Monthly Archives: March 2012 - Page 2

Smartphones Invade the Prepaid Market



jfruh writes “When tech geeks debate the state of the smartphone world, they usually focus on the iPhone and its high-end Android rivals from the major carriers. But Android is rapidly entering the lower-end world of contractless prepaid phones that you can buy at 7-11 or Wal-Mart. 63 percent of prepaid phones sold in 2011 were smartphones, and while they might not offer cutting-edge hardware or easy customization, they do provide a smartphone experience without an onerous contract.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Slashdot

“Girls Around Me” Creeper App Just Might Get People To Pay Attention To Privacy Settings

girlsaroundme1Cult of Mac has a great write-up of an app for iOS called Girls Around Me, which essentially displays check-ins and public profiles of girls around you. With a little shift in context it could easily be confused for a hot new startup (discoverability meets speed dating!), but no, it really is just a way for guys to creep on nearby girls who have failed to lock down their info.

It’s sad, but maybe something like this is what people need to shock them into understanding just how much information they put online.
TechCrunch

Qualcomm preps quad-core Snapdragon chip to counter Intel

Qualcomm is preparing a quad-core version of its Snapdragon S4 chip for thin and light Windows 8 laptops, which the chip maker hopes will steal some thunder from Intel's second wave of ultrabooks due later this year.
Computerworld News

Teddy bear-faced robot is built for battlefields

Six feet tall, able to bench 500 pounds, and made of aluminum, this isn’t your average teddy bear. The Bear robot, so called for its cutsey bear-like face designed to be familiar and reassuring, is agile, strong and capable of lifting and carrying an injured fighter out of harm’s way.




FOXNews.com

Here Are The Women of Y Combinator And They Are Awesome

Olga-VidishevaI would normally rather have a root canal instead of write about the issue of women in technology. I just find most essays on this really tedious and obvious. (Sorry Alexia.)

But I do want to point one thing out. When I went to my first Y Combinator Demo Day three years ago, there was one woman. At this week’s Demo Day, there were four companies with one or all female founders among the 66 startups in the class.

I’m going to keep this post simple. No complaining. Less navel gazing. Just more role models. So here are the women of Y Combinator and they are awesome:
TechCrunch

Does Google think you’re boring?

Google introduced a little tool called Account Activity on Wednesday to tell you what you’ve been doing online, especially at its key sites like Gmail and YouTube. It tells me I’m boring.




FOXNews.com

Facebook’s Zuckerberg takes Tokyo victory lap, meeting PM Noda

Mark Zuckerberg’s surprise visit with Japanese prime minister Yoshihiko Noda came as his Facebook enjoys a belated boom in the world’s third-largest economy.




FOXNews.com

Designing a Smart-Phone Alphabet for the Illiterate

Peanut farmers in India are helping to design a text-messaging app that could aid the many millions who can’t read or write.

On the road to Chennakeshavapura, a helpful sign on a stone identifies the village as CK Pura for short, but that message is lost on many illiterate residents. For them, reading and writing matters less than channeling enough water to their fields and growing enough peanuts to ride out the drought years.







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RIM Blackberry Playbook boasts a million and counting

Determined to actually drive some good publicity for itself, Research in Motion has announced that more than a million Playbook tablets have made their way to end users, a little over a year after it was first introduced to the market. Of course, at this point RIM is losing money on every Playbook it sells,

Read The Full Story
SlashGear

FCC looking into San Francisco-area’s policy on jamming public’s cellphones

A new policy for jamming cellphone traffic on San Francisco-area transit is sparking renewed debate about the use of such measures and has sparked an inquiry by the Federal Communications Commission.




FOXNews.com

1.9 Billion Digits: Brazil’s Bid For Biometric Voting



MatthewVD writes “Brazil is on a massive fingerprinting spree, with the goal of collecting biometric information from each of its 190 million citizens and identifying all voters by their biological signatures by 2018. The country already has a fully electronic voting system and now officials are trying to end fraud, which was rampant after the military dictatorship ended. Dissenters complain that recounts could be impossible and this opens the door for new kinds of fraud. Imagine this happening in the U.S.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Slashdot

Microsoft Windows 8 will have user-friendly reinstall button

So, how many of you can relate to this story? Your computer has been infected by a virus, or it’s just running really slow, or you accidentally deleted a system file, or maybe you bought the computer from someone else and it still has all the previous owner’s junk on it. If you wanted to

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SlashGear

Hackers Can Easily Lift Credit Card Info From a Used Xbox



zacharye writes “Using nothing more than a few common tools, hackers can reportedly recover credit card numbers and other personal information from used Xbox 360 consoles even after they have been restored to factory settings. Researchers at Drexel University say they have successfully recovered sensitive personal data from a used Xbox console, and they claim Microsoft is doing a disservice to users by not taking precautions to secure their data. ‘Microsoft does a great job of protecting their proprietary information,’ researcher Ashley Podhradsky said.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Slashdot

UFO Waterproof Remote found floating in the company of the rich and famous

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Dreams are nice. Yachts are better. So while you cling to far-flung notions that you’ll ever truly know what ‘money to burn’ means, the Barry Dillers of our world are crisscrossing international waters, drenching models with diamonds and dropping their universal controllers in the hot tub with abandon. Rescuing these rapscallion, modern-day robber barons from the pitfalls of excess is Crestron, with its UFO Waterproof Remote made specifically for H2O hanky panky. The disc-shaped unit, which admittedly looks more like a pool toy than high-end control hub, comes encased in a rubberized shell and features a 2.8-inch display, giving Greek shipping heirs and their ilk instant access to lighting, security systems, A/V equipment and thermostats from the comforts of their sun deck jacuzzi. Alright, so the 1% aren’t the company’s sole market base, as the unit’s also ideally positioned for use in hospitals, owing to its ability for easy sterilization. But let’s be honest, the real reason this floating controller shares a frisbee-like shape is aerodynamics. All the better to hit your staff with, right Ms. Campbell? Official PR and its hydrophobic emphasis after the break.

Continue reading UFO Waterproof Remote found floating in the company of the rich and famous

UFO Waterproof Remote found floating in the company of the rich and famous originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 30 Mar 2012 20:23:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Engadget

Hallmark Greets Digital, Acquires SpiritClips To Let You Send Photo/Video E-Cards

Hallmark SpiritClipsPhotos and video can be even more personal than a handwritten card. That’s why Hallmark has just acquired SpiritClips, an online video production and streaming service that also makes personalized digital e-cards. It looks like Hallmark customers will soon be able to create and send e-cards by uploading their own photos or choosing from video content created by SpiritClips.

Hallmark already has its own line of animated video e-cards, but they’re not very personalized. As more of our intimate connections happen online, the SpiritClips acquisition will let Hallmark stay relevant rather than living off its dead-tree printing business.
TechCrunch

iPad buyers: Your tablet is at the store (maybe)

The wait for a new iPad ordered online from Apple stretches one to two weeks, but customers can walk into a company store now and buy a tablet, according to a stock sampling on Friday.
Computerworld News

Dell expands virtual desktops into the cloud

Dell said this week it is expanding its virtual desktop offerings into the cloud through a partnership with another company.
Computerworld News

Yahoo to begin massive layoffs next week

Yahoo is planning to announce layoffs next week followed by a major restructuring plan the week after, reported AllThingsD citing multiple sources. Under new CEO Scott Thompson, Yahoo is trying to refocus its products and drastically slim down its operations. The job cuts are expected to be in the thousands. Sources say that the cuts

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SlashGear

RFID Enables Study of Chicken Pessimism

The smaller tracking devices become, the more applications they find.

The coolest thing about RFID chips — those ultra-cheap, ultra-tiny devices allow remote tracking, even without batteries — is that these qualities make them suitable for types of research that would otherwise be impossible. Or at least challenging.







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Sony’s Xperia Ice Cream Sandwich rollout pushed to mid-April (and beyond)

ImageTo be fair, things have… changed a bit since we heard back in November that the Xperia handset line would be getting Ice Cream Sandwich by March of 2012. Specifically, Sony Ericsson is no more, and it’s up to Sony Mobile alone to continue the torch carrying. At any rate, the outfit has made clear today that it’ll be mid-April at the earliest before any of the Xperia smartphones see an Android 4.0 update, with the Xperia Arc S, Xperia Neo V and Xperia Ray amongst the first on deck. We’re told that the updates will start hitting that trio in the middle of next month, with every last owner to be gifted in the four to six weeks following. Beyond that, the Xperia Play, Xperia Neo, Xperia Mini, Xperia Mini Pro, Xperia Pro and Xperia Active will start seeing ICS “from the end of May / early June.” You know, pretty much right when Android 5.0 will be unveiled.

Sony’s Xperia Ice Cream Sandwich rollout pushed to mid-April (and beyond) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 30 Mar 2012 18:08:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Mobile Burn  |  sourceSony Xperia Product Blog  | Email this | Comments
Engadget

Ask Slashdot: A Cheap, DIY Home Security and Surveillance System?



scubamage writes “Six weeks ago, my home was broken into while my fiance and I were at work. Two laptops were stolen, an iPad, a power brick, a safe (complete with several years worth of taxes, my birth certificate, and old copies of my driver’s license), a digital SLR, and several other costly items. We are now dealing with an attorney because the homeowner’s insurance is fighting us on a number of items and we’re not backing down. It has been a nightmare. However, we’ve now noticed that someone has been visiting our house during the day. There has been garbage left sitting on our back porch table, so its unlikely to have blown there. We’ve also seen footprints in our garden that are not there in the morning. Our neighborhood is essentially empty during the day, and we want to know who is on our property while we’re not. If we’re really lucky, reporting it to the police could recover some of our property. My fiance has asked me to assemble a home security system that is motion activated, and both notifies us of an entry, as well as records video or rapid HD stillframes when sensing motion. The goal is to do this cheaply and more effectively than going with a private security company like ADT (who, consequently, our police department told us to ignore due to the incredibly high rate of false alarms). We’ve already gotten the dog and the gun, so we have those bases covered. What suggestions do you have on setting up home security systems, and what have you done to build one in the past?”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Slashdot

Evinar – A Google Hangouts For Facebook That Broadcasts Anything (Except The Audience)

Evinar ScreenshotWith Evinar, you can’t bring audience members onto a live streaming stage with you, but you can broadcast anything else. Evinar is a new Facebook Page app launching today via TechCrunch that lets you stream to a live audience nearly nearly any type of content, including YouTube, Ustream, Hulu, Facebook photos, Flickr, SlideShare, tweets, or uploaded text and images.

Evinar definitely lacks interactivity. You can’t collaborate or video chat with the first 10 viewers like on Hangouts, or pipe in the webcam streams of any audience member like promising startup OnTheAir. Plus you can’t stream your own webcam directly. Still, web celebs and thought leaders could use Evinar to connect with their fans in more ways than a standard video stream.
TechCrunch

Lenovo IdeaPad U310 and U410 undress for the FCC’s czars

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When Lenovo took the wraps off its IdeaPad U310 and U410 at CES, we were left feeling happy / sad. On the one hand, we were dismayed by the half-hearted inclusion of a memory card slot, but the company did earn high marks for sticking to that sleek Ultrabook form factor and pricing the duo at a $ 700 entry point. Now that luxurious-looking laptop pair’s making another public appearance, stopping by the FCC for a step and repeat and splaying its guts and user manual in the process. While the filings reveal no surprise specs for these 13- and 14-inchers — those internal goodies were divulged back in January — this Commission pit stop is a solid indication that all systems are go for a planned May launch. Be sure to hit up the source below to trawl the RF reports if diagnostics get you hot under the collar.

Lenovo IdeaPad U310 and U410 undress for the FCC’s czars originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 30 Mar 2012 16:57:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Engadget

Why Are Fantasy World Accents British?



kodiaktau writes “An interesting article from the BBC News Magazine explores the reasons why most fantasy worlds use British as their primary accent. Citing specific examples from recent and upcoming shows and movies like Lord of The Rings, The Hobbit and Game of Thrones, the article concludes British accents are ‘sufficiently exotic,’ ‘comprehensible’ and have a ‘splash of otherness.’ It would be odd to think of a fantasy world having a New Jersey accent, or even a Mid-West accent, which tends to be the default for TV and movies in the U.S., but how do UK viewers feel about having British as a default? More specifically, what about the range of UK accents, like Scottish, Welsh, Cockney? The International Dialects of English Archive shows at least nine regional sounds, with dozens of sub-regional pronunciations in England alone. In the U.S., there have always been many regional accents that might be used in interesting ways. Filmmakers should consider looking at speech accents from other areas of the world to create more interesting dialects.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Slashdot

Tegra 4 Likely To Include Kepler DNA



MrSeb writes “Late last week, Jen-Hsun Huang sent a letter to Nvidia employees congratulating them on successfully launching the highly acclaimed GeForce GTX 680. After discussing how Nvidia changed its entire approach to GPU design to create the new GK104, Jen-Hsun writes: ‘Today is just the beginning of Kepler. Because of its super energy-efficient architecture, we will extend GPUs into datacenters, to super thin notebooks, to superphones.’ (Nvidia calls Tegra-powered products ‘super,’ as in super phones, super tablets, etc, presumably because it believes you’ll be more inclined to buy one if you associate it with a red-booted man in blue spandex.) This has touched off quite a bit of speculation concerning Nvidia’s Tegra 4, codenamed Wayne, including assertions that Nvidia’s next-gen SoC will use a Kepler-derived graphics core. That’s probably true, but the implications are considerably wider than a simple boost to the chip’s graphics performance.”
Nvidia’s CEO is also predicting this summer will see the rise of $ 200 Android tablets.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Slashdot

Listen to the Engadget Mobile Podcast, live at 5PM ET!

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Time to podcast up! Who’s with us? For starters, we’re going to have Myriam, Brad, Joseph and — making his mobcast debut — our very own Andrew Munchbach! So join us at the normal time, chat it up in our Ustream chat below, and we’ll have a grand ‘ol time talking all about phones and stuff.
March 30, 2012 5:00 PM EDT

Continue reading Listen to the Engadget Mobile Podcast, live at 5PM ET!

Listen to the Engadget Mobile Podcast, live at 5PM ET! originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 30 Mar 2012 15:59:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Engadget

BlackBerry maker gives up on consumer market

Struggling BlackBerry maker Research in Motion Ltd. said Thursday that it plans to return its focus to its corporate customers after failing to compete with flashier, consumer-oriented phones such as Apple’s iPhone and models that run Google’s Android software.




FOXNews.com

Mac owners 3X more likely to preview next OS than Windows users

Mac users are nearly three times more likely to be running an early version of the OS X Mountain Lion operating system than PC owners testing Microsoft’s Windows 8, the Chitika online ad network said today.
Computerworld News

Inside Best Buy: An Anonymous Store Manager Speaks About Recent Changes

bestbuyFrom the outside, we early adopters see Best Buy as a dinosaur in a dying world. The company recently announced the closing of 50 stores in the U.S. and 400 layoffs, mostly in corporate. It would be easy to say “Good riddance” and ignore the slow decline of bricks and mortar, but I wanted to speak to someone inside the company.

I got a hold of a manager who wished to remain anonymous and was considered a solid and dedicated employee. I asked him what it’s like inside his store right now.

“Basically what’s going on is that we got to work and heard about the 50 store closings and we started wondering about job security. Immediately my reaction was ‘Oh, crap, what am I going to do?’” he said.

TechCrunch

AT&T now accepting Lumia 900 pre-orders, only those seeking cyan or black need apply

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Friendly reminder here, folks. As expected, AT&T has opened the pre-order floodgates for the Nokia Lumia 900 today ahead of its April 8th release in the US. Interested parties can secure their reservation for the Window Phone 7.5-loaded device at either AT&T’s retail or online stores. While you’ll be able to snag one in either matter black or cyan blue, we’d be remiss not to point out that the white version (slated for an April 22nd release) isn’t yet on offer. If you’ll recall, parting with $ 100, along with agreeing to a two-year contract is all it’ll cost ya’ to get in on the action. Be sure to let us know if you plan on reaching for the “light” in the comments.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in.]

AT&T now accepting Lumia 900 pre-orders, only those seeking cyan or black need apply originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 30 Mar 2012 14:49:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Engadget

‘Speed of light’ scientist resigns over mistake

The Italian professor who challenged Einstein’s famous theory of relatively, leading an experiment that appeared to show tiny particles moving faster than the speed of light, has resigned from his post.




FOXNews.com

Global Online Freedom Act Approved By House Committee



Fluffeh writes “While it is a bit disappointing that companies might need a law to avoid providing tools that censor free speech to overseas regimes, an updated version of a bill that’s been floating around for a few years — the Global Online Freedom Act — has passed out of the House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on Africa, Global Health and Human Rights. The version that made it out of committee took out some controversial earlier provisions that had potential criminal penalties for those who failed to report information to the Justice Department. However, the Center for Democracy and Technology has raised some concerns: ‘While some companies – such as GNI members Google, Microsoft, Websense, and Yahoo! – have stepped up and acknowledged these responsibilities in an accountable way, other companies have not been so forthright. GOFA, however, is a complex bill. While it presents a number of sensible and innovative mechanisms for mitigating the negative impact of surveillance and censorship technologies, it also raises some difficult questions: can export controls be meaningfully extended in ways that reduce the spread of (to borrow words from Chairman Smith) “weapons of mass surveillance” without diminishing the ability of dissidents to connect and communicate? How can – and should – U.S. companies engage with so-called “Internet-restricting” countries?’”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Slashdot

Let there be light: ‘Human Achievement Hour’ to coincide with Earth Hour

The Competitive Enterprise Institute plans to commemorate Earth Hour 2012 with its “Human Achievement Hour,” 60 minutes to gather with friends in a heated home, watch television and surf the Internet instead of dimming or shutting off the lights altogether to draw attention to climate change.




FOXNews.com

The new boom box: Jambox is app-controlled and awesome

Who would think one small box has such power? The Jambox is a wireless portable speaker that bumps up the sound of all of your media — and it’s controlled by apps. 




FOXNews.com

Turning in an old Xbox? Consider hard drive data, report says

Speaking to gaming blog Kotaku, a host of researchers said that Xbox 360 user data is not safeguarded from future access even after its hard drive is formatted.
[Read more]
CNET News

A Nano-Smackdown

Rival proposals do battle, and a vote is postponed.

The European Telecommunications Standards Institute, or ETSI, decided to postpone a contentious vote today over the future of mobile nano-SIM cards, report GigaOm et des autres.







Technology Review RSS Feeds

Startup Secret 53: Seduce like Evernote

Don’t sell. Let customers buy. It takes guts, but you’ll end up with fans, not just users.
[Read more]
CNET News

7 Gadgets only Mega Millions winners can afford

A world-record $ 540 million Mega Millions jackpot has lottery players lining up for tickets. But what would you buy with your winnings? Here’s how to make a dent in that dough: We spend $ 1.3 million for you on some crazy-expensive hardware.




FOXNews.com

Kelihos gang building new botnet, researchers say

The cyber-criminal gang that operated the recently disabled Kelihos botnet has already begun building a new botnet with the help of a Facebook worm, according to security researchers from Seculert.
Computerworld News

EXCLUSIVE: How to talk to an NBA star this March Madness weekend

You might not be able to catch the March Madness Final Four or Championship in the same room as your friends and family, but you can join them virtually — and chat directly with three basketball stars during the games — using the PlayUp 2.0 app.




FOXNews.com

Rubidium Detector Converts Infrared Images Directly To Visible Light

Chinese physicists demonstrate a practical system for converting infrared images directly into visible ones

The technology that makes infrared cameras possible are sensors that generate a current when struck by infrared photons. An array of these sensors can then be used to recreate an image.







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Raspberry Pi sees ZX Spectrum emulator port

So far, everyone scrambling to get their hands on the much sought after Raspberry Pi seem to be hoping to use it as a media player. The cheap Linux computer is capable of decoding 1080p video, and its low profile makes it ideal for the living room. Clearly, everyone needs to think a little bigger.

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SlashGear

Samsung store takes cue from Apple Store in London

The company has teamed up with U.K. retailer Phones 4U to offer a store-within-a-store that comes with the “clean” look found in Apple Stores.
[Read more]
CNET News

Google Drive leaks suggest 5GB free storage, in-app document editing

Google Drive leaks suggest 5GB free storage, in-app document editing

Mountain View has been leaking Google Drive details like a glacial trickle, but we still have no firm notion of how much free cloud storage it’ll bring or just how deeply it’ll be integrated with other services. There have been rumors of a Dropbox-like 2GB limit, but now a screenshot purporting to show the beta version’s main welcome page points to a healthy 5GB instead. Moreover, Google’s Support portal mentions that the Drive app for Android will have document-editing capabilities, which brings us back to the question of whether this is a whole new service, or an add-on to Google Docs or indeed a complete re-branding of Google’s documents platform. Regardless, calling it ‘Drive’ still makes it sound like sat nav.

Google Drive leaks suggest 5GB free storage, in-app document editing originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 30 Mar 2012 08:43:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Engadget

Liquor stores will laugh in the Face.com at your fake ID

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Okay, it’s only 3 months till your glorious 21st birthday, so near, yet technology has to come along and rain on your parade. You might think you look legal, but if claims by engineers at Face.com are to be believed, they’re not having it. Using the firm’s face recognition technology and a new API, they believe it can determine age based on a photo. The technology is open to all developers who might want to add age restriction into their apps, although it’s unlikely that you would want to rely on this as your sole method of verification. The algorithm takes a number of factors into account, such as face shape, and skin smoothness, so at the very least you’ll be able to find out if your t-zone routine is working. Hit up the more coverage, where there’s a free iOS app to learn the harsh reality.

Liquor stores will laugh in the Face.com at your fake ID originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 30 Mar 2012 08:22:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink SlashGear  |  sourceVentureBeat, Face.com  | Email this | Comments
Engadget

E.U. Ministers care more about security than privacy, says official

Europe's Justice Commissioner said this week that interior ministers are the biggest obstacle to data protection laws in the E.U.
Computerworld News

Micron, Oracle settle memory price-fixing lawsuit

Micron Technology has reached an agreement to settle a lawsuit filed by Oracle over an alleged conspiracy to increase DRAM prices, it said on Thursday.
Computerworld News

RoboBonobo: A Project To Outfit Apes With Tablets and Telepresence Bots



MrSeb writes “Ken Schweller, a computer scientist and psychologist, and also the chairman of the Great Ape Trust in Des Moines, Iowa, has a vision: He wants to put wireless Android tablets in the hands of bonobo apes. The Great Ape Trust Sanctuary is home to seven bonobos, including the world-famous Kanzi, and two orangutans. So far the Sanctuary has focused almost exclusively on language, with the bonobos and their keepers communicating through lexigrams on a touch-screen TV. Now Schweller wants to go one step further and outfit the bonobos with wireless tablets running custom Bonobo Chat software, allowing the apes to communicate with their keepers (and other bonobos!) from anywhere in the Sanctuary, and to remotely control devices such as vending machines, doors, and the RoboBonobo. If all this wasn’t weird (cool?) enough, the RoboBonobo is even outfitted with a water cannon (so the telepresent apes can play “chase games” with humans) and Schweller is trying to fund the whole thing with Kickstarter. If you’re a big fan of apes (or Darwinism), be sure to donate.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Slashdot

RIM revenue plummets; new CEO to consider licensing

Revenue and sales continue to shrink at Research In Motion as the company struggles to stay relevant before it launches a new smartphone platform.
Computerworld News

Wikidata to provide structured data for all Wikipedia versions

A new initiative will make it possible for any language version of the online encyclopedia to automatically pull in data rather than enter the information manually. But will it drive off editors?
[Read more]
CNET News