by Jemima Kiss on (#5176)
China’s 115 million upper middle class women are driving ecommerce and social media in China, outspending their US equivalents by double on the biggest shopping days of the year Continue reading...
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Link | http://feeds.theguardian.com/ |
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Updated | 2024-11-25 11:15 |
by Alex Hern on (#5178)
Meet DAR-1. He might not look like much, but robots like him are showing startling new ways that humans can interact with machinesIn still pictures, DAR–1 (pronounced ‘Darwin’) doesn’t look like the kind of robot that might encourage empathy.The machine’s six spindly legs lend it an uncanny arachnoid appearance, and with no case for modesty’s sake, the exposed circuitry doesn’t hide its electrical heart. Continue reading...
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by Benjamin Lee on (#50ZH)
App-users at the SXSW festival in Austin have been unwittingly mimicking the plot of Alex Garland’s new film, by finding themselves quizzed by a gorgeous robot-in-disguise Continue reading...
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by Stuart Dredge on (#50YS)
Social network’s updated guidelines also cover self-harm, bullying and harassment, violence and graphic contentFacebook has updated its community standards guidelines to provide “more detail and clarity†on the content it allows or bans on its service.The social network stressed in a blog post that its policies are not changing, but that “we have heard from people that it would be helpful to provide more clarity and examplesâ€.“When this is the case, we expect people to clearly indicate their purpose, which helps us better understand why they shared that content.We allow humour, satire or social commentary related to these topics, but we may ask Page owners to associate their name and Profile with any content that is insensitive, even if that content does not violate our policies.â€â€œWe remove photographs of people displaying genitals or focusing in on fully exposed buttocks. We also restrict some images of female breasts if they include the nipple, but we always allow photos of women actively engaged in breastfeeding or showing breasts with post-mastectomy scarring. We also allow photographs of paintings, sculptures and other art that depicts nude figures.â€â€œWe also remove content that expresses support for groups that are involved in the violent, criminal or hateful behaviour mentioned above. Supporting or praising leaders of those same organisations, or condoning their violent activities, is not allowed.†Continue reading...
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by Keith Stuart on (#50WF)
The place to talk about games and other things that matter Continue reading...
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by Toby Moses on (#50TY)
PS4, Xbox One, 2K Games, cert: 16 Continue reading...
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by Andy Robertson on (#50SK)
Xbox One, Xbox 360, Frontier, cert: 12
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by Eleanor Dallaway on (#50RZ)
Over the past 20 years, data analysis has become one of the primary factors for success in sport. We look at ten of the greatest sporting triumphs to date, made possible through the use of data analysis
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by Eleanor Dallaway on (#50RX)
Over the past 20 years, data analysis has become one of the primary factors for success in sport. We look at ten of the greatest sporting triumphs to date, made possible through the use of data analysis
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by Rory Summerley on (#50RD)
Wii U, Nintendo, Cert: 3 Continue reading...
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by Jemima Kiss on (#4ZJ0)
The American architect’s pioneering design principles are influencing a new generation of digital designers are reinterpreting his work for the mobile era Continue reading...
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by Alex Hern on (#4ZHE)
David Chang, the founder of the Momofuku chain, lays the blame for worldwide gastronomical monoculture squarely at the internet’s feetThere’s many things the internet can be blamed for, from revenge porn to Grumpy Cat, but celebrity chef David Chang has added a new item to the list.“Everything tastes the same,†he says, “and it’s the internet’s fault.†Continue reading...
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by Alex Hern on (#4ZHG)
The author’s manifesto for creator-owned comics shook up that industry, and now he has set his sights on TV Continue reading...
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by Rhik Samadder on (#4Z92)
On-demand apps promise to meet all your needs. Rhik Samadder accesses the world under his thumb – and meets the real people behind the service economy Continue reading...
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by Carole Cadwalladr on (#4Z6R)
Jack Cator was 16 when he started a website that allows users internet anonymity. Nine years on, HideMyAss! is a multi-million-pound global business Continue reading...
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by Martin Love on (#4Z3C)
Suzuki’s tough little Jimny can cope with the roughest of conditions. Just don’t drive it on the road… Continue reading...
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by Jemima Kiss in Austin, Texas on (#4YSB)
The hectic, eclectic Texas arts festival gets busier every year – and it’s one of the best places in the world to get a preview of the future Continue reading...
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by Rupert Neate on (#4YDH)
Meerkat has taken the internet by storm since it launched two weeks ago. The Guardian tracked 'Mr Meerkat' - aka Ben Rubin, the founder and chief executive of the app – down to the San Francisco basement where his team of 11 people built Meerkat in just eight weeks. It's now expected to be 'the app of the SXSW festival'. In an interview streamed live on Meerkat on Thursday 12 March, Rubin told us what it was like to watch his app go viral Continue reading...
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by Rupert Neate in San Francisco on (#4Y8Z)
Ben Rubin’s mobile video service, which lets Twitter users take their viewers with them, has been the talk of Silicon Valley as investment offers pour in Continue reading...
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by Joanna Walters in New York on (#4Y84)
Despite service being very slow, Cubans flock to cultural centre in Havana and welcome a rare source of open-access internet service Continue reading...
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by Zoe Williams on (#4XHP)
‘Something has gone very right with the cabin design – you can drive for hours without needing a break’ Continue reading...
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by Lauren Gambino in Los Angeles on (#4X2R)
Wisconsin law says those aged 10 and older must be charged as adults for severe crimes, but an appeal to move case to juvenile court is possible Continue reading...
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by Ben Child on (#4WP2)
With the rumour mill working overtime, we sort the wheat from the chaff about Episode VIII and the first Star Wars spin-off film, Rogue One Continue reading...
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by Rupert Neate in San Francisco on (#4WJY)
Reddit interim CEO’s $16m lawsuit exposes pervasive sexism that hinders promotion of women in technology and venture capital, reporters say Continue reading...
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by Stephanie Kirchgaessner in Rome on (#4WG6)
Paduan engineer predicts ‘high-quality vending machines’ using fresh products will become ubiquitous – but traditionalists are dismissive even before unveiling Continue reading...
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by Stuart Dredge on (#4WG8)
Civilisation creator’s latest focuses on building starships and conquering the galaxy, and is perfectly tuned for lapsed gamers who loved his earlier work Continue reading...
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by Stuart Dredge on (#4W6N)
Hi ho, hi ho, it’s off to the App Store the famous fairytale goes, with the latest app from a children’s publisher that prioritises reading over digital gimmicks Continue reading...
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by Nick Gillett on (#4W4J)
Wii U & 3DS; Nintendo; £TBA Continue reading...
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by Dave Johnson on (#4W4M)
Why the gold Apple Watch costs $10,000, the US president reads fan mail on Jimmy Kimmel and a horse’s tale from a south London charity Continue reading...
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by Staff and agencies on (#4W4P)
New biography of the late Apple co-founder reveals closeness of the relationship between him and his successorSteve Jobs rejected an offer of a liver transplant from Tim Cook in 2009, a new biography of the late Apple co-founder reveals.Despite becoming increasingly ill from cancer, Jobs angrily turned down the proposal by the man who would go on to run Apple after he died.His relationship with Iger had become so strong that Steve had wanted Iger to join the Apple board, which Iger couldn’t do for fiduciary reasons. In fact, because of their friendship, Iger also turned down an invitation from Sergey Brin, Larry Page, and Eric Schmidt to be on Google’s board. “He told me he’d get jealous,†says Iger. Continue reading...
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by Staff and agencies on (#4W1Y)
Minority shareholders in Sweden’s Aspiro accept £36m offer as competition in the streaming market intensifiesJay-Z has won control of a Swedish music streaming company after more than 90% of shareholders accepted the star’s $54m (£36m) offer.A spokesman for Project Panther Bidco, a company controlled by the 45-year-old rapper, said on Friday that all the conditions for completing the acquisition of Aspiro had now been met.Related: Tidal takes on Spotify with lossless-quality streaming music Continue reading...
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by Samuel Gibbs on (#4W1A)
Campaigners call for ban on Mattel doll that uses voice-recognition technology to respond to children’s questions – and send recordings to third partiesA “smart†Barbie doll that can have “conversations†with children should not go on sale, privacy advocates have said.Billed as the world’s first “interactive dollâ€, the toy uses voice recognition technology similar to that employed by Apple’s Siri and Google’s Now digital assistants to understand what a child is saying to Barbie and respond.Related: Samsung rejects concern over 'Orwellian' privacy policy Continue reading...
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by Julia Kollewe on (#4VX6)
Electronic wristbands use customers’ heartbeats to verify their identities and could mean the end of passwords and pin codes Continue reading...
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by Hannah Jane Parkinson on (#4VW9)
El Risitas, the ‘Apple engineer’ from a clip poking fun at the new MacBook has gone viral. But who is he really? Where did the meme originate from? And can it unseat Hitler?Shoulders shaking and wiping tears from his eyes, the Apple MacBook engineer with a thick moustache screeches with laughter. He straightens up and slaps a table. “Wait! It gets better!†he cries. “It was so thin the battery wouldn’t fit inside! That’s all our customers need! I got promoted!â€Move over Hitler: there’s a new parody video star in town. Of course, the guy in the video currently pushing at 1.8million views and 20,000 likes on YouTube, reduced to a quivering wreck by Apple’s new flagship product having “NO USB PORTS!â€, isn’t actually an employee of Tim Cook. Continue reading...
by Keith Stuart and Jordan Erica Webber on (#4VVJ)
Bungie’s first-person shooter took best game, but the night belonged to smaller studios such as Ustwo, creators of smartphone puzzler Monument ValleyActivision’s online sci-fi shooter Destiny picked up best game at the Bafta video game awards on Thursday night, while The Last of Us: Left Behind triumphed in the Story and Performance categories.However, it was very much an a night for the smaller games studios.
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by By Evan Schwarten on (#4VK4)
iiNet board backs bid from rival, which would make TPG Australia’s second biggest internet provider behind Telstra
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by Samuel Gibbs on (#4VGZ)
Fitbit’s latest fitness-tracking watch has constant heart rate monitoring, GPS and can count stair climbs, but is let down by data analysisThe Fitbit Surge is a top of the range “fitness superwatchâ€, with constant heart rate tracking and GPS but does it really deserve that self-proclaimed “super†prefix?The premium wrist-worn fitness tracker from Fitbit, one of the first companies to make a smartphone-connected device, the Surge claims to be able to do it all, and with a battery that lasts for days.Related: The future of wearable technology is not wearables – it's analysing the dataPros: solid battery life, constant heart rate monitoring, altimeter, accurate step tracking, easy to read screenCons: occasional syncing issues, poor data analysis, erratic heart rate during run, chunky, poor sleep tracking Continue reading...
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by Keith Stuart on (#4VE1)
Playtonic is a new studio, but its staff helped create some of the greatest games of the 90s. Now they want to bring the glory days back with Project UkuleleBetween 1994 and 2002, there wasn’t another game studio in the world like Rare. Founded by brothers Tim and Chris Stamper and co-owned by Nintendo, the developer found a way to combine idiosyncratic British wit with the rich design sensibilities of the Super Mario creators. The result was some of the decade’s most beautiful and engrossing games. The Super Nintendo classic Donkey Kong Country, the seminal console shooter Golden Eye, the expansive 3D platformer Banjo Kazooie, the raucous Conker’s Bad Fur Day... these games combined extraordinarily detailed worlds, lush soundtracks and memorable characters. They sold in their millions. Rare was loved unconditionally.Then things changed. Continue reading...
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by Dominic Rushe in New York on (#4TCE)
Last month FCC voted to approve new powers to oversee broadband internet after Obama called for regulators to maintain a free and open internetAfter a year of acrimonious wrangling, threats and an unprecedented online campaign, the Federal Communications Commission on Thursday finally released its new rules on regulating the internet.The 313-page document is now being scrutinised by an army of communications lawyers as the cable and telecoms industry considers whether – or more likely when – to sue the regulator in the hopes of overturning the new rules. Continue reading...
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by Samuel Gibbs on (#4SNB)
Google’s vision of a cloud-computing future has another champion, the £800 Chromebook Pixel 2, with a high resolution screen and solid aluminium bodyGoogle has launched a new premium Chromebook – the Pixel 2. It is faster than its predecessor and has a high resolution screen but it raises the question: does anyone really want to pay £800 for a glorified web browser.Google’s Chromebooks are designed to be a fast, cheap, portal to the internet costing under £250 and providing a browsing experience far better than similarly priced PCs. They are essentially a computer that’s just a web browser, capable of doing anything you can through the browser but not much more.In addition to being sharp, the Pixel’s display boasts rich colours and wide viewing angles, even despite the touchscreen’s glossy finish. The visibility is so good, in fact, that when my seatmate on a recent flight asked me to open the window shade, I could make out the contents of the screen, even with sunlight streaming in next to me.About the battery life: it’s out-of-this-world good. The last Pixel was a disappointment in that regard, and most other Chromebooks are serviceable, but not stupendous. Google rates this Pixel as good for 12 hours, and in our own battery test, it clocked in at 14.The limitations are the opposite of the new MacBook: there’s plenty of processing power inside the Pixel, but there are some software limitations. Forget video editing or anything resembling heavy-duty gaming, for instance; there just aren’t apps for those things on Chrome OS. For the basic tasks and mundanities we all slog through each day, though, Chrome OS is now more than enough. The biggest downside at this point is the local storage. Google really, really wants you to use Drive, so it gives you 1TB of online storage but only 32GB of hard drive space. You’ll fill that with photos and torrented copies of The Hobbit movies way too quickly.The standard Pixel 2 has lots of muscle, but there’s an even stronger kid on the block. If you really want to be the biggest Chromebook on the block, Google actually makes a Chromebook Pixel 2 LS version. Google says the “LS†stands for “ludicrous speed,†and that version packs an Intel Core i7 processor, 16GB of RAM and 64GB of storage. Why would you ever need that kind of power on a Chromebook, which runs and stores most everything in the cloud? I’m sure a developer somewhere will figure it out.The new Chromebook Pixel is an improvement over its predecessor in every important way—it’s the best kind of upgrade, the kind that keeps what worked about the previous model and upgrades everything else.It’s still the same kind of computer the first Pixel was, though. Its quality is excellent, but its operating system combined with its price makes it a nonsensical purchase for most people. Continue reading...
by Tara Conlan on (#4T2W)
Sunday evening show offers an aerial take on hit Robot Wars with teams building flying machines before pitting them against rivals Continue reading...
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by John Plunkett on (#4T0F)
Tony Hall says Make It Digital initiative, giving about 1m coding devices to 11-year-olds, will do for coding what the Micro did for home computing in the 80s Continue reading...
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by Stuart Dredge on (#4T0H)
‘Personal coding device’ will be given to one million British schoolchildren in the autumn, with the hope of stimulating their interest in computer programmingThe BBC’s new Micro Bit programmable device is designed to complement computers like the Raspberry Pi rather than compete with them, according to people involved with the project.The broadcaster is planning to give one million units of the device away in the autumn as part of its Make It Digital initiative, including one for every child in year seven of the British education system – ie 11-12 year-olds.Related: Coding at school: a parent's guide to England's new computing curriculumRelated: 'Great big poo balls!' What it's like making a Kano computer with your kidsRelated: Kids coding at school: 'When you learn computing, you're thinking about thinking' Continue reading...
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by Hannah Jane Parkinson on (#4SSW)
Social network responds to petition from anti-body shaming group to get rid of status option and double-chin emojiFacebook has removed the “fat†option from its list of “feelings†available as part of its status feature, apparently in response to a Change.org petition which gathered almost 17,000 signatures.Playwright Catherine Weingarten and a group campaigning against negative body image, Endangered Bodies, argued that “fat†is not, in fact, a feeling, and that the status option – along with an illustrative emoji face with a double-chin – was derisive to overweight people and damaging to those struggling with body image. Continue reading...
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by Samuel Gibbs on (#4SR2)
Social network revises usage policy to ban users from posting nude or sexual images without the subject’s consentTwitter has taken steps to stop the posting of “revenge porn†on the site and to prevent the spread of stolen nude photos, such as those of Jennifer Lawrence.The social network has updated its rules governing the content that users can share, so consent is now required from the subject of the pictures. Continue reading...
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by Staff and agencies on (#4SR4)
Chinese ecommerce group may be making a defensive move against rival Tencent, which owns WeChat messaging appAlibaba is investing $200m in Snapchat, propelling the notional value of the photo-messaging app to a stellar $15bn (£10bn).The funding from the Chinese ecommerce company, first reported by Bloomberg, means that Snapchat’s worth has increased by $5bn in a matter of months. It dwarfs the $3bn offered by Facebook for the company in late 2013.Related: Snapchat adds entertainment and news with Discover Continue reading...
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by Tom Chatfield on (#4SJH)
Wearable technology is fleetingly entertaining, but when get into our cars we take our lives in our hands
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by Patrick Wintour Political editor on (#4SH2)
by Owen Bowcott Legal affairs correspondent on (#4SHK)
Commissioner who oversees interceptions says figure does not represent ‘significant institutional overuse of communications data powers’ Continue reading...