Google invites devs over for a Chromecast hackathon plus SDK show-and-tell, updates official app

Google has slowly trickled out more authorized commercial apps that can stream to its Chromecast dongle since launch (Hulu, Pandora, and most recently HBO Go) but what about homebrew? So far developers have been able to work with a preview Cast SDK (creating a few impressive demonstrations) but restrictions have prevented these apps from being released for widespread use. That will probably change next month, as Google has invited several developers including CyanogenMod / AirCast dev Koushik Dutta and Thomas Kjeldsen to a hackathon on December 7th and 8th in Mountain View. An opportunity to test drive the “upcoming release” of the Cast SDK is promised, plus an opportunity to talk with Google engineers about what it can do.

While we wait to find out what devs will be officially allowed to create for the $35 dongle, the official Android Chromecast control app got an update tonight. The new version brings a lightly refreshed design with the side-tray style seen in many Google apps lately, and adjusted the display of time zone settings and the Chromecast MAC address to ease troubleshooting.

Filed under: , ,

Comments

Source: Koushik Dutta (G+), Thomas Kjuldsen (G+), Android Central Forums

300ft Drone-Powered Hack Foresees A Future Stuffed With Eye-In-The-Sky All-Seeing Apps

300ft

Hackathon hacks can lead to fully fledged apps and companies. Other times they are intended to be nothing more than a great hack. 300ft is certainly that: a neat hack, built overnight at the TechCrunch Disrupt SF hackathon, which pulls in “close to live” aerial imaging from UAVs (aka drones) so the  user can check how busy a prospective outdoor leisure location is before heading out.

The hack team behind 300ft deployed a fleet of drones over “the most popular places in San Francisco” — such as the marina and the piers — to pull in up-to-date imagery (hours old, rather than a real-time stream) to flesh out their app.

“You can dig into any one of these [several San Francisco locations] and view the latest data we’ve collected, oftentimes just a few hours old,” said 300ft hack team member Mark McSpaddan, also director of technology at travel technology company Sabrelabs, presenting the hack on stage (see video below). “Each image has time, geolocation and thanks to Weather Underground’s API weather data as well.”

The 300ft app is a neat hack in another sense, neatly combining aspects of the work done by the respective companies of the duo behind it, McSpaddan and Bret Kugelmass, co-founder of UAV imaging service startup Airphrame – with the former providing the travel tech, and the latter company delivering the eye in the sky capability.

300ft isn’t intended to become a business in its own right. But its creators are confident that services relying on real-time aerial imaging are very much coming down the pipe. Just don’t expect drones to be delivering pizza or tacos or burritos any time soon. “The pizza drone story is a completely unreasonable use of the applications of drones,” Kugelmass told TechCrunch in a backstage interview. “Same with the tacos, same with the burritos. That’s not happening.”

“It might happen at some point, but that’s in the distant, distant future,” he added when pressed. So sorry guys, no pizza-on-your-head deliveries just yet.

“This was just a great hack,” Kugelmass continued, discussing what the team had done with 300ft. “Airphrame’s business is separate. Sabre’s business is separate, this was just a great chance to come together and explore what’s possible in the future… UAV technology will be used for things other than the transport of heavy goods at first.”

Airphrame, which was founded more than a year ago, already has commercial customers for its UAV-powered aerial imaging capabilities although Kugelmass said it’s not currently disclosing customer names on confidentiality grounds. He did confirm that Airphrame’s customers are “commercial sector” entities though, not government agencies.

So, even though the 300ft hack itself isn’t going anywhere after today it likely anticipates a future wave of apps and services that will make commercial use of UAV technology. Military tech does have a habit of trickling down into commercial products, so expect to see more apps leveraging drone-powered near real-time aerial imaging capabilities in the not too distant (but potentially slightly dystopic) future — especially as the cost of the necessary hardware continues to come down.

Returning to the 300ft hack, it started as “some sketches and some things we had experimented with”, said McSpadden. “And then yesterday Bret sent his Airphrame crew out and they gathered a tonne of data [including the Americas’ Cup boat race].”

McSpadden added that one possible use-case for a drone-powered app in the travel sector could be to provide hotels with an information service they offer their customers, telling them which beaches are the least crowded, for instance. “A concierge with that kind of knowledge would be much more valuable,” he added.

GlassFrogger makes Glass wearers hop in real life to brave simulated streets (update: code and video)

GlassFrogger gets Glass wearers hopping in real life

Google may keep a tight lid on Glass development, but that hasn’t stopped coders at the Breaking Glass Hackathon from building some clever wearable apps. Take the event’s winning entry, GlassFrogger, as an example: the HTML5-based game recreates Frogger on Google’s eyepiece by making players hop in the real world to cross virtual roads. It’s a multi-platform title, too, with support for any device sporting a modern web browser. GlassFrogger is free to use today, but try to avoid playing while you’re out on the street — there’s enough roadkill inside the game, thank you.

Update: We’ve since been in touch with co-author Adam Singer, who has posted both source code and the GlassFrogger pitch; you can see his team demonstrating the game after the break.

Filed under: , , ,

Comments

Via: Robert Scoble (Google+)

Source: GlassFrogger

Epson dangles $1,000 bounty to attract augmented reality apps

Epson hosting Moverio hackathon on August 24th and 25th

Epson’s Moverio BT-100 is one of the more hackable headsets thanks to its Android control box, but few developers have given it a good look. The company may have an incentive for those coders — it’s holding its first-ever Moverio hackathon on August 24th and 25th. Those who visit Epson’s Long Beach headquarters on those days can design and pitch an augmented reality concept in hopes of winning a either $1,000 grand prize or one of two $500 runner-up awards. Space is very limited at just 50 slots, so you’ll want to sign up quickly if you’re interested. Whether or not you can attend, the hackathon is good news for Moverio owners that could soon get more use out of their $699 eyewear.

Filed under:

Comments

Source: Eventbrite

Disrupt NY Hackathon Hardware Find: Robots!

robot

The floor at Disrupt’s NY Hackathon is filled mostly with people working on software projects, but there were also some interesting hardware endeavors underway. One in particular caught my eye: a robot built from open-source components build to help anyone subject their app or device to strenuous, physical testing in a non-simulated environment.

The basic bot is built from an Arduino controller, along with 3D-printable components is a test automation device for iPhone, brought by R/GA Technical Director Sune Kaae and designed/built by Jason Huggins, creator of Selenium-based open source Angry Birds-playing robots. It’s a device that Kaae says is easily programmed via Node.js, meaning it’s accessible for software developers who are more familiar with web languages.

One of the big remaining challenges facing hardware startups, Kaae says, is that developers are intimidated by a perceived barrier to entry in programming physical devices. They don’t have to be, though, he explained, since it can be made relatively easy to accomplish things with programming languages they already understand.

Kaae’s robot, which positions a touchscreen-compatible stylus anywhere on a screen someone wants to place it, and can run tests that just aren’t possible via simulated virtual testing, or are too costly or boring to do human testing for. It can also help with things like testing movement for the Nike Fuel + Band, which R/GA helped design.

Right now, Kaae’s looking for a mathematician to help refine the product, to make sure that when you input a coordinate to hit, it hits exactly that coordinate and not just roughly the right area. But the little bot is a great example of how some people are trying to make it easier to make and test hardware to begin with.

Twitter reportedly working on location-based discovery tool

Twitter reportedly working on locationbased discovery tool

The next big Twitter feature? Finding out what your neighbor’s talking about, 140 characters at a time, of course. According to All Things D, the service is working on exactly that, a location-based feature that was reportedly developed at a hack week held by the company earlier this month. Twitter, predictably, isn’t commenting on the reportedly upcoming feature, but D has says that this information is coming from “multiple sources.” No word on how close they all are to one another.

Comments

Source: All Things D

PBS shows how hacking is reclaiming its good name after a bad rap (video)

PBS explains how hacking got a bad rap and is reclaiming its good name video

Hacking is still a loaded concept for many, often conjuring negative images of corporate espionage, fraudsters and prank-minded script kiddies. PBS’ Off Book wants to remind us that hacking wasn’t always seen this way — and, thanks to modern developments, is mending its reputation. Its latest episode shows that hacking began simply as a desire to advance devices and software beyond their original roles, but was co-opted by a sometimes misunderstanding press that associated the word only with malicious intrusions. Today, hacking has regained more of its original meaning: hackathons, a resurgence of DIY culture and digital protests prove that hacks can improve our gadgets, our security and even our political landscape. We still have a long way to go before we completely escape movie stereotypes, but the mini-documentary may offer food for thought the next time you’re installing a custom ROM or building your own VR helmet.

Filed under: , , ,

Comments

Startup Weekend Transmedia – San Francisco Feb.1-3

Start up week end transmedi Startup Weekend Transmedia – San Francisco Feb.1 3

Ever wondered what Don Draper does between two episodes of Mad Men? Most likely, he drinks more whisky, maybe runs errands, meets charming women… Unfortunately we, the audience, will never know for sure since we can only passively witness what the show lets us see through that weekly 40-minute window. Now imagine if you could extend that world beyond the episodes and your TV screen, make it interactive, build additional story lines, mobile apps, games that let viewers choose their own adventure, or connect with the characters! How about doing the same for a game you play with your friends, or a documentary on a real-world issue dear to your heart, or even a marketing stunt for that killer idea you plan on launching?

Welcome to Startup Weekend Transmedia, a Startup Weekend focusing on media, entertainment, and the future of storytelling. Transmedia is a technique of creating a multi-platform universe where each platform supports different story-lines, that serve the main « storyworld ». Transmedia can be applied to entertainment, non-fiction and educational content, advertising and branding…

Ubergizmo is a media partner of Startup Weekend Transmedia, the event will be haled Feb1-3 at PARISOMA in San Francisco. Our readers get a 15% discount on registration fee,  please use the special code « Ubergizmo » when registering on Eventbrite !

Join 60 programmers, art directors, film producers, game designers, developers, advertisers, marketers – to form multidisciplinary teams and prototype transmedia experiences, all in 54 hours. Teams will be coached by industry experts from EA/Bioware, Unit9, Situate, Storify, Mozilla, Zeega, Mixamo and will have the opportunity to pitch and demo their prototype in front of judges from Lucasfilm, AKQA, IDEO.org and the Mayor’s Office of Innovation. Winning prizes include incubation services, goodies, and exclusive access to tools/content from our partners.

(more…)

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Mobile World Congress 2013, Best of CES 2013 @ Ubergizmo,

Did You Preorder a Set of Project Glass Explorer Editions?

Later this month and early next month, Google is planning two hackathons in San Francisco (1/28-1/29) and New York (2/1-2/2) that they’re calling “Glass Foundry” for any developer who preordered a set of Glass from last year’s I/O conference. More »

Google invites Glass pre-order holders to hackathons in New York, San Francisco

Google invites Glass pre-order holders to hackathons in New York, San Francisco

Google just hit our inbox with an email inviting folks who pre-ordered the Explorer Edition of Project Glass to two-day hackathons in San Francisco and New York, where they’ll be the first group of developers — not being paid by Page and Co. — to collectively develop for Glass. Dubbed Glass Foundry, the events will introduce developers to Glass, set them up with access to the hardware and familiarize them with the API, called Mirror. Throughout the powwow, Google engineers will be on-hand to help out with development, and the second day will feature demos and “special guest judges.” Hackers in San Francisco can look forward to the event on January 28th and 29th, while those in New York City can snag time with the device on February 1st and 2nd. Hit the jump for the full text of Mountain View’s email.

Continue reading Google invites Glass pre-order holders to hackathons in New York, San Francisco

Filed under:

Comments