Moto X unveiling event to be followed up with star-studded after-party

On July 19, Motorola fired out a pre-event invitation to a Moto X event on August 1 in New York, prepped to bring the full device details to light. Now it has sent out another invite, this time bringing on a secondary event – a party, of sorts, full of big names in custom-fitted fun. In addition, the Moto X makes a somewhat candid appearance in the latest invite, more so than in the last one.

Invite

The latest invite includes both another look at the user-oriented approach included with the Moto X and sets prospective attendees up for a wild night, with a secondary event starting at 8PM EST and lasting until the wee morning hours. It looks like Google is gearing up for quite the kick off.

There’s a host of entertainment involved, among them being DJ Kaskade, M4SONIC, Thank You X, Chef Marc Forgione, SOL REPUBLIC, and the comedy team JASH. Beyond that, the invite also gives us one other interesting piece of information, which you can spot for yourself up on the left corner: a shot of a white Moto X, which looks similar to the one Google’s Eric Schmidt was seen using.

The flagship has been seen in a myriad of leaks, not the last of which were a ton of screenshots that surfaced yesterday showing some off its much-touted features. The device will be able to function based on certain situations, such as switching into hand set mode when the user is driving, and being silent at night when one is likely to be sleeping.

Beyond that, the smartphone will also allow for rather extensive customizations, including different colors and engraving, as well as rumors of wooden back panels and other materials. You can check out some of the latest news about the upcoming phone in the timeline below, and then head on over to our Moto X tag portal for more info.


Moto X unveiling event to be followed up with star-studded after-party is written by Brittany Hillen & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2013, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Google reportedly testing Helpouts: professional services through Hangouts

Google reportedly testing Helpouts

There’s no question that Google Hangouts can be helpful; wouldn’t it be nice to get cash for hosting them? Google may be sympathetic to that idea. TechCrunch claims that the search firm is testing Helpouts, a service that would let most anyone book Hangouts that optionally require fees. The appointment system would lean on Google Wallet for transactions, and it would divide chats into categories such as repair (think tech support) or education. Don’t assume that you’ll be starting a side business just yet, though. Helpouts reportedly entered internal testing in late June, and any public launch would be “at least a month away” — if it happens at all, that is. We’ve reached out to Google for answers, so we’ll let you know if and when it’s time to start charging for online conversations.

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Source: TechCrunch

Google Play Games app now available

We knew the Google Play Games app would be arriving in the Play Store some time today, and now it is officially available for download. The same app will come pre-loaded on the newly announced Nexus 7 tablet, and will serve as a central hub of sorts for viewing game achievements, leaderboards, checking out what friends are playing, and all that good stuff.

Capture

Word surfaced about the Google Play Games app from Google at its event earlier today, with the news perhaps being drowned out by the excitement surrounding the new Nexus 7 and Android 4.3. As its name suggest, this is a dedicated gaming app, and makes it easier to stay on top of one’s Android gaming habit, and makes it a bit easier for friends to check out what you’re up to.

The app is only 2MB in size, and is available for devices running Android 2.2 and higher. Google is hailing its biggest features as a unified system of sorts that brings all the aspects of Android gaming together. With the app, users can discover new games by seeing what their friends are playing, and vice versa.

Players can play games with their friends, and see all the pertinent details related to that. The Google Play Games app can also be used to jump into multiplayer games, and to compare scores with other gamers playing the same app. There’s also achievement tracking, letting gamers see, for example, what they’ve unlocked for a particular game, and what achievements are left to earn.

In case you missed it, the Google Play store was also in news today for adding a textbook category, giving it a further push into the educational market. The category allows students to either rent or purchase textbooks, depending on need and availability.

SOURCE: Android Community


Google Play Games app now available is written by Brittany Hillen & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2013, SlashGear. All right reserved.

What the Inside of Google’s Chromecast Looks Like

What the Inside of Google's Chromecast Looks Like

Curious as to what’s hiding inside the Google Chromecast dongle? Thanks to the FCC, we don’t have to wonder what the Chromecast is packing anymore. There’s a Marvell DE3005 chip and an AzurWare chip to take care of Wi-Fi duties, according to Anandtech. FCC documents actually show Chromecast details in May, with pictures of its innards added today. Enjoy the guts. [FCC via @nerdtalker, Engadget]

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Google Chromecast H2G2-42 FCC documents show off what’s inside the $35 dongle

Google Chromecast H2G242 FCC documents show off what's inside the $35 dongle

Even though Google only announced its new Chromecast HDMI dongle earlier today, we got our first peek at it in May. That’s when the mysterious H2G2-42 leaked in FCC documents, with few details other than the name referencing Douglas Adams’ book. As Anandtech’s Brian Klug points out, the documents have been updated, and now include a few pictures of the Chromecast with its external casing removed. Inside there’s a Marvell DE3005 chip, plus Azurewave hardware to handle its (2Ghz only) WiFi duties. Hit the link below to take a look, although at the $35 sticker price you can probably afford to do an iSuppli-style teardown of your own.

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Source: FCC, Brian Klug (Twitter)

The Daily Roundup for 07.24.2013

DNP The Daily RoundUp

You might say the day is never really done in consumer technology news. Your workday, however, hopefully draws to a close at some point. This is the Daily Roundup on Engadget, a quick peek back at the top headlines for the past 24 hours — all handpicked by the editors here at the site. Click on through the break, and enjoy.

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SlashGear 101: Android 4.3 Jelly Bean, what’s new?

There are two major paths you might go down when you’re attempting to see what’s different in the change-over from Android 4.2 or 4.2.x over to 4.3 Jelly Bean: one is behind the scenes, the other – right up front. What we’re going to be doing is taking a mostly up-front approach, sourced straight from Google’s guides, tuned here for the common user while we keep the developer back end in mind: those bits and pieces are put in place for your machine to work well – here’s what you’ll be well off knowing.

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Graphics

Google has added a collection enhancements in the performance features already built-in to Jelly Bean, this including vsync timing, triple buffering, reduced touch latency, CPU input boost, and hardware-accelerated 2D rendering. You’ll find that this hardware-accelerated 2D rendering is now optimized for the stream of drawing commands.

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While this doesn’t end up changing a lot for those of you that just want to open their phone and kick up some dust with a high-powered graphics-intensive game, your device’s GPU will thank you for the more efficiently rearrangement and merging of draw operations. This renderer can also now use multithreading across multiple CPU cores to perform “certain” tasks.

You know what that means?

If you’re all about making the most of your multi-core processor (like most hero phones these days employ), you can now make them dance for your 2D rendering! Of course, again, that may not mean a lot for the lay person, but check down in the GPU profiling area in the Developer Bits section later in this run-down – see how you can see it with pretty live graphs and rings!

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Google’s Android 4.3 adds on improved rendering across the board, but centers again on the rendering of shapes and text. Efficiency in these areas allow circles and rounded rectangles to be rendered with higher quality, while text optimizations come into play when multiple fonts are used near one another, when text is scaled at high speed (think about zooming in) and when you’ve got oddities like drop shadows and CJK (complex glyph sets) lurking around.

This all ties in with OpenGL ES 3.0 and Google’s adoption of said system for Android 4.3 Jelly Bean. We’ll be attacking this bit of system integration, that is Khronos OpenGL ES 3.0, in a separate article – for now you’ll just want to know that this expands developer abilities to bring high-quality graphics and rendering to apps with new tools included in the official Android Native Developer Kit (NDK).

You’ll also find that custom rotation animation types have been added with Android 4.3, meaning you’ll be seeing apps choosing to use “jump-cut” and “cross-fade” when you turn your device on its side rather than just “standard” as you’re seeing now. Along with this, believe it or not, the ability to lock the screen to its current orientation has only just been introduced with Android 4.3 – helpful for camera apps, especially.

UI Automation

Android 4.3 Jelly Bean builds on an accessibility framework allowing simulations to be run on devices – this means your device will believe it’s being tapped, touched, etcetera, while you’re running these commands from a separate machine. Google notes that the user can: “perform basic operations, set rotation of the screen, generate input events, take screenshots,” and a whole lot more.

We’ll be waiting for this set of abilities to be expanded beyond the developer realm and into the remote control Android smartphone universe. This sort of usability has already begun with display mirroring – now it’s time to get weird with it.

Developer Bits

Developers will now be able to make user of On-screen GPU profiling. This data comes up in real time and shows what your device’s graphics processing unit(s) are doing and can be accessed in your Developer Options under settings. If you do not see these settings right out of the box, it’s just because you’ve not un-hidden them yet (this is default in all Android iterations above 4.2).

gpuprofiling

To un-hide Developer Options, go to Settings – About phone – Build number, and tap the Build number of your device 7 times quickly. From there you’ll be in business. Android 4.3 offers a collection of developer abilities behind the scenes, also including a set of enhancements to Systrace loggin.

systrace

With the Systrace tool, developers are able to visualize app-specific events inside the software they create, analyze the data that’s then output, and use Systrace tags with custom app selections to understand the behaviors and performance of apps in ways that are both easy to understand and in-depth enough to expand well beyond analysis tools of the past.

Security Systems

One of the most important additions to Android in this update for the business owner or employee that needs a bit more security than the average user is the addition of Wi-Fi credential configurations for individual apps to connect with WPA2 enterprise access points. Google adds API compatibility with Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP) and Encapsulated EAP (Phase 2) credentials, just like they’ve always wanted.

Android 4.3 adds KeyChain enhancements which allow apps to confirm that commands entered into them – passwords, for example – will not ever be exported off the device itself. This is what Google calls a “hardware root of trust” for the device, and they suggest that it cannot be broken, “even in the event of a root or kernel compromise.” That’s hardcore.

This security is expanded with an Android Keystore Provider which can be used by one app that will then store a password that cannot be seen or used by any other app. This key is added to the keystore without any user interaction and locks the the data down the same way the KeyChain API locks down keys to hardware.

You’ll also want to have a peek at our exploration of Restricted Profiles and Google’s expanded vision for multiple users on one device. Built-in kid-proofing!

Where and When

Google will be pushing Android 4.3 over the air to Nexus devices starting today – for models like the Nexus 4, Nexus 7, and Nexus 10, and SOON for the HTC One Google Play edition and Samsung Galaxy S 4 Google Play edition. As for the rest of the Android universe – we’ll just have to wait and see! There’s always the hacker forums, and stick around our Android portal for the news when it pops up!


SlashGear 101: Android 4.3 Jelly Bean, what’s new? is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2013, SlashGear. All right reserved.

For Music Fans, Google Chromecast Is No Apple Airplay

For Music Fans, Google Chromecast Is No Apple Airplay

About two and a half years after Evolver.fm started taking Google to task over its lack of a super-simple wireless music solution along the lines of Apple’s AirPlay for zapping music to speakers around the house, Google unveiled on Wednesday what some are calling its answer to AirPlay: Chromecast.

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Qualcomm earnings show record quarter as Snapdragon keys in on smartphone heroes

If you picked up an HTC One, a Samsung Galaxy S 4, an LG Optimus G, or a Motorola DROID RAZR HD device over the past few months, you’re now working with Qualcomm hardware. That’s exactly as this company intended for this year’s smart device push – and exactly what Qualcomm’s earnings report this week shows. Qualcomm’s fiscal Q3 2013 starts with a cool $6.24 billion in revenues, up 35% compared to the same quarter last year.

sg_nokia_mwc2013_1

Up there at the top end of the smartphone spectrum, Qualcomm made a killing in sales this quarter. They also sat in the entire range of Windows Phone 8 devices released this year (and throughout the OS’s history, for that matter), and have been part of quite a few of each of the top manufacturer’s midrange phones as well.

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It was more common over the past several months to hear of a smartphone being released with a Qualcomm processor than it was to hear of a smartphone being released with a processor made by any other company. Qualcomm let it be known that for the three months in this third quarter of their fiscal 2013, they had MSM chip shipments at 172 million units. That represents a 22% growth over this same quarter one year ago.

Qualcomm currently has $30.4 billion of cash, cash equivalents and marketable securities (as of June 30, 2013), and has announced a return of capital to stockholders in the form of $1.64 billion – that’s including $604 million, or $0.35 per share, of cash dividends paid as well as $1.04 billion through repurchases of 16.7 million shares of common stock.

snapdragon

That’s not half bad for what’s easily on of the most visible mobile chipmakers on the planet – Qualcomm also notes that they’ve now got an operating cash flow at $2.08 billion, up 125% year-over-year. The Snapdragon-toting group of processor makers reports operating income at $1.68 billion as well – that’s up 21% compared to this same quarter one year ago.


Qualcomm earnings show record quarter as Snapdragon keys in on smartphone heroes is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2013, SlashGear. All right reserved.

You Can Get Chromecast Tomorrow (And Cheaper) If You Buy From Amazon

You Can Get Chromecast Tomorrow (And Cheaper) If You Buy From Amazon

This may turn out to be a mistake on Amazon’s part, but right now Google Chromecast is listed as being for sale, right now, and Prime-eligible. That means you can have the crazy new must-buy streaming dongle shipped to you by the end of the week for free if you’re a Prime member, or by end of day tomorrow for an extra eight bucks. Crazy.

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