Motorola Heads Back To China With New Smartphones

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Motorola’s smartphones haven’t been officially available in China for a few years now but that changes today. There’s no doubt in the fact that Motorola’s acquisition by Chinese behemoth Lenovo had some part to play in this. Motorola smartphones are now officially back in China. The company has introduced some of its recent popular devices in the People’s Republic.

Today the company gathered “hundreds of fans and guests” to celebrate the launch of Moto X, Moto X Pro, Moto G and the Moto Hint in China. Rick Osterloh, Motorola president, was on hand to speak about the company’s history in China and how important it is for Motorola to be back with its products.

Moto X 2014 edition is the first smartphone that Chinese customers will be able to purchase. Osterloh described it as “the best Android smartphone in the world,” ultimately the market will decide how much truth there is to this statement.

Prices start 2,999 CNY or $479. Shipments begin early next month. Motorola will release the Moto X Pro and Moto G LTE in China towards the end of next month. Moto Maker will also make its way to the country in the near future.

At the event several Experience Zones were also set up where attendees could try out the company’s latest generation of devices, and explore how Motorola has tweaked its services for this market, like the fact that Moto Voice now works in Chinese as well.

Motorola Heads Back To China With New Smartphones , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Analysts Believe China Is Apple’s Biggest iPhone Market Now

 

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There have long been indications that the Chinese market is going to overtake the U.S. to become Apple’s biggest market. Apple CEO Tim Cook himself pointed out this possibility back in October last year, he said that this was “just a matter of time,” and if analysts are to be believed this time has come. Analysts expect that Apple is going to confirm this possibility tomorrow during its Q1 earnings call.

According to UBS analysts customers in China accounted for 36 percent of all iPhone shipments in the most recent quarter, as opposed to 24 percent for the United States. Comparing with the same time last year we see the U.S. accounting for 29 percent of all iPhone shipments against China’s 22 percent.

Creative Strategies backs this assumption by UBS analysts and forecasts that Apple will have sold 2 million more iPhone units in China than it has in the United States during the company’s final calendar quarter of 2014.

Analysts are of the view that Apple is going to increase its focus on China now. It is a lucrative market for the company, seeing as how the iPhone accounts for a substantial chunk of its revenue, so it may not be long before Apple Pay lands in the country along with a plethora of new retail stores planned to cover major cities of the People’s Republic.

Analysts Believe China Is Apple’s Biggest iPhone Market Now , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Google Lunar XPRIZE awards $5.25m to moon mission hopefuls

astrobotic_0The Google Lunar XPRIZE competition has handed out $5.25m to five companies for their contribution to taking a private spacecraft to the moon, with the so-called Milestone Prizes awarded in advance of final entries in 2016. XPRIZE aims to spur space exploration with a $30m prize pot from Google’s wallet, challenging private industry and researchers help take a private craft … Continue reading

1Password gets even better, now has easier login creation

1PasswordAppIconFor the security-conscious among us, 1Password has proven itself an indispensable tool. The app — available for iOS, Android, Windows, and OS X — both manages and generates secure passwords for you, and their new TouchID features are promising. An update, rolling out for iOS users today, brings in the ability to generate one-time passwords as well as some new … Continue reading

Drone landing at White House may spell doom for consumers

the-white-house-extLate last night, a Drone landed on the grounds of The White House. It led to a lockdown of the premises, with a White House spokesperson telling The New York Times that Secret Service agents were looking into it. The President was in no danger (he’s in India), but consumer use of drones is. This incident at the White House … Continue reading

Cablevision’s WiFi calling service: another reason you don’t need an iPhone

motoG-motorolaThis week the folks at Cablevision released a WiFi calling service called Freewheel without the iPhone and without the Samsung Galaxy S5. What does this say to the two biggest names in smartphone manufacturing inside the United States? What does it say to those consumers that seek out Samsung or Apple because they’ve seen their friends using said brands on … Continue reading

Justice Sotomayor: Stop Bending the Constitution to Favor Cops

Has the Supreme Court given law enforcement more leeway that the Constitution permits? Justice Sonia Sotomayor seems to think so. At oral argument in Rodriguez v. United States, a case involving the use of drug-sniffing dogs during traffic stops, Justice Sotomayor vigorously resisted the government’s arguments and expressed a broad concern about the Court’s deference to law enforcement in Fourth Amendment cases. Those who share her belief that neither the Fourth Amendment nor any other part of the Constitution ought to be reduced to “a useless piece of paper” should insist that the Court consistently hold those who enforce the law fully accountable to it.

The facts of the case: On March 27, 2012, Nebraska police officer Morgan Struble stopped Dennys Rodriguez for swerving once towards the shoulder of the road. After questioning Rodriguez and issuing him a written warning, Struble asked permission to walk his drug-sniffing dog around the outside of Rodriguez’s vehicle. When Rodriguez refused, Struble made him exit the vehicle and wait for backup to arrive. Roughly eight minutes later, a second officer showed up, and Struble led his dog around the car. The dog gave an “alert” for illegal drugs, and a subsequent search turned up a bag of methamphetamine.

The Supreme Court held in Illinois v. Caballes (2005) that the use of drug-snuffing dogs during routine traffic stops does not violate the Fourth Amendment if the stop is not “prolonged beyond the time reasonably required to complete that mission.” But in Rodriguez’s case, the “mission” was completed— the officer had let Rodriguez off with a warning. The question is whether an officer may detain someone and force them to wait for a canine sniff without reasonable suspicion or other lawful justification.

At oral argument, Justice Department lawyer Ginger Anders contended that there was no constitutionally significant distinction between trotting out a drug-sniffing dog during a stop and making someone wait for the dog after a completed stop, so long as the whole affair “falls within the amount of time it usually takes to do a routine traffic stop.” On this reasoning, the fact that the initial mission (writing Rodriguez up for crossing the white line) was complete would not preclude the officer from embarking on another mission, with the aid of a drug-sniffing dog. Anders added, “[F]rom the officer’s perspective, I think there’s an interest in officers having some leeway to sequence the stop.”

Several of the Justices appeared troubled by this reasoning. “The dog sniff is something else altogether,” Chief Justice Roberts stated, and Justice Breyer agreed, saying, “Once [the traffic stop is] over, it’s over, done, finished.” Justice Kagan, for her part, suggested that Anders’ arguments lacked any limiting principle: “You really are saying because we have a reason to pull you over for a traffic stop, that gives us some extra time to start questioning you about other law enforcement­-related things and to do other law enforcement-­related business.”

But Justice Sotomayor’s forceful response stood out. Not only did she point out that signing off on dog sniffs that are extraneous to the mission of a given stop would create “an entitlement to search for drugs by using dogs, whenever anybody’s stopped,” but, responding to Anders’ plea for leeway, she made a more profound point: “We can’t keep bending the Fourth Amendment to the resources of law enforcement.” Sotomayor may have been an alluding to Heien v. North Carolina, a 2014 case in which the Court (over Justice Sotomayor’s strong dissent) held that a traffic stop based on a police officer’s mistaken view of the law did not violate the Fourth Amendment because that mistake was “reasonable.”

The Fourth Amendment is not the only context in which the Supreme Court has bent the Constitution to meet law enforcement needs. In Harlow v. Fitzgerald (1982), the Court invented the doctrine of “qualified immunity,” which protects government officials from liability for constitutional injuries unless their conduct violates clearly established statutory or constitutional rights. You will not find this doctrine in constitutional text or history or any federal statute — the Court simply made it up to ensure that police officers enjoy far more leeway than doctors, pilots, and others who routinely make life-or-death decisions under stressful conditions. The Court has also enabled the expansion of civil asset forfeiture, which allows law enforcement to take property from citizens, regardless of whether the property owner is guilty or innocent–and without even charging the owner with a crime. The Court’s lax treatment of a practice that is rooted in medieval superstition and which today serves primarily to pad law enforcement budgets has left law-abiding citizens vulnerable to policing for profit.

Americans expect and deserve a level playing field every time they seek justice in our courts. Our nation was founded on the principle that public officials possess only delegated (and therefore limited) powers, and they must be held accountable for the responsible exercise of those powers. Implementing that principle requires judicial engagement — a genuine, fact-driven effort to determine the constitutionality of government action, without unwarranted deference to officials’ supposed good faith and good judgment. Justice Sotomayor’s fellow justices should heed her warning.

Do Parents Squash the Kindness in Their Kids?

The other day, I read about some really cool research that suggests that little kids are naturally altruistic.

It got me thinking: What is it we do that stops them from being that way? Because, let’s face it, not all big kids — and definitely not all grownups — are kind and look out for others.

Felix Warneken, a Harvard researcher, studies the evolutionary origins of human cooperation. For years, people have thought that selfishness is the norm, and that parents and teachers are the ones that teach children to help. Warneken wondered if this was really true, and did a bunch of experiments with young children to test their altruism.

He and other researchers did things like drop things in front of kids (playacting that it was an accident) and see if they picked them up — and the kids did. If the researchers dropped them clearly on purpose, the kids didn’t pick them up. In other experiments, the researchers pretended to have trouble doing something — like getting something out of a box — and toddlers routinely came and helped, even when they had a fun toy to play with instead. When the researchers added rewards, they found that rewards didn’t make kids more likely to help — in fact, they found that after a while, the kids who got rewards lost interest in them and stopped helping, whereas the kids who didn’t get rewards kept right on helping.

So interesting — and so hopeful. Until you realize, like I said before, that not all kids stay kind and helpful.

It seems to me that there are three likely contributors to this problem:

1. There’s not a lot of positive reinforcement for altruism. I mean, most of us would thank our kids for picking something up when we dropped it or for holding a door. But I don’t know that we all would make a big deal out of it. We might be pleased, or pat ourselves on the back for the really excellent parenting that produced such a nice kid, but I doubt that most parents make a point of actively encouraging altruistic behavior. On the other hand, we do go out of our way to actively encourage achievement. Which leads me to the second likely contributor…

2. There is a lot of reinforcement for behavior that isn’t altruistic. When’s the last time you saw a parent praise a child for letting the other team score a goal? Or the last time a you heard one praise a child for helping someone instead of studying for a test? Let’s face it: As a society, we may say we value kindness, but we value achievement more. That’s what a kid is going to get kudos for — and it’s hard to achieve and be truly altruistic at the same time.

The biggest contributor, though, may be this one:

3. There’s not a lot of role-modeling of altruism. It’s the Inconvenient Truth of parenthood: Kids pay more attention to what we do than what we say. So we can talk all we want about being kind and helpful, but it’s our actions that matter. Picture this: A child is walking with his mother and a passerby drops a glove. The mother notices but is in a hurry so doesn’t pick it up. The child goes to pick it up, and is pulled along by mother. What’s the lesson learned?

We all let so many opportunities for kindness pass by. We don’t always stop to pick up dropped gloves, hold doors, help cheer up crying children, feed expired parking meters, donate to whoever is collecting for a cause or club outside the grocery store, help carry heavy packages or dig into our wallets when the person in front of us in line comes up a little short. How many of these things happen with our children watching?

And those are just the little things. Bigger acts of charity are even less common — and so even less likely for children to see.

It’s so sad. Because, really, this research suggests that it’s not so much that we need to teach our children to be kind — we just need to get out of their way, and not stop them.

Reading the article made me do some serious soul-searching about myself and my parenting and all the chances I might have missed.

It’s worth thinking about. If all of us parents could try not to let those opportunities to help and care pass by, if we could all try being kinder, if we could just try not to squash the kindness in our kids, just imagine what might happen.

And maybe, if we switched things around and followed their example, we could be kinder too.

5 Steps To Stronger, Leaner Arms

This time of year, our arms are hidden under sweaters, blazers and any number of layers. But soon enough, it’ll be time uncover your limbs — and if you put in a little work now, they’ll look amazing come spring. The key to stronger arms: the tricep muscle, the one on the bottom side of your arm that (cringe) jiggles a bit when it’s been too long since your last sweat sesh.

Ava DuVernay's Next Film Will Be A Drama Set During Hurricane Katrina

“Selma” director Ava DuVernay has found her next feature film: a “sweeping love story and complex murder mystery” set against the devastation of Hurricane Katrina. Participant Media will produce the film; “Selma’s” David Oyelowo is in negotiations to star.

“I’m thrilled to reunite with my Participant family on this project and fortunate to work again with the always exquisite David Oyelowo,” explained DuVernay, who previously worked with the company on 2012’s “Middle of Nowhere” (which also starred Oyelowo). “The story we’re interested in will explore the complexities of intimate relationships within times of chaos, while also examining the chaos itself. I’m looking forward to the journey.”

DuVernay will write, produce and direct the untitled film. The 42-year-old director had not set a follow-up movie following “Selma,” but did tell The Guardian last year that a television series about “the black experience in America,” as the publication put it, was in her future as well.

DuVernay’s “Selma” was nominated for Best Picture, but she was not afforded the same honor in the Best Director category.