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28 Sep 09:35

Microsoft Ditches Anti-Piracy Partner After Embarrassing DMCA Takedowns

by Ernesto

microsoftOver the past year the number of DMCA takedown requests sent out by copyright holders has increased dramatically, and so have inaccurate notices targeting legitimate content.

Microsoft has been one of the most active notice senders and over the past year alone has asked Google to remove more than 10 million infringing URLs from its indexes.

The software giant has also developed a reputation for sending a lot of false notices, most of which have been sent through the French company LeakID.

This morning we again reported on some rather embarrassing takedown notices, which asked for the removal of Microsoft’s own website, its Wikipedia entry and an Open Source project. If that wasn’t bad enough, Microsoft also claimed ownership of a porn video.

It turns out this was the final straw for the company. Microsoft has just announced that it has decided to stop working with LeakID effective immediately.

“Microsoft is committed to ensuring that enforcement measures are appropriate and completely accurate. We are investigating the circumstances of this takedown and have instructed the vendor that it is no longer authorized to send notices on our behalf,” a Microsoft spokesman just informed TorrentFreak.

This makes Microsoft the first company to publicly cut its ties with an anti-piracy company for making too many embarrassing mistakes.

Microsoft’s troubles with LeakID started last year when a DMCA notice ordered Google to remove legitimate webpages from AMC Theatres, BBC, Buzzfeed, CNN, HuffPo, TechCrunch, RealClearPolitics, Rotten Tomatoes, ScienceDirect, Washington Post, Wikipedia and even the U.S. Government.

In another notice Microsoft asked Google to remove a Spotify.com URL and on several occasions they even asked Google to censor their own search engine Bing.

Hats off to Microsoft for taking a stand on this matter in public. For us it probably means that we’ll have fewer mistakes to point out in the future, but it also shows that all our previous digging expeditions have not been in vain.

Source: Microsoft Ditches Anti-Piracy Partner After Embarrassing DMCA Takedowns

28 Sep 09:26

Hanging up: the fall of Symbian's smartphone empire - Verge Forums

by Verge Forums
27 Sep 20:32

Nvidia: It is ‘no longer possible’ for video game consoles to catch up to PCs

by Jacob Siegal
Console Graphics PC Graphics ComparisonWhen Sony and Microsoft announced the specs of their new video game consoles, gamers were quick to realize that the architecture of the next-generation console is nearly identical to that of a high-end PC. 8GB of RAM, 8-core processors, and AMD graphics cards make for powerful machines, but do the consoles stack up to their gaming PC counterparts? According to an interview with a Nvidia executive at PCPowerPlay, the answer is no. In fact, Nvidia Senior VP Tony Tamasi believes that it is "no longer possible for a console to be a better or more capable graphics platform than the PC."

Continue reading...
27 Sep 15:01

Get Reminders About New Movies and TV Show Episodes From Google Now

by Eric Ravenscraft

Get Reminders About New Movies and TV Show Episodes From Google Now

The Newsroom, Game of Thrones, Archer and basically all the other good shows are over for the year. When are they coming back? Well, Google can tell you with a quick search.

On mobile or desktop search, the Knowledge Graph card comes with a button to get a reminder for new episodes, new albums, or new things that a particular actor is in. The reminders cards will then show up in Google Now on Android or iOS.

Check out Google’s new “Remind Me” feature for TV shows, authors, and more | Ars Technica

27 Sep 13:08

Beats ends HTC partnership, buys back $265 million of shares

by Tom Warren

Popular headphone maker Beats is buying back HTC's 25 percent stake in the company. HTC originally bought a $300 million, 50.1 percent stake in Beats back in 2011, and the headphone maker then paid $150 million to buy back half of that investment last year. Today's announcement means the close partnership between the two companies comes to an end, with Beats buying back the final $265 million in shares. In a statement, HTC says Beats will still be an important partner, but it refused to say exactly how important or the reasons behind the split and any financial impact.

HTC has been struggling to gain smartphone market share recently, with its profits dwindling quarter upon quarter. Conversely, Beats' revenue has been strong and the...

Continue reading…

26 Sep 23:11

Samsung Galaxy Note 3 video walkthrough

by Alex Dobie

Samsung Galaxy Note 3

It's time to kick off our Note 3 coverage with an in-depth look at the phone's hardware and software

We've got the Samsung Galaxy Note 3 in-house and we're putting the phone through its paces as we prepare our full review. But first we've got a full video walkthrough of Samsung's latest half-phone, half-tablet 5.7-incher. Join us after the break for the lowdown on the Galaxy Note 3's redesigned externals, upgraded hardware and new software tricks. We've also got a hands-on gallery with the "jet black" version of the phone.

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26 Sep 20:43

Some 'unlocked' Galaxy Note 3s apparently SIM-locked to specific regions

by Alex Dobie

Galaxy Note 3 SIM lock

European SM-N9005 and Latin American SM-N900 locked to SIMs from their respective regions

Here's some alarming news for those wanting to pick up an unlocked, SIM-free Samsung Galaxy Note 3 and use it internationally. Reports have been surfacing over the past day from Note 3 owners in Europe and Latin America that their devices come with stickers warning that they're only compatible with SIMs from their particular regions.

Like many others, our European Galaxy Note 3 box is sealed with a sticker saying it's "only compatible with a SIM-card issued from a mobile operator within Europe," before going on to list individual countries. And while we were able to load a T-Mobile USA SIM into our UK-specific phone without any error messages, enough other "unlocked" Note 3 owners are reporting problems to indicate a widespread issue.

read more


    






26 Sep 20:42

Top 10 Android games this week: Hill Bill, Kingdom Rush Frontiers, FIFA 14

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.

MotoHeroz

Description: MotoHeroz takes the fun, fast gameplay of a Trials style game, adds it to a frantic rally race and delivers a fresh, new kind of side-scrolling platform racing game. Players race, chase and rally their way through a brightly colored world, competing against their friends for the fastest times, entering daily races and hunting for secrets and coins.

Dead on Arrival 2

Description: Tear though wave after wave of the walking dead with custom built death-dealing weapons like the fire-spitting Minigun or the room clearing Rocket Launcher. Or perhaps you’ll prefer the Freeze Ray or Flame Thrower to stop the hordes in their tracks.

Kingdom Rush Frontiers

Description: Bigger and badder than ever before, Kingdom Rush: Frontiers is a whole new level of the furiously fast, enchantingly charming gameplay that made the original title an award-winning hit. Tap your troops through an epic (mis)adventure as you defend exotic lands from dragons, man-eating plants and ghastly denizens of the underworld -all with flashy new towers, levels, heroes and more goodies to help you crush your foes to a pulp.

Sheep Happens

Description: The sheepocalypse is coming! Sheep Happens is a chaotic endless runner where you must maneuver around other runners, obstacles and sheep falling from the sky as you chase down the swindling Hermes.

FIFA 14

Description: REAL PLAYERS. REAL TEAMS. REAL LEAGUES. Welcome to the most authentic football game for Android smartphones and tablets. Feel the excitement of every pass, shot and tackle with new touch controls. Plus, live every moment of real-world football mastery with EA SPORTS™ Football Club Match Day.

The Secret Of Space Octopuses

Description: The Secret of Space Octopuses is a horizontal scrolling adventure game, mixing platform, puzzle and combat.

Excalibur: Knights of the King

Description: Excalibur is a side-scrolling action MMORPG set in the realm of King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table. Combining MMORPG and classic beat ‘em up features, Excalibur allows players to explore the fabled world of Camelot with their fingertips.

Deer Hunter 2014

Description: Return to the wilderness in the most visually stunning FPS hunting simulator on Android! Travel from North America’s Pacific Northwest to the Savannah of Central Africa in an epic journey to hunt the world’s most exotic animals!

Hill Bill

Description: Hill Bill is a motorcycle trick jumping game starring a hillbilly with Evel aspirations. Play across 6 beautiful worlds and over 60 levels. Perform death-defying jumps over junk, rusted cars, air planes, circus animals, canyons and more.

MADDEN NFL 25 by EA SPORTS™

Description: An experience 25 years in the making! EA SPORTS delivers the most authentic NFL football experience to date for Android smartphones and tablets with MADDEN NFL 25. Build your Ultimate Team of NFL stars and run the show on offense and defense with new and improved touch controls, game modes and much more!

COMING SOON

26 Sep 16:58

VLC Adds Better Porting to Mobile, A Dozen New Codecs, and More

by Thorin Klosowski

VLC Adds Better Porting to Mobile, A Dozen New Codecs, and More

Windows/Mac/Linux: VLC is one of our favorite video players out there. The release of version 2.1 packs in a ton of new features, including significant improvements to how it handles outputting videos to mobile devices like Android and iPhone, and more.

The big improvements added in VLC 2.1 are underneath the hood. These include support for a ton of new audio and video codecs, 4K support, and a whole new set of options to efficiently send video to the iPhone and Android. You can find all the new improvements over on VLC's update log, or just download the update and start using it for free.

VLC 2.1 (Free)

26 Sep 16:57

Open alternatives to MPAA's copyright curriculum propaganda

by Cory Doctorow


Jane from Creative Commons sez, "It has come to our attention that the Motion Picture Association of America, the Recording Industry Association of America, and top internet service providers are drafting curriculum to teach kids in California elementary schools that copying is wrong, or as Wired.com puts it, 'Downloading is Mean!'

"This message is way too simple. In this digital age, the most important thing we should be teaching kids is to be creative and take full advantage of all the web has to offer. Copyright, asking permission, open licensing, and all the other legal nuances, should be seen as secondary (and even complementary) to this purpose. We should be starting with the things kids can do versus what they can't do."

In addition to the campaign's overly simple and negative approach, other issues include the complete absence of fair use from the curriculum -- exceptions and limitations to copyright that allow various uses of copyrighted materials for educational, journalistic and other purposes. Wired.com reports, 'Its president, Marsali Hancock, says fair use is not a part of the teaching material because K-6 graders don't have the ability to grasp it.'

Assuming the net generation and their younger counterparts are as dumb as assumed in the above statement, the curriculum still leaves out a crucial and growing part of the Internet landscape -- the commons of free and open materials in the public domain and/or released under open licenses that actually encourage copying, redistribution, revision, and remix! In short, everything this simplified anti-piracy campaign is conveniently leaving out in its copyright curriculum for kids.

There is a more balanced approach to educating kids about copyright that includes the alternatives, and here are some organizations and experienced educators who have developed copyright curricula. The following list of resources are open educational resources (OER), licensed under a CC license that enables free and legal reuse, redistribution and remix. In short, stuff that is free and just fine and even great to copy!

Open curriculum alternatives to MPAA’s new anti-piracy campaign for kids

    






26 Sep 14:35

At TechCrunch Italy, MUBI Launches Its Film Streaming Service In The Land Of Fellini

by Mike Butcher
INCEPTION

MUBI, the global curated film streaming service, has been in the process of rolling out its platform to multiple countries and today, at the TechCrunch Italy conference in Rome, it launches its service in Italy (here) and also goes live on the MUBI iPad.

The launch brings the number of countries served by MUBI to ten, including the US, Canada, UK, France, Germany, Italy, Turkey, Norway, Australia and New Zealand. Each country has a localized film library (with original language and local subtitles). Their service is very simple by design: there is no search, recommendations and large catalogs which can sometimes confuse users.

MUBI says it is different to Netflix and all the other Video on Demand streaming services out there, in that it uses film experts to handpick its daily output library, which is available at €4.99 per month.

Founder Efe Cakarel says he thinks “only Netflix and MUBI will eventually win, and everybody else (including telco’s) will get squeezed out.”

Why is this? Well, take the case of Telenor, the incumbent telco in Scandinavia. Two weeks ago it announced it was getting out of the VOD business.

And in the case of services like Lovefilm or wuaki.tv, they are coming under pressure from Netflix because they provide an identical service without the benefit of Netflix’s guaranteed economies of scale.

By contrast MUBI’s pitch is that it complements the Netflix experience rather than competes with it, focusing on quality rather than quantity and simplicity. Cakarel says this emphasis on simplicity has lead to greater conversion rates.

“Since we launched this model, we see conversion from signup to trial (with a credit card) of 20% compared with 0.8% before, when we had an offering like Netflix. That’s an unbelievable number that is now statistically significant. 20 out of 100 people who signup to MUBI give us their credit card within 7 days. We grew our paying subscribers by 90% over the past 6 months in UK, our biggest market,” he told me.

And that’s with zero advertising dollars.

That said, the streaming game is not over yet, and newer upstairs like wuaki.tv are doing their damnedest to prove a hybrid model of subscription mixed with a-la-carte can work in this space.


26 Sep 14:06

How to "Just Say No" to Peer Pressured Spending

by Claire Murdough

How to "Just Say No" to Peer Pressured Spending

There’s no getting around it—being on a budget is challenging. It’s particularly tough when you feel pressured to spend by friends or family. Whether it’s an invite to eat out, or a destination wedding that requires an expensive ticket, saying "no" to spending can feel daunting.

This post originally appeared on Ready For Zero.

It’s something I’ve had plenty of experience with, though I’m still not the picture perfect model for saying no to social spending. There are tons of instances when I’ve been swayed to spend despite being on a budget, or caved and made choices that didn’t really fit my spending plan. That being said, I did learn how to find the confidence to say no–though it took some work and practice on my part.

What helped the most was pinpointing the habits that were making it difficult, and thinking about ways I could work to change them. Here are five of the biggies, along with the switches that helped me to stay on track with my financial goals.

The Habit: Making Excuses

Stretching the truth to avoid hurt feelings is so tempting. I’m a bit ashamed to admit it, but I’ve been known to make excuses when faced with the pressure of spending. For example, if asked to eat out, I would say I was too tired or needed to pick up dry-cleaning. Little did it matter that I don’t own a single thing that requires dry-cleaning. Little lies to soften the truth weren’t intentionally harmful, per se, but were problematic in the fact that they covered up a larger reality. They didn’t solve the problem and only diverted the attention temporarily.

The Switch: Being Upfront About Financial Circumstances

The number one thing that helped me to stop being led by peer pressured spending was honest communication. Not only being honest about my financial circumstances, but also being honest if I was disappointed. It doesn’t need to be a speech. What’s been the most successful has usually been short, sweet and truthful: "I want to, but I can’t afford it right now."

You can’t control someone else’s reaction to, but you can control your level of honesty. When I initially made excuses, people would show their clear disappointment. Once people were aware of my financial situation via honest communication, they were overwhelmingly understanding.

The Habit: Making "One Last Time" Promises

I often found myself saying the same thing when faced with peer pressured spending: "I’ll stop after this time." The problem was–I usually didn’t. I’d just make another "one last time" promise the next time. Soon enough, it became an excuse to push off the responsibility in facing my budget. "Next time" was intangible, and flexible so I treated it as such.

The Switch: An Immediate Start

To truly stand behind my choice to stick to a budget, I had to understand the importance of an immediate and instantaneous start. That meant acknowledging that "one last time" was only a way to justify the immediate spending. I stopped pushing it off, and took the cold turkey approach. Or rather, the "no more cold turkey deli sandwiches for lunch" kind of approach.

The Habit: Ignoring the Invite Entirely

There came a point when I became so uncomfortable saying no that I did what any well-intentioned person would do–I ignored the invite in hopes that it go away. I’m not sure if I need to explain why that didn’t work. Let’s just say I wasn’t making any new friends or strengthening any relationships via that route. I also felt pretty cruddy about my actions. It felt like I was hiding from something, when in reality I was putting myself in that uncomfortable mind-frame. Ultimately, it only worsened my ability to think clearly about how I could be responding.

The Switch: Responding in a Timely Manner

Ignoring something doesn’t make it go away–an important life lesson, but sometimes difficult to remember nonetheless. Delaying a response or ignoring the invite completely was only making it more stressful. In addition, I wasn’t giving the inviter the level of respect they deserved. Timeliness and a quick response actually made it easier to decline when I wasn’t able to fit in an event or a purchase.

The Habit: Taking a Backseat in Social Planning

The pressure for social spending usually came about when I was in a situation that was led by someone else. Not a bad thing, by any means, but not having control also left me feeling vulnerable about my budgeting choices. More often than not, it led to pressured spending.

The Switch: Investigating Budget-Friendly Activities

Taking the reigns over the planning of a social gathering gave me the opportunity to keep it a low-budget event. That didn’t mean I began suggesting that we play with sticks and drink rain water. I found things that were genuinely interesting, and found people with similar interests to take part. There are tons of options out there, but it’s important that you have genuine interest in them. That means seeking out things that align with what entertains or makes you happy. Things like hiking, community theater in the park, video game conventions or public science talks.

The Habit: Making Choices Based on Fear of Social Embarrassment

I found one of the scariest things about saying no to spending while on a budget was the fear that it would set me apart. That somehow being on a budget, or not wanting to spend money was an embarrassing proclamation. But if you think about it, everyone has a spending limit, even if it doesn’t match yours or mine. For instance, if you were to approach a group of friends and ask them to buy a solid gold sculpture of a T-rex, they’d probably (and rightly) say no. Because it sounds unreasonable. No one is immune to personal limits to their spending.

The Switch: Finding a Spending Comfort Level

Scaled down, the same can be applied to everybody’s view of spending. Eating out might seem unreasonable to you, but not to someone else. When you explain your limit, they should understand. It took me some time, but I finally found greater value in balance than I did in always saying yes. Now, before I accept or decline an invite, I take a minute to ask myself, "Am I within my limits?" as a way to double check my motives.

Though peer pressure is an issue often associated with kids or teens, it continues to pose a challenge as we age and advance in career or social circles. Since it’s an ongoing challenge, it’s important to learn ways to deal with situations that cause you to feel pressured into something you wouldn’t normally do. Learning to say no confidently comes about through trial and error. But it does get easier. A new mindset led by a few mental switches can help to fortify your desire to stick close to that budget.

Saying No to Peer Pressured Spending |Ready For Zero


Claire is a Content Intern at ReadyForZero. She's a Bay Area native with an affinity for travel and food who enjoys writing about personal finance and many other topics.

Want to see your work on Lifehacker? Email Tessa.

Illustration by Nick Criscuolo.

26 Sep 13:32

Google “Condemned” By UK Politicians For Linking to Piracy

by Andy

google-bayDuring the last couple of years entertainment companies have heavily criticized Google for linking to copyright-infringing material in its search results.

Google has responded by removing many millions of links but apparently that’s just not enough. In the past couple of weeks the world’s largest search engine has become a punching bag for the music and movie industries and today they find themselves battered again, this time by a British House of Commons report.

The Culture, Media and Sport Committee comprises MPs from several parties including those from the Conservative / Liberal Democrat coalition government and Labour opposition. Today in a new report aimed at supporting the creative economy, the Committee dedicates an entire section to copyright and piracy issues. It has many targets for criticism but begins with a swipe at the UK’s leading Internet rights groups.

Open Rights Group

“The relationship between the strength of Britain’s creative industries and robust copyright laws is acknowledged by the Open Rights Group which aims radically to liberalise the use and sharing of copyrighted content.

“While we share the Open Rights Group’s attachment to freedom of expression via the internet, we firmly repudiate their laissez-faire attitudes towards copyright infringement,” the Committee says.

Repeating industry claims that film and music piracy results in lost annual sales of £400 million (while noting it could be well in excess of £1 billion) the report says the Open Rights Group’s “quibbles” that the figures “were not based on exact science” should not detract from the damage piracy causes the creative economy.

IP Crime Unit and site blocking

cityoflondonpoliceThe report goes on to mention the creation of a new City of London Police unit dedicated to cracking down on intellectual property crime and reveals that a first-of-its-kind conference is being planned “to bring players from across the world to London” to discuss enforcement issues.

On the blocking of infringing websites by ISPs the Committee said there were signs that the courts are making it easier, citing comment from the MPAA supporting “improvements to the justice system” to allow site blocking orders to be obtained more efficiently.

“We encourage businesses to use the current law to bring claims wherever it is feasible for them to do so. There nonetheless remains a systemic failure to enforce the existing laws effectively against rife online piracy,” the report notes.

But inevitably the big guns were turned on the messenger.

Google in the firing line again

The Committee begins by quoting Google itself, who at the time were removing around 9 million URLs from its indexes every month at the request of copyright holders. This was countered with information provided by the BPI who said that despite Google’s alleged algorithm changes, the instances of infringing sites turning up in the top 10 results had fallen only marginally, from 63% in August 2012 to 61% a year later. Clearly the Committee are unimpressed.

“We strongly condemn the failure of Google, notable among technology companies, to provide an adequate response to creative industry requests to prevent its search engine directing consumers to copyright-infringing websites,” the report states in emphasized bold type.

“We are unimpressed by their evident reluctance to block infringing websites on the flimsy grounds that some operate under the cover of hosting some legal content. The continuing promotion by search engines of illegal content on the internet is unacceptable. So far, their attempts to remedy this have been derisorily ineffective,” it continues.

“We do not believe it to be beyond the wit of the engineers employed by Google and others to demote and, ideally, remove copyright infringing material from search engine results. Google co-operates with law enforcement agencies to block child pornographic content from search results and it has provided no coherent, responsible answer as to why it cannot do the same for sites which blatantly, and illegally, offer pirated content.”

Turning up the heat further still in an attempt to have Google held accountable through the reporting of a government office, the report has more proposals.

“We recommend that the Intellectual Property Office’s annual reports include an assessment of the degree of online copyright infringement and the extent to which identified search engines and other internet services facilitate this. We further recommend that the Government consider how it might incentivise technology companies to hinder access via the internet to copyright infringing material.”

Of course, while “carrots” are offered to do something about infringement, no document of this nature could conclude without a recommendation to bring out the sticks.

10 years in jail for “serious” online infringement

Citing the successful prosecution of SurftheChannel owner Anton Vickerman, the report notes that while large scale copyright infringement in the offline world can result in harsh penalties, online those punishments are limited to two years. To sidestep this issue a decision was made to prosecute Vickerman on counts of Conspiracy to Defraud which ultimately secured a four year jail sentence. In future the Committee would like to see such maneuvering become unnecessary.

“We recommend that the maximum penalty for serious online copyright theft be extended to ten years’ imprisonment. Criminal offences in the online world should attract the same penalties as those provided for the physical world by the Copyright, etc. and Trade Marks (Offences and Enforcement) Act 2002,” the Committee notes.

Digital Economy Act

Finally the report criticizes the delay in implementing the controversial Digital Economy Act, stalled now for the best part of three years. In particular, the issuing of warning notices to infringers should come sooner rather than later.

“We recommend that a copyright infringement notification system envisaged by the Digital Economy Act be implemented with far greater speed than the Government currently plans. By targeting information letters to the worst infringers, early implementation will, we believe, serve an important educative purpose which could percolate more widely,” the report states.

However, if the government can’t get its act together, a voluntary scheme between ISPs and copyright holders should be put in place.

“We are encouraged by the progress that has been made towards instituting a voluntary system of warning letters following discussions involving internet service providers and rights owners. If this can be achieved by mutual cooperation rather than legislation, it will be a major step forward.

“However, should voluntary initiatives such as this prove unsuccessful then the Government should ensure that the equivalent measures in the Digital Economy Act are promptly put into effect,” the Committee concludes.

Source: Google “Condemned” By UK Politicians For Linking to Piracy

26 Sep 13:25

EE lights up 4G LTE service in another 12 UK towns

by Alex Dobie

EE

EE, currently the UK's largest 4G LTE network, has announced that it's switched on LTE services in another twelve towns across the country. From today EE's 4G should be available in Ashby-de-la-Zouch, Beaconsfield, Blackburn, Burton upon Trent, Coalville, Chester-le-Street, Fleet, Gerrards Cross, Halifax, Hinckley, Houghton-le-Spring and Reigate, bringing the total number of EE 4G markets to 117.

This, EE claims, brings it to 60 percent UK population coverage, eleven months after it launched its LTE network. The carrier will face renewed competition from the likes of O2 and Vodafone, which have just launched their own 4G networks, as well as Three, which will do so before the end of the year at no additional cost to customers.


    






26 Sep 13:20

Easyjet tells law professor he can't fly because he tweeted critical remarks about airline

by Cory Doctorow

"You're a lawyer. You know u can't tweet stuff like that and expect to get on an @easyJet flight."

— Mark Leiser (@mleiser) September 24, 2013

Mark Leiser, a law professor who writes a tech law column for The Drum, says he was denied boarding on an Easyjet flight after he tweeted critical remarks about the airline (he said that a delayed flight had caused a soldier on his flight to miss a connection and that Easyjet had refused to help). According to Leiser, a member of staff told him, "You're not allowed to talk about Easyjet like that and then expect to get on a flight."

“I put out a tweet about it and then when I got in the queue, and a member of staff approached me and asked if she could have a quick word," Leiser explained. "She said she understood I’d said something on social media about easyJet and then told me they were not allowing me to board the flight.

“I said you’re kidding me; I asked where that had come from and she told me I should know I’m not allowed to do that. I was stunned. I told her I didn’t really understand what she was telling me and she said: ‘You’re not allowed to talk about easyJet like that and then expect to get on a flight’.”

“She then asked me to step out of the queue and repeated that she was not letting me on the flight. I told her she’d better get somebody down to discuss this and she told me the manager was on his way to speak to me. Then she told said she couldn’t believe I thought what I’d done was appropriate. I was just sitting there in disbelief.

“So the the manager arrived and told me that based on my tweet they couldn’t let me board the flight because I wasn’t allowed to do that and I should know better. He then called over to the girl on the counter to instruct my bags be taken off the flight. It wasn’t until I asked him if he’d heard of free speech that the tone changed. He asked me if I was a lawyer and I told him I taught law at Strathclyde.

"He quickly had a word with his staff and then told me I’d better get on the flight because they were waiting for me. If I hadn’t had my ID badge I don’t think he’d have let me on the flight."

EasyJet under fire after claims it refused to let The Drum columnist Mark Leiser on board for sending critical tweet [Angela Haggerty/The Drum]

(via Digg)

    






25 Sep 20:42

Valve announces its Steam Machines line of gaming consoles

by Jacob Siegal
Valve Steam Machines Release Date 2014Right on the heels of Monday's announcement, Valve has announced the hardware companion to SteamOS — Steam Machines. The long-rumored console previously dubbed the 'Steam Box' reached legendary status in recent months as rumors swirled regarding Valve's entrance into the hardware world. But instead of one single console, Valve is partnering with several other companies to bring SteamOS gaming machines to the market in 2014.

Continue reading...
25 Sep 20:42

Samsung to unveil its first smartphone with a curved display next month

by Jacob Siegal
Samsung Curved DisplaySamsung proved earlier this year that curved displays are feasible, and the next step will be making use of new curved designs in smartphone. Reuters reports that Samsung has confirmed plans to introduce a smartphone with a curved display in South Korea sometime next month. The South Korean electronics company has already revealed prototypes with flexible screens and curved glass, but this is the first confirmation of a product announcement from Samsung. Of course, if Samsung's pricey curved OLED HDTV is any indication, producing these displays is still a very expensive process. Curved and flexible displays could be a fascinating proposition for portable electronics, but the technology will have to be affordable first before it can be widely adopted.
25 Sep 20:41

Gmail For Android Updated With Card-Style Layout

by Sarah Perez
Android_1

Google’s Gmail application for Android is being updated today with a new design which will bring Google’s now preferred “card style” user interface to the Conversation View within the app. This layout, which Google popularized through its Google Now search application, has become the new go-to design paradigm at Google, arriving across other Google products and services, including Google Drive, the new Google Wallet apps, Maps, Google+ and elsewhere.

It mimics the idea of using index cards, and fits somewhere between minimalism and skeuomorphism, as Fast Company’s recent deep dive into Google’s design process explained.

In Gmail, cards will be used to better highlight multi-person, threaded messages in the app’s “Conversation view,” allowing for a “new, cleaner design,” states the company in a post on Google+ this afternoon.

In addition, the app will include other design tweaks, like checkmarks for multiple message selection which makes it easier to see which emails you’re about to move, delete or archive en masse. And the app will alert you in your inbox if account sync is turned off for some reason, to help keep you from missing messages.

Though some users are already seeing an app update in Google Play, not everyone is seeing the updated design just yet. The rollout is a staged one, so your mileage may vary, as they say.

News of the updated Gmail app comes on the heels of some serious issues which affected Gmail’s delivery times for an entire day on Monday. Even now, it seems the damage to the Gmail brand continues – many people have called me today, for example, saying, “oh, I thought I’d dial you since I just don’t trust Gmail right now.” That may be why now is a time for a little good news from Gmail… well, good news if you actually like the card-style layout, that is.


25 Sep 20:39

Amazon hopes to lure you away from iTunes with integrated Cloud Player MP3 store

by Chris Welch

Amazon's Cloud Player for PC is moving closer than ever to a full-fledged iTunes competitor today; the app now features an integrated Amazon MP3 storefront where users can buy songs and albums directly without visiting Amazon.com. Until today, transactions had to be conducted over the web, though it has never taken long for freshly purchased content to instantly pop up in Cloud Player. Like Amazon MP3's web store, the Cloud Player PC app curates music into categories like "Editor’s Picks", "Album of the Week" and so on.

Any content you buy will instantly be made available on Amazon's Cloud Player apps available on Kindle Fire, Android, iOS, Samsung smart TVs, Roku, Sonos, and the web. While iTunes still dominates the digital music...

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25 Sep 20:35

Mailbox for iOS has been found to have a major security flaw: the app executes any Javascript hidden

by Andy Orin

Mailbox for iOS has been found to have a major security flaw: the app executes any Javascript hidden in the body of HTML-formatted emails, opening potential for malicious exploits. Read more here. Update: A statement from the Mailbox team:

"Many thanks to the community for continuing to push Mailbox to be as great an app as possible. As others have noted, the risks here are extremely limited thanks to the inter-app security built into iOS. That being said, we're working on an improvement to mail formatting that will mitigate the issue entirely and aim to ship it soon."

25 Sep 15:27

Amazon unveils Kindle Fire HDX alongside new $139 Kindle Fire HD

by Brad Reed
Amazon Kindle Fire HDX Release Date

Jeff Bezos is officially done messing around in the tablet wars. Amazon announced on Wednesday that it's releasing two new tablets this fall, the Kindle Fire HDX and a new Kindle Fire HD that will sell starting at just $139. It shouldn't come as much of a surprise, of course, since BGR exclusively revealed just about everything there was to know about these new tablets in a series of reports. The Kindle Fire HDX, which will be the company's new flagship tablet, will come in 7-inch and 8.9-inch models and will feature a quad-core Snapdragon 800 2.2GHz processor, a display that with a resolution of 339 pixels per inch for the 8.9-inch model and 323 pixels per inch for the 7-inch model, and up to 11 hours of battery life for mixed use. The 7-inch Kindle Fire HDX will start shipping on October 18th and will cost $229 while the 8.9-inch Kindle Fire HDX will start shipping on November 7th and will cost $379.

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25 Sep 15:26

YouTube launches library of free music that anyone can use

by Jacob Kastrenakes

YouTube includes a number of simple production tools to help filmmakers improve their projects, but today it's launching one that could be huge for the low- or no-budget shooter: a library of completely free music that can be used in any video — even ones that don't end up on YouTube. The YouTube Audio Library is launching with 150 tracks in genres spanning from funky dance and electronic to sappy country tunes, all of which can be streamed and downloaded as 320kbps MP3 files. You might expect them all to be corny jams or forgettable muzak — and some certainly are — but there are absolutely some gems within the collection that do a great job representing their genre without feeling like a knockoff product.

Though the cost of...

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25 Sep 12:54

Amazon Introduces Mayday, A Unique And Amazingly Useful Live Tech Support System For Kindle

by John Biggs
scaled.KindleFireHDXMayday

Live support has always been a dream for major retailers. While chat solutions already exist, today Amazon announced a new support service available on Kindle HD products called Mayday. It is a single-click, hardware-support solution that lets users work with a remote tech support representative to solve problems with their tablets.

The service allows you to see the remote tech support person in a small window on your screen and also displays your screen on the support person’s computer where they can watch what you’re doing online, annotate the screen, and even tap through the interface. Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos said it’s like “actually very similar to having someone standing next to you” and offering tech support.

The service is unique to Amazon, and the company built a full infrastructure to support it at their HQ in Seattle and on board the hardware. By compressing the video signals, they are able to send more data to the devices from tech support and allow tech support to see the data remotely. Amazon’s goal is a 15-second response time, and they will ramp up staffing around major holidays when Kindles are flying fast and furious under the Easter tree.

While some may be concerned about privacy, rest assured the support person will not be able to see out of your camera, and you can mute your audio at any time. Bezos equated the experience to going into a store for tech support. “If you went to some physical store location to ask for help for your device, they’re going to see everything,” said Bezos. More important, however, is how many people the service will help.

“Are we in charge of our devices or our devices in charge of us? Getting good tech support isn’t easy, but it’s important,” he said.

The service will be available on the new Kindle Fire HDX tablets. You can read more about the service at Amazon’s Mayday page.


25 Sep 12:47

Commissioner Gordon is getting his own television series with 'Gotham'

by Bryan Bishop

Sure, most of the attention has been on Ben Affleck being cast as Batman in Zack Snyder's sequel to Man of Steel, but what about the rest of the Batman universe? Deadline reports that Fox has closed a deal for a television series centered around none other than the Dark Knight's ally Commissioner Gordon. Called Gotham, the show focuses on Gordon's early years as a detective on the Gotham City police force, and while it will include some of Gotham's most famous villains it will reportedly not feature Batman himself.

Bruno Heller, the creator of The Mentalist, will be producing the show in conjunction with Warner Bros. Television, and Fox's deal includes a series commitment — signaling just how bullish the network is on the project....

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25 Sep 12:47

Amazon's new $139 Kindle Fire HD is the cheap tablet to buy

by Dan Seifert

Amazon is rolling out the brand-new Kindle FIre HDX with upgraded everything tonight, but last year's Kindle Fire HD isn't going anywhere anytime soon. In fact, the company announced that it is updating the tablet and cutting its price down to $139 — a very aggressive price point for a still-competitive tablet.

The new Kindle Fire HD features a 7-inch, 1280 x 800 pixel display, faster dual-core 1.5GHz processor, and dual stereo speakers. It won't give the new Nexus 7 much of a performance challenge (that's reserved for the new HDX models), but for nearly $100 less, it's certainly an enticing deal for anyone looking for a low-cost tablet. The new Kindle Fire HD is thinner and lighter than before and has a new industrial design with...

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25 Sep 12:45

Galaxy Note 3 and Galaxy Gear now available in parts of Europe

by Alex Dobie

Galaxy Gear, Galaxy Note 3

Ahead of the U.S. launch next week, Samsung's latest oversized smartphone the Galaxy Note 3, and its smartwatch companion the Galaxy Gear, have landed at some retailers in Europe. In the UK both are available from Samsung's flagship store at London's Westfield Stratford shopping center, which is selling the Note 3 for £649, the Galaxy Gear for £299 or both together for £848 (a saving of £100.)

Elsewhere, independent retailer Carphone Warehouse has the Note 3 for £629.95 SIM-free, or free on contracts from £47 per month. Both devices should start popping up at more UK and EU retailers over the next week, and we'll have much more Galaxy Note 3 coverage for you before the week's out, so stay tuned!

More: Galaxy Note 3 hands-on, Galaxy Gear hands-on

Source: Samsung UK, Carphone Warehouse


    






24 Sep 23:04

Most Popular Desktop Music Player: Winamp

by Alan Henry

Most Popular Desktop Music Player: Winamp

If you like your music player to also reflect your tastes, help you organize your tunes, and look or work the way you want it to, you have options. Last week we asked you which were the best. You responded, and we took a look at the top five desktop music players. Now we're back to highlight the winner.

Most Popular Desktop Music Player: Winamp

Voting was tight across all five of our top music players, but Winamp fans came out of the woodwork to take the top spot with over 27% of the vote. Many of you pointed out that aside from the added bloat over the years, Winamp is still fast, flexible, free, customizable, and—say it with me—it really whips the llama's ass.

Second place wasn't too far off. With over 23% of the overall vote, foobar2000 came in next, which most of you praised for probably being the objective best overall. It's fast, flexible, free, and while its learning curve can be off-putting, it really does give you the power to start from scratch and add features and plugins to build the perfect music player for you. Right behind it in third was our most surprising contender, Zune Music, which brought in 20% of the overall vote. We saw a lot of love for it in the comments (and some hate, too) but many of you praised the fact that Xbox music isn't nearly as good, and loved its attractive interface, seeded playlists, and the fact that unlike the others, it's not just playback controls and a list of songs. In fourth place with just shy of 20% is MediaMonkey, one of our favorite tools to not just play your music, but help you organize it with robust tagging and metadata management tools. Bringing up the rear in fifth is MusicBee, with just over 9% of the votes cast, even though we saw real passion for it in the discussions.

For more detail on the top five, and the slew of honorable mentions not included here, head back to the Hive Five feature and read more.

The Hive Five is based on reader nominations. As with most Hive Five posts, if your favorite was left out, it's not because we hate it—it's because it didn't get the nominations required in the call for contenders post to make the top five. We understand it's a bit of a popularity contest, but if you have a favorite, we want to hear about it. Have a suggestion for the Hive Five? Send us an email at tips+hivefive@lifehacker.com!

Photo by Henrik Dreisler.

24 Sep 23:03

Petcube Opens Kickstarter Campaign To Let People Play With Their Pets Remotely

by Eliza Brooke
Petcube_fold

If you haven’t gotten your dose of cute cat footage for the day, watch this and then listen up. A startup called Petcube has launched a Kickstarter campaign today to manufacture a sleek box, tricked out with a laser pointer, wide angle camera lens, speakers and Wi-Fi, that allows people to play with their pets remotely.

Pet owners set up the cube in their homes and then use Petcube’s app to speak to their furry friends and drive them crazy with the laser.

The goal is to get some of the first Petcubes into animal shelters, which would have public access feeds so that anyone can play with the parentless pups. In fact, anyone can make their feed public for 15-30 minute intervals so that those whose landlords don’t allow pets (cough) can get in on the fun.

At 320 backers so far, Petcube has raised $32,679 of a $100,000 goal in less than one day.

The Petcube team — Yaroslav Azhnyuk, Andrey Klen, and Alex Neskin — has been working on the project for about a year now and is in the current cohort of HAXLR8R’s hardware accelerator program. After bootstrapping for a year, the startup raised a small round of seed funding from HAXLR8R, SOSVentures, and angel investor Semyon Dukach.

At the moment they are speaking with potential manufacturers, with the intention to ship the hardware in May of next year.

Azhnyuk said they will definitely have an Android app ready by May, as well. An iOS app is currently in the prototype stage. The apps will be free, and the cube will likely retail for $199.

The cubes are silver and quite sleek, but Petcube will also be selling skins to personalize them. Make them furry, for instance.

“For us this is just the beginning. We’re seeing it as this thing to connect all of the other pet-related devices,” Azhnyuk said. “For developers we’ll be giving access to the API, which will make it possible to connect others to Petcube.”

Petcube has been talking with Sphero, for instance, the maker of the phone-controlled robotic ball. The only potential issue I see here is when the ball gets stuck under a couch and out of reach. Then you have to watch your pet struggle with it, which is simultaneously sad, hilarious, and anxiety-producing.

The laser pointer is most appealing to cats and small- to medium-sized dogs, Azhnyuk said; large dogs don’t tend to go for it, which is a good reason to get other hardware makers in on the action. The jury is out on turtles and fish.

There’s also the possibility to gamify what one can only assume will be an already engrossing experience.

“For game developers we’ll give them the opportunity to program their interfaces on top of the Petcube gaming experience. You have a new gaming experience when you’re playing with a live being,” Azhnyuk said. “Then you can also overlay [visuals] on top of the gaming experience.”

Petcube isn’t the only startup in the long-distance pet love space: last month Petzila, a remote treat dispenser, launched an Indiegogo campaign that overshot its fundraising mark by nearly $50,000. With that kind of market validation, the odds seem to be in Petcube’s favor.


24 Sep 21:23

New York unveils 'text stops' to curb crashes by distracted drivers

by Jacob Kastrenakes

You're probably familiar with highway rest stops, but drivers might soon be seeing something a little less ordinary along the road: text stops. New York plans to establish 91 "Texting Zones" along state highways, encouraging drivers to wait until they can safely pull off the road to respond to a text message. The signs will read "Text Stop" and "It can wait," and both will note how far away the nearest texting zone, rest stop, or parking area is that drivers can pull off at. The initiative is more marketing and awareness than a big undertaking, as it largely rebrands existing rest points by simply plopping down a sign.

Companies and governments have been attacking texting while driving from all sides of late, be it through legislation, a...

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24 Sep 21:21

Youtube comments to be powered by Google+ going forward, curated and sorted for you

by Andrew Martonik

New Youtube Comments

Comments from your circles are surfaced; better moderation tools for video producers

If you've spent any amount of time on Youtube you know the comments aren't always the highest of quality, and Google is hoping to mitigate that issue by transitioning Youtube comments to be powered by Google+. Starting this week with the channel discussion tab and coming to all videos later this year, all comments on Youtube will be transitioned to Google+ discussions.

Moving to Google+ comments not only pushes towards a "real name" policy on Youtube, but also gives Google the opportunity to better sort and feature the comments and discussions that are most relevant to you. Comments that you care about most — from people you know, follow or are engaged in discussion with — will be shown at the top of the list.

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