Last.fm is killing off subscription radio, will focus on music-discovery app Scrobbler

Today, music-streaming service Last.fm announced plans to end its subscription service across all platforms. In place of its curated, ad-free radio for $3 a month, the company will focus on its Scrobbler app, which logs every song you listen to on your Last.fm profile and helps with music discovery. You’ll still be able to listen to your personal stations and library via the Youtube-powered Last.fm player on the desktop (currently in beta), and users can still play their Last.fm tracks on Spotify . In other words, Last.fm will now rely on third-party providers rather than streaming from its own servers. Users have a few reasons to be disappointed: for one, the Scrobbler app is only available for iOS, and streaming on the Android app will end along with the subscription service on April 28th. And for our friends in Canada, this means Last.fm will join Spotify, Pandora and other biggies in not supporting streaming in the Great White North. We’ve reached out to Last.fm for some clarification on what this means for users on all platforms — we’ll have an update once we hear back. Filed under: Internet , Software Comments Source: Last.fm

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Last.fm is killing off subscription radio, will focus on music-discovery app Scrobbler

Candy Crush maker’s IPO values company at more than $7 billion

King, the company behind the Candy Crush saga filed its IPO today, but is the maker another Zynga ( Farmville ), another Rovio ( Angry Birds ) or something else again? Nearly 100 million users play Candy Crush every day, and while the company’s titles remain free to play, it depends on virtual goods, additional levels and content purchases to bring in the cash. Selling shares at $22.50, it’s raised around $500 million for the company and its early investors, valuing King at around $7 billion. The company apparently isn’t going public because it needed the money, however, but because it will give the company stock it can use to make acquisitions… and let investors cash out if they want to. Shareholders will be pushing the gamesmaker to repeat the success of Candy Crush , something that more recent titles, like Farm Heroes saga, haven’t (so far, at least) been able to accomplish. Filed under: Cellphones , Gaming , Tablets Comments Source: NY Times , WSJ , SEC

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Candy Crush maker’s IPO values company at more than $7 billion

Apple’s latest App Store experiment makes finding apps easier

With more than a million apps available on the App Store, finding the right one is often more troublesome that is needs to be. In an effort to ease that burden, Apple has quietly begun testing a new related search suggestion feature that aids the discovery of new apps, displaying categories similar to your current search term. For example, when you perform a search for Twitter apps, the App Store displays related listings for “news apps, ” “traffic apps” and “photo editors, ” queries that loosely match what users might associate Twitter with (okay, maybe not traffic updates). In the past, app suggestions were limited to Genius recommendations and “Customers also bought”, but Apple’s latest experiment shows it may soon do more with the App Store data available to it. It’s not known whether the company is manually curating groups of apps or relying on tags and keywords provided by developers, but it’s a small peek at the future we first imagined when Apple bought app discovery service Chomp . [Image credit: Macstories ] Filed under: Cellphones , Internet , Software , Mobile , Apple Comments Source: Macstories

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Apple’s latest App Store experiment makes finding apps easier

Apple’s iTunes Radio now streams the news, thanks to NPR

It’s been nearly a year since Apple announced its plans to join Spotify, Rdio and Pandora as a music streaming service provider. However, while beats, melodies and harmony are great, some would say iTunes Radio ‘s sonic buffet is lacking — it has no news channels. No longer. NPR has joined the service as a 24-hour news streaming station, with broadcasts starting right now . Of course, folks have long been able to get their public radio fix via NPR’s website, but now fanboys and girls can get it straight from Apple’s service. For now, NPR is the first and only news channel on iTunes Radio, but we’ve a sneaking suspicion that exclusivity won’t last for long. Filed under: Internet , Apple Comments Source: NPR

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Apple’s iTunes Radio now streams the news, thanks to NPR

Google’s lightweight image format makes YouTube pages load 10 percent faster

We all want the internet to be faster, right? Well, Google is hoping to make that happen one YouTube thumbnail at a time. Its leaner WebP image format has been used on the Play store for some time now , and Mountain View’s latest venue for the faster-loading files its video service. The outfit says that the switch has resulted in up to 10 percent speedier page-loads, and overall it’s shaved tens of terabytes off its internal data transfer rates every day. The Chromium Blog says that this should help lower bandwidth usage for users as it rolls out, and, what’s more, that there’s a test-version of WebP running in Chrome’s beta channel that’s faster yet. How much so? It drops image decode speeds by 25 percent. If that means faster access to super hero videos and pictures of lazy dogs , sign us up. Filed under: Internet , Google Comments Source: The Chromium Blog

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Google’s lightweight image format makes YouTube pages load 10 percent faster

Facebook wants to help you write code faster with its ‘Hack’ programming language

Mark Zuckerberg and Facebook often try to assist and provide tools for coders, both current and future ones . With that in mind, the social network today announced Hack , an open-source language for programmers. This new language has been used internally at Facebook for the past year and offers a lot of potential for developers, enabling them to program faster and be able to catch errors more easily, among other things. Hack, which was developed for the HHVM platform, is designed to be extremely friendly with PHP; as Facebook puts it , its new programming language “offers the best of both dynamically typed and statistically typed languages, and that it will be valuable to projects of all sizes.” Essentially, this means you theoretically could have access to websites that are faster and more reliable. Interested in learning more? Head over to Facebook’s Engineering blog, where you’ll find all the nitty-gritty details you’re looking for. Filed under: Internet , Facebook Comments Via: GigaOM Source: Facebook

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Facebook wants to help you write code faster with its ‘Hack’ programming language

Ex-Microsoft employee arrested for leaking company secrets

Remember all those Windows 8 screenshots that surfaced before the platform was released? Well, some of those might have been courtesy of Alex Kibkalo , an ex-Microsoft employee who was just arrested for stealing and leaking company secrets. Unlike the HTC execs who reportedly stole trade secrets to run a new firm, though, Kibkalo allegedly leaked info to a French tech blogger for something akin to revenge — he was apparently angry over receiving a poor performance review when he was still with Microsoft. According to Seattle Post-Intelligencer , the accused sent the blogger (whom he met on a forum) parts of Windows 8’s code and Microsoft’s Activation Server Software Development Kit. While Kibkalo’s charging paper states that the blogger only posted Windows 8 screenshots, Microsoft believes its former employee also encouraged him to share the development kit online. He supposedly wanted that to happen so hackers can use the kit (one of Microsoft’s defenses against software piracy) to crack the company’s products. If you’re wondering how exactly the accused got caught, it’s because the blogger contacted Microsoft in September 2012 to verify the Windows 8 code Kibkalo sent. When Redmond determined its authenticity, investigators looked through the blogger’s Hotmail account and instant messenger, where they found incriminating emails and chat logs. In one of those sessions, the accused even claimed that he broke into one of the company’s buildings in an attempt to copy a server. Kibkalo’s now facing criminal charges for this particular offense, but according to investigators, he also bragged about leaking Windows 7 files in the past. [Image credit: Victor/Flickr ] Filed under: Misc , Microsoft Comments Via: ZDNet Source: Seattle PI

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Ex-Microsoft employee arrested for leaking company secrets

Intel flaunts 8-core Extreme Edition Haswell with support for DDR4 memory

Since Intel’s next Haswell chips are aimed squarely at enthusiasts, what better place to unveil them than at the Game Developer’s Conference ? The 4th-gen Core-i7 Extreme Edition CPU, codenamed “Devil’s Canyon, ” will feature eight unlocked cores and 16 threads, trumping the last model’s six cores. It’ll also support the latest DDR4 memory standard, which brings much higher transfer speeds and lower power drain than DDR3. Along with a better thermal interface, all that will enable “significant” overclocking and performance enhancements, according to Intel. It also announced a Pentium Anniversary Edition with unlockable cores and revealed the “Black Brook” reference all-in-one — designed to show off tech like its RealSense 3-D camera (see the video after the break). Finally, Intel revealed that its 5th-gen Broadwell 14-nanometer processors will be available unlocked and with IRIS graphics. Given that those chips are expected soon and the Extreme Edition Core CPU will arrive in mid-2014, it might be prudent to put off that upgrade. Filed under: Desktops , Peripherals , Intel Comments Source: Intel

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Intel flaunts 8-core Extreme Edition Haswell with support for DDR4 memory

Layar brings its augmented reality to Google Glass

Augmented reality is fun and all, but holding your phone to your face always seemed, to us, like too much effort. Layar agrees, which is why the outfit has now brought its AR secret sauce to Google Glass . Once the APK is installed, saying “OK Glass, scan this” will see the head-mounted wearable find additional content for your right eye. Considering the company’s print expertise , most of these will involve extra value material from magazines, but could also be used to examine maps and real estate listings. The video after the jump says you could also watch movie trailers just by staring at a poster — assuming that you don’t mind your fellow cinema goers thinking you’re a bit odd. Filed under: Google Comments Source: Layar for Glass , Layar

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Layar brings its augmented reality to Google Glass

vrAse turns your smartphone into a VR headset (hands-on)

We’ll admit it, when we first laid eyes on vrAse — a smartphone case that gives your handset Oculus Rift -like functionality — we we’re a bit… curious? The ambitious/ingenious project was launched on Kickstarter at the end of last year, and while it didn’t get quite the huge sum that Oculus did, it captured enough imaginations to secure the money it needed. How does it work? An optimized app splits its output into two — side by side. You then slide the phone into the headset/case which has a lens feeding into each eye, creating a large, 3D image. The hardware we saw was just a prototype, but final designs should be ready by summer. We also got to try it on! In effect, the vrAse is creative use of existing hardware (your phone) and existing software techniques, with some barebones hardware that brings the it all together (the case). The first benefit of this approach is the cost, the vrAse (think VR , case ) will retail for around $100 once it fully launches later this year. Another benefit is that by offloading the heavy lifting to your phone, the brains of the operation is effectively endlessly upgradeable. Update your phone, you have a new engine in the machine. Other perks of this method mean you can also benefit from other features that come with a phone such as the camera or microphone. In our quick demo with the vrAse, we we shown a demo that sits you in a roller coaster. The phone being used was a Galaxy Note, so one with a larger screen, but we were surprised by how immersive the experience was. As we rode around the virtual landscape, we genuinely felt the urge to lean left and right along with it — and the anticipation of a loop the loop was very real! Another demo we were shown used the phone’s camera — so that we could actually see the real world — but the software placed virtual furniture in the room that we could walk around and even change the color of with a voice command to the phone. Apps aren’t limited to working with the hardware either, games, for example, can have an optional 2D mode for when you just want to play on the phone directly. The experience is perhaps not as fully immersive/slick feeling as the Oculus Rift due to the inherent compromises that come with an open hardware platform, and decentralized software (it’s, of course, open to iOS, Android, Windows Phone and beyond). This should improve, however, once the final hardware is comes to market, and the goal posts become a little more fixed. We were shown how the retail unit will look, but were unable to take photos. As you can imagine, it’s somewhat more attractive than the prototype we saw, and very much in keeping with similar headsets we’ve seen of late. Filed under: Gaming , Wearables , Mobile Comments

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vrAse turns your smartphone into a VR headset (hands-on)