Social Print Studios, a Web gallery for social photos, is encouraging Instagram users to bring their snapshots to physical life using Prinstagram.
CNET News
Monthly Archives: November 2011
Prinstagram delivers retro photos to your doorstep
Lenovo confirms Windows Phone device for second half of 2012
Lenovo confirmed today that it has plans to release a Windows Phone device during the second half of 2012. It’s not too surprising since rumors had persisted about a Lenovo Windows Phone and an image had leaked last month purported to be of such a device. The authenticity of the leaked image was confirmed today [...]
SlashGear
Nexus One Gets A Taste Of Ice Cream Sandwich Thanks To CM9
Google may have run out of love for the Nexus One as far as Ice Cream Sandwich is concerned, but that doesn’t mean the legions of loyal Android developers have. An intrepid dev named TexasIce on the XDA forums has managed to get an early build of CyanogenMod 9 up and running on Google’s first Nexus device, and it looks mighty impressive for a work-in-progress.
TechCrunch
Tobii looks to keep you alert by detecting when you’re tweet-driving (video)
Continue reading Tobii looks to keep you alert by detecting when you’re tweet-driving (video)
Tobii looks to keep you alert by detecting when you’re tweet-driving (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 30 Nov 2011 17:26:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Engadget
EyePoppers: The Best Science Photos of the Week
Galaxy Nexus LTE press images appear in Verizon webpage guts
When you’ve got a device so monumentally important to the operating system it runs that people are hunting through the webpage code for the carrier it’ll be carried on to find press images of it even though the only change their sure to see is the branding on the back of said phone, you know [...]
SlashGear
TechCrunch Gadgets Webcast: The Standing Desk
This week we bring you the Fujifilm X10, the Galaxy Tab 8.9, and my new standing desk. The standing desk, incidentally, is my second desk, which puts me firmly in the 1% camp when it comes to home workstations.
Network Optix Raises $750K For Their Enterprise Video Platform
One of the companies at Disrupt SF 2011 that escaped the horror of presenting on stage was Network Optix, whose impressive video handling technology was a little too practical for presentation. They’ve been busy the last few months in improving their product and forging business relationships, and have just announced that they’ve raised $ 750K with which to continue development.
Their product is what they call Enterprise Video as a Service, and is designed around the idea of handling all the complex transcoding and bandwidth issues associated with viewing and manipulating video on different platforms. Sound complicated? It is. But it’s also pretty cool.
TechCrunch
PCIe 4.0 inches towards reality, hits 16 gigatransfers per second (that’s a thing, right?)
Don’t get too excited just yet, but PCIe 4.0 is coming. PCI-SIG, the body that governs the standard, has announced the next evolution of the interface, which should start popping up in servers, desktops, laptops and even tablets around 2015. Sadly, details are pretty slim on the slot — final specs aren’t expected to be announced before 2014. All we know is that PCIe 4.0 will be able to perform 16 gigatransfers per second (GT/s), which tells us only slightly more than jack squat. It simply means that a PCIe 4.0 card will be capable of transferring 16 billion discrete chunks of data per second, twice that of PCIe 3.0. What that doesn’t tell us though, is the size of those chunks. If they’re the same size, 4.0 will provide double the current bit rate of 1 GB/s per-lane. If, for some reason, the channel width were halved there would be no speed increase — but we seriously doubt that’s the case. So, will we be looking at 32 GB/s PCIe 4.0 x16 GPUs in a few years? That is a definite maybe.
PCIe 4.0 inches towards reality, hits 16 gigatransfers per second (that’s a thing, right?) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 30 Nov 2011 15:04:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
SkyDrive juices up document sharing and uploading, grabs a HTML5 smoothie afterward (video)
SkyDrive juices up document sharing and uploading, grabs a HTML5 smoothie afterward (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 30 Nov 2011 14:42:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Apple’s Siri balks at abortion queries, pro-choice advocates charge
Pro-choice advocates have accused Apple’s new Siri voice-activated assistant of refusing to locate family planning or abortion clinics, and have kicked off a petition urging Apple to update Siri.
Computerworld News
Revolights inventor lights the way for safer cycling (video)
Kent Frankovich’s design, which makes it easier for cyclists to see and be seen, is a spin on the good old-fashioned bike reflector.
CNET News
Cyber Monday sales break record, surpass $1.25B
Consumers took advantage of Cyber Monday deals, racking up $ 1.25 billion worth of online purchases on the first business day of the week following Thanksgiving.
Computerworld News
Sky testing huge cable & WiFi broadband roll-out
Sky has trialled its own cable installations, the company has confirmed, experimenting with the possibility of bypassing BT in the UK and operating its own broadband network over which it would have full control. Another possibility – though only rumored at this stage – is using a huge expansion of The Cloud, a UK WiFi [...]
SlashGear
Live Blog: The Spotify Special Event
Hot music startup Spotify is holding a special event in New York City this morning, where it’s going to unveil what it’s calling a “New Direction” for the service. Spotify hasn’t given any details on what to expect, but it obviously considers it to be a very big deal — enough so that it’s invited dozens of reporters to attend.
Several reports indicate that Spotify will be launching a new platform for third party developers, who will be able to integrate Spotify’s large catalog of music into new applications.
As seems to be Spotify’s style, the event has unusually high production values: waiters are handing out espressos and bite-sized breakfast foods that I’ve never heard of (but are quite delicious). The company has a custom backdrop for the stage featuring music-themed illustrations. And there are over a dozen flat-panel televisions lining the walls, which I suspect will be used to showcase third-party apps later on in the event.
TechCrunch
EBay finishes data center in a very hot place
Temperatures in Phoenix, Arizona — one of the most arid places in the U.S. — routinely exceed 100 degrees Fahrenheit (38 degrees Celsius). That's about the opposite of the typical cool-weather environments companies often choose to build data centers.
Computerworld News
AMD Confirms Commitment To x86
MrSeb writes with an excerpt from an Extreme Tech story on the recent wild speculation about AMD abandoning x86: “Recent subpar CPU launches and product cancellations have left AMD in an ugly position, but reports that the company is preparing to jettison its x86 business are greatly exaggerated and wildly off base. Yesterday, Mercury News ran a report on AMD’s struggles to reinvent itself and included this quote from company spokesperson Mike Silverman: ‘We’re at an inflection point. We will all need to let go of the old ‘AMD versus Intel’ mind-set, because it won’t be about that anymore.’ When we contacted Silverman, he confirmed that the original statement has been taken somewhat out of context and provided additional clarification. ‘AMD is a leader in x86 microprocessor design, and we remain committed to the x86 market. Our strategy is to accelerate our growth by taking advantage of our design capabilities to deliver a breadth of products that best align with broader industry shifts toward low power, emerging markets and the cloud.’ The larger truth behind Silverman’s statement is that no matter what AMD does, it’s not going to be ‘AMD versus Intel’ anymore — it’s going to be AMD vs. Qualcomm, TI, Nvidia, and Intel.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Hackers Steal Old Usernames, Passwords for U.N. Employees
Proximiant Launches “Tap And Go” Digital Receipts For Retailers
Proximiant just launched a new service that provides digital receipts to customers of brick-and-mortar merchants. Like Square, the service involves the use of a low-cost hardware dongle that’s given away for free. But unlike Square, Proximiant leverages NFC (near field communication) to send the receipt from the cash register to the mobile phone.
Blog – Is Personal Data the New Currency?
What if Facebook paid you? Several startups envision an era in which we are all the brokers, and beneficiaries, of our own personal data.
If you’re a Facebook user–and let’s face it, you are–you might figure that the price is right. “Free” has a nice ring to it, after all. You get a digital forum in which to interact with your friends and acquaintances, to share photos and notes, to poke and be poked–all for nothing. Zip. Nada. Sweet deal, right? How could it get any better?
Cisco data center forecast very cloudy
Global cloud computing traffic will grow 12-fold from now to 2015, according to a newly released survey from Cisco.
Computerworld News
Worms shot into space show humans could survive a trip to colonize other worlds
The stuff of science fiction for decades has been the thought of humans colonizing another world. NASA has been studying microscopic worms originally taken from a garbage dump on earth called Caenorhadbitis elegans or C elegans on the ISS since 2006. The worms were shot into space and studied on the ISS as a project [...]
SlashGear
Web app scans Facebook for unflattering photos
So you're at the company Christmas party, and you've drank too much. The next day, an unflattering photo is on Facebook, but you don't know it since you haven't been tagged.
Computerworld News
Why America Doesn’t Need More Tech Giants Like Apple
Hugh Pickens writes “Optimists says that if only America produced more companies like Apple and Amazon and Google and Facebook, the country’s economic problems would be fixed — America could retrain its vast, idle construction-and-manufacturing workforce, and our unemployment and inequality problems would be solved. But Apple’s $ 1 billion new data center in North Carolina has been a disappointing development for many residents, who can’t comprehend how expensive facilities stretching across hundreds of acres can create only 50 new jobs, especially after thousands of positions in the region have been lost to cheaper foreign competition. In fact, Apple actually exemplifies some of the reasons why the U.S. has such huge unemployment and inequality problems: ‘Digital’ businesses like Apple employ far fewer people than traditional manufacturing businesses, Apple’s 60,000+ jobs are not just in the U.S. — they’re spread around the world. Companies like Apple ‘create amazing products and vast shareholder wealth, but they don’t spread this wealth around as much as earlier industrial giants did,’ writes Henry Blodget. ‘So, yes, we should celebrate the success of Apple, Google, Facebook, and Amazon. But we shouldn’t delude ourselves into thinking they’re going to solve our unemployment or inequality problems.’”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Video – Andrew Phillips
See 2011 TR35 winner Andrew Phillips describe his work.
Technology Review RSS Feeds
Blog – Video Search Solves the News Segmentation Problem
The problem of indexing video news content has been solved by computer scientists at an innovative French search engine
Video search is one of the most difficult challenges facing search engines. Given a particular query, the task is to select from all stored videos the ones that the searcher most wants to see.
TeaMp0isoN hacks UN and posts email addresses, passwords and logins
The hacking attacks continue to happen online around the world with some of the attacks resulting in serious data loss for the government and private companies. Hacker group TeaMp0isioN has hacked the UN and taken their stolen email addresses, usernames, and passwords and out them up on Paste Bin. Apparently, the hacker group thinks the [...]
SlashGear
Oldest Hairy Microbe Fossils Discovered
Android Dev Demonstrates CarrierIQ Phone Logging Software On Video
Token_Internet_Girl writes with a followup to last week’s news about Android developer Trevor Eckhart, who was researching software from CarrierIQ, installed on millions of cellphones, that secretly logged a variety of user information — from button presses to text message contents to browsing data. CarrierIQ tried to silence Eckhart, but later backtracked. Now, Eckhart has posted a video demonstration of CarrierIQ’s logging software. From the article:
“The company denies its software logs keystrokes. Eckhart’s 17-minute video clearly undercuts that claim. … The video shows the software logging Eckhart’s online search of ‘hello world.’ That’s despite Eckhart using the HTTPS version of Google, which is supposed to hide searches from those who would want to spy by intercepting the traffic between a user and Google. …the video shows the software logging each number as Eckhart fingers the dialer. ‘Every button you press in the dialer before you call,’ he says on the video, ‘it already gets sent off to the IQ application.’”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Video – Ajit Narayanan
See 2011 TR35 winner Ajit Narayanan describe his work.
Technology Review RSS Feeds
Five Companies to Watch
Even though not all of these publicly traded (or soon to be publicly traded) companies make games, all are exploiting their popularity. Two of them, Zynga and Apple, are relatively new players in the games industry, but both have benefited immensely from the surging demand for casual games, which can be played in spare moments on a smart phone or a social-networking website. The other companies have track records in the mature, though still lucrative, market for complex, “hard-core” games typically played on consoles and personal computers. But now they are adjusting their strategies to take mobile and social gaming into account.
Sony updates PS3 to version 4.00 ahead of PS Vita launch
Sony is setting the table for the PlayStation Vita today, with the release of a new PS3 update. With version 4.00, rolling out now, PS3 users will be able to share content like music, video and images with the forthcoming Vita, scheduled to launch in Japan on December 17th. The refresh also allows gamers to save PS Vita games and data on their PS3 hard drives, while updating their handheld software using the PS3′s network. There are some more PS3-specific features, as well, including enhanced PSN privacy settings and game patches, among others. Find out more at the source link below.
Sony updates PS3 to version 4.00 ahead of PS Vita launch originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 30 Nov 2011 05:30:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Engadget
Path’s Second Iteration Is Less Photosharing And More Everything Sharing
In the mobile startup tradition of quick product iteration, Path Two has hit the app store this evening — expanding beyond photosharing to people, place, music, chat and sleep mode sharing. Path founder Dave Morin says that the second phase of Path is about giving people a place to “capture all the experiences” on their path through life.
The existing Path UI on iOS and Android has been completely revamped (beautifully) and is basically a multimedia timeline. You can right swipe for settings, left swipe to add friends, and swipe down to view your own or your friends’ Paths. To initiate a Path post, click on the + button in the left corner and out pop six option icons.
Apple Reportedly Fine-Tuning ‘iTV,’ Combining TV and the Web
How Does Laptop Wi-Fi Affect Male Fertility?
Latest Humble Bundle Comes With Uplink Source Code
SharkLaser writes “The latest Humble Bundle comes with four great indie games from Introversion. Included in the pack are Uplink, Darwinia, DEFCON and Multiwinia. Bonus games include Aquaria, Crayon Physics Deluxe and the recently added Dungeons of Dredmor. Introversion also showcases some of their prototypes, like Subversion City Generator which demonstrates procedural generation of complex city environments, and Voxel Tech Demo for showing destroyable environments using voxel technology. Hackers and open source programmers around the world should also celebrate — Introversion will release source code for their games Darwinia, Multiwinia, DEFCON, and most importantly, Uplink, the legendary hacking simulation that is one of its kind.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Peter Thiel floats cash to floating tech incubator
Famed tech investor Peter Thiel is now helping to launch a commercial “seastead” 12 miles off the California coast.
CNET News
The Personal Computer Is Dead
Power is fast shifting from end users and software developers to operating system vendors.
The PC is dead. Rising numbers of mobile, lightweight, cloud-centric devices don’t merely represent a change in form factor. Rather, we’re seeing an unprecedented shift of power from end users and software developers on the one hand, to operating system vendors on the other—and even those who keep their PCs are being swept along. This is a little for the better, and much for the worse.
Linux Mint 12 “Lisa” now available, is most popular open source OS
In just the last twelve months, Linux Mint has surpassed Ubuntu as the most popular open source operating system on open source ranking website DistroWatch. Why, you ask? Perhaps because the latter has been looking with a new perspective on the user interface, and begun aiming at mobile platforms instead. However, note that Linux Mint [...]
SlashGear
Is the Time Finally Right For Hybrid Hard Drives?
a_hanso writes “Hard drives that combine a traditional spinning platter for mass storage and solid state flash memory for frequently accessed data have always been an interesting concept. They may be slower than SSDs, but not by much, and they are a lot cheaper gigabyte-for-gigabyte. CNET’s Harry McCracken speculates on how soon such drives may become mainstream: ‘So why would the new Momentus be more of a mainstream hit than its predecessor? Seagate says that it’s 70 percent faster than its earlier hybrid drive and three times quicker than a garden-variety, non-hybrid disk. Its benchmarks for cold boots and application launches show the new drive to be just a few seconds slower than a SSD. Or, in some cases, a few seconds faster. In the end, hybrid drives are compromises, neither as cheap as ordinary drives — you can get a conventional 750GB Momentus for about $ 150 — nor as fast and energy-efficient as SSDs.’”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Galaxy Nexus getting Flash and AIR support come December
We knew that Adobe was on track to roll out Adobe Flash support for Android 4.0 (and in particular, the Samsung Galaxy Nexus) before the end of this year but, at that time, we didn’t know the exact month, whether it’d be either November or December. Now, fast forwarding to today, Adobe has just tied [...]
SlashGear
iPhone up in Smoke on Plane, Australian Air Safety Bureau Investigating
Disease in a Dish
SandyStation interactive sandbox uses Kinect to make topography much more interesting (video)
[Thanks, Mark]
SandyStation interactive sandbox uses Kinect to make topography much more interesting (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 30 Nov 2011 01:05:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Engadget
FCC riles AT&T by releasing report on T-Mobile merger
The U.S. Federal Communications Commission has allowed AT&T to withdraw its application to buy the mobile licenses owned by T-Mobile USA, as AT&T had requested, but the agency has also released a staff report that disputes many of the benefits the two mobile carriers claimed the merger would produce.
Computerworld News
Harvard-designed ‘soft robot’ shows you how low it can go (video)
It’s the stuff of slow-moving robopocalyptic nightmares: a ‘soft robot’ designed by a team of Harvard scientists that draws inspiration from invertebrates like worms and starfish. The wired ‘bot is made from a flexible elastomer material that allows it to squeeze into spaces that are inaccessible for more traditional robots. Inside are chambers that inflate and deflate, allowing the thing to undulate forward. Definitely check out the robot in action after the break.
Continue reading Harvard-designed ‘soft robot’ shows you how low it can go (video)
Harvard-designed ‘soft robot’ shows you how low it can go (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 30 Nov 2011 00:24:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Engadget
Tech Toys: The Hottest Gadgets of the Week
Got gizmos? For those who love gadgets as much as we do, we’ve compiled this collection of the must-have gadgets of the week. From Frisbees to fridges, smartphones to headphones, here’s the best of the best. And for tons of great gear, check out Uncrate.com.
Obama Orders Federal Agencies To Digitize All Records
Lucas123 writes “President Obama this week issued a directive to all federal agencies to upgrade records management processes from paper-based systems that have been around since President Truman’s administration to electronic records systems with Web 2.0 capabilities. Agencies have four months to come up with plans to improve their records keeping. Part of the directive is to have the National Archives and Records Administration store all long-term records and oversee electronic records management efforts in other agencies. Unfortunately, NARA doesn’t have a stellar record itself (PDF) in rolling out electronic records projects. Earlier this year, due to cost overruns and project mismanagement, NARA announced it was ending a 10-year effort to create an electronic records archive.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Samsung wins a patent battle to sell Galaxy Tab 10.1 in Australia, war with Apple not over
The latest development in the patent skirmish between Samsung and Apple is a decision in Australia’s Federal Court to overturn a ban on Galaxy Tab 10.1 sales that was placed in October. The Sunday Morning Herald reports local retailers are still unsure when they may be able to sell Samsung’s slate, as Justice Lindsay Foster ruled the ban will remain until 4PM Friday, giving Apple time to appeal the case to the High Court first. Like its battle over the redesigned slate just introduced in Germany, this war between the electronics giants will continue on — we’ll let you know when there’s another decision of consequence.
Samsung wins a patent battle to sell Galaxy Tab 10.1 in Australia, war with Apple not over originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 29 Nov 2011 23:13:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Engadget
Microsoft sells nearly 1 million Xbox 360s in record week in Xbox history
The aging Xbox 360 just recorded the biggest sales week in its not-quite-venerable history, moving nearly one million units over the seven day period, specifically selling more than 960,000 consoles in the U.S. during the week of Black Friday. For a console that’s entering the seventh year of its product lifestyle, that’s one very impressive [...]
SlashGear






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