Skip to main content

Posts

Showing posts from November, 2018

Best headphones with Google Assistant integration

As Amazon and Apple continue to push their virtual assistants onto consumers, Google follows suit. The conglomerate has teamed up with a few big-name companies to enable Google Assistant integration into a variety of headphones. If you want to take full control of your phone from your headphones, any of these picks will do. See the full list of headphones with Google Assistant integration at SoundGuys Best all around Google Assistant headphones: Sony WH-1000XM3 The new Sony WH-1000XM3 uses LDAC as its main Bluetooth codec, but you might not be getting the best they have to offer. Reasons to get the Sony WH-1000XM3: The WH-1000XM3 include top-notch noise cancelling technology that beats out the Bose QC 35 II and makes them a great choice for frequent flyers and daily commuters. Sound quality is excellent and features a more emphasized low-end than the WH-1000XM2 . Battery life lasts 24 hours when constantly emitting 75dB(SPL), which is louder than a vacuum cleaner. Th...

This is the only charge cable you need

If you own any mobile devices, you also know that there are tons of different charging cables available. You may also know that smartphones, tablets, notebooks, and even portable consoles don’t always support the same power cable. However, what if you could buy a charging cable that could support all of your devices, no matter what kinds of power ports they might have? That is what the new Xpower DoubleMag 2-Ways Magnetic Cable is all about. This is the first magnetic cable with two-way charging support. It has magnetic connectors on each end, along with a wide variety of connection adapters, so no matter what phone, tablet or other product you have, it will be able to power up your mobile device. The connection adapters include standard USB, USB Type-C, Lightning and microUSB ports. The adapters can be mixed and match on each end of the DoubleMag 2-Ways Magnetic Cable so you will never have to get a clumsy power cord adapter ever again. There’s even an LED light adapter that you c...

Amanita Design’s Chuchel is finally available on Android

If you like your Android games to be funny, unique, and really zany, have we got the game for you. Amanita Design’s Chuchel is a ridiculous puzzler game one reviewer describes as “like playing a Saturday morning cartoon.” We actually wrote about the launch of Chuchel late last year, expecting it to land on PC and mobile around the same time. However, that was not to be, as Chuchel landed on Steam in early March 2018, but is just now hitting mobile. Editor's Pick 15 best puzzle games for Android Puzzle games used to be a simple genre with a simple idea. You solve puzzles for time killing enjoyment. However, the genre ballooned in a big way on mobile. In fact, it's one of the … Chuchel’s art and gameplay style is very similar to other Amanita Design games like  Machinarium , Botanicula , and Samorost 3 . In Chuchel, you control the game’s namesake protagonist as he fends off his rival Kekel in pursuit of a cherry. If that sounds totally ridiculous to you, th...

बॉस ने जुए में बर्बाद कर दी ये दुनिया की मशहूर मोबाइल कंपनी

जियोनी भारत से अपना कारोबार तो समेट ही रही है। दरअसल जियोनी के संस्थापक और चेयरमैन लियू लोरांग को जुआ खेलने की लत है और हाल ही में हांगकांग के एक कैसीनों में उन्होंने 1 अरब ईएमबी यानि करीब 1,006 करोड़ रुपये गंवा दिए। from Latest And Breaking Hindi News Headlines, News In Hindi | अमर उजाला हिंदी न्यूज़ | - Amar Ujala https://ift.tt/2RjYGHz

Rolling, hopping robots explore Earthly analogs of distant planets

Before we send any planet-trotting robot to explore the landscape of Mars or Venus, we need to test it here on Earth. Two such robotic platforms being developed for future missions are undergoing testing at European Space Agency facilities: one that rolls, and one that hops. The rolling one is actually on the books to head to the Red Planet as part of the ESA’s Mars 2020 program. It’s just wrapped a week of testing in the Spanish desert , just one of many Mars analogs the space program uses. It looks nice. The gravity’s a little different, of course, and there’s a bit more atmosphere, but it’s close enough to test a few things. The team controlling Charlie, which is what they named the prototype, was doing so from hundreds of miles away, in the U.K. — not quite an interplanetary distance, but they did of course think to simulate the delay operators would encounter if the rover were actually on Mars. It would also have a ton more instruments on board. ESA shows off sweet new rende...

Check out Prague’s Old Town in this 405 gigapixel photo

Jeffrey Martin takes massive panoramic photographs of the world and his photos let you go from the panoramic to the intimate in a single mouse swipe. Now he’s truly outdone himself with a 900,000 pixel-wide photo of Prague’s Old Town that took six months to build. The photo, viewable here , has a total spherical resolution of 405 gigapixels and is amazing. Martin used a 600mm lens and 50MP DSLR to take photos of nearly everything in the Old Town. You can see the Cathedral, Castle Hill and even spot street signs, building signs and pigeons. It’s a fascinating view of a beautiful city. Martin said it took him over six months to post-process the picture and it required thousands of photos and tweaks. He said the files are six times bigger than anything Photoshop can manage so he found himself working with delicate fixes as he stitched this amazing photo together. from Gadgets – TechCrunch https://ift.tt/2E28kfh

Loro’s mounted wheelchair assistant puts high tech to work for people with disabilities

A person with physical disabilities can’t interact with the world the same way as the able, but there’s no reason we can’t use tech to close that gap. Loro is a device that mounts to a wheelchair and offers its occupant the ability to see and interact with the people and things around them in powerful ways. Loro’s camera and app work together to let the user see farther, read or translate writing, identify people, gesture with a laser pointer and more. They demonstrated their tech onstage today during Startup Battlefield at TechCrunch Disrupt Berlin. Invented by a team of mostly students who gathered at Harvard’s Innovation Lab, Loro began as a simple camera for disabled people to more easily view their surroundings. “We started this project for our friend Steve,” said Loro co-founder and creative director, Johae Song. A designer like her and others in their friend group, he was diagnosed with Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis, or ALS, a degenerative neural disease that paralyzes the m...

The Coinmine One is a box that mines crypto at home

For $799 you can start mining cryptocurrencies in your home, a feat that previously either required a massive box costing thousands of dollars or, if you didn’t actually want to make any money, a Raspberry Pi . The Coinmine One , created by Farbood Nivi, soundly hits the sweet spot between actual mining and experimentation. The box is about as big as a gaming console and runs a custom OS called MineOS. The system lets you pick a cryptocurrency to mine — Monero, for example, as the system isn’t very good with mature, ASIC-dependent currencies like BTC — and then runs it on the built-in CPU and GPU. The machine contains an Intel Celeron Processor J Series processor and an AMD Radeon RX570 graphics card for mining. It also has a 1 TB drive to hold the massive blockchains required to manage these currencies. The box mines Ethereum at 29 Mh/s and Monero at 800 h/s — acceptable numbers for an entry-level miner like this one. You can upgrade it to support new coins, allowing you to get in...

YouTube rolls out Stories to creators with over 10K subscribers

A year ago, YouTube launched its own take on Stories , with the addition of a new short-form video format called Reels. The feature, which was rebranded as “YouTube Stories” at last year’s VidCon , was initially available only to select YouTube creators. But in June, YouTube said it would later in the year expand Stories to all creators with more than 10,000 subscribers. Today, it has done just that. Now, YouTube is beginning to roll out Stories to a wider set of creators, giving them access to the new creation tools that include the ability to decorate the videos with text, stickers, filters and more. The feature is very much inspired by rival social apps like Snapchat and Instagram — except that,  in YouTube’s case, Stories disappear after 7 days, not 24 hours. The idea behind YouTube Stories is to give creators an easy way to engage with their fans in-between their more polished and produced videos. Today’s creators are no longer simply turning a camera on and vlogging — the...

Plex teams with TIDAL to bring a discounted streaming music subscription to its media app

Media center app Plex today announced a partnership with streaming music service TIDAL, offering discounted access to TIDAL’s 60 million tracks and 244,000+ music videos for Plex Pass subscribers. The Plex Pass is the media center app’s own subscription program , which adds support for watching and recording from live TV as well as other premium features and advanced controls. Now, Plex Pass holders will be able to add TIDAL into the mix for $8.99 per month, instead of its usual $9.99 per month price. It’s not a steep discount, but one that could prove compelling for serious Plex users who have already centralized their access to entertainment within the Plex app. Over the past year or so, Plex has doubled down on its mission to become a one-stop shop for all your media, having added support for podcasts, streaming TV (by way of a digital antenna) and a DVR, personalized news, and, most recently, web shows.  This is in addition to the software’s ability to organize your home med...

Facebook exempts news outlets from political ads transparency labels

Facebook pissed off journalists earlier this year when it announced that ads run by news publishers to promote their articles involving elected officials, candidates and national issues would have to sport “paid for by…” labels and be included alongside political campaign ads in its ads transparency archive  that launched in June, albeit in a separate section. The News Media Alliance  — representing 2,000 newspapers, including The New York Times and NewsCorp, plus other new organizations — sent a letter to Mark Zuckerberg in June protesting their inclusion. They claimed it would blur the lines between propaganda and journalism, and asked Facebook to exempt news publishers. Now Facebook has granted that exception. Next year once Facebook has figured out more ways to verify legitimate news organizations that publish with bylines and dates, cite sources and don’t have a history of having stories flagged as false by third-party fact checkers, they’ll no longer have their U.S. a...

Revolut is ready to launch in Singapore and Japan

Fintech startup Revolut has been teasing Asian market expansions for more than a year, but it sounds like it might finally happen. The company has secured licenses to operate in Singapore and Japan. It now expects to launch its service in Q1 2019. In Singapore, the company was granted a Remittance License by the Monetary Authority and a Stored Value Facility approval — these two things combined let Revolut users hold money as well as send and spend money. In Japan, the company has been authorized to operate by Japan’s Finance Service Agency. According to Revolut, those approvals are enough to launch the service in those countries. But not all features will make their way to Singapore and Japan. Regulation varies from one country to another, so the company might not be able to provide the same limits and feature set everywhere. At launch, Revolut will focus on the electronic wallet and the payment card. You won’t be able to buy cryptocurrencies, create business accounts and more. L...

Facebook staff discussed selling API access to apps in 2012-2014

Following a flopped IPO in 2012, Facebook desperately brainstormed new ways to earn money. An employee of unknown rank sent an internal email suggesting Facebook charge developers $250,000 per year for access to its platform APIs for making apps that can ask users for access to their data. Employees also discussed offering Tinder extended access to users’ friends’ data that was being removed from the platform in exchange for Tinder’s trademark on “Moments,” which Facebook wanted to use for a photo-sharing app it later launched. Facebook decided against selling access to the API, and did not strike a deal with Tinder or other companies, including Amazon and Royal Bank of Canada mentioned in employee emails. The discussions were reported by The Wall Street Journal as being part of a sealed court document its reporters had reviewed from a lawsuit by bikini-photo-finding app developer Six4Three against Facebook alleging anti-competitive practices in how it changed the platform in 2014...