Microsoft Rumored To Have Google Glass Rival On The Way

Will AR goggles become the new Ray-Bans?

Industry analyst Brian White is the source of a new rumor about Microsoft’s future in wearable tech: White suggests that Microsoft is following Google’s lead and will introduce its own wearable augmented reality goggles in the first half of 2014.

White’s argument is that Google has made such a splash in both hardware and the software apps that will support Glass that Microsoft is going to try to directly compete with Google. Since Microsoft has been moving into smartphone and tablet markets in an effort to rival both Google and Apple, White’s arguments are plausible: Microsoft could easily be keen to tap into the reams of user data that connected AR goggles will generate as Google itself is. The same reason explains why other players including China’s Baidu and a long list of other folks are also reportedly working in the AR headware space.

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via Fast Company http://www.fastcompany.com/3007929/tech-forecast/microsoft-rumored-have-google-glass-rival-way?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+fastcompany%2Fheadlines+%28Fast+Company%29

Tesla’s Model S Beats Sales Goals, Makes Profitability Likely

Tesla cuts budget Model S, but looks on course to make money.

Tesla has said it has beaten its sales goal for the first quarter, selling 4,750 Model S electric cars–that’s 250 above its predicted quota. If sales keep up, the company looks like it will safely reach its plan to sell 20,000 vehicles this year.

The company has also said it won’t be selling the 40 kWh version of the car because it wasn’t seeing enough demand for the entry-level option.

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via Fast Company http://www.fastcompany.com/3007665/tech-forecast/teslas-model-s-beats-sales-goals-makes-profitability-likely?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+fastcompany%2Fheadlines+%28Fast+Company%29

Chinese Celebrities Accused Of Apple-Smearing Campaign

Strange how a bunch of Chinese celebrities all decided to dislike Apple at 8:20 p.m.

There appears to be something rotten in the state of Weibo (China’s 140-character social network rip-off of Twitter), and according to a short list of Chinese celebrities that rotten something is Apple. According to Taiwanese film star Peter Ho, for example, Apple has “so many tricks in its after-sales services. As an Apple fan, I’m hurt.” The complaints surfaced after an exposé was broadcast on the official CCTV channel that said Apple was abusing Chinese consumers by not replacing broken iPhones, and instead just fixing them.

But Ho’s tweet had a strange ending: “Post at 8:20″…as if he’d copied and pasted text from an email, perhaps, and accidentally included the instruction to post at that time. Which, coincidentally, was the same time that other celebrities posted anti-Apple comments. Perhaps there’s something rotten in an anti-Apple campaign too.

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via Fast Company http://www.fastcompany.com/3007113/fast-feed/chinese-celebrities-accused-apple-smearing-campaign?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+fastcompany%2Fheadlines+%28Fast+Company%29

Facebook Overhauling News Feeds To Be Content-Specific: Report

Photos, music, and more meant to be easier to find.

Facebook appears poised to overhaul its messy news feed, making it easier for users to filter. The filters will emphasize parts of the feed, like photos from Facebook or Instagram or a music feed. Photos will also be bigger on both the website and mobile site.

Facebook’s filtered music feed could be the most prominent change, as it would bring tighter integration with Spotify or Rdio and Facebook’s social systems, with current track info being shared to friends. There’s also said to be concert data and album releases. This may be a not-so-indirect assault on the newly revamped MySpace, leveraging Facebook’s bigger social networking muscles and enormous user base. It’s also a play to make more money as TechCrunch has said that ad images will be “more vivid,” and, thus, more clickable.

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via Fast Company http://www.fastcompany.com/3006661/tech-forecast/facebook-overhauling-news-feeds-foreground-instagram-spotify-rdio-more-report

Chasing Xbox Spying Allegations, Australian Police Raid Potential Hacker’s Home

Microsoft, Sony, Epic Games, Blizzard, and Valve are the big computing and gaming names allegedly involved in the hacker hunt down under.

It’s Xbox meets The X-Files.

TheTechGame.com reports that the home of a West Australian man was raided by eight local police officers and a member of the FBI, apparently connected to allegations of corporate espionage on the next-generation Xbox. The team was armed with a search warrant and a battering ram, which went unused as Dan Henry, a.k.a. online personality and alleged hacker SuperDaE, was at home. The warrant allowed search of all computer materials, and Gizmodo.au says the police took about 10 servers, a decade of hard drives, laptops, and cell phones. Henry is under investigation for corporate espionage relating to the unreleased future Xbox, codenamed Durango.

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via Fast Company http://www.fastcompany.com/3006118/fast-feed/chasing-xbox-spying-allegations-australian-police-raid-potential-hackers-home?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+fastcompany%2Fheadlines+%28Fast+Company%29

Iran Says It Fired A Monkey Into Space, Landed It

The country’s defense ministry says the nation has successfully flown a monkey into space on a rocket trip.

Though details are sparse, the Iranian defense ministry is claiming today that it has successfully launched a capsule containing a live monkey into space atop a rocket. The capsule was later successfully recovered “intact” on the ground and the monkey, according to the report, is safe.

Iran is, if the news proves true, following in the footsteps of the U.S., which successfully flew several monkeys into space–Albert II was the first to survive the flight beyond the atmosphere in 1949 (though he died when the capsule impacted the ground). Iran has been continually developing its space rocket program over the years–including flying other “creatures.” This has been to the discomfort of many who note that the technology needed to propel a capsule into space is equivalent to Intercontinental Ballistic Missile systems. Launching and retrieving a monkey would represent a huge technological leap, and may be an attempt to demonstrate the space program has peaceful goals.

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via Fast Company http://www.fastcompany.com/3005111/iran-says-it-fired-monkey-space-landed-it?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+fastcompany%2Fheadlines+%28Fast+Company%29

Apple Rumor Patrol: The Truth About The Long-Promised iPad Mini

We’ve heard rumors of a smaller iPad for a couple of years now.

Steve Jobs himself once dismissed the idea, but he was famous for carefully controlling PR, and even making distracting statements. Now it appears the 7-inch iPad is finally on its way–and soon.

Battery

One of the more intriguing bits concerning the iPad mini’s internal components that have “leaked” is its battery. MacRumors has got hold of a pre-production part that it deems likely to be a match for the final in-production battery–and it’s pretty convincing. It has a capacity of 4490 mAh or 16.7 watt-hours. That’s almost exactly three times the size of the iPhone 5’s 5.45 watt-hours and a third of the iPad 3’s 42.5 watt-hours.

Fishy Chippery

The mini’s leaked battery details are not just trivial data. They implies that the mini may not be as powerful in terms of graphics or computing cycles as the full-on iPad, simply because there’s less room in the battery for energy to drive more powerful chips. But we do know that the iPad 3 uses a double line of LEDs to light its retina screen, and these seriously munch into the 3’s battery life. The mini is rumored to not have a retina screen, and this along with its small size means it may gobble down much less power per hour.

These arguments point to one of two main conclusions. The iPad mini may have a prodigious working battery life, lasting far longer than the iPhone does. Or it may be based on the iPhone 5 chipset (rather than the iPad 2 internals, as had previously been suggested) and thus have a more expected battery life, but deliver a computing performance that’s as good as the iPhone 5 and far better than the iPad 2.

Wi-Fi-Only

A rumor a week ago suggested the new smaller iPad would come only with a Wi-Fi option, lacking the 3G capabilities of the bigger iPad. This rumor didn’t chime with us because Apple has already shown it can design modular hardware for the bigger iPad, with the mobile broadband system slotting into the iPad’s case as a daughterboard to the full motherboard. Why wouldn’t it do the same trick, possibly even with identical circuitry, as it does for the full iPad? Technologically it wouldn’t be tricky or expensive to develop, and it would give Apple the option of selling a more capable mobile device to users who may prefer its smaller screen size over the bigger iPad.

And remember–a mini iPad is going to be much more portable than a big iPad. Apple could make yet more money by letting its users have access to books, music, and apps on the go, and not just when they’re in a Wi-Fi area.

Price

iPad mini SKU information, including price, has allegedly appeared in the systems of Media Markt, a German-based big box electronics retailer with a presence across Europe. The mini is, according to this info, due in 16 individual types: 8 each of white and black, with half of each color being equipped with mobile broadband and memory in capacities from 8GB to 64GB.

At the bottom end it’ll likely cost $323 and the top-end version with broadband will be about $841. For comparison the Amazon Kindle Fire is $159 and the slightly more capable Google Nexus 7 is $199.

iBooks

According to one of the more recent rumors, Apple’s launch even for the iPad mini will have a big element dedicated to iBooks. The 7-inch or so screen the new iPad is said to sport is roughly the size of a large paperback book’s page, and if it features the same in-cell touch sensing as the iPhone 5 this means the display will make for an excellent e-reader.

Apple’s already made a big push for e-textbooks and compared to its other content offering systems it seemed that at first iBooks wasn’t quite so well used. In January Apple pushed out iBooks 2 and an authoring tool to let anyone put together a book for the platform and that immediately led to 350,000 book downloads and 90,000 downloads of iBooks Author in the first three days. Perhaps now is the perfect time to remind schools and home users of iBook’s power, and to push a device that seems ideally suited for consuming reading material.

The Future

All of these pieces of the puzzle join pleasingly together, and they don’t necessarily point to a 7.85-inch iPad as being the simpleton, low-price cousin to the iPad. What they may imply is that the mini is going to be a very capable device, possibly among the top in its size class and easily outperforming its immediate peers.

It seems to be priced aggressively. The low margin entry level system–at around $250–is Apple’s version of a “loss leader,” and it’s countered by the bigger units with more memory and mobile broadband units. Apple makes more money on these larger capacity devices, as it has long done so on all iDevices, because it charges a premium for the memory chips.

This strategy is in stark contrast to Amazon’s strategy with the new Kindle Fire, which is sold in a one-size-fits-all capacity and at zero profit to Amazon. Jeff Bezos’ company makes all its money from the Fire on selling apps, books, and other content for it–and can do so because the Fire is running so heavily a modified version of Android that it can basically only access material from Amazon’s digital lockers. Apple’s machine is similarly tied to Apple’s iTunes system, but is also free to run apps that deliver content from other partners. But Apple makes money on both the hardware and the software.

An iPad mini with more power than the iPad 2, perhaps approaching iPhone 5 class power, also makes sense in terms of Apple’s future product portfolio. The iPad 4 is presumably due in Spring, and if it were much more than a generation ahead of the iPad mini in terms of performance then it would make the mini look like a very poor buy for at least the next six months until that product was upgraded.

Will it cannibalize “full” iPad sales, or damage the iPod touch’s sales figures? That’s hard to predict, but Apple seems to have pitched its size far above the iPod and significantly less than the iPad–meaning it’ll appeal to different users.

[Image: Flickr user danpawley]

Chat about this news with Kit Eaton on Twitter and Fast Company too.

via Fast Company http://www.fastcompany.com/3002157/apple-rumor-patrol-truth-about-long-promised-ipad-mini?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+fastcompany%2Fheadlines+%28Fast+Company%29

Baidu Employees Sacked, Then Arrested, After Accepting Bribes

Baidu, China’s biggest search engine and more or less the local equivalent of Google, has sacked four employees after they allegedly accepted bribes in return for deleting posts. The deleted content was on its TieBa forum service and seem to be related to publicly-created posts that those paying the bribes disagreed with or were upset by. Baidu noted in a statement it keeps a log of every deletion action by an employee and does not tolerate untoward behaviour.

After the firing, three of the four staff members were arrested by police on suspicion of accepting bribes. Much attention has been focussed on Baidu as a good indicator of the strength of China’s Net economy, and the firm is seemingly considered to be in rude health.

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via Fast Company http://www.fastcompany.com/3000153/baidu-employees-sacked-then-arrested-after-accepting-bribes?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+fastcompany%2Fheadlines+%28Fast+Company%29