Thursday, June 19, 2014

Ambient glasses put smartphone notifications right in front of your eyes

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2014/06/19/ambient-glasses-notification-lights/

Still not sold on smartwatches, but want to know what's going on with your phone without taking it out of your pocket? Maybe Matilde's Fun-iki glasses, spotted at CNET Japan's Live 2014 event, will do the trick. Connecting to smartphones through WiFi, a trio of LEDs above each lens will glow (or pulse) when there's a notification, or simply to add a little, er, color to your complexion. The lights cycle through various shades of red, green and blue, and you're able to assign specific colors to specific notifications: these frames aren't limited to just phone calls and email pings and adding further third-party apps' notifications is apparently easy.

There's speakers within the arms, while it charges through the micro-USB port on the left side -- we're told it'll typically blink and glow for around two days. It's a pretty simple pair of glasses: notifications are pretty much it -- there's no interactive component or camera within the hardware itself, but you can setup the notifications, color cycles and pulse rates through a companion app. There's also three different light-up modes: 'disco' and 'party' make the LEDs go a little crazy (just think of the Tinder applications), while 'relax' mode takes gentler hues and fades them in and out. Oh and there's a morse code mode, where you can flash out a specified message. Because anachronisms.

The company says that it expects them to go on sale later this year, for a pricey 15,000 yen (around $147). Interestingly, the initial product could open up different styles: there's not much stopping Matilde adding prescription lenses, or even adding some water protection. (It's working with Paris Miki, an established Japanese glasses-maker, on the project). The company said that work is already underway on sports activity apps for the hardware. Given the squash goggle styling of the hardware, we reckon there's some potential there.

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The Smartphone Even The NSA May Have Trouble Hacking Is Coming Soon

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/silent-circle-blackphone-2014-6

silent circle phone

If you're worried about the NSA listening in on your smartphone, Silent Circle's "Blackphone" may be the last best hope.

First announced in January, the Android-based phone goes on sale before the start of July for $629, according to NBC News.

While the price is a bit hefty, it comes with impressive features, including fully encrypted voice, text, and video calls, and a virtual private network that anonymizes web surfing — all built on a custom version of Android.

Demand for such a device certainly ramped up after Edward Snowden began leaking top-secret documents detailing NSA surveillance programs, but Silent Circle had been working on the device long before.

"We did this because there was a problem that was not being solved: secure communications," CEO Mike Janke, a former Navy SEAL, told AFP in January.

With Janke leading the company, Silent Circle's team includes a number of cryptographic experts. including Phil Zimmermann, the creator of the widely-used PGP (Pretty Good Privacy) standard.

The company has taken great pains to ensure it could not give up user data, even if compelled to by a government. While many U.S. companies receive controversial national security letters forcing them to share customer info, Silent Circle is incorporated in Switzerland and has Swiss data centers.

But the main thing that sets the security of the phone apart is that the encryption itself resides only on the handset. While encrypted data passes through the company's servers, the individual keys necessary to unlock and read the data are only on the phones.

Basically, if Silent Circle was forced to hand over data, all they could give up is a bunch of encrypted gibberish.

"There is no such thing as a completely secure phone," Janke told AFP. "! Nothing is going to protect you from your own behavior. But out of the box, this phone does a lot of things to protect your privacy."

Silent Circle isn't the only company to come up with such a device. Boeing unveiled their own version of a "black" phone in February that had a "self-destruct" feature.

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Facebook Just Fired A Huge Shot At Cisco (FB, CSCO)

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/facebook-just-fired-a-huge-shot-at-cisco-2014-6

Facebook Wedge switch

Facebook has announced a new product that should have Cisco shaking in its boots (and we're not talking about its Snapchat-killer Slingshot).

On Wednesday, Facebook introduced Wedge, making good on its promise from last year to push into the $23 billion Ethernet switch market, currently dominated by Cisco.

Wedge is part of the Open Compute Project (OCP), one of the most important tech projects Facebook has ever created. OCP began in 2012 as a radically new way to build and buy computer hardware. It creates free and "open source" designs where anyone can contribute to the designs and use them for free, ordering them from a contract manufacturer.

The hardware it designs ranges from computer servers to hard drives to the racks that hold them all. While Facebook still leads the project, it has grown into an industry phenom. In 2013, Facebook saved "over $1 billion" by using the hardware invented by CEO Mark Zuckerberg.

And a year ago, OCP announced plans to build a network switch. And not just any network switch, but one designed as a software-defined networking (SDN) device. SDN is a radically new way to build networks that threatens Cisco, or at least Cisco's 60+% profit margins.

SDN takes the fancy features baked into network equipment – things like security, mana! gement&n bsp;– and puts them into software, turning the hardware into something that dumbly moves bits of information around. The hardware switch becomes easier to move around and manage, and far less expensive, all things that work better with today's cloud-computing environments.

Cisco has already recently released its own SDN product line. These products encourage customers to keep buying Cisco's high-performance but expensive gear by including features that will only work with said Cisco's products. No doubt a lot of enterprises will want that.

But Facebook's switch is a threat for a lot of reasons. For one, Facebook is already testing it in its own data centers, one of the most demanding environments around, it said.

For another, like we mentioned, it's "open source." Cisco gear is somewhat like Apple's gear. Cisco controls and keeps secret every part of it from the operating system to the custom processors.

The Wedge is different. Everything from the software to the choice of processor (Intel, AMD, or ARM), is "open source" meaning others can see and use or modify the design.

As Facebook's  Yuval Bachar and Adam Simpkins explain in a Facebook post about it

Traditional network switches often use fixed hardware configurations and non-standard control interfaces, limiting the capabilities of the device and complicating deployments. ... 

Unlike with traditional closed-hardware switches, with “Wedge” anyone can modify or replace any of the components in ! our desi gn to better meet their needs.

OCP has already attracted some big players beyond Facebook, too, including Microsoft, Intel, Goldman Sachs, Rackspace, and many others. 

Facebook Najam Ahmad.JPGIt's worth noting that enterprises cannot buy this switch from Facebook. They would have to order it from a custom manufacturer, just like all other OCP designs.

But if this switch does well for Facebook, enterprises will be encouraged to try SDN.

And up-and-coming competitors to Cisco, like Arista and Big Switch (an SDN startup), are involved in OCP and are standing by to cash in.

Here's a diagram of the Wedge shared by Facebook:

 

 

 

SEE ALSO: The hardware Facebook invented is radically changing the $150 billion enterprise market

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Wednesday, June 18, 2014

Fleksy brings a predictive messaging app to the Gear 2 smartwatch

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2014/06/18/fleksy-messenger-app-gear-2-tizen/

Fleksy's already brought its intuitive touch keyboard to the Galaxy Gear, but now Samsung's smartwatches all run Tizen, it needed an upgrade to operate on the phone maker's own OS. That's exactly what the company has done with the release of a new messaging app for the Gear 2 smartwatch, which delivers a diminutive yet fully-featured predictive keyboard capable of accessing your SMS conversations and contacts. As a dedicated messaging app, it also handles all of the heavy lifting, letting you send and receive messages directly from your wrist. In order to operate, the app syncs with your Samsung smartphone, which Fleksy says "integrates all information from both devices." There's no word on whether you'll be able to load Fleksy Messenger on the original Gear, but it is now available as a free download from Samsung Apps. Hopefully an enterprising developer will port it over.

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Scientists use lasers to understand how water stays liquid below its freezing point

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2014/06/18/scientists-superchilled-water/

We only remember a few things from science 101, but we're reasonably certain that water boils at 212 degrees (Fahrenheit) and freezes at 32. Scientists at Stanford's SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, armed with a Linac Coherent Light Source X-Ray Laser, however, have shown us otherwise. Should you be armed with such a device, the normal rules of physics no longer apply, and -- for the first time -- it becomes possible to observe water right down to its molecular level, even while it is supercooled as a liquid to minus 52 degrees Fahrenheit.

Although supercooling water has long been possible, it's been mostly impossible to observe and understand what happens during this process. One of the key things that the SLAC team has discovered, by using the X-Ray laser, is that water is able to, for want of a better word, "sweat." As they sent chilled droplets down a vacuum chamber into the eye of the laser, they observed that some droplets rapidly evaporated, allowing the rest of the water to enter its supercooled state. What's the point in all of this? The atmosphere absorbs different levels of solar radiation depending on if the water is in a crystalline or liquid state. Being able to understand how much of each is floating around the earth at any one time is key to being able to predict levels of climate change -- and, hopefully, finding a way to prevent it.

[Image credit: Greg Stewart / SLAC]

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Amazon's Firefly recognizes everything you see and hear, then lets you buy it

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2014/06/18/amazon/

So yes, Amazon's phone is a real thing... and it's turning out to be quite a sales tool, too. Jeff Bezos just pulled back the curtain on the device's Firefly feature, which scans music, art and even products you have laying around in the real world. Why? So you buy can it all from Amazon, of course.

Here's how it works: you'll be able to use the phone's Firefly app (which you can invoke with a dedicated button) to snap images of DVDs, books, QR codes, CDs, bar codes, and more. From there, the app chews on that data to recognizes it and finds them in its massive database. Music and video are no match for Firefly either, as the app can listen in on content of both types -- you'll get a more detailed view, along with the ability to buy that stuff directly from Amazon (or, you know, play it through iHeartRadio).

The initial impression Firefly gave off made it seem like an app tailor-made to drive more sales on Amazon, but there's a little more to it than that. With the ability to recognize street addresses and phone numbers, Amazon wants to make Firefly a part of your everyday life -- Bezos probably doesn't want you to scribble down another address ever again. And here's the really big bit: Amazon is making a Firefly SDK available to developers, so they can bake those audio, visual, and text recognition smarts into their own apps. Want to add your lunch to MyFitnessPal? Snap a photo of it, and let Firefly do all the heavy lifting in the backend; that corresponding nutritional data should be where it should before long.

Amazon's Fire Phone. Will you get one?

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BlackBerry is getting Amazon's catalog of 200,000 Android apps

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2014/06/18/blackberry-gets-amazon-appstore-library/

BlackBerry Z10

BlackBerry users haven't exactly had an abundance of apps to choose from lately, due in no small part to the once-legendary phone maker's dwindling market share. However, the company just reached an app library deal with Amazon that could give you a reason to hang on to that Q10 or Z30. When BlackBerry 10.3 launches in the fall, it will have access to the Amazon Appstore's catalog of 200,000-plus Android apps -- you'll have little trouble finding Minecraft, Netflix and other big-name titles.

BlackBerry's own app library isn't going away. However, you can't count on the official media stores lasting for much longer; BlackBerry World's music and video sections are shutting down on July 21st. While you'll still have access to your existing purchases, you'll have to look to third-party services for anything new. That's unfortunate if you regularly shop for flicks and tunes from your phone, but the larger Android library might help mitigate the loss.

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Source: Inside BlackBerry

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These Emotions Make Things Spread Like Crazy Online

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/these-emotions-make-things-spread-like-crazy-online-2014-6

If a piece of content makes a reader feel a certain way, the reader is more likely to share it on social media.

Which emotions lead to the most shares?

BuzzSumo's Noah Kagan analyzed the top 10% of articles that get shared online. From those articles, he found that articles that make a reader feel "awe" get shared most. Making a reader laugh means a higher probability of sharing too. Articles that make people feel sad get shared infrequently.

Other factors that contribute to an article's shareability include length (aim for about 2,000 words) and use of photos. Chart via Statista.

2014_06_18_Virality

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11 Traits All Successful Leaders Share

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/traits-all-successful-leaders-share-2014-6

Henry Ford

In 1908, a young journalist named Napoleon Hill met with the industrialist Andrew Carnegie, one of the richest men to ever live, to discuss how he became so successful.

Carnegie liked Hill so much that he decided to share his core values and strategies, which launched Hill's career as a pioneer of the self-help genre.

His 1937 book "Think and Grow Rich" went on to become one of the bestselling books of all time. Hill based his insights on the lives of legendary businessmen of the early 20th century, like Thomas Edison and Henry Ford.

Here are the 11 traits that Hill found all successful leaders share:

1. They have unwavering courage based on self-confidence.

When leaders have a vision they believe in and know that they are capable of realizing it, others will believe in them, too.

2. They have self-control.

Strong leaders need to be able to control themselves if they're going to be able to control others. This means refraining from overreacting to something either positive or negative, which can give people a bad impression.

3. They are fair.

"Without a sense of fairness and justice, no leader can command and retain the respect of his followers," Hill writes.

4. They don't wait for perfect answers to make a decision.

Great leaders practice what Hill calls "definiteness of decision." This means that they do not defer making a decision until they find a "perfect" answer or reach full consensus. They can't be afraid of risk or criticism.

5. They work by a plan.

Hill said that successful leaders never operate on guesswork, and that a resolute leader can trump someone who is naturally more talented. "Henry Ford accumulated a fortune, not because of his superior mind, but because he adopted and followed a plan which proved to be so! und," he writes.

6. They do more than what is required.

The best leaders attain a position of power because they outperformed their competition. And if they're at the top of their field, they maintain greatness by outperforming themselves.

7. They are exceptionally likable.

In his essay "Develop A Pleasing Personality," Hill explains that it was steel magnate Charles M. Schwab's charming demeanor that made him so much money. His boss, Andrew Carnegie, told Hill that he gave Schwab a regular million-dollar bonus (a tremendous amount of money in the late 19th century) not for the work he did, but for the work he used his pleasing personality to get others to do.

8. They are sympathetic.

Successful leaders understand the personalities and problems of their team members. Hill says it's not a coincidence that history is filled with kings and dictators being overthrown, since "people will not follow forced leadership indefinitely."

9. They pay attention to detail.

The best leaders set themselves apart by giving every part of their job their full effort, no matter how small it may be. If a lack of attention leads to regular tiny mistakes, their accumulation can become linked with reputation.

10. They assume full responsibility for their team.

"The successful leader must be willing to assume responsibility for the mistakes and the shortcomings of his followers," Hill writes. The best leaders do not look for excuses to blame others or situations for failures that happened under their watch.

11. They are cooperative.

"Leadership calls for power, and power calls for cooperation," Hill says. The best leaders recognize that by themselves they cannot handle every challenge that comes their way, and instead build a team that they can work with, rather than make demands of.

SEE ALSO: 7 Habits Of Exceptionally Resilient People

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drag2share: Amazon's New Fire Phone Is A Nightmare For Retailers (AMZN)

source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/businessinsider/~3/S9oHjBca4-g/amazons-new-phone-enables-showrooming-2014-6

amazon firefly button

Amazon just unveiled a new smartphone called the Fire Phone. 

The phone makes Amazon an even bigger threat to brick-and-mortar retailers thanks to a feature called Firefly. 

Firefly allows you to scan items in-person and encourages you to buy them on Amazon instead. 

In other words, Fire has a built-in showrooming tool. 

The feature "turns the Fire Phone into a sort of universal object scanner that'll recognize books, DVDs, or jars of Nutella, and help you buy them—from Amazon," writes Robert Sorokanich at Gizmodo

Amazon has already taken market share from traditional retailers by offering lower prices. 

The biggest obstacle it has faced is counting on customers to go to the website and look up items, rather than buying in stores. 

Amazon's Firefly removes the middle man and makes shopping on Amazon effortless. 

That could become a big headache for its competitors. 

Firefly has other handy uses. 

For instance, it can recognize a painting and immediately transfer you to the Wikipedia page. 

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IBM's Watson Computer Made A BBQ Sauce, And It's Delicious

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/ibms-watson-made-a-bbq-sauce-and-its-delicious-2014-6

ibm cognitive cooking

Watson, a cognitive computing system that can learn and process natural human language, has been one of IBM's most exciting projects of the last decade. Over the past few years, Watson has learned a variety of tasks, from defeating contestants on "Jeopardy" to diagnosing life-threatening diseases. Now the cloud-based system is making its first foray into an industry we can all enjoy: food. 

IBM calls it "cognitive cooking," a collaboration with New York's Institute of Culinary Education that uses data to create the best-tasting food possible. 

IBM engineers carefully examined flavor compounds in thousands of ingredients, going down to the molecular level to measure the pleasantness of each. Then, using nutritional data from the FDA, they had the chefs at ICE try out the combinations Watson had determined would make for a delicious meal. 

When you consider how many ingredients there are out there, all of which can be prepared in a variety of ways, it's obvious why a computer like Watson is best suited for the job. According to IBM, the possibilities for combinations of flavors and ingredients number in the quintillions, far more than a human could possibly try out for themselves. 

"We wanted to see how we could push the boundaries of cognitive computing and if computers could be creative. We created an application that allows users to create a new recipe that’s never been seen before and hopefully tastes good,"  IBM engineer Florian Pinel said to Business Insider. "We wanted to focus on food because it's easy to gather data on and it's something everyone cares about."

Using t! he flavo r combinations generated by Watson, IBM's cognitive cooking team created a database of 30,000 recipes with ingredient combinations they say are scientifically determined to have a pleasant taste. 

"Part of it is that subjectivity — if you don’t like Brussels sprouts maybe we can’t make you like them no matter how much we try with the computer," Pinel said. "But there is that common pleasantness measurement that was identified by some studies and that was universal. Watson focuses on the side behind the universal component." 

Here's a look at what that recipe-generating software looks like. Users can select from a list of cuisines and dishes that contain ingredients selected by Watson. ibm watson cooking

IBM premiered Watson's cooking skills with a food truck at SXSW back in March. Chefs from ICE prepared dishes, like Portuguese lobster rolls and Peruvian potato poutine, that contained Watson-generated ingredient combinations and were chosen by tweeted votes from the public. 

The cognitive cooking team then sent some lucky journalists the Bengali Butternut BBQ Sauce, a golden, syrupy sauce created by Watson and the ICE chefs. It's a versatile sauce that can be enjoyed hot or cold, but the chefs recommend serving it on pork ribs or grilled chicken. 

ibm bbq sauce

We tried it as a dipping sauce with chicken tenders and were surprised by how delicious it really was. It has a tangy, spicy flavor that's most likely a result of the white wine and vinegar used. Interestingly enough, the recipe generated by Watson's software uses only natural ingredients, and the sauce lacks that overpowering smoky taste that more traditional BBQ sauces have. 

Pinel says that the BBQ sauce is just the beginning of what's in store from IBM's cognitive cooking team. 

"This is just a teaser to give people a taste of cognitive computing," he said. "I don’t think that IBM is going to start selling BBQ sauce, but this is an active project, and there’s development happening."

Those developments could be really useful for chefs in the future. 

"We can see, for example, what further compounds are shared by what ingredients, which is an insight chefs don’t have from their own ingredients. You know, they didn’t necessarily take a chemistry class before they started cooking, so that's a new insight for them that they really like," Pinel said. "A future insight could be what those flavor compounds smell like, so we could predict the smell of the whole dish."

IBM only made a few batches of the BBQ sauce, but they posted the complete recipe on their blog. If you want to try whipping up a batch of the BBQ sauce, here's the recipe: 

Bengali Butternut BBQ Sauce
Approximate Yield: 550g

300g butternut squash, diced

200g white wine

100g rice vinegar

50g butter, unsalted

5g ta! marind c oncentrate

40g water

10g chili paste (Sriracha)

4g soy sauce

50g dates, pitted and chopped

2g Thai chili

3g mustard seed

3g turmeric, fresh, thinly sliced

0.4g cardamom, ground

5g coriander leaves

2g Meyer lemon zest, grated

5g salt, to taste

10g Meyer lemon juice

6g molasses

1. Gently sweat the squash in the butter over medium low heat until softened, approximately 5-10 minutes.

2. Add the vinegar, tamarind, water, wine, chili paste, and soy; bring to a simmer and reduce heat to low. Add the dates, chili, mustard seed, turmeric, and cardamom. Continue to simmer and reduce to roughly 250g, for about 20 minutes.

3. Remove from heat; add the coriander leaves and lemon zest. Blend to a very smooth consistency and cool.

4. Season the mixture with salt, lemon juice, and molasses. Chill. 

SEE ALSO: This Stylish Wearable Tech Solves An Annoying Problem For Women

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CHART: How Far Soccer Players Run During A World Cup Match

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/chart-soccer-players-run-miles-2014-6

One aspect of soccer that separates it from many other sports is the unique combination of speed and endurance that is required and no position must run farther during a match than midfielders. These players are often asked to cover the entire length of the field which can be up to 130 yards long.

During the United States National Team's opening match against Ghana, midfielder Michael Bradley led the team with 7.9 miles covered during the match. The match lasted 100 minutes and one second, which means Bradley averaged 4.75 mph for more than an hour and a half, with only one real break (cont. below).

Soccer Distance

This chart also shows that even goalkeepers must travel long distances with Tim Howard traveling just under three miles during the match.

We also get a sense of the impact fresh legs can have on a match.

Alejandro Bedoya, who was replaced by Graham Zusi mid-match, combined with Zusi to travel 7.8 miles, topped only by Bradley.

Similarly, Jozy Altidore and Aron Johannsson combined to run 7.1 miles, a half-mile more than the team's other forward, Clint Dempsey.

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