HTC may be building a 5 inch Nexus phone for Google

HTC may be building a 5 inch Nexus phone for Google

Rumor has it that Google will released at least two new Nexus phones again this year… and that HTC may be building two of them. Now some of the details are starting to emerge… and it looks like one phone will have a 5 inch display, 4GB of RAM, and a 2770 mAh battery, among other things.

Android Police has published specs for the phone that’s code-named “Sailfish” or “S1.” You should probably take the report with a grain of salt, since it comes a single source… but Android Police says it’s a source that’s been reliable in the past.

Continue reading HTC may be building a 5 inch Nexus phone for Google at Liliputing.

HTC may be building a 5 inch Nexus phone for Google

Rumor has it that Google will released at least two new Nexus phones again this year… and that HTC may be building two of them. Now some of the details are starting to emerge… and it looks like one phone will have a 5 inch display, 4GB of RAM, and a 2770 mAh battery, among other things.

Android Police has published specs for the phone that’s code-named “Sailfish” or “S1.” You should probably take the report with a grain of salt, since it comes a single source… but Android Police says it’s a source that’s been reliable in the past.

Continue reading HTC may be building a 5 inch Nexus phone for Google at Liliputing.

Chrome OS update makes Android apps on the Chromebook Flip

Chrome OS update makes Android apps on the Chromebook Flip

Less than a week after releasing the first build of Chrome OS for the Asus Chromebook Flip that lets you run Android apps on the touchscreen laptop, Google has released an update that fixes some of the issues with the first build.

The good news is that rotating the screen won’t cause apps to crash anymore. The less good news is that they won’t necessarily resize automatically.

It’s also now easier to tell Android apps from Chrome web apps at a glance.

Continue reading Chrome OS update makes Android apps on the Chromebook Flip at Liliputing.

Chrome OS update makes Android apps on the Chromebook Flip

Less than a week after releasing the first build of Chrome OS for the Asus Chromebook Flip that lets you run Android apps on the touchscreen laptop, Google has released an update that fixes some of the issues with the first build.

The good news is that rotating the screen won’t cause apps to crash anymore. The less good news is that they won’t necessarily resize automatically.

It’s also now easier to tell Android apps from Chrome web apps at a glance.

Continue reading Chrome OS update makes Android apps on the Chromebook Flip at Liliputing.

Dealmaster: Get a Dell Inspiron 3650 desktop with Core i7 for just $579

Plus deals on smart TVs, routers, gaming consoles, and more.

Greetings, Arsians! Courtesy of our partners at TechBargains, we have a bunch of deals to share today. Of note, we have a bestseller from earlier this month—you can still get the redesigned Dell Inspiron 3650 PC with Core i7 Skylake processor, 16GB of RAM, and an AMD R9 360 GPU for just $579. That's over $300 off its original price of $899, so if you're on the market for a new desktop, this is one you should consider.

Also check out the rest of the deals below.

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Huawei hedges bet on Google’s Android, plans in-house OS

Like Samsung before it, Huawei hopes to have a “Plan B” should Android terms go bad.

The default theme on the Huawei Honor 5X. Of course a gold phone needs a gold interface.

A report from The Information (subscription required) claims that Huawei is building its own in-house OS as a possible "Plan B" to Android. To spearhead the development of an in-house operating system—and improve its Android skin—Huawei has hired former Apple designer Abigail Brody. The report says that the non-Android OS "isn’t far along" and is a "contingency measure" in case Google's current Android terms become undesirable to Huawei.

Huawei is the number three smartphone OEM, behind Samsung and Apple. The Chinese company isn't a huge deal in the West, though—a big portion of those sales come from Huawei's home turf. Huawei is often seen as being in a position similar to Samsung's, just at an earlier stage of development. Like Samsung, Huawei is a massive company. It's the world's largest telecom equipment manufacturer, and it designs its own SoCs. Now Huawei is taking another page from the Samsung playbook, and the company is trying to develop an Android alternative.

Samsung's homegrown operating system is Tizen, a Linux-based OS that works a lot like Android (especially Samsung's Android phones) but lacks the app ecosystem and developer support of Android. That's the challenge with creating an Android alternative—can you make something that's so much better than Android that the lack of apps becomes acceptable for consumers?

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HTC Sense Home heading to non-HTC devices?

HTC Sense Home heading to non-HTC devices?

Many of the top Android smartphone makers load their handsets with customized versions of Google’s operating system. While some phones ship with the same basic Android user interface you’d find on a Google Nexus phone, most big companies like to distinguish their devices with custom software.

Samsung has its TouchWiz user interface. LG has its own LG UX. Sony has the Xperia UI. And HTC has Sense.

For the most part you get the skin that comes with your phone.

Continue reading HTC Sense Home heading to non-HTC devices? at Liliputing.

HTC Sense Home heading to non-HTC devices?

Many of the top Android smartphone makers load their handsets with customized versions of Google’s operating system. While some phones ship with the same basic Android user interface you’d find on a Google Nexus phone, most big companies like to distinguish their devices with custom software.

Samsung has its TouchWiz user interface. LG has its own LG UX. Sony has the Xperia UI. And HTC has Sense.

For the most part you get the skin that comes with your phone.

Continue reading HTC Sense Home heading to non-HTC devices? at Liliputing.

Supreme Court sends off patent troll that challenged review rules with an 8-0 slapdown

Giuseppe Cuozzo drove too fast, got an odd patent, and sold it to trolling pros.

19-year-old Giuseppe Cuozzo's drawing of his idea, from 2000. (credit: USPTO)

Patent trolls don't fare well at the Supreme Court. When they show up, their cases tend to result in decisions that are ruinous for the profit margins of their industry. Two prominent examples: the 2006 eBay v. MercExchange case effectively ended trolls' abilities to get injunctions, and the 2014 Alice Corp. case made it far easier for patent defendants to invalidate abstract software patents.

And yet, the cases keep coming. The most recent example is Cuozzo Speed Technologies LLC v. Lee, a case that was resolved earlier this week with an 8-0 opinion dismantling arguments presented by Cuozzo, a patent-holding entity controlled by two New York patent lawyers, Daniel Mitry and Timothy Salmon. The two attorneys own dozens of other patent shell companies through their consultancy, Empire IP.

What were Mitry and Salmon hoping for? Using the Cuozzo case as their vehicle, they hoped to tweak changes in the rules for "inter partes reviews," or IPRs, a proceeding created by Congress in 2012 that allows the patent office to take a second look at patents to see if they should never have been issued in the first place. While the tech sector still seeks legislative reform to end the spate of "patent troll" lawsuits, IPRs have been an effective way to shut down some patent cases at a fraction of the cost of a full-blown court trial.

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TVPRO HD6 is a $146 mini PC that looks like a webcam (for video conferencing)

TVPRO HD6 is a $146 mini PC that looks like a webcam (for video conferencing)

I’ve got a Logitech webcam that sits on top of my monitor waiting for me to plug it in when I’m making a video call. It’s held in place by a small clip that grabs the edge of my display. And when I saw a picture of the new TVPRO HD6 computer, my first thought was that it looks a bit like my webcam… and there’s a good reason for that.

The TVPRO HD6 has the guts of a Windows 10 computer, but they’re stuffed into a compact case that’s designed to clip to the top of your monitor.

Continue reading TVPRO HD6 is a $146 mini PC that looks like a webcam (for video conferencing) at Liliputing.

TVPRO HD6 is a $146 mini PC that looks like a webcam (for video conferencing)

I’ve got a Logitech webcam that sits on top of my monitor waiting for me to plug it in when I’m making a video call. It’s held in place by a small clip that grabs the edge of my display. And when I saw a picture of the new TVPRO HD6 computer, my first thought was that it looks a bit like my webcam… and there’s a good reason for that.

The TVPRO HD6 has the guts of a Windows 10 computer, but they’re stuffed into a compact case that’s designed to clip to the top of your monitor.

Continue reading TVPRO HD6 is a $146 mini PC that looks like a webcam (for video conferencing) at Liliputing.

Man beats murder rap because DNA expert illegally testified via Skype

Court says defendant has “constitutional right” to confront witnesses at trial.

(credit: Jorge Correa)

There's this pesky thing called the US Constitution, and sometimes there's a price to be paid when it's subverted.

That's what is happening in New Mexico, where a convicted murderer serving a life term won a new trial because a DNA prosecution expert in the prosecution's case testified via Skype, denying the defendant Truett Thomas' Sixth Amendment rights to confront witnesses in court, according to the New Mexico Supreme Court.

The case against Thomas began in 2010 when Albuquerque police discovered Guadalupe Ashford's body behind a trash can in a small parking lot. The woman was assaulted, and sustained significant head injuries, "including lacerations, skull fractures and a dislodged tooth." Police found blood on the scene that didn't match the woman's and ran it through the Combined DNA Index System (CODIS) database, which matched the defendant. The defendant denied he knew the woman.

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Smart Meter: Bundestag verordnet allen Haushalten moderne Stromzähler

Die Proteste der Verbraucherschützer haben nichts genützt. Vielen Kleinverbrauchern droht nach einem Beschluss des Bundestags die “Zwangsbeglückung” mit vernetzten Stromzählern. (Smart Grid, GreenIT)

Die Proteste der Verbraucherschützer haben nichts genützt. Vielen Kleinverbrauchern droht nach einem Beschluss des Bundestags die "Zwangsbeglückung" mit vernetzten Stromzählern. (Smart Grid, GreenIT)

Watch Boston Dynamics’ newest robodog fetch a soda and slip on a banana peel

Boston Dynamics’ future with Alphabet could be up in the air, but they keep making bots.

Boston Dynamics, the high-profile robotics company that Alphabet reportedly doesn't want, has released a video of its latest robot: SpotMini. SpotMini is a 4-legged robot that weighs just 55lbs and has an all-electric locomotion system.

SpotMini is one of the quietest robot Boston Dynamics has ever built thanks to the all-electric system. In the past, the company has used gas engines and hydraulics in its robots, making for loud, outdoor-only bots that sound like dirtbikes or chainsaws. Boston Dynamics' Alphadog was a much larger 4-legged robot, but it deemed too loud by the US Marines when they tested it as a pack mule last year.

The goal with the SpotMini seems to have been to build a robot quiet enough, small enough, and clean enough that it can be used as a house robot. It's shown indoors walking up steps and ducking under tables. There's even an attachable arm that lets it do useful things like fetching a soda or cleaning the dishes (well, moving a dish from the sink to the washing machine, but that's a start!).

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