Wednesday, September 10, 2014

Google Just Made It Even Easier For You To Call Your Friends For Free (GOOG)

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/google-integrates-google-voice-with-hangouts-2014-9

The rumors finally came true: Google just officially announced the integration of Google Voice and Google Hangouts, meaning you'll easily be able to send messages, video chat, and now call your friends and family all from one app on Android, iOS, and desktop. Before, you had to download a separate Google Voice app to make calls. 

Good news for your relationships and your bank account: Calls are completely free in the U.S. and Canada, and international rates are pretty cheap, too (it's only 5 cents a minute to call a friend in Mexico, for instance, compared to 28 cents on a regular phone). 

The new version of Hangouts that supports calling will roll out to users over the next few days. If you use Hangouts on your Android phone, you'll also have to install the accompanying dialer to turn on voice calls.

Here a peek at what phone calls will look like in Hangouts: 

Hangouts Voice

SEE ALSO: Meet The Man Who's Whipping Google Employees Into Shape

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Microsoft is reportedly buying 'Minecraft' developer Mojang for $2 billion

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2014/09/09/microsoft-buying-mojang-minecraft/

Well, this is rather surprising: Microsoft is in talks to buy Minecraft's developer, Mojang, according to a few different sources. The Wall Street Journal says that the ever loose-lipped "person familiar with the matter" has noted the deal is valued at over $2 billion, while reps for both Redmond and the Swedish developer remain mum on the subject. We've reached out to Microsoft and, as expected, were told by a company spokesperson that the outfit doesn't comment on rumors or speculation, as well. If true, this doesn't come too far after outspoken Minecraft mastermind Markus "Notch" Persson recently changing his stance on the Facebook/Oculus VR purchase. Maybe he's come around to the idea of no-longer being one of the world's largest indie developers? Hopefully we'll know rather soon. Until then, you'll find us playing with Steve on Xbox One.

Update: A few new developments have surfaced, including details on the deal and when it should be completed. The New York Times reports that Microsoft approached Mojang as early as three months ago and the purchase should be finished by the end of this month. Perhaps most interesting though is that should the deal go through, Notch might not stay past six months after the ink has dried. Why? He likely wants to make sure his employees are being well taken care of. According to Bloomberg's sources, Notch (not Microsoft) actually made the approach to Redmond given the positive experience Mojang had bringing Minecraft to the Xbox One. Bloomberg also reports that Notch will help with the transition into ownership, but doesn't plan on staying long beyond that -- this isn't Microsoft forcing him out, it could be him looking to try his hand at something else.

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Source: Wall Street Journal, CNBC, New York Times, Recode, Bloomberg

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Visa's Token Service generates fake CC numbers to keep your real ones safe

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2014/09/10/visa-token-service/

D0G6PE Woman verifies account balance on smartphone with mobile banking application.  mobile banking phone Mobile; Phone; Bankin

If you haven't heard yet, Cupertino just launched a digital wallet called Apple Pay that randomizes your credit cards' numbers. The one responsible for generating those fake numbers for Visa cards in particular, is Visa itself, through its new Token service, which the world's largest credit and debit card company has announced right after Apple's big reveal. These "tokens" are random numbers not associated with your name or real card numbers. You can use them to purchase anything online or by using mobile to pay via contactless payment systems in brick-and-mortar stores. Visa's system can even generate different tokens for each merchant, device or type of purchase, if you want to be even more secure.

The great thing about using tokens is that you won't have to scramble to cancel and replace your card with a new one in case a retailer or a website suffers a security breach, because they never had your real CC details in the first place. As you've probably guessed, Apple Pay users will get the first crack at using Visa's Token Service, starting in October for folks in the US and in 2015 for the rest of the world. The technology was designed to work with all major platforms, though, so it'll eventually be available to its other customers (read: those using other devices through other digital wallets) in the future.

[Image credit: Alamy]

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Via: Reuters

Source: Visa (1), (2)

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Tuesday, September 09, 2014

An analog timepiece beats in the heart of this awkward smartwatch

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2014/09/09/an-analog-timepiece-beats-in-the-heart-of-this-awkward-smartwatc/

Think you know what to expect in the emerging category of wrist-worn computing? Think again -- the thick, heavy device pictured above is the Halo: a smartwatch that almost has more in common with a traditional timepiece than it does with a smartphone. Lonshine technologies bills the Halo as "the world's first smart analogue watch," meaning that it still relies on the ticking of mechanical quartz movement to keep time. This is a smartwatch that has a real watch face and real hands nestled underneath a transparent touchscreen.

If you're wondering "why" (so were we), the answer is simple: battery life. The Moto 360 may be an attractive, functional wearable, but when its battery runs down it loses the ability to tell time. The Halo doesn't -- its mechanical movement runs on a standard watch battery, and lasts up to three years. Its higher functions are completely separate, almost an afterthought to the device's primary function as a timepiece. Unfortunately, that disharmony shows.

The Halo is a heavy, thick watch that comes in two variants -- an extra thick model (the Halo-2) that features extra batteries in the wrist-band and room for a sim-card as well as a slightly slimmer (but still notably large) Bluetooth model. Both watches run a heavily stripped down version of Android and can be used to make and accept calls and text messages (as as Google Hangouts) and display weather data. The experience is responsive, and overlays the traditional watch nicely, but it's extremely limited. This is a last generation smartwatch embedded within last century's timepiece.

For its faults, the Halo is actually a very novel idea -- by retaining classic watch mechanics, it ensures the wearer will always have at least basic functionality from the wearable, giving it a form of battery life that no other smart wearable on the market can manage. Lonshine technologies says it's looking for partners in the US to help market and distribute the watch, but couldn't say when it will launch. When it does arrive, however, it should be somewhere in the $300 price range.

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A jet fit for a (Sacramento) King: Nike's sports plane of the future

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2014/09/09/nike-teague-concept-athlete-plane/

If you haven't heard of Teague, it's the Seattle-based firm that designed this year's e-bike of the future, the Pringles can and the original Xbox. The company also has a sideline aircraft cabins, and it was here that it learned of a peculiar problem facing professional sports teams. According to a 2008 study, baseball players that cross three time zones to play a game would have a 60 percent chance of losing, thanks to the lack of comfort afforded by air travel. That's why the company paired up with Nike to design an aircraft interior designed to expressly carry a basketball team from coast-to-coast without compromising their performances. That's why it comes with lie-flat beds that are tall enough for a 7-foot player, smart bathroom facilities that analyze hydration statistics and a separate chill-out zone for pre-and-post-game relaxation. Curious for a little tour of these state-of-the-art facilities? Head on down and check out the gallery.

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Via: Wired

Source: Teague

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Hands-on with the Dell Venue 8 7000 tablet and Intel RealSense

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2014/09/09/dell-venue-8-7k-hands-on/

If you've been on vacation even once in the last four years, you've seen it: tourists whipping out awkward tablets with sub-par cameras to capture what can only be the worst photographs. Tablets aren't known for their stellar imaging capabilities, but Dell and Intel's next joint effort may change that, at least to some degree. During this morning's Intel Developer Forum keynote, Michael Dell and Intel CEO Brian Krzanich will preview a new tablet: the Dell Venue 8 7000 series. At 6mm thick new slate is purported to be the world's thinnest tablet. It's also the first device to feature Intel RealSense - a photo technology that creates a depth map within every image it takes. Krzanich gave me a quick preview of the device before today's keynote.

True to Dell's word, the new Venue 8 7000 is very thin. It's svelte profile leaves it feeling very light in the hand, though Krzanich was unable to tell me its exact weight. The CEO says he's been testing the tablet out for a few months now, and he's become quite fond of it. It's not hard to see why -- it's a light, comfortable device to use ...though Intel's RealSense camera module does leave it looking a little unbalanced. The bevy of camera sensors takes up residence on the device's left side, embedded in a large speaker bar that gracing the tablet's same end. It gives the device an obvious place to grip without covering the screen, but lacks the symmetry of dual-speaker devices like the HTC One or NVIDIA Shield.

Still, it's easy to excuse the visual imbalance for the sake of the RealSense camera's capabilities. Krzanich fired up his tablet's camera app to show off the camera's depth mapping capabilities, beckoning me to touch the screen and drag between two points. This caused the app to draw a line under my finger, actively measuring the distance between the points. Krzanich says the camera can map a depth of several meters, and anything within that range can be accurately measured by the Venue 8 7000's onboard software. The app will also have refocus and filtering technology, and Intel hopes that it will spark new ideas in the minds of developers.

Details on the Dell Venue 8 7000 (and the long-term implications of RealSense) are still scarce, but in the few minutes I spent with the tablet impressed.

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Sprint and T-Mobile fight to buy back your old devices

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2014/09/09/sprint-t-mobile-trade-in-program-fight/

Electronics Scrap Recycling At Aurubis

With the new iPhone making its debut later and other phones coming out in the next few months, you're probably already looking for the best way to trade in your old device for a new one. Sprint and T-Mobile both want your business really badly, it seems, so now they're trying to one-up each others' -- and everyone else's -- buyback programs. While the Now Network has long paid up to $300 for old gadgets, the company will now start matching any higher trade-in price you get from the other three major carriers, in an effort to offer the best deal possible. But Big Magenta won't go down without a fight: in case you get a better buyback pricing from another carrier, the company will not only match it, but also add $50 on top of the total amount to make the deal sweeter.

As Sprint pointed out in is press release, though, T-Mobile only lets you trade in one device per line and only when you're buying a new one, whereas its buyback program accepts up to three eligible devices at once. Choosing between the two then depends on how many devices you're trading in, which one will pay you the most and when you're turning in your old devices: Sprint's new policy starts immediately, but T-Mobile's will start on September 17th and is only available for a limited time. Your move, AT&T and Verizon.

[Image credit: Getty Images]

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Source: Sprint, T-Mobile

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Is this the most amazing bathtub in the world? (Spoiler: Yes, yes it is)

Source: http://sploid.gizmodo.com/is-this-the-most-amazing-bathtub-in-the-world-spoiler-1632193942/+caseychan

Is this the most amazing bathtub in the world? (Spoiler: Yes, yes it is)

It's not a new image, but I just saw it popping again on my feed and I had the irresistible urge to get in there, to enjoy this bath during that sunset until I look like a California prune.

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Monday, September 08, 2014

Article: Nvidia stakes its claim in deep learning by making its GPUs easier to program

GPU maker Nvidia has been riding a wave of renewed relevancy lately as the popularity of deep learning continues to grow. Over the weekend, the company tried to capitalize even more on the craze by releasing a set of libraries called cuDNN that can be integrated directly into popular deep learnin...

http://gigaom.com/2014/09/08/nvidia-stakes-its-claim-in-deep-learning-by-making-its-gpus-easier-to-program/

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Amazon Just Dropped The Price Of Its Smartphone To 99 Cents

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/amazon-fire-phone-smartphone-99-cents-2014-9

Jeff Bezos Amazon Fire Phone

Amazon dropped the price of its first smartphone, the Fire phone, from $199 to 99 cents with a two-year contract with AT&T.

Even with the slashed price, the phone still comes with a year of Amazon Prime, which includes free shipping on millions of items as well as a growing selection of free movies, books, and music. 

Amazon launched the phone July 25, and it was widely seen as a bit of a flop with slow usage growth, according to market research (Amazon hasn't released any sales numbers). 

The phone has two main unique features: Dynamic Perspective, which allows it to react to how it is held, and Firefly, which can scan more than 100 million objects and make it easy to buy them on Amazon.com.

Amazon also announced that Fire phone will be on sale in the U.K. and in Germany starting Sept. 30.

Here's the statement from the company:

Dynamic Perspective, Firefly, world-class customer support with Mayday, free unlimited cloud storage for photos, 32GB of storage—and, for a limited time, customers get 12 months of Prime membership with Fire phone, which includes unlimited streaming of tens of thousands of movies and TV episodes from Prime Instant Video, access to over a million songs to download or stream from Prime Music, over 500,000 books to borrow from Kindle Owners’ Lending Library and free two-day shipping on tens of mil! lions of items. Now there’s another great reason to buy Fire—it’s just 99 cents with a two-year contract. Customers can purchase Fire on www.amazon.comwww.att.com and in AT&T stores nationwide.

“Fire is now 99 cents with a two-year contract, plus customers get one full year of Prime included,” said Ian Freed, Vice President, Amazon Devices. “With access to all of the Prime content, Mayday, 32GB of memory and free unlimited cloud storage for photos, plus the exclusive Dynamic Perspective and Firefly features, Fire is another example of the value Amazon delivers to customers.”

SEE ALSO: We Wanted To See If People Were Excited About Amazon's Fire Phone — Here's What We Found

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HP's Chromebook-like 'Stream' laptop is real, but not as cheap as we thought

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2014/09/08/hp-stream/

Don't believe everything you read, kids. When we first saw leaks for the HP Stream, a $199 laptop primarily meant to be used online, like a Chromebook, we were pretty excited -- here was something as affordable as a Chrome OS device, but running full Windows. It turns out, however, that although the Stream is indeed a real product, it's not as cheap as we all thought. HP just formally unveiled it, and it's actually going to start at $300, not $199, as previously reported.

That disappointment aside -- a $199 Windows laptop would have been sweet -- the specs match up perfectly with the rumors. This is a 14-inch machine, with a 1,366 x 768 display, 2GB of RAM, 32GB of local storage and a low-powered AMD A4 Micro processor that allows for a fanless design. On the outside, it looks similar to HP's Android-powered SlateBook, with bright-colored accents, two USB ports (3.0 and 2.0), an HDMI socket and a microSD slot. Even the weight is basically the same, at 3.8 pounds. Similar to how Chromebooks come with 100GB of Google Drive storage, the Stream will include 100GB of OneDrive space, free for two years.

The Stream ships later this month, on September 24th. The higher-than-expected price aside, we still hope to check one out -- ultimately, having more alternatives to Chromebooks is a good thing. Until then, what say you guys? Anyone out there buying? Sound off in the comments.

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This Technology Straight Out Of 'Minority Report' Is Real — And Soon We'll Be Using It Every Day

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/sc/intel-realsense-technology-to-change-computers-2014-9

realsense blade4 gaming

This post is sponsored by Intel

Imagine you had the ability to video conference your boss at the beach while making it look like you were sitting in your living room. What if you could arrange photos on your computer by flicking your wrist, without even touching the screen? Or your computer could read your face and detect what emotions you were feeling, right at that moment?

While these futuristic abilities sound like scenes straight out of "Minority Report," they actually exist. Since 2012, Intel has invested a great deal of effort into its RealSense program. What Intel refers to as "perceptual computing" allows computers to "see" depth the way the human eye does, using an integrated 3D depth and 2D camera.

Business Insider Studios was recently given a personal tour of Intel's Innovation Lab, located in Santa Clara, to learn more about RealSense 3D technology. Intel's Director of Perceptual Computing Dr. Achin Bhowmik and Application Engineer Dmitry Ivanov led the tour, giving us a glimpse of several demos that showed the 3D camera in action.

"It's about giving the computer the ability to perceive the user and the world," explained Bhowmik. "As humans, we constantly see the world in 3D. We know how far things are, we know the shape of the environment around us. We wanted to add these same human-like senses to the computer to reinvent what the machine does."

RealSense 3D before after

What began as a bulky attachment in its beta stage has shrunk into a sliver of a device that can now be embedded into electronic equipment of almost any size. Intel's RealSense technology comes in three forms: a front-facing camera (which captures facial movements, tracks fingers and hands, and detects backgrounds and foregrounds), a rear-facing ca! mera (th at can scan and measure rooms and objects), and a snapshot camera (which can alter photo backgrounds after a photo has been taken).

Intel Hand Tracking.JPG

fedex.JPGOne can't help but ask: Do we really need this technology? What's wrong with using a controller to play a game? Or swiping your screen to flip through photos? Bhowmik argues that advances like this don't make us lazy, but rather make our lives easier. "The same argument was made for the automatic car," Bhowmik said. "Initially people thought, 'What's wrong with having a stick shift?' But automatic cars became hugely popular because they made people's lives easier — the same way touch screens simplified computing devices by replacing or augmenting the mouse."

By the end of 2014, Intel RealSense 3D cameras will come already installed in computer devices made by Acer, Asus, Dell, HP, Lenovo, Fujitsu, NEC, and Toshiba, to name a few. Brands like Crayola, Skype, Scholastic, and DreamWorks have plans to incorporate the technology into their individual applications. 

Bhowmik thinks computer devices are only the beginning for Intel RealSense technology. "This technology started with laptops and tablets, but we believe that it'll eventually be everywhere," said Bhowmik. "Everything that's autonomous — such as robots and drones — should have senses. The human senses receive information via seeing, hearing, touching, etc., and the human brain processes that information to allow comprehension of the physical world and enable effortless movements and interactions. The same should go for these devices."

Learn more about Intel! 's RealS ense technology

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Article: Toshiba adds 1080p IPS display and Skullcandy audio to its Chromebook 2

Having joined the Chromebook party earlier this year with the first Chromebook to feature a 13-inch HD display, Toshiba has followed it up with its Chromebook 2. On display it IFA, Toshiba's second-generation Chromebook will come in two versions that continue the 13-inch display tradition and bri...

http://www.gizmag.com/toshiba-chromebook-2-ips-skullcandy/33711/

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The Big Picture: Infrared satellite images reveal the true extent of a forest fire

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2014/09/08/big-picture-infrared-satellite-imaging/

DigitalGlobe's satellite reveals a forest fire through infrared imaging

DigitalGlobe's recently launched high-res imaging satellite isn't just in orbit for the sake of creating pretty pictures; it can also uncover things that you might never see at all. As proof, the company has posted before-and-after imagery of a California forest fire that shows off the advantages of WorldView-3's shortwave infrared sensor, which can easily see past clouds and smoke. Suffice it to say that the sensor's effect is dramatic -- areas that would have been completely obscured are suddenly in plain sight, revealing both the perimeter of the blaze and its intensity. The hope is that firefighters will use overhead shots like these to pinpoint areas where they're needed most, saving people and whole regions. It could be a while before emergency teams are pulling up satellite views at a moment's notice, but it won't be surprising if aircraft-based fire recon eventually becomes obsolete.

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Source: DigitalGlobe

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Google's latest object recognition tech can spot everything in your living room

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2014/09/08/google-details-object-recognition-tech/

Google object recognition spots items in a living room

Automatic object recognition in images is currently tricky. Even if a computer has the help of smart algorithms and human assistants, it may not catch everything in a given scene. Google might change that soon, though; it just detailed a new detection system that can easily spot lots of objects in a scene, even if they're partly obscured. The key is a neural network that can rapidly refine the criteria it's looking for without requiring a lot of extra computing power. The result is a far deeper scanning system that can both identify more objects and make better guesses -- it can spot tons of items in a living room, including (according to Google's odd example) a flying cat. The technology is still young, but the internet giant sees its recognition breakthrough helping everything from image searches through to self-driving cars. Don't be surprised if it gets much easier to look for things online using only vaguest of terms.

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Via: GigaOM

Source: Google Research Blog

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