NASCAR driver Brad Keselowski talks the technology illusion up to Sprint Cup Series title

We had the opportunity to chat briefly with NASCAR driver and contender for the upcoming Sprint Cup Series title Brad Keselowski on the perception that NASCAR is devoid of technological innovation – and how false that perception is. As it turns out, for those of you unfamiliar with the way a driver interacts with his pit crew, there’s been a massive amount of new technology appearing in NASCAR racing over the past few years. The driver is part of an experience now that’s not just based on how well he or she can drive a car, but how well they’re able to make use of the many technologies around them. NOTE: Our own Vincent Nguyen will be heading down to the pits at the Sprint Cup AdvoCare 500 this weekend – check below for details and watch Keselowski LIVE right along with us!

As Keselowski made clear, NASCAR is not the same sport it was back at the start – this is no bootlegging drag. Instead as Keselowski reaches for his first ever NASCAR Sprint Cup Series title (just a few points behind leader Jimmie Johnson at the moment), he’s got many tools at his disposal not just to prepare for the race, but to blast through the track on race day with the team’s pit crew closer than ever before. And with technology inside the vehicle that’s well beyond what teams had only a few years before.

“If you look at NASCAR today, the perception is that there’s very little technology while in reality it’s the exact opposite.”

SlashGear: How would you describe the way the technology you use on and off the track today affects how you drive on race day?

Brad Keselowski: If you look at NASCAR today, the perception is that there’s very little technology while in reality it’s the exact opposite. As a team we continue to push the envelope to be smarter, to be better prepared, and to communicate in better ways. That’s all part of the picture. We’re always evolving new technologies that can help us do those things.


SG: Has there been any technology or breakthrough over the past few years that has changed the way you race?

BK: Technology has definitely changed the way we race. The biggest thing is that we communicate a lot better. Communication is so important in NASCAR – between drivers, crew chiefs, crew members, etcetera. That extra bit of communication goes across several different forms of technology that make it stronger.

SG: How would you say the communication innovations of the past few years have changed the way the sport is perceived (or portrayed) by the media?

BK: I think that the key thing for our sport is that technology is constantly being integrated – there are some fascinating new technologies that we’ve implemented. But we do it all behind closed doors; which is both good and bad.

Good because we want to keep those secrets so our competitors don’t get them. Bad because the perception of the sport is that we don’t have it. It’s a very tricky line to walk.

SlashGear will be attending the AdvoCare 500 NASCAR Sprint Cup at the Phoenix International Raceway on Sunday, the 11th of November with a full schedule ahead of us (including the big race itself starting at 3PM ET!) We’ll be covering the race all day long and jumping in on the pits for up-close and personal peeks at the cars before they burn up the track for one of the most important races of the year – have a peek at our basic itinerary here:

1. Pace Car Ride at speeds of 120+ MPH
2. Tour of NASCAR garage
3. Driver’s Meeting
4. Meet and Greet with General Motors Racing’s Chevrolet program manager for NASCAR’s top-tier Sprint Cup Series Alba Colon
5. AdvoCare 500 race (312 laps, 312 miles) Sunday, Nov. 11, 3 p.m. ET on ESPN with LIVE coverage from SlashGear!

So stick with us through the weekend for all of the hot action straight from the pits! And be sure to comment with any questions you’ve got or requests you have for us and we’ll see what we can do!


NASCAR driver Brad Keselowski talks the technology illusion up to Sprint Cup Series title is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


The Engadget Interview: ARM’s Lead Mobile Strategist James Bruce (video)

The Engadget Interview: ARM's Lead Mobile Strategist James Bruce

Last week we got the chance to spend a few minutes with James Bruce, ARM’s Lead Mobile Strategist, to chat about the company’s past, present and future. We discussed the recent Cortex A50 announcement and ARM’s broad history — including key products like the Nokia 6110 and how the company’s chip designs have “changed how people compute and lead their digital life” over the past five years. We also talked about the scalability and flexibility of the ARM architecture, from embedded systems to smartphones and tablets to servers. So what’s in the pockets of one of the most important people in the chip world? A Nexus 7 and a global Galaxy S III, it turns out. Go ahead and watch the full interview above.

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The Engadget Interview: ARM’s Lead Mobile Strategist James Bruce (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 05 Nov 2012 09:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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The Engadget Interview: Parrot CEO Henri Seydoux

The Engadget Interview Parrot CEO Henri Seydoux

This man sure knows how to entertain photogs, but he’s much more than just a charming French poser. Meet Henri Seydoux, the founder, chairman and CEO of today’s multi-talented Parrot. While promoting the recently launched Zikmu Solo wireless speaker in Hong Kong, Seydoux sat down with us to share the amusing story behind himself and his company. Check out the video after the break to hear how Seydoux’s encounter with Roland Moreno, the inventor of the smart card, made him drop journalism in favor of software engineering, as well as his detailed explanation on why many Bluetooth audio products suck, and how Bluetooth will continue to rule the world “like Beyoncé.” Enjoy!

Continue reading The Engadget Interview: Parrot CEO Henri Seydoux

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The Engadget Interview: Parrot CEO Henri Seydoux originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 29 Oct 2012 09:20:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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SlashGear interviews Futura on Samsung and the power of cross-branding

The artist / designer known as Futura 2000 has executed a rather interesting set of collaborative projects in his lifetime, painting a portfolio of historically significant cross-overs that’s lead him straight to Samsung. The folks at Samsung took the opportunity very recently to team up with Futura for the first time to present a unique use-case for the Galaxy Note 10.1 (tablet with S-Pen stylus) and its major potential in the hands of this creative icon and legend. In our interview we found that though Samsung presents this man as a larger-than-life hero here in their second collaboration (here using the Galaxy Note II as a central device), he’s actually quite the down-to-earth conversationalist, and has shown his approach with the Galaxy Note device series to be made with the same intrigue as your everyday average gadget enthusiast.

The Galaxy Note II event in New York City introduced a project Futura and Samsung would present together immediately following the main keynote that headed off the night. The night ended with a Kanye West concert, but not before Futura’s crowd-sourced digital mural was crafted live as the Samsung press and special guests filtered in to the venue. Made of a vast collection of guest-created images collected from Galaxy Note II devices throughout the night, the artist made one wild amalgamation to shine on its many contributors.

Above: Futura sits amongst the fray at the Galaxy Note II event in NYC. Below: DJ Hudson Mowhawke delivers tunes at the Galaxy Note II event near a giant display showing off the finer points of the Galaxy Note series.

In the hands-on period between the keynote and the concert, Futura sat at attention yet very obviously relaxed in the center of what was essentially a mad rush for touches on the newly available devices. A darkened club atmosphere, bright lights and colorful devices, and the artist in the center of it all, wearing dark pants, sneakers, and a white t-shirt with a leopard print pocket. His demeanor was that of a wise worldly fellow mixed with the seemingly unending hunger for staying on-point with not just his own artwork, but the most interesting and fabulous tools with which to do it.

That’s where Samsung comes in.

Above: Samsung’s Galaxy Note II keynote shows the collection of creative partners they’ve got ready to speak on the features of the Note series at the event.

Futura: They’ve asked me to speak on the creative possibilities on the tablet – specifically with the S-Note function and a lot of the different stuff you can do with the device. Kind of like a paint program, but it’s quite intense. I just got my device recently and within a few days of just messing with it, without even a formal walk-through, I felt like the device was intuitive enough to figure out, and I was able to do some really cool stuff.

Also the pen, itself, is amazing. I’ve worked with tablets before, whether its… you know, other names I don’t need to mention. Those always married up like a mouse. You do what you do with it… *clicking, mouse-movement gesture* within the tablet.

This is quite different.

The intensity, the sensitivity – I was messing around with something and it looked just like I spray painted it!

SlashGear: Have you gotten to use the Note II extensively yet?

F: Ah here, actually, I’ve got it in my back pocket. We’re gonna get plug in on it pretty soon and they’re gonna project my screen on to the monitor there and just go at it.

SG: I [Chris Burns] just got it too and reviewed it for SlashGear – it’s really nice, feels really good. [see our full review of the T-Mobile Galaxy Note II right now if you do so please]

F: Yeah it’s fun – it does feel good, and sexy, yeah.

SG: Your career path has been many different places – it’s always been interesting to see you delving into working with brands. Lots of different brands – designing a bike here, or this or that there – do you see yourself continuing to do that now?

With Samsung specifically, how do you see that affecting your art career?

F: The one thing about Samsung I’m kind of excited about – obviously – is – yeah there’s a list of companies that I’ve collaborated with, put my name on their product, bla bla bla – but I’ve never been [with] a tech company. And one of the biggest tech nerds out there – ever since my advantage, I guess, of going to Asia, for the rest of the whole swarm, I was always into gadgets and stuff like that.

I spent tons of money on all the kinds of stuff. Probably had every phone, PDA, you know, that’s probably been out there – if it’s cool, I may have got my hands on it, you know, as a consumer. So finally, [I get] to work with a brand that’s got a product that I can really use.

At this point Futura hails a server that’s been circling, asking quite politely if he can have two of the spring rolls she’s been serving to the crowd. In such a laid-back environment that this man creates, we can’t resist grabbing a roll as well.

F: There we go! Thank you so much, I’m going to dip this one, *dips from the sauce presented thusly*, thank you!

So all the collaborations. You know, the bike collabo, that makes sense, I guess, you know, Nike. CK1, that was like 6 years ago – maybe not so much. But you know, Samsung though, yeah, this is awesome.

And what I was saying is – you can do some stuff on this device that you can export out. I mean, you know, what, I got an idea for a painting, or a design sketch thing. It’s like other devices can’t just do that. This could be a very interesting addition.

Above: DJ Craze – another of Samsung’s special guests – lays down a few fine musical constructs for party attendees.

SG: If you have a brand, and Samsung, they have a brand – do you feel like this is a cross brand? Your name, Futura, do you feel like that’s a brand?

F: Yes. I do. I have a – I mean I subsequently closed my shop in Japan. You know, I had a shop in Japan where I was making stuff and putting my name on it. And thus those products are from, you know, my brand. But now, no, I’m actually kind of no longer doing that. However –

Skye, grab these foodie people! *Futura once again hails a server via his partner*

Above: The crowd gets thick at the event right before the Kanye session is about to begin.

F: But yes I understand that the Futura signature was once a graffiti tag on the walls of New York subways is now a brand. And I’m cool with that actually. I mean I’m not – I’m choosing these collaborations based on, obviously, what it is, not what the pay day is.

And to some degree, it’s not like – and as I say now, I had to close my store. It’s not like my motive is to manufacture things, put my name on them, you know – I want to pursue my art career. And I recently had a show in New York about a month ago.

I’m trying to get out of that lifestyle, get back into painting.

Above: Futura poses in front of one of his works of art at his recent show: Future-Shock at Valmorbida in New York. Image via 12ozProphet.

Stick around SlashGear for our continued interview series with the top minds in many industries and of many different disciplines, each of them making use of the technology that makes our modern world great. With an artist like Futura creating greatness with a device like the Galaxy Note II as a tool, the tool’s potential shines like a beacon for all to see – and want. Expect tech companies to continue with this trend in the near future – and keep an eye on Futura as he moves into tomorrow right on the cuff with creative intent.


SlashGear interviews Futura on Samsung and the power of cross-branding is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Art Thompson, Red Bull Stratos’ technical project director, talks circuit breakers, wind shear and biomedical data

Art Thompson, Red Bull Stratos' Technical Project Director, talks circuit breakers, wind shear and biomedical data

While Felix Baumgartner landed safely on the ground just a matter of hours ago, the internet is still resonating with the sound of tweets, status updates and YouTube clicks, all thanks to what was one of the most spectacular human endeavors in recent history. The mission was simple, to send a man up in a balloon higher than ever before, and have him safely jump to the ground. This kind of “simple” is usually anything but — if you just look past the well-manicured exterior. Which, as luck would have it is exactly what we did.

With the cheers of success still ringing in his ears, we got some quality time with Art Thompson, the technical project director, and Baumgartner’s earliest collaborator on the Stratos mission. We wanted to know a little bit more about what went on behind the scenes, and Thompson was more than happy to oblige. They’re understandably proud of what they just achieved.

Continue reading Art Thompson, Red Bull Stratos’ technical project director, talks circuit breakers, wind shear and biomedical data

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Art Thompson, Red Bull Stratos’ technical project director, talks circuit breakers, wind shear and biomedical data originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 16 Oct 2012 17:53:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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‘Samsara’ creators Ron Fricke and Mark Magidson discuss the digital filmmaking divide (video)

'Samsara' creators Ron Fricke and Mark Magidson discuss the digital filmmaking divide video

We’ve set up shop in a conference room above Third Avenue in Manhattan, a Canon 5D trained on Ron Fricke and Mark Magidson. I find myself apologizing awkwardly for the setup, several times. There’s a long boardroom table in the middle and a customary junket breakfast spread to the right. It’s about as plain as meeting rooms come, save for a few movie posters lining the walls, advertising films distributed by the indie film company that owns the space. Hardly ideal for our purposes, but here were are, all clumped into a single corner, with the director and producer of Samsara flanking a cardboard poster for their movie, leaned atop a stand. It’s not the welcome befitting the creators of a big, beautiful sweeping cinematic masterpiece. But they’re tired — too tired to care about such things, perhaps. They dismiss such apologies, clip their lavaliere microphones on over their shirts and sit down.

Fricke motions to the single SLR seated atop a tripod, explaining that he used the same model on a recent commercial shoot. “We have a solid background grounded in shooting in film, and that just stays with you,” he adds. “When I’m shooting like with a 5D, like what you’re using now to shoot this interview, I’m working with it like it’s a 65 camera. It’s my frame of reference, my background. I’m just wired that way.” The world of filmmaking has changed dramatically in the two decades since the duo first unleashed Baraka on the world, a non-narrative journey across 25 countries that became the high-water mark for the genre and a staple in critics’ lists and film school syllabi.

Continue reading ‘Samsara’ creators Ron Fricke and Mark Magidson discuss the digital filmmaking divide (video)

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‘Samsara’ creators Ron Fricke and Mark Magidson discuss the digital filmmaking divide (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 15 Oct 2012 14:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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V-Moda’s M-100 audiophile headphones get ready for mass production, we go ears-on

VModa's M100 audiophile headphones get ready for mass production, we go ears on

V-Moda’s been seriously edging for the audiophile crowd lately — namely with its Crossfade M-80 on-ear headphones, the VAMP headphone amp for the iPhone 4/4S, and a soon-to-be disclosed followup dubbed as Vamp Versa. That brings us to its soon-to-be released M-100 headphones, which haven’t really been a secret since their inception, making them a special set. Unlike many companies who strive for secrecy in regards to upcoming products, V-Moda’s taken a drastically different approach with its latest cans, with owner Val Kolton stating that they’re effectively the first crowd-sourced set of headphones.

Many headphone lovers out there likely know that Kolton’s been heavily in contact with the Head-Fi community, hoping to craft the best sounding, looking and fitting ear-gear possible. As he puts it, “the easter egg and inside joke is that the [M-100 headphones] can actually stand up. It is the first headphone that we know of that ‘stands above the rest’ and all others fall down/crawl. It also can stand on top of a few other new brand’s models almost like Cirque De Soleil.” It may be hard to tell based on the fashion-focused looks, but the company is adamant that its audio gear goes through more stringent research and testing than some of the biggest names out there, and that it’ll show in the end products. Most notably, its TrueHertz testing where, for the M-100, “six points from 5hZ to 12kHz are measured to be within [its] obsessive quality control levels.” According to Kolton, most companies only check at 1Khz, and allow for much wider variances. He followed up stating that “like fine wine, a headphone is only as good as its fit (taste buds) and its driver variances (grapes/cork). To us, all brands advertising ‘HD’ sound [aren’t being forthright] unless they believe or even know these key components are “‘fugazi.'”

For perspective, the M-100 is essentially the third iteration of the Crossfade LP over-ear headphones. Aside from a few tweaks to the design, it’s packing an audiophile-focused tuning (rather than DJ) that’s based on blending the voicings of its M-80 on-ears and the LP2 over-ears. It wouldn’t be unfair to say the company is aiming for a flat, yet fun sound — all in a package that’s fit to take to the streets like its earlier offerings. Those familiar may know that just under 150 of the first 200 production-quality models are currently floating around as early stock and test units for a final bit of real-world feedback before mass-production begins — and this editor’s been lucky enough to get his mitts on a set for some initial impressions. So, is the product shaping up to match all the hype? Click on past the break our take.

Continue reading V-Moda’s M-100 audiophile headphones get ready for mass production, we go ears-on

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V-Moda’s M-100 audiophile headphones get ready for mass production, we go ears-on originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 11 Oct 2012 15:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Google’s Eric Schmidt claims 1 billion Android activations by next year

Earlier this morning, former Google CEO and current chairman Eric Schmidt spoke with Walt Mossberg and Kara Swisher of AllThingsD to talk about various things that Google is up to currently, as well as Schmidt’s thoughts on the patent wars and Apple‘s Maps app. During the interview, Schmidt projected that there would be more than one billion Android activations within a year from now.

Schmidt says that there are 1.3 million Android activations per day on average, so if that keeps up, Schmidt thinks there will be over a billion Android devices roaming around throughout the world. Of course, he brings Apple into the mix as well, saying that while Apple has a respectable ecosystem with a lot of developers, Android simply has more:

“The Android-Apple platform fight is the defining contest. Here’s why: Apple has thousands of developers building for it. Google’s platform, Android, is even larger. Four times more Android phones than Apple phones. 500 million phones already in use. Doing 1.3 million activations a day. We’ll be at one billion mobile devices in a year.”

Android is already half way to the goal of one billion device activations, and if the past is any indication, we may see the number of daily activations grow little by little over the next several months. Around two years ago, Android was only seeing a measly 200,000 daily activations, but almost a year later that number jumped to over 500,000.

Schmidt also brought up the PC market and compared the numbers. He mentioned that smartphones and other mobile devices are getting extremely close to surpassing PC use, which isn’t a too much a surprise. We saw yesterday that PC sales have dipped for the first time in 11 years. Could it be the start of a new revolution?

[via BGR]


Google’s Eric Schmidt claims 1 billion Android activations by next year is written by Craig Lloyd & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Google’s Eric Schmidt talks about self-driving cars, patent wars, and more in interview

A few hours ago, Google‘s Eric Schmidt had an interview with Walt Mossberg and Kara Swisher. During the 60 minute discussion, Schmidt touched on a lot of topics, including the current patent wars, Apple and Google Maps, and his experience of riding in a self-driving car. The interview was wrapped up with a Q & A session, in which Schmidt answered a variety of questions, some hypothetical, some relevant to current issues.

During the first half-hour, Schmidt, Mossberg and Swisher discussed the four big tech companies, which Schmidt identified as Facebook, Amazon, Apple, and Google. When Microsoft‘s absence from the list was pointed out, he said the omission was deliberate, and due to the company’s failure to bring “state of the art products into the field.” Later during the Q&A, someone asked which tech company he would choose to be CEO of, to which Schmidt carefully side-stepped the question by complimenting each company. When asked, “So which one?”, referring to which company he would be choose to be CEO of, Schmidt responded: “Which one has the most cash? That would be Apple.”

Schmidt said, “They should have kept our maps.”

The conversation quickly switched to Apple and its decision to drop Google Maps, in which Schmidt had little to say, except that Google Maps are better than what Apple offers. He expressed uncertainty about whether Apple will allow the company’s map app in the App Store, stating that Apple has rejected some of their apps in the past. He did say that the two companies stay in communication.

The issue of the ongoing patent wars arose early in the second half of the interview, with Schmidt saying that they “annoyed” him. When asked specifically for his opinion on the court’s decision in the Apple – Samsung spat, he was unwilling to comment on the jury’s decision, except to say that it is ultimately the little companies that are suffering.

Finally, the interview wrapped up with a discussion of integrated software/hardware devices, such as the soon-to-be-released Surface devices from Microsoft. Schmidt said that what the world is seeing is an evolution into integrated hardware and software, as is the case with Google’s Chromebooks. Soon after this, self-driving cars were discussed, and Schmidt described the experience of riding in one as “life-changing.”

Check out AllThingsD for the full interview.


Google’s Eric Schmidt talks about self-driving cars, patent wars, and more in interview is written by Brittany Hillen & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Just Mobile talks about working with Apple and why it manufactures in Taiwan exclusively

Just Mobile talks about Apple product certification, previews its AluRack, AluBase and HeadStand

For the average Joe that have managed to stay out of the Apple circle, the Just Mobile brand might not immediately ring a bell, but chances are you would’ve come across one of its peripheral designs at some point. The only problem is unless you knew the company in the first place, you’d easily assume that the aluminum or even plastic knock-offs are just based on generic designs, because there are simply too many of them. It’s no wonder Just Mobile co-founders Nils Gustafsson and Erich Huang take imitations of all forms very personally (especially the ones they and their lawyers see at CES), but fortunately, we were spared from prolonged ranting when we visited the duo’s office in Taichung, Taiwan recently. What we were treated to instead was an insight into how an accessory maker works with Apple and why Just Mobile manufactures exclusively in Taiwan, as well as getting a preview of the upcoming AluRack, HeadStand and AluBase that are due out this month.

Continue reading Just Mobile talks about working with Apple and why it manufactures in Taiwan exclusively

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Just Mobile talks about working with Apple and why it manufactures in Taiwan exclusively originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 08 Oct 2012 10:11:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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