Hulu launches free clips site for mobile devices

Hulu launches free clips site for mobile devices

The new Hulu mobile site does not require a subscription

Hulu announced today that its new, free mobile site at Hulu.com now features "a curated collection" of clips from popular and trending TV shows.

The free clips are "hand-picked & crafted by our editorial team just waiting for you to snack on," Hulu Senior Product Manager Karan Nischol wrote today in a blog post on the company's site.

"It is a daily portal of what's going on in TV, pop culture and news, all in the form of easily watched clips," he continued.

The site opens to a "trending" tab, but users can also browse clips in five other categories: Trailers, Comedy, News, Celebrity and Latino. Viewers can also see clips from specific shows.

We asked Nischol whether the new site is available outside the U.S., and we'll update this blip if we hear back.

More blips!

Check out more of TechRadar's blips if you can tear yourself away from watching clips of The Voice long enough.


Source : techradar[dot]com

German chancellor calls Obama over alleged US spying of her phone

German chancellor calls Obama over alleged US spying of her phone

We all should really call each other more often (credit: Flickr/World Economic Forum - Remy Steinegger)

President Barack Obama got a call from German Chancellor Angela Merkel today, and it wasn't to see how things were in Washington post-government shutdown.

Merkel rang Obama after receiving information the National Security Agency may have spied on her communications, specifically on her personal cell phone, for years.

Merkel also made clear her expectation that US officials "provide an explanation about the possible extent of such surveillance practices, and thus answer questions that the German government already posed months ago," a spokesman for the chancellor told Der Spiegel.

Past, present, future?

According to a statement posted on the White House website about the call between the heads of state, "The president assured the chancellor that the United States is not monitoring and will not monitor the communications of Chancellor Merkel."

The statement reflects others put forth from White House Spokesman Jay Carney and the US National Security Council, but none address past actions.

So don't worry, Ms. Merkel, the US isn't currently spying on you and won't in the future, but as for previous instances ... let's sidestep that one.

Spreading accusations

According to the White House website statement, Obama and Merkel "agreed to intensity further the cooperation between our intelligence services."

German officials didn't elaborate how they received information that Merkel's communications were being monitored, but Der Spiegel said the call was spurred by its own research.

"After the information was examined by the country's foreign intelligence agency ... Berlin seems to ahve found their suspicions plausible enough to confront the US government," Der Spiegel wrote in its report.

The Merkel/Obama convo comes one day after James Clapper, US director of national intelligence, denied claims made by Le Monde that the US intercepted over 70 million phone calls in France in the last 30 days.


Source : techradar[dot]com

Ofcom ensures free exit strategy if mobile networks hike prices mid-contract

Ofcom ensures free exit strategy if mobile networks hike prices mid-contract

Users will be able to break ties with networks who raise their bill

Ofcom has today ruled that mobile and internet users, who are subject to mid-contract prices rises, should be able to cancel their agreement, without having to pay early termination fees.

Under new plans, networks and ISPs hoping to up fixed contract fees will have to give customers 30 days notice, during which time they'll be able to walk away from their contract early.

Until now, users have been to swallow incremental price rises if they're in the middle of those long 18-24 month contracts.

The new rules will come into effect on January 23 2014. After that customers entering into mobile, landline or broadband contracts will have an easy get-out clause.

New deal

"Ofcom is today making clear that consumers entering into fixed-term telecoms contracts must get a fairer deal," said Ofcom's consumer group director of Claudio Pollack. "We think the sector rules were operating unfairly in the provider's favour, with consumers having little choice but to accept price increases or pay to exit their contract.

"We are making it clear that any increase to the monthly subscription price should trigger a consumer's right to leave their contract – without penalty."

The announcement comes following a long campaign, spearheaded by the Which consumer rights website, which claimed an overwhelming victory for the campaign's 59,000 supporters.

"Thanks to you," the site wrote on Tuesday, "millions of mobile phone, broadband and landline customers will benefit from new rights. Now if mobile providers want to hike prices on fixed contracts, you can show them what you think by cancelling without having to pay a penny."


Source : techradar[dot]com

Samsung may kill off unlicensed third-party accessories with ID chip

Samsung may kill off unlicensed third-party accessories with ID chip

Don't let this happen to you! (credit: DailyMail)

Samsung and Apple are frequently at each other's throats over patents, but great minds apparently think alike when it comes to potential profits from third-party accessory makers.

PhoneArena today reported that Samsung may be exploring the use of dedicated ID chips for future devices as a method of warding off an ever increasing number of faulty third-party accessories.

Like Apple, Samsung has endured bad publicity in recent months over poorly-made accessories such as chargers and batteries from unlicensed vendors, which occasionally malfunction when used with the Korean manufacturer's devices.

In the most extreme example, such accessories can cause a device to burn or actually explode, which certainly isn't in the best interest of Samsung or its customers.

Extreme measures?

According to Korean news agency ETNews (via Google Translate), Samsung is apparently considering the use of "a dedicated ID chip" for future devices, which would simply reject accessories that aren't deemed kosher for use with smartphone or tablet.

While such a tactic may seem extreme, Samsung may simply be again following in the footsteps of rival Apple, who incorporated similar security measures into the Lightning port used with all of the company's current iPhone and iPad products.

Thanks to the increasing popularity of mobile devices, third-party accessories are a booming business with the potential for huge profit margins - especially when knockoff makers can circumvent paying royalties to company actually making the devices.

Of course, Samsung is also likely eyeing ways to keep such profits for themselves by limiting the sale of accessories to licensed vendors, and such ID chips could be their way of doing just that.


Source : techradar[dot]com

Where phone meets body

Where phone meets body

You will become the technology of the future

Apple's decision to include a fingerprint scanner in the new iPhone 5S may or may not have convinced you to buy one, but it marks another step forward in biometrics and the fusion of phone and user.

It's not beyond the realms of possibility that the next decade could see advances that feel like they're straight out of the pages of a sci-fi novel.

Imagine taking a hands-free call without a headset, for example. Or feeling your temple buzz when you enter an open Wi-Fi zone. Or swallowing a pill that can report your body temperature and health back to a dedicated phone app.

This sort of tech is not a distant pipe dream: it's being developed right now, and could be in mainstream use more quickly than you might think.

Pills and implants

It's going to take some time before we're happy to have electronic chips embedded into our wrists or jaws, and much of the sensory tech currently in development is in a more natural form.

The CorTemp pill from HQInc is powered by a tiny built-in battery and can measure your temperature, heart rate and other data. The pill reports back wirelessly to another device (such as your phone). It can be used to help spot health problems and check on the effectiveness of medicine in the same way that Windows reports back on the health of your hard drive.

CorTemp
The CorTemp pill can monitor your health internally

HQInc's Lee Carbonelli explains: "Sensor innovations can be used as diagnostic tools, as well as in wellness and prevention, and apps will play a prominent role in data recording and for transmission of data to medical professionals."

You may balk at the idea of popping a super-smart pill that reports back to your doctor, but as Google's Eric Schmidt said in 2012: "If it makes the difference between health and death, you're going to want this thing."

Grindhouse Wetware is another outfit that devotes itself to biohacking in a variety of forms. One of the projects it's working on is Circadia, a small implantable circuit board that measures your vital statistics and reports back wirelessly.

Via its integrated LED lights you can glance at your arm to check for notifications from your Android phone. "Circadia has a Bluetooth module that takes your biological data and uploads it to your phone," Grindhouse's Tim Cannon told us. "You can also make the device sing 'peanut butter jelly time' to your phone, and the LED on the device blinks rapidly as it does that!"

Circadia
Grindhouse's Circadia integrates LED lights and sensors

The usefulness and application of the collected data is just as just as important as the devices themselves.

"I think in the next 10-20 years we will be using the data we are collecting now to make more intelligent choices about our lives," says Tim, "and we'll be replacing pieces of our bio that are unnecessary or undesirable (arms, hearts, etcetera). We will hopefully be having a conversation about life and life extension and what the ramifications are culturally."

Built-in audio

Devices like Google Glass have brought notifications, search results and driving directions closer to our eyeballs than ever before, but through the power of bone conduction you can have calls or notifications beamed straight into your head, no Bluetooth headset required.

The technology has already been trialled in Germany, where commuters resting their heads against a train window were treated to targeted advertising. Passengers were "surprised" and "enjoyed this new form of advertising", if you take the word of the agency who carried out the experiment. Your mileage may vary.

In recent weeks we've also seen a team from Disney Research pass audio messages through the touch of a finger.

Disney Research
Can you press harder, I'm in a tunnel?

This tech uses low electrical pulses rather than bone conduction, but the implications are the same: you may soon be able to take calls, listen to podcasts and hear alerts while your phone stays in your pocket, with no headphones required.

Security

Apple's Touch ID has grabbed most of the headlines over the past few weeks, and security is another area where our bodies will almost certainly be playing a larger role in the future.

We've already seen some possibilities bounced around various tech conferences — Motorola's Regina Dugan floated the idea of pills or an electronic tattoo as authentication methods at the Wall Street Journal's D11 conference this year. Essentially, you become the password.

It's not all pie-in-the-sky, either: MC10's Biostamp tattoo is built from stretchable silicon and contains very small circuits and antennae that can be used to prove you are who you say you are. Don't be surprised if you see it appearing alongside the iPhone 7 or Nexus 8 — one day, your phone will respond to your touch and your voice alone.

MC10
Forgotten your password? Use your electronic tattoo instead

In the near term at least, it seems that smart body monitors are the most realistic next step, building on the fitness tracker wristbands of today to help us learn more and more about our sleep, diet and general health.

Dave Asprey is one of the pioneers of the fledgling trend of biohacking - author, entrepreneur, investor and currently employed at Trend Micro, Asprey has spent more than a decade using body monitors and training devices to improve his diet, IQ and lifestyle.

He told TechRadar he thinks the data from the next wave of biosensors will open up countless opportunities: "The insight we glean from this new use of big data will teach us more about what it means to be human than we've ever known before.

"Hidden in the everyday biological and sociological behaviours of people, are the keys to unlocking the complex interaction between the environment and ourselves. In order to know what small changes to make, we must get the data. And then, we must use it wisely. That is the new frontier of biohacking."

You might think Google and Apple know a lot about you now, but it won't be long before our phones are monitoring us and offering feedback in even more intimate ways. Other innovations are still some distance off: while it would be useful to capture every great moment we see automatically, for now you'll have to make do with a lifelogger device such as Memento.

Unless, that is, you have a space for a prosthetic eye, in which case check out the work the Eyeborg Project team are doing. However these phone+body technologies pan out, the gap between them will get smaller and smaller.


Source : techradar[dot]com

BlackBerry OS 10.2 is rolling out this week but the US has to wait

BlackBerry OS 10.2 is rolling out this week but the US has to wait

The BlackBerry Z30 already rocks 10.2

BlackBerry has confirmed that it will roll out the BlackBerry OS 10.2 update this week.

That means that BlackBerry Z10, Q10 and Q5 owners will soon have the opportunity to download and install the software update.

Exactly when you receive the new software will depend on what network you're on, but Europe, Canada, the Middle East, Africa and Asia Pacific are first in line to get the 10.2 upgrade.

Interestingly, the US faces a bit of a wait: BlackBerry says the US roll out will start "this winter".

Refinement time

It comes with "hundreds of refinements" including automatic prioritisation of your inboxes, upgraded keyboard smarts and "enhanced" copy and paste.

As rumoured, you'll also be able to see message previews of BBMs, texts and emails when you're in other apps, with the ability to reply in those dynamic notifications too.

Check out BlackBerry's run down of the main features on its blog post here, and keep your eyes peeled for the update soon. And if you simply can't wait for the update to roll out you can always dash out and buy a Z30 which ships with 10.2 on board.

  • Like the sound of BlackBerry OS 10.2? You'll be needing a Z10 then

Source : techradar[dot]com

Moto G trademark spotted, could this be the Google smartwatch?

Moto G trademark spotted, could this be the Google smartwatch?

G for Gem? G for Google? G for Grapefruit?

The Google smartwatch, known to some as Google Gem, is something that we have been hearing a lot of speculation about in recent weeks.

Hearing that Motorola has gained ownership of the trademark 'Moto G' may well go some way to confirming that there is something in the works.

There has been some speculation as to what this could be, given that it could just as easily be a variant of the Moto X.

Lets get speculating!

Everybody has their own ideas as to what it could be, Phandroid speculate that it could be a Google Play edition of the Moto X, a la Samsung Galaxy S4 Play.

Moto G trademark spotted
What could the Moto G be?

We're a little more sceptical on that, as it would put the new handset in direct competition with the upcoming Nexus 5.

Whatever the Google owned brand has in mind, we won't know for certain until, or should that be if, Motorola officially announce the device.

Either way we might not be far off this smart phone/watch as Droid-life reveals it's spoken to a rep from US carrier Verizon who claims it's heard the Moto G is "coming soon."

Until then, we might as well say that it is a Motorola grapefruit. Now that would be tasty...

Why not let us know what you think it could be in the comments below?


Source : techradar[dot]com

LG G Flex grins for the camera in new photo leak

LG G Flex grins for the camera in new photo leak

LG G Flex just hanging out atop a pile of lesser phones (credit: Federico Ini on Twitter)

The LG G Flex is back and this time it's brought a camera.

LG's curvaceous handset found its way into the mitts of a journalist in Argentina who shared a few snaps of the thing on Twitter.

It looks massive, which is thanks to the 6-inch screen, and keeps its buttons on the back just like the LG G2.

Ain't nothin' but a G Flex

Specs still come with question marks all over them, but the word is of a 13MP camera that has an OLED display "that curves on a different axis" according to The Verge, which worked with Federico Ini to nab some extra shots.

Ini, who doesn't reveal where he got his information but since he has the actual phone we'd say is pretty well informed, says that the G Flex will land in South Korea next month, but there's no plan to offer the Flex in the US, Europe or Latin America.

Colour us disappointed: this is like the Samsung Galaxy Round all over again.


Source : techradar[dot]com

Galaxy Gear gets Galaxy S3, Note 2 and S4 variants support

Galaxy Gear gets Galaxy S3, Note 2 and S4 variants support

The Galaxy S3 will get Gear functionality soon

Samsung has announced that the Android 4.3 Jelly Bean update will hit the Galaxy S3 and Galaxy Note 2 handsets from the end of October and bring with it support for the Galaxy Gear smartwatch.

We'd already heard that the Galaxy S4 would see the latest version of Jelly Bean (and with it Gear support) by the end of the month and it's good to see Samsung is finally adding more handsets to the roster.

The Galaxy S4 Mini, Galaxy S4 Active and Galaxy S4 Zoom, as well as both the Samsung Galaxy Mega 5.8 and 6.3 will gain a separate software update to add Gear functionality.

The 4.3 Jelly Bean update brings easier text input as well as enhanced graphics and multimedia to the brands ageing handsets.

It also means that they gain Samsung's Knox business solution, Smart Switch, HomeSync and Group Play 2.5.

Galaxy Gear... but not 4.3?

JK Shin, CEO and President of IT & Mobile division at Samsung said "Extending the Galaxy Gear compatibility to more Galaxy devices reflects our deep commitment to continuing to deliver our consumers enriched mobile experiences"

Unfortunately for those using any of the aforementioned S4 variants, or the Galaxy Mega handsets, there is still no word - if indeed there ever will be - on a 4.3 update.

Instead, the S4 handsets are being treated to an internal update to address lack of Gear functionality.

Samsung has said that the Gear update should land from the end of the month, although this will obviously vary depending on market and mobile network.


Source : techradar[dot]com

Nokia: why we didn't need Full HD or quad core until now

Nokia: why we didn't need Full HD or quad core until now

The reasons behind the technology uncovered

While Samsung, HTC, LG, Sony and every other phone brand that isn't Apple was unveiling quad core phones, Nokia's hold out was notable.

When even the likes of ZTE are making a supercharged handset for a very low price, you'd have to wonder why Nokia would swim against the tide for so long, with flagship after flagship device sailing by using only a dual core CPU.

The argument that quad core is unnecessary isn't valid, as anything that requires heavy lifting (such as photography and editing at high resolution) needs an engine to keep up – and Nokia's imaging hardware was certainly struggling with the larger files.

However, Samuli Hanninen, Nokia's VP of software program management, told TechRadar that it was a combination of having to work with Microsoft to get the platform ready as well as the right technology not being available.

Bigger makes things harder

He outlined how things like the larger sensor on the Lumia 1020 needed elements within the Windows Phone platform rewritten to support its massive pictures, and the Full HD display needed work on the OS level to support things like a third column before the Lumia 1520 could be unveiled.

"We also had to work on the apps; this led to things like the extra row in the email app to make the most of the extra space [a six inch display could offer], " said Hanninen.

He also pointed out that while it wasn't technically possible to run a quad core processor with Full HD graphics on a Windows Phone last year, Nokia wouldn't have wanted to use one anyway on its hardware.

"I don't think it took us a long time [to bring a Full HD display to a Nokia phone]," Hanninen said when asked why Nokia had delayed the decision so long.

"You only see the benefits when using a 5-inch screen and larger, anything below that the eye can't see the difference.

Nokia Lumia 1520

"If I had the possibility of having a quad core CPU last year, I'd have said that I don't want it," said Hanninen. He pointed out that while phones went down that route last year, the performance wasn't good enough in Nokia's eyes.

"You have to get the best from a quad core chip. If you do it badly then the phones get very hot," he added.

The challenger appears

The availability of Qualcomm's Snapdragon 800 chip seems to have changed that thinking for Nokia and Microsoft, as both had to agree on the changes to the Windows Phone platform to allow the hardware through.

But with the more power-efficient chip, as well as its enhanced ability to process large photo and video files, Nokia finally believed the time was right to use the unit in both its phone and tablet range, with the Lumia 2520 Windows tablet taking a faster-clocked version of the same chip too.

Power-fans finally thinking that Nokia will be throwing caution to the wind and plugging in the most powerful unit just to satisfy consumers, especially now Microsoft has allowed it in Windows Phone, will need to think again though.

Hanninen pointed out that things like battery life and mobility are the priority for Nokia, not headline speeds, as he believes that customers value that more in real life.


Source : techradar[dot]com

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