an example.

On top of this, Pichai was adamant that Google “want[s] to be in China” and is taking a “thoughtful” approach to making it happen. Just what that means isn’t immediately apparent, although there has been talk of Google Play and a handful of Android services coming to China. The big challenge is balancing the company’s desire for profit with its historical aversion to censorship. As much as the company hates that its services aren’t available on Android phones sold in China, it also doesn’t like having to remove apps or search terms in the name of silencing political dissent.

Via: Business Insider

Source: The Verge, Recode, YouTube