The Technology Thread - Part 1

They have been vulnerable for awhile now. Seems like a lot of them are just learning this fact though
 
Delivery Drones at Last? FAA Contemplates Relaxing "Line of Sight" Rule

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Many drone businesses—like aerial pizza delivery!—don’t make sense when FAA rules require that humans have a clear line of sight to an aircraft. But the FAA’s drone boss just told us that naked eyes won’t always be a requirement.

Jim Williams leads the FAA office in charge of integrating unmanned aerial vehicles into US airspace, and he came to the Drones, Data X conference in Santa Cruz today with a message: the FAA is working as fast as it can to enable legitimate drone uses—as long as it can keep people safe. Primarily, the FAA cares “if you can see your aircraft, if you can see other aircraft, and you can get out of the way,” says Williams.

And while right now, “seeing your aircraft” means seeing it with the naked eye, Williams tells Gizmodo that future first-person view (FPV) goggles could be a possibility too. Right now, Williams explains, FPV goggles narrow your field of view, removing your peripheral vision, and so the FAA doesn’t consider them equivalent to being inside the cockpit of an airplane or keeping an eye on your drone from the ground. But he says the FAA might approve a newer FPV system with a much wider field of view—if a company tried to get one approved.

Besides, he says, there are technologies on the horizon that could let drones keep themselves in check, automatically sensing and avoiding collisions. “Sensor technology, as it develops, will eventually be able to deliver an equivalent level of safety [to line-of-sight operations],” predicts Williams.

“We understand there’s a lot of value in flying beyond visual line of sight, and that’s an area we hope to move on rapidly in the next few years,” he says.

Either way, it’s going to be a while before the FAA’s proposed drone rules take effect. Williams says it typically takes about 16 months starting at this point in the process. “We’re going to do everything we can to beat that 16 month timeframe.”

http://gizmodo.com/faa-may-relax-line-of-sight-restriction-grounding-del-1701606519

I want drones delivering my Amazon stuff
 
Microsoft Hololens breakdown

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Last night, I donned a Microsoft HoloLens for the second time. It was incredible. I could see objects made of light appear in the real world—and this time, I could freely walk around them without a tether. I even built my own holographic app. It felt so easy.

Now let me tell you why I’m still a bit skeptical.

In January, the first time I tried HoloLens, it was a big, bulky contraption with exposed circuitry everywhere, plus a separate processor unit you literally had to hang from your neck. It was tethered to the ceiling. Just about the prototype-iest prototype ever. Oh, and you had to walk into some very specific, very small rooms in the basement of a Microsoft building to see it in action, which raised a few questions about whether the demo were staged.

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Well, all of that has definitely changed. HoloLens is now a slick, futuristic headset that doesn’t require a cord. It actually looks kind of like a consumer device, with a microUSB port and a headset jack instead of cable soup. It already lasts up to four hours on a charge. At the Intercontinental Hotel in San Francisco, they just handed me one, and let me put it on my head by myself. I walked around a giant room. I think it’s safe to say this demo wasn’t staged.

But what you might not understand—at least, not without trying HoloLens yourself—is how little the experience you see resembles Microsoft’s demo videos.

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Here, try this for me real quick. Pick up your smartphone. Hold it about a foot in front of your face. Now imagine that the phone is a window into a parallel world. Through that window, you can see holograms that appear to exist in the real world—but all around that phone, you’re only seeing the world. In other words, you have to be looking directly at a digital object to see it, because HoloLens currently has a ridiculously tiny field of view. As soon as you turn your head a little bit, the holograms disappear.

And if those holograms are large enough, you’ll only be able to see a little piece of them, too. See this human body? She can probably only actually see his neck, shoulder, and jaw from the distance she’s standing:

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And he can’t actually appreciate this big screen on the wall:

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Unlike the Oculus Rift and other virtual reality headsets, it’s just not an immersive experience. It’s a bit of a bummer.

Does that make the technology any less exciting? Perhaps a bit. It’s certainly worrying that the field of view hasn’t improved. (I also found the prototype pretty uncomfortable to wear, even though I really like the design of the folding, stretching band.) But it’s still so amazing to me that this works at all—that a portable device can convincingly place CG objects into the real world. And the current HoloLens does feel good enough for a developer kit; to give game developers and app developers a glimpse at what they’re building.

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And to my complete and utter surprise, building an app for HoloLens—the first app I’ve ever built, mind you—was remarkably exciting.

Okay, okay, so I didn’t actually write any code. Microsoft just sat us down with the Unity game engine, Visual Studio, and a whole bunch of premade 3D objects and scripts. All I had to do was check some boxes, drag and drop some objects, hit a few keys to compile, and give it a try on the headset itself.

But it wasn’t like Microsoft hid any complexity, either. I could look through every script in Unity to see exactly how they worked, how few lines of code holographic apps will require. To turn a normal Unity game into a HoloLens game, for instance, all you’ve got to do is add an object called a holographic camera. You can add new voice commands with a single line of code—I decided that “pew pew pew” would cause an crunched up virtual paper ball to drop onto a virtual pad of graphing paper, and “by the beard of Zeus” would return it to the sky.

But the most impressive part is how the Hololens’s array of cameras can turn the real world into a video game canvas right before your eyes. With the flip of a switch in Unity, I was able to see the table and couch and objects around me as rough polygonal objects, and place my virtual graphing pad on a real table. All of a sudden, the real and the virtual started to combine.

“Pew pew pew.” A paper ball falls from the sky. It rolls off a table and onto the floor. A table and a floor which I never had to draw, render, or define. The HoloLens just saw them, told Unity that they existed, and my voice command set the wheels in motion for a CG object to interact with objects that actually exist in my life. I hear the light, crunchy sound the ball makes as it hits the table’s surface. Thanks to 3D audio, I can even hear where it falls if I turn around.

It’s a shame that just as I start turning, the ball disappears from my vision—god that field of view is so, so tiny—but this feels like a great start.

http://gizmodo.com/microsoft-hololens-round-2-why-cant-i-see-more-of-thi-1701500831

I want one
 
Everything You Need to Know About Tesla's New Household Batteries

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Tesla unveiled a new product line at its design studio in LA tonight. It’s called Tesla Energy and it’s a suite of batteries for homes and for businesses. The existence of the batteries has been one of the worst kept secrets of all time. But we are here at the announcement event and finally have some details. And they’re pretty damn cool.

“Our goal is to fundamentally change the way the world uses energy,” Elon Musk said in a pre-event briefing with the press. “Which sounds crazy.”

It does sound crazy. But that’s the business Musk seems to have gotten himself into.

What are they?

The home battery is called the Powerwall. The business-targeted battery is called the Powerpack. They’re “completely sustainable, zero carbon,” as Musk puts it.

The Powerwall increases the capacity for a house with solar panels, but can also be used during power outages. It can fit on the wall in your garage—to power your Tesla, of course—or the outside wall of your house. It’s about 3 feet across, 4 ft tall, and 6 inches deep. It comes with a 10 year warranty.

It’s connected to the internet so it’s constantly talking to Tesla Energy and monitoring usage.

How much do they cost?

Tesla’s selling price to installers is $3500 for 10kWh and $3000 for 7kWh.

Business battery prices haven’t been made public as of yet.

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How do they get installed?

“We’re working with certified installers for the Powerwall,” Musk said. “It’s designed to be easy to install, with two people in maybe a half an hour to an hour.”

When can I get one?

You can order the Tesla Powerwall battery now online but they’re not slated for release until late summer. The Powerpack (business version) will start to become available later this year. They’ll be making a larger push with businesses in 2016.

But that being said, they’re already out in the real world. The company partnered with SolarCity for a pilot project in California that supplied roughly 300 homes with the batteries. About a dozen Walmart stores in California and a Cargill animal processing plant have the business-grade batteries and have been testing those as well.

Tesla Energy plans to be in Germany and Australia by the end of the year. He also sees potential uses in developing countries with little access to reliable power. “In a lot of places there are no utility lines,” Musk said.

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Is Musk using them at his home?

Yes, but he’s not going to be able to go completely off the grid soon.

“My house doesn’t have quite the right roof to generate enough solar power to go off the grid,” Musk said before the event. “I think it’ll probably be 2/3 solar power when it’s all said and done.”

Why does any of this matter?

By pulling homes and businesses off the grid during peak hours, America’s electrical infrastructure would see greater stability. With enough people on board (and critical mass of adoption is obviously a ways into the future) we’d likely see fewer brownouts in our cities.

Another attractive part for consumers is that this kind of battery will give homeowners complete energy independence, allowing them to sever connections to utility companies.

What are the specs for the home version?

-Energy: 7kWh or 10kWh

-Continuous Power: 2kW

-Peak Power: 3kW

-Round Trip Efficiency: >92%

-Operating Temperature Range: -20C (-4F) to 43C (110F)

-Dimensions: H: 1300mm W: 860mm D:180mm

Should I buy one?

Well, that depends on a lot of things. Do you have a home? Do you live in an area with a lot of sunlight? Do you have a bunch of extra cash to make an investment in clean energy? Then yes, you should definitely look into the Tesla Energy line of products.

Do they come in different colors?

They certainly do.

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http://www.teslamotors.com/powerwall

These sound awesome
 
The Trillion Frame-Per-Second Camera That Will Visualize Atoms

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The newest high-speed camera on the block won’t be making its way into Michael Bay’s hands anytime soon, but it will be making his ‘splosions look rather poky. See, this camera will be helping scientists watch atoms zoom around at 28,000 miles-per-second.

It’s called Sequentially Timed All-optical Mapping Photography, or STAMP, and it records at a trillion frames per second, billions of times faster than your typical Hollywood feature. According to the research team at the University of Tokyo that’s developing it, the new device “holds great promise for studying a diverse range of previously unexplored complex ultrafast phenomena,” such at atoms whizzing about after getting excited by lasers, acoustic shock waves, and explosions of hot plasma. (We’ll be posting gifs as soon as they’re available.)

A press release describes how the device uses optics to snap its ultrafast images:

STAMP relies on a property of light called dispersion that can be observed in the way a misty sky splits sunshine into a rainbow of colors. Similarly, STAMP splits an ultrashort pulse of light into a barrage of different colored flashes that hit the imaged object in rapid-fire succession. Each separate color flash can then be analyzed to string together a moving picture of what the object looked like over the time it took the dispersed light pulse to travel through the device.​

Incredibly, this isn’t even the fastest camera in the world. Another optical technique, called the pump-probe method, can take pictures at even higher speeds, but apparently, it can only capture one frame at a time. Fastest camera or not, it’s pretty damn impressive to think we now have the technology to watch particles flying around at significant fractions of the speed of light. If that doesn’t get you excited, well, you can always keep your fingers crossed that Hollywood will snag one for its next dizzyingly fast blockbuster.

http://www.techradar.com/us/news/ph...n-record-a-trillion-frames-per-second-1292519

That's awesome
 
Thank God the FAA Is Switching to Satellites for Air Traffic Control

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As unnerving as it is to hear, air traffic control has always been pretty piecemeal. Relying on a combination of instrumentation—namely, radar, radios, and GPS—as well as good old fashioned eyeballs, pilots do a pretty good job navigating the sky. But they’re about to get a lot better with a new satellite-based system.

Appropriately named NextGen, the new system being deployed widely this year by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) promises to improve every single air traveller’s experience. The key is constant connectivity to precise satellite technology that gives all aircraft and controllers in flight towers access to real-time-data from the time the plane leaves the gate until it arrives at its destination. This means weather problems are more easily spotted and avoided—which is a huge deal since weather causes 70 percent of all delays. Beyond that, the entire air traffic control system is becoming more automated and modernized. The FAA already has a list of NextGen success stories, too.

The NextGen system will get even better as more planes use it, too. “All you need is one aircraft to land and the benefits begin,” said the FAA’s Warren Strickland in a statement. “With connections, the benefits are exponential.” Heck, even an incremental benefit would be nice at this point!

http://www.faa.gov/nextgen/experience/

About damn time
 
Cut Down on Your Chrome Data Usage on iOS and Android

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Browsing the web on your mobile is always something of a compromise between getting all the information you need and trying not to hit your mobile data limit (if indeed you have one). Chrome for iOS and Android includes a Data Saver feature you can utilize to compress files before they reach you and save yourself some megabytes.

On Android, tap the More button (three vertical dots to the right of the address bar) and choose Settings, then tap Data Saver to turn it on. On iOS, the procedure is the same, except the Data Saver option is inside an extra Bandwidth menu. Once the feature’s activated, you can visit the same screen to check up on the amount of data you’ve saved.

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Last month Google released an official extension for your desktop browser or Chrome OS machine: Obviously data usage isn’t such a concern here but if you’re tethering from your phone or your wifi is patchy then it can come in handy. It works in exactly the same way—you turn it on and then you can chart the effect it has. Remember: You’ll get your pages faster as well as saving data.

By switching on Data Saver you’re allowing your web traffic to be routed through Google’s servers, where it’s compressed to varying degrees—images may look blurred and extra features like geo-location may not work. Secure HTTPS pages and pages loaded in incognito mode are not rerouted and not compressed. Check the support page for more information.

https://support.google.com/chrome/answer/2392284

That is very useful
 
IBM Just Cracked One of the Biggest Problems Facing Quantum Computing

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Quantum computing could make complex calculations trivial—but it’s currently fraught with problems. Now, though, IBM has solved one of the biggest, allowing it to detect the internal errors that could otherwise render quantum calculation useless.

One of the many problems exhibited by the breed of future computers is that they exist in the delicate and fuzzy quantum world, using not bits but qubits—quantum bits. Each of these qubits can represent a 0, a 1, or—crucially—both, providing the ability to dramatically bump up computation speeds. When both exist at the same time on the quibit, they are related by what physicists call a phase relationship.

But in real quantum computers, errors can occur when a qubit holds both states: they can flip to being just a regular 0 or 1 (known as a bit flip), or the phase relationship can change sign (known as a phase flip). While there are already techniques in existence that can detect both errors, so far it’s been impossible to detect them both at the same time. That’s not much use, because you needed to be able to detect all errors for a quantum computer to work reliably. But researchers at IBM have cracked the problem. PhysOrg explains how:

The IBM Research team used a variety of techniques to measure the states of two independent syndrome (measurement) qubits. Each reveals one aspect of the quantum information stored on two other qubits (called code, or data qubits). Specifically, one syndrome qubit revealed whether a bit-flip error occurred to either of the code qubits, while the other syndrome qubit revealed whether a phase-flip error occurred. Determining the joint quantum information in the code qubits is an essential step for quantum error correction because directly measuring the code qubits destroys the information contained within them.​

It’s a seemingly simple solution to what’s been a huge problem in the quantum community. IBM reckons it should be enough to introduce this kind error detection in the larger arrays of qubits that researchers hope to create in the future. We sure hope so.

http://phys.org/news/2015-04-scientists-critical-quantum.html

When we crack that and make it practical for everyone that is going to be huge
 
Adidas's App Uses Spotify To DJ Your Run

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Listening to music whilst running is great — if only to drown out the little voice in your head, swearing about how unfit you are, you useless lump — but matching the BPM of the song to your running cadence is nearly impossible.

There are apps that will build you specific playlists, but that’s an unreasonable amount of extra effort to put towards an activity that’s already pretty soul-sucking in the first place. Adidas and Spotify have just partnered to release something that might solve the problem, though.

The Adidas Go app is a running app that’s plugged into your Spotify account, using a mixture of your existing playlists and a recommendation engine to find a song that matches your current running speed — without you having to think about it. I just took it for a run around the park, and once given a few minutes to bed down, the songs that came on were dead-on for my pace, enough so that I almost wanted to keep running.

Apart from the headline Spotify integration, the app can also pull songs from your local library to sync up to your workout. If paired with the existing micoach app, Go also serves as a basic fitness tracker, complete with workout stats, activity logs, and a way to gloat about your physical prowess on Facebook.

https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/adidas-go/id977724812?mt=8

Cool idea but if I do workout I always prefer Drum and Bass which is usually around 140 BPM's or punk rock which is pretty fast
 
The Microsoft Band Could Get Way More Interesting With DIY Web Apps

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Soon, the Apple Watch will wirelessly monitor your glucose level. But you know what? The Microsoft Band can do that too. This is just one of many apps that will come to the formerly-unimpressive Band—thanks to a new ability to turn web data into live tiles for the wearable.

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See the picture above? That’s the real-time feed from a Dexcom glucose meter beaming its data to the web. Specifically, you’re looking at the blood sugar levels of Microsoft program manager Scott Hanselman, a Type-1 diabetic who’s well-known for trying to hack his condition.

How did that data get to the band? Simple: a new version of the Microsoft Band SDK can ping a server on the web, and turn any JSON or XML response into a “Web Tile.” An app, basically. The glucose monitor connects to Scott’s phone over Bluetooth, pushes the data up to an Azure server, and this Web Tile pulls the data down again in real time to his wrist.

But it’s not limited to glucose data: that could theoretically be any real-time data from any web server or website that packages it in the right way. Microsoft programmers tell me tells me you could create a Web Tile for any such source of data, send them in an email or even a Tweet. Then, anybody with the Microsoft Band app can download it, and boom—a new tile on their Band with a brand-new feature.

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Is it enough to make the Band a contender in the smartwatch space? Maybe not—particularly if Microsoft’s relying on savvy users and developers to do the heavy lifting. But Microsoft says it’s reaching out to companies to build some examples, and it’s pretty cool that Band owners might soon be able to roll their own apps for the wearable.

You should be able to build your own Web Tiles this summer, according to a rep.

http://gizmodo.com/the-microsoft-band-could-get-way-more-interesting-with-1701095426

Would be cool if this sets a new trend as far as wearables go
 
New Chrome Extension Warns You If Your Google Password Gets Phished

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Here’s a Chrome extension you should go install right now: The new Password Alert extension helps secure your Google account by letting you know when you’ve unwittingly given your credentials away to a website that’s not Google. GO INSTALL IT.

The extension works by storing a hashed version of your password that’s compared to any passwords you submit over the internet. When the extension notices that you’ve punched your password into any website that’s not accounts.google.com, you’ll be prompted to change your password.

The tool also reads the HTML of sites you visit so it can detect websites that are impersonating Google’s login pages. Though the tool is limited to Google and Google for Work accounts for now, the code is open source, so it can be implemented by non-Google services in the future.

Phishing is one of the most vexing problems for people who want to keep your accounts and personal information safe. People are gullible and click links they shouldn’t click. No amount of training seems to dissuade people from compromising their own accounts by doing silly things like punching in passwords to websites they shouldn’t trust. That makes safeguard software like Password Alert a boon for security. At least until someone figures out how to social engineer around it again.

https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/password-alert/noondiphcddnnabmjcihcjfbhfklnnep

You can install it with the link, I just did
 
This Tiny Robot Can Pull Weights 2,000 Times Heavier Than It

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Scientists from Stanford have developed a series of super-small, super strong robots—including this one, that can haul up to 52 pounds, despite weighing less than half an ounce. That’s like you pulling a blue whale.

New Scientist reports that the Stanford lab has been busy building a series of super-strong robots, all of which are based around adhesive feet inspired by geckos. It describes how it works:

The adhesives are covered in minute rubber spikes that grip firmly onto the wall as the robot climbs. When pressure is applied, the spikes bend, increasing their surface area and thus their stickiness. When the robot picks its foot back up, the spikes straighten out again and detach easily.​

The results include a 9-gram robot that cal pull over 2 pounds as it climbs walls and a tiny 20 milligram bot—put together under a microscope—that can carry 500 milligrams. The researchers reckon robots like these could be scaled up and used in the future to haul heavy loads around factories and building site.

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http://www.newscientist.com/article...than-100-times-their-weight.html#.VT3h7heepW0

That is crazy awesome
 
This Guy Implanted a Cattle Tracker in His Hand to Hack a Phone

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A security expert had a computer chip for tracking cows implanted in his hand by an “unlicensed amateur” so he could show how hackers could use tools hidden underneath their skin to hijack devices.

Seth Wahle paid someone $40 to implant an off-the-shelf chip normally used for agricultural cattle tracking with an NFC antenna into his hand so he could demonstrate how easy it is to get through airport security with a tiny hacking tool lodged in your skin, and to draw attention to the possibility that criminals could use implants to hack Android phones.

He’ll present the attack at the Hack Miami conference in May with security consultant Rod Soto, according to Forbes. They’ve emphasized how you’d basically have to be put through the airport luggage X-ray machine for anyone to notice the chip.

“This implanted chip can bypass pretty much any security measures that are in place at this point and we will show proof of that,” says Soto.​

The demo attack uses a known security flaw, so it wouldn’t pose a threat in real life. But that doesn’t mean the general idea of criminals using implants to remotely access phones and networks is off-limits.

More sophisticated code on the chip would increase the potential for more serious damage, especially if a zero-day (an unpatched,previously-unknown vulnerability) was put into action via a chip, warns Soto.​

Not exactly the most pain-free route to demonstrate a hypothesis, but you’ve got to admire his commitment.

http://www.forbes.com/sites/thomasbrewster/2015/04/27/implant-android-attack/

This guy can't be the first to think of it. Bio-tech enhanced terrorist is now something we have to worry about
 
A Smart Modular Roadway Could Ping Workers When It Needs To Be Replaced

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Autonomous vehicles get all the glory in our ideal transportation future, but they’re gonna need somewhere to drive. Our streets are seriously lagging, technology-wise. Enter smart roadways that can alert crews when they need to be repaired—and then can be swapped out as easily as Lego bricks.

It’s not just cars that will be getting more intelligent, writes David T. Hartgen in the Wall Street Journal. Changing roadway design will be optimized for self-driving cars, ensuring that elements like interchanges and express lanes allow vehicles to travel swiftly and safely through cities.

But the most critical and expensive part of auto transportation—maintenance—could be solved by making roadways not only smart but modular, with a universal system for reporting and repairing problems. It would change the entire structure of the way transportation works in the US:

Automated monitoring of road conditions will be widespread and tied directly to repair schedules. Maintenance and repair may be quickly addressed using long-lasting composite materials. Highway departments could become largely contract managers rather than construction and maintenance units.​

Imagine city streets, then, as a much more flexible system, with lanes that can be added or removed as traffic patterns change, or bridges that snap into position when they need to be upgraded. Instead of a fleet of cement mixers, each state’s highway department gets a 3D printer to help keep roadways up-to-date, saving time, materials and money.

Until, you know, flying cars.

http://www.wsj.com/articles/keys-to-the-highway-of-the-future-smart-cars-smarter-networks-1430104847

Our roadways have been needing an upgrade for a very long time
 
With More Than 70 New Apps, Google Now Just Got Way More Useful

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Google Now is the opt-in, “just a swipe away” assistant that keeps track of everything going on in your digital life. It’s a powerful little tool meant to usurp all the Siri and Cortana alternatives, and Google made a huge stride today to make that happen, adding over 70 new apps to Google Now like Spotify, Feedly, and RunKeeper.

Google’s director of product management Aparna Chennapragada recently let slip that many more third-party apps would be coming to Google Now, and now he’s delivering on that promise. You can take a look at all the new partners right here, and many well-known apps have some neat tricks. For example, Spotify can now deliver curated playlists to Google Now based on your listening habits. All the other apps offer equally similar lite experiences that tap into the main app on your smartphone, just like every other Google Now card.

Of course, you’ll need the latest version of the Google app to tap into these passive awareness superpowers. But if you do, you’ll find there’s a lot more it can do for you.

http://insidesearch.blogspot.com/2015/04/new-in-google-app-more-now-cards-from.html

How much info are you willing to give Google though is the real question
 
The Best Private Roku Channels, and How to Install Them

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As if the Roku didn’t have enough channels already, there’s a decent selection of “private” channels you won’t find in the channel store. Here are some of the best private channels worth checking out.

Technically, private channels and apps are part of the Roku channel store, but not displayed publicly. A channel can be private for a number of reasons: maybe it has adult content, maybe it’s still in beta, or maybe it’s just an unofficial third-party channel for a service without any official app. You won’t find them when you browse the channel store with your remote, and to install them you’ll need a secret code or link.

The Best Private Channels

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There are hundreds of private channels out there, but you can find most the best channels in a few places. For example, at The Nowhere Man web site, you can gain access to:

-Bloomberg News Live

-John Green’s Crash Course

-NBC Nightly News and CBS News archives

-NASA TV and Hubblecast HD

-Khan Academy learning videos

-Government-focused channels like C-SPAN, The Pentagon Channel, and White House Press Briefings

-International news from Al Jazeera (English, American, and Arabic), BBC, and CNN International

-TED Talks

-Adult Swim shows

-PBS

-Universal Sports Network

-Live local news for most major areas

You can watch all of those in one place when you download this cool channel called Nowhere TV (code: H9DWC). The channel acts like a channel hub of sorts with a little bit of everything. There’s even some home & garden, cooking, and spirituality sub-channels. Some of the content is audio-only podcasts, but there is plenty of video. If you still want more, here are some of the other more interesting private channels and apps out there:

Nowhere Bullet: a Roku screensaver that shows your Pushbullet notifications (code: nowherebullet).

Nowhere Tweet: a Twitter reader and screensaver (code: V8MRS).

Nowhere Vine: an app that plays Vines on your Roku (code: nowherevine).

Unofficial Twitch: Let’s you watch all of Twitch.tv’s streams on your Roku (code: TwitchTV)

Great Chefs: A cooking show originally on PBS, but now is a collection of episodes available to view whenever you like (code: greatchefs).

The Internet Archive: A massive collection of old films, cartoons, and TV shows (code: NMJS5).

Amateurlogic: A video podcast channel that covers amateur radio, photography, computers, raspberry pi, and other electronics projects (code: Alogic).

Relax TV: Nothing but hours of tropical lagoons, rain storms, fireplaces, and waterfalls to relax to (code: vrqhq).

Wilderness Channel: A full on TV channel dedicated to hunting, fishing, survival training, and nature (code: fl821095).

Ace TV: B-movie action, horror, sci-fi, and kung-fu movies streamed 24/7. May contain mature content (code: acetv).

Keep in mind, these channels are either in beta form or developed by third parties, so bugs are a reality you may have to cope with every once in a while—a small price to pay for channels that are free. You can find more private channels at sites like Roku-Channels.com, RokuGuide.com, StreamFree.tv, and RokuChannels.tv.

How to Install Private Channels

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Once you’ve picked some channels you want to add, installing them is quick and easy. There are two ways to do it:

Go to the Roku web site, sign in to your account you used when you set it up, and head to the My Account page.
Then click Add a Channel under Manage Account. Once there, enter the channel’s code and click Add Channel.
Or, you can find a link that automatically sends you to the Add Channel page and enters the code for you. It will have the same URL as the Add Channel page, but the the code will be at the end. Either way works just fine as long as the code is right.

Once you’ve installed the channel or app, you’ll need to update your Roku so it will actually appear. They will show up normally within 24 hours, but you can speed up the process by going to Settings > System > System Update. In a few moments your new channels will appear on the Home screen.

http://lifehacker.com/the-best-priv...o-install-them-1700519600/+kcampbelldollaghan

Click the link for all the links in the original article for all the channels
 
What It Feels Like to Shoot With the Military’s Experimental Smart Scope

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You’ve probably never fired an M4 carbine. Until a couple weeks ago, I hadn’t either. But at a recent DARPA demo day, I loaded a magazine (also a first for me), snuggled up to the deadly assault rifle, and looked through one of the most technologically advanced smart scopes ever built. Then I pulled the trigger.

“That’s a hit,” I heard a voice say behind me. The target was only about a hundred yards away, but I hadn’t fired a gun since I earned my rifle shooting merit badge in Boy Scouts. I couldn’t count the number of processes going on inside the futuristic computer on top of the gun, but there were at least four visible sensors on the front. Facing me was a crisp display slightly smaller than a credit card showing crosshairs and some basic ballistics information. In the near future, a weapons system like this might also shoot self-guided bullets—more on that in a second.

The craziest thing: The scope isn’t just built to improve accuracy. It aims to improve everything.

The Need for a Super Smart Scope

The M4 carbine is a popular gun in the United States military, but it’s one of many weapons used by soldiers. Virtually all of these have rails that support a seemingly limitless number of accessories, from the most basic optical scope to the most expensive thermal imaging technology. Since each combat scenario requires a unique set of tools, soldiers maybe find themselves weighed down with extra accessories or, worse, swapping out components on the battlefield.

So there’s a demand for an all-in-one scope, one device that simplifies the whole setup. Companies like TrackingPoint have been making futuristic digital optics systems for years—including set ups that designed to make the gun aim itself. They’re prohibitively expensive, however, and literally limited in scope.

This is where DARPA comes in. The military’s research and development arm excels at solving impossible problems, and the challenge of building an affordable super smart scope is exactly that.

Imagine a scope that not only incorporates all of the bulky components a soldier would ever need as well as offer features that top brass have only dreamed about. Imagine a network-connected scope that sends ballistic data back to base. Imagine a scope that not only helps soldiers aim but also tells them who not to shoot. And imagine if that scope fit in the palm of your hand and weighed only a few ounces.

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That’s the scope I looked through at my recent visit to Fort AP Hill. (Sidenote: This is the same base where the Army built a fake village—complete with a mosque and subway—for training.) The day’s main event was a live fire demo of DARPA’s newest super smart scope. To be precise, it was a working prototype that’s about twice the size of the final design. The scope works, though, and it could change the way we fight wars

It’s somewhat humbly called the Computational Weapon Optic (CWO). Built within DARPA’s Transformative Applications (TransApps) ecosystem—the same system that DARPA developed to power smartphones and tablets on the battlefield—the device is exactly what it sounds like: a computer that you attach to a rifle.

What It Feels Like

I was the only journalist at DARPA’s recent demo day, surrounded by high-ranking officers of several branches of the military, most of whom were wearing fatigues. The live fire demo served as a proof of concept for the Computational Weapon Optic, as well as a chance for the top brass to decide if they might devote some budget dollars to developing the technology further.

By the time Doran Michel, the (now former) program manager of the TransApp program wrapped up the demo day, I was sold. I’m pretty squeamish at the thought of technology that’s designed to help soldiers kill better, but the emphasis DARPA placed on the Computational Weapon Optic seems geared towards more efficient defense rather than more vicious offense. Or at least that’s the pitch I got.

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I asked if I could look through the scope to get a better idea of the experience. A few minutes later I had a magazine in one hand and the M4 carbine in the other.

There’s nothing about holding an assault rifle that doesn’t feel dangerous or deadly. Mind you, I’m just nerdy blogger with no military experience. So when I tucked my cheek down onto the cold steel, my hands were sweaty. When I flipped the safety switch off, my finger was shaking a little bit. I can’t imagine what an 18-year-old in Afghanistan must feel like at that moment.

When I looked into the high res display on the Computational Weapon Optic, the first thing I thought of was Call of Duty. This is pretty silly, since I’ve never played Call of Duty—though I was a pretty big DOOM enthusiast back in the day. Something about crosshairs on a digital display gave me feelings, though. I have mixed thoughts on the military and games, but something about that screen made me wonder. I squeezed the trigger.

Firing an M4 carbine kind of hurts. It’s an extremely loud and powerful weapon. Frightened as I secretly was, though, the super smart scope made everything seem more controlled. Maybe it was something about the comfort of a computer doing calculations while I re-learned the feeling of firing a weapon. Maybe it was something about the display blinking with information. Maybe it was the DARPA pitch.

The Features

The natural assumption is that a smart scope helps you see your target better in a variety of conditions. But like I said before, the Computational Weapon Optic is designed to make everything better.

For starters, the scope makes it quick and easy to zero the scope, when it’s first mounted on the rifle. (Zeroing a scope is usually a time-consuming process that amounts to calibrating the optic after it’s first mounted.) The Computation Weapon Optic’s connectivity also makes it easy for a coach to guide a new shooter through the process through a tablet. Like the rest of the TransApp ecosystem, the scope runs a highly customized version of Android that’s compatible with a number of devices. The whole system is also controlled with three simple buttons on the top of the scope.

The Computation Weapon Optic also helps soldiers work together. Multiple scopes can be networked through the standard issue Type-1 handheld radio, so shooting can be synchronized. Soldiers already do this in order to fire at a target without giving away their position, but it’s currently done with voice commands over the radio. Radio chatter, quite ironically, is a great way to give away a soldier’s position. So instead of hearing a countdown, the soldiers see commands on the scope’s display.

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This is where things get really futuristic. The Computational Weapon Optic is not only equipped with an optical scope but also night vision and thermal imaging. There’s a laser rangefinder and magnetometer to help determine distance to target. Thanks again to the networking capabilities, fellow soldiers can see the expected trajectory of their bullet on a smartphone or tablet as well as the exact distance to their target. This obviously makes aiming easier.

You can see where this is going. If the networked Computational Weapon Optic can communicate with Type-1 radios, it can also determine where those radios (read: soldiers) are. Perhaps the most powerful feature of the scope is that it warns the shooter when the rifle is aimed at one of his fellow soldiers. The military calls this fratricide prevention, but you can just think of it as a solution to the military’s endemic friendly fire problem. This is what it looks like in action:

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All that, and the whole setup could be cheaper than some of the military’s more complicated solutions that offer fewer features. Meanwhile DARPA’s developing other smart scope technology, like the One Shot XG for snipers. Then there’s the Extreme Accuracy Tasked Ordnance (EXACTO) ammunition project. That’s the self-guided bullets mentioned above, but it’s also designed for snipers. The Computational Weapon Optic can communicate could help any soldier with a rifle.

The Future

This is only the beginning. When I visited DARPA’s TransApp program office last year, I wasn’t struck by how advanced the software was. I wasn’t even blown away by the implications, as vast and exciting as they truly are. I was stunned at how out of touch the Pentagon was in terms of innovation.

Soldiers told me how some troops in Afghanistan were still using paper maps from the 90s. So an Army private being deployed might be navigating his hometown with GPS on a smartphone one day and then confined to a pencil and protractor in combat in Afghanistan a few weeks later.

There are a lot of reasons why every soldier isn’t issued a smartphone along with a rifle, but over the past five years DARPA’s TransApp program has made progress in building a foundation for a tech-first future. The software ecosystem not only makes smartphones and tablets useable and useful on the battlefield. It enables all of the technology in a soldier’s toolkit to work together. Now, the software can power weapons systems like the Computational Weapon Optic as well as cheap helmet-mounted displays that put satellite imagery and maps right in front of soldiers’ eyes. The TransApp team has already built one, in fact.

Now think even further ahead. What could the military do with virtual reality? Well, the TransApp program already thought of that, too. The DARPA team came up with something called Crystal Hull for armored vehicles. Using a VR headset like the Oculus Rift a low cost 360-degree camera, this system would enable tank drivers to see in every direction, while making use of the TransApp mapping features. Mission data is stored automatically, just like the ballistics information from the Computational Weapon Optic, so commanders can keep track of their soldiers in real-time without dangerous radio chatter.

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I tried out Crystal Hull myself and navigated through city streets as if my vehicle were made of glass. To access mission data, I used a standard Xbox controller, which the TransApp team liked because it would make immediate sense to soldiers. Again, it felt weird to treat war like a video game. But really, these types of innovations are just making use of the same technology that makes video games work. They’re making the military work better, too.

The demo day took place during Doran Michels’ last week at DARPA. The budget for the TransApp program expired this spring. So Michel’s, a former Army infantry officer and FBI Special Agent, will move on to other projects. The TransApp project will continue, nevertheless, through the Army’s Nett Warrior project. Again, the effort to bring mobile apps to the military has only just begun. If the TransApps ecosystem continues to win support from top brass, it’s highly plausible that all soldiers will be using apps that power all of their equipment on the battlefield in the very near future. (Some already are, actually.)

There are a lot of reasons why the military may or may not arm soldiers with DARPA’s latest creation—many of them involve taxpayer dollars. But as I drove away from the base, my finger stinking like gunpowder, I thought of one reason why any peace-loving American should care. The military is treating technology and innovation differently. And it’s a very good thing to see the Pentagon bucking its overly bureaucratic past and trying to act more like Silicon Valley.

http://gizmodo.com/what-it-feels-like-to-shoot-the-military-s-experimental-1700448634

DARPA is doing some amazing stuff. I keep saying it but WW3 is going to be insane if it ever pops off
 
Self-Driving "Taxibots" Could Eliminate 9 Out of Every 10 Cars

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Just as Uber emerged as an alternative to public taxis, automated vehicles could represent the next wave of urban transportation. A new study shows how shared self-driving cars could not only improve city streets but also the cities themselves.

Researchers at the Paris-headquartered International Transport Forum found that if fleets of shared, self-driving cars named “TaxiBots” hit the streets of a major city, it could produce a treasure trove of benefits that would make any urban planner break down into ugly, gasping sobs of joy.

First, self-driving robo-rides could eliminate nine out of every ten cars on the road of a mid-sized European city. Next, automated chauffeurs completely eliminate the need for on-street parking, which frees up over 200 soccer fields’ worth of space. And when combined with higher capacity public transportation like buses and trains, TaxiBots use 65 percent fewer vehicles during rush hour than normal cars.

For this study, “TaxiBot” refers to hypothetical, “self-driving cars that can be shared simultaneously by several passengers.” To arrive at their conclusions, the study’s researchers developed a model based on the mobility patterns of their case study city (Lisbon). Looking at its population, size, commuting activities, car ownership, and other variables, they applied a model that simulated behaviors of would-be TaxiBotters: for example, pick-up and drop-off locations, wait times, and how a possible dispatcher system might work. And they found that the shareable super cars could be a massive boon.

For now, yellow cabs and black Ubers are the only chariots roaming Earth’s biggest concrete jungles, so it might be worth revisiting the study to account for places bigger than Lisbon, assuming the same kind of data is available.

https://medium.com/the-ferenstein-w...liminate-90-of-cars-open-acres-of-618a8aeff01

Driverless cars are so close it seems
 
An Iron Man Bluetooth Speaker Is More Useful Than Most Collectibles

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Unless you’ve managed to hold on to the imagination that inspired your make-believe childhood adventures, all those comic book collectibles you’ve bought don’t do much more than decorate your den. Except for this Iron Man helmet replica that’s secretly also a wireless Bluetooth speaker.

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At just shy of eight-inches tall it’s a perfect 1:1 scale replica of Tony Stark’s actual Iron Man helmet, but since it’s packed full of electronics you unfortunately can’t wear it. But that’s ok, because you can instead wirelessly connect your smartphone to it to blast your tunes, connect to another audio source via a cable as needed, or even just plug a flash drive in the back full of MP3s.

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The Iron Man helmet speaker won’t be available until closer to the end of May, which is ideal because it gives you about a month to scrape together the $450 Brando wants for it. Steep, but once you also get the torso CD player, leg woofers, and surround-sound arms, your Iron Man stereo suit will be the envy of all the Avengers—or your neighbors.

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http://lifestyle.brando.com/MARVEL-...-Scale-Bluetooth-Speaker_p13043c1768d137.html

It would make Tony proud
 
We've Just Developed a Portable Cloaking Device

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If you’re a non-magical being, you might think your chances of becoming invisible are slim to nil. But don’t jump to conclusions just yet: Researchers are now claiming to have developed a portable system that can make small objects, like your keys or pet lizard, disappear from sight.

The key to real life invisibility lies in clever optical tricks that bend light around an object, shielding it from detection. In principle, such technology has only been demonstrated for very tiny objects, but now, a group of researchers from the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology say they’ve developed a scaled-up system that can be ported around and used for classroom demonstrations.

The problem researchers typically run into when they try to bend light around an object lies in compensating for the extra distance the light must travel. Since they can’t very well increase the speed of light in air, the KIT team has developed a silicon-based organic polymer (PDMS), that, doped with titanium dioxide nanoparticles, scatters light waves to slow them down. Once slowed, the light can be sped up again to make up for the longer path around the veiled object.

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When the KIT researchers want to cloak an object, they place it inside a hollow metal cylinder coated with acrylic paint, which diffusely reflects light. That metal tube is then embedded inside a light-scattering PDMS block. If the time it takes light to travel through the block is just the right proportion of the time it takes light to travel through the cloak, the cloak becomes invisible. Or so the researchers say—the first actual demonstration of this technology will take place on May 13th, according to a press release.

While it’s a far cry from a cloak you can actually don—unless you fancy walking around inside a giant metal tube inside a giant block of silicon—this proof-of-concept could, one day, lead to more sophisticated materials that are wearable. In the meanwhile, a simple device that can make cellphone-sized objects disappear from sight sound like the start of any number of excellent pranks.

http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2015-04/tos-nhi043015.php

It's a start
 

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