Hunting Ducks from a Folding Kayak

Hunting Ducks from a Folding Kayak

The folding Oru Kayak goes from flatpack to floating in just minutes. Tough enough for the real world? We took it down the Colorado River, armed with a shotgun, to find out.

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The FAA's Drone Ban at the Super Bowl Is Absurd

The FAA's Drone Ban at the Super Bowl Is Absurd

You may have heard about the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) quietly declaring that this year’s Super Bowl will be a “no drone zone.” You may not have heard just how big that no drone zone will be. It’s 60 miles wide. The no drone zone is larger than the city of Phoenix. Seems a little bit absurd, huh?

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Paul Vo's Physics Defying Wand Makes Guitars Sound Entirely Different

Inventor Paul Vo’s latest crazy musical innovation is a hand-held wand that changes the sound of guitars like magic. Hold up to a guitar string, and the string starts to vibrate. Depending how you use the wand, it opens the door to a multitude of new sounds. Vo did it again.

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Google Chromecast A Hit In The US, Cast Button Pressed 1 Billion Times

chromecast-streamingBack in the middle of 2013, Google announced the Chromecast. The HDMI dongle back then was an interesting device which allowed users to attach it to their TVs via the HDMI port and mirror the content on their phones or tablets while allowing remote control via their mobile devices. It was also priced at a very affordable $35.

Like we said it was an interesting device, but as it turns out not only is it interesting, it is a huge hit. According to Google’s Chief Business Officer Omid Kordenstani, it seems that based on research done by the NPD Group, the Chromecast is the number one streaming device in the US, and it seems that the Cast button has since been pressed a whopping 1 billion times since it was launched about one and a half years ago.

Is this all that surprising? Hardly. Back in 2014, Google announced that they had since managed to sell millions of Chromecast devices which is pretty impressive. The device has also managed to make its way into international markets where it turns out that they are pretty popular in Europe as well.

Since then rival companies have created similar devices of their own, such as Amazon with their Fire TV Stick, Roku and their Roku Stick, and Xiaomi recently launched the Mi Box Mini which while slightly different in application, pretty much offers up similar features as well.

Google Chromecast A Hit In The US, Cast Button Pressed 1 Billion Times , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

OUYA Gets New Lease On Life With $10 Million Investment From Alibaba [Rumor]

ouya-june-launchThe OUYA Android gaming console was launched back in 2012 on Kickstarter where it has since managed to become the 3rd most funded project on the website of all time. While the concept of the OUYA was good, unfortunately it seemed that the console failed to live up to the hype and numerous delays did not sit well with its backers and gamers.

So far we haven’t really heard much from the company since then, but it looks like they could soon be getting a new lease on life, thanks to Chinese company Alibaba, who for those unfamiliar managed to set an impressive record for an IPO valued at $25 billion. According to a report from The Wall Street Journal, Alibaba was said to have invested $10 million into OUYA.

The investment is hardly an altruistic move on Alibaba’s part as one of the conditions was that OUYA’s software and library of more than 1,000 games would also be incorporated into Alibaba’s own set-top box, which we guess is a fair tradeoff. Alibaba’s investment would also help OUYA grow in the Chinese market where the ban on consoles was lifted back in 2014.

Previously we had heard the rumors that OUYA was potentially looking to be acquired by Chinese-based companies, but so far it looks like the rumors have not proven to be true and the rumored investment by Alibaba is probably the closest thing to it. It remains to be seen how helpful the investment will be for OUYA, but in the meantime it definitely seems that the company has gotten a new lease on life.

OUYA Gets New Lease On Life With $10 Million Investment From Alibaba [Rumor] , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Google Admits They Faced Challenges With The Nexus 6’s Inventory

nexus-6-review-3When the Nexus 6 was released, given its impressive hardware specs, it was sold out pretty quickly. Back then Google promised that they would try and get it restocked every Wednesday via the Google Play Store, but like we said with its popularity, inventory of the handset depleted pretty quickly.

However it seems that it wasn’t just the popularity of the handset that was to blame, but Google’s management of it. Speaking during Google’s Q4 2014 earnings call, Google’s CFO Patrick Pichette was quoted as saying, “We also faced a few real challenges as well. While the Nexus 6 was very well received as a new phone, we had real issues and were unable to secure sufficient inventory to meet the demand that we had forecasted.”

It’s interesting to see that despite the huge hike in price of the Nexus 6 compared to its predecessor the Nexus 5 where the phone was subsidized by Google, customers still flocked to it and purchased it regardless. As it stands the Nexus 6 still runs out of stock every now and then, but it wasn’t as bad as before.

In any case we can only hope that Google will have learnt from this and that with their next-gen Nexus handset, whatever it is going to be called, Google would have figured out how to better manage their supply.

Google Admits They Faced Challenges With The Nexus 6’s Inventory , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Tesla Model S is getting even quicker through a software update

If you didn’t think that Tesla’s Model S P85D was bonkers enough, you’re in for a treat. Elon Musk has revealed that the already speedy electric sedan is getting a software update that will improve its 0-60MPH acceleration time by a tenth of a second…

Amazon put $1.3 billion into Prime Instant Video last year

Amazon may have surprised Wall Street by how much sales went up in the fourth quarter of last year ($29.3 billion, with a profit of $214 million), but for customers its Prime service is the big deal. Founder and CEO Jeff Bezos said Prime membership i…

Purported iPad Pro case leaked, has four speaker cutouts

ipad-air-2-review-20-600x3591The iPad Pro is widely rumored to be Apple’s foray into bigger tablets, challenging the size of a computer screen. At a reported 12-inches or better, the rumored tablet has reached mythical levels. While Apple admits they’ve discussed a larger tablet, the last we’d heard about it from Apple was that it wasn’t even a ‘thing’ yet. The rumors won’t … Continue reading

How to Fix the (Not-So) Secret Service

Finally, a security breach at the White House that does not appear to be the fault of the Secret Service -this time. A drone crashed onto the grounds. Fortunately, it was harmless. That it penetrated the perimeter at all illustrates the magnitude of the responsibility the Secret Service has. Short of erecting a bubble over the White House complex, there is no immediate or obvious answer to drone intrusion – yet. But there are things that can be done to solve some of the other security problems that have come to light.

Heads have recently rolled at Secret Service headquarters. Many veteran agents privately admit that accountability and discipline were often lacking at the venerated agency, and that this move is long overdue.

Admittedly, the system is not perfect, nor can it be. As Jerry Parr, the Secret Service agent who pushed President Reagan into the limousine after he was shot and ordered the driver to speed toward the hospital, would often tell people: “being president is dangerous.” The job of the Secret Service, he said, was not to eliminate all the dangers, but to reduce them as much as humanly possible.

To accomplish that, as a new leadership team takes over at the Secret Service, they should give serious consideration to the following ways to fix the agency’s problems:

1. Return the agency to the Department of the Treasury. The Secret Service had always been the jewel in Treasury’s crown. But in an effort to populate a new government bureaucracy, the Secret Service was moved to the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) in 2003 and things have never been the same since. At DHS, the Secret Service is one of many entities, forced to fight for funds and attention. That was not the case when it was part of Treasury, and it is no coincidence that Secret Service morale and performance have suffered since the move to DHS. The Department of the Treasury building is literally within the White House complex, and senior Secret Service agents used to serve on the Secretary of the Treasury’s immediate personal staff. The relationship between the Secret Service and the White House was special, and the pride employees felt at being part of it made a difference in how they performed their tasks. With its primary missions of protecting the President, our currency and guarding against financial crimes, the Secret Service belongs in the Treasury Department, just as the FBI belongs at the Department of Justice. Bringing the Secret Service home to Treasury will be an immediate shot in the arm to employees at all levels.

2. Hire an experienced, credible and savvy public affairs staff. The Secret Service has always relied on Special Agents to fill public affairs roles, and that is often like putting a square peg in a round hole. The Secret Service needs a staff that understands and respects the press, and will be straightforward, honest and complete when answering questions.

3. Appoint a Director who is experienced and uncompromising in the highest standards of protection, who understands the rich history and culture of the Secret Service so he/she can have immediate credibility with employees, yet is someone who brings a fresh perspective to the position. The Director should not be window-dressing to serve a political agenda, but a real pro that can get the best performance out of every person in the agency.

4. Solve the identity crisis of the Uniformed Division. The more than 1,300 men and women who are often the public face of the Secret Service are the first line of protection, yet who they are as an organization has been all over the map. Originally established in 1922 as the White House Police, they were later renamed the Executive Protective Service and later as the Uniformed Division. Their management structure has also been inconsistent. Sometimes they reported to the Presidential Protective Division of the Secret Service, sometimes not. Recent events clearly show weaknesses that need to be immediately addressed.

With a Presidential campaign likely to see many candidates who will need protection, a multi-city Papal visit, and a President who has vowed to be active, the next few months will be as challenging as any in memory for the Secret Service. It is critical that the agency get its act together, so it can get the support it needs from Congress and the White House in terms of budget and personnel.

Mark D. Weinberg served as Special Assistant to the President and Assistant Press Secretary in the Reagan White House. He is currently a communications consultant.