Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Xbox Music updated with volume control, cloud sync options, and performance improvements

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Hot on the feels of a significant Windows 8 Mail app update, Microsoft's Xbox team is releasing a new version of Xbox Music. The update brings performance improvements on the RT side, making it a lot more usable on devices like the Surface RT. Speed aside, Microsoft has also added in independent volume control for Xbox Music, meaning you can let the app play quietly in the background while the system volume remains louder.


The latest Xbox Music update also simplifies control over music in the cloud. The preferences panel lets you add songs from your collection and have them replicated on other Xbox Music devices, and there's also an option to automatically add matched songs from PCs into music in the cloud. Other minor tweaks include a...


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Monday, March 25, 2013

Heavy weather: why we need supercomputers to teach us how clouds and climate change work

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There's a dark cloud hanging over the science of climate change, quite literally. Scientists today have access to supercomputers capable of running advanced simulations of Earth's climate hundreds of years into the future, accounting for millions of tiny variables. But even with all that equipment and training, they still can't quite figure out how clouds work.


That mystery is actually the source of their greatest uncertainty when it comes to accurately predicting how much our planet's temperature will increase, scientists say. "How much the climate would warm largely depends on how clouds would change in the future," said Yen-Ting Hwang, an atmospheric scientist at the University of Washington, in an email to The Verge, noting "clouds...


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Saturday, March 23, 2013

Hyperkin's Retron 5 gaming console can play almost any cartridge known to man

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Good news for fans of old video games — accessories maker Hyperkin is unveiling a retro console that will play almost any cartridge you can throw at it, reports Slashdot . Named the Retron 5 for its five slots, the machine will handle the same trio of NES, SNES, and Genesis cartridges as its predecessor, the Retron 3, as well as Famicom and Game Boy Advance games — not to mention Mega Drive, Super Famicom, Game Boy Color, and original Game Boy titles. HDMI out means you’ll get a clear, digital signal to your HDTV, and Hyperkin says that it will upscale your games to 720p. There are a bunch of built-in niceties, like the ability to save and resume at any point in the game, overclocking to speed through slow parts, and a PS3-like...


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Friday, March 22, 2013

How The @ Reply Killed Google Alerts

The once-reliable method for tracking your online footprint is falling into disrepair . And, coincidentally, irrelevance.



Vanity seeps into all worlds, but on the Internet it thrives. There's never been a greater need — or, at least, desire — to know what's being said about you than among the internet's ceaseless torrent of content.


For a long time that need was filled by Google Alerts, a remarkably simple tool that crawls the Internet mentions of a specific keywords, and sends back a quick email digest of its results once per day, week, or in real time. Its uses were manifold: reporters used it to keep up with beats, brands used it to keep up with mentions (and to keep tabs on bad press), and publications used it to watch their stories spread.


However, Google Alerts' prevailing use was as a safety net for one's online persona. After a simple setup, one could be sure to catch any mention of themselves across all corners of the Web — be it curiosity, vanity, or paranoia. "I definitely still have a Google Alert for my name, and anyone who says they don't is lying," New York Magazine's Stefan Becket told BuzzFeed. In 2009, Kashmir Hill at Forbes told readers, "[p]lease, I beg you, put a Google alert on your name." It became a valuable, if slightly unseemly, part of the culture of living and working online.


In recent months, Google Alerts' reliability seems to has dropped off noticeably, prompting groans from faithful users across the Internet. As far back as last April, message boards and blog posts have noted Alerts' failure to deliver. In February, Search Engine Land's Danny Sullivan blogged that the service was returning meager results well below its normal output. Google responded off the record, saying the issues should be fixed but recent posts like The Financial Brand's open letter to Google, which claims an 80 percent decrease in alerts volume, show that the problem persists. Becket also admits that, at this point, they're "pretty useless."



Perhaps most revealing is a comparison of Google Alerts results with Google Search: a simple, time-limited search on Google News often retrieves far more results on a given name or topic over a set stretch of time than Alerts' custom emails dredge up. The mentions are out there, but Google Alerts can't seem to find them, suggesting a possible problem with the algorithm (or, perhaps, a simple lack of upkeep).


Yet while some are lamenting what seems to be the loss of another dependable Google tool (R.I.P., Reader), the truth is that as quickly as alerts have fallen into disrepair, they've been replaced.


Today, it's the @ reply — or the Facebook status comment — that's the most reliable indicator of one's internet footprint. Entire careers are now devoted to the task of monitoring interactions across Twitter and the social web, as social media managers have sprung up for most brands and newsrooms. Vanity searching on Google still serves a purpose, but it's increasingly a supplementary one — a way to pick up the scraps.


"My 'mentions' column is a helpful way to track the reach of my articles as well as the conversation which they generate," Mashable reporter Alex Fitzpatrick said. "If a piece generates a particularly high amount of engagement or discussion on Twitter, that's an indication I should consider a follow-up — ideas for which are often generated by engaging with the people who are popping up in my Mentions column."


For others, custom Tweetdeck or Hootsuite columns can protect against Twitter's complex and nuanced world of subtweeting, or the act of tweeting without mentioning one's handle. "I do confess to doing the occasional Twitter search for my name," Becket said. "But most subtweets don't include the person's name anyway, so you'll probably miss some even with a search."


Not all is lost for Google Alerts, though. For those in the highest echelon of fame and the few that enjoy rabid Internet followings, Google Alerts still unearth a fair share of news. Kim Kardashian is an avid user, for example. And this alert for Justin Bieber, which I let run for 24 hours, sent seven different email alerts and surfaced over 60 news hits.




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Microsoft Reveals Law Enforcement Interactions For First Time

Microsoft has joined the handful of companies attempting to provide some level of transparency regarding requests from law enforcement agencies. For the first time, Microsoft has released information on the level of cooperation it had with law enforcement about users of its online services.


According to information released by Microsoft today, the company received a total of 75,378 requests for information from law enforcement in 2012. 70,665 were for user accounts associated with services such as Hotmail, Outlook.com, SkyDrive and Xbox Live, with the remaining 4,713 requests about Skype user accounts.


Microsoft broke out the Skype data, it said, because Skype is a Luxembourg-based division and therefore subject to separate privacy laws in that nation and the European Union.


Combined, the requests for information affected 137,424 accounts, most of it for information about an account holder's name, email, gender, or address information. 137,424 revealed accounts sounds like a lot, but according to Microsoft that's a pittance of the total accounts it manages.


"To give you a sense of proportion, we estimate that less than two one-hundredths of one percent (or 0.02 percent, to put it another way) were potentially affected by law enforcement requests," wrote Microsoft General Counsel Brad Smith.


In only 2.2% of the cases did Microsoft provide content data to law enforcement - and none of that was Skype content, since Microsoft does not archive Skype data.


A vast majority of the 1,558 instances where Microsoft did supply user content happened in the United States, where Microsoft supplied content data 1,544 times in 2012. Brazil received data seven times, Ireland five times, and New Zealand and Canada each getting user data once.


You might expect that the U.S. would be the top requester of all the nations in Microsoft's report for customer information, but in actuality, counting requests for account information and content, it was Turkey that took the top spot for most law enforcement requests complied with in 2012.


The top five nations that Microsoft complied with law enforcement requests were:



  1. Turkey (8,997)

  2. United States (8,740)

  3. France (7,377)

  4. Germany (7,088)

  5. United Kingdom (7,057)


Microsoft's report also broke down when requests for data were rejected, either because there was no customer information to be found or the requests did not meet legal requirements.


Check out the report information (in PDF and Excel format) for yourself to see how much your home country's authorities interacted with Microsoft.


Image courtesy of Shutterstock.



Thursday, March 21, 2013

Verizon takes on SMS challengers with cross-platform Messages service

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As non-traditional messaging services like Google Voice, iMessage, and WhatsApp continue to displace lucrative SMS services, carriers are looking for ways to hold on to what they have. Today, Verizon is announcing an update that brings its Verizon Messages (formerly VZ Messages) SMS service cross-platform, letting you send and receive SMS messages from your computer’s browser as well as your iPad or Android device — phone or tablet. Messages that you send are stored on Verizon’s cloud service for 90 days unless you delete them, and can be saved permanently on an SD card if you want to keep them around longer.


Can be set to send an automated reply when you're busy


Like iMessage’s Do Not Disturb feature, Verizon Messages can be...


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Catching Up With The Original King Of Twitter

Six years ago, Austin blogger Paul Terry Walhus was anointed by Slate , the New York Times and Salon as the most popular man on Twitter. A look back with the former king.



Via: walhus


Among the dozens of articles introducing the world to a new microblogging service called Twitter, Slate's, published in April of 2007, was one of the best. "Twitter is not a mere procrastination tool," wrote Michael Agger. "It acts as a mental escape hatch." Prescient!


The piece introduced us to a man named Paul Terry Walhus, a "gray-haired Austin coffee-shop blogger" who, with "8,789 friends and 1,722 followers", was the "most popular person on the site."


By the standards of 2007-era Twitter — the site was founded today in 2006 — Walhus was a celebrity. Writing later in the New York Times, Jason Pontin described the "gray-haired blogger" (again) as "one of the best-loved twitterers." He was, in effect, Twitter's first celebrity – the @justinbieber of 2007.


Walhus still tweets from the same handle, @springnet, and in largely the same style: short, functional posts, many intended to network with others or update you on what he's doing. He's got almost ten times as many followers as he did in 2007, with over 13,000. By 2013 Twitter standards, however, this makes him a power user, not a celebrity.


"I got started at South By Southwest," Walhus told BuzzFeed. "A lot of my friends who went there from Austin discovered Twitter. We all got on and started using it to communicate mostly about what was going on at SouthBy."


SXSW 2007 is often pinpointed as the moment Twitter first caught on — the "Twitter Board," a TV that displayed tweets from around Austin, is what most attendees remember. Walhus, an Austinite with a preexisting web presence as a blogger, simply rode Twitter's first big wave. "I tweeted a lot during SouthBy," he says.



Via: darowskidotcom


Reports that he was the most "popular" user on Twitter are questionable, he says — the site that the Times and Slate used for reference combined "friends" (effectively "people you follow") with "followers" in a way that has fallen out of favor. He doesn't remember climbing past the second-place spot, anyway. "There may have been one person ahead of me," he says. Nonetheless, to be on Twitter in early 2007 was to know his handle. "I had more friends than Jon Edwards," says Walhus. "I probably still do," he jokes.


Back then, Walhus, in addition to blogging, worked in IT for the trendy San Jose Hotel, just south of downtown Austin. He also worked as a web developer and Unix administrator. Many of his early tweets, he says, were send from the Unix command line. "It kind of lent itself to typing on the command line," he says. It reminded him a bit of Unix messaging services.


Today, like many Twitter users, Walhus tweets from his phone — either his Android handset or his iPhone — or through the site's web interface. He still blogs and works in web development, but does some social media consulting on the side. Twitter, he says, has changed. "It's become more one social network niche out of many — you've got all the others now," he says. Though he still gets a lot of use out of it: "It's become the place where you can very quickly find and have a dialog with someone. It's very instantaneous."




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