Monday, June 16, 2014

Crowd-control drones reveal the technology's dark side

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2014/06/16/desert-wolf-skunk-mine-strike-suppression-drone/

The treatment of South African miners has been a troublesome issue ever since black laborers were forced into the mines in 1894. It's led to a series of bloody strikes and protests, starting in 1946 and continuing through apartheid right up until today. A new type of crowd suppression drone from a local defense contractor isn't going to help matters, especially given the fact that the country is in the grip of a 21-week miners' strike in which some protestors have already been killed. The Skunk, built by Desert Wolf, is designed to "control unruly crowds without endangering the lives of security staff," and is reportedly already being adopted by mine owners.

Equipped with a 4,000-strong clip and four paintball gun barrels, the Skunk can fire up to 80 projectiles in a single second. It can carry dye markers, pepper spray bullets or even solid plastic balls, which somewhat stretches the definition of "non lethal." The hardware also carries strobe lights and on-board speakers to disorientate and warn the crowd, as well as a FLIR thermal camera for night vision operations. According to defenceWeb, unnamed mine operators have already placed orders for 25 Skunks, which could be deployed as early as next month. Good luck, then, to anyone trying to protest for safer working conditions beyond that date.

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Via: PrivacySOS

Source: defenceWeb, Desert Wolf

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drag2share: Samsung hints that its next Galaxy Note phone will have a quad HD display

source: http://www.engadget.com/2014/06/16/samsung-hints-at-quad-hd-galaxy-note/?utm_source=Feed_Classic_Full&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Engadget&?ncid=rss_full

Samsung Galaxy Note 3 checking out YouTube

It's no surprise that Samsung would make a new Galaxy Note smartphone given the series' very healthy sales, but just how is the company going to improve on the design of the Note 3? By giving it a quad HD screen, apparently. The company has posted a web profile for an unannounced SM-N910A (the Note 3 for AT&T is the SM-N900A) that includes a 2,560 x 1,440 display, hinting that the future Galaxy Note will pack visuals roughly as sharp as LG's G3. It also backs what we've heard about Oculus VR getting greater-than-1080p OLED screens from the Korean tech firm. There aren't any other big clues in the profile, but they come on the heels of import data that suggests the next Note will maintain the same 5.7-inch screen size as its predecessor -- Samsung may be resisting the urge to produce a truly gigantic phone like the G Pro 2 or Lumia 1520.

As for what's behind that new panel? That's tougher to prove. SamMobile claims that the new Note will be powered by a speedier Snapdragon 805 or Exynos 5433 processor (depending on the market) and ship with a newly stabilized 16-megapixel camera. Those make sense when Galaxy Notes are historically more powerful than the Galaxy S models they follow, but nothing's set in concrete -- we wouldn't rule out a surprise or two. If the profile is accurate, though, fans of Samsung's larger handsets have at least a visual upgrade to look forward to this year.

Samsung SM-N910A web profile

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These Wireless Earbuds Charge While They're in Your Pocket

Source: http://gizmodo.com/these-wireless-earbuds-charge-while-theyre-in-your-pock-1591345231

These Wireless Earbuds Charge While They're in Your Pocket

These are perhaps the headphones of the future: earbuds which use Bluetooth to beam audio to your ears, with small rechargeable batteries to eliminate cables, in perhaps the smallest package of its type we've seen.

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This Nanotube Sponge Can Suck Up Water Straight From The Air

Source: http://gizmodo.com/this-nanotube-sponge-can-absorb-water-straight-from-the-1591142624

This Nanotube Sponge Can Suck Up Water Straight From The Air

A team of researchers has found inspiration in an unlikely critter: the humble Namib Desert beetle, a south African species that gathers water molecules straight from the air. The beetle does this by developing a pattern of water-attracting and repelling molecules on its wings and trapping water molecules in these peaks and troughs.

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Fly Around The World With This Map of Drone-Recorded Videos

Source: http://gizmodo.com/fly-around-the-world-with-this-map-of-drone-recorded-vi-1591162763

Fly Around The World With This Map of Drone-Recorded Videos

Ever wish you could pick a place on the planet and instantly have a drone's-eye view? Well, now you can.

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Autonomous camera drone lets you shoot your own action scenes

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2014/06/15/hexoplus-autonomous-camera-drone/

Hexo+ captures an extreeeeeeme biker

If you want to record a bike ride or some other adventure by yourself, you typically have to wear an action camera. Going that route is fine for a first-person view, but what if you want some more dramatic shots? That's where Hexoplus' crowdfunded Hexo+ camera drone comes into play. The robotic hexacopter captures aerial footage of your expeditions simply by detecting where you are (or rather, where your phone is) and following along -- you only have to set a preferred distance. It's fast (43MPH) and stabilized, too, so it should keep up even if you're racing across hilly terrain.

Should you like the idea of starring in your own sports movie, you'll need to pledge at least $499 if you want a Hexo+ and already have a GoPro camera on hand; $699 will get you both the craft and a camera. That's a lot of money just to get yourself in the frame, but it might be worthwhile if it gives you the production quality you usually only see from a big studio. You'd better hope that the FAA gets its drone rules in order before Hexoplus' planned May 2015 ship date, though. After all, you don't want to get into a legal battle over your airborne magnum opus.

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Source: Hexoplus, Kickstarter

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Sunday, June 15, 2014

Hands On With Meta's Amazing 3-D Glasses, Which Are Poised To Take The World By Storm

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/meta-3-d-glasses-2014-6

Meta 1 prototype

Tucked away in the hills of Portola Vally, California, overlooking grass and trees and even some deer, you'll find the headquarters of Meta, which has been working on augmented reality glasses that they hope will change the future. And the world. 

The glasses aren't just for entertainment, and they're not just a smartphone for your face. This is a whole other segment of computing that enhances how you interact with the world around you.

A team of fewer than 50 people lives in a huge rented mansion on a 20-acre estate overlooking the wilderness west of Silicon Valley. It's something out of a movie, with a pool, a tennis court, and pictures of "Iron Man" Tony Stark adorning the walls. 

That's because the glasses that Meta is developing resemble something from an "Iron Man" movie. Look through the lenses, and physical objects are rendered virtually. Then, whatever you're looking at — be it a phone or a document or even a keyboard — can be all manipulated by your hands. 

"The future that we're envisioning has to do not only with showing awesome-looking holograms, but it has to do with collaborating and it has to do with eye contact," Meta CEO Meron Gribetz told me on a sunny Friday afternoon. "This is the first computer ever to allow you and I to make eye contact while we are looking at digital information at the same time. And we see it from different perspectives."

Meta has several experts on its team, including Professor Steve Mann, the inventor of wearable computing. Meta has also hired Jayse Hansen, the designer behind Tony Stark's holographic interfaces in the first and third "Iron Man" movies, to create a user interface that's basically the same as in the films.

The Meta 1 glasses have been shipping out to developers for $667. The MetaPro glasses, for consumers, however, will take things a step further, offering more-functional and better-! looking frames. They'll arrive in the fall for around $3,650. But, Gribetz assured me, that price tag will be coming down "soon" for regular customers. 

"This is all going to be very cheap in the future," Gribetz said. 

You can preorder a pair, or sign up for a development kit, on their website.

The possibilities for such glasses are endless, whether it be playing games on your living room floor or sculpting a vase and sending it to a 3-D printer. You can check out videos on YouTube showing you what the glasses are capable of. And companies like Salesforce are already signed on to use the glasses for upcoming products.

meta chess

Life At Meta

I went to the Meta campus to meet the team and try out a pair of the Meta glasses. 

Mattan Kitchales, head of marketing and PR, met me at the door, wearing sunglasses and looking as relaxed as anyone who lives on a 20-acre beautiful estate. "Working and living here is like a dream come true," he told me. 

He gave me a brief tour of the house, which runs on the same principle as a kibbutz: everyone lives together, makes food together, washes dishes together, and works together.

Kitchales met Gribetz in the Israel Defense Forces, where Gribetz was in an elite technological unit, more than 10 years ago. The two were roommates, as well, and he told me that Gribetz has been envisioning and talking about virtual reality and computers since then.

Take a tour of the Meta campus>>

After ! the mili tary, Gribetz studied computer science and neuroscience at Columbia University, which led to thoughts about computers helping people with visual impairments. Which eventually led to the Meta glasses.

After a few minutes talking with Kitchales, Gribetz came out to the backyard to meet me, wearing shorts and a blue V-neck. He looks like he could be Christian Slater's younger brother.

Gribetz was visibly excited to show me the rest of the house, and to give me a demo of the glasses. And after trying them out, it's easy to see why he was so happy. 

What They're Like

The glasses themselves are pretty comfortable, as far as wearing a computer on your face goes. They even come with prescription inserts for people with bad eyesight. 

They have two 1,280x720-pixel LCD displays, each with a 40-degree field of view. They have two RGB cameras; surround sound; a 3-D depth sensor; and a nine-axis integrated motion unit with accelerometer, gyroscope, and compass.

All those tech specs basically mean that when you're wearing the glasses, it's hard to remember that you're not looking at the real world. The glasses look like a pair of aviators, but with a wire that runs to the Meta's computer. And you can see through them, so you're not completely shut out from the rest of the world.

It's more than just two screens in front of your face. 

Meta Spaceglasses demo

During my demo, I blew up asteroids with my fingers. I typed on a keyboard. I even spun a car around with my hands, allowing me to look at it from different angles. I picked up objects and moved them around.

There's a small learning curve: it's a little bit weird touching things that aren't even there. You're supposed to move your fingers and hand exactly where your brain is telling you to go. But your brain is also telling you that there's nothing re! ally the re. 

After a minute, my brain and eyes caught up to each other, and I was able to move things around with relative ease. To zoom in on something, you pull it toward your face, just like you would in the real world. 

Graphics were high resolution. I could read text. I could watch a television screen. Playing "Minecraft" while wearing a pair of the glasses would be a possible use case. "It'll be like crack for kids," Gribetz joked, and I think he's right. 

The coolest part was when someone else put their hand in my field of view. I could see their hand rendered virtually in front of my face, grabbing the object I was working on; it was like they were entering my virtual world. 

The Other Guys

Meron Gribetz

Until recently, the glasses had been called Google Glass killers. But they're not really comparable. And they don't compete with Oculus Rift, either. 

Gribetz explained that there are three categories of wearable computing. The first is the "notification machine," which is just giving you popups and tidbits of information. 

"Google is the information king, and they're going to win that category. And I wish them all the luck in the world," Gribetz said. 

The second is the "'Matrix' machine," which transports you to a different reality. "The Oculus is going to be the best way to consume what I call 'old-world' movies and games in the next 10 years. And Oculus is going to win in that environment," Gribetz explained.

But the new ge! neration of virtual reality — which he calls the "natural machine" — will be collaborative and more like the real world, Gribetz says. And that's where the Meta glasses come in.

"What Meta's about, fundamentally, underneath all the layers of 'coolness,' is bringing people together and making digital information the adhesive between people, instead of the separator," Gribetz said.

Theoretically, the Meta glasses can incorporate the "information machine" and the "'Matrix' machine," making for an all-in-one device that you already know how to use.

"It's an evolution of the iPad, which is an evolution of how we manipulate things in the real world," Gribetz said. "People get it. Touch the photograph, and it moves around on the table. Touch a photograph on the iPad, and it moves around on the iPad. It's a natural progression."

Meta demo

The Future

In a world where we spend so much time looking at our smartphones, laptops, tablets, or TV screens, there's not much room for collaboration.

But with the Meta glasses, other people will be able to see what you're working on. You won't just be waving your arms in front of you like a spaz — other people in the room will be able to see that you're manipulating a virtual document or playing a game or even working on a 3-D model. 

In Gribetz's world, when you walk into a coffee shop, you won't see a bunch of heads looking down at computer screens. Instead you'll see people gazing at their virtual workspaces. If someone is looking at pictures of their trip to Peru, you'll be able to see them swiping through the pictures. He hopes it will spark a conversation.

"They're not just moving their hands; they're holding holograms, and other people can see you doing that," Gribetz said. "I envision a future where people are less worried about sharing information, and are more focused on meetin! g new pe ople using the digital information."

meta virtualBut it goes even further. While wearing the glasses, you see panels of information. Those panels are connected to the internet, and you can scroll through them like you can on a browser. 

"If you'd like, you could have more than one 'iPad,' you could have an infinite number of iPads kind of stuck in contextual places in the real world," Gribetz said. "So when you're going out of the house, you could have a shopping list stuck to your door, for example. Your spouse could leave you a note on the fridge. You could start sticking these widgets of contextual information all over your environment."

It's like combining all of your devices — smartphone, computer, portable laptop, tablet, game console — into one wearable device. "The office place of the future is going to be defined by Meta's technology," Gribetz assured me.

The Meta team works under the philosophy, called "natural computing," which means computing should only emulate what your brain does without it. "We don't want to clutter people's lives with a bunch of crap," Gribetz said. "The best success for us to know when you want and when you don't want to stuff, because they're equally important."

That means no display ads will pop up while you're wearing the glasses.

Instead the glasses will be an extension of the real world. An extension of what you do anyway with all your gadgets, and how others view you while you're using those devices. 

"There's a giant movement that's emerging on the internet of people who are becoming anti-iPhone and anti-technology," Gribetz said. "So when you're with a group of friends, you'll have that moment where everyone is staring down at their phones. And there's no talking anymore between your buddies. It's kind of frustrating to a lot of people. And I think computing doesn't hav! e to be like that."

SEE ALSO: Take a tour of Meta, the company that wants the world to be like an 'Iron Man' movie

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Saturday, June 14, 2014

drag2share: How Three 20-Somethings Built Elite Daily, A Site With 40 Million Readers, With $60,000

source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/businessinsider/~3/QSvawqkLAmo/elite-daily-raises-15-million-and-has-40-million-uniques-2014-6

Elite Daily Office

Elite Daily, a news website with 55 employees and 40 million monthly uniques, just raised a $1.5 million convertible note (a type of debt) from Greycroft, Vast Ventures, Red Sea Ventures, SocialStarts, and angel investors.

The funding is the first outside capital the startup has ever raised. Three founders, who are all younger than 30, built a media property that rivals traffic of sites such as Upworthy, Wall Street Journal and even Business Insider in just two years on a bootstrapped budget.

While undergrads at Pace University, David Arabov, 23, and Jonathan Francis, 28, pooled together $60,000 with another friend, Gerard Adams. None of them had media or technology experience, but they had a lofty ambition to create The Huffington Post for millennials.

"We were supposed to go to law school, we took the LSATS and everything," CEO David Arabov told Business Insider in an interview. "But we didn't think traditional media had done a great job of creating content online, and newer publications were pretty niche."

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Aussie Defender Makes An Incredible Save As A Ball Nearly Passes The Goal-Line

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/goal-line-technology-chile-australia-2014-6

After years of allowing goals that never actually crossed the line, FIFA finally decided to add goal-line technology to the 2014 World Cup and in the fourth game, it was put to great use. 

In the second half of the Chile-Australia game, Aussie Alex Wilkenson cleared the ball of the goal just in time when a Chilean player was able to get it by the goalie:

australia goal line technology

The ball came so close though, that a quick look could have called this a goal. The refs were able to use the new goal-line technology however, to prove that Wilkenson made an incredible save. Pretty cool:

goal line technology

 

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Today, Bitcoin's Doomsday Scenario Arrived

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/today-bitcoins-doomsday-scenario-arrived-2014-6

There is only way to hack the entire Bitcoin network, which has continued to hum along in the face of numerous Bitcoin business failures.

It involves a series of group of Bitcoin miners taking control of 51% of the Bitcoin's processing power, thus giving them the power to confirm transactions that don't exist. Miners are simply computers that unscramble the encrypted series of numbers attached to every Bitcoin transaction. There is profit in numbers, and many miners have formed large pools to extract the maximum amount of profit for their work. 

As a completely unregulated global currency made out of computer code, the only thing that has prevented the 51% threshold from being reached has been a form of mutually assured destruction: As soon as the 51% figure is reached, the price of Bitcoin will tank, leaving the digital junta little time to make much of a profit.

Today, mining pool GHash's share of the Bitcoin network ticked 51%:

51% bitcoin

Prices briefly sank 2% as word spread that the 51% level had been achieved. The crisis was momentarily resolved after a member of GHash agreed to remove some of its resources from the pool.

But there is now debate raging in Bitcoin world about what to do next. One commentator who wished to remain anonymous told BI, "This is not Bitcoin anymore, it's centralized GHashcoin....They are killing what is a big part of Bitcoins value."

Two Cornell computer scientists posted a note to HackingDistributed confirming that, indeed, this is a doomsday scenario:

Is this really Armageddon? Yes, it is. GHash is in a position to exercise complete control over which transactions appear on the blockchain and which miners! reap mi ning rewards. They could keep 100% of the mining profits to themselves if they so chose. Bitcoin is currently an expensive distributed database under the control of a single entity, albeit one whose maintenance requires constantly burning energy -- worst of all worlds. 

Jeff Garzik, one of Bitcoin's core developers, was slightly more sanguine, Tweeting that the total share of processing power owned mattered less than the leadership at the top of that share.

The two Cornell researchers, Ittay Eyal, and Emin Gün Sirer, propose creating a "hard fork" on the Bitcoin network, a set-aside part of Bitcoin's transaction ledger that would sacrifice some  Bitcoin attributes in the name of preventing another similar attack. Others have proposed creating a peer-to-peer network of mining nodes which, instead of being able to access the entire blockchain, only target specified branches. 

There is a third way, the Eyal and Sirer say, which seems to describe the current situation:

...We can carry on as if nothing of importance happened. GHash will be on their best behavior for the next few weeks, and Bitcoin will limp along. What will bring the actual demise of Bitcoin is the subject of a future blog post, but this is by no means the end.

But it doesn't look good. 

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Friday, June 13, 2014

Firefox OS apps run like native apps on Android

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2014/06/13/firefox-os-apps-run-on-android/

The beauty of apps written for Firefox OS is that they're basically just web apps -- they're built primarily on Java Script and HTML5. That means if you can run the app on Mozilla's mobile operating system, you can run them in its browser too. In fact, if you install Firefox 29 on Android, you can run so-called Open Web Apps (OWA) on your Google-powered phone. Not only that, but they're not confined to the browser. Apps installed from the Firefox OS Marketplace are treated just like native apps. They get their own icon in the launcher and home screen, can be uninstalled from the menu and run without the usual browser UI clutter (such as an address bar or back button). Of course, the performance probably won't match truly native apps, and most won't abide by Android's interface conventions. Still, there are some developers who might enjoy the idea of building an app once and running it across all platforms.

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Via: Android Community

Source: Mozilla

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New littleBits modules make the Synth Kit more powerful and versatile

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2014/06/13/littlebits-midi-cv-usb/

Click 'em together, make some noise. Littlebits are like Lego for music nerds (like us). That's fun and all, but currently, once you've built your mini-modular synth creation, there isn't really much else you can do with it. That won't be the case for much longer though, as three new modules are coming along to spice things up.

We are raising the ceiling of complexity of what you can do with littleBits, adding wireless control, programmability, and now audio control to allow you to make sophisticated electronics in a fraction of the time and cost, allowing for whole new experiences. -- Ayah Bdeir (Founder, littleBits)

A new MIDI block lets you hook into music making software like Ableton or Logic, while the CV block means you can connect your littleBits to older/analog gear. If you just want to play with sound, a USB I/O module will let you pipe the littleBits' audio directly into your PC. No word on price, but expect to see them come to market in time for the (now noisier) holidays.

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Source: littleBits

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Architects Turned A Tiny 425-Square-Foot Loft Into A Dream Home

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/425-square-feet-manhattan-micro-loft-2014-6

Untitled 1

New York City is chock-full of laughably small, awkwardly shaped apartments. Which is why it takes a good imagination to not only make them livable, but actually desirable.

The designers at Specht Harpman Architects recently worked wonders on a 425-square-foot loft on the Upper West Side.

The space, at the top of a six-story brownstone, has 25 feet of vertical space and even access to a rooftop  giving them plenty to work with.

Check out the photos below to see the new micro-loft.

This was the space before. It was run down, with exposed brick walls and dated paint.Manhattan Micro Loft

For such a small space, it didn't have much room for storage.Manhattan Micro Loft The architects' solution was to create multi-level “living platforms" in order to squeeze everything in, but still make it feel open.Manhattan Micro Loft One of their goals was to create a flowing interior "that dissolves the notion of distinct 'rooms.'"Manhattan Micro Loft A cantilevered bed on steel beams floats over the main living space on the third floor.Manhattan Micro Loft And the tiny bathroom is tucked beneath the stairs.Manhattan Micro Loft Which now have a ton of storage space. They feature built-in drawers and shelves, similar to Japanese kaidan dansu.  Manhattan Micro LoftThe roof garden at the top allows light to radiate throughout the apartment. Manhattan Micro Loft Pretty impressive. It's hard to tell that this was still the same apartment.Manhattan Micro Loft Compare it again to the new space:Micro Loft Rendering

Job well done. 

SEE ALSO: The 10 Most Expensive Homes For Sale In New York City

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