Sunday, July 14, 2013

Moto X's Open Mic demoed, enables voice command when screen is off (video)

Moto X's Open Mic demoed, enables voice command when screen is off

Just when we're getting bored of all these static Moto X leaks, a couple of new video clips popped up to finally show off some of the software goodies. The first one appears to be a leaked Rogers promotional video (embedded after the break), in which a nice lady introduces us to a new Google Now voice command feature, which can be toggled with a custom phrase even when the screen is off. According to another clip uploaded by kronikbudz, said feature is called Open Mic, but there's no indication as to whether this will be exclusive to Motorola devices or whether it'll come with the next Android release.

The Rogers video adds that the Moto X will provide ambient "active updates" notifications on the screen when the phone is locked, and this is pitched as a more sensible replacement for the meaningless blinking light. Later on, the same lady demonstrates how one can activate the phone's camera -- even when locked -- by simply twisting the wrist twice. We're a bit worried that this may allow accidental activations, unless the phone can detect whether it is inside a pocket or bag.

Finally, the lady says the Moto X will be "exclusively" heading to Rogers this August in either black or white, thus confirming the "late Summer" window that we were previously told. Enjoy your very own exclusivity while it lasts, Mr. Schmidt!

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

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IEA: Risks Could Pare Oil-Supply Gains

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Saturday, July 13, 2013

Another state bans Google Glass from casinos

google glass

July 12, 2013 at 4:58 PM ET

Google co-founder Sergey Brin, left, wears Google Glass glasses at an announcement for the Breakthrough Prize in Life Sciences at Genentech Hall on UC...

Jeff Chiu / AP file

Google co-founder Sergey Brin, left, wears Google Glass glasses, at a February event.

Delaware has joined several other states in banning Google Glass at its casinos.

The Delaware State Lottery announced on Friday that it was banning Google Glass and similar devices from the state's three casinos.

The agency said any patron wearing Google Glass or similar devices must remove them or be subject to eviction.

Google Glass, developed by Google, is the tiny eyeglasses-mounted device capable of shooting photos, filming video and surfing the Internet.

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eBay Debuts 3D Printing iPhone App

Ebayprinting3d
for MIT Technology Review Mit-technology-review-10b46dc0fb

EBay dips its toes into the 3D-printing pool with an iPhone app that lets users customize accessories.

EBay announced Friday that it is getting into 3D printing with a new iPhone app called eBay Exact that lets users customize jewelry and accessories that will then be 3D printed and sent to them. Functionally, it's not mind-blowing, yet it shows just how far 3D printing has come in the past few years and gives a hint of where it could go next

The app is pretty simple: Once you open it up, you see several items from 3D printing companies MakerBot, Sculpteo and Hot Pop Factory: mostly jewelry and iPhone cases, plus a few other items. You pick an item (I chose the Platonix necklace, available through Hot Pop Factory), and then modify a few features like the pattern, material, shape or color. (Some items can't actually be modified at all.)

Ebay-Printing

Available items are mostly made from plastic and metal. Users pay via eBay-owned payment service PayPal, and the purchase arrives within a week or two.

Since eBay already offers a number of popular and trusted apps, consumers may be more likely to find out about this one than other 3D offerings. They may be more willing to try it, too. Eventually, I could imagine 3D printing becoming a part of eBay's core business, with sellers of accessory products in particular (like smartphone cases) offering a slew of customizable options.

Mashable composite. Images courtesy of eBay

This article originally published at MIT Technology Review here

Topics: 3D printing, Apps and Software, ebay, Home, iPhone Apps, Mobile, Tech

MIT Technology Review is a Mashable publishing partner that identifies emerging technologies and analyzes their impact for technology and business leaders. This article is reprinted with the publisher's permission.

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Halting aid to Egypt over military 'coup' would hurt US interests

Some in Congress want to call the military takeover in Egypt a coup and cut off the $1.5 billion aid the US gives the country annually. This position fails to appreciate the limits of the leverage Washington derives from its aid to Cairo and the potential consequences of halting it.?

By Jeffrey Martini,?Op-ed contributor / July 11, 2013

Female members of the Muslim Brotherhood and supporters of deposed Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi rally at the Rabaa Adawiya square in Cairo, July 11. Op-ed contributor Jeffrey Martini writes: 'Those that advocate for suspending' US aid to Egypt miss 'the broader strategic picture....Like it or not, Washington and Cairo need one another.'

Amr Abdallah Dalsh/Reuters

Enlarge

When Egyptians took to the streets demanding the ouster of President Morsi, the Egyptian military could have intervened with a scalpel. Instead it used a hammer. Less than a week into the intervention, the military has deposed the president, taken senior members of the Muslim Brotherhood into custody, suspended the constitution, dissolved the upper house of parliament, taken control of the country?s flag ship newspaper, intimidated independent media, and escalated violence against pro-Morsi demonstrators.

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Thus far the US administration has assiduously avoided the term ?coup? to describe the military?s actions. This is a conscious effort to avoid tripping the legal requirement that the US suspend aid to countries where the military has overthrown democratically elected governments. Not surprisingly, many disagree with the administration?s approach. Critics advocate for acknowledging that what occurred in Egypt is a coup and shutting off the more than $1.5 billion that Egypt receives annually from the US government.

Unfortunately, this position fails to appreciate the limits of the leverage Washington derives from its aid to Cairo and the potential consequences of halting it.

The United States has provided several streams of aid to Egypt over the past three decades. The largest stream is the $1.3 billion in Foreign Military Financing that is given to Cairo annually to acquire fighter jets, tanks, helicopters, and the spare parts and maintenance each piece of equipment requires.

A second smaller stream is the so-called Economic Support Funds, which since the 2011 Revolution, have been allocated to pay down Egypt?s more than $2.5 billion in debt to the US. In other words, those funds are delivered in the form of a self-addressed check ? a form of debt forgiveness that the US can use as a kind of ?carrot.? Giving money to Egypt to pay down its US debt in this form allows the US to hold Egypt to International Monetary Fund conditions that would put its economy on a more stable path.

And finally there are smaller pots of money the United States allocates for democracy promotion, professional military education, and other programs.

Egypt is currently the fifth largest recipient of US assistance worldwide. This leads many policymakers to assume it is a great source of leverage for the US to influence the Egyptian government?s decisionmaking. This view overstates what the US can accomplish by threatening to withhold aid. For starters,?US aid to Egypt pales relative to the $12 billion in aid the Arab Gulf states of Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and Kuwait have pledged to Cairo over the past few days.

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Friday, July 12, 2013

Record-breaker for stocks sparked by upbeat Fed comments

stocks

16 hours ago

Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange at the end of the trading day Thursday. The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed at record hig...

Andrew Burton / Getty Images

Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange at the end of the trading day Thursday. The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed at record high today, up 169.26 points to close at 15,460.92.

It was a record-breaking day on Wall Street on Thursday.

Not only did the Dow and S&P 500 crash through their previous record highs, but the technology-heavy Nasdaq closed at its highest level in 13 years when the dot-com bubble was bursting.

The Nasdaq had its best day in three months, jumping 57.55 points, or 1.63 percent and closing at its highest level -- 3,578.30 -- since Sept. 29, 2000. That was when the dot-com bubble was bursting after a speculative period from 1997 when stock markets saw their equity value rise rapidly from growth in the Internet sector and related fields.

Thursday's big surge upwards came less than a day after Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke said the Fed would keep its foot on the stimulus gas pedal for some time, even if the unemployment rate hit the Fed's target of 6.5 percent.

His remarks were bolstered by the minutes from the Fed's latest policy meeting, which showed that policymakers wanted further reassurances about the strength of the jobs market before pulling back on stimulus measures.

(Read More: Will Investors Finally Buy Bernanke's Explanation)

Uncertainty over the Fed's direction had caused concern in the markets for weeks, but on Thursday Bernanke's words seemed to remove any doubt and investors went wild.

Thursday also saw the Dow Jones Industrial Average shoot up 169.26 points, or 1.11 percent, to close at a new all-time high of 15460.92. All 30 Dow components finished higher, led by Intel and Microsoft. The blue-chip index's point gain for 2013 is already greater than any year on record.

The S&P 500 soared 22.40 points, or 1.36 percent, to finish at 1,675.02, logging its sixth-consecutive rally and also setting a new closing high. The index is now on pace for its biggest weekly gain since January.

The CBOE Volatility Index (VIX), widely considered the best gauge of fear in the market, slid near 14.

"While you cannot guarantee that short-covering is taking place, this looks, smells and feels like a huge short-covering," said Art Cashin, director of floor operations at UBS Financial Services. "Next week, we have the equivalent of what used to be the Humphrey-Hawkins testimony so we could get a lot of volatility again."

On a day for records:

  • The Dow and S&P 500 had their best day in one month
  • The S&P 500 has its first 6-day winning streak in almost two years
  • This was the second highest number of advancing stocks at the New York Stock Exchange this year (2,203 stocks rose at the NYSE?the most since the first trading day of the year on Jan. 2)
  • All 10 S&P 500 sectors ended the day up, and 8 of 10 sectors closed up over 1 percent.
  • All 30 Dow stocks, 90 percent of the S&P 500, and 94 percent of the Nasdaq 100 closed up.

(Read More: What Did Ben Say? Playing the Fed Word Game)

The dollar dropped broadly against a basket of currencies, with its index falling to $82.418, its lowest since June 25 and down around 2.8 percent from the three-year high of $84.753. Meanwhile, Treasury prices gained after the government auctioned $13 billion in 30-year bonds at a high yield of 3.660 percent. The bid-to-cover ratio, an indicator of demand, was 2.26, versus the recent average of 2.59.

On the economic front, weekly jobless claims rose by 16,000 last week to a seasonally adjusted 360,000, according to the Labor Department, above expectations for a reading of 340,000. The four-week moving average of new claims increased by a more modest 6,000 to 351,750.

Meanwhile, import and export prices declined for the fourth-straight month in June, according to the Labor Department.

Gasoline prices are forecast to jump between 10 and 20 cents per gallon within the next few days, driven by rising oil prices and peak driving season. Oil prices have risen in recent weeks on geopolitical concerns, along with declining inventories.

In Asia, the Shanghai Composite rose above the key 2,000 level for a second straight session on hopes that Wednesday's dismal trade data will lead the Chinese central bank to ease monetary policy in an effort to boost growth.

(Poll: Will China Experience a 'Hard Landing' in 2013?)

Meanwhile, the yen strengthened further against the dollar on Thursday after the Bank of Japan held its monetary policy steady, but upgraded the country's economic outlook.

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