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02 May 13:19

Guantanamo attorney found dead in apparent suicide

by Xeni Jardin

Detainees at Camp X-Ray sit in a holding area with Naval Base Guantanamo Bay military police during intake on Jan. 11, 2002. Camp X-Ray is now an abandoned area. US DoD photo.

Jason Leopold at Truthout reports that an attorney who represented detainees at Guantanamo Bay, where a mass hunger strike is ongoing, was found dead last week in what sources said was a suicide:

Andy P. Hart, 38, a federal public defender in Toledo, Ohio, apparently died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound. Hart left behind a suicide note and a thumb drive, believed to contain his case files. It is unknown where Hart died, what the suicide note said or whether an autopsy was performed.

Read the rest. Hart leaves behind a daughter, 11 years old.
    


02 May 13:13

Google adds remote desktop to Hangouts, lets users simultaneously video chat and troubleshoot

by Nathan Ingraham
Google__remote_desktop_large

Google+ Hangouts just received a small but potentially quite useful upgrade today — as of now, Hangouts include a remote desktop feature. This lets you remotely control the computer of someone you're having a Hangout with for troubleshooting purposes, and the Hangout lets you keep chatting and walk through the troubleshooting process with the person on the other end. The feature is tucked away under the "Hangout Apps" section, and you'll obviously need permission from the other user, but this is a pretty clever way for Google to solve the constant problem of remote support.

Not surprisingly, it's build on the same technology as Chrome Remote Desktop, but building it into a video chat client is a nice touch. A whole host of services...

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02 May 13:09

TV Guide says Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. is "an action-packed thrill ride".

http://www.tvguide.com/News/Pilots-Fall-2013-ABC-CBS-CW-Fox-NBC-1064830.aspx

The show features in their 10 Promising Pilots list.

02 May 13:09

Anti-Piracy Group Demands Blocks of KickAss, isoHunt, 1337x and H33T

by Andy

kickassSite blocking actions have been slowly creeping into acceptability around Europe over the past couple of years, at least with anti-piracy outfits and courts.

More recent and notable successes for the entertainment industries include the blocks against major torrent sites in the UK, and in Italy where a total of 27 domains were blocked last month.

In addition to sundry other countries already initiating court-ordered blockades, action can be expected from other major regions in the months to come. Spain has been allowed off the United States’ naughty step after agreeing to bring in tough new measures, France has its eye on future domain blocking, and just this week Norway moved a major step towards infringing site censorship.

Today we can report that yet another entertainment industry anti-piracy group has gone to court to have someone of the world’s largest torrent sites blocked by ISPs. According to court papers filed at the end of last month, The Greek Society for the Protection of Intellectual Property (AEPI) is targeting a total of ten sites.

The list of domains includes KickAssTorrents, isoHunt, 1337x and H33T, plus several local sites – Greek.to, Greek-Team.cc, P2Plaent.net, Tsibato.info, GreekDDL.eu and Greek-Best.com

On April 30 AEPI’s demands were heard by the Athens Court (court papers, Greek PDF). The anti-piracy group initially requested a temporary injunction against several ISPs including OTE, Wind, Vodafone, Forthnet, Hellas Online, On Telecoms and the academic GRNET, to force them to block the above sites by IP and DNS.

AEPI

AEPI argued that an immediate injunction is required to stop the sites further damaging their members’ businesses but the ISPs countered by informing the court that the sites have been open for years so urgency is not an issue.

“It should be noted that this is the first time a case of this magnitude and importance has appeared before a [local]court, even for temporary measures,” Greek news outlet ADSLGR told TorrentFreak in a comment.

“The option to block access to sites raises serious questions on the issue of the protection of Net Neutrality. The decision is expected within the next few days and will take effect until there is a ruling about the injunction measures asked by AEPI. Even if there is no concept of ‘legal precedent’ in the Greek Law System, it is believed that a ruling favoring AEPI may influence future cases in Greece.”

TorrentFreak sources have confirmed that later this month The Pirate Bay will also be targeted by AEPI. The anti-piracy group did not immediately respond to our request for comment.

Source: Anti-Piracy Group Demands Blocks of KickAss, isoHunt, 1337x and H33T

01 May 22:39

Ahead of Google I/O, Chrome starts moving toward web apps that act like real programs

by Dante D'Orazio
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Google is continuing work to grow Chrome OS into a fully-functional replacement for desktop operating systems. Today the company has begun promoting the selection of "packaged apps" — web applications that primarily live offline and look and feel like traditional native programs — in the Chrome Web Store. The new section, aptly called "Apps," is only available for users on the developer channel of Chrome for now, but it will filter down eventually to the stable channel. With the update, these packaged apps are available for users to browse through for the first time (before you had to have the URL if you wanted to download them from the Web Store), and older apps that aren't quite "packaged apps" have been moved into a "Websites"...

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01 May 16:52

Music Rights Group Sues ISPs Over “Pirate Tax”

by Ernesto

lootOver the past several years Belgian music rights group SABAM has pressured Internet providers to take responsibility for online piracy.

An attempt to force ISPs to monitor and filter copyrighted material found itself stranded in the European Court, but the group has not given up.

This week SABAM sued the Belgian ISPs Belgacom, Telenet and Voo, claiming a 3.4 percent cut of Internet subscriber fees as compensation for the rampant piracy they enable through their networks.

SABAM argues that authors should be paid for any “public broadcast” of a song. Pirated downloads and streams on the Internet are such public broadcasts according to the group, and they are therefore entitled to proper compensation.

“The ISPs make profits by offering Internet subscriptions through which movies and music can be downloaded and thus need to pay royalties,” SABAM states in a comment on the case.

The proposed “pirate tax” would not make it legal for consumers to download from unauthorized sources.

For their part the ISPs criticize SABAM’s demands, which would effectively require all customers to pay a “tax” while only a small minority download or stream unauthorized music.

“What SABAM wants is tantamount to imposing a linear tax,” says a Belgacom spokesman. The ISP further points at European legislation under which they are not liable for the traffic of their consumers.

“A postman doesn’t open letters he delivers. We are also just transporting data, and we are not responsible for the contents,” Belgacom says.

Telenet responds with a similar claim, pointing out that they cannot be held liable for pirating consumers.

“Providing Internet access is a ‘mere conduit principle’: Forwarding information without any intervention also means that an Internet provider can not and should not be liable for the content distributed over the Internet,” the ISP says.

Aside from the question of whether the law provides for an Internet licensing fee on ISP subscriptions, the 3.4 percent figure seems unfair as only a minority of Internet users transfer unauthorized music.

ISPA, the professional association of Internet providers, agrees with this assessment. The group further points out that those who already pay for their music will be required to pay twice if SABAM has its way.

“The so-called license fee on Internet access comes down to a tax that will hurt all consumers, including people who do not use their Internet to download music or movies. Those who download legally will be punished by SABAM’s proposal, as they will pay twice,” ISPA writes in a press release.

Internet access will certainly become more expensive in Belgium if Sabam is successful. And it may be just the beginning, as the movie, book, software, gaming, photography and other industries may also try to claim their share of the booty.

A ruling in the case is expected to be handed down next year.

Source: Music Rights Group Sues ISPs Over “Pirate Tax”

01 May 16:49

Steven Soderbergh says studios are keeping 'cinema' out of movie theaters

by Jacob Kastrenakes
Amc-movie-theater-logo_1020_large

Less viewers are going to the movies each year, and more of what they're seeing is from big-budget studios. But at the same time, an increasingly vast majority of what's being made is independent and — not surprisingly — struggling to be seen. Filmmaker Steven Soderbergh, who has successfully navigated the industry with both studio hits, such as Ocean's Eleven, and acclaimed independent releases, such as Sex, Lies, and Videotape, spoke at length about the state of the filmmaking industry during a keynote at the San Francisco International Film Festival on Saturday. These days, Soderbergh said, having an independent film reach an audience is like "trying to hit a thrown baseball with another thrown baseball."

The crux of the...

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01 May 12:39

Microsoft embeds Skype directly into Outlook.com inbox [video]

by Brad Reed
Microsoft Skype Outlook IntegrationHere's a good way for Microsoft to attract new users to its Outlook web mail platform that doesn't involve convincing people that Gmail is too scary to use. Microsoft's Skype blog announced this week that it has started rolling out a preview version of Outlook that will give users the ability to make Skype calls directly from their web browsers. The video demonstration that Microsoft has posted of Skype in Outlook shows that the integration is very smooth — when you click over someone's email profile, you can now see voice and video calling icons that you can click to connect with someone over Skype. The preview version of Outlook is launching in the United Kingdom this week and will roll out in the United States over the next couple of weeks. Microsoft's full video of Skype in Outlook is posted below.

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01 May 12:39

In latest bid to evade copyright cops, The Pirate Bay moves domain to tiny Caribbean island

by Brad Reed
Pirate Bay Domain HostIt's been a wild year for The Pirate Bay as the infamous BitTorrent site has moved its domain name from one country to another in a desperate bid to stay ahead of the world's copyright cops. TorrentFreak reports that less than a month after getting booted out of Greenland, The Pirate Bay has now moved its domain to an even more obscure location in the tiny Caribbean island of Sint Maarten, whose population in 2010 was slightly less than 38,000 people. The site has decided to move to the new ThePirateBay.sx domain because "Swedish authorities have filed a motion at the District Court of Stockholm on behalf of the entertainment industries, demanding the seizure" of two other Pirate Bay domains, TorrentFreak says. The way things are going, The Pirate Bay might have to rely on the human-fish hybrids who live in the long-lost city of Atlantis for hosting before all is said and done.
01 May 12:36

Samsung Galaxy S4 launches on Phones4U in the UK

by Alex Dobie

Galaxy S4

New Samsung phone available in-store and online through major retailer

British retailer Phones4U sends word that it's officially launched the Samsung Galaxy S4, with the handset being available online, in-store and in store-in-store locations at PC World and Currys. P4U offers the Galaxy S4 on a range of tariffs through EE, T-Mobile, Vodafone and Orange, with prices starting at £36 per month for a free GS4. That'll get you unlimited data and calls, and 2000 minutes.

The cheapest monthly price plan we could fine was on Orange, with £26 per month (and £299 up-front) getting you unlimited texts and calls, and 250MB. 4G LTE plans are also available on EE through Phones4U, with prices starting at £199 up-front and £31 per month for 500MB, all the way up to an eye-watering £81 per month for 20GB with roaming included.

The full list of pricing options can be found over at the source link.

Source: Phones4U

More: Samsung Galaxy S4 review

    


01 May 12:33

The best how to tie a bow tie video on YouTube

by Michael Roston

This is the best YouTube video on how to tie a bow tie.

There are three reasons why it's the best:

  • It's one minute and nine seconds long, so it's easy to re-watch over and over again while you are trying and failing to tie your bow tie, and meanwhile nervously sweating through your previously-well-pressed shirt.
  • It's really simple. There's no jargon or complicated explanation. They just do it, and that makes you feel like you can do it, sweaty shirt and your wife waiting for you notwithstanding.
  • Lucky Levinson and his buddy are just really simple middle-aged dudes, and there's nothing in this video to distract you like a cute kid or a pretty lady or any of the other gimmicks other how to tie a bow tie videos use to get clicks.

But I'll tell you a better secret. Buy a bow tie with one of the adjustable clips in the back. Get that thing tied once, and then remove it with the clip in the back. It's still tied, and it looks nicer than a cheesy clip-on bow tie.

Or, you know, go for that whole black tie/necktie thing if that's what you're into.

30 Apr 20:18

Posterous is shutting down today: here are the best alternatives

by Adrianne Jeffries
Posterous_1020_large

In 2010, the makers of the ultrasimple blogging service Posterous went on an aggressive recruiting campaign to snatch users from "dying platforms." The startup released 15 importers that made it easy for users to migrate their blogs and photos from services like Ning, Twitpic, and Blogger. "Whatever the reason, whatever the site, we want you to switch to Posterous," the company said.

Anyone who was compelled by that campaign probably regrets it now. After growing quickly for three years, Posterous started struggling and pivoted to become Posterous Spaces, a Google Groups-like discussion app. When Twitter bought Posterous in the spring of last year, it was widely understood to be an "aquihire," a way for Twitter to absorb the Posterous...

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30 Apr 20:18

Good Deal: Barnes & Noble drops Nook Simple Touch to £29 in the UK

by Matt Brian
Nookgooddeal_large

Barnes & Noble's once-promising digital business is struggling to compete with Amazon and Apple, which is perhaps why the company is slashing the prices across its range of Nook readers and tablets in the UK. As part of the "Get London Reading" initiative, the company has dropped the price of the Nook Simple Touch to £29 from £79, with the Simple Touch GlowLight seeing a similar cut from £109 to £69. The 7-inch Nook HD has also been reduced and is now priced at £129 (from £159), with the 9-inch Nook HD+ coming down £179 (from £229). That makes the bookseller's entire lineup cheaper than rival Amazon and Apple devices for a limited time. Barnes & Noble has opened orders for the Nook Simple Touch on its website, but the rest of the...

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30 Apr 20:17

Digg's Google Reader replacement to launch as beta in June

by Dan Seifert
Digg__1_of_1__large

New RSS reading services have been launching left and right ever since Google announced its plans to kill Reader on July 1st, but one of the most interesting options is coming from a rather unlikely source, the resurrected social news platform Digg. Digg revealed its plans to offer an RSS reader shortly after Google's announcement in March, and now it says that a beta version of the service will be available in June. That's good, because if Digg is going to capture the the remaining RSS addicts that haven't switched to a new service yet, its going to want to have its product launch before Reader shuts down.

According to the company's informal, survey-based research, a large number of respondents (40 percent of the 8,600 participants)...

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30 Apr 13:10

With latest patent setback, Google has seen ‘nothing but heartbreak’ from Motorola merger

by Brad Reed
Google Motorola Merger AnalysisIf Google really only did love Motorola for its patents, then it seems the company's relationship with the iconic mobile phone manufacturer won't end happily ever after. A new report from Bloomberg notes that Google's $12.4 billion investment in Motorola looks even worse this week after a federal judge ruled that Microsoft "owes only pennies in royalties per sale of each Xbox video-gaming system and Windows operating system instead of the potential billions of dollars Google sought in a patent-infringement case." The latest blow to Motorola's patent portfolio value comes after Google agreed with the Federal Trade Commission late last year to not use its industry standard Motorola patents as weapons in intellectual property suits.

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30 Apr 13:08

Best Buy sells off final remnants of failed UK business

by Matt Brian
Best-buy-logo-stock1_2040_large

It's been over a year since Best Buy shut down its retail stores in the UK, but the company today announced it will sell its 50 percent share in its Best Buy Europe joint venture with Carphone Warehouse to its partner for £500 million ($775 million). Best Buy says it made the decision to sell its stake partly to "simplify its business" and to strengthen its balance sheet, but will pay £29 million ($45 million) to Carphone Warehouse as part of its termination agreement.

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30 Apr 13:08

Meet the 'Deciders,' the gatekeepers of free speech on the internet

by Aaron Souppouris
Facebook-kb_large

Last year, the "Deciders" held a meeting at Stanford Law School's faculty lounge. Both individually and together, the elite few in the lounge that day wield enormous influence over the future of free speech on the internet. Working for companies such as Google, Facebook, Twitter, and Yahoo, everyone at the low-key meeting was in charge of their respective companies' policies on takedowns and censorship. They dubbed themselves the Deciders in tribute to Twitter's Nicole Wong, who got the nickname while serving as deputy general counsel at Google. A report from New Republic explains how the Deciders work, how they came to meet, and how they're shaping all of our futures.

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30 Apr 13:08

Yahoo! For Android Goes 1.0 With Story Streams, 'Summaries By Yahoo!'

by Liam Spradlin

unnamed

Yahoo's self-branded app for Android – called simple Yahoo! – has just moved up to version 1.0, an update that brings with it some not-insignificant enhancements.

First among these is the app's story streams and "summaries by Yahoo!", in which news stories are parsed into bite-sized summaries. The functionality is somewhat similar to Wavii's aggregation and summarization service, but is more probably tied to Yahoo's recent acquisition of Summly. While we can't be sure just yet if Summly's handiwork is making Yahoo's app tick behind the scenes, it was noted at the time of acquisition that the summary service's technology would "soon return to multiple Yahoo!

Done With This Post? You Might Also Like These:

Yahoo! For Android Goes 1.0 With Story Streams, 'Summaries By Yahoo!' was written by the awesome team at Android Police.

    


30 Apr 13:05

Back to Basics: Perfect Your Note-Taking Techniques

by Thorin Klosowski

While we might associate note-taking with school, it's something most of us continue doing for the bulk of our lives. If your techniques are feeling a bit crowded recently, it's time to get back to the basics and reboot your notes. Here are a few of the best practices.

Taking notes serves one simple purpose: to help you remember information. That's really it, but with so many different methods of note-taking out there it's good to find what works for you on different projects. So, if you're a little lost for a place to start or you just want to reboot your technique, it might be time to get back to the basics to find a system that works for you.

Take Solid Notes by Keeping Them Simple

Organization is key with notes, and the more organized you are the better the chances you'll actually remember that information. The basic idea of notes is to keep them short, but have enough triggers in the keywords to jumpstart your memory when you look at them again:

  • Stick to keywords and very short sentences.

  • Write out your notes in your own words (not verbatim from a teacher or colleague). One exception to this is when you hear a good turn of phrase that helps you remember the the note, or if you're writing out a direct quote.

  • Adjust the note-taking style to fit both your needs and the speakers.

Really, you only want to write down what matters. Notes are tricky, because you want to keep things simple, and get down only the amount of information needed to help you recall it later. If you're not already using one, a text expander can also make the process of typing out notes a lot quicker by letting you instantly type our forms, bibliography info, and more.

You can also create a system of symbols to organize information quickly. This includes using something like an asterisk to denote an important task or a question mark to denote an item you want to research later. The idea is to make your notes easy to scan through to find the parts you need to pay more attention to.

Once you actually take the notes, you need a system to find what you're looking for. Writer Tim Ferriss recommends coming up with an indexing system so you can quickly find what you're looking for. This could mean hand-numbering pages, and writing out an index at the beginning of a notebook to quickly find notes.

He talks about doing this with paper, but digital note taking services like Evernote are great for this as well when you use tags. For simplicity's sake, we also like Simplenote as a plain text method that also supports tags. Just make sure you always tag your notes with relevant information like the class, meeting, project, or chapter.

Find a Note Taking System that Works for You

You have a lot of options for different note-taking methods, but none of them are perfect for everyone. Depending on the circumstance and the type of person you are, you'll have better luck with certain methods. So, it's best to try a few.

One summary of studies from the WAC Journal points out that structuring notes in a hierarchy (much like an outline) is the most beneficial to students. Since notes in a hierarchy are basically just an outline, you can use pretty much any piece of writing software out there to keep it all organized. This style keeps things organized, but it's not always useful in the real world where teachers and colleagues jump around on the topics they're covering.

That's where non-linear notes, including methods like mind-mapping, the Cornell System, or Smart Wisdom come in useful. Each of these types of notes are useful for certain people. The Cornell System (seen to the left), which uses a grid, is well-loved and easy to use for lectures, and while it's usually associated with brainstorming, mind mapping is great for taking notes during meetings (seen above). It's time-consuming, but worthwhile to play around with different methods to see what works best for you.

A lot of these non-linear note-taking methods work great both on paper and digitally. You can print out a set of guidelines for something like the Cornell System, or grab a template to use on your computer. For mind-mapping, you have a ton of options for digital notes.

Don't Waste Your Time with Outdated Techniques

It has long been recommended that rereading your notes, highlighting them, underlining them, or even summarizing them can help you retain information. The problem, as shown in a report by Association of Psychological Science, is that most of those methods aren't worth the time. In fact, as Time reports, they're mostly ineffective:

Highlighting and underlining led the authors’ list of ineffective learning strategies. Although they are common practices, studies show they offer no benefit beyond simply reading the text. Some research even indicates that highlighting can get in the way of learning; because it draws attention to individual facts, it may hamper the process of making connections and drawing inferences. Nearly as bad is the practice of rereading, a common exercise that is much less effective than some of the better techniques you can use. Lastly, summarizing, or writing down the main points contained in a text, can be helpful for those who are skilled at it, but again, there are far better ways to spend your study time. Highlighting, underlining, rereading and summarizing were all rated by the authors as being of “low utility.”

Better methods include taking breaks and spreading out your studying (known as distributed practice), and taking practice tests (which isn't really applicable outside of school). If you're not a student, then you can probably skip the reading aloud and highlighting tricks you picked up in your youth. Just keep your notes organized so you can quickly find them when you need to reference them.

Photos by Korean Resource Center, Tim Regan, and Valerie Everett.

30 Apr 13:04

Indigo Wants to Be Your Personal Assistant Across Devices

by Alan Henry

Android (4.0+)/WP8: We've seen a number of new, great personal assistant apps appear recently, but Indigo stands out because it keeps track of your conversations, questions, and reminders. That means you can put down one device, grab another, and pick up right where you left off.

Indigo has the features you would expect from a decent personal assistant: The app can get you the weather, add calendar appointments to your phone's calendar or your Google calendar, set reminders and alerts so you don't forget to do something you planned, and help you with basic research. Ask it basic knowledge questions and it can go back and forth with you for ages. The app can also connect to Facebook and Twitter, update those services for you by voice, and send SMS messages for you. Indigo can also look up nearby locations, show you Yelp and Google Places reviews, plot directions for you, and even show you the location on Street View, without you touching the phone.

Indigo is definitely in beta, and has a bit of growing to do, but if you have multiple Android devices or WP8 devices, it's useful to be able to work on one device, then pick up where you left off with the same reminders and saved data on another phone or tablet. The description at Google Play says the app specifically supports Nexus phones and tablets and the Galaxy S3, but I had no issues with the app on my testing phones, as long as they were Ice Cream Sandwich or higher.

Indigo (Free) | Google Play

Indigo (Free) | Windows Phone App Store via Addictive Tips

30 Apr 13:02

Chrome Office Viewer Opens Microsoft Office Documents in New Tabs

by Alan Henry

Chrome(Beta): If you're stuck on a system without Microsoft Office and you get an Excel spreadsheet or PowerPoint presentation, you don't have to go through hoops uploading it to another service and hoping the translation goes well. Chrome Office Viewer views Word, Excel, and PowerPoint documents inside of Chrome flawlessly.

Chrome Office Viewer is fast, free, and loads Office documents without having to install additional software just to get the fonts or formatting to display properly. Plus, it avoids the need to upload your document to Google Docs, for example, just to look at it. Of course, it's a document viewer, so if you want to edit the file, you'll need to run it through Google Docs, Office, or find another compatible tool, but if you just want to look at or print an attachment someone sent you, this extension does the trick.

Chrome Office Viewer (Free) | Chrome Web Store

29 Apr 23:29

Minnesota taxman says real musicians don't tour or let their stuff be played on public radio

by Cory Doctorow
Jon sez, "Minnesota Department of Revenue tells musical artist during lengthy audit: You clearly aren't interested in profit, as you've "allowed" your music to be played on Minnesota Public Radio, you have had enough years of touring, so there is currently no need for any further promotional touring, and you should be signed to a major label by now."
    


29 Apr 23:29

iMito MX1 Puts an Android-Powered Home Media Center in Your Pocket

by Adam Dachis

We've always liked Android on our TVs, be it through Google TV or and HDMI-enabled Android tablet, but neither offers an easily-transportable and dedicated home theater PC setup. The iMito MX1, on the other hand, fits an Android-based HTPC into a device the size of a large thumb drive.

The iMito MX1 connects over HDMI but will most likely require a USB power source. Most TVs have a service port (among many other awesome, underused ones) you can use for power, so you should have no trouble keeping things contained. It comes with plenty of cables so you can hook up external USB devices like a hard/thumb drive, a mouse and keyboard, a game pad, or even a webcam. Other devices can connect over Bluetooth as well, and you can expand its pretty minimal storage (1GB) with a microSD card.

The MX1 functions similarly to an Android tablet and can do most of the things a tablet can do, but on your TV. Aside from performing the functions most Google TV boxes can handle, like Netflix, Plex, web browsing, Facebook, and more, you have the option of using pretty much any tablet-friendly Android app. This includes a large variety of games and even retro game emulators.

I tested the MX1 alongside a large variety of other Android stick-shaped HTPCs and they all came with a few quality issues. Some had Wi-Fi problems, others just didn't really work at all, and the MX1 struggled with Bluetooth at first. After rebooting once it started to work just fine, and it provided the smoothest experience of the options I tested. That said, quality control seems to be a little lax with these devices so—if you want one—you should purchase from Amazon or another store with a good return policy in case you get a dud. Quality issues aside, the MX1 provides a really cheap way to take your media and games on the go so you can have your media center at pretty much anyone's home or while on vacation.

iMito MX1 Android 4.1 Mini PC ($60) | Amazon

29 Apr 19:44

When trademark becomes a tool for stealing our language

by Cory Doctorow

My latest Guardian column is "Trademarks: the good, the bad and the ugly," and it looks at why trademark, at its best, does something vital -- but how trademark can be abused to steal common words from our language and turn them into a twisted kind of pseudo-property.

Trademark lawyers have convinced their clients that they must pay to send a threatening notice to everyone who uses a trademark without permission, even where there is no chance of confusion. They send letters by the lorryload to journalists, website operators, signmakers, schools, dictionary publishers – anyone who might use their marks in a way that weakens the association in the public mind. But weakening an association is not illegal, despite the expansion of doctrines such as "dilution" and "naked licensing."

When called out on policing our language, trademark holders and their lawyers usually shrug their shoulders and say, "Nothing to do with us. The law requires us to threaten you, or we lose our association, and thus our mark." This is a very perverse way of understanding trademark.

The law is there to protect the public interest, and the public interest isn't undermined by the strength or weakness of an association with a specific word or mark with a specific company. The public interest extends to preventing fraud, and trademark uses the motivation of protecting profits to incentivise firms to uphold the public interest.

Trademarks: the good, the bad and the ugly

    


29 Apr 19:40

Proposal would fine tech companies for not obeying FBI's wiretap demands

by Xeni Jardin
Ellen Nakashima in the Washington Post: "A government task force is preparing legislation that would pressure companies such as Face­book and Google to enable law enforcement officials to intercept online communications as they occur, according to current and former U.S. officials familiar with the effort." Companies that fail to obey wiretap orders would be penalized.
    


29 Apr 16:28

Google Now Comes to the iPhone and iPad

by Thorin Klosowski

iOS: Google has updated its Google Search app to include a bunch of Google Now features, providing live weather and traffic updates, sports team scores, and plenty more.

The iOS version of Google Now is embedded into the Google Search app. Google Now is about pulling live information from your Google account to provide you with relevant information for your day. This includes traffic updates based on your calendar, or sports scores based on your location. In the Google Search app, it does this by showing you various "cards" when you open up the app, and tracking your day over WiFi.

The iOS version of Google Now isn't nearly as function as the Android version, and it's missing certain features like nearby events, activity summary, and boarding passes, but it still manages to get a lot of info into the app. The Google Search app is available right now for both the iPhone and iPad.

Google Search (Free) | iTunes App Store via The Verge

29 Apr 16:27

Google Now Opens Up To iPhone And iPad Users

by Taylor Hatmaker

Today, Google's Googliest project makes the leap from Android to iOS. Google Now, announced last June at the company's I/O 2012 conference, is part smart search and part personal assistant — but don't call it Siri. The service will make its debut on iOS through an update to Google's core Search app, available in the App Store.

According to Google's blog post on the release, "Today, with the launch of Google Now on iPhone and iPad, your smartphone will become even smarter. Google Now is about giving you just the right information at just the right time. Together, Google Now and voice search will make your day run a little smoother."

Google Now for iOS will be nearly identical to the Android release, though it won't enjoy the same deep integration as it does on Google's own mobile platform. That means no homescreen widget, of course, and no "swipe up" gesture for instant, fluid access. The iOS version will also be missing a few of the cards you'd find on Android: For now, cards for boarding passes, nearby events, Fandago and Zillow will remain an Android exclusive.  

A 20% Project That Took Off

We spoke with Google's Baris Gultekin, co-creator of Google Now, about the product's migration to that other platform. According to Gultekin, Google Now is the latest product home run with humble beginnings as a year-long 20% project (Google encourages employees to dedicate 20% of their time to a pet project that interests them).

"In the early days it was all about keywords," Gultekin explains. "With Google Now, you don't even have to search. We're really interested in having computers do all the hard work." 

For Google Now, the heavy lifting comes easy. A smart search app on steroids, it provides instant access to a spread of useful information, delivered via "cards". The cards are wholly dependent on context. As Gultekin puts it, "The product is different given the situation you're in." You might see a card for commute traffic around rush hour, or a card for your flight reservation the morning before you head to the airport.

Google Now Is Google, Now

Google Now is an umbrella project of sorts, tying Google's vast web of products together. Naturally, the product is also right at home on Google Glass, the company's futuristic eyewear that also aims to make this whole business of carrying the Internet less interruptive.

Google is betting big on Google Now, so it will be interesting to see if the service takes off in Apple's ecosystem. Google iOS ports like Google Maps are wildly popular, but will iPhone users take notice of Google Now? 

From its perfect morsels of context-dependent info to its uncanny knack for knowing what you needed to know before you knew you needed to know it, Google Now is a powerful tool — and a fun one.

Try it out today in the App Store and have fun pitting it against Siri in voice-powered search time trials.

You know you want to.

29 Apr 14:21

Automagic Is a Powerful, Easy to Use Automation Tool for Android

by Alan Henry

Android: There are plenty of automation tools available for Android, but Automagic is one of the first we've seen that guides you through the process of creating actions in a smooth, easy-to-follow manner. Don't let the wizard fool you, the app is remarkably powerful.

Automagic is just as powerful as other automation tools, but what makes it really worth a look is the way you design and build the tasks you want to perform. The app guides you through the process by establishing each action as a "flow," consisting of a trigger, an action, and a condition. Then the app walks you through selecting each element, building a flowchart as you go that describes what you want the task to do. You action is shown to you like a flowchart, complete with true/false conditions that lead to different outcomes, and you can make it as simple or as complex as you like.

For example, you can build a simple flowchart that turns off Wi-Fi and Bluetooth when your battery gets below 50%, or build a more complicated one that, when your battery is at 50%, checks to see if Wi-Fi and Bluetooth are on and connected to something, and only disconnects them if they're not, or if Wi-Fi is connected to a network that's not your home network, or also change the brightness of your phone in the process, and do on.

Other apps like our previously mentioned favorite Tasker, Llama, and Atooma (among others) all have similar features, but it's Automagic's GUI that makes it stand out. It's is $4 at Google Play, but you can download a 10-day trial version (limited to three flows) to see if it works for you from the developer's website before you buy.

Automagic Automation ($4) | Google Play via How-To Geek

29 Apr 14:20

Weaponizing The Patent System: A Tiny Startup Faces Financial Extinction

by Nick Statt

Ditto is a 15-person eyewear startup that utilizes remarkable software — a 3D modeling system that  replicates the buyer's face — to let customers try on glasses virtually before purchasing them. Unfortunately for Ditto, its innovative software has put the company in the crosshairs of Glasses.com

Glasses.com is owned by 1-800 Contacts, a much larger online eyewear retailer that recently purchased an old patent from a defunct company (U.S. Patent 7,016,824 covers selling glasses online based on 3D models) and announced its own version of 3D try-on software for glasses - while simultaneously filing a patent-infringement lawsuit against Ditto.  

1-800 Contacts claims that it plans to its own service as an iPad app sometime soon. But this plan was first publicized on April 17, 2013, while Ditto launched its version a year ago. 

David vs. Goliath

"It's a game-changing event, truly. It's terrifying," sighed Ditto CEO Kate Endress. "We've had to stop all marketing, every dollar has to go into this litigation." 1-800 Contacts refuses to license the patent to Ditto; instead it's seeking an injunction to stop Ditto from using the software. The only option, as Ditto sees it, is to lawyer-up and try and win the suit. 

Making things even more expensive, 1-800 Contacts is suing California-based Ditto in its home state of Utah. Whatever the outcome of the suit, the most likely result is the depletion of Ditto's cash reserves and the destruction of the company. 

That's because this battle is far from equal. 1-800 Contacts was founded in 1995 and took off thanks to a partnership with Wal-Mart started in 2008. In 2012 it was bought by WellPoint for close to $900 million. Yeah, that WellPoint, the largest for-profit, managed health care company in the Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association, with revenue in 2012 of $61.7 billion and more than 43,000 employees.

"If we win this infringement case, we're still out the millions of dollars we spent winning. That's why it has become punitive for companies to innovate," Endress said. "The patent systems is structured in a way where it lets corporations act like patent trolls where they can buy things they didn't invent." And in this case, "we are literally going up against a giant corporation," Endress noted. 

1-800-Not-Our-Fault

When reached for comment, 1-800 Contacts told ReadWrite:

1-800 CONTACTS and its Glasses.com division have invested significant time and resources into the development of the interactive try-on platform technology and acquiring the appropriate patent rights to protect it. However, we do not comment on pending litigation.  

1-800 Contacts released a more elaborate statement to the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), which has defended Ditto online: "1-800 Contacts invested significant time and resources to acquire and license the existent patent rights needed to practice its technology. Clearly, Ditto did not do the same."

The EFF was not impressed: "1-800-Contacts says it is not a patent troll. Sure, the company is not a classic patent troll - a shell company that does nothing but buy patents and sue - but it's little better." 

What Makes A Patent Troll?

Could this entire issue be a misunderstanding, where 1-800 Contacts actually spent years pouring money into this concept, only to see a brash startup steal its lunch? Maybe, but 1-800 Contacts' history of aggressive litigation doesn't inspire confidence in that interpretation.

In 2002, the company pursued WellU.com over pop-up advertisements that displayed competitors' products. 1-800 Contacts was granted a preliminary injunction, but WellU won on appeal. In 2008, the company fought with Google over controversial search-related provisions of a Utah trademark law that were eventually repealed. And in 2010, 1-800-Contacts sued Contact Lens King, Inc. over key-word advertising. 

Despite the odds, Endress vows that, "We're going to vigorously defend ourselves. We're so proud of what we built. Maybe we can become cash flow positive and survive." The EFF is asking for help in trying to invalidate the patent in question, but no matter how the legal complications unfold, the road Ditto faces will certainly be long and expensive.

 

Images courtesy of Ditto.

28 Apr 23:36

Integrate a Wireless Charger Into Your Nightstand

by Shep McAllister

If your phone supports wireless charging, but you don't want to clutter your nightstand with an ugly charging pad, you can build it straight into the furniture.

The video above does a great job of walking you through the process, but basically you'll use a chisel or router to create a cavity on the underside of the top of the nightstand, then slide the charger into place. The video uses an IKEA HEMNES nightstand and a Nokia Qi charger, but the basic steps should be similar no matter what you're working with. This particular arrangement does allow the charger to rest on the side wall of the nightstand, but if you aren't so lucky, a thin piece of scrap wood or metal will keep it from falling.

This is similar to a previously-mentioned project that added a PowerMat charger to a bookshelf, but this one doesn't require you to disassemble the charging base or permanently attach it to any furniture.

DIY Qi Wireless Charging Nightstand (cheap, quick and easy) | YouTube