Tag Archives: Anything

BlackBerry 10 Can BBM Anything You’re Watching, Even Porn

redletterdave writes “The new BBM in BlackBerry 10 has the option to automatically share what music you’re listening to as one’s status update. As it turns out, this BBM feature in BlackBerry 10 can actually share anything you’re listening to with your BBM network, including videos. Therefore, any videos viewed in the BlackBerry Z10 browser or media player will be displayed for all of one’s BlackBerry contacts to see, even if you don’t want your network to know you’re watching certain videos.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.




Slashdot

Ask Mark Shuttleworth Anything



In addition to founding Canonical Ltd., the Ubuntu Foundation, and funding the Freedom Toaster, Mark Shuttleworth is a space enthusiast. In April 2002 Mark became the second self-funded space tourist and the first African in space. He spent eight days participating in experiments on the International Space Station as part of his $ 20 million trip. Now he’s ready to answer your questions. Ask him anything you like, but please limit yourself to one question per post.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.




Slashdot

ASUS unveils RT-N12HP WiFi router with extra-long antennas: compensating for anything?

ASUS unveils RTN12HP WiFi router with extralong antennas compensating for much

If getting long-range WiFi is a perpetual battle, ASUS just started a nuclear war. Its fresh RT-N12HP router carries a pair of (thankfully removable) high-gain, 9dBi antennas and a separate signal amplifier that can jointly boost the range of the router’s 802.11n wireless up to 300 percent versus challengers that reach the same 300Mbps peak speed. Beyond that, the hotspot mostly claims sheer flexibility as its virtue with support for as many as four separate WiFi networks and a fast toggle between pure router, access point and repeater modes. Once ASUS confirms that we can grab the N12HP in specific countries, it’ll likely deliver a good signal from corner to corner in most any home — and invite some Freudian interpretations.

Continue reading ASUS unveils RT-N12HP WiFi router with extra-long antennas: compensating for anything?

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ASUS unveils RT-N12HP WiFi router with extra-long antennas: compensating for anything? originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 27 Oct 2012 03:03:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Fareastgizmos  |  sourceASUS  | Email this | Comments
Engadget

Acoustic barcodes store data in sound, go on just about anything (video)

Acoustic barcodes store data in sound, go on just about anything

Technologies like NFC, RFID and QR codes are quickly becoming a normal part of everyday life, and now a group from Carnegie Mellon University has a fresh take on close-quarters data it calls acoustic barcodes. It involves physically etching a barcode-like pattern onto almost any surface, so it produces sound when something’s dragged across it — a fingernail, for example. A computer is then fed that sound through a microphone, recognizes the waveform and executes a command based on it. By altering the space between the grooves, it’s possible to create endless unique identifiers that are associated with different actions.

It’s easy to see how smartphones could take advantage of this — not that we recommend dragging your new iPhone over ridged surfaces — but unlike the technologies mentioned earlier, not all potential applications envisage a personal reading device. Dot barcodes around an area, install the sound processing hardware on site, and you’ve got yourself an interactive space primed for breaking freshly manicured nails. We’re pretty impressed by the simplicity of the concept, and the team does a good job of presenting scenarios for implementing it, which you can see in the video below. And, if you’d like to learn a little more about the idea or delve into the full academic paper, the source links await you.

Continue reading Acoustic barcodes store data in sound, go on just about anything (video)

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Acoustic barcodes store data in sound, go on just about anything (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 13 Oct 2012 00:57:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Hack a Day  |  sourceChris Harrison (1), (2) (PDF)  | Email this | Comments
Engadget

Teespring Wants To Be The Place Where You Can Crowdfund Anything, Is Starting With T-Shirts

teespring-logoAt first glance, Teespring looks like it’s trying to become a Kickstarter for t-shirts, with its recently launched website that allows anyone to design custom tees which are then crowdfunded into production. But as co-founder Walker Williams explains, the two business models are not quite the same. Although Kickstarter also serves as a crowdfunding platform, the production of the item being promoted is up to those raising the funding. At Teespring, however, all production and the shipping are handled by the company itself.

TechCrunch

Why Facebook’s Search Engine Won’t Be Anything Like Google’s

Trying to match Google’s immense index of the Web would be very costly—but Facebook could instead build search on top of the data we’ve already given it.

When Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg mentioned during an interview last month that he wanted to build a search engine, headline writers instantly put leading search engine Google on notice. Yet, while Larry and Sergey are probably watching closely, the technology and data at Facebook’s disposal suggest the company will most likely create something fundamentally different from Google’s search service.







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Mobile Operator Grabs 4G Lead In UK — But Will Anything Work On It?



pbahra writes “Finally, the U.K. is going to get a 4G mobile-Internet service. For a country that was once at the cutting edge of mobile telephony, its lack of high-speed mobile broadband was becoming a severe embarrassment. Everything Everywhere, Britain’s largest mobile network operator, has been granted permission by U.K. regulator Ofcom to provide next-generation LTE services as early as Sept. 11. Although Ofcom’s ruling is a significant step for the U.K.’s telecoms future, the choice of frequency — 1,800 MHz — means that devices that can take advantage of the much faster data speeds that LTE offers — theoretically up to 100 megabits a second — are limited. Currently the only significant market using the frequency is South Korea. While 1,800 MHz is in use in a small number of European countries, and in Australia, numbers of users are small in comparison to the U.S. This means devices may be harder to get and cost more. So, anyone who thinks their new iPad is going to zip along at 4G speeds is going to be disappointed; the new iPad only supports U.S. LTE frequencies. For the same reason, those hanging on for the new iPhone, expected to be announced on Sept. 12, in the hope that it will be LTE-compliant are unlikely to have good news. Even if there is a new iPhone, and even if it is LTE-enabled, will it operate on Everything Everywhere’s frequency?”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Slashdot

Tipflare: Two MIT Seniors Build A One-Stop Shop For Recommendations On Anything

big_logoWith so much information, content and so many services now living online, there’s a lot of choice — even for something as simple as where to go to buy a new pair of socks. Oh, and there’s a lot of data. As it’s evolved and gotten better at making sense of its new Big Data, the Web has become an extraordinary engine for discovering new stuff: News, cat videos, porn, you name it. Naturally, scores of sites are becoming (or are building) recommendation engines to help users wade through the noise, and, dining on Big Data, they get smarter every day.

However, as it stands today, the discovery process is pretty fragmented, as recommendation engines tend to be domain-specific. Want to find a good movie? Try Netflix. Want to find a good book? Go to GoodReads, etc. And this fragmentation makes for a crappy user experience. So, frustrated with the fact that there’s no one-stop shop for great recommendations on, well, everything, a couple of seniors at MIT have developed, and quietly launched, Tipflare to be that general solution.
TechCrunch

Snowflakes of Mars: Unlike anything you’ve seen

After collecting the vast quantities of data gathered by orbiting Mars spacecraft, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology team has uncovered some rather interesting facts about Martian snow — snow like nothing we can ever experience on Earth.




FOXNews.com

You Don’t Know Anything About Other Countries

318133_405793086120501_155278647838614_1196681_509443974_nIn today’s fast-paced and global tech world, internationalization is often on the minds of entrepreneurs and CEOs. If done correctly, it’s a great step that will make your business thrive on a global scale. However, there are a few essential insights an entrepreneur/CEO needs to break into a new country successfully. This is both easier and harder than you think it is. Easier, because you’ve already built up your business in one market. Harder, because what you don’t know how to do, you really don’t know. And there’s no faking it – examples of internationalization gone wrong are a dime a dozen (think “All Your Base Are Belong To Us” or i18nguy). If you’re seriously considering venturing beyond your core domestic audience, make sure you cover your bases and internalize these lessons.
TechCrunch

Steve Ballmer’s Windows 8 rig measures 80 inches, so… does that do anything for ya?

Steve Ballmer's Windows 8 rig measures 80 inches, so... does that do anything for ya?

To all the executives out there, consider what you have hanging on the walls of your office. Perhaps it’s a fine work of art — maybe even an original — but it most certainly isn’t an 80-inch Windows 8 computer. That curious distinction belongs to Microsoft CEO, Steve Ballmer, who has eschewed use of his phone, notepad and a more practical email solution in the name of awesomeness (or, perhaps compensation for those lagging Windows Phone sales.) Initially said to be a machine that’d be marketed and sold by Microsoft, the company has since clarified that no such effort will take place — although the door remains open for independent vendors to step in and sell similar behemoth Windows 8 setups. Unlike most tablets, we’ve a hard time imagining ol’ Steve throwing this one under his arm as he scoots out of the office… but then again, the man can afford some mighty good chiropractors.

Steve Ballmer’s Windows 8 rig measures 80 inches, so… does that do anything for ya? originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 26 May 2012 07:39:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Engadget

ShopLocket Promises Customers They Can Sell Anything, Anywhere

Screenshot_1A new startup called ShopLocket says it’s ready to serve people who want to sell things online, but don’t need to create a full-blown storefront.

Supposedly, co-founder and CEO Katherine Hague was part of that group herself. She wanted to sell some T-shirts on her blog and website, but she didn’t need to create a full-blown Shopify store, nor did it make sense to pay the $ 29 monthly fee. With ShopLocket, she wanted to create something that was simpler and more affordable, while still looking professional.
TechCrunch

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

Verizon Envisions 4G Wireless in Just about Anything

At an “innovation center,” Verizon adds wireless to cars, ATMs, and jukeboxes.

Tucked away in a new office block in Waltham, Massachusetts, is a kind of wireless Tomorrowland. Inside several colorfully lit chambers, visitors can marvel over a Buick that displays a live video stream from the owner’s living room, ATMs that allow wireless video chats with bank representatives, and head-mounted displays that might someday deliver live security camera video feeds to patrolling security guards.







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Blogger shows world how to sneak anything past TSA’s nude body scanners

Some people argued that the United States Transportation Security Administration’s nude scanners were an invasion of privacy while others were concerned with radiation emitted by the machines. Now, however, it appears as though past arguments pale in comparison to recent information brought to light by scientist and blogger Jonathan Corbett.




FOXNews.com

Microsoft Research’s shoulder mounted system makes anything a multitouch display

Remember the nifty new 3D transparent display, augmented reality mirror, and remote sharing technology that Microsoft revealed just over a week ago? Turns out that Redmond’s research arm wasn’t done doling out the gadget goodies, as it’s now showing off a new Wearable Multitouch Projector that turns any surface into a gesture-sensitive display. Using Kinect-style motion and depth sensing cameras in concert with a pico projector and a PC, you can tap, swipe and pinch-to-zoom to your heart’s content on the nearest flat surface. It’s currently a rather clunky, cabled contraption, but the touch input does appear to work pretty well, and the researchers who built it think that the tech can be miniaturized to a more user-friendly size in the future. See for yourself in the video after the break.

Continue reading Microsoft Research’s shoulder mounted system makes anything a multitouch display

Microsoft Research’s shoulder mounted system makes anything a multitouch display originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 07 Mar 2012 21:16:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Ubergizmo  |  sourceMicrosoft Research  | Email this | Comments
Engadget

Can the education-focused OLPC XO 3.0 tablet teach consumer manufacturers anything useful?

The goal of the OLPC XO 3.0 is not to sell a sexy entertainment product, but instead to get every child in the world with a connected computer. Is there anything consumer tablet manufacturers can learn from a tablet made with “cheap” education as its guiding philosophy?
CNET News

Scan Anything and Let Your Phone Do The Rest

A new app lets users capture visual and audio input with a smart phone and search for related information.

Many people rely on their smart phones to search for things online. At the movies, users might try to identify an actor from a film trailer. At a concert, they might hear a song and check which album it was on. When shopping, they might try to find the best deal on a product by searching nearby stores. Apps that identify songs, images, and video, or that read barcodes, make it easier to do this.







Technology Review RSS Feeds

I’m 17. I have 3 months to live. ask me anything

ive been lurking the site for a few weeks now and decided to go for it.

I was diagnosed with kidney cancer years ago, and I got better. But now I’ve been diagnosed with stage 4 anaplastic non-hodgkins lymphoma. I’ve been getting treatment and surgeries, but it’s spread to the bone and to other organs. My doctor gave me 3 months. I am very scared and I think talking about it anonymously would help..

EDIT: some people have asked for my music.. here it is.. http://fosnio.bandcamp.com/

trying my best to answer questions. so many coming in. thanks a lot.

submitted by cancerkid94 to IAmA
[link] [1181 comments]
reddit: the front page of the internet

I am Bear Grylls. Ask me Anything.

Thank You Reddit! It’s been fun.

Check out http://theadrenalist.com for more videos and cool stuff from me.

submitted by TheAdrenalist to IAmA
[link] [3316 comments]
reddit: the front page of the internet

We are Frictional Games, creators of “Amnesia: The Dark Descent”. Ask Us Anything!

To celebrate the one year anniversary of Amnesia: The Dark Descent we have decided to do a IAMA. The entire current team at Frictional Games will be up for questioning. Here is a list of all people and their user names (in order of being hired):

  • FG_Jens: Founder, sound designer
  • FG_Thomas: Founder, programmer
  • FG_Marc: Artist (models & levels)
  • FG_Luis: Programmer
  • FG_Marcus: Artist (models & levels)
  • FG_Mikael: Writer
  • FG_Rasmus: Artist (concepts & models)
  • FG_Peter: Programmer

Notes: Not everybody was working full-time employed during Amnesia.

Proof: http://frictionalgames.blogspot.com/2011/09/amnesia-one-year-later.html

submitted by FG_Thomas to IAmA
[link] [531 comments]
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