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17 Sep 13:37

Apple adds two-factor authentication to iTunes

by Rich McCormick

At the same time as Apple released iOS 9, its next big update for its mobile operating system, the company has also put out an update for iTunes. Version 12.3 of the software adds support for both iOS 9 and Mac OSX El Capitan, fixes a selection of small bugs, and — most importantly — enables two-factor authentication. The 233 MB update, the first for major update iTunes since late June, is now available to download.

Apple has been steadily adding support for two-factor authentication to its software and services, updating iMessage and FaceTime with the enhanced verification in February, after introducing it to iCloud websites and apps in July last year. Apple originally added two-factor verification to Apple IDs in 2013, but as shown...

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17 Sep 13:36

Amazon's answer to Apple TV: a Fire TV box with Alexa and 4K video support

by Lauren Goode

Last week Apple sucked up most of the air in the tech press with its newest gadgets, which included a long-awaited, new Apple TV. This week, Amazon has some TV box news of its own.

The e-commerce giant just announced a variety of updates to its Fire TV product line. The newest Fire TV set-top box, a flat, plastic box that plugs into your TV and offers a variety of internet video content, now supports 4K Ultra HD video, a claim that Apple can't make with its own set-top box. (You'll have to be watching 4K content, on a 4K TV, to really reap the benefits of this, but at least the option is there.)

Amazon has also brought "Alexa," the popular cloud-based assistant found in the enigmatic Echo speaker, to the Fire TV through its...

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17 Sep 13:30

Google App update enables Now on Tap on Marshmallow, brings new app drawer to earlier versions

by Alex Dobie

Things are a little wonky still, but Now on Tap is finally ready for M Preview testers to tinker with — as part of an app update that also re-vamps the app drawer for those on Lollipop and earlier.

Now on Tap, Google's "in the moment" contextual assistant feature, has been conspicuous in its absence from Android 6.0 Marshmallow preview builds up until now. But now Nexus owners with the latest Marshmallow preview build can start tinkering with one of the new OS's most notable features, as an update to the Google App finally enables Now on Tap.

17 Sep 13:30

Google Glass is now Project Aura, absorbs talent from Amazon

by Rich Edmonds

Google Glass has a new name. Meet Project Aura, the division Google hopes to pump new life into. The company has been hiring engineers and software developers for the project, including ex-Amazon employees from Lab126 who previously worked on the Fire smartphone.

16 Sep 21:48

ivee Is A $99 Voice-Controlled Amazon Echo Competitor

by Lucas Matney
Screen Shot 2015-09-16 at 12.17.16 PM Voice-controlled devices have kind of been invading every square inch of our lives. Our phones have boasted highly personal assistants for some time, and now major forces like Amazon are selling home devices with their own voice control integration. ivee Voice is another voice-controlled home hub, similar to the Amazon Echo, that has just launched its own crowdfunding campaign. ivee lacks… Read More
16 Sep 19:00

Presidential Candidate Lawrence Lessig Steps Up To Assist Kim Dotcom

by Andy

lessigAfter failing in a last ditch attempt to have their extradition hearing delayed once again, next week Kim Dotcom and his former Megaupload colleagues will head off to the North Shore District Court to do battle with the United States.

In addition to their already sizable team of legal representatives, Dotcom et al have been hiding somewhat of a trump card up their collective sleeves. Earlier today Kim Dotcom advised TF that none other than Harvard Law School’s Professor Lawrence Lessig had been retained to provide expertise in the hearing beginning next Monday.

In submissions filed today, Professor Lessig provides his expert legal opinion on the criminal allegations of the United States Department of Justice which support their efforts to extradite Kim Dotcom.

Step-by-step in a 38-page testimony, presidential candidate Lessig undermines the U.S. case at almost every turn. Beginning with copyright infringement (this is after all the biggest U.S. infringement case of all time), Lessig says that claims that the defendants themselves infringed are not supported by the facts presented in the case.

Copyright infringement

“A showing of willful criminal copyright infringement requires compact factual proof identifying a specific copyrighted work, a right of the owner that has been violated, the geographical location of the infringement and other specific facts needed to establish a violation of United States criminal law. Such compact facts are absent here,” the professor writes.

“The generalized accusations, defective and irrelevant allegations, scattered facts of alleged multiple infringements and statistics set forth in the Superseding Indictment and Record of the Case do not satisfy requirements of proof but rather manifest unreliability of the overall approach.”

Furthermore, Lessig says that three of the four counts are now outside the three-year statute of limitations provided by the US-NZ Extradition Treaty.

Like many before him, Professor Lessig also notes that the Department of Justice is attempting to charge the Megaupload defendants with a crime that does not even exist under U.S. law.

“Many allegations in the Superseding Indictment appear to attempt to allege secondary copyright infringement. Such allegations may be relevant in a civil
case alleging secondary infringement but they cannot be a basis for criminal charges of direct copyright infringement. Congress has never defined a crime of ‘secondary copyright infringement’,” Lessig writes.

“The Megaupload cloud service is a dual use technology capable of substantial non-infringing uses and thus protected by the ‘Sony Doctrine‘,” he adds. “Under civil copyright law, internet service providers, such as Megaupload, do not have a duty to investigate potential infringement.”

Conspiracy

Highlighting three counts of alleged conspiracy, Lessig homes in on one in particular – Conspiracy to Commit Copyright Infringement. The DoJ claims that the defendants conspired with users of Megaupload to commit copyright infringement but Lessig says the allegations are not supported by the facts.

“There is no showing of specific criminal ‘willful’ infringements committed by specific individual users. There is an even more serious lack of evidence of communications between respondents and such alleged users needed to prove an agreement that is subject to laws of conspiracy,” the professor explains.

“The United States Constitution prohibits the United States DOJ from prosecuting, as they apparently want to here, a new kind of criminal conspiracy based on defendants providing an ‘environment of infringement’ or their failing to disable all links to an allegedly infringing copy. Under the approach of the DOJ, many online operations and even individual persons would, without notice, suddenly become subject to criminal prosecution.

“General allegations of, ‘fostering an environment’ cannot substitute for the requisite agreement or for the necessary ‘willful’ mental state of the alleged conspirator,” Lessig notes.

Fraud by Wire and Aiding & Abetting Fraud by Wire

Several other counts allege fraud relating to the online abuse tool Megaupload provided to copyright holders for disabling infringing links to their works. The DoJ claims that Megaupload misled copyright holders into thinking that all links to a file would be removed, not just the specific links being reported.

“The DOJ appears to be asserting that an ISP like Megaupload, which receives copyright take down notices identifying one URL, must search for and delete all duplicate files used by different users in the cloud system or be subject to a copyright or fraud claim. In my opinion the DOJ’s novel theory of copyright or fraud liability is erroneous,” Lessig writes.

Commenting on Megaupload’s use of “data deduplication” techniques to reduce the numbers of files stored, Lessig says that while one use of a file might be infringing, others may not.

“It is possible for one uploader to have a right to fair use of a copy of a file, e.g., a purchaser uploading a backup or an educational organization offering critical commentary, while other uploaders might have no such fair use right,” he explains.

“It is contrary to the purpose of the DMCA that a fair use right would be violated through a take-down notice directed at another person’s wrongful use. If such a
violation were to occur, the provider of the take-notice would be subject to liability under the DMCA (17 U.S.C. § 512(f)).”

Lessig says that in his opinion the DoJ is attempting to use its “wire fraud” theory to criminalize “new categories of conduct” without Congressional authorization.

“Criminal charges based on alleged DMCA shortcomings would be contrary to DMCA principles stated by Congress. Wire fraud allegations further suffer from lack of requisite damages suffered by the victim of the fraud,” he writes.

Conclusion

In summary, Lessig says that the DoJ has failed to prove a case of direct civil copyright infringement or of criminal copyright infringement. Neither has it proven a case of criminal conspiracy or wire fraud. Overall, Lessig believes that the DoJ case is so weak that extradition for Dotcom et al will not be possible.

“It is my opinion that the Superseding Indictment and Record of the Case filed by the United States Department of Justice (DOJ) do not meet the requirements necessary to support a prima facie case that would be recognized by United States federal law and subject to the US – NZ Extradition Treaty,” Lessig writes.

“Insofar as they are alleged in the Superceding Indictment and the [Record of the Case], respondents’ actions were not prohibited by criminal statutes of the United States. Filings of the DOJ attempt to create a false impression of criminal guilt and are not reliable.”

Speaking with TorrentFreak, Megaupload lead global defense counsel Ira Rothken says that Lessig’s opinion is not only of great value to the current proceedings, but also to the wider Internet.

“We are pleased and honored to have an opinion from Professor Lessig, a top internet law scholar, concluding that U.S. criminal claims against Kim Dotcom lack merit,” Rothken told TF.

“The opinion not only supports Kim Dotcom but all netizens globally who provide or use automated dual use technologies like cloud storage.”

Kim Dotcom’s extradition hearing gets underway next week and Lessig’s expert opinion (PDF) may yet prove priceless to the entrepreneur.

Source: TorrentFreak, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and ANONYMOUS VPN services.

16 Sep 19:00

BlackBerry Venice gets a hands-on treatment, shows off customization and more

by Jared DiPane

The BlackBerry Venice has been the talk of the town for quite some time already, and now new images have surfaced showing off even more of the phone. As our first decent look at the operating system it will run, it resembles a very stock Android style, with custom icons. Additionally, there seem to be some extra shortcuts that pop up with the long-press of the home button, which usually brings up Google's app.

16 Sep 18:58

Ahmed Mohamed won't be charged for bringing homemade clock to school

by Colin Lecher

Following news that 14-year-old Ahmed Mohamed was arrested for bringing a homemade clock to school, there's been an outpouring of support for the Texas student. Police, at first, kept the option open to charge Mohamed with making a "hoax bomb," but at a press conference today announced that "the case is considered closed."

According to The Dallas Morning News, who first broke the story, Irving Police Chief Larry Boyd told a gathering at a press conference that officials were "confident it's not an explosive device." (In an unfortunately worded moment, he reportedly also said there was "no evidence that there was an intention to create alarm.") According to Boyd, it was a "naive accident." Boyd, according to the Morning News, also denied...

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16 Sep 16:32

[Rumor] Amazon's Voice Assistant Alexa Might Soon Be Working A Double Shift On Fire TV

by Rita El Khoury

alexa-firetv

Alexa, what are you doing tonight? Oh, you'll be in my living room, listening for my every word? I think I like where this is going... You're a very dedicated assistant Alexa. I want to give you a raise and ask you to be a more permanent resident in my life. How would you like to work inside my Fire TV as well as my Echo? No, I didn't say light my fire baby, though I like the way you think.

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[Rumor] Amazon's Voice Assistant Alexa Might Soon Be Working A Double Shift On Fire TV was written by the awesome team at Android Police.



16 Sep 16:31

Send, Microsoft's Email Client That Is Shaped Like An Instant Messenger, Comes To Android

by Bertel King, Jr.

Send

Cut the crap, and give it to me straight. No subject lines, no signatures―just send me what matters.

"We got you," says a fictional Microsoft employee.

And then Microsoft Send appears in the Play Store.

Send1 Send2 Send3

Here's where I get you up to speed. Think of this Microsoft Garage app as instant messaging that works through your Office 365 email account.

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Send, Microsoft's Email Client That Is Shaped Like An Instant Messenger, Comes To Android was written by the awesome team at Android Police.



16 Sep 16:28

New Trailer For The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 2

New Trailer For The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 2

All things Prim

In the strictest sense, this isn’t really a promo for The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 2, more a look back at Katniss Everdeen’s (Jennifer Lawrence) close bond with her sister Primrose (Willow Shields), whose choice by the first film’s game lottery led to all of Katniss’ journey from small town hunter to rebel icon. But take a look anyway.  

While we’re on the subject of the film, tickets for the final chunk of the franchise will be going on sale on October 1, so mark that date in your calendars if you’re eagerly anticipating what should be a much more eventful second film adapted from Suzanne Collins’ third book. 

This one finds Katniss and the rebels making the final push against Donald Sutherland's scheming President Snow and the Capitol, with lives on the line and sacrifices to be made. The new movie should boost the action quotient as the bigger beats are to be found lurking towards the end of Suzanne Collins’ third tome. Check out the new poster below, which sees Katniss with a Mockingjay friend whose name isn’t given, but we’re going to assume is Flapperly Warblebreath.

Mockingjay-2-new-poster

With Francis Lawrence again directing and J. Law joined on screen by Shields, Josh Hutcherson, Liam Hemsworth, Julianne Moore, Sam Claflin, Elizabeth Banks, Stanley Tucci, Woody Harrelson, Jena Malone and more, The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 2 flits into our cinemas on November 19.  










16 Sep 12:07

Focus Your Spending On Things You Love, Cut All the Things You Don't

by Eric Ravenscraft

Focus Your Spending On Things You Love, Cut All the Things You Don't

Once you start cutting expenses to improve your budget, everything you can spend money on starts to feel guilt-inducing. Instead of cutting every luxury, focus on a few that you really love.

As personal finance blog I Will Teach You to Be Rich points out, not all luxury purchases are created equal. What may be a frivolous waste of cash for one person can be a lifetime investment that makes life better for someone else. By focusing your spending on the little luxuries that make you the happiest, you can get the greatest value from your money:

If you can afford it, and you want it, there’s nothing wrong with treating yourself from time to time. That’s one of the reasons why I’ve always said you should cut costs mercilessly on the things you don’t care about and — this is almost MORE important — spend extravagantly on the things you love.

The trick here isn’t to spend more, but rather to maximize how much the things you buy are worth to you. Which would you rather have? Twenty-five $4 coffees, or a $100 pair of boots that will last for a long time. Would you rather have the nicer car with a higher monthly payment, or a slightly crappier car, but take a nice vacation? The answer will be different for everyone, which is why the dollar value of an item isn’t necessarily reflective of the personal value of that item.

Inside the secret world of luxury | I Will Teach You to Be Rich via Rockstar Finance

Photo by PT Money.

16 Sep 12:06

You can now pre-order the Moto X Style and Moto 360 (2015) in the UK

by Rich Edmonds

Both the Moto X Style and Moto 360 are now available for pre-order in the UK. Consumers looking to grab the latest in smartphone and smartwatch tech from the company will soon be able to do so, reserving a spot today on the official UK website store.

16 Sep 12:03

14-year-old Ahmed Mohamed arrested for bringing homemade clock to school

by Rich McCormick

Police in Texas have arrested a 14-year-old boy for building a clock. Ahmed Mohamed, who lives in Irving and has a keen interest in robotics and engineering, put the device together on Sunday night. When he took it to school the next day, he was pulled out of class, interviewed by police officers, and taken in handcuffs to juvenile detention, after being told by teachers that his creation looked like a bomb.

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16 Sep 12:02

Uber fights back against driver lawsuit

by Amar Toor

Uber this week moved to appeal a decision that grants class-action status to a lawsuit brought by its drivers. As The Wall Street Journal reports, the company filed a request for appeal on Tuesday, arguing that the ruling from US District Judge Edward Chen was "manifestly erroneous."

The lawsuit was brought by three Uber drivers who claim they are employees of the company, rather than independent contractors, and should therefore receive benefits including health coverage and workers' compensation. The case could have important implications for Uber and other so-called "sharing economy" companies that rely on contractor labor. Uber drivers seeking employee status earned an early victory in June, when the California Labor Commission r...

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15 Sep 18:57

Add Baking Soda or Vinegar to the Washing Machine to Avoid Allergy Problems

by Melanie Pinola

Add Baking Soda or Vinegar to the Washing Machine to Avoid Allergy Problems

Many of us have sensitive skin and might actually have allergic reactions to laundry soap. To avoid this, try adding a cup of vinegar or baking soda to the wash.

Stain Removal 101 cites this tip from dermatologist Dr. Jeanine Downie. The vinegar or baking soda, when added to the final rinse of the clothes, helps remove excess detergent residue. Skin irritations and other symptoms like itchy watery eyes or not, using vinegar and baking soda in your laundry also boost towels.

Finally, consider using hypoallergenic laundry detergents and use less detergent—most of us are wasting money because of tricky detergent measuring cups.

Laundry Detergent Allergy Symptoms and the Cure | Stain Removal 101

Photo by live w mcs.

15 Sep 18:56

Amazon Underground, The Revamped Appstore That Offers Paid Apps And Features For Free, Will Be Supported By Ads That Play When You Open Up Apps

by Jacob Long

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When Amazon announced Underground, the remodeled Appstore that features the ability to play paid and freemium games (as well as other apps) for free, I immediately raised the question of how they planned to make money on this venture. Users obviously benefited by getting free stuff and certain developers would make more money since Amazon compensates them on a per-minutes-used basis. But where was the cash flow to Amazon?

A deeper dive into their developer documentation gives a clue.

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Amazon Underground, The Revamped Appstore That Offers Paid Apps And Features For Free, Will Be Supported By Ads That Play When You Open Up Apps was written by the awesome team at Android Police.



15 Sep 18:53

LG showed off its prototype dual-sided displays, and they're glorious!

by Staff

LG showed off its amazing double-sided OLED displays at the IFA 2015 show in Berlin. These super thin displays will allow you to see what's on the tv even if you're standing behind it. LG featured both an 111-inch and 55-inch version of the dual-sided display, and both would allow you to watch two different sources on each side. The 111-inch version is made of three separate 65-inch Ultra HD OLED displays mounted vertically in a wave pattern. Meanwhile, the 55-inch version is just an incredible 5.3 inches thick.

Sadly, these are just prototypes and will not be up for sale just yet. LG is flexing its muscles and showing the world what its technology can do. While not many of us have the need for double sided TVs, the technology and thinness of these displays would create new mounting solutions in commercial settings. Or perhaps you do want to put one in the middle of your living room?

Video Source: LG Display YouTube

15 Sep 16:45

The Jungle Book’s first trailer shows Disney’s animated classic coming alive

by Bryan Bishop

Disney showed off a lot of new movies at its D23 conference last month, but one of the most arresting pieces of footage was from The Jungle Book — and now it's time for the world at large to see the first trailer. Jon Favreau is directing the adaptation of Disney's animated film, and while it's part of the studio's larger initiative of turning its classics into live-action films, the new Jungle Book is actually a CG and live-action hybrid. The animals and environment are actually photorealistic computer-generate imagery, merged together with performance capture and footage shot of the cast, particularly Neel Sethi, who plays Mowgli.

The film also stars such heavyweights as Ben Kingsley, Idris Elba, Scarlett Johansson, and Christopher...

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15 Sep 13:30

Walk alongside the elephants of the Samburu National Reserve in Street View

by noreply@blogger.com (Google Blogs)
Today for the first time, we’re releasing Street View imagery of Kenya—including the Samburu National Reserve, Lewa Wildlife Conservancy and the David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust—in partnership with Save the Elephants and with the support of the Samburu County Government. We'll let Save the Elephants' David Daballen take it from here. -Ed.

It’s a wild life at the Save the Elephants research camp in Samburu, in the heart of northern Kenya’s wilderness. For the last 15 years at Save the Elephants, I’ve spent my days among the elephants, working alongside my fellow Samburu people to study and protect them. Research shows that 100,000 elephants across Africa were killed for their ivory between 2010-2012, but thanks to our work in the Samburu National Reserve their numbers are now slowly increasing. Today, a visit to Samburu is a chance not only to see these magnificent creatures in their natural habitat, but also discover a uniquely beautiful landscape where people’s lives are interwoven with the landscape’s wildlife. It’s my honour to invite you on a journey to my homeland with Street View in Google Maps.

Every time I drive into the Reserve, I can see the trust on the elephants’ faces and feel a warm welcome. When I’m out and about, I never know which of my fellow citizens I’ll bump into next. It could be some of the 600+ elephants I can recognize—like the Hardwood family—frolicking together, a group of Samburu warriors walking along the Ewaso Nyiro River, a pride of lions enjoying a bit of shade, or a leopard crossing the path. While you make your journey through Street View, you may be surprised what awaits.

South of Samburu, up into the hills of Kenya, the Lewa Wildlife Conservancy awaits exploration. In this greener landscape, you can cross the open savannah, where animals like zebras and rhinoceroses live protected from poachers and hunters. Every day, the Lewa radio command center plots the movements of elephants (and other GPS-collared wildlife) onto Google Earth to help rangers determine where elephants are and when they might be in danger. If an elephant’s GPS collar sends an alert to indicate the elephant has stopped moving, a team of rangers and tracking dogs will investigate. Save the Elephants was one of the first organizations to use this technology, having collared 266 elephants across Africa since 1998.

Visiting the David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust, you can see the devastating effect of poaching and other causes of elephant deaths in Kenya. Founded in 1977, the Trust provides lifesaving assistance to wild animals in need, including orphaned elephants and rhinos. At their Elephant Orphanage in Nairobi, elephant caretakers stand in for an elephant’s lost family, providing 24/7 care and specially formulated milk. As the orphans grow, they are gradually reintegrated back into the wild, where they are protected by the charity’s Anti-Poaching and Aerial Surveillance Teams. To date, the David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust has hand-raised more than 180 orphaned infant elephants, including little Sokotei, who I helped to rescue in Samburu after his mother died of natural causes when he was six months old. He’s just one elephant amid thousands that have been lost across the continent, but when you're up against a challenge of this scale, every elephant counts.

I hope this glimpse into life in Samburu has inspired you to learn more about elephants’ plight and how you can help. Samburu is my home and is full of life. To ensure it remains that way, please consider supporting the research of Save the Elephants, making a donation to the anti-poaching efforts of Lewa Wildlife Conservancy, or fostering an orphaned elephant at the David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust. After exploring in Street View, come and see us here in Kenya in person—we’d love to have you!

Posted by David Daballen, Head of Field Operations at Save the Elephants
15 Sep 12:17

Practice Frugality to Boost Creativity, Not Just to Save Money

by Eric Ravenscraft

Practice Frugality to Boost Creativity, Not Just to Save Money

“Why go to all that trouble when you can just buy [X]?” It’s such a common refrain when it comes to money-saving tricks, most of us assume it’s common sense. If you’re looking for a better reason to stay frugal, make it an exercise in creativity.

As personal finance blog Frugalwoods points out, there are more benefits to practicing frugality than simply saving money. When you actively try to avoid solving your problems by throwing money at them, you’re forced to look for more creative solutions:

Since our default is to not spend money, we’re constantly engineering ways to circumvent buying things. Whether it’s taking hand-me-downs and making them look new or finding interesting ways to entertain ourselves, frugality gives us the gift of using our minds–instead of our money–to create our delightfully quirky world.

In some cases, this might mean finding clever ways to decorate. In others, it might mean working out your own low-budget solution to a problem. All of those situations, though, require creative, atypical thought to deal with. If you’re looking for a creative boost, try solving a problem without spending money.

11 Benefits of Frugality That Have Nothing To Do With Money | Frugalwoods via Rockstar Finance

Photo by Richard Masoner.

15 Sep 12:16

Qualcomm announces Quick Charge 3.0 — from 0 to 80 percent in 35 minutes

by Phil Nickinson

Qualcomm has announced the third version of its Quick Charge standard — appropriately named Quick Charge 3.0 — which it says will allow compatible phones to go from dead to 80 percent charged in just 35 minutes. It'll debut on the Snapdragon 820 processor in 2016, and also be on a handful of other chipsets.

Quick Charge is Qualcomm's proprietary (but almost certainly also licensed) technology that allows a mobile device to smartly communicate with a charger so that it can safely and efficiently increase the charge rate. Initially available only on wall plugs, Quick Charge is now found on vehicle chargers as well as external battery packs.

In addition to the Snapdragon 820 processor, Quick Charge 3.0 will be available on the Snapdragon 620, 618, 617 and 430 platforms.

15 Sep 12:15

Sony closes down its European online store, redirects consumers to partners

by Rich Edmonds

Sony has closed its online store in Europe. Should you wish to purchase a product from the company in the region, you'll need to choose one of Sony's partners. The main European website for Sony now acts as a gateway for consumers to read up more on its catalogue, while offloading sales to partnered stores.

15 Sep 12:12

Opera For Desktop Gets Password Sync, Starts Integrating SurfEasy VPN

by Frederic Lardinois
speed_dial_mac_eng (1) Earlier this year, Opera Software bought SurfEasy, a virtual private networking (VPN) service that helps users maintain their privacy and surf safely. With the release of Opera 32 for desktop today, the company is now starting to integrate SurfEasy into its flagship browser for Windows, Mac and Linux. Read More
14 Sep 20:13

Dwelling on Your Money Mistakes Means You'll Probably Repeat Them

by Kristin Wong on Two Cents, shared by Andy Orin to Lifehacker

Dwelling on Your Money Mistakes Means You'll Probably Repeat Them

Everyone makes financial mistakes, but it’s all too easy to dwell on them. And unfortunately, dwelling is counterproductive. When it comes to your finances, you’re better off looking to the future rather than the past.

The more you focus on your past spending pitfalls, the more likely you are to repeat them. This is what a recent study published in the Journal of Consumer Psychology suggests. Researchers wanted to take a look at how our memories of past financial mistakes or achievements affect our present habits. In one experiment, when subjects were asked to remember past spending mistakes, they were more likely to incur debt during an imaginary trip to the mall.

Other subjects were instead asked to remember instances in which they made good, prudent spending decisions. But they had to remember a lot of these instances, and when they couldn’t, those subjects went spend-happy at the mall, too.

The study concluded:

We show that while recalling successes seems like a good idea, in cases when such recall is difficult, this strategy may backfire...Further, compared to easy recall of successes, recalling failures does little to enhance self-control, despite conventional wisdom that one learns from their past mistakes. In fact, our results instead argue that focusing on one’s past mistakes may doom us to repeat them. Given that many factors may lead interventions and help programs to fail, every ‘nudge’ matters—we hope that identifying this danger of recall may help design more effective programs.

The study suggests it’s best to move on from money mistakes, and leave the past in the past. It’s good to learn from those mistakes, sure, but dwelling on them seems to make us feel like we’re doomed to make them again. Check out more about the study at the links below.

Photo by geralt.

Haunts or helps from the past: Understanding the effect of recall on current self-control | Journal of Consumer Psychology via Vanderbilt University

14 Sep 20:08

Fall 2015 movie guide: the 34 films on our radar this awards season

by Emily Yoshida

It's time to clear this summer's glut of sequels, franchises, and reboots away and make room for fall movie season — aka Oscar season, aka prestige season, aka grown-up season, aka STAR WARS OMG BB-8 KYLO REN WOOOKIEEEESSSS JFAOIC":LADLKJSLKJFSD season.

It'll be hard to escape the gravity of The Force Awakens over the next few months, but we've got a long way to go 'til December, and plenty of notable films to check out until then — whether they're spooky Halloween thrillers, festival-lauded indies, or all-out Oscar bids. And fall is proving to be the new summer as well: besides the return of the galaxy far, far, away, we've got two highly anticipated franchise installments (Spectre and Mockingjay — Part 2) to look forward to as well....

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14 Sep 20:07

This motorcycle airbag jacket will automatically inflate when it detects an accident

by Jacob Kastrenakes

Airbag jackets for motorcycles are starting to get a lot more useful. Last week, motorcycle wear company Dainese announced a jacket, called the Misano 1000, that includes a built-in airbag and all of the tech necessary to automatically know when to deploy it. That last part is what's important: other airbag jackets tend to rely on cues from sensors integrated with the bike itself, if not with an actual tether to the bike. The Misano 1000, on the other hand, seems to have acceleration sensors built into the jacket that can detect when a rider is in a collision or has been thrown from the bike. That should allow a rider who wears one of these to move from one motorcycle to another and bring the protection with them.

Continue reading…

14 Sep 16:34

Google Camera v3.0 Sneak Peek - Part 1: Smart Burst, Creations, and Animated GIFs [APK Teardown]

by Cody Toombs

Camera.v3.0-a

We're just two weeks away from the anticipated launch date for Android 6.0, up to two Nexus phones, and possibly many other surprises. As we all know, secrets are rarely well-kept as the clock counts down on big new products, and that means bits and pieces occasionally escape. We've got an early look at the resources belonging to Google Camera v3.0, which we expect to see included with the upcoming Nexus handsets and rolling out to the Play Store.

Read More

Google Camera v3.0 Sneak Peek - Part 1: Smart Burst, Creations, and Animated GIFs [APK Teardown] was written by the awesome team at Android Police.



14 Sep 16:28

Little girl scared of her own shadow

by Mark Frauenfelder

This toddler is having a nice time in a parking lot when she is startled by a stranger who silently sneaked up to her. She panics and flees, but like the monster in It Follows, the stranger pursues her relentlessly.

[via]

14 Sep 16:28

Why snoozing puppies twitch cutely and other facts about animal sleep

by David Pescovitz

Walruses sleep in a big pile. Hippos bob to the surface to take a breath and then sink back underwater. (more…)