Google

Sorry, But Google Glass Isn’t Actually For Sale To Everybody Yet

As reported on TechCrunch. by Frederic Lardinois You Know You Want A Galaxy S5 With Swarovski Crystals On The Back Rumor has it that Google Glass is currently for sale to anybody in the United States. Sadly (or not — depending on your feelings about Glass), that’s not actually the case. While the Google Glass store is indeed open and seems to be taking orders (Update: all the models are sold out now), Google tells us that this isn’t the public launch of Glass to anybody who…

Continue reading

Automotive Business

FTC: State bans on Tesla’s direct sales model are hurting competition

As reported on Engadget. BY JON FINGAS Tesla has just gained a valuable ally in its battle to sell cars directly to customers: the Federal Trade Commission. The regulator now argues that state bans on direct sales are “protectionist,” propping up the traditional dealership business model rather than protecting companies from unfair abuses by automakers. It’s the “competitive process” that should decide which sales model is better, not the law. The FTC also doesn’t buy the notion that Tesla’s modest US…

Continue reading

Space

Watch NASA’s Morpheus take to the air – then make a smooth landing

As reported on Engadget. BY MARIELLA MOON NASA’s Morpheus lander has gone a long way since it crashed and burned in 2012. The agency’s vertical landing and takeoff test vehicle now has a number of successful flights under its belt, including one that’s just concluded at the Kennedy Space Center. On this most recent flight, the lander easily traversed 1,300 feet at a speed of 36mph for 98 seconds, proving that it has a future in delivering cargo to space.…

Continue reading

Government Internet

It’s time for the FCC to stand up for Americans instead of ruining the internet

As reported on The Verge. By T.C. Sottek Cowardice and capitulation could mess up a vital utility The internet is fucked, and the US government is making it worse. Political cowardice caused the FCC to lose its first battle for net neutrality regulation: the rules that keep the internet as you know it free and open. The idea of net neutrality is that all traffic is created equal — whether you’re a movie streaming from Netflix, or a…

Continue reading

Legal Politics

The FCC’s New Net Neutrality Rules Will Brutalize The Internet

As reported on TechCrunch. by Alex Wilhelm Next St Google, AT&T, Verizon And Comcast Each Spent More Than $3M In Q1 Lobbying Congress The FCC will propose new net neutrality rules that at once protect content from discrimination, but also allow content companies to pay for preferential treatment. The news, first reported by the Wall Street Journal, would in fact create a two-tiered system in which wealthy companies can “better serve the market” at the expense of younger,…

Continue reading

Microsoft Tablet

Rumoured Microsoft Surface Mini Tablet Crops Up In Amazon Listings

As reported on TechCrunch. by Natasha Lomas  Next Story Uber, SnapCar And Others May Not Be Able To Use Geolocation In France Although it hasn’t happened yet, it’s clearly only a matter of time before Microsoft officially unboxes a smaller form-factor version of its Surface tablet. A Surface Mini has beenrumoured for well over a year – with both 7- and 8-inch options apparently being considered to augment the company’s existing line up of Windows powered tablets with the Surface 2 and Surface Pro…

Continue reading

Culture Engineering

IBM’s Watson supercomputer will soon be your personal shopper

As reported on Engadget. BY MARIELLA MOON Watson had been a doctor, a geneticist, a game show contestant and even a chef in the past. But now IBM’s supercomputer has a new career: personal shopping. IBM has partnered with digital commerce firm Fluid to develop a cloud-based app called Expert Personal Shopper (XPS), which uses Watson’s brains to answer buyers’ highly specific questions. In short, the computer with many hats now plays the role of a sales associate when you’re shopping online.…

Continue reading

Art

Lost Andy Warhol artworks discovered on Amiga floppies from the ’80s

As reported on Engadget. BY JON TURI Rediscovered artwork like a napkin Picasso or unearthed Matisse can be identified on sight, but pieces crafted in the digital age by pop-artist extraordinaire Andy Warhol and encoded in an outdated format are far more difficult to ascertain. In fact, it took the retro know-how of Carnegie Mellon University’s Computer Club and a team of artists, archivists and curators to wrangle some of Warhol’s lost pixels into the physical world. The…

Continue reading

Article Culture

You might also like this story about weaponized clickbait

As reported on The Verge. By Casey Newton Sleazy tabloid links have taken over the web — but their days may be numbered Reading news online over the past year, I came to realize that more or less every story now includes a beautiful woman. Tucked into modules with names like “around the web” or “you might like,” there she is, demonstrating her bosom or backside or pearly-white smile. Often she is a celebrity, talking about…

Continue reading

Apple Culture Engineering Environmental

New Apple Campus 2 Video Shows Eco-Friendly Aspects Of The “Mother Ship”

As reported on TechCrunch. by John Biggs The company will supply 1,000 shared bicycles at the new HQ and will use 30% less energy than the typical office building. It will also include solar and other renewable energy sources. Built in the “fruit bowl of America,” the new 2.8-million-square-foot space will house 13,000 engineers and be finished in 2016. Below are some more shots of the amazing new space.  

Continue reading