Beyond the kernel: Windows Phone 8’s Siri-like speech, VoIP integration, NFC Wallet

Ars on Windows Phone 8

Windows Phone 8 will be built around the same core components as Windows 8 and will support the development of native code applications. It will also boast a set of new APIs that not only fill out gaps in the current platform, but also provide some unique capabilities not found on the competition.

Since Apple first showed off Siri, conversational speech systems—allowing the phone to be controlled using some approximation of natural speech rather than rigidly fixed commands—have become all the rage. Siri is, however, essentially a sealed system that can’t directly interact with third-party applications.

Windows Phone 8 will include a conversational speech recognition system based on the TellMe technology used in Windows Phone 7. There’s a twist, though: Microsoft is making an extensible system. Application developers will be able to add new nouns and verbs to TellMe so that users can use the same conversational style to perform specific actions within applications.

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Beyond the kernel: Windows Phone 8’s Siri-like speech, VoIP integration, NFC Wallet

Rudimentary Liver Grown In a Dish

ananyo writes “Japanese scientists have coaxed stem cells into forming a 5-millimeter-long, three-dimensional tissue that the researchers labelled a liver bud — an early stage of liver development. The bud lacks bile ducts but has blood vessels, and when transplanted into a mouse, was able to metabolize some drugs that human livers metabolize but mouse livers normally cannot. The work is ‘the first report demonstrating the creation of a human functional organ with vascular networks from pluripotent stem cells,’ the team claims.”


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Rudimentary Liver Grown In a Dish

Google Maps to soon include waterway travel in England and Wales

Google Maps to soon include waterway travel in England and Wales

Here in America, avid motorists tend to tick that ‘Avoid Ferries’ option whenever possible. In England and Wales, however, travel including waterways is looked quite fondly upon. To that end, Google has reportedly started the process of mapping towpaths in the two nations, as it attempts to map bridges, locks and some 2,000 miles of canal / river paths. The Guardian quotes Ed Parsons, a geospatial technologist at Google UK, as saying the following: “Canal towpaths offer green routes through our towns and cities, and by working with the Canal and River Trust we’re adding towpaths to Google Maps and encouraging people to discover their local waterway.” As delightful as the news may be, we still can’t help but focus on a single mental image. That image, if you’re curious, is embedded after the break.

Continue reading Google Maps to soon include waterway travel in England and Wales

Google Maps to soon include waterway travel in England and Wales originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 20 Jun 2012 04:45:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Google Maps to soon include waterway travel in England and Wales

RIM reportedly firing up to 6,000 in $1 billion savings drive

RIM reportedly firing between 2,000  6,000 in $1 billion savings drive

The Waterloo Record is reporting that RIM is laying off a portion of its workforce as part of its cost-cutting review process. It’s believed that between 2,000 and 6,000 employees could be let go as the troubled company attempts to save $1 billion by the end of the fiscal year. Company watcher Martin Chmiel took to Twitter to say that the manufacturing team had been hardest hit, with hundreds of people departing in the past 24 hours.

RIM reportedly firing up to 6,000 in $1 billion savings drive originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 20 Jun 2012 07:03:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Mobilesyrup | sourceThe Waterloo Record, Martin Chmiel (Twitter) | Email this | Comments

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RIM reportedly firing up to 6,000 in $1 billion savings drive

Cartoon Network’s iPhone and iPad app adds a live TV feed, for authenticated customers

Cartoon Network's iPhone and iPad app adds a live TV feed, for authenticated customers

Cartoon Network announced plans to join the TV Everywhere party with a live internet feed of its channel (for authenticated cable / satellite customers) during upfronts and now the updated v1.8 app has arrived on iPhones and iPads. The feed can also be streamed with Flash on the channel’s website (we tried it on an Android 2.3 device and logged in but couldn’t get it to play), although the only differences we noticed were that the website feed was slightly ahead of our cable box and iOS was a few seconds behind, but with slightly higher picture quality. All in all it’s very similar to the WatchESPN experience (which ABC expanded upon last week with Watch Disney, Watch Disney Jr and Watch DisneyXD apps, though the full experience is only currently available to Comcast customers), and should satisfy all those who have been missing the Toonami experience when they’re away from home. Take a peek after the break for a preview trailer, shot of the login screen and press release.

Continue reading Cartoon Network’s iPhone and iPad app adds a live TV feed, for authenticated customers

Cartoon Network’s iPhone and iPad app adds a live TV feed, for authenticated customers originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 19 Jun 2012 21:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Confirmed: Flame created by US and Israel to slow Iranian nuke program

Kaspersky Lab

Flame

The United States and Israel jointly developed the Flame espionage malware to collect information that would be useful in disrupting Iran’s nuclear program, the Washington Post reported, citing unnamed Western officials with knowledge of the operation.

While important, the report isn’t entirely unexpected. Researchers said last week they had conclusive proof that developers of Flame collaborated with developers of Stuxnet, the highly sophisticated computer worm that targeted uranium enrichment operations in Iran’s Natanz nuclear facility. A week before that, an in-depth article in the New York Times provided the first confirmation that Stuxnet was created by the US and Israel before they ultimately lost control of it. Flame was part of “Olympic Games,” the same classified effort that spawned Stuxnet, Washington Post journalists Ellen Nakashima, Greg Miller, and Julie Tate reported Tuesday.

Still, the report is the first to cite unnamed officials saying Flame was jointly devised by personnel in the National Security Agency, the CIA, and Israel’s military. As such, it has helped to flesh out details of what is believed to be the first sustained campaign of computer-aided sabotage of a US adversary. And like the confirmation that Stuxnet received the explicit backing from two US presidents, the latest confirmation could harm US interests by touching off a cyber-arms race and making it harder for US officials to argue against their use.

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SeaOrbiter to begin construction by year’s end, project price tag clocks in at $52.7 million

SeaOrbiter to begin construction by year's end, project price tag clocks in at $527 million

Remember that USS Enterprise-esque ocean research vessel we first ran across back in 2005? Yes, the one that was originally slated to hit the open waters in 2008 or 2009. After catching heat for its lofty ambitions for the last 12 years, the SeaOrbiter is finally set to begin construction later this year. The ship is slated to measure 170 feet (51 meters) tall, but to stabilize the vessel over half of the vehicle would stay below the surface, providing all sorts of collection systems and useful tools. Not only does it look like something out of Minority Report, but the SeaOrbiter is 100% sustainable. The ship’s power is set to come from solar, wind and wave power with biofuel in case nature doesn’t cooperate — when the vessel isn’t adrift via ocean currents. Funding has been obtained for the $52.7 million undertaking, which will produce an endless amount of data on global warming and marine biology around the globe. For a look at some renders of the massive vehicle, click though the gallery below for a quick peek.

SeaOrbiter to begin construction by year’s end, project price tag clocks in at $52.7 million originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 19 Jun 2012 18:24:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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SeaOrbiter to begin construction by year’s end, project price tag clocks in at $52.7 million

Pre-Fab Construction Methods Mean World’s Tallest Building Will Take Just Three Months to Build

0skycity.jpg

Remember Broad Sustainable Building, the Chinese firm that put a 30-story hotel up in fifteen days? The web is abuzz with news that BSB is now planning to erect the world’s tallest building. The Sky City building, located in Chinese provincial capital Changsha, will top out at 838 meters.

The Burj Khalifa, currently the world’s tallest, tops out at 828 meters. But whereas the BK took five years to construct, BSB is projecting they can put Sky City up—all 220 stories of it—in just three months.

The big question is, How? The answer is the same as with the 15-day hotel: Pre-fab. As CNN’s Shanghai branch reports,

The key to achieving such stunning speed is an innovative construction technique developed by BSB. Most of the company’s buildings are pieced together with prefabricated components from its factory. In this case, 95 percent of Sky City will be completed before breaking ground.

[BSB CEO Zhang Yue] said Sky City is expected to consume a fifth of the energy required by a conventional building due to BSB’s unique construction methods, such as quadruple glazing and 15-centimeter-thick exterior walls for thermal insulation.

The company’s construction methods also seem to save money. According to Chinese newspaper 21 Century Business Herald, the total investment in Sky City is RMB 4 billion (US$628 million), compared with US$1.5 billion on Burj Khalifa and US$2.2 billion on Shanghai Tower.

BSB expects the building will go up in January 2013. If it does, Dubai shouldn’t feel too bad about losing the World’s Tallest Building title; at least they can point out that the as-yet-undisclosed architect of Sky City, according to BSB, hails from Dubai himself.

(more…)

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Pre-Fab Construction Methods Mean World’s Tallest Building Will Take Just Three Months to Build

US 3G and 4G networks face off once more, Verizon just squeaks out win over AT&T

US 3G and 4G networks face off once more, Verizon just squeaks out an edge over AT&T

Competition for the US cellular speed crown is certainly fiercer than it was last year, when Verizon’s 4G LTE let it walk over the competition unimpeded. With AT&T’s LTE in the running, though, have the ranks changed? No, but only just barely: as PCMag discovered in its annual countrywide testing, Verizon mostly trumped its fellow telecom giant in upload speeds and reliability. AT&T could once more claim to be best in a category with the fastest downloads, although it’s counterbalanced by having a considerably smaller LTE network. For everyone outside of T-Mobile and its still very respectable HSPA+ network, it’s better luck next year. We’ll be most intrigued then, quite frankly — in addition to 2013 giving us a genuinely functional Sprint LTE network, that’s when we could see a blistering-fast T-Mobile LTE-Advanced produce an upset victory.

US 3G and 4G networks face off once more, Verizon just squeaks out win over AT&T originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 18 Jun 2012 23:56:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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US 3G and 4G networks face off once more, Verizon just squeaks out win over AT&T

The Microsoft Surface, A 10.6-Inch Windows 8 Tablet From Microsoft

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“It embodies hardware and software working together. People want to work and play,” Steve Ballmer said today amid much fanfare at Milk Studios in downtown Los Angeles. Microsoft has officially entered the ring with Apple.

Microsoft views the Surface as a “stage for Windows 8.” It’s 9.3mm thin, has full size USB 2.0 ports, a massive kickstand and weighs only 1.5 lbs. The casing is made out of magnesium (specifically, a material Microsoft calls VaporMg) and screen is covered in the Gorilla Glass 2 and optically bonded, a feature Microsoft brags was specifically made for the Surface. The Surface is directly aimed at consumers, and with that, the iPad.

Windows 8 is at the core of Surface. As such, it’s Metro device but also has access to all the Windows, not to mention Xbox features. This is clearly the product Microsoft had in mind when it announced the Xbox SmartGlass feature at E3 earlier in the month.

Microsoft also announced several accessories for the Surface including a clever 3mm thick cover that features a full (albeit super-slim) keyboard. Since it’s held on by magnets, it will likely be called a copy of the iPad’s SmartCover, too. The backside of the Surface even features a massive, unit-wide kickstand.

There will be two hardware options for Microsoft’s Surface, with both an ARM option and, for the full Windows experience, an Intel chip.

But like most hardware, it’s nothing without the right software. Ballmer was very clear at the beginning of the announcement event that this tablet’s strength is the Windows ecosystem. This tablet runs Windows 8, and with that, both Metro and the traditional desktop environment. Every application that runs on Windows, save perhaps Skyrim and the like, should run on a x86 Surface.

Still, if Microsoft is attempting to take on Apple, it will need to court a new crop of developers. The iPad’s strength comes from its legions of small 3rd party devs that for the most part completely ignore all things Microsoft. Up until this product, there wasn’t another tablet platform with the same sort of penetration numbers as the iPad. But with the Surface, Microsoft is essentially giving developers a massive user base as the applications will hit both mobile and desktop units — and Metro’s dedication to the touchscreen makes the deal even sweeter.

The new Windows RT-powered Surface will sport either 32 or 64GB of storage depending on the purchaser’s preference, while the more traditional Intel variant will come with either 64 or 128GB. Microsoft declined to dive into specifics about their new tablet’s release, though they were quick to note that the Surface tablets would be priced “competitively” when they make it to market.

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The Microsoft Surface, A 10.6-Inch Windows 8 Tablet From Microsoft