Sega’s created the projection-mapped kids’ sandbox of the future

If grown-ups can have flashier, fancier toys as the years go by, so can kids. Sega’s latest games machine is set to appear in arcades as well as in the waiting rooms of car dealerships and real estate offices. It’s not any kind of video game, though — it’s an interactive sandbox that projects images based on what players are building with its non-sticky sand. Sega calls it “Eederu Sunaba” or Picture Appears! Sandbox (a loose translation, but hey), and it’s equipped with sensors that can determine the height differences on the surface of the sand, along with a projector to make the magic happen. If a kid (or an adult — no judgment here) piles up sand to make a hill, the projector beams an image that makes it look like it’s covered in grass, or even in snow if the hill’s tall enough to be a mountain. Trenches, on the other hand, are filled with digital water, complete with swimming schools of fish, though the system can also project insects like ladybugs and butterflies instead. These virtual organisms can even detect if you’re trying to touch (or squish) them. Definitely beats trying to craft a sandcastle in the playground and coming up with something that looks like a mound of dirt, doesn’t it? If you don’t live in Japan, you can ask those University of West Bohemia students how they created their Kinect sandbox (that’s very similar to this one) back in 2011. Or, you can just watch the video below and live vicariously through those happy Japanese kids. [Image credit: Nikkei Technology/Sega ] Filed under: Misc Comments Via: Nikkei Technology , Japan Trends Source: Sega

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Sega’s created the projection-mapped kids’ sandbox of the future

Facebook test lets users schedule when a post will be deleted

It’s certainly nothing new for Facebook to test new features amongst a limited number of users before a widespread rollout, or killing them entirely (it did ask for willing participants , after all). With its latest trial, the social network is trying out an option in its iOS app that allows you to schedule when a post will delete. Taking a cue from its own ephemeral offering Slingshot , the feature will sort the erasing after a period ranging from one hour up to a week. As The Next Web points out, it’s likely that deleted posts will remain on Facebook servers rather than being permanently deleted, but that’s a point we’ll be looking to clarify if the tool gets officially added in the future. Filed under: Internet , Software , Facebook Comments Source: The Next Web

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Facebook test lets users schedule when a post will be deleted

Apple reveals new iCloud pricing, but you still only get 5GB of space for free

It used to be that if you compared iCloud pricing to other online storage services, Apple didn’t look so hot. (Twenty bucks a year for 10GB?! Bye, Felicia .) Now, in a bid to better compete with bigwigs like Google Drive and Microsoft OneDrive, Apple is revising its iCloud plans so that they’re a little more affordable. Now, 20GB costs 99 cents a month; 200GB costs $4; 500GB is $10; and 1TB is $20 a month. All told, that’s an improvement — at least compared to the Apple of years past. It must be noted, though, that the free storage plan still only includes 5GB of space — a bit stingy considering Google and Microsoft both offer 15GB gratis. Also, as low as Apple’s prices are compared to the olden days, Google’s are still better: Google charges $10 a month for 1TB, not $20, and it also offers a more inexpensive 100GB option, which Apple doesn’t do. Filed under: Internet , Apple Comments Via: 9to5Mac

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Apple reveals new iCloud pricing, but you still only get 5GB of space for free

Visa’s Token Service generates fake CC numbers to keep your real ones safe

If you haven’t heard yet, Cupertino just launched a digital wallet called Apple Pay that randomizes your credit cards’ numbers. The one responsible for generating those fake numbers for Visa cards in particular, is Visa itself, through its new Token service , which the world’s largest credit and debit card company has announced right after Apple’s big reveal. These “tokens” are random numbers not associated with your name or real card numbers. You can use them to purchase anything online or by using mobile to pay via contactless payment systems in brick-and-mortar stores. Visa’s system can even generate different tokens for each merchant, device or type of purchase, if you want to be even more secure. The great thing about using tokens is that you won’t have to scramble to cancel and replace your card with a new one in case a retailer or a website suffers a security breach, because they never had your real CC details in the first place. As you’ve probably guessed, Apple Pay users will get the first crack at using Visa’s Token Service, starting in October for folks in the US and in 2015 for the rest of the world. The technology was designed to work with all major platforms, though, so it’ll eventually be available to its other customers (read: those using other devices through other digital wallets) in the future. [Image credit: Alamy] Comments Via: Reuters Source: Visa (1) , (2)

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Visa’s Token Service generates fake CC numbers to keep your real ones safe

Google’s latest object recognition tech can spot everything in your living room

Automatic object recognition in images is currently tricky. Even if a computer has the help of smart algorithms and human assistants , it may not catch everything in a given scene. Google might change that soon, though; it just detailed a new detection system that can easily spot lots of objects in a scene, even if they’re partly obscured. The key is a neural network that can rapidly refine the criteria it’s looking for without requiring a lot of extra computing power. The result is a far deeper scanning system that can both identify more objects and make better guesses — it can spot tons of items in a living room, including (according to Google’s odd example) a flying cat. The technology is still young, but the internet giant sees its recognition breakthrough helping everything from image searches through to self-driving cars . Don’t be surprised if it gets much easier to look for things online using only vaguest of terms. Filed under: Internet , Google Comments Via: GigaOM Source: Google Research Blog

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Google’s latest object recognition tech can spot everything in your living room

TiVo proves that ‘size matters’ with absurd 26,000 hour DVR

TiVo has taken the TV-watching to a new, insane dimension with the Mega , a rack-mountable, 24TB DVR that will cost around $5, 000. That trumps its current flagship Roamio Pro ‘s 4TB storage by sixfold and makes it look quaint in comparison. Like that box, the Mega supports six channels of simultaneous recording, built-in transcoding, multi-room capability and live streaming to smartphones or tablets. In addition, it uses RAID 5 and hot-swappable drives, so that you won’t lose your Shark Week marathon in case of a hard disk failure. While the Mega seems like overkill in nearly every way, TiVo explained that “size matters — people hate being forced to delete cool stuff from their DVR.” That shouldn’t be a problem, since the new system brings 4, 000 hours of HD recording, or nearly 26, 000 hours at regular SD resolution. However, with the five grand price tag, you’ll need to both be rich and have a lot of time to watch TV, a market segment we doubt is all that large. However, with a full keyboard, ethernet and a recording scheduler, it could also appeal to video producers or broadcasters who need to track and store a lot of content. The Mega will arrive early next year along with final pricing, but if you’re interested, beware — it’s not likely to fit under your TV stand. Filed under: Home Entertainment , Storage Comments Via: The Verge Source: TiVo

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TiVo proves that ‘size matters’ with absurd 26,000 hour DVR

T-Mobile sues Huawei for stealing parts from its phone testing robots

Cellular providers and phone makers don’t always have the best relationships, but things are getting particularly sour between T-Mobile USA and Huawei. The UnCarrier is suing Huawei for trying not just to copy its phone testing robot technology, but to steal it. The phone maker’s staffers reportedly took illegal photos of the testing gear, and then swiped components; they even tried to break in when banned from the premises. T-Mobile insists that it spent “tens of millions” of dollars to switch to other phones as part of the breaches, and that Huawei may have earned “hundreds of millions” in ill-gotten profit. You would expect many companies to fight such allegations tooth and nail, but Huawei isn’t. It agrees that there’s at least some merit to claims that its workers were “acting inappropriately, ” and notes that the employees involved were fired. While it’s planning to protect itself in court, it “respects” T-Mobile’s right to sue over the thefts and plans to cooperate. Those kind words probably aren’t going to placate Magenta’s lawyers, but they suggest that the two telecom giants won’t be fighting to the bitter end. Filed under: Cellphones , Robots , Wireless , Mobile , T-Mobile Comments Via: TmoNews Source: Seattle Times

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T-Mobile sues Huawei for stealing parts from its phone testing robots

​FBI says it located the Silk Road by exploiting an error with the server’s login page

The US Federal Bureau of Investigation may have seized the Silk Road and sold off its horde of ill-gotten Bitcoin , but the case isn’t over yet — the dark web site’s creator still has to face trial. The defense of Ross Ulbricht, the man allegedly behind the Silk Road, is doing its best to discredit the FBI’s evidence; specifically, its accusing the bureau of sniffing out Silk Road server’s location through illegal means. The FBI says that couldn’t be further from the truth. In a court rebuttal, the FBI claims that the IP address of the server was “‘leaking’ from the site due to an apparent misconfiguration of the user login interface by the site administrator.” Basically, FBI officials exploited a glitch to get the server to cough up its hidden location. Officials found that the login page could be coaxed into producing an IP address that didn’t match TOR standards. When this address was used in a non-TOR browser, it produced an element of the login page, confirming that it represented the server’s true location. If this rebuttal is accepted, it will dismiss the defense’s accusations that the FBI used the NSA to illegally hack into the server to find its location. This would ensure that most of the FBI’s evidence is admissible and possibly seal Ulbricht’s fate. Check out the FBI’s full rebuttal in the court document below. Silk Road Prosecution 4th Amendment Rebuttall Comments Source: Wired

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​FBI says it located the Silk Road by exploiting an error with the server’s login page

MOTA’s vibrating jewelry promises more subtle notifications

Do you remember Ringly? The idea behind it was that people would use a vibrating ring to alert you about incoming calls, emails or text messages. If you can imagine that same concept, albeit in a smaller and less gendered package, then you have the starting point for the MOTA Smart Ring. Silicon Valley design outfit MOTA believes that in order to stop people checking their phone during conversations, notifications need to be buried somewhere even less obtrusive (and visible) than on a smart watch, and hey, it’s pretty easy to look at your hands, right? The idea, very simply, is that the screen of the device would face in toward your palm, and whenever you received a call, it would vibrate to let you know. When you got an email or text message, the text would be scrolled across a small OLED touch display that you could read simply by looking at your hands. Once you’ve digested the contents, you can dismiss it with a swipe and continue to go about your day, and most importantly, not stopping to check your smartphone. Additionally, the SmartWatch will last 36 hours on a single charge, but in order not to compromise its water resistance, would replenish its reserves of power on an inductive charging plate. I’ll admit, that when I first saw the renders and promo video for this device, I was skeptical that squeezing the required technology into a such a small piece of hardware would be possible. After all, if these displays were easily achievable, plenty of other smart wearables would have shaved plenty of heft from their sizes already. Then there’s our wariness about how a battery would sit inside this hardware, given that there doesn’t seem to be enough space. Unfortunately, while the company does have finished dummy units to show, the working prototype is a little less powerful. In fact, the one model that actually has any technology inside it looks more like this. So far, the device can only light up one of four different-colored lights, depending on the type of message that you receive. Those wires that are coming out of the back, for your information, are running to the battery terminals, which remains outside of the hardware itself. Given that the company is hoping to have the SmartRing manufactured and mass-produced by January, there isn’t a lot of time to resolve these fundamental issues. Then, there’s my objection to the idea that staring at your hand while a ticker-tape scrolls slowly across your finger is somehow less rude than checking your watch or phone. Of course, being distracted and looking at other things during a conversation is rude, no matter the medium, but I’d imagine that reading every word slowly scrolling out would take far more time than a quick glance at a 2-inch display located on your wrist. Still, we’re at such an early stage in the SmartRing’s life that we can only be hopeful that MOTA can demonstrate some real innovation here. If you’d like to get on board, then the device will retail for $100, but if you pledge to the company’s $150, 000 Indiegogo campaign, you’ll get a SmartRing for $75. The clever jewelry will be available in “Midnight Black” or “Pearl White, ” and if you’re worried about the one-size-fits-all approach, don’t be: the company promises that a sizing accessory will enable all shapes and sizes to wear the device. Filed under: Wearables Comments Source: Indiegogo

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MOTA’s vibrating jewelry promises more subtle notifications

Fake cellphone towers hiding in plain sight, intercepting your phone calls

In response to the loads of info leaked on government surveillance , a number of ultra-secure handsets have popped up to elude prying eyes. One such option is the CryptoPhone 500 from ESD that’s built on a regular Galaxy S III frame. In a recent report from Popular Science , that company says that its customers discovered 17 fake cell towers across the US — just in the month of July. It’s unclear who’s running the so-called “interceptors, ” but back in June police departments in 15 states admitted to using similar devices known as “stingrays.” ESD CEO Les Goldsmith says that it’s unclear who’s responsible, but “a lot of these interceptors are right on top of US military bases.” On a basic level, the phony towers are really radio-capable computers that can bypass a devices built-in encryption. To test out how different handsets react, Goldsmith and Co. took an iPhone, Galaxy S4 and CryptoPhone on a drive past a government facility this summer. While the two regular handsets barely displayed any change (switching from 4G to 3G), the encrypted device “lit up like a Christmas tree.” It could be quite a while before we get any detailed info on who’s behind the intercepting, but according to this report and others, it’s quite clear that said means of gazing at cellphone use have increased significantly as of late. [Photo credit: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images] Filed under: Cellphones , Wireless , Mobile Comments Via: Business Insider Source: Popular Science

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Fake cellphone towers hiding in plain sight, intercepting your phone calls