Google Maps: use “OK Google” voice commands just when you’re driving

Google Maps: use “OK Google” voice commands just when you’re driving

The Google app for Android lets you use your voice to search the web, set reminders, open apps, and do a lot of other things. You can use it by tapping the microphone icon on your phone, but if you enable “OK Google” hotword detection, you can also interact with your phone without ever touching it… assuming you’re willing to put up with a little extra battery drain and the chance that your phone might mishear something else you’ve said and start trying to answer questions when you aren’t asking.

Continue reading Google Maps: use “OK Google” voice commands just when you’re driving at Liliputing.

Google Maps: use “OK Google” voice commands just when you’re driving

The Google app for Android lets you use your voice to search the web, set reminders, open apps, and do a lot of other things. You can use it by tapping the microphone icon on your phone, but if you enable “OK Google” hotword detection, you can also interact with your phone without ever touching it… assuming you’re willing to put up with a little extra battery drain and the chance that your phone might mishear something else you’ve said and start trying to answer questions when you aren’t asking.

Continue reading Google Maps: use “OK Google” voice commands just when you’re driving at Liliputing.

WSJ: Qualcomm could spend over $30 billion to acquire NXP Semiconductor

NXP itself acquired Freescale Semiconductor for $12B less than a year ago.

Enlarge (credit: Qualcomm)

Smartphone chipmaker Qualcomm is in talks to acquire NXP Semiconductors "in the next two to three months," according to a report from the Wall Street Journal. The deal, which may cost Qualcomm over $30 billion, could be nearly as big as SoftBank's $32 billion buyout of ARM Holdings that was announced a couple of months ago.

NXP is one of the inventors of near-field communication (NFC), a technology primarily known for enabling wireless payment services like Apple Pay and Android Pay. NXP controllers are nearly ubiquitous in modern smartphones in both the iOS and Android ecosystems—the iPhone 6, 6S, and 7 all use NXP controllers, as do Android phones like the Galaxy S7 and Nexus 6P. The company is also a major player in the "Internet of Things" industry, and the acquisition of Freescale Semiconductor for $12 billion late last year made NXP "the world's top maker of automotive electronics."

Qualcomm has been pushing its own SoCs and modems for connected cars for a while now, and it announced a version of its Snapdragon 820 SoC specifically for connected cars earlier this year. NFC offers many different automotive products, including lower-level stuff like temperature sensors, power management controllers, and more. And while NXP does offer some ARM SoCs that could conceivably overlap with Qualcomm's own offerings, Qualcomm mostly sticks to high- and mid-end smartphone and tablet SoCs while NXP has more of a focus on extremely low-power solutions for integrated devices.

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Deals of the Day (9-29-2016)

Deals of the Day (9-29-2016)

Want to run Android apps on your Chromebook? Right now there are three models that can do that: and if you’re looking for a reasonably good deal on one, Groupon is selling a refurbished Acer Chromebook R11 convertible notebook with 4GB of RAM and a Celeron N3060 for $200.

That’s one of the best prices you’ll find right now for a Chromebook that already supports Android apps. But support is coming to dozens of additional Chromebooks in the coming months… and you can find plenty of new or refurbished Chrome OS laptops for even lower prices if you’re not hung up on the idea of getting one with a touchscreen display.

Continue reading Deals of the Day (9-29-2016) at Liliputing.

Deals of the Day (9-29-2016)

Want to run Android apps on your Chromebook? Right now there are three models that can do that: and if you’re looking for a reasonably good deal on one, Groupon is selling a refurbished Acer Chromebook R11 convertible notebook with 4GB of RAM and a Celeron N3060 for $200.

That’s one of the best prices you’ll find right now for a Chromebook that already supports Android apps. But support is coming to dozens of additional Chromebooks in the coming months… and you can find plenty of new or refurbished Chrome OS laptops for even lower prices if you’re not hung up on the idea of getting one with a touchscreen display.

Continue reading Deals of the Day (9-29-2016) at Liliputing.

Android Wear 2.0 delayed until 2017, but Developer Preview 3 is out now

Android Wear 2.0 delayed until 2017, but Developer Preview 3 is out now

There’s good news and bad news for folks that have been waiting for new features to hit their Android Wear smartwatches. The good news is that Android Wear Developer Preview 3 is now available and it does have some new goodies, including the ability to browser the Google Play Store for smartwatch apps on your smartwatch (rather than by using your phone).

The bad news? Google has decided to extend the preview program… which means that the company won’t officially release Android Wear 2.0 until early 2017.

Continue reading Android Wear 2.0 delayed until 2017, but Developer Preview 3 is out now at Liliputing.

Android Wear 2.0 delayed until 2017, but Developer Preview 3 is out now

There’s good news and bad news for folks that have been waiting for new features to hit their Android Wear smartwatches. The good news is that Android Wear Developer Preview 3 is now available and it does have some new goodies, including the ability to browser the Google Play Store for smartwatch apps on your smartwatch (rather than by using your phone).

The bad news? Google has decided to extend the preview program… which means that the company won’t officially release Android Wear 2.0 until early 2017.

Continue reading Android Wear 2.0 delayed until 2017, but Developer Preview 3 is out now at Liliputing.

Google pushes Android Wear 2.0 back to 2017, issues third developer beta

Wear version of Google Play allows app downloads directly from the watch.

Google announced Android Wear 2.0 alongside what later became Android Nougat at Google I/O a few months ago, but aside from a second Wear 2.0 developer preview build in July, we haven't heard much since. There's good and bad news on that front: the good news is that Google is releasing a third Wear 2.0 developer preview today with some new features and tweaks. The bad news is that the final release of the software is being delayed.

Wear 2.0's release date has been pushed back from a vague "this fall" window to an equally vague "early 2017" window, presumably so Google can keep testing and tweaking. To that end, Google will release a fourth developer preview build, and the 2.0 update will begin trickling out to supported watches after that.

The biggest addition to the Android Wear Developer Preview 4 is a watch version of the Google Play store that can browse and download watch apps and watch faces without your phone—developers told Google that they wanted watch apps to be easier to find, and this is Google's answer. Text entry still looks painful, and relatively wimpy watch hardware may slow things down, but if the eventual goal is to make watches that can operate independently of phones, this is an important step.

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Y2K 2.0: Is the US government set to “give away the Internet” Saturday? [Update]

No. In fact, the US will still control a large swath of the ‘Net.

(credit: Christiaan Colen)

UPDATE: 5:53pm EDT: A Texas federal judge Friday denied (PDF) a request by Arizona, Nevada, Oklahoma, and Texas to block the US from ceding the Internet's root zone oversight duties to the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers. Unless a higher court intervenes, the changeover will begin tonight at midnight EDT.

Original story:

Remember the projected Y2K bug disaster? The world's computers would supposedly go haywire as the clock ticked to January 1, 2000, thus destroying the world and ensuing widespread panic. Didn't happen. Fast forward to today, however, and another doomsday scenario is afoot (albeit with much less fanfare).

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Research: Movie Piracy Hurts Sales, But Not Always

New research published by economists from the European Commission shows that online movie piracy significantly hurts sales. However, the effects differ greatly between countries. And in some cases piracy may actually increase revenue due to a sampling effect.

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and ANONYMOUS VPN services.

europe-flagResearch into online piracy comes in all shapes and sizes, often with equally mixed results. The main question is often whether piracy is hurting sales.

New research conducted by economists from the European Commission’s Directorate-General for Internal Market, Industry, Entrepreneurship and SMEs, tries to find answers for the movie industry.

For a new paper titled “Movie Piracy and Displaced Sales in Europe,” the researchers conducted a large-scale survey among 30,000 respondents from six countries, documenting their movie consumption patterns.

Using statistical models and longitudinal data, they were able to estimate how piracy affects legal sales and if this differs from country to country.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, the findings show that not every pirated movie is a lost sale. Instead, for every hundred films that are first viewed from a pirated source, 37 viewings from paid movies are ‘lost’.

This results in a displacement rate of 0.37, which is still a high number of course, also compared to previous research.

It’s worth noting that in some cases piracy actually has a beneficial effect. This is true for movies that people have seen more than twice.

“Interestingly, we found evidence of a sampling effect: for movies that are seen more than twice, first unpaid consumption slightly increases paid second consumption,” the researchers write.

However, the sampling effect doesn’t outweigh the loss in sales. Overall the researchers estimate that online piracy leads to a significant loss in revenue for the movie industry.

“Using a back-of-the-envelope calculation, we show that this implies that unpaid movie viewings reduced movie sales in Europe by about 4.4% during the sample period,” they write.

This negative effect is driven by a relatively small group of consumers. Roughly 20% of the respondents with the highest movie consumption are responsible for 94% of lost movie sales. Or put differently, the most avid film fans pirate the most.

Interestingly, there are large between-country differences too. In Germany online movie piracy results in ‘only’ a 1.65% loss, this figure is 10.41% for Spain. The UK (2.89%), France (5.73%), Poland (7.21%) and Sweden (7.65%) rank somewhere in between.

According to the researchers, their findings can help policymakers to decide what the best anti-piracy enforcement strategies are. In addition, changes between countries could help to evaluate existing and future measures and inspire future research.

“The estimates that we provide can help policy makers to asses the efficient use of public resources to be spent on copyright enforcement of movies.”

“In particular, since we find that virtually all the lost sales of movies are due to a very small group of individuals, most damages of movie piracy could therefore potentially be prevented with well targeted policies,” the researchers conclude.

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and ANONYMOUS VPN services.

LeEco gears up for a US launch (smartphones, smart TVs, and more)

LeEco gears up for a US launch (smartphones, smart TVs, and more)

Chinese company LeEco offers a range of products in its home country including smartphones, smart TVs, smart bicycles, and more. Now the company is getting ready to do the same thing in the United States.

LeEco has been showing off some of its China-only products at events in the US since the Consumer Electronics Show in January. This summer the company announced that it was acquiring Vizio, one of the biggest players in the US TV space.

Continue reading LeEco gears up for a US launch (smartphones, smart TVs, and more) at Liliputing.

LeEco gears up for a US launch (smartphones, smart TVs, and more)

Chinese company LeEco offers a range of products in its home country including smartphones, smart TVs, smart bicycles, and more. Now the company is getting ready to do the same thing in the United States.

LeEco has been showing off some of its China-only products at events in the US since the Consumer Electronics Show in January. This summer the company announced that it was acquiring Vizio, one of the biggest players in the US TV space.

Continue reading LeEco gears up for a US launch (smartphones, smart TVs, and more) at Liliputing.

Leistungsschutzrecht: Oettingers bizarre Nachhilfestunde

Günther Oettinger will sein geplantes Leistungsschutzrecht erklären – mit fragwürdigen Studien, ungebetener Berufsberatung und – wichtig – ohne jede Sachkenntnis. Außerdem scheint er nur Überschriften zu lesen. (Günther Oettinger, Google)

Günther Oettinger will sein geplantes Leistungsschutzrecht erklären - mit fragwürdigen Studien, ungebetener Berufsberatung und - wichtig - ohne jede Sachkenntnis. Außerdem scheint er nur Überschriften zu lesen. (Günther Oettinger, Google)

Molecular muscles can stretch and contract in three dimensions

A molecular daisy chain forms complex configurations that expand and contract.

Enlarge (credit: Nature Chemistry)

Without functioning muscles, we wouldn’t be able to do a whole lot. Even our most basic needs, eating and breathing, depend on our muscles. Yet on the molecular level, muscles are quite simple. They're composed of two different types of filaments that are tightly bound together. Muscle movement occurs when these filaments slide over one another in a concerted contraction.

Recently, scientists have designed molecular muscles that are even more advanced than the linear biological muscles, exhibiting a similar ability to contract and stretch but to do so in both two and three dimensions. These systems have a complex structure similar to a daisy chain.

A molecular daisy chain

Daisy chains are assembled by repeatedly threading the stem of one flower through a loop that is created at the end of the stem of the preceding flower. The flower heads themselves act as a structural barrier, or stopper, preventing the flower from slipping through the loop.

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