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Google drops SMS Search, nudges basic phone users toward smartphones

Google SMS Search disappears

If you’re still wielding a basic feature phone, you may be familiar with Google SMS Search: it’s a handy tool that lets you text a search query and get a quick result. Or rather, it was a handy tool. Google now confirms that it quietly dropped the service within the past few days, delivering an automated shutdown warning to anyone messaging the short code. A Google employee explains the closure as a simple “streamlining” effort, although we’ve reached out for greater detail. It makes sense that Google would drop SMS Search when basic phones are quickly becoming the minority in a world full of web-friendly smartphones. However, the lack of advance notice could have some in that group upgrading their devices sooner than expected — if that’s even an option in the first place.

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EA points toward SimCity sales as high point in recent quarter

Electronic Arts has reported its Q4 2013 earnings, and the company boasted a $ 1.04 billion revenue, which is up from $ 977 million a year ago. Net income also saw a growth from last year, with $ 169 million in cold, hard profit for the quarter, compared to $ 56 million during the same quarter last year. However,

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SlashGear

Facebook rethinks its ‘hackathons’ with an eye toward mobile

Facebook is retooling its famous "hackathon" all-night coding workshops to give engineers more time to conceive new products, hopefully with a focus on mobile.
Computerworld News

Hon Hai Looks Toward Indonesia’s Promising Economy As Apple’s Growth Slows

Hon Hai logoHon Hai is planning to diversify its business away from producing Apple devices by signing an agreement with Indonesia to make and sell handsets in that country, reports Reuters. A Hon Hai spokesman said that the company, which derives about 60 to 70 percent of its revenue from manufacturing work for Apple, hopes to sign the agreement next month. Hon Hai, the parent company of Foxconn, is one of Apple’s largest suppliers. The Taiwanese company joins other manufacturers looking to make their business less dependent on Apple contracts as the Cupertino company’s growth slows. Earlier this month, Hon Hai reported a 19 percent in 1Q sales, due in large part to falling demand for iPhones. Another heavily Apple-dependent manufacturer, Cirrus Logic, has said that it is trying to diversify its customer base and is now shipping to several mobile phone manufacturers. Fellow Apple chip maker SK Hynix may start selling to Samsung, a deal that could help the Korean tech giant avoid supply disruptions for its Galaxy S4 smartphone, a key iPhone rival. Hon Hai spokesman Simon Hsing told Reuters that the company is currently in talks with several Indonesian phone companies and will finalize the details of its investment and partnership agreements after securing a memorandum of understanding (MOU) with the government. Indonesian Trade Minister Gita Wirjawan has previously stated that Hon Hai’s investment would be between $ 5 billion and $ 10 billion, and that it would build a factory near Jakarta to assemble 3 million handsets a year. Hon Hai won’t export phones from Indonesia or manufacture Apple products there. Instead, it will make devices for local brands and sell them domestically. Latching onto Indonesia is a savvy move for Hon Hai because the nation’s growing economy will be driven in large part by the tech industry. Hsing said that the phone market in Indonesia is worth $ 2.4 billion. According to a recent IDC report, IT spending in Indonesia is forecasted to reach $ 15.8 billion this year. Furthermore, up to 70 percent of Indonesia’s population is working age–in other words, they are the people who will drive spending on consumer tech.
TechCrunch

Senate takes major step toward Internet sales tax

The U.S. Senate has voted 74-20 to close debate and move to a final vote on a bill allowing states to collect sales tax from out-of-state Internet and catalog retailers.
Computerworld News

Perceiving Robotic Industrial Arm Inches Toward Autonomy

kkleiner writes “Willow Garage spinoff IPI has developed a visual system for its line of robotic arms that enable the machines to perceive a specific object in the midst of random ones. On-site videos show the ‘sensing’ robots analyzing stacks of random boxes, selecting certain ones, and tossing them to a human handler. The software is also used in an automated box unloader that requires no human supervision.”

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Slashdot

Proceed with Caution toward the Self-Driving Car

Completely autonomous vehicles will remain a fantasy for years. Until they’re here, we need technology that enhances human drivers’ abilities rather than making those abilities increasingly obsolete.

 







New on MIT Technology Review

Microsoft builds toward Windows Blue releases

There’s more confirmation (if you needed/wanted it) that Microsoft is readying Blue builds of Windows RT and Windows Server. [Read more]


CNET News

IBM moves toward post-silicon transistor

Exploring methods of computing without silicon, IBM has found a way to make transistors that could be fashioned into virtual circuitry that mimics how the human brain operates.
Computerworld News

Curiosity sleeps as solar eruption barrels toward Mars

Curiosity hunkered down after the sun unleashed a blast that raced toward Mars.


FOX News

Rise of the machines? New steps toward bionic humans

New research could pave the way to building machines from biological materials like heart tissue — and rebuild a broken human heart.


FOX News

Intel works toward integration as it aims for exascale

Intel's aim is to lead the way in creating the first exaflop supercomputer, so it is making architectural improvements to its processors with the hope to reach that goal between 2018 and 2020.
Computerworld News

Sprint looks toward transformation as losses continue

Sprint Nextel posted another quarterly loss but reported progress toward becoming just plain Sprint, a company with more money and fewer networks, which it hopes to be by the end of this year.
Computerworld News

Singaporean Maritime Tech Firm Ascenz Gets $482K In Funding From Red Dot Ventures As It Sails Toward The Chinese Market

Ascenz LogoSingapore-based maritime technology company Ascenz has received $ 482,000 in funding from technology incubator Red Dot Ventures as it sets its compass towards China.
TechCrunch

Singaporean Maritime Tech Firm Ascenz Gets $482K In Funding From Red Dot Ventures As It Sails Toward The Chinese Market

Ascenz LogoSingapore-based maritime technology company Ascenz has received $ 482,000 in funding from technology incubator Red Dot Ventures as it sets its compass towards China.
TechCrunch

Two Advances Point Toward a Cheaper Electric-Car Battery

Lithium-sulfide batteries could store far more energy than lithium-ion ones.

For the roads to start filling up with electric cars, batteries will need to get much cheaper—as much as 80 percent cheaper by some estimates (see “How Improved Batteries Will Make Electric Vehicles Competitive”). Two recent advances that make an experimental type of battery much more practical could lead to such cost savings.







New on MIT Technology Review

Apple stock slouches toward $500, near February lows

Apple’s stock continues its recent declines, dropping nearly 4 percent in a day, and reaching prices where it was in mid-February. [Read more]


CNET News

iPhone 5 edges toward supply-demand balance

iPhone 5 supplies continued to improve this week as Apple reduced the wait time for delivery to “2 weeks” on its online store.
Computerworld News

One Step Toward a Babel Fish: Real-Time Voice Translation For Phones



the_newsbeagle writes “Douglas Adams’s fictional Babel fish., which lived in the brain and could translate any language in the universe, was so incredibly useful that it simultaneously proved and disproved the existence of God This real-time translation app for mobile phones, offered by the Japanese telecom company NTT DoCoMo, isn’t going to freak out theologians any time soon. The company admits it has lots of work to do to improve translation accuracy, and it can currently only translate between Japanese and three languages: English, Korean, and Mandarin. But by allowing phone calls to pierce the language barrier, we just might have taken a step toward the universe that Adams envisioned: one where open communication between people of different cultures leads to an onslaught of terrible bloody warfare.”

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Slashdot

European Central Bank Casts Wary Eye Toward Bitcoin



An anonymous reader writes “Erik Voorhees blogs for bitinstant.com: ‘On Oct 29, 2012, the European Central Bank (ECB) released an official (and very nicely prepared) report called “Virtual Currency Schemes (PDF).” The 55-page report looks at several facets of what virtual currencies are, how they’re being used, and what they can do. As it happens, the term “Bitcoin” appears 183 times. In fact, roughly a quarter of the whole report is specifically dedicated to Bitcoin and it’s probably a safe assumption that Bitcoin’s growth over the past year was the catalyst for producing this study in the first place. The report from the ECB concludes, in part: Virtual currencies fall within central banks’ responsibility due to their characteristics, and Virtual currencies could have a “negative impact on the reputation of central banks.”‘ Could this be the first step toward regulation of the digital currency?”

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Slashdot

Intel strives toward tiny chips to run wearable computers

Intel evangelist Manny Vara, at the company’s European Research and Innovation Conference in Barcelona, said wearable computers may be two to five years away.
Computerworld News

Obama, Romney outline policies toward tech startups

In response to a query from a New York City-based tech group, the Democratic and Republican presidential candidates outline how their respective policies will benefit tech innovators and entrepreneurs. [Read more]


CNET News

All systems go for Felix Baumgartner’s 23-mile-high freefall toward sound barrier

Next Monday over New Mexico, Felix Baumgartner will attempt the highest, fastest free fall in history and try to become the first skydiver to break the sound barrier.




FOX News

Tennessee Crater Inches Toward Recognition



tetrahedrassface writes “Slashdot carried the story of an-as-yet unverified impact crater in Tennessee a couple of years ago. After a few weeks of fairly hardcore sample taking, digging, obtaining some good images and manipulating them, I’m proud to report the first batch of evidence in favor of it being an impact site. The primary smoking gun is the presentation of an astrobleme, obtained from High Resolution Ornithographic Images taken in 2008. Also of note are the melted/deformed rocks, magnetic crater dust, and the fitment of the crater rim to a circle. A rented plane and a bunch of photographs today and it’s pretty obvious that it’s a crater, folks. Cheers!”

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Slashdot

The Oatmeal’s Fundraiser Tops $1M Toward Tesla Museum



The Oatmeal’s call to raise funds for a museum celebrating Nikola Tesla seems to have electrified enough people. From Digital Trends: “The Oatmeal has raised over $ 1 million on IndieGoGo in an effort to secure Wardenclyffe, the site of Tesla’s final laboratory, to build a museum dedicated to Tesla. … [Oatmeal founder and artist Matthew] Inman’s original goal of $ 850,000 would buy just half of the cost of the property, but the state of New York has agreed to match contributions, bringing total funds up to $ 1.7 million. Raising the capital to build a museum from the property will be another cost, but from the looks of it, with 36 days left and having already surpassed the $ 1 million mark, there should be funds to spare.”

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Slashdot

Luxury watchmaker turns hand toward retro games

Shooting stars with some cash to burn should check out this set of ridiculously expensive Pac-Man and Space Invaders timepieces featuring authentic moon dust and fragments of Apollo 11.
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CNET News

Sony sells 2.2 million PS Vitas worldwide, will redirect marketing toward ‘younger audience’

Sony sells 22 million PS Vitas worldwide, will redirect marketing toward 'younger audience'

Sony confirmed to us that it sold 2.2 million PlayStation Vitas worldwide as of June 30th, roughly 250,000 a month since it passed the 1.2 million mark back in February. In an interview with PlayFront, German boss Uve Bassendowski blamed the slow sales on the company ignoring young customers to court a more grown-up demographic — but would redress that balance soon. Compared to the 3DS at the same point in its life, it had sold over three million units worldwide even before Nintendo scythed $ 80 from the ticket — the sort of cut that Sony has ruled out for this year

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Sony sells 2.2 million PS Vitas worldwide, will redirect marketing toward ‘younger audience’ originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 20 Aug 2012 12:37:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Engadget

NASA spacecraft speeding toward Mars landing

After an 8 1/2-month voyage through space, NASA’s souped-up Mars spacecraft zoomed toward the red planet for what the agency hopes will be an epic touchdown.




FOXNews.com

NASA’s Mars rover heading toward ’7 minutes of terror’

When NASA’s newest and largest robotic rover lands on Mars early Monday morning, it will use a supersonic parachute, a tether and rockets to safely alight 350 million miles from home
Computerworld News

Is Google headed toward an Android Nexus PC?

In this edition of Ask Maggie, CNET’s Marguerite Reardon discusses whether Google will use the Android mobile OS or browser-based Chrome OS to take on Apple and Microsoft in computing, and she explains why it’s still important to check the coverage of your wireless provider before you sign up for a contract.
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CNET News

Qualcomm sees smartphones pushing demand toward end of year

Qualcomm has lowered its forecast of global cellular device shipments for 2012 due to a gloomy economic outlook, though it expects device sales to surge in the fourth quarter because of upcoming products, a likely reference to Apple's iPhone and Microsoft's Windows 8 tablets.
Computerworld News

‘Rah’ squared: Cheerleaders urge girls toward science

A group of cheerleaders with science degrees performs in order to inspire more girls to take science seriously.
[Read more]
CNET News

Solar X-Flare Blasts Directly Toward Earth



Freshly Exhumed writes with this excerpt from Space Weather: “Big sunspot AR1520 unleashed an X1.4-class solar flare on July 12th at 1653 UT. Because this sunspot is directly facing Earth, everything about the blast was geoeffective. For one thing, it hurled a coronal mass ejection (CME) directly toward our planet. According to a forecast track prepared by analysts at the Goddard Space Weather Lab, the CME will hit Earth on July 14th around 10:20 UT (+/- 7 hours) and could spark strong geomagnetic storms. Sky watchers should be alert for auroras this weekend.”

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Slashdot

Carriers hesitant toward text donations to Romney, Obama

If you were hoping that perhaps some day you would be able to send a donation to your favorite political candidate by sending a text message, there is some unfortunate news for you. It appears that, even though the Federal Election Commission approved this kind of mobile donation, getting major carriers to set up the

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SlashGear

Virgin Galactic Hits Milestone As Commercial Space Travel Rockets Toward Reality

4116479211_607b088786_oNASA may not be sending anyone to Mars anytime soon, the exploration of space and beyond – though on a much smaller scale – is being spearheaded by folks like Richard Branson and Jeff Bezos. (Maybe you’ve heard of them.) Though Bezos and Blue Origin continue to work under a veil of secrecy in Texas, Virgin Galactic keeps humming along in the Mojave having recently scored a major milestone for the sub-orbital space tourism arm of Branson’s Virgin empire.

Earlier this month Virgin Galactic and its partner Scaled Composites received an experimental launch permit from the Federal Aviation Administration, the first for a manned experimental aircraft. Considering there have been numerous test flights of both the mother ship (WhiteKnightTwo) and spacecraft (SpaceShipTwo) since 2009, I asked Virgin Galactic president and CEO George Whitesides what comes next.
TechCrunch

A Virtual Telescope Turns Back toward Earth

A plug-in for WorldWide Telescope lets curious users explore the home planet.

WorldWide Telescope is a free piece of software that lets people take a virtual tour through the far-flung corners of outer space. It also helps astronomers share scientific data on cosmological phenomena. Now a new plug-in is turning that virtual telescope back toward Earth.







Technology Review RSS Feeds

Ahead of SEC decision on ‘blood minerals’ disclosure, US tech industry takes steps toward compliance

So-called “blood diamonds” or conflict diamonds are the public face of an ongoing human rights challenge in Africa, but conflict minerals are a potentially larger issue that has gone largely unheard in the U.S. — and you’re probably holding them in the palm of your hand.




FOXNews.com

Cheap Dye-Sensitized Solar Cell Moves toward Commercialization

Printable photovoltaics could become viable, thanks to a new advance.

Easy-to-make solar cells that capture light with dyes have garnered an impressive string of scientific awards, including the Millennium Technology Prize in 2010. Yet they’ve had little commercial impact since their invention in 1988.







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Barobo’s Mobot goes up for pre-order, slinks toward your impressionable children (video)

ImageIn what may be the first notable instance of a product actually losing the “i” in favor of building out its own persona, Barobo’s iMobot is not only not going by Mobot, but it’s also up for pre-order. The modular robotics platform can be claimed for $ 269.95 (with extension plates and the like available as optional extras), and we’re told by the company that these will be on the move by August at the latest. Moreover, a grant has been secured to provide “at least $ 500,000 over the next two years to Barobo, with potential for up to another $ 500,000 in matching funds if the company can make sales and attract venture capital.” Folks involved with the project are hoping to see Mobot used as a tool for teaching robotics as early as third grade, and given the choice of tinkering with one of these or fiddling with a TI-83 Plus… well, you know. For those unaware of Mobot’s potential, head on past the break for a freshly cut video.

Continue reading Barobo’s Mobot goes up for pre-order, slinks toward your impressionable children (video)

Barobo’s Mobot goes up for pre-order, slinks toward your impressionable children (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 19 Apr 2012 08:30:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Engadget

Survey: Android programmers shifting toward Web apps

Difficulties coding for Google’s mobile OS are pushing programmers toward Web apps instead, an Appcelerator survey finds. But Google+ has lots of traction.
[Read more]
CNET News

Open Source Advocates’ Attitudes Toward Profit



jfruh writes “Marten Mickos, ex-head of MySQL, was discussing his new open source cloud initiative with the New York Times when he mentioned in passing that ‘Some people in open source think it is immoral to make a profit. I don’t.’ This has set off some predictable hand-wringing within the movement. While some community members are ideologically opposed to profit-making, that attitude isn’t held by a majority, or even a plurality.”

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Slashdot

25 million tons of tsunami debris floating toward US shores

Wrecked cars, portions of house, boats, furniture and more, all swept up by the destructive, 9.0 magnitude earthquake that struck off the coast of Japan one year ago, is on a collision course with California.




FOXNews.com

Nascent Graphene Institute Makes Steps Toward Transistors



judgecorp writes “A research team at Manchester has taken a big step toward building transistors with graphene. So far graphene’s marvelous conductivity has actually proved a drawback, but the team has sandwiched a layer of molybdenum disulfide between layers of graphene to provide a high on/off ratio. Also, the British Government is finding £50 million to fund Manchester as a center for graphene study and development, led by two professors there, Sir Kostya Novoselov and Sir Andre Geim, who shared the 2010 Nobel prize for Physics for their work on graphene.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Slashdot

Incredible, sci-fi railgun takes step toward reality

A theoretical dream for decades, the futuristic railgun — which uses magnets to shoot bullets for hundreds of miles at speeds of up to Mach 7 — just took another step toward reality.




FOXNews.com

Russian cargo spaceship heads toward ISS

Russia’s space agency says an unmanned cargo ship carrying 2.6 tons of supplies and equipment has lifted off for the International Space Station.




FOXNews.com

Massive solar flare headed toward Earth, may spark celestial light show

A powerful flare erupted from the sun Thursday, Jan. 19, unleashing a plasma wave that may supercharge the northern lights for skywatchers in high latitudes this weekend.




FOXNews.com

Research Archive JStor Moves Toward Open Access

A nonprofit organization that holds millions of pieces of academic work will soon let the public see it for free.

An organization that maintains a huge database of academic research plans to soon let the public view some of the trove of information for free—a big boost for the idea of “open access” to the world’s knowledge.







Technology Review RSS Feeds

‘Doomsday Clock’ Ticks One Minute Toward Destruction

In a sign of pessimism about humanity’s future, scientists today set the hands of the infamous “Doomsday Clock” forward one minute from two years ago.




FOXNews.com

Mozilla pushes Firefox fuddy-duddies toward the future

People using a nearly two-year-old version of the browser now are being nudged to upgrade to Firefox 8. That should millions of people to Mozilla’s fast-release plan.
CNET News

AT&T, Deutsche Telekom withdraw FCC application for T-Mobile merger, look toward DoJ

Now that FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski has called for an administrative hearing on the proposed AT&T’s proposed buyout of T-Mobile, the two parties have decided to formally withdraw their application to the Commission. The confirmation came today, with an announcement from AT&T and Deutsche Telekom, which owns T-Mobile USA. In a statement, the two companies reiterated their commitment to the deal, adding that they’re looking to receive final approval from the DoJ: “This formal step today is being undertaken by both companies to consolidate their strength and to focus their continuing efforts on obtaining antitrust clearance for the transaction from the Department of Justice.” AT&T also reaffirmed that it would incur a $ 4 billion hit should the deal fall through, and that it expects to take out a pretax charge for that amount during the fourth quarter of this year. Of course, Genachowski’s decision must still obtain approval from the full Commission, but it certainly looks like both parties are gearing up for a courtroom battle.

AT&T, Deutsche Telekom withdraw FCC application for T-Mobile merger, look toward DoJ originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 24 Nov 2011 04:27:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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