E3: Oculus Touch comes out swinging with two stellar motion-controller games

Video: Sam and Kyle get scared by Wilson’s Heart, exchange fireballs in The Unspoken.

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LOS ANGELES—Oculus may be the best-known name in the virtual reality gaming space, but it's still lacking in one key category: motion controllers. The HTC Vive has proven how fun those devices can be in a VR game or app, and Oculus' answer, the "Touch" set of motion-tracked controllers, still doesn't have a price or a release date.

Thankfully, Oculus Touch is getting closer to a "fall" launch, and at this year's E3, Oculus Studios gave Ars a chance to try two brand-new games in wildly different genres—to prove how serious the company is about hand-tracking gaming.

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Monohm’s Runcible’s round “phone-like” thing hits Indiegogo for $399 and up

Monohm’s Runcible’s round “phone-like” thing hits Indiegogo for $399 and up

These days there are smartphones with big screens and… less big screens. There are models with glass that wraps around the edges, and models that have modular components. But most smartphones look pretty much the same: a rectangle with a glass display.

Monohm’s Runcible breaks the mold. It’s designed to look more like a pocket watch than a smartphone… and in fact, you can’t even hold it to your head to make calls (you’ll need to pair a Bluetooth headset if you want to use the Runcible as a phone).

Continue reading Monohm’s Runcible’s round “phone-like” thing hits Indiegogo for $399 and up at Liliputing.

Monohm’s Runcible’s round “phone-like” thing hits Indiegogo for $399 and up

These days there are smartphones with big screens and… less big screens. There are models with glass that wraps around the edges, and models that have modular components. But most smartphones look pretty much the same: a rectangle with a glass display.

Monohm’s Runcible breaks the mold. It’s designed to look more like a pocket watch than a smartphone… and in fact, you can’t even hold it to your head to make calls (you’ll need to pair a Bluetooth headset if you want to use the Runcible as a phone).

Continue reading Monohm’s Runcible’s round “phone-like” thing hits Indiegogo for $399 and up at Liliputing.

Napster returns! Well, it’s a cat logo on top of Rhapsody, wearing a Napster trench coat

A new home for valuable assets from 17 years ago.

The DJ Cat logo will remain associated with the Napster brand.

Rhapsody announced yesterday that it will be forsaking its given name (well, its second given name, as the music streaming service started as Listen.com back in 2001) in favor of the name "Napster." Yep, Napster is coming back (again), 17 years after it debuted and caused a culture war over peer-to-peer music downloads and file sharing.

It seems that nothing is changing about Rhapsody except the name and the branding—in fact, Rhapsody already sells its streaming service under the Napster name in countries outside the US. But the company may be looking for a new way to compete in a packed music streaming market, and pulling on the heartstrings of millions of now-grownups who gleefully marvelled at the ease with which they were able to download music in the new millennium might be just the ticket.

Of course, Rhapsody-now-Napster will still cost money: $1 for the first three months and then $9.99 every month after that to stream music from the company's library. But then, that's what keeps it "100% legal," as Rhapsody's website proclaims.

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ISIS hacker pleads guilty to giving terrorists US military kill list

Prosecution represents “the nexus of the terror and cyber threats,” feds say.

(credit: YouTube/CNN)

A hacker the US authorities have labeled as the leader of an overseas Internet hacking group—the Kosova Hacker's Security—pleaded guilty Wednesday in federal court to charges of providing material support to the US enemy. It was the first known prosecution of a hacker joining forces with a terror group in a bid to carry out terrorism, the government said.

The defendant, a Kosovo citizen named Ardit Ferizi, was arrested in Malaysia last year and was accused of stealing data on US military personnel by hacking US corporate computers and then providing that data to the Islamic State terror group.

"Ferizi admitted to stealing the personally identifiable information of over 1,000 U.S. servicemembers and federal employees, and providing it to ISIL with the understanding that they would incite terrorist attacks against those individuals," said Assistant Attorney General for National Security John Carlin. "The case against Ferizi is the first of its kind, representing the nexus of the terror and cyber threats."

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Android N Developer Preview 4 finalizes APIs, teases “7.0” version number

“Namey McNameface” is apparently the codename for this version of the preview.

The latest version of the Android N Developer Preview is out, and the Developer Preview Program is really starting to wrap things up. Version 4 brings finalized APIs and the final SDK for developers, so the time for serious bug fixing is right now. After this preview, there's just one more version to go until the final release in "Q3 2016."

With the final SDK, the Play Store is also ready to accept apps that are targeting API 24 (the API level of Android N). Devs are encouraged to test backward compatibility on their Alpha or Beta channels and then push full N-ready apps to the Play Store. (Developers, you're totally going to do this, right?)

On the consumer side of things, Google has added a silly joke to the hidden Android N version screen. If you go to the "About Phone" screen and mash on the Android version number section, you'll get the usual "N" logo to pop up. Long press on the "N" logo and instead of an Android version of Flappy Bird, you'll now get an "N" logo with "Namey McNameface" written across it. We're guessing that's not going to be the final "N" name.

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Coffee no longer comes with cancer warning—it may actually prevent it

World Health Organization reviews the data and reverses an old warning.

(credit: trophygeek)

Despite brimming data showing that drinking coffee can be good for your health, there has been a lingering black stain on the popular drink’s reputation—the 1991 assessment by the World Health Organization that classified coffee as a possible carcinogen. Today, that stain got scrubbed away.

In a Wednesday announcement and an accompanying article in the journal The Lancet Oncology, the WHO reversed that 1991 classification, striking coffee from the Group 2b list of foods and beverages that are “possibly carcinogenic to humans.” That initial classification was based on “limited evidence of an association with cancer of the urinary bladder from case-control studies, and inadequate evidence of carcinogenicity in experimental animals.” According to 23 health experts who met in May to review more than 1,000 new and old human and animal studies on coffee, that limited evidence didn’t stand up. The experts concluded that coffee is a Group 3 agent, which is “not classifiable as to its carcinogenicity to humans.”

Moreover, amid their review, the experts also noted that several studies provided evidence that coffee drinking may reduce the risk of cancers of the liver and uterine endometrium. For more than 20 other types of cancers, the effect of coffee drinking was inconclusive, the experts found.

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Google releases Android N Developer Preview 4, final Android N APIs

Google releases Android N Developer Preview 4, final Android N APIs

Google plan to launch the next major version of Android this summer, and ahead of that launch the company has released a fourth developer preview of Android N, along with the final version of the Android N APIs and software development kit for Android N.

Developers and beta testers can download the update from Google or wait for an over-the-air update if they’re already signed up as a beta tester.

Android N Developer Preview 4 is available for the Google Nexus 6, 5X, 6P, 9 and Pixel C, the Sony Xperia Z3, and the General Mobile 4G Android One phone.

Continue reading Google releases Android N Developer Preview 4, final Android N APIs at Liliputing.

Google releases Android N Developer Preview 4, final Android N APIs

Google plan to launch the next major version of Android this summer, and ahead of that launch the company has released a fourth developer preview of Android N, along with the final version of the Android N APIs and software development kit for Android N.

Developers and beta testers can download the update from Google or wait for an over-the-air update if they’re already signed up as a beta tester.

Android N Developer Preview 4 is available for the Google Nexus 6, 5X, 6P, 9 and Pixel C, the Sony Xperia Z3, and the General Mobile 4G Android One phone.

Continue reading Google releases Android N Developer Preview 4, final Android N APIs at Liliputing.

The female ethos in Game of Thrones

The ladies dominate Season 6 to save Westeros from the doom of winter.

Exploring the female themes in Game of Thrones season 6. Edited by Jennifer Hahn. (video link)

There was something gnawing at me after so many critics panned the first episode of Game of Thrones season 6. Many considered it "boring" or "tedious" since there was so much exposition, and some felt the season was headed nowhere. I realized a few episodes in what that pestering feeling was—EACH STORYLINE IS ABOUT A STRONG WOMAN. If that’s "tedious," I’m all for the bland.

This is a logical story progression, not a plot to pander to a sense of diversity. If you consider what Joseph Campbell has written about the structure of epic stories, you'll start to see what’s going on here. Emerging from the bloody battles and men on the many thrones of power, each storyline has seen a strong heroine prevail or at least scheme to dominate her opposition. What we're seeing here is the classic Campbellian emergence of the mother—the ethos of nature, life, and resurrection—rising to fight the darkness, the winter, and the ruin in this hero cycle. In this video, we explore each storyline and track the journey of this female ethos.

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Asus Zenbook Flip UX360 now available for $749

Asus Zenbook Flip UX360 now available for $749

After making a debut in Taiwan in April, the Asus Zenbook Flip UX360 is now available for purchase in the United States.

It’s the first member of the Asus Zenbook family to feature a convertible design: flip the 13.3 inch touchscreen display back 360 degrees until it’s back-to-back with the keyboard and you can hold the laptop like a tablet.

The Asus Zenbook Flip UX360 is available from the Microsoft Store for $749.

Continue reading Asus Zenbook Flip UX360 now available for $749 at Liliputing.

Asus Zenbook Flip UX360 now available for $749

After making a debut in Taiwan in April, the Asus Zenbook Flip UX360 is now available for purchase in the United States.

It’s the first member of the Asus Zenbook family to feature a convertible design: flip the 13.3 inch touchscreen display back 360 degrees until it’s back-to-back with the keyboard and you can hold the laptop like a tablet.

The Asus Zenbook Flip UX360 is available from the Microsoft Store for $749.

Continue reading Asus Zenbook Flip UX360 now available for $749 at Liliputing.

FBI says utility pole surveillance cam locations must be kept secret

“Disclosure of even minor details about them may cause jeopardy,” bureau says.

(credit: Chris Blakeley)

The Federal Bureau of Investigation has successfully convinced a federal judge to block the disclosure of where the bureau has attached surveillance cams on Seattle utility poles. The decision Monday stopping Seattle City Light from divulging the information was expected, as claims of national security tend to trump the public's right to know.

However, this privacy dispute highlights a powerful and clandestine tool the authorities are employing across the country to snoop on the public—sometimes with warrants, sometimes without. Just last month, for example, this powerful surveillance measure—which sometimes allows the authorities to control the camera's focus point remotely—helped crack a sex trafficking ring in suburban Chicago.

Meanwhile, in stopping the release of the Seattle surveillance cam location information—in a public records act case request brought by activist Phil Mocek—US District Judge Richard Jones agreed (PDF) with the FBI's contention that releasing the data would harm national security.

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