Pages

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Facebook Is Creating Location-Sharing App

Facebook is developing a new app that keeps track of user location, and reports that information to friends when they're nearby, according to a report.
The app will be released mid-March, and will run even when it isn't open on users' phones, Bloomberg reports. For example, Facebook user Shirley may get a notification that says Bob is around the corner — even if neither of them happens to be using the app at that time.
Facebook is showing a keen interest in location-sharing. The company tested a “Find Friends Nearby” feature in its mobile app last June. Designed to facilitate meeting new people, users can quickly add the "John Smith" they meet at a party, without confusing him with the dozens of other John Smiths on Facebook.
Friendthem, another company, accused Facebook of stealing the idea, however; and shortly after, the social-network giant removed the feature from its mobile app.
Facebook's new app would be similar to location-sharing apps, Glancee and Highlight, and would run in the background of users' phones. Highlight, for instance, analyzes users' Facebook information to let them know when they're near friends, as well as when they're close to people with whom they share mutual friends or similar interests on the site.
Facebook acquired Glancee last May. The company's staff joined Facebook, and at the time indicated that it would be creating products for the site's community as a whole. Members of Glancee's engineering team are a part of the group creating the new app, Bloomberg reported.

Tegra 4-powered Project SHIELD Visits the ‘Badass Crater of Badassitude’

Maybe you’re just tired after a marathon Borderlands 2 session. Maybe you need to answer nature’s call. Whatever the reason, never again will you have to worry about losing precious gaming time just because you have to go “Away From Keyboard.”
Project SHIELD will soon redefine what it means to be AFK with its ability to stream your high-end PC games straight to our Android-powered mobile gaming device. Now you can continue playing your game from the comfort of your couch or, well, anywhere else you might find yourself sitting in your house.
What you see below is a demo of Project SHIELD running the ‘Badass Crater of Badassitude’ level of Borderlands 2 from a GeForce-enabled PC. This particular rig happens to be a Falcon Tiki PC running a GeForce GTX 680 graphics card, allowing us to run the game with the graphics settings cranked all the way up.
Booting up your Tegra 4-powered Project SHIELD is as simple as turning on a smartphone or tablet. Streaming a PC game is just as easy: fire up the SHIELD Android app and tap a few buttons. Within a matter of seconds you’ll be back in the action with all the graphical bells and whistles you’re used to on your PC.

Limited Edition BlackBerry Z10 coming for developers in hot-rod red



Blackberry just announced at its Blackberry Jam event in Amsterdam that it'll have a limited edition red version of its fresh new Z10 smartphone for developers only. It'll only release 12,000 of the devices, but the deadline for grabbing one's been extended to February 28th. Looks pretty nice, now if we only had an app we could get started on...

HTC promises 'new sound and camera experience'

HTC reckons it's got something new up its sleeve. Could the hotly-tipped HTC M7 be the smart phone to "kick off a new sound and camera experience in 2013"?
HTC teases its purported photographic innovation in an infographic tracing the history of photography from the Daguerreotype up to today's camera phones. The infographic notes that in 2012 the megapixel wars escalated with the coming of the 41-megapixel Nokia 808 PureView, but quotes an unnamed reviewer who pooh-poohs the usefulness of that behemoth of a camera.
The 808 PureView remains something of a novelty, but whispers persist the technology will trickle down to Nokia's Lumia line-up of Windows Phone smart phones, possibly in the rumoured Nokia EOS PureView. Judging by the disparaging notes about climbing megapixel counts, HTC probably won't go the multi-megapixel route, so will probably add more features to a more conventionally-specced camera in its new models, or perhaps re-invent the technology behind the lens.
We could find out in just a couple of weeks. HTC is revealing some new stuff at a launch event on 19 February. HTC is aiming to steal a march on rivals by making its announcement before the big trade show Mobile World Congress where phone companies traditionally show off their wares for the coming year. It's a safe bet we'll see the M7, which has been heavily leaked and was recently spotted in the hands of HTC's boss.