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14 Dec 10:23

NYT and ABC News lied about CIA operative

by Rob Beschizza

Since 2007, ABC News and the New York Times have known that ex-FBI agent Robert Levinson, missing in Iran, was spying there for the CIA. Since then, however, they've repeatedly lied about the purpose of his trip. J.K. Trotter tallies the misleading stories:

It’s one thing for a news outlet to keep secrets at the request of the government, or in order to keep someone safe. It’s another thing to affirmatively and knowingly spread lies. And this isn’t the first time the Times has knowingly repeated false information at the request of the CIA. The paper was criticized in 2011 after it revealed that it had known that Ray Davis, an American accused of murder in Pakistan, had been a CIA contractor, even as it repeated false statements from Barack Obama claiming he was a diplomat.

To avoid endangering Levinson, they could have simply said that he had disappeared in Iran. Instead, knowing otherwise, they repeated specific details ("on a business trip") that they knew were untrue, until the AP found out and exposed him yesterday:

In an extraordinary breach of the most basic CIA rules, a team of analysts — with no authority to run spy operations — paid Levinson to gather intelligence from some of the world's darkest corners. He vanished while investigating the Iranian government for the U.S.

    






14 Dec 10:17

Beatles bootlegs headed to iTunes next week

by Josh Lowensohn

A slew of hard to find Beatles recordings are arriving on iTunes next week as part of a new album called The Beatles Bootleg Recordings 1963. The set includes 59 tracks, 44 of which were live from BBC radio, along with 15 outtakes recorded in the studio, reports NME. It's a follow-up to last month's Live at the BBC Volume 2, which compiled 63 tracks recorded during BBC performances. The arrival of the new album may be bittersweet for Beatles fans who purchased the $149 "complete" box set just a few years ago. That collection included all the studio albums, as well as live concert video and recordings, whereas this newer compilation is mostly live performances.

Continue reading…

13 Dec 23:46

Google's plan to rule the world

by Brad Reed
Google Android China AnalysisLike a lot of major American companies, Google has had some issues dealing with the Chinese government. In fact, Google hasn't invested any resources in the country for years and last year the government blocked all of Google's major services including Gmail, Google Maps and Google Drive. It goes without saying that this is a bit of a problem for a company as ambitious as Google since China's fast-growing economy represents a huge opportunity for every major tech firm. Thankfully for Google, it seems to have an ace up its sleeve in the form of Android.

Continue reading...
13 Dec 22:09

Skype 4.5 Introduces A Floating Picture-In-Picture View For Android Tablets And Other Enhancements

by Bertel King, Jr.

Skype-ThumbIt's 2013, and chances are that someone has asked you to make a Skype video chat at some point or another. This isn't too all-consuming on PCs, where a user can fire up their webcam and tuck the Skype client away in the corner. Anyone using an Android device, on the other hand, has had to devote the entire screen to the conversation. But thanks to the latest Skype update, many of us will be freed from the burden of giving a video chat our undivided attention, as we will now have the ability to tuck the entire session away into the corner.

Done With This Post? You Might Also Like These:

Skype 4.5 Introduces A Floating Picture-In-Picture View For Android Tablets And Other Enhancements was written by the awesome team at Android Police.

    


13 Dec 22:08

British Library uploads over a million historical images onto Flickr to research and remix

by Kwame Opam

The British Library announced yesterday that it has uploaded more than one million public domain photos from the 17th, 18th, and 19th centuries to Flickr. The move comes as part of an ambitious project that will crowdsource inventive ways to navigate the massive store of photos, foster research, and encourage users to remix and repurpose the images.

Continue reading…

13 Dec 22:08

Microsoft joins major push to kill passwords once and for all

by Brad Reed
Microsoft Google Anti-Password AllianceAs passwords have become more annoying and less secure over the years, several of tech's brightest minds have looked at one another and said, "Surely there must be a better way?" And although Google has typically been the most visible face in the crusade to kill the password, it looks like Microsoft will put more of its own resources into the effort as well. IDG News, via Network World, reports that Microsoft has joined the board of directors of the FIDO Alliance, an industry consortium founded in 2012 to reduce Internet services' reliance on passwords. The alliance, which includes heavyweights such as Google, Lenovo and LG, is working on "standardizing authentication technologies will lead to better interoperability and innovations in biometrics, PINs (personal identification numbers) and secondary authentication technologies," IDG News says.
13 Dec 16:48

Top 10 new Android games this week: Small World 2, Angry Birds Go!

by Steve Raycraft

Welcome back to Android Gaming Weekly, our weekly recap on new game releases. We still plan to cover upcoming releases and games we’re playing, but this column is dedicated to new games you can install and start playing right now. Check out our top picks and let us know if you have any suggestions for next week in the comments below.

Medieval Wars: Strategy & Tactics

Description: In Medieval Wars: Strategy & Tactics you are to lead the armies of England and France, as well as the armies of crusaders, in three campaigns and try to win the biggest wars and battles of European medieval history. Scenario maps will let you take part in Russian feuds, stop the Saracens under the flag of Charles the Great and lead The Hussites.

 

Savant – Ascent

Description: Based off Savant’s universe, the game has you battling scrap robots to reclaim your tower. Fight your way up the enemy-infested tower, dodging and shooting your way to the top.

 

Angry Birds Go!

Description: Welcome to downhill racing on Piggy Island! Feel the rush as you fling those freewheeling birds and piggies down the track at breakneck speed – with plenty of twists and turns in a thrilling race to the finish line.

 

Playground Wars

Description: Hey, Alex! Our playground has been taken over! Only you can help us take it back! Prepare for an epic battle to defend your treehouse against those pesky kids from the next street over!

 

Heroes of Steel RPG

Description: Heroes of Steel is a highly tactical turn-based RPG in which you command a party of four unique characters, each with their own special powers and abilities. Engage in strategic combat with the devious, magical and evil races who threaten humanity’s last settlements.

 

Small World 2

Description: Based on the phenomenally successful Small World fantasy board game with over 500,000 copies sold! Take control of insanely fun fantasy race and special power combos, such as Berserk Halflings, Triton Merchants, Alchemist Ratmen and Dragon-master Amazons, to grab all the land you can in a world that is just too small to share with your opponents!

 

Conjurer: Awoken

Description: A fast-paced action tower defense game, Conjurer: Awoken provides non-stop waves of action and strategy!

 

Get the Toy

Description: Get the Toy game is a perfect replica of our favorite toy claw machine game. Collecting toys has always been fun for all ages, so what are you waiting for? Spend free coins to control your claw and grab your favorite toy.

 

Color Chaser

Description: Simple and addictive game that you will love from the first touch! Make your way to the top of the ranking competing against your friends to get the highest score. Have fun breaking the pieces by tapping them. Color Chaser is easy to learn, quick to play and will test both your speed and your concentration!

 

Sonic the Hedgehog 2

Description: Speed back in time to discover the game that first united Sonic the Hedgehog with his amazing flying sidekick Miles “Tails” Prower. Run through high speed levels packed with enemies and hazards as you zoom along loop de loops in your mission to destroy the devious Dr. Eggman.

 

COMING SOON

13 Dec 16:47

TeliportMe panorama app adds 3D effects in latest update

by Andrew Martonik

TeliportMe Panorama 360

Fog, rain, lens flare and snow create a more immersive experience

TeliportMe Panorama 360, an interesting photography app that lets you create and share full 360 degree panoramas, is introducing 3D effects today. Among other subtle design tweaks that build on an already well-made app, you'll now have the option of adding four different weather effects to your panoramas: fog, rain, lens flare (sun) and snow, each of which are live animated overlays on your pictures. Lens flare is offered for free, while the others will set you back a $1 in-app purchase each, or $2 for the group.

After taking your panorama, simply hit the different effects at the bottom of the edit screen to reflect the current weather situation of the picture you took. It adds an extra bit of immersion to pictures that already pull you in with full 360 degree views. The effects are non-destructive to your original picture, so you always have the plain, unedited panorama to refer back to later.

As an extra bit of holiday fun, there will also be a "Christmas" effect that adds some snow, fog and a little season-appropriate music to your picture. For a short time you'll find holiday specials that give you 50 percent off in-app purchases when you bundle them together as well. The latest version of TeliportMe's Panorama 360 app is available now in the Play Store.


    






13 Dec 16:44

Disable Automatic Image Loading in Gmail to Save Data and Privacy

by Eric Ravenscraft

Disable Automatic Image Loading in Gmail to Save Data and Privacy

This week, Google made a change to how it loads images in your email. Now, instead of pulling images from the source, Google caches the pictures on its own servers. That's great if you want the pictures, but if not, you can turn it off.

While Ars Technica points out that this move inadvertently makes it more difficult for marketers to get data about you, they still take up bandwidth. If you're on a metered connection (or just don't want images enabled by default), you can disable them in your Settings here. The privacy minded will also note that the nature of this feature means that Google makes a copy of every image it shows you, so if you're in that rare group of people who share links to sensitive information you don't want Google storing away, you should probably turn this feature off.

How to block Gmail from displaying images in emails by default | Ghacks

13 Dec 16:44

HOWTO unshrink a garment

by Cory Doctorow
Ever shrunk a garment in the dryer? I'm a laundry freak, and a pretty careful one, but I know I've done it (and inevitably, it ends up ruining something my wife's just bought). Turns out there's a way to unshrink clothes: soak them in baby shampoo or hair conditioner, then stretch them out (ideally, by wearing them) as they dry.
    






13 Dec 16:44

Australian man travels to Thailand to track down his scammers

by Mark Frauenfelder

Keith Jones was scammed out of US$110,000 by a fraudulent investment firm. Not surprisingly, law enforcement initially had little interest in the case, so Mr. Jones decided to track down the criminals on his own, leading him from his home in Australia to Thailand. He made this high-quality and fascinating documentary of his sleuthing.

HSBC bank, which gave the scammers an account to rip off Mr. Jones, also refused to help him. (That's not surprising either, once you read Matt Taibbi's Rolling Stone article, "Gangster Bankers: Too Big to Jail How HSBC hooked up with drug traffickers and terrorists. And got away with it.")

Above, an update to Jones' story. Unfortunately, the criminals are still at large.

This story is one of deceit, theft, police incompetence, international loopholes and the apathy of a major corporate bank. It is also his story of how almost entirely on his own he tracked down a sophisticated gang of fraudsters.

This is his second time in Bangkok in two years, and exactly as before, he’d rather not be there, but unfortunately, sometimes, there are things that you just have to do whether you like it or not. He’s about to board an overnight train to Chiang Mai, a 14 hour journey to the north of Thailand. He’s making this film as a record of the atrocious and ridiculous events that have lead him to this point. He’s also making it as some sort of catharsis. Finally, he’s making it as a stark warning to others.

Life can be strange sometimes. One minute, you can be travelling along thinking that everything is okay, and almost out of nowhere, the malicious actions of another person can affect your life forever. His story begins back in Australia. He was working from his office one day, when the phone rang. It was the company calling themselves Humphrey Capital Investments, a global financial services group with offices in California and Singapore. Over the coming weeks, he had several informal conversations with their senior portfolio manager John Thompson. One of his recommendations was to invest in Nokia shares. This seemed to present a good buying opportunity.

Humphrey Capital Group sent him client forms, and after processing his application, they bought Nokia shares on his behalf. He subsequently paid the invoice by bank transfer to their company account at an HSBC bank in Hong Kong. Over the coming weeks, John Thompson rang him several times to discuss his portfolio, but at the end of the month, he rang to tell him that his company had been bought out by a group called Wellnic Investments. His new advisor would be Edward Martin, the Vice Chairman of Wellnic Investments. Wellnic’s credentials looked similarly impressive, and their website showed detailed information on the company.

A few days later, he had a call from Edward Martin, and like his predecessor, Edward had an American accent and came over as professional and friendly. He explained that he’d be his new advisor, and he looked forward to a long and profitable relationship, and that’s exactly how it turned out to be. Over a very long period, Keith Jones purchased a variety of low-risk US stocks, trusts and deposits. All trades were paid for through account at a HSBC Bank in Hong Kong.

Subsequently, like the proverbial lamb to the slaughter, he continued to make investments through the Wellnic Group. Within 12 months, he’d invested over $110,000 US dollars. Even saying it now makes him feel quite sick. You often hear that people are scammed through greed, and where unrealistic returns are involved, but most of his investments with Wellnic were supposed to pay around 10 to 12 percent per annum; good, but at the time, not unrealistic. In fact, it was only when things started to sound too good to be true that he became suspicious.


    






13 Dec 16:39

FEATURE -- How IFTTT automated (and archived) my digital life

by Darren Murph
IFTTT iOS AutomationRight around this time three years ago, a five-letter service was born. Like most startups, it took some time to simmer… to cultivate enough respect to make its way around the wild, wild tubes that us folk refer to as the internet. In the time since, IFTTT has rapidly evolved, supporting all sorts of new services, popping out an iOS app, and creating something of a budding ecosystem with shared recipes. For those unfamiliar with IFTTT, fret not — it’s a pretty nerdy service. But here’s the thing: it exists to simplify the life of the layperson, too.

Continue reading...
13 Dec 16:35

Twitter Reverts Changes To Blocking Functionality After Strong Negative User Feedback

by Matthew Panzarino
Screen Shot 2013-12-12 at 4.26.55 PM

Update: Twitter has reverted the changes to blocking functionality that it made earlier today. After the changes, an outpouring of negative user feedback appeared on Twitter, blogs and other services. We hear Twitter executives began hashing this one out in internal discussions almost immediately after negative sentiment started to rise and Reuters reported that an emergency meeting was held to discuss the changes.

Twitter obviously made these changes for a reason, and both statements given to us by Twitter and things that we’ve heard indicate that there were many requests made to eliminate the ‘blocked’ notice. Specific accounts of reprisals in response to a blocked person being notified of being blocked spurred this change.

But at this point it appears that at least some re-thinking of the feature is in order, and Twitter appears to be choosing to roll these changes back for now until it can come up with a system that works for the majority of users.

Either way, Twitter deserves some credit for responding quickly and decisively to revert what was obviously a very unpopular change.

Here is Twitter’s statement, courtesy of VP of Product Michael Sippey:

Earlier today, we made a change to the way the “block” function of Twitter works. We have decided to revert the change after receiving feedback from many users – we never want to introduce features at the cost of users feeling less safe. Any blocks you had previously instituted are still in effect.

In reverting this change to the block function, users will once again be able to tell that they’ve been blocked. We believe this is not ideal, largely due to the retaliation against blocking users by blocked users (and sometimes their friends) that often occurs. Some users worry just as much about post-blocking retaliation as they do about pre-blocking abuse. Moving forward, we will continue to explore features designed to protect users from abuse and prevent retaliation.

We’ve built Twitter to help you create and share ideas and information instantly, without barriers. That vision must coexist with keeping users safe on the platform. We’ve been working diligently to strike this balance since Twitter’s inception, and we thank you for all of your support and feedback to date. Thank you in advance for your patience as we continue to build the best – and safest – Twitter we possibly can.

Original article follows:

Twitter has introduced a new blocking policy that is materially different from the one that they’ve had in the past. Blocked users can now see your tweets while logged in and continue to follow you on the service, allowing potential harassers or abusers to continue to track your updates on the network, even though you’ve explicitly blocked them.

This greatly reduces the effectiveness of some aspects of the block functionality on Twitter and opens the door for those who have been harassed or stalked on social networks to have their updates monitored more easily. Blocked users can now retweet your tweets, fave them and RT them while logged into their account.

TechCrunch spoke to Twitter about the changes, and the company says that the change, which does not notify or alert the person you’ve blocked in any way, was done to prevent a scenario of retaliation. The company said that they had seen situations where users, once they discovered that they had been blocked — because they could no longer view tweets or interact with tweets — would find other ways to attack or harass the blocker or even be spurred to greater abuse.

Twitter says that another reason for the change is to better communicate to users that ‘blocked’ does not mean ‘invisible’ and that your information is still public.

This new method means that the only way to prevent someone from following you or interacting with your tweets is to make your account completely private. This will prevent anyone you block from seeing your tweets.

While we doubt Twitter had anything but good intentions here, changing blocking because a blocker might be antagonizing or inciting someone they’ve blocked just by blocking them will likely not sit well with victims of harassment.

It’s worth noting that you could previously view the public tweets of users that had blocked you while logged out of the service — and by visiting a profile page. But now they can do it while logged in and interact with them. If you’ve blocked them, you will not see these interactions, but others will, and those you have blocked will still be able to fave tweets, for instance, and see those in a list of tweets that they’ve faved.

This new blocking method is more of a mute filter that prevents you from seeing any tweets or interactions from a blocked follower. But those interactions still happen. In some ways, this new method is actually a more accurate picture of what happens with a Twitter account when you block someone. They could always see your tweets and manually RT them to their followers by copying and pasting text. Now, however, they can do so within the constructs of Twitter — you just cannot see them. Though their followers and anyone searching for your name can.

Twitter notes that those tweets may also show up in your searches.

Here is the current blocking policy:

If you block another user, you will no longer see:

  • The user in your follower list
  • Any updates from that user in your Home timeline, including any of their Tweets that were retweeted by accounts you follow
  • Their @replies or mentions in your Connect tab
  • Any interactions with that user’s Tweets or account (i.e., favorites, follows or Retweets) in your Interactions or Activity tabs

Twitter also notes the following:

If your account is public, blocking a user does not prevent that user from following you, interacting with your Tweets, or receiving your updates in their timeline. If your Tweets are protected, blocking the user will cause them to unfollow you.

And here’s the previous policy:

Blocked users cannot:

  • Add your Twitter account to their lists.
  • Have their @replies or mentions show in your mentions tab (although these Tweets may still appear in search).
  • Follow you.
  • See your profile picture on their profile page or in their timeline.

Privacy note: If your Tweets are public (i.e., not protected), they will still be visible on your public profile page to anyone, regardless of whether they have a Twitter account or not.

We do not send notification to a user when you block them, but because they will no longer be able to follow you, they may notice that they’ve been blocked.

The changes to Twitter’s policy may indeed prevent some immediate knowledge that a user has been blocked, though they didn’t get a notification before and still won’t get one now. It could cause a lag between the time that they get blocked and when they realize it — but the scenario by which this could prevent retaliation once discovered gets blurrier.

Many Twitter users who have been abused and who undergo continuous harassment on Twitter — especially women — will likely not be pleased that their tweets can now be easily favorited and re-tweeted within the confines of Twitter’s platform. Yes, their tweets were never truly private because Twitter is a public service — but a policy that makes it easier to interact with tweets and add commentary to them (even if it’s not visible to you, personally) seems like it’s missing the point.


13 Dec 16:27

New Google Tips is surprisingly helpful

by Rich McCormick

Google has launched Google Tips, a site which uses clickable cards to explain the features and capabilities of Google's biggest products. The cards explain concepts such as sharing photos with specific people in Google+ circles, synchronizing Android smartphone contacts to a Google account, and using YouTube's video editing tools.

Card descriptions are written in colloquial English: photos are to be "spiffed up," YouTube can be played "like a jukebox." Clicking on one takes you to a simple walkthrough, estimating how long the process will take, and detailing the "stuff you'll need" to complete the task. In almost every case, the first step is signing up for — or logging in to — a Google account. By using this kind of friendly and...

Continue reading…

12 Dec 21:23

What's The Best Photoshop Alternative?

by Alan Henry

What's The Best Photoshop Alternative?

If you need to edit images, touch up photos, remove objects, or just make an image look the way you want before you share it or post it online, you have tons of great choices, many of them free or low-cost. Adobe's Photoshop is a great tool, and the leading industry standard, but this week we want to talk about your favorite feature-rich alternatives.

The last time we asked you for your favorite image editing tools, Photoshop came out on top. We figured that if we asked the same question again, we'd likely get the same result, which is totally fair. Instead, we're tweaking the question a bit to highlight some of the other tools that are either just as good, good enough, cheaper, or generally more available. Leave your pick in the discussions below!

Let's hear your vote in the discussions below! To cast your vote, follow these guidelines:

  1. Follow this format for your vote, including the bold print. If you don't, it won't be counted:
    A SCREENSHOT OR LOGO OF YOUR FAVORITE PHOTOSHOP ALTERNATIVE
    [preferably at 970x546]


    Vote: [BEST PHOTOSHOP ALTERNATIVE]

    Why: Explain why this app is the one you prefer. Is it cheap and have the features you need? Make your case! Try to keep it to a single paragraph, maybe two.

  2. Don't duplicate nominations! Instead, if someone's nominated your pick, star (recommend) it to give it a boost, and reply with your story instead.
  3. Please don't leave non-entry, direct comments on this post. They'll just get pushed down. Save your stories for others' submissions!

If you're not sure what we mean, just check out the nominations by our writers below. We'll give you a head start, and they should all be in the proper format, so you can just follow our lead.

The Hive Five is our weekly series where you vote on your favorite apps and tools for any given job. Have a suggestion for a topic? Send us an email at tips+hivefive@lifehacker.com!

Photo by Linux Screenshots.

12 Dec 21:21

UK Court of Appeal grants HTC stay on injunction

by Alex Dobie

HTC logo

Manufacturer may resume shipping HTC One Mini into the UK

HTC UK has released a statement saying it's been granted a stay on the injunction preventing shipments of the HTC One Mini into the UK. This follows a High Court ruling earlier this month which found that a component in the device infringed upon patents owned by Nokia, resulting in an injunction against the handset. At the time any action against the HTC One, which was also found to infringe upon the Finnish manufacturer's patents, was delayed by the judge to give HTC an opportunity to appeal. With today's developments the HTC One Mini now finds itself in a similar situation.

HTC says it'll "continue to aggressively appeal" against the decision on the Nokia patent, while working with suppliers to source alternative parts.

We've got the company's statement in full after the break.

read more


    






12 Dec 21:20

io9 offers huge glimpse at the in-progress Firefly Online game.

http://io9.com/keep-flyin-an-exclusive-first-look-at-firefly-online-1481677328

There's a few bits that have been seen before but a whole lot that hasn't yet.

12 Dec 21:19

Smartphone patent wars exposed as completely futile

by Tero Kuittinen
Smartphone Patent WarsIt happened again — a handset sales injunction resulting from a patent infringement ruling has been overturned. This time the drama played out in the UK, where Nokia's attack on HTC led to the sales injunction of the HTC One mini handset. And like clockwork, the sales ban was stayed by the Court of Appeals, allowing HTC to continue One mini sales. Such as they are. We have seen the same minuet danced across various continents, perhaps most visibly in the U.S. market, where Samsung and Apple are locked in an eternal and pointless battle. Samsung is trying to get ITC to slap sales injunctions on various iPhone models and Apple is doing the same to Samsung's Galaxy range.

Continue reading...
12 Dec 21:18

Contextual Lockscreen Cover Hits Google Play Boasting Less Battery Drain And 100 More Upgrades

by Josh Constine
Cover_AvailableOnGooglePlay

Cover is bringing its situation-aware lockscreen to more Android users today after its beta test launch six weeks ago. It’s now available in the Google Play store to Android 4.1+ users in the US, Canada, and Europe. Cover’s 100 new improvements include cutting down battery drain and being better at detecting if you’re in your car, at home or at work so it puts the right apps on your lockscreen.

“The big question I had personally was whether users would understand the concept of the lockscreen” Cover founder Todd Jackson tells me about what he’s learned from its thousands of beta testers since October. “Turns out they do. We were specifically focused on building a lockscreen rather than a launcher. They like the flexibility of being able to use Cover with other launchers.”

Steamrolling over a user’s existing customization was sticking point that hurt Facebook Home’s early adoption. By acting as an interaction layer that floats on top of a user’s Android homescreen, Cover has found people more willing to adapt to how it radically alters their lockscreen.

horizontal_graphic

Covering The Bases

Check out my launch story on Cover for the full-rundown of how it works.

To recap, though, Cover can recognize when you’re at home, work, or in you car, and shows you the apps that fit that situation. The suggestions are based on crowdsourced data at first, like that people often use Dropbox at work and Netflix at home, but Cover learns what you use in these situations too and adapts its lockscreen shortcuts. Cover’s Peek feature lets you quickly look inside your apps, and its fast-app switching drop-down menu makes it a breeze to bounce back and forth between maps, messaging, or what have you.

You can watch our quick Cover demo and my interview with Jackson in the video player below.

To get people to surrender the most visible part of their phone to Cover, it had to make some improvements. “Cover is a different app than most apps. Most you just forget about” Jackson tells me, noting there’s little risk to one more download. “Cover? You either love it, or you hate it and you uninstall it. When you’re building an app that replaces a core aspect of their phone, the quality bar is really high” says Jackson.

That’s why Cover used the Android’s beta system. Jackson admits it wasn’t perfect, as it created friction to downloading Cover on its big launch day. Some users griped about having to use Google+, or never visited their G+ profile so they missed their invitation to download Cover once it was their turn. But the app just wouldn’t have been ready for prime time without the detailed feedback and bug reports the Android beta testers offered.

App Switch TutorialCover discovered that the number #1 thing people cared about was battery life. Jackson explains, “The beta helped us learn what are people’s thresholds. For most people, if Cover is responsible for more than 5% of their battery usage, they’ll uninstall it, so we worked really hard to get it under 5%.”

Other improvements include more accurate motion sensing algorithms for detecting you’re in your car, KitKat compatability, more stable app peeking and switch, new tutorials for how to use app switching and operate Cover with pincode security turned on, more customization, and the ability to share your Cover set up to Facebook/Twitter/Google+.

Another frequently requested feature was the recommendations of apps other people use at home, work, in the car, or with their headphones plugged in. That validates a big potential business model for Cover in app discovery. It could potentially charge other developers to have Cover suggest their app. That could create a route for Cover to make good on the $1.7 million it raised from investors including First Round Capital courtesy of Josh Kopelman, Harrison Metal, Capital, Max Levchin, and Keith Rabois.

Plenty Of Android Pie To Go Around

Now that it’s publicly available, Cover can test its might versus other lockscreens like Aviate, Facebook Home, Widdit, and more. With time, it might take on a whole additional weightclass of competitors. Jackson says “A lot of users are actually asking us to build a launcher” which would pit Cover against GO Launcher, Nova LauncherEverything.me, and others.

But Jackson is convinced there will be enough users for everyone. “It will be an interesting space to watch the next few years as Android gets better and the phones get better, appealing to a higher market. The Android pie itself is growing really huge. People are just starting to realize they can customize their phone. I think a handful of the startups you mention are all going to do really well.”

Cover and many of these launchers and lockscreens are shockingly different interfaces than people are used to. People fear what they don’t understand, creating a barrier to adoption. But we all need to come to grips with the fact that screen after screen of app folders may not be the best way to organize a phone.

There’s a swirling sea of apps out there. The next wave of mobile won’t be about adding more, but using context to help us navigate between them.

Download Cover for free from Google Play


12 Dec 21:18

YouTube Opens Up Live Streaming And Google+ Hangouts On Air To All Verified Accounts

by Ingrid Lunden
youtube breaking bad middle school musical

Bring on the school holiday pageants, local baseball games and armchair poetry slams… YouTube today announced that it is expanding its live video services to the masses. Everyone who has a verified account can now stream live video on YouTube, and verified accounts can now create a Google+ Hangout on Air.

The company today has not given an update on how much take-up the live service has seen overall, but big-name, high-profile live events have proven to be major draws on the platform. The Red Bull Stratos Mission, for example, drew 8 million concurrent viewers.

Live events give Google a way to complement the role it plays as the archive of the long-tail and keeper of viral clips. “Appointment” viewing around live events presents specific kinds of advertising opportunities and helps YouTube position itself more securely as a TV alternative.

Whether that positioning can work in the context of long-tail content that may not attract that many concurrent users is another question. On the other hand, it presents particular opportunities for hyperlocal advertising that complements Google’s pitch as a one-stop marketing shop for smaller businesses.

The YouTube live video service has been in a “beta” mode for the last year, with selected accounts in specific categories like musicgamingsports, news given the facility for live streams. The service was extended to accounts with at least 100 followers in August of this year. Before that, the limit was 1,000 followers.

YouTube says all verified accounts in good standing are now eligible, regardless of the number of followers.

The feature is getting rolled out internationally over the next few weeks. Those who are interested can check to see if it’s been turned on for them here. Your Video Manager status will also indicate when it’s been turned on.

This service might drive more YouTube users to go through the process of verifying themselves on the platform — thereby giving Google much more data on how people are using the service, and to suggest things to you in particular. Similarly, the other feature getting announced today could help Google drive more users to Google+.

The Google+ Hangout On Air, which lets users create two-way video broadcasts, is another way to drive more usage to Google+.

You can launch a Google+ Hangout on Air directly from the YouTube Live events manager. “This gives you a simple way to reach your fans live and is the ideal way to to invite participants to join your show,” writes Satyajeet Salgar, product manager, and Tim James, software engineer, in their blog post.

Image: Middle School Musical, Breaking Bad


12 Dec 17:33

Images Now Showing

by The Gmail Team
Posted by John Rae-Grant, Product Manager

Have you ever wondered why Gmail asks you before showing images in emails? We did this to protect you from unknown senders who might try to use images to compromise the security of your computer or mobile device.

But thanks to new improvements in how Gmail handles images, you’ll soon see all images displayed in your messages automatically across desktop, iOS and Android. Instead of serving images directly from their original external host servers, Gmail will now serve all images through Google’s own secure proxy servers.

So what does this mean for you? Simple: your messages are more safe and secure, your images are checked for known viruses or malware, and you’ll never have to press that pesky “display images below” link again. With this new change, your email will now be safer, faster and more beautiful than ever.
Of course, those who prefer to authorize image display on a per message basis can choose the option “Ask before displaying external images” under the General tab in Settings. That option will also be the default for users who previously selected “Ask before displaying external content”.

Similar to existing features like default https access, suspicious activity detection, and free two-step verification, image proxying is another way your email is protected. This new improvement will be rolling out on desktop starting today and to your Gmail mobile apps in early 2014.
12 Dec 17:05

Harper government wants lifetime gag agreements from Canadian parliamentary staffers

by Cory Doctorow

Robbo sez, "In order to receive their negotiated raises and any holiday bonus, Parliament Hill staffers are being required to sign a lifetime confidentiality agreement, with hefty penalties for any breach, designed to thwart whistleblowers. So much for transparency in government."

(Not?) Coincidentally, the Harper government is embroiled in a potentially fatal scandal involving the Prime Minister's Office conspiring to cover up hundreds of thousands of dollars' worth of expenses fraud by prominent Tory senators, and the only reason the PM is still in office is that none of his staffers have directly fingered him (yet?).

Hill journalists were sent a grainy photo of the new agreement last week from "Nanker Phelge," a pseudonymous email account that appears to have been set up by a Hill staffer unhappy over the change in policy.

"At a time when some parliamentarians are moving to create a more open and transparent Parliament, the [House of Commons'] Board of Internal Economy is putting measures in place to ensure parliamentary staff can't be whistleblowers on their employers," the email said.

The author highlights several provisions, including the lifetime application of the contract and the fact that any breach can result in immediate termination without pay or notice, as well as a new requirement to disclose all outside work, including volunteer gigs.

Hill staff asked to sign lifetime confidentiality agreements [Yahoo News/CBC Newswire]

(Thanks, Robbo!)

    






12 Dec 17:04

Pirate Bay Docks in Peru: New System Will Make Domains “Irrelevant”

by Andy

The world’s leading entertainment companies and their armies of lawyers have tried pretty much every trick in the book to take The Pirate Bay offline.

Their numerous attacks have included police raids, the total confiscation of the site’s hardware, plus prolonged legal action resulting in the criminal convictions for its founders. More recently the site’s domains have been blocked in various countries around Europe but no tactic has yet managed to bring the site to its knees.

There have been small victories, however. Perhaps realizing that blockades weren’t having the desired effect in the past year action has been taken against the site’s domains. Fearing a domain seizure by Swedish authorities, last April the site moved to a Greenland-based domain. The stay was short-lived, with the site moving first to Iceland and then the .sx ccTLD for Sint Maarten.

That residency was to last just eight months, terminated this week following pressure from Dutch anti-piracy outfit BREIN. The .AC ccTLD of Ascension Island was next up, a handy stopover on the way to its latest destination.

As of a few minutes ago the site’s new domain became ThePirateBay.pe. The .PE represents the ccTLD of Peru, chosen by the site “because it’s in South America.”

Quite how long the world’s most famous torrent site will stay sandwiched between Ecuador and Bolivia is anyone’s guess, but TorrentFreak was told that there will soon come a time when seizing Pirate Bay’s domains will be a pointless exercise.

Currently under development is a BitTorrent-powered browser that will enable users to store and distribute The Pirate Bay and other sites without need for central hosting. This means sites will be able to exist in a new and decentralized form with no reliance on a public-facing website.

In a message to “BREIN and friends,” The Pirate Bay cautions that while closing down domains may be an irritant today, that loophole won’t be open forever.

“They should wait for our new PirateBrowser, then domains will be irrelevant,” an insider told TorrentFreak.

“Once that is available then all links and sites will be accessible through a perfectly legal piece of browser software and the rest of it will be P2P, with no central point to attack via the legal system.”

And according to the spokesman this process of attack and adaption, such as Pirate Bay’s move to the cloud last year, is leading to one place – the advent of new and hardened file-sharing networks.

“By their actions they finally brought on the next generation of decentralized services,” the insider concludes.

TorrentFreak is informed that the new system, which is still under development, will appear as a standalone browser and also as Firefox and Chrome plugins. Until then the varied climate of Peru will suffice.

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

12 Dec 16:59

Instagram Introduces Instagram Direct

by Jordan Crook
instagramdirect

Today at a press event in New York, Instagram founder Kevin Systrom has announced that the photo-sharing service is introducing private photo-sharing and messaging. The feature is called Instagram Direct.

Instagram has always been a mostly public social network, with a broadcast structure instead of connections based on mutual friendship, like Facebook. The introduction of Instagram Direct marks a new phase for the company.

Now, users who follow each other will be able to send each other private chat-like messages, which can include photos or videos (of course). Previously, users have only been able to like or publicly comment on pictures.

Here’s how it works:

When you go in to post a picture (the same way that you’ve been posting pictures on Instagram), you’ll see two new tabs on the top of the post: Followers and Direct.

With Direct, you can choose a specific friend and type a special message, and that goes only to your friend. Once that friend opens up the photo, their profile picture within the message gets a check mark, noting that it’s been read. Users can also like direct photo messages, and chat can ensue from there.

You can send Direct messages up to 15 people, and Instagram Direct also offers up suggested recipients.

When you receive a photo, you’ll see a little inbox icon on the top right corner of the app, which will send you directly to your new messages. You can chat privately one-on-one or with a group of people.

People who mutually follow each other can easily send messages to each other. If you don’t follow someone, and they’ve sent you a direct message, it’ll show up as a pending request rather than a received message in your private inbox.

When you accept, that person can henceforth send you direct messages that will land in your inbox.

Instagammers can not send text-only messages to each other, but must send pictures to start the chat function.

Users have had some options for privacy on the network, with the option to block certain users or mark your profile as private, which means you must accept follow requests.

But the move toward a more private, precious Instagram makes sense.

Messaging adds a new layer of engagement to the app. Users can now start up a conversation, which shouldn’t be difficult considering they’re watching their friends lives unfold in pictures.

Here’s a video preview:

instagram13-banner


12 Dec 13:38

Get Extra Close with These Macro Photo Wallpapers

by Adam Dachis

Get Extra Close with These Macro Photo Wallpapers

Some of the best images don't show everything, but instead one small detail. Macro photos not only look great, but often make for simple and less-distracting wallpapers. Check out some of our favorites and add them to your desktop this week.

Chasing You

Get Extra Close with These Macro Photo Wallpapers

Download This Wallpaper (1920x1200) | MintLights on deviantART

Edge of Snow

Get Extra Close with These Macro Photo Wallpapers

Download This Wallpaper (2880x1800) | The Paper Wall

Droplets

Get Extra Close with These Macro Photo Wallpapers

Download This Wallpaper (1920x1200) | The Paper Wall

Leaves and Stones


Get Extra Close with These Macro Photo Wallpapers

Download This Wallpaper (2560x1600) | The Paper Wall

Coin

Get Extra Close with These Macro Photo Wallpapers

Download This Wallpaper (1920x1440) | The Paper Wall

Flowers

Get Extra Close with These Macro Photo Wallpapers

Download This Wallpaper (1920x1200) | The Paper Wall

Moss

Get Extra Close with These Macro Photo Wallpapers

Download This Wallpaper (1920x1200) | The Paper Wall

Autumn Leaves

Get Extra Close with These Macro Photo Wallpapers

Download This Wallpaper (2560x1600) | The Paper Wall

Sneaky Lizard

Get Extra Close with These Macro Photo Wallpapers

Download This Wallpaper (2560x1600) | The Paper Wall

For more great wallpapers, check out our previous Wallpaper Wednesdays. Got any great wallpapers you'd like to share? Email me a link with "Wallpaper Wednesday" in the subject line. Submitting your own work is highly encouraged!

11 Dec 23:12

Google Keep for web updated with colorful design and streamlined tools

by Jacob Kastrenakes

Google Keep for the web is getting an update today that'll make it as stylish as its Android counterpart and just a bit easier to use as well. With today's update, notes are now more colorful and will include much larger fonts in order to neatly fill up space. Google has also added the ability to rearrange individual items in lists, to easily switch between active and archived notes, and to find any of your notes through an improved search.

While Keep stirred up a lot of excitement when it was released over the spring, Google's given its website almost no attention between then and today. Even today's updates aren't major — Keep is still far from turning into a formidable Evernote competitor — but it's our first real sign that...

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11 Dec 21:22

YouTube’s copyright cops are coming after gamers’ ‘Let’s Play’ videos

by Brad Reed
YouTube Gaming Videos Takedown ControversyUnder constant pressure and foot-stamping from copyright holders, Google has implemented a new system within YouTube that automatically flags videos that may contain copyrighted material. The trouble, as Computer and Video Games reports, is that the new system is flagging a lot of gamers' "Let's Play" videos where they give multipart walkthroughs of popular video games overlapped with their own commentary. While such videos may technically violate gaming companies' intellectual property rights, game publishers have long tolerated and even encouraged them since they're great ways to promote games online.

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11 Dec 21:17

Android Device Manager arrives in Play Store to track missing gadgets

by Casey Newton

In August, Google released Android Device Manager, a Find My iPhone-style service for locating and remotely wiping your missing phones and tablets. At that time, the service was available only on the web. Today, it's coming to your mobile devices. Android Device Manager is now as a free download from the Play Store.

Like its web counterpart, Android Device Manager lets you find all the devices associated with your Google account. Using the app, you can reset your device's lock screen PIN or erase all the data on the phone. There's nothing fancy about the app, but it could come in handy the next time your smartphone goes missing — and it blunts an advantage that iOS has had over Android since 2010.

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11 Dec 21:16

London designer creates 3D-printed, regenerative running shoes from protocells

by Valentina Palladino

At the Wearable Futures conference, London designer and researcher Shamees Aden debuted a running shoe prototype that will put your worn out kicks to shame. The shoes, which he developed with University of Southern Denmark professor Martin Hanczyc, are 3D printed from a synthetic biological material that can repair itself overnight.

The running shoes are the product of Aden's study of protocells. The basic protocell molecules are not themselves alive, but can be combined to create living organisms. Mixing different protocells creates different properties, and allows them to be programmed to behave differently depending on heat, light, and pressure. The shoes' unique construction allows them to be 3D printed to the exact size of the...

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11 Dec 21:16

Canada's postal service ending home mail delivery over five years

by Jacob Kastrenakes

Canada's postal service will phase out door-to-door delivery over the next five years. Citing the rise of digital communications and a projected loss of CAD$1 billion by 2020, Canada Post today outlined a series of actions that it would take to streamline its organization and reduce losses. In particular, cutting out direct to-door delivery — which is currently only used to service one-third of Canadian households — will "provide significant savings," Canada Post says. Mail will still be delivered to community, grouped, lobby, and rural mailboxes, which make up how the remaining two-thirds of Canadian households receive their mail.

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