Hackers reverse engineer Wii U GamePad to stream from PC

Thought using the Wii U GamePad as a simple PC controller was a neat trick? Try this on for size: a small team of hackers has figured out how to stream PC games to the tablet-esque controller natively, circumventing its host console. The hack was shown this week at the 30th Chaos Communication Congress , where the group revealed how it reverse engineered the GamePad controller. After weaving a complex tale of dumped firmware, decoded video and buggy streams, the team showed a simple drawing app streaming from a laptop to the Wii U GamePad. Impressive? Sure, but the crowd didn’t erupt into applause until they booted up a Gamecube emulated session of The Legend of Zelda: Wind Waker . Despite some crashes, the demo appeared to be fairly playable — though the team warns that the available code is aimed primarily at developers. The group eventually plans to build user-friendly tools for Windows and OSX, as well as an Android port designed to allow users to substitute the Wii U GamePad with their own tablets, streaming from the console to the slate of their choice. It’s not quite ready to replace your NVIDIA Shield , but the project is brimming with potential. Check out the presentation’s slides at the source link below, or read on for a video of the hack in action (the fun starts about 47 minutes in). Filed under: Gaming , Nintendo Comments Via: NeoGaf Source: Libdrc , Slides (Google Drive) , 30C3

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Hackers reverse engineer Wii U GamePad to stream from PC

Time Machines: Casio gets smart at CES 2000

Welcome to Time Machines , where we offer up a selection of mechanical oddities, milestone gadgets and unique inventions to test out your tech-history skills. In the week’s leading up to the biggest gadget show on Earth, we’ll be offering a special look at relics from CES’ past. Smart devices have infiltrated our outfits in many ways, but one in particular has been a staple of our ensembles for centuries. From pockets to wrists, its accessibility has also tempted inventors to add camera optics, dating as far back as the 1800s. Although we’ve refined these devices for years, advancements beyond timekeeping tend to come and go. Head past the break for more of the story. CASIO WQV-1 WRIST CAMERA There’s been a great deal of traction in the tech-enabled timepiece market lately, from the crowdfunded success of Pebble to the recent launch of Samsung’s Galaxy Gear . Not only can the latter connect wirelessly to select Samsung smartphones, but it can also take photos. And with snapshots becoming one of the main currencies in social media, camera-studded smart devices are on the rise. Thirteen years ago, Casio lead an early wave of wrist-worn camera tech with its launch of the WQV-1 Wrist Camera at the 2000 Winter Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas, but it wasn’t the first to consider such a hybrid. UK optics and photography company J. Lancaster & Son patented a telescoping camera that fit into a pocket watch-styled casing back in 1886. Although to fit the photo gear inside, they had to ditch the timekeeping tech entirely. It may have been good for secret selfies and clandestine snapshots, but not much else. Spin the clock ahead nearly a century to the 1970s and watches with LED displays like the Hamilton Pulsar P1 and Sinclair Black Watch began to pop up on the market. They had a futuristic look and backlit watch faces, but often suffered from poor battery life. During that same decade, the liquid crystal display (LCD) was also developed. It appeared in watches like the 1974 Casiotron, and converted electrical signals into illuminated digits that could display both time and date, and were typically more reliable in build quality than LEDs. By the time the ’80s rolled around, watches were getting significantly smarter with the addition of calculator functionality, but it wasn’t long before watches like the 1984 Seiko UC-2000 and its UC-2200 keyboard peripheral allowed users to do actual computing. By 1999, Samsung seemed to find inspiration in the tech-laden detective comic Dick Tracy and introduced its SPH-WP10, a CDMA-based watch that offered wireless phone functionality in a wrist-worn form factor. When Casio released its WQV-1 Wrist Camera, it stepped up the gimmick game. It even hedged its bets and launched more than one unique watch at CES that year. Alongside the Wrist Camera, it also showed off its MP3 watch called the WMP-1V, which had a headphone jack so users could get their groove on and tell the time. The WQV-1 Wrist Camera captured snapshots through a lens located just above the timepiece (facing away from the wearer). Images were perhaps best viewed on its 120 x 120 display due to the low image resolution (around 0.03 megapixel). Photos could be taken using three modes: Normal, a 16-shade grayscale monochrome; Art, two-tone only; and Merge, which combined two photos into a single shot. The photos could be exported as BMP or JPEG files, but you’d need a PC running Windows, as well as Casio’s proprietary infrared adapter and Link software. If you had a friend with a Wrist Camera, you could also beam photos directly to their watch. The 1MB of built-in storage could only hold about 100 images, but the monochromatic output and limited resolution likely didn’t provide many “keepers.” Although the technology was still young, it was an iterative step forward in consumer wearables and as the years passed, other watch-based devices popped up — with varied results. Around the same time as the WQV-1 launch, IBM teamed up with Citizen and Tokyo Research Lab to work on its Linux-based WatchPad 1.5 , exploring the possibilities of high-functioning, wrist-worn computers, but it failed to go beyond the prototype phase. In 2004, Microsoft’s Smart Personal Objects Technology (SPOT) started arriving on watches to deliver MSN Direct services over FM airwaves, only to be discontinued in 2008 (followed by the MSN Direct service itself in 2012). The camera didn’t make a splash in the market again until this year, when Samsung launched the Galaxy Gear smartwatch. It’s an ambitious device, aiming to outdo the relatively simplistic functions of the popular Pebble by adding a full-color touchscreen and a 1.9-megapixel camera. Although watches have bigger brains than ever, the ones that have made it to market often fail to gain enduring success and many seem to rely heavily on companion devices for any significant functionality. If wrist-worn form factors continue to come up short in the camera department, snapshot addicts may have to look elsewhere for photographic convenience. Filed under: Science , Alt Comments

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Time Machines: Casio gets smart at CES 2000

Internet Archive starts preserving classic game consoles on the web

Many gamers won’t load a console emulator for much more than a brief nostalgia kick. The Internet Archive has loftier goals, however. It’s expanding its Historical Software Collection to include the free-to-play Console Living Room beta, which recreates classic ’70s and ’80s systems on the web for the sake of the historical record. The initial library includes hundreds of games for the Astrocade, Atari 2600 , Atari 7800 , ColecoVision and Magnavox Odyssey . There are gaps in the catalog, and sound isn’t working; the CLR isn’t yet a match for a conventional software emulator, let alone the real thing. The Internet Archive promises to address both problems in the near future, though, and it shouldn’t be long before its collection delivers a complete vintage gaming experience… minus the old-fashioned tube TV. Filed under: Gaming , Internet Comments Via: Internet Archive Blogs Source: Console Living Room

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Internet Archive starts preserving classic game consoles on the web

Cydia update courts iOS 7 jailbreakers with a new interface (video)

The availability of an iOS 7 jailbreak may have caught the Cydia team off-guard, but not for long. Jay Freeman and fellow developers have just updated their unofficial app platform to match Apple’s minimalist look. It’s more than just a cosmetic upgrade, too, as it includes iOS 7’s swipe-based navigation and appears to run faster. Individual app writers will still have to update their code for everything to run smoothly, but jailbreak users who’ve just been waiting for an OS-native Cydia will want to check for the update today. [Image credit: iOS Hacker ] Filed under: Cellphones , Tablets , Software , Mobile , Apple Comments Via: iOS Hacker , 9to5 Mac Source: Jay Freeman (Twitter)

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Cydia update courts iOS 7 jailbreakers with a new interface (video)

CyanogenMod downloaded 10 million times as it begins to go legit

Though CyanogenMod has gotten plenty of ink lately for its Oppo N1 hookup and Google Play approval , it’s still first and foremost a modding outfit. In fact it just marked 10 million downloads of its custom Android ROMs, according to its latest stats. That marks a lot of folks wanting to un-skin some models, or give others like Samsung’s Galaxy S (shown above) new life. That model, along with the Galaxy SII and SIII were the most popular devices to mod, a reflection of their popularity and perhaps users’ disdain for TouchWiz . It helps that you can now skip difficult command-line installs, thanks to OTA updates and new desktop and mobile apps . Now if you’ll excuse us, we’re going to install CyanogenMod’s Android 4.2.2 ROM on our Galaxy S — a device officially unsupported since the Gingerbread era . Filed under: Software Comments Via: Phone Arena Source: CyanogenMod

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CyanogenMod downloaded 10 million times as it begins to go legit

Samsung’s 2014 smart TVs will let you control videos by pointing your finger

Samsung’s 2014 smart TV lineup may revolve around impressive-looking hardware , but the Korean tech giant has revealed that interface improvements will also play an important role. Its new TVs will support finger gestures that should be more intuitive than the whole-hand commands of this year’s models ; you can stop a movie with a spinning motion, for instance. Voice control will also be more powerful. It’s at last possible to change channels or launch apps with a single step, and search results appear in one place. While the gesture and voice upgrades may not be revolutions, they’ll likely be welcome to viewers frustrated with unwieldy TV software. Filed under: Home Entertainment , HD , Samsung Comments Source: Samsung Tomorrow

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Samsung’s 2014 smart TVs will let you control videos by pointing your finger

Netflix teases 4K streaming straight to UHD TVs, expect details at CES next month

Netflix has been talking up its ability to stream Ultra HD resolution video (demonstrated at the last CES with a local video feed, as seen above), and CPO Neil Hunt reiterated those “next year” promises to Stuff.tv . Specifically, he indicated the streamer has deals to offer 4K video via embedded players on UHD TVs from several manufacturers that will be announcing them at CES. What you won’t hear about — at least immediately — is any 4K support from set-top boxes, including the two next-generation consoles, as Netflix is apparently waiting for standards (read: DRM) and HDMI 2.0 to mature first. Gigaom spotted a few test 4K videos on Netflix early in November, however they won’t play in that resolution on current hardware either. Content-wise, early adopters can expect House of Cards season two and… probably not a lot else, but that should keep everyone busy for one Kevin Spacey-filled week or so. Filed under: Home Entertainment , HD Comments Source: Stuff.tv

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Netflix teases 4K streaming straight to UHD TVs, expect details at CES next month

Smokio electronic cigarette may be the first time ‘smart’ and ‘smoking’ have been used in the same sentence

Well, you had to see this coming right? Someone was bound to connect an electronic cigarette sooner or later. Smokio’s bring its e-cigarette to market along with apps for iOS and Android, so you can track smoking, check the battery and regulate the amount of vapor you’re getting with each puff. Heck, you can even map all the places you’ve been smoking with the thing, and if you need some positive reinforcement, the app’ll show you the equivalent number of analog cigarettes you’d have smoked, had you not switched. Smokio is currently listed as “coming soon” on the company’s site, with no word on pricing. Apparently it’ll start shipping next month, after the completion of an upcoming Kickstarter campaign. There’s also a video below, if you can stand to hear someone use the term “vape” over and over again in a short period of time. Now if only would could figure out how bad those smartphones are . Filed under: Misc Comments Source: Smokio

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Smokio electronic cigarette may be the first time ‘smart’ and ‘smoking’ have been used in the same sentence

Mac and iOS users can now gift iBooks

Your chances of buying tangible gifts for the holidays may be fading fast, but your digital options are now wider than ever. Apple has just enabled full gift support on the iBookstore for both iOS and Mac users; you can buy someone a specific book rather than giving them iTunes credit. As with apps and media, it’s simple to either time the gift delivery or attach a message. An iBook may not be quite as elaborate as a present under the tree, but we doubt that many iPad-toting readers will mind. Filed under: Cellphones , Tablets , Internet , Mobile , Apple Comments Source: 9to5 Mac

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Mac and iOS users can now gift iBooks

Xbox 360 Time Warner Cable app finally gets video-on-demand

It’s been a long wait for Xbox 360-faithful wanting Time Warner Cable video-on-demand through their console, but the feature has finally arrived with some 5, 000 promised titles (there’s good news for Roku users too, where TWC TV has added VOD to go along with that new YouTube app ). If you somehow still aren’t entertained, well maybe chatting with other TWC customers via the app’s messaging feature will do the trick. This seems a tad redundant when the 360’s native messaging client is a few button presses away, but we dig having another way to spoil the latest New Girl for our pals. Filed under: Gaming , Home Entertainment , HD , Microsoft Comments Source: Xbox Wire

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Xbox 360 Time Warner Cable app finally gets video-on-demand