Google Image Search Introduces ‘Style Ideas’ Feature

When it comes to fashion, it’s about how you piece an entire outfit together. While some items look great on their own, sometimes using it with another item might actually detract from the overall look you’re going for. However if you’re a seasoned fashionista then this shouldn’t be a problem, but for the novice it can be overwhelming.

However the good news is that Google is here to help. The company has announced a new feature of Image Search called “style ideas”. In addition to searching for images of a piece of clothing or fashion accessory, style ideas will also display lifestyle images of the product that you’re searching for so that you can get an idea of what it will look like in real-life, and the outfits and styles that you can use with it.

According to Google, “Now while perusing fashion product images, Image Search will surface a grid of inspirational lifestyle images and outfits that showcase how the product can be worn in real life. With style ideas, you can see real-life options of what bag and jeans look stellar with those red high heels you’ve been eyeing. Or if running gear is more your speed, no sweat—workout ensemble ideas are just a tap away.”

This new feature joins the likes of the “Similar items” feature that was announced a couple of days ago, where users could search for lifestyle images and find similar items worn in the photo that they’ll be able to buy. Note that this only works in the Google search app or on mobile web.

Google Image Search Introduces ‘Style Ideas’ Feature , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Google Might Have A Device Codename ‘Bisto’ In The Works

Last month according to the rumors, the possible codenames for Google’s 2017 Pixel phones might have been revealed where they are known as Muskie and Walleye. For those who aren’t into fishing, these handsets have been given codenames after fishes, which is similar to how Google gave codenames to the Pixel handsets last year.

That being said, it seems that Google might have a new device in the works codename “Bisto”. This is according to a recent APK teardown of the beta version of the Google app, in which there have been several references made to a certain “Bisto”. It can’t be confirmed as to what Bisto might be, but it has been suggested that it could be a portable audio device.

This is because there is a string in the code in which notifications can be “read aloud inside your headphones”. There is also a string that references a preference setting to enable “Spoken notifications”. Could this be some kind of headphones that Google is launching, or maybe something else entirely?

There have been rumors in the past that in addition to a Google Glass successor, Google could also be working on an audio-based wearable. In any case it seems like it might be too early to tell, but with Google I/O 2017 taking place next month, maybe we will find out more then.

Google Might Have A Device Codename ‘Bisto’ In The Works , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Nintendo Switch is the fastest-selling Nintendo system ever

You know how companies often boast about how their next gen product is the best ever, compared to their previous gen product? That is generally true, though there are some exceptions, like the Samsung Galaxy Note 7 and the Nintendo Wii U. It seems that Nintendo is making up for lost time and sales with the Nintendo Switch. The Japanese … Continue reading

Scott Pruitt Heads To Coal Mine To Pitch New EPA Agenda

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SYCAMORE, Pennsylvania — The head of the Environmental Protection Agency chose a Pennsylvania coal mine with a history of violating environmental laws as his venue for unveiling a new plan to refocus his agency in a way that he says will both protect the planet and promote economic growth.  

Ignoring the fact that the U.S. coal industry’s troubles are primarily the result of market forces, Scott Pruitt offered roughly 75 miners at the Harvey Mine this hopeful message: The “regulatory assault” on coal is over.

It was here in Appalachian coal country, at North America’s largest producing underground coal complex, that Pruitt formally launched the EPA’s “Back-To-Basics agenda.” But instead of sharing details about that plan, he commiserated with those in the room. What happened to coal under former President Barack Obama, Pruitt said in a four-minute address, is “really sad.”

Pruitt, a climate change denier and longtime ally of the fossil fuel industry, claimed that coal, oil and gas companies are both pro-environment and pro-growth. Now that Obama is out of office, he said, America doesn’t have to chose between the two.

“It’s been said — I think you’ve heard it said — you can’t have your cake and eat it too,” Pruitt said. “I’ll tell you, whoever says that doesn’t know what you’re supposed to do with cake.”

Pruitt’s message wasn’t surprising, but his choice of venue was somewhat baffling.

Consol Energy was fined $3 million just last year for dumping mine wastewater into Ohio River tributaries. Consol Energy owns the Bailey Mine Complex, which includes Harvey Mine. The company exceeded its daily or monthly effluent limit more than 300 times between 2006 and 2015, according to the EPA complaint. Consol, which now focuses primarily on natural gas production, has voiced its intent to sell off its remaining coal assets.

Patrick Grenter, a senior campaign representative for the Sierra Club’s Beyond Coal Campaign, told The Huffington Post that Consol has operated recklessly for many years. In a 2005 settlement, the company paid $36 million to replace a dam that it was accused of damaging with its operations. 

Grenter called Pruitt’s visit to Harvey Mine “very concerning.” He said the only reasonable conclusion he could draw is that “’back-to-basics’ means back to promoting polluters over public health.”

Pruitt’s visit to coal country comes a little over two weeks after President Donald Trump, surround by coal miners, signed an executive order instructing the EPA to review Obama’s Clean Power Plan, a policy limiting greenhouse gas emissions from power plants. The order also took measures to further protect the coal industry, namely by instructing the Department of the Interior to lift a temporary ban on coal leasing on federal lands that the Obama administration put in place last year.

The American Federation of Government Employees, which represents 700,000 federal and D.C. government employees, including EPA workers, has called the order the latest in “a continued assault on the country’s top-line of defense for community health.”

Miners, most of whom were in their 30s and 40s and many of whom were covered in dust from their morning shift below ground, began to gather inside a large common area of the portal building before Pruitt’s address. At one end, workers wearing headlamps, hardhats and reflective suits came and went from a silver elevator shaft. On a long wall, a board covered in tags indicated who was on shift.

“[It’s] no lie that the [coal] industry in the last eight years, we’ve all felt a lot of pain,” said Jimmy Brock, CEO of CNX Coal Resources, which operates the Harvey Mine. But the Bailey complex persevered somehow, he said. 

“It’s easy to be optimistic now,” Brock said following Pruitt’s speech. He added that coal miners should never apologize for the work they do.

Other miners in attendance seemed to share Brock’s optimism about the future of coal.

Eben McClay, of the nearby town Claysville, has worked at the Bailey complex for a decade. He told HuffPost that he sees Trump as being “all about America” and likes to see the administration standing up for coal and bringing jobs and industry back to the U.S. 

“The coal mine produces a lot of money and a lot of jobs for this area — for a lot of families,” he said. 

Harvey Mine is located in Pennsylvania’s Green County, which has a population of just over 35,000. The coal industry here employs between 7,000 and 8,000 people, according to Robbie Matesic, executive director of the county’s Department of Economic Development. The county probably couldn’t withstand a sudden death of the industry, she said, but added that she is seriously concerned about climate change and believes coal companies must be held accountable for the environmental damage they cause. 

“Here’s our problem: We have an economy dependent on it,” she said. “The truth is our economy is not healthy because of the way it is dependent on the energy industry.”

The community has been working hard to diversify its economy for the last several years, Matesic said. But it needs more time. 

Mark Kusky, a coal miner who has been with Consol for 11 years, said it’s encouraging to see Trump follow though on his campaign promise. Asked about climate change and the argument for cutting carbon emissions and moving toward renewable energy, Kusky said all energy sources have their downsides.

He added that he’s hopeful coal will make a comeback, but that only time will tell if it can become the powerhouse it once was.

“The future looks bright from where we’re standing,” he said.

Matesic, however, said the only way to have healthy economies is to diversify ― meaning Trump and Pruitt are giving the coal industry, and communities like her own, false hope. 

“If the Trump administration is really concerned about the economic health and the environmental health of this country — if they really are — they’re not going about it the right way,” she said.

See more about EPA’s “Back-To-Basics” Agenda here.  

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Dems Challenge Jared Kushner's Security Clearance Over Hidden Russian Meetings

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Five House Democrats on Thursday challenged senior White House adviser Jared Kushner’s top security clearance for his failure to disclose meetings with Russian officials.

“Mr. Kushner must divulge the details of his meetings with foreign officials and explain why he did not reveal them when he was clearly required by to do so by law,” the lawmakers said in a statement. “The fact that Kushner is President Trump’s son-in-law does not place him above the law. Anyone else would face severe discipline for failing to disclose meetings with foreign officials, a material omission which potentially amounts to a criminal offense.” 

The lawmakers sent a letter Thursday to FBI Director James Comey and the U.S. Office of Personnel Management calling for Kushner’s security clearance to be suspended pending an investigation into his “compliance with the law.” The letter was signed by Democratic Reps. Don Beyer of Virginia, Jerrold Nadler of New York, Ted Lieu of California, Peter Welch of Vermont and Jamie Raskin of Maryland.

The letter cites a New York Times article last week revealing that Kusher failed to disclose “dozens” of foreign contacts when he filled out an FBI national security form, as required for his clearance. Those contacts included at least two meetings with high-level Russians while Kushner was working on Trump’s transition: Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak and Sergey Gorkov, an executive of Russian state-owned Vnesheconombank, which was under U.S. sanctions.

The representatives also demanded that Kushner “immediately make public all meetings he had with foreign government officials” from the time Trump announced his candidacy in June 2015 to his inauguration in January.

“Lack of candor, particularly regarding contacts with Russian officials, was a significant issue for the Trump transition,” notes the letter, pointing to Michael Flynn’s ouster as Trump’s national security adviser after “lying about foreign contacts” during the transition. “We are concerned that Jared Kushner may have engaged in similar deception,” the letter adds.

Deliberate false statements on a security form jeopardize clearance and can be prosecuted as a felony punishable by up to five years in prison, the letter points out.

There was no immediate response to the letter from the FBI.

Kushner’s attorney told the Times last week that Kushner submitted his form prematurely and promised the FBI  in January to provide supplemental information. Aides told the Times Kushner hasn’t finished compiling the supplemental material

The Senate Intelligence Committee plans to quiz Kushner as part of its ongoing probe into the Trump team’s Russian ties.

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Saturn and Jupiter's moon burps bode well for distant life

Scientists recently took a closer look at data over a decade old and concluded that two moons orbiting Saturn and Jupiter might have environments that foster life. During an October 2015 flyby of the ringed planet’s moon Enceladus, the probe Cassini…

Fitbit’s Smartwatch Could Launch Without Third-Party Apps

Fitbit’s offerings to date have largely targeted those in the fitness market where if they want to measure things like calories, heart rate, distance run, and so on, Fitbit offered up affordable solutions for that. However the company does plan to get into the smartwatch game, but it seems that the launch of the company’s smartwatch could be hobbled.

In a report from The Verge, they have heard that there are certain software aspects of the smartwatch that won’t be ready at launch. Fitbit had previously said that they plan to have their own app store for their smartwatch, but the report claims that the app store might not be ready in time, and that the smartwatch will launch without any third-party apps.

Instead Fitbit will apparently be responsible for creating all the apps that will be available for the smartwatch, although they are also trying to court app developers to build apps for them. We suppose at the very least users will end up using the Fitbit smartwatch like a regular tracker, at least until the app store is up and running, which isn’t necessarily a bad thing.

However if you are looking forward to the smartwatch, it has recently been reported that the release has been delayed to the fall of 2017, which has also been independently confirmed by The Verge.

Fitbit’s Smartwatch Could Launch Without Third-Party Apps , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Apple Acquired ‘Workflow’ App Will No Longer Get Significant Updates

If you’re hoping that after acquiring Workflow, Apple would continue to let its developer work on the app and provide updates like new features and what not, you might be disappointed to learn that the version of Workflow that you’re using now is pretty much going to be the same version for the foreseeable future.

This is according to a report from iGeneration (via AppleInsider) in which according to emails sent to users, it seems that there will no significant updates released for the app. This doesn’t mean that the app will end up being neglected, but rather if there are updates, it will only to address bugs with the software, but don’t expect anything new.

However the fact that Apple is keeping the app around is interesting as Apple has in the past been quick to shut down services that they’ve acquired. Perhaps Apple wants more iOS users to use it app and get used to its features before baking it into iOS. The fact that the app is now free (with Apple reimbursing customers who paid for it) suggests that the company wants the app to reach a wider audience.

In any case we guess if you’re already pretty happy with the way Workflow is now, then this doesn’t really change anything.

Apple Acquired ‘Workflow’ App Will No Longer Get Significant Updates , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

PaperLike Wants To Make Your iPad Pro Feel Like Paper

While Apple’s iPad Pro is definitely not the cheapest iPad we’ve seen, and the Apple Pencil being one of the most expensive stylus we’ve come across, reviews of the tablet and the stylus have been fantastic. Artists and graphic designers have lauded praise onto the combination, claiming that the experience offers up an almost lag-free interface.

However if there is one drawback it is that no matter how smooth the input feels, it isn’t quite the same as drawing on paper, which is what a Kickstarter project called PaperLike is trying to change. On the surface it looks like PaperLike is a screen protector, which we guess it is, but its creator claims that it will offer up a texture for the iPad Pro that makes it feel like you’re drawing on paper.

Its creator writes, “I was blown away by its responsiveness and palm rejection, but regrettably the plasticky feel when writing on the iPad with the Apple Pencil really disappointed me, as I really missed the haptic feedback […] After some extensive research and testing we made the PaperLike. It is a screen shield that makes writing on the iPad Pro with the Apple Pencil feel like writing on paper. It is incredible how it completes the iPad Pro experience.”

Whether or not PaperLike has successfully achieved this is unclear since we can’t actually try it for ourselves. However if you’re curious a pledge of €19 will nab one one PaperLike for the 12.9-inch model, or €17 for the smaller 9.7-inch iPad Pro.

PaperLike Wants To Make Your iPad Pro Feel Like Paper , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Inmates Secretly Built Computers That Connected To The Prison Network

Image credit – Ohio Office of the Inspector General

Prisons aren’t meant to be fun or relaxing so as you can imagine, a lot of the little luxuries in life we take for granted aren’t quite as readily available in most prisons, such as computers. However inside a medium-security prison at Ohio, it seems that the inmates were somehow resourceful enough where they managed to assemble two working computers in secret.

How they obtained the parts they needed was during an onsite computer skills and electronics recycling program. The computers were in operation for about four months, with one of them actually being hidden in the ceiling. It was only discovered after the prison’s IT department was alerted to a connected device that used a contractor’s stolen credentials that had exceeded the daily internet usage threshold.

After forensics went through the computers, it was discovered that they contained software that they used to apply for credit cards, research tax-refund fraud, search inmate records, obtain prison passes for restricted areas, and so on. These inmates even used the computer for tips on how to make drugs, explosives, and more.

According to Randall Meyer, the Ohio inspector general, “It surprised me that the inmates had the ability to not only connect these computers to the state’s network but had the ability to build these computers. They were able to travel through the institution more than 1,100 feet without being checked by security through several check points, and not a single correction’s staff member stopped them from transporting these computers into the administrative portion of the building. It’s almost as if it’s an episode of Hogan’s Heroes.”

Inmates Secretly Built Computers That Connected To The Prison Network , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.