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In this episode, we analyze the intriguing dynamics between ChatGPT and Google, uncovering the reasons behind ChatGPT's recruitment efforts targeting Google employees. Invest in AI Box: https://Republic.com/ai-box Get on the AI Box Waitlist: https://AIBox.ai/ AI Facebook Community Learn more about AI in Video Learn more about Open AI
In this episode of "The Conversion Show," Erik Christiansen, CEO of Justuno, is joined by Travis Logan, Co-Founder & CTO of Justuno, and this week's guest Brian Peters, Head of Platform Partnerships at Shopify. The conversation kicks off by looking at the most talked about statistic from Brain's presentation at the Shopify Enterprise Partner Summit 2023, 35% of Shopify Plus merchants have seen smaller cart sizes and 50% are seeing less site traffic and lower conversion rates. Brian breaks down what this means for merchants and what the future looks like for E-commerce. Erik, Travis, and Brian discuss:Finding the right product-market fit.Brand identity online.Influencer marketingMarketing is brand experience.Does high customization equal high converting?To survive as a brand you have to convert at checkout.Zero-party data expands beyond your email list.Why Shopify is the number one converting checkout in the world.Host: Erik Christiansen, CEO of JustunoGuest: Travis Logan, CTO at JustunoGuest: Brian Peters, Head of Platform Partnerships at ShopifyTranscript:Erik 00:00:50 - 00:01:22Welcome to the show today. I'm very excited because I have two guests. And so this is going to be a jam-packed episode where we're going to gain some insights into Shopify like never before. We're going to learn what that the leadership, what's top of mind with the Shopify leadership along with just, you know, leadership. Because today I have my my co-founder, Travis Logan, CTO of just, you know, on the show and Brian Peters, head of platform partnerships at Shopify.Erik 00:01:22 - 00:01:33So hang on, today is going to be a very insightful show. So we're going to jump into it. And the reason I have Brian on the show today. Welcome, Brian. Well, thank you.Brian 00:01:33 - 00:01:34Thank you. Good to be here.Erik 00:01:34 - 00:02:06I have Brian on here because I was down at the Shopify Enterprise event down in L.A., right by where that I-10 fire was, what, two days ago? I'm not surprised because that, you know, no Shopify, they like to select very colorful neighborhoods to have events like this colorful, really cool spot in the heart of downtown L.A. Brian got on stage and gave a presentation and he had a slide that stood out to me.Erik 00:02:06 - 00:02:45And that's what we're talking about today. The quotes from the slide were, according to a survey of Shopify Plus merchants, 35% have seen smaller cart sizes and 50% are seeing less site traffic and lower conversion rates. Now, we also the second reason we're here is Travis and I were at the Google next event in San Francisco wandering the expo and we stumbled upon a Shopify booth at Google Nexus conference.Erik 00:02:46 - 00:03:16Which one was...
Uppföljning / uppvärmning Serierapporten Har någon beställt en ny Macbook Pro ännu? Datormagazin Retro #5 och bokningsläget: 865 exemplar bokade! Ämnen Google Pixel Event. Fredrik önskar att han hade en anledning, Jocke tar rollen som tveksam till helheten Städa upp Photos-biblioteket. Bra applikation: Photos duplicate cleaner MacOS Monterey: Intryck? Fredrik upptäckte strax efter inspelning att Monterey faktiskt inte stödjer hans Macbook M1:an är SNABB. Film och TV HBO Max för 44,50kr per månad för resten av livet för nya kunder. Jocke försöker se Free guy. Somnade halvvägs igenom. 1,5/5 BM (Jocke). 3/5BM (Fredrik) 2/5BM (Christian) Sunshine. Jocke ser om. 5/5 BM The King's Speech. 5/5BM Cake. Underligt drama med Jennifer Aniston. 3/5 BM The shawshank redemption. Jocke ser om. 6/5BM. Foundation. Baseras på böckerna av Isaac Asimov. Sänds på tv+. 4/5BM. Six Feet Under. HBO Max. 4/5 BM Dune. Jocke har sett. 5/5 BM Länkar Ekobryggeriets tonics Kyrö-gin Ratata tas som gisslan NetNewsWire RSS Reader Fredriks blogg Goaccess.io Beställ Datormagazin retro #5 Googles pixelevent Pixel pass Material you Googles Nexus-enheter Lineageos Singles' day Photos duplicate cleaner Installera Homebrew, Ruby och Jekyll på MacOS Monterey Apple M1-processorn är snabb HBO Max Free guy Sunshine The king's speech Cake The shawshank redemption Foundation Dune Det som göms i snö Fullständig avsnittsinformation finns här: https://www.bjoremanmelin.se/podcast/avsnitt-280-som-kungen-gjorde-forr.html.
Listen to a short-form recap or roundup of all the top 9to5Google stories of the previous 24 hours. 9to5Google Daily is available on Google Play, iTunes and Apple’s Podcasts app, Stitcher, or through our dedicated RSS feed for Pocket Casts and other podcast players. New episodes of 9to5Google Daily are recorded every weekday. Subscribe to our podcast in Google Play or your favorite podcast player to guarantee new episodes are delivered as soon as they’re available. Why not add the 9to5Google Daily to your Google Assistant Routine for a quick morning update? Learn how to add us directly to your Assistant Routines right here. Follow Damien: Damien Wilde Stories discussed in this episode: Google confirms September 30 launch for Pixel 5, Chromecast, new Nest speaker OnePlus 8T leak shows off Samsung-inspired hardware to match OxygenOS 11 The very first ROM based upon Android 11 is already available Google Fiber will start testing ‘2 Gigabit Internet’ for $100 this fall Google Nexus 7 may no longer be able to watch Netflix in HD Drop us a line at gtips@9to5g.com. You can also rate us in Google Play, Apple Podcasts or recommend us in Pocket Casts to help more people discover the show!
This is the FOCUS Points photography podcast where we will talk on how you can start your photography adventure with a budget and have fun doing it You can find us in Instagram @focuspointspodcast and on Twitter @focuspointspod You can find Amaurie Ramirez also on www.amaurierazphoto.com . There you can find all his social media accounts also a large variety of prints for sale. EPISODE NOTES We want to use this podcast to educate: how to start despite your budget encourage those starting out How we started taking photos, what made us start, and what we used. We were single and had time for leisure. We were searching for the perfect cup of coffee and traveled to different locations. Using the opportunity of being in various towns, we took photos and edited them on our phones (iPhone and Google Nexus), then post to social media. Instagram's “Weekend Hashtag Projects” for motivation and for ideas. What we recommend: Use your phone if you don't have a camera. Find inspiration from other photographers Watch tutorial videos Listen to photography podcasts Read about how to compose your photos Choose a theme Which photography genre interest you the most — if street photography, go and hit the streets: always look up for a new perspective, shoot down low. Look for reflections, architecture, patterns, colors, etc. If you like Nature, go to state parks, lakes and waterways, national parks if you have any nearby. For portraits ask family and friends to pose If you have a camera — use automatic mode if you don't know how to use manual mode, shoot in JPEG until you learn how to shoot RAW. Play with it. Use your computer to edit the photos — if you have a Mac you can use the Photos app to tweak the brightness, shadows, contrast, etc. You can also edit with your own phone. Editing software/apps Lightroom (desktop and mobile) Afterlight Carbon is great app for black and white photography Snapseed, very useful and full of features. One of the apps we used the most in our early days. Get accessories if you can Tripod, backpacks, extra batteries Phones these days shoot in dark mode and a tripod is ideal for stability if you want to shoot at night Go and shoot, shoot, shoot I want to give a small project for those first listeners that want to start something and don't know how. An easy project to start creating — take sunrise and sunset photos. Upload your photo to Instagram with the hashtag #focuspointspodproject We want to see your work and give you a shout out on our next episode with some tips For our lens art in the logo go to https://www.freepik.com/free-photos-vectors/technology --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/focuspointspodcast/support
Warum ich wohl kein weiteres Handy mehr als gebraucht an Portale verkaufen werde... An sich bin ich nicht der Typ, der "alte" und gebrauchte Handys wieder in Umlauf bringt. Per ebay ist mir das ganze Geschacher und möchte-gern-Gefeilsche zu doof. Und im Nachgang nur Ärger, wenn dann doch noch ein halbwegs unsichtbarer Kratzer unter einem 1.000-Watt-Baustellen-Strahler auftaucht... aber spannend, was Leute so alles zu Hause oder bereits auf ebay ersteigert haben! Aber diesmal hätte es mir um das Pixel 2 echt Leid getan, daher wollte ich eine Ankauf-Plattform testen... und, was soll ich sagen: das mache ich auch nie mehr wieder! Ein Handy, drei exemplarische Anbieter, drei verschiedene Preise - zu viel Aufwand für das bisschen Geld? (Logos in Originalgröße der Webseite entnommen, keine Wertung!)/ Bild-Quelle: Google, Rebuy, zoxs, wirkaufens Was soll ich sagen? Hier liegt noch mein erstes NEXUS rum, das Google NEXUS 5, mein Weggang von den "großen" Marken hin zu "stock android", also reinem blanken Google-Android, ohne Werbung, Zusatz-Apps und unnötigem Schnickschnack. Und ja, es geht noch, hat eine funktionable Sim-Karte in sich, wenn auch von einem UAE-Anbieter und auch der Akku schlägt sich noch recht passabel. Gut, die Zeiten der Android-Updates sind leider vorbei, was das Gerät mit Android 6 langsam zu einem Sicherheitsrisiko macht, aber für "harte Einsätze" und unterwegs ein super Gerät - auch nach all den Jahren! Ebenso habe ich noch ein NEXUS7 Tablet, ein NEXUS 6, und und und und und. Zum Einen gehen mir die Anwendungszwecke nicht aus, zum anderen stellt sich immer die wirtschaftliche Frage: rentiert sich ein Verkauf? Da sich ebay für mich kategorisch ausschließt und auch meist der Drittmarkt über amazon für eine Einmalaktion kaum lohnenswerte Preise aufruft, habe ich per Google-Suche nach Ankauf-Plattformen gesucht und auf den Top-Positionen die üblichen gefunden: Rebuy scheint ganz besonders viel Geld für die Schlagwortsuche auszugeben, landeten sie bei allen meinen Versuchen immer an erster Stelle. Gefolgt von wirkaufens. Also gut, ihr zwei seid in der Testauswahl. Und dann war da noch zoxs. Sagt mir nix, hat aber positive Bewertungen. Also: da waren es drei. Und damit fing die Qual an: Nun gibt man, jeweils im "Verkaufen"-Bereich die rudimentären Daten an. Bei mir ging es um ein Google Pixel 2 XL 128 GB, aus meiner Sicht, dank Displayschutzfolie und Google Case um ein neues, nicht neuwertiges, Gerät. Keine Kratzer, keine Beschädigungen, keine Probleme. Je nach Anbieter kann man den Barcode der Verpackung scannen oder einfach die Bezeichnung eingeben. Dann durchläuft man, mal mehr, mal weniger "komplex", den Fragenkatalog: Akku in Ordnung, Original Verpackung vorhanden, original Netzteil vorhanden, kein Displaybruch, keine Reparaturen, etc. Um nach einigen Mausklicks dann ein Angebot zu bekommen. Da ich den Verkauf weit vor der Ankündigung und der Vorstellung des Pixel 3a ins Auge gefasst habe, hatte ich mir 450€ vorgestellt... ein Schnäppchen für ein top gepflegtes Telefon! Das Case hätte ich sogar als Dreingabe (immerhin 50€) drauf gelegt - aber keiner der Kaufdieste hatte Interesse. Also, mal bei ebay und amazon recherchieren, ob meine Preisvorstellung realistisch ist. Und, was soll ich sagen: 400€ sind locker noch drin! Bis die Preisportale zuschlugen: der günstigste, wirkaufens, wollte knapp über 200€ locker machen. Rebuy lag im Mittelfeld mit 250€ und, zu meiner Überraschung, bot mir zoxs knapp über 300€! Ich habe den "Vorgang" dann erst mal ein paar Tage liegen lassen und mir nochmals Gedanken gemacht. Es blieb bei meiner Entscheidung, das Gerät kommt weg. Um so größer meine Überraschung, dass die Preise nun bei ALLEN Portalen gefallen waren: im Schnitt zwischen 20 und 80€! Und am nächsten Tag wieder... Minimum 10€ weniger... kennt man ja, Strafe muss sein - also die Cookies gelöscht und zusätzlich im Inkognito-Modus probiert... da waren sie wieder, meine "alten" Erst-Preise. Da die Fragen eine gewisse Ähnlichkeit aufweisen, wollte sich mir der Unterschied in den Preisangeboten nicht ganz erschließen und somit bekamt zoxs mein Telefon. Ich gab es dort als "neu" an, was es faktisch ist, und bestätigte, dass das Barcode-IMEI-Seriennummer-Etikett nicht gebrochen oder zerstört ist. Nachmittags ging es mit der per email übersandten DHL-Etikette auf die Reise. Ich war neugierig, was würde wann bei rum kommen? Zwei Tage später die Ernüchterung: "neu" heißt originalverpackt, nicht ungebrochenes Siegel. Mal unterstellte mir automatisch, ich hätte mich "vorgedrängelt", da "wie neu" nicht binnen 24 Stunden sondern innerhalb ein paar Tagen geschätzt wird. Schon wurden mir 10€ Bearbeitungspauschale abgezogen. Auszug der zoxs.de-Bewertungs-email / Quelle: zoxs.deDie Unverschämtheit schlechthin war aber die weitere Abstufung des Gerätezustands, welche durch folgendes Bild versucht wurde zu untermauern: Detailbild der sichtbaren Schäden - viel Staub, viel Licht und ein... Haar?!? / Quelle: zoxs.deAlso wurden mir nun 216 Euro geboten. Wenigstens gibt es einen Link, um das Angebot anzunehmen oder abzulehen, was eine Rücksendung statt einer Überweisung auslösen würde. Ein kurzer Inkognito-Blick auf Rebuy und wirkaufens ergab, dass ich, ausgehend von der Rückmeldung von zoxs, hier ähnlich bepreist werde. Also: kurze Überlegung, was ich mit dem Telefon noch machen könnte - und dann die Entscheidung: Angebot annehmen. Ich muss aber gestehen: verarscht komme ich mir trotzdem vor. Aber wenigstens kam das Geld schnell, so dass ich den Vorgang unter "ausprobiert, aber nie mehr wieder" abhaken konnte. Zoxs hat, wie ich heute gesehen habe, die Beschreibungen für "neu" mit einem YouTube-Erklärvideo aufgewertet... und nicht nur drei "exemplarischen" Bildern, die eine Originalverpackung darstellen sollen. Nichstdestotrotz bin ich immer noch der Meinung, dass mein Gerät mehr wert war und diese doppelte Abstufung nicht gerechtfertig. Aber: Rücksendung. Bei DHL abholen. Auspacken und überprüfen, dann wieder bei den beiden anderen rechnen lassen. Und wieder vom Ergebnis enttäuscht sein um es wieder zurück senden zu lassen? Also, dann lieber die Kohle auf dem Konto. Trotzdem: ein erneuter Verkauf über eine diese Plattformen kommt für mich nicht mehr in Frage. Sollte es mich mit dem aktuellen Telefon überkommen, mal doch amazon oder ebay oder sogar das Kleinanzeigenportal testen. Ankaufsplattformen sind für mich auf jeden Fall raus! Alleine schon die signifikanten Abweichungen in der Preisgestaltung der jeweiligen Seiten, die für den Anwender völlig unschlüssig gewählt sind. Dann die Kurzfragen, die für den Anbieter immer genug Luft lassen, um doch noch "Schäden" zu entdecken und den Preis kurzfristig zu drücken. Transparenz sieht da anders aus. Macht aber auch nichts, mir fällt gerade eine tolle "Zweitverwertung" im IoT-System "Schutzbier" für mein aktuelles Pixel ein, wenn denn dann der Nachfolger ins Haus kommt... spart viel Mühe und Zeit - und ein Butterbrot kann ich mir auch ohne Verkauf noch leisten... Und wie geht ihr das Thema? Gute oder ähnliche Erfahrungen mit Ankaufsplattformen gemacht oder gibt es noch einen Anbieter, den ich übersehen habe aber vielleicht doch noch ausprobieren sollte, weil Service und Preis unübertroffen sind? Oder gehört ihr zu den Leuten, die das Handy gerne mal verlieren und dann erst neu kaufen? Oder habt ihr einen Schrank voll, der die komplette Laufbahn Eurer Mobilfunkkarriere mit allen Modellen von damals bis heute beinhaltet? Schreib es mir in die Kommentare, schickt mir eine Mail oder lasst mir eine Sprachnachricht zukommen! Meinen PodCast abonnieren: | direkt | iTunes | Spotify | Google |
In this episode, we take a look at the reimplementation of NetBSD using a Microkernel, check out what makes DHCP faster, and see what high-process count support for DragonflyBSD has to offer, and we answer the questions you've always wanted to ask us. This episode was brought to you by Headlines A Reimplementation Of Netbsd Using a Microkernel (http://theembeddedboard.review/a-reimplementation-of-netbsd-using-a-microkernel-part-1-of-2/) Minix author Andy Tanenbaum writes in Part 1 of a-reimplementation-of-netbsd-using-a-microkernel (http://theembeddedboard.review/a-reimplementation-of-netbsd-using-a-microkernel-part-1-of-2/) Based on the MINIX 3 microkernel, we have constructed a system that to the user looks a great deal like NetBSD. It uses pkgsrc, NetBSD headers and libraries, and passes over 80% of the KYUA tests). However, inside, the system is completely different. At the bottom is a small (about 13,000 lines of code) microkernel that handles interrupts, message passing, low-level scheduling, and hardware related details. Nearly all of the actual operating system, including memory management, the file system(s), paging, and all the device drivers run as user-mode processes protected by the MMU. As a consequence, failures or security issues in one component cannot spread to other ones. In some cases a failed component can be replaced automatically and on the fly, while the system is running, and without user processes noticing it. The talk will discuss the history, goals, technology, and status of the project. Research at the Vrije Universiteit has resulted in a reimplementation of NetBSD using a microkernel instead of the traditional monolithic kernel. To the user, the system looks a great deal like NetBSD (it passes over 80% of the KYUA tests). However, inside, the system is completely different. At the bottom is a small (about 13,000 lines of code) microkernel that handles interrupts, message passing, low-level scheduling, and hardware related details. Nearly all of the actual operating system, including memory management, the file system(s), paging, and all the device drivers run as user-mode processes protected by the MMU. As a consequence, failures or security issues in one component cannot spread to other ones. In some cases a failed component can be replaced automatically and on the fly, while the system is running. The latest work has been adding live update, making it possible to upgrade to a new version of the operating system WITHOUT a reboot and without running processes even noticing. No other operating system can do this. The system is built on MINIX 3, a derivative of the original MINIX system, which was intended for education. However, after the original author, Andrew Tanenbaum, received a 2 million euro grant from the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences and a 2.5 million euro grant from the European Research Council, the focus changed to building a highly reliable, secure, fault tolerant operating system, with an emphasis on embedded systems. The code is open source and can be downloaded from www.minix3.org. It runs on the x86 and ARM Cortex V8 (e.g., BeagleBones). Since 2007, the Website has been visited over 3 million times and the bootable image file has been downloaded over 600,000 times. The talk will discuss the history, goals, technology, and status of the project. Part 2 (http://theembeddedboard.review/a-reimplementation-of-netbsd-using-a-microkernel-part-2-of-2/) is also available. *** Rapid DHCP: Or, how do Macs get on the network so fast? (https://cafbit.com/post/rapid_dhcp_or_how_do/) One of life's minor annoyances is having to wait on my devices to connect to the network after I wake them from sleep. All too often, I'll open the lid on my EeePC netbook, enter a web address, and get the dreaded "This webpage is not available" message because the machine is still working on connecting to my Wi-Fi network. On some occasions, I have to twiddle my thumbs for as long as 10-15 seconds before the network is ready to be used. The frustrating thing is that I know it doesn't have to be this way. I know this because I have a Mac. When I open the lid of my MacBook Pro, it connects to the network nearly instantaneously. In fact, no matter how fast I am, the network comes up before I can even try to load a web page. My curiosity got the better of me, and I set out to investigate how Macs are able to connect to the network so quickly, and how the network connect time in other operating systems could be improved. I figure there are three main categories of time-consuming activities that occur during network initialization: Link establishment. This is the activity of establishing communication with the network's link layer. In the case of Wi-Fi, the radio must be powered on, the access point detected, and the optional encryption layer (e.g. WPA) established. After link establishment, the device is able to send and receive Ethernet frames on the network. Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP). Through DHCP handshaking, the device negotiates an IP address for its use on the local IP network. A DHCP server is responsible for managing the IP addresses available for use on the network. Miscellaneous overhead. The operating system may perform any number of mundane tasks during the process of network initialization, including running scripts, looking up preconfigured network settings in a local database, launching programs, etc. My investigation thus far is primarily concerned with the DHCP phase, although the other two categories would be interesting to study in the future. I set up a packet capture environment with a spare wireless access point, and observed the network activity of a number of devices as they initialized their network connection. For a worst-case scenario, let's look at the network activity captured while an Android tablet is connecting: This tablet, presumably in the interest of "optimization", is initially skipping the DHCP discovery phase and immediately requesting its previous IP address. The only problem is this is a different network, so the DHCP server ignores these requests. After about 4.5 seconds, the tablet stubbornly tries again to request its old IP address. After another 4.5 seconds, it resigns itself to starting from scratch, and performs the DHCP discovery needed to obtain an IP address on the new network. In all fairness, this delay wouldn't be so bad if the device was connecting to the same network as it was previously using. However, notice that the tablet waits a full 1.13 seconds after link establishment to even think about starting the DHCP process. Engineering snappiness usually means finding lots of small opportunities to save a few milliseconds here and there, and someone definitely dropped the ball here. In contrast, let's look at the packet dump from the machine with the lightning-fast network initialization, and see if we can uncover the magic that is happening under the hood: The key to understanding the magic is the first three unicast ARP requests. It looks like Mac OS remembers certain information about not only the last connected network, but the last several networks. In particular, it must at least persist the following tuple for each of these networks: > 1. The Ethernet address of the DHCP server > 2. The IP address of the DHCP server > 3. Its own IP address, as assigned by the DHCP server During network initialization, the Mac transmits carefully crafted unicast ARP requests with this stored information. For each network in its memory, it attempts to send a request to the specific Ethernet address of the DHCP server for that network, in which it asks about the server's IP address, and requests that the server reply to the IP address which the Mac was formerly using on that network. Unless network hosts have been radically shuffled around, at most only one of these ARP requests will result in a response—the request corresponding to the current network, if the current network happens to be one of the remembered networks. This network recognition technique allows the Mac to very rapidly discover if it is connected to a known network. If the network is recognized (and presumably if the Mac knows that the DHCP lease is still active), it immediately and presumptuously configures its IP interface with the address it knows is good for this network. (Well, it does perform a self-ARP for good measure, but doesn't seem to wait more than 13ms for a response.) The DHCP handshaking process begins in the background by sending a DHCP request for its assumed IP address, but the network interface is available for use during the handshaking process. If the network was not recognized, I assume the Mac would know to begin the DHCP discovery phase, instead of sending blind requests for a former IP address as the Galaxy Tab does. The Mac's rapid network initialization can be credited to more than just the network recognition scheme. Judging by the use of ARP (which can be problematic to deal with in user-space) and the unusually regular transmission intervals (a reliable 1.0ms delay between each packet sent), I'm guessing that the Mac's DHCP client system is entirely implemented as tight kernel-mode code. The Mac began the IP interface initialization process a mere 10ms after link establishment, which is far faster than any other device I tested. Android devices such as the Galaxy Tab rely on the user-mode dhclient system (part of the dhcpcd package) dhcpcd program, which no doubt brings a lot of additional overhead such as loading the program, context switching, and perhaps even running scripts. The next step for some daring kernel hacker is to implement a similarly aggressive DHCP client system in the Linux kernel, so that I can enjoy fast sign-on speeds on my Android tablet, Android phone, and Ubuntu netbook. There already exists a minimal DHCP client implementation in the Linux kernel, but it lacks certain features such as configuring the DNS nameservers. Perhaps it wouldn't be too much work to extend this code to support network recognition and interface with a user-mode daemon to handle such auxillary configuration information received via DHCP. If I ever get a few spare cycles, maybe I'll even take a stab at it. You can also find other ways of optimizing the dhclient program and how it works in the dhclient tutorial on Calomel.org (https://calomel.org/dhclient.html). *** BSDCam Trip Report (https://www.freebsdfoundation.org/blog/bsdcam-2017-trip-report-michael-lucas/) Over the decades, FreeBSD development and coordination has shifted from being purely on-line to involving more and more in-person coordination and cooperation. The FreeBSD Foundation sponsors a devsummit right before BSDCan, EuroBSDCon, and AsiaBSDCon, so that developers traveling to the con can leverage their airfare and hammer out some problems. Yes, the Internet is great for coordination, but nothing beats a group of developers spending ten minutes together to sketch on a whiteboard and figuring out exactly how to make something bulletproof. In addition to the coordination efforts, though, conference devsummits are hierarchical. There's a rigid schedule, with topics decided in advance. Someone leads the session. Sessions can be highly informative, passionate arguments, or anything in between. BSDCam is… a little different. It's an invaluable part of the FreeBSD ecosystem. However, it's something that I wouldn't normally attend. But right now, is not normal. I'm writing a new edition of Absolute FreeBSD. To my astonishment, people have come to rely on this book when planning their deployments and operations. While I find this satisfying, it also increases the pressure on me to get things correct. When I wrote my first FreeBSD book back in 2000, a dozen mailing lists provided authoritative information on FreeBSD development. One person could read every one of those lists. Today, that's not possible—and the mailing lists are only one narrow aspect of the FreeBSD social system. Don't get me wrong—it's pretty easy to find out what people are doing and how the system works. But it's not that easy to find out what people will be doing and how the system will work. If this book is going to be future-proof, I needed to leave my cozy nest and venture into the wilds of Cambridge, England. Sadly, the BSDCam chair agreed with my logic, so I boarded an aluminum deathtrap—sorry, a “commercial airliner”—and found myself hurtled from Detroit to Heathrow. And one Wednesday morning, I made it to the William Gates building of Cambridge University, consciousness nailed to my body by a thankfully infinite stream of proper British tea. BSDCam attendance is invitation only, and the facilities can only handle fifty folks or so. You need to be actively working on FreeBSD to wrangle an invite. Developers attend from all over the world. Yet, there's no agenda. Robert Watson is the chair, but he doesn't decide on the conference topics. He goes around the room and asks everyone to introduce themselves, say what they're working on, and declare what they want to discuss during the conference. The topics of interest are tallied. The most popular topics get assigned time slots and one of the two big rooms. Folks interested in less popular topics are invited to claim one of the small breakout rooms. Then the real fun begins. I started by eavesdropping in the virtualization workshop. For two hours, people discussed FreeBSD's virtualization needs, strengths, and weaknesses. What needs help? What should this interface look like? What compatibility is important, and what isn't? By the end of the session, the couple dozen people had developed a reasonable consensus and, most importantly, some folks had added items to their to-do lists. Repeat for a dozen more topics. I got a good grip on what's really happening with security mitigation techniques, FreeBSD's cloud support, TCP/IP improvements, advances in teaching FreeBSD, and more. A BSDCan devsummit presentation on packaging the base system is informative, but eavesdropping on two dozen highly educated engineers arguing about how to nail down the final tidbits needed to make that a real thing is far more educational. To my surprise, I was able to provide useful feedback for some sessions. I speak at a lot of events outside of the FreeBSD world, and was able to share much of what I hear at Linux conferences. A tool that works well for an experienced developer doesn't necessarily work well for everyone. Every year, I leave BSDCan tired. I left BSDCam entirely exhausted. These intense, focused discussions stretched my brain. But, I have a really good idea where key parts of FreeBSD development are actually headed. This should help future-proof the new Absolute FreeBSD, as much as any computer book can be future-proof. Plus, BSDCam throws the most glorious conference dinner I've ever seen. I want to thank Robert Watson for his kind invitation, and the FreeBSD Foundation for helping defray the cost of this trip Interview - The BSDNow Crew As a kid, what did you dream of to become as an adult? JT: An Astronaut BR: I wanted to be a private detective, because of all the crime novels that I read back then. I didn't get far with it. However, I think the structured analysis skills (who did what, when, and such) help me in debugging and sysadmin work. AJ: Didn't think about it much How do you manage to stay organized day to day with so much things you're actively doing each day? (Day job, wife/girlfriend, conferences, hobbies, friends, etc.) JT: Who said I was organized? BR: A lot of stuff in my calendar as reminders, open browser tabs as “to read later” list. A few things like task switching when getting stuck helps. Also, focus on a single goal for the day, even though there will be distractions. Slowly, but steadily chip away at the things you're working on. Rather than to procrastinate and put things back to review later, get started early with easy things for a big task and then tackle the hard part. Often, things look totally chaotic and unmanageable, until you start working on them. AJ: I barely manage. Lots of Google Calendar reminders, and the entire wall of my office is covered in whiteboard sheet todo lists. I use pinboard.in to deal with finding and organizing bookmarks. Write things down, don't trust your memory. What hobbies outside of IT do you have? JT: I love photography, but I do that Professional part time, so I'm not sure if that counts as a hobby anymore. I guess it'd have to be working in the garage on my cars. BR: I do Tai Chi to relax once a week in a group, but can also do it alone, pretty much everywhere. Way too much Youtube watching and browsing the web. I did play some games before studying at the university and I'm still proud that I could control it to the bare minimum not to impact my studies. A few “lapses” from time to time, revisiting the old classics since the newer stuff won't run on my machines anyway. Holiday time is pretty much spent for BSD conferences and events, this is where I can relax and talk with like-minded people from around the world, which is fascinating. Plus, it gets me to various places and countries I never would have dared to visit on my own. AJ: I play a few video games, and I like to ski, although I don't go very often as most of my vacation time is spent hanging out with my BSD friends at various conferences How do you relax? JT: What is this word ‘relax' and what does it mean? BR: My Tai Chi plays a big part in it I guess. I really calms you and the constant stream of thoughts for a while. It also gives you better clarity of what's important in life. Watching movies, sleeping long. AJ: Usually watching TV or Movies. Although I have taken to doing most of my TV watching on my exercise bike now, but it is still mentally relaxing If FreeBSD didn't exist, which BSD flavour would you use? Why? JT: I use TrueOS, but if FreeBSD didn't exist, that project might not either… so… My other choice would be HardenedBSD, but since it's also based on FreeBSD I'm in the same dillema. BR: I once installed NetBSD to see what It can do. If FreeBSD wouldn't exist, I would probably try my luck with it. OpenBSD is also appealing, but I've never installed it. AJ: When I started using FreeBSD in 2000, the only other BSD I had heard of at the time was OpenBSD. If FreeBSD wasn't around, I don't think the world would look like it does, so it is hard to speculate. If any of the BSD's weren't around and you had to use Linux, which camp would belong to? (Redhat, SUSE, Debian, Ubuntu, Gentoo?) JT: I learned Linux in the mid 90s using Slackware, which I used consistently up until the mid 2000s, when I joined the PuppyLinux community and eventually became a developer (FYI, Puppy was/is/can be based on Slackware -- its complicated). So I'd go back to using either Slackware or PuppyLinux. BR: I tried various Linux distributions until I landed at Debian. I used is pretty extensively as my desktop OS at home, building custom kernels and packages to install them until I discovered FreeBSD. I ran both side by side for a few months for learning until one day I figured out that I had not booted Debian in a while, so I switched completely. AJ: The first Linux I played with was Slackware, and it is the most BSD like, but the bits of Linux I learned in school were Redhat and so I can somewhat wrap my head around it, although now that they are changing everything to systemd, all of that old knowledge is more harmful than useful. Are you still finding yourself in need to use Windows/Mac OS? Why? JT: I work part time as a professional Photographer, so I do use Windows for my photography work. While I can do everything I need to do in Linux, it comes down to being pragmatic about my time. What takes me several hours to accomplish in Linux I can accomplish in 20 minutes on Windows. BR: I was a long time Windows-only user before my Unix days. But back when Vista was about to come out and I needed a new laptop, my choice was basically learning to cope with Vistas awful features or learn MacOS X. I did the latter, it increased my productivity since it's really a good Unix desktop experience (at least, back then). I only have to use Windows at work from time to time as I manage our Windows Terminal server, which keeps the exposure low enough and I only connect to it to use a certain app not available for the Mac or the BSDs. AJ: I still use Windows to play games, for a lot of video conferencing, and to produce BSD Now. Some of it could be done on BSD but not as easily. I have promised myself that I will switch to 100% BSD rather than upgrade to Windows 10, so we'll see how that goes. Please describe your home networking setup. Router type, router OS, router hardware, network segmentation, wifi apparatus(es), other devices connected, and anything else that might be interesting about your home network. BR: Very simple and boring: Apple Airport Express base station and an AVM FritzBox for DNS, DHCP, and the link to my provider. A long network cable to my desktop machine. That I use less and less often. I just bought an RPI 3 for some home use in the future to replace it. Mostly my brother's and my Macbook Pro's are connected, our phones and the iPad of my mother. AJ: I have a E3-1220 v3 (dual 3.1ghz + HT) with 8 GB of ram, and 4x Intel gigabit server NICs as my router, and it runs vanilla FreeBSD (usually some snapshot of -current). I have 4 different VLANs, Home, Office, DMZ, and Guest WiFi. WiFi is served via a tiny USB powered device I bought in Tokyo years ago, it serves 3 different SSIDs, one for each VLAN except the DMZ. There are ethernet jacks in every room wired for 10 gigabit, although the only machines with 10 gigabit are my main workstation, file server, and some machines in the server rack. There are 3 switches, one for the house (in the laundry room), one for the rack, and one for 10gig stuff. There is a rack in the basement spare bedroom, it has 7 servers in it, mostly storage for live replicas of customer data for my company. How do guys manage to get your work done on FreeBSD desktops? What do you do when you need to a Linux or Windows app that isn't ported, or working? I've made several attempts to switch to FreeBSD, but each attempt failed because of tools not being available (e.g. Zoom, Dropbox, TeamViewer, Crashplan) or broken (e.g. VirtualBox). BR: I use VIrtualBox for everything that is not natively available or Windows-only. Unfortunately, that means no modern games. I mostly do work in the shell when I'm on FreeBSD and when it has to be a graphical application, then I use Fluxbox as the DE. I want to get work done, not look at fancy eye-candy that get's boring after a while. Deactivated the same stuff on my mac due to the same reason. I look for alternative software online, but my needs are relatively easy to satisfy as I'm not doing video editing/rendering and such. AJ: I generally find that I don't need these apps. I use Firefox, Thunderbird, OpenSSH, Quassel, KomodoEdit, and a few other apps, so my needs are not very demanding. It is annoying when packages are broken, but I usually work around this with boot environments, and being able to just roll back to a version that worked for a few days until the problem is solved. I do still have access to a windows machine for the odd time I need specific VPN software or access to Dell/HP etc out-of-band management tools. Which desktop environments are your favorite, and why? For example, I like i3, Xfce, and I'm drawn to Lumina's ethos, but so far always seem to end up back on Xfc because of its ease of use, flexibility, and dashing good looks. JT: As a Lumina Desktop developer, I think my preference is obvious. ;) I am also a long timeOpenBox user, so I have a soft place in my heart for that as well. BR: I use Fluxbox when I need to work with a lot of windows or an application demands X11. KDE and others are too memory heavy for me and I rarely use even 20% of the features they provide. AJ: I was a long time KDE user, but I have adopted Lumina. I find it fast, and that it gets out of my way and lets me do what I want. It had some annoyances early on, but I've nagged the developers into making it work for me. Which command-line shells do you prefer, why, and how (if at all) have you customised the environment or prompt? BR: I use zsh, but without all the fancy stuff you can find online. It might make you more productive, yes. But again, I try to keep things simple. I'm slowly learning tmux and want to work more in it in the future. I sometimes look at other BSD people's laptops and am amazed at what they do with window-management in tmux. My prompt looks like this: bcr@Voyager:~> 20:20 17-08-17 Put this in your .zshrc to get the same result: PROMPT='%n@%m:%~>' RPROMPT='%T %D' AJ: I started using tcsh early on, because it was the shell on the first box I had access to, and because one of the first things I read in “BSD Hacks” was how to enable ‘typo correction”, which made my life a lot better especially on dial up in the early days. My shell prompt looks like this: allan@CA-TOR1-02:/usr/home/allan% What is one thing (or more) missing in FreeBSD you would import from another project or community? Could be tech, process, etc. JT: AUFS from Linux BR: Nohup from Illumos where you can detach an already running process and put it in the background. I often forget that and I'm not in tmux when that happens, so I can see myself use that feature a lot. AJ: Zones (more complete Jails) from IllumOS how do you manage your time to learn about and work on FreeBSD? Does your work/employment enable what you do, or are your contributions mainly done in private time? JT: These days I'm mostly learning things I need for work, so it just falls into something I'm doing while working on work projects. BR: We have a lot of time during the semester holidays to learn on our own, it's part of the idea of being in a university to keep yourself updated, at least for me. Especially in the fast moving world of IT. I also read a lot in my free time. My interests can shift sometimes, but then I devour everything I can find on the topic. Can be a bit excessive, but has gotten me where I am now and I still need a lot to learn (and want to). Since I work with FreeBSD at work (my owndoing), I can try out many things there. AJ: My work means a spend a lot of time working with FreeBSD, but not that much time working ON it. My contributions are mostly done outside of work, but as I own the company I do get more flexibility to take time off for conferences and other FreeBSD related stuff. we know we can bribe Michael W Lucas with gelato (good gelato that is), but what can we use to bribe you guys? Like when I want to have Allan to work on fixing a bug which prevents me from running ZFS on this fancy rock64 board? BR: Desserts of various kinds. AJ: I am probably not the right person to look at your rock64 board. Most people in the project have taken to bribing me with chocolate. In general, my todo list is so long, the best way is a trade, you take this task and I'll take that task. Is your daily mobile device iOS, Android, Windows Mobile, or other? Why? JT: These days I'm using Android on my Blackberry Priv, but until recently I was still a heavy user of Sailfish OS. I would use SailfishOS everyday, if I could find a phone with a keyboard that I could run it on. BR: iOS on the iPhone 7 currently. Never used an Android phone, saw it on other people's devices and what they can do with it (much more). But the infrequent security updates (if any at all) keep me away from it. AJ: I have a Google Nexus 6 (Android 7.1). I wanted the ‘pure' Android experience, and I had been happy with my previous Nexus S. I don't run a custom OS/ROM or anything because I use the phone to verify that video streams work on an ‘average users device'. I am displeased that support for my device will end soon. I am not sure what device I will get next, but it definitely won't be an iPhone. News Roundup Beta Update - Request for (more) Testing (http://undeadly.org/cgi?action=article&sid=20170808065718&mode=flat&count=30) https://beta.undeadly.org/ has received an update. The most significant changes include: The site has been given a less antiquated "look". (As the topic icons have been eliminated, we are no longer seeking help with those graphics.) The site now uses a moderate amount of semantic HTML5. Several bugs in the HTML fragment validator (used for submissions and comments) have been fixed. To avoid generating invalid HTML, submission content which fails validation is no longer displayed in submission/comment previews. Plain text submissions are converted to HTML in a more useful fashion. (Instead of just converting each EOL to , the converter now generates proper paragraphs and interprets two or more consecutive EOLs as indicating a paragraph break.) The redevelopment remains a work-in-progress. Many thanks to those who have contributed! As before, constructive feedback would be appreciated. Of particular interest are reports of bugs in behaviour (for example, in the HTML validator or in authentication) that would preclude the adoption of the current code for the main site. High-process-count support added to master (http://lists.dragonflybsd.org/pipermail/users/2017-August/313552.html) We've fixed a number of bottlenecks that can develop when the number of user processes runs into the tens of thousands or higher. One thing led to another and I said to myself, "gee, we have a 6-digit PID, might as well make it work to a million!". With the commits made today, master can support at least 900,000 processes with just a kern.maxproc setting in /boot/loader.conf, assuming the machine has the memory to handle it. And, in fact, as today's machines start to ratchet up there in both memory capacity and core count, with fast storage (NVMe) and fast networking (10GigE and higher), even in consumer boxes, this is actually something that one might want to do. With AMD's threadripper and EPYC chips now out, the IntelAMD cpu wars are back on! Boasting up to 32 cores (64 threads) per socket and two sockets on EPYC, terabytes of ram, and motherboards with dual 10GigE built-in, the reality is that these numbers are already achievable in a useful manner. In anycase, I've tested these changes on a dual-socket xeon. I can in-fact start 900,000 processes. They don't get a whole lot of cpu and running 'ps' would be painful, but it works and the system is still responsive from the shell with all of that going on. xeon126# uptime 1:42PM up 9 mins, 3 users, load averages: 890407.00, 549381.40, 254199.55 In fact, judging from the memory use, these minimal test processes only eat around 60KB each. 900,000 of them ate only 55GB on a 128GB machine. So even a million processes is not out of the question, depending on the cpu requirements for those processes. Today's modern machines can be stuffed with enormous amounts of memory. Of course, our PIDs are currently limited to 6 digits, so a million is kinda the upper limit in terms of discrete user processes (verses pthreads which are less restricted). I'd rather not go to 7 digits (yet). CFT: Driver for generic MS Windows 7/8/10 - compatible USB HID multi-touch touchscreens (https://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-current/2017-August/066783.html) Following patch [1] adds support for generic MS Windows 7/8/10 - compatible USB HID multi-touch touchscreens via evdev protocol. It is intended to be a native replacement of hid-multitouch.c driver found in Linux distributions and multimedia/webcamd port. Patch is made for 12-CURRENT and most probably can be applied to recent 11-STABLE and 11.1-RELEASE (not tested) How to test" 1. Apply patch [1] 2. To compile this driver into the kernel, place the following lines into your kernel configuration file: device wmt device usb device evdev Alternatively, to load the driver as a module at boot time, place the following line in loader.conf(5): wmt_load="YES" 3. Install x11-drivers/xf86-input-evdev or x11-drivers/xf86-input-libinput port 4. Tell XOrg to use evdev or libinput driver for the device: ``` Section "ServerLayout" InputDevice "TouchScreen0" "SendCoreEvents" EndSection Section "InputDevice" Identifier "TouchScreen0" Driver "evdev" # Driver "libinput" Option "Device" "/dev/input/eventXXX" EndSection ``` Exact value of "/dev/input/eventXXX" can be obtained with evemu-record utility from devel/evemu. Note1: Currently, driver does not support pens or touchpads. Note2: wmt.ko should be kld-loaded before uhid driver to take precedence over it! Otherwise uhid can be kld-unloaded after loading of wmt. wmt review: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12017 Raw diff: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12017.diff *** Beastie Bits BSDMag Programing Languages Infographic (https://bsdmag.org/programm_history/) t2k17 Hackathon Report: Bob Beck on buffer cache tweaks, libressl and pledge progress (http://undeadly.org/cgi?action=article&sid=20170815171854) New FreeBSD Journal (https://www.freebsdfoundation.org/past-issues/resource-control/) NetBSD machines at Open Source Conference 2017 Kyoto (http://mail-index.netbsd.org/netbsd-advocacy/2017/08/10/msg000744.html) *** Feedback/Questions Dan - HDD question (http://dpaste.com/3H6TDJV) Benjamin - scrub of death (http://dpaste.com/10F086V) Jason - Router Opinion (http://dpaste.com/2D9102K) Sohrab - Thanks (http://dpaste.com/1XYYTWF) ***
On this week's all-star episode, we present outspoken commentator and podcaster Kirk McElhearn, also known as Macworld's "iTunes Guy." During this episode, Gene will recount his frightening experience, when his car was totaled as a result of being struck at high speed by a truck. The discussion continues with Kirk's progress report on his home-built faux Mac clone, which is usually referred to as a Hackintosh. Was it all worth it, or is it better to buy a real Apple Macintosh and not put up with things that just won't work without lots of baby-sitting? You'll also hear Kirk's skeptical comments about whether he's interested in buying a new Mac, and about Apple's forthcoming speaker/digital assistant known as HomePod, which will ship later in 2017. You'll also hear from columnist Rob Pegoraro, who writes for USA Today, Yahoo Finance, Consumer Reports, Wirecutter and other publications. During this segment, Rob will recount his problems with a broken Google Nexus 5x, which succumbed to a known hardware defect, and why he bought a Pixel phone as its replacement, since he favors Android over iOS. Gene recounts his concern with the recent review of Samsung's Galaxy S8 at Consumer Reports; Rob doesn't do reviews there. He'll also talk about his next computer, a 21.5-inch iMac with 4K Retina display. You'll also hear a brief report on China's version of the CES. The discussion will move to the productivity possibilities for an iPad, or the lack thereof, Apple's forthcoming move to overhaul the Mac Pro, and the prospects for the iMac Pro, due to arrive in December of 2017 at a starting price of $4,999.
It's not even the first proper episode but Chris and Joe talk about kernel security, UEFI Secure Boot, the latest Raspberry Pi news, Nexus devices being abandoned and MP3 becoming (sort of) free. GrSecurity Kernel Patches Will No Longer Be Free To The Public - Phoronix (http://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=news_item&px=GrSecurity-No-Longer-Free) Secure Boot booted from Debian 9 'Stretch' (https://www.theregister.co.uk/2017/05/01/debian_stretch_omits_secure_boot/) Devuan GNU/Linux 1.0 "Jessie" to Support Raspberry Pi 3, Acer Chromebook Devices (http://news.softpedia.com/news/devuan-gnu-linux-1-0-jessie-to-support-raspberry-pi-3-acer-chromebook-devices-515469.shtml) Get a free AIY Projects Voice Kit with The MagPi 57! - The MagPi MagazineThe MagPi Magazine (https://www.raspberrypi.org/magpi/google-aiy-voice-magpi-57/) What is this bullsh*t, Google? Nexus phones starved of security fixes after just three years • The Register (https://www.theregister.co.uk/2017/05/01/google_eol_for_nexus_phones/) Full MP3 Support Being Added To Fedora Linux - Phoronix (http://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=news_item&px=Full-MP3-Support-In-Fedora)
It's not even the first proper episode but Chris and Joe talk about kernel security, UEFI Secure Boot, the latest Raspberry Pi news, Nexus devices being abandoned and MP3 becoming (sort of) free. GrSecurity Kernel Patches Will No Longer Be Free To The Public - Phoronix (http://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=news_item&px=GrSecurity-No-Longer-Free) Secure Boot booted from Debian 9 'Stretch' (https://www.theregister.co.uk/2017/05/01/debian_stretch_omits_secure_boot/) Devuan GNU/Linux 1.0 "Jessie" to Support Raspberry Pi 3, Acer Chromebook Devices (http://news.softpedia.com/news/devuan-gnu-linux-1-0-jessie-to-support-raspberry-pi-3-acer-chromebook-devices-515469.shtml) Get a free AIY Projects Voice Kit with The MagPi 57! - The MagPi MagazineThe MagPi Magazine (https://www.raspberrypi.org/magpi/google-aiy-voice-magpi-57/) What is this bullsh*t, Google? Nexus phones starved of security fixes after just three years • The Register (https://www.theregister.co.uk/2017/05/01/google_eol_for_nexus_phones/) Full MP3 Support Being Added To Fedora Linux - Phoronix (http://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=news_item&px=Full-MP3-Support-In-Fedora)
It's not even the first proper episode but Chris and Joe talk about kernel security, UEFI Secure Boot, the latest Raspberry Pi news, Nexus devices being abandoned and MP3 becoming (sort of) free. GrSecurity Kernel Patches Will No Longer Be Free To The Public - Phoronix (http://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=news_item&px=GrSecurity-No-Longer-Free) Secure Boot booted from Debian 9 'Stretch' (https://www.theregister.co.uk/2017/05/01/debian_stretch_omits_secure_boot/) Devuan GNU/Linux 1.0 "Jessie" to Support Raspberry Pi 3, Acer Chromebook Devices (http://news.softpedia.com/news/devuan-gnu-linux-1-0-jessie-to-support-raspberry-pi-3-acer-chromebook-devices-515469.shtml) Get a free AIY Projects Voice Kit with The MagPi 57! - The MagPi MagazineThe MagPi Magazine (https://www.raspberrypi.org/magpi/google-aiy-voice-magpi-57/) What is this bullsh*t, Google? Nexus phones starved of security fixes after just three years • The Register (https://www.theregister.co.uk/2017/05/01/google_eol_for_nexus_phones/) Full MP3 Support Being Added To Fedora Linux - Phoronix (http://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=news_item&px=Full-MP3-Support-In-Fedora)
Denis KNAUF, Gregor PRIDUN, Stefan HASLINGER, Anna GEIGER und Hari LIST plaudern über freie Software und andere Nerd-Themen. Shownotes auf http://goo.gl/6elvKj oder http://biertaucher.at
“You’re just saying words right now.” Welcome to another tantalizing episode of Attack of the Androids! This week Mat Lee, myself, Nick Carroll and Joey Kelley are ready to discuss the past week’s Android news. On today’s show we’re talking about two Google Nexus rumors, RemixOS … Read more » The post AotA 178: Honeypot Yourself appeared first on Attack of the Androids.
News High-tech Quenton: Azerty c’est fini! Oasis : Interdire les liens hypertextes Binzen : la sélection naturelle ? Quelle sélection naturelle ? Kaldin: Netflix vs VPN. 3, 2, 1, FIGHT ! Les News Gaming Kaldin: Minecraft à l’école Le dossier de la semaine Phil_Goud: La VR sur smartphone : la VR qui fera un carton? Le coup de coeur de la semaine Quenton: LifeLine l’espace où vous êtes le héro! Le truc inutile de la semaine Oasis : Le clavier Emojis Binzen : une tablette gamer Et toi, à quoi tu veux jouer ? Les news en bref Oasis : Le wifi dans les TGV ? pas avant 2017 ! Oasis : HTC serai le constructeur de la prochaine génération des telephone Google Nexus Kaldin: Les députés parlent d’eSport
This week we try out Google’s upcoming Nexus 6P smartphone courtesy of Huawei, and discuss ASB Clever Kash, streaming vs network TV, Google and Microsoft’s historic agreement, free Internet for Africa, NZ rural broadband and Paul’s embarrassing admission. Running time : 1:01:21
Au programme : Conférence Google Nexus 2015 Conférence Microsoft Lumia & Surface 2015 Oculus Connect 2015 Et plus encore... Pour soutenir l'émission, rendez-vous sur http://patreon.com/RDVTech Plus d'infos sur l'épisode : Les animateurs sont Ulrich Rozier (@UlrichRozier), Cassim Ketfi (@NotCassim) et Patrick Beja (@NotPatrick). Le générique est de Daniel Beja (@misterdanielb). Sa musique libre de droit est sur MusicInCloud.fr. La mise en ligne est assurée par Florent Berthelot (@Aeden_). Commentez cet épisode et retrouvez d'autres émissions sur frenchspin.fr ! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Hoy en Data te contamos acerca de todos los lanzamientos que hizo Google la semana pasada: Nuevos Google Nexus 5x y 6p, los nuevos Google Chromecast para Audio y Video, la tablet Pixel C y la reestructuración de Google con #Alphabet
Dejamos nuestras impresiones sobre el Google Nexus Event. La presentación de Google del año 2015. Mas ruido que nueces.
This week, Will, Norm, and Jeremy discuss the Google Nexus launch event, the new Chromecast, Android Marshmellow, the Oculus Connect event, new VR demos from Oculus (including Bullet Train), and the iPhone launch event. All that, plus first iPhone 6S and 6S Plus impressions, upgrading to SmartThings 2.0, and more. Enjoy!
Der nächste Star-Wars-Film lässt noch auf sich warten, doch Volker Zota bringt bereits einen Droiden aus dem Film mit ins Studio von c't uplink. Während der Sendung entwickelte der kleine Kerl aber ein merkwürdiges Eigenleben. Alexander Spier klärt dann auf, welche Bauteile im Smartphone eigentlich immer den ganzen Strom fressen, und was man dafür tun kann, dass das Handy auch mal zwei Tage am Stück durchhält. Das Thema der Woche, die Google-Veranstaltung, durfte im Podcast natürlich nicht fehlen: Alex sieht im vorgestellten Tablet-Hybriden Pixel C einen ernstzunehmenden Konkurrenten zum iPad pro. Vom Chromecast ist Volker hingegen eher ernüchtert und bei den Nexus-Smartphones sind sich alle drei Redakteure ausnahmsweise einig. Mit dabei: Alexander Spier (asp, @MutantHappy), Hannes Czerulla (hcz, @Hannibal4885) und Volker Zota (vza, @DocZet) Die c't 22/15 zur Sendung gibt's am Kiosk, im heise shop und digital in der c't-App für iOS und Android. Alle früheren Episoden unseres Podcasts gibt es im Blog unter: blog.ct.de/ctuplink
Der nächste Star-Wars-Film lässt noch auf sich warten, doch Volker Zota bringt bereits einen Droiden aus dem Film mit ins Studio von c't uplink. Während der Sendung entwickelte der kleine Kerl aber ein merkwürdiges Eigenleben. Alexander Spier klärt dann auf, welche Bauteile im Smartphone eigentlich immer den ganzen Strom fressen, und was man dafür tun kann, dass das Handy auch mal zwei Tage am Stück durchhält. Das Thema der Woche, die Google-Veranstaltung, durfte im Podcast natürlich nicht fehlen: Alex sieht im vorgestellten Tablet-Hybriden Pixel C einen ernstzunehmenden Konkurrenten zum iPad pro. Vom Chromecast ist Volker hingegen eher ernüchtert und bei den Nexus-Smartphones sind sich alle drei Redakteure ausnahmsweise einig. Mit dabei: Alexander Spier (asp, @MutantHappy), Hannes Czerulla (hcz, @Hannibal4885) und Volker Zota (vza, @DocZet) Die c't 22/15 zur Sendung gibt's am Kiosk, im heise shop und digital in der c't-App für iOS und Android. Alle früheren Episoden unseres Podcasts gibt es im Blog unter: blog.ct.de/ctuplink
Originally recorded live on Google On-Air on October 01, 2015 via Zoom H5 & M-Audio Mobile Pre.Produced by Jeffrey Barron (@JeffreyABarron) and Tercius Bufete (@TerciusBufete) with music provided by Dogmazic. See the video version of the episode here:https://youtu.be/nJCINARQEL8 Google Nexus event and our experiences at ONA and TwitchCon!Show NotesJeff's time at TwitchCon! I met Brian Kibler, Day9, Kripparian and Cosmowright. Day9 signed my Lobber Crews. One of my favorite cards. Also Squarespace... See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
This week, Will, Norm, and Jeremy discuss the Google Nexus launch event, the new Chromecast, Android Marshmellow, the Oculus Connect event, new VR demos from Oculus (including Bullet Train), and the iPhone launch event. All that, plus first iPhone 6S and 6S Plus impressions, upgrading to SmartThings 2.0, and more. Enjoy!
Der nächste Star-Wars-Film lässt noch auf sich warten, doch Volker Zota bringt bereits einen Droiden aus dem Film mit ins Studio von c't uplink. Während der Sendung entwickelte der kleine Kerl aber ein merkwürdiges Eigenleben. Alexander Spier klärt dann auf, welche Bauteile im Smartphone eigentlich immer den ganzen Strom fressen, und was man dafür tun kann, dass das Handy auch mal zwei Tage am Stück durchhält. Das Thema der Woche, die Google-Veranstaltung, durfte im Podcast natürlich nicht fehlen: Alex sieht im vorgestellten Tablet-Hybriden Pixel C einen ernstzunehmenden Konkurrenten zum iPad pro. Vom Chromecast ist Volker hingegen eher ernüchtert und bei den Nexus-Smartphones sind sich alle drei Redakteure ausnahmsweise einig. Mit dabei: Alexander Spier (asp, @MutantHappy), Hannes Czerulla (hcz, @Hannibal4885) und Volker Zota (vza, @DocZet) Die c't 22/15 zur Sendung gibt's am Kiosk, im heise shop und digital in der c't-App für iOS und Android. Alle früheren Episoden unseres Podcasts gibt es im Blog unter: blog.ct.de/ctuplink
Nexus enthusiasts, Ian R Buck and Ryan Rampersad, discuss the latest event from Google - covering the Nexus 5X and Nexus 6P, plus new Chromecasts and tablet-chromebook convertibles.
Au programme : La couverture en direct de la conférence Google Nexus 2015. Plus d'infos sur l'épisode : Les animateurs sont Jérôme Keinborg (@JeromeKeinborg), Cédric Bonnet (@CedricBonnet), Stéphane Le Boisselier (@lbstephane) et Patrick Beja (@NotPatrick). Sans oublier Korben (@Korben), qui n'était pas avec nous pour cet épisode ! Le générique est de Daniel Beja (@misterdanielb). Sa musique libre de droit est sur MusicInCloud.fr. La mise en ligne est assurée par Florent Berthelot (@Aeden_).
Brandon and scott talk about "Breaking Bad" and "Emmy Awards." Scott talks about Ios 9 and what he thinks about it. And last In Brandon's Tech news, he talks about ">Google Nexus announcement, and the HTC Aero.
>Brandon and scott talk about "Breaking Bad" and Also they Talk about the "Emmy Awards." Scott talks about Ios 9 and what he thinks about it. And last In Brandon's Tech news, he talks about the Google Nexus announcement, and the HTC Aero.
The Nexus Root Toolkit is a very useful utility which can help you easily root your Google Nexus device. Despite its name however, this utility has much more to offer. It can lock or relock your bootloader, help you flash custom and stock roms, perform a backup and restore of your device among many other things. In this podcast, we walk you through the NRT interface and demonstrate a few of its features. Please keep in mind that NRT relies on ADB and Fastboot in order to work properly. Let us know which features you find most useful!
The Nexus Root Toolkit is a very useful utility which can help you easily root your Google Nexus device. Despite its name however, this utility has much more to offer. It can lock or relock your bootloader, help you flash custom and stock roms, perform a backup and restore of your device among many other things. In this podcast, we walk you through the NRT interface and demonstrate a few of its features. Please keep in mind that NRT relies on ADB and Fastboot in order to work properly. Let us know which features you find most useful!
The Nexus Root Toolkit is a very useful utility which can help you easily root your Google Nexus device. Despite its name however, this utility has much more to offer. It can lock or relock your bootloader, help you flash custom and stock roms, perform a backup and restore of your device among many other things. In this podcast, we walk you through the NRT interface and demonstrate a few of its features. Please keep in mind that NRT relies on ADB and Fastboot in order to work properly. Let us know which features you find most useful!
In this podcast Leonid demonstrates a simple way to flash a stock Android rom on to a Google Nexus device. The factory images can be downloaded here. The following tools were used to flash the image: Download the 7-zip utility to extract the compressed image here. The ADB and Fastboot tools are used to flash the image on the Nexus device. Download the Minimal ADB and Fastboot installer here. Please be sure to back up any important data before proceeding!
In this podcast Leonid demonstrates a simple way to flash a stock Android rom on to a Google Nexus device. The factory images can be downloaded here. The following tools were used to flash the image: Download the 7-zip utility to extract the compressed image here. The ADB and Fastboot tools are used to flash the image on the Nexus device. Download the Minimal ADB and Fastboot installer here. Please be sure to back up any important data before proceeding!
In this podcast Leonid demonstrates a simple way to flash a stock Android rom on to a Google Nexus device. The factory images can be downloaded here. The following tools were used to flash the image: Download the 7-zip utility to extract the compressed image here. The ADB and Fastboot tools are used to flash the image on the Nexus device. Download the Minimal ADB and Fastboot installer here. Please be sure to back up any important data before proceeding!
Nesta edição: – Google Nexus 5 é anunciado oficialmente – Android 4.4 KitKat é anunciado oficialmente – Galaxy Nexus não vai receber a atualização para o Android 4.4 KitKat – Android KitKat: mais detalhes sobre os primeiros updates; Motorola pretende atualizar “por etapas” – [TargetHD Responde] Vale a pena mudar para o Nexus 5, uma […]
For our first show, the Android Crew, Greg Lopez, Tomi Geczy, Brandon Cross and Cory Martin all meet to hash out the latest Android happenings, starting with new hardware announced at Mobile World Congress. The crew starts out with the Samsung Galaxy S6 by discussing the pros and cons of the drastic new design. Here are a few links to some of the items which they discussed: Samsung Galaxy S6 and Galaxy S6 edge reportedly facing touchscreen issues - SamMobile https://is.gd/Y7hOc1 Here is a link to the new accessibility features for the galaxy S6 https://groups.google.com/forum/m/#!topic/eyes-free/bpaJIotS1kE Here is a PDF for the Samsung S6 manual that talks about the accessibility features https://downloadcenter.samsung.com/content/UM/201503/20150303094626458/SM-G920F_UM_EU_Lollipop_Eng_Rev.1.0_150302.pdf The new Loop Pay on the S6 looks possibly better than other NFC-based payment options, offering backward compatibility with existing point-of-sale hardware. Loop Pay on S6: https://www.nfcworld.com/2015/03/01/334371/samsung-unveils-galaxy-s6-with-nfc-and-looppay-mobile-payments/ S6/S6 Edge available via US and Canadian carriers on 4/10/2015, prices still unknown https://mobilesyrup.com/2015/03/10/samsung-galaxy-s6-gold-canada/ Wireless charging and Fast Charge 2.0 technologies are contrasted, speed versus convenience? It is suggested that wireless charging might be detrimental to battery-life. One of the sources of this information came from the Wikipedia article provided here. Wireless charging may generate additional heat: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inductive_charging Finally, it was unanimously decided that the Samsung Galaxy S6 would make an excellent choice for those considering switching to Android from other platforms. The S6 wasn't the only cool phone announced, with HTC and their M9 now boasting a 20 Megapixel camera and 2800 MA battery which might be important for another soon to be announced app: https://www.techradar.com/news/phone-and-communications/mobile-phones/htc-one-m9-what-we-want-to-see-1266545 At finally long last, Blind Bargains brings us an interview from CSUN where it is suggested that the KNFB Reader app might soon be coming to Android: https://www.blindbargains.com/bargains.php?m=12451 Those monster megapixel cameras on these Android phones might soon be a very important tool for us who are blind or visually impaired. For those of us who might need to conserve the cash, the new Motorola E now has LTE, 4.5 inch screen, 5 MP camera, yet has no flash according to All about Android It is suggested that the phone may have a price-point of $150.00 US. If you're in to unusual, you might enjoy the Alcatel One-Touch Idol-3 Handset with earpiece on front at top and bottom. Check out this article, Alcatel OneTouch Idol 3 can take phone calls even when upside down https://www.engadget.com/2015/03/01/alcatel-onetouch-idol-3/ Finally, if you're a fan of the stock droid experience, All Huawei phones released are running stock android: https://www.theverge.com/2015/3/3/8140837/huawei-watch-design-interview-mwc-2015 What will be laid to rest is the Google Nexus 5 according to this article, Nexus 5 no longer for sale https://www.cnet.com/news/google-puts-the-kibosh-on-nexus-5-sales/ Of course, the Apple Watch may have some competition as the Samsung Gear series of watches appear to come with similar accessibility features including a built-in screen-reader, negative colors and a privacy screen option among many others, check out the links to some details on the Samsung Gear accessibility features: Samsung Gear S Specs: https://www.samsung.com/global/microsite/gears/gears_specs.html Samsung Gear S Accessibility User Guide: https://eguides.sprint.com/support/eguides/samsunggears/index.html#samsung_gear_s_ug/accessibility_settings.html Of course, if you're in to the immersive experience, the HTC Vibe definitely has you covered with a whole series...
For our first show, the Android Crew, Greg Lopez, Tomi Geczy, Brandon Cross and Cory Martin all meet to hash out the latest Android happenings, starting with new hardware announced at Mobile World Congress. The crew starts out with the Samsung Galaxy S6 by discussing the pros and cons of the drastic new design. Here are a few links to some of the items which they discussed: Samsung Galaxy S6 and Galaxy S6 edge reportedly facing touchscreen issues - SamMobile https://is.gd/Y7hOc1 Here is a link to the new accessibility features for the galaxy S6 https://groups.google.com/forum/m/#!topic/eyes-free/bpaJIotS1kE Here is a PDF for the Samsung S6 manual that talks about the accessibility features https://downloadcenter.samsung.com/content/UM/201503/20150303094626458/SM-G920F_UM_EU_Lollipop_Eng_Rev.1.0_150302.pdf The new Loop Pay on the S6 looks possibly better than other NFC-based payment options, offering backward compatibility with existing point-of-sale hardware. Loop Pay on S6: https://www.nfcworld.com/2015/03/01/334371/samsung-unveils-galaxy-s6-with-nfc-and-looppay-mobile-payments/ S6/S6 Edge available via US and Canadian carriers on 4/10/2015, prices still unknown https://mobilesyrup.com/2015/03/10/samsung-galaxy-s6-gold-canada/ Wireless charging and Fast Charge 2.0 technologies are contrasted, speed versus convenience? It is suggested that wireless charging might be detrimental to battery-life. One of the sources of this information came from the Wikipedia article provided here. Wireless charging may generate additional heat: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inductive_charging Finally, it was unanimously decided that the Samsung Galaxy S6 would make an excellent choice for those considering switching to Android from other platforms. The S6 wasn't the only cool phone announced, with HTC and their M9 now boasting a 20 Megapixel camera and 2800 MA battery which might be important for another soon to be announced app: https://www.techradar.com/news/phone-and-communications/mobile-phones/htc-one-m9-what-we-want-to-see-1266545 At finally long last, Blind Bargains brings us an interview from CSUN where it is suggested that the KNFB Reader app might soon be coming to Android: https://www.blindbargains.com/bargains.php?m=12451 Those monster megapixel cameras on these Android phones might soon be a very important tool for us who are blind or visually impaired. For those of us who might need to conserve the cash, the new Motorola E now has LTE, 4.5 inch screen, 5 MP camera, yet has no flash according to All about Android It is suggested that the phone may have a price-point of $150.00 US. If you're in to unusual, you might enjoy the Alcatel One-Touch Idol-3 Handset with earpiece on front at top and bottom. Check out this article, Alcatel OneTouch Idol 3 can take phone calls even when upside down https://www.engadget.com/2015/03/01/alcatel-onetouch-idol-3/ Finally, if you're a fan of the stock droid experience, All Huawei phones released are running stock android: https://www.theverge.com/2015/3/3/8140837/huawei-watch-design-interview-mwc-2015 What will be laid to rest is the Google Nexus 5 according to this article, Nexus 5 no longer for sale https://www.cnet.com/news/google-puts-the-kibosh-on-nexus-5-sales/ Of course, the Apple Watch may have some competition as the Samsung Gear series of watches appear to come with similar accessibility features including a built-in screen-reader, negative colors and a privacy screen option among many others, check out the links to some details on the Samsung Gear accessibility features: Samsung Gear S Specs: https://www.samsung.com/global/microsite/gears/gears_specs.html Samsung Gear S Accessibility User Guide: https://eguides.sprint.com/support/eguides/samsunggears/index.html#samsung_gear_s_ug/accessibility_settings.html Of course, if you're in to the immersive experience, the HTC Vibe definitely has you covered with a whole series...
For our first show, the Android Crew, Greg Lopez, Tomi Geczy, Brandon Cross and Cory Martin all meet to hash out the latest Android happenings, starting with new hardware announced at Mobile World Congress. The crew starts out with the Samsung Galaxy S6 by discussing the pros and cons of the drastic new design. Here are a few links to some of the items which they discussed: Samsung Galaxy S6 and Galaxy S6 edge reportedly facing touchscreen issues - SamMobile https://is.gd/Y7hOc1 Here is a link to the new accessibility features for the galaxy S6 https://groups.google.com/forum/m/#!topic/eyes-free/bpaJIotS1kE Here is a PDF for the Samsung S6 manual that talks about the accessibility features https://downloadcenter.samsung.com/content/UM/201503/20150303094626458/SM-G920F_UM_EU_Lollipop_Eng_Rev.1.0_150302.pdf The new Loop Pay on the S6 looks possibly better than other NFC-based payment options, offering backward compatibility with existing point-of-sale hardware. Loop Pay on S6: https://www.nfcworld.com/2015/03/01/334371/samsung-unveils-galaxy-s6-with-nfc-and-looppay-mobile-payments/ S6/S6 Edge available via US and Canadian carriers on 4/10/2015, prices still unknown https://mobilesyrup.com/2015/03/10/samsung-galaxy-s6-gold-canada/ Wireless charging and Fast Charge 2.0 technologies are contrasted, speed versus convenience? It is suggested that wireless charging might be detrimental to battery-life. One of the sources of this information came from the Wikipedia article provided here. Wireless charging may generate additional heat: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inductive_charging Finally, it was unanimously decided that the Samsung Galaxy S6 would make an excellent choice for those considering switching to Android from other platforms. The S6 wasn't the only cool phone announced, with HTC and their M9 now boasting a 20 Megapixel camera and 2800 MA battery which might be important for another soon to be announced app: https://www.techradar.com/news/phone-and-communications/mobile-phones/htc-one-m9-what-we-want-to-see-1266545 At finally long last, Blind Bargains brings us an interview from CSUN where it is suggested that the KNFB Reader app might soon be coming to Android: https://www.blindbargains.com/bargains.php?m=12451 Those monster megapixel cameras on these Android phones might soon be a very important tool for us who are blind or visually impaired. For those of us who might need to conserve the cash, the new Motorola E now has LTE, 4.5 inch screen, 5 MP camera, yet has no flash according to All about Android It is suggested that the phone may have a price-point of $150.00 US. If you're in to unusual, you might enjoy the Alcatel One-Touch Idol-3 Handset with earpiece on front at top and bottom. Check out this article, Alcatel OneTouch Idol 3 can take phone calls even when upside down https://www.engadget.com/2015/03/01/alcatel-onetouch-idol-3/ Finally, if you're a fan of the stock droid experience, All Huawei phones released are running stock android: https://www.theverge.com/2015/3/3/8140837/huawei-watch-design-interview-mwc-2015 What will be laid to rest is the Google Nexus 5 according to this article, Nexus 5 no longer for sale https://www.cnet.com/news/google-puts-the-kibosh-on-nexus-5-sales/ Of course, the Apple Watch may have some competition as the Samsung Gear series of watches appear to come with similar accessibility features including a built-in screen-reader, negative colors and a privacy screen option among many others, check out the links to some details on the Samsung Gear accessibility features: Samsung Gear S Specs: https://www.samsung.com/global/microsite/gears/gears_specs.html Samsung Gear S Accessibility User Guide: https://eguides.sprint.com/support/eguides/samsunggears/index.html#samsung_gear_s_ug/accessibility_settings.html Of course, if you're in to the immersive experience, the HTC Vibe definitely has you covered with a whole series...
Microsoft will, dass wir Windows 10 lieben. Ob die bisherigen Details zur neuen Windows-Version uns überzeugt haben und ob die Datenbrille HoloLens die Zukunft ist, darüber sprechen wir diese Woche in c't uplink. Jürgen Kuri hat das Titelthema aus c't 4/15 mitgerbracht: Als "Trends 2015" sieht er nicht nur Virtual-Reality- und Augmented-Reality-Brillen wie Microsofts HoloLens. Spannend wird vor allem, wie sich unsere Interaktion mit technischen Geräten im Alltag verändert -- und wie sich künftig unsere Umwelt an uns anpasst, ohne dass wir irgendwelche Knöpfe drücken müssen. Zum Schluss gibt's noch ein paar handfeste Gadgets: Wir haben das Google Nexus 6 und das Yotaphone 2 mit E-Ink-Display getestet und das Panasonic Lumix CM1 ausprobiert, das eine Mischung aus Smartphone und Kompaktkamera ist. Wir fragen uns: Gibt es eine Zielgruppe für die mit 900 Euro ziemlich teure Smartphone-Knipse?
Microsoft will, dass wir Windows 10 lieben. Ob die bisherigen Details zur neuen Windows-Version uns überzeugt haben und ob die Datenbrille HoloLens die Zukunft ist, darüber sprechen wir diese Woche in c't uplink. Jürgen Kuri hat das Titelthema aus c't 4/15 mitgerbracht: Als "Trends 2015" sieht er nicht nur Virtual-Reality- und Augmented-Reality-Brillen wie Microsofts HoloLens. Spannend wird vor allem, wie sich unsere Interaktion mit technischen Geräten im Alltag verändert -- und wie sich künftig unsere Umwelt an uns anpasst, ohne dass wir irgendwelche Knöpfe drücken müssen. Zum Schluss gibt's noch ein paar handfeste Gadgets: Wir haben das Google Nexus 6 und das Yotaphone 2 mit E-Ink-Display getestet und das Panasonic Lumix CM1 ausprobiert, das eine Mischung aus Smartphone und Kompaktkamera ist. Wir fragen uns: Gibt es eine Zielgruppe für die mit 900 Euro ziemlich teure Smartphone-Knipse?
Microsoft will, dass wir Windows 10 lieben. Ob die bisherigen Details zur neuen Windows-Version uns überzeugt haben und ob die Datenbrille HoloLens die Zukunft ist, darüber sprechen wir diese Woche in c't uplink. Jürgen Kuri hat das Titelthema aus c't 4/15 mitgerbracht: Als "Trends 2015" sieht er nicht nur Virtual-Reality- und Augmented-Reality-Brillen wie Microsofts HoloLens. Spannend wird vor allem, wie sich unsere Interaktion mit technischen Geräten im Alltag verändert -- und wie sich künftig unsere Umwelt an uns anpasst, ohne dass wir irgendwelche Knöpfe drücken müssen. Zum Schluss gibt's noch ein paar handfeste Gadgets: Wir haben das Google Nexus 6 und das Yotaphone 2 mit E-Ink-Display getestet und das Panasonic Lumix CM1 ausprobiert, das eine Mischung aus Smartphone und Kompaktkamera ist. Wir fragen uns: Gibt es eine Zielgruppe für die mit 900 Euro ziemlich teure Smartphone-Knipse?
This episode we go hands on with Microsoft Lumia 830 and Motorola Moto G, and we discuss Sky's Neon streaming service, OneDrive unlimited storage, new Google Nexus devices, Azure Australia, Electric Vehicles and the latest from Toyota. Running time : 0:55:50
このページをウェブブラウザで見る: リンク backspace.fm #059は、Mac界の重鎮バスケさんをお迎えして、Googleから発表された新Nexusシリーズや、バスケさんが最近iPhoneから乗り換えたというMoto X、Moto 360の話まで、ガッツリGoogleトークでお送りします。Macユーザーからみた今時のAndroidの状況などが垣間見れる感じで面白いです。 audio 要素はサポートされていません Download MP3 (38.8MB) 今週のニュース 【重要】 サービス終了撤回のお知らせ|livedoor Reader 開発日誌 こち亀100巻分無料に、ジャンプ+100万DLで - コミックナタリー MicrosoftのOffice等とSaaSの雄Salesforceが統合へ…時代の変化の大きな象徴 - TechCrunch Chromium Blog: Noto on ChromeOS: No More “Tofu” マイクロソフト、Android Wear用の手書きキーボードAnalog Keyboardを実験リリース - Engadget Japanese Nexus関連 「Android L」は「Android 5.0 Lollipop」に 新Nexus端末は11月発売 - ITmedia ニュース Android L Google、「Android 5.0 Lollipop」を正式発表 - ITmedia Mobile Android OSの次期バージョンは「L」――新たな“マテリアルデザイン”を採用 - ITmedia Mobile Nexus 6 Google、6型クアッドHDディスプレイを搭載した「Nexus 6」発表 - ITmedia Mobile Nexus 6 rumored to be launched as Nexus X to avoid Blade Runner trademark, expected quiet launch around Halloween 9to5Google Nexus 6はAndroidの夢を見るか? - Togetterまとめ Nexus 9 HTC製で399ドルから:Google初の8.9型タブレット「Nexus 9」――Android 5.0 L+64ビットTegra K1+2048×1536液晶 - ITmedia Mobile Nexus 7は消えちゃうの? グーグルにも聞いてみました : ギズモード・ジャパン Moto X My Moto X design ▶ Moto Display - YouTube Moto 360 Moto 360 by Motorola 次週予告・告知 今週のbackspace.fmはいかがだったでしょうか? おかげさまで、iTunesのPodcast配信も好調です。 ぜひ気に入ったら購読して頂けると幸いです。 番組中に紹介したネタのリンクはURL backspace.fm から参照してください。 番組内容に関するフィードバックやリクエストなども #(ハッシュタグ)backspacefm にてお待ちしてます。 iTunesのレビューも大変参考になるので、気に入ったらレビューしていただけるとうれしいです!
DigitalOutbox Episode 226 DigitalOutbox Episode 226 - Apple iPads and Retina iMac, Google Nexus 6 & 9 Playback Listen via iTunes Listen via M4A Listen via MP3 Shownotes 2:26 - Apple Keynote 21:15 - Google Android Announcements 33:48 - BBC to publish 'right to be forgotten' removals list 35:26 - Facebook Launches "Safety Check" Feature For Major Disasters 36:25 - Google changes 'to fight piracy' by highlighting legal sites 37:27 - Spotify announces family plans for up to 5 users 39:07 - Twitters Music Card Now Plays In Its Mobile Apps And Supports iTunes Previews 40:05 - Tweets from accounts you dont follow will soon appear in your timeline 41:29 - Amazon launches Pass My Parcel for same-day in-store order collection in the UK 43:26 - HBO will launch a standalone streaming service in the US next year 44:53 - Steam pulls game after its developer tweets Gabe Newell death threat
主持:陸志勤、李碩宏;嘉賓主持:Derek iPhone、iPad炒賣已是舊聞,現在竟連售後服務Genius […]
Todd recaps his trip to Google I/O and explains why he made the switch from iPhone to Android! Get a full review of the Google Nexus 5 Phone, Samsung Gear Live smart watch, and the Mac Pro. Plus our favorite apps--Runtastic, FlyWheel --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/tech-411-show/support
JNH Software newsletter, talking about how to print from a portable device like an iPhone, iPad, Android Tablet, Windows Surface or Google Nexus using WiFi and eMail.
Brian Klug of AnandTech returns to wrap up the Apple A7 talk and then dive into the new Google Nexus 5 and what the future holds for mobile chipsets, displays, cameras, and more.
This is the thirty fifth e-Learning Stuff Podcast,The Google Nexus One James Clay gives his first impressions of the Google Nexus One.
MSNBC Acquires Breaking News, Google Nexus, Skype on TV, CES 2010