Apple TV adds rare regional service with Watchever in Germany

Apple TV adds rare regional service with Watchover in Germany

Sometimes minor-sounding events presage bigger things to come (and sometimes not), so Cupertino’s recent addition of a new subscription service app to Apple TV in Germany, Watchever, made our ears perk up. The service — which is still rolling out in the country and may not work on all devices, according to its Facebook page — offers Netflix-like streaming of movies and TV shows in dubbed German or original formats for €9 ($12) per month. More significantly, it marks one of the first times Apple TV has added programming specific to a single region on its streaming service, perhaps marking a new trend we could see elsewhere, too. Apple currently has paid subscription apps like NBA, MLB and WSJ from which it gets a nice cut, so a regional expansion would make financial sense — particularly in countries that don’t know a pop fly from a pop tune.

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Via: TNW

Source: Watchever (Facebook), (Twitter)

Google’s ‘Defend your Net’ campaign asks Germans to resist copyright changes

Google's 'Defend your Net' campaign asks Germans to resist copyright changes

Remember when the German government was thinking about making search engines either remove news excerpts from results, or pay royalties for including them? Well, these changes could soon be enforced, and Google has launched the “Defend Your Net” initiative to urge the German people to stop that happening. On the campaign’s pages, the search giant voices its opinions on what such a decision would do: harm the German media and, by extension, the country’s economy. It also points out that its news service is ad-free, publishers can opt out of listings, and that some German outlets receive roughly half their traffic from Google searches. Anyone who wants to receive information on the bill’s progress can register for email updates, and a tool is available to find the contact details of your local official if you’re feeling proactive. Need firing up? Then check out Google’s motivational video below.

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Via: The Next Web

Source: Google Defend Your Net campaign (German)

HTC opens store-within-a-store in Germany, hopes it’s your One-stop shop

HTC tests storewithinastore in Germany, wants to be notsoquietly brilliant at retail

Electronics giants who want to compete for retail attention but can’t always justify a full presence have a common trick: open a mini store. Apple did it, Microsoft did it, and Samsung virtually based the Galaxy S III launch on it. HTC is next at bat. While it has its own stores in Asia and parts of Europe, the smartphone designer is trying out a store-within-a-store at the giant Saturn-Markt shop in Hamburg, Germany. Swing by and you can buy or test a device like the One X+ or Windows Phone 8X alongside accessories — including Beats headphones, naturally — with dedicated staff to help. HTC didn’t immediately have details of larger plans when we reached out, but there’s talk at MyDrivers of further such stores as well as seminars that would help make sense out of Sense. There’s no guarantee that HTC will benefit from carving out its own retail space in what’s often considered hostile territory; even so, the move can’t hurt when the company is fighting for relevancy.

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Via: TonisTechBlog

Source: MyDrivers (translated)

This 40kW Missile Defense System Will Pew-Pew Missiles Clear Out of the Sky

The wall of hot lead thrown out by a Phalanx system may be effective against inbound artillery threats, but spewing hundreds of rounds to knock out a single bomb isn’t exactly efficient. Instead, one German defense contractor aims to simply fry them out of the sky. More »

Google Play Movies, Music reach Australia, Canada and parts of Europe on November 13th (update: Google scales it back)

Google Play on Google TV

Google’s long-awaited offering of Google Play Movies and Music on Google TV may have answered a longstanding demand for streaming access from some viewers, but it still left many of those outside of the US turning to alternatives. The company is closing that open loop with plans to take the media strategy global. Australia, Canada, France, Germany and the UK will all get similar streaming video options on their Google TV hubs as of November 13th; while content will undoubtedly vary, the gesture once more puts the international stores on roughly the same level as their American counterpart. The only debate left likely centers on what movie to rent for celebrating the occasion.

Update: Google has made a new post suggesting that its earlier outline was a mistake: Australia and Canada aren’t part of the November 13th mix.

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Google Play Movies, Music reach Australia, Canada and parts of Europe on November 13th (update: Google scales it back) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 08 Nov 2012 16:51:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceGoogle TV (Google+)  | Email this | Comments

OTA Jelly Bean 4.1.1 update arrives on Galaxy Note 10.1 in Germany

OTA Jelly Bean 4.1.1 update arrives on Galaxy Note 10.1 in Germany

Live in Germany, own a Galaxy Note 10.1 and need a Jelly Bean-based sugar fix? You’re in luck, as the Android 4.1.1 update Samsung promised back in September has touched-down in Deutschland. The 300MB OTA update brings with it several improvements, including greater multitasking and S-Pen functionality, new Quick Commands and the Paper Artist app from the Galaxy Note II. It might be an isolated release, but for all those still waiting, take it as a good indication your update isn’t far off.

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OTA Jelly Bean 4.1.1 update arrives on Galaxy Note 10.1 in Germany originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 08 Nov 2012 09:29:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink SamMobile  |  sourceAll About Samsung (German)  | Email this | Comments

Proportional VR experiment shrinks man down to rat size, lets us play games with rodents

Proportional VR experiment shrinks man down to rat size, lets us play games with rodents

Sure, you can always play catch with the dog, but what kind of game can you play with a caged rodent? Well, “find the poster,” apparently. A team of researchers from Universities in Spain, Germany, Austria, England and the US have put together a virtual reality system designed to let humans interact with rats at the rodent’s scale, challenging human participants to find and lead the rodent to a unmarked goal. According to a paper published in PLoS One participants were “beamed” into the rat’s environment by linking a head-mounted display and joystick to a rat-sized telepresence robot. Human players were then treated to a proportionally accurate representation of the game arena. The rat was there too, tracked with an overhead camera and represented by a human avatar.

Participants were tasked with coaxing their opponent in front one of three posters in attempt to sleuth out which one represents the “winning” position. When both players are in front of the correct mystery poster, a bell sounds and the game ends. The game was primarily created to test a scaled immersive virtual reality teleoperator system, but researchers are optimistic the technology could be used to observe animal behavior from a new perspective. Check out the setup in action after the break, or read on through to the source link below for a detailed description of how mankind and some of nature’s smaller creatures can get along in a virtual space.

Continue reading Proportional VR experiment shrinks man down to rat size, lets us play games with rodents

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Proportional VR experiment shrinks man down to rat size, lets us play games with rodents originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 04 Nov 2012 14:36:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Verge  |  sourcePLoS One  | Email this | Comments

Robot Plays Ping Pong, Learns, Wipes the Floor with You

This isn’t the only robot that can kick your butt at ping pong. But unlike other ping pong playing ‘botsot, this one wasn’t programmed with its abilities. It has learned through experience. Robotics experts at the Technical University of Darmstadt in Germany created this robot arm that learns to adapt its game as it plays.

ping pong robot

Much like the Borg, it assimilates knowledge and adapts. But there is no cube ship or sexy Seven of Nine model. This is just an arm. The team attached the robot arm to the ceiling and attached a camera to watch and analyze the game. They taught the arm to play ping pong by feeding it more and more difficult shots. The arm was soon generating its own shots thanks to it’s amassed knowledge.

That’s right. It learned. It wasn’t trained in advance… and it is armed with ping pong balls. We are all so dead. I can already see the little plastic bits sticking out of open wounds in human foreheads.

[via Geekosystem]


Google Music comes to Europe November 13, brings Google Music match, too

Google Music comes to Europe November 13Folks may be more excited about the newest Nexus phones, tablets and their fresh flavor of Jelly Bean, but Mountain View also unveiled a little something for music lovers across the pond today. That’s right, Google Music is coming to Europe beginning November 13th. Unfortunately, not everyone on the continent will gain access, but residents of the UK, France, Germany, Italy and Spain will have Google’s musical cloud servies in just a couple weeks. Not only that, Big G is adding an iTunes Match-style feature to Google Music that’ll scan your songs and add them to your cloud library, no uploading required. The feature will launch in Europe, with US residents enjoying the feature “soon after.”

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Google Music comes to Europe November 13, brings Google Music match, too originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 29 Oct 2012 12:22:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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German robot arm learns ping-pong as it plays humans, might rival its masters

Germans robot arm learns pingpong as it plays, might rival its human masters

We like to tell ourselves that learning by doing is the best strategy for improving our skills, but we seldom apply that philosophy to our robots; with certain exceptions, they’re just supposed to know what to do from the start. Researchers at the Technical University of Darmstadt disagree and have developed algorithms proving that robot arms just need practice, practice, practice to learn complex activities. After some literal hand-holding with a human to understand the basics of a ping-pong swing, a TUD robot can gradually abstract those motions and return the ball in situations beyond the initial example. The technique is effective enough that the test arm took a mere hour of practice to successfully bounce back 88 percent of shots and compete with a human. That’s certainly better than most of us fared after our first game. If all goes well, the science could lead to robots of all kinds that need only a small foundation of code to accomplish a lot. Just hope that the inevitable struggle between humans and robots isn’t settled with a ping-pong match… it might end badly.

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German robot arm learns ping-pong as it plays humans, might rival its masters originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 28 Oct 2012 07:57:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink New Scientist  |  sourceUniversity of Texas (PDF)  | Email this | Comments