Reeder 2 hits the App Store, brings back iPad compatibility

DNP Reeder 2

When Silvio Rizzi pulled down the Reeder app for iPad after Google Reader’s death, he swore to develop and eventually release a new version. Now, Rizzi has made good on that promise by launching Reeder 2 — a reworking of the older RSS reader that’s compatible with both iPhones and iPads. The app sports a brand-spankin’ new interface that replaces the old browns and sepias with gray, pulls feeds from several sources — including Feedly and Feedbin — and it can now also open links on Google Chrome. Reeder 2’s now available on the App Store, but if you feel iffy shelling out $4.99 for it, you can give the RSS client a whirl by getting the older iPhone version for the low, low price of free.

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Source: Reeder 2 (App Store)

PSA: the Nokia Lumia 1020 arrives in the UK today

PSA: the Nokia Lumia 1020 arrives in the UK today

Let’s face it — we can’t be sure Nokia’s Lumia 1020 is worth the hype until it’s taken a thousand shots of Big Ben and Westminster tube station. Fortunately for us, the PureView-toting handset is landing in the UK from today. We’ve managed to wrangle confirmation that Vodafone, Three and O2 will be selling the unit, but alas, EE currently has no plans to offer the handset to its million-strong LTE customer base. We suspect more than a few of you, disappointed at Cupertino’s latest imaging update, may be throwing your cash at the screen right now.

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Source: Nokia (Twitter)

Estimote Details iOS 7 iBeacon Support For Its Contextual Proximity Shopping Devices

estimote

Estimote, a Y Combinator graduate and Hardware Alley exhibitor here at TechCrunch Disrupt SF 2013, was able to talk about something today that it’s never been able to before: how its product will work with Apple’s new iBeacon tech in iOS 7. iBeacons allow developers to communicate with iOS devices via Bluetooth Low Energy, in order to provide them with contextual info based on their immediate surroundings.

Back in July, John Biggs wrote about Estimote and its initial product, which is essentially a rock-shaped device which uses Bluetooth low energy to allow a retailer to do things like communicate deals to shoppers based on which aisle they’re in, for instance, or by letting them even send a payment token from a smartphone, with variable proximity programmable by the retailer, so you could either tap to pay or just get close to a terminal.

The tech was impressive enough as it is, but now that Apple has introduced iOS 7 and made its iBeacons feature official, Estimote’s Chris Waclawek explained that it’ll be much, much easier for companies to build software for iOS devices that can work with Estimote in a variety of ways. The company plans to make a variety of different kinds of hardware that can take advantage of iBeacon, to make things like abandoned shopping cart follow-up a realistic and easy-to-implement possibility for brick and mortar stores.

This would work by allowing retailers to detect how long they’re spending in fitting rooms, for instance, so that they can tell when a shopper has spent say 20 minutes trying something on, and then walked out without purchasing that item. They could then follow-up with a specific coupon for that article, allowing them to try to complete a sale that otherwise would’ve definitely been beyond reach.

Waclawek explained that Apple’s decision to embrace Bluetooth LE for these kinds of uses by developers means that NFC and QR codes are definitely dead at this point, since Bluetooth allows for much greater range and doesn’t require combining with any other tech for handshaking or anything else. He’s clearly excited by the prospects now that iBeacons is out and developers will have access to the tech.

The Engadget Mobile Podcast, live at 1:15AM ET!

The Engadget Mobile Podcast, live at 1AM ET!

We’re just wrapping up the two of the busiest weeks of the year, and coincidentally it happened near the end of our lengthy hiatus. Now we’re back, and we have no intention of going anywhere for a while. This week we’ll be discussing yesterday’s Apple event, the Galaxy Note 3 and Galaxy Gear, Microsoft’s big decision regarding Nokia and plenty more! It’s going to be big, but it’ll be packed with all sorts of opinions about the latest wireless news. Join us!

September 12, 2013 1:15:00 AM EDT

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iPhone 5s fingerprint reader has a timed safeguard, dislikes sweaty digits

iPhone 5S' fingerprint sensor has a 48hour unlock window, dislikes sweaty digits

Beyond the basics, Apple has said little of how the iPhone 5s Touch ID fingerprint reader works — we mostly know that it’s inaccessible to the outside world. Thankfully, the company has shed further light on Touch ID through statements to the Wall Street Journal. To start, iPhone owners will have to unlock with a passcode if they either reboot or haven’t unlocked within 48 hours. The safeguard prevents hackers from simply biding their time while they look for a workaround, Apple says. Legitimate users will also want to keep their hands dry, as the reader doesn’t work well with fingers covered in sweat and other liquids. You won’t want to try unlocking immediately after running, then, but it’s evident that Apple already knows many of Touch ID’s real-world limitations.

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Source: Wall Street Journal (1), (2)

Prep Pad Is A Connected Kitchen Scales That Quantifies The Nutritional Mix Of Your Meals

Counter Top BT scales

Cooking is set to get a whole lot smarter if connected kitchen device startup, The Orange Chef, pulls off its grand vision. Here at TechCrunch Disrupt SF’s hardware alley it’s showing off the Prep Pad: a Bluetooth kitchen scales plus app combo that’s due to land this November, costing $150.

The connected kitchen device startup has pretty humble beginnings in this space. Formerly known as Chef Sleeve, it manufactured plastic covers to protect iPads used in the kitchen to view recipes while cooking. From there it expanded to other culinary-related iPad accessories — such as iPad kitchen stands, and a chopping board with a built-in iPad slot. But those products were just its first phase. It’s now thinking a whole lot smarter by bringing connectivity and dedicated apps into its kitchen-focused mix.

If you’re getting a spot of deja vu, that’s because earlier this year at TechCrunch Disrupt NY, the startup discussed its plans for a connected scale as part of the next phase of its product portfolio. Four months later, here at Disrupt SF, it’s got the finished product on show. To get to this point it took to Kickstarter to help fund manufacturing costs, raising close to $50,000.

The Prep Pad consists of an aluminium frame topped off with a paper composite surface that can be hygienically wiped down, plus the electronic guts (weight sensor with +/-1gram accuracy, microcontroller and Bluetooth LE connectivity). It’s actually making the device itself, not just the software, here in Silicon Valley. ”We’re bringing back consumer electronics to Silicon Valley,” says founder Santiago Merea.

“That gave us an edge and we could develop it in record time,” he adds. ”We did our Kickstarter campaign [back in May]. We started developing the product… We actually did it in six months — the software and everything.”

The basic idea of the Prep Pad is to give people more control over their eating habits by visualising the nutrition content of foodstuffs in real-time, allowing the user to adjust ingredients to achieve a more healthy balance. It uses Bluetooth to send weight data to the corresponding app (called Countertop), and then turns that data into a visual nutritional pie.

The user specifies what foodstuff/liquid they are weighing in the app, either by manually selecting it within the app, or scanning a product barcode, or there’s also a voice-capture feature. The app then builds a visualisation of how balanced that particular combination of meal ingredients is. It’s a gadget that looks perfectly positioned to capitalise on the quantified health trend, complementing activity-focused devices like the FitBit and Jawbone UP.

In addition to a visual pie displaying protein, carbs and fats, Countertop displays a balance score (out of 100), plus the total calories per meal count. The balance score is customised to each user, depending on the answers they give to a series of questions during the app set-up process about their exercise level and health goals, such as whether they need to gain or lose weight.

The app lets users hide particular ingredients, so they can see how each ingredient affects the overall nutritional mix of the meal they are making. There’s also a recipe cards feature (below right) that allows users to save a series of ingredients and share those as a recipe with others.

The Prep Pad is just the beginning of phase two for the company. Under its new moniker, The Orange Chef is gearing up to launch a whole range of connected kitchen items — with its next product after the scales likely to be a smart “visual” thermometer that will tell the user whether their steak is cooked, for instance, rather than just providing basic temperature data.

“We’re not going to tell you the temperature, because no one cares about that,” says Merea. “In the same way that we don’t show weight here [on the main Countertop app view]… Weight is not part of the equation at all — it’s in the background. We went even further. That’s the design that we have — we hide weight, we hide temperature.

“So we’re not going to show you the thermometer temperature, we’re going to show you visually if your steak is done or not, because that’s what you are about. And then how do you like it — so it’s going to learn from you.”

Beyond that? “We’ll continue connecting the kitchen,” Merea adds. “Every accessory that you can think of in the kitchen we’re going to make it smart. That’s our plan. To make a very smart kitchen that works all together. And not only that connects it, it is not just a connection, it’s how can we leverage this technology to make it better, to make the cooking better, to make it easier, to make it fun.”

The Prep Pad is now available for pre-order on The Orange Chef website.

Google Glass app Blue puts real-time baseball info in your eye (video)

DNP Google Glass app Blue puts realtime sports info in your eye

The boys of summer are about to come home, but that doesn’t make developer Aaron Draczynski’s Google Glass baseball app any less rad. Blue uses geolocation to determine what park you’re at and feeds all manner of ball diamond-data directly into your eye. Whether it’s displaying play-by-play descriptions, who’s on the mound or how fast and what type his last pitch was, sitting in the stands no longer means missing out on the info you’d get from a TV broadcast. While this might seem like it’d be a better tablet or phone app, wearing Glass to a ballgame does have a distinct advantage: it lets you hold more than two $15 beers at a time.

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Via: Buzzfeed

Source: Papermodelplane

Samsung Galaxy Note 3 reaches the FCC with AT&T- and Sprint-compatible bands

Samsung Galaxy Note 3 reaches the FCC with AT&T- and Sprint-compatible bands

We’ve seen a few international Galaxy Note 3 models pass through the FCC for approval; now, it’s time for two American versions. The first variant, the SM-N900A, has just cleared the US agency with support for AT&T’s GSM, HSPA and LTE frequencies — most likely, it’s a peek at what we’ll see on October 1st. A second model, the SM-N900R4, appears destined for LTE-capable CDMA carriers such as Sprint, US Cellular and numerous regional US providers. While there are no surprises in the FCC filings, it’s evident that Samsung’s giant Android smartphone will soon be ubiquitous in the States.

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Source: FCC (1), (2)

Node modular sensor gets Android compatible version

Image

Variable’s been promising an Android version of Node since we first heard about it in early February of last year. The company’s finally delivering on that promise with the launch of the latest edition of its modular monitor. The new Node is dually compatible Google’s mobile operating system and iOS. The model also features a souped up wireless sensor, a quicker processor and more memory. That version’ll run you $149, a fact the company is celebrating by dropping the original iOS-only version down to $99.

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Source: Node

Like Us Network, A Pacemaker, Mark Cuban, And A Vending Machine: A Mobile Payments Journey

vendingMachine

What is this? An ordinary vending machine you say? If that was your guess, you would be wrong, but it would be understandable why you might notice anything special about it. That’s because, on the outside, this looks just like any other plain-Jane vending machine. No special screens or tap zones or NFC chips or anything like that grace its exterior, yet this machine can accept mobile payments from PayPal or Google Wallet.

How? Well, it has a special device inside of it — conceived and developed by Like Us Network‘s Ray Hernandez and Keyston Clay — that hooks up to the existing hardware inside and communicates wirelessly to accept payment and add credit from PayPal and Google Wallet. Other payments platforms are being planned as we speak.

Using either a smartphone app they developed or a mobile website (in order to identify a vending machine ID and to close the loop on the transaction) the credit is added to the machine when authorized. Pow! Your drink pops out just like you slid in a crisp dollar bill (or conversely like you struggled for over 3 minutes trying to unfold a bill that could be mistaken for a spitwad).

Outside the transactional nature of the payments process, there is also a loyalty play built in. The app can also tabulate loyalty points for sharing your purchase and execute other trackable activities. In one scenario, the team is investigating variable product pricing depending on the influencer status of the purchaser. For example, someone with a high Klout score might get an item for a reduced price or possibly even for free if they agree to broadcast their purchase. They are even considering geo-fencing some vending units to broadcast their location for impulse purchases. Pretty smart.

There have been many concepts over the years, mostly international, that have attempted or roll out alternative payments abilities for vending machines, but many have required new interfaces, hardware changes or payments methods that are not agnostic and that can add considerable capital expense to a deployment. That kind of  expense is notorious for stunting a roll out and stifling innovation.

But the beauty of Like Us Network’s approach is that it is plug and play. You drop their little wireless node into the vending machine, hook it up to the old-school chip board inside and mobile payments are enabled. No external alterations to the machine itself are required.

Monetization

Obviously it could be difficult to mark up items for sale, but the team are considering a few options. They are investigating a convenience fee for consumers or possibly data fees to the vending owners for the cloud ability of their node.

What pops into my mind as a viable option for monetization would be to simply take a cut of any (and only) purchases where the payment is facilitated by the system. I mean, that purchase might not have happened otherwise so the cut could be justified.

In general, I think their concept is a great idea, but who cares what I think? What I really want to know is “what does Mark Cuban think about it?” As it turns out, he actually has an opinion about it and, in fact, is an investor. Mark has invested $75,000 so far in the Like Us Network device.

How Mark Cuban came to be involved as an investor is an interesting story all by itself. Mark and Ray Hernandez came together during a freak accident at a gym where a man working out had a pacemaker “event” and fell off a treadmill. Both Cuban and Hernandez and some other good folks, came the man’s aid and afterward, conversation took place and the concept got onto Mark’s radar. He advised Ray and Keyston and now here we are at the concept’s launch at TechCrunch Disrupt SF 2013.