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27 Aug 08:37

20 best new Android games released this week including Grand Mountain Adventure, Hipster Attack, and Kahuna

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 fantastic first taste of one of the best skiing games I've ever played on mobile, a goofy hipsterrific tower defense game, and a fantastic digital adaptation of the card-based board game Kahuna. 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 Grand Mountain Adventure, Hipster Attack, and Kahuna was written by the awesome team at Android Police.

26 Aug 11:43

[Update: APK Download] PayPal mobile app now focused on sending money to friends

by Corbin Davenport

Much like the desktop site, the PayPal mobile app has always supported sending money to friends, but it was a secondary feature. With the growing popularity of peer-to-peer payment apps like Venmo (which PayPal also owns), PayPal has decided to redesign the app and place a greater emphasis on sending money to friends.

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[Update: APK Download] PayPal mobile app now focused on sending money to friends was written by the awesome team at Android Police.

25 Aug 17:22

13 new and notable Android apps from the last week including Xbox Game Pass, IMDbPro, and Insomnia (8/18/18 - 8/25/18)

by Matthew Sholtz

roundup_icon_largeWelcome to the roundup of the best new Android applications and live wallpapers that went live in the Play Store or were spotted by us in the previous week or so. This week we have an app to control your Xbox Game Pass account, an IMDbPro account app that's a great resource for anyone in the entertainment industry, and an app that will keep your screen on as long as you wish.  So without further ado, here are the most notable Android apps released in the last fortnight.

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13 new and notable Android apps from the last week including Xbox Game Pass, IMDbPro, and Insomnia (8/18/18 - 8/25/18) was written by the awesome team at Android Police.

25 Aug 10:04

Road rage at 5mph leads to car flip

by Mark Frauenfelder

Two domesticated primates, ensconced in their respective horseless carriages, engage in a territorial dispute that results in an outcome that benefits neither of them.

Certifiable road rager flips his car at 5 MPH

24 Aug 12:44

This nail dispensing hammer is a work of genius

by Seamus Bellamy

Michael Young's an industrial designer. After over six years of tinkering, he came up with this frigging masterpiece of a prototype: a framing hammer that dispenses nails. If it ever makes it to market, having mashed my digits setting up a nail to be driven into boards an untold number of times, I will be the fist in line to buy this thing.

24 Aug 12:44

Fingernails lovingly sculpted into tiny feet

by Rusty Blazenhoff

Brought to you by Nail_Sunny, the Russian nail art chain behind "teeth nails," comes "feet nails."

They're equally as creepy: https://www.instagram.com/p/BmtVpjInq39/?taken-by=nail_sunny

(Mashable)

22 Aug 23:11

Caucasian Ovcharka determines child lacks skills necessary to play at beach

by Jason Weisberger

The Caucasian Ovcharka is a member of the extremely large, very willful, and demonically intelligent tree of the dog family. This doggo decided silly kid shouldn't be allowed to play in the ocean without a life jacket. Canine Overlord immediately corrects the situation.

A CO is a bad choice for anyone who isn't an experienced large breed dog owner. They are guard dogs first and cuddly mountains of fur second. There is no known maximum size, they are fearless and extremely aggressive when the guard genes kick in.

Image via gfycat

22 Aug 23:09

Build a Crowbox kit and become friends with your neighborhood crows

by Mark Frauenfelder

Josh Klein became a TED talk sensation a number of years ago when he created a vending machine that taught crows how to exchange lost coins for peanuts. Now Josh has a new project based on his vending machine -- an "experimentation platform designed to autonomously train corvids (the family of birds crows belong to)." I asked him to write a bit about it. Here it is:

Ten years ago I walked out on the TED main stage in one of my very first public appearances and poured my heart out about the craziest, weirdest, most unlikely thing I'd ever attempted: building a vending machine for crows.

The response was immense, and for several months I was convinced that we were on the verge of transforming how the entire human race interacted with animals. We built an open source version of the box so anyone could make one, assembled dozens of kits so people could buy them and do their own tests, and I ran around in a media-fueled frenzy trying to get people to understand that crows really could change the world.

Then bad things happened. The community of fans stopped trying to assemble the design as they found it too hard to work with. Those who bought kits generally didn't finish building them. A big news outlet misreported my results and then redacted the piece by basically calling me a liar. Worst of all, I got so hurt that I stopped trying.

For a while. For whatever reason my inner ten year old wouldn't stop insisting that despite sinking a decade into obsessing over corvids (the family crows belong to) and other synanthropes (animals which live close to humans), I needed to do more. That my delicate ego didn't really mean much when humanity was increasingly ready to turn the corner on how they think about and live with other species.

In short, the work still matters. Enough that I spent another ten years working with a partner, Steve (a genius at hardware/software design), to develop and test over a dozen new prototypes of the CrowBox. While we were at it, folks like Steve Joy and Christophe Vieren built their own machines and shot videos of wild corvids using them, and most recently a team from University of Cambridge ran a series of experiments proving New Caledonian crows can use a vending machine they created.

All of which helped push us to finally release an updated version of the CrowBox: an appliance designed to facilitate experiments in training corvids. This design is cheaper, tougher, and easier to assemble - and is completely open source, of course. We've tested it with a few different groups of crows and jays with positive results, and have developed complete documentation, assembly videos, and community software support to help folks get up and running quickly. Now we're looking to build a community of like-minded folks to expand the design, test and improve the training protocol, and see how much we can learn about autonomously training corvids.

Download the design, build a box of your own, and jump in by testing it with your local birds. Nobody's likely to get rich off this and there are no guarantees of success, but with a little luck we'll be able to move the needle on how people think about their relationships with animals and learn a ton in the process.

the official CrowBox site

22 Aug 16:42

Elderly elephant enjoys Debussy

by Rob Beschizza

I too flap my ears whenever Clair de Lune is performed for me.

22 Aug 12:57

Super, super, super-size me: a 2142 calorie meal

by Thersa Matsuura

Have you ever woken up one morning and bemoaned how much time you waste everyday preparing and eating meals? You have to rifle through your refrigerator to dig up ingredients, prepare them in some mildly pleasing and palatable way, before finally consuming them. Even if you’re the type of person who prefers eating out, there’s the choosing a restaurant, deciding what to order, paying, and, again, actually sitting down to eat the meal. This isn’t even addressing the time spent trying not to think about what insidious strain of salmonella or E. coli might be lurking under that leaf of Romaine lettuce. Time. Money. Dangerous vegetables. Well, in Japan the company Peyoung might have an answer to your prayers. Especially if your prayers included: How do I get an entire day's worth of calories into one sitting? A little while ago I was stopped dead in my tracks at my local 7-11 when I saw this package (above). Let me read that for you. It says Cho-Cho-Cho Omori Gigamax Yakisoba (Super, Super, Super Large Serving Gigamax Cup Fried Noodles). You'll notice the 2,142 calories is written nice and boldly, too. Below that is a friendly request to limit your consumption of this yummy and enormous meal to only once a day, because you could possibly exceed your daily calorie intake, and that would be bad. But isn't that the dream? One delicious meal, prepared in a mere three minutes, and all those pesky calories garnered in one fell swoop?
21 Aug 23:23

Street artists subvertise Facebook bus stop ads in London

by Rusty Blazenhoff

Thanks to the members of a street art project, some bus shelter adverts for Facebook in London were improved by a good ol' fashioned culture jam.

The Protest Stencil is taking credit for these subvertising efforts which altered Facebook's messaging to say, "Fake news is not our friend, it’s a great revenue source," and "Data misuse is not our friend, it’s our business model."

They refer to their work as "honest Facebook ads," writing, "To facebook, you’re not a ‘friend’, you’re the product on sale." Preach it! https://www.instagram.com/p/BmgCAhknnv7/?taken-by=proteststencil https://www.instagram.com/p/BmbKDvQHRFP/?taken-by=proteststencil

(Design You Trust)

image via Protest Stencil

21 Aug 12:38

Gmail for Android adds ‘Undo Send’ feature from desktop version

by Abner Li

One of the useful features that Gmail gained over the years is “Undo Send.” Like the name suggests, Gmail will allow you to take back an email after tapping the send button through an artificial delay. Long available on the web, this functionality is now making its way to Gmail for Android.

more…

19 Aug 08:57

25 new and notable Android apps from the last two weeks week including Pixel Shortcuts: Launcher, GoDaddy, and Tasty (8/4/18 - 8/18/18)

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 I have a nifty app from Chris Lacy that can uncover hidden apps in your drawer, as well as new offerings from GoDaddy and Tasty. So without further ado, here are the most notable Android apps released in the last fortnight.

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25 new and notable Android apps from the last two weeks week including Pixel Shortcuts: Launcher, GoDaddy, and Tasty (8/4/18 - 8/18/18) was written by the awesome team at Android Police.

17 Aug 20:20

NASA's gorgeous music video for Claude Debussy's "Clair de Lune"

by David Pescovitz

The scientist/artists in NASA's Scientific Visualization Studio created this magnificent video to accompany a recent performance by the National Symphony Orchestra Pops of Claude Debussy's "Clair de Lune." From NASA:

The visuals were composed like a nature documentary, with clean cuts and a mostly stationary virtual camera. The viewer follows the Sun throughout a lunar day, seeing sunrises and then sunsets over prominent features on the Moon. The sprawling ray system surrounding Copernicus crater, for example, is revealed beneath receding shadows at sunrise and later slips back into darkness as night encroaches...

The visualization uses a digital 3D model of the Moon built from Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter global elevation maps and image mosaics. The lighting is derived from actual Sun angles during lunar days in 2018.

17 Aug 00:45

Why were people thinner in the 1970s?

by Mark Frauenfelder

On July 26, Guardian columnist George Monbiot tweeted a photo of people on Brighton Beach in 1976, with the comment:

In this photo, from 1976, almost everyone is what we would now call slim. So what has happened? A sudden loss of willpower, as some rightwing journos claim? No. An obesogenic environment created by junk food manufacturers and their advertisers.

As you can see, lively Twitter discussion ensued. Monbiot did some research into people's dietary and exercise habits, then and now. He found that people actually ate more in the 1970s than they do now. Manual laborers are heavier today than they were in the 1970s. Kids move around as much today as they did 50 years ago.

"So what has happened?" asks Monbiot? His answer: lots more sugar.

The light begins to dawn when you look at the nutrition figures in more detail. Yes, we ate more in 1976, but differently. Today, we buy half as much fresh milk per person, but five times more yoghurt, three times more ice cream and – wait for it – 39 times as many dairy desserts. We buy half as many eggs as in 1976, but a third more breakfast cereals and twice the cereal snacks; half the total potatoes, but three times the crisps. While our direct purchases of sugar have sharply declined, the sugar we consume in drinks and confectionery is likely to have rocketed (there are purchase numbers only from 1992, at which point they were rising rapidly. Perhaps, as we consumed just 9kcal a day in the form of drinks in 1976, no one thought the numbers were worth collecting.) In other words, the opportunities to load our food with sugar have boomed. As some experts have long proposed, this seems to be the issue.

The shift has not happened by accident. As Jacques Peretti argued in his film The Men Who Made Us Fat, food companies have invested heavily in designing products that use sugar to bypass our natural appetite control mechanisms, and in packaging and promoting these products to break down what remains of our defences, including through the use of subliminal scents. They employ an army of food scientists and psychologists to trick us into eating more than we need, while their advertisers use the latest findings in neuroscience to overcome our resistance.

Image: Evan-Amos - Own work, CC0, Link

16 Aug 17:06

Oil paintings show how people who wear glasses see the world without them

by Rusty Blazenhoff

People who have good vision: Ever wonder what it's like to see the world as someone who is nearsighted? Well, Cape Town-based artist Philip Barlow has imagined this blurry world for you in a series of hyperrealistic oil paintings. See more of his work on his Instagram. https://www.instagram.com/p/BW1y2TCgKyO/?taken-by=philipbarlow https://www.instagram.com/p/BZ_8I5WALSd/?taken-by=philipbarlow https://www.instagram.com/p/BkQAOzWgGq4/?taken-by=philipbarlow https://www.instagram.com/p/Bh1LgIYg9J5/?taken-by=philipbarlow https://www.instagram.com/p/Bkm8LcUBsaH/?taken-by=philipbarlow https://www.instagram.com/p/Be8yTgXneu4/?taken-by=philipbarlow https://www.instagram.com/p/BlZx08lBC_V/?taken-by=philipbarlow

(Bored Panda)

15 Aug 23:53

What if English were phonetically consistent?

by Mark Frauenfelder

Japanese is a hard language to learn, but one of the easy parts is its generally phonetic consistency. English is also hard language to learn, and it's made harder because letters and letter combinations are pronounced differently depending on the word they are in. An example that illustrates this is "ghoti," a made up word that is pronounced "fish." The "gh" is pronounced like the "f" sound in "tough," the "o" is the "i" sound in "women," "ti" is the "sh" sound in "fiction."

Aaron Alon made a video that shows what English would sound like if each vowel had one, and only one, pronunciation. The result sounds like an American pretending to have a weird pan-European accent.

13 Aug 16:21

Nissan releases all-electric camper van model

by Andrea James

Nissan electric cargo vans had become a favorite of people who wanted to convert them into electric campers, so Nissan has now come out with an official model. (more…)
13 Aug 12:23

Just look at these bananails.

by Cory Doctorow

Just look at them. (Thanks, Sean!)

12 Aug 17:20

15 best new (and 1 WTF) Android games released this week including FNGenius: Live Game Show, Heroes Inc. 2, and DueLito

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 new game show quiz game from FOX TV, a solid sequel to a hero collection game, and a refreshing dueling game that can be played on a single device. So without further ado, here are the most notable Android games released in the last week.

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15 best new (and 1 WTF) Android games released this week including FNGenius: Live Game Show, Heroes Inc. 2, and DueLito was written by the awesome team at Android Police.

12 Aug 17:19

This is the summer of the firenado

by Andrea James

Leicestershire Fire and Rescue captured this firenado footage in Derbyshire at a plastics factory fire. Via The Guardian (more…)

10 Aug 19:43

Bacteria shown to have built immunity to hand sanitizers

by Seamus Bellamy

Good news everyone: those superbugs we’re all so afraid of? They’re evolving to be immune to a number of those popular alcohol-based hand sanitizers we all assumed would help to keep us from getting sick. Nature’s amazing! Seriously though, the planet is totally trying to kill us for all the shit we do to it. From Ars Technica:
Bacteria gathered from two hospitals in Australia between 1997 and 2015 appeared to gradually get better at surviving the alcohol used in hand sanitizers, researchers found. The bacteria’s boost in booze tolerance seemed in step with the hospitals’ gradually increasing use of alcohol-based sanitizers within that same time period—an increase aimed at improving sanitation and thwarting the spread of those very bacteria. Yet the germ surveillance data as well as a series of experiments the researchers conducted in mice suggest that the effort might be backfiring and that the hooch hygiene may actually be encouraging the spread of drug-resistant pathogens.
The more the bacteria drink, the higher their resistance to alcohol becomes. They’re just like us! The bacteria that researchers are most concerned about becoming tolerant to current booze-based sanitation products is called enterococcus faecium: it’s responsible for the majority of infections that folks pick up in a hospital environment and has already proven to be resistant to a number of antibiotics. According to this report, bacterial tolerance to alcohol-based sanitizers could undermine the way that hospitals prevent the spread of bacteria and other ugly stuff, on a world-wide basis. Happy Hump Day. Image via Flickr, courtesy of Manchester City Library
10 Aug 19:41

Pool and bowling trick shot artists join forces for some mind-boggling tricks

by Andrea James

Florian Kohler (previously), aka Venom Trickshots, teamed up with bowling trick shot master Jason Belmonte for some pretty astonishing billiards-bowling hybrid tricks. (more…)

10 Aug 19:32

Brilliant movie goof Twitter account

by David Pescovitz

On the @movie_goofs Twitter account, a fellow named Sean posts brilliantly funny "movie goofs" that aren't actually goofs. And for additional fun, see the responses from folks who don't seem to get that Sean is just kidding.

(Daily Dot via Neatorama)

10 Aug 19:29

Dog scolds lions for laying in its field

by Seamus Bellamy

Rex worked hard for this field. He was still making payments. To find lions laying there, rent-free, in his paddock? That simply would not do. A dressing down was in order.

09 Aug 13:05

Watch an artist make remarkably lifelike cat portraits from felted wool

by Andrea James

Wakuneco uses wool felt to make amazingly detailed custom-ordered cat portraits that look uncannily like the subjects. Here are how the finishing touches like whiskers get done. (more…)

09 Aug 13:04

12% of music industry revenues go to musicians

by Cory Doctorow

There are more people who want to make art than the market would support, and the arts are a highly concentrated industry: combine those two facts and you get a buyers' market for artists' work, controlled by intermediaries, who take almost all of the money generated by the work. (more…)

07 Aug 21:49

Google will soon let you turn off conversation view in Gmail app

by Ryan Whitwam

Gmail changed how we use email forever the instant it appeared. The days of managing a measly 25MB inbox ended, and conversation view made it easier to follow long email chains. However, some people never got used to conversation view. Gmail will offer a reprieve on Android very soon with the option to disable this feature.

Google added a setting in the web version of Gmail back in 2010 to disable conversation view.

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Google will soon let you turn off conversation view in Gmail app was written by the awesome team at Android Police.

07 Aug 21:45

UK regulators ban lies in ISP ads, advertised speeds drop by 41%

by Cory Doctorow

The UK Committees of Advertising Practice changed the rules for ISP advertising: where once the ISPs could advertise speeds of "Up to" some incredibly high number so long as 10% of customers ever achieved that speed, now ISPs can only advertise a speed promise if 51% of their customers attain that speed at all times. (more…)

06 Aug 19:16

Android 9 Pie: Powered by AI for a smarter, simpler experience that adapts to you

The latest release of Android is here! And it comes with a heaping helping of artificial intelligence baked in to make your phone smarter, simpler and more tailored to you. Today we’re officially introducing Android 9 Pie.

We’ve built Android 9 to learn from you—and work better for you—the more you use it. From predicting your next task so you can jump right into the action you want to take, to prioritizing battery power for the apps you use most, to helping you disconnect from your phone at the end of the day, Android 9 adapts to your life and the ways you like to use your phone.

Tailored to you

Android 9 aims to make your phone even smarter by learning from you and adapting to your usage patterns. That’s why Android 9 comes with features like Adaptive Battery, which learns the apps you use most and prioritizes battery for them, and Adaptive Brightness, which learns how you like to set the brightness in different settings, and does it for you.

battery-brightness.gif

Android 9 also helps you get things done faster with App Actions, which predicts what you’ll want to do next based on your context and displays that action right on your phone. Say it’s Tuesday morning and you’re preparing for your commute: you’ll be suggested actions like navigating to work on Google Maps or resuming an audiobook with Google Play Books. And when you put in headphones after work, you may see options to call your mom or start your favorite Spotify playlist.

Android 9 App Actions

Later this fall, we’ll also roll out Slices (pie...slices...get it?!) which shows relevant information from your favorite apps when you need it. If you start typing “Lyft” into Google Search, you’ll see a “slice” of the Lyft app, showing prices for your ride home and the ETA for a driver so you can take action more quickly and easily.

android 9 pie - slices

Now easy as pie

Making your phone smarter and more adaptive is important, but we also want Android to be easier to use and more approachable. In Android 9, we’ve introduced a new system navigation featuring a single home button.

This is especially helpful as phones grow taller and it’s more difficult to get things done on your phone with one hand. With a single, clean home button, you can swipe up to see a newly designed Overview, the spot where at a glance you have full-screen previews of your recently used apps.

Swipe up from anywhere to see full-screen previews of recently used apps and simply tap to jump back into one of them. If you find yourself constantly switching between apps on your Pixel, we’ve got good news for you: Smart Text Selection (which recognizes the meaning of the text you’re selecting and suggests relevant actions) now works on the Overview of your recent apps, making it easier to perform the action you want. You can enable this new system navigation in Settings once you’ve received your update to Android 9 (learn more in the help center).

Intuitive_nav1.gif

Changing how you navigate your phone is a big deal, but small changes can make a big difference too. Android P also brings a redesigned Quick Settings, a better way to take and edit screenshots (say goodbye to the vulcan grip that was required before), simplified volume controls, an easier way to manage notifications and more. You’ll notice small changes like these across the platform, to help make the things you do all the time easier than ever.  

Find the balance that’s right for your life

While much of the time we spend on our phones is useful, many of us wish we could disconnect more easily and free up time for other things. In fact, over 70 percent of people we talked to in our research said they want more help with this. So we’ve been working to add key capabilities right into Android to help people achieve the balance with technology they’re looking for. 

At Google I/O in May, we previewed some of these digital wellbeing features for Android, including a new Dashboard that helps you understand how you’re spending time on your device; an App Timer that lets you set time limits on apps and grays out the icon on your home screen when the time is up; the new Do Not Disturb, which silences all the visual interruptions that pop up on your screen; and Wind Down, which switches on Night Light and Do Not Disturb and fades the screen to grayscale before bedtime.

AndroidPie_DigitalWellbeing

Digital Wellbeing will officially launch on Pixel phones this fall, with Android One and other devices coming later this year. But these features are available in beta now for Pixel phones running Android 9. To try them out:

  1. Make sure you’re running Android 9 Pie on your device. (Learn how to check which version of Android you have.)

  2. Sign up for the beta with the email address you use with Google Play.

  3. Accept your invitation to become a beta tester by clicking the link in your welcome email.

Once you’ve accepted your invitation, Digital Wellbeing will appear in your phone’s Settings app. It may take up to 24 hours for Digital Wellbeing to appear on your device.

Security and privacy baked in

Improving security is always important in each of our platform releases.  In addition to continuously hardening the platform, and an improved security model for biometrics, Android 9 enables industry-leading hardware security capabilities to allow protecting sensitive data like credit card information using a secure, dedicated chip.  Android 9 also brings important privacy improvements, such as TLS by default and DNS over TLS to help protect all web communications and keep them private.

Coming to a device near you

Starting today, an over-the-air update to Android 9 will begin rolling out to Pixel phones. And devices that participated in the Beta program from Sony Mobile, Xiaomi, HMD Global, Oppo, Vivo, OnePlus and Essential, as well as all qualifying Android One devices, will receive this update by the end of this fall. We're also working with a number of other partners to launch or upgrade devices to Android 9 this year.

Learn more about Android 9 Pie at android.com/9.