Wednesday, January 12, 2011

¡Increíble! Google Turns Your Android Phone Into An On-The-Fly Conversation Interpreter

Source: http://techcrunch.com/2011/01/12/android-translations/

When it came to translations, you used to either need an interpreter or a book to navigate another language. That was either costly or cumbersome, respectively. Then the Internet came along and made things significantly easier. Except you had to be chained to your computer to translate something. A year ago, Google made things easier again by launching their Translate app for Android. But that’s nothing compared to what they’re releasing today.

The latest version of Google Translate for Android comes with a few updates to celebrate the one-year anniversary. Most of these are to the user interface. But there’s also one new feature they’re previewing in alpha mode. And it’s awesome: Conversation Mode.

Essentially, this allows you to speak in one language into your phone and the app will read it out loud translated into the language of the person you’re speaking with. That person can then respond and it will translate it back into your language. Yes, amazing.

Google actually demoed this on stage at a conference in Berlin back in September of last year. There, after a few minor hiccups, an English to German conversation was had pretty quickly. At the time, they noted that hopefully it would be available to consumers in a few months. And now here it is — with some limitations.

First of all, Google is quick to note that this is very much an alpha feature. In other words, expect a lot of hiccups. They note that background noise, thick accents, and quick speech can all trip up the app. Further, it only works for English and Spanish currently. But I don’t care — this is still amazing. And you know they’ll improve it rapidly.

Google also notes that the overall app is now seeing daily usage from more than 150 countries around the world. Currently, it supports 53 languages for text input and 15 for voice input (though that’s different from this conversation mode). They also say that the majority of usage comes outside the U.S. right now, which probably shouldn’t be too surprising given what it does.

Again, this feature is Android-only for now in alpha. And it should be available shortly in the latest Google Translate app update.



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Mixpanel Gets A UI Makeover; Monthly Data Volume Growing By 40 Percent

Source: http://techcrunch.com/2011/01/12/mixpanel-gets-a-ui-makeover-monthly-data-volume-growing-by-40-percent/

We’ve written about Mixpanel, an analytics-focused startup whose backers include Y Combinator, Michael Birch, and Max Levchin. The startup, which currently tracks over 1 billion actions per month, allows developers to track a variety of user actions, including the number of pages a user has viewed, iPhone app analytics, interactions on Facebook apps and email analytics. Today, the company is announcing a UI makeover, and revealing that data volume is growing by 40 percent each month.

Mixpanel is tracking how many comments, subscribers, likes, shares, and page views users are getting. And Mixpanel places all of this data on an easy-to-read dashboard for users to check and monitor. Mixpanel has also added the ability for users to create custom email digests of data, that will send daily or hourly emails to users to track certain analytics.

Another feature MixPanel will soon be adding is the ability to bookmark certain sites that will allow users to track visitor retention by source (i.e. what percentage of visitors are coming from Twitter). This data will also be added to email digests.

In the future, co-founder Suhail Doshi says that mobile analytics will be upgraded to target iPhone and Android devices. And Mixpanel will soon be releasing version 2.0 of its analytics platform.



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Get Visitors Stay a Little Longer on your Website

Source: http://www.labnol.org/internet/site-visitors-stay-longer/18469/

As a website owner, you not only want to attract more visitors to your website but you would also like them to stay a little longer while they are on your site.

Let me share two experiments in this direction that seem to be working out well for my blog. These require no programming and can be used on any website /blog as long as you have the freedom to add a couple of lines of JavaScript to your template.

1. Facebook Recommendations

Ever since I added a Facebook widget to my blog's sidebar (screenshot), I have noticed that the average time spent by a visitor on this site has increased.

That makes sense because this unique widget lists your blog's most recent articles in a unique order of "social popularity" and people do like to check out content that their friends and others may have liked.

Facebook offers two types of widgets – recommendations and recent activity. You can put them both on the same page and rotate (similar to split-testing). The code for that looks something like this – remember to replace labnol.org with the domain of your website.

   1: <script type="text/javascript">    2: var fb = Math.random();    3: if (fb < .5){    4:  document.write('<iframe src="http://www.facebook.com/plugins/recommendations.php?site=labnol.org&amp;width=300&amp;height=300&amp;header=false&amp;colorscheme=light" scrolling="no" frameborder="0" style="border:none; overflow:hidden; width:300px; height:300px;" allowTransparency="true"></iframe>');    5: } else {    6:  document.write('<iframe src="http://www.facebook.com/plugins/activity.php?site=labnol.org&amp;width=300&amp;height=300&amp;header=false&amp;colorscheme=light&amp;recommendations=true" scrolling="no" frameborder="0" style="border:none; overflow:hidden; width:300px; height:300px;" allowTransparency="true"></iframe>');    7: }    8: </script>

2. Twitter Favorites

Most websites now embed a Twitter widget that either displays the most recent tweets of the website owner or the conversations (aka @replies) that he or she is currently having with others on Twitter.

I also use the Twitter widget on my blog homepage (see the sidebar) but in a slightly different manner. Whenever there's a tweet that mentions one of my blog stories I add that tweet to my Twitter favorites. These recommendations then automatically appear on the site through the faves widget of Twitter.

The big advantage with Twitter's widget is that you get to easily promote even your older content which otherwise stays hidden in the archives and may never get noticed by new visitors.

Also see: Discover the Most Popular Links on a Page

Facebook    Twitter    Digital Inspiration @labnol

This article, titled Get Visitors Stay a Little Longer on your Website, was originally published at Digital Inspiration under Blogging, Seo, Internet.


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Double Exposures? Transparent Objects? No, Just Cunning Street Art [Photography]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5731597/double-exposures-transparent-objects-no-just-cunning-street-art

Double Exposures? Transparent Objects? No, Just Cunning Street ArtThese tricks of the eye aren't anything fancy. It's merely American street artist Cayetano Ferrer playing games, by pasting photos over signs and boxes to make them look transparent. So transparent, they could seriously mess with you. [Fubiz via Photojojo]

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Mattel's Mindflex Duel in the works, allows true test of wills

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/01/12/mattels-mindflex-duel-in-the-works-allows-true-test-of-wills/

Disguised as a mere toy, the original Mindflex is actually a kind of limited telekinesis simulator in that it allows you to control the up and down movements of a ball suspended in air by, well, flexing your brain. With the release of the Mindflex Duel, you can now test your telekinetic prowess against that of your closest friends. That's right, Mattel's latest offering allows you to play what amounts to tug-of-war (with a tiny foam ball) using only the power of your mind. The Duel also lets people play cooperatively, but that doesn't sound like nearly as much fun as hooking this to a stim unit for a little friendly competition and some elevated stakes for the loser. We're not sure why, but the mind games won't start until August, though the device is currently available for pre-order on Amazon for $99.99.

Mattel's Mindflex Duel in the works, allows true test of wills originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 12 Jan 2011 11:04:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Great Article by @heidicohen - 7 Top Online Marketing Trends for 2011 (with data) - http://bit.ly/dVj0sc

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Five Easy Places to Recycle Your Old Gadgets and Computers [Environment]

Source: http://lifehacker.com/5731190/five-easy-places-to-recycle-your-old-gadgets-and-computers

Five Easy Places to Recycle Your Old Gadgets and ComputersMaybe you got some next-generation gear over the holidays. Maybe you're just cleaning out unused cruft in this new year. Whatever the reason, you've got gadgets that need to go. Here's where to bring them for responsible, ecological, and (mostly) free recycling.

Many towns, cities, counties, and states have their own e-cycling programs that offer convenient drop-off locations for old computers, big monitors, and other electronics. The EPA suggests a cluster of search sites for helping you find a local ecycling program, including EcoSquid and the Consumer Electronics Association's MyGreenElectronics. And beyond the picks you see below, the EPA has a grid list of consumer-friendly e-cycling programs from stores and manufacturers.

With that in mind, almost everybody has a Best Buy, Goodwill, or Staples somewhere near them. Read up on their recycling programs, and learn about two other options you might not have considered:

Best Buy

Five Easy Places to Recycle Your Old Gadgets and Computers
Oddly enough, the electronics superstore that only just recently dropped a hefty restocking fee also has the most convenient and customer-friendly electronics recycling program around. Each household can bring in up to three items per day, including older-style CRT TVs (up to 32 inches in size), any flat-panel TV, monitors, cellphones, GPS units, DVD players—basically, if it has a plug and a display, and you can carry it, Best Buy takes it. There's a $10 charge for TVs and monitors, but you get that back in a $10 gift card. [Details]

Your Cellphone Maker or Service Provider

Five Easy Places to Recycle Your Old Gadgets and Computers
New cellphone packages often come with a pouch in which to mail back an older cellphone for recycling, or for re-purposing as an emergency 911 phone for community services. If your phone didn't, check out your current or past cellular provider. Each of them offers phone recylcing services, generally free and offered through both in-store drop-offs and postage-paid mail-ins. Your phone's maker (LG, Motorola, etc.) likely offers a similar low-hassle deal. [Details: AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile, Verizon; manufacturer details linked at EPA's Ecycling site]

Office Depot & Staples

Five Easy Places to Recycle Your Old Gadgets and Computers
Both of the office supply giants are fairly convenient for recycling smaller gadgets in different ways. Office Depot sells boxes (small, medium, and large for $5, $10, and $15, respectively) that you can fill with pretty much any gadget that fits, then drop it off for recycling. Staples does the smaller stuff for free, like phones, PDAs, calculators and the like. If you drop off TVs or monitors or other notably big gear, it's a $10 charge. It seems steep, but the back-end recycling groups such stores work through are often charging them very close to that amount themselves, or possibly a bit more. [Details: Office Depot, Staples]

Goodwill

Five Easy Places to Recycle Your Old Gadgets and Computers
The place thats synonymous with charitable drop-off partners with Dell to accept computers and monitors in "any condition," as well as any gear associated or attached to a computer. Its recycling program is free, and its web site is refreshingly simple. [Details]

Apple

Five Easy Places to Recycle Your Old Gadgets and Computers
Their recycling program is restricted to computers, iPods, and cellphones, but it makes it rewarding to turn them in. Recycle your old iPod or any brand of cellphone at an Apple store and you'll get 10 percent off the purchase of a new iPod. If you can't make it to a store, you can print out a prepaid shipping label. You can also recycle your older PC or Mac, desktop or laptop, through a prepaid shipping program through Apple, and if your older computer is worth anything, in reuse potential or just parts, that value will be applied to an Apple Store credit. Recycling any computer or display without worrying about the value is a straight $30, though you can ship it with a prepaid label. [Details]


Where do you recycle your gadgets and computer gear when it falls out of use? Tell us about recycling spots and ideas we missed in the comments, and we'll update the post with good picks.

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Google Chrome Drops H.264 Support, Even Though It Still Loves Flash [Video]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5730968/google-chrome-drops-h264-support-even-though-it-still-loves-flash

Oh wow. Google's dropping support for h.264 video in Chrome, because, they say, they're only going to support "open codec technologies":

To that end, we are changing Chrome's HTML5 support to make it consistent with the codecs already supported by the open Chromium project. Specifically, we are supporting the WebM (VP8) and Theora video codecs, and will consider adding support for other high-quality open codecs in the future. Though H.264 plays an important role in video, as our goal is to enable open innovation, support for the codec will be removed and our resources directed towards completely open codec technologies.

Instead, Google's going to push its own WebM video, based on the VP8 standard and Theora. The problem is that there's not a ton of support for WebM yet, in particular when it comes to hardware decoders and when it comes to mobile. H.264 also already has a ton of momentum, largely thanks to the mobile space. But this will definitely help WebM get some pick up.

In other words, the video standards battle is back on. And expect to still see lots of Adobe Flash outside of Google's YouTube to play video if you're using Chrome. Speaking of! How come Adobe Flash—a very closed technology—will still be baked into Chrome? [Google]

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World's First Electric Supercar Taking Pre-Orders and Going Into Production [Cars]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5731351/worlds-first-electric-supercar-taking-pre+orders-and-going-into-production

World's First Electric Supercar Taking Pre-Orders and Going Into ProductionThe Li-Ion Inizio holds the distinction of being one of the first all-electric supercars. It can hit speed up to 170 MPH and with a range of 250 miles. Now it's going into production and can be yours for $139,000.

Li-Ion won 2.5 million dollars in the the 2010 Automotive X-Prize for their work on their Wave II vehicle. Now, according to Gizmag, they're using the money to bring the Wave II and the Inzio to market. The Inizio has three models for sale at $139,000, $189,000 and $249,000, with the fastest Inizio model going from 0-60 in 3.4 seconds. It uses 12 batteries, comes equipped with two motors and charges in 8 hours.

World's First Electric Supercar Taking Pre-Orders and Going Into Production

The less able Wave II will sell for 39,000 and 49,000, with the more expensive model able to travel 200 miles on a single, seven-hour charge. Pre-orders for both cars will begin this month. If all goes to plan, the Inizio should begin shipping in July 2011, and the Wave II will arrive in December 2011. [Gizmag]

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Aigo A8 / Leo 14 megapixel cameraphone hands-on (video)

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/01/11/aigo-a8-leo-14-megapixel-cameraphone-hands-on-video/

We were wandering the floor at CES just before the end of the show when we stumbled upon this oddly familiar device. It's the Aigo A8 -- née Altek Leo -- an Android cameraphone (more like a phonecamera, really) destined for China Unicom that sports a 14 megapixel autofocus camera with a CCD sensor, xenon flash, 3x optical zoom, and support for 720p HD video recording. Of course, we wasted no time taking this rare beast for a spin, even going so far as to sample the camera. Take a look at the pictures below, followed by more information -- and videos -- after the break.

Continue reading Aigo A8 / Leo 14 megapixel cameraphone hands-on (video)

Aigo A8 / Leo 14 megapixel cameraphone hands-on (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 11 Jan 2011 16:08:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Google will drop H.264 support from Chrome, herd the masses towards WebM and Theora

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/01/11/google-will-drop-h-264-support-from-chrome-herd-the-masses-towa/

We knew Google was rather fond of its WebM video standard, but we never expected a move like this: the company says it will drop support for the rival H.264 codec in its HTML5 video tag, and is justifying the move in the name of open standards somehow. Considering that H.264 is presently one of (if not the) most widely supported format out there, it sounds a little like Google shooting itself in the foot with a .357 round -- especially considering the MPEG-LA just made H.264 royalty-free as long as it's freely distributed just a few months ago. If that's the case, Chrome users will have to download a H.264 plug-in to play most web video that's not bundled up in Flash... which isn't exactly an open format itself. Or hey, perhaps everyone will magically switch to Chrome, video providers will kowtow, unicorns will gaily prance, and WebM will dominate from now on.

Google will drop H.264 support from Chrome, herd the masses towards WebM and Theora originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 11 Jan 2011 17:11:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Bug Labs' BUGswarm and Verizon BUGbundle hands-on

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/01/11/bug-labs-bugswarm-and-verizon-bugbundle-hands-on/

Remember Bug Labs, the guys building open-source hardware modules that make it easy (and relatively inexpensive) to prototype new gadgets of your own creation? The last time we visited with these guys at the spring CTIA show last year, the company's upgraded BUGbase 2.0 was still in mockup form -- and carrier deals were little more than a gleam in CEO Peter Semmelhack's eye. Nearly a year has passed since then, and Bug's ecosystem has grown considerably to encompass a bunch of third-party modules, prototyped products, and carrier-specific packs for Sprint, AT&T, and Verizon that let your meticulously hacked-together hardware communicate over the network of your choice.

Of course, this all necessitated a follow-up meeting, which we were delighted to have at CES a couple days ago. Read on!

Continue reading Bug Labs' BUGswarm and Verizon BUGbundle hands-on

Bug Labs' BUGswarm and Verizon BUGbundle hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 11 Jan 2011 18:24:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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