nedelja, 1. junij 2014

Intel Wants In on Self-Driving Cars, Too - Webmaster News

New Post has been published on http://www.outils-webmaster.eu/intel-wants-in-on-self-driving-cars-too/

Intel_car 



Just a few days after Google unveiled its self-driving car prototype, Intel is getting in on the automated vehicle industry, too.



The company is introducing what it calls an “in-vehicle solutions platform,” which could eventually support self-driving vehicles like the Google car. Intel’s new hardware and software technology aims to help “the car evolve to better inform, assist and eventually assume control,” according to a press release.



The infotainment system — which comes with processors, an operating system and developer kits — would make it easier for automakers and suppliers to bring updates to its platform much faster (in only 12 months) and at 50% of the cost.



Earlier this week, Google unveiled the design of its self-driving car prototype, a small two-seater with no steering wheel, no brake pedal and a “stop” panic button. The dimensions are still unknown, but it has a smiley face on its front exterior.



Self-driving cars have the potential to make the roads much safer, thanks to built-in sensors that can inform a computer to make driving decisions much faster than humans. For example, the Google car can slow down for jaywalking pedestrians, watch for cars that sneak out of hidden driveways and look for cyclists making gestures that indicate a possible turn. In addition to reducing crashes, self-driving cars could ease congestion, improve fuel economy, reduce parking needs and bring mobility to those who are unable to drive.



Although there are challenges ahead — such as consumer adoption and cost — the potential here is massive. Not surprisingly, companies want in.



Although the product is available for auto systems with advancer driver assistance capabilities, future iterations will be “geared for advanced driving experiences such as autonomous or self-driving cars.”



Intel said it is actively collecting data about how people drive and how cars can be more adaptive, predictive and interact with drivers and its surroundings.



In 2012, the company established a $100 million Intel Capital Connected Car Fund to grow car tech integration and help it enable future autonomous driving capabilities.



Have something to add to this story? Share it in the comments.



Source: http://mashable.com/2014/05/30/intel-car-technology-infotainment/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=rss



The Apple-Beats Deal: A 10-Year Affair Ends in Marriage - Webmaster News

New Post has been published on http://www.outils-webmaster.eu/the-apple-beats-deal-a-10-year-affair-ends-in-marriage/

Dsc07898Apple’s



RANCHOS PALOS VERDES, California — Just hours after after Apple’s historic $3 billion acquisition of Beats, two architects of the deal, Apple VP Internet Software and Services Eddy Cue and Beats Co-Founder and CEO Jimmy Iovine, said this deal was, in some ways, a decade in the making.



Cue revealed that he and Iovine have known each other for 10 years. Iovine, who’s been making music for 40 years, actually visited a number of tech companies, including Apple, during the dawn of the digital music era between 1998 and 2003. “When I met Eddy and Steve [Jobs], I told [my team], ‘These guys get it. They know and respect what we do. They respect copyright and the entire food chain.’ I always wanted to work with them.”



It would take more than a decade for Apple and Beats to consummate the relationship. In the interim, Beats would connect with HTC. Iovine said he was convinced that mobile phones were the one thing that could save the music industry and desperately wanted a mobile partner. They chose HTC and it didn’t go well. “It was really a culture clash. It crashed and burned.”



Cue was, by the way, fully aware of Beats’ interest, but the time simply wasn’t right. Iovine joked that Apple makes deals the way “they make products,” which is to say slowly and carefully.



Now, Iovine gets his wish, although he’s actually working for Apple, not with them. He also surprised some when he stated that, “I just left the record industry four hours ago. I am a retired record executive.” Some expected Iovine to establish a music label for Apple. Of course, his partner Dr. Dre was not in attendance and he could continue to produce records for Apple under a Beats label.



Apple’s Cue outlined the three primary reasons the company made the biggest acquisition in its history:



The Talent: “[Jimmy Iovine] is the smartest person in music I have ever met.”



The hardware: “They’ve built amazing, premium headphones.”



Beats Music “It’s the first music subscription service done right.”



While Apple plans on keeping the Beats brand name alive, don’t be surprise if you see co-branded Apple headphones and portable speakers in the not-too-distant future. “We think there’s a huge opportunity for headphones…and speakers.” said Cue.



Jimmy Iovine



Beats Founder Jimmy Iovine



Image: Mashable, Lance Ulanoff



Both men described the music industry’s current situation as just this side of a Titanic-style disaster.



“Music is dying in the way that we know it,” said Cue and noted that while iTunes recently surpassed 35 billion downloads, the number of new music releases added this year is the smallest they’ve ever had.



“The record industry has dwindled a lot in the last 10 years,” said Iovine, adding, “The whole feel of the thing and the commentary on the music industry is so negative.”



Mossberg-Swisher-Cue-Iovine



From left to right: Walt Mossberg, Kara Swisher, Eddy Cue and Jimmy Iovine.



Image: Mashable, Lance Ulanoff



Both men see Beats curation model as a key to success, which, at least in Apple’s case is an about face for a company that showed no interest in the music subscription model. In fact Iovine recommends that other services, like Spotify, adopt the subscription model and fast. “Spotify is a very good service,” said Iovine, “but I think they need to push into curation as well. Because when you have these free services, it costs a fortune and it’s all being funded by venture capitalist.”



Cue and Iovine were not, however, ruling out the possibility of a free version of Beats music.



As for some of the nuts and bolts of the deal, Iovine and Dre will report to Eddy Cue for software services and Apple’s Phil Schiller for hardware. Iovine said he plans on spending a lot of time at Cupertino.



Source: http://mashable.com/2014/05/29/beats-deal-we/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=rss



Microsoft Smartwatch Will Continuously Measure Heart Rate: Report - Webmaster News

New Post has been published on http://www.outils-webmaster.eu/microsoft-smartwatch-will-continuously-measure-heart-rate-report/

Windows-smartwatch1 



Microsoft is planning to launch a new smartwatch that will be compatible with iOS, Android and Windows Phone devices, according to a new report.



The watch will reportedly have heart rate monitoring capabilities and a two-day battery life.



Citing “multiple sources with knowledge of the company’s plans,” Forbes reports the watch will rely on technology used by Xbox Kinect engineers to enable the watch to track its wearer’s heart rate at all times.



A spokesperson for Microsoft declined Mashable’s request to comment but a recently granted patent indicates Microsoft could indeed be working on such a device. That patent, first filed in 2012, depicts a smartwatch with heart-rate and fitness tracking capabilities.



The report comes one day after Samsung announced its plans for Simband, a fitness tracking wristband that will also be able to continuously monitor a user’s heartbeat.



It’s not known when the watch may be released but Forbes reports the company may be eyeing a summer launch date. Though Microsoft has made little mention of its strategy for wearables, the company announced earlier this year it would not be charging developers to use Windows on devices with screens smaller than 9 inches, including wearables. The first software development kit for Windows on Devices, Microsoft’s platform for connected devices (i.e. the “Internet of Things”), is planned for late Spring.



Have something to add to this story? Share it in the comments.



Source: http://mashable.com/2014/05/29/microsoft-smartwatch-report/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=rss



Picture of the Day: A Swirling Storm from Space - Webmaster News

New Post has been published on http://www.outils-webmaster.eu/picture-of-the-day-a-swirling-storm-from-space/

A SWIRLING TORNADO FROM SPACE



swirling-storm-from-space-iss-nasa



Photograph by NASA



Pre-Winter Tornado, Southwestern Australia (NASA, International Area Station, 03/29/14)



One of the Exploration 39 crew members aboard the International Space Station on March 29 made use of a 14mm lens on a digital still electronic camera to picture this pre-winter tornado found just off the coast of southwestern Australia. A solar variety panel on the orbital outpost is in the left side of the frame. [source]



In Staff Earth Observations (Chief Executive Officer), crewmembers on the International Area Station (ISS) photo the Earth from their distinct viewpoint located 200 miles (322 km) above the surface. Photos tape how the planet is changing with time, from human-caused changes like metropolitan development and storage tank building, to natural dynamic occasions such as cyclones, floods and volcanic eruptions.



A significant focus of Chief Executive Officer is to keep track of disaster response occasions in support of the International Disaster Charter (IDC). Chief Executive Officer images provides researchers on Earth with vital data to understand the planet from the point of view of the ISS. Crewmembers have been photographing Earth from space given that the very early Mercury objectives starting in 1961. The continuous images taken from the ISS guarantee this record continues to be unbroken. [source]



Exploration 39 was the 39th expedition to the International Space Station. It marked the first time the ISS had actually been under command of a Japanese astronaut, area veteran Koichi Wakata. After Exploration 21 in 2009 and Exploration 35 in 2013, it was just the 3rd time an ISS-crew has been led by a non-NASA or RSA team member.



NASA’s Marshall Area Air travel Center on Flickr



Source: http://twistedsifter.com/2014/05/swirling-storm-cloud-from-space/



Behind "Halt and Catch Fire": Compaq"s Rise to PC Domination - Webmaster News

New Post has been published on http://www.outils-webmaster.eu/behind-halt-and-catch-fire-compaqs-rise-to-pc-domination/

CatchfireA



For his day job, Brian McCullough is the CEO of ResumeWriters.com and has founded several companies in the online careers space. He started the Internet History Podcast as a crowd-sourced history project in February of this year. You can subscribe to the podcast here.



This Sunday, AMC is premiering a new original series called “Halt And Catch Fire.” Set in the early 1980s, it tells the story of a band of cowboy entrepreneurs and engineers who join the PC Wars by cloning an IBM machine and taking on Big Blue for control of the nascent personal computer industry.



AMC’s show is fictional, but it turns out, there is a true life story that is similar to this course of events, and it led to the creation of one of the greatest technology companies of all time, Compaq Computers.



Rod Canion was one of the co-founders of Compaq back in the early 80s, and he was there for the real world PC wars. He’s written a book about the time period, Open: How Compaq Ended IBM’s PC Domination and Helped Invent Modern Computing. In the interview below, I spoke to Rod about the book, the process of taking on Big Blue and cloning the IBM-PC, and how a series of incredible calculated gambles paid off to eventually build one of history’s most successful technology companies.



You can listen to the whole interview (embedded below), or just read this lightly edited (and heavily compressed) summation of the story below.



Rod Canion, Jim Harris and Bill Murto were mid-level managers at Texas Instruments. Converts to the still nascent personal computer revolution, the trio decided to strike off on their own and form a company to produce a product in an entirely new category of PC: the portable. Portable PC’s were not laptops because the technology did not exist yet to make computers that small and light. Portables were designed to be moved from desk to desk easily, were rugged enough to travel with, and at around 30 pounds or so, had the form factor of a large-ish suitcase.



The first mass-produced portable computer was the Osbourne 1, which had come out earlier in the year. The Kaypro was also an early pioneer in this category, but both systems had their own unique and proprietary architecture, which limited their popularity and adoption. The computer industry had been transformed by the introduction of the IBM-PC in August of 1981. The imprimatur of the IBM brand was enough to convince millions of people to join the micro-computer revolution and the IBM-PC soon became the best-selling computer in the world.



And so, the trio from Texas Instruments had decided that their big idea would be to create the first portable that was compatible with the IBM-PC.



Rod Canion, from the interview:





It was one of those things that I literally felt a chill down my spine. The idea came together because it was really a combination of things that made it work. The idea for a portable computer–there were a number of those already in the market–the only of reason we were actually even looking into that area was because (…) the first idea we had had, the venture capitalists decided not to fund it.



(…)



The morning of January the 8th, 1982 (…) I was going over the idea of a portable computer. How could we make one that was differentiated enough to make it worthwhile? (…) Not being able to get software developed for it was a killer. (…) Every computer ran different software. There were literally somewhere close to 300 different computer companies making new computers at the time. (…) That morning, the idea hit me that, what if we could make our computer run software that already was out there? That is, run the software for the product that was getting the most software and always getting the software first when the new one came out, and that was the IBM-PC.





Because the IBM-PC was so popular, most developers programmed for the PC first, and all the best applications and programs could be found on the PC. But because IBM had famously rushed the PC to market, its system was made up of off-the-shelf components and software. Anyone could purchase the same off-the-shelf hardware and software and “clone” an IBM-PC.



Again, Rod Canion:





Because IBM had done something they had never done before, which was bring a computer to market that wasn’t just totally protected from the copying standpoint. We didn’t want to copy their computer! We wanted to have access to the software that was written for their computer by other people.





The idea was to create a computer that was mostly like IBM-PC and mostly ran all the same software, but sold at a cheaper price point. The first company to pursue this strategy was Columbia Data Products, followed by Eagle Computer. But soon, most of the big names in the young computer industry (Xerox, Hewlett-Packard, Digital Equipment Corporation, Texas Instruments, and Wang) were all producing PC clones.



But all of these machines were only mostly PC-compatible. So, at best, they were DOS compatible. But there was no guarantee that each and every program or peripheral that ran on the IBM-PC could run on a clone. The key innovation that Canion, Harris and Murto planned to bring to market under the name Compaq Computer Corporation would be a no-compromises, 100% IBM-PC compatibility. This way, their portable computer would be able to run every single piece of software developed for the IBM-PC. They would be able to launch their machine into the largest and most vibrant software ecosystem of the time, and users would be able to use all their favorite programs on the road.





We couldn’t have done it if IBM hadn’t done exactly what they did because nobody else… Apple certainly wouldn’t have stood for us to make a product that ran their software. They had enough protection on it to prevent that, as did all the others. IBM–the best one to pick–also happened to be the only one that wasn’t protected and it was because of this sort of strange thing. They didn’t believe much in the market, they just rushed a one-year project to get to market.





Compaq lined up venture financing–most famously from a young John Doerr at Kleiner Perkins. With this money, they quickly hired as many young programmers and engineers as they could, being careful not to poach from or anger their former employer. The key to cloning the IBM-PC was to reverse engineer the BIOS, which was the one piece of the machine that was proprietary IBM technology. But that was a tricky proposition. The BIOS had been published in the user manual, but anyone who had even looked at the BIOS code couldn’t work on rewriting it for fear of tainting the project. Running afoul of IBM’s intellectual property would doom the project.





There were actually a few companies that went in and just started copying out of the manual and they ended up getting sued and shut down.



(…)



We knew there was a way to do it. We believed we could do it legally. We didn’t just assume things. We hired the best intellectual property attorneys we could find and used their strict guidance to help us do the reverse engineering very carefully.



(…)



What our lawyers told us was that, not only can you not use it [the copyrighted code] anybody that’s even looked at it–glanced at it–could taint the whole project. (…) We had two software people. One guy read the code and generated the functional specifications. So, it was like, reading hieroglyphics. Figuring out what it does, then writing the specification for what it does. Then, once he’s got that specification completed, he sort of hands it through a doorway or a window to another person who’s never seen IBM’s code, and he takes that spec and starts from scratch and writes our own code to be able to do the exact same function.





With a small team and a budget that was an infinitesimal fraction of IBM’s yearly revenues, the Compaq team succeeded in their task in 9 short months.



In November of 1982, the Compaq Portable was launched as the first 100% PC compatible machine in the world. Compaq’s machine was so good, in fact, that it proved to be more compatible–especially more backwards-compatible with older software and peripherals–than IBM’s own machines were. One reviewer said that Compaq was more IBM compatible than even IBM was.





[We had] just a bull-headed commitment to making all the software run. We were shocked when we found out none of our competitors had done it to the same degree. We could speculate on why they had stopped short of complete compatibility: It was hard. It took a long time. And there was a natural rush to get to market. People wanted to be first. There was only one thing for us: we didn’t have a product if we couldn’t run the IBM-PC software. And if you didn’t run all of it, how would anyone be confident enough to buy your computer, if they didn’t know they were always going to be able to run new software? We took it very, very seriously.





The Compaq Portable was immediately and wildly successful. In its first year of sales, Compaq sold 53,000 machines, generating sales of $111 million and making Compaq the fastest start-up to hit the $100 million mark, that quickly in its existence. IBM eventually launched a portable of it’s own, but again, the Compaq models proved to be more compatible, as well as more rugged and reliable. Compaq machines eventually outsold IBM portables 10-to-1.



Flush with this success, Compaq attacked IBM on its own turf, launching a range of full-functioning desktop computers. When IBM was slow to embrace Intel’s next generation 386 chip, Compaq seized the moment and launched the first 386 system, thereby leaping to the head of the technological pack. Building off its cloning strategy, Compaq was a leader in moving the computer industry to a new standard, based upon the original IBM-PC paradigm, but no-longer led by IBM. When IBM retrenched and tried to enact a closed, proprietary system with the PS/2 line, Compaq led the way in defending the clone model that IBM was attempting to eradicate. Instead of the “IBM standard” computers moved toward the “industry standard” that became the PC we remember from the late 80s and early 90s. This standard is largely remembered as the “Wintel” duopoly (for Windows software and Intel chips) but a forgotten third leg of this stool is Compaq, which did more than any other manufacturer to ensure the survival and dominance of the industry standard model that had grown out of the IBM-PC, but was no longer beholden to it.





We were really almost the magician in the back room guiding it [the industry]. (…) Backward-compatibility, that was the key technology to begin to stop IBM’s advance with their new PS/2. I mean, they sold millions of those. People look back now and say, “Oh, that was a bad idea.” Well, it was viewed as a great idea at the time! And was about to succeed. (…) All the other computer companies were buying licenses from IBM and beginning to build PS/2 compatibles. (…) It [was] gonna be an IBM-dominated and controlled ballgame. We couldn’t accept that.





Heck, as Rod points out, it’s a little known fact that the version of DOS that was eventually used on most 100% IBM compatible computers was a version that Compaq licensed back to Microsoft after reverse engineering that as well. So, it can be argued that Compaq played a forgotten but key role in Microsoft’s eventual rise to world domination.





It’s one of those strange things. We kept it secret because it seemed like it would just muddy the water for our competitors… for Microsoft. (…) There was a lot of interest in, well, let’s give this version back to Microsoft, and let it become their standard. From Microsoft’s standpoint, all of their computer companies that were using MS-DOS wanted a compatible version. (…) We were recognized as by-far the most compatible. So, we were giving Microsoft something their customers were asking for. So, we were able to license back to them… Microsoft does whatever they do with it and gets it ready to become their standard version of Microsoft [sic] and then begins to sell it to all the other computer companies.





It’s somewhat forgotten today, but Compaq was perhaps the biggest winner of the original PC wars. By 1986, it became the the youngest-ever firm to break into the Fortune 500. In 1987, Compaq hit the $1 billion revenue mark, becoming the fastest ever company to reach that milestone. By the late 90s and early 2000s, Compaq was the largest PC manufacturer in the world, before it was absorbed by Hewlett Packard. Today the Compaq brand is the lower-end representative of HP’s computer business. And IBM is no longer even a PC manufacturer.





Everybody always thinks of intellectual property as building an immovable wall that your competitors can’t come in. And that just wasn’t the way it worked in an industry standard environment. (…) When the industry standard began to develop, it threw a twist into it that nobody really got for a long time. Fortunately for Compaq, we “got it” because we were at the heart of it being created. (…) We were driving [the industry] instead of trying to figure out what was going on around us. And IBM never got that part of it.





One part of the history that AMC’s new show gets right is that in the early 80s, Texas really was a hub for technology innovation, especially in the PC manufacturing realm. Silicon Prairie is the cute branding term. How exactly did that happen?





You know, a lot of people have asked that question, and it’s hard to put your finger on it. (…) It dawned on me one day that, at the time, of the five companies that at one time had been in the top two or three PC companies… of the top five, three had been from Texas! Apple was from the west coast. IBM from the east coast. But the first one had been Tandy. They were the leader for a while before IBM came along. And then, Compaq came along. (…) And then Dell came along behind us, using the foundation we had built. (…) There’s a certain risk-taking gene almost that runs through a lot of Texans.





Is Rod planning on watching Halt And Catch Fire?





I have not looked at the whole episode. I’ve seen the trailer for it. I am gonna watch it. It looks pretty exciting. It may actually be as exciting as the real thing.





Source: http://mashable.com/2014/05/29/halt-and-catch-fire-amc-compaq/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=rss



Samsung Shows Off Simband, a Futuristic Health Tracker - Webmaster News

New Post has been published on http://www.outils-webmaster.eu/samsung-shows-off-simband-a-futuristic-health-tracker/

Sami-bandSamsung’s



Hoping to take the lead in the race to build the ultimate wearable device, Samsung offered a sneak peak Wednesday at its next-generation health-tracking wristband, known as the Simband.



Using different wavelengths of light beamed at your skin, Simband will track multiple measures of its wearer’s health continuously, such as blood pressure, respiration, heart rate, hydration level, and the amount of carbon dioxide in your blood.



The one Simband demonstrated on stage at Samsung’s “Voice of the Body” event in San Francisco showed a continuous stream of heartbeat information, seismograph-style, such as one might see on a hospital-grade ECG machine. A “shuttle battery” will allow you to wear the device 24 hours a day, charging it on your wrist while you sleep.



The still-speculative Simband is designed around a new open software platform called SAMI, for Samsung Architecture Multimodal Interactions. The company described it as one health platform to rule them all, bringing in information from non-Samsung health trackers too. Samsung says it will release SAMI APIs for developers by the end of the year.



“We believe that once we’re working from a common platform, sensors will become more accurate, and will be brought to market more quickly,” said Ram Fish, president of digital health for Samsung Electronics. He added that SAMI will exist as a “compliment” to Samsung’s already existing S Health platform.



samsung SAMI



Young Sohn, president and CSO of Samsung electronics, announces the open-source SAMI platform.



No price or release date was offered for what was described as an “investigational device.” Given that Apple is said to be announcing a health-tracking platform called HealthBook next week, the timing of Samsung’s announcement suggests the company is staking its claim to the next-generation wearable space first.



Source: http://mashable.com/2014/05/28/samsung-simband/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=rss



Apple"s iWatch Could Have a Round Face - Webmaster News

New Post has been published on http://www.outils-webmaster.eu/apples-iwatch-could-have-a-round-face/

Iwatch 



As Apple season kicks into high gear, so do more frequent reports about the mythical iWatch.



The most recent report has nothing to do with release date, price or specific functionality, but it does have to do with a key component of any wearable device: design.



According to Brian Blair, an analyst at Rosenblatt Securities, the iWatch will have a round face. Business Insider shared Blair’s findings, which the analyst got from “supply chain sources” during a recent trip to Taiwan.



Blair’s sources say that like the Moto 360, the iWatch will have a round face — thus looking more like a regular watch. Apparently, however, the design will be “slimmer” than the approach Motorola is taking with its Android Wear-based smartwatch.



Motorola said that one of the reasons it went for a round design, as opposed to square, was the extra usable surface area a sphere offers on a wrist. The biggest factor preventing most smartwatch makers from doing rounded screens already has largely been about the design of the screen and other components. Apple, more than any other company, is adroit at fitting components into a specific design profile, so the idea that the company might go in that direction isn’t surprising.



Blair says there will be various “models” of the iWatch, which could mean distinct versions for men and women. His sources also reportedly tell him the watch is supposed to go into production in July/August. If true, that could mean the iWatch could debut as early as late-September or early-October.



Of course, all of this is just conjecture from unnamed supply chain sources and we should take all of it with very large grains of salt. Apple deals with hundreds of component makers and, as a result, most supply-chain rumors are notoriously inaccurate.



Still, when it comes to Apple — smoke often does indicate fire. Frankly, the last time we can remember such sustained buzz for an unannounced Apple product was with the original iPad.



Have something to add to this story? Share it in the comments.



Source: http://mashable.com/2014/05/28/iwatch-round-face-rumor/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=rss