Sunday, 30 June 2013

Daily Crunch: Click Roll

1404Here are some of yesterday’s stories on TechCrunch Gadgets: LaCie Adds Some Polish To Its NAS Units With ?NAS OS? AliveCor Turns Mobile Devices Into Low-Cost Heart Monitors, Raises $3 Million kandenchi: Designer Mouse That Looks Like A Battery CineSkates: Roller Skates For Your Camera Failbook Phone: AT&T Already Looking To Ditch The HTC Status, Says Source

Source: http://techcrunch.com/2011/08/24/daily-crunch-click-roll/

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Why Obama Was Never Going To Be A Civil Liberties Champion

imagesBarack Obama was never going to be a champion of civil liberties; he leads a very old and quickly growing strain of the Democratic party that prioritizes the collective good over individual rights. This coercively inclusive worldview feels that every business, government agency, country, and citizen has an obligation to contribute to the greater good.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/gmQ4Qut9VTM/

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Skype 5.3 for Windows released, improves mobile video call quality

Version 5.3 of Skype for Windows has just been released, with the main emphasis of the new release being improved call quality, and the quality of video received by mobile Skype users. Presumably one party of the video call must be using Skype for Windows 5.3, though.

Beyond improved call quality, not much has changed. You can now see your friends' presence icons when contact cards are collapsed, and the topic editing button is now always visible on the conversation header. For a complete list of changes, hit up the Skype Garage blog.

Download Skype 5.3 for Windows

Skype 5.3 for Windows released, improves mobile video call quality originally appeared on Download Squad on Thu, 07 Apr 2011 12:17:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://downloadsquad.switched.com/2011/04/07/skype-5-3-for-windows-released-improves-mobile-video-call-quali/

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Elephant Quest is an addictive, deep platformer

elephantquest
When someone tells me about a "platformer", my first thought is that it's probably a simple game that mainly revolves around running and jumping around, with a minimal plot. [Play a Zelda game! -Ed]

Elephant Quest is one platformer that managed to prove me completely wrong. Yes, you do run and jump around, and you also shoot at stuff. But the game has much, much more going for it.

Basically, as you run, jump and shoot, you gain experience points and level up. Hitting Space brings you into an interface where you can convert your experience points into Charisma, Intelligence, Agility and Dexterity points. Once you've "specialized" your points, you then get to pick what exact skills you'd like to enhance in each field. For example, you could use your dexterity to enhance your weapons or increase your swiftness.

The game is played in a huge maze; you go through rooms using doors, and there's a large map. As the name implies, there are quests you can take, too. For example, one quest had me searching all over the place for ten balloons.

The bottom line is that this is a surprisingly deep game that just might ensnare you for a good bit longer than you intended to play. Beware!

Elephant Quest is an addictive, deep platformer originally appeared on Download Squad on Fri, 25 Mar 2011 15:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://downloadsquad.switched.com/2011/03/25/elephant-quest-is-an-addictive-deep-platformer/

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Saturday, 29 June 2013

Deal of the Day ? HP Pavilion TouchSmart 14z-f000 AMD A4 Quad-core Sleekbook

Saturday’s LogicBUY Deal is the configurable�14″ HP Pavilion TouchSmart 14z-f000 customizable Sleekbook, starting at�$455.99. �Features: AMD A4-5000 1.5GHz Quad-core 4GB RAM 500GB hard drive 14″ LED-backlit 1366X 768 BrightView LCD touchscreen Radeon HD 8000 graphics 802.11n WiFi Webcam HDMI. two USB 3.0 ports Windows 8 (64-bit) $479.99 – 5% coupon code = $455.99 with $9.99 [...]

Source: http://the-gadgeteer.com/2013/06/29/deal-of-the-day-hp-pavilion-touchsmart-14z-f000-amd-a4-quad-core-sleekbook/

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A Mobius Strip Track Makes Magnet Hovercrafts Even Cooler

Superconducting magnets are freakin' awesome. You should know this already. But the folks at the Royal Institution took it a step further with their futuristic upside-down, M�bius strip track that's fit for a racing game set in 21xx. Hopefully this is what the Hot Wheels of the future are like. Err, "Hot Superconducting Magnets," I guess.

But on top of the sheer cool-factor of seeing something hover upside down, you'll also get a nice explanation on how this kind of stuff actually works. It's not as great as getting an actual superconducting magnet car and accompanying track of your own, but here's to hoping. [Boing Boing]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/a-mobius-strip-track-makes-magnet-hovercrafts-even-cool-618712302

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Pelican i1075 iPad Case review

It seems more people are finding that an iPad and a keyboard (for easier data entry) covers most of the functions they used to rely on a laptop computer for. �This means that a lot of the gear bags on the market, designed for laptops, are not suited for the relatively tiny iPad and keyboard. [...]

Source: http://the-gadgeteer.com/2013/06/28/pelican-i1075-ipad-case-review/

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Yahoo To Sunset AltaVista, Axis, RSS Alerts, and Nine Other Products, Some As Soon As Today

yahoo-logoYahoo under Marissa Mayer is taking a page from her old employer, Google, and sunsetting 12 products, with some starting as soon as today. Included are Alta Vista and other search products like its experimental Axis extension, as part of "an ongoing effort to sharpen our focus and deliver experiences that enhance your daily lives," in the words of Jay Rossiter, EVP of platforms.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/E0W1q-V3PdU/

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Friday, 28 June 2013

Add a Windows 8 user tile to your Windows 7 taskbar

Now that Windows 8 images have begun leaking out, it's only a matter of time until developers start releasing mods for Windows 7 which mimic upcoming features. Over at Into Windows, they've spotted one such mod already.

In the earliest Windows 8 images, we saw Windows Live integration on the taskbar. In the far right corner, there's a user tile displayed. If you'd like to do the same on Windows 7, download Taskbar User Tile from DeviantArt user AngelWZR.

Once installed, your current picture will appear on the taskbar. Click it, and a menu appears which allows you to log off, switch users, and access the control panel. Right now, the mod only works if your taskbar is displayed on the bottom of your Windows desktop.

Add a Windows 8 user tile to your Windows 7 taskbar originally appeared on Download Squad on Wed, 06 Apr 2011 14:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://downloadsquad.switched.com/2011/04/06/add-a-windows-8-user-tile-to-your-windows-7-taskbar/

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Scientists Built a Mini Laser Gun That Generates Anti-Matter

Scientists Built a Mini Laser Gun That Generates Anti-Matter

Remember that time you mixed vinegar and baking soda and decided you wanted to be a scientist? Maybe you should have followed through. Then you could have been one of the guys that just developed a tabletop "gun" that creates positrons by shooting lasers at gold.

A team of physicists working at the University of Michigan just published a paper about their device in Physical Review Letters. But basically, it's small enough to sit on a table and can create positrons?anti-electrons?like its big, big brother, the particle accelerator at CERN. Positrons, if you aren't familar, are found around black holes and pulars. You know, cool stuff.

PhysOrg explains the process in more detail:

The team fired a petawatt laser at a sample of inert helium gas. Doing so caused the creation of a stream of electrons moving at very high speed. Those electrons were directed at a very thin sheet of metal foil which caused them to smash into individual metal atoms. Those collisions resulted in a stream of electron and positron emissions?the two were then separated using magnets.

The researchers report that each blast of their gun lasts just 30 femtoseconds, but each firing results in the production of quadrillions of positrons?a density level comparable to those produced at CERN.

For scale: petawatt is one quadrillion watts, a femtosecond is a one quadrillionth of a second, and a quadrillion is 1,000,000,000,000,000.

The thought is that we can use gadgets like this to study positrons more easily than ever and learn more about those gaping black holes in space and other things like them. It's pretty exciting stuff, even if you and I can't quite understand the subtle nuances of it. But that's what the scientists are for. Good thing they all stuck with it. [PhysOrg]

Image by Ingrid W./Shutterstock, virtually unrelated to the actual experiment (duh)

Source: http://gizmodo.com/scientists-built-a-mini-laser-gun-that-generates-anti-m-611320833

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AOL Launches Its Own News Reader

AOL Launches Its Own News Reader
With Google Reader's demise looming, a host of media companies have jumped to fill the impending void. The latest? Good ol' AOL.
    


Source: http://feeds.wired.com/c/35185/f/661457/s/2db7d450/l/0L0Swired0N0Cgadgetlab0C20A130C0A60Caol0Elaunches0Eits0Eown0Ereader0C/story01.htm

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Half-Life 2 crowbars its way out of Linux beta, brings Oculus Rift support with it

Valve's Half-Life 2 along with Episodes One and Two are out of beta and available for download on Steam for Linux, the company announced today. While we welcome any Half-Life news, it's hard to not get disappointed when the number three isn't involved. Gordon Freeman's last known appearance uses the new SteamPipe content delivery system and "numerous" community bug fixes have been implemented.

That's not all! Oculus Rift (and other virtual reality device) support has been added as well. We aren't aware of any other VR units besides the Rift, but in March Valve told us it's pursuing hardware itself. Speculating about other VR systems isn't far from speculating about Half-Life 3's existence -- we don't know anything at this point. However, Linux gaming site Phoronix says to expect more good Valve Linux news in July. We reached out to Valve for more info and will update if we hear anything back.

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Via: Phoronix

Source: Steam

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/06/27/half-life-2-linux-oculus-rift/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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Thursday, 27 June 2013

Gmail update brings the delete option back by default

Gmail

A quick update to the Gmail app tonight brings about a couple changes. First off is that Google has brought back the delete option by default, alongside the archive button. (Previously you had to turn that back on in the settings.) Also listed is "tap sender images to select multiple e-mails in the conversation list," but we've been doing that for a little while now, right? Plus, the requisite bugfixes. 

Not a huge update, but any update to the Gmail app is an important one. Head on over and set things right.

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/zEGEw0sRnUQ/story01.htm

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Amazon Makes Your Boring Facebook Birthday Posts Worth Something

Amazon Makes Your Boring Facebook Birthday Posts Worth Something
Posting a Facebook birthday greeting is the lowest level of well wishing. Now you can take the laziest birthday greeting and add something tangible, an Amazon gift card.
    


Source: http://feeds.wired.com/c/35185/f/661457/s/2d764976/l/0L0Swired0N0Cgadgetlab0C20A130C0A60Camazon0Ebirthday0Egift0C/story01.htm

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Inside Digg?s Race to Build the New Google Reader

Inside Digg’s Race to Build the New Google Reader
When in April, Google announced it planned to shut down Google Reader on July 1, it was almost not even surprising that on the very same day Digg replied: Don?t sweat it. We?ve got this. This is the story of ...
    


Source: http://feeds.wired.com/c/35185/f/661457/s/2d8c2c08/l/0L0Swired0N0Cgadgetlab0C20A130C0A60Cinside0Idigg0Ireader0C/story01.htm

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A Pint-Sized Dialysis Machine Gets Its First Taste of Human Blood

A Pint-Sized Dialysis Machine Gets Its First Taste of Human Blood

Who needs gigantic dialysis machines? The first portable blood filter has just been approved for testing on humans, and it's practically pocket-sized.

The Hemopurifier has been in development for years now, and it finally got approval from the FDA for a extremely limited field test where it'll try to treat Hepatitis C by filtering the blood Hep-afflicted kidneys can't handle. The very first phase of tests will involve 10 patients, all with end stage renal disease, who get to replace two weeks of standard dialysis sessions with the rolling pin-sized device.

To use it, all you have to do is slam the thing into your arm, at which point your blood pressure is all it takes to draw blood up into the tube, push it through the filter, and back into your arm. It's equal parts creepy and awesome.

This is a super early trial, so the goal is just to get safety procedures in place before even thinking about how effective the thing actually is. But if it works well in practice, it could be a useful weapon against all kinds of blood-borne diseases, and could even help fight certain forms of cancer. That is, if you can get over the unpleasantness of plugging it into your arm. [Medgadget]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/a-pint-sized-dialysis-machine-gets-its-first-taste-of-h-589453823

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Wednesday, 26 June 2013

From 2G to 4G: How to make sure you get the T-Mobile iPhone 5 performance you deserve!

From 2G to 4G - My bizarre iPhone 5 experience with T-Mobile

After its failed merger with AT&T, it seemed that T-Mobile was doomed. But the company has come roaring back with a 4G network buildout, game-changing contract deals for its customers, and an aggressive marketing campaign. I decided to switch to T-Mobile when I got my iPhone 5, but I ran into a few roadblocks that finally got sorted this past weekend.

T-Mobile uses GSM, the same type of technology that AT&T uses for its wireless coverage throughout the US. While T-Mobile's network isn't as wide as AT&T, they do have some advantages - there's a lot less traffic congestion on T-Mobile's network, so you get faster data transfer speeds in heavily populated areas, for example. T-Mobile is building out its LTE network to help accommodate the faster speeds of the iPhone 5 and other LTE-capable devices.

T-Mobile also costs less than the competition, and doesn't force customers into long-term plans that incur steep early termination fees for leaving early. That, and an irrepressible desire to support the plucky underdog, is what drew me in. And as the proud owner of a new unlocked iPhone 5, I figured it was as easy as going to my local T-Mobile store, signing up for service, popping in a nanoSIM and going.

It wasn't. I was left with a phone that was crippled.

In major urban areas and a few outlying, wealthy and populated suburbs, my phone would show a 4G or LTE connection. But most of the time I was relegated to EDGE speeds. That's right, 2G.

For a long time, the running joke was that the iPhone, especially on AT&T's network, could do anything except make a phone call. (When the iPhone finally came to Verizon, I'd ask people if they knew what the killer app was on the Verizon iPhone, then show them the phone app.)

With T-Mobile, I was stuck at the opposite end of the spectrum - my iPhone worked great for voice calls, but everything else sucked. Unless I was on a trip to New York or San Francisco - then everything worked fabulously.

I checked a few times with T-Mobile, and they told me that they're in the process of "refarming" their cell phone towers. The bulk of T-Mobile's network in outlying areas comprises second-generation PCS technology which operates on the 1900 megahertz spectrum. Those are the towers that my iPhone was connecting with 90 percent of the time.

Those towers are being converted from EDGE to 4G HSPA+. As this buildout happens, people with unlocked iPhones from AT&T should see faster service. But it's going to take a long time for T-Mobile to get its entire network there - probably at least through the end of 2013.

This is where I was ready to throw in the towel and just go with AT&T, which I had been reluctant to do because, well, I have my reasons.

Then it dawned on me: You can buy an iPhone 5 on contract from T-Mobile that works just great on T-Mobile's network. I spoke with a T-Mobile rep about it.

"Well, sure, we can sell you an iPhone 5 that works every bit as good as every other phone on our network," he said. "But it's a locked phone."

Shouldn't I have had essentially the same phone from Apple, minus the locked profile?

Turns out I didn't.

T-Mobile started selling the iPhone 5 on April 12, 2013. I got my iPhone around April 15. My unlocked GSM phone - a $649 phone direct from Apple - was missing the frequency support to communicate on T-Mobile's network.

It took me about an hour and a half at a local Apple Store to convince the Genius who was helping me - and later the store manager - that all I needed to do was to swap out my phone with another unlocked GSM model. Once that was done, I had a new iPhone 5 in hand, with the same T-Mobile nanoSIM, and it works on 4G almost everywhere.

I must have gotten stuck with some old channel inventory before Apple began shipping iPhone 5s optimized for T-Mobile.

There were a couple of lessons I learned along the way that are worth passing along:

  • Unlocked phones are worth the money, compared to the cost of buying a locked phone and paying a long-term contract. It's more money out of your pocket up front, but less money out of your pocket in total.

  • They're especially worth the money if you plan to travel internationally. Buy a new nanoSIM when you arrive at your destination and be saved the hideous expense of international roaming rates.

  • The unlocked iPhone 5 that's sold in the Apple Store today works every bit as good on T-Mobile as phones bought from T-Mobile.

  • If your unlocked iPhone 5 is stuck in 2G hell on T-Mobile and it's still under warranty, go back to where you purchased it and explain to them it's not working right. Don't take no for an answer - insist on getting your phone swapped out.

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/rR9ItiGFwsw/story01.htm

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