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by Nicola Davis on (#AXN3)
A new device called Icaros pairs with a VR headset to give physical activity a digital edgeNeed a spot of exercise but can’t face the gym? Love gaming but not the couch? Icaros could be the answer. Devised by German design company Hyve, the contraption is paired with a VR headset to bring physical activity to a virtual experience.“You are balancing your centre of mass,†explains senior innovation designer Johannes Scholl, who came up with the idea for his industrial design diploma thesis in 2012. “When you are doing a steep decline, for example, it really goes into your shoulders, into your chest muscles. When you do left and right turns it is pretty exhausting to your abs and to your lower back muscles.†Continue reading...
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| Link | http://www.theguardian.com/ |
| Feed | http://www.theguardian.com/technology/rss |
| Updated | 2026-05-04 22:02 |
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by Samuel Gibbs on (#AXN5)
With good sound and 24bit support, M2L Fidelio headphones work nicely with iPhone and iPad – but nothing elseThe first Lightning connector-equipped headphones for the iPhone aren’t made by Apple – they’re a pair of Philips with excellent sound but major downsides.
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by Jemima Kiss on (#AXN7)
Google, Facebook and Apple are improving their news output by doing deals with cash-strapped media firms, but this raises fears of a conflict of interestWhat should we make of recent overtures by tech firms to the news industry? Is this good news for news, citizens and the robustness of the tech industry?The industry has always been defined by technology, from its Gutenbergian roots to the digital, social and mobile journalism of today, but it is the accelerated pace of change that is now a greater challenge. In large media organisations, where institutional change is difficult, many have been slow to understand the potential and threat of technology – which can provide new audiences and formats, yet also unprecedented competition. It is a thrilling, if unsettling, time. Continue reading...
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by Sam Thielman in New York on (#AW9S)
Five subreddits – including r/fatpeoplehate and r/hamplanethatred – removed from social news site as site chiefs say: ‘We’re banning behavior, not ideas’The “front page of the internet†now has less hate. Social news site Reddit announced on Wednesday that the company would be banning subreddits – areas of the site dedicated to a single topic – “that allow their communities to use the subreddit as a platform to harass individuals when moderators don’t take action.â€â€œWe’re banning behavior, not ideas,†the post said. Five subreddits were removed: r/fatpeoplehate and r/hamplanethatred, both of which are about hating overweight people; r/transfags and r/neofag, which target the gaming community; and r/shitniggerssay. Most of the subreddits being banned are fairly small, Reddit leadership said: the only subreddit being banned with more than 5,000 subscribers was r/fatpeoplehate. Continue reading...
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by Suzanne McGee on (#AW68)
Abandoning a six-figure Silicon Valley job to start from scratch could be a pipe dream. Or it could be a rare opportunity in a ‘place where they reward failure’“This might be one of the worst decisions I’ve ever made in my life,†said Thomas So. On the other hand, it could be a risk that pays off big time, the 24-year-old calculates. Last month, So walked away from a programming job at a Silicon Valley startup paying him a six-figure salary, leaving behind stock options worth (he calculates) millions more, to join a startup that at that point was being funded with cash from its founders’ credit cards.Nor was he alone. Mike Eidlin, one of the four co-founders of bookmarq, a fledgling social networking site whose goal is to link booklovers worldwide, abandoned his fledgling career as an investment banker with Citigroup in Tokyo to return to the San Francisco Bay area, and re-start his career from scratch. Continue reading...
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by Guardian Staff on (#4KPS)
Apple unveils more details of the much anticipated Apple Watch and a new, thinner MacBook Continue reading...
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by Samuel Gibbs in Berlin and Alex Hern on (#4K74)
Apple’s smallest laptop increases in screen size but shrinks in body size with new reversible USB type-C ports
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by James Bridle on (#4GJP)
New customers of the e-reading service will have to abide by different data laws Continue reading...
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by Associated Press on (#4FJZ)
Hillary Clinton is in good company when it comes to the use of unofficial email accounts in office, even as she faces criticism from potential rivals Continue reading...
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by Samuel Gibbs on (#2YZ3)
Social network finally rolls out a contingency plan for if the worst happens allowing a trusted person to take control of a deceased’s accountFacebook is letting users in the US designate a “legacy contact†that can take control of an account after their death.
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by Stuart Dredge on (#2YYF)
New report pitches future of app-like album releases and monthly subscriptions for fans, with the likes of Spotify and Apple as middlemenMusic streams on services like Spotify are about to start counting towards the UK’s official albums chart, but could streaming ultimately change the way albums are packaged and paid for by fans?A new report by music industry consultancy firm Midia Research hopes so. It pitches a future of “interactive artist subscriptions†where albums look more like apps, and where fans pay artists a small amount every month for access to their music – with streaming services acting as the middlemen.Related: Streaming music: what next for Apple, YouTube, Spotify… and musicians?One solution is artist subscriptions within streaming services, with users paying a small monthly fee – say $/€1 – for a month’s worth of artist content.With the cost added directly to a monthly music subscription, users would get access to a curated channel of artist content including all the features of 360° music products. Artist subscriptions should, just like standalone apps, be immersive, programmed and interactive experiences, telling the artist’s story to new fans and enriching it for existing fans.Related: The future of music sales is here. So how CAN the artists make it pay? Continue reading...
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by Jack Schofield on (#2YNG)
Robert needs a new phone, as the battery in his Huawei Y300 doesn’t last long enough anymore. He wants a robust, cheap smartphone with a good battery life that he can buy outright – but Jack Schofield thinks he should wait ...
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by Alex Hern on (#2YJM)
Customers told their bookings have been cancelled after exchange rate error led to first and business class tickets cut to fraction of usual costUnited Airlines has cancelled the reservations of thousands of customers who took advantage of a pricing glitch to save thousands of pounds on first class tickets.The glitch, first spotted by money saving site DansDeals, caused first and business class tickets sold through the airline’s Danish website to be drastically mispriced. For instance, a round trip from Heathrow to New York for two, which costs £6118.92 on the British site, was sold for just 974 Danish Krone, less than £100. Continue reading...
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by Samuel Gibbs on (#2Y69)
Third-generation device generates good quality video for a reasonable length of time, but lacks precision control without the custom controllerThe Parrot Bebop is a camera drone with a real focus on recording video and some seriously impressive image stabilisation. It is Parrot’s third generation full-sized flying quatrocopter and is aiming to fly into a sweet spot in the market.The device is a half-way house between a drone designed for carrying a large camera, such as those often used in TV shows like Top Gear and the toy drones intended to entertain. A “prosumer droneâ€, it lands at the fun end of the scale, very much for those looking to make home movies rather than television documentaries, but that’s no bad thing.Related: Parrot Minidrone Rolling Spider review: an indoor drone for big kidsRelated: Parrot Minidrones Jumping Sumo review: rolling, jumping robotRelated: Parrot Zik 2.0 review: wireless headphones designed by Philippe StarckPros: super smooth video, easy to set up, robust enough to survive a crash, fun to fly, two batteries in the box, GPSCons: graining in low-light conditions, difficult to control precisely, legislation on drone use restrictive, expensive for a toy Continue reading...
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by Dominic Rushe in Washington on (#2XFY)
Senate commerce committee chair John Thune said proposals were being pushed an ‘increasingly imperious president’ and would stifle innovationThe US government is on a path to have “virtually unlimited power†to regulate every aspect of the internet, the chairman of the powerful Senate commerce committee said Wednesday.Republican senator John Thune slammed the Federal Communications Commission’s (FCC) plans to introduce sweeping new powers to regulate the broadband industry, saying they would stifle innovation and create a “Mother may I†system for regulating the internet. Continue reading...
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