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22 Jun 19:47

Android Pay v1.4 prepares to launch streamlined loyalty signups, Transport for London integration, and discovery for apps and local retailers that accept it [APK Teardown]

by Cody Toombs

pay

If the presentations at Google I/O last month were any indication, Android Pay is growing quite quickly. Several new features were announced, but most were still only demos, not available to the public. A fresh update to the Android Pay app came out yesterday and a teardown reveals a few of those key features are either ready to launch or getting closer. There's also work being done on a map that will show merchants in close proximity that accept Android Pay, and a shortcut already showing up that will direct users to apps with Android Pay integration.

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Android Pay v1.4 prepares to launch streamlined loyalty signups, Transport for London integration, and discovery for apps and local retailers that accept it [APK Teardown] was written by the awesome team at Android Police.

22 Jun 19:45

Snapseed 2.6 update brings neutral color picker and presets to RAW white balance editor, blue filter for black and white options

by Jacob Long

BWfilterswithcolors

The latest Snapseed update brings a couple of things that the development team says have been oft-requested by users. For those tweaking RAW images, you get two new handy ways to get the white balance. For all image types, an additional color filter has been added to the existing choices in the black and white editor.

You already could adjust the color temperature for RAW images with Snapseed, but this isn't a foolproof method since it requires you to be able to eyeball the photo to figure out when you have correctly set the temperature.

Read More

Snapseed 2.6 update brings neutral color picker and presets to RAW white balance editor, blue filter for black and white options was written by the awesome team at Android Police.

22 Jun 19:42

Phones without headphone jacks are phones with DRM for audio

by Cory Doctorow

Headphone_jack_3.5mm (1)

Nilay Patel's magnificent rant about Apple's rumored announcement that future phones won't have headphone jacks starts with the main event: "1. Digital audio means DRM audio." (more…)

22 Jun 19:40

Video: Guys whose boss made them illegally dump hazardous chemicals in the desert

by Cory Doctorow
animation (4)

On March 3, a worker shot this video of him and his co-workers illegally pouring HOCUT 795-B out on the Nevada desert floor, then burning out the residue, at the insistence of their (unnamed) employer. (more…)

22 Jun 19:39

Treasure trove of royalty-free stock photo websites

by Andrea James

2016-05-Life-of-Pix-free-stock-sea-road-beach-PaulJarvis

The fine folks at Small Business Web Designs in Australia put together a very helpful list of 50 Top Rated Websites for Royalty Free Stock Images, like Path to the Sea by Paul Jarvis on Life of Pix. (more…)

22 Jun 19:35

Amazon Announces Upgraded Kindle and a White Kindle Paperwhite

by Eric Ravenscraft
Amazon Announces Upgraded Kindle and a White Kindle Paperwhite

Today, Amazon announced an upgraded version of its standard Kindle, plus a white version of its Paperwhite model. Both are available starting today for the same price as the old models.

The regular Kindle gets the most significant update, with double the storage of previous models, up to 4GB of space. It also comes with a couple new features including Bluetooth audio support, and a thinner, lighter frame which can help quite a bit when you’re holding your device up for long periods of time. The regular Kindle starts at $79.99.

https://www.amazon.com/All-New-Kindle...

The Kindle Paperwhite didn’t get an under-the-hood upgrade, but you can now buy the Paperwhite in white. Finally, doing away with that chroma misnomer once and for all. This model of Kindle also maintains its previous price point of $119.99.

https://www.amazon.com/Amazon-Kindle-...

22 Jun 19:33

Simple Habit is an app to squeeze mindfulness into your busy day

by Natasha Lomas
Simple Habit The stress of running a startup guided founder Yunha Kim to her next idea: a mindfulness app called Simple Habit, offering five-minute audio meditations so that busy people can squeeze a little tranquility into their day. Read More
22 Jun 19:32

Google and Udacity launch a new Android programming course for beginners

by Lucia Maffei
Android Basics Nanodegree 3 Google wants more people to learn to program — especially for its Android platform. While the company already offered a few programming courses, they were typically geared toward students with at least some rudimentary programming experience. Starting today, the Google Android Basics Nanodegree class is available on the online learning platform Udacity. It’s the first Android… Read More
22 Jun 19:30

Dropbox adds new sharing features and a nifty document scanner

by Nick Statt

Dropbox announced a handful of new features today, including a new scanner for its iOS app that can identify and remember printed text. Now, Dropbox's mobile app will let you snap a photo of any document containing text, and the software will automatically convert it into a file in your account. Using optical character recognition, the company says you can then search for words found within the document to resurface the image later. Dropbox did not give a concrete timeline for when the feature will come to Android.

The company's goal is to get people to think of Dropbox as a place to create files, and not simply store them. While the company has around 500 million users, only a tiny fraction of that number constitutes paying customers...

Continue reading…

22 Jun 13:14

Jaguar Used as Prop for Olympics Shot Dead after Torch Passing

by McCullough
Jaguar Used as Prop for Olympics Shot Dead after Torch Passing
22 Jun 13:04

Voice Bridge puts your landline inside your cell phone

by Ashley Carman

Before I start telling you about this new gadget, let’s have a moment of silence for the landline phone number.



Okay great, thanks for participating. Now for a gadget. Invoxia, the company behind the Triby, wants you to not only remember the landline, but to use one, too. Its new Voice Bridge product connects your landline phone to Wi-Fi so that phone calls can be forwarded to your smartphone or tablet. Voice Bridge essentially turns your smartphone into a second interface for your landline and allows it to act more like your cell number.

Continue reading…

21 Jun 23:39

These guys built the ‘World’s Largest Nerf Gun’ and it shoots massive darts at 40 mph

by Greg Kumparak
nerfd Bigger isn’t necessarily better when it comes to Nerf battles — but… well, this one wins. It’s a four foot tall recreation of the Nerf N-Strike Maverick — one of the greatest Nerf guns of all time. Oh, and it works. It shoots massive darts* at around 40 miles per hour. Read More
21 Jun 21:00

Idiots ignite fireworks shelves inside a Walmart

by Mark Frauenfelder
walmart-fireworks

Interestingly, you can buy fireworks at Walmart stores in Arizona. You aren't supposed to light them all at once inside the store, though. The gentleman who did will soon learn that fireworks are harder to come by in prison.

21 Jun 20:59

Couples who divide housework fairly have more sex

by David Pescovitz

sharing-chores-rw

New research from the University of Utah and Cornell University suggests that couples involved in egalitarian marriages, at least as chores are concerned, have more sex. (Note that the study is only about heterosexual marriages.) This new study appears to counter a 2014 New York Times Magazine article titled "Does Gender Equality Kill Sex Lives?." For this work, the Utah and Cornell researchers compared a 2006 marital satisfaction survey with data from 1992-1994. From a news release about the paper:

Turns out, the “rules” that govern sexual and marital satisfaction have been changing rapidly—and, like many generalizations about modern marriage, the 2013 study (that the NYT article reported on) was based on outdated data. As Cornell University Professor Sharon Sassler shows in her new paper, “A Reversal in Predictors of Sexual Frequency and Satisfaction in Marriage,” presented today to the Council on Contemporary Families, when couples share similar tasks rather than different, gender-stereotyped ones, this seems to deepen desire.

Sassler reports, “Contemporary couples who adhere to a more egalitarian division of labor are the only couples who have experienced an increase in sexual frequency compared to their counterparts of the past. Other groups – including those where the woman does the bulk of the housework – have experienced declines in sexual frequency. This finding is particularly notable given reports indicating that sexual frequency has generally declined worldwide over the past few decades.”

Quartz digs deeper into the new study:

...Couples who reported sharing housework equally had sex 6.8 times per month, on average, or about once more per month than those where the woman does more “routine housework,” defined as: preparing and cooking meals, washing dishes, cleaning around the house, shopping for groceries, and doing laundry...

The study had some not-so-great findings too. Couples in which the man does the bulk of the housework have significantly less sex than those in conventional or more egalitarian pairings (the study did not look at same-sex couples). And while sexual satisfaction varied little between conventional and egalitarian couples; counter-conventional couples, those in which he does the bulk of the housework, were more dissatisfied with their sex lives compared to those in other arrangements.

21 Jun 20:59

Kid gets head unstuck from fence bars

by Mark Frauenfelder
Screen Shot 2016-06-21 at 10.55.50 AM

A little kid figures out how to break out of his self-imposed prison.

21 Jun 20:58

Trippy animated zoom video makes everything you see in the real world recede

by Mark Frauenfelder
loop

After watching Ben Ridgway's "Continuum Infinitum" video, everything I looked at seemed to recede for a while. Ben recommends downloading the video and looping it.

As you watch the movie for a minute or so and then look away, you will experience a mild optical illusion that feels as if everything you look at is shrinking away from you. This is caused by the motion after-effect (MAE). It is a visual illusion experienced after viewing a moving visual stimulus for a time (tens of milliseconds to minutes) with stationary eyes, and then fixating on a stationary stimulus. The stationary stimulus appears to move in the opposite direction to the original (physically moving) stimulus. The motion aftereffect is believed to be the result of motion adaptation.

Neurons coding a particular movement reduce their responses with time of exposure to a constantly moving stimulus; this is neural adaptation. Neural adaptation also reduces the spontaneous, baseline activity of these same neurons when responding to a stationary stimulus. One theory is that perception of stationary objects, for example rocks beside a waterfall, is coded as the balance among the baseline responses of neurons coding all possible directions of motion. Neural adaptation of neurons stimulated by downwards movement reduces their baseline activity, tilting the balance in favor of upwards movement.

21 Jun 20:55

The best thing to come to your bath since bubbles

by Drew Kozub

Bathforia’s Bathtub Caddy has a spot for all the essentials needed to take an ordinary bath and make it something luxurious.

The grown up equivalent of tub toys

You won't always have the time for a luxurious soak in a hot bubble bath. But when you do, do it up right. Bring a book, bring your wine, and leave your cares outside of the tub.

Your bath, but better

Bathforia's Bathtub Caddy imagines all of the most relaxing things you could do in the tub and helps you do them better. Flipping through a mystery or romance novel in the tub is a great idea. In theory. When you're actually soaking in the tub, trying to find the perfect height to keep your arms warm and underwater without submerging your book, it's near impossible. This bathtub caddy's adjustable stand gives you the perfect spot to prop your book or tablet for bathtime reading.

Bathforia Bathtub Caddy

$39.99

Bathforia's Bathtub Caddy has a spot for all the essentials needed to take an ordinary bath and make it something luxurious.

Visit website

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21 Jun 20:55

Videolan releases VLC 2.0 for Android, adding features but reducing permissions

by Devin Coldewey
vlc_bunny VLC, the venerable and widely used multi-platform video player, received a major update on Android today, adding a number of highly requested features while managing to actually reduce the number of permissions it needs. That seems like an infallible sign of a trustworthy developer right there. Read More
21 Jun 16:54

How many rescuers does it take to dislodge a cow?

by Andrea James

cow-head-tree

At least five plus a backhoe, if the cow managed to stick its head in a tree. North Yorkshire Fire probably did not train for this, but they saved the cow regardless. (more…)

21 Jun 16:52

Twitter videos can now be 140 seconds long

by John Callaham

Twitter is now allowing anyone to upload longer videos to their accounts. The new video length limit is 140 seconds, compared to the older limit of 30 seconds. Twitter's sister app Vine is beta testing a way to upload videos up to 140 seconds as well.

In a blog post, Twitter stated:

Starting today, you'll have more room to unleash your creativity on Twitter. Where previously, uploaded videos were limited to 30 seconds, now anyone can create video Tweets up to – you guessed it – 140 seconds long. (Select publishers will continue to be able to post videos up to 10 minutes long through our professional publisher tools.)

The support is being added to Twitter on iOS, Android and the web, and will be included soon in updates to its Windows and Mac apps.

In the near future, iOS and Android Twitter users will be able to view videos that will take up the entire screen:

Here's how it will work: tapping on a video Tweet or Vine on your timeline will take you to a new, full-screen viewing experience, where more great video and Vine Tweets will be suggested below.

Vine is beta testing the longer 140 second video length with a select group of users. Those videos will also be able to be watched in a full-screen mode:

You'll continue to see Vines, those short looping trailers we all know and love. It's just that now some Vines might have a longer video too. If you're not yet seeing the "Watch more" option, hang tight! (We're rolling the changes out to everyone as fast as we can, but computers like to be methodical. Those are the rules!)

21 Jun 16:52

How to take better photos with your Android phone

by Cella Lao Rousseau

Take your Android photography to the next level with these tips and tricks for capturing masterpieces with your smartphone.

Many Android phones come with a high-quality camera designed to capture your subject's tiniest details and features, and while they're not technically on the same level as a DSLR camera, you can still take the perfect picture with just your phone if you know how to use it. Even if you're a beginner, you can quickly learn how to capture amazing photos with your Android phone (and if you actually are a beginner, be sure to check out our top 10 Android photography tips for beginners!)

Here are some helpful tricks to help you take better photos with your Android device!

Explore your camera settings

Get acquainted with your phone and all the camera settings before you start shooting, and you'll feel a lot more comfortable capturing your shots!

While shooting from your phone's stock camera is great for 99.9% of pictures — especially if you've got a recent Samsung, LG or HTC phone — playing around with the various modes and settings can really allow you to experiment and get creative.

Make sure your lens is clean

While this may seem like an obvious one, cleaning your phone lens can be a lot harder to remember than cleaning your DSLR lens. After all, there's no lens cap protecting your Android phone's camera from dirt and scratches like professional cameras have.

Carrying around a small lens cleaning cloth, or even having small micro fiber lens cleaning patches stitched to the inside of your purse or your jacket are simple ways to remind you to clean your phone lens and screen, so you're always ready to take the clearest shots with your phone.

Or just use your shirt.

Don't forget to clean your front lens, too! We break down how important cleaning your lenses can be in our top 8 tips to make you an Android photography expert.

Forget the flash: use external lighting

When it's dark outside, it's a knee-jerk reaction to turn on the flash to light up your photos, but it's not always the best for picture quality. In fact, we'll go one further: Don't bother using your flash. Nearly ever.

Always try to find a natural light source when you're shooting your photos. If you're at a restaurant and want to snap a picture of your meal, try to get a seat by a window, so you can capture all the meal's details with the perfect lighting. If you're looking to take a selfie, try posing in front of a big window. This won't only make your face and features light up – even on a cloudy day – but it will darken the background and make you the center of attention.

If it's absolutely impossible to capture your picture without natural lighting (and sometimes that's the case), try your best to find another external light source, like a lamp or even a candle. While it may seem silly, almost any other lighting will look better than the flash, especially since you then have more control of what you choose to light and highlight in your photographs.

Crop, don't zoom

Just like your Android phone's flash, zoom is another readily available option for phoneographers that should be avoided like the photographic plague.

Zoom can lower the quality of your pictures, and you might actually be cutting out something you didn't notice in the photo that you may find amazing when you glance at the picture during editing.

It's hard to remember when you're shooting, but your Android device is not the same as a DSLR camera: you can't just zoom in on something and have the quality stay virtually the same. A lot of professional photographers avoid the zoom altogether and prefer to crop strategically in the editing process afterwards, so they don't miss out on anything they captured in the picture.

If you really need to get in close with your subject, pick yourself up and physically move closer to it rather than using your zoom. This is the best way to get creative control over your photo subject without using zoom to mess up the picture's overall quality.

Burst first, ask questions later

Bursting may seem like a lazy way to take pictures, but it's probably the most efficient way to capture your perfect shot!

Whether it be selfies, landscapes, or a masterpiece of a meal, using burst is a great way to take a bunch of photos without stress: just hold down the shutter button and your phone will take rapid-fire shots that you can browse through later to find the perfect one.

While a bunch of the pictures you take with burst will be terrible and totally unusable, there are bound to be a few gems hiding in there. Take the time to go through your burst shots and pick out the best ones, and always remember to delete the bad burst photos so they don't take up space on your phone.

Find a favorite photography editing app

After you're done shooting, you're going to want to up your photo game by editing your pictures with your favorite editing app.

There are plenty of photo editing apps to choose from out there, and all of them do their own unique things like overlay certain filters, allow you to edit brightness and contrast, and even add text or stickers to your photos.

Photo editing apps are also a great tool to have if you're not confident with the photos you've taken. You can even salvage some photographs through a little bit of editing and tweaking if you're worried about quality.

Follow your favorite photographers on social media

Sometimes taking the best pictures with your Android phone doesn't start with your camera app; it starts with a quick visit to social media to get motivated from Android phone photographers who are already taking beautiful pictures!

Following some of your favorite photographers on social media is an amazing way to get ideas, see what kind of art other people are creating, and get motivated to go out and start shooting. Some may even respond in the comments if you ask them how they shot a certain subject in a certain style or how they managed to edit a specific photograph to look a certain way.

Creep around the discover page on Instagram and see what other Android phone photographers have shot. Start by mimicking a style you're fond of, and it will eventually evolve into your own.

Some photographers on social media even share their own tips and tricks for shooting, so be sure to check out a bunch of different profiles for inspiration.

Your turn

Are there any tips and tricks for shooting amazing photos with your Android phone that we may have missed? Let us know in the comments below.

21 Jun 16:52

Tumblr joins the rush to offer live video streaming support

by John Callaham

The micro-blogging service Tumblr is the latest to join the trend of offering live video streaming support for its audience. The new feature will roll out later today.

Tumblr says:

By the end of today, you'll be able to broadcast yourself directly into your followers' dashboards. And they'll be able to broadcast themselves directly into yours. We trust you all to be beautiful, weird, compelling, and just generally Tumblr about this whole thing.

Live videos can be posted on a Tumblr page from a variety of apps, including YouTube, and those posts can be reblogged as well. If you follow Tumblr users, you will be given a notification if they launch a live video streaming post, and that post will be pinned on top of your dashboard.

21 Jun 13:17

16 new and notable Android games from the last 2 weeks (6/8/16 - 6/20/16)

by Michael Crider

nexus2cee_gamethumbWelcome to the roundup of the best new Android applications, games, and live wallpapers that went live in the Play Store or were spotted by us in the previous 2 weeks or so.

Please wait for this page to load in full in order to see the widgets, which include ratings and pricing info.

Looking for the previous roundup editions? Find them here.

Games

Galcon 2: Galactic Conquest

Android Police coverage: Galcon 2 revives a simplified space strategy game with new multiplayer modes and more complex tactics

Galcon is a surprisingly old strategy game where planets are the playing field and spaceships are both the resources and the units.

Read More

16 new and notable Android games from the last 2 weeks (6/8/16 - 6/20/16) was written by the awesome team at Android Police.

21 Jun 13:13

Police can use evidence found during illegal stops, Supreme Court rules

by Xeni Jardin

U.S. Supreme Court. Larry Downing/Reuters

The U.S. Supreme Court today delivered a damaging blow to the Fourth Amendment “by making it even easier for law enforcement to evade its requirement that stops be based on reasonable suspicion,” as a New York Times editorial puts it.

Justices ruled 5 to 3 [PDF] that a police officer’s illegal stop of a man on the street should not prevent using against him any evidence obtained from a search connected to that stop.

(more…)

21 Jun 13:06

Google is making two-factor authentication a lot easier to use

by Tom Warren

Google has supported two-factor authentication for more than five years now, but the search giant is making it a little easier to use this week. Previously, you've had to manually enter a code from an authenticator app or via SMS, but Google is introducing a new prompt that you can tap on your phone to approve login requests. It's very similar to how Twitter's two-factor authentication works, generating a notification that you accept from a phone and it approves the login attempt.

The new prompt works on both Android and iOS devices, but you'll need to download the Google app for iOS to enable the new feature for iPhones. You'll also need to opt-in to this new Google prompt by visiting the Google account page and navigating to Sign-in &...

Continue reading…

21 Jun 00:01

Google Keep v3.3.243 puts a pin in note pinning [APK Teardown]

by Cody Toombs

keep

Last week brought a rush of new app updates from both the Play Store and the Android N developer preview. There were surprisingly few new features to discuss, and not much for teardowns; but the Google Keep app does have at least one notable addition in store for us. It looks like Keep is going to give users the ability to pin important notes so they remain readily available and won't get lost as new items are added.

Read More

Google Keep v3.3.243 puts a pin in note pinning [APK Teardown] was written by the awesome team at Android Police.

20 Jun 21:45

Wigglegrams - 3D images that need no glasses

by Mark Frauenfelder

tumblr_ns23r1TVDR1qkfmxeo1_500

The Wigglegram subreddit has oodles of examples of 3D GIF images made by taking photos from different vantage points and looping them.

View post on imgur.com
Exploding Ocean [OC] from wigglegrams
Yosemite Raven - 3D GIF [Nishika N8000 - Portra 400] from analog

Here's a barely SFW video made of wigglegrams: https://vimeo.com/79508268

20 Jun 21:42

Starbucks offers 2-for-1 Frappuccino deal when using Android Pay

by Dan Thorp-Lancaster

Android Pay users in the UK are in for a treat on Tuesday June 21, thanks to a 2 for 1 Frappuccino deal at Starbucks. With the deal, you can snag a second Frapuccino for free when using Android Pay to buy your first at any Starbucks in the UK.

If you're already an Android Pay user, this is certainly a pretty sweet deal. If you're interested, the promotion will only be available on June 21 and only for the first transaction, according to the Android Pay website.

20 Jun 18:33

Zen gardening game Viridi is now available on iOS and Android

by James Vincent

Do you like tending succulents? Are you a fan of earthenware pots with geometric designs? Have you ever wanted to sing to a snail? If you answered "god yes please" to all three of these questions, then I have just the thing for you: Viridi, a zen gardening game that came out on desktop last year and launches today on iOS and Android.

Viridi combines botany with the gameplay mechanics of a very chill Tamogotchi. You pick a pot, put some seedlings in it, and then just check in every now and again to water them, dig out the weeds, and talk to that snail that's making a circuit around your pot. There are no real goals to be achieved (apart from keeping your plants alive long enough to flower — a process that can take weeks), but the game's...

Continue reading…

20 Jun 18:20

The Google app takes on WebMD with an intelligent symptom search

by Sarah Buhr
google-health-search-ios If you’ve ever turned to the interwebs when feeling sick you may have started worrying you had a deathly, flesh-eating virus instead of the common cold. Google aims to eliminate some of that anxiety and confusion in the following days with a few tweaks to the Google app. The Google app works by voice command searches for things like the weather in San Francisco or asking it to time… Read More