Showing posts with label Apple Inc.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Apple Inc.. Show all posts

Here’s What A Web Browser Running On The Apple Watch Looks Like (Spoiler: Not Great)

“Wouldn’t it be neat to have a web browser on my Apple Watch?”

No, no it wouldn’t. It’s a thought most smartwatch owners have had at one time or another — but in the end, we probably don’t want that.

Comex, a well-known jailbreak developer who went off to spend some time as an Apple intern before moving on to other projects, has whipped up a fleeting but seemingly functional example of what a browser might look like running on the Apple Watch — and… well, again: you probably don’t want this.

The web just wasn’t built for screens this small. It took years for smartphone browsers to become more usable than frustrating, and a lot of the usability gains there came from massive screen spec jumps. A 1.5″ smartwatch screen never becomes particularly web-friendly, no matter how many pixels you cram in that screen.

Alas, Comex makes no mention of how he got this up and running. Out of the box, running arbitrary code like this shouldn’t be possible — while a native SDK is inbound, only stuff built with Apple’s somewhat limited WatchKit framework is supposed to run on the device for now. Is this a subtle demonstration of the world’s first jailbroken Apple Watch?

Here’s the vid, as tweeted by Comex and spotted by 9to5mac (Speaking of usability: pardon the wonky tallness of the video; it was shot vertically, so there’s no easy way to embed it in a pretty way. For best viewing, consider fullscreening it):

Apple Confirms Tattoos Can Affect Apple Watch’s Heart Rate Sensor Readings

Apple has updated its Apple Watch support documentation, confirming that the device may have issues when worn by users who have wrist tattoos. The changes were added following a series of reports from new Apple Watch owners who found that their tattoos seemed to interfere with the smartwatch’s ability to track their pulse or cause other problems. Apple now says that permanent and temporary changes to your skin, including the ink used in tattoos, can impact the heart rate sensor’s performance.

In addition, the document clarifies, the ink, pattern and saturation of the tattoo can block the light from the sensor, making it difficult for Apple Watch wearers to get reliable readings. That is to say, those with darker tattoos that cover more of the skin’s surface may have more issues than those with lighter tattoos that are smaller in size.

The paragraph on tattoos was added to a page detailing how the Apple Watch heart rate sensor works, in a section that explains what sorts of factors could affect the sensor’s performance and a wearer’s ability to get a good reading. The Internet Archive, which keeps historical copies of websites, shows that an earlier version of this same page didn’t include the note about tattoos, ahead of the Apple Watch’s launch in April.

That implies that Apple learned of the issues from user feedback, as Watch owners began to call in to report problems with their device. Some users even posted videos to YouTube demonstrating the problem first-hand, which were picked up by the media.
It’s not all that surprising that a wrist tattoo could impact the effectiveness of the Apple Watch’s light sensor. The sensor allows an Apple Watch owner to wear the device looser on the wrist – “snug but comfortable,” says Apple – and still get a good reading. Explains Apple:
Apple Watch uses green LED lights paired with light‑sensitive photodiodes to detect the amount of blood flowing through your wrist at any given moment. When your heart beats, the blood flow in your wrist — and the green light absorption — is greater. Between beats, it’s less. By flashing its LED lights hundreds of times per second, Apple Watch can calculate the number of times the heart beats each minute — your heart rate.
This type of technology has been known to cause problems in the past. For example, a reddit user several months ago noted that they had a problem getting a good reading using the Fitbit HR heart monitor. (A CNet report from 2014 also found that some of the then-current heart rate monitors on the market could also be thrown off by skin pigmentation.)

Apple Watch’s sensor is actually more advanced than the company has claimed, according to the teardown from iFixit posted in late April. The site said that Apple’s heart rate monitor is “actually a plethysmograph—it looks and acts like a pulse oximeter, but Apple isn’t claiming it can measure your blood oxygen level,” iFixit’s analysis noted. It suggested also that Apple wasn’t advertising the functionality due to FDA regulations.
Despite having this better sensor, it doesn’t solve the problems associated with inks on the skin blocking readings.

Apple recommends a workaround for those who experience these sorts of issues, saying that you can connect your Apple Watch wirelessly to external heart rate monitors, like Bluetooth chest straps. Of course, that’s not quite as elegant a solution as simply wearing a watch, but at least it will give more serious athletes and other quantified self enthusiasts an alternative means of gathering this data.

GNN Tech - 5 Effective Tools to Encrypt Your Secret Files

(GNN) - We now live in an age where everyone is watching everyone else, and everyone is reading each other’s emails, and opening each other’s files. This means that you need to pay closer attention than ever before towards encryption tools, and anything designed to protect your privacy.

We obsess over online privacy, especially when Eddie and Glenn decided to reveal top-secret files to the world.

We have seen how encryption tools like Bitlocker and secure zipping tools such as 7-Zip work. So here are 5 we have not already covered.

VeraCrypt
I am cheating a bit here, because VeraCrypt is a fork of the well-known but now discontinued Truecrypt. So do we count this as a new app, or a version of the old one? For the purposes of this article, I am going to go for the former.


VeraCrypt is simply brilliant. It can open TrueCrypt volumes, and it claims to have an algorithm with “enhanced security”, making the volumes tougher to crack. There is also a Mac OS X and Linux version for all those not rocking a Windows machine.

Kleopatra
Kleopatra is a “Certificate Manager and Unified Crypto GUI” which can be obtained from Git. In fact, you can obtain the source code from Git, so this option is only for those brave-of-heart who are willing to fight the good fight and help put Kleopatra together.AES Crypt
AES Crypt is as simple as it comes. It places an option in the Windows Explorer right-click menu window, and you can then encrypt the file with a password. AES Crypt will then give you an encrypted version of the file, which can only be opened by someone knowing the password. You can then email it out, put it on Dropbox for someone to download, and so on.


This means AES Crypt does not delete the original file. So if it has to be deleted, don’t forget about it. And don’t forget the password to your encrypted file either. Otherwise you’re really in trouble.

MiniLock
MiniLock goes a little bit further than AES Crypt in that it requires more than a password. You need your email and secret passphrase to generate a MiniLock ID. Then when someone wants to send you a file, they can use your MiniLock ID to encrypt it. If you want to encrypt and send something, you must have their MiniLock ID.

MiniLock also has a Chrome browser extension for creating files on the fly.

DMCrypt
DMCrypt is a Linux-only disk encryption program, so this is one I am not overly familiar with (my experience with Linux lasted a whopping 10 minutes). But it seems like a solid program, and therefore worth mentioning on Cool Websites & Apps.

In my mind, DMCrypt is a lot like Truecrypt/Veracrypt. You make an encrypted folder to store your sensitive files and you access it by mounting the folder as a partition. Here is an excellent guide to setting up an encrypted folder with DMCrypt.

Which encryption program do you use to point the finger at the NSA and GCHQ?

New Apple TV Hardware With Siri, App Store And HomeKit Said To Be Planned For WWDC

(GNN) - Apple had Apple TV news at its most recent special event, but it wasn’t the new Apple TV hardware some expected.

That refresh is coming in June at WWDC, however, according to Buzzfeed’s John Paczkowski, and alongside it we’ll finally see an App Store for the set-top box, as well as an official SDK, Siri support,

increased onboard storage and HomeKit support for passing on Siri instructions to connected home devices.

The new hardware from Apple makes a lot of sense in terms of timing: A price drop of the existing Apple TV was announced at the most recent event, providing the basis for clearance of existing inventory in preparation for a new model. Apple also announced a key step in a move towards Apple TV acting as a true replacement for, rather than just a complement to, existing satellite and cable TV services, thanks to the launch of HBO Now, a $15/month HBO streaming service available independent of any existing subscriptions.

Apple is already planning to launch a new streaming video service  complete with access to live broadcast channels and with pricing undercutting many cable packages in the fall with a summer unveil, according to recent reports. And we’ve heard that a new streaming music service, built on Beats Music but sporting iTunes branding, will launch in June as well. In other words, all the ingredients are coming together for WWDC to act as a media-focused special event, in addition to its role as a developer conference.

An Apple TV SDK, which would debut as part of this new hardware refresh, and help populate a new App Store, is another good reason for it to break cover at WWDC, as is the support for HomeKit-enabled devices. Using this new Apple TV, owners would be able to issue voice commands via Siri to accessories participating in Apple’s HomeKit program, which has been announced but not yet properly launched in terms of consumer availability just yet. It’s another big development platform that Apple could highlight at WWDC.

I wouldn’t be surprised if new Apple TV hardware also incorporated some kind of Apple Watch hook, in the form of a remote app for additional voice/gesture control options, so keep an eye out for that as well. It’s beginning to sound like the Apple TV could be poised to make an even bigger splash than the wearable, however, given how potentially disruptive of existing media markets it could be with this slate of new features, streaming services and third-party app support.

Apple declined to comment on this report.

U.S. Presbyterian Church close to accepting same-sex marriage

(GNN) - The U.S. Presbyterian Church was close on Tuesday to approving a change in the wording of its constitution to include same-sex marriage, a move which threatens to further splinter one of the largest U.S. mainline Protestant denominations.

The 171 regional "presbyteries" or local leadership bodies of the church have been voting on whether to change the wording to call marriage a contract "between a woman and a man" to being "between two people, traditionally a man and a woman."


The definition under debate is contained in the Louisville, Kentucky-based church's "Book of Order," part of its constitution. The change requires a simple majority of 86 votes, and only one more vote is needed, according to the Presbyterian Lay Committee, a conservative group which opposes the change. The vote could come by Tuesday night.

The church has more than 1.7 million members.

A gathering of elders and ministers of the church voted last June to allow clergy to perform same-sex weddings. The move gave clergy the choice of whether to preside over same-sex marriages in states where they are legal.

In 2012, the church's General Assembly narrowly voted to reject a proposal to redefine marriage as a union between "two people."

The church, also known as PCUSA, has lost more than 500,000 members over the past decade. Some church leaders have expressed concern that endorsement of same-sex marriage could cause an exodus of parishioners who see it as incompatible with biblical teachings.

"These are indeed difficult days for folks both within the PCUSA and other denominations that have made these same choices in the past," said Carmen Fowler LaBerge, president of the Lay Committee, in a conference call on Tuesday.

Clergy will not be compelled to perform same-sex marriage if the wording is changed.

David Gushee, a professor of Christian ethics at Mercer University in Atlanta, said that as with other denominations like the United Church of Christ that have changed policy on gay and lesbian issues, some congregants will be lost, but others will be gained.

"All across Christianity, we see the dominoes falling of abandoning the historic stigma and rejection of gay people and gay relationships," Gushee said.

The U.S. Supreme Court agreed this year to take up the issue of whether states can ban gay marriage, which is now allowed by 36 states and the District of Columbia.

(Reuters)(Editing by Eric Walsh)

Incomedia WebSite X5 Professional v11.0.5.24 + Keygen

(GNN) - WebSite X5 Professional 11 is the Perfect Solution for Creating Websites, Blogs and Online Stores. Optimized for search engines and fully functional on tablets and smartphones. In addition, it is complete with an app for mobile devices!

Designed for those who need to create professional websites, WebSite X5 Professional 11 maintains the structure of a guided tour, but has loads of extra tools and advanced features. The result is an amazing combination of simplicity and power.

MAIN FEATURES

This app offers a value-added service: a website that displays and functions correctly on a mobile device, and complete with an app.
The FeedReady app is ready and free for both iOS and Android: link it to your blog or RSS feeds and invite users to download it so they can receive all your news on their tablets and smartphones.

Import the product list and create the catalog, configuring all the necessary information: descriptions, costs, variants, photos, availability, etc. You have all the tools you need to present products in their best light and set up the purchasing process, deciding on delivery and payment methods and current promotions, using coupons, if you want.

Use the Dynamic contents feature so that others can update them, as for the CMS, working directly online. You maintain complete control over the project, with the advantage that clients don't have to depend on you for small changes.

Let users register online to members' areas so that, once they have validated their e-mail address, they can access the areas that require a login and password. You can store the data in a database and handle registration through the online Control Panel.

Use the available options to improve the optimization of website pages and contents: pictures, videos, products, etc. Before going online, use the project analysis features to further improve optimization.

Activate the bundled web-hosting service: 12 months of web space, broadband, databases and unlimited e-mails, as well as hosting and managing all the domains you want through the control panel.

 This is Torrent Download file. You must be Install µTorrent in your System.


http://extratorrent.cc/download/4064499/Incomedia+WebSite+X5+Professional+v11.0.5.24+%2B+Keygen+-+%5BFirstUploads%5D.torrent

The Gold Apple Watch Is Perfect For Douchebags

(GNN) - Editor’s Note: Kevin Rose is the founder of Digg, a technology investor, and CEO of North Technologies, creator of the watch news aggregator, Watchville.

I’m a mechanical watch collector and self admitted Apple fanboy. I wanted to love the Apple Watch Edition (Edition = marketing speak for “gold”). But I don’t understand the value here outside of the literal 1-2 troy ounces of 18k gold ($900-$1,800).

With its luxury watch offering, Apple missed me as both a technologist and collector. Let me explain.



Selling To The Technologist
The path to the technologist’s pocketbook is paved with (surprise) bleeding edge technology.

For Apple to succeed with the Watch Edition it would need to offer us more, technically. Say, an extra sensor or higher resolution display that has yet to hit high enough production volumes to make it throughout the rest of the line. The technologist could then point to these features as justification for the extravagant purchase. After all, higher tech is the reason they purchased the retina Macbook when it was first released.

Sadly this is not the case here, as nothing is different technically in this watch except for the addition of gold, for which you pay an over $7k markup.

Selling To The Collector
The watch collector craves the story, the artisanship of a collectable watch. We enjoy the painstaking craftsmanship that goes into making a timepiece that will last for decades.

A popular advertising campaign by storied watch manufacturer Patek Philippe states: “You never actually own a Patek Philippe. You’re merely looking after it for the next generation.”

Will The Apple Edition Watch Last To The Next Generation?
For me to purchase this watch as a collector, Apple would need to create a different (and more expensive) fabrication process that uses new internal (not just external) materials, specifically built to stand the test of time. Sell me on the story of lasting technology, a watch that even when out of date will still function for my grandkids, a watch that won’t be shuffled off to a corner of your closet like an old iPod.

As with traditional watches, add in a transparent sapphire back. I imagine something similar to the digital FPJourne Elegante would do. Showcasing the internal upgrades would also add to its collectability.
Right now with the Apple Watch Edition, the buyer is getting the same internals of the $349 version in a gold case. Where is the collectability in that?

I believe watchmaker Roger Smith best sums it up in saying (in reference to the late watchmaker Dr. George Daniels, creator of the coaxial escapement):

“For it takes a lifetime of experiences to create the pieces that he did. So when a collector buys a Daniels watch, they are not buying the year that it took Daniels to make the piece, they are buying the many years of self-sacrifice that it takes in order for a man to rise to a level where he can create greatness.”

Mass produced internals created in China, by machines, doesn’t create a feeling of craftsmanship or an aura of exclusivity – both key tenants a high-end collectible timepiece must have.



Selling To The Gold Lover
Apple’s focus should be on selling as many watches as possible, not becoming a fashion brand. Gold (the color) is hot right now in the fashion world. Why not use technology to get the gold watch in the hands of more people. Why didn’t Apple develop some type of “10x stronger gold coating” giving us the same visual aesthetic with the technological payoff? I’d happily pay an extra $500-$1,000 for that upgrade. But we don’t need solid gold on something that is disposable after a couple years.

So, I’m lost. Who is this watch for?

Without a technological advantage, and no upgrade or trade-in path, I would imagine the value to the consumer is that of broadcasting wealth. There are certain markets where this watch will sell well, regions of China (just put a goat on it) and Dubai come to mind.

But elsewhere, I fear that we’ll look at the Watch Edition as actress Anna Kendrick did:
I’m not sure that’s the image Apple wants.

Callr Releases A Mobile App To Make Conference Calls Less Of A Hassle

(GNN) - Do you hate conference calls? Do you hate having a thing just appear on your calendar with some sort of dial-in information that you always forget and then you have to go to your calendar with phone in hand and dial some numbers and then wait for a digital voice to welcome you and ask for a code and then you have to dial some more numbers? And if at any point you get any of it wrong, you have to go back and try to get the numbers right again?


Well, a startup called Callr has solved at least some of those problems — namely the need to search for, find and dial those elusive conference call numbers yourself. And now it has an iOS app and an Android app that will make it even easier for you to manage calls you’re scheduled to make.

Callr works like this: You hook it into your calendar and it automatically ingests all the details for upcoming calls. Then, when it comes time for your meeting to start, Callr dials into your meeting for you, then calls your phone and instantly connects you.

Callr saves you at least a few minutes of fumbling with dial-in codes and whatnot, and also makes sure you dial in to your meeting on time. (Actually, it generally dials you in a minute before a meeting starts, just to make you look good.) If you happen to miss a call, or can’t pick up at the very moment a call starts, Callr allows you to just call it back and it will automatically connect you to your conference.

Anyway, it’s been one of my favorite new tools ever since I started using it a few months ago. And with its new mobile apps, Callr is making managing conference calls even easier.


The main advantage to the app is that it gets new users signed up faster, since it can simply connect with the phone’s calendar to ingest meetings. It also provides more granular tools around snoozing calls if you can’t pick up right at the time they happen. Finally, Callr on your smartphone will allow deep linking with meetings that are supposed to happen on Skype, allowing users to quickly get connected through the messaging platform’s mobile app.

While Callr has only been available for the last four months, it’s connected 14,000 calls for users, according to Callr founder Mike Endale. (It doesn’t count calls that aren’t connected.) And people are actually listening in on those calls. Endale says the average call lasts 17 minutes after users are connected.

Anyway, the Callr app. Try it. It’s awesome.

Would You Buy A Rugged Case Kit For The Apple Watch?

(GNN) - Of all the complications that will worry the outer rim of Apple Watch buyers’ minds, the question of whether they need to purchase a case to protectively encase their expensive wrist-wear is perhaps the most frivolous.

On the surface it sounds ludicrous.

Who keeps a watch inside a case when it’s attached to their person? And yet the Apple Watch is really a very small wrist computer, with a price-tag that ranges right up to the luxury end of the market. To $10,000, or even $17,000.

It’s also intended as a multipurpose device, with fitness tracking functionality rubbing up against notifications and comms, with some ostentatious bling thrown in (at least if you’re shelling out for 18-karat gold). So it’s supposed to track you when you sweat through a half marathon and then remain on your wrist during that fancy dinner. Same device, different aspects.

Add to that, given that keeping your smartphone in a protective case is well-established behavior, the notion of similarly encasing a smartwatch is only really a small step away.

And so enter device case-maker, Lunatik, with a plan to build and sell ruggedized cases for the Apple Watch. It’s been working on this accessory since Apple officially unveiled its smartwatch last fall, using a mechanism previously patented for encasing the iPod Nano when worn on the wrist. The metal case is being designed to protect without limiting access to the various controls and sensors on the watch.

The forthcoming Epik Apple Watch Kit is only in prototype form at this point (with the latest samples pictured pictured below) — the team is aiming for a shipping timeframe of three months after the Apple Watch itself comes to market at the end of April, so circa summer.

Lunatik founder Scott Wilson says the intention is to test the market for this Apple Watch accessory, via a crowdfunding campaign. So it’s ready to admit it might have misjudged the madness of the moment.

And quite possibly it has.
But if someone is crazy enough to spend $15,000 on a smartwatch, what’s another $99 to $149 on a ruggedized case-plus-strap combo which promises to keep a few scratches off your investment?

Wearable technology is most relevant in situations where a phone interaction is not accessible or ideal. Sport, fitness and extreme conditions are a few of these occasions,” argues Wilson. “They also require more physically enhanced and purpose-built design to endure these extreme conditions.”


The aluminum Epik face case will apparently include hydrophobic vents for “an added layer of dust and water ingress protection”. It will also come with a custom plastic band strap, so you can leave your fancy leather/linked Apple Watch band at home when you hit the trail.

Wilson also talks up the personalization angle as a selling point for third party Apple Watch cases — given that wearable tech can’t help but elbow into the fashion space. So this is also about offering choice to appeal to personal taste, identity and style.

Which is another way of saying that a naked Cupertino-made Apple Watch might not look brawny enough for some folk. And those guys might actually prefer to put a rugged rim on it.

Amazon’s Apple Watch App Will Let You Shop From Your Wrist

(GNN) - Though online retailer Amazon wasn’t among one of the many applications Apple introduced this week as coming soon to its new wearable device, the Apple Watch, the company does have an Apple Watch version of its mobile shopping app in the works, we understand.

The shopping app will allow consumers to search for products and even buy them from their wrist using Amazon’s 1-Click ordering system.

Of course, it’s not surprising that Amazon will

address the forthcoming mobile platform – after all, the company tends to release a version of its shopping app on almost any viable mobile or connected platform, not just its own Kindle hardware. And it already has an Android Wear (i.e., smartwatch) version of its shopping app in the wild, so it makes sense that it would build the Apple Watch counterpart, too.

In fact, our understanding is that the Apple Watch version of the Amazon shopping app will operate just like the current Amazon app for Android Wear. That means it will support the ability to search for items using your voice, save products to your Amazon Wishlist, and even the ability to check out quickly using Amazon’s 1-Click ordering. (Oh, this could be dangerous, I think.)

The retailer, however, is not officially confirming the details around its new Apple Watch app at this time, but instead is only hinting that such a thing is in the works. A company spokesperson told us the only statement they’re offering for now is as follows:

“Amazon is constantly innovating on behalf of our customers. We are committed to being anywhere customers want to shop. That includes watches. We have an Amazon shopping app for Android Wear and will look to expand to other devices.”

“Other devices” essentially confirms Amazon’s plans to release an Apple Watch app, if you read between the lines, of course.

(Note: Above image is a mock-up.)

VW unveils multi-billion auto investments through next five years

GNN - Volkswagen AG (VOWG_p.DE) is to invest 85.6 billion euros ($106 billion) in its automotive operations over the next five years to push foreign expansion, new models and technology to back its quest for global leadership.

Volkswagen said the bulk of the cash will flow into developing more efficient vehicles and production methods, taking its capital expenditure to between 6 and 7 percent of revenue in the period from 2015 to 2019, which analysts said amounts to a slight hike in investment spending.

Analysts at investment banking advisory firm Evercore ISI said, "As expected, VW's five-year capex planning has not become a victim of the company's efficiency program which is, among other things, aiming at 5 billion euros of efficiency gains at the VW brand by 2018."

 
Volkswagen shares rose 1 percent, to 176.10 euros at 1140 GMT, while the DAX .GDAXI blue chip index was trading up 2 percent.

Around 41.3 billion euros of the investment plan will go toward developing a range of sports utility vehicles, modernizing part of the light commercial vehicle portfolio and toward developing hybrid and electric drives.

At the same time, investments are also planned in new vehicles and successor models in almost all vehicle classes, which will be based on modular toolkit technology and related components, the company said in a statement.

Volkswagen Group Chief Executive Martin Winterkorn said the investment plan will help it become "the leading automotive group in both ecological and economic terms with the best and most sustainable products."

Around 23 billion euros will be spent on expanding capacity at its plant in Poland where it builds Crafter vans, and the new Audi plant in Mexico, as well as on paint shops and a production facility to make vehicle parts.

Poised to meet its annual sales target of 10 million vehicles four years early in 2014, Europe's largest carmaker has also sought to embark on an efficiency drive to save 5 billion euros across its multi-brand group which includes luxury division Audi and Czech carmaker Skoda.

But squeezing budgets appears to be tough as VW faces costly commitments to develop fuel-efficient powertrains to meet carbon dioxide emission targets, and to beef up its troubled operations in the United States while expanding in China, its biggest market.

Volkswagen's Chinese joint ventures will invest 22 billion euros in new production facilities and products by 2019, the company said.

(1 US dollar = 0.8049 euro)

(GNN, Reuters, Aip)(Reporting by Andreas Cremer, Jan Schwartz and Edward Taylor; Editing by Kirsti Knolle and Vincent Baby)