Sunday, May 8, 2016

Xiaomi Mi Max and Mi Band 2 leak before May 10 launch

Xiaomi is holding its Beijing event in a week, on May 10, where the company will announce the Mi Max smartphone and the Mi Band 2. Photos of the two have emerged showing the devices beforehand.

The Xiaomi Mi Max will feature a flat, metal frame and the traditional for the company capacitive buttons under the screen. The specs of the phone include a 6.4" 1080p display, a Snapdragon 650 chipset with 3GB of RAM and 32GB of storage.

The camera duo is a 16MP snapper at the back and a 5MP at the front.

As for the Mi Band 2, it will feature a similar design to its predecessor, but with the major difference of a monochrome display. The band will also have a physical button on the right side.

The display of the Mi Band 2 will show the time and battery status in addition to daily steps, heart rate and other stats.

source

Samsung Galaxy Note 6 will have USB Type-C connector, rumor says


At this point Samsung is just a few months away from unveiling the Galaxy Note 6, so understandably the number of rumors regarding it is starting to rise.

The latest mumbling says in no uncertain terms that the successor to the Note5 will have a USB Type-C port, which will thus make its first ever appearance in the Korean company's portfolio. It will replace the ever-prevalent microUSB connector. What isn't as clear is which standard Samsung will use alongside the port itself - USB 3.1 or an older one.

Anyway, if Samsung wants to continue its VR push (and there's no reason not to), then it will also have to release a new Gear VR headset alongside the Note 6. That's because the current Gear VR connects to your Samsung phone via microUSB. The new Type-C connector in the Note 6 will therefore require an updated headset.

So far we've heard that the Galaxy Note 6 will have a 5.8-inch QHD Super AMOLED touchscreen (which might be curved), 6GB of RAM, Qualcomm's upcoming Snapdragon 823 SoC running things, the 12 MP rear camera from the Galaxy S7 and S7 edge (though improved somewhat), and a 4,000 mAh battery. It will be water and dust resistant.

Source

iPhone 7 will have 3.5mm headset jack after all, latest leak says


So far almost every rumor that's talked about the upcoming iPhone 7 has mentioned that Apple's next smartphone will get rid of the 3.5mm headset jack, instead relying on the Lightning port for audio transmission. This has been repeated so many times that by now it's pretty much accepted as fact - but that may not have been wise, as it turns out.

Today a leaked shot purportedly showing the iPhone 7's innards comes to contradict all of those previous reports. That's because the part shown does in fact feature the connection to the 3.5mm headset jack, even if overall it looks pretty different to what's been used for the iPhone 6s.

And that in itself raises some questions about the (unverifiable) authenticity of this leak. Needless to say then, don't take this for granted just yet. Still, if this part does belong to the iPhone 7, then the rumors of the headset jack's demise have been false.

The Apple iPhone 7 could be waterproof and it might sport a touch home button. Its antenna lines are apparently going to be redesigned for a more streamlined look. The iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus are due to be outed at Apple's annual fall event.

Source (in French)

HTC Desire 830 debuts, OnePlus 3 specs detailed


It certainly wasn’t the most eventful of weeks, but we still saw an announcement from a major manufacturer and a bunch of interesting rumors. A few nicely made promo videos also made it to the list of our most popular articles.

Understandably, the HTC Desire 830 announcement captured the spotlight - the new mid-range leader of the Taiwanese company was the only actual hardware we got this week. Meanwhile the Sony Xperia X Performance got its EU launch detailed with pricing and July launch confirmed.
The OnePlus 3 specs got detailed, while a glimmer of hope appeared that the next iPhone will still have a 3.5mm audio jack. The Xiaomi Mi Max and Galaxy Note 6 phablets also made a couple of appearances in our news section.

In other news Samsung and Sony have released a bunch of videos each to promote their latest and greatest and all of the clips seem to be worth your time.

VR possibilities at Google I/O 2016: Four things I'm hoping to see

 Google might be ready to launch a whole new vision of VR. And honestly, in a year filled with big VR hardware all over the place, I'm more interested to hear about what Google's got in the works than anyone else.

Google's I/O developer conference is just around the corner. There are a lot of VR-targeted developer sessions this year, including what looks like a big keynote-style presentation delivered by Google's new head of VR, Clay Bavor. Google I/O is, historically, where big ideas get announced: Android Wear, Google Glass and Google Cardboard.

Google Cardboard has been Google's little Trojan horse into virtual reality. In a landscape of expensive, somewhat closed-off rigs, Cardboard is the closest to "open" that exists: apps run on both iOS and Android across dozens of phones, and YouTube offers an increasing flow of 360-degree videos to watch. Most people will never get the chance to buy a virtual-reality headset, and many haven't tried one.
But Google Cardboard is foldable and cheap. It comes free with newspapers. You might get one at a concert. It's not perfect, but it's cool enough to keep around on my desk. And I definitely want to see what Google has in the works for a follow-up.

With that in mind, here's what I'm looking forward to most...assuming they actually happen.

Room-sensing with a next-gen headset

You might not be aware of what computer vision can achieve, or what Project Tango is. But first, know that depth-sensing 3D cameras have been in Google's prototype Project Tango tablets for years, enabling VR headsets to get a sense of advanced motion without needing a sensor bar or sensor boxes like PC-based VR rigs such as the Oculus Rift and HTC Vive use. You could wander a room with a wireless headset on, and it would know the size and layout of the room. Ever since I tried out Project Tango in VR a couple of years ago, I've thought about it sneaking its way into next-gen mobile VR headsets. Oculus is already working on these ideas, but Google will probably get there first.

Saturday, May 7, 2016

BEYOND DIGITS - VOICES IN THE SECOND MACHINE AGE


Amazon’s unanticipated success with Echo – try getting hold of one at the moment! – has begun an interesting new line of thought based on the idea of “voice as a platform”. The argument goes that typing is a clumsy and clunky way of interfacing with machines, far inferior to just being able to talk in your natural voice to them. Perhaps, the logic suggests, typing will come to be seen as a brief and transitory period in the evolution of hominum ex machina.

In the next period of evolution – literally beyond digits – the sci-fi vision of Star Trek and Space Odyssey will come true. Although Spock does seem on occasion to type on his terminal, Kirk more often than not barks something into the ether and things seem to happen! Of course, Dave and Hal are on speaking terms – until the end! And Jarvis doesn’t wait for an email or a text to save Iron Man’s bacon, time and time again!

Maybe, one day, typing will become as rare as writing with a pen is now! Perhaps, like me, you can hardly write on paper nowadays at all; it seems so difficult, and tiring! I don’t think I’ve written more than 50 words on paper now for years. Would our 1st Grade teachers have imagined that 45 years ago?

The idea of voice as the dominant computer interface is gaining traction as the notion of “bots not apps” gains steam. http://econ.st/1ROJ203 In recent weeks, more and more of the tech illuminati have been road-testing their new vision of AI based services existing in the device agnostic cloud helping us do things such as tell someone we’re running late because of traffic, buy shoes we’ve seen in a road side advert from the train, or set up a new meeting to discuss an idea you’ve just thought of at the gym. All by simply speaking to Alexa, or Siri, or Dragon, or Amy, or Cortana, or M. Or by them doing it automatically for us.

Although in its infancy, this is an important trend; one to follow closely, methinks.

Before we all get too far into where this idea will go over the medium term though, there is an aspect of it which particularly tickles me. Namely the roll of “voice” in this potential new “era of voice”.

According to many studies (a recent one here http://bit.ly/1Y5acDT) the world’s favorite accent is British. (Now you can see where I’m going with this and why it tickles me!) By a very wide margin the British voice is regarded as numero uno (!) by folks north, south, east and west. In countries that have always been British allies, countries that have been opponents in war, and in countries that were former colonies. By everyone!!!

As a Englishman who’s lived in America for coming on 17 years now, the truth of this is something I’ve seen time and time again. When I came to the strange land of my dreams http://bit.ly/1QYD2Vj I had heard reports of Americans saying to random English strangers “gee, I love your accent” but dismissed them as ridiculous exaggerated clichés. But actually it happens all the time! My H&R Block tax preparer said it to me last month!

When I landed in San Francisco in the 1999 code rush, a wise Brit who had already been here 20 years whispered in my ear, “I’ve figured out there’s a 25% premium for having a British accent in America”. I took his advice to heart and though my lovely English rose sounds more and more like Anglo-American curio Loyd Grossman http://theatln.tc/1IwJhg6 nowadays, I have maintained my received pronunciation http://bit.ly/1NSiSgt with a vengeance! (My critics would probably suggest it accounts for 100% of the “success” I’ve had in America!)

So the question in my mind is what does this mean for the “British voice” when “voice” is the de facto way of working with our new machines? Is the accent of a voice more, or less, important? Given that we will presumably choose the voice that talks to us (as you can already in Waze http://bit.ly/1rR1cs3) will more people chose to have an English robot assistant (“Carson as a Service” as my colleague Rob Brown calls it!) or will they prefer to have Samantha http://bit.ly/1mAcxBU at their beck and call?

If the English voice becomes the international “voice of business” as the English language has become the international “language of business”, presumably this conveys some advantage to England, non? (!) Or does the advantage diminish because of the software generated ubiquity of it? If kids in Shengzu or Lima or Dodama use the Jarvis setting on Echo does the allure of “Englishness” – that so captivated Loyd Grosman through the technology of plastic – draw them to favor the UK, culturally and economically, in ways that are both easy and hard to imagine? Or does “English” continue to mutate into “Globlish” http://bit.ly/1rR4JGT with a diffusion of its power as its core DNA becomes harder and harder to trace?

What benefit or cost accrues to Englishman like me in this new global order? Reports from the Globlish front line suggest that English as a Foreign Language (EFL) speakers prefer speaking to other EFL speakers rather than “real” English speakers. Will their “accent interface” (i.e. an EFL type one) overtake the need for my “RP” version?

Though these may be somewhat abstract (and I imagine some thinking, trivial) notions, I do think there is something important at the heart of these considerations. As technology permeates every aspect of our world and our lives – in ways visible and invisible – through IoT, wearables, AR, and VR, the onus on manufactures and developers will be to adapt technology to suit people, not as has been the case for the initial waves of computing, for people to adapt to suit technology. Humanizing technology will be a critical differentiator between success and failure in the next generations of consumer and enterprise technology. The rise of “design thinking” is testament to this truth.

The voice – as one of the five primary senses – is therefore at the crux of this humanization. The voice interface on my Bavarian motor car is hardly human at all. But in time it will be and the commercial spoils will fall to those who can win this race.

What role “Englishness” plays in this is, I suppose, mainly interesting to Brits like me. But there are clues in these developments as to the shape “computing” will take in the Second Machine Age.

Until voice is superseded by “thought as a platform”. But that’s for another time!

source : futureofwork.com

Saturday, November 21, 2015

Detailed Review of Empower Network Compensation Plan


For those interested in work from home opportunities, check out my 5linx review here.  In the beginning, Empower Network was established as a blogging platform. It was aimed at people who wanted to create blogs, but had no technical knowledge or skills.signup here

Every basic member of the program receives a pre-setup blog which is completely search engine optimized.

You neither have to pay hosting fees nor go through complicated setup procedures. You just have to click a button and start blogging.

How Does The Empower Network Compensation Plan Work?



Empower Network allows you to earn 100% commissions on your sale. However, it’s obvious that if you want to sell products, you will first have to purchase them. Empower Network will not pay any commissions for sales of products that you did not personally purchase. Thus, the more you pay, the more you earn.

It is important to understand that commission for 2nd, 4th and 6th member referred by you to Empower Network will be passed on to your sponsor. Similarly, you will receive commissions for 2nd, 4th and 6th members referred by your down-line members. At the same time, Empower Network compensation plan will provide you with one of the highest paying online marketing opportunities present today. signup here

After 6th member, every 5th commission will be passed on to your sponsor. In other words, it goes like 2, 4, 6, 11, 16, 21, 26, 31 and so on. In simple words, every member in your down-line will be valuable to you forever. In the same way, you will be valuable to your sponsor forever.

Basically, the compensation plan of Empower Network works like Herbalife and Amway. However, it has been perfectly optimized so that you receive most benefits. In order to earn some good money, you will not have to sell physical products or take calls from customers.