Rdio hits Harman/Kardon and Denon connected speakers, Samsung TVs
If you prefer Rdio’s brand of music streaming, there are some new options for connected speakers and smart TVs that play nice with the service. The audio subscription (including its free tier) is now available on Harman/Kardon and Denon audio gear and Samsung’s line of smart TVs. What’s more, Rdio will soon launch on connected TVs from Hisense and LG as well. These devices join Rdio’s list of in-home tech that already includes the likes of Sonos, Roku, Amazon TV, Chromecast and more. The music app also plays nice with Google Cast, so you can employ it on compatible speaker setups from LG and Sony.
Filed under:
Internet, Software
Source:
Rdio
Tags: audio, denon, harmankardon, music, musicstreaming, rdio, samsung, streaming
Pandora’s One Day Pass is 24-hours of ad-free listening for 99 cents
If you find yourself in need of 24-hour access to ad-free music streaming, Pandora now offers an option with its new One Day Pass. For 99 cents, you’ll gain access for the Pandora you know and love without all of the distracting advertisements the free tier includes. This means that for under a dollar, you can switch over to the one-day option for times (dinner parties, etc.) when you’d rather not have tunes interrupted by the occasional marketing pitch. Pandora’s One Day Pass will be available for listeners in the US Thursday, September 10th through the streaming service’s Android and iOS apps.
Source:
Pandora
Tags: audio, internet, internetradio, mobilepostcross, music, musicstreaming, onedaypass, pandora, software
Adblock Browser officially launches on iOS and Android
With more than 400 million desktop installations in its pocket, it was only a matter of time until Adblock Plus became available on mobile devices. Eyeo, the company behind the extension, first tested the water back in 2013, but when Google pulled the app, it decided that incorporating its filters into Adblock Browser was the best way to go. After months of testing, the app has finally launched on iOS and Android devices, promising to let users “browse fast, safe and free of annoying ads” on their smartphone or tablet.
Like its desktop counterpart, Adblock Browser can block all ads or let users choose to whitelist their favorite sites in order to ensure they continue to receive advertising revenue. It claims to speed up page loads, save data and conserve up to 20 percent of battery life by people choose whether they wish to restrict tracking cookies, malware domains and social media sharing buttons.
The launch comes just a day before Apple holds its latest iPhone event, where it’s expected to explain how iOS 9 users will be able to block content from loading in the default browser app. With Adblock’s new browser and Apple backing the use of web filters, more mobile users may choose to block ads and impact the income of online publishers as a result.
Filed under:
Cellphones, Internet, Software, Mobile, Google
Via:
Adblock Plus
Source:
Adblock Browser (iOS), (Google Play)
Tags: adblock, adblockbrowser, adblockplus, android, browser, google, ios, mobilepostcross
Twitter for Windows 10 gets a ‘trending stories’ page
Windows 10 just got a new Twitter app, and while it did get one interesting new feature, other changes merely brought it up -to-date with other versions. For instance, the new app (version 4.1.0) now allows Windows 10 users to quote tweets without wasting valuable characters, a feature that’s been around on the web and mobile apps since April. It did get one interesting new feature called “happening now” that shows popular Twitter stories in a grid (above). However, that may need some tweaking, as the stories I saw didn’t reflect my interests whatsoever.
The new version still hasn’t arrived to Windows 10 mobile, which isn’t too surprising since the OS is still in beta. When it does launch officially, however, apps like Twitter are supposed to be “universal” and run across all Windows 10 platforms. Since developers are more inclined to create apps for the huge numbers of Windows 10 desktop users, Microsoft is hoping that the mobile OS will also get reasonably up-to-date software — the lack of which is its biggest weakness.
Filed under:
Software, Microsoft
Via:
Windows Central
Source:
Microsoft Store
Tags: app, FeaturedStories, microsoft, retweets, Twitter, Windows10
Opera Mini for Android update saves data without wrecking websites
To date, Opera Mini’s data saving on Android has been an all-or-nothing affair: either you visit heavily compressed websites with altered layouts, or… you find another browser. You won’t have to make that binary choice going forward, however. An updated version of Opera Mini introduces a “High” compression setting that, despite its name, is less aggressive than the original (now dubbed “Extreme”). It’ll still save you precious bandwidth, but it maintains image sizes and allows for such extravagances as video playback. Think of it as a way to overcome a slightly flaky 3G or WiFi connection, rather than a bid to conserve data at all costs. If that sounds like your cup of tea, the new Opera Mini should be available today.

Opera Mini’s Extreme compression (left) versus the new High mode (right).
Filed under:
Cellphones, Internet, Software, Mobile
Source:
Google Play
Tags: android, browser, datacompression, internet, mobilepostcross, opera, operamini, web
Firefox creator writes an unofficial, on-point episode of ‘Silicon Valley’
Many in the tech sphere will tell you that HBO’s Silicon Valley is sometimes too accurate in its send-up of the San Francisco Bay Area’s frequently ridiculous startup culture. But how good would it be if someone who actually came from the industry wrote an episode? You’re about to find out. Firefox co-creator Blake Ross has posted an unofficial Silicon Valley screenplay that starts where the second season finished, and it’s clearly the result of someone who’s witnessed startup shenanigans first-hand. Richard has to hire his own CEO replacement, and grapples with the prospect of open-sourcing Pied Piper’s code.
This isn’t the sign of an impending career change. Ross tells our TechCrunch colleagues that he’d be happy to write Silicon Valley, but that’s as far as it goes right now. However, this isn’t necessarily a one-and-done project. Ross is hoping for feedback to see which dialogue works, and he may even write an entire unofficial season before the real show resumes in 8 months. Think of this as one of the more ambitious, informed pieces of fan fiction you’ll ever see — it’s authentic enough that it wouldn’t feel out of place on TV.
Filed under:
Internet, Software
Via:
TechCrunch
Source:
Blake Ross (Facebook)
Tags: blakeross, firefox, hbo, internet, mozilla, screenplay, screenwriting, script, siliconvalley, web
ICYMI: Coral protector bot, non-ugly wearable glasses & more
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Today on In Case You Missed It: The nation’s largest vision insurance company, VSP, is beta-testing wearable health-tracking glasses and somehow they don’t even look ridiculous. An autonomous robot submarine is patrolling coral reefs and killing the starfish that normally eat coral, to preserve the reef. (So many conflicting feelings, amirite?) And MIT researchers are back with another 3D printer to blow your mind. This one is machine-vision enabled, meaning it can scan as it prints and correct itself.
We’re also covering some of the biggest stories of the week but if you only have time for one, read up on how easy baby monitors are to hack.
If you come across any interesting videos, we’d love to see them. Just tweet us with the #ICYMI hashtag @engadget or @mskerryd.
Filed under:
Misc, Meta, Robots, Transportation, Wearables, Science, Internet, Software, Facebook
Tags: 3Dprint, 3Dprinter, AIrobot, Coral, coralreef, coralreefrobot, engadget, engadgetdaily, engadgetdailyshow, engadgetvideo, facebook, icymi, InCaseYouMissedIt, MIT, ProjectGenesis, robotsubmarine, video, VSPglasses, wearableglasses
Twitter clutters up iOS and Android timelines with ‘Who to Follow’
Twitter really wants new users to stick around. Now that means helping them find interesting accounts by placing “Who to follow” in the timeline of its iOS and Android apps. So now when you load Twitter on your phone you can expect to see in your timeline: “While you were away” ( a collection of tweets from accounts you follow that were published while you were away), a sponsored tweet or two and now Who to follow. Fortunately when it does pop up in your timeline its anchored to where it appeared and doesn’t clutter up your feed every time you load the app. Also you can tap on the tiny X in top right-hand corner to dismiss the feature so it doesn’t disrupt the flow of your meticulously curated list of random thoughts from friends and brands.
We’re adding who to follow to iPhone & Android home timelines to show interesting accounts: https://t.co/KrkEZKz64S pic.twitter.com/PLHDJsMbBH
— Twitter (@twitter) September 4, 2015
According to a Twitter spokesperson, how often you’ll see Who to follow depends on how much you use the service. If you use Twitter infrequently, the company assumes your timeline isn’t very engaging and believes that finding new accounts to follow could change that. If you’re a power user of the service, Who to follow will appear less often.
Filed under:
Cellphones, Internet, Software
Source:
Twitter
Tags: SocialNetworks, Timeline, Twitter, WhoToFollow
Forget football: How fantasy sports are helping kids learn
By his second semester on the job in 2009, Eric Nelson, a civics and history teacher at North Lakes Academy in the Minneapolis suburbs, was at a loss. No matter what tool he used — gripping news articles, an interactive map of YouTube trending videos, a failed-state index — he couldn’t manage to keep his students interested in world events for any extended period of time. “They were just zombies,” he recalls.
Nelson’s is a common tale. Multiple studies have documented the growing trend of apathy among young Americans toward world events. A National Geographic survey, for instance, found that only 37 percent of young people (18-24) could locate Iraq on a map; 48 percent think that Islam is the predominant religion in India (it’s Hinduism); and 20 percent place Sudan in Asia (it’s the largest country in Africa).
Throwing up his hands in frustration one day, Nelson turned to his online fantasy football league for a distraction. Instead, what he found was inspiration. Realizing how much he was learning about the NFL in the process of managing his fantasy team, he thought: What if I applied the mechanisms and tools used in fantasy sports to world events? “The next day I went in and [the class] drafted countries,” he recalls, “and I scored them based on how many times they were mentioned in the news.” And thus Fantasy Geopolitics, an online tool to engage students in world events, was born.

Country draft in progress.
As it turns out, Nelson isn’t the first to gamify current events in this manner, but he has been the most successful. In the past several years, short-lived communities for handicapping Supreme Court decisions and congressional movements have sprung up at universities or as one-off projects. But Fantasy Geopolitics is the only such program designed with classroom learning in mind. The tool Nelson has created is robust enough to react to news in real time, yet simple enough for the average sixth- to 12th-grader to use. “Fantasy football sets the standard of fantasy sports,” he says, “I believe Fantasy Geopolitics sets the standard for fantasy learning.”
It’s a big claim, but the program has already seen rapid growth. Within a month of his initial idea, Nelson couldn’t keep up with scoring the news manually, so he contracted developer friends to automate the system. And now, what began as a Google spreadsheet has become a full-blown software-as-a-service network. In the winter of 2014, he formally launched the platform online and began raising funds through Kickstarter. Today, some 50,000 students and more than 1,000 teachers are using Fantasy Geopolitics as part of their history, civics and world-events curriculum.
The basics of the game are simple: Teachers sign up, create a league and invite their students to join. Students select countries during a web-based draft, and earn points based on how their territories are performing in the news. Nelson and his developers created software that monitors The New York Times website for names of countries. Every time a nation is mentioned, the student who owns that country receives a point. So, in essence, a story about Croatia has the same value as a quarterback passing for a touchdown. The Fantasy Geopolitics website uses the tracking scripts Nelson and his developers created to populate live maps and leaderboards automatically.

Dashboard view includes rankings, messages and a news feed.
Version 2.0 launched in mid-August. In addition to being optimized for mobile devices, where Nelson says many students track their teams and news, the update brings with it many user-experience improvements. The new Fantasy Geopolitics dashboard includes tools for trading teams, current rankings of the top news-making countries, and a map that color-codes countries based on their current trending status. Pricing for the current school year varies based on league size: The free starter plan allows for up to five players; 100 players costs $99 a year and 250 runs at $198.
According to Nelson, the updates help Fantasy Geopolitics become even more like fantasy sports league dashboards, which are rich in information and context. “I got so into [fantasy football] because there was all this information available about what was happening — the player updates and team updates,” he says. “That can exist here; we just call it news. You can engage with news and interact with it a little more fully. And then if you can adjust your lineup, you compete better.”

The leaderboard shows who’s on top and what countries they own.
Competition is what drives interest and encourages activity and research outside the game, as well. There are fewer variables in Fantasy Geopolitics than football or baseball (or any professional sport, for that matter), so scouting becomes even more strategic. Before the draft, students must scour the news for trends and emerging stories. For instance, in an Olympic year, countries that might otherwise fly under the radar could surge. And Djibouti, a popular gag pick based on its name alone, could be a dark horse if Navy base Camp Lemonnier makes headlines. (Case in point: It spiked in mid-August when it was announced that China was looking to take over the base.)
To stay sharp throughout the season, students must closely monitor news about the countries they own, while also keeping an eye on others that might be targets for potential trades. “I discovered that students were actually starting to really study the news to gain a competitive edge from week to week over their peers,” says Gerald Huesken Jr., a teacher of history and government at Elizabethtown Area High School in Elizabethtown, Pennsylvania, who’s been using Fantasy Geopolitics in his classroom.
Huesken, Nelson and many other teachers report that students are even taking the game to their own channels, such as Facebook groups and Twitter lists. “They started a Facebook group to talk about the game a little bit,” Nelson recalls, “They were trash talking each other on there, but in a smart, informed way, which is super cool. It seemed to be more in their zone, their zone for learning.”
Indeed, the idea of the “zone,” applies to teaching as much as it does to sports. In fact, so-called competitive fandom has been shown to facilitate learning. A study conducted by researchers at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, for example, explored how online fantasy baseball-like programs could lead to more-impactful learning experiences in other fields. The authors posited that a goal-based system (one in which you want to earn points and win) encourages players to engage with a large body of content (e.g., news, analysis and statistics) and use that knowledge to their competitive advantage.
Though it’s still too early to quantify just how much Fantasy Geopolitics can improve academic performance, there’s more than enough anecdotal evidence to prove its worth. Nelson, for instance, says he’s noticed an uptick in test scores. Meanwhile, Huesken was pleased to see students in his history classes making connections between historical details and current events in papers and on tests. At the very least, it helps trap wandering minds: “I often use [it] during prom season,” says Stephanie Pearson, head of the Contemporary Studies Department at Holy Trinity Catholic High School in Ontario, Canada. “It’s a sly way to keep students on task.”
Nelson has seen enough to feel confident that his platform has the makings of a powerful learning tool, and so has left teaching to pursue expanding the business and building out the platform even further. Some of the first updates will be simple; the team is starting to roll out an embedded messaging tool, for example, and they’re planning to bake in the ability to set up playoffs and tournaments.
But Nelson’s vision is more global than that — literally. Heeding feedback from teachers like Huesken, the site will soon allow for inter-school competitions, which could let leagues across the world from one another compete and collaborate. (There are already teachers using the platform as far away as Spain and Australia.) These collaborations could allow Fantasy Geopolitics developers to format the games around world events, such as the Olympics, and integrate more deeply with videoconferencing tools like Skype and Google Hangouts.

A trade in progress.
An app is also in the works, but Nelson first wants to focus on adapting the tools he’s built for other civics and social-studies lessons. For instance, he’s considering developing a US edition for the 2016 presidential election, which will help better convey the Electoral College and process.
Regardless of the subject matter, Nelson believes the software has the unique ability to empower students in the learning process. “Rather than me being the source of knowledge, my students manage their own learning, just like they manage their team,” he explains. “[Fantasy Geopolitics] encourages a reimagining of the way learning and curiosity actually works — a student now owns it, and manages it, and wants to do it.”
[Images credits: Stephanie Pearson (top) Fantasy Geopolitics/Eric Nelson (screenshots)]
Filed under:
Misc, Internet, Software
Tags: education, fantasyfootball, fantasysports
ICYMI: Self-healing plastic, Star Wars gear and more
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Today on In Case You Missed It: We are seriously in awe of the scientific discovery that came from studying squid. Researchers developed a plastic that can reform, no weaker, after getting cut in half– just so long as water is applied to it. And if you have a couple hundred dollars to blow, you can use it to buy an alarm clock that syncs with Spotify to gently ease you in and out of sleep with a matching glowing light. Also check out the new smart stethoscope product for medical professionals, allowing them to record the heartbeats they hear, then analyze the sounds in an app.
But I know why you’re really here, nerds! If you haven’t done so yet, check out the video of the Star Wars live stream in which many, many cool new gadgets are unveiled, all with a Galaxy Far Away theme.
If you come across any interesting videos, we’d love to see them. Just tweet us with the #ICYMI hashtag @engadget or @mskerryd.
Filed under:
Displays, Misc, Household, Meta, Peripherals, Robots, Wireless, Science, Software
Tags: alarmclock, engadget, engadgetdaily, engadgetdailyshow, engadgetvideo, icymi, InCaseYouMissedIt, plastic, plastichealsitself, seacreatures, smartalarmclock, smartstethoscope, Spher, Sphero, Spotify, Spotifyalarmclock, squid, starWars, Stethoscope, video, Withings










