Tag Archives: friendly

XBMC for Android’s End User Friendly build gets stable release

Back in January, XBMC for Android trotted out what it called the first End User Friendly build of its mobile media center — a release designed with compatibility in mind. Half a million downloads later, the team is ready for the custom build’s first major update, releasing XBMC for Android’s first stable End User Friendly version today. “This is the first and only truly End User Friendly release of XBMC available on the internet,” writes the team on its official blog. “We’re hoping that it will in time bring XBMC to a whole new mainstream level.” For the uninitiated, the release page gives new users a brief rundown of what XBMC is, explaining how the software snags streaming content from all over the web and serves it to the user in a single, easy to access place. Installation is a little more complicated than simply hitting up Google Play, but folks who tried the team’s last release should be familiar with the process: sideload two APKs, and jump in. Check out the release for yourself at the source.

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Source: XBMC for Android

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Friendly Machines

Making human-friendly robots is a pressing challenge and a big opportunity.

As a research scientist I hear this question all the time: when are your robots going to replace me? But that is certainly not my goal.







New on MIT Technology Review

Editor’s Letter: When graphing gets friendly

In each issue of Distro, editor-in-chief Tim Stevens publishes a wrap-up of the week in news.

Editor's Letter Winding Down

We’ve escaped Las Vegas. While a few of us were stricken by the CES Death Flu, and poor Danny Mak was rather more literally struck by a car whilst crossing Paradise Road, we got out of Sin City not much the worse for wear. Tired, sure, but alive — and that’s good, because we had to jump right into the fray again with big news out of the Zuckerberg camp this week.

At a private event in San Francisco, Mark Z himself introduced the world to something new from Facebook. No, it isn’t the dedicated Facebook Phone people have been talking about since long before HTC inserted a little blue button with an ‘f’ on it into the Status. Instead, we got the new Facebook Graph Search, something those with profiles on the service probably didn’t know they wanted — and, frankly, may not actually want.

Put simply, Graph Search is a way for users to query information about their connections on Facebook, but it goes deeper than that, letting you discover relations and behaviors shared between your friends — and presumably strangers too, if their privacy settings are suitably lenient. The key example given by project lead Lars Rasmussen was of moving to a new town and needing to find a dentist. By querying Graph Search, he can see which of his friends live in a given area and can go further by seeing which have mentioned liking (or hating) a dentist.

While it’s very limited at the moment, the concept could be extended into every aspect of your activities on the social network, including querying which of your friends have a birthday in June, which of your friends drive Subarus and which of your friends listened to Katy Perry last week. And, if there’s something you search for that Facebook can’t find internally, it’ll hand the query over to Bing.

The early phases of testing Graph Search will only be open to maybe a few thousand individuals — but a drop among the millions willfully shoveling the details of their lives to fuel Facebook’s furnace.

Disconcerting? Maybe a little, but we were assured at the event that all will be able to be fully controlled by privacy settings when the feature rolls out. That’ll take a while. The early phases of testing Graph Search will only be open to maybe a few thousand individuals — but a drop among the millions willfully shoveling the details of their lives to fuel Facebook’s furnace. When it’s your turn, make sure to get those privacy settings right, lest it be your secret craving for pop rock that’s discovered.

As we get closer to the January 30th launch of BlackBerry 10 we’ve been seeing more and more of the operating system and hardware it’ll be running upon. Over the past week we saw a very detailed video walkthrough of the Z10 handset, got pictures of a white version of that phone, confirmed Twitter and Google Talk integration and thumbed our way through a sales training document that indicates a massive 70,000 apps will be ready for download at launch. Mind, that’s about 10 percent of the number of apps available in the Play Store or iOS App Store by last count, but it’s a healthy start.

Google announced it’s going to start letting developers get time with Project Glass at the end of the month. At developer events ranging from January 28th to February 2nd, those who pre-registered at Google I/O last year (and who were willing to pay the $ 1,500 fee for early access) can sit in on two-day training courses on how to write apps that use the specs. We now know it’s a REST API for controlling the things, a simple interface that should make app development easy — but might also be a confining limitation for those who were hoping to take full control of all Project Glass has to offer.

We’ll be taking you briefly back to CES in this week’s Distro, taking a look at the battle for control of the second screen that is really coming to a head. We also have our Best in Show awards for the things that really stood out to us from the floor, plus a detailed explanation of just what Ultra HD is, and whether you need to start saving up for a new flat-panel TV. Ross Rubin talks about compromising for the greater good in Switched On, Joshua Fruhlinger politely requests that social networks stop trying to figure him out in Modem World and we’re going to show you what a wall of 3D printers looks like. Now, put your feet up and enjoy this week’s issue of Distro — and please excuse us while we try to catch up on some sleep.


Tim Stevens is Editor-in-chief of Engadget and Editorial Director for AOL Tech. You can find him on Twitter at @tim_stevens.

This piece originally appeared in Distro #74.

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Engadget

‘User friendly’ XBMC for Android build rolls out for set-top boxes and mobile devices

'User friendly' XBMC for Android build rolls out for settop boxes and mobile devices

If you’ve been waiting to try out XBMC on your Android, it appears now is the time. While beta and nightly builds were already available, the team behind it has finally readied a release it says is “end user friendly,” ready to run on most any device. It achieves that feat by offloading video player duties to another app, in this case MX Player, in order to get around XBMC’s lack of hardware support for many devices. After sideloading the two necessary APKs we were able to get it up and running without any trouble, tossing in add-ins and playing back locally stored media without a problem. There’s a video to go along with the release (embedded after the break) but installing it yourself is probably the best way to get a feel for its video, picture and audio playback abilities.

Gallery: XBMC for Android

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Source: XBMC for Android

Engadget

The Lives of Others: Civo Gives Strangers A Friendly Place For “Visual Conversation”

Civo2Civo is a beautiful new social discovery app that seeks to break users out of their social or geographic networks without forcing them to leave their comfort zones. It went live last week and is available in the iOS App Store (an Android version is in the works).
TechCrunch

6 Business Friendly Features In iOS 6 And What They Say About The New “Surface” Threat

Surface vs iPadApple CEO Tim Cook said in the earnings call this past week that 80% of the Fortune 500 companies use iPhones and iPads. To make his point, Cook said companies such as Canon are outfitting its entire field sales teams with iPads.

TechCrunch

Rethink delivers Baxter the friendly worker robot, prepares us for our future metal overlords (video)

Rethink delivers Baxter the friendly worker robot, prepares us for our future metal overlords video

No one would characterize existing factory robots as especially warm and fuzzy: they’re usually disembodied limbs that are more likely to cut you than hug you. Rethink Robotics wants to put a friendly face on those machines, both figuratively and literally. Its about-to-ship Baxter worker robot carries a touchscreen face that’s as much about communicating its intent as giving humans something more relatable. Likewise, it’s designed to be easily programmed by its organic coworkers and react appropriately — you guide Baxter by one of its two arms to tell it what to do, and its combination of cameras and a quad-core processor let it adapt to real-world imperfections. Even the series elastic actuators in its arms give it a softer, subtler movement that’s less likely to damage products or people. While Baxter isn’t as ruthlessly quick as most of its peers, the relatively low $ 22,000 price and promise of an SDK for its Linux brain in 2013 should make it easier to accept than the six-digit costs and closed platforms of alternatives. We just hope we’re not being lulled into a false sense of security as lovable robots invade our manufacturing base ahead of the inevitable Robopocalypse.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

Continue reading Rethink delivers Baxter the friendly worker robot, prepares us for our future metal overlords (video)

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Rethink delivers Baxter the friendly worker robot, prepares us for our future metal overlords (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 19 Sep 2012 03:28:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Gogo and AeroSat get friendly on Ku-band, bring international in-flight WiFi closer

Gogo AeroSat international inflight WiFi

Gogo has a virtual lock on in-flight WiFi for the US, but most of us forget that everything goes dark the moment you decide to cross the border. The company already has a deal with Inmarsat for Ka-band Internet connections, and now it’s partnering up with AeroSat to bring Ku-band satellite access. The tie-in will let Gogo offer precious relief from tedium on international flights, whether it’s a modest hop to the Great White North or an hours-long trip across the ocean. Gogo considers the deal an interim step until Inmarsat’s technology is ready, making for much quicker availability than if it had just waited until it could use Ka-band: Ku-band satellite linkups should be on airliners as soon as the end of 2012, while Ka-band won’t even show its face until at least late 2014. It’s unknown what kind of premium we’ll pay over the $ 13 maximum Gogo normally charges, but if AeroSat lets us squeak in a few more Twitter updates on our way home from Barcelona, it’ll be worthwhile.

Continue reading Gogo and AeroSat get friendly on Ku-band, bring international in-flight WiFi closer

Gogo and AeroSat get friendly on Ku-band, bring international in-flight WiFi closer originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 18 May 2012 16:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Canon firmware update for XF camcorders incoming, brings broadcast friendly format along

Canon firmware update for XF Camcorders incoming, brings broadcast friendly format along

Still loving your XF video shooter from Canon, but lamenting the lack of 1440 x 1080, 35 mbps HD? Better sit down on your director’s chair then, as it looks like a forthcoming firmware update for the series adds exactly this (at both 50i and 60i.) The format is popular with broadcast and news, and no doubt Canon is hoping to broaden the appeal of the XF line by bundling it in — or smoothing the workflow of existing owners. The update will be available to all four cameras in the range (XF100, XF105, XF300, and XF305,) and you’ll be able to start shooting with it from end of May.

Continue reading Canon firmware update for XF camcorders incoming, brings broadcast friendly format along

Canon firmware update for XF camcorders incoming, brings broadcast friendly format along originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 13 Apr 2012 19:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Engadget

Facebook is too friendly; new app helps users make enemies

EnemyGraph is a free Facebook app that serves a single purpose: it allows users to name their enemies.




FOXNews.com

Pinterest Updates Terms Of Service As It Preps An API And Private Pinboards: More Copyright Friendly

pinterest-logo6Pinterest is growing up fast: just days ago the image-based social network rolled out redesigned profile pages, and now it’s following that up with an updated Terms of Service, Acceptable Use Policy and Privacy Policy that sharpen how the company interfaces on a number of commercial points as it rides its wave of growth as it rapidly reaches and passes 12 million users.

“We think that the updated Terms of Service, Acceptable Use Policy, and Privacy Policy are easier to understand and better reflect the direction our company is headed in the future,” CEO Ben Silbermann wrote in an email to Pinterest users informing them of the changes, due to take effect on April 6. From the looks of it, that future direction involves not just more private experiences on Pinterest but also a much stronger push to get Pinterest working in a whole lot more places.
TechCrunch

Dell working on business friendly Windows 8 tablet

Windows 8 is certainly proving popular ahead of its release later this year: the consumer preview release racked up over one million downloads in less than 24 hours last week. While OEMs are almost certainly eyeing up ways to capitalize on the potential success of the operating system across the tablet and desktop space, Dell

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SlashGear

Just A Friendly Reminder: If You Sold Your Apple Stock In October, You Were, In Fact, An Idiot

Screen Shot 2012-01-07 at 3.18.16 PMOn October 19 of last year I wrote a post entitled: If You Sold Your Apple Stock Today, You’re An Idiot. Because their Q4 numbers missed Wall Street expectations, Apple’s stock dropped over 5 percent on that day, to close below $ 400-a-share after hitting an all-time high just days before. My argument was that it was the Wall Street expectations that were horribly flawed, not Apple’s actual performance. And the stock would recover quickly as a result leading up to their Q1 earnings, which even Apple was predicting would be a blow out.

Reading the comments on that post — which I love to do — you’d think I was saying something insane. When the stock fell to $ 363 right after Thanksgiving, a few remembered the post and once again pointed out the irrational insanity of this fanboy.  But then a funny thing happened yesterday. Apple’s stock closed at a new all-time high.
TechCrunch

Animoto Learns To Play Friendly With Instagram, Now Pulls Photos In Directly

AnimotoIt’s not a bad day for Instagram. First came the announcement that they were 2011 Crunchies Finalists. Shortly thereafter, they finally figured out how to push fullsize Instagrams to your Facebook Timeline. Capping off the day, automatic video slideshow service Animoto has launched full, built-in Instagram support.
TechCrunch

Social Travel: Rediscovering the Friendly Skies

Photo Credit / Creative Commons Flickr, Phineas BWe’ve heard endlessly how “social” will eventually disrupt and transform old, stodgy industries, perhaps even reinvent them for the better. The promise of this change, of course, is often tempered by the reality that, if indeed this stuff actually happens, it will take time and we’re currently in the early stages of the game.

And when it comes to travel, one of the most heavily regulated industries, while disruption and transformation would be music to travelers’ ears, change won’t come fast. There are a number of reasons travel has become more of an onerous task (thank you, TSA), yet consumers continue to brave the elements to happily trot around the globe.
TechCrunch

WiFi Direct and DLNA get friendly, make streaming media a little bit easier

WiFi Direct

DLNA and WiFi Direct are both pretty sweet technologies on their own but, together, they offer the promise of simple, wireless media streaming without the need for that pesky router middleman. The Digital Living Network Alliance has officially incorporated WiFi Direct into its interoperability guidelines, which means you could soon be streaming movies and music between devices (like your laptop and smartphone) without connecting to a home (or public) network. And don’t forget, only one part of the equation needs to be WiFi Direct certified — so don’t worry that your aging computer doesn’t support it, as long as your smartphone does you’re golden. Check out the PR after the break.

Continue reading WiFi Direct and DLNA get friendly, make streaming media a little bit easier

WiFi Direct and DLNA get friendly, make streaming media a little bit easier originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 16 Nov 2011 02:24:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Engadget

Friday Poll: Is Siri a little too friendly?

Siri is getting good reviews as a sidekick, but a couple of security questions are swirling around the iPhone 4S’ virtual assistant. Is Siri getting a little too friendly?
CNET News.com

Ask Slashdot: Websites Friendly To eReader Browsers?

DJCouchyCouch writes “I have a Kobo Touch eReader that comes with a bare-bones web browser. Since the screen is E-Ink based, the browsing experience is pretty poor due to the low refresh rate of the screen. Scrolling is twitchy and often laggy. Are there sites out there that can reformat a website to be more like book reading? I’m not asking for a perfect, tablet-like experience, just something better than what it does now.”

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Slashdot

Scammers pretend to be friendly office printers

Hackers have found a new hook to trick people into opening malicious attachments: send emails that purport to come from office printers, many of which now have the ability to email scanned documents.
Computerworld News