PS Vita Case with L2 R2 Triggers is Only for Second Gen Vita: DAMMIT

Even though many PS4 games have or will have support for Remote Play on the PS Vita, the handheld’s lack of actual L2 and R2 triggers severely gimps the experience. Now we have some good news and bad news. The good news is that a third party manufacturer will release a PS Vita case that adds the two triggers. The bad news is that it will only work with the second generation Vita.

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The case, which is made by Joetsu Denshi Kogyo, will be available in Japan this April for about $25 (USD). From the images on Rakuten it appears that the case uses a mechanical solution. The L2 and R2 triggers seem to be connected to buttons that tap the rear touch pad on the appropriate spots, a solution so simple you’d think Sony would have come up with it when the handheld first launched.

Sony, in case it wasn’t obvious enough this accessory is for customers like me who have at least two of your current products. Come on guys. Show us some love.

[via Dualshockers]

Aiptek ProjectorPad P70: Android Tablet With Built-In Projector

If you want to beam your smartphone or tablet’s screen onto a wall, whether for a work presentation or to watch YouTube videos, pico projectors are easy to find. However, what about smart slates with projectors built in? Aiptek’s P70 is the first I’ve seen, and this 7” Android tablet looks a handy device indeed, albeit with some real drawbacks you should be mindful of.

The Case Against DRM Needs to Be Made Now

The Case Against DRM Needs to Be Made Now

DRM, or digital rights management, is a digital lock placed on media content and devices. Supporters say DRM protects businesses and artists from piracy and theft. Sounds good, right? Opponents say it kills innovation, doesn’t stop piracy, and helps malware distributors. This month, a group led by the Electronic Frontier Foundation has assembled to come up with ways to fight DRM.

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Google's 3D-Scanning Project Tango Just Got a Little More Real

Google's 3D-Scanning Project Tango Just Got a Little More Real

Google ATAP (that’s Advanced Technology and Projects) is where wonderful things are born. Things like the animated magic of Glen Keane’s Duet or the modular Project Ara smartphone. It’s all great stuff, but it’s also all experimental—if a project doesn’t make enough progress in two years, it’s dead. But Google’s Project Tango is alive and well: it just graduated from ATAP.

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Recommended Reading: Reliving virtual reality in the '90s

Recommended Reading highlights the best long-form writing on technology and more in print and on the web. Some weeks, you’ll also find short reviews of books that we think are worth your time. We hope you enjoy the read.

A Look Back at the Doomed…

Google Earth Pro drops $399 subscription, now available for free

Google Earth Pro drops $399 subscription, now available for freeGoogle has recently revealed that it is dropping the paid subscription from Google Earth Pro, a more robust version of its Google Earth software. The Pro service will now be available for free, previously costing $399 per year. While the standard version of Google Earth has often been more than enough for casual map and globe users, the Pro version … Continue reading

Scott Walker's State of Ignorance

You’re running for president — time to stick it to a university!

San Francisco Police Question Man After Human Remains Are Found In Suitcase

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — A man was detained Friday night in connection with a suitcase that had been found on a downtown San Francisco street stuffed with human remains, authorities said.

Police Chief Greg Suhr confirmed the “person of interest” was detained for questioning in the Tenderloin district, the San Francisco Chronicle reported (http://bit.ly/1Dpchju ). The move came only hours after police released grainy surveillance photos of a man wearing a striped baseball cap, light blue jeans and a blue and orange jacket.

The suitcase was found Wednesday afternoon on a street in the city’s South of Market neighborhood. More body parts were found in a trash can nearby.

Police said that in addition to the man pictured in the photo, a second person was detained. His connection to the case was not revealed.

The newspaper reported that police did not know if the “person of interest” had committed a crime, only that video footage showed him in the area where the suitcase was discovered.

The man, whose identity was not released, was cooperating with detectives, police spokeswoman officer Grace Gatpandan said.

“Homicide has to figure out whether this person is involved with the crime,” Gatpandan said.

The San Francisco medical examiner determined that the remains belong to an unidentified light-skinned man. Authorities will now turn to a DNA laboratory to identify him.

Personal Heroes

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Barilla and Gay Families: 18 Months Later, Does the Pasta Company Really Care? (VIDEO)

My godchild is an amazing, confident, happy 3-year-old with two mommies. Families are made in the heart. They have little to do with blood, marriage certificates or adoption and cannot be hijacked by one social demographic or culture. They are heart bonds. Family is not limited to tradition but encompassed by love.

So in September 2013, when the chairman of Barilla, the famous pasta brand, said he would never use a gay family in one of their advertising spots for TV, it set off a global storm, and it hit home with me. The company was forced to try to defend their position, then apologize, and finally admit that they needed to leave antiquity and join the modern age.

A month later, in November 2013, Barilla announced that it would work to make the company more diverse saying it would create an ad campaign more inclusive than the previous ads, which had depicted only “traditional” families.

Over a year later they have yet to produce an ad featuring a gay family. In fact, nine months after this announcement, Italian frozen-food company Findus produced Italy’s first gay-inclusive d. See it here.

In summer 2014 Barilla launched a contest calling for content creators to submit work under 60 seconds that reflected their new diversity campaign. When I heard about the contest, I felt strongly compelled to create a commercial testing their commitment to a more inclusive ad campaign. Their new call to action — “Love life, love pasta, in your own way” — asked us to bring our distinct voice emphasizing the values they want to promote, these values being diversity, uniqueness and inclusion. I saw this as a great opportunity to offer them a commercial with high production value and a modern take on family.

In fact, my submission was the only one that confronted them face-to-face with a gay family. However, regardless of its superior production quality, I was not surprised when the spot was not selected by Barilla for competition. It represented a beautiful, sexy, loving lesbian family.

My motivation was to make sure that Barilla could not deny that the beauty of the family values that they hold so dear for their brand are also found in LGBT families and other “alternative” families.

Barilla has not changed their stance, and I would bet that they don’t plan on it, unless someone stirs the pot. In the barrage of the information age, once they aren’t “news” any longer, who holds them accountable? Me.

My spot is a very fast, sweet and sexy 56 seconds. Even if Barilla didn’t have the guts to choose it as a finalist, it’s important to me that this representation of family be seen, if not for me, then for my godchild, who deserves to know that her family is as important and as valuable as any other.