Showing posts with label Tech. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tech. Show all posts

Thursday, February 19, 2015

Facebook building versions of its apps in 'virtual reality'



Washington: Facebook has reportedly declared that it is building versions of its apps in virtual reality.

Chris Cox, the company's head of product said while speaking at Recode's Code Media conference in Dana Point that Facebook VR was on its way. While he did not describe the app in details, he imagines world where people would be able to share their "current environment" with others using the app. It would become an everyday way of sharing, Cox added, reported The Verge.

However, he also added that users may have to wait "a while" before they could try Facebook in virtual reality. "We're a long way away from everyone having those headsets," Cox said.

Facebook's desire to venture into " virtual reality" was clearly spelt when the company acquiredOculus VR in a two billion dollar deal last year.

(ANI)

How to get WhatsApp calling feature now



WhatsApp is expected to introduce the calling feature in its app soon. This feature will allow people to talk to their WhatsApp contacts using the cellular data connection or Wi-Fi. This means they won't have to pay for the call charges. Only the data charges will apply, irrespective of where you are calling.

This is similar to Skype or Viber. But considering the user base of WhatsApp it is a big deal.

The feature is not yet officially available. But there are people using the calling feature in WhatsApp and you too get it now, with a little bit of luck.

But before we talk about the luck part, this is what you have to do to get the calling feature in WhatsApp:

  •  You must have an Android phone that is running Android Lollipop. In fact at this moment, we are not even sure if the feature works on the non-Nexus phones or not. So it is even better if you have Android Lollipop on a Nexus device.
  • Uninstall WhatsApp.
  • Go to WhatsApp.com and download the app from there. This means you will get the latest app. This is an APK file.
  • If you know how to install the APK file install it. If not, follow these steps: Got to Android Play Store > Install ES File Explorer > Open ES File Explorer > Go to the downloaded APK > Install WhatsApp APK
  • Once you have the latest version of WhatsApp and if your phone has Android Lollipop, you need to find someone who has already got the WhatsApp calling feature. Ask around, ask your friends on Twitter and Facebook if any of them have the calling feature.
  •  Ask the person who already has the WhatsApp feature activated to give you a WhatsApp call.
  •  Once you get the call, the same feature will also get activated on your phone. It will show different tabs for chats and calls. And you will get a phone call button in a chat window.

Now here is the luck part. The feature doesn't get activated for everyone. It looks like WhatsApp is still testing it and even the users who get call from someone who already has WhatsApp calling feature are getting it randomly. Chances are that once you get a WhatsApp call, you too will probably get the feature. But if you don't, then you will have to wait for a few more weeks. It is expected that the calling feature in WhatsApp will be available soon.

Wednesday, February 18, 2015

Now, click your fashion selfie and earn rewards


Representative image for selfie

London: Ever thought of scanning the clothes you wear and sharing the product information with your friends via selfies and earning rewards with an app?

An app called Stylinity enables users scan the barcode on products they wear and helps them attach a shoppable link and product's description along with any photos they wish to share of themselves wearing the products.

If their friends want to buy the product, they do not have to go scout for it online as there is a direct link to it, DigiDay website reported.

Users earn reward points from the retailers that the app partners. These points are redeemable for cash or products. "It is like an automated photo booth in the dressing room," Tadd Spering, the app's founder and CEO, was quoted as saying.

The app has partnerships with over 180 retailers and caters to women in the age group 18-34.

"Stylinity is different because a selfie is authentic, user-generated content. It doesn't repel customers and makes brands more real," Spering added.

Smartphone dongle detects HIV, syphilis in 15 minutes



Washington: Researchers have developed a low-cost smartphone dongle that can simultaneously detect HIV and syphilis from a finger prick of blood in just 15 minutes.

The device, developed by a team of researchers led by Samuel K Sia, associate professor at Columbia University School of Engineering and Applied Science, can perform a point-of-care test that simultaneously detects three infectious disease markers.

The device replicates, for the first time, all mechanical, optical, and electronic functions of a lab-based blood test, researchers said.

The device performs an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) without requiring any stored energy: all necessary power is drawn from the smartphone.

It performs a triplexed immunoassay not currently available in a single test format: HIV antibody, treponemal-specific antibody for syphilis, and non-treponemal antibody for active syphilis infection.

The accessory or dongle easily connects to a smartphone or computer and was recently piloted by health care workers in Rwanda who tested whole blood obtained via a finger prick from 96 patients who were enrolling into prevention-of-mother-to-child-transmission clinics or voluntary counselling and testing centers.

"Our work shows that a full laboratory-quality immunoassay can be run on a smartphone accessory," said Sia.

"Coupling microfluidics with recent advances in consumer electronics can make certain lab-based diagnostics accessible to almost any population with access to smartphones. This kind of capability can transform how health care services are delivered around the world," he said.

Sia's team developed the dongle to be small and light enough to fit into one hand, and to run assays on disposable plastic cassettes with pre-loaded reagents, where disease-specific zones provided an objective read-out, much like an ELISA assay.

Sia estimates the dongle will have a manufacturing cost of USD 34, much lower than the USD 18,450 that typical ELISA equipment runs.

The team made two main innovations to the dongle to achieve low power consumption, a must in places that do not always have electricity.

The researchers eliminated the power-consuming electrical pump by using a "one-push vacuum," where a user mechanically activates a negative-pressure chamber to move a sequence of reagents pre-stored on a cassette.

The process is durable, requires little user training, and needs no maintenance or additional manufacturing.

Sia's team removed the need for a battery by using the audio jack for transmitting power and for data transmission. And, because audio jacks are standardised among smartphones, the dongle can be attached to any compatible smart device in a plug-and-play manner.

The research is published in the journal Science Translational Medicine

New technique could solve smartphone overheating



New York: Researchers have developed a new temperature mapping technology for tiny devices that could help solve the problem of overheating in smartphones and computers.

The new thermal imaging technique allows engineers to "see" how the temperature changes from point to point inside the smallest electronic circuits.

Called plasmon energy expansion thermometry or PEET, the technique allows temperatures to be mapped in units as small as a nanometre, a unit of measure equal to one-billionth of a metre.

This breakthrough should enable engineers to design microprocessors that minimise the problem of overheating in smartphones and computers, said the researchers.

"With the old techniques, measuring the thermal conductivity of a nanowire returns one number. Mapping temperature with PEET, we get 10,000 numbers as we go down the wire," explained lead researcher Chris Regan, associate professor of physics and astronomy at University of California, Los Angeles.

"It is the difference between seeing the score and watching the game -- one gives you much better knowledge of the players," Regan pointed out.

Modern microelectronic circuits contain billions of nanometer-scale transistors.

Although each transistor generates only a tiny bit of heat as it operates, many transistors operating at once make the computer chips get very hot, which is why cellphones get warm and computers need fans to run properly.

The research team built its technique on the same physical principles behind the glass-bulb thermometer that was invented by Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit in 1724.

PEET determines temperature in the same way by monitoring changes in density using a transmission electron microscope. The team demonstrated the technique on tiny aluminum wires that were heated on one end.

The study appeared in the journal Science.