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Android Auto Update Changes Interaction Limit with Music Play App

April 5, 2016 By Cristopher Hall Leave a Comment

alt="google music play"

Google has been rather reserved as far as Android Auto was concerned, allowing only some apps to support the system. The search giant has also made sure that every app in Android Auto followed the same template so that all users experienced the same.

But one of the things that bugged users for a while is the interaction limit within Google Play Music on Android Auto. They could only interact with the user interface with six taps at a time, including browsing through a playlist, skipping music, and other commands of the sort.

In today’s update for Android Auto, that limitation has been removed at least for Google Play Music. It’s possible that other media and music apps for Android Auto will also be updated sometime in the future.

It’s noteworthy to mention that the interaction limit is not completely gone. What happened is that Google has tweaked the limit to make it disappear when the car is in Park mode. So don’t be surprised if the interaction limit still exists when you are in Driving mode.

Some users might not know that even third-party head units can detect whether you are in Park or not. For example, the Pioneer AVH-4100NEX won’t allow you to use Android Auto if you are not in Park.

While this might be frustrating, it makes sense. Drivers should not be playing around with their phones when you’re driving. Google helps you to keep your eyes on the road for your own safety behind the wheel.

The Android Auto update was rolled out today, as Google also expanded the list of countries where the system has started being available.

India and 17 other countries (including, Austria, Brazil, Costa Rica, Ecuador Guatemala, Russia, Venezuela, and others) can now download Android Auto from Google Play Store.

Not much else has changed with the new update, and it’s a bit strange that the interaction limit has only been lifted for Google Play Music. Spotify, Pocket Casts or other apps have remained the same, so we’ll have to wait and see if Google will roll it out to other apps.

Why strange, you ask? Because the change is part of an Android Auto update, no a Google Play Music update, so users expected some improvements across more apps.

Either way, it’s great to see that Google is really invested in working on Android Auto to make it better and better with each update.
Image Source: Gizmodo

Filed Under: Tech & Science

Japanese Researchers Grow Fully-functioning Skin in Lab

April 4, 2016 By Cristopher Hall Leave a Comment

alt="Young Man Concerned about Potential Hair Loss"

According to a team of Japanese researchers, it’s possible to grow a fully functional skin that has everything it needs, from hair follicles to sweat glands. Could this be a more effective treatment for people who deal with hair loss?

There are only a handful of treatments that deal with alopecia and other types of hair loss that occurs due to degradation of hair follicles in the skin.

But with the solution provided by these Japanese researchers, the new lab-grown skin might be able to offer new hope to those who want to cover their baldness.

Research leader Dr. Takashi Tsuji from the RIKEN Centre for Developmental Biology based in Kobe explains the newly designed skin has been fitted with fatty tissue and dermis, the layer where sweat glands and hair follicles are located.

This new technique has allowed the team to grow artificial skin successfully, mimicking  the function of the natural tissue. Their developments contribute to the advancement of bioengineering technologies that will be included in regenerative therapies for patients with scars, burns, and alopecia.

For the lab-developed skin, researchers used certain chemicals to transform cells from mouse gums into stem cells. The newly created stem cells were then transplanted into another mouse for testing.

Just a few days later, the stem cells started transforming into skin tissue, which was then removed and implanted into the original mice. The new skin allowed the mice to sweat and grow hair, as the organ bonded well with the original skin and started the creation of new tissues.

The findings of the RIKEN Center, featured in Science Advances, represent a giant leap in “creating artificial human skin in the laboratory that contains all three natural skin layers, a handful of the usual glands and even hair follicles.”

Before this discovery, advancement in the field of artificial skin has been prevented by the fact that the skin didn’t contain the essential organs, such as hair follicles or sweat glands.

Scientists have previously created in a lab the epidermis – or the outer skin layer – but it could never work if it wasn’t complete with the missing organs and functions of the natural skin.

More than just help people dealing with hair loss, the development of the Japanese researchers represents good news for burn victims and other individuals who require skin transplants.
Image Source: Demand Studios

Filed Under: Health Tagged With: artificial human skin, hair follicles, hair loss, lab-grown skin, Stem Cells, stem cells treatment, treatment for hair loss

More Obese Than Underweight People Worldwide, Study

April 1, 2016 By Cristopher Hall Leave a Comment

obesity epidemy

According to a major study conducted by the Imperial College London, the number of obese adults in the world has surpassed the number of those who are underweight.

Starting from 1975 and ending in 2014, the team of scientists looked at and compared body mass index (BMI) among nearly 20 million adult men and women. The results were featured in a recent issue of The Lancet.

What lead author Prof Majid Ezzat calls “an epidemic of severe obesity” is, in fact, the modern day plague causing the population to become increasingly more obese. This health-damaging disease has tripled in men and more than doubled in women, according to the results.

For the study, scientists pooled data from 186 countries, revealing that the number of obese people across the world had spiked from “105 million in 1975 to 641 million in 2014.”

Meanwhile, the number of underweight people had also gone up from “330 million to 462 million” over the same period. In other words, the study’s conclusion is that in 2014, there were 266 million obese men and 375 million obese women worldwide.

This research also shows that there are almost “zero chances” for us to reach the World Health Organization’s global obesity target for 2025; the WHO wants no rise in obesity above 2010 levels.

According to its clinical definition, obesity is represented by an increased BMI – which measures weight in relation to height – of 30 kilograms per meter squared (kg/m2).

While the results of this study might seem good news for the number of underweight individuals, there has been a critical shift in our world over the last 40 years.

Underweight prevalence has been surpassed by obesity, which has prompted Prof Ezzat to call the governments to action and start implementing policies to address obesity.

There isn’t just one solution to the obesity epidemic, but Prof Ezzat believes that making healthy food more affordable while increasing the price of unhealthy processed foods could be one of the answers.

In the meantime, Prof George Davey Smith from the School of Social and Community Medicine at the University of Bristol believes there can also be an unhealthy focus on the problem of obesity in detriment of “the substantial remaining burden of under-nutrition.”

This could divert significant resources away from disorders that affect the poor and the underweight to those that are statistically more likely to affect the wealthier.

The truth is that while the causes of obesity are complex, we live in a world which encourages low levels of physical activity and poor diets.
Image Source: Think Progress

Filed Under: Health Tagged With: governmental action against obesity, increased BMI, obesity, obesity epidemic, underweight people, underweight prevalence

Microsoft Takes Another Shot at AI Bots

March 30, 2016 By Cristopher Hall Leave a Comment

bot fiasco last week, Microsoft appears to be relentless

After the Tay bot fiasco last week, Microsoft appears to be relentless as the company is planning to keep trying until they get it right. According to reports, Microsoft is on the verge of showcasing not one, but several prototype bots at the annual Build conference that will take place later today. These bots are said to be the product of Microsoft’s belief and attempt to regard conversation as a platform and create AI assistants that can interact with users through natural language and even help them with various tasks.

It would seem that the Tay Bot experience did not put off the company whatsoever. For anyone unaware of the entire story, Microsoft’s Tay was a bot that was designed to speak like a teenage girl via Twitter as an experiment for researchers to understand artificial intelligence. Having access to a unique Twitter account, Tay could tweet to people or reply to other tweets and each separate experience would allow her to learn more and more from the messages she could see.

The experiment, however, did not return the expected results when Tay was pretty much exposed to the anonymous trolls the internet hosts, with no other source of information. As a result, Tay came to be a sexist personality that thinks Donald Trump is the best thing since French toast. As a result, Microsoft shut the bot up; but they did not delete the account, instead only protecting Tay’s tweets so they cannot be seen by anyone. She even made another cameo on Twitter this morning, before it fell into what everyone calls a meltdown and spamming everyone with the same message: “You are too fast, please take a rest…”

Nevertheless, Microsoft is far from admitting defeat in the battle of AI computers and robots. And they’re not the only ones who are placing a huge load of effort into creating bots that can both learn from its experiences as well as be able to talk fluently, much like a person. Apple has Siri, Amazon has Alexa, and Facebook will soon have the assistant currently only dubbed as ‘M’ that currently only mysteriously resides in the Messenger app.

It is not clear what the nature of the incoming bots is, but it’s suspected that they will be different from one another. There is a rumor travelling around that suggests that one of them intends to be a Domino’s delivery bot which will be showcased during an on-stage demo.

Image Source: 1

Filed Under: Tech & Science Tagged With: microsoft ai, microsoft ai bots, tay bot

Facebook Quick to Put Some Minds at Ease with the Safety Check Feature

March 22, 2016 By Cristopher Hall Leave a Comment

The tragedy that hit Brussels

The tragedy that hit Brussels, Belgium in Europe, after two explosions took place in Zaventem airport and a third on the Maelbeek subway near the European Union headquarters, left Brussels in a state of panic, worry and lockdown. All airplane arrivals at the airport in question have been rerouted to nearby cities, and both the Belgium and France borders have increased security tenfold. 6 hours after the attacks, 34 were confirmed dead and over 170 wounded, sending the entire state into alarm.

Facebook has, however, already given way to their safety check feature that can set your mind at ease about a relative or friend, as long as they allow Facebook to track their movement. Basing on an internet connection or mobile connection, Facebook users can mark themselves safe using this feature, sending mobile push notifications to friends to let them know they are unharmed following grand scale events such as the Brussels attack. Similarly, someone from the outside may check on Facebook friends in the area of attacks via the feature.

This is not the first time that Facebook summons the feature, previously having made use of it during other nationwide tragedies such as the Nepal earthquakes, the terrorist attacks in Paris and floods that took place in India. However, some grunts of disapproval could be heard when Facebook did not enable the feature for the attacks that took place in Beirut and Baghdad.

Facebook’s answer to that was that the feature was originally planned to be used for national events only, but was decided to be pushed to cover for the Paris Terror Attacks in the end. This, by itself, created some displeased responses from people asking just how huge a scale must a disaster be in order to be notified via Facebook.

The original statement that came from Mark Zuckerberg himself, the Facebook CEO, was that the feature was originally only intended for natural disasters, then decided to cover in happenings of the likes too because there are many types of conflicts in the world. Facebook then promised to work hard to help people who are victims of such events as often as they can.

While Facebook has been on point with gathering information from its users living or visiting Brussels at the time of the disasters, there’s no telling if the feature will remain as reliable if the misfortune strikes again in the near future.

Image Source: 1

Filed Under: Headlines Tagged With: Brussels Explosions, Facebook mark as safe, Facebook Safety Check

Storks Give Up Migration in Favor of Junk Food

March 17, 2016 By Cristopher Hall Leave a Comment

European storks are modifying their natural behavior

While we’re certain this is not an example of human kind’s tendency towards laziness and procrastination, it would appear that European storks are modifying their natural behavior. This modification involves something that comes as a result of human influence as well as the global environmental change. Instead of migrating south during the winter, these birds remain on European land – most specifically in the regions of Spain and Portugal – the entire year, where they have taken a liking to various types of junk food and other leftovers.

The particular storks that do display this type of behavior, however, are a new species that has suffered this change as a consequence of human actions. Researchers from the University of East Anglia have studied this species and announced their findings in a press release that was published two days ago, on Tuesday.

Their findings speak of this type of stork living near landfill sites, where junk food and remains of human meals are stocked up and provide a considerable amount of sustenance for the white storks. In essence, because they no longer need to migrate to warmer regions where they can find food during the winter season, this type of stork is now bound to the originating location.

As a result, the population of white storks in Portugal has gone up in numbers considerably in the past 20 years, nowadays accounting for 14,000 wintering birds. The reaction of scientists goes both ways, becoming of a mixture of enthusiasm at the prospect of studying the changes in migratory behavior and the concern expressed towards the fate of the white storks that have given up an incredibly old habit.

When the researchers studying these birds connected GPS tracking devices on the bodies of 48 different white storks, they learned more about their flight patterns, flight distances, their nesting areas, and their feeding areas. This confirmed that the white storks’ had taken a liking to landfills in the slightly warmer climate of Spain and Portugal, and as a result, would no longer feel compelled to travel all the way to African planes in order to be able to feed during the winter.

However, some concerns may arise regarding this change in behavior. Just recently, the European Union has decided that a number of these landfills will slowly be closed and replaced with facilities that keep food waste covered and away from outside access. Considering the storks in question are staying during the winter, it may cause a small decrease in the population until they regain their migration habits again.

Image Source: 1

Filed Under: Tech & Science Tagged With: stork feeding, stork migration patterns, University of East Anglia, white stork

The Team of Housekeeping Robots Continued with Braava

March 15, 2016 By Cristopher Hall Leave a Comment

Braava Mopping Robot

Coming from the famous iRobot company that made the equally clever Roomba automated vacuum cleaning robot, as well as the Mirra pool cleaner and Looj gutter cleaner, is the Braava Mopping Robot that promises to keep your kitchen and bathroom floors squeaky clean. And it’s not even that expensive come to think of it and weighing the amount of work you would spare yourself of. For the $200 it costs, the Braava Jet is a slow moving but just as thorough robot that knows how to move around sinks and toilets to ensure the most sanitary of states of your bathroom.

It also comes in one more model than just the classic one, the Braava 300 that can handle much larger surfaces, at the expense of losing the ability to damp sweep. However, it can run by itself and either mop or sweep for surfaces amounting to 350 and 1,000 square feet respectively.

Measuring 7 inches in length and 3.3 inches in height, the Braava Jet makes use of spray-jets and sweeper pads to clean the most varied and difficult to reach corners of your bathrooms, were you to attempt cleaning by yourself. And it was made to be the smartest it can get, with as little personal input from you necessary.

When setting it up for its task, all you need to do is attach the preferred pads – whether it’s mopping or sweeping. The Braava will then detect which pads you put in independently and begin its task once you press the clean button. The robot is programmed to spray and sweep twice onto the same surface for a thorough job when mopping while the sweeping is a preliminary task that will only be performed once. Alternatively, you can program an area for the robot to maintain its cleaning into.

The sensors that the bot is equipped with seem to be able to learn and map its surroundings as it goes for the subsequent laps around the kitchen or bathroom. Meanwhile, if you were concerned about the robot ending up just smudging the mess from one place throughout the whole room, it’s good to know that Braava was designed to continuously absorb the dirt it gathers inside, keeping the pads clean without risking making a bigger mess than before.

And because iRobot was thoughtful of how everything about the Braava works, finishing the job with this robot is as easy, stress-less and dirt-free as everything else. By pressing the eject button, you can simply drop the dirty pads into the trash.

The Braava is available online already, and you should start seeing it in retail stores starting April 1st.

Image Source: 1

Filed Under: Tech & Science Tagged With: braava mopping robot, braava sweeping robot, iRobot, irobot braava

YouTube Gaming Makes Mobile Game Streaming Possible

March 10, 2016 By Cristopher Hall Leave a Comment

YouTube gaming app has a surprise for us

The latest version of the YouTube gaming app has a surprise for us. What do you think you need to stream your favorite games? A much higher than average computer, a stable connection and throw in a few pieces of professional equipment if you want to make things classier? Google disagrees; Google thinks that the next step of game streaming is to make it mobile. And by that we mean the fact that the tech giant has just released a build that allows you to play your favorite mobile phone games and stream t for others to watch.

However, so far this feature has only made it in several areas around the globe. More specifically, it is only available in Australia, New Zealand, Ireland and Canada at the current time, but will most likely be stretched out to the rest of the world when it starts picking up public. Not to mention that the only platform that can currently take it is Android.

And come to think of it, this change was blatantly in our face and soon to happen given the fact that mobile technology these days is becoming more and more proficient, and will most likely soon reach the capabilities of average computers. 3D gaming has developed onto the mobile platform – whether we’re talking smartphones or tablets – at an alarming rate in the past years, luring some companies into doing things such as devising controllers for your phone.

And because streaming is an unexplainable but extremely powerful source of entertainment of our days (see famous YouTubers that own gaming channels such as PewDiePie), Google realized it was about time it was made available for the mobile medium as well. Think about this: your phone has the technology, if not a strong 4G connection, then surely a stable WiFi back at home at least, an inbuilt webcam and a microphone. Provided that you remember to not cover the camera with your thumb while you play, this will be just like regular gaming streaming.

The YouTube Gaming app comes with a multitude of features that were made for both the streamers and the viewers. While streaming can be down live whenever you decide for it from a simple drop down menu, anyone watching you via mobile doesn’t need to have their freedom sacrificed and remain in the app fullscreen to be able to hear you while they reply to a text. Instead, they get pop out the stream and concern themselves with what they need to do while the video is still running.

Image Source: 1

Filed Under: Tech & Science Tagged With: Android game streaming, Google, mobile game streaming, Youtube gaming app

Facebook Opening New Doors for Article Writers

March 8, 2016 By Cristopher Hall Leave a Comment

posting articles via the Instant Articles feature

Another partnership that Facebook has made with the developer of leading publishing software WordPress brings writers an easier method of posting articles via the Instant Articles feature. This new update hasn’t been noticed by a great number of users so far as the feature in question was only pushed to a limited and rather small number of publishers. However, come April 12th, the new feature, and the WordPress integration will be made available to the entirety of Facebook users, writers, bloggers and regular users alike.

So thanks to this Facebook – Automattic partnership, writers will be able to post, modify and update content even easier than before thanks to the direct WordPress plugin that will exist within Facebook itself. While it may not seem like a groundbreaking implementation, the Instant Articles feature will greatly assist those accounts that are connected to both platforms.

It is estimated that more than twenty-five percent of all the websites that exist worldwide are powered by the WordPress publishing software. Along with all the benefits of having both your editing and publishing tools along straight into the media environment that you wish your posts and articles to reach, the WordPress plugin has another several functionalities. One such functionality is the provided ability for content creators to adapt the format of their blogs and articles to suit mobile versions of their articles. This will increase the readability, the format as well as the loading times of said webpages on mobile means.

This new Instant Articles feature also includes several optimization improvements for media and visuals for the content creators’ articles. During its preview demonstration, developers showcased how the plugin can benefit writers using a demonstrative example from the Foreign Policy magazine – with and without the Instant Articles feature.

According to Chris Ackermann, a Facebook engineer that has also worked on the development of Instant Articles integration, there are two ways in which publishers can use the tool. The more fundamental method entails only activating the plugin to create Instant Articles when they use standard WordPress templates. Alternatively, the tool also offers a more detailed and customized production feature for those who wish it, allowing you to make use of multiple additional features.

Considering the partnership with WordPress, the Instant Articles feature may gain a lot more ground in the near future. While the Facebook feature has existed since last year, there weren’t many publishers who were able to make use of it.

Now, with the addition of the WordPress plugin as well as the benefits regarding advertising revenue, a larger number of users may start using it once it goes live globally in April.

Image Source: 1

Filed Under: Tech & Science Tagged With: Facebook, Facebook WordPress integration, Instant Articles Feature, WordPress

Scientists Peer into the Distant Past of the Universe

March 4, 2016 By Cristopher Hall Leave a Comment

galaxies that are more than 13 billion light years away

Mankind may continue to be grounded to planet Earth for decades, and stuck in this solar system for centuries, but that doesn’t stop scientists from looking at galaxies that are 13.4 billion light years away. This is officially the furthest mankind has seen up to this point, even if the galaxy that they found there shows up as nothing more than a red blotch on a screen.

The whole concept of looking at different galaxies is a little mind-bending to begin with. Whenever scientists peer through telescopes such as Hubble, that is capable of rendering images of extremely distant objects, they are not just looking incredibly far. They are also looking into the past. Every object that is visible through a telescope either produces or reflects light, making us capable of seeing it in the first place. For the light to be seen by human eyes, it has to travel for millions, even billions of years in order to reach the Earth.

That’s why the galaxy that astronomers have found on Thursday is a great reason for excitement. When the researchers realized that the light emitted by galaxy GN-Z11 had travelled for approximately 13.4 billion years to be able to be seen by us, they also had the epiphany that they were actually looking at a very distant age of the universe.

More specifically, they were looking at our universe as it was in its infancy. 400 million years old or 400 million years after the Big Bang to be exact. Or in other words, 3 percent of its current age.

So on the cosmic scale, practically newborn.

But the first question that arises in our heads, of course, is ‘how’ scientists managed to figure out just how far into the past they had peered? The answer lies in a very basic concept that astronomers have used to detect large space object movement such as stars and galaxies orbits for decades. It is called redshift and is regards the light that is emitted from said objects. When they move closer to the observation point, objects tend to glow blue; when they move away, objects tend to glow red.

Naturally, with the expansion of the universe, the GN-Z11 galaxy has a very distinctive red glow. And because it displays an extremely high rate of star formation, it is bright enough to spot; even from 13.4 billion years in the future. Scientists have detected that it grows nearly 20 times faster than our own Milky Way.

This galaxy sighting has resulted in a world record. Scientists believe that the oldest galaxies formed somewhere nearly 200 million years after the Big Bang. What is next? Will there be a day when we witness the very creation of our universe as we know it?

Image Source: 1

Filed Under: Tech & Science Tagged With: Big Bang, Furthest galaxies, Hubble Space Telescope, Observing space

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