Friday, March 25, 2016



Google is putting more focus on mobile photo editing.

Google Nik, a photo editing suite for desktop, just went from $149 to…free.
The Internet giant announced the news in a blog post on Thursday. “We continue to focus our long-term investments in building incredible photo editing tools for mobile, including Google Photos and Snapseed,” the Nik team explained.
Google bought the German Nik back in 2012, the company behind the Snapseed mobile photo app.
Such a development could be surprising. But Google has trotted out similar, photo-friendly freebies in the past. During its annual I/O developer summit in 2015, Google debuted free unlimited storage space for images and videos up to certain resolution ceilings on the then-refashioned Google Photos (a revamped iteration of Picasa).
Thus, the move to make the desktop version of Nik software free is probably another sign that Google is focused more on growing its on-the-go photo editing toolset and less on elaborate, high-end professional photo editing computer software.
The move comes just as Adobe, owner of the popular Photoshop editing software, also puts more cash into wooing mobile app developers.
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The seven plug-in tools in the Nik suite can be integrated with software from other providers, including Adobe Photoshop and Lightroom as well as Apple Aperture. Those plug-ins cover retouching, color correction, photo filters, and image sharpening, among other facets.
Google added if customers already purchased the Nik collection in 2016, the company will issue a refund.
The Google Nik plugins can be added on Photoshop, Lightroom or Aperture. Google Nik Website


Good news for amateur and professional photograph enthusiasts. Google has just made its Nik Collection photo editing software available completely free of charge.
That collection includes seven different desktop services that fell into Google’s lap after it acquired Nik Software back in 2012. That deal was largely about getting control of popular photo app Snapseed, a pretty powerful tool in itself, but Google later pulled the remaining Nik Software services together in an attractive $149 bundle. That’s now become free, and anyone who forked out to buy it this calendar can claim a refund.
What services are we talking about here. It’s certainly beyond the basics offered by apps like Instagram, as Google itself explained:
The Nik Collection is comprised of seven desktop plug-ins that provide a powerful range of photo editing capabilities — from filter applications that improve color correction, to retouching and creative effects, to image sharpening that brings out all the hidden details, to the ability to make adjustments to the color and tonality of images.
Free software is always welcome since it can help democratize photography tools, but the news has some fans worried that it may be  a sign that these services will be discontinued soon. Google, of course, just killed off Picasa, which was once the center of its online photography ambition.
It’s a little too early to call the end of Nik Software, particularly when Google said that this price removal is one of its “long-term investments in building incredible photo editing tools.” Beyond Snapseed, which was made free and launched on Android after the Nik Software acquisition, its portfolio also includes Google Photos, its cloud storage service for mobile that just got a smart new feature to create albums automatically.

Tuesday, March 22, 2016

  • Night Shift changes colour temperature of display when it's dark outside
  • Notes now have option of security through password or fingerprint 
  • iPads now support multi-user modes so they can be shared by students
  • Users can also extract full resolution photo from an unwanted Live Photo

  • Night Shift changes the colour temperature of the phone's display when it's dark outside. The later and darker it gets, the warmer the temperature. 
    It uses the device's clock and location to determine when it's sunset, then it automatically shifts the colours in the display to the warmer end of the spectrum, reducing the amount of blue light.  
    Night Shift can be scheduled automatically (including across time zones) and filter hews and intensity levels can be customised
    The Night Shift icon has also been added to the Control Center, which can be accessed by swiping up from the bottom of the screen
    Night Shift changes the colour temperature of the phone's display when it's dark outside. The later and darker it gets, the warmer the temperature. It uses the device's clock and location to determine when it's sunset, then it automatically shifts the colors in the display to the warmer end of the spectrum

    The aim of this is to help users sleep. In the morning it returns the display to its regular settings.
    Night Shift can be scheduled automatically, including across time zones, and filter hews and intensity levels can be customised.
    Its icon has also been added to the Control Center, which can be accessed by swiping up from the bottom of the screen.
    Another change is that Notes now has the option of adding a password or fingerprint to access to individual notes, to let users keep their private information more secure.
    Notes can now also be sorted by date created, date modified or alphabetically.
    An update to News means the articles in 'For You' are now better tailored to particular interests. 
    There are also new features for the iPad to help teachers use them with their students.
    'iOS 9.3 includes a preview of new features that will make it even easier for schools to put devices where they'll have the greatest impact, in the hands of students,' according to the Apple website. 
    iPads now support multi-user modes which automatically sync data so no one device has to be assigned to any particular student.

    Users can also now extract the full resolution photo from an unwanted Live Photo, which could save space on some devices. Until now, in order to save just the still image from the photo, users had to disable the Live photo portion. With iOS 9.3, they can have both

    Until now, in order to save just the still image from the photo, users had to disable the live photo portion. 
    This meant they had to pick either a Live photo or a still. With iOS 9.3, they can have both.
    iOS 9.3 also expands Quick Actions, pressured touches on apps, to a lot more stock apps including Weather, Compass, App Store, iTunes Store and Health as well as Settings, which now has WiFi and Bluetooth shortcuts.

    Monday, March 21, 2016

    Greg Joswiak, vice president of iOS, iPad and iPhone product marketing, unveils the new iPhone SE at Apple headquarters March 21, 2016.
    Marcio Jose Sanchez / AP
    Greg Joswiak, vice president of iOS, iPad and iPhone product marketing, unveils the new iPhone SE at Apple headquarters March 21, 2016.
    CUPERTINO, Calif.—Apple unveiled a small new iPhone, a new iPad tablet for business use and knocked $50 (U.S.) off its Apple Watch at a product event Monday. The announcements, which were largely expected, aim to keep up the company’s commercial momentum in the face of unexpected challenges.
    The company could use a lift. Sales of its flagship iPhone are levelling off after surging last year to record levels that made Apple the world’s biggest company by stock market value. Many are wondering if Cook can come up with another big hit.
    And on Tuesday, Apple lawyers will square off with authorities in federal court over the FBI’s demand for help unlocking a San Bernardino killer’s encrypted iPhone. The tech giant insists the government’s plan would compromise security for all iPhone users.
    While Apple’s dispute with the government has commanded headlines for weeks, it warranted only a brief mention at the product event. “We did not expect to be in this position,” CEO Tim Cook told the gathering. “But we believe we have a responsibility to protect your data and to protect your privacy.”
    The new phone — the iPhone SE — is an upgrade to the older, four-inch iPhone 5S, released in 2013. It’s aimed at consumers who haven’t sprung for the bigger-screen iPhone 6 models that Apple introduced over the last two years. The new phone comes with features like Apple Pay and the company’s fastest processor, which have previously been offered only on versions of the iPhone 6.
    Apple also unveiled a smaller model of the iPad Pro, which the company introduced last year with several features — like a detachable keyboard and stylus — designed for business users. The Apple Watch got a price cut, and will now start at $299 (U.S.), down from $349 (U.S.); it will also come with new wristbands made of woven nylon. Apple launched the smartwatch to great fanfare last year, although it has yet to win a big following.
    The iPhone SE might not see the kind of blockbuster demand that Apple enjoyed with its large-screen iPhone 6 and 6S models, according to several financial analysts, but it could help Apple boost overall sales. It might also draw some additional users into the market for Apple’s online services, including Apple Music, Apple Pay and the highly profitable mobile App Store.
    While shoppers bought a record 74.8 million iPhones in the final three months of 2015, Apple has signalled demand in the current three-month period will fall short of the 61 million iPhones sold in the January-March quarter last year.
    The iPhone SE will sell for $399 (U.S.) with no cellular contract, significantly lower than larger iPhone models, which list at $549 (U.S.) or more. The smaller phone may appeal to some shoppers, especially in overseas markets, who want a premium phone at lower cost. It could also draw interest from owners of older iPhone 5 models who find the larger models unwieldy.
    Analysts generally expect Apple to release a more dramatically revamped iPhone 7 in the fall.
    The proliferation of iPhone and iPad models may seem contrary to Apple’s traditional focus — espoused by late Apple co-founder Steve Jobs — on producing fewer products that it believes are superior to competitors’ offerings. Its rival Samsung, by contrast, is known for selling a multitude of phones and tablets at various sizes and prices.
    But Apple has gradually expanded its family of devices in recent years to reach consumers in different market categories, which also helps the company sell more online goods and services, said Gartner tech analyst Brian Blau.
    “Tim Cook has said he thinks there’s a lot of life left in the iPhone product line, despite the media and investor community pressuring Apple over the potential decline in premium iPhone sales,” Blau said. “I think it’s exactly these types of things that he has in mind.
    Apple is to launch a new smaller iPhone called the iPhone SE that will also be the company’s “most affordable” model.
    Small is the new big as Apple announces 4-inch iPhone SE
    The technology giant said that most users’ first iPhone was often one of their older, 4-inch sized devices, and led to the creation of the SE, which is the same size as 2013′s iPhone 5s.
    Greg Joswiak, vice president of iOS, iPad and iPhone product marketing, announces the new iPhone SE at Apple headquarters
    Greg Joswiak, vice president of iOS, announces the new iPhone SE in California (Marcio Jose Sanchez/AP)
    Apple chief Tim Cook said: “The iPhone is the most loved smartphone in the world, and today we are welcoming a new member to the family.”
    Despite its smaller size and cheaper price – beginning at $399 (£277) – the SE will come with up-to-date specifications including a 12-megapixel camera and the ability to record video in 4K – four times that of HD.
    Greg Joswiak, vice president of iOS, iPad and iPhone product marketing, announces the new iPhone SE at Apple
    The iPhone SE looks more like the iPhone 5 than the 6 (Marcio Jose Sanchez/AP)
    It has been suggested the move to introduce a four-inch phone for the first time since 2013 is an attempt to further break into the emerging markets in India and China.
    Pre-orders for the new iPhone will begin on March 24, with the device going on sale on March 31 in the UK.

    Saturday, March 19, 2016






















































    Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg introduces a new messenger platform at the F8 summit in San Francisco
    If you're not much of a chess player , then Facebook Messenger has another hidden game you can play with your mates.
    This time it's a basketball-themed game no doubt inspired by the current March Madness tournament taking place in the US.
    In order to play it, you'll need to make sure you've got the latest version of Facebook Messenger installed on your iPhone or Android smartphone.
    All you have to do to play it is send the emoji of a basketball to your friend inside a conversation, then tap on it.

    Facebook Messenger's Secret Basketball Game
    Facebook Messenger's Secret Basketball Game
    A basketball and a hoop will pop up, and your challenge is get the ball through the hoop as many times as possible by flicking it with with your finger.
    If you manage to sink the shot, you'll be rewarded with some happy emojis. If you lose, you'll get some sad ones instead.
    You can compete with other player to get the highest number of consecutive shots on target.
    And if you decide that you'd rather just go back to playing chess - then here's how to play that instead .
    Facebook Messenger Basketball Mini-Game

    We'll give Facebook credit; it's very creative with the Easter Eggs it packs into Facebook Messenger. If you're not really a chess fanatic, or even very good at the game, then you probably felt a bit bummed about Facebook's recent inclusion of a little chess mini-game into Messenger. Thankfully, that wasn't Facebook's first and only foray into Messenger-based mini-games.
    Now, it's been revealed that Facebook has also snuck a little basketball game into its messaging app—perfectly timed for the start of all the March Madness craziness. To access it, all you have to do it send a basketball emoji to one of your friends (or a group of people you're talking to). And once you've done that, just tap the basketball to start the game.
    The game isn't NBA Jam—sadly—but it is a fun little way to compete against your friends. Just flick your finger on your screen to get the ball in the hoop. That's it. Miss, and you'll get a random "way to go" emoji as a reaction to your poor shooting skills. Make the bucket, and you'll be rewarded with a happier and/or more-encouraging emoji. You'll need the encouragement, too, as the game doesn't stay easy for very long. Make more shots, and the basketball rim will start moving around. Make even more, and it'll move even faster.
    Facebook hasn't commented about the mini-game, nor has it offered up any suggestion as to future mini-games it might launch within Messenger. We're also assuming that you have to have the most recent version of Messenger installed to play the game. Some of this writer's friends have reported issues getting it to work, but they also haven't updated their app recently. Do that, lest you find yourself just tapping on a tiny basketball icon for no reason.
    Once you get tired of playing basketball, you can try typing "@fbchess" into your chat with a friend (no quotes) to engage them in some Messenger-based chess. Or, if you're done with gaming for the day, you could just send @dailycute back and forth, too.






    Just send the basketball emoji on iOS or Android.



    s



    March Madness is upon us, bringing dunks and layups galore as 68 college teams vie fr the national championship. It's easy to get swept up in the hype, but if you're anything like me a trip to the court only ends in disappointment, rather than any spectacular recreation of a trick shot or buzzer beater. Instead, we recommend checking out Messenger Madness, a hidden game built into Facebook's chat app. Just send a basketball emoji to some friends and you can face off in a swipe-based shooting contest.
    At first it's easy enough.

    March Madness is upon us, bringing dunks and layups galore as 68 college teams vie for the national championship. It's easy to get swept up in the hype, but if you're anything like me a trip to the court only ends in disappointment, rather than any spectacular recreation of a trick shot or buzzer beater. Instead, we recommend checking out Messenger Madness, a hidden game built into Facebook's chat app. Just send a basketball emoji to some friends and you can face off in a swipe-based shooting contest.
    At first it's easy enough. The ball moves after each throw, creating increasingly difficult angles for your digits to contend with. The aim is to nail consecutive baskets and build up a high score that's insurmountable for your Facebook friends. The problem is that the basket moves from side to side once your score breaches 10, making perfect shots nigh on impossible. But what would be the fun without a little challenge?

    March Madness is upon us, bringing dunks and layups galore as 68 college teams vie for the national championship. It's easy to get swept up in the hype, but if you're anything like me a trip to the court only ends in disappointment, rather than any spectacular recreation of a trick shot or buzzer beater. Instead, we recommend checking out Messenger Madness, a hidden game built into Facebook's chat app. Just send a basketball emoji to some friends and you can face off in a swipe-based shooting contest.
    At first it's easy enough. The ball moves after each throw, creating increasingly difficult angles for your digits to contend with. The aim is to nail consecutive baskets and build up a high score that's insurmountable for your Facebook friends. The problem is that the basket moves from side to side once your score breaches 10, making perfect shots nigh on impossible. But what would be the fun without a little challenge?

    The ball moves after each throw, creating increasingly difficult angles for your digits to contend with. The aim is to nail consecutive baskets and build up a high score that's insurmountable for your Facebook friends. The problem is that the basket moves from side to side once your score breaches 10, making perfect shots nigh on impossible. But what would be the fun without a little challenge?

    Friday, February 19, 2016

    If you think winter nights are long, think again.
    You could be living in a world where, once every 69 years, the sun almost totally disappears for three and a half years.
    Researchers have discovered a binary star system, two stars orbiting each other, that boasts a new record for the longest known stellar eclipse and the longest time between eclipses.
    It smashes the record held by the previous system, Epsilon Aurigae - a giant star that is eclipsed by its companion star every 27 years, for periods ranging from 640 to 730 days.
    Researchers have discovered a binary star system, two stars orbiting each other, that boasts a new record for the longest known stellar eclipse and the longest time between eclipses. It is 10,000 light years from Earth and is referred to by its catalogue number TYC 2505-672-1. Illustration of the system is shown 
    Researchers have discovered a binary star system, two stars orbiting each other, that boasts a new record for the longest known stellar eclipse and the longest time between eclipses. It is 10,000 light years from Earth and is referred to by its catalogue number TYC 2505-672-1. Illustration of the system is shown 
    The new system is 10,000 light years from earth and while it doesn't yet have name, it is referred to by its catalogue number TYC 2505-672-1. 
    The discovery was made from photographic plates taken by Harvard in the 1980s as part of the Digital Access to a Sky Century at Harvard (DASCH) program, by a team of astronomers from Vanderbilt and Harvard Universities.
    ‘It’s the longest duration stellar eclipse and the longest orbit for an eclipsing binary ever found by far,’ said Joey Rodriguez, a doctoral student and the lead author of the paper.
    The university had recently started to put the plates, from between 1980 and 1989, into a digital form when the binary system caught the attention of Sumin Tang, a postdoc student.
    Tang presented her own results on the system at a conference, which led to Rodriguez and Tang collaborating.
    The eclipse smashes the record held by the previous system, Epsilon Aurigae - a giant star that is eclipsed by its companion star every 27 years, for periods ranging from 640 to 730 days. The light curves from Epsilon Aurigae are pictured top, while the light curves for the new binary system are shown bottom
    The eclipse smashes the record held by the previous system, Epsilon Aurigae - a giant star that is eclipsed by its companion star every 27 years, for periods ranging from 640 to 730 days. The light curves from Epsilon Aurigae are pictured top, while the light curves for the new binary system are shown bottom
    The research team found 9,000 pictures of the binary star system taken by the Kilodegree Extremely Little Telescope (Kelt), shown. They used the pictures to discover that the system is made of a pair of red giant stars
    The research team found 9,000 pictures of the binary star system taken by the Kilodegree Extremely Little Telescope (Kelt), shown. They used the pictures to discover that the system is made of a pair of red giant stars
    They found 9,000 pictures of the system taken by the Kilodegree Extremely Little Telescope (Kelt).
    They discovered that the system is made of a pair of red giant stars. 
    One of the stars had been stripped down to a relatively small core and surrounded by an extremely large disk of material that produces the extended eclipse.
    The system is so far away that they could only extract a limited amount of data, but could estimate the surface of the companion star is about 2,000 times hotter than the surface of the sun. 
    The distance between the two is about as far as our sun to Uranus.

    RECORD HOLDING ECLIPSES  

    OLD RECORD HOLDER: EPSILON AURIGAE
    Eclipsed every 27 years
    Eclipses lasting from 640 to 730 days
    2,000 light years from Earth
    NEW RECORD HOLDER: TYC 2505-672-1
    Eclipsed every 69 years
    Eclipses lasting 1277 days
    10,000 light years from Earth
    ‘Right now even our most powerful telescopes can’t independently resolve the two objects’ said Rodriguez. 
    ‘Hopefully, technological advances will make that possible by 2080 when the next eclipse occurs.’
    ‘One of the great challenges in astronomy is that some of the most important phenomena occur on astronomical timescales, yet astronomers are generally limited to much shorter human timescales,# said co-author Keivan Stassun, professor of physics and astronomy at Vanderbilt.
    ‘Here we have a rare opportunity to study a phenomenon that plays out over many decades and provides a window into the types of environments around stars that could represent planetary building blocks at the very end of a star system’s life.’
    This system will allow researchers to carefully study the eclipse in 2080 when the next one is predicted.
    If you think winter nights are long, think again.
    You could be living in a world where, once every 69 years, the sun almost totally disappears for three and a half years.
    Researchers have discovered a binary star system, two stars orbiting each other, that boasts a new record for the longest known stellar eclipse and the longest time between eclipses.
    It smashes the record held by the previous system, Epsilon Aurigae - a giant star that is eclipsed by its companion star every 27 years, for periods ranging from 640 to 730 days.
    Researchers have discovered a binary star system, two stars orbiting each other, that boasts a new record for the longest known stellar eclipse and the longest time between eclipses. It is 10,000 light years from Earth and is referred to by its catalogue number TYC 2505-672-1. Illustration of the system is shown 
    Researchers have discovered a binary star system, two stars orbiting each other, that boasts a new record for the longest known stellar eclipse and the longest time between eclipses. It is 10,000 light years from Earth and is referred to by its catalogue number TYC 2505-672-1. Illustration of the system is shown 
    The new system is 10,000 light years from earth and while it doesn't yet have name, it is referred to by its catalogue number TYC 2505-672-1. 
    The discovery was made from photographic plates taken by Harvard in the 1980s as part of the Digital Access to a Sky Century at Harvard (DASCH) program, by a team of astronomers from Vanderbilt and Harvard Universities.
    ‘It’s the longest duration stellar eclipse and the longest orbit for an eclipsing binary ever found by far,’ said Joey Rodriguez, a doctoral student and the lead author of the paper.
    The university had recently started to put the plates, from between 1980 and 1989, into a digital form when the binary system caught the attention of Sumin Tang, a postdoc student.
    Tang presented her own results on the system at a conference, which led to Rodriguez and Tang collaborating.
    The eclipse smashes the record held by the previous system, Epsilon Aurigae - a giant star that is eclipsed by its companion star every 27 years, for periods ranging from 640 to 730 days. The light curves from Epsilon Aurigae are pictured top, while the light curves for the new binary system are shown bottom
    The eclipse smashes the record held by the previous system, Epsilon Aurigae - a giant star that is eclipsed by its companion star every 27 years, for periods ranging from 640 to 730 days. The light curves from Epsilon Aurigae are pictured top, while the light curves for the new binary system are shown bottom
    The research team found 9,000 pictures of the binary star system taken by the Kilodegree Extremely Little Telescope (Kelt), shown. They used the pictures to discover that the system is made of a pair of red giant stars
    The research team found 9,000 pictures of the binary star system taken by the Kilodegree Extremely Little Telescope (Kelt), shown. They used the pictures to discover that the system is made of a pair of red giant stars
    They found 9,000 pictures of the system taken by the Kilodegree Extremely Little Telescope (Kelt).
    They discovered that the system is made of a pair of red giant stars. 
    One of the stars had been stripped down to a relatively small core and surrounded by an extremely large disk of material that produces the extended eclipse.
    The system is so far away that they could only extract a limited amount of data, but could estimate the surface of the companion star is about 2,000 times hotter than the surface of the sun. 
    The distance between the two is about as far as our sun to Uranus.

    RECORD HOLDING ECLIPSES  

    OLD RECORD HOLDER: EPSILON AURIGAE
    Eclipsed every 27 years
    Eclipses lasting from 640 to 730 days
    2,000 light years from Earth
    NEW RECORD HOLDER: TYC 2505-672-1
    Eclipsed every 69 years
    Eclipses lasting 1277 days
    10,000 light years from Earth
    ‘Right now even our most powerful telescopes can’t independently resolve the two objects’ said Rodriguez. 
    ‘Hopefully, technological advances will make that possible by 2080 when the next eclipse occurs.’
    ‘One of the great challenges in astronomy is that some of the most important phenomena occur on astronomical timescales, yet astronomers are generally limited to much shorter human timescales,# said co-author Keivan Stassun, professor of physics and astronomy at Vanderbilt.
    ‘Here we have a rare opportunity to study a phenomenon that plays out over many decades and provides a window into the types of environments around stars that could represent planetary building blocks at the very end of a star system’s life.’
    This system will allow researchers to carefully study the eclipse in 2080 when the next one is predicted.
    This is an artists conception of binary star system TYC-2505-672-1. (Jeremy Teaford, Vanderbilt University)
    This is an artists conception of binary star system TYC-2505-672-1. (Jeremy Teaford, Vanderbilt University)

    A total eclipse of the Sun lasts about 12 minutes here on Earth, but if you live in the binary star system TYC 2505-672-1, one sun disappears for three-and-a-half years as it is eclipsed by its companion.
    Writing in the Astronomical Journal, researchers from Vanderbilt and Harvard universities say these long eclipses happen every 69 years in the system that is nearly 10,000 light-years away. They say that sets records for both “longest duration stellar eclipse and the longest period between eclipses in a binary system.”
    Binary systems contain two stars that orbit each other.
    "It's the longest duration stellar eclipse and the longest orbit for an eclipsing binary ever found …by far," said lead author and Vanderbilt doctoral student Joey Rodriguez.
    The researchers said the previous record holder was Epsilon Aurigae, which is eclipsed by its fellow star every 27 years for between 640 and 730 days.
    The researchers made the discovery using two resources.
    First, they accessed the American Association of Variable Star Observers (AAVSO), a non-profit group of amateur and professional astronomers who study variable stars. The group provided the paper’s authors with “a few hundred” observations of TYC 2505-672-1's latest eclipse.
    The researchers also used the Digital Access to a Sky Century @ Harvard (DASCH), which contains thousands of photographic plates made by Harvard astronomers from 1890 and 1989.
    Using the available observations, the team believes the system is made up of two red giant stars. One of these stars, they say, has been “stripped down to a relatively small core,” creating a large disc of debris that causes the long eclipses.
    "About the only way to get these really long eclipse times is with an extended disk of opaque material. Nothing else is big enough to block out a star for months at a time," Rodriguez said.

    The phone that really CAN tell you if you're hot or not: Caterpillar's latest Android phone has built in thermal imaging camera

    • The $600 Cat S60 has underwater camera and thermal imaging camera 
    • Rugged smartphone runs on Android Marshmallow and can survive drops
    • It also has Gorilla Glass 4 display, and touchscreen works with wet fingers

    When you think of Caterpillar, yellow and black construction machinery is more likely to come to mind than smartphones.
    But, in the image of its famed rugged equipment, the brand’s newest smartphone is built to withstand a beating – and it has thermal imaging sensors built into it.
    The $600 Cat S60 has promised to give users a ‘sixth sense,’ and with a strengthened die cast frame and the ability to function underwater for an hour at a depth of roughly 16 feet, the firm says it is essentially indestructible.
    When you think of Caterpillar, yellow and black construction machinery is more likely to come to mind than smartphones. But, in the image of its famed rugged equipment, the brand’s newest smartphone is built to withstand a beating – and it has thermal imaging sensors built right into it

    THE INDESTRUCTIBLE PHONE 

    The Cat S60 can survive a drop of almost six feet, and will function under water for up to an hour at a depth of almost 16 feet.
    The smartphone is dustproof and has a die cast frame, along with a Gorilla Glass display.
    Along with underwater capabilities, the phone also has a thermal image camera, allowing users to see 'invisible' heat contrast. 
    The Cat S60 is a smartphone, a thermal camera, and an underwater camera all in one.
    It runs on Android Marshmallow, and has a 3800mAh battery.
    According to Caterpillar, the S60 is the first phone to contain an integrated thermal camera, using an embedded heat visualization device made by FLIR.
    By creating an image that highlights temperature differences, the camera shows heat that is invisible to the naked eye.
    The practical uses are expansive, from detecting heat loss around windows and doors to identifying overheating appliances, or flaws in insulation.

    More Minecraft.
    Above: More Minecraft.
    Image Credit: Microsoft
    Correction: We originally stated that the 13 redstone skins cost $2 each, but they actually all come in a bundle for $2 total.
    Minecraft’s getting more content today.
    Microsoft announced today that the first big update of the year for its block-building game is available now for the Windows 10 and mobile versions. Minecraft, which is on just about every platform imaginable, has sold over 70 million copies (which is why Microsoft bought Minecraft developer Mojang for $2.5 billion in 2014). However, this new content, called the Overworld Update, is currently only available on PC and mobile. Sorry, PlayStation 4, Xbox One, and Wii U players.
    “With the Overworld Update, make more advanced mechanical contraptions with additional components, including comparators, repeaters, dispensers, droppers, hoppers and more,” Microsoft details on its site, Xbox Wire. “Stumble upon witch huts as you explore spooky swamps, and steal their unique potions to use for yourself. Other new gameplay elements include slime blocks, wearable pumpkins, and red sandstone.”
    Microsoft is also rolling out new skins based on the game’s redstone component along with the update. Two of them, the Composer and Artisan, are free, with 13 more available in a bundle for $2.

    Monday, February 15, 2016

    Quake warning: The app provides a countdown to the start of an earthquake.—  Reuters
    Quake warning: The app provides a countdown to the start of an earthquake.— Reuters
    NEW YORK: Smartphones could become the makeshift quake detectors of the future, thanks to a new app launched designed to track tremors and potentially save the lives of its users.

    MyShake, available on Android, links users to become an all-in-one earthquake warning system; it records quake-type rumblings, ties a critical number of users to a location, and could eventually provide a countdown to the start of shaking.

    Its inventors say the app, released by the University of California, Berkeley, could give early warning of a quake to populations without their own seismological instruments.

    "MyShake cannot replace traditional seismic networks like those run by the US Geological Survey," said Richard Allen, leader of the app project and director of the Berkeley Seismological Laboratory.

    "But we think MyShake can make earthquake early warning faster and more accurate in areas that have a traditional seismic network, and can provide life-saving early warning in countries that have no seismic network."

    Earthquake-prone countries in the developing world with poor ground-based seismic network or early warning systems include Nepal, Peru, Pakistan, Turkmenistan and Iran, he said.

    The algorithm behind MyShake, developed by a handful of Silicon Valley programmers, relies on the same technology smartphone gamers depend on to sense the phone's orientation, known as the accelerometer, in order to measure movement caused by quakes.

    What smartphones lack in sensitivity - they can only record earthquakes above magnitude 5 within 10 km - they make up for in ubiquity.

    Currently, 300 smartphones equipped with MyShake within a 110km square area are enough to estimate a quake's location, magnitude and origin time.

    There were some 3.4 billion smartphone subscriptions worldwide in 2015, according to the Ericsson Mobility Report, so the app's creators hope to build a seismic network covering the globe.

    "We want to make this a killer app, where you put it on your phone and allow us to use your accelerometer, and we will deliver earthquake early warning," Allen said.

    Sophisticated early-warning systems can warn of coming quakes as much as a few minutes before they begin, but cannot stop them causing death and destruction on a large scale.

    Nepal is still rebuilding after two separate earthquakes in April and May 2015 that killed 9,000 people, injured more than 22,000 and damaged or destroyed nearly 900,000 houses.  —  Reuters

    File picture shows a seismograph readout.
    File picture shows a seismograph readout.    
    A new Android app is capable of detecting tremors and sending the data to scientists.
    The developers of the MyShake app claim to be able to detect a magntitude five earthquake from 10 kilometres away or less.
    The app collects quake data at a central site, where an algorithm confirms that an earthquake is indeed occurring.
    "The location, origin time, and magnitude of the earthquake are then determined on the basis of multiple triggers from the network of phones. This information can be used to estimate the shaking intensity and the remaining time until damaging waves arrive at a target location," read an excerpt of the study, published in the Science Advances journal.
    Worried about your phone's battery life when using the app? The team has sought to reassure users.
    "The MyShake application currently uses about the same power that a smartphone uses when it is on but is not being used. For most users, a phone running MyShake does not need to be charged more than once every 24 hours."
    Of course, the app requires plenty of users to be truly effective. So how accurate is it then?
    Well, the team said that out of 1000 simulations (featuring 200 phones), the apps missed about three percent of events.
    "We also conducted a second group of 1000 simulations without earthquakes, just false triggers. None of these generated a false event. This is because we require >60 percent of active phones within a 10-km radius region to trigger for an event declaration," the team explained.
    New App Turns Android Smartphones Into Earthquake Detectors
    Researchers have developed an app that can turn smartphones into a worldwide seismic network that could eventually warn users of impending jolts from a nearby earthquake.
    With the help of a smartphone's accelerometer - the motion-detection instrument - the app, called MyShake taps a phone's ability to record ground shaking from an earthquake.
    The android app, which can be downloaded from Google Play Store, runs in the background with little power, so that a phone's onboard accelerometers can record local shaking any time of the day or night.
    For now, the app only collects information from the accelerometers, analyses it and, if it fits the vibrational profile of a quake, relays it and the phone's GPS coordinates to the Berkeley Seismological Laboratory at the University of California, Berkeley, for analysis.
    However, once enough people are using it, the seismologists plan to use the data to warn people miles from ground zero that shaking is rumbling their way.
    "MyShake cannot replace traditional seismic networks like those run by the US Geological Survey, UC Berkeley, the University of Washington and Caltech, but we think MyShake can make earthquake early warning faster and more accurate in areas that have a traditional seismic network, and can provide life-saving early warning in countries that have no seismic network," said the leader of the app project Richard Allen from the University of California, Berkeley.
    A crowd-sourced seismic network may be the only option today for many earthquake-prone developing countries, such as Nepal or Peru, that have a sparse or no ground-based seismic network or early warning system, but do have millions of smartphone users.
    "In my opinion, this is cutting-edge research that will transform seismology," UC Berkeley graduate student Qingkai Kong, who developed the algorithm at the heart of the app, said.
    Smartphones can easily measure movement caused by a quake because they have three built-in accelerometers designed to sense the orientation of the phone for display or gaming.
    While constantly improving in sensitivity for the benefit of gamers, however, smartphone accelerometers are far less sensitive than in-ground seismometers.
    But they are sensitive enough to record earthquakes above a magnitude 5 -- the ones that do damage -- within 10 kilometres.
    And what these accelerometers lack in sensitivity, they make up for in ubiquity. There are an estimated one billion smartphones worldwide, the researchers said.
    In a paper published in the journal Science Advances, the researchers described the algorithm in the mobile app that analyses a phone's accelerometer data and distinguishes earthquake shaking from normal vibrations, such as walking, dancing or dropping the phone.
    In simulated tests, the algorithm that the researchers developed successfully distinguished quakes from non-quakes 93 percent of the time.
    Boko Haram fighters trained in Somalia- President

    Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/02/boko-haram-fighters-trained-in-somalia-president/
    Boko Haram fighters trained in Somalia- President

    Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/02/boko-haram-fighters-trained-in-somalia-president/
    Manchester United are to name Old Trafford’s South Stand, which contains the only original part of the 1910 stadium infrastructure, after one of the club and England’s legends, United director Bobby Charlton.

    Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/news/

    Thursday, February 11, 2016

    Global warming: West Antarctic ice sheet could melt in next 1,000 years!
    Zee Media Bureau
    London: A new study suggests that the West Antarctic ice sheet may disappear within the next 1,000 years in the wake of global warming.
    The Antarctic and Greenland are covered by ice sheets, which together store more than two thirds of the world's freshwater. As temperatures rise, ice masses melt; in consequence the global sea level rises and threatens the coastal regions.
    "Given a business-as-usual scenario of global warming, the collapse of the West Antarctic could proceed very rapidly and the West Antarctic ice masses could completely disappear within the next 1,000 years," said one of the study authors, Johannes Sutter from the Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research, Bremerhaven, Germany.
    The Antarctic already today contributes to the annual sea level rise with 0.4 millimetres, as per scientific findings.

    “If the ocean temperature rises by more than two degrees Celsius compared with today, the marine-based West Antarctic ice sheet will be irreversibly lost. This will then lead to a significant Antarctic contribution to the sea level rise of some three to five metres,” Sutter noted.
    For the study, the researchers analysed the changes to the Antarctic ice sheet in the last interglacial period and applied their findings to future projections.
    The climate scientists used two models in their study. A climate model that includes various Earth system components such as atmosphere, oceans and vegetation, and a dynamic ice sheet model that includes all basic components of an ice sheet (floating ice shelves, grounded inland ice on the subsurface, the movement of the grounding line).
    Two different simulations were used with the climate model for the last interglacial period to feed the ice sheet model with all the necessary climate information.
    The findings were published online in the journal Geophysical Research Letters.
    (With Agency inputs)
    First Published: Wednesday, February 10, 2016 - 22:17

    What's going on with polar ice sheets?

    With the Arctic and Antarctic experiencing below average, if not record-low, sea-ice coverage, climate and polar researchers are scrambling to quantify how ice-loss could effect global sea levels.

    Recent measurements show that the Arctic’s sea ice extent in January was the lowest ever in the satellite record, while the Antarctic also saw lower than average ice coverage last month and a major ice sheet there could be verging on instability.
    The reports come at a time when climate and polar researchers are investigating the potential for heavy melting of ice sheets in the Arctic and Antarctic, and the effects the loss of the ice could have on global sea levels.
    According to the National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC), January’s sea ice extent in the Arctic averaged 5.2 million square miles, down from the more than 5.6-million-square-mile average observed between 1981 and 2010. The previous January low came in 2011; this month’s mark was around 35,000 square miles less than that record.
    The NSIDC, which researches and manages data about frozen regions around the globe and their climates, says the drop varied significantly from highs observed last January. The month’s unusually high temperatures, which were caused by a strong negative phase arctic oscillation – a variance in air pressure between the poles and more central latitudes – led to the extremely low ice coverage throughout much of the Arctic region.
    The Barents, Kara, and East Greenland seas had “unusually low ice coverage,” and less than average coverage in the Bering Sea and Sea of Okhotsk was observed. Ice in the waters surrounding most of northeastern Canada and western Greenland were reported to be “near average.”
    This data continues a negative decade-over-decade trend for January. The month’s average now sits at negative 3.2 percent every decade based on data collected since 1979. It also continues a trend of a less than 5.5-million-square-mile extent reported in each consecutive January since 2005.
    Despite what appears to be a consistent downward tendency in sea ice extent, a recent study published in Geophysical Research Letters suggests that the rate of Arctic ice loss may actually be slowing, at least in the Atlantic. Even though the January trend is on a negative trajectory, a tendency for more ice overall has been observed since 2005.
    “There is little doubt that we will see a decline in Arctic sea ice cover in this century in response to anthropogenic warming,” according to the research letter. However, “internal climate variations and other external forcings could generate considerable spread in Arctic sea ice trends on decadal timescales.”
    This research is supported by analysis of Meridional Overturning Circulation in the Atlantic, ocean patterns that circulate warm water to the Arctic and reduce the ice extent. While the study focuses on the Atlantic’s circulation, warming waters on the other side of the pole could persist.
    Another recently released study concerning an Antarctic ice sheet could also point to changes in ice levels at that pole and its effects on global waters. The West Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS), “considered the major contributor to global sea level rise” tens of thousands of years ago, could be primed to repeat history if the effects of greenhouse gases partially melt or collapse the sheet. The WAIS could have added several meters to seawater levels globally at a time when polar temperatures averaged 2 degrees Celsius higher than they are today.
    While the researchers behind the study and its simulations are still not certain about the effects of the potential WAIS melt, “Given a business-as-usual scenario of global warming, the collapse of the West Antarctic could proceed very rapidly and the West Antarctic ice masses could completely disappear within the next 1,000 years,” according to lead author Johannes Sutter of the Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research.
    The study estimates that the melt could lead to a sea level increase of 3 to 5 meters, notwithstanding a the potential for a rise of several more if ice at the Arctic pole also continues to disappear.



    Arctic sea ice extent hit a new January low last month, as warm temperatures enveloped the region and low air pressure allowed cold air to escape to mid-latitudes.
    Arctic sea ice extent during January averaged 5.2 million square miles (13.53 million square kilometers), which is 402,000 square miles (1.04 million square kilometers) below the 1981 to 2010 average for the month and 35,000 square miles (90,000 square kilometers) below the previous record January low in the satellite era, which occurred in 2011. This was largely driven by unusually low ice coverage in the Barents Sea, Kara Sea, and the East Greenland Sea on the Atlantic side, and below average conditions in the Bering Sea and Sea of Okhotsk.

    Earth's 2015 Temperatures Warmest On Record


    Temperatures across most of the Arctic Ocean during January were a remarkable 13 degrees F (6 degrees C) above average. This was to a large extent a result of the Arctic Oscillation — a variation in pressure patterns in the Northern Hemisphere — entering a strong negative phase during the first three weeks of the month, according to the National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC), which released the figures. That meant that lower air pressures allowed warmer air to push north, and cold air to head the other way.
    However, NSIDC underlined that, even allowing for such extremes as a result of natural fluctuations, the overall trend is clear: January sea ice extent in the Arctic is declining by an average of 3.2 percent per decade. Since January 2005, that extent has not once been above 5.5 million square miles (14.25 million square kilometers) during the month; from the start of the satellite record through 2004, it had never been below that level.
    Antarctic sea ice extent was also below average for the month, just one year after it reached record high levels. Indeed, on average Antarctic sea ice continues to increase in extent (albeit at a far lower level than Arctic sea ice is decreasing) despite the fact that the ocean around it is warming.

    What’s Ahead For Climate Change In 2016?


    Several theories have been offered to explain this, including changes in wind or water circulation patterns, or increases in snowfall. Another theory is that melting glaciers and ice shelves — which, unlike sea ice, are freshwater, which freezes at a higher temperature than saltwater — are causing a freshening of the sea surface along the edges of the Antarctic continent.
    It’s certainly the case that numerous Antarctic glaciers and ice shelves are melting, including some that had previously been considered stable. In some cases, this has led to outright collapse: For example, Larsen-A in the Antarctic Peninsula collapsed in 1995, followed by Larsen-B in 2002, and now their larger neighbor, Larsen-C, twice the size of Wales, may well join them.
    Unlike sea ice — which, as its name reflects, is frozen ocean — ice shelves are floating on the sea surface while still anchored to the shore; as they melt or collapse, they add to the total volume of the ocean. Of particular long-term concern is the fact that ice shelves that fringe Antarctica also act as “dams” for the massive ice sheet that covers the continental landmass; were those plugs to be removed, it is postulated, it could ultimately result in the loss of that ice sheet, with globally catastrophic levels of sea level rise.

    Global Warming Right Before Your Eyes: Photos


    A new study in the journal Nature Climate Change attempted to quantify how much of such ice shelves could “safely” be lost without starting to affect the dynamics of the ice sheet behind them. The authors combined satellite radar data with airborne observations of ice thickness to create models to calculate the buttressing effect of ice shelves.
    They found that, on average, 13 percent of total ice shelf area is “passive shelf ice:” it’s floating ice that provides no further buttressing. That is to say, the loss of such passive shelf ice would not in itself affect the ice sheet, although it would expose a “safety band” of ice behind it.
    “Once ice loss through the calving of icebergs goes beyond the passive shelf ice and cuts into the safety band, ice flow toward the ocean will accelerate, which might well entail an elevated contribution to sea-level rise for decades and centuries to come,” explained study co-author Dr Johannes Fürst, from the University of Erlangen-Nuremberg’s Institute of Geography. Unfortunately, some ice shelves have less passive ice than others.
    “The Amundsen and Bellingshausen Seas (in the West Antarctic) have limited or almost no passive ice shelf, which implies that further retreat of current ice-shelf fronts will have serious dynamic consequences,” Furst added. ”This region is particularly vulnerable as ice shelves have already been thinning at high rates for two decades.”
    Tags sea level rise sea ice Ice Glaciers
    http://news.discovery.com/earth/arctic-warms-antarctic-ice-shelves-weaken-160209.htm

    "I want to respond to Marc Andreessen's comments about India yesterday. I found the comments deeply upsetting, and they do not represent the way Facebook or I think at all," Mark Zuckerberg said in a Facebook posting yesterday afternoon. 

     

    mark zuckerberg facebook As the controversy refused to die down, Mark Zuckerberg on tried to distance himself from the comments made by his board member.
    Facebook founder and head Mark Zuckerberg has distanced himself from the comments made by Marc Andreessen about India, saying the remarks were “deeply upsetting” and did not represent the company’s thinking.
    “I want to respond to Marc Andreessen’s comments about India yesterday. I found the comments deeply upsetting, and they do not represent the way Facebook or I think at all,” Zuckerberg said in a Facebook posting yesterday afternoon.
    His comments came after Andreessen made a objectionable tweet after the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) ruled against Facebook’s free but restricted internet programme.
    “Anti-colonialism has been economically catastrophic for the Indian people for decades. Why stop now?” Andreessen tweeted, immediately evoking a sharp reaction from Indians.
    Andreessen quickly deleted the tweet and apologized through a series of tweets yesterday.
    “Last night on Twitter, I made an ill-informed and ill-advised comment about Indian politics and economics. To be clear, I am 100 per cent opposed to colonialism, and 100 per cent in favor of independence and freedom, in any country, including India,” he said later in a series of tweets.
    “I am a huge admirer of the nation of India and the Indian people, who have been nothing but kind and generous to me for many years. I apologize for any offense my comment caused, and withdraw it in full and without reservation. I will leave all future commentary on all of these topics to people with more knowledge and experience than me,” Andreessen said.
    As the controversy refused to die down, Zuckerberg on tried to distance himself from the comments made by his board member.
    “India has been personally important to me and Facebook. Early on in my thinking about our mission, I traveled to India and was inspired by the humanity, spirit and values of the people. It solidified my understanding that when all people have the power to share their experiences, the entire world will make progress,” Zuckerberg wrote.
    Facebook stands for helping to connect people and giving them voice to shape their own future, he said.
    “But to shape the future we need to understand the past. As our community in India has grown, I’ve gained a deeper appreciation for the need to understand India’s history and culture,” Zuckerberg said.
    “I’ve been inspired by how much progress India has made in building a strong nation and the largest democracy in the world, and I look forward to strengthening my connection to the country,” Zuckerberg wrote.

     

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