Saturday, January 2, 2016

Meet the world's smallest camera-equipped drone


The Axis Vidius is a quadcopter that fits in the palm of your hand -- it's roughly 1.5 inches square -- yet it's able to livestream and record video in 420p. Axis says its Vidius model is the smallest-ever camera-equipped drone, and it's so tiny that users don't have to register it with the Federal Aviation Administration (meaning it weighs less than .55 pounds).
The FAA launched its online drone-registration program in December. It requires all pilots, even hobbyists, to register their robots by February 19th -- it will generally cost $5 per registration, but the FAA is waiving this cost through January 20th. Information in the registry will be public record. In the program's first two days, the FAA collected 45,000 registrations.
The teensy Vidius drone may appeal to those who don't want to deal with federal paperwork before flying, though it does have limitations. Pilots can stream a live video feed from the 'copter via WiFi, though it has a flight time of just five to seven minutes on a 20-minute USB charge. Vidius comes with a 2.4 gHz controller, and users can pilot it with a smartphone or tablet, as well. Vidius is up for pre-order now with a ship date of January 29th at the latest. It's on sale for $75 before January 7th; afterwards, it'll be $95.
A tiny drone could be a nice way to have a little -- and we do mean little -- fun.

Oculus Pushes Back Touch Controller Launch To Second Half Of 2016



Sometimes timing creeps up on you and you have to move things back. It’s an ugly reality for hardware creators, but it happens.
Today, Oculus announced that its Touch controllers will be shipping in the second half of 2016 instead of immediately with the Rift, which is still coming in Q1 2016 with preorders coming “soon.”
Oculus founder Palmer Luckey tweeted a link to a blog post from the company, positioning things around the importance of “getting it right” rather than merely getting it out there:

As we wrote in June, the Touch controller, known as the “Half Moon” prototype, will let you pick up objects, fire a gun, or point at things while in a virtual reality experience with the Rift.
Here’s the full post:
On the path to perfecting Touch, we’ve decided that we need more time before release, and we’ll now be shipping Touch in the second half of 2016. Pre-orders will open a few months prior to launch.
Rift remains on schedule to ship in Q1 with pre-orders launching very soon.
On Touch hardware, we’ve made significant advances in ergonomics, and we’re implementing many changes that make Touch even more comfortable, reliable, and natural. We’re also implementing changes that improve hand pose recognition.
We’re also outputting larger numbers of pre-production runs, which means we can get a lot more Touch hardware in the hands of developers who need it.
There will be a huge amount of ground-breaking new content launching alongside Touch. We shared a handful of early previews at Oculus Connect 2 in September, but we can’t wait to show you what’s coming next.
The feedback on Touch has been incredibly positive, and we know this new timeline will produce an even better product, one that will set the bar for VR input. We appreciate your patience and promise Touch will be worth the wait.

Pre-orders will open a few months before the Touch controllers are slated to ship. 







The First International Beauty Contest - Judged By Robots


Robots are starting to appear everywhere: driving cars, cooking dinners and even as robotic pets.
But people don’t usually give machine intelligence much credence when it comes to judging beauty. That may change with the launch of the world’s first international beauty contest judged exclusively by a robot jury.
The contest, which requires participants to take selfies via a special app and submit them to the contest website, is touting new sophisticated facial recognition algorithms that allow machines to judge beauty in new and improved ways.
The contest intends to have robots analyze the many age-related changes on the human face and evaluate the impact on perception of these changes by people of various ages, races, ethnicities and nationalities.
Dr. Alex Zhavoronkov, a consultant on the competition and CEO of Insilco Medicine, a bioinformatics company focusing on aging research, says “Recent advances in Deep Learning have made machine recognition of beauty aspects far better than ever before.”
Machine intelligence capabilities have been steadily growing in sophistication every year. Some experts say Moore’s Law — where a microchip doubles in computing power about every 24 months — may not hold up as well as it has in the last two decades. However, even if Moore’s Law fails in the future, new methods of computing, like quantum computing, may again set the industry on breakneck development speeds.
Part of the AI beauty contest framework is not just for humans submitting selfies, but also programmers submitting their best algorithms for machine detection of beauty. Near the bottom of the contest website is a link for algorithm submissions that takes coders to a page saying, “Would you like to go down in history as one of the first data scientists who taught a machine to estimate human attractiveness?” In a way, this makes the contest a crowd-sourced event.
Of course, getting robots to understand beauty is not just for kicks. Behind the motive is a massive anti-aging industry that wants to better understand how youthfulness can be better monitored and implemented. I suspect it’s part of the reason Microsoft, Nvidia, Youth Laboratories and other companies are prominently listed on the website as “partners and supporters.”
“This contest will help build impartial feature-specific and general robots that will help us understand our faces. But my personal dream is to have this contest extended into anti-aging and general healthcare space,” said Nastya Georgievskaya, robot tutor at Youth Laboratories, a company developing deep learning systems for facial analysis.

Getting robots to understand beauty is not just for kicks.

Dr. Zhavoronkov told me the contest hopes to facilitate the launch of a series of apps that will allow people to track the effects of various products (including cosmetics) on their face — ones that quickly allow them to understand the impact on perception using impartial opinion of deep-learned algorithms.
“People may not care about how to extend their lifespans, but they definitely care about the way they look,” Zhavoronkov wrote me. “Insilco Medicine used massive multi-omics data from academic and commercial partnerships to predict the likely geroprotectors that may have beneficial effects on human skin, and we need a way to test the efficacy of these interventions. We will be launching an application called RYNKL in the coming weeks if all goes well, which will allow users to take standardized selfies periodically to analyze the changes in ‘wrinkleness’ of their face in the context of their lifestyle, behavior, and other interventions.”
This beauty contest will run every half a year, and more and more teams from all over the world will be invited to try their robots on human faces linked to multiple other parameters. The overriding goal of the contest is discover complex rating systems that will teach machines to evaluate humans, which will be important to getting robots to act more like us — and also to understand our ways. Of course, humans may be in for a surprise if machines decide many of us are not attractive — or are even downright ugly.
Alex Shevtsov, founder and CEO of Youth Laboratories, recently asked, “You may like your Tesla, but would you like your Tesla to like you?”
Despite the competition featuring the next generation of machine recognition, the beauty contest does not allow participants to use make-up, have beards or wear hats in their submitted selfies. Maybe in a few years, that will be worked out, so machines will be able to understand more than skin-deep beauty, but also human’s love of endless and often artistic material accessories, like earings, fancy dresses and even tattoos.
Eventually, through this technology, machines may even learn to judge another machine’s appearance, opening up the possible world of robot attraction and love.

5 Top tech Innovation of 2015


 2015 was a great year when it came to technological innovations that could potentially change the way we live. Since the ‘top five tech innovations’ category was a very diversified one, we listed what we believed were to be the most popular entities in terms of innovation. Here they are.

Project Loon - Internet Coverage via Hot Air Balloons


Google’s idea of bringing free wireless internet access to various underdeveloped regions is very much possible thanks to Project Loon. But what exactly is Project Loon? The venture comprises up of hundreds of large air balloons suspended in mid-air through helium.

At this moment, a couple of dozen float over the Southern Hemisphere at an altitude of around 20 kilometers, and each balloon supports an array of solar-powered electronics. These electronics make a radio link to a telecommunications network on the ground and deliver high-speed Internet coverage to smartphones and other devices.

According to Google, these balloons will be able to deliver economic and social benefits since access to internet will bring about a wide range of learning opportunities for those living in impoverished areas, or those who cannot afford to pay for their own internet connection. In this way, lots of people will have access to limitless amounts of information, thus educating themselves in the process as well.

Flexible OLED Displays from LG for Next-Generation Gadgets & Consumer Electronics


LG first showcased its flexible OLED displays at CES 2015 and what they do is that they are able to project an image and at the same time, bend flexibly. This is possible thanks a bendable polyimide film, which has its obvious advantages over hard plastic and the screen size of this display was 18 inches. Another added advantage was that it can roll into a single tube and be stored for later use.

This will make it extremely portable for users who want to carry their large screen entertainment equipment and best of all, it will not even take up a lot of space. This is the technology that makes possible curved TVs and even wearables that may end up consuming less battery. LG expects to start mass production of 60-inch flexible OLED displays by 2017.


Driverless Cars from Google, Tesla & Others


Google and Tesla have been working on driverless cars for quite a while now and we have to say that in the foreseeable future, we will no longer have to rely upon our own two hands and feet to drive the vehicle because the autonomous, sophisticated and adaptable software is going to do that for us. We did speak about the possibility of Driverless Cars entering the geographical region of Pakistan, but in order for that to take place, consumers will have to embrace this technology, along with the severe improvement of transportation infrastructure as well as abiding traffic laws to the letter.  Let us hope that our roads and traffic laws have significantly improved till then.


VR Gaming Becomes a Serious Prospect -  Thanks to Sony, Oculus & HTC


What is more immersive in gaming than experiencing visual fidelity in next generation gaming titles? Why its you being present inside a game of course! That is what Virtual Reality gaming, or VR gaming is all about. Through the use of your head and body motion, products like Oculus VR, HTC Vive and Sony’s Project Morpheus will allow you to place yourself in the game, and interact with in-game worlds and objects.

This time the demos from Sony and Oculus Rift are going for something more than just a gimmick.  Right now it’s looking that VR headsets will take a hefty investment to own. But in time, we expect VR gaming to be an activity that is within the reach of the mainstream audience.

Project Ara- A SmartPhone Via Modular Components


If you can upgrade your computer hardware by replacing components, then why the same principle cannot be applied to mobile hardware? Of course it can; thanks to Project Ara, it is definitely possible to upgrade or switch your smartphone component for a better performing one instead of spending a huge amount of money on an entire new smartphone altogether.

The only problem is that this venture is much more complicated than what is actually being let on. It will definitely take a fair amount of work before the very first modular smartphones of Project Ara are sold at a mass scale (because mobile hardware works quite differently as opposed to computer hardware), but when they do, you will definitely be saving a ton of money when it comes to upgrading your handset.

These were our top five tech innovations of 2015. Do you believe that there was an innovation that belongs in our list? If so, then let us know in the comments below and why it deserves a place.

Microsoft Selfie - Latest App for iOS


Microsoft is making yet another entry at the App Store, this time largely as an app developer. Its latest app called Microsoft Selfie can really help you take your self-shot like a boss.


Microsoft Selfie for iOS

On the surface, you’d have it mistaken for another Microsoft app, the Lumia Selfie, but this being Microsoft, things are not as monotonous.



Compared to the billions of other similar apps that you can find, Microsoft Selfie brings “intelligent enhancements” to your photographs by considering factors such as age, gender, skin tone, lighting, noise and many more to bring out the perfect shot. It has experimented in the same field previously with a few age guessing apps so the developers wanted to make an app with some of that tech thrown in.


How Does it Works?

You have the option of taking photos both through the front or rear camera. There is a slider which allows you to customize how much you want the effects to obliterate your face.


Naturally, there is also a fairly large selection of filters with curious names like “1965” that can be added both to your new photos and library. You can then compare the unedited and obliterated versions side-by-side. Apart from that, everything is fairly straightforward.
If you’re vested in Apple’s ecosystem, it is probably not a bad idea to try the app for yourself. With several others, most notably Google not developing for Windows, it is refreshing to see Microsoft continuing to cater to rival platforms.