Thursday, November 07, 2013

Google Is Banning All Chrome Add-Ons That Don't Come From Its Chrome Web Store (GOOG)

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/google-bans-some-chrome-extensions-2013-11

samsung chrome netbook

In the name of fighting bad guy hackers, Google on Thursday said it will not allow its Windows Chrome browser to run any add-ons unless they are downloaded from its own Chrome Web store.

Unsanctioned add-ons will be banned beginning in January.

Add-ons, which are also called extensions, are little apps that add extra functions to the browser. For instance, they can let you post stuff from the Web to your social media accounts or create to-do lists, etc.

Sometimes a cloud service will offer an add-on and let you install it right from its own web page. This will be forbidden. However, enterprise departments will still be able to install add-ons through their own enterprise tools, Google said.

This comes on top of a new feature Google added last week that will let you reset your browser completely, including wiping out all add-ons you've downloaded. That way, if you think you've downloaded an evil one, you can get rid of it.

There's been some jaded comments across the Internet about the banned add-ons. Some people are saying that Google will ban add-ons it doesn't like, like ones that let people download YouTube videos. We'll see.

PC World's Brad Chacos also points out that Google doesn't store add-ons for free.

Developers who want to include their Chrome Web Store have to pay a $5 registration fee—and if your Chrome Web Store-hosted app! or exte nsion generates income, Google will take a 5 percent cut of the revenue.

Still, many PC users could find that they like the trade-off: less choice for more security.

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LightSpeed Is Helping Stores Kill Off 'Showrooming' For Good

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/lightspeed-point-of-sale-2013-11

Dax DaSilvaThe common narrative since e-commerce sites like Amazon and eBay exploded is that physical retail will die a slow, painful death.

But it doesn't have to. Entrepreneur Dax DaSilva, founder and CEO of point-of-sale system LightSpeed, wants to use technology to revive the retail experience by, ironically, bringing the best of the web into the store.

The rapidly growing Montreal-based company has more than 15,000 store locations using its technology and is adding between 500 and 1,000 new businesses a month. Many of those customers are independent boutiques — small businesses that are looking for ways to stay competitive. 

The company sells cloud-based software available on any device, as well as a "pro" product tailored to Apple hardware, and the subscription price starts at $79 a month. LightSpeed recently got $30 million in funding from early Facebook investor Accel Partners.

The system brings all of the data and information a business has — from inventory, e-commerce sales and customer data, and detailed product information — and makes it available to employees on iPads on the sales floor and in the back office.

That helps managers automate some of the ordering and inventory tasks that take up so much time, so they can focus on the look, feel, and product mix of the store. It also helps sales staff immediately know what's in stock, so they don't have to make repeated trips to the back. 

"If you're not upgrading to a system that manages all of the customer touch points and your back office and ordering, then you're not going to have the right product for the right person at the ! right ti me," DaSilva told Business Insider. "That's the key to retail, right?"

Technology is no longer a threat to brick-and-mortar stores, and it can be an essential competitive advantage.

If a woman comes into a store looking for a purse, for example, a salesperson can refer to the LightSpeed software on her iPad. It will call up the most popular bags in stock, how they compare to what other retailers are offering, useful details about each specific product, and related items that the shopper might be interested in. 

A new employee can have the sort of knowledge that only very experienced sales staff used to have inside of a week, DaSilva says. "That's the kind of experience that you've got to deliver, because if a customer can have better information by surfing the web on their own, then there is not a compelling reason to come in." 

LightSpeed launched in 2005, as Apple was rising, with the realization that the options available for point-of-sale systems were big, ugly, and expensive custom machines that required an outsourced IT team. That was unappealing to small and design-focused businesses. People wanted to use Macs, so the company obliged them. LightSpeed grew and evolved as Apple did, eventually moving to mobile point of sale using the iPad.

The difference between older systems and new, data-centric ones like LightSpeed is significant. When a relatively inexperienced and inexpensive salesforce can provide excellent service, it opens up a great deal of opportunity for smaller businesses to grow sales and improve their businesses.

It can even take the phenomenon of "showrooming," where people go to a store to look at a product and then buy it online at a discount, and turn it on its head. DaSilva is seeing more people shop online first and then buy in store.

"This year there's been a lot of talk about 'webrooming,'" Da! Silva sa id. "People read about products in 2-D on their iPads at home, and then they go into a store to see and feel the products. A retail setting — it is entertainment and a bit of a hunt. It's about finding that perfect item and being excited about it and bringing it home. "

LightSpeed takes the information and personalization of e-commerce and combines it with the fundamentally appealing experience of going shopping. 

Some e-commerce players, like Warby Parker and Frank & Oak, have realized this interplay and opened physical locations to get the best of both worlds.

Small retailers see the potential. "There are whole streets in SoHo and Williamsburg that use LightSpeed," DaSilva said. "It's a little bit of a virus — a good virus." 

Brick-and-mortar stores aren't dying. They're just getting better at what they do. 

SEE ALSO: How Location Targeting Is Transforming Retail

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Chrome users on Windows will soon have to get extensions through Google's store

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/11/07/chrome-windows-extension-policy/

Chrome logo

Google already hopes to prevent security threats in Chrome by blocking downloads, and it's now planning a similarly cautious approach for extensions. The company has announced that all extensions for the browser's Windows beta and stable versions must be hosted in the Chrome Web Store as of January. While developers and corporate users will still get to install add-ons from local sources, the rest of us will have to go through the official portal. The safeguard should reduce the chances that deceptive extensions hijack the app, according to engineering lead Erik Kay. Google tells us that there aren't any plans to put similar limits on other platforms, since most complaints about bad extensions come from Windows surfers. The policy could go a long way toward protecting Chrome, albeit at the expense of choice -- developers who don't want to go use the Web Store will soon be out of luck.

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Source: The Chromium Blog

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New SD card format is speedy enough for 4K video

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/11/07/new-sd-card-format-is-speedy-enough-for-4k-video/

New SD card format is speedy enough for 4K video

Outside of a few smartphones, 4K video capture has largely been limited to pro-level hardware; the SD cards in regular cameras frequently can't handle so many pixels at once. That won't be a problem in the near future, as the SD Association has just unveiled an Ultra High Speed Class 3 (U3) card format that's up to the job. The spec guarantees write performance of at least 30 MB/s, or enough bandwidth to record 4K clips without hiccups. You'll have to wait for U3-capable devices and cards to begin shooting, but it shouldn't be long before you can produce footage worthy of your Ultra HD TV.

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Source: SD Association (PDF)

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Nvidia GeForce GTX 780Ti: Gaming in Glorious 4K

Source: http://gizmodo.com/nvidia-geforce-gtx-780ti-go-gaming-in-glorious-4k-1460076732

Nvidia GeForce GTX 780Ti: Gaming in Glorious 4K

Earlier this year, Nvidia dropped a bomb on the world of graphics processing with the Titan, a real luducrious powerhouse what cost a whopping $1,000. Now, the monsterous Titan is getting (another) "affordable" twin in the form of the Gefore GTX 780Ti, which Nvidia's calling the best gaming GPU on the planet.

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A Tiny Ultralight Tripod Designed For Compact Cameras and Smartphones

Source: http://gizmodo.com/a-tiny-ultralight-tripod-designed-for-compact-cameras-a-1460083292

A Tiny Ultralight Tripod Designed For Compact Cameras and Smartphones

Even if you've got a massive DSLR in your camera arsenal, there's no shame in occasionally relying on your lightweight smartphone or a compact point and shoot for pictures. And on those days when you just don't feel like lugging a heavy camera and its cumbersome accessories, the Lollipod will fill in as an incredibly lightweight and compact tripod designed exclusively for smaller shooters.

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RunKeeper adds that iPhone 5s special sauce to its running app

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/11/07/runkeeper-adds-that-iphone-5s-special-sauce-to-its-running-app/

RunKeeper adds that iPhone 5s special sauce to its running app

If you thought that Nike+ Moves was the only fitness app to quickly latch on to Apple's new M7 co-processor, think again. RunKeeper has announced that the latest update to its iOS app will now automatically track periods of activity lasting longer than 15 minutes and will also track your cadence -- letting you analyze that statistic with the same level of obsessive detail as you do your pace and elevation. If you own an iPhone that isn't a 5s, the company is throwing a bone your way too, letting you prove how grueling your morning run is by sharing route details to other users over AirDrop -- as if those incredible calf muscles weren't evidence enough.

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CIA reportedly pays to collect foreign call data from AT&T

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/11/07/cia-reportedly-collects-foreign-call-data-from-att-in-deal/

Wiretapped payphone

The NSA wields its legal authority to collect phone call data from American telecom providers, but the CIA apparently doesn't even need to apply pressure. The New York Times claims that the agency has a years-old voluntary agreement with AT&T that lets it obtain the call records of foreign suspects; the CIA pays $10 million per year in compensation. While the carrier reportedly hides identifying data for American participants, intelligence officers can demand that information as well if they get FBI subpoenas. Both AT&T and the CIA tell the Times that they're obeying the law, but that may not be very reassuring to those who want to keep their international calls private.

[Image credit: David Drexler, Flickr]

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Source: New York Times

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Google brings KitKat keyboard, Hangouts with SMS to Play Store

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/11/07/google-keyboard-hangouts/

Google brings KitKat keyboard, Hangouts with SMS to Play Store

Google has put a huge emphasis on bringing many of its branded Android apps and services to the Play Store for more users to enjoy without requiring a pure Android device, and two more of them are beginning to roll out today. First up is the new Hangouts app with integrated SMS that the company promised last week, since Google fortunately appears to have overdelivered on the "coming weeks" timeframe. In addition to the much-hyped SMS and MMS integration, it also adds support for animated GIFs, device status (such as your current mood) and the ability to share your location in your conversations.

Additionally, the app for the stock Android keyboard has received an update to version 2.0, which bestows upon it many of the enhancements Nexus 5 users have already experienced; the downside is that Emoji, one of the biggest features added to the KitKat keyboard, will only be available to users with the new OS installed on their device. This admittedly won't do many people much good at the moment, but at least it'll be there waiting for you once more smartphones and tablets get the new version of Android. There are still some benefits to getting the new keyboard if you're still on Jelly Bean, such as space-aware gesture typing, rationalized punctuation that varies with your particular screen size (whether it be a smartphone or tablet) and more. We've got the download links below if your'e ready to update.

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Via: TalkAndroid, Droid-Life

Source: Google Play (keyboard), (Hangouts)

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An App-Connected Laser Tape Measure Will Never Mistake Inches For Feet

Source: http://gizmodo.com/an-app-connected-laser-tape-measure-will-never-mistake-1459713322

An App-Connected Laser Tape Measure Will Never Mistake Inches For Feet

Sure, that laser rangefinder made short work of measuring every dimension in that room you plan to renovate. It's just too bad you jotted all those measurements down on the back of an old receipt that promptly went missing. That's why Bosch has given its new GLM 100 C laser rangefinder Bluetooth capabilities and an accompanying app so every last measurement is accurately documented.

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You'll want to go to China after watching this time-lapse video

Source: http://sploid.gizmodo.com/china-is-impossibly-beautiful-in-this-awe-inspiring-tim-1459981891/1459993159/@jesusdiaz

You'll want to go to China after watching this time-lapse video

59 photographers in 49 cities, more than 200,000 photos, and one really awesome country: China. After you watch this incredible time-lapse, you will want to go to China and backpack for three months.

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YouTube flips the switch on its new conversation-style comment system powered by Google+

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/11/06/youtube-comments-google-plus/

YouTube flips the switch on new comment system powered by Google

Back in September, YouTube revealed its plan to overhaul comments on the video site with the helping hand of Google+. Now, that new system has gone live. Conversation-style commenting that ranks based on a number of key factors (like people you know), allows private notations solely for those in your Circles and serves up easy moderation in order to quell the naysayers like word filters and auto-approval. The new Google+-powered system should be popping up on YouTube channels that you frequent soon as the global roll out has already begun.

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Via: TechCrunch

Source: YouTube

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Verizon's LTE network won't support Nexus 7 (2013) until after KitKat upgrade

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/11/06/nexus-7-verizon-lte-android-kitkat/

DNP Verizon Nexus 7 LTE

Nexus 7 owners, you'll unfortunately have to wait for Android KitKat before you can connect to Verizon's LTE network. In September, the carrier revealed that the pint-sized slate would have to go through a month-long certification process before it can connect to the internet via LTE. Now, Big Red claims the fault lies with Android Jelly Bean, and that Google and Asus (the device's manufacturer) have advised the carrier to suspend the certification process until KitKat arrives. According to Mountain View, its newest mobile OS is coming in the next few weeks -- for now, (disappointed) Nexus 7 users can head past the break for Verizon's full statement.

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Source: Android Police

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Amazon Kindle HDX 8.9 review: a high-end tablet at a mid-range price

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/11/07/amazon-kindle-hdx-8-9-review/

Amazon Kindle HDX 8.9 review: a high-end tablet at a mid-range price

It's worth noting just how far Amazon has come since the early days of the Fire line. With the first generation, it was tough to see the tablet as anything more than a content-delivery device designed to keep users locked into the Kindle ecosystem. It was an uninspired bit of hardware that seemingly arrived off the same factory line as the BlackBerry PlayBook. Granted, Amazon's new HDX tablets still aren't the sexiest devices around, but the company's taken great pains to ensure they're some of the best. That means a stellar screen, some zippy internals and a slimmed-down body. Starting at $379 for the 8.9-inch model, the price has come along for the ride as well. It's hardly expensive, but we've long since stopped using the word "budget" to describe it.

Still, Amazon's managed to keep pricing down thanks to its content-centric business model, which assumes you'll continue buying stuff long after you open the box. This comes with some drawbacks, of course -- namely, an ecosystem that's far more closed-off than regular Android would be. But as long as you're stuck with Fire OS, the company's going to do what it can to provide the best experience possible with the addition of some compelling features. Does all that add up to a truly competitive device? Or has Amazon strayed too far from its budget roots?%Gallery-slideshow104327%

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Google Text-to-Speech hits the Play Store, brings charming British accent with it

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/11/07/google-text-to-speech-app-play/

DNP Google psuhes TexttoVoice App directly to Play, bypassing carrier updates

Google is continuing its trend of pushing Android's built-in apps directly to the Play Store with Text-to-Voice. The application isn't very flashy on its own, but when coupled with Google Books it can read you a bedtime story or even integrate with Google Translate for aural pronunciation examples. Mountain View also added Korean language support, which could be useful if you ever want to ask a question while touring Samsung HQ. However, to use the app you have to be running Ice Cream Sandwich at the minimum -- you're still out there, right?

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Via: Phone Arena

Source: Google Play

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Wednesday, November 06, 2013

Samsung ATIV Book 9 Lite review: What does it take to make an $800 version of a $1,400 Ultrabook?

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/11/06/samsung-ativ-book-9-lite-review/

Samsung ATIV Book 9 Lite review: What does it take to make an $800 version of a $1,400 Ultrabook?

It is what it sounds like. The Samsung ATIV Book 9 Lite, announced at the same time as the ATIV Book 9 Plus, is a mid-range version of the company's flagship laptop. Priced at nearly half the price ($800 vs. $1,400), it's made of plastic instead of aluminum, with an AMD chip instead of the usual Intel Haswell processor. But it has generally the same look, and is nearly as thin and light as the real thing. In fact, it stands as one of the most lightweight machines you can get for this price, even if it doesn't qualify as a bona fide Ultrabook. So is it worth getting this and saving yourself six hundred bucks? And how big a deal is the difference in specs?%Gallery-slideshow103483%

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The New Mobile Advertising Ecosystem Explained

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/the-new-mobile-advertising-landscape-2013-11

Mobile Advertising Graphic Final

Mobile advertising has carved out a significant share of overall digital ad revenues faster than many expected. But increased spending hasn't made the mobile ad ecosystem any less complex.

Ad networks, ad exchanges, real-time bidding platforms, and many other self-styled mobile ad "solutions," seem to offer everything to everyone, including the best data, the best and most varied targeting technologies, and access to the most premium sites and apps.

In a new report from BI Intelligence, we cut through the noise, identify the most meaningful shifts in the mobile ad landscape, and demystify the actual role played by the different entities and technologies, explaining each player's strengths and weakness. We also look at how the rise of programmatic buying will affect buyers and sellers across the mobile landscape

Here are some of the key developments in the mobile ad ecosystem:

In full, the report:

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UK retailer offers 7-inch tablet with speedy Tegra 4 chip for £180

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/11/06/advent-currys-pc-world-dixons-tegra-note-advent-vega-stylus/

Image

Hey, do you remember Advent? It turns out that the Dixons-owned brand has slapped its logo all over NVIDIA's Tegra Note reference design tablet in preparation for the holidays. Packing a 7-inch 1,280 x 800 display, the Advent Vega Tegra Note comes with a Tegra 4 paired with 1GB RAM, 16GB storage and Jelly Bean. 'Round back, you'll find a 5-megapixel primary camera and a 2-megapixel webcam up front, and there's micro-USB, micro-HDMI-out, Bluetooth 4.0 and 802.11 b/g/n WiFi finishing off the spec list. As with the original, the slate comes with a stylus, which NVIDIA promises will be incredibly responsive thanks to its DirectStylus know-how. Pre-orders begin tomorrow, and the hardware will start hitting doorstops on November 15 for the rather reasonable sum of £180.

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Source: Advent Vega (PC World)

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Swype 1.6 for Android adds mini keyboards for big screens

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/11/06/swype-1-6-for-android/

Swype 16 brings continuous dictation, mini keyboards for big screens

Nuance isn't letting SwiftKey's customizable keyboard layouts go unanswered. The company has just launched Swype 1.6, a big update to its Android add-on that provides a similar amount of control. Users with giant phones can choose separate mini keyboards for both landscape and portrait views, and exacting typists can either fine-tune the dimensions or pick a secondary language. There's also a pair of upgrades for those who don't like to type at all -- Swype now offers both continuous dictation as well as support for voice recognition in a different language than the keyboard. Whatever your input preferences, you can buy a fresh copy of Swype 1.6 for $4 from either Google Play or the Amazon Appstore.

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Source: Google Play

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Tuesday, November 05, 2013

I Bought an Apartment Just to Rent It Out on Airbnb

Source: http://gizmodo.com/i-bought-an-apartment-just-to-rent-it-out-on-airbnb-1458666661

I Bought an Apartment Just to Rent It Out on Airbnb

In 2012 I bought an apartment specifically to rent out on airbnb. I've been managing it remotely for the past year. This post includes everything I learned as well as some revenue numbers.

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This Quadcopter Turns Into a Self-Balancing Rolling Wheel

Source: http://gizmodo.com/this-quadcopter-turns-into-a-self-balancing-rolling-whe-1458696855

This Quadcopter Turns Into a Self-Balancing Rolling Wheel

Researchers at the University of Tokyo have managed to teach a quadcopter some impressive new tricks that vastly expand its capabilities past flying. Their Multi-field Universal Wheel for Air-land Vehicle—or MUWA for short—features variable pitch propellers so the thrust can be directed in opposite directions, allowing it to balance on edge like an autonomous bike wheel.

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Bubl's 360-degree camera records Street View-like spherical footage (video)

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/11/05/bublcam-360-degree-camera/

Bublcam is a simple, 360degree spherical camera with livestreaming video

Many of the 360-degree cameras on the market will only shoot footage on a horizontal plane, which isn't very helpful if a subject sails overhead. Bubl's upcoming, baseball-sized Bublcam should provide a more complete view of the world. The gadget's four cameras are arranged in a tetrahedral layout that captures seamless, spherical images; software for Android, iOS and PCs lets viewers pan anywhere in the shot, much like they would with Google's Street View. It's also relatively internet-savvy thanks to its built-in WiFi, which lets owners both stream to a nearby device and upload their recordings to Dropbox, Google Drive and Younity. Bubl is crowdfunding the project, with pledges starting at $399 CAD ($383 US plus shipping) for those who want a Bublcam to call their own. Should the company reach its $100,000 goal, backers should get their extra-immersive cameras beginning in May. Check out a demo of the playback software after the break.

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Source: Kickstarter, Bubl

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Good news, fitness freaks: Nike's Move app, which brings Fuelband functionality to the iPhone 5s usi

Source: http://gizmodo.com/good-news-fitness-freaks-nikes-move-app-which-brings-1458662128

Good news, fitness freaks: Nike's Move app, which brings Fuelband functionality to the iPhone 5s using its M7 motion-sensing co-processor, is now available in the App Store.

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Square Enix's streaming service uses virtual supercomputers to kill game latency

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/11/04/square-enix-project-flare/

Square Enix introduces Project FLARE, promises to power up cloud gaming

Streaming game services are nothing new, but Square Enix thinks they need a fix. Today, the company behind Final Fantasy and Deus Ex: Human Revolution (seen above) announced a new cloud gaming platform that it claims kills game latency dead. It's called Project FLARE, which it describes as a "technological breakthrough in cloud game architecture." It claims to harness the power of "virtual supercomputers" to offer powerful performance and incredible "Hollywood-level" animation that current streaming services just can't handle. Though Project FLARE is just exiting its R&D stage, Square Enix has already engaged Ubisoft as an early partner. It's currently shopping its technology around to other developers, and hopes to bring games to beta in about two years.

Jacob Navok, Square Enix's director of business development, tells us the secret sauce behind Project FLARE is a technology that lets them run CPUs and GPUs in separate servers to turn up the graphic potential and efficiency of any game. In a hotel room in San Francisco, the company showed several demonstrations of this, such as incorporating video streams into Final Fantasy gameplay, real-time camera switching in Agni's Philosophy and the ability to dramatically increase the number of objects on screen in Deus Ex without affecting the game's frame rate. Since developers can now fill the screen with lots of items, Navok hopes this will result in far more realistic battle and crowd scenes in the future.

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Source: Project Flare

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Nikon's $2,750 Df DSLR lets you shoot full-frame digital images like it's 1959 (hands-on)

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/11/04/nikon-df-camera/

Nikon's $2,750 Df DSLR lets you shoot fullframe digital images like it's 1959 handson

Reincarnation is the new innovation -- the camera industry's latest salute to days gone by comes compliments of Nikon. The 16.2-megapixel Df blends a full-frame sensor and modern capabilities with a "timeless design." It may look like something you just dug out of your great grandfather's secret chest in the attic, but people on the other end of your images will assume those snappy shots are the product of a serious professional tool. And they'd be right -- even if pros prefer something more modern for their day jobs, the Df stands up extremely well on paper. In fact, it contains the same incredible sensor found on the flagship D4, along with the same level of weather proofing you'd get with the D800 -- all wrapped in a 710-gram (1.56-pound) body that feels great and is the lightest in Nikon's full-frame range.

Other key specs also stand up to scrutiny: the Df has an EXPEED 3 processor, a 204,800 top ISO, 39 AF points, a 2,016-pixel 3D matrix metering system and 5.5 fps burst shooting. In addition to the 3.2-inch, 921k-dot LCD, you can also frame shots using the pro-grade, glass pentaprism viewfinder, which has virtually 100 percent coverage and also lets you remove the visible AF points when shooting in manual focus -- something a lot of photographers will do if they're using very old lenses. Speaking of which, the Df is compatible with not only current AF, AF-S, DX and AF-D lenses, but Ai and non-Ai Nikkor glass going all the way back to 1959, the year in which the manufacturer introduced its first F-series SLR. This compatibility comes with enhanced functionality courtesy of a new metering coupling lever on the bayonet mount.

You also get a full array of dedicated dials, including EV, shutter speed and ISO, all of which have the same tactile gravitas you'd get on something like the 30-year-old Nikon F3. Additionally, Nikon is announcing a special edition 50mm f/1.8 lens, which is set to retail for $3,000 in a kit with the camera or $280 on its own. The Df will also be available individually in the US and ships later this month for $2,750.%Gallery-slideshow102871%%Gallery-slideshow103026%

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Monday, November 04, 2013

Get $200 at Target with any iPad Trade-In, Even A First Gen Model

Source: http://lifehacker.com/get-200-at-target-with-any-ipad-trade-in-even-a-first-1458268904/@Shane_Roberts

Get $200 at Target with any iPad Trade-In, Even A First Gen Model

If you've been thinking of upgrading up a new iPad Air, or if your old iPad is just gathering dust, Target is offering a rare opportunity to get decent trade-in value from your old model.

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This morphing table can create a virtual version of you in realtime

Source: http://sploid.gizmodo.com/this-morphing-table-can-create-a-virtual-version-of-you-1458375473/@barrett

This morphing table can create a virtual version of you in realtime

Keiichi Matsuda is excited about this invention and I can't blame him: A solid table that reproduces a virtual version of anything that you put under its sensors—in realtime. You can see how it reproduces the hands moving in the clip above, but there's more:

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