Shared posts

01 Aug 13:28

Google’s next big project: Making local news relevant again

by Brad Reed
Google Now Local News ProjectGoogle isn't afraid to take a chance on outlandish-seeming projects but the company's next challenge might be its most daunting yet: It wants to make local news relevant again. Quartz reports that Google is testing out a new feature for its Google Now mobile application that will deliver users more local news based on wherever they're located.  Johanna Wright, Google's vice president of search, tells Quartz that the company wants the new feature to help users learn more about their neighborhoods and potentially get more involved in their communities.

Continue reading...
01 Aug 13:27

Facebook switches on secure browsing by default

by Sam Byford
Mark-zuckerberg-theverge-stock-9_1020_large

Facebook has announced that all users will now access the desktop site with https, a protocol that makes the connection between browsers and the social network more secure. This has been an option since early 2011, and about 35 percent of users had enabled it themselves before Facebook started actively switching people over this year.

Continue reading…

01 Aug 13:20

At this point we are quite confident that public The Old Reader will be available in the future, now...

At this point we are quite confident that public The Old Reader will be available in the future, now with a proper team running it.

More details later this week.
Sorry about Monday. Again.

31 Jul 22:44

'The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey' gets its expected extended cut on November 5th

by Nathan Ingraham
487242_492682337434043_158110467_n_large

Peter Jackson has never attempted to inject brevity into his Middle-earth films. The Lord of the Rings trilogy clocked in at over nine hours across three films, and Jackson then released extended cuts that pushed the running time up even further. However, those extended editions were celebrated by fans — rather than using poorly-produced deleted scenes, Jackson wove a significant amount of material seamless back into his movies, complete with full special effects and a rewritten score. Now, Jackson and Warner Bros. have formally announced he's doing the same for The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey.

It's not a surprise, as Jackson has mentioned the possibility of extended Hobbit cuts pretty frequently (most recently when he liveblogged...

Continue reading…

31 Jul 22:43

Google Testing Local News In Google Now, As Well As The Limits Of Feature Bloat On The Android Assistant

by Darrell Etherington
Google_now

Google is testing out local news cards for Google Now according to a new report from Quartz, which cites Google’s VP of Search and Assist as the source of the info. The local news card is in the experimental A/B testing phase, with the aim of gathering feedback from users about whether it should go live to the broad Android user base.

The news would tell you things like nearby crimes, as well as restaurant openings and more, but tailored to your specific interests and bound to geolocation coordinates. It’d be kind of like having your town’s daily newspaper delivered directly to your phone, but perhaps more hyperlocal and having that change depending on where you are at any given moment.

It sounds like a good idea, despite the general failure of local news initiatives like Patch, since it works by collecting news from other sources and is probably a better and more sustainable approach to digital local news than new reporting bodies. But in the larger picture of Now, it begins to beg the question of what Google wants its Android assistant to really be.

Google Now is a service that provides quick access to the information that’s most immediately pertinent to you at any given time. Right now that means popping up flight schedules, transit stops and travel ETAs to key locations like home and work, as well as weather and more. It’s the “more” that becomes potentially troubling; Now is currently pretty easy to pick up and understand, but Google has to think carefully about what new features it brings on, lest it become feature-burdened and unwieldy.

The good news is that Google is doing A/B testing with this and other new features it’s contemplating bringing to Google Now. And it’s also true that not all of the cards need to be activated, or turned on by default. But even just making them available risks overcomplicating the service and making it less intuitive and natural for users, which is a big part of its appeal. Also, local news, while a neat trick, doesn’t seem all that useful in an instantly digestible context like this one.

I have one request for Google around Now: keep it clean. There’s a lot the personal assistant ‘could’ do, but that doesn’t mean there’s a lot it should.


31 Jul 22:42

OCD Sufferers, Rejoice: Google Calendar For Android App Now Syncs Notification Dismissals Across Devices

by David Ruddock

unnamed

A small but very much helpful update was announced for the Google Calendar app today: sync of notification dismissals across multiple devices. And yes, this is a staged rollout, so you will have to wait patiently for the updated app to actually become available. Hopefully it won't take long.

That's really the only change, aside from the standard bug fixes. This new cross-device sync will not dismiss notifications for skinned calendar apps on devices like the Galaxy S4 or HTC One, of course, so you may just want to disable notifications for such apps and use Google Calendar exclusively at this point, because this is too convenient a feature to pass up.

Done With This Post? You Might Also Like These:

OCD Sufferers, Rejoice: Google Calendar For Android App Now Syncs Notification Dismissals Across Devices was written by the awesome team at Android Police.

    


31 Jul 22:41

Brown? In London? Papers please.

by Cory Doctorow


(Photo: NRBrizzle)

In London today, members of the UK Border Agency were stopping people of color at various tube stations and demanding that they show identity papers. Several eyewitnesses confirmed that the patrol officers were singling out brown people, that they were intimidating in demeanor, and that they threatened to arrest passers-by who asked what was going on. At least one officer is reported to have removed his badge number. This comes as the UKBA began to blitz London's neighbourhoods with vans threatening undocumented migrants with arrest and deportation and exhorting them to turn themselves in.

Kensal Rise resident Phil O’Shea told the Times he was threatened with arrest when he asked what was going on.

He said: “I thought the behaviour of the immigration officers was heavy-handed and frightening. They appeared to be stopping and questioning every non-white person, many of whom were clearly ordinary Kensal Green residents going to work.

“When I queried what was going on I was threatened with arrest for obstruction and was told to ‘crack on’.

“I asked that officer for his name but he refused to give it and said I could read his number on his shoulder but I couldn’t see a number there.”

NEWSFLASH: UK Border Agency ID Checking People of Colour At Train Stations [Scriptonite Daily]

(via Charlie Stross)

    


31 Jul 22:39

Methodic Adds Smart, Time-Sensitive Shortcuts to Your Home Screen

by Eric Ravenscraft

Methodic Adds Smart, Time-Sensitive Shortcuts to Your Home Screen

Android: Most of us have a set of shortcuts we put on our home screen that we use most often, but we don't use every shortcut equally. Methodic instead offers smart shortcuts based on which apps you use most.

Read more...

31 Jul 20:26

New HTC One tweak lets you run Sense and stock Android on the same phone

by Zach Epstein
HTC One Stock AndroidDevices running stock Android haven't exactly been big sellers compared to vendor-customized devices, but a vocal minority continues to clamor for more pure Google experiences. What if users could have the best of both worlds? BGR recently covered custom HTC One software in development that would allow users to switch back and forth between stock Android and HTC's Sense software at will on the One. Now, that software has been released by MoDaCo as a free public beta and it not only lets users switch back and forth, but it also can share data between the stock Android and Sense builds. This is a custom ROM that requires root access so it isn't for casual users and installing the software will obviously void your warranty, but experienced users looking for the best of both worlds on one of the most gorgeous smartphones of all time should look no further. All of the files needed to install the new software and a complete installation guide can be found on the MoDaCo site, which is linked below.
31 Jul 20:23

UK internet providers get into a tussle over the definition of 'superfast'

by Matt Brian
Speedtest_marked_large

EE, the biggest carrier and currently the only provider of 4G services in the UK, has been rapped by advertising regulators over its use of the term "superfast." According to EE, the phrase captures just how speedy its LTE network is, but UK telecoms giant BT isn't prepared to let that stand. BT argues that the terminology of superfast internet should only relate to fixed-line broadband services, a market that it conveniently has a huge amount of power over.

The UK's Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) is inclined to agree with BT but in doing so shows the absurdity of the company's objection. While EE's website is deemed to be misleading, the carrier's TV adverts escape punishment because they carry small print clarifying the the...

Continue reading…

31 Jul 20:22

Google Glass faces driving ban across UK as distraction concerns mount

by Chris Welch
20130506-12135657--20130501_095746_475_verge_super_wide_large

Before Google Glass even reaches consumers, the UK Department for Transport is working to forbid drivers from donning the futuristic device behind the wheel. And its argument is simple: Glass takes your attention off the road. "We are aware of the impending rollout of Google Glass and are in discussion with the police to ensure that individuals do not use this technology while driving," a DfT spokesperson told Stuff.

Currently in its still-growing Explorer phase, Glass has already seen bans in locations sensitive to stealth photography (i.e. casinos), and there's also been early pushback from some restaurants and bars that oppose Google's headset from a social perspective. But a proper driving ban could be a major hindrance to Google's...

Continue reading…

31 Jul 20:17

Vodafone UK offers unlimited calls and texts on PAYG

by Alex Dobie

Vodafone

1GB, unlimited calls and texts for £30, 2GB for £40​ on new PAYG plans

Vodafone UK has announced some new additions to its Pay As You Go line-up today. The new "Vodafone Red Freedom Freebee" gives customers unlimited calls and texts — much like the contract-based Vodafone Red service — with the option of 1GB of data for £30, or 2GB for £40. That's a large amount of money to be spending on a pre-paid service plan, but it also gets you access to a greater data allowance than some other carriers are offering, in addition to unmetered calls and texts.

Vodafone has also tweaked its other PAYG offerings, allowing customers to get unlimited texts on a £10 "Freebee" deal, as well as 1GB of data from a £20 bundle.

The operator's PAYG announcements follow the launch of new, competitive pre-paid prices from rival Three.

More: Vodafone

    


31 Jul 20:16

Microsoft Office now available on Android phones, for subscribers only

by Alex Dobie

Office for Android

You can now get Office on your Android phone — assuming you fit into a very specific group of people

Microsoft has today launched Office Mobile for Android phones, a new app for Office 365 subscribers that allows them to view and edit their Word, Excel, Powerpoint and other documents on their Android phones.

But you'll need to be an Office 365 subscriber to get in on the spreadsheet-based action — Microsoft isn't offering a free version of the app right now. Nor is it opening things up internationally — the app is U.S.-only at the moment, though The Verge writes that Microsoft plans to open up to other markets gradually. Finally, it's also a phone-only app at present — sadly there's no Android tablet support in this release.

Regardless, if you're living in (and paying for) the Microsoft Office ecosystem, the new app looks attractive enough, and offers the kind of quick, basic editing experience you'll likely want on a smartphone. Hit the Google Play link up above to grab the app.

    


31 Jul 17:02

Great Firewall of Cameron goes mandatory, ISPs required to buy magic no-false-positive beans, as well

by Cory Doctorow

Britain's Great Firewall of Cameron has just made the jump from "voluntary" to "mandatory." The UK government has announced that the demand that all ISPs offer an opt-out "adult content" filter will soon be a requirement, covering even small ISPs and ISPs that advertise themselves as censorship-free. ISPs will be required to operate filters that do not "unintentionally filter out legitimate content" -- effectively, this is a mandate to go shopping for magic beans. Jim Killock from the Open Rights Group sez:

"Preselected" parental filters are now official policy, and should extend to small ISPs, according the the Department of Culture, Media and Sport's new strategy paper. They say "we need good filters that are preselected to be on ... the settings to install family friendly filters will be automatically selected; if you just click next or enter, then the filters are automatically on" They state that "We expect the smaller ISPs to follow the lead being set by the larger providers". Finally, DCMS demand ISPs give them magic beans ("We want industry to continue to refine and improve their filters to ensure they do not -- even unintentionally -- filter out legitimate content") and threaten them with regulation if they do not answer to future demand.

Government wants default blocking to hit small ISPs (Thanks, Jim!)

(Image: Haricot magique, a Creative Commons Attribution Share-Alike (2.0) image from st3f4n's photostream)

    


31 Jul 12:29

Sony Xperia Z Ultra confirmed for Sept. 12 release

by Casey Rendon

Sony Xperia Z Ultra

Soon to be available in black and white for £599.98 inc VAT

Unlocked Mobiles has put up their pre-order page for the Sony Xperia Z Ultra, with launch details very to close to what we already expected. Sony's latest phone, packing a 6.44-inch Triluminos display and a Snapdragon 800 processor with Android 4.2, will be available September 12. Pricing comes in a little lower than previously thought, at £599.98 inc VAT and £499.98 ex VAT.

Following the official announcement of this monstrous phone, the official specifications were released for those interested. To get an up close and personal look at the new addition of the Xperia family, be sure to see our hands-on video.

Source: Unlocked Mobile

    


31 Jul 12:29

NVIDIA Shield review

by Jerry Hildenbrand

NVIDIA Shield.

NVIDIA has long been a major player in the PC gaming industry, and that translates nicely to mobile with Shield

The NVIDIA Shield is not the first Android handheld designed for gaming. We’ve seen Archos try its hand at a small-form tablet with gaming controls, MOGA and others have created accessories that will transform your smartphone into a gaming unit, and using USB host with a game controller can make plenty of phones or tablets into a great on-the-go gaming rig. We'll try to forget about the Xperia Play. Sony sure did.

But NVIDIA has done something different. The Shield isn’t an Android device that also plays games pretty well, it’s a gaming machine first and foremost. Every design decision, every hardware part, every component was chosen and used to try and offer the best gaming experience you can get from an Android-powered device. You'll be able to pick up your own NVIDIA Shield starting today (July 31). Preorders are shipping, and units are available for $299 at NVIDIA.com or Newegg.com, or at a SHIELD Experience Center in select GameStop, Microcenter, Canada Computer locations in the U.S. and Canada. Now the real question is -- did NVIDIA succeed at making the Android game system everyone has been waiting for?

Editor’s note: This review was co-authored by both Jerry Hildenbrand and Kevin O’Quinn, Android Central’s resident NVIDIA “champ." Kevin is a known hardware junkie, and provided input about the hardware and specifications from his perspective.

read more

    


31 Jul 12:27

Bubble-wrap laying/popping bike

by Cory Doctorow

Eric Buss, a "comedy magician," built a bicycle with a bubble-wrap roll on its front fork, which lays down its own satisfyingly poppy trail ahead of its leading edge. All my life, I have tried to ensure that the bubbles are popped and done with, but the bastards keep making more. Where does it all come from? Will our long nightmare of unpopped bubbles ever end?

Eric Buss' "Bubble Wrap Bike" (via Geeks are Sexy)

    


31 Jul 12:21

Asus abandons Windows RT

by Brad Reed
Asus Windows RT CriticismIt's not just consumers who are avoiding Windows RT these days. In an interview with AllThingsD, Asus chairman Jonney Shih said that his company has no current plans to release any more tablets based on Microsoft's Windows RT platform because the results from earlier RT tablets have been "not very promising." While Shih didn't rule out making a Windows RT device again at some point he said that for now Asus remains solely focused on creating Windows 8 devices that use Intel chips. Asus is just the latest Windows OEM to give Windows RT the cold shoulder as HTC had to cancel plans to release a Windows RT tablet earlier this year and Acer has said that it's unsure if it will ever release another Windows RT tablet again.
31 Jul 12:21

Samsung accused of gaming Galaxy S4 benchmark results

by Brad Reed
Samsung Galaxy S4 Benchmark ResultsRemember how well Samsung's Galaxy S4 performed in early benchmark tests? Well it turns out there might have been a good reason for that that had little to do with the device's vast superiority to other smartphones — instead, it seems that Samsung designed the device specifically to perform well on performance tests. Anandtech has a lengthy post detailing how Samsung has been "aggressive" in optimizing its devices' CPUs and GPUs to perform well on benchmark tests while not necessarily delivering a better overall user experience.

Continue reading...
31 Jul 12:20

Streetlife, The U.K. Local Social Network, Raises Further £600K From Archant Digital Ventures, Shohet & Cie

by Steve O'Hear
Screen Shot 2013-07-30 at 11.38.57

The U.K.’s Streetlife.com, a local social network that lets residents connect and converse with their neighbours and foster a stronger sense of community, has raised £600,000 in a new round of funding.

The investment comes from existing backer Archant Digital Ventures, the incubator and investment arm of regional U.K. media company Archant, and new investor Shohet & Cie.

The additional capital will be used to give Streetlife a marketing push, rolling out the brand across more of the U.K., and in what looks like a case of stepping on the gas, the startup says it plans to raise a further £3 million by year’s end, with the aim being to “fully capture the U.K. market”.

The perceived lack of local community, particularly in highly populated urban areas in the U.K. (and I suspect in other developed countries), is arguably a major a problem in a post-industrial era where people frequently move, commute quite far to work, and, rather strangely, don’t actually talk to their neighbours. That’s the problem that Streetlife has set out to solve, at least on the consumer end.

To achieve this, the site provides a platform for local residents, community groups, local authorities and businesses to “exchange practical information, advice, opinions and resources”; users sign up using their postcode to start and join conversations with others in their locality, and declare what local topics they are interested in and how much of their profile they want to share and with whom — a sort of ‘local Facebook’, if you will. It’s a proposition that is seeing Streetlife boast close to 100,000 users in more than 500 “communities”, says the company.

Of course, with a laser-focus on local social networking comes an obvious business model in the form of local advertising, which also points to Archant Digital Ventures’ financial interest in the startup. The regional media company’s incubator/investment arm, run by Serge Taborin, is charged with finding new opportunities in the digital space that build on Archant’s legacy as a local newspaper publisher and provider of other local media and advertising-funded ventures. The idea is that the startups it incubates and/or invests in can exploit the media company’s significant regional reach to gain traction and monetize through local advertising.

Unsurprisingly, when I met with Taborin a few months back he made quite a convincing case for why U.K. startups with a heavy local focus might want to consider Archant Digital Ventures as an alternative or complementary partner to early-stage VC or competing accelerators/incubators. Doing so also potentially opens the doors to be acquired by Archant itself — the latest example being the majority stake it acquired in Planningfinder.com just last week.

Interestingly, however, not only is Streetlife able to benefit from Archant’s longstanding relationship with local advertisers and its existing consumer base, but content on the site is also feeding some of the stories picked up by local journalists writing for various Archant properties. That’s a nice symbiotic relationship, and reminds me of the way Twitter helps generate story leads (and low hanging fruit) for national media.

Along with Archant, Streetlife’s previous backers include Paul Ettinger, one of the founding team behind coffee chain Caffè Nero, Steve Pankhurst, founder of Friends Reunited, and Gi Fernando and Ankur Shah, co-founders of Techlightenment. Today’s new round of funding brings the total raised by the startup to £1.4 million.


31 Jul 12:20

Quip Is A Beautiful New Mobile-First Word Processor From Ex-Facebook CTO Bret Taylor

by Josh Constine
QUip

30 years later and our word processing software hasn’t changed, not even to adapt to mobile. That changes tonight with the launch of Quip, a free new word processing app from former Facebook CTO Bret Taylor’s new startup. Quip works on desktop but is designed for mobile. It automatically formats documents to the size of your screen, offers in-app collaboration and messaging, and even works offline.

“Quip is a modern word processor optimized for the era of tablets and phones”, Taylor tells me.” We’re in the middle of a transition away from the desktop computer, yet word processors have stagnated. For dramatic effect, Taylor dropped a screenshot of MacWrite (shown to the left) into the Quip introduction post, and told me “It’s comical how similar that looks to what we use today.”

The shift to mobile is so seismic that it trumps the importance of all the legacy word processing features and “gives us an opportunity to change this software”, Taylor says. That’s an opportunity Microsoft was stupid to squander.

Quip looks polished, which makes sense considering Taylor specifically left Facebook in June 2012 to start the company with Kevin Gibbs, the father of Google Apps Engine. Taylor redirected his backchannel.org site to Quip.com in December 2012, revealing the startup’s name to the world. While no details were released, our own Ingrid Lunden sniffed out that it might be a collaborative writing app based on the pen in the app’s icon and a patent for cloud collaboration awarded to the startup.

Now we have all info. So what makes Quip different?

First it adapts documents to whatever size or shape screen you’re working on. If you’re on an iPhone an embedded photo might appear full width, but on an iPad it would appear on the right surrounded by text.

The collaboration tools might be the most exciting part. You can share any document with another user, and when they first open it you’ll get a notification. Taylor says this lets you jump in and walk them through the doc using Quip’s internal messaging system. “It feels like sitting at a desk with someone around a piece of paper” Taylor tells me.

All your collaborative edits and messages are turned into a chat-like thread you can follow. To find your co-writers, Quip asks you to sign in with Google and let it access your contacts. That might seem like a snub to Taylor’s old employer, but really it just denotes that Quip is built for serious business, not just playing around with your friends.

On the iPad you’ll see the communication stream right next to your document, whereas you slide it out on iPhone. You can @ mention people to call their attention within documents, quickly add images, link out to other Quip docs or folders, and use formatting tools to add your own style. I love the “Use most recent photo” option alongside the standard “Take with camera” and “Select from Photos”, though its a shame that’s only for Quip messaging and now document editing.

From the Quip “desktop” home page of the app you can see all your current documents and check your inbox for new updates and messages. If your connection drops while you’re writing, no sweat. Quip will synchronize your documents back to the cloud when you get your connection back. Taylor says he loves how seamless this works while he commutes on San Francisco’s BART subway which has spotty mobile reception.

The elephant in the room is how Quip works with Microsoft Word. Right now there’s no special way to import docs from Word or export than to the old girl. However, Taylor says his team worked hard on flawless copy and paste. Quip will preserve formatting when you copy text to or from Word.

Quip is free for personal use, but charges $12 a month per user for business. It’s available now for iPhone, iPad, and desktop, and Taylor says an Android app is in the works. Typing tools were a lucrative business for Microsoft on the desktop. That opportunity in mobile let Quip raise $15 million in Series A funding led by Peter Fenton at Benchmark Capital, which pays for its 12-person team.

Quip will be mainly competing with the now-misinformed idea that word processing is best done on the desktop. In the app space, though, it will face off with Apple’s own Pages, stripped down but cheap apps like iA Writer, and more advanced but pricey options like Textilus.

Quip does have a bit of a learning curve. Not necessarily because there’s anything wrong with the design, but because you have to unlearn a lifetime of Microsoft Clippy-instilled habits. There are a few awkward gestures in Quip for iPhone. You pull down from the top to reveal your desktop, but I found myself accidentally opening the iOS notification tray.

Once you get the hang of Quip, though, it seems like it could finally let you express your inner wordsmith from your couch, commute, or coffee spot.


30 Jul 22:44

Tackling the fragmentation myth

by Dustin Earley

Have you heard the latest news? Have you seen the headlines? It’s worse than we thought. Android fragmentation is at an all-time high. There are so many devices, running so many different versions of Android, Google has ruined Android by not throwing a choke chain on manufacturers and yelling “HEEL BOY!” every time they consider making more than one phone a year. Or at least that’s what some people want you to think.

According to the latest numbers from Open Signal, Android is a complete mess. There are some interesting facts about the 682,000 phones surveyed, like how dominant Samsung is and how the Nexus 4 is one of the top ten most popular Android devices in use. But their charts can be misleading, and the impressions people are getting from them are wrong.

If you look at the charts on Open Signal’s site and read the comments on the various reporting on them, you’ll notice two common misconceptions being thrown around. One, all these devices with different screen sizes and operating systems make it much harder for developers to make apps, and two, not being on the latest version of Android is terrible and OMG fragmentation.

You can argue whether or not those things are true or whether or not they’re bad, but the simple fact of the matter is that Google developed an adaptive operating system and development environment that tackles these problems, and they are getting better all the time.

As an Android app developer, you already know not to develop for any number of screen sizes. You instead use the tools Google gives you to make an app that scales and adapts to any screen size. As an Android app user, you may or may not have already noticed this. Some apps scale really well and play nice with all kinds of devices, while others aren’t quite there yet.

Either way, it doesn’t matter what version of Android you are on or what screen size you’re using, if apps are developed right it shouldn’t matter. Don’t place the blame on Google here; they’re not the problem. It’s the same problem that exists right now on iOS with apps still using non-iPhone 5 screen resolutions, creating hideous black bars in apps, and the same problem that’s going to be worse when iOS completely changes its look and developers are scrambling to make apps that fit in. They’re all developer’s problems. Not Google’s problems. Not Apple’s. Developer’s. Again, Google provides the necessary tools to make any app look good on any display. And it’s not that hard to do. It’s up to developers to utilize these tools.

As time goes on, scalable, adaptive apps are going to keep getting better and better. Google suggests developing for three different screen sizes — phone, mid-size tablet and large tablet — and apps will adapt in-between. They may not be the ideal, pixel-for-pixel developer porn playground some people think an operating system needs, but they work. And they work well.

The other major problem Open Signal tries to places emphasis on is what operating system version and API level a device is using and how it’s causing fragmentation. We’ve talked about this before, but it bears repeating. Google has solved this problem in the form of Google Play services. Google Play services is an app that is pushed to any Android device using 2.2 or higher and contains the latest Google services APIs. In other words, 98.5% of Android devices are running the newest APIs thanks to Google Play services.

Google put a lot of work into Google Play services this year, and it has made a huge impact. Google Play services is the reason why every Android device on 2.2 or higher is now running Hangouts instead of Google Talk. It’s the reason why 98.5% of Android users have access to the latest Google services APIs, no matter what firmware they’re running.

Google is adding more into Google Play services, just like they’ve added more apps into the Play store, separating them from the core OS. With these two things alone, Google has solved the fragmentation problem. Fragmentation, at least in the way that it’s still portrayed to this day, doesn’t exist. There’s still a lot of intense debate to be had surrounding the topic, but the bottom line is that it’s nowhere near the problem it’s often played up to be.

30 Jul 22:42

Using Facebook is about to get a lot more annoying

by Brad Reed
Facebook 15-Second Video AdsIt was only a matter of time before Facebook started bringing auto-play ads into users' news feeds. Unnamed sources tell Bloomberg that Facebook will start letting marketers "buy their way directly" into Facebook users' feeds "with a 15-second pitch" that will cost them between $1 million to $2.5 million per day to buy. Bloomberg's sources say that "the commercials will initially be sold on a full-day basis and can only be targeted to users based on age and gender" and that "Facebook members won’t see a spot more than three times in a given day." Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg has pushed back the timetable for when the new ads will launch because he wants to make sure that they don't degrade users' experience on the site, Bloomberg's sources say.
30 Jul 22:40

Rover, A “Dogbnb” Site, Raises $3.5M And Nabs Commercial Promotion From Petco

by Eliza Brooke
9dfb784b2bba0af6e5f9aedeb7fc68ce

Rover, the Airbnb of dog sitting, has raised a $3.5 million funding round led by Petco. The pet specialty giant, now one of Rover’s largest investors, will be joining the site’s board of directors. The two are at work on commercial promotion of Rover across Petco’s lines of business.

Rover CEO Aaron Easterly told us that this fundraising is more of an ancillary round than an official series. The important thing, he said, is the strategic relationship with a leading pet supplies retailer.

“When we were in our early stages we talked with people at Petco. We thought we had very similar philosophies on how the pet business was evolving,” Easterly said. “We had similar values, so we agreed to stay in touch. We rekindled that conversation after our Series B, as we were a little more mature and had a lot of growth to point to.”

Easterly said that the site’s biggest growth challenge and greatest opportunity is the 90 percent of dog owners that do not use commercial solutions for housing their dogs while they are away. Easterly derived this stat by looking at the existing market size in the American Pet Products Association National Pet Owner’s Survey and comparing it to an estimate of how big the market would be if all dog owners used a commercial service when they traveled. This is calculated by using Census data on households, the National Pet Owner’s Survey, and U.S. Travel Association.

Most of this 90 percent of people don’t even think to look for a service like Rover, Easterly said, and instead turn to family and friends for dog sitting. It’s a visibility problem that Rover has thus far sought to rectify with mass-media campaigns in TV and radio, and that promotion by Petco could go a long way in alleviating.

Although Rover faces competition from similar sites like DogVacay, Easterly said that their true competitors are those family and friend dog sitters.

Rover’s 150,000-person member base is relatively broad, but it does skew older than one might expect of a startup: Their biggest single demographic group is women aged 35-45. This is the group that sees itself as pet parents rather than pet owners and cares about whether their dog gets to sleep in a bed, Easterly said. These owners may be more likely to spend extra money on their pets, but at an average price of $30 a night, Rover is within most dog owners’ means.

This is Petco’s first investment in an early-stage, offline company, Petco VP of Business Development Ted Root tells us. Working with Rover is an opportunity to grow the service side of their offerings, which already includes in-store grooming and vaccinations.

“We believe that there’s rapid growth opportunity in certain slices of the service segment in the pet specialty arena,” Root says. “There are lots of mature services like grooming and things along those lines but boarding is highly fragmented… We see the opportunity to take advantage of a formalization of this super fragmented market where people have leaned on friends and family for a long time.”

Rover specifically complements Petco’s Pooch Hotels, daycare and boarding locations where dogs can play with each other. Dog owners want variety in their overnight options, and Rover is helping Petco deliver that. The involvement with Rover also provides another online growth avenue to Petco, which is strong in its brick-and-mortar presence.

The commercial evidence of the Petco partnership will become visible in the next few months, Easterly says, although he did not provide specifics on what that will look like beyond Petco offering Rover’s services to its customers.

Although Petco will be its main focus in the coming months, Rover also plans to release its Android app soon, as it is currently only available for iPhone. The mobile apps are primarily focused on keeping pet owners in contact with their pooches while they are away, through photo sharing and text communication.

Rover raised $7 million in Series B funding led by Foundry Group last February after closing a $3.4 million round led by Madrona Venture Group in April 2012.


30 Jul 20:16

Rotolight sends fraudulent takedown notice to censor unfavorable review

by Cory Doctorow


Den Lennie posted a video to Vimeo that compared the Rotolight Anova to a competing product, the Kino Flo Celeb, and found the Rotolight product inferior. Rotolight responded by filing a perjurious, fraudulent DMCA takedown notice with Vimeo (who, to its shame, honored it), claiming that the review violated Rotolight's trademark. This is pure copyfraud: first, because the DMCA is only available as a remedy for copyright infringement (not trademark infringement) and second, because product reviews are not trademark infringements, full stop.

Using a Copyright Infringement claim to shut down the opposition (Thanks, Dave!)

    


30 Jul 20:14

Now an ISP, Google not so hot on net neutrality

by Rob Beschizza
Ryan Singel, at Wired:
In a dramatic about-face on a key internet issue yesterday, Google told the FCC that the network neutrality rules Google once championed don’t give citizens the right to run servers on their home broadband connections, and that the Google Fiber network is perfectly within its rights to prohibit customers from attaching the legal devices of their choice to its network.
    


30 Jul 20:06

Bradley Manning Found Not Guilty Of ‘Aiding The Enemy,' Found Guilty On 19 Lesser Counts

by Alex Wilhelm
2013-07-29_15h27_46

Today Judge Denise Lind announced her verdict in the case of Pfc. Bradley Manning, the young solider under prosecution for his alleged leaking of classified documents to the Wikileaks organization: not guilty of ‘aiding the enemy.’ Manning was found guilty on lesser counts, for a total of 19 charges. Four of those had been plead to lesser infractions.

Though Manning manged to avoid the heaviest charge set against him, the book was tossed and squarely hit him.

According to early reporting, Manning was found guilty of five counts of espionage. The sentencing portion of this trial now begins. Both the prosecution and the defense are expected to call as many as two dozen witnesses.

The information that Manning is generally accepted to have handed to the controversial journalism outfit included a film clip now known under the moniker “Collateral Murder.” That video contains footage that includes the killing of innocents. The government, during the trial, chose to describe the clip as instead “actions and experiences of service members conducting a wartime mission.” Sometimes the odor of a situation is exacerbated by the sterility of the language used to describe it.

The trial of Manning has been part of a larger conversation on government secrecy and the right of the public to understand the workings of their elected and unelected officials. Regarding Manning specifically, the question of whether or not he “aided the enemy” by leaking military information has troubled many, as its implications may be far-reaching. If a whistleblower leaks information, and it is published, it is all but certain that the “enemy” will have access to it.

Given that, the leaking of any classified information regarding any topic near to national security could have led to painfully oppressive prison terms if Manning had been found guilty of the specific charge. This would discourage others from stepping forward when it was appropriate to do so. It is perhaps time to update the Espionage Act, under which Manning was found repeatedly guilty.

Top Image Credit: Patrick Slattery


30 Jul 20:00

The Flash Is Racing To Screens

The Flash Is Racing To Screens

Small screens, for now...

While the DC Universe is expanding in fits and starts on cinema screens with the recent announcement of the Batman/Superman film at Comic-Con, the other major superheroes from the canon are having a tougher time of it. It appears, however, that Barry Allen – one of the people who filled the Flash’s suit through the years – will be getting his chance on TV, via Arrow.

Talking at the Television Critics Association press tour, The CW's network boss,Mark Pedowitz, dropped word that the start of Allen's tale will be told in an episode of the show, which chronicles the adventures of Green Arrow.

"We're planning an origin story," Pedowitz said. "We'll see how it goes. Hopefully it'll go well. We do want to expand on the DC universe." Assuming it goes well, we could see a Flash TV show joining Arrow on screens, although that has yet to be decided.

A big factor might be Warner Bros.’ plans for the character in cinemas, especially in light of the planned Justice League film. The companies have traditionally shied away from having simultaneous TV series and movies featuring the same character, so that could end up delaying or derailing plans. And it’s not like Allen hasn’t been on TV before, although the previous live-action take ran for just one season in the early 1990s.

Still, Barry Allen is getting better treatment than Wonder Woman, with Pedowitz revealing on the same panel that a reboot series called Amazon is on hold because of script issues. Diana just can’t lasso a break...

    


30 Jul 16:51

EXCLUSIVE: Full specs and everything else you need to know about Amazon's next-gen Kindle Fire HD tablets

by Zach Epstein
Amazon Kindle Fire HD 2013 Specs

Amazon to combine powerhouse specs and affordable prices in bid to scorch the competition


Amazon's first-generation Kindle Fire was absolutely not an iPad killer, and that's exactly why it was so successful. The online retail giant sought not to compete with Apple's juggernaut but rather to open a new door, one that would focus on a more compact design and far more affordable pricing. At $499, the iPad was a tremendous value. At $199, the Kindle Fire was a steal. But the Kindle Fire was just the beginning and affordability alone would only take Amazon so far. The company's current Kindle Fire HD models were the result of that realization, though they were merely the tip of the iceberg. With its next-generation Kindle Fire HD tablets that are set to debut this fall, Amazon is taking things to a completely different level — and its rivals should be worried.

Continue reading...

30 Jul 16:38

A view of the stars — anytime, anywhere

by Maggie Koerth-Baker
Never Ending Night is a project aimed at making a live feed of the starry night sky available online 24 hours a day. It's art — imagine a world where everyone can see the same patch of sky from the same perspective — influenced and facilitated by science. And you can help fund it.