Amazon Delivery by Drone?

If this were April 1st, I would blame an April Fool’s joke! But, it seems that they are serious! Check out the video below, as someone orders from Amazon, then gets dleivery in less than 30 minutes via a drone!

How cool is that?!? Delivery’s would be limited to 10 miles or less from the fulfillment center, but this is wild!

Granted it is 5 years out (and that is really ambitious!) And, the “air traffic control” aspects are daunting. But, as an idea, this is actually pretty cool!

Save Winamp… Make it Open Source!

Hundreds of thousands have signed the peptition asking AOL to Open Source Winamp.

Winamp lovers beg AOL to open source code

Ars Technica – “Last week, AOL announced the impending death of Winamp, saying that the 16-year-old media player would be shut down within a month.

‘Winamp.com and associated Web services will no longer be available past December 20, 2013. Additionally, Winamp Media players will no longer be available for download. Please download the latest version before that date,’ AOL announced.

But fans of the venerable software have launched a ‘Save Winamp’ website and petition asking AOL either to keep Winamp alive or to open source its code.

‘The history of digital music started with Winamp,’ says the group, which includes nine developers who have pledged to improve Winamp if the source code is released. ‘Our goal is to convince Nullsoft [the AOL subsidiary behind Winamp] to release the Winamp source code and we will take it further in an open-source way.’

The petition was started by Web hosting company owner Peter Zawacki of Australia, and it has more than 12,000 supporters thus far. ‘If AOL allows it to go open source it WILL live on forever and be in the hands of people who love it and use it every day,’ the petition states.

We’ve asked AOL if the company is willing to release Winamp’s source code but haven’t yet received a response.”

Google Voice Command via a Google Chrome Plug-in

A new Google Chrome extension gives you Google voice command of your browser.

Google releases ‘OK Google’ Chrome extension for hands-free voice search on the desktop

9 to 5 Google Blog – “Google announced today on Google+ that it’s releasing a new extension for Chrome that will enable hands-free activation of the voice search features it rolled out earlier this year. Google announced the conversational voice search features for Chrome back in May and has been updating it on various platforms since, but previously users had to actually click a microphone icon to activate voice search on the desktop.

Now, like on Android 4.4 devices and within the Google Now mobile apps, using the extension users will be able to simply say ‘OK Google’ to initiate a search:

This year, rather than stopping midway through to wash your hands and type in a search, you can just speak to your laptop: ‘Ok Google, how many ounces are in one cup?’ Et voila, the cooking can go on. You can also say ‘Ok Google, set a timer for 30 minutes’ so you don’t forget to baste that turkey.

Users will have to be on Google.com in Chrome in order to activate a voice search hands-free.

The free extension is available on the Chrome Web Store now for English speakers in the U.S.”

elementary OS, the Linux for Mac Lovers?

elementaryOS

The elementary OS is a new version of Linux that is more like a Mac. It is simple and refined looking. If you are looking for something just a bit different… give it a try! Even on an “under-powered” machine.

elementaryOS Web Site

“Community Driven.
elementary has a single goal: to provide the best possible experience for our community. We’re driven by a desire to be better, not by a paycheck. Contributors aren’t profit-maximizers, they’re purpose-maximizers.

Transparent and Open.
We believe in the power of open source and global collaboration. That means anyone can download, use, modify, and contribute to the code we’ve written to bring their ideas to life. The code is developed in the open, meaning it’s available for review, scrutiny, and improvement by tens of thousands of developers all around the world. All before it hits your system.

Beautiful and Usable.
elementary is crafted by designers and developers who believe that computers can be easy, fun, and gorgeous. By putting design first, we ensure we’re not compromising on quality or usability.

Modern Computing.
elementary OS is a free replacement for Windows on the PC and OS X on the Mac. It comes with what you’d expect, like a fast web browser and an app store with thousands of apps. Plus some things you may not expect, like free updates and no known viruses.

Speedy
Luna has been engineered from the ground up to be light on its toes. It starts up quickly, logs in instantly, and uses the bare minimum of resources so that your apps enjoy a speed boost as well. And with Luna, you get the same Linux foundation chosen for the world’s fastest supercomputers.

Full of Features
When you install elementary, you’re not just installing an operating system. You’re installing an excellent suite of custom tailored apps that let you get right to business. Easily surf the web, check your email, listen to music, and tackle everyday tasks or pleasures.

Music
Browse by albums, Make playlists, Rate songs, and see similiar tracks.

Midori
Surf the web with the speed of the same rendering engine as Google Chrome and Apple Safari.

Empathy
Connect with Jabber, Facebook, Google Talk, AIM, IRC, Yahoo! and more.

Geary Mail
View multiple accounts, get desktop notifications, and read your mail in conversations.

Shotwell
Import, Organize, and Edit photos. Make a slideshow. Share with Facebook or Flickr.

Updates
Always stay on the cutting edge. Get updates right away, forever, for free.”

Safeplug: Anonymous Surfing in a Box!

Pogoplug SafeplugThis box gives everyone on your internal network Tor browser anonymity!

Say hello to Safeplug, Pogoplug’s $49 Tor-in-a-box for anonymous surfing

GigaOmSUMMARY: The box takes a minute to set up and promises anonymity for all surfing done through the connected router. It may not prove quite that simple to use in reality, but it’s certainly an intriguing and cost-effective privacy tool.

You may know Pogoplug as the maker of little ‘personal cloud’ devices for streaming media from your home to your smartphone, or, if you’re more up to speed with what the company’s been doing, you may be aware of its Dropbox-battling cloud storage services. But while security has always been a necessary aspect of these plays, Pogoplug is now jumping headfirst into that space with its new product, Safeplug.

Safeplug is essentially Linux-based hardware packaging for Tor, which is slightly-hard-to-use software for people who want to surf the web anonymously. Tor does this using encryption and by bouncing everyone’s traffic around other users’ connections, making it almost – but not always – impossible to see who’s visiting which page. Safeplug also automatically blocks ads.

‘We’re huge fans of Tor and are very good at building these small appliances,’ Pogoplug CEO Dan Putterman told me, explaining that Safeplug just needs to be plugged into the user’s router. ‘It takes 60 seconds to install, then all of your in-home internet access becomes completely anonymized. We want to just take what is currently available today to a more technical crowd and democratize it, making it easier to use for an average user.’

Anonymity is complex

Safeplug with phoneIf only things were that simple. Tor may be good for privacy, but it doesn’t play nicely with all the things you might want to do on the internet – all that bouncing-around of traffic means slower surfing, which becomes an issue with streaming video and gaming, and the anti-fraud mechanisms in online banking services aren’t too keen on anonymized access either.

Pogoplug is aware of these limitations, Putterman said, which is why users can whitelist certain sites so that their use is not run through Tor. Users can also set up Safeplug to work on a per-browser basis, so for example Firefox may always run through Tor while Chrome won’t. I worry that this sort of complexity will bedevil those who expect to just plug the thing in and forget about it.

On the plus side, users can also set themselves up as Tor nodes to help others surf anonymously (the default setting for this is ‘off’ as it has bandwidth implications). Putterman said Pogoplug hadn’t actually talked to the Tor folks before putting their open-source project in a box (‘We wanted to have some aspect of secrecy in the development process’) but pointed out that it would ‘hopefully make a significant impact in terms of the number of relays out there’, thereby making Tor better at what it does.

‘Vetted software’

Safeplug runs Tor and a proxy server with ‘hardened’ SSH access, and that’s about it. It costs $49 and is initially on sale in the U.S. Pogoplug plans to also sell it across Europe and Asia, and yes, Putterman is conscious of that fact that some people there won’t be brimming with trust for a security product coming out of the U.S.

‘It’s using very vetted software,’ he pointed out. ‘We could have run a VPN or proxy service somewhere else, but we realized the only way to truly guarantee [anonymity and safety] is not to be reliant on any other service. People who are sceptical can look at the Linux level and see exactly what processes are running. Technical users can look inside the box and feel safe that it’s only running Tor.’

Pogoplug has even made firmware updates for the device pull-only, not push – ‘If we pushed, we’d have to track all the boxes. It’s pull-based for security reasons.’

Safeplug aside, Pogoplug is also seeking to reassure customers outside the U.S. with the siting of its data centers (Pogoplug only used Amazon Glacier for a few months in the early days of its cloud storage product). It has several in the U.S. and one in Israel, and it’s currently setting one up in France. Japan’s next on the list.”

Microsoft Sells 1 Million Xbox Ones in the First 24 Hours Too!

Well, wadda ya know? The PS4 sold 1 million in 24 hours last week, and this week, the Xbox One sold 1 million in the first 24 hours. Very, very interesting!

Microsoft sells 1 million Xbox One units in its first 24 hours

TheNextWeb – “Microsoft has announced a successful Xbox One launch with over 1 million units sold worldwide in the first 24 hours. That roughly matches Sony’s PlayStation 4, which also topped 1 million in its first day.

Friday’s launch outpaced the launches for the Xbox 360 and the original Xbox. As TechCrunch points out, Microsoft’s numbers include sales in a total of 13 countries, while Sony launched the PS4 in just the US and Canada.”

So, arguably, Sony did better!

Bitcasa Jacks Up Their Price… a LOT!

I thought Bitcasa was “da bomb” because they offered unlimited storage, with no restrictions, at $99.00 per year. And, I signed up. But, no way I am renewing at $999.00 per year! Are you kidding?!? I got Pogoplug. $49.99 per year. They had better not raise their price, or I will be REALLY miffed!

Bitcasa’s infinite cloud storage balloons to $999 a year

Engadget – “If you thought Bitcasa’s infinite cloud storage was too sweet of a deal to exist on this mortal plane for $99 a year, that’s because it was — or at least partly because the bulk of subscribers filled up far less of their digital lockers than expected. According to the outfit, 98 percent of its customers use less than five terabytes of data, and 92 percent ‘do not store anywhere close to a terabyte.’ In addition, the firm says a survey of its customers revealed they valued more features over additional space. As result, the unlimited service will now cost $999 a year, or $99 per month, and the company will focus on making the platform more useful, starting with a freshly-released API. Free accounts have been tweaked to start at 5GB (as opposed to 10GB), and the $99 per year (or $10 a month) tier now nets 1TB of space. For those with even more bits to squirrel away, 5TB can be had by contributing $499 a year (or $49 each month) to Bitcasa’s coffers.

Existing subscribers will get to keep their current plan’s rates and storage, but won’t get access to some new offerings — such as the future Linux client — unless they switch to the new pricing scheme. Tencent’s free 10TB of online storage might sound even more tempting now, but it’s worth taking this instance as an example of what could happen to your cloud paradise.”

Will Microsoft Buy Winamp and Shoutcast?

As someone that runs Internet Radio Stations, the idea of Shoutcast going away is scary, and the idea that Microsoft may buy it is crazy!

Source: Microsoft In Talks To Buy Shoutcast And Winamp From AOL

TechCrunch – “Looks like the llama may not get off so easily after all. AOL yesterday announced that it was shutting down Winamp, media playing software for Windows and Android devices that it picked up through its 1999, $80 million acquisition of Nullsoft in 1999. But today Techcrunch has learned that AOL is talks with Microsoft to sell Winamp, along with Shoutcast, a media streaming service also developed by Nullsoft. We have also learned that AOL has been planning to announce the closure of Shoutcast next week.

AOL has declined to comment for this story, and we are still waiting to hear back from Microsoft with a response. From what we understand, the deal is not yet finalized, with AOL and Microsoft still working out the price. It could also be very wishful thinking from those intent on trying to save both services.

AOL did not give any guidance yesterday on what would happen with Shoutcast.

If this is correct, it would represent an interesting, and strange, twist in the story.

On the AOL side, it’s fairly clear why AOL is closing down Winamp and Shoutcast, and it makes sense why it would want to sell both.

As an owner, AOL has never given much of a strong direction to the products, at a time when other digital music companies have been building up audiences and evolving technologies (although, as we pointed out earlier this week when writing about Rdio layoffs, the digital music business is tough). It has already shuttered and sold off other music assets as part of a bigger strategic shift to focus resources as a web publisher (it owns TechCrunch, Engadget, Huffington Post and a number of other bloggy properties), and as a rich-media advertising network operator across those and third-party sites, with an increasing focus on ad-tech to improve how those ads are delivered and measured.

Yes, music properties could very much fit into that mix, but not without a lot of financial and strategic investment in them.

On the Microsoft side, the Windows giant has had its own setbacks in music (RIP Zune). But it has more recently thrown a lot of eggs into the Xbox Music basket, which works on the Xbox 360, Windows 8, Windows RT, Windows Phone 8,iOS and Android devices, offering free, ad-supported streaming, subscriptions, and downloaded music.

Where would Winamp or Shoutcast fit into that mix? While I’m still trying to figure out what Microsoft would do with Winamp, Shoutcast has a platform that acts as a portal to over 50,000 radio stations. This could be one area that Microsoft might want to add to the Xbox Music platform, and which it currently lacks, to complement its Pandora-style personal radio feature.”

HBO GO is Now Available on Chromecast

HBO GO users can now rejoice! Google Chromecast now supports your HBO GO addiction!

HBO GO now works with Chromecast

“Grab your favorite snack and get cozy on your Iron Throne, because HBO GO has added Chromecast support to their Android, iOS and web app. Now you can easily enjoy ‘Game of Thrones,’ ‘Boardwalk Empire,’ ‘Girls’ and your favorite movies on your TV by casting from the HBO GO app or website.

To start casting from HBO GO, just check that you have the latest version of the app for Android or iOS. You can also cast from hbogo.com using Chrome browser on your laptop or any Chromebook. The mobile and web apps will be rolling out over the next few days.

Winter is Coming!”

1 75 76 77 78 79 231