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Iceland's crowdsourced constitution submitted for approval, Nyan Cat takes flight over Reykjavik originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 31 Jul 2011 07:03:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Permalink AFP | Stjornlagarao 2011 (Translated) | Email this | CommentsIt's the news bit you've been waiting years to hear! The folks at the IEEE standards body have today announced a next-generation WiFi IEEE 802.22TM standard – technology that's designed to facilitate wireless data transfer up to 60 miles (or a hundred kilometers) at 22Mbps. This technology is said to work over these great distances by utilizing television bands – without interfering with the reception of existing television broadcast stations at that. Imagine it – connect to your HambergerDLX network anywhere inside your town from your smartphone with no data plan costs. Magical freedom!
This technology takes advantage of VHF and UHF TV bands and transmits broadband wireless internet over 60 miles in diameter. This technology takes place in the space between channels, aka the place where the poltergeists live, if you believe technology lore. The officials at the IEEE standards body have noted the following about this new age in wireless technology:
This new standard for Wireless Regional Area Networks (WRANs) takes advantage of the favorable transmission characteristics of the VHF and UHF TV bands to provide broadband wireless access over a large area up to 100 km from the transmitter. Each WRAN will deliver up to 22 Mbps per channel without interfering with reception of existing TV broadcast stations, using the so-called white spaces between the occupied TV channels.
IEEE, the world's largest professional association advancing technology for humanity that is, noted that this technology will be "especially useful" in less densely populated areas, developing countries, and other locations where most vacant television channels can be found. They're there – let's use em!
What if it's true? It seems much, much too good to be true, doesn't it? It's the inexpensive means of getting data we've always dreamed of. Just think of only spending $60 a month (or however much it costs near you) for data both in and outside your home, unlimited data, data you'd otherwise have to pay twice as much for on a network that might just as well be cut out of the equation altogether? The facts are here, the news release is plain and simple, but something tells me this tech might never see the light of day – what do you think?
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The first eee pc (originally with xandros, now jolicloud) and the eee pad transformer (with Android), photographed with an Android phone. Everything Linux baby :P
How do I even start this? If stupid was an Olympic sport this dude would be the Michael Phelps of idiots. You have to watch the whole video below see the dude's injuries for yourself and then decide how legit his story is. I'm calling BS. To the dude stuck in a storm drain, think up a better lie to avoid embarrassment next time or better yet, just stay off the news.
I would have understood if you said you had just landed the number to the hottest chick in the bar, you were too drunk to drive so you walked home, and dropped your phone in the drain and had to get it back. I think most guys would have went after it, possibly without so much verve. Dreaming up a convoluted story about gang members, your buddies house a few doors down, and needing the phone to call for help doesn't fly with my BS detector.
The funniest part of that entire video is when he starts showing his injuries and blaming them on the gang beating he took before diving into the manhole. Dude, all of those injuries and scrapes are right where an idiot diving into a manhole would have been cut up. I can't believe the dude had the stones to go on live TV news after that. The pic you see here is what the police saw when they showed up. If anything ever deserved the Picard meme, this is it.
[via BuzzFeed]
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I was recently discussing companies that are trying to make it big with living room entertainment products with a friend, when he asked me which company — Microsoft or Apple — was doing a better job. My first reaction was to say Apple.
After all, as I noted on these pages earlier this week, the new Mac mini is the best computer to hook up to a television, and I'm a firm believer that the Apple TV is the top set-top box in the market. It seemed like an open-and-shut case.
But then I started thinking about things a bit more deeply. More specifically, I thought about Microsoft's Xbox 360 and Kinect devices and all that they offer. Upon doing so, I came to a new conclusion: Microsoft is actually making Apple look bad in the living room, and it's doing so with ease.
See, when I think about Apple's living-room products compared to Microsoft's, I'm left wanting more. For years now, I've hoped that the Apple TV would feature gaming, and it still doesn't. I've wanted it to allow me to record live television, and it doesn't. And although I don't have a problem with it, the latest Mac mini's missing DVD drive is an issue for some folks.
The Xbox 360, on the other hand, comes with many of the things I'm looking for in a home-entertainment device. I can play top-notch video games both offline and online. And if I want to sit back and relax with a favorite movie, I can pop a disc into the device and do so. Even better, Microsoft's console allows for access to a host of streaming services, including Netflix. Combine that with the Kinect, and I don't think there's any doubt that Microsoft is trumping Apple in the living room.
I'll be the first to admit that I'm not the biggest fan of the Kinect or motion gaming. In fact, I've said on SlashGear before that my Kinect is collecting dust. But I can still appreciate innovation when I see it. And I think that Microsoft deserves a lot of credit for delivering a product that breaks down some barriers and sets benchmarks in its respective market.
It's rather odd to say such a thing about Microsoft. In most cases, it's Apple that breaks down the barriers and sets benchmarks. But in the living room, the iPhone maker has been decidedly run-of-the-mill. Rather than push boundaries, Apple has stayed well within them. And in the process, it has allowed companies like Microsoft and Sony to win the battle for the living room.
Before Apple fans jump all over this column, allow me to say that I fully realize that Apple knows what it's doing in the consumer space, as evidenced by its recent financial showing. And in many markets, it has made Microsoft look bad. But whether the company's fans like it or not, the living room isn't one of them.
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Giant body of water found in space, black hole claims it was just hydrating originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 23 Jul 2011 12:37:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Permalink | NASA | Email this | CommentsThis deals platform goes by the name "Link, Like, Love." It's the greatest thing since sliced bread. It's going to destroy all other credit cards and deals programs. They'll never know what hit em. This is a deals program that you set up with your credit card in which you "like" deals on the internet then instantly get the deals you've liked when you use your credit card to purchase the goods or services that are involved in the deal. That's powerful. That's a Google Offers killer – isn't it? Let's have a quick talk on what this new platform means for everyone from small business owners to MasterCard.
All you've essentially got to do here is begin by linking your American Express card to your Facebook account for starters. Next you've got to find a deal that you enjoy, "like" it, this loading the deal to your American Express account, then you've just gotta get out there and get that deal! Have a look at the message being sent out to draw consumers in for this promotion:
"You and your friends like and share many things on Facebook. Now, American Express has deals and experiences for you based on those likes and interests. And once you sign up and choose your deals, all you have to do is use your American Express® Card and statement credits will be sent directly to your Card account.
No coupons. No hassles. Just a credit on your statement, and savings in your pocket."
This does away with the hassle of teaching consumers any new process (all of these things are inherently understood for a basic Facebook and American Express user, if you ask me,) and makes way for a completely employee-less sale. The time and effort that goes into training a staff on how to use a special deal costs a company that time and effort – this way the cost is minimized to essentially nothing. What this model does is takes transaction history and utilizes it to the max.
With transaction histories, merchants will be able to target offers to the people who've proven that they'll be willing to come to specific businesses if they feel the product, service, or better yet, deal on a product or service, is worth the time and effort they've got to spend getting it. Membership Rewards will almost certainly build into this as well, making for a great long-lasting business model for both businesses AND American Express. When you teach a person how to do a task with your unique tool, their first instinct becomes to use that tool to do the task.
And what's best in this whole situation? Unlike Groupon who take a 50 percent cut of each deal, American Express takes zero precent, making their money instead from normal payment transaction fees.
Win for American Express.
Win for businesses.
Win for Facebook.
[via Facebook]
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http://osnews.com/story/24966/Google_Apple_Sues_Because_it_Can_t_Respond_Through_Innovations_
Lol save HTC petition :p
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http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/business-14169940
What I like about Greek newspapers is that most of them declared that all the Greek banks passed the test, while this is not true. At least for two of them.
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There's this thing about social commentary – it doesn't matter. Or at least that's what folks like Zuckerberg and the +1 folks at Google don't want you to believe. Today you've got the opportunity to make yourself heard with a "Meh" shirt on Woot, one with a mark modeled after the "Like" button and pointing in a certain "whatever" direction. As a child of the Nevermind generation, I can't possibly resist. Will you get a "Meh" shirt, or will you just forget about it?
This is all part of a much bigger issue, if you ask me, one born of complete not-caring for the barrage of YOU MUST CHOOSE bursting forth from every internet seam. Even the sale of the shirt begs you to decide. But let me ask you this: will you sign up for Google+, will you stick with Facebook and continue to Like all things, or will you keep on making Facebook groups dedicated to getting that Thumbs Down button? Dislike all, please!
For those of you who don't give a hoot about any of these social networks popping up here and there, this is the shirt for you – but I implore you: don't buy it. Instead show your not caring and complete lack of devotion to the cause (and all causes) by just sharing the image above. In fact, don't even link back to anything, because that would mean that you care, and you don't.
Kurt Cobain, you've ruined us all forever.
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3G ASUS Eee Pad Transformer spotted online, priced starting at 499 euros originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 11 Jul 2011 12:23:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Permalink Notebook Italia | ASUS (manual), (guide), (product page) | Email this | CommentsQuadrocopters: blooper reel edition originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 03 Jul 2011 11:19:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Permalink | University of Pennsylvania | Email this | CommentsSoftware download store GetJar has refused to comply with a Cease & Desist (C&D) demand from Apple, arguing that the contentious "app store" name is not yet an official trademark and that the Cupertino company is little more than a pack of bullies. "We started formally distributing free apps in early 2005 and are among the pioneers of the modern direct-to-consumer (D2C) app store distribution space when the iPhone was just an R&D project in Steve Job's head" GetJar CMO Patrick Mork highlights, going on to suggest that Apple's legal attention was only provoked when GetJar helped launch the previously-exclusive iOS game "Cut The Rope" on Android.
Mork also runs through the history of the "app store" trademark, or at least Apple's attempts to establish the term as such. As he points out, Apple was denied the trademark by the USPTO in 2008, and then granted a "provisional" registration as long as nobody else contested it; unfortunately, Microsoft and others did.
"GetJar won't be subject to this kind of bullying. We're not going to "Cease & Desist". We were here long before Steve & Co. We were built by developers, to help developers. Not to help sell handsets or search results. In the words of Twisted Sister: We're not going to take it! Steve Jobs isn't our Dad" Patrick Mork, CMO, GetJar
As GetJar sees it, Apple's C&D is the latest in a number of concerning shifts within the mobile ecosystem to a closed state, where even "open" platforms like Android place limitations on developers such as not allowing them to "choose their billing solution." The recent spate of Microsoft patent settlements by various Android-adopting OEMs – most recently Wistron – also gets a mention. "Is anyone actually worrying about whether app developers and content providers make enough money to keep the lights on?" Mork concludes.
The company is now kicking off "The Open And Free App Movement (#OFAM)" to try to gather disgruntled developers, OEMs, carriers and other interested parties into a single place, and hopefully introduce some change. Whether that will succeed is one question; the bigger one, perhaps, is how Apple's legal team will respond to GetJar's refusal to follow the C&D's demands.
[via PhoneArena]
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http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/business-14101885
OMG the Chinese will start drinking stuff prefixed with nes-. The demise has begun.
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Continue reading Quadrocopters reined in by Kinect leash, we feel safer already
Quadrocopters reined in by Kinect leash, we feel safer already originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 04 Jul 2011 01:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Permalink | Flying Machine Arena (YouTube) | Email this | Comments