Shared posts

06 Jul 20:19

Double The Trouble

by BD
Fabric Store | TN, USA

(As the store is quite busy on a Saturday night and there is only one cashier scheduled, I’ve taken over the customer service desk which has two registers. I am calling customers to both sides so I can help two people at once. I’ve just called the next two customers down, two of whom I have to ask to take a longer route to the secondary register on my right.)

Customer #1: *at the left side of the desk* “Why are you letting people check out over there? Won’t everyone skip the line and go to the other side for a shorter line?”

Me: “Ma’am, I called them from the long line. That’s the only line I’m calling from. They were kind enough to go around to the other side of the desk so I can help both of you at once. Since there’s such a long line tonight I’m doing what I can to keep the line moving.”

Customer #1: “That doesn’t seem right.”

Me: “I’m sorry about the inconvenience, but thank you for hanging in there with me while I try to get everyone taken care of. Your total is [total]. If you’ll please swipe your card at the pin-pad I’ll get these people started on the other register.”

Customer #2: *on the right side of the desk* “Since you’re doing the work of two people do you get paid twice as much?”

29 May 00:58

Google Play makes it easier to find kid-friendly apps

by Mona Lalwani

Finding kid-friendly content in the clutter of inappropriate digital entertainment is one of the hardest tasks for parents. Google Play will now include a discovery tool that makes it easier for families to find apps, movies, shows and books that are best-suited for kids. One-third of the Android users in the US are parents with kids aged 12 and under. If you're one of those parents, and you're looking for an app that keeps your toddler occupied or a tween-fiction book to encourage a reading habit, you will be able to tap the Family button on the home page to browse content by age and interests. You can also personalize the search based on characters -- so Elsa, SpongeBob and Peppa Pig all get their own character badges.

Google started keeping a tighter check on the apps coming through the Play Store with a rating system earlier this year. This new feature builds further on that system. The company says it wants to empower parents to make informed decisions and this family-focused discovery tool, which rolls out in the next few weeks, will make that happen.

Don't miss out on all the latest news and updates from Google I/O 2015. Follow along at our events page.

Filed under: Google

Comments

19 May 04:17

Leak hints at the first round of Apple Watch upgrades

by Jon Fingas
Complications on the Apple Watch

There hasn't been much talk of software upgrades for the Apple Watch now that it's a real product you can (sort of) buy, but sources for 9to5Mac understand that there are some important tweaks in the pipeline. To start with, you'll reportedly see third-party "complications" (those elements that show calendars, the weather and more) on watch faces. This sadly wouldn't bring true third-party watch faces, but it'd give you a quick way to check information from other apps. You could see if you have any Twitter mentions just by looking at your wrist, for example.

Apple would also tackle concerns that you're left high and dry if you lose the Watch. It's believed to be working on a "Find my Watch" feature that, like Find My iPhone, would help you track, lock and wipe the wristwear. Since the device can't easily connect to the internet on its own, it'd use its wireless signals to determine its location relative to the iPhone and ping you if it thinks you've forgotten your timepiece. This feature might depend on newer wireless hardware to work properly, though, so there's no guarantee that you'll see it this year.

The rest of Cupertino's rumored plans are definitely dependent on new hardware. The company supposedly plans to add health features (such as blood pressure monitoring and sleep tracking) over the next "several years," some of which likely didn't make the cut the first time around. Also, the Watch would be marketed as a "primary input device" for the next-generation Apple TV. You wouldn't need it (there would still be that more advanced remote), but it'd play an important role. And unlike many of the features mentioned in the leak, you may not have to wait long to see what the Watch can do with Apple's new set-top box -- Tim Cook and crew are still expected to unveil the new Apple TV at WWDC in June.

Filed under: Home Entertainment, Wearables, HD, Mobile, Apple

Comments

Source: 9to5Mac

15 May 21:12

Not The Most Piercing Observation

by BD
Tattoo & Piercing Shop | Cedar Rapids, IA, USA

(A lady has come in to get her tongue pierced. At the moment, she has been looking at jewelry while our lead piercer sterilizes her jewelry.)

Customer: “You guys have a lot of jewelry on sale!”

Me: “We certainly do. We switched to implant grade titanium and these pieces were left from before the switch.”

Customer: “That’s cool! I just don’t understand how someone could wear this piece. I feel like they would bite it.”

Me: “We’ve never had that problem. Mainly because it’s a belly button ring. “

18 Apr 16:04

Alcatel OneTouch Watch review: No beginner's luck here

by Chris Velazco

The Alcatel OneTouch name doesn't exactly conjure up images of premium, fashion-forward devices, but that hasn't stopped the company from dreaming big with its first smartwatch. To add steam to the Alcatel OneTouch Watch hype train, the company's design brass went as far as telling our own Richard Lai that the company's gunning to be the Zara of the wearable world. Not a style guru? Essentially, Alcatel's been trying to cook up a fashion-forward smartwatch without a price tag that'll make your wallet groan. At $150, I'd argue the end result fulfilled the latter half of that equation more than the former, but the bigger question is whether Alcatel's first attempt at a wearable (running its own homebrew software, no less) is actually worth a damn. Well, after having spent a full week with the Watch lashed to my wrist, I'm unconvinced.

Hardware

It's usually only high-end smartwatches that get circular screens, but Alcatel's eager to prove you don't have to shell out gobs of cash for a wearable that looks like a traditional watch. It's not hard to see where the company cribbed its design cues from, either. From the round body hewn partially of stainless steel, to the occlusion that obscures the bottom of the 1.2-inch screen, to the single crown button lodged on the right edge, the Watch looks more than a little like the Moto 360. I can't fault Alcatel for those external similarities -- the 360 is easily one of the most attractive wearables out there -- but the design team dropped the ball on a few key details that kept the Watch from looking and feeling as nice as it could.

The design team dropped the ball on a few key details that kept the Watch from looking and feeling as nice as it could.

Take that chassis for instance. I dig the mostly metal build and the fact that it's water- and dust-resistant up to the IP67 standard, but the rear of the Watch's body is made of chintzy, easily marred black plastic. Hardly a dealbreaker, but it feels cheap and out of place here. It'll sound a little persnickety, but the font Alcatel used to highlight the 12 and 6 o'clock hours is really bothersome too. I can't quite place what typeface it used, but my gut says it's something incredibly generic like Arial Black. What really gets me is that a slightly crisper, classier face (or even just a typeface change) would've made the Watch look so much more sophisticated -- instead, it feels like Alcatel phoned this part in.

What's worse, the strap is just lousy. My review unit came with a stiff, dark gray resin band with red trim (there's also a fetching white model up for pre-order), and hardly anything about it'll make you want to wear it for any serious amount of time. The dense material makes for some sweaty, uncomfortable wrists, and the locking clasp you'll use to adjust the band's fit is both initially confusing and tricky to open unless you've got sturdy nails. Thing is, the band also doubles as the Watch's charging system so there's no way to swap it for something a bit more comfortable. Forget separate cables or wireless charging docks -- the end of that rigid plastic strap flips up to reveal a full-size USB jack that slips into your laptop or wall charger, like one of Nike's old FuelBands. I've been wondering if we'd ever see this in a proper smartwatch, but the stiffness of the jack makes it really hard to slip the fastening loop over it. That wouldn't be such a big deal if the charging end of the wristband wasn't so prone to popping loose when that fastener isn't firmly holding it in place. Sigh: a great idea marred by poor execution.

It's not all bad, though, I promise. The Watch is powered by an STMicroelectronics STM429 chipset and a surprisingly long-lasting 210mAh battery keeps things humming along (the Moto 360 has a 320mAh battery, for comparison'). The screen, while relatively low-res at 240 x 204, is bright enough to withstand some harsh spring sunlight. I'd have loved to see an ambient or auto-brightness mode that kicked the screen into a low-power state so I didn't have to paw at a button whenever I wanted to see the time, but Alcatel was clearly keeping costs down. Even so, there's a gyroscope, altimeter, accelerometer, heart rate monitor and an NFC radio lurking in that 10.5mm thick body; would adding a light sensor really have been that difficult?

Software

Alcatel's body of work is made up mostly of Android smartphones, so it was a surprise to hear that the company didn't throw Android Wear on its first smartwatch. Instead, it runs a proprietary OS that, while intentionally limited in functionality, still manages to play nice with both iOS and Android devices running the simplistic OneTouch Move companion app. I spent my week with the Watch (come up with the catchier name next time, y'all) paired alternately with an iPhone 6 and a Galaxy S6 Edge, and to its credit, it performed just as well on one as it did on the other. Granted, sometimes that meant the Watch was equally lame on both platforms, but hey -- at least it was consistent.

Sometimes that meant the Watch was equally lame on both platforms, but hey -- at least it was consistent.

Once you fire up the Watch for the first time and blaze through the dead-simple setup process, you're left looking at, well, the time. Pressing and holding the watch face brings up a selection screen that gives you three total choices: a digital readout, a minimalist analog display and a slightly more ornate analog look with on-screen hour indicators that reach out to touch the ones painted directly on the face. You'd be right to think that's not very thrilling, but digging into the companion app lets you swap background colors and images for a little extra character.

The colorful grid of app icons you'll swipe through after tapping on the display is almost reminiscent of Windows 8's Start Screen, but only about half of them actually count as apps -- the rest are system settings like screen brightness and airplane mode that didn't get lumped into a separate menu. And the rest? The weather app gives you current conditions plus high and low temperatures for the next five days, while an included activity tracker monitors your daily step counts and calories burned. You can measure your heart rate, use the Watch as a compass or stopwatch, locate your phone and even control music playing on your handset. All pretty de rigueur for a smartwatch these days. Meanwhile, swiping up from the bottom of the screen opens a notification shade and, tapping on the "6" brings you back to where you just were.

And, well, that's all the thing does. At the time of writing, there is no extensibility, no extra software you can install, nothing to help the Watch weasel its way into your life. Alcatel spokespeople said back at CES that they were seeding devices to developers in an effort to jumpstart development of fresh, new apps, but we'll have to wait and see how that shakes out. There's good reason to don your skeptic hat, though -- if a developer and needs to devote time and energy to making a killer app for a wearable platform, you'd better believe it'll be one people have already embraced. The whole iOS/Android agnosticism thing is great in that it potentially doubles Alcatel's market for the Watch, but I wonder how many app makers will bother giving this thing a shot.

In use

I realize I've been harsh on this thing so far, but know this: Questionable design aside, the Watch does most of what it set out to do without too much fuss. Using a doodad on your wrist to count steps can be tricky, but watching the counter tick upward in time with my steps down Broadway was reassuring... even if the count was several hundred steps off compared to the Withings Activité. That's no great sin though -- there's plenty of motivational value in a "broad strokes" look at your movement. Speaking of tricky, heart rate monitors can be iffy when you cram them into smartwatches and the Watch is no exception. I could be sitting dead still and breathing normally, but my readings would jump from 62 beats per minute to 145 within the span of a minute or two. Cheapo sensor, or heart attack waiting to happen? My money's on the former.

To my utter shock, using the Watch as a remote shutter button for my phone's camera was the simplest, most impressive trick Alcatel brought to the table. The interface consists of a single button to snap a photo and it just worked every time. Bravo. Just forget about changing focus from your wrist, though. Too bad the built-in music-control app doesn't fare nearly as well. Cycling through tracks with a quick left or right swipe is simple enough, but waiting for the volume level to catch up to where my finger was placed took ages.

When everything's synced up properly, the experience can be almost peachy. The issue is, the Watch is pretty lousy at connecting to your phone again if you spend too long out of range. Actually, you don't even need to be all that far away -- I've seen it fumble the connection while sitting right next to my iPhone on a couch. Either way, you probably won't notice the problem until a blue bubble pops up on the display asking you to launch the OneTouch companion app again to re-forge the bond between devices. Oh, what's that? You were expecting an important message? Hope you weren't counting on your wrist to buzz, then. Occasionally, fetching an updated weather forecast will take so long you'll wonder why you didn't dig your phone out of your pocket to start with.

When everything's synced up properly, the experience can be almost peachy.

My beef extends well beyond just connectivity issues, by the way. The built-in accelerometer usually does a fine job of lighting up the screen when you bring your wrist up to your face, except when it just doesn't. It usually sorts itself out after a little while, but as I write this sentence, it's been over an hour since the motion-sensitive display feature stopped working and I have no idea why. I also spent one Sunday on an 11-mile traipse around town and racked up something like 23,000 steps. My phone died midway through the day and I thought nothing of it until I finally got the thing to a charger after midnight. All of the day's movement data? Nowhere to be found. Since there's no way to view information older than a day on the Watch itself, all of the ego-swelling statistics from that day seem to have disappeared forever. It's these little technological lapses that turn a potentially serviceable smartwatch into something that needs coddling. No thanks.

If the Watch has a single saving grace, it's the 210mAh battery tucked away in there. Alcatel claims the average user can squeeze between two and five days out of the Watch before it needs to charge again, and thankfully that's roughly what I've seen over the past week. Even with brightness cranked all the way up and notifications pouring in like a tidal wave, I couldn't get the Watch to die before a full 48 hours had passed. Three to three and a half days was the average amount of time it took to fully kill this thing, and with a little forethought (and a lot of airplane mode), the Watch could easily hit four of five days before officially giving up the ghost.

The competition

The Watch is nothing if not a curious little beast, thanks to its cross-platform predilections and more-or-less "premium" design. If you're not absolutely dying for a color screen, but still want a wearable that feels like something your grandfather and not your kid cousin would wear, consider the Pebble Steel. It's a touch more expensive at $199, but you get an e-paper display that'll sip on the battery for up to a week and a crazy amount of third-party apps and support.

If you're willing to give up on iOS compatibility (for now, anyway) some of the less expensive Android Wear watches might be more up your alley. Google's online store dropped the price of a non-customized Moto 360 to $165 since a new one is very clearly hurtling toward store shelves, making it the cheapest Wear watch you can buy new in-box right now. It doesn't come close to delivering the sort of battery life I squeezed out of the Watch, but the huge boost in functionality makes it worth a nightly trip to a power outlet. On the flip side, if you're more concerned about owning a fitness-focused wristwatch that doesn't look like something out of a Playskool vision of the future, the $150 Withings Activité Pop should do nicely. What it lacks in features it makes up for with effortlessly good looks and a battery you won't have to worry about for months.

Wrap-up

Here's my smartwatch philosophy in a nutshell: The best ones do exactly what you need them to when you need them to, and then fade away into the background when it's all done. When everything works the way it's supposed to, Alcatel OneTouch's Watch manages to hit that threshold. It's not the most handsome, nor the most thoughtfully designed wearable, but at least its functional. Too bad, then, that the occasional moments of data loss, flaky connections and sometimes screwy basics make the Watch feel like something you have to take care of. Rather than adding convenience to your life, Alcatel's first wearable borders on being burdensome. I don't doubt that the company's ironing out some kinks and prepping firmware updates to clean up the experience down the line, but man -- talk about a lousy first impression.

Comments

03 Oct 03:16

NFL Sunday Ticket To Remain A DirecTV Exclusive

by Chris Morran

sundayticketMillions of football fans now have a reason to not ditch DirecTV. After months of negotiations, the satellite service has finally renewed its deal to be the exclusive carrier for NFL Sunday Ticket.

DirecTV has been the sole pay-TV source for Sunday Ticket, which shows all Sunday afternoon out-of-market football games… for the price of several hundred dollars a year per subscriber.

Neither the NFL nor DirecTV is saying exactly how much the new deal is worth, but ESPN’s Darren Rovell reports that it will cost the satellite company about $1.5/year for the next eight years.

If true, that’s more than DirecTV earns from the fees it charges to Sunday Ticket subscribers, but the company knows that many of these customers might consider switching switch to cable — or simply drop pay-TV service altogether — if it weren’t for being able to see their favorite teams play each week.

Additionally, the exclusivity deal allows DirecTV to continue selling online-only versions of Sunday Ticket to non-satellite customers. AT&T has already expressed interest in packaging a wireless version to its customers, though it’s unclear if that would conflict with the deal between NFL and Verizon Wireless that allows for live-streaming of in-market games.

This is why Sunday Ticket has been such a key piece of DirecTV’s pending merger with AT&T. If the negotiations had failed, AT&T would have been able to walk away from the acquisition.

After all, DirecTV customers who want high-speed broadband service generally get it a cable TV company. If a cable customer drops her pay-TV service, she’ll still be paying for Internet. If a satellite customer gets rid of his TV package, that’s the end of their financial relationship.

The goal of the AT&T merger is to ultimately bring some sort of broadband solution to DirecTV customers that doesn’t come from a third party. AT&T says it has the technology to deploy a relatively high-speed wireless broadband service to rural areas, but has yet to reveal details on price, availability or timing.

With the country’s most-watched sport locked in as an exclusive for the better part of a decade, DirecTV is likely to maintain a healthy number of subscribers, giving AT&T time to deploy a wireless broadband offering and to hopefully continue building out its new gigabit fiber service.

16 Aug 04:11

The Science of Strengthening Glass

by Rick Osgood

Strengthen Glass

[Ben Krasnow] is at it again. This time he’s explaining a simple method for strengthening glass. As usual, he does a fantastic job of first demonstrating and explaining the problem and then following it up with a solution.

[Ben] first uses a simple rig to place a controlled amount of force against a glass microscope slide. His experiment shows that the slide shatters once about 30psi of force has been applied to the center of the slide.

[Ben] then goes on to explain that current methods for producing glass leave many tiny impurities, or cracks, in the glass. As the glass slide flexes, the inside edge is placed into a compression force while the outside edge is under tension. The glass is more easily able to handle the compression force. The tension is where things start to break down. The tension force eventually causes those tiny impurities to spread, resulting in the shattering glass.

One possible solution to this problem is to find a way to fill in those tiny impurities. According to [Ben], most glass has sodium added to it in order to lower the melting temperature. [Ben] explains that if you could replace some of these smaller sodium atoms with larger atoms, you could essentially “fill” many of the tiny impurities in the glass.

[Ben] does this himself by heating up a small vat of potassium nitrate. Once the powder becomes molten, he submerges the glass slides in the solution for several hours. During this time, some of the sodium atoms are replaced by potassium atoms due to the natural process of diffusion.

Once the slides have cooled down, [Ben] demonstrates that they become much stronger. When placed in the testing rig, the stronger slides do not break until the pressure gets between 60psi and 70psi. That’s twice as strong as the original glass. All that extra strength from such a simple process. Be sure to watch the full video below.


Filed under: chemistry hacks, misc hacks
02 Jun 19:54

A Remote Possibility Of Sleep Talking

Home | Finland

(Not only do I talk in my sleep, I also move around and do things frequently. While I don’t remember the details, I’m usually aware of having talked in my sleep when I wake up.)

Me: “Was I laughing in my sleep last night?”

Husband: “When I came to bed, you grabbed my hand and squeezed it, and giggled for about five minutes straight.”

Me: “I dreamed I was pushing buttons on the TV remote.”

Husband: “It must have been a funny show.”

09 Apr 03:26

Roving Band Of Miscreants Flipping Over Smart Cars Around San Francisco

by Mary Beth Quirk

Do you live in San Francisco? Cool, I hear it’s a nice city. Oh, do you own a Smart Car? You might want to check outside and see if it’s resting on all four wheels as it’s supposed to, after police say a roving pack of vandals has been going around the city overturning the teensy little vehicles.

Flipping over Smart Cars makes me think of the mean people who put turtles on their backs just to see them struggle to right themselves, only in this case the vehicles can’t wiggle in protest. Their owners, however, are probably really ticked off, reports NBC Bay Area.

The news station found at least four of the vandalized cars, which have been flipped onto their front or rear ends or on their sides.

“Whoever is doing this just has misdirected anger,” said one woman who was carsitting for a pal.

Police say the suspects are still out there and will face felony vandalism charges if they’re ever caught. And it sounds like quite a fair amount of witnesses noticed something was amiss over the weekend.

One man said he saw about six to eight people wearing hooded sweatshirts flipping cars at 1 a.m. this morning.

“They looked like they were up to no good,” he said. “And sure enough, they huddled around it and lifted it up.”

“They look like they are dachshunds sitting up on their hind legs,” he added.

So cute! But so wrong.

As for why these miscreants are out there behaving badly, it’s not totally clear — but it could just be that the cars are so itty bitty and light, well, it’s just too great of a temptation for the more dastardly among us.

Vandals Flip Smart Cars Over in San Francisco [NBC Bay Area]

Follow MBQ on Twitter because she is a friend to turtles: @marybethquirk

07 Feb 23:45

Make Your Own Candy Sprinkles At Home

by Laura Northrup
(Food52)

(Food52)

I’m not a fan of candy sprinkles: to me, they taste like wax-covered blah. Are people like me consigned to a dull-sprinkle-free existence, though? No! Using a few simple ingredients, a pastry bag, and your choice of flavors, it’s possible to make your own sprinkles at home.

Unless your household eats a truly alarming number of ice cream sundaes, you probably won’t save much money with this DIY project. Maybe if you already have every supply on hand, including a fine-tip pastry bag. The treat is being able to choose your own flavorings and colors, and knowing that you can make sprinkles at home, even if you decide to never do it again.

How to Make Your Own Sprinkles [Food52] (Thanks, Carole!)

06 Feb 18:41

A Hit Of Caffeine

Bakery | CA, USA

(The bakery closes at two pm every Sunday. I am out on the patio about an hour after closing, sweeping and stacking furniture. A middle-aged customer and her elderly mother approach.)

Daughter: “Oh, hi! We’d like to get some coffee, please.”

Me: “Oh, I’m sorry, but the coffee’s all gone now. We’re closed.”

Daughter: “You are?”

Me: “Yes. I’m afraid we close at two on Sundays.”

Mother: “Oh, you bad girl!”

(The customer proceeds to hit me with her rolled up newspaper, leaving me speechless!)

06 Jan 21:00

January 06, 2014


KERPOW