Tesla’s long-delayed Model X SUV is testing in California

It may look like a Prius that’s been vomited on by Mad Max, but the vehicle you see in the clip below is probably Tesla’s long-delayed Model X SUV . You see, when companies begin stress-testing vehicles, they dress them down with a dodgy paint job and go riding out a deserted airfield, like the one at the old naval base in Alameda. No amount of weird paint, however, could disguise the latest all-electric vehicle to roll off the production line, especially one as long-awaited as the X. It’s been a long road, getting from there to here. The Model X was originally announced back in 2012 , but by the start of 2014, issues with the battery meant the date was pushed back to early 2015. Then, back in November , Elon Musk revealed that the company was having difficulty mass producing components for the falcon-winged vehicle, pushing the launch date back to the tail-end of 2015. If the company is feeling bullish enough to let its high-riding whip out in public, then perhaps he’ll make that deadline. It looks like, despite the heftier build, that the Model X will still be mightily fast, let’s just hope that the company puts Insane Mode as a button right on the steering wheel. Filed under: Transportation Comments Via: TechCrunch

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Tesla’s long-delayed Model X SUV is testing in California

Reddit posts its first transparency report

Reddit may not be subject to as much legal scrutiny as tech giants like Google or Microsoft , but there’s enough of it that the internet community has published its first transparency report . The site says that received 55 demands for user info through subpoenas, search warrants and emergency requests in 2014. That’s a tiny amount compared to the 174 million total redditors , but that makes it a bigger target than Dropbox and other services that you’d think would be more conducive to secret activity. The site had a bigger problem on its hands with 218 copyright and trademark takedown requests, although it’s not clear if that includes any calls to pull celebrity photos stolen in last year’s iCloud breach . Not that cops or lawyers got as much as they’d like. Reddit notes that it denied just under half of all data requests, and over two thirds of takedowns — in many cases, the copyright notices were overbroad attempts to censor entire subreddits or less-than-flattering (but still legal) material. The site’s main challenge is simply getting permission to tell people what’s going on. Gag orders prevented it from giving a heads-up for 13 data requests, so the company can’t always be as forthcoming as it would hope. [Image credit: Eva Blue, Flickr ] Filed under: Internet Comments Via: TechCrunch Source: Reddit Blog

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Reddit posts its first transparency report

Amazon put $1.3 billion into Prime Instant Video last year

Amazon may have surprised Wall Street by how much sales went up in the fourth quarter of last year ($29.3 billion, with a profit of $214 million), but for customers its Prime service is the big deal. Founder and CEO Jeff Bezos said Prime membership in the US grew by 50 percent last year, despite a price hike . That growth probably explains (and helps justify) the expanding number of services it’s tacked on to what was originally just an offer of free / cheap shipping. According to Bezos, Amazon plowed $1.3 billion into Prime Instant Video alone in 2014, snapping up exclusives, content from HBO and creating award winning programming like Transparent . [Image credit: Shutterstock] Of course, since this is Amazon there’s no exact number of Prime subscribers revealed, but the company apparently spent “billions” on shipping for the program. The company’s Fire phone didn’t seem to merit much discussion, but for now Wall Street is happy and customers keep clicking that Buy button, so why rain on the parade? Filed under: Internet , Amazon Comments Source: Amazon

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Amazon put $1.3 billion into Prime Instant Video last year

Google X Labs made synthetic skin to test a cancer-detecting bracelet

If someone asks you to name a Google X Labs moonshot, you’d probably say Glass , self-driving car or maybe even Project Loon . But as you might remember from the WSJD Live conference last year, it also has a flourishing Life Sciences division that employs 100 doctors and scientists, and one of their main projects is a Fitbit-like bracelet that can detect cancer cells . Now, The Atlantic has taken a peek into the division’s headquarters in Mountain View. The publication’s video (below the fold) also explains why the team has to create synthetic human skin mixed with the real thing to cover disembodied arms. See, those arms serve as testers for the Labs’ cancer-detecting bracelet project. For that to make sense, though, you need to understand how the system works: first you’ll need to take pills packed with nanoparticles that circulate throughout the body looking for cancer cells. If they find any, they’ll bind to those cells, which then literally light up. After that, the cell-particle combos make their way underneath the bracelet, since it has a magnet that attracts the nanoparticles. Since the team wants to make sure that an illuminated clump of cancer cells is visible through human skin, they created those practice arms. They’re covered in skin exhibiting different properties (thickness, etc.), as well as skin mimicking those of different ethnicities and skin tones. The bracelet probably won’t be sniffing out cancer in the real world anytime soon, though, so watch the interview for now to see what it’s like inside Google X Labs’ Life Sciences department. Filed under: Science , Google Comments Source: The Atlantic

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Google X Labs made synthetic skin to test a cancer-detecting bracelet

Government raked in $44.9 billion from wireless auction

The FCC’s latest wireless auction brought in far more money than anyone expected. The Chairman, Tom Wheeler, set a goal of raising $10.6 billion by selling off 1, 600 licenses to blocks of wireless spectrum. In the end, the government not only blew past its goal, but also its previous record of raising $19.1 billion in 2008, when it auctioned off significant pieces of the 700Mhz band that delivers LTE for a number of carriers. This auction ended with the government raising $44.9 billion, which surprised many observers, especially since even smaller markets like Portland, ME received sizable bids worth tens of millions of dollars. Who won which pieces of spectrum in the 1, 700Mhz and 2, 100Mhz bands is unknown right now, but we do know that 70 different companies and organizations submitted bids. Obvious players were involved, like AT&T and Verizon, but Dish also participated, as did some private equity firms, like Grain Management LLC. Interestingly, Sprint sat this one out, though the company does have what the Wall Street Journal calls , “largest stores of spectrum” in the industry. Part of the reason people were shocked by the high price tag, is that these higher frequencies are actually considered less valuable than lower bands. That’s largely because they’re unable to cover as much distance or penetrate buildings as easily. But, since they’re able to carry large amounts of data over short distances, they can be very useful in cities. Hopefully we’ll have more information about who won what soon, but for now lets just enjoy the cash windfall for the government and the American tax payer. [Image credit: Shutterstock] Filed under: Wireless , Verizon , AT&T Comments Source: Wall Street Journal

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Government raked in $44.9 billion from wireless auction

Microsoft’s new Outlook apps for iOS and Android promise higher productivity

Microsoft has released new Outlook apps for iOS and Android, and they might just be light-years better than those web apps the company has unleashed in the past. See, these are the result of Redmond’s Accompli acquisition in December, and seeing as we liked that startup’s email app when we test drove it last year, we have high hopes for these new ones. The company says the new Outlook for the mobile platforms comes with a built-in calendar and makes attachments easier to add for higher productivity. They’re apparently more tightly integrated with Office apps and Outlook for desktop, as well. We can’t say whether they’ll truly blow your current email apps out of the water as we haven’t tested them yet, but you can find out for yourself by downloading either (or both) from iTunes or Google Play . Take note that the Android app’s just a preview at the moment, so Microsoft could still tweak its features for the final version. Filed under: Cellphones , Mobile , Microsoft Comments

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Microsoft’s new Outlook apps for iOS and Android promise higher productivity

Microsoft’s OneDrive gets better at showing and sharing your photos

Microsoft has long wanted you to use OneDrive to store your photos, but actually viewing those photos isn’t ideal — you’re ultimately using a file browser that just happens to have some photo-related features. That’s going to change in the next couple of weeks, though. The folks in Redmond are rolling out a photography-focused update to OneDrive that gives your image library some TLC. You can organize photos into albums with edge-to-edge photo collages and larger single-picture views. It should be much easier to find and share your snapshots, as well. OneDrive now draws on Bing image recognition to give your pics basic tags (like “beach” or “dog”), and PCs running Windows 7 or 8 can automatically sync photos from devices as soon as you plug them in. Only web and iOS users will see the new photo tricks right away, but they’ll reach Android and Windows Phone in the days ahead. Filed under: Storage , Internet , Mobile , Microsoft Comments Source: OneDrive Blog

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Microsoft’s OneDrive gets better at showing and sharing your photos

PlayStation is getting a Spotify-powered music service, closing Music Unlimited

Sony today revealed PlayStation Music, a new Spotify -powered music service coming to PlayStation 3, 4 and “Xperia smartphones and tablets” this spring. The service will outright replace Music Unlimited, the service that Sony previously implemented across devices, powered by its own enormous music catalog. The news marks the first time Spotify has come to any game console, and is a major coup for Sony’s PlayStation group in the battle for major home entertainment apps on game consoles (Xbox One notoriously got HBO Go first). PlayStation Music will require a Spotify paid subscription (the “Premium” membership), and enables both playback on the aforementioned devices and the ability to listen to music in the background during games. When the service launches at some point in Spring 2015, it’ll be available in “41 markets around the world.” There are no images/video of the service in action just yet, nor is there news of exactly how pricing will work. We do know the exact date that Music Unlimited will go away, though: March 29, 2015. Sony says that paid users who are still signed up as of February 28th will receive free access through the end of the run. It’s not clear how, or if, their accounts will transfer over to PlayStation Music, but we’d bet they won’t given the tie to Spotify’s accounting system. In case it weren’t clear, this is great news: Music Unlimited is, to put it politely, hot garbage. Here’s what we said about it in our review of the PlayStation 4 : “Music Unlimited is, unbelievably, the only option for playing music on the PlayStation 4. You can’t set up a media server, or play MP3s or audio CDs. There’s a free 30-day trial to the subscription service as part of buying a PS4, but it’s a cumbersome hassle if you’re not already a member. And why can’t we play our own music on this super-powerful PC-esque game console? Sony says more options are coming, but at launch this is your only option. Music Unlimited takes a shockingly long time to load, and navigation within the app is similarly sluggish. When you’ve finally located music you’d like to listen to, you can thankfully push the Home button and keep listening to it on a system level. Jump into a game and turn off the game’s music track — voila! It’s pretty slick, but that same feature existed in a smarter form on the Xbox 360. And on the 360, we could load our own music onto the box.” That was one of the few massive negatives in an otherwise overtly positive console review. Glad to see it’s been sorted! We’ll have more coverage of PlayStation Music as the year rolls on. Filed under: Gaming , Household , Software , HD , Mobile , Sony Comments Source: Sony PlayStation , Spotify , Sony PlayStation EU

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PlayStation is getting a Spotify-powered music service, closing Music Unlimited

The Big Picture: 3D Paris apartment shows what Unreal Engine 4 can do

See that room above? It looks real, but it’s not — and by that we mean it’s just a 3D environment made in Unreal Engine 4. Sure, we already have a pretty good idea what the new engine can do, such as bringing realistic skin (among other things ) to games. But this “Unreal Paris” project by CG designer Dereau Benoît proves that it can be used to create objects and environments that look more like photographs of the real thing rather than CG. Benoît has created a snazzy Parisian apartment with receiving rooms, dining area, kitchen, bedroom, hallways and even a full bathroom. Benoît didn’t skimp on the details: the walls and ceilings are rich with patterns, there’s sunlight flooding in through the open windows, and you’ll see shadows, textures and even reflections mimicking their real-life counterparts. He took down the demo he uploaded on his website (presumably to iron out the kinks), but you can watch a video of the tour below to see what kind graphics to expect in future games. Filed under: Gaming Comments Via: Eurogamer , Neogaf Source: Dereau Benoît

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The Big Picture: 3D Paris apartment shows what Unreal Engine 4 can do

Swyp is yet another one-card wallet vying for your attention

High-tech cards that store all your credit, gift and loyalty card info haven’t exactly made it big yet, but the competition’s already heating up. The newest entry in the race is called Swyp: a metallic device with a screen that transforms into the card you want to use when you need it, so long as you choose the appropriate one using its scroll buttons. In order to upload info, you’ll need to scan credit cards and loyalty cards with magnetic strips (support for scannable barcodes will come later) using a reader that plugs into a phone’s headphone jack. Each card’s details are then stored in the accompanying app, which you can also use to snap pictures of paper receipts. The device itself can store up to 25 cards’ info, more than what its rivals can handle: Coin , its oldest competition, can store up to 8 cards, while Plastc can keep up to 20. According to The Verge , Swyp was designed to deactivate if your phone detects that the card is more than six feet away, though there’s a way to override that if you’re, say, paying at a restaurant. Its creator, Ash Dhodapkar, also told the publication that Swyp will have a rechargeable battery (Coin, on the other hand does not — you’ll have to toss it when it runs out of juice), though it’s unclear if it will work with wireless chargers. It lacks a bunch of other features found on Plastc, including chip-and-pin technology, as well as NFC support, but it is loads cheaper than the competition (Coin costs $100, while Plastc is $150). A small number of Swype cards are now up for pre-order for $49 per, but once those are all gone, you’ll have to pay $99 to get one when it launches this fall. Filed under: Misc Comments Via: The Verge Source: Swyp

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Swyp is yet another one-card wallet vying for your attention