Xbox Music ditches free desktop streaming on December 1st
If you’re hooked on Xbox Music’s free desktop-based listening, you’re going to have make some backup plans very shortly. Microsoft has announced that it’s dropping the no-cost web and Windows streaming option as of December 1st; after that, you’ll have to pay for a Music Pass if you want all-you-can-eat tunes beyond the 30-day trial period. The company claims that it’s refocusing Xbox Music to make it the “ultimate music purchase and subscription service,” although it’s not elaborating on what that entails. Suffice it to say that Microsoft has a lot of competition in the free music space. Its main rival, Spotify, has over 30 million free users worldwide on a wider range of platforms — it wouldn’t be easy for Microsoft to challenge that lead using the free tier you know today.
Filed under: Internet, Software, Microsoft
Source: Xbox Support (sign-in required)
Google Earth updates with an enhanced 3D experience and easier way to view KML Files [APK Download]
A new update is being pushed out to Googlers who have Google Earth for Android installed. Google Earth first made its appearance on Android way back in February of 2010. Since then is has received a number of updates with the last real big update coming in May of 2013 when street view was added in. Today Google Earth gets a substantial bump in version number from 7.1 to 8.0. The leap offers a heck of a lot too.
The file size is reduced a fair amount. Coming down from 8.5GB to just a touch over 8GBs. Besides the file size shrink, Google puts emphasis on new 3D rendering technology that gives Google Earth its first major 3D overhaul since it launched over 10 years ago. The new technology will provide you with much sharper views of the surroundings.
Google is also pushing the same data from Google Maps to Google Earth now. That means roads and POI will be all up to date as they are on Google Maps. There is also some rework down to the Roads and labels in terms of their visual appearance. Things look a lot less slapped over the area and more integrated. You can see the before and after in the two images below.

Google also did a little Drive integration for those of you that make your own maps in Google Earth. Now you can open up your KML files saved in Drive through Google Earth on your phone or Tablet. Might not mean much to the average person out there, but those that use the ability to build maps inside earth, this must be great news.
In true Google fashion the update is rolling out to users slowly through the Play Store. You can check now to see if the update is available. If not, then head over to Gappsearly for the updated APK and give it a look.
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Google Launches ‘Inbox by Gmail’ to the Play Store [APK Download]
Google has announced, and released, a new app today that is quite something else really. The new app is simply called Inbox by Gmail. It is just that too, an Inbox for all your Googley things, not just your email.
Inbox by Gmail automatically works with your current Gmail account. This isn’t an update to Gmail, but a separate app that is designed to enhance your life. In a nutshell, Inbox will group messages into Bundles. This allows you to deal with similar messages all at once instead of pecking around. The Bundles are based on the content inside the messages or by filters you create on your own. Highlights will bring up the most important information without having to ever open up the message. For instance, shipping information inside an email will simply display. Toss in reminders, snooze and search and you have one very, seemingly, cool app that compliments your Gmail life. Take a quick look at the video.


Inbox by Gmail is free, but you will need an invite from a friend or from Google to gain access to it. You might want to start blasting your contacts for a little help. Otherwise you can email the Gmail team at inbox@google.com and request access.
You can download the new app from the Play Store, but it does seem to be region locked to just the US. The APK is available for you to install if you can’t access it on the Play Store, but without an invite into the service you will be out of luck anyways. Pick it up and get a request filed. If you happen to already be in, shoot us an invite!
Inbox by Gmail APK download available at Gappsearly
Source: Google Blog Via AndroidPolice
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Google’s ‘Inbox’ is a smarter take on email, created by the Gmail team

If you’re anything like us, Google’s Gmail has an iron grip on your life. Google’s looking to create a whole new iron grip with a new app from its Gmail team, and it’s called “Inbox.” What is it? That’s a good question — Google’s made a demo slash advertisement video that we’ve dropped below. As far as we can tell, Inbox is a combination of Google Now and your Gmail inbox — a “smart” inbox, if you will. It combines alike pieces of email (bank invoices, for example), highlights related information (like Google Now alerting you to flight changes, traffic, etc.) and keeps track of your life (it’ll give you reminders, among other heads ups). Is this the end of Gmail? We seriously doubt it, but it is Google’s latest foray into simplifying email. Head below for more!
In introducing the service, Google’s Sundar Pinchai called out the frustration of an overflowing email inbox. Inbox is Google’s attempt to make the inbox more approachable and organized without much user effort. ” For many of us, dealing with email has become a daily chore that distracts from what we really need to do-rather than helping us get those things done,” Pinchai wrote. “If this all sounds familiar, then Inbox is for you. Or more accurately, Inbox works for you.”
As seen below in GIF form, the app both shows prioritized events and emails you’ve received. Think of it as the lovechild of Cards and Gmail. Whether it’ll replace our standard Gmail app is another question altogether; trading the flexibility of Gmail for a more streamlined inbox is appealing, but also Gmail has an iron grip on our lives. In case that wasn’t clear the first time.

The app’s still in the invite stage, and Google says the first round of invites are already out in the world. Should your current Gmail (or whatever service) inbox be without an invite, Google’s set up an email address for you to ask to get in on the action. It’s only running on a Nexus 6 in the image, but Google says it runs on Android phones with Jellybean or better (4.1+) and iPhones running iOS 7 or better. There’s a web-client as well, but it’s a Chrome-exclusive.
[Image credit: Google]
Filed under: Cellphones, Tablets, Internet, Software, Mobile, Google
Source: Google
Offended by the ‘Hatred’ trailer? You’re a hypocrite (and that’s a good thing)
This week, a game about a genocidal maniac was announced. There’s a video trailer for the game that depicts ultraviolent bedlam: a murder spree of innocent victims, many begging for their lives. So it’s basically another week in video games, then? Not quite.
Okay, okay — let’s rewind and unpack. An unknown development studio from Poland (Destructive Creations) released an announcement trailer (with extremely violent gameplay and sociopathic dialog) for its upcoming PC game, Hatred. The video’s around 90 seconds long and, if you’re like me, you’ll likely find it difficult to sit through. Before the very, very angry main character begins his murder spree, he declares, “My genocide crusade begins here.” He’s a tall, muscular, white guy with long black hair — he sort of looks like Glenn Danzig — and he’s about to kill a lot of people. But isn’t that what you do in loads of other games? Yes! But also no.
This is not a piece about Hatred (the game). What we’ve seen of it thus far is a single trailer (above) that’s by most standards offensive and, more importantly, bland looking. I want to address the difference between Hatred‘s brand of violence and, say, Grand Theft Auto‘s.
In both games, you’re given free rein to murder innocent civilians. I’ve personally spent many hours careening down the sidewalks of Liberty City, or Vice City, or San Andreas, mowing down pedestrians to accrue police stars and play the game of “survive as a mass murderer.” It’s a game that Grand Theft Auto‘s worlds allow — even enable — but it’s not “the point.” And it certainly feels a lot different than what Hatred‘s trailer portrays. But why? And does “the point” matter when you’re acting virtually sociopathic?
THE THIN VEIL OF HYPOCRISY
There are loads of ultraviolent games. Remember Manhunt? How about Gears of War: Judgment? Adrian Chmielarz helped create that one, as well as critically acclaimed Bulletstorm. Chmielarz was creative director overseeing both titles, and he’s been the guy on the receiving end of flak for his violent game. He likens his work to a form of catharsis. “Stories — told by books, movies or experiences through video games — allow for catharsis that satisfies our primal side without any discernible harm to anyone,” Chmielarz told me via email this week. He’s a longtime game developer with some seriously gruesome work on his resume, including the just-released The Vanishing of Ethan Carter.
“Some creators achieve that [catharsis] through empathy, but in video games we mostly achieve that through hypocrisy,” he said. “You kill, torture, dominate, humiliate and sin without consequences, but game designers always offer a thin veil of an excuse.” He offered up Bulletstorm as an example, a game where “you are rewarded for creative kills.” The “excuse” in Bulletstorm? Enemies are “clearly evil, bloodthirsty thugs, the worst scum in the known universe,” and the kills are cartoonish. “You impale enemies on gargantuan cacti with a super-kick, for example. Reasonably hard to confuse that with real life.”
It is reasonably hard to confuse that with real life, but it also remains a “thin veil of an excuse” — you are still murdering, like, thousands of dudes in Bulletstorm. And that’s why I’m having a hard time being outright offended at Hatred‘s trailer, despite feeling pretty thoroughly offended. The wrapping is certainly intended to stir emotion: a soliloquy to hatred and violence by a man arming himself to the teeth, followed by a spree of extreme violence perpetrated on people screaming for mercy. His goal — your goal, as the player — is annihilation. No, “Those are the bad guys! Get them before they get you!” Just genocide.
As Chmielarz put it, Hatred (at least that trailer) doesn’t allow me to be the hypocrite I want to be.
GTA says, “You’re a criminal fighting for your life, so it’s okay to murder those people.” Uncharted says, “Those bad guys are trying to kill you. Kill them first!” Call of Duty says, “Those guys are terrorists trying to destroy the world! Stop them!” They allow me the pretend that my mass-murdering isn’t cold-blooded. And that’s a good thing!
“A hypocrite knows right from wrong; they know they sin when they sin,” Chmielarz said. “They find excuses for these sins just like we find excuses to mow down another hundred enemies in a video game. And even though they don’t follow it, deep down they know which way the moral compass is pointing. Hatred takes the excuses away from us and asks us to enjoy the sin out there in the open.”
HATRED FOCUSES ON VIOLENCE AND MURDER AS THE POINT. IN MOST VIOLENT GAMES, MURDER IS THE MEANS, NOT THE OBJECTIVE.
Hatred‘s development studio Destructive Creations is led by CEO Jaroslaw Zielinski. He told me in an email interview this week why he thinks people are finding offense with the announcement trailer. He said the following when I asked why myself and others have a hard time watching it:
- “Because all women die the same ways as men and there’s no mercy for anyone.”
- “Because all those executions are pretty suggestively done, with no cartoonish moves. And peoples’ reaction to them is pretty flattering for me as an animator.”
While he’s right about the “no mercy for anyone” bit, I don’t think the extreme violence is actually what I’m having a hard time with (though I can’t speak for others). For me, it’s context. Without the (admittedly thin) excuse of being in a virtual war, or being a virtual assassin, or whatever else, I find senseless virtual killing to be…well, senseless. And if anything, I find it pretty reprehensible. Which, yes, I realize makes me a hypocrite. I’m okay with that.
From what the trailer for Hatred shows, the game isn’t making a statement about violent games. It’s not saying, “We’ve removed your thin excuse to show you what you’re really doing in these games.” It’s violence for violence’s sake. Zielinski explained what Hatred‘s trying to convey as follows:
“By the game? That we should not bend under political correctness propaganda which we can see everywhere right now. We live in the free world, with freedom of speech and artistic expression and we should use it in any way we want, otherwise we’ll be falling under SJWs [Social Justice Warriors] regime. Some reactions for this trailer are a great example of this. Fortunately there are many people who understand us and are standing on our side.”
Hatred may be intended as an expression of free speech in its most potentially offensive form, and I’m certainly not calling for it to be censored. As someone who supports social justice, I think the statement about “SJWs” is ridiculous, but that’s a whole other conversation. What doesn’t square here is the fantasy aspect: There’s nothing to excuse away the violence in Hatred. I can get behind people (myself included) virtually killing other virtual beings as long as there’s some remnant of an excuse. Hatred strips that, which both makes me not want to play it and worries me about those who do. Chmielarz puts it as such:
“Hatred takes the excuses away from us and asks us to enjoy the sin out there in the open. We will not do it.
A request to bare our animal souls in front of ourselves is a step too far. The fact we cannot do it is a gift, one that allows us the realization that we’re not as corrupt and empty as we subconsciously feared we were. And thus a lot of people will not buy and play Hatred, feeling disgust just looking at the game’s title. However, and I guess that is the key here, I don’t think it is Hatred we really despise.
It’s the realization that we are surrounded by people who do not have enough basic decency to be hypocrites. People who have no moral compass, no empathy, who refuse to acknowledge that no, it’s not ‘just a game.’ With their cold realism, motion-captured animations and hair-raising screams, the creators of Hatred go all the way to make sure it’s not just a game, but an experience.
We don’t want to acknowledge the ugly truth that there are people out there whose idea of fun is to press the shotgun barrel against the face of a terrified woman — and pull the trigger.”
New Sky+ app pushes pictures from your mobile devices to the big screen
For anyone with a Sky+HD box, the Sky+ app for Android and iOS gives you a handy way to manage recordings while away from home, and lets you use mobile devices as substitute remotes when you’re plonked in front of the TV. Now, with an updated version of the app released today, you can also use it to push your summer holiday snaps to the biggest display in your living room. As long as the smartphone or tablet running the Sky+ app is connected to the same WiFi network as your set-top box, tap the new camera icon in the app’s navigation bar and you’ll be able to send any images stored on the device to your TV screen, or set a slideshow running.
The update also tweaks the app’s UI to make it look more like the new Sky+ homepage. As such, you now have access to the “New & Recommended” content category, as well as a shortcut to all the sports channels and details of upcoming live events. The app now works with Sky’s Smart Series Link feature, too, which automatically records the next season of a show you’ve instructed it to record previously. Furthermore, Sky teamed up with the Royal National Institute of Blind People (RNIB) to make the new version of the app more accessible. It now works with the voice-over features built into Android and iOS, so it’s able to talk blind and partially sighted users through any information displayed on-screen, while also letting them navigate around the app using a series of gestures.
Filed under: Cellphones, Home Entertainment, Tablets, Software, Mobile
Samsung teases the Samsung Galaxy Note 4 Android Lollipop update with a sweet tweet
With the official release of Android Lollipop, all eyes are on the manufacturers to see which of them can get their updates out the fastest. It’s no surprise then that Samsung has tweeted the above picture to presumably confirm that the Samsung Galaxy Note 4 Android Lollipop update is on its way. Hopefully the update comes a little faster than this year’s update to the Note 3 which really only started in late February, and while that was certainly faster than some other manufacturers, we expect better from Android’s most prolific OEM to date. Perhaps they will be a little faster this time if they don’t put TouchWiz over everything that Google has painstakingly redesigned with Material Design…
The Samsung Galaxy Note 4 is Samsung’s most attractive package yet in 2014, with a 5.7-inch Super AMOLED Quad HD display powered by the Snapdragon 805, it’s one of the few phones out at the moment which even holds a torch to the size and functionality of the Nexus 6 – and yes, in this particular instance, size is a good thing. Samsung’s track record of updates certainly isn’t without tarnish, because although its flagship devices usually get updates sooner or later, plenty of its mid to low range devices never see an update, something we’ll be keeping an eye on this time around with Android Lollipop.
Are you leaning towards getting a Samsung Galaxy Note 4? Let us know your opinions in the comments below.
Source: Twitter via TalkAndroid
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Windows 10 brings Windows Phone’s notification center to the desktop
If Windows 10 is going to unify your experiences on devices ranging from smartphones to PCs, it only makes sense that key mobile features would reach the desktop, right? Microsoft certainly thinks so. The team in Redmond has released an updated version of the Windows 10 Technical Preview that brings Windows Phone’s Action Center (that is, a notification area) to PCs. Whether there’s an app update or an important meeting coming up, you can now find about it all in a single place; you won’t have to check Live Tiles or jump into the apps themselves. No, it’s probably not worth installing Microsoft’s pre-pre-pre-release operating system just to try this out, but it’s definitely worth an update if you’re already living on the bleeding edge.
Filed under: Desktops, Laptops, Software, Microsoft
Source: Blogging Windows
Apple acknowledges iCloud attack, says servers were not affected
Following reports yesterday that China was secretly collecting data from iCloud users, Apple has confirmed to Dow Jones that it is aware of network attacks on its service. The iPhone maker said it knows about “intermittent organized network attacks” on people who were trying to access iCloud.com, although the company failed to mention China specifically in the statement to Dow Jones. Apple did say these recent attacks had not compromised its servers, and added that iOS and desktop users (who running the latest version of OS X) should not be worried — it appears this issue was limited to the iCloud website. We’ve reached out to Apple for comment and will keep you in the loop should any more details emerge soon.
Update: Below is Apple’s official statement on the matter, along with a link to some browser security instructions.
We’re aware of intermittent organized network attacks using insecure certificates to obtain user information, and we take this very seriously. These attacks don’t compromise iCloud servers, and they don’t impact iCloud sign in on iOS devices or Macs running OS X Yosemite using the Safari browser.
Filed under: Cellphones, Internet, Software, Mobile, Apple
Source: Dow Jones
Google Play Music’s Material Design update and Songza integration starts to rollout [APK Download]
I know you have all been eagerly waiting for the new Material Design elements of Google’s redesigns to come through to all of our apps. I know I have been. One app that seems to be the hottest topic and most sought after is the update to Google Play Music. I am happy to report that the update that moves Play Music to v5.7 is now starting to roll out to devices.


The update ties the app in with the look and feel of the Play Store, Google+ and other apps that already have the changes. You get the slide out navigation with the animated hamburger icon rotating to an arrow. You get a ton of color, bigger images and a lot more. While the new look is a pretty big deal, it is the integration of a new-ish service to Play Music. A while back Google purchased Songza. While the reports said that Sangza would remain its own company, we all knew Google would do a little cross integration to their own services. Today’s update also does just that.
If you are an AllAccess subscriber you will find a new section in the Listen Now area that will constantly change based on the time of day, activity or even for your mood. Offering you music that is curated specifically for Waking Up Happy, Working Out, Driving or many more. The new activity section is available online and should be making its appearance on your device after the update.
I know you all hate waiting about as much as w do., so the APK for the latest update, which carriers version number 5.7.1717Q.1530520, is linked below for you. If you would rather check the Play Store to see if the update is available, that link is below also.
Download – Google Play Music v5.7
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