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Saturday, June 21, 2014

Google Reveals How the Android Wear UI Will Work



When Google announced Android Wear back in March, it illustrated the company’s seriousness about the wearable game. Since then, Google has dropped bread crumbs, slowly painting us a bigger picture of what’s to come with its mobile OS. A new video from the company, released just days before its big I/O conference, outlines some of the main interaction considerations for developers who will be building apps for the inevitable wave of new wrist worn gadgets.
The big takeaway? Interacting with our gadgets is about to get a whole lot simpler. Android Wear’s banner claim is that its interface will free us from the time sucking grid of icons on our smartphones. Instead, the interface will be glanceable; requiring users to engage far less time and attention to get the information they’re looking for.
ANDROID WEAR’S BANNER CLAIM IS THAT ITS INTERFACE WILL FREE US FROM THE TIME SUCKING GRID OF ICONS ON OUR SMARTPHONES. INSTEAD, THE INTERFACE WILL BE GLANCEABLE.
Here’s a quick look at how they’re doing it: The first thing you notice about theAndroid Wear interface is how little there is to notice. In the video’s example of the home screen, you see the time, weather and a “G” icon that will help you navigate to voice or text search. Users simply have to hit the button and say “Ok Google” to make any voice command available.
Android-Wear
But it’s not a one-way conversation. Google’s depth of data makes it easy for Android Wear to build a smart context around each user, allowing wearables to know what’s important to a person and when it’s important. For example, based on your calendar or inbox your smartwatch could notify you a few hours before your flight and prompt you to check in.
Another important feature is device-to-device communication. Any notification you get on your phone, you’ll get on your wearable, too. Where a smartwatch diverges from the phone is how it presents that information. Android Wear relies on stacks, which allows developers to bundle multiple notifications together like an inbox, while pages allow more than one glanceable screen of information at a time for one notification. Think of this like flipping through a tiny ebook of notifications. You can combine stacks and pages and reply to any notification through voice activation.
The video covers pretty high-level stuff, but with LG and Motorola already building their own Android Wear smartwatches, you can bet it won’t be long before we get a proper look at what this OS is capable of.

Monday, June 16, 2014

Formula One Legend Michael Schumacher 'Not In a Coma Anymore'

MAINZ, Germany -- Retired Formula One superstar Michael Schumacher is no longer in a coma and has left the hospital, his manager said Monday.
The racing legend had been treated at a hospital in Grenoble, France, sincesuffering head injuries while skiing in the Alps in December.
Schumacher's manager Sabine Kehm said the German driver was "not in a coma anymore."
In a statement, Kehm said that Schumacher would "continue his long phase of rehabilitation," adding that it would "take place away from the public eye."
She added: "His family would like to explicitly thank all his treating doctors, nurses and therapists in Grenoble as well as the first aiders at the place of the accident, who did an excellent job in those first months."
Schumacher's family also expressed thanks to "all the people who have sent Michael the many good wishes ... We are sure it helped him."
Schumacher, 45, is the most successful driver in Formula One history.
The seven-time world champion was skiing with his son in the French resort of Meribel when he fell and hit his head on a rock.

MICHAEL J. FOX - OUTSTANDING LEAD ACTOR IN A COMEDY SERIES...



Android users can now run Firefox OS apps (all six of them)

  • By  on June 15, 2014 at 11:01 am
  • Open Web Apps
  • Mozilla’s Firefox OS is based on Gecko — the same core rendering engine that its desktop and mobile Firefox web browsers use. This unified framework goes to the essence of what Firefox and Mozilla are about. Mozilla sees the future of apps and browsing as two sides of the same coin. To push its vision for “Open Web Apps,” Mozilla has rolled out v29 of Firefox for Android, which enables you to download and install Firefox OS marketplace apps on your Android device with no additional configuration.
    When developers create apps for Android or iOS, they need to build them using Java or objective C, respectively. This has traditionally allowed for a more robust set of APIs and vastly improved performance compared to web-only technologies, but things are slowly changing. Firefox OS apps are built using HTML5, CSS, and JavaScript. The upshot of this is that they can run on any platform with the proper rendering engine, in this case Gecko.
    Web AppsMozilla isn’t the first company to push web apps on mobile devices as an alternative to native ones. That distinction goes to Palm, which used a similar approach to the app ecosystem on webOS. That didn’t go so well, but the capabilities of browsers have advanced considerably in the last four or five years. Mozilla’s WebAPI documentation provides methods for accessing hardware (camera, battery stats, sensors, etc.) as well as a variety of data management and communication features. The gap between native apps and web apps is more technologically narrow than it once was.
    With the new support for Android, all you need to do is install the updated Firefox browser from Google Play — attempting to grab anything from the FF marketplace with Chrome results in an error. The apps will go through the standard Android installation dialog (packaged as an APK), and even show up in the app drawer. They open like normal apps, but all the rendering is done through Firefox’s Gecko engine. As for usability and performance, web-based apps like this have definitely come a long way over the years. They work, but the design language is much less refined.
    Mozilla hopes that its Open Web App initiative will spur more development of apps based on web technologies. Developers could potentially save themselves a lot of headaches by building apps once with web languages instead of doing the same thing multiple ways for different mobile operating systems. However, cross-platform compatibility is currently limited to Android. Apple doesn’t allow third-party browser engines on iOS (even Chrome for iOS uses the stock WebKit engine), so there’s no way to render Open Web Apps.
  • Expanding web apps to Android isn’t Mozilla’s only mobile play. Firefox OS itself is still under development and there are new entry-level smartphones running the software set for release in India (and a few other markets) for as little as $25. Even the super-cheap Moto E can’t compete with that. With Microsoft still faltering, Mozilla’s open approach and entry into big developing markets could potentially earn it a comfortable (but distant) third place slot in the mobile device ecosystem.

Cristiano Ronaldo tells Portuguese what they want to know: he is ready

Pelé calls him ‘the best player in the world’ but can he fulfill one remaining goal and win a trophy with Portugal at the World Cup?

Cristiano-Ronaldo-Portugal
Cristiano Ronaldo has declared himself 100% fit and ready to face Germany in Portugal's opening game. Photograph: Francisco Leong/AFP/Getty Images

Ever since leaving for the World Cup there has only been one question hanging over Portugal. A big question. Cristiano Ronaldo, though he kept a roomful of journalists waiting for more than an hour for his scheduled press conference, was eventually able to answer it himself. “I would like to be 110% fit but I am 100% fit and that should be enough to help the national team,” the Portugal captain said. “I am here to help, I believe I can make a difference, but one player is not a team. I cannot carry the national side on my own.”
If that might be termed a secondary question about Portugal, it has been hanging over them for a few years now. Ronaldo having outshone his perennial rival Lionel Messi over the course of last season, Portugal begin the World Cup against Germany with the world’s best player in their midst, a situation that last pertained when Eusébio helped them to third place in England in 1966.
“Having the best player in the world in our squad does not make it mandatory for us to win the World Cup,” said Portugal’s coach, Paulo Bento. “I have said this before to the people of Portugal. There have been times when we have had the world’s best player and not even qualified for the World Cup.”
International football is an arena where Ronaldo consistently outscores Messi. Whereas the latter seems to save his most scintillating performances for Barcelona and to date has struggled to be anything like as effective for Argentina, Ronaldo is unquestionably Portugal’s main man. Captain, record goalscorer, most recognisable performer and currently biggest injury concern, he dominates Portuguese football to a degree that is almost unhealthy.
Actually, there is no need to be so circumspect. Portugal’s reliance on a player Carlo Ancelotti described as “extraordinarily consistent” after finishing as Champions League top scorer for a second successive season is definitely unhealthy. Next to “the best player on the planet” (Diego Maradona, 2012), Portugal’s other forward options look positively weedy.
Hélder Postiga, Nani and Hugo Almeida have their virtues but they are not going to kick sand in anyone’s face, with the possible exception in Almeida’s case of lacklustre Ireland in last week’s final friendly. Most people are slightly surprised to find they are still around, such is the forcefield effect that Ronaldo’s presence on the pitch exerts.
Nowhere was this better demonstrated than in Portugal’s play-off success over Sweden, the other international side fuelled almost exclusively by the gifts of a single player. All too predictably, and far from inaccurately, the showdown was billed as a contest to decide which extravagant individual talent would have to sit out the World Cup.
Zlatan Ibrahimovic did his bit, scoring twice in the decisive game, but it was not enough because Ronaldo weighed in with a memorable three. Almost by himself Ronaldo took Portugal to Brazil, although it sometimes feels that Ronaldo takes himself to the major tournaments and Portugal merely turn up as part of his entourage.
At the end of his first season at Manchester United the winger played in the 2004 European Championship final against Greece, an up-and-coming talent just beginning to impress old hands such as Luís Figo, Rui Costa, Deco and Ricardo Carvalho. He has since moved from the wing to centre stage in every sense, accepting responsibility to lead the attack and create goals and more often than not proving successful. “Portugal depend a lot on Ronaldo,” Figo said, a little unnecessarily. “He is the No1.”
Within Portugal there is no doubt about that. Even on the world stage he has a significant backer in Pelé, who rates him more highly than Messi on the grounds that Ronaldo is a more direct attacking handful for defenders to deal with. “Messi comes from behind like I used to do,” Pelé said. “Ronaldo is more important because he is the player who scores goals from the front.” For Argentina at least Messi has been known to blend into the background, and recognising that as a failing Alejandro Sabella has attempted to build his side around the Barcelona forward’s talents.
Portugal have been playing a support act to Ronaldo for years and the Real Madrid player, at 29, as long as he can stay fit, is at the right age to make his strongest impact yet on a World Cup. Certainly Sir Alex Ferguson, who brought him to England in 2003, believes he is at the peak of his powers. “In the six years we had him at Manchester United you saw his game grow all the time,” Ferguson said. “Now you see the complete player.”
The only doubt surrounding Ronaldo’s contribution to this World Cup is over his fitness. He has tendonosis in his left knee as well as a separate muscular problem in his left thigh, and while they are not the sort of injuries that would rule him out of a tournament they may render him less explosive and therefore less effective. A team that has grown so dependent on a single star player could struggle in a difficult group if he is below his best.
The nation breathed a sigh of relief when Ronaldo played for an hour against Ireland and performed with such conviction that the injury question was set aside, yet while he now seems certain to start against Germany, there are no guarantees he will complete that game or be completely untroubled in the ones that follow.
Perhaps rashly, Ronaldo once said he would be fully content with his career only when he had won a trophy with Portugal. He is not exactly running out of time, it is just that Portugal’s development is not keeping pace with his own. Leaving aside the fitful and frequently distracted Nani, whose shortcomings are familiar to Manchester United supporters, the next most stellar presence in the Portuguese side is probably João Moutinho, a midfielder who joined Monaco from Porto for around £20m at the start oflast season and has been a regular international since the 2006 World Cup.
Moutinho was one of the most eye-catching players in Portugal’s run to the semi-finals of the European Championships two years ago but his first season in France has not gone well. L’Equipe voted him among their five biggest disappointments of the season after a promising start at Monaco tailed off into anonymity, and even when playing well Moutinho has never been a prolific goalscorer for club or country. William Carvalho, an Angolan-born defensive midfielder, is rapidly making a name for himself and should feature in Brazil whether Paulo Bento opts for the usual 4-3-3 or a more defensive 4-4-2, but with Ricardo Quaresma not even making the squad Portugal would be short of width and attacking inspiration should their regular source of ideas find himself compromised.
As an unapologetic show-off with a repertoire of tricks and a reputation for conning referees, Ronaldo has always divided opinion and did little to enhance his popularity rating among neutrals with his ridiculously over the top celebration after scoring from the penalty spot when Real Madrid won their 10th European Cup last month. The only thing funnier than Ronaldo taking the chance to show off his finely-honed torso after scoring a practically meaningless goal was Rio Ferdinand’s attempts to defend him.
Apparently it is reasonable to act like that if you have a supermodel girlfriend. Ferdinand was on firmer ground explaining what drives his former team-mate. “He is an exhibitionist,” the former England defender said. “His ego is gargantuan.” In Salvador on Sunday, Ronaldo bridled a little when asked if he needed a World Cup to complete his career. “I don’t think I have to show anyone anything,” he said. “Look at my statistics, my resume. I don’t have to demonstrate anything to anyone. All I want to do is continue my career.”

Declan Galbraith - Tears in Heaven