Thursday, April 03, 2014

drag2share: This is what it's like to operate an arcade claw machine using just gestures (video)

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2014/04/03/intel-realsense-claw-crane-game-idf-2014/

We knew gesture cameras will be making their way to computers and mobile devices this year, but seeing one on the classic claw crane was a pleasant surprise for us. This IDF tech demo was courtesy of a Guangzhou company called The Best Sync, and according to Intel VP Doug Fisher, it only took three days to develop this project using Intel's RealSense technology -- as represented here by the Creative Interactive Gesture Camera (co-developed by SoftKinetic). The gestures were simple: move your hand in one of the four directions to position the claw, and clench your fist to drop it on the dolls. The joystick replacement didn't make the game any easier, but it seemed like everyone still had fun with it. Well, at least this author did, as you can see in our video after the break.

Filed under: ,

Comments

---
drag2share - drag and drop RSS news items on your email contacts to share (click SEE DEMO)

Read More...

Wednesday, April 02, 2014

drag2share: ISPâs âsix-strikeâ system is now in full force, says industry official

Source: http://gigaom.com/2014/04/02/isps-six-strike-system-is-now-in-full-force-says-industry-official/

A U.S. Chamber of Commerce official stated on Wednesday that an anti-piracy program involving major internet service providers is now in full effect, more than a year after news of the so-called Copyright Alert System was first reported.

“The last year has been a ramp-up … March is the first month those [notices] are going out to full capacities,” said Rick Cotton, speaking at a copyright event in New York.

Cotton, who heads the Chamber’s anti-counterfeiting and piracy division, was referring to a system in which five ISPs (AT&T, Cablevision, Comcast, Time Warner, and Verizon) agreed to undertake an escalating series of measures against alleged infringers on behalf of content owners, beginning with a warning notice.

Cotton claimed the scheme has reduced piracy, but declined to provide specific details such as how many times the ISPs have taken action against their subscribers. A recent report suggested Comcast alone has sent out 625,000 notices.

The program itself came about early in 2013 after the entertainment industry and the ISPs reached a discreet deal that was loosely modeled on France’s now-abandoned “3 strikes” system.

The American version is different in that it contains six strikes, not three, and is a voluntary arrangement between studios and the ISPs. It also doesn’t culminate in the ISPs cutting off internet service, but instead slowing it down.

“There’s an enormous fall-off when people get the first notice,” said Cotton, adding that it is too early to talk about the system’s more severe measures. “The vast majority of people say they stop when they receive the notice.”

Robert Levine, the host of the event and the author of a popular book defending copyright, pointed out to Cotton that people wishing to avoid the six-strikes system can turn to technology like encryption and virtual private networks. Cotton acknowledged that “piracy will never go away” but that the goal for now is to focus on education rather than enforcement.

A long-time lawyer for NBC, Cotton’s view is that the “infrastructure sector” of the internet — ISPs, payment systems, ad networks and so on — is more willing than in the past to tell users “what the rules of the road are.” He also also described copyright infringers as “criminals,” which is unlikely to endear with many in the technology sector, who are critical of the hard lines espoused by big content owners.

Overall, the event, which was hosted by the Copyright Clearance Center, reflected one side of a familiar dichotomy over the internet, which many content owners have long regarded with fear and mistrust.

Related research and analysis from Gigaom Research:
Subscriber content. Sign up for a free trial.

---
drag2share - drag and drop RSS news items on your email contacts to share (click SEE DEMO)

Read More...

drag2share: TomTom Squeezes a Heart Rate Monitor Into Its GPS Watches

Source: http://gizmodo.com/tomtom-squeezes-a-heart-rate-monitor-into-its-gps-watch-1557035030

TomTom Squeezes a Heart Rate Monitor Into Its GPS Watches

When we reviewed the TomTom Runner GPS watch last year, we pointed out that if you wanted to monitor your heart rate, you'd need to buy an extra accessory. But for athletes looking to seriously train their bodies, metrics on how fast or far they ran, swam, or biked isn't enough. So TomTom has updated the Runner GPS with a new Cardio version that now includes an integrated heart-rate monitor.

Read more...

---
drag2share - drag and drop RSS news items on your email contacts to share (click SEE DEMO)

Read More...

drag2share: FORECAST: Amazon Will Sell Nearly Six Million Fire TVs This Year

source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/businessinsider/~3/AiuDzVvGNm0/forecast-amazon-will-sell-nearly-six-million-fire-tvs-this-year-2014-4

We forecast that Amazon will sell nearly 6 million of its just-announced Fire TV streaming devices in the U.S. this year.

Amazon's new streaming device will begin shipping today. The device is priced at $99, on par with Apple TV, but well above Google's Chromecast.

  • Amazon will sell 5.8 million Fire TVs in the U.S. this year, giving it about one-fifth of the streaming device market share by sales.
  • Apple will still be the top streaming device this year, selling 8.8 million Apple TVs, accounting for just under one-third of the streaming device market.
  • Roku will come in third, selling about 5 million devices.
  • Google's Chromecast will round out the top four, selling 4 million devices during the year.

Our forecast is based on the trajectory of Kindle Fire sales, alongside the trends we've been tracking closely in the streaming device market. Google, for example, sold 2.7 million Chromecasts in the U.S. in the first two quarters the devices were on the market, according to data from Hillside Partners.

It's important to bear in mind, Amazon has a unique advantage within the streaming device market.  

It already has a significant media ecosystem, and thus a built-in audience for the Amazon Fire TV. For anyone with a Prime subscription, including many Kindle Fire users, the appeal of the Amazon Fire will be unlimited access to Amazon Instant, the company's streaming service.

And like Netflix, the company is betting big that original content will make Amazon Instant even more appealing. Amazon recently approved six new original series for production.

The company's Kindle Fire tablets and Prime subscription strategy demonstrate that Amazon knows how to incentivize users to stay within the Amazon ecosystem. The company is expected to generate $5.7 billion in revenue from digital media this year, according to Morgan Stanley.  

Dow nload the chart and data in Excel.

FORECASTUSStreamingDeviceSalesIn2014

Read More...

drag2share: Here comes Amazon Fire TV: Amazon announces its $99 TV set-top box

Source: http://gigaom.com/2014/04/02/here-comes-amazon-fire-tv-amazon-announces-its-tv-set-top-box/

Amazon officially announced a TV streaming box called Amazon Fire TV at its press event in New York Wednesday morning. The device is a set-top box with a dedicated remote control that is powered by a quad-core CPU and a dedicated GPU, which results in it being three times as powerful as competitors like Apple TV and Roku. Fire TV goes on sale immediately for $99.

The device comes with a dedicated remote control that enables voice input through a microphone button. The box itself is connected through 802.11 a/b/g/n dual-band Wi-Fi.

IMG_1267

The device will come with a number of featured third-party apps at launch, including Hulu Plus, Netflix, Quello, NBA GameTime, Plex, Vevo, TED amd MLB.tv. Netflix and Hulu Plus are featured right on the home screen, and content of these apps is available through content recommendations that take into account which serves a viewer subscribes to. FreeTime also doubles as a kind of parental control for the device: Parents can set time limits for video viewing, and kids won’t be able to exit the app and access other content without their parents’ approval.

Amazon Fire TV also integrates other Amazon services. Users who have the Amazon Cloud Drive app installed on their mobile devices can view photos on the TV right after they’re uploaded to the cloud. Subscribers can also access FreeTime, Amazon’s curated tier of kids content, through the device.

IMG_1271

Another key feature is gaming. Amazon wants to deliver thousands of gaming titles from publishers like Disney, Ubisoft and EA, but not directly go up against Xbox One and PS4, but rather target casual and mobile gamers. To do so, it will sell a dedicated game controller, dubbed the Fire Game Controller, for $40. For that price, consumers will also get 1000 Amazon coins to spend on game titles. There will also be a multiplayer mode that will integrate tablets and phones. And yes, this is the game controller that leaked a few weeks ago.

The device goes up against competition from Apple, Roku and Google, whose devices all sell on Amazon.com as well. Kindle VP Peter Larsen took a direct stab at Roku Wednesday, demonstrating how hard it can be to find titles via search with a traditional remote control. He also quoted Amazon customer reviews of Apple TV, Roku and Vizio media streamers highlighting the same issue.

It had been clear for a long time that Amazon had been working on a TV streaming device. The company had hired a good chunk of the team that built Logitech’s Revue Google TV box, and reportedly was looking to launch in time for the 2013 holiday season, but decided to delay the release for unknown reasons.

Developing news, more to come.

 

---
drag2share - drag and drop RSS news items on your email contacts to share (click SEE DEMO)

Read More...

drag2share: Amazon FLUNKS New Energy Report — Facebook and Apple Get 'A's

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/greenpeace-cloud-computing-report-2014-4

Google server farmAccording to "Clicking Clean: How Companies are Creating the Green Internet," a new Greenpeace report on energy usage by the cloud-computing industry, IT behemoths like Apple, Facebook and Google are leading the charge for renewable energy, while several others — notably Amazon Web Services and Twitter — receive failing grades due to their reliance on “dirty” power from coal and other greenhouse-gas emitting sources.

At a February shareholders meeting, Apple CEO Tim Cook even suggested that climate skeptics "get out of the stock," if they didn't approve of the company's green initiatives. 

“Apple’s rapid shift to renewable energy over the past 24 months has made it clear why it’s one of the world’s most innovative and popular companies,” said Gary Cook, the report's lead author and a senior IT analyst for the environmental group. “By continuing to buy dirty energy, Amazon Web Services not only can’t seem to keep up with Apple, but is dragging much of the internet down with it.”

The cloud industry is growing rapidly, and those endless server farms burn a lot of power — more each year than all but five of the world's most energy-hogging countries, the report states.

Fortunately, it’s also among the environmentally responsible sectors of the global economy.

The report is generally upbeat, noting that six of the top cloud-computing companies — Google, Apple, Facebook, Box, Rackspace and Salesforce — have made str! ong comm itments to the goal of powering their data centers with 100% renewable energy. As such companies make decisions about where to situate their operations, these clean-energy policies are causing a scramble among states and energy utilities to adopt green policies to woo their business.

Screen Shot 2014 04 01 at 5.44.55 PM

Apple, for instance, has increased its use of green energy at its iCloud data centers from 35% to 75% in three years, rolling out massive solar arrays near its server farms in North Carolina and Nevada, and relying on wind energy for its sites in Oregon and California.

Google powers its server farms in Iowa, Oklahoma and Finland with renewable energy, and has made major investments in solar power.

The report heaps praise on Facebook for pulling back the curtain on its energy footprint, going so far as to provide “facility-specific performance dashboards,” so anyone can see exactly where the company’s power is coming from. (It has also made the software open-source, inviting other companies to follow its lead.) One new Facebook data center, based in Sweden, uses 100% hydropower, and the company announced plans to build a new server farm in Iowa that will run entirely on wind-power.Screen Shot 2014 04 01 at 5.43.45 PM

eBay, which has had a more mixed record on green energy, recently installed natural gas fuel cells around its Utah data center rather than continue to purchase energy from local coal-powered plants.

And Apple, Google and Facebook — all of which operate data centers in North Carolina — successfully pressured Duke Energy, the largest ut! ility in the country and, according to Greenpeace “one of its biggest emitters of global warming pollution,” to launch a program in the state to offer renewable energy to major customers.

But other big tech companies, notably Amazon and Twitter, get slammed in the report for making use of “dirty” energy from coal and other fossil feuls and for failing to be transparent about energy usage.

Twitter, which rents its server space from “colocation” companies, the report says, “[discoloses] no information about its energy footprint,” earning an "F" for transparency on Greenpeace’s report card. The company has made, “no public effort to procure renewable energy for its data centers,” the report adds.

"Twitter believes strongly in energy efficiency and optimization of resources for minimal environmental impact," a spokesperson for the service emailed Business Insider. "As we build out our infrastructure, we continue to strive for even greater efficiency of operations."

Amazon, which provides cloud services for Netflix, Pinterest, Spotify, and Vine, among many other companies, was named the least transparent company in the report, “[failing] to make public even the most basic details on its energy footprint.” The company also gets dinged for operating “without any apparent regard to environmental impact or access to renewable energy.”

Amazon did not respond to a request for comment. 

Disclosure: Amazon founxer and CEO Jeff Bezos is an investor in Business Insider through his personal investment company Bezos Expeditions.

Join the conversation about this story »


    






---
drag2share - drag and drop RSS news items on your email contacts to share (click SEE DEMO)

Read More...

drag2share: This New, Flying Wind Turbine Is Also A WiFi Hotspot

source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/businessinsider/~3/bxCoku2SYDs/altaeros-energies-wind-turbine-is-also-a-wifi-hotspot-2014-4

The invention could have a major impact in places like Alaska, with vast swaths of land that are off the grid, and without traditional sources of power and internet access.

The startup, Altaeros Energies, developed the BAT-Buoyant Airborne Turbine, which is filled with helium and can rise to 1,000 to 2,000 feet to generate power from strong, high-altitude winds. Because the turbines can access these high-altitude winds, they generate roughly double the energy of standard turbines.

In addition to generating lower-cost energy for remote areas, the turbines could serve as sources of internet connectivity and cellphone service. They'll also be able to provide weather data to communities.

The flying turbine transfers the energy through cables that tether it to the ground. This is what it looks like in action:

Wind turbine GIF

Altaeros hopes to deploy the new turbines near remote Alaska villages that are off the grid, according to the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner. The company received a $1.3 million grant from the Alaska Energy Authority to test the turbine there.

Read More...

drag2share: Philips' New Clear LED Bulbs Look Just Like Incandescents

Source: http://gizmodo.com/philips-new-clear-led-bulbs-look-just-like-incandescen-1556835056

Philips' New Clear LED Bulbs Look Just Like Incandescents

Despite being more energy-efficient and longer lasting, consumers keep finding excuses for wanting to stick with ancient incandescent lightbulbs. But with clear glass and a special LED lens that looks like a traditional filament, Philips' latest LED bulbs might finally convince those afraid of change.

Read more...

---
drag2share - drag and drop RSS news items on your email contacts to share (click SEE DEMO)

Read More...

drag2share: Meet Apple's 'SkyNet' - Multipeer Connectivity Framework

source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/businessinsider/~3/8BEK5F5lQJE/mobile-insider-meet-apples-skynet--mozilla-board-shakeup--pebble-hits-target-shelves-2014-4

MEET APPLE'S 'SKYNET' – THE iOS 7 FEATURE THAT COULD 'CHANGE EVERYTHING'Apple's mundane-sounding Multipeer Connectivity Framework attracted little attention during its quiet rollout for iOS 7. But following the recent release of the quirky FireChat app, which uses the Framework to connect users who don't have direct access to Wi-Fi or a data connection, the feature's significant disruption potential is beginning to raise eyebrows.

The technology is called mesh networking. "It's going to change everything," Mike Elgan writes for Cult of Mac, comparing the technology's potential impact to "the Internet itself."

Here's how it works: Using the same inter-device connections that power Air Drop file transfers, Apple devices within range can connect to each other, acting as relay nodes in a device network running separately from the Internet. Apps like FireChat use the mesh network to relay data from device to device, until they find a device with Internet connectivity to bridge the gap.

"Apple is a leader here with its Multipeer Connectivity Framework," notes Elgan. "But it appears that Google is also going big with consumer-level mesh networking."

Eighty-five percent of Apple's mobile devices currently run iOS7.  (Cult of MacWired)

Read More...

drag2share: Hypnotizing joint animation requires another joint

Source: http://sploid.gizmodo.com/hypnotizing-joint-animation-requires-to-smoke-a-joint-1556492706/@caseychan

Hypnotizing joint animation requires another joint

What? Wait. What. Whaaaaaa... Magic! Wait, what? Wow!

Read more...

---
drag2share - drag and drop RSS news items on your email contacts to share (click SEE DEMO)

Read More...

drag2share: 8 hours of airliners departing from Los Angeles in one single photo

Source: http://sploid.gizmodo.com/awesome-image-shows-8-hours-of-airplanes-departing-from-1556515164/@caseychan

8 hours of airliners departing from Los Angeles in one single photo

Los Angeles architectural photographer Mike Kelley posted this awesome image of almost all the departures and some of the arrivals at LAX during a period of eight hours last Sunday. You can buy the photo here if you want.

Read more...

---
drag2share - drag and drop RSS news items on your email contacts to share (click SEE DEMO)

Read More...

drag2share: Computers Are Now Able to Teach Each Other Pac-Man, The End is Near

Source: http://gizmodo.com/computers-are-now-able-to-teach-each-other-pac-man-the-1556505099

Computers Are Now Able to Teach Each Other Pac-Man, The End is Near

Until now, humans have had one significant advantage over computers and robots: We meatbags were the only ones who could teach them how to function. Now, researchers at Washington State University have created computers that can teach other computers. And they're using Pac-Man to do it. Is nothing sacred?

Read more...

---
drag2share - drag and drop RSS news items on your email contacts to share (click SEE DEMO)

Read More...

drag2share: Lenovo's latest budget Android tablets focus on high-quality audio

source: http://www.engadget.com/2014/04/01/lenovo-tab-a-series-tablets/?utm_source=Feed_Classic_Full&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Engadget&?ncid=rss_full

Lenovo Tab A8-50 tablet

If Samsung's new Galaxy Tabs aren't your cup of tea, Lenovo may have the budget tablets you're looking for. It just unveiled four entry-level Android slates that expand on the sound quality focus we saw in last year's models. The Tab A7-30, A7-50, A8 and A10 all have Dolby audio that should improve your small-screen movie experience. They also have "responsive" (if unnamed) quad-core processors, too. You're mostly choosing devices based on screen sizes. The A7-30 has a basic 7-inch display and optional cellular support, while the A7-50 jumps to HD and throws in a 2-megapixel front camera; move to the A8 and you'll get an 8-inch panel, while the A10 includes (you guessed it) a 10-inch display. Lenovo plans to ship the new Tab A-series worldwide in the second quarter of the year, with UK prices ranging from a frugal £100 ($166) for an A7-30 to a still quite affordable £170 ($283) for an A10. There's no mention of a US launch for the new A-series so far, but we've reached out for more details. We'll let you know if these starter tablets reach American shores.

Read More...

drag2share: Amazon delivery lockers now also accept returns

source: http://www.engadget.com/2014/04/02/amazon-locker-returns/?utm_source=Feed_Classic_Full&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Engadget&?ncid=rss_full

You're not the only one who's ever bought silly things from Amazon while drunk. Good thing Amazon has several return methods, the newest of which lets you send back that banana slicer through the company's strategically placed delivery lockers. According to The Wall Street Journal, the e-commerce giant will now let you return duds that way, so long as you get a drop-off code from its Online Returns Center first. You'll need that code to open a cabinet on the locker, where you can stick in a box (up to12x12x12 inches in size) that holds and conceals your embarrassing purchase.

The WSJ says this move could save Amazon some serious cash, as up to a third of online purchases are usually returned and shipping's one of the company's biggest expenses. After all, carriers can retrieve items and deliver new orders at the same time whenever they visit a location. Unfortunately for customers, Amazon charges the same amount for locker returns as it does for UPS drop offs. We imagine it's still a welcome development for folks who live or work near one of those lockers, though -- whatever makes it more convenient to send back that Borat mankini, right?

Filed under: ,

Read More...

drag2share: Samsung's Smart Home service ready to control new wave of TVs and appliances

source: http://www.engadget.com/2014/04/02/samsung-smart-home-app-service-ready/?utm_source=Feed_Classic_Full&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Engadget&?ncid=rss_full

Samsung has just taken a big step in its home automation plans by launching its Smart Home service in the US and Korea. That means you can now download an Android app that, in conjunction with Samsung's cloud service, will give you control over certain (crazy expensive) Samsung smart appliances. In the US, those include Samsung's T9000 Smart French Door refrigerator, the WF457 smart front loading washing machine, all 2014 Smart TVs and, later in the year, the Smart Bulb, Gear Fit and Smart Ovens. On top of an app for any Android 4.0 or later device, a Tizen app will soon arrive to Samsung's Galaxy Gear 2 smartwatch, as well. Once all that's installed and connected, you'll be able to fully contr! ol a was h cycle, check the temperature of the fridge or even say "good night" to the TV remote to shut down all connected devices. Samsung has promised that all of this is encrypted and secure, so let's hope that's the case -- all this is just the beginning of its "grand plan" to enhance your home.

Read More...