The Next Web |
- DigiCal for Android gets new-look widgets and calendar view options
- The rise of OpenStreetMap: A quest to conquer Google’s mapping empire
- Android developer missing TestFlight? TestFairy has you covered
- Type Machine for Android remembers everything you type
- Troubled Bitcoin exchange Mt. Gox has filed for bankruptcy protection in Tokyo
- Manchester United fans are getting a shot to ‘be’ at a match via a live Google+ Hangout
- Vietnam’s central bank rules that Bitcoin isn’t a legal currency and warns of risks
- WeChat comes to the desktop with the launch of a native Mac client; Windows is likely to be next
- Hulu parts ways with its Japanese business, selling it to Nippon TV
- Google amps up Hangouts for iOS, adding stickers and Vine-like short video messaging
| DigiCal for Android gets new-look widgets and calendar view options Posted: 28 Feb 2014 04:57 AM PST
The update brings an overall cleaner design to all widget types and introduces some much needed pre-configured widget options for people that don't have time to tinker and set up their own. As a bonus, it'll also now show a live preview of how widgets will look before you settle on your theme. Among the list of updates, there's the option to set lock screen widgets so you can view your meetings without needing to unlock your device (provided you're running Android 4.2 or newer) and a few other little tweaks for premium DigiCal+ users – like the option to use the 'Month Calendar' widget. ➤ DigiCal [Google Play] Featured Image Credit – Thinkstock
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| The rise of OpenStreetMap: A quest to conquer Google’s mapping empire Posted: 28 Feb 2014 04:21 AM PST ![]()
This definition of omnipresent sums up many facets of society. Fast food chains? Everywhere. Reality TV shows? You know the answer. And what about Google? Yup, right again. What started as a simple search engine back in 1998 is now an omnipresent force, spanning search, email, video, productivity, smartphones, laptops, glasses, navigation and more. And by more, we mean more. Just last month, Google acquired Nest for multiple billions, even though it really only has a (smart) thermostat and smoke detector to its name. But it's all about the future, and the future is very much about smart homes and the Internet of everything. Not long before Nest, Google acquired Boston Dynamics, a company that builds robots that can walk and run and have names like BigDog, Cheetah, WildCat and Atlas. Cheetah can apparently run faster than Usain Bolt. This initiative could well be bolstered by its subsequent acquisition of artificial intelligence (AI) firm DeepMind, for what's thought to be in the region of $500m. Five years from now, Google may have data-points from every facet of your life – at home, on the bus, and in the car. However, this is all just scene-setting for what we're really here to talk about – maps. Navigation: There's a (Google) map for thatDeeply entrenched in Google's arsenal of innovation is Google Maps, a service you've no doubt encountered in your time online through Google's own cross-platform mapping tools, or the slew of third-party apps that suckle from its navigational teat. Maps is a massively useful service, one that single-handedly underscores the value of 3G- and 4G-enabled smart devices, as it means no more expensive satnav systems for your car, and no more stopping strangers in the street to ask where the Horse & Hound pub is. As with most of Google's services, Maps brings endless value to the table, and it's difficult to knock something that has ultimately changed the way people interact with the world around them. But is a future where Google knows where you are at all times a good thing? We're already seeing how Google+ is being used as its cross-product glue, providing a 'unified' experience. Want to post a comment on YouTube or write a review on Google Play? You gotta use Google+. Google Maps is one obvious omission here – you can use it on the Web without having to surrender any account details. Could that change in the future? Who knows. But anything's possible. Of course, you're not physically tethered to Google Maps – you use it because it's genuinely a great service. Decent alternatives include Microsoft's Bing Maps and Nokia's HERE mapping services, but 'Google Maps is Google Maps', right? Then there's OpenStreetMap, which you may have encountered before without really knowing it. For the unitiated, OpenStreetMap is a free, editable map of the world created by the online masses. Yes, it's just like Wikipedia…but for maps. OpenStreetMap is also a little bit like Google's very own Map Maker tool, insofar as it taps the goodwill of the public to improve the geo-data associated with its maps, without a hint of financial reward. One key difference, of course, is that OSM is a not-for-profit that gives the data back to the community to reuse in other products and services. Google, on the other hand, is a multi-billion dollar corporation that sells much of this data back to third-parties. The hows and whys of people's decision to donate their spare time to a money-making enterprise is an argument for another day. But the fact that Google has adopted an OpenStreetMap-style approach to improving its own maps is telling – and it also bodes well for the future of OSM. In recent times, OSM has hit the headlines on a number of occasions, often when a well-known tech-brand adopts the open-source mapping platform instead of Google. Foursquare ditched Google Maps back in 2012 for the OpenStreetMap-powered MapBox, Craigslist uses it for apartment searches, while the mighty Apple has turned to OpenStreetMap data too, even though it took a while for the attribution to be added. One of the key reasons more companies have started using OpenStreetMap over Google Maps in recent times comes down to two simple things: price and quality. Back in 2012, Google introduced usage limits for its API, which basically stipulated that once a third-party app exceeded 25,000 map loads for 90 consecutive days, the company/developer would have to pay $4 for every subsequent 1,000 map loads above the free allowance. This fee was subsequently lowered to $0.50, but only after some big-name departures, including the aforementioned Foursquare. There are rather a lot of OSM-based services out there now, including Germany-based Skobbler, which serves up GPS navigation and other travel-themed apps for iOS and Android. Skobbler hit the headlines at the end of January, after it was acquired by personalized navigation company Telenav for $25 million. But perhaps one of the more fascinating facets of this deal was who was already leading Telenav's efforts in the OpenStreetMap space – this was none other than Steve Coast, founder of the OpenStreetMap project itself, who had joined Telenav from Microsoft the previous September. Coast was quick to point out Google's own efforts in the people-powered mapping space, as he explained in a post-Skobbler acquisition blog post
But that's only the tip of the iceberg. There has been more than a few dissenting voices over the years, from those concerned about Google's hold on all our data. 'Owning' locationSerge Wroclawski, the OpenStreetMapper and self-proclaimed ethical hacker behind the Emacsen blog, posted a very interesting and heartfelt article last month called Why the World Needs OpenStreetMap. While he raises a number of important points, one of the core underlying tenets of his argument centers on the issue of 'owning' location. "In the 1800s, people were struggling with time – not how much of it they had, but what time it was," he says. "Clocks existed, but every town had its own time – 'Local Time' – which was synchronized by town clocks or, more often than not, church bells. Railway time, then Greenwich Mean Time [GMT] eventually supplanted all local time, and most people today don't think about time as anything but universal." Using this concept of the universality of time, Wroclawski prods at the modern-day quandary of location – vis-à-vis who owns it, and should one corporation lay claim to the notion of 'place'. It's not just about Google Maps of course – there's Nokia's HERE Maps which was boosted by its $8 billion Navteq acquisition back in 2007, and TomTom too, underpinned by its 2008 Tele Atlas acquisition. But Google is a good example of how one company could grow to own the concept of 'place'. Wroclawski argues that such companies are striving to become "the definitive sources" of location, given that it's such big business. "With all these companies, why do we need a project like OpenStreetMap?," he ponders. "The answer is simply that as a society, no one company should have a monopoly on place, just as no one company had a monopoly on time in the 1800s. Place is a shared resource, and when you give all that power to a single entity, you are giving them the power not only to tell you about your location, but to shape it." Ultimately, Wroclawski's concerns about place-ownership center on things such as who decides what is displayed on a map (e.g. Google), and the mass collection of data. It all makes for an interesting read, one that builds a strong case for OpenStreetMap as a 'thing'. A Wikipedia-style platform for maps – open, transparent and editable by anyone with a desire to do so. With that in mind, we caught up with Steve Coast to get the lowdown on where OpenStreetMap has come from, where it's at, and where things could go from here. The rise of OpenStreetMap |
| Android developer missing TestFlight? TestFairy has you covered Posted: 28 Feb 2014 03:50 AM PST ![]() Shortly before Apple acquired the beta app testing platform TestFlight this month, the company announced it was dropping support for Android apps – leaving users without an easy alternative to switch to. However, TestFairy has just launched a hassle-free migration service for TestFlight users looking to carry on their development and testing without having to radically change their workflow. In fact, users can shift across with their existing TestFlight SDKs as they are now and the system will convert the apps to work with TestFairy's API when they're uploaded.
In addition to painless migration, the company says TestFairy also offers the option to record videos (of what a user was doing in the app), generate heat maps, and provide coverage reports for further fine-tuning. Featured Image Credit – Shutterstock This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now |
| Type Machine for Android remembers everything you type Posted: 28 Feb 2014 03:14 AM PST ![]() It's a problem we've probably all encountered at some point. You enter a chunk of text on your phone, but your fat-fingeredness leads you to accidentally delete it. Or perhaps you jotted something down in one of your apps, but can't recall where? This is where Type Machine for Android wants to help. Type Machine basically collects your entire text-input history, covering every app. To enable Type Machine, you have to switch it on within the accessibility settings of your device, then all you have to do is type away as normal, then revisit Type Machine whenever you wish to search back through your typing history. You can filter by app, and user a little slider to see what you typed letter by letter, then 'tap' and copy the text to your clipboard. From our tests, it does work with most native Android apps, though for some reason it didn't work with Twitter at all. This is seemingly a known issue. And for the privacy-concerned among you, it won't save any text entered into password fields, while you can set a PIN to lock your history. You can also configure a list of apps you don't wish to track. If you can ignore the inevitable privacy concerns such an app raises regardless of the baked-in features designed to combat this, Type Machine is a neat little app for sure that could have many (legitimate) uses. And it's yours for $1.99 on Google Play now. Feature Image Credit – Shutterstock This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now |
| Troubled Bitcoin exchange Mt. Gox has filed for bankruptcy protection in Tokyo Posted: 28 Feb 2014 02:10 AM PST ![]() Troubled Bitcoin exchange Mt. Gox, once the largest of its kind, has filed for bankruptcy protection, the Wall Street Journal reports. At the Tokyo district court today, a lawyer for Mt. Gox announced the move and said the company has an outstanding debt of about 6.5 billion yen ($63.6 million). Mt. Gox disappeared from the Internet earlier this week amid rumors that it is battling insolvency. Subsequently, CEO Mark Karpeles told customers on the Mt. Gox homepage that he was "working very hard with the support of different parties to find a solution" to the exchange's various issues. The exchange has consistently traded below the market valuation for months due to security concerns — and recently it completely froze withdrawals, sending prices on the exchange crashing as customers worried about the future of Bitcoins stored in Mt. Gox. What was more, a document claimed to have been leaked out of Mt. Gox was circulating within the Bitcoin community earlier this week, which suggested that 750,000 Bitcoins belonging to the company's customer base had been lost. Filing for bankruptcy protection will no doubt add on to those concerns — and cast a shadow on the future of Bitcoin. Pre-empting such a response, the heads of six of the world's biggest Bitcoin exchanges earlier penned a letter in response to reports of Mt. Gox's impending insolvency. Image Credit: Yoshikazu Tsuno/AFP/Getty Images This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now |
| Manchester United fans are getting a shot to ‘be’ at a match via a live Google+ Hangout Posted: 28 Feb 2014 01:40 AM PST Manchester United has teamed up with Google to let a selected group of fans "be" at Old Trafford on March 16 for the kick-off of a match between United and Liverpool. Through 'Front Row,' these selected fans can witness the match via a live Google+ Hangout. To have a shot at being selected, fans have to share a picture on Google+, along with the tag #MUFrontRow. A "handful" of the submissions will be selected, though no specific number was provided. You get more swag after the match too — each participant will get photos of your appearance on the pitch and a welcome on United's Google+ page. It seems like initiatives such as these that blend offline and online social interactions are growing in popularity as brands and celebrities seek new ways to keep in touch with their audience — and that's all the better for fans. Thumbnail image via Andrew Yates/AFP/Getty Images This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now |
| Vietnam’s central bank rules that Bitcoin isn’t a legal currency and warns of risks Posted: 27 Feb 2014 11:03 PM PST
In a statement, Vietnam's central bank notes that there has been an increase in Bitcoin activity recently. In response to that, it says Bitcoin is harmful as it is linked to criminal activities such as money laundering, drug trafficking and tax evasion among others. It also says that Bitcoin trading poses a lot of risks — citing the fluctuation in its value ever since exchange Mt. Gox went offline amid insolvency rumors. Due to the volatility of Bitcoin, Vietnam's central bank notes that it could potentially be damaging for investors as well. The bank also states that financial institutions are not allowed to use Bitcoins when providing services — but didn't lay out specific regulations for Internet users — which suggests that Vietnam could allow Bitcoin to continue existing even as it warns of the risks, though users won't be able to receive any legal backing even after encountering issues such as fraud. ➤ Vietnam Says Bitcoin Transactions Are Illegal [Associated Press] Image va Shutterstock, thumbnail image via Shutterstock This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now |
| WeChat comes to the desktop with the launch of a native Mac client; Windows is likely to be next Posted: 27 Feb 2014 09:34 PM PST There's now an additional way for users of popular messaging service WeChat to communicate — via a newly-launched native desktop Mac client. Announced on its official Weibo account, the WeChat Mac client is available in both English and Chinese and brings the WeChat interface into a setting optimized for the Mac desktop. You need to have Mac OS X 10.7 (Lion) or above to install the client. A Web version of WeChat has already been available for users to chat on their PCs — all you have to do is scan a QR code to sync your mobile version to the browser — but this is the first time a native desktop client has been introduced. Other than providing more options for users and making it easier to chat across platforms, WeChat's move brings it closer in line with its fierce rival, Japanese messaging app Line, which already has desktop clients for both Mac and Windows users. Windows users of WeChat have to wait for their turn though — despite the company declining to comment on its future plans, a WeChat Windows client is expected to land at some point in the future. This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now |
| Hulu parts ways with its Japanese business, selling it to Nippon TV Posted: 27 Feb 2014 06:54 PM PST
In a blog post (via GigaOm), Hulu CEO Mike Hopkins says that Hulu has "reached a point in the growth of the business in Japan where we feel the best path forward is to sell the company to a strategic buyer." Nippon TV, a television network in Japan, will be acquiring the video streaming service's operations in the country — for an undisclosed amount. Hopkins notes that Hulu is now accessible across more than 90 million devices in the Japanese market and includes content from 50 partners, totaling more than 13,000 TV dramas, anime programs and movies. The Hulu brand will still stay on in Japan though. Going forward, Hulu will be licensing its brand and technology and continue to provide services to the Japan business — which technically wouldn't mean much change on the part of users. ➤ An International Update From Hulu in Japan [Blog Post] Thumbnail image via Toshifumi Kitamura/AFP/Getty Images This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now |
| Google amps up Hangouts for iOS, adding stickers and Vine-like short video messaging Posted: 27 Feb 2014 06:22 PM PST ![]() Google has finally taken steps to super-charge its Hangouts app with new features, catching up with many of the messaging apps out there that have added a ton of features including stickers. A bunch of rich emoticon-like stickers have landed on Google Hangouts for iOS in a new update rolled out today. What's more, Google has also introduced Vine-like short video messages which you can send to your friends in place of photos, for example. You get to record videos up to 10 seconds long and send them to your friends, after which they will play in a loop automatically within your chat. The new version of Hangouts for iOS also features location sharing now, and is optimized for the iPad, thus including picture-in-picture video calling and a two-pane conversation view. Google has already relaxed Android settings to enable users to replace the central SMS system with Hangouts, but its move to introduce new features — even on iOS — could appeal to more users. We previously noted given the importance of messaging services in the mobile ecosystem now, considering the $19 billion acquisition of WhatsApp by Facebook, Google could consider super-charging its Hangouts app. This could include tighter synergies between its mobile apps and Hangouts, or the addition of games, stickers and other services that are proving popular in Asia with the likes of Line and WeChat. ➤ Google Hangouts: iOS Read – After missing out on WhatsApp, what does Google do next? Headline image via Justin Sullivan/Getty Images This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now |
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