Asus Zenfone AR is the first phone with both Google Tango and Daydream VR and augmented reality support

Asus Zenfone AR is the first phone with both Google Tango and Daydream VR and augmented reality support

As expected, Asus has unveiled a new phone that supports Google’s Tango technology for creating 3D maps of the world around you and interacting with them… and which also supports Google’s Daydream virtual reality platform.

That makes the Asus Zenfone AR the first phone to support both Tango and Daydream, and it’s also only the second commercially available phone with Tango support. It’s also the first phone to feature 8GB of RAM.

Google helped unveil the phone at the Consumer Electronics Show today, to demonstrate some of the experiences possible.

Continue reading Asus Zenfone AR is the first phone with both Google Tango and Daydream VR and augmented reality support at Liliputing.

Asus Zenfone AR is the first phone with both Google Tango and Daydream VR and augmented reality support

As expected, Asus has unveiled a new phone that supports Google’s Tango technology for creating 3D maps of the world around you and interacting with them… and which also supports Google’s Daydream virtual reality platform.

That makes the Asus Zenfone AR the first phone to support both Tango and Daydream, and it’s also only the second commercially available phone with Tango support. It’s also the first phone to feature 8GB of RAM.

Google helped unveil the phone at the Consumer Electronics Show today, to demonstrate some of the experiences possible.

Continue reading Asus Zenfone AR is the first phone with both Google Tango and Daydream VR and augmented reality support at Liliputing.

Blackberry’s last in-house QWERTY phone, the “Mercury,” gets teased

Pay your last respects to the real Blackberry before everything gets outsourced to TCL.

Blackberry is done making smartphone hardware. The company said last year it would "end all internal hardware development" and "pivot to software." The brand will still appear on hardware, as it is "outsourcing" the Blackberry brand to Chinese electronics company TCL. We've seen this happen already with the "Blackberry" DTEK line, which so far has taken bog-standard TCL smartphone designs and slapped a Blackberry logo on them.

Before Blackberry bows out of the phone hardware market, the company has one last in-house design left: the Blackberry "Mercury." Today the phone is just being teased. We don't have any specs, and "Mercury" might not even be the final name (DTEK70 gets thrown around a lot in leaks), but at CES TCL is showing off a QWERTY-bar Blackberry phone that runs Android 7.0 Nougat.

The Priv looked like a typical smartphone when closed, but pulling on the bottom revealed a slide-out QWERTY keyboard. The Mercury changes up the design by shrinking the screen and affixing the keyboard to the front of the device, just like an old school Blackberry phone. Crackberry managed to go hands-on with the phone, which it describes as a metal body with a soft touch back. There's a USB Type C port on the bottom, and Blackberry has cleverly hidden the fingerprint reader inside the space bar.

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‘Copyright Trolls’ Hit With Class Action Lawsuit For Theft by Deception

A new class-action lawsuit is targeting a group of filmmakers, lawyers, and BitTorrent monitoring experts. According to a complaint filed at an Illinois federal court, the “copyright trolls” have been engaging in misleading, threatening and intimidating tactics in order to obtain settlements from alleged movie pirates.

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

trollsignIn recent years so-called copyright trolls have been accused of various dubious schemes and actions, including intimidation and extortion.

Last month it became apparent that these concerns are not just one-sided complaints, when the U.S. Government launched a criminal case against two of Prenda Law’s principals.

This week, copyright trolling allegations are once again brought to the forefront. In a class action lawsuit filed in an Illinois federal court on behalf of accused pirates, a group of rightsholders, lawyers, and a torrent monitoring expert are accused taking part in an “extortion conspiracy.”

The case centers around Clear Skies Network (CSN) which brought several lawsuits against alleged downloaders of the movie “Good Kill.” As is common in these campaigns, the rightsholders work in tandem with lawyers and BitTorrent monitoring experts to make their case.

One of their targets was a 62-year-old woman, who has now decided to strike back, also on behalf of other defendants that are in the same position.

The complaint details how the woman was repeatedly threatened and intimidated with a possible $150,000 in statutory damages, asking her to settle for only a few thousand. It also mentions various other allegations including false statements.

In addition, the complaint notes that the defendants may have purposefully operated a honeypot where they themselves distributed the infringing movie before its theatrical release in the U.S.

“CSN and/or the German John Doe relies on ‘fake experts’ and/or honeypots or seeds its Motion Picture for the express purpose of being able to claim that it has ‘caught’ people downloading the copyrighted material,” it reads.

The monitored torrents and the various associated IP-addresses were used as the base evidence for copyright lawsuits throughout the country. According to the class action complaint, the rightsholders continuously relied on the same German monitoring outfit whose evidence is insufficient to prove infringement.

Instead of protecting copyrights, the accused downloaders believe that the entire practice is primarily meant to generate a steady income flow for the filmmakers and other parties involved in the conspiracy.

“CSN’s existence has little to do with the protection of a copyright, and is instead an entity formed for the primary purpose of income generation through exploitation of the court system,” the complaint states.

As such, they accuse the alleged conspiracy of using the copyright cases as an extortion mechanism.

“[The defendants] have been engaged in a conspiracy to monetize infringement whereby they use questionable means to entrap unsuspecting Illinois residents who have allegedly violated CSN’s copyrights, and then extort money from these individuals using threatening and misleading settlement and litigation tactics under the guise of the Copyright Act.”

For the 62-year-old woman, this led to physical and emotional distress, and through the class action suit, she hopes to set the record straight.

Together with other potential members of the class, who have been treated similarly, she accuses CSN, the lawyers and the German torrent monitoring outfit, of conspiracy to improperly prosecute copyright infringement.

As compensation for the alleged unlawful acts, including of theft by deception barratry and maintenance, they ask for actual monetary damages as well as punitive damages.

According to FCT’s ‘Sophisticated Jane Doe’, it is about time that the Northern Illinois District takes a close look at these practices, and she hopes that it will help to finally cure this “judicial plague.”

A full copy of the class action complaint is available here (pdf).

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

Fed up with their employer’s scam, two Indian call center workers called FTC

Of the suspects named, two men in US believed to be involved are still fugitives.

Enlarge / This is a call center in New Dehli, India, not the Phoenix 007 operation that was busted. (credit: ILO)

Last year’s unraveling of the massive India-based telephone scam ring may have been helped by a phone call to a Federal Trade Commission lawyer.

According to a Tuesday report in The New York Times, the bust seemingly was aided by the efforts of two teenage employees from one of the companies. The pair blew the whistle on their former employer, the Phoenix 007 call center that's based outside of Mumbai. The workers reached Betsy Broder of the FTC after being shuffled from the Internal Revenue Service's main switchboard.

Indian and American authorities believe that this call center, along with several others, was part of a massive ring to call Americans in the United States and trick them into ponying up thousands of dollars in fraudulent fees. This criminal operation is believed to have resulted in hundreds of millions of dollars in losses. 

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Asus launches Zenfone 3 Zoom with 2.3x optical zoom, 3 lenses

Asus launches Zenfone 3 Zoom with 2.3x optical zoom, 3 lenses

Asus was one of the first companies to launch a smartphone with an optical zoom lens. But the Asus Zenfone Zoom with its mechanical zoom lens wasn’t exactly a huge success.

Now Asus is back at it, this time with the a phone featuring 3 camera lenses which combine to let you take photos with up to 2.3x optical zoom or up to 12x digital + optical zoom.

There’s also support for bokeh-style depth effects.

Continue reading Asus launches Zenfone 3 Zoom with 2.3x optical zoom, 3 lenses at Liliputing.

Asus launches Zenfone 3 Zoom with 2.3x optical zoom, 3 lenses

Asus was one of the first companies to launch a smartphone with an optical zoom lens. But the Asus Zenfone Zoom with its mechanical zoom lens wasn’t exactly a huge success.

Now Asus is back at it, this time with the a phone featuring 3 camera lenses which combine to let you take photos with up to 2.3x optical zoom or up to 12x digital + optical zoom.

There’s also support for bokeh-style depth effects.

Continue reading Asus launches Zenfone 3 Zoom with 2.3x optical zoom, 3 lenses at Liliputing.

Mohu AirWave antenna streams OTA TV to nearly any device

Mohu AirWave antenna streams OTA TV to nearly any device

Mohu makes a popular line of antennas that you can plug into a TV to pick up over-the-air broadcast television channels. But the company’s new AirWave isn’t just for TVs. It lets you stream live TV to a range of devices including smartphones, tablets, computers and media streamers from Roku, Apple, and Amazon.

The AirWave will be available in late Spring for about $150.

Here’s how it works: connect the AirWave to your home WiFi network, install a Mohu TV app on your device (or use a web app) and you can watch live TV on:

  • Android or iOS phones or tablets
  • PCs (with a web app)
  • Roku
  • Chromecast
  • Apple TV
  • Amazon Fire TV and Fire TV Stick

In addition to watching live TV on just about any device, you get access to a program guide with 14 days worth of data.

Continue reading Mohu AirWave antenna streams OTA TV to nearly any device at Liliputing.

Mohu AirWave antenna streams OTA TV to nearly any device

Mohu makes a popular line of antennas that you can plug into a TV to pick up over-the-air broadcast television channels. But the company’s new AirWave isn’t just for TVs. It lets you stream live TV to a range of devices including smartphones, tablets, computers and media streamers from Roku, Apple, and Amazon.

The AirWave will be available in late Spring for about $150.

Here’s how it works: connect the AirWave to your home WiFi network, install a Mohu TV app on your device (or use a web app) and you can watch live TV on:

  • Android or iOS phones or tablets
  • PCs (with a web app)
  • Roku
  • Chromecast
  • Apple TV
  • Amazon Fire TV and Fire TV Stick

In addition to watching live TV on just about any device, you get access to a program guide with 14 days worth of data.

Continue reading Mohu AirWave antenna streams OTA TV to nearly any device at Liliputing.

LG threatens to put Wi-Fi in every appliance it introduces in 2017

Its new fridge includes Amazon’s Alexa and a bunch of cameras.

(credit: LG)

In the past few years, products at CES have increasingly focused on putting the Internet in everything, no matter how "dumb" the device in question is by nature. It's how we've ended up with stuff like this smart hairbrush, this smart air freshener, these smart ceiling fans, or this $100 pet food bowl that can order things from Amazon.

Now that phenomenon is reaching its logical endpoint: during the company's CES press conference today, LG marketing VP David VanderWaal says that "starting this year" all of LG's home appliances will feature "advanced Wi-Fi connectivity." One of the flagship appliances that will make good on this promise is the Smart Instaview Refrigerator, a webOS-powered Internet-connected fridge that among other things supports integration with Amazon's Alexa service.

Alexa isn't an inherently bad fit for a refrigerator, which like the Amazon Echo itself can just sit in the corner of your kitchen awaiting your command. The main problem there is that LG hasn't announced how much this fridge will cost; it's almost certainly going to be more than the cost of adding an Amazon Echo to your current kitchen setup or even the cost of an Echo plus a new dumb fridge that just sits there and keeps food cold without connecting to your network. Other potentially useful additions include "stickers and tags" you attach to specific items in the fridge to denote what food is stored where and when it expires, which lets the fridge generate alerts when foods are close to spoiling. A wide-angle camera mounted inside the fridge lets you look inside your fridge remotely just in case you think you left something off your grocery list.

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New analysis shows Lamar Smith’s accusations on climate data are wrong

It wasn’t a political plot—temperatures really did get warmer.

Enlarge / A research vessel drops off a float that will make measurements as it drifts. (credit: Olivier Dugornay/IFREMER)

When the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) updated its global temperature dataset to include revisions to the underlying databases, US House Science Committee Chair Lamar Smith (R-TX) somehow knew that the scientists had done it wrong. In fact, he accused them of having “altered temperature data to get politically correct results.”

How could he know that? Well, Rep. Smith rejects the conclusions of climate science—like the fact that the Earth’s climate is warming. Despite the slight up and down wiggles of the estimated annual temperatures, the warming of the last couple decades increased ever so slightly in NOAA's new analysis. To Smith, the result was a red flag. Suddenly he wanted to see the researchers’ e-mails and echoed the accusations of contrarian blogs about scientists’ supposedly nefarious adjustments to sea surface temperature measurements.

Rather than invoking scientific conspiracies, issues like this should be settled by analyzing the data. A new study, led by University of California Berkeley’s Zeke Hausfather, does just that—and Rep. Smith won’t like these results, either.

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Tablo Live stick can stream TV from your antenna to just about anywhere

Tablo Live stick can stream TV from your antenna to just about anywhere

Want to watch live TV on your computer, or build your own PC-based DVR? Then you can connect any number of TV tuners to your computer. But what if you want to use your phone, tablet, or media streaming box?

Tablo’s got you covered with its new Tablo Live stick. Well, sort of.

Here’s the idea: buy this $99 TV tuner, plug it into your antenna, and it will stream over-the-air TV to any device on your home network via WiFi.

Continue reading Tablo Live stick can stream TV from your antenna to just about anywhere at Liliputing.

Tablo Live stick can stream TV from your antenna to just about anywhere

Want to watch live TV on your computer, or build your own PC-based DVR? Then you can connect any number of TV tuners to your computer. But what if you want to use your phone, tablet, or media streaming box?

Tablo’s got you covered with its new Tablo Live stick. Well, sort of.

Here’s the idea: buy this $99 TV tuner, plug it into your antenna, and it will stream over-the-air TV to any device on your home network via WiFi.

Continue reading Tablo Live stick can stream TV from your antenna to just about anywhere at Liliputing.

Signature OLED TV W7: LGs neuer OLED-Fernseher hat 2,57 mm dünnes Panel

LG hat mit dem Signature OLED TV W7 einen neuen Fernseher mit extrem dünnen Panel vorgestellt: Das Gerät kann mit Hilfe von Magneten an der Wand befestigt werden. Der Hauptteil der Technik ist in der separaten Soundbar untergebracht, die über ein Flachbandkabel mit dem Panel verbunden ist. (CES 2017, OLED)

LG hat mit dem Signature OLED TV W7 einen neuen Fernseher mit extrem dünnen Panel vorgestellt: Das Gerät kann mit Hilfe von Magneten an der Wand befestigt werden. Der Hauptteil der Technik ist in der separaten Soundbar untergebracht, die über ein Flachbandkabel mit dem Panel verbunden ist. (CES 2017, OLED)