Microsoft renames its Health app after the Band wearable
Sure, Microsoft may not be releasing a new version of its Band activity tracker this year. But that hasn’t stopped the company from rebranding its generically named Health app on Android, as noticed by Paul Thurrott. “We’ve got a new name! The Microsoft Health app is now the Microsoft Band app, everything else is the same,” the patch notes say.
Apparently, bug fixes are a part of the update too, but if recent Google Play reviews are anything to go by, the application still needs a ton more where those came from. Over on iOS, the app still carries the Health name. Now to see if a new moniker sparks fresh interest from its developers. Spoiler: it probably won’t.
Via: Paul Thurrott
Source: Google Play
T-Mobile tells iPhone owners not to install iOS 10 just yet
T-Mobile issued a stern warning to its customers against downloading and installing the new iOS 10 update to their existing 6, 6 Plus and SE iPhone models. According to the T-Mobile website, doing so will, cause the handset to “lose connectivity [to the T-Mobile network] in certain circumstances.” Once that happens, the user can only re-establish their network connection by fully powering down the phone and restarting it. That said, the company does expect Apple to push a corrective patch live within the next 48 hours.
Via: Verge
Source: T-Mobile
Galaxy Note 7 replacements hit stores on September 21st
If you’ve turned in your Galaxy Note 7 (like you should!), you’ve probably been wondering when Samsung would start getting replacement devices out the door. Turns out you won’t have to wait too long: the company just announced that “most retail locations” in the US will have the phone available on September 21st. This news comes as the US consumer safety group officially recalled the product, a move that Samsung already made a few weeks earlier.
In case you haven’t been paying attention to Samsung’s issues, the company recalled the Galaxy Note 7 after reports of the battery overheating and, in some cases, exploding. It’s been a tough few weeks for the company since, as it lost a huge amount of market value and had to suffer such indignities as the NYC MTA telling consumers not to use the phone on the subway and the FAA warning against using the Note 7 on airplanes.
The good news is that replacement phones will be out in the wild and in consumer’s hands less than a month since these troubling reports first started coming in. If you own a Note 7, you can either turn it in and get a new one when your preferred retailer has stock, swap it for a Galaxy S7 or S7 Edge and get a refund for the price difference or get a full refund. It looks like Samsung will have this embarrassing incident behind it before long, but it’ll certainly feel the impact when the company reports its financials next month.
Source: Samsung (BusinessWire)
Searching GIFs in iOS 10’s iMessage briefly turned up porn
As happens occasionally in huge operating system overhauls, Apple’s iOS 10 caused some mayhem as phones and devices tried to update and ran into trouble — with some devices even getting bricked. Though they announced a quick fix to the issue, others have cropped up in the days since, including today’s snafu: porn GIFs surfacing in iMessage’s new search. News spread after Deadspin found a very adult one of a My Little Pony character while searching the word “huge,” while The Verge received reports of female-on-male fellatio appearing after a woman’s daughter looked using the word “huge.”
Both terms have since been added to some sort of blacklist that brings up no results when searched for, a collection that already included some obvious offenders. A few searches still produce some provocative GIFs, like “power” as noted in the screenshot above. The search was built on Bing, so at least we know who didn’t ensure that Apple’s bundled feature was as squeaky-clean as the company wanted it to be. But since a search for “sub” produces a non-sexual yet very graphic GIF of Mortal Kombat’s Sub-Zero ripping a man’s head and spine from his body, so it’s unclear what level of appropriate they’re going for. Animated gore in, naughty stuff out?

Via: The Verge
Source: Deadspin
US consumer safety group recalls the Samsung Galaxy Note 7
The US Consumer Product Safety Commission has officially recalled the Galaxy Note 7, noting that its lithium-ion battery can overheat and catch fire. This follows a recall that Samsung itself implemented in early September. Shortly after this initial rollback, the CPSC published a statement urging anyone with a Galaxy Note 7 to power it down and stop charging it, and Samsung said it was working with the safety group on an official government recall.
Samsung says that the overheating issue affects just 24 per 1 million devices, but the company isn’t taking chances. On top of a global recall of 2.5 million devices, the company plans to launch a software update on September 20th that limits the Galaxy Note 7’s battery to a 60 percent charge.
Since news of the fire hazard broke, the Federal Aviation Administration and New York’s Metropolitan Transportation Authority have warned against bringing the Galaxy Note 7 on both planes and trains, respectively. Samsung lost $26 billion in market value in the weeks following the recall.
Developing…
Source: CPSC
Ex-HTC CEO hints at the future of VR headsets
For a man who spent 18 years at HTC turning smartphones from mere business tools into ubiquitous consumer gadgets, Peter Chou knows a thing or two about nurturing new product categories. In fact, he had already started his second chapter at the company by bringing us the Vive virtual reality headset before his quiet departure last August. Today, Chou’s mission is extended by way of two chairman roles: One at visual effects studio Digital Domain where he can “fully and deeply understand” VR content creation, and another at VR game studio Futuretown where he is also an investor. This may seem like a weird match given Chou’s prior focus on hardware, but to him it felt like a logical next step. After all, it’s now content, not hardware, pushing VR forward.
Chou crossed paths with Futuretown while he was still developing the Vive. At the time, Chou wanted to extend HTC’s resources to support small VR companies with great potential, so he tasked his team with a scouting mission. That led them to Futuretown, which happened to be located nearby. One day its CEO Johan Yang simply walked over to meet Chou for some guidance.
“They were worried at the time because they didn’t really know where the market was, but I told them, every industry is like that,” Chou told Engadget ahead of Futuretown’s Tokyo Game Show press event. “At the beginning you can’t really see the market and how great the market is, but if you have a vision, if you believe that is the future, then you should work on that and build capabilities in that area, and try to be the best.”
Chou would later invest in Futuretown personally and then serve as a mentor under the “Honorary Chairman” title. This proved to be a smart move. The startup has already three VR games that quickly rose to popularity. In particular, Cloudlands: VR Minigolf now owns 30 percent of the Vive market share, which translates to about 30,000 units out of the estimated total of 100,000. The game was also recently updated with a level editor along with over 200 user-created levels from the earlier beta program. Furthermore, Futuretown will add Oculus Rift support to at least two of those games, and they are ready to launch as soon as the Oculus Touch controller arrives — likely by end of year, as speculated by Yang.
Back in July, Chou returned to his hardware roots and announced Digital Domain’s professional 4K 360-degree camera, the Zeus. Then, this week he unveiled Futuretown’s first hardware product, the 5D Totalmotion modular simulator ride, in the hopes of making VR more immersive and user friendly. It will have four games at launch: Whiteout: Ski VR, Infinity Rider: Motorcycle VR, Wave Breaker: Surf VR and Stallion Adventures: Horse Riding VR.
Neither Yang nor Chou would say how much the machine might cost, but it’s clear that it won’t come cheap and is geared towards the business market (think: malls, arcades and internet cafes). Yang explained that these are the sorts of places where VR is already gaining momentum in parts of Asia, HTC and Futuretown’s home region.

Peter Chou showing off Digital Domain’s professional 360-degree 4K camera, the Zeus, at a press conference in July. (Image credit: Digital Domain)
While Futuretown isn’t the first company to release such hardware for enhanced VR experience, Chou is confident that his motion feedback machine is already better and easier to use than what the competition is offering. What he doesn’t have total control over right now, however, is the headset. It’s certainly come a long way from the days when you could easily get motion sickness after just one or two minutes, whereas now you might be able to last 30 to 40 minutes straight. Even so, Chou reckons the industry is still a ways off from realizing his vision. He described VR’s current state as feeling like somewhere between 480p and 720p (even though it’s a 2K display inside most high-end headsets), which is still usable but leaves room for improvement. Obviously, it would also be more convenient to go wireless as well.
Obviously, it would also be more convenient to go wireless as well.
“I would say the 1080p kind of experience plus wireless are two to three years away,” Chou said “There’s some solution coming out of maybe second half of next year, but I think it will probably go to the next step in 2018.” Similarly, Chou and Yang expect some strong smartphone VR solutions to arrive in the same time frame, especially given how tech giants like Google, Qualcomm, Intel and NVIDIA are more actively looking at VR and inside-out tracking technologies. Just look at Google’s Tango for a sense of where these companies are headed.

Oculus founder Palmer Luckey trying Futuretown’s 5D Totalmotion platform at the Tokyo Game Show. (Image credit: Futuretown)
For those who think two to three years seems like a long time, Chou would like to remind you that it took even longer for smartphones to catch on — five or six years, he says. “In 2005, if you said everyone would have a smartphone, nobody would believe that. But today, the smartphone is an essential part of our lives.” Perhaps, he says, VR will follow a similar path to eventual success — a future where our smartphones alone can somehow deliver compelling VR experience without breaking our wallets or draining our handset batteries. Or maybe he is wrong. Maybe by that point the smartphone will have a different form factor altogether. Time will tell.
SwiftKey for Android is now powered by a neural network
From today, the popular keyboard app SwiftKey will be powered by a neural network. The latest version of the app combines the features of its Neural Alpha, released last October, and its regular app in order to serve better predictions. It’s the first major change to the main Swiftkey app since Microsoft acquired the London-based company earlier this year.
Understanding why the new SwiftKey is going to be better than what came before it requires a little effort, but the real-world benefits are definitely tangible. See, the regular SwiftKey app has, since its inception, used a probability-based language algorithm based on the “n-gram” model for predictions. At its core, the system read the last two words you’ve written, checked them against a large database, and picked three words it thought might come next, in order of probability.
That two-word constraint is a serious problem for predicting what a user is trying to say. If I were to ask you to guess the word that comes after the fragment “It might take a,” the first suggestion you come up with is unlikely to be “look.” But with a two-word prediction engine, it’s only looking at “take a,” and “look” is the first suggestion. There had to be a better solution. Simply upping the number of words it looks at is impractical — the database grows exponentially with every word you add — so SwiftKey’s initial solution was to boost its n-gram engine with less fallible, personalized data. If you regularly use phrases, SwiftKey uses that data to improve predictions. And you could also link social media and gmail accounts for better predictions.
The Neural Alpha launched last year did away with all those additional layers, and instead relied solely on a neural network for predictions. A neural network is a loose term that defines an algorithmic system, modelled on the way the brain processes information, that can learn from datasets. To train its network, SwiftKey used millions of complete sentences and applied “tags” to each word. These tagged terms helped the network to understand what the sentences “meant,” or more accurately, how they were structured. This tagged database essentially a broad pool of interconnected synonyms, but rather than linking words by meaning, like a thesaurus, SwiftKey’s database links them by their linguistic use.
The SwiftKey that users will be updating to today is fully trained. It’s trained to use its database of tags to examine entire sentences, stringing together words as though they were code to find more accurate suggestions. The sequence of tags that makes up “It might take a” will throw up more suggestions than can possibly be displayed on-screen, but the neural network puts a probability on each, and displays the three most likely.

Neural Alpha’s prediction system was obviously, at its core, far superior to the n-gram method. So why has it taken 11 months for SwiftKey’s users to feel the benefit? Aside from the usual stability and quality assurance side of things, there were some major hurdles to overcome. First, last year’s release was powered by a phone’s GPU, which drastically limited the number of devices that can run it. Second, while Neural Alpha outperforms n-gram, it didn’t always outperform SwiftKey’s personalized predictions engine.
Over the past year, engineers have been working on both those issues. It very quickly became apparent that using GPUs to power the network was not a viable long-term option. Yes, GPUs are better suited to running the math, but there are literally thousands of different Android phones out there, all with slightly different configurations. Executing code on the many different Android GPUs around just isn’t practical, and there was no way to use cloud computing for something that needs to always be working.
What nearly every Android phone does have is an ARM or ARM-compatible processor inside. With that base level of compatibility to work from, SwiftKey reworked its engine to run entirely off the CPU. Naturally, that brings up a worry of speed being affected — the last thing you want is a laggy keyboard. But speaking with Engadget, SwiftKey project manager Ben Leavett said “across all the devices we currently support, people will be able to use this tech, and there will not be a discernible difference in speed.”
As for personalized predictions, the solution they went with seems so obvious: run both the customizable n-gram engine and the neural network simultaneously, and have them compete against each other for your keyboard’s affection. Leavett compared the competition as the two engines trying to see “which can shout the loudest.” The more technical explanation is that both models attach a probability of their predictions being correct, and the app displays the top three.
Part of the challenge of combining these engines was that SwiftKey had to balance the “volume” of these “shouted” predictions. The n-gram system’s opinion of its guessing abilities was far higher than it should’ve been when compared to the neural network’s. In the final app, for the majority of predictions at least, the neural network will now win out. But when you’re typing a phrase you use often, the n-gram system will jump in and “shout louder,” and its suggestion will be the first you see.
Running local neural networks is only just becoming viable on smartphones. Apps like Google Translate can process translations using machine learning, and in recent months Prisma has added offline processing to its iOS app. But neither of these apps are used with the same frequency as you use your keyboard. And SwiftKey’s Android install base is in the “hundreds of millions” range. Overnight, the app’s neural network will become one of the most utilized in the world, and almost certainly the most used on mobile. And very few people will know.
SwiftKey decided not to make a big deal about the switch from n-gram to neural network. The team had considered some sort of notification on installing the update, but quickly realised the tough truth: the majority of users couldn’t care less what’s happening behind the pixels on their phone display. Informing users of the change in an disruptive way was more likely to draw ire and confusion than a celebratory applause for the engineering team. “If it makes the experience better, they’re fine with it,” Leavett explained. Hopefully, it will.
A totally new energy source in slow moving rivers

Today on In Case You Missed It: University of Michigan researchers spent years creating a water-harnessing river turbine to create electricity, called the VIVACE. It’s the first time electricity appears to be effectively generated in slower rivers rather than oceans, but that’s because the developers used physics to get turning turbines to agitate the water enough to create more energy for their neighboring cylinders. It’s an as-yet prototype but a promising new development in the realm of water-powered electricity.
If you’re interested in the giant balloon video from China, that’s here, and the JibJab app can be downloaded from an app store. As always, please share any interesting tech or science videos you find by using the #ICYMI hashtag on Twitter for @mskerryd.
Google’s latest virtual tour takes you inside 10 Downing Street
A few years ago, Google was allowed access to London’s famed Downing Street to look upon the iconic black door of Number 10. And now, the search giant has been welcomed inside so we may all roam the gaff of post-Brexit hot potato winner and current Prime Minister Theresa May. As Wired notes, this isn’t the first time rooms in the residence have been papped in 360 degrees, with Eye Revolution holding that honour. More than a simple addition to Street View, though, Google’s Arts and Culture division has given Number 10 the virtual tour treatment.
Google already expanded its archives with thousands of natural history exhibits earlier this week, and like those, the Number 10 tour is an educational experience. Two special exhibits are featured: One offering a brief history of two 20th century PMs, Winston Churchill and Harold Wilson, while another elaborates on some of the more important rooms within the residence. Google recommends you load up the Arts and Culture app and stick your smartphone in a Cardboard viewer for the best experience, which includes audio descriptions.
Alternatively, you can simply nose around various luxuriously furnished rooms or relax in the garden by way of Street View. Unfortunately, you can only ogle a fraction of the Prime Minister’s labyrinthine abode, which boasts around 100 rooms — we’re not getting a Cribs level of access here, in other words. Still, considering Theresa May wants to rifle though all our browsing histories, it’s nice to be invited in for a cup of tea and a jammy scone.
Via: Wired, The Telegraph
Source: Google (1), (2)
Qualcomm could make dual cameras standard on phones
Qualcomm’s new offering called “Clear Sight” could put dual cameras in more Android phones. It’s a single module that’s already equipped with two rear cameras and low light imaging algorithms, after all, and phonemakers can simply slap it onto their devices instead of developing their own. It’s more similar to Huawei P9’s Leica-endorsed dual cams than to the iPhone 7’s in that Clear Sight is comprised of a black-and-white and a color image sensor. See, black-and-white sensors can take better images in low-lighting than color sensors can. So, the tech combines the B&W photo taken by one of the cameras with the colors captured by the other to get the best of both worlds.

Since it’s only compatible with phones powered by a premium Snapdragon 820 or 821 processor, expect any Clear Sight device to be on the higher end of the pricing scheme. But who knows — it could make dual cameras so common until they become a staple even in more affordable Android devices.
Via: The Verge
Source: Qualcomm



