Thursday, January 30, 2014

Instagram Invite For Mysterious December 12 Media Event May Hint Toward Printing

Instagram has invited members of the media to an event in NYC on December 12 to “share a moment” with Kevin Systrom and the Instagram team.
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It’s unclear what this event is in reference to, but considering that the invitation was sent in the mail, on paper, the photo-sharing app could be hinting at a future in print. Other invites were a block of wood with pictures printed on them, with a hanger on one side to hang on the wall. If that isn’t a hint toward printing, I don’t know what is.
It sounds ridiculous, considering the digital revolution is in…

Toshiba Unveils 13″ Chromebook For $279, Available February 16 -

Here at CES 2014, Toshiba has justunveiled a new Chromebook, running Google’s Chrome OS on a 13.3-inch display for the first time, and priced below the $300 mark.
This is the company’s first step into Chrome territory, while competitors like Dell, Lenovo, HP, and Acer have been pumping out the light-as-air notebooks for a while now.The Toshiba Chromebook is powered by an Intel Haswell chip, with a promised battery life of nine hours. Meanwhile, the laptop sports a 13.3-inch 1366 x 768 display, with a .8-inch profile at 3.3 pounds. On the inside, alongside that Haswell processor, you’ll find 16GB of SSD storage, 2GB of RAM, as well as dual-band 802.11 a/b/g/n Wifi. And once you have Wifi on a Chromebook, the magic really begins.These devices run on a Chrome OS, which is essentially a beefed up Chrome browser. This means that access to various applications and programs is limited to web apps. However, Google is working to make the browser experience as complete as possible with the help of Google Apps and Gchat + Hangouts. Toshiba’s Chromebook is available for $279 starting on February 16.

Wednesday, January 29, 2014

Leadership tips for aspiring female tech executives

This is a guest post by growth equity investor Sonya Brown 
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As more women move into the C-suite, they are shaking up the order of things. New research shows that startups with female executives are more likely to succeed.
But according to Dow Jones, the median proportion of female executives at successful companies is still only 7.1 percent.
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This is likely to change in the coming years — Marissa Mayer, Sheryl Sandberg and Meg Whitman are all examples of powerful women who currently lead significant consumer and enterprise companies. The advantages of female leadership at tech companies are numerous — among them, relationship-building and networking.
I believe…



TiVo Moves Storage Of TV Shows Into The Cloud With New Network DVR Service -

DVR manufacturer TiVo has spent most of the last 15 years building hardware that would allow consumers to record their favorite TV shows and watch them later. Now the company is working toward building products that would let consumers save their favorite shows not on a hard drive in a box, but up in the cloud. TiVo’s network DVR offering isn’t coming totally out of the blue. After all, the company has spent the last few years adding cloud-based elements to its service and apps. Part of that was out of a desire to make its products more nimble — you can make changes to a user interface more easily if it’s powered via the Internet — and part was to enable future services.

Well, they’re here. With the network DVR, TiVo will be able to deliver the same consistent UI to users without having to have a hard drive in its set-top boxes. That will dramatically lower the cost of producing hardware, and it offers all sorts of new pricing and business models on top of its service.
In addition to making the service available on TiVo hardware that doesn’t have a hard drive built in, the cloud-based services enable TiVo users to access live and recorded content on other devices and apps. Likesay, TiVo’s iPad app, or a TiVo Roku channel.
While TiVo would provide the apps and user interface that consumers see, it would be up to its service provider partners to actually provide all the storage and connectivity to content that would be available. That is, TiVo would be the front end, but Comcast, Virgin Media, or other partners who choose to deploy network DVR with TiVo’s help would do the heavy lifting on the back end.
In that respect, its relationship with those providers wouldn’t be that different from how it interacts with Netflix, Hulu, or other streaming video partners, who handle all the storage and delivery for their own.
Bu TiVo could enable its service provider partners to manage various content rights, create different tiers of service, and set their own multiscreen policies.
One example of new services and revenue models that could be enabled is to allow cable subscribers to buy additional network DVR storage for when they bump up against storage limits. It could also enable them to offer automatically make cloud-based copies versions of popular TV shows and make access available to pre-recorded assets.
The new offering points to a major change in the way service providers think about how subscribers gain access to their content. And it’s a big step forward for TiVo into a world where hardware isn’t what powers these types of services.

Saturday, January 25, 2014

The Fin Is A Bluetooth Ring That Turns Your Hand Into An Interface

Smart glasses! Smart watches! Smart… rings?
While many in the tech world would agree that wearable devices are the natural next stage of computing, no one has really cracked the code. As much as we geeks love to chat about Google Glass and Pebble watches, no wearable has breached the mainstream and achieved any degree of ubiquity just yet.
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RHL Vision, a competitor in the TechCrunch CES Hardware Battlefield today, thinks they have the answer: Bluetooth rings that turn your fingers into buttons.
Here’s how it works: by tucking an optical sensor into a small ring placed around your thumb, the Fin is

Path Finally Closes That Elusive Series

It’s been a bumpy road for Dave Morin’s Path, as manic rumors over the last year have pegged the “private” social network at once as the subject oflagging growth, shrinking staff and potential acquisitions, while at the same time raising a mega $50 million round at a $500 million valuation.
Today, the company’s long path to a Series C appears to finally have come to an end. Having recently revealed an additional revenue stream with the launch of premium subscription plans and product additions like private sharing, over the last quarter, Path has been making moves that appear to have reassured investors of its…

Atlas Wearables Takes On Jawbone And Nike With A Smarter Exercise Tracker

If there’s one lesson to be learned at this year’s CES, it’s that everybody and their mothers are going nuts for wearables. More than a few of these peculiar gadgets are meant to make sure you’re getting enough exercise, but a new fitness tracking hardware startup thinks they’ve got an edge on all the wearable incumbents that have popped up these past few years.
You see, rather than just counting your steps for the day, the Atlas — which is being shown off for the first time onstage at our Hardware Battlefield — is capable of determining exactly what exercises you’re doing to…
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Google Stole Its Smart Contact Lens From Microsoft. And That’s a Good Thing -

Google latest bombshell of a research project is a smart contact lens diabetics can use to read blood sugar levels through the tears in their eyes. Thanks to a tiny microchip, Google says, the lens can provide a new glucose reading as often as once a second.Some have pointed out that the project follows in the footsteps of rival Microsoft, but this is merely another reason to applaud Google, a company with a knack for bringing research into the real world that we’ll likely never see from Microsoft.
The lens Google unveilTechCrunch notes, one of the Googlers behind the project, Babak Parvis, once collaborated with the Redmond software giant on a lens the company fashioned for tracking blood sugar without needles.
ed on Thursday seems to draw heavily, if not directly, from work done by Microsoft. As
So, no, the Google lens isn’t all that new. But it’s still worthy of attention, mainly because it’s coming from Google.
At Google, you see, this kind of blue-sky research isn’t just blue-sky research. Its research operations are designed to work in step with the rest of the company, and push its work as close to the commercial realm as possible. That means the stuff coming out of Google skunkworks programs like the Google X Lab has a very real chance of seeing the light of day, unlike much of the research happening at Microsoft.
This is true not only of eye-catching gadgets like Google Glass — another graduate of the Google X Lab that gave birth to the new smart lens — but also the countless research projects that aim to fundamentally remake how we build software and how computers operate. In so many cases, these projects — from the Google Brain artificial intelligence project that’s improving Android’s voice recognition tools to the Borg software system underpinning Google’s entire software empire — have already remade Google and countless other companies intent on following its lead.
Google has stocked its research operation with some of the sharpest minds from places like DEC and Bell Labs and Xerox PARC, and they’ve created new-age software like Google MapReduce and the Google File System and the Google BigTable database. These massive creations run across thousands of computers and are now the basis for how vast swathes of the web store and analyze data. MapReduce and GFS gave rise to Hadoop, software now used by everyone from Facebook and eBay to countless everyday businesses. Borg, a means of carefully spreading computing tasks across entire data centers of machines, has already inspired the new computing system that underpins Twitter.

Engadget Mini Android News & Magazines

Engadget Mini is a real-time stream of everything important, interesting, and fun in the world of consumer technology, with instant updates on the latest product news and reviews, as well as a mix of the best photos, videos, and posts from across the social web. Curated by the editors of Engadget, with Mini’s bite-sized updates you won’t miss a beat.
Features:
• View real-time photos, videos, gadget reviews and social posts from across the web.
• Visit the original source of content for more context.
• Share updates with their friends.

The ‘smart life’: How connected cars, clothes and homes could fry your brain

Over the last few years, Iran, China and the United States have all deployed weapons capable of damaging physical infrastructure, all without a single explosion.
Unlike conventional weapons, these cyberweapons aren’t restricted by international treaties — partly because governments know so little about their neighbors’ electronic arsenals.
“With nuclear weapons, we at least had some idea from satellites about how many weapons the Soviet Union had and what they were capable of,” Robert Axelrod, a political scientist at the University of Michigan, told NBC News. “Cyberweapons are different. They can be stockpiled with other countries knowing it, causing them to be more frightened than they need to be, or not frightened enough.”
A new study from Axelrod and fellow University of Michigan researcher Rumen Iliev tries to shed some light on why governments choose to launch cyberattacks, the timing behind them, and what kind be done to prevent them from
getting out of hand.
Iran reportedly launched a cyberattack against Saudi Arabia oil firm Aramco in 2012. China has been accused of doing the same against the U.S. government computer systems.
But the most famous attack almost certainly originated in the United States. In 2010, Stuxnet made headlines.
It seemed like the perfect computer worm. For 17 months, it sped up the centrifuges at Iran’s nuclear enrichment center in Natanz while undetected, damaging but not destroying them. Then, quietly, it self-destructed.
In the end, Stuxnet temporarily disabled one-fifth of the facility’s centrifuges, setting back Iran’s nuclear program by two years, cyberdefense expert Ralph Langner said in Foreign Policy. It was a big win for for U.S. and Israeli intelligence — who, according to documents leaked by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden, developed the worm together.
“The capabilities that were employed in Stuxnet were far beyond the capabilites of what individual hackers could do,” Axelrod said.
Escape into the wild
The problem? Stuxnet escaped from Iran, possibly on somebody’s laptop. Now it’s out in the wild, available to both foreign governments and individual hackers who might want to attack anything from water treatment plants to electrical grids to other nuclear power plants.
If U.S. intelligence officials had used Axelrod and Iliev’s model, they probably would not have chosen a different path, said Axelrod, mostly because the people who created it had to move fast. Stuxnet depended on exploiting at least three different vulnerabilities in Iran’s nuclear facilities, any of which could have been fixed by the time the worm was deployed.
That short time window, the high stakes involved with delaying Iran’s nuclear program and the ability of Stuxnet to operate undetected for so long made it seem like a good idea at the time. (Axelrod’s study breaks down these factors down into “persistence,” “stealth” and “stakes” — basically, whether a cyberattack needs to be used quickly before becoming irrelevant, whether an attack will be useless later if used immediately and whether the stakes are high enough to risk the blowback from an attack).
Stuxnet certainly met its objective — delaying Iran’s nuclear progress. But its “escape” was probably unforeseen, said Axelrod, and is just one of the many dangers of letting cyber conflicts go unregulated.
The model he developed could help countries at least begin a dialogue about what is acceptable and what isn’t, possibly leading to a ban on attacking things like civilian or banking infrastructure, Axelrod said.
“I think it could lead countries to realize that that they can’t exactly judge another country’s capabilities on what they see on a day-to-day basis,” he said. “That makes any kind of established norms or agreements on limiting the use of cyberweapons more valuable.”

Keen On 2014: Apple, Apple & Apple

Having reviewed 2013 with me, Robert Scoble now turns his Google Glass enabled eyes forward to 2014. What, I asked
him, are going to be the really big deals in 2014?
Apple, Apple and Apple, Scoble predicts. Firstly, there’s going to be what Scoble calls a “war of wearables” between Apple’s iWatch and Google Glass in the next twelve months. Secondly, traditional television is about to be finally blown up by products like Apple tv. And, Scoble says, if Tim Cook really wants to radically change things, he can spend all those Apple billions on something really big – like NFL tv rights. Thirdly, Scoble says, Apple has the chance to truly win what Fred Vogelstein calls the “dogfight” to control the $250 billion media industry.
But Scoble isn’t just a misty eyed Apple fanboy. He sees great potential for Amazon in 2014, a company that, he says, “knows” his buying habits better than anyone. And he even thinks that Microsoft – if the new CEO could unchain all its remarkable talent – could make a dramatic comeback in next 12 months.
But the biggest winner in 2014, Scoble says, may be what he calls “iteration”. There won’t be any truly new-new things in 2014, he says. It will be a year of refinement rather than revolution.

MeMINI Is A Wearable Camera That Let’s You Save Video Clips Minutes After Cool Stuff Happened

Meet meMINI, a wearable videocamera that’s currently seeking $50,000 in crowdfunding onKickstarter to help you save the best bits of your daily life for posterity without having to record everything and then edit the footage for highlights.
Wearable life logging cameras are nothing
new, even if the idea of walking around with an all-seeing digital eye recording your daily life (and therefore other peoples’ too) still raises eyebrows. Whether it’s GoPro for adrenaline junkies, helmet cams for police or cyclists, or Google Glass for, well, Robert Scoble’s personal shower time, the hardware kit to capture your unique-snowflake first-person perspective on everyday life is already…
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10 Simple Things You Can Do Today That Will Make You Happier, Backed By Science

Happiness is so interesting, because we all have different ideas about what it is and how to get it. It’s also no surprise
that it’s the Nr.1 value for Buffer’s culture, if you see ourslidedeck about it. So naturally we are obsessed with it.
I would love to be happier, as I’m sure most people would, so I thought it would be interesting to find some ways to become a happier person that are actually backed up by science. Here are ten of the best ones I found.

1. Exercise more – 7 minutes might be enough

You might have seen some talk recently about the scientific 7 minute workout mentioned in The New York Times. So if you thought exercise was something you didn’t have time for, maybe you can fit it in after all.
Exercise has such a profound effect on our happiness and well-being that it’s actually been proven to be an effective strategy for overcoming depression. In a study cited in Shawn Achor’s book, The Happiness Advantage, three groups of patients treated their depression with either medication, exercise, or a combination of the two. The results of this study really surprised me. Although all three groups experienced similar improvements in their happiness levels to begin with, the follow up assessments proved to be radically different:
You don’t have to be depressed to gain benefit from exercise, though. It can help you to relax, increase your brain power and even improve your body image, even if you don’t lose any weight.
A study in the Journal of Health Psychology found that people who exercised felt better about their bodies, even when they saw no physical changes:
We’ve explored exercise in depth before, and looked at what it does to our brains, such as releasing proteins and endorphins that make us feel happier, as you can see in the image below.

2. Sleep more – you’ll be less sensitive to negative emotions

We know that sleep helps our bodies to recover from the day and repair themselves, and that it helps us focus and be more productive. It turns out, it’s also important for our happiness.
In NutureShock, Po Bronson and Ashley Merryman explain how sleep affects our positivity:
The BPS Research Digest explores another study that proves sleep affects our sensitivity to negative emotions. Using a facial recognition task over the course of a day, the researchers studied how sensitive participants were to positive and negative emotions. Those who worked through the afternoon without taking a nap became more sensitive late in the day to negative emotions like fear and anger

Android’s Rise To Platform Dominance In One Graph

With Android landing on all-in-one computers and Windows extending its reach deeper into the mobile world, the platform world is tightening into three key teams: iOS and OS X, Windows, and Android.
Chrome OS, BlackBerry, and the other minor players have derivative unit volume, and can therefore be discounted in our larger image of the market.
To compare those three groups yields an irksome, yet interesting, picture. Gartner recentlyreleased a set of statistics and prognostications along those operating system niches, stacking the groups against one another. The fine folks over at Redmond Magazine did us the favor of graphing the results.
Here, in a single chart, is the rise of Android, the slippage in the PC market, and Apple’s rising tide:
fMicrosoft manages to stay atop Apple, but the chart makes it plain that if Microsoft doesn’t want to fall even further behind Android — recall that Android is now being deployed across device classes — it will have to grow its mobile base at a far more rapid pace than it has thus far. Put another way, for Microsoft to chase Google, it can’t lean on the PC market, even as that market category stabilizes.
We can presume that Apple’s growth is mostly iOS-based, given that its OS X offerings are dealing with similar headwinds as Microsoft’s Windows platform.

In July 2013, my colleague Josh Constine and I called Android the new Windows. Recently, Paul Thurrott made the
 point that 2013 was “the year that Android became the Windows of the mobile world.” In an increasingly multi-modal computing market, where the difference between device classes is blurring, operating systems are becoming more diversely deployed. So, we can’t keep Android unit volume in one bucket, and Windows PC numbers in a separate class.
Microsoft, if it wants to regain the mantle of the leading platform company, has to do more than end the decline in the PC market: It has to ignite its own mobile growth. // news from
- See more at: http://hiperdvd.com/androids-rise-to-platform-dominance-in-one-graph-56/#sthash.hmYAdhDO.dpuf

Facebook Without The Cool Kids

advertising demographic that Facebook is losing asteens take their mercurial attention elsewhere in a sullen search of what’s cool. Facebook sans the cool kids may well be taking a substantial knock to the accuracy of its data, too.
A study of Facebook use among 16-to-18-year-olds in eight EU countries recently concluded that Facebook is “dead and buried” to teens, who have migrated to rival platforms like Instagram (itself owned by Facebook, of course), Snapchat and Twitter. Who is on Facebook? Parents.

Case in point: my 70-year-old mother is on Facebook (how she came to sign up is a telling tale in itself*). On her Facebook profile she deliberately has only a handful of friends — being as she’s not accustomed to the concept of sharing digital information with large groups of people. So instead of the hundreds of ‘friends’ younger Facebook users (used to) typically amass, she has around 10 connections on the service.
Now, as a general rule, the more data a service has on its users, the more data points it holds to triangulate to improve the accuracy of the information it holds. (Even factoring in those Facebook users who accept friend requests from random strangers — big data can be filtered; small data is riddled with holes and lacks a large enough sample size to accurately patch its gaps). So little wonder that the data Facebook holds on my mum is spectacularly wrong.
Based on the handful of friends she does have on the service, Facebook auto-filled the following fields: her current location, her (former) school, and her workplace. Or presumably that’s how it filled in those data fields. Because all that triangulated information was wrong (I’ve since deleted it for her, but the point stands: Facebook had associated incorrect information with her profile).
Facebook’s guess-work in auto-filling those fields seems to be attached to the few connections she does have on the service. For example, the school it listed her as having attended is the school one of her Facebook connections went to; and the location it said she can be found at is the location where another of her connections lives, and so on.
It may be that Facebook deliberately fills in such profile fields (via ‘best guess’) to encourage users to correct inaccurate data and thus socially engineers them to work for it on burnishing its data banks.
Or it may be that Facebook’s interface encourages people to confirm certain data points as they go along — such as where they live or went to school — and my mum simply didn’t notice that the suggested answers were so off the mark (and thus mistakenly confirmed Facebook’s algorithmic assumptions). Either way, she didn’t notice the info was inaccurate so it was left there to mislead (until I removed it and left those fields blank).
Facebook also, of course, made all her data public by default (my mum obviously had no idea it had done this) — which resulted in her receiving an unsolicited message from a spammer. She did see this, and became unnerved by this “stalker,” as she termed him. The result? She mistrusts Facebook even more than she already did. And is now even less inclined to voluntarily feed it with information. “Can I sue them?” she asked, when told the default Facebook data privacy setting had been public.
The only data she said she had filled in herself — ergo, the only accurate data on display on her profile — was her name, email and birth date. Plus a profile photo she had been encouraged to upload by her Facebook friends.
A single Facebook user that has been sketched inaccurately by the data inputted into a handful of data fields doesn’t amount to much. But if the proportion of active Facebook users is becoming skewed towards demographics that are less likely to amass huge friend bases on the service, and also less likely to voluntarily feed accurate info into Facebook’s data banks (either because they don’t trust it or don’t notice it’s wrong) then it seems likely that the quality of the data Facebook holds on its user-base is being diluted.
And that in turn paints Facebook as a less attractive proposition for advertisers: with less accurate user data in its databanks, and less attractive ad demographics comprising its (less) active user-base. Bottom line: less relevant targeted marketing and advertising leading to fewer money-making clicks.
While Facebook gets user data from other external sources, too — via its Facebook Login program, for instance, that allows it to stick its fingers in other developers’ pies — if Facebook as a brand has become toxic with teens, developers developing cool new services aren’t going to be falling over themselves to associate their shiny new thing with the digital equivalent of dad dancing. So it’s in with ‘sign up via email’ and out with ‘log in with Facebook’.
Teens are the most exciting demographic not merely because they are so lucrative from an advertiser point of view, but because they are such energetic users. When teens like something they obsess over it. They get their friends to obsess over it. They become addicts and advocates. Teen usage burns very bright indeed. And then they take that energy on to the next new new thing. Making it all the more chilly, for a business, when the cool kids move on.
Senior Facebook users obviously aren’t going to have the same usage pattern as teens. Not even close. And that changes what Facebook is now — and what it can become in future.
For me, and I am admittedly a rather atypical Facebook user (not to mention well north of the teen demographic), this long-in-the-tooth social network has felt like a very middle of the road service for years — a place where I almost never post anything, and which I check only occasionally to see friends’ wedding/new baby photos. As an information portal/photo-swapping site it can sometimes be mildly diverting or mildly entertaining or mildly useful. It’s rarely any more compelling than that. Twitter is where the really interesting information and interactions live IMO. From a data point of view, Twitter feels far more alive than Facebook.
No wonder Zuckerberg wants to connect fresh billions of Internet ingĂ©nues to his social network by targeting developing countries. In new markets he again has the chance of tapping into caches of teens who haven’t had a chance to get disenchanted with Facebook yet. Who can be sold on a ‘cool new service for keeping up with friends’ — being as it’s one their mums and dads haven’t heard of yet. And who can inject Facebook with the vitality of obsessive usage data again.
Except, even in those untapped markets Facebook has its work cut out to get users engaged because emerging economies are going mobile first. And many such countries have been keen adopters of social mobile messaging rivals that are already eating Facebook’s lunch elsewhere. Whether it’s WhatsApp or Weixin or Snapchat or even BBM. Mobile messaging — with its more bounded and intimate form of social networking, that allows teens to go off and do their own thing away from the parents — is where the kids are obsessing now.
And where the kids go, the adults eventually tend to follow (if only to check up on them).
So a Facebook that pesters pensioners for personal information needs to take serious stock of what its overreaching behaviour has wrought. And accept that its days as the digital Breakfast Club — where cool kids come together and come of age — are gone. Facebook’s future belongs to the mainstream and the middle aged. You could say it’s the new Yahoo — albeit one that lacks a shiny new Marissa Mayer-esque figurehead to rally the troops right now. (Zuckerberg and his perma-hoodie feel about as fresh as an old-school uniform.)
As Facebook approaches its 10th birthday, it’s time to take stock, to leave the wild parties to Snapchat and its ilk. Time to stop trying to clone cool. And consider what this massively mainstream service can knit from the fuzzier threads of data that a more established, less excitable user-base is going to give it. Or it can splash serious cash on trying to buy cool – and careen off in search of a premature mid-life crisis.
*My mother signed up for Facebook because of the pester-power of its spam advertising which uses direct appeals from people you know to emotionally blackmail you (via email) to sign up. So you could argue that Facebook sewed the seeds of its own demise among the hyper sensitive teenage group by failing to respect the subtle inter-generational boundaries that delineate essential social spaces that separate adults from their offspring. Spaces that allow teens to go off and start creating adult identities of their ow

oogle Play Services Gets Improved Mobile Ads And Multiplayer Support, Google+ Sharing And Preview Of Drive API

Google today started rolling out the latest version of its Google Play services for Android. Just like earlier updates, version 4.1 brings a number of incremental changes to the company’s service for integrating Google services into mobile apps. The rollout is currently in process and should land on all Android devices worldwide within the next few days.
Today’s update brings support for turn-based multiplayer games to Play services, for example. With this, developers can easily build asynchronous games with up to eight participants. Every time a player takes a turn, the data is uploaded to Google’s servers and shared with the other players. Google has integrated this service with its tools for matching players with others, too.Also new in this update is improved support for Google+ sharing. This, the company says, will make it “even easier for users to share with the right people from your app.” As part of this update, users will be able to get auto-complete support and suggested recipients for all Gmail contacts, device contacts and people on Google+.
Developers can now also use Play services to access Google Drive through a new API that’s now in preview. With this, they can read and write files in Drive. Users will be able to work on these files offline, and changes will be synced automatically.
For developers who use Google’s ad products, this new version introduces full support forDoubleClick for Publishers, DoubleClick Ad Exchange and Search Ads for Mobile Apps. What’s most interesting for advertisers, though, is that publishers can now also use a new location API to give Google access to a user’s location when requesting ads. Location-based ads are likely to perform better than generic ads, after all, though users have generally been a bit nervous about sharing this data with advertisers given the potential privacy ramifications.
One other feature most users will likely appreciate is improved battery life. While Google isn’t sharing any details about this, the company said that anybody who has Google Location Reporting turned on should see longer battery life after this update, though whether that means less than 1 percent more (likely) or 10 percent more (very unlikely) remains to be seen.
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Microsoft’s Satya Nadella On Outgoing CEO Ballmer’s Legacy, Management Style, And Vision

ZDNet’s Mary Jo Foley today published an interview with Microsoft’s Satya Nadella, one of its key executives and a candidate to be its next CEO. The discussion as written focuses on the legacy and style of the company’s outgoing CEO Steve Ballmer, with whom Nadella has worked closely.
Given the CEO buzz about Nadella, his views, and criticisms of Ballmer matter. If you are at all interested in the internal dynamics of Microsoft, Foley’s piece is mandatory reading. I’ve selected a few short segments that are worth discussing here, but the full interview is worthy.
After asking Ballmer to vet his performance, especially in reference to his past work, his boss pushed aside the concept, according to Nadella -Microsoft is Windows and Windows is Microsoft, but that doesn’t mean that the company, let alone its main brand and platform, have remained static. In fact, the above Ballmer quote fits nicely into the last year of the company under his management.
Ballmer has overseen both a dramatic revamp of Microsoft business model — from software in a box to devices and services — and a reorg of its corporate structure. Those are both new formulas enacted under Ballmer.
Whoever becomes the next Microsoft CEO will be handed the keys to a very different car. The company that shipped Windows 7 is in many ways over. Azure, Office 365, Windows 8.1, Lumia, and the like are essentially products of a new generation. That generation will be Ballmer’s functional legacy, I think, more than the company’s stagnant (until this year) stock price.
Finally, as you probably expected given his bombastic persona, Ballmer is an aggressive manager:
-Foley conducted the interview a few weeks back, so we can’t really tell much about its timing in terms of reading the tea leaves about what it could mean for his changes in CEO Bingo.
Still, I think that the picture that is coming out of Nadella is that he’s a calm, technology-minded person who understands the enterprise space. In my (admittedly few) interactions with the guy, that’s the vibe I picked up.
In a way, the legacy of a CEO can be compared (if we avoid the comically disparate scales involved) to an outgoing president’s. Both often see during their tenure the launch of new products or initiatives that don’t come to full fruition until after they leave office. George W. Bush’s stellar legacy with AIDS in Africa is an example of this. His paintings are not. (And no, I am not comparing Ballmer to Bush, calm down.)
If the current crop of rumors is correct, we could see a new CEO for Microsoft by the end of the year. If that bears out, and it’s not Nadella, we can at least appreciate that in ten years’ time — at which point he will be a half decade shy of 60 — we’ll know who the frontrunner will be.

Sunrise Adds iPad App And Week View In Its Quest To Build The Best Calendar Platfor

Calendar app Sunrise released a major update today, completing two missing pieces of the complicated calendar puzzle — you can now use Sunrise on your iPad with a new design tailored for bigger screens, and there is a much-requested week view to get a better picture of what your schedule looks like. Finally, the company added background updates so that your calendar is always up to date when you open the app.
“We realized that mobile is an even bigger paradigm shift than we originally thought,” co-founder and CEO Pierre Valade told me. “Every other day, I don’t even use a computer anymore — I consider the iPad as a mobile device. People want to feel productive anywhere, and work from their iPad. So that’s why we built Sunrise for the iPad.”
The iPad app is what you would expect if you are an existing Sunrise user. You get a bigger perspective on your calendar with a more detailed month view — you can actually see your events from the month view. Events work exactly the same way, with information pulled from Facebook, LinkedIn and other platforms. The infinite feed is slightly deemphasized with the full screen month view, but there is now this new week view. In fact, the week view makes more sense on the iPad than on the iPhone.
Most of the time, when you open your calendar, you want the answer to a simple question — what’s next? That’s why Sunrise’s feed has always been one of its key features — you open the app and you get a scrollable list of all your next events. But sometimes, you want to schedule a call or a meeting and you need to see more easily when you are available.
That’s where the week view kicks in. If you have a busy schedule with only a few empty zones, or want to see how your week looks at-a-glance, just press the new week view button at the top, and the screen will switch to a very readable week calendar.
Like the month grid, it relies a lot on scrolling, not on tiny text. Sunrise remains clean yet easy to understand. With a finger swipe, you can move around your day feed, week view or month grid. The overall design is very fluid.

Spruce up your selfies with Lil Bub’s new ‘Tuxedo Kittie

One of the most famous Internet cats is helping us move beyond 2013, the year of the selfieand create ever stranger self portraits with her very own mobile app, now available for iOS and Android devices. Tuxedo Kittie Lil Bub is continuing her ascent to pop culture stardom with a new photo editing app 
“Tuxedo Kittie” is the latest multimedia venture from Lil Bub, the celebrity cat best known for her adorably bug-eyed,
tongue-sticking out expression that helps set her apart from her more dour compatriots like Colonel Meow and Grumpy Cat. It works the same way as any popular mobile photo-editing software, except instead of providing users with faux-vintage filters, Tuxedo Kittie lets them apply weird space-age filters and stickers that all pay homage to the famous feline in one way or another.
In other words: watch outCatPaint; there’s a new cat-based photo-editing mobile app in town.
This isn’t the first step that Lil Bub has taken into establishing herself as a media mogul of sorts. At little more than two years old, the cat already has a book, a feature-length documentary produced by VICE, and a web series to her name. She even produced her own hour-long Yule log video last year for the holidays, which has already garnered almost 1.75 million views.
With all the money and fame already behind her, stepping into the vibrant world of mobile apps was only a matter of time. I wouldn’t be surprised if her next move is to fire a shot atCatmoji and try to establish a competing cat-centric social network. But let’s just hope that doesn’t mean there will be years of cantankerous litigation once Grumpy Cat shows up, Winklevoss-style, and starts demanding royalties.
You can check out some of the weird and wonderful photos that Lil Bub fans are already submitting through Tuxedo Kittie and download the app here.