Thursday, June 05, 2014

These VR gloves will let you control Oculus and more for $350

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2014/06/05/control-vr-motion-tracking-gloves/

With the sale of Oculus Rift to Facebook for $2 billion, virtual reality has officially become very interesting for developers. One of the companies trying to ride that wave is Control VR, which is ready to launch its gesture control gloves on Kickstarter. Though VR gloves have been around for a long time, so far they've been prototypes, DIY projects or very pricey devices used for surgery, robotics and other specialized fields. Control VR is aiming wider, however, with an early backer price of $350. It believes it can hit that number using DARPA-designed microsensors which detect small inertial changes in order to finely track your arms, hands and fingers. That'll let you control virtual objects like game characters and 3D animations, or even physical devices like robots or military hardware.

The development kit will come with 20 free demo apps, and support Windows, Android and Mac operating systems. In addition, the team will supply an open-source SDK to create software for the Oculus Rift, Google Glass and even the Parrot AR drone. As with Oculus, Control VR is targeting consumers as much as it's targeting businesses. Potential uses include 3D motion capture (including the difficult-to-animate fingers), music composition, design, a control interface for Google Glass and Oculus Rift, a controller for games and apps like Google Earth, and even a drone control interface.

While all of this sounds pretty ambitious, the company believes there's no similar tech that's close to the same state of readiness. As such, they're seeking $250,000 when Control VR launches today on Kickstarter at 12:30 PM ET (that's the same sum Oculus originally sought, by the way). A $350 pledge will get you on the early backer's list and net you a one-arm system with a 7-sensor glove, a one-sensor chest piece, an arm sensor, 20 app demos and the SDK. $699 will get you a two-arm system. If you're among the first 1,000 backers of either package, Control VR says you'll receive it sometime in December of this year, while later backers will receive theirs in January 2015. You can make your pledge when the Kickstarter page goes live at 12:30 PM ET -- at which point you'll get all the info and a more detailed video.

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This Android Smartphone Turns Into A Tablet You Can Use As A Giant Phone

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/asus-padfone-x-for-att-2014-6

PadFone

If you've been on the fence about buying a tablet, Asus thinks it's solved your problem.

The PadFone X, which will be available on AT&T in the coming weeks, is an Android smartphone that comes with its own accompanying tablet.

The catch, however, is that you can't use the tablet without plugging the smartphone into its back.

The tablet portion is essentially a shell for the smartphone. 

As its name implies, the PadFone X is meant to be a smartphone and tablet in one device — not separate. The result is a somewhat bulky combination that provides a generally mediocre overall experience.

That being said, the PadFone does have its benefits. You pay one price — $199.99 on a two-year contract with AT&T — and get the benefits of a phone when you need it and a tablet when you want it.

You also don't have to worry about scouting out a Wi-Fi network to use the tablet if you're already using AT&T's data.

Here's a quick look at what it's like using the PadFone X.

The smartphone slides into a slot in the back of the tablet.

PadfoneBack

Once you slide it in, the tablet powers on.

PadFoneFront

The phone is literally being used to power the tablet, which means you can make phone calls with it.

PadFoneCall

Or send text messages.

PadFoneText

The PadFone X is slated to hit AT&T stores later this month. Stay tuned for our full review. 

SEE ALSO: Now Windows tablets will be just as thin as the iPad thanks to Intel's new chip

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Wednesday, June 04, 2014

Facebook's New Feature Has Users Thoroughly Creeped Out

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/facebooks-new-feature-creeped-out-users-2014-6

Facebook Listens

Facebook recently rolled out a new feature that's leaving some users speechless and others running to sign a petition to have it removed, news.com.au reports.

The social network's new quirk allows its mobile app to turn on your smartphone's microphone, listen in on what's around you. Facebook identifies the music or TV shows it hears, and can tell the world you're currently "Listening to Iggy Azalea" if it hears you bumping "Fancy."

The opt-in feature has many users creeped out. More than half a million have flocked to sign a sumofus.com petition to have the new gimmick axed from the app.

"Tell Facebook not to release its creepy and dangerous new app feature that listens to users’ surroundings and conversations," the petition urges. "Facebook says it'll be responsible with this feature, but we know we can't trust it."

At a time when privacy concerns run rampant Facebook's new feature seems to go against the trend. In May Microsoft announced you'll be able to buy an Xbox One without the similarly creepy always-on Kinect watching and listening to your every move.

The sumofus.com petition is a little less than 200,000 signatures away from its goal: 750,000. Perhaps if it reaches that mark Facebook will actually listen to its users.

SEE ALSO: The most popular apps in the U.S. right now

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Non-Safari iPhone browsers will soon have access to Appleâs full-speed Javascript engine

Source: http://gigaom.com/2014/06/04/non-safari-iphone-browsers-will-soon-have-access-to-apples-full-speed-javascript-engine/

One of the most obvious drawbacks of Apple’s approach to iOS development has been the fact that no browser except for Safari could tap into Apple’s fastest Javascript engine. Not only did this decision prevent standalone browser apps like Chrome from running at full speed, it also hampered apps like Twitter that need to open a lot of URLs. As noted in Re/code, this is changing in iOS 8: Apps using the latest WebKit interface will have access to Apple’s Javascript engine. Hopefully, this means users will soon be able to also set a new default browser as well, but we’ll see: iOS 8 may be significantly more open than previous versions, but Apple’s not going to radically change overnight.

Related research and analysis from Gigaom Research:
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Lego's Getting Three More Female Scientist Minifigs

Source: http://lego.gizmodo.com/legos-getting-three-more-female-scientist-minifigs-1586081172/+ericlimer

Lego's Getting Three More Female Scientist Minifigs

Human girls can be scientist of all stripes, and they should have toys that encourage them to do so. That's why it's awesome that Lego ideas just greenlit three new female Lego scientist minifigs—an astronomer, a paleontologist, and a chemist—for an August 2014 release. Yay!

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