5 SECONDS OF SUMMER

Michael Clifford Fires Back at Abigail Breslin's Diss Track

Stars Most Stylish Selfie of the Week

Stars Most Stylish Selfie of the Week

GMAIL BLOCKED IN CHINA

5-Minute Outfit Idea

5-Minute Outfit Idea: An Effortless, Polished Look to Try This Weekend.

Facebook suffers outage

Facebook suffers outage affecting users worldwide!! .

Thursday, 26 June 2014

FDA clears robotic legs for some paralyzed people

FDA clears robotic legs for some paralyzed people

Associated Press


WASHINGTON — Federal health regulators have approved a first-of-a-kind set of robotic leg braces that can help some disabled people walk again.

The ReWalk system functions like an exoskeleton for people paralyzed from the waist down, allowing them to stand and walk with assistance from a caretaker.

The device consists of leg braces with motion sensors and motorized joints that respond to subtle changes in upper-body movement and shifts in balance. A harness around the patient's waist and shoulders keeps the suit in place, and a backpack holds the computer and rechargeable battery. Crutches are used for stability.
ReWalk is intended for people who are disabled due to certain spinal cord injuries.

The device was developed by the founder of Israel-based Argo Medical Technologies, who was paralyzed in a 1997 car crash.

Sensors help smartphone security

Sensors help smartphone security

By Mark Ward
BBC News



Researchers are making a smarter "kill switch" for phones that knows when a gadget is in the hands of a thief.

Software on the phone watches how you use your phone to build a portrait of your "normal" behaviour.
The software logs which apps were used and when, where the phone goes as well as more subtle indicators such as how the phone is held.

The software quickly spots if a phone is not being used by its owner and shuts down to stop data being stolen.

Swipe security

"We're leveraging the predictability in our everyday lives," said Dr Gunes Kayacik who is heading the research project at the Interactive and Trustworthy Technologies Group of Glasgow Caledonian University.
Phone-owners use different apps at different times of the day and the patterns of use are usually linked to the same locations, said Dr Kayacik.

Using seven separate sources of data generated by a phone it becomes possible to quickly build up a profile of a smartphone owner's typical behaviour, he said.

Profiling-software developed by the Glasgow team logs the apps being used, the base stations the phone talks to and which wi-fi networks are nearby as well as ambient data about noise, light, magnetic fields and the handset's orientation and location.

Early versions of the behaviour-logging software currently take a few days to build up a profile of average use, said Dr Kayacik. The software gets better at spotting its real owner the longer it runs.
"We look at when the applications are being used and where," he said. "If a phone is being used out of place and out of time we can detect it."

In addition, he said, the behavioural cues the software picks up can also detect if a phone has   fallen into the hands of an unauthorised user even if they are in a location where the phone is regularly used by its real owner.

Current versions of the logging software can spot if a phone has been stolen in a couple of minutes, he said.
As well as acting as an anti-theft device, the software can also be used as a guarantor of identity when people use their phones to shop online or send messages to friends and family.

Prof Lynn Baillie said the software could be used in place of the Pin and screen-swipe systems currently used to safeguard phones against unauthorised use.

Research suggests people have to swipe or tap in their Pin up to 100 times a day just to unlock their handset and use it, she said.

That system is so cumbersome many people do not bother with any security measures at all, said Prof Baillie.
By contrast, the behaviour modelling system would keep a phone unlocked as long as it was in the hands of its owner, she said.

"You may still have to use a Pin but only when it was really needed," she said. The extra security measures could be triggered only in certain circumstances such as when someone was shopping or trying to log on to a corporate network, she added.

Mobile security expert Nigel Stanley of consultancy Open Sky said the Glasgow research looked "interesting".

"Clearly something needs to be done to secure these devices in a smarter way," said Mr Stanley.

"However," he said, "we need to think about the privacy implications of putting into practice such monitoring - is it sent back to a central site for processing or is it simply used locally on the device?"

DARPA's Robotics Challenge Finals Just Got A Whole Lot Harder

DARPA's Robotics Challenge Finals Just Got A Whole Lot Harder

Adam Clark Estes
Gizmodo

Photo from the DARPA Robotics Challenge website


DARPA just announced the details of the final round of its years-long Robotics Challenge, and boy, do they sound difficult. Not only will all the robots have to work wirelessly and without human intervention, the course must be completed all at once. If a robot falls and can't get it up, it's done.

If you paid attention to the Robotics Challenge Trials a little over six months ago, you'll realize how difficult these new guidelines are. Not only were the robots allowed to be tethered to communication lines and power with wires, they also had to do just one challenge at a time. The tasks involved simple things like climbing a ladder and cutting a hole in the wall, and they varied in difficulty. But the teams always had a chance to regroup in between.

For the finals, things aren't going to be so easy, and that's the whole point. The challenge aspect of the DARPA Robotics Challenge involves building robotic technology that could be deployed in manmade and natural disaster. (We can only assume the Pentagon counts war as a manmade disaster.) DARPA said in a conference  call with journalists on Thursday that the trials went better than expected so they're upping the difficultly in order to make the finals better resemble a disaster.

And now, the wires are coming off. The competing robots will not only need to handle communications with their human operators wirelessly, they'll also need to carry enough batteries to stay powered up during the course. Imagine the moment in Pinocchio when the strings are cut,and the doll becomes more like a real boy. This is happening with robots, and that's awesome.

DARPA is pushing the date for the finals back six months to give the 11 competing teams a little bit of extra time to prepare. The event will now take place June 5 and 6 at the Fairplex in Pomona, California. Each robot will be required to complete eight prepared tasks as well as one surprise task—again, they must finish all the tasks without human intervention—and each task will be more difficult than the last.

One other piece of news from the competition: Team SCHAFT, the winner of the trials last December that's pictured at the top of this post, will not be in attendance. The team's owner, Google, decided to pull it from the competition and commercialize the technology instead. Because why work with the government when you can sell robots straight to the people?

iPhone or Android: it's time to choose!

iPhone or Android: it's time to choose!


It’s impossible for Google or Apple to introduce a new feature, let alone a whole new revision, to their mobile operating systems without it instantly being compared to the other’s alternative.




The sparks that inflame heated discussions about who’s got the better notifications or smarter multitasking come right from the top of both companies. While unveiling Android L yesterday, Google’s Sundar Pichai took a subtle dig at Apple’s new iOS 8 by saying that custom keyboards and widgets "happened in Android four to five years ago." Three weeks earlier, Apple CEO Tim Cook was more direct in his critique:

Though both companies have embraced their adversarial relationship, their mobile platforms are actually growing more similar than different in their function and purpose. Apple has Continuity between iOS and OS X, while Google has synced notifications between Android and Chrome OS. One company’s HealthKit is the other’s Google Fit.



The goal is the same for both: to build a comprehensive ecosystem of hardware, services, and apps that locks users in. Life will surely be sweeter once every gadget you own relates intelligently to every other, but to get there, you’ll have to decide where your loyalties lie. And the fact that both Android and iOS platforms are set for their biggest updates in years this fall means that the obsessive comparisons between them will be as salient as they’ve ever been. More than ever, your smartphone preference will dictate your choice of tablet, TV, car, watch, and even fitness tracker.

Google’s marathon I/O 2014 keynote demonstrated a grand plan to deliver a cohesive and unified experience across all manner of devices and screen sizes. Unmistakable, however, was the hub-like function of the Android smartphone.

The new Android Wear for smartwatches (and eventually other wearables as well) does a number of neat things, but most of them rely on a connection to an Android phone. If you want to order pizza by mashing on your wrist, you’ll need to get into Google’s ecosystem.

The same is true if you want to make use of the new Android TV functionality that will come installed on Sony and Sharp TVs this year — another reason to buy an Android device. As expansive as Google appears to be, it all eventually links back to the phone, which is the personal heart of the ecosystem that the company is building.

Apple’s approach is no less ambitious. Its new software will sync not just your photos, but even your edits to those photos across devices. Apple wants the iPhone to control your entire house with HomeKit and to be your personal physician with HealthKit. Apple TV and AirPlay already offer much of the interactivity that Android TV promises, while CarPlay is set to expand the iPhone’s influence in a similar fashion to how Google envisions Android Auto will make its phones more useful for drivers.

 All these overlapping approaches are just spokes that keep returning to the crucial hub that is the smartphone: iPhone for one camp or Android for the other.

The phone remains at the center

Amazon recognized this dynamic — the necessity for a phone to serve as the anchor point of a broad web-based ecosystem — with the recent introduction of its own Fire Phone. Microsoft knows it just as well, and has been trying for years to make Windows Phone a credible alternative to the established leaders. The choice of a person’s first smartphone drives so many of the subsequent decisions that he or she will make — such as which music streaming, cloud storage, or photo-sharing service to use — that it becomes paramount for companies to make sure that initial device is running their software. Google’s low-cost Android One hardware platform aims to achieve precisely that goal with smartphone newcomers in developing markets.
What Apple and Google are building is what Nike, Adidas, and all the fashion brands wish they had: a set of concrete reasons to compel people to use one company for all their needs. It’s brand loyalty based on practicality as much as emotional attachment.
This is broadly to the benefit of the user. iOS 8 looks hugely promising in part because of the ways it’s caught up to Android with basics like widgets, interactive lock-screen notifications, and general platform openness to third-party modifications. Android is also growing more polished and refined with each new iteration, closing the gap in aesthetics and responsiveness. The basic feature sets of the two operating systems are nearly identical, and now it’s the branching out from that core functionality that’s setting them apart and forcing people to choose one or the other. It will be hard to switch between them, but iOS and Android are doing their utmost to make that unnecessary.

Neither Google nor Apple seems interested in connecting their respective walled gardens

The utopian scenario would be to have one global ecosystem where the communication between Apple and Google was about device interoperability instead of trash talk among execs. In its absence, a few sprouts of hope come from companies like Nike and the Google-owned (but still independently operated) Nest. The latter just opened up software development for making apps for its Learning Thermostat while the former will make its Fuel points available for users of both Google Fit and Apple’s HealthKit to use in quantifying their fitness.

Until this year, the major updates to iOS and Android have always come at different times and focused on different things, making direct side-by-side comparisons dicey and unreliable. But now the two dominant mobile platforms look to be doing the same thing at the same time: expanding their reach into cars, health, the home, and wearables, while also unifying the user experience across all their devices. Google and Apple’s plans are coalescing around similar priorities and both promise their next big software release in the fall. That will be when the clash between them will be felt most starkly, and when the choice between the two will be more impactful than ever

The old specter of Apple’s walled garden remains. And the more unified Google becomes, the more it’s beginning to resemble it. The difference with the latest software from both, however, is in the scale of the closed ecosystems that are being built. They are, by design, big enough to fit your whole life into. While the next phone you buy might not last much longer than a couple of years, the ecosystem it plugs and locks you into will likely be the one you use for a long time to come.

Twitter launches Ramadan 'hashflags'

Twitter launches Ramadan 'hashflags'

Alex Hern 

Guardian News


Twitter has introduced its second set of "hashflags" for users observing Ramadan and celebrating Eid, following from the state-specific flags introduced during the world cup.

Users of the service tweeting #Ramadan or #Eid, in Arabic or English will see special icons – a crescent moon and Arabic calligraphy, respectively – next to the tags.

"This week, more than 1.5 billion Muslims around the world will observe the ninth month of the Islamic Calendar as Ramadan, the month of fasting," says Twitter. "
And they will also gather on Twitter to share their celebration. In fact, based on our research, people sent more than 74.2m tweets about Ramadan from around the world last year."

Twitter's data team put together a visualisation to show how users tweeted about Ramadan in 2013. In the UK and Malaysia, the word "happy" predominates. Prayer, or صلاة, "is mentioned most often in Ramadan tweets from Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Bahrain and Egypt".

As well as adding a little extra colour to the site, Twitter is providing a more useful service to it
Islamic users: from Friday, anyone can tweet Arabic news channel al Arabiya to find out when iftar is in their location. Users need to tweet #iftar and then their location (#london or #newyork, for instance) to @alarabiya to find out what time in the evening they can break their fast. To do the same with the beginning of the fast, they can send #imsak instead.

FIFA bans Suarez for 4 months for biting ! !

FIFA bans Suarez for 4 months for biting opponent !


By GRAHAM DUNBAR, AP Sports 
WriterAssociated Press




RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) -- FIFA banned Uruguay striker Luis Suarez from all football activities for four months on Thursday for biting an opponent at the World Cup, a punishment that rules him out of the rest of the tournament and the start of the upcoming Premier League season.

The ban also covers Uruguay's next nine international games, which goes beyond the next four months and rules him out of next year's Copa America. It will likely carry over to qualifying matches for the 2018 World Cup.

FIFA also fined the Liverpool striker 100,000 Swiss francs ($112,000).

Uruguay's football federation said it plans an appeal to FIFA before the team's round-of-16 game against Colombia on Saturday in Rio de Janeiro.

Suarez bit the shoulder of Italy defender Giorgio Chiellini during Uruguay's 1-0 win in the group stage on Tuesday, but escaped unpunished as the referee did not see the incident.

''Such behavior cannot be tolerated on any football pitch and in particular not at a FIFA World Cup, when the eyes of millions of people are on the stars on the field,'' Claudio Sulser, chairman of the FIFA disciplinary committee, said in a statement.

Uruguay federation president Wilmar Valdez said it was ''a severe punishment.''

''It feels like Uruguay has been thrown out of the World Cup,'' Valdez said in Rio.

This is the third time Suarez has been banned for biting an opponent after similar incidents with Ajax in the Dutch league and Liverpool. He was given a 10-match ban by the Premier League for biting Chelsea defender Branislav Ivanovic in April 2013.

''Hopefully he will realize now that behavior of this type will not be tolerated under any circumstances,'' said FIFA vice president Jim Boyce of Northern Ireland.

In Uruguay, even fans who agreed Suarez's action was ''stupid'' did not agree with the sanction.

''Uruguay is a small country that eliminated two big nations like Italy and England and it's not for FIFA's benefit to let Uruguay continue playing,'' supporter Juan Jose Monzillo said in Montevideo

By banning Suarez from all football activities, FIFA also prohibited Suarez from entering a stadium or team hotel at the World Cup. It also stops him from even training with Liverpool until the ban ends in late October.
''He cannot be actively involved'' with a club, FIFA spokeswoman Delia Fischer said.

Suarez and the Uruguay football federation can appeal the sanctions, though Liverpool could not be formally involved in any legal challenge, Fischer said.
The four-month ban includes Liverpool's first three Champions League group-stage games in the five-time European champion's return after a five-year absence. Suarez will also miss the first nine matches of the Premier League.

Suarez would still be allowed transfer to a different club during the ban, but would not be able to play for a new club until the sanction ends, Fischer said. He has been linked to a move to Barcelona.

Sports manufacturer adidas, which sponsors both Suarez and the World Cup, said it agreed with the ruling. The company said it will not use Suarez for ''additional marketing'' during the World Cup but would not immediately drop him as a client.

''We will again be reminding him of the high standards we expect from our players,'' adidas said in a statement.
Any appeal by Uruguay must first go to the FIFA appeal committee, Fischer said. If rejected, Suarez and Uruguay could take the case to the Court of Arbitration for Sport in Lausanne, Switzerland.

At CAS, Suarez could first appeal to have the sanctions frozen during the process which would clear him to return early for Liverpool.

In a statement, Liverpool chief executive Ian Ayre said the club ''will wait until we have seen and had time to review the FIFA Disciplinary Committee report before making any further comment.''

After Aereo, what's next for Internet TV?

After Aereo, what's next for Internet TV?

RYAN NAKASHIMA
Associated Press 



LOS ANGELES (AP) — The Supreme Court shot down Aereo's business model this week, but that doesn't mean customers' desire for a better TV experience is gone.

Americans are still fed up with huge channel bundles, high prices, poor service and the lack of ability to watch all their shows on all their devices. That's part of why Aereo was attractive: It offered local broadcast channels and a few others on multiple devices for just $8 a month.

Industry watchers say the pay TV business must continue to evolve to win over unhappy customers, even if the nation's top court said grabbing signals from the airwaves and distributing them online without content-owner permission isn't the way.

"Even without Aereo, the reason people were cutting the cord, for cost reasons and so on, those don't go away," said Robin Flynn, an analyst with market research firm SNL Kagan.

Last year, the number of pay TV subscribers in the U.S. fell for the first time, dipping 0.1 percent to 94.6 million, according to Leichtman Research Group.

Into that breach have leapt companies that have offered quality TV content online for low cost, like Netflix and Amazon. Hulu, which is owned by major broadcast networks ABC, NBC and Fox, offers full episodes of popular shows like "The Colbert Report" the next day for free.

While that's not live TV, which Aereo offered, for many it's a good-enough substitute.

The decision against Aereo is a setback, but not a fatal one for people who want to break away from traditional TV, said Bill Niemeyer, senior analyst at TDG Research.

"While the content on the major broadcast networks is very important for some people, it's not important for everyone," Niemeyer said. "So it's a dent, but I don't think it's going to significantly change the trends."

If anything, the rise and fall of Aereo has highlighted an important fact — that high-quality TV signals are available on the airwaves for free — something that might have been forgotten if Aereo hadn't insisted that its technology simply replicates the antenna and wire that an average person could set up on their own.

"What Aereo has really done in our perspective is to address the lack of understanding that over-the-air is free," said Mark Buff, CEO of Mohu, a company that makes flat indoor antennas that attach to walls.

Mohu has sold 1.5 million antennas since it began in 2011 and they work in the kind of dense urban areas like New York where Aereo is believed to have had a small subscriber base. It is about to launch Mohu Channels, a device that blends Internet video services like Netflix with free-to-air TV in a single channel guide.
"We certainly do see and believe that the cord-cutting movement is on the rise," he said.
Alki David, the CEO of online streaming company FilmOn, said the Supreme Court's ruling actually creates an opportunity for startups because the court said that Aereo bears an "overwhelming likeness" to cable companies.
According to David, that means online video companies can compel broadcasters to license their TV signals under the "retransmission consent" rules outlined in the 1976 Copyright Act.

That could help online video companies create small broadcast-channel only bundles for consumers rather than 100-plus channel packages from traditional pay TV operators that cost more than what some consumers are willing to pay.

"This might be the undoing of the bundling system," David said. "The only compulsory license we're after are the four or five local channels in the city we're in. Of course it would be great. What else can it mean?"
But it's not like the pay TV industry is standing still.

Satellite TV company Dish Network Corp. said it's preparing to launch an online TV service with channels like ESPN, ABC, Disney Channel and others for about $20 to $30 a month before the end of the year.

The target audience is young urban professionals who don't want to watch more than 20 or 30 channels.
Since last year, Comcast Corp. has offered a slimmed down package combining Internet service, a little more than 10 local TV channels and HBO for $40 a month for 12 months. That's just $10 more than getting the Internet alone.

Niemeyer says the incremental $10 charge for broadcast TV and HBO seems like a very Aereo-like offering, especially because the HBO GO app allows for online viewing, and having a pay TV subscription will allow customers to sign in to different online offerings by networks.

"It's something they wouldn't have done five years ago, but they're doing it," he said. "I think they're trying to think long-term about how to still be a big-dollar business. It means they have to change. They have to change on channel bundling, how they deliver services to people, using what pipes and how."

Fresh Juices Recipes :

Fresh Juices Recipes :

Fruity cleanser


This watermelon fruit juice will make you feel better from the inside out


Ingredients
Flesh of 1/4 Seedless Watermelon
1/2 cup (125ml) grape juice
1 cup (250ml) cranberry juice

Method
Process watermelon in a juicer. Place watermelon juice in a jug with remaining ingredients and stir well to combine. Serve over ice.

Apple and strawberry juice

This apple and strawberry  fruit juice will make you feel better from the inside out

Ingredients
1 large red apple
250g (1 punnet) strawberries
Ice cubes

Method

Step1
Halve 1 large red apple and remove the core. Cut each half into 4 wedges.

Step 2
Wash 250g (1 punnet) strawberries and remove hulls. Process the fruit in a juice extractor. Pour the juice over ice cubes in serving glasses. Serve immediately.

ELSA FRENCH BRAID TUTORIAL FROM FROZEN:

ELSA FRENCH BRAID TUTORIAL FROM FROZEN:

Photography: Bryce Covey 


1) Create a deep side part and pull all hair to the opposite side.
2) Begin a regular French braid at the top, near the part.
3) Continue creating the French braid along the side/hairline moving towards the ear.
4+5) Add hair from the opposite side by taking horizontal sections and bringing them around to the front where the braid is located.
6) Continue taking even sections to add to both sides of the braid, making sure the braid remains located along the hairline.
7) Once you have placed all the loose hair into the braid, continue braiding the tail and secure with a clear rubber band.
8) Spray with finishing spray.
9) Loosen braid to desired size.



Tip:
If you have thinner or shorter hair, add clip-in or permanent extensions to create more fullness and length.

Hope you like it.

Djuice Launches Apportunity 2014 to Promote Local App Developers

Djuice Launches Apportunity 2014 to Promote Local App Developers



Telenor Pakistan’s youth brand djuice, has announced the launch of Apportunity 2014 – a competition for Pakistani students and software developers to create mobile phone applications (apps).
djuice has been organizing this competition for the past two consecutive years, which has gained immense popularity amongst the youth across the country.
This year, djuice has partnered with Microsoft to help bring the competition to the Windows Phone platform besides the already popular Google Android and Apple iOS platforms.
Microsoft is also supporting djuice to reach major university incubation centres in order to encourage quality app submissions. Moreover, with the support of Pakistan Software House Association (P@SHA), for the first time, djuice is opening the competition to software houses, as well.
The brand team will be visiting universities all across Pakistan to conduct mentoring sessions in order for users to interact with industry experts and refine their app ideas
While sharing his delight, Farid Ahmed, Director Marketing, Telenor Pakistan said, “Through this contest, we intend to provide opportunities to the young talent to bring innovation and creativity and enable them to have a significant share in the global mobile application market.We expect that Apportunity, besides being an exciting contest, will present innovative ideas to drive our ambition of bringing internet for all,” he added.
The winner of the competition will grab an opportunity to present their app at the Digital Winners Global App Developer Challenge 2014 in Oslo, Norway and will get a chance to win a grand cash prize of $33,000, in case the participant does not win at the event, djuice Pakistan will give them a consolation of Rs. 200,000 worth of prizes.
The runner-up in Pakistan will also receive Rs. 200,000 worth of prizes.
The contest has also introduced a new category – Best Internet App – whose winner will get Rs. 100,000 worth of prizes. djuice will also award Nokia Lumia handsets and internships at Microsoft Innovation Centre Pakistan to the winners of each category.
The competition has 10 distinct categories for app submission, such as business, entertainment, sports, utilities etc.
To participate in the competition, terms of services, FAQs and submission of app ideas visit this link: www.djuice.com.pk/apportunity
The deadline for entries is July 10, 2014, while app submission will be entertained till August and the winner will be announced by the end of August.

"Google Introduces Android L"

"Google Introduces Android L"



Google has released its new flavour of android named as “Android L” on this year’s Google I/O Conference.

The newer version definitely packs up some major improvements, that is visually and some under the hood goodies which includes New UI, better performance, better graphics, better integration with other devices, transition effects, animations, ART Runtime, battery life, notifications etc.

New UI “Material Design”



Google finally has realized that their Holo-Theme UI is getting pretty boring and they need to come up with some thing new, the Android L brings new looks to its interface which is more flatteEven ,colorful, minimalistic and simple

This new design is called “Material Design” and we definitely had a little hint about this new UI from Google. Material design packs up new Roboto font and some new animations that offer easier transitions between apps, in addition to making the end user experience a whole lot more enjoyable than ever before.

Even the soft-keys button design have been changed.
Recent apps menu has been revamped and now shows cards that show what recently opened apps were with the content also being displayed in the cards and would also show the chrome tabs in the same recent menu.

Better Notifications


Google stressed upon the notifications a lot this time. They’ve revamped the notification system and changed the way of interaction with notifications.
The enhanced notifications system now shows the most important ones on top and hides ones that are not top-priority. The notifications will now pop up on an open application so that you can interact with it without opening the notification bar.
The lock screen will feature a range of notifications that can interacted by different gestures and tapping. Plus notifications will now appear on top of an opened app

Better Search System

Search is now more integrated with the device as the Android L will bring additional improvements like, Google emphasized their ‘rediscovery’ feature, meaning that Google Search will now show you search-results on the basis of what you’ve searched before. It means that the search would actually learn your interests and on the basis of those it would give you further search results.
Navigation result would also be affected accordingly.

Integration and Pairing with Other Devices

With Android L you’ll get better integration between your phone and smart-watch. Plus another really interesting feature is also introduced by Google, which is that whenever your phone detects your smart watch near it, the phone will automatically unlock itself rather than asking you to enter the whole code again.
The devices would build smart connection between devices (that run on Android) which would allow for seamless transition between form factors. This means that the game you were playing on your Android L-based smartphone or tablet will be seamlessly available for play on your Android TV or perhaps even your Chromebook.

Android L has ART Runtime plus it’s 64-Bit ready Now


ART runtime was initially introduced in Kit Kat as an optional runtime in Developers options. But with Android L Google is officially making its transition to the ART runtime and would replace the aging Dalvikruntime.
In general the ART is more efficient over Dalvik and would boost performance because ART will bring (Ahead-Of-Time) execution of apps, while Dalvik uses JIT (Just-In-Time), meaning that code is executed when you start the app. On the bit of dark side of the ART It would require more space for apps.
ART is entirely 64-bit, so it can take advantage of new apps written from the ground-up for 64-bit processing architecture. It will also allow much larger RAM memory to be installed on newer devices, So future High-end phones will sport 3 GB of RAM or more.

Project Volta and Battery Saver mode


A simple rule applies in the battery life “The more you use the more you loose” but by handling the power eating various subsystem of device the battery life could be increased.
Google has introduced Project Volta which aims to increase battery life by handling WiFi, GPS etc. Another feature is added which is called Battery historian. It gives a detailed history of when the battery was drained and what exactly caused the battery depletion to help developers identify features that affect battery life too much. So expect Android Apps to be more battery efficient now.
With the android L the Google is also introducing a better battery saving mode which would have an energy-efficient mode which simply limits your handset’s performance by lowering processor clockspeed and the display’s refresh rate.
According to Google, a Nexus 5 gets extra 1.5 hours of on-screen battery life with the new battery saving mode on.

Screens from Android L






Ufone Offers Free Facebook Usage for 2G and 3G Users

Ufone Offers Free Facebook Usage for 2G and 3G Users


Ufone is now offering its entire prepaid customer base to use Facebook absolutely free of charge, without any subscription charges, daily charges or anything else.
Free Facebook from Ufone will be available on both 2G and 3G networks, meaning that customers in all covered area of Ufone network can use free Facebook on their devices
Customers do not need to subscribe to any other 3G or 2G bundles or any other mobile internet package to avail the offer.
On a related note, Telenor’s free Facebook offer expired on June 20th, 2014.
How to Activate Free Facebook on Ufone
  • All you need to do is dial *3434# to enable free Facebook on your Ufone Number
  • Customer will only subscribe the offer once to avail this offer
  • There are no activation, subscription or any other charges associated with the offer
Terms & Conditions
  • This offer is valid for all prepaid customers
  • Offer is available for both 2G and 3G coverage areas
  • Free Facebook offer will allow access to Facebook application, Facebook Messenger & Facebook URLs free of cost.
  • Viewing external images and website links is not free and will be charged as per standard data charges
  • Downloading of Facebook IOS and Android application will be charged as per standard data charges.
  • Third party Facebook applications like BlackBerry Facebook app will be charged
  • Voice/video calling on Facebook will be charged as per standard data charges
  • It is recommended to use default browser of your handset, Facebook usage on third party browsers (Nokia browser/Opera mini) may incur standard data charges.
  • If a customer is subscribed to social daily or social monthly then his social bucket would be used first for Facebook consumption
  • There is no data volume limit on this offer
  • This offer is for a limited-time only
  • Offer is subject to change at any time.