Shryne for iPhone Lets You Download and Archive Your Own Social History

iOS/OS X: Services like Facebook, Instagram, and Google Hangouts all have their own archives, but they can be tricky to download and organize, if you can at all. Shryne is an iPhone app (and companion desktop tool) that puts you in control, and lets you download, archive, and organize it all. Read more…

Continue Reading:
Shryne for iPhone Lets You Download and Archive Your Own Social History

GE Will Stop Making CFL Lightbulbs Because LEDs Are Better

GE just announced that it no longer make or sell compact fluorescent lamp (CFL) lightbulbs in the US. The company will wind down the manufacturing of CFL bulbs over the course of the years, and it will begin to shift its focus on making the newest and most energy-efficient lightbulbs, LEDs. Read more…

Read More:
GE Will Stop Making CFL Lightbulbs Because LEDs Are Better

US government says 22 Clinton emails contain top secret info

Just days before the 2016 election cycle really kicks into gear, the US government offered new details on the Clinton email fiasco . With the Iowa caucuses set to take place soon, the Obama administration confirmed for the first time that messages from Hillary Clinton’s private server did in fact contain sensitive information. In fact, 22 of the emails have been censored as they included top secret details and state secrets. The Associated Press reports that seven email chains are being withheld from the next release from the State Department due to their sensitive nature. What’s more, 37 pages include details on “special access programs” like confidential sources or government surveillance. “The documents are being upgraded at the request of the intelligence community because they contain a category of top secret information, ” said State Department spokesman John Kirby. Some of the messages won’t be published online at all, even with black boxes cover up the sensitive info. It’s not clear whether Clinton sent the emails herself or exactly what they contained. Back in December, reports of top secret emails being stored on the server first surfaced. The State Department will further investigate if the details were classified as the time they were discussed in these most recent emails. Timing couldn’t be worse for the Democratic front-runner for the 2016 presidential nomination. With the big showdown with opponent Bernie Sanders in Iowa looming, today’s news won’t help ease critics’ concerns. Clinton has maintained that she never sent or received info on her personal email account that was classified at the time. However, the State Department’s next release of emails, which is said to come today, will be the first that includes talk of top secret contents. In addition to the presidential race, there could be legal ramifications if the on-going probe uncovers any evidence that Clinton was in any way responsible for the transmission of sensitive material. Source: Associated Press

Originally posted here:
US government says 22 Clinton emails contain top secret info

These SteamVR games will make or break virtual reality

In one month, the HTC Vive will be available for pre-order , giving consumers a chance to buy the first room-scale virtual reality system with full head and hand motion tracking. It sounds great, but what are you going to play with it? Valve knew you were going to ask that — which is why it hosted the SteamVR Developer Showcase in Seattle this week. In all, the company showcased twelve games that stood out as some of the best VR experiences Vive owners can have in 2016. Better still? There’s not a bad egg in the bunch — I’ve played all of them, and I already want to play all of them again. Believe or not, the fact that I can say that about Valve’s showcase is huge. Oculus’ Palmer Luckey once told me that the only thing that could kill virtual reality is bad virtual reality — and he’s right. The sense of presence one feels in consumer VR is so hard to articulate that the challenge of explaining it to new users has become something of an inside joke to the industry. Every developer I asked at the event told me the same thing: If you want a newbie to understand why VR matters you have to make them try it . If they do, and the experience is bad, they’ll write it off as a gimmick. That’s why events like the SteamVR developer showcase are so important: These are the first, best experiences consumers will have. These are the games that will make or break the virtual reality industry. Thank goodness they don’t suck. Part of what makes most of these SteamVR launch titles work is that there’s no learning curve . Thanks to Valve’s lighthouse laser tracking tech and the HTC Vive’s motion controller, interacting in VR is pretty much like living your normal life. If you want to go somewhere, you walk there. If you want to pick something up, you reach out and grab it — albeit by pulling a trigger on a controller rather than physically closing your hand. This makes everything feel easy and natural. When attack drones assault you with lasers in Space Pirate Trainer, you can avoid them by dodging and ducking. When Zombies charge you in Arizona Sunshine, defending yourself is just a matter of raising your arm (and the virtual gun it holds) and shooting. For the first time ever, you don’t need to learn how to manage swing-power meters to play a golf video game — in Cloudlands VR Minigolf you simply swing a club. If you’re a human alive today, you know how to play games in virtual reality. That said, there are still rules to learn. Yes, you can walk around in a real world space, which translates to in-game movement, but that space is limited by reality. How do you walk down a virtual hallway if your real-world couch is in the way? Games like Budget Cuts and The Gallery answer that with teleportation mechanics — moving the player’s physical walking space to a new point in the virtual world. For Budget Cuts , this manifests as an in-game portal gun, where The Gallery uses a simpler (and less narratively explained) fade-cut to the new location. There were abstract experiences too, like the omnipresent canvas of Tilt Brush . This painting program that lets you draw directly on the virtual air around you — but it’s still built upon the rules of a reality the player already understands. It’s not just the visual illusion of the HTC Vive’s headset that made these experiences feel real, it was the act moving, interacting and existing in a virtual world as you do a physical one. For now, that’s an HTC Vive exclusive experience. The Oculus Rift is launching with a focus on a seated experience, although most of the developers at SteamVR’s Developer Showcase did say they planned to port their games to the Rift after Oculus Touch launches later this year. We don’t even know how much the HTC Vive is going to cost , and it’s too early to say which consumer VR headset will reign supreme at the end of the year — but if you do go all in with SteamVR, at least you’ll know that there are a dozen top-tier experiences you can have. Hopefully, this is just the beginning.

View post:
These SteamVR games will make or break virtual reality

Facebook eyes ride-sharing feature for events pages

Facebook has been ramping up its Events pages as of late, and a recent patent application shows another use for those listings. In the paperwork, the social network explains how Events pages can also serve as a hub for ride sharing. Instead of the usual Going, Not Going, and Interested RSVPs on an event’s page, you would have the option to say whether or not you plan to drive. If you do, you can input details as to how many passengers you can take, if you just want to offer a ride to friends and what time you’ll be leaving. As you might expect, Facebook can pair passengers and drivers based on personal details like common interests, where you went to school and more to decrease the chances of awkward silence. After your pals (or soon-to-be pals) are all locked in, you’ll receive navigation info to guide you to the pickup spots. While a patent app doesn’t mean the company will actually implement the feature, this makes a lot of sense for Facebook. Using the Events pages as a primary interface could allow the folks in Melo Park to include ride sharing and carpooling relatively easily. For now, though, you’ll have to rely on hailing an Uber through Messenger . Via: Tech Insider Source: USPTO

See original article:
Facebook eyes ride-sharing feature for events pages

This Babylonian Astronomy Text Changes History

More than a thousand years before the first telescopes, Babylonian astronomers tracked the motion of planets across the night sky using simple arithmetic. But a newly translated text reveals that these ancient stargazers also used a far more advanced method, one that foreshadows the development of calculus over a thousand years later. Read more…

More:
This Babylonian Astronomy Text Changes History

How A Tesla With Autopilot Forced Us To Take The Road Trip Of The Past

The weird thing about the road trip of the future is that it’s much more like the road trips we used to take in our past than anything else. My coworkers and I just did 1400-odd miles in an electric Tesla Model S that could also drive itself. It wasn’t just the trip of the future. It was the way things used to be, too. Read more…

Originally posted here:
How A Tesla With Autopilot Forced Us To Take The Road Trip Of The Past

Themepark in an ancient, cavernous Transylvanian salt-mine

Transylvania’s Salina Turda themepark is housed in an ancient salt mine with millennia of history. Visitors use its vertical shafts to access vast underground salt caverns and lakes dotted with a concert hall, mini-golf courses, bowling alleys, and rowboats. (more…)

Visit site:
Themepark in an ancient, cavernous Transylvanian salt-mine

A Health Insurer Lost Six Hard Drives Holding Data About 1 Million Customers

The health insurer Centene has admitted that it’s performing an “ongoing comprehensive internal search” for six hard drives. Sadly, those hard drives contain personal details about 1 million of its customers. Oops. Read more…

View article:
A Health Insurer Lost Six Hard Drives Holding Data About 1 Million Customers

Here’s a Homemade Exoskeleton Jacking Up a Small Car

There’s all sorts of expensive R&D facilities working frantically to make body-enhancing skeletons into actual things, but the research isn’t limited just to big companies. Two years ago, a YouTuber showed off his Elysium -inspired suit curling 170lbs; last weekend, he decided to life a Mini Cooper. Read more…

View post:
Here’s a Homemade Exoskeleton Jacking Up a Small Car