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11 Nov 19:37

20 best new Android games released this week including Teslagrad, Scanner REDACTED, and Spitkiss

by Matthew Sholtz

Welcome to the roundup of the best new Android games that went live in the Play Store or were spotted by us in the previous week or so. This week I have a beautiful puzzle-platformer, the 1.0 version of Ingress, and a crazy release all about swapping spit. So without further ado, here are the most notable games released in the last week.

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20 best new Android games released this week including Teslagrad, Scanner REDACTED, and Spitkiss was written by the awesome team at Android Police.

10 Nov 18:03

18 new and notable Android apps from the last two weeks including Rivet Beta, Reachability Cursor, and the Call of Duty Companion App (10/27/18 - 11/10/18)

by Matthew Sholtz

roundup_icon_largeWelcome to the roundup of the best new Android applications that went live in the Play Store or were spotted by us in the previous two weeks or so. This week I have a beta app for reading practice, a cursor app that makes one-handed use of a phone a breeze, and a Call of Duty companion app. So without further ado, here are the most notable Android apps released in the last two weeks.

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18 new and notable Android apps from the last two weeks including Rivet Beta, Reachability Cursor, and the Call of Duty Companion App (10/27/18 - 11/10/18) was written by the awesome team at Android Police.

08 Nov 23:55

Puzzle-platformer Teslagrad is available on Android

by Matthew Sholtz

Teslagrad was announced for Android back in September. At the time it was only available on the Play Store for pre-registration, and a release date was unknown. As of today the indie 2D Metroidvania is available for purchase. You can snag a copy right now for $4.89, which is a 30% discount off the planned retail price.

If you are unfamiliar with Teslagrad, then let me fill you in. It is a fantastic indie Metroidvania game filled with plenty of puzzles and platforming.

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Puzzle-platformer Teslagrad is available on Android was written by the awesome team at Android Police.

08 Nov 23:54

Xiaomi enters UK market with Mi 8 Pro, Band 3, and much more, targeting budget-conscious consumers

by Scott Scrivens

Considering it was only founded in 2010, Xiaomi's rise has been meteoric. It's now the fourth largest smartphone maker in the world, leading the field at home in China and in the second largest market, India. This year has seen the company's expansion into Western Europe, where it's already reached number four in sales despite only selling in a handful of countries so far. That position is set to be bolstered by Xiaomi's official launch in the UK.

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Xiaomi enters UK market with Mi 8 Pro, Band 3, and much more, targeting budget-conscious consumers was written by the awesome team at Android Police.

08 Nov 23:54

Files by Google: the file management app for every Android user

Last December, Google launched Files Go: an app to free up space on mobile phones, find files faster and share them with others easily and quickly—even without an internet connection. Files Go was built to solve file and storage management problems for the next generation of smartphone users in countries such as India, Brazil and Nigeria. It helped people make the most of limited phone storage, enjoy their favorite videos and music, and send apps to each other at blazing speeds without using mobile data.

In less than a year, Files Go has grown tremendously to serve over 30 million monthly users. We’ve noticed that people across the globe are using it, no matter what type of mobile phone they have or how fast their internet connection is. We often find that products designed for the Next Billion Users work just as well for everyone—including people with a fast 4G connection and a top of the line smartphone who want to organize their files and save on storage as well!

Today, we’re rebranding the app to Files by Google. We’ve also redesigned the user experience to make sure that the content of your mobile phone is the focus when you use the app, all while keeping the same functions and playfulness that people love. When you clear out files you no longer need, we now celebrate how much you saved by telling you what you’ve freed up room for—whether it’s enough to take a few more selfies, or to download a whole movie!

You can download Files by Google here. We’re keen to hear what you think.
07 Nov 19:24

Driver turns back on train, loses it

by Jason Weisberger

An Australian locomotive engineer is very embarrassed.

Via Newsweek:

For around 50 minutes, the 1.2-mile locomotive sped along with 268 wagons in tow until authorities decided to remotely derail it from BHP's operations center almost 1,000 miles away in Perth.

The locomotive got free when its driver stepped out of his cab to check on one of the wagons. However, before he could get back in, the train had already set off on its unplanned journey. "While the driver was outside of the locomotive, the train commenced to run away," the Australian Transport Safety Bureau (ATSB) explained.

No one was injured in the accident, though the ATSB said the train was badly damaged along with around a mile of track, The Guardian noted.

07 Nov 19:23

Google announces Android support for new ‘Foldables’ device category

by Abner Li

With Samsung expected to preview its highly rumored foldable smartphone today, Google announced Android support for this new device category. Named “Foldables,” Google is laying out the basic groundwork by taking advantage of existing Android features.

more…

The post Google announces Android support for new ‘Foldables’ device category appeared first on 9to5Google.

07 Nov 19:23

Watch this woman make a bamboo furniture set from scratch

by Mark Frauenfelder

Equipped only with handtools, this woman harvests bamboo from a grove and makes a beautiful furniture set. It is interesting to see how she heats the bamboo over a fire to make it bendable.

[via Core77]

06 Nov 21:10

Nook 10.1″ tablet runs Android, has a keyboard dock, Google Play, and costs just $129

by Ben Schoon

Android tablets are pretty much dead at this point with even Google shifting attention to its Chrome OS-running Pixel Slate. However, Barnes & Noble has just come out this week to unveil a brand new affordable Android tablet with the Nook 10.1″.

more…

The post Nook 10.1″ tablet runs Android, has a keyboard dock, Google Play, and costs just $129 appeared first on 9to5Google.

06 Nov 21:06

Watch this very funny glass door prank

by David Pescovitz

Well played and certainly worth the effort:

06 Nov 21:05

Why you should store your plastic wrap in the freezer

by David Pescovitz

When I was young, my mom banned plastic wrap from our kitchen because it frustrated her so much when it would invariably cling to itself. Apparently you can avoid this problem though just by storing the plastic wrap in the freezer. The cold temporarily reduces its clinginess. From Mental Floss:

The cold temperature alters the polyethylene at the molecular level, which helps to remove the static and stickiness...

The freezer only temporarily changes the properties of the plastic wrap, giving you enough time to rip a sheet off and cover your leftovers with it while the material is still cool. Once the plastic wrap warms up, it will go back to its old, clingy self.

Carolyn Forte of the Good Housekeeping Institute tried it out and gave the freezer method a thumbs up. "The plastic wrap was a lot easier to unroll and use," she tells Good Housekeeping. "It doesn't stick to itself when it's cold, but still works to cover up a dish. As it warms up, it goes back to being sticky, but it's definitely easier to handle when cold."

06 Nov 14:36

Android turns 11 today: Happy Birthday!

by Scott Scrivens

They grow up so fast, don't they? It's hard to believe, but today marks the 11th anniversary of the first Android beta. If you thought the 5th of November was only important because of Guy Fawkes and the Gunpowder Plot, think again — the first public launch of Android is what makes today special.

Of course, the commercial release didn't happen until nearly a year later when, on September 23 2008, Android version 1.0 was announced alongside the HTC Dream/T-Mobile G1.

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Android turns 11 today: Happy Birthday! was written by the awesome team at Android Police.

06 Nov 14:27

Watch a unicorn complete a gymnastics bars routine

by Jason Weisberger

My daughter competes in the Jr Olympics gymnastics program and loves every minute of it. This video is the kind of shenanigans she can appreciate.

03 Nov 19:46

31 best new Android games released this week including Old School RuneScape, Football Manager 2019 Mobile, and Football Manager 2019 Touch

by Matthew Sholtz

Welcome to the roundup of the best new Android games that went live in the Play Store or were spotted by us in the previous week or so. This week I have the official release of Old School RuneScape, plus two separate Football Manager titles from Sega. So without further ado, here are the most notable games released in the last week.

Please wait for this page to load in full in order to see the widgets, which include ratings and pricing info.
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31 best new Android games released this week including Old School RuneScape, Football Manager 2019 Mobile, and Football Manager 2019 Touch was written by the awesome team at Android Police.

03 Nov 12:50

Disneyland's laundry used "gamification" as an "electronic whip," leading to worker stress and injuries

by Cory Doctorow

A non-negotiable feature of Disneyland's 2008 contract with Unite Local 11 -- which represents the laundry workers who clean linens from the resort's hotels and restaurants -- was a new "work-tracking" system that used "gamification" to display realtime signals about each worker's productivity on public leaderboards, colorcoded with the slowest workers' names in red, as well as color-coding indicators on individual machines to indicate whether they were underperforming.

The workers called this system "the electronic whip" and they say that it had the intended effect of speeding up their work -- at the expense of bitter fighting between workers (in a workplace that had a decades-long reputation for being a good and pleasant place to work) and a sharp increase in on-the-job injuries.

Disneyland has been the site of intense union organizing, a pushback that was triggered by a decades-long ratcheting-down of real wages and working conditions.

While this whip was cracking, the workers sped up. ‘We saw a higher incidence of injuries,’ Topete said. ‘Several people were injured on the job.’ The formerly collegial environment degenerated into a race. The laundry workers competed with each other, and got upset when coworkers couldn’t keep up. People started skipping bathroom breaks. Pregnant workers fell behind. ‘The scoreboard incentivises competition,’ said Topete. ‘Our human competitiveness, whatever makes us like games, whatever keeps us wanting to win, it’s a similar thing that was happening. Even if you didn’t want to.’

The dark side of gamifying work [Vincent Gabrielle/Aeon]

(Thanks, Don!)

(Image: Cryteria, CC-BY)

02 Nov 19:33

How to cook Brussels sprouts, restaurant style

by Mark Frauenfelder

Poorly roasted Brussels sprouts are awful, nearly as bad as boiled ones. In this video, you'll learn how to cook them the right way -- "charred, dark, and with maximum crunch."

Image: YouTube

02 Nov 16:25

Time lapse of a kitten growing up

by Mark Frauenfelder

A photographer embarked on a multi-year project to photograph a kitten as it matured.

31 Oct 01:16

Effects artist models the universe at a scale of 1:190,000,000

by Mark Frauenfelder

If you shrink the earth to 1/190 millionth of its current size, it becomes the size of a tennis ball. With this scale as a starting point, a visual effects artist made a very cool video that shows the relative sizes of other planets and stars.

[via Evil Mad Scientist]

30 Oct 16:39

Cat crashes a fashion show catwalk, hilarity ensues

by Rusty Blazenhoff

A cat stole the show at the recent Esmod International Fashion Show in Istanbul, Turkey by preening itself, playfully attacking models, and actually walking the catwalk.

Fashion designer Göksen Hakkı Ali told The Dodo, "Everybody was in shock."

I'm dying, this is too good! Brb, gonna go watch it a hundred more times.

Instagram Photo

30 Oct 16:37

Relax with this wintry real-time stream from a Norwegian train

by David Pescovitz

Having a great time, wish I was there!

This video produced the NRK TV-program "Nordlandsbanen Minutt for Minutt", which shows ride on the train cabin driver's view through beautiful Norwegian landscape.

(via Kottke)

29 Oct 20:18

A tale of a whale song

Like us, whales sing. But unlike us, their songs can travel hundreds of miles underwater. Those songs potentially help them find a partner, communicate and migrate around the world. But what if we could use these songs and machine learning to better protect them?

Despite decades of being protected against whaling, 15 species of whales are still listed under the Endangered Species Act. Even species that are successfully recovering—such as humpback whales—suffer from threats like entanglement in fishing gear and collisions with vessels, which are among the leading causes of non-natural deaths for whales.

To better protect those animals, the first step is to know where they are and when, so that we can mitigate the risks they face—whether that's putting the right marine protected areas in place or giving warnings to vessels. Since most whales and dolphins spend very little time at the surface of the water, visually finding and counting them is very difficult. This is why NOAA’s Pacific Islands Fisheries Science Center, responsible for monitoring populations of whales and other marine mammals in U.S. Pacific waters, relies instead on listening using underwater audio recorders.

NOAA has been using High-frequency Acoustic Recording Packages (HARPs) to record underwater audio at 12 different sites in the Pacific Ocean, some starting as early as 2005. They have accumulated over 170,000 hours of underwater audio recordings. It would take over 19 years for someone to listen to all of it, working 24 hours a day!

image4

Crew members deploy a high-frequency acoustic recording package (HARP) to detect cetacean sounds underwater (Photo credit: NOAA Fisheries).

To help tackle this problem, we teamed up with NOAA to train a deep neural network that automatically identifies which whale species are calling in these very long underwater recordings, starting with humpback whales. The effort fits into our AI for Social Good program, applying the latest in machine learning to the world’s biggest social, humanitarian and environmental challenges.

The problem of picking out humpback whale songs underwater is particularly difficult to solve for several reasons. Underwater noise conditions can vary: for example, the presence of rain or boat noises can confuse a machine learning model. The distance between a recorder and the whales can cause the calls to be very faint. Finally, humpback whale calls are particularly difficult to classify because they are not stereotyped like blue or fin whale calls—instead, humpbacks produce complex songs and a variety of vocalizations that change over time.

https://youtu.be/k6oeR4yK_oo

A spectrogram (visual representation of the sound) of a humpback whale song in Hawaii.

We decided to leverage Google’s existing work on large-scale sound classification and train a humpback whale classifier on NOAA’s partially annotated underwater data set. We started by turning the underwater audio data into a visual representation of the sound called a spectrogram, and then showed our algorithm many example spectrograms that were labeled with the correct species name. The more examples we can show it, the better our algorithm gets at automatically identifying those sounds. For a deeper dive (ahem) into the techniques we used, check out our Google AI blog post. To find out how this project was started, read the NOAA Fisheries blog post by Research Oceanographer Ann Allen.

Now that we can find and identify humpback whales in recordings, it allows us to understand where they are and where they are going—as shown by the animation below.

image5

Since 2005, NOAA’s Pacific Islands Fisheries Science Center has deployed, recovered and collected recordings from hydrophones moored on the ocean bottom at 12 sites. On this map, you can see the spots where more whales were found by our classifier in orange and yellow.

In the future, we plan to use our classifier to help NOAA better understand humpback whales by identifying changes in breeding location or migration paths, changes in relative abundance (which can be related to human activity), changes in song over the years and differences in song between populations. This could also help directly protect whales by advising vessels to modify their routes when a lot of whales are present in a certain area. Such work is already being done for right whales, which are easier to monitor because of their relatively simple sounds.

The ocean is big and humpback whales are not the only ones to make noise, so we also started training our classifier on more species sounds (like the southern resident killer whale, which is critically endangered). We can’t see the species that live underwater, but we can hear a lot of them. With the help of machine learning, we hope that one day we can detect and classify a lot of these species sounds, giving biologists around the world the information needed to better understand and protect them.

image6

A humpback whale breaching at the surface of the water. (Photo credit: Hawaiian Islands Humpback Whale National Marine Sanctuary.)


29 Oct 20:12

Dolphins forced to simplify calls due to human noise pollution in the oceans

by David Pescovitz
As a result of noisy ship engines and the racket of ocean mining, bottlenose dolphins have slowly reducing the complexity and changing the frequency of their calls. According to new research from the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science and published in the journal Biology Letters, "the noise-induced simplification of dolphin whistles may reduce the information content in these acoustic signals and decrease effective communication, parent–offspring proximity or group cohesion." From YaleEnvironment360:

“It’s kind of like trying to answer a question in a noisy bar and after repeated attempts to be heard, you just give the shortest answer possible,” Bailey said. “Dolphins simplified their calls to counter the masking effects of vessel noise.”

Dolphins are highly social animals and use their calls to stay together as a group, talk as they feed, and call out their names when they meet new members of their species. Each animal has a distinctive whistle, which typically uses complex sound patterns with variations in pitch and frequency.

photo: US Navy

28 Oct 18:35

30 best new Android games released this week including Shining Force Classics, Ghostbusters World, and Trivia Crack 2

by Matthew Sholtz

Welcome to the roundup of the best new Android games that went live in the Play Store or were spotted by us in the previous week or so. This week I have a collection of Shining Force games from Sega, the official release of Ghostbusters-themed augmented reality collection game, and the sequel to the ever-popular Trivia Crack quiz game. So without further ado, here are the most notable games released in the last week.

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30 best new Android games released this week including Shining Force Classics, Ghostbusters World, and Trivia Crack 2 was written by the awesome team at Android Police.

27 Oct 17:19

10 new and notable Android apps from the last week including Blizzard Esports, Heritage Scanner, and Otter Voice Notes (10/20/18 - 10/27/18)

by Matthew Sholtz

roundup_icon_largeWelcome to the roundup of the best new Android applications that went live in the Play Store or were spotted by us in the previous week or so. This week we have an esports app, an app that can guess your heritage just by scanning a picture of your face, more than a few A&E Android TV releases, and a note taking app that uses a smart AI to transcribe your voice recordings. So without further ado, here are the most notable Android apps released in the last week.

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10 new and notable Android apps from the last week including Blizzard Esports, Heritage Scanner, and Otter Voice Notes (10/20/18 - 10/27/18) was written by the awesome team at Android Police.

27 Oct 12:24

Dog exits vehicle and leaps into a pile of leaves

by Rob Beschizza

Stella (Instagram) is "Queen of the Sploot" and this week's number #1 source of videos ganked by people on Twitter and Facebook.

Instagram Photo

Instagram Photo

Instagram Photo

27 Oct 12:21

Powerful essay about by being in the psych ward at age 14

by David Pescovitz

Over at YR (formerly Youth Radio), Desmond Meagley wrote and illustrated a moving, sad, and ultimately hopeful personal story about being committed to the psych ward at age 14. From "5150'd: My Journey Through a Psych Ward":

After I had a meltdown in the middle of my sixth grade class, my school gave my family an ultimatum: if I was going to be enrolled there, I also had to be in therapy. Just like that, my struggle to be heard was confined to dimly lit sessions with the school counselor and an outside therapist. I tried to be honest with them, but I was a little too young to grasp what was at the root of my mental health issues. I was also scared of what might happen if I was *too* honest.

I was getting used to pushing my mental health aside, believing that I would eventually grow out of my depression and anxiety… even though they were getting worse.

That’s the thing about chronic mental illness: you don’t grow out of it. It grows with you, getting smarter, more mature, more convincing. Constantly having to outsmart the worst parts of your own brain is a nightmare.

"5150'd: My Journey Through a Psych Ward" (YR)

illustration: Desmond Meagley

27 Oct 12:14

Google might be developing a ‘Play Pass’ subscription service for Android apps & games

by Abner Li

Earlier this month, Google announced a slew of new features for Android developers like Instant Apps to demo paid games to In-App Updates that are particularly useful for the large downloads. This emphasis on gaming reflects how profitable the category is with a possible “Play Pass” subscription service now in the works.

more…

The post Google might be developing a ‘Play Pass’ subscription service for Android apps & games appeared first on 9to5Google.

27 Oct 12:14

Google might be planning to remove & replace Android voice unlock on all devices

by Abner Li

For several years now, the Google app allowed users to unlock a device with your voice when interacting with Google Assistant. After removing on the Pixel 3 and Pixel 3 XL, “Unlock with Voice Match” appears to be nearing deprecation and replacement on all other Android devices given that it’s not too secure.

more…

The post Google might be planning to remove & replace Android voice unlock on all devices appeared first on 9to5Google.

24 Oct 12:28

People, like Marilu Henner, who remember nearly every moment of their life

by Rusty Blazenhoff

Actress Marilu Henner (Taxi) can recall specific details from almost every day in her life. She has hyperthymesia, a rare condition that only she and 10 other people in the world are proven by tests to possess. In this 60 Minutes (Australian version) segment, Henner talks with her about "superior autobiographical memory." She considers it a gift but others interviewed consider it a burden.

Imagine being able to remember every minute detail of your life. You can recall what the weather was like, what you were reading or what you wore to the shops at any minute, any hour or any day stretching back decades. It sounds like some kind of parlour trick, but it's actually a real and very rare medical phenomenon.

Previously: This woman remembers every detail from her life since she was 12 days old

(Likecool)

22 Oct 22:07

Because sexism: Mansize Kleenex to be renamed

by Rusty Blazenhoff

Quick! Get some of these sexist facial tissues while you still can.

It took them 60 years but Kleenex is finally renaming their "Mansize" tissues after getting customer complaints. The facial-tissues-formerly-known-as-Mansize will now be branded "Extra Large."

Parent company Kimberly-Clark "succumbed to growing public demand to change the name, despite not itself believing that the Mansize branding suggests or endorses gender inequality."

Sam Smethers, chief executive at feminist campaign group, the Fawcett Society, praised the move, saying: "Rebranding mansized tissues is not to be sneezed at. Removing sexist branding such as this is just sensible 21st century marketing. But we still have a long way to go before using lazy stereotypes to sell products is a thing of the past."

(DesignTaxi)