Deals of the Day (12-26-2016)

Deals of the Day (12-26-2016)

Did you get a new tablet, phone, or Kindle for the holidays? Then you might want to stock up on some cheap eBooks, mobile games, music, or videos… and funnily enough, there are some pretty great deals on each of those things at the moment.

Today you can add a few more digital deals to the pile. Amazon is offering some best-selling eBooks for up to 80% off the list price today, and Telltale is offering up to 80 percent off some of its iOS and Android games, including  Batman, The Walking Dead, Tales of Monkey Island, and Tales from the Borderland.

Continue reading Deals of the Day (12-26-2016) at Liliputing.

Deals of the Day (12-26-2016)

Did you get a new tablet, phone, or Kindle for the holidays? Then you might want to stock up on some cheap eBooks, mobile games, music, or videos… and funnily enough, there are some pretty great deals on each of those things at the moment.

Today you can add a few more digital deals to the pile. Amazon is offering some best-selling eBooks for up to 80% off the list price today, and Telltale is offering up to 80 percent off some of its iOS and Android games, including  Batman, The Walking Dead, Tales of Monkey Island, and Tales from the Borderland.

Continue reading Deals of the Day (12-26-2016) at Liliputing.

Top Spotify Lawyer: Attracting Pirates is in Our DNA

Spotify is not only one of the world’s most popular music platforms, it’s also one that’s proven particularly popular with both current and former pirates. In a new interview, General Counsel of Spotify Horacio Gutierrez explains that tackling the piracy problem was one of the company’s key goals, describing the effort as being embedded in the company’s DNA.

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

spotifyAlmost eight years ago and just months after its release, TF published an article which pondered whether the fledgling Spotify service could become a true alternative to Internet piracy.

From the beginning, one of the key software engineers at Spotify has been Ludvig Strigeus, the creator of uTorrent, so clearly the company already knew a lot about file-sharers. In the early days the company was fairly open about its aim to provide an alternative to piracy, but perhaps one of the earliest indications of growing success came when early invites were shared among users of private torrent sites.

Today Spotify is indeed huge. The service has an estimated 100 million users, many of them taking advantage of its ad-supported free tier. This is the gateway for many subscribers, including millions of former and even current pirates who augment their sharing with the desirable service.

Over the years, Spotify has made no secret of its desire to recruit more pirates to its service. In 2014, Spotify Australia managing director Kate Vale said it was one of their key aims.

“People that are pirating music and not paying for it, they are the ones we want on our platform. It’s important for us to be reaching these individuals that have never paid for music before in their life, and get them onto a service that’s legal and gives money back to the rights holders,” Vale said.

Now, in a new interview with The Journal on Sports and Entertainment Law, General Counsel of Spotify Horacio Gutierrez reveals just how deeply this philosophy runs in the company. It’s absolutely fundamental to its being, he explains.

“One of the things that inspired the creation of Spotify and is part of the DNA of the company from the day it launched (and remember the service was launched for the first time around 8 years ago) was addressing one of the biggest questions that everyone in the music industry had at the time — how would one tackle and combat online piracy in music?” Gutierrez says.

“Spotify was determined from the very beginning to provide a fully licensed, legal alternative for online music consumption that people would prefer over piracy.”

The signs that just might be possible came very early on. Just months after Spotify’s initial launch the quality of its service was celebrated on what was to become the world’s best music torrent site, What.cd.

“Honestly it’s going to be huge,” a What.cd user predicted in 2008.

“I’ve been browsing and playing from its seemingly endless music catalogue all afternoon, it loads as if it’s playing from local files, so fast, so easy. If it’s this great in such early beta stages then I can’t imagine where it’s going. I feel like buying another laptop to have permanently rigged.”

Of course, hardcore pirates aren’t always easily encouraged to part with their cash, so Spotify needed an equivalent to the no-cost approach of many torrent sites. That is still being achieved today via its ad-supported entry level, Gutierrez says.

“I think one just has to look at data to recognize that the freemium model for online music consumption works. Our free tier is a key to attracting users away from online piracy, and Spotify’s success is proof that the model works.

“We have data around the world that shows that it works, that in fact we are making inroads against piracy because we offer an ability for those users to have a better experience with higher quality content, variety richer catalogue, and a number of other user-minded features that make the experience much better for the user.”

Spotify’s general counsel says that the company is enjoying success, not only by bringing pirates onboard, but also by converting them to premium customers via a formula that benefits everyone in the industry.

“If you look at what has happened since the launch of the Spotify service, we have been incredibly successful on that score. Figures coming out the music industry show that after 15 years of revenue losses in music industry, the music industry is once again growing thanks to music streaming,” he concludes.

With the shutdown of What.cd in recent weeks, it’s likely that former users will be considering the Spotify option again this Christmas, if they aren’t customers already.

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

Solar cells with a dark side may be in your future

Balancing flow of energy through a molecule to improve solar energy performance.

Enlarge (credit: Dr. Sebastian Schulz, KIT)

Modern solar panel technology is pretty damned awesome. I say this from personal experience, since my roof is pretty much maxed out. I may even move the inverter into the lounge to replace the television as my visual entertainment of choice.

Most people don't view solar panels as a source of entertainment, though. They want power, and the big thing that everyone talks about when it comes to power is the panels' efficiency: how many photons that hit them liberate electrons. The usual answer is... not many.

There is a fundamental limitation, called detailed balance, that helps limit the efficiency. Essentially, absorption of a photon and emission of a photon are the same thing (you just reverse the direction of time). So, if something is good at absorbing photons, it's also good at emitting photons. When your solar panel absorbs a lot of photons, there are lots of excited electrons around, and many of them will lose their energy by emitting other photons. In the end, where these two processes balance out helps set the maximum possible efficiency of a standard solar cell.

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AMD Ryzen, Intel Kaby Lake-R chip details leaked

AMD Ryzen, Intel Kaby Lake-R chip details leaked

AMD’s first Ryzen chips are expected to ship in 2017, and the company has said that the octa-core, desktop-class processors are competitive with some of Intel’s most powerful desktop chips.

Now a leaked set of benchmark results from a French publication suggest that AMD isn’t kidding.

But Intel also has some new chips coming in 2017. BenchLife has spilled the beans on some changes in Intel’s roadmap, suggesting we could see some new desktop class processors unveiled at the Consumer Electronics Show in January.

Continue reading AMD Ryzen, Intel Kaby Lake-R chip details leaked at Liliputing.

AMD Ryzen, Intel Kaby Lake-R chip details leaked

AMD’s first Ryzen chips are expected to ship in 2017, and the company has said that the octa-core, desktop-class processors are competitive with some of Intel’s most powerful desktop chips.

Now a leaked set of benchmark results from a French publication suggest that AMD isn’t kidding.

But Intel also has some new chips coming in 2017. BenchLife has spilled the beans on some changes in Intel’s roadmap, suggesting we could see some new desktop class processors unveiled at the Consumer Electronics Show in January.

Continue reading AMD Ryzen, Intel Kaby Lake-R chip details leaked at Liliputing.

Angry Birds Going Into The Space (and the Pigs)!

Rovio is very creative in twisting the battlefield for the Birds and Pigs in Angry Birds game. If you are a fans of this game, you might have grown tired of the static battle ground on the land and might want something new on the new sequel. Well, if you are hoping so, the Angry […]

Rovio is very creative in twisting the battlefield for the Birds and Pigs in Angry Birds game. If you are a fans of this game, you might have grown tired of the static battle ground on the land and might want something new on the new sequel. Well, if you are hoping so, the Angry […]

HandBrake 1.0 released after 13 years (open source video transcoder)

HandBrake 1.0 released after 13 years (open source video transcoder)

HandBrake is a popular free and open source tool for converting and compressing videos. It’s a cross-platform application that’s available for Windows, macOS, and Linux and you can either run HandBrake with a graphical user interface or run it as a command line tool.

While HandBrake has been available for 13 years, this week the developers have finally released version 1.0.

The version number doesn’t necessarily mean that earlier builds weren’t stable.

Continue reading HandBrake 1.0 released after 13 years (open source video transcoder) at Liliputing.

HandBrake 1.0 released after 13 years (open source video transcoder)

HandBrake is a popular free and open source tool for converting and compressing videos. It’s a cross-platform application that’s available for Windows, macOS, and Linux and you can either run HandBrake with a graphical user interface or run it as a command line tool.

While HandBrake has been available for 13 years, this week the developers have finally released version 1.0.

The version number doesn’t necessarily mean that earlier builds weren’t stable.

Continue reading HandBrake 1.0 released after 13 years (open source video transcoder) at Liliputing.

Review: The AirPods are fine wireless headphones for a certain type of person

If you’re way into Apple, your EarPods fit, and you have expendable cash, welcome.

Andrew Cunningham

When we reviewed the iPhone 7 in September, we also got to spend some time with a pair of the fancy new wireless AirPods. At the time, the “final” versions were slated to ship in just a few weeks, but the planned late October release was delayed with no reason or time estimate given. AirPods didn’t actually start shipping until earlier this month, and quantities were limited enough that shipping times quickly slipped to January and February.

Apple doesn’t usually like to announce things early, and it doesn’t like to miss its own deadlines in public, but it also needed to have a bold statement about the wireless future to go along with the iPhone 7’s missing headphone jack. But the problems with the AirPods, whether they were wireless issues or manufacturing bottlenecks, were apparently severe enough for the timing to slip.

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Best and worst fitness wearables of 2016: The year of the second-gen devices

What worked and what failed this year, and some advice for Pebble lovers everywhere.

(credit: Valentina Palladino)

2016 was a year of looking inward for most companies making wearables. Big names like Fitbit and Garmin released a handful of totally new products, but most companies focused on making improvements to their existing products. While refinements are not as exciting as brand-new product debuts can be, they show us the direction in which fitness trackers are moving.

This time last year, the open question was if smartwatches and all-purpose devices like the Apple Watch would kill fitness-only devices like those made by Fitbit. Thanks to developments made this year, we can say that both categories will likely survive—mostly because the consumer wearable landscape has expanded to encompass a few distinct categories: the "move more" devices, the serious training devices, and the all-purpose smartwatches. Most of the second- and even third-generation products that came out this year fit into these categories, and there are obvious hits and misses.

We're going to examine each category and where it went in 2016 and then tell you our picks for best and worst device in each—along with our predictions for 2017 and beyond. If you've been waiting for the holiday to pick up a fitness tracker or fancy smart watch, now might be the time!

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Ars Technica’s best video games of 2016

Unique shooters, compelling indies, and even one VR title make the cut.

Enlarge (credit: Aurich vs Game Companies)

Before we get on to the list, don’t miss this year’s Ars Technica Charity Drive sweepstakes. You can win one of nearly 100 prizes, including limited-edition gaming collectibles, all while helping out a good cause. Entries are due by January 3. Thanks in advance for your donation!

Much like 2015 before it, 2016 was jam-packed with enough quality titles to make narrowing down a top 20 list quite a chore. But the Ars gaming brain trust was up to the task, arguing late into the night here on the Orbiting HQ about which games should make the cut and which (ahem) should not. In the end, after multiple bouts of arm-wrestling, we all agreed that total gaming domination in 2016 belonged to...

20. Abzû

Platforms: Windows, PS4
Release Date: August 2
Developer: Giant Squid

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Google Tango review: Promising Google tech debuts on crappy Lenovo hardware

The 3D sensing abilities are exciting, but not fully baked yet.

A look at smoe Tango apps. Video produced by Jennifer Hahn. (video link)


Remember Project Tango? Google's 3D-sensing smartphone project started development three years ago and first became public in 2014. The goal was to equip a smartphone with a depth sensor and other computer vision abilities. Why? To see what developers could come up with. It's a bit like strapping an Xbox Kinect to the back of a smartphone.

Now, Tango is finally out in a consumer device, but this is not the triumphant launch of a new flagship product. After years of buildup, Tango is quietly debuting on a mid-range Lenovo phone, the Phab 2 Pro. The bloated, ugly hardware Lenovo created for the Phab 2 feels more like a barely designed developer kit than a slick consumer product.

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