Kinect meets Minecraft, animates a giant statue in your honor (video)

This isn’t the first time Kinect and Minecraft have crossed paths — scavenge the ‘nets and you’ll find plenty of user interface examples. What Nathan Viniconis has done, however, is different. What you’re looking at above is rendered instantly by way of using what the Kinect sees and constructing an in-world monument in real time. Not only that, but the project has now evolved into a sort of stop motion animation. It’s pretty impressive, even for those who have little to no idea what Minecraft is. All the nitty gritty details are available on the project page. The video, of course, is after the break.

Continue reading Kinect meets Minecraft, animates a giant statue in your honor (video)

Kinect meets Minecraft, animates a giant statue in your honor (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 21 Jan 2011 20:11:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung has a new Gem

Samsung reveals a new Android phone and some feature details, but tells nothing of a carrier or a release date.

Originally posted at Android Atlas

Android source code, Java, and copyright infringement: what’s going on?

So it’s been a fun day of armchair code forensics and legal analysis on the web after Florian Mueller published a piece this morning alleging Google directly copied somewhere between 37 and 44 Java source files in Android. That’s of course a major accusation, seeing as Oracle is currently suing Google for patent and copyright infringement related to Java, and it prompted some extremely harsh technical rebuttals, like this one from ZDNet and this one from Ars Technica. The objections in short: the files in question are test files, aren’t important, probably don’t ship with Android, and everyone is making a hullabaloo over nothing.

We’ll just say this straight out: from a technical perspective, these objections are completely valid. The files in question do appear to be test files, some of them were removed, and there’s simply no way of knowing if any of them ended up in a shipping Android handset. But — and this is a big but — that’s just the technical story. From a legal perspective, it seems very likely that these files create increased copyright liability for Google, because the state of our current copyright law doesn’t make exceptions for how source code trees work, or whether or not a script pasted in a different license, or whether these files made it into handsets. The single most relevant legal question is whether or not copying and distributing these files was authorized by Oracle, and the answer clearly appears to be “nope” — even if Oracle licensed the code under the GPL. Why? Because somewhere along the line, Google took Oracle’s code, replaced the GPL language with the incompatible Apache Open Source License, and distributed the code under that license publicly. That’s all it takes — if Google violated the GPL by changing the license, it also infringed Oracle’s underlying copyright. It doesn’t matter if a Google employee, a script, a robot, or Eric Schmidt’s cat made the change — once you’ve created or distributed an unauthorized copy, you’re liable for infringement.*

Why does this matter? Because we’re hearing that Oracle is dead-set on winning this case and eventually extracting a per-handset royalty on every Android handset shipped. In that context, “those files aren’t important!” isn’t a winning or persuasive argument — and the more these little infringements add up, the worse things look for Google. Whether or not these files are a “smoking gun” isn’t the issue — it’s whether Android infringes Oracle’s patents and copyrights, since the consequences either way will be monumental and far-reaching. Ultimately, though, the only person who can resolve all of this for certain is a judge — and it’s going to take a lot more time and research to get there.


*They’re not directly comparable, but think about the Psystar case for a second. Even though Psystar desperately wanted to argue that Apple’s OS X license agreement was invalid, the judge never got there — he simply ruled Psystar wasn’t authorized to copy and distribute OS X, and swung the hammer. It really is that simple sometimes.

Android source code, Java, and copyright infringement: what’s going on? originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 21 Jan 2011 19:15:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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The 10 Geekiest Animated Series of All-Time

star trek animated.jpg

With news of an impending Angry Birds animated series, it seemed like an appropriate time to ask the PCMag staff what they considered the geekiest animated series of all time. We got plenty of answers–and even more nostalgia–but somehow managed to cut the list down to 10 shows (well, 10 shows and a lengthy honorable mention list).

Check out the winners after the jump–and let us know what we left off in the comments section.

Flipit! powers USB devices when outlets are taken

Clever design of USB charger lets you juice your device even when all AC outlets are in use.

Roundup: Which AV receiver is right for you?

CNET compares midrange AV receivers based on what kind of buyer they appeal to.

Nexus S OTA 2.3.2 update rolling out now, your SMS relations will thank you

Embarrassing SMS misdirect bug on your Android device? Nexus S owners should start checking their phones now for an over-the-air update that’s supposed to fix the problem. It’s being rolled out gradually, so just be patient if it’s not there yet. How will we know the problem’s gone for good? We’ll just assume so until we find out otherwise, in some unfortunate manner.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

Nexus S OTA 2.3.2 update rolling out now, your SMS relations will thank you originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 21 Jan 2011 18:59:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Trio of new HTC phones uncovered ahead of MWC

Will the successors to last year’s Wildfire and Desire HD join a buttonless device on stage at Mobile World Congress?

Originally posted at Android Atlas

Gadget Lab Podcast: TDK Boombox, Screwy iPhones

          

The Gadget Lab crew jams into this week’s podcast with an awesomely loud boombox made by TDK. It’s called the Radio Raheem, and it hooks straight into an iPod or any line-in accessory. You can even use it as a guitar amplifier. What a mean machine.

I show off what’s easily one of the dumbest iPad accessories I’ve ever seen: The Padlette is a weird rubber grip that stretches across your tablet so you can cling it to one hand.

Dylan found something cooler at CES: The Victorinox is a flash drive that’s disguised as a Swiss Army knife. (Surprisingly, Dylan managed to get it past airport security without getting groped.)

I close the podcast with a silly rant about iPhone screws, which Apple recently changed to make it harder to repair by yourself.

Like the show? You can also get the Gadget Lab video podcast via iTunes, or if you don’t want to be distracted by our unholy on-camera talent, check out the Gadget Lab audio podcast. Prefer RSS? You can subscribe to the Gadget Lab video or audio podcast feeds

Or listen to the audio here:

Gadget Lab audio podcast No. 100

http://downloads.wired.com/podcasts/assets/gadgetlabaudio/GadgetLabAudio00100.mp3


Motorola Xoom priced at $800 at a minimum, according to Verizon leak

Wow, insider tipsters are getting efficient! Verizon appears to have only just added Minimum Advertised Pricing for the Motorola Xoom to its internal systems, but already it’s been leaked out by more than one source. Android Central has the damning evidence, which lists an $800 levy for any prospective owners of the flagship Android Honeycomb device. It’s accompanied by a listing of the HTC Thunderbolt at $250, with the logical conclusion being that the Moto tablet will come unsullied by subsidies while the HTC LTE handset will probably cost that much on a two-year deal. That makes plenty of sense to us — the typical smartphone price is $200 and Verizon can point to the 4G goodness the Thunderbolt brings as justifying its $50 premium, whereas the Xoom’s cost seems to be in line with the Galaxy Tab’s pricing. Now, how about some launch dates, leaksters?

Motorola Xoom priced at $800 at a minimum, according to Verizon leak originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 21 Jan 2011 18:41:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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