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  • Google’s Music All Access app to arrive on iOS soon

    Google plans to bring its own streaming music app to iOS that will let the company compete directly against Apple’s own music offerings. On Thursday at the AllThings D conference, Google SVP of Android, Chrome and Google Apps Sundar Pichai said Google Play Music All Access app would be available for iOS in a few weeks, though he did not offer a specific date.

    The new Google Play Music All Access service was just announced at Google’s own developer conference earlier this month, but at the time, only for Android devices and the web. It’s a streaming music service that will cost $9.99 per month — though users signed up for trial service before June 30 get a discounted $7.99 per month rate. (It’s not clear if that will apply to iOS users should this launch on that platform prior to the last day of June.)

    Considering recent history, it’s fairly unsurprising that Google is offering this service on its competitor’s platform. The company has created a virtual Google layer of services on iOS: it’s offering everything from Google Now to Chrome, Gmail, YouTube,  and Google+ to iOS customers.

    But this move is particularly savvy considering Apple’s struggles with getting its own streaming music service off the ground. “iRadio” has been rumored unlikely to be ready for introduction at WWDC in a few weeks, which could push back its official debut until the fall at another Apple event. Granted, there are already plenty of other streaming music apps available for iOS users to choose from, but this move could let Google  pick up a few more users from its chief mobile competitor before Apple gets its musical act together.

    Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
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  • HTC One with stock Android: $599 to cut your carrier’s control

    After originally denying it would do so, HTC is indeed going to offer what it calls a “Nexus Experience” edition of its HTC One handset, confirming rumors of such a move. The unlocked phone running a plain version of Android 4.2.2 goes on sale June 26 for $599 without contract, according to Google’s Sundar Pichai, speaking at the D11 conference on Thursday. Google will sell the phone directly through its Google Play store, just as it will do for a Samsung Galaxy S 4 “Google Edition” phone.

    When rumors of this phone made the rounds, I liked the idea and I still do. Google can help HTC in one area it sorely lacks compared to Samsung: marketing. HTC is helping itself as well with a price that’s $50 lower than Samsung’s Google Edition smartphone. While I don’t mind Samsung’s plastic-based hardware — it helps allow for a removable battery and microSD card — the HTC One is indeed a well-designed and premium-quality phone with an aluminum frame.

    This new HTC One model will keep the 32 GB of internal storage — a Developer Edition is available with 64 GB but uses HTC Sense software — and will be released first in the U.S. The handset uses GSM networks, so it will work on both AT&T and T-Mobile’s networks. Here’s a rundown of the supported frequencies and technologies:

    • HSPA/WCDMA: 850/1900/2100 MHz
    • GSM/GPRS/EDGE: 850/900/1800/1900 MHz
    • LTE: 700/850/AWS/1900 MHz (US)

    Google will provide software updates directly, just as it does for its own Nexus devices. Effectively, there’s no need to wait for carriers to test and push software updates and HTC won’t be responsible either.

    HTC One BlackThere is a bit of a downside to this, however. Just like Samsung’s similar Google Experience model, any software features created by HTC for the One won’t be present: this phone will run plain old Android. Sure you can skin it or add custom software to your heart’s content, but you won’t get all of the camera modes and options provided by HTC Sense, for example. Some of these make the phone a better device, so there’s a small trade-off.

    It’s one I’d personally make however for either Samsung’s or HTC’s flagship because it provides total control over how the phone works and looks. So too do Nexus devices — are they going away?

    I suspect the Nexus program changes but doesn’t disappear. Instead of trying to design cutting-edge phones to show handset makers how to build a great Android experience, I think Google focuses on reasonably good Nexus phones that aren’t quite flagship models. What will make them appealing however — aside from the pure Android experience — is a lower contract-free cost in the $250 to $350 price range.

    Regardless of what Google does with the Nexus, I think it’s smart that HTC reversed course on this. The company has a chance to sell even more of its flagship smartphones, won’t likely have as many support costs, and gains the benefit of Google helping sell the phone.

    Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
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  • Vine is taking over America

    Vine App Growth Analysis
    Just a few months ago, Vine was mostly dismissed as a painful hipster affectation. A service that revolves around taking 6-second video clips and sharing them with the world does sound like a flash in the pan. But something fascinating happened over the past couple of months: Vine became one of the biggest app market growth stories in recent history.

    Continue reading…

  • How To Moderate a Panel Like a Pro

    The panel discussion was invented by someone who liked to sit three feet above his audience, talk with five of his closest friends for an hour, and barely acknowledge that there are 100 other people in the room, usually sitting in uncomfortable chairs.

    But until the panel discussion disappears from the agendas of conferences and networking events, you may be asked to moderate one. Lucky for you, the bar is very, very low. If you can find a way to deliver a few fleeting moments of entertainment or interaction, you will be regarded as a rock star. If you can toss in some insight and controversy, they may erect a statue of you at the convention center.

    I’ve moderated more than 300 panel discussions at events like the Consumer Electronics Show, the Sundance Film Festival, and various Harvard Business School conferences. Here are a dozen guidelines to put you on the right track when you’re tapped to run a panel.

    Don’t prep with your panelists. Many moderators imagine they are running a Congressional hearing, not a panel discussion. They hold pre-panel conference calls, and write lengthy e-mails back and forth hashing out the terrain each speaker intends to cover. Avoid that as much as possible. Your goal is to be a group of smart, funny people on-stage having a dynamic conversation. That doesn’t mean that you as a moderator shouldn’t research your panelists and their work so that you can come up with appropriate questions. My advice is to send your panelists a single pre-event e-mail, listing three questions you plan to open with, and asking them if there are any other issues they think are important to cover. At the event, socialize with your panelists and make sure everyone has met one another, but resist the urge to talk about what you’re going to talk about on-stage.

    Sit with your panelists. It’s just not possible to run a good panel discussion by standing at the podium. Sit in the middle of your panelists, so you can easily make eye contact, and if needed, tap someone long-winded on the elbow and say, “Janet, those are fascinating examples, but can we get Bill’s take on this topic?”

    Moderators can’t also be panelists. Just as an orchestra conductor would never whip out his viola to play a solo, your job is to encourage your panelists to give great performances. Once you start chiming in or rebutting panelists, the balance gets thrown off. You just can’t play both roles at once. (And just as a conductor would, you also need to be firm about not letting certain panelists dominate the discussion.)

    No slides. Letting panelists show slides is almost certain death, and it radically reduces the role of the moderator. Exceptions: If panelists are talking about a visual topic, like retail store design, you can let each speaker bring the same number of example photos to show. If speakers are movie directors, letting everyone show a clip from their latest film, of a similar length, is fine. But letting speakers bring PowerPoints will usually gobble up your time and prevent any kind of interesting interactions from happening.

    State your objective at the outset. Don’t write a long-winded introduction. Two sentences will do. Why is this topic important now, and what do you hope to accomplish within the next hour. “With all of the publicity around Google Glass, everyone is thinking about wearable computing. Our objective with our time today is to share some of the thinking about how wearable displays like Glass will change the way we interact with others.”

    Never let the panelists introduce themselves. That’s the moderator’s job. Be as brief as you can, especially if the audience is holding a program guide with lengthier bios in it. Three lines is the absolute longest anyone’s introduction should be. No one cares where each panelist worked 27 years ago, or how you first met them.

    Involve the audience within the first five minutes. This lets your audience know that you’re aware of them, and it keeps your panelists from acting as if they’re in a bubble. You can ask a few people to introduce themselves just by name, title, and company, to get a sense for who is in the audience. I sometimes ask audience members to applaud or boo in response to questions. “Have you ever had a great idea for improving a process at your company? Please applaud.” “OK, now, have you ever found it difficult to get the necessary resources or support to actually improve the process? Please boo.” It livens up the room.

    Don’t go down the line every time. By the time the fifth panelist is answering the same question as four other people have answered, the odds they will contribute something interesting have dropped almost to zero. When you ask a question, two answers is plenty, unless a third person is dying to jump in. Instead, ask a related question, ask for a concrete example, or simply shift gears and ask your other panelists about something else.

    Invite panelists to ask each other questions. When you send out your pre-panel email, or when you chat with panelists on-site, ask them to think of one question they’d like to ask their fellow panelists. Often, these questions are sharper or more provocative than the questions on your list — and panelists are often more candid when one of their peers asks them a question, as opposed to the “official moderator.”

    High Altitude+Specifics+Audience. As you plan out what you want to do with your time, divide it into three roughly equal categories. “High altitude” are those questions where you give your panelists a chance to discuss what is happening in the world at a 30,000-foot level. Specifics are where you invite them to share funny anecdotes, war stories, or concrete examples — things that the audience can really relate to. Audience means not just leaving time for Q&A, but also coming up with creative ways to bring the audience into your conversation. After you’ve asked panelists about the worst hire they ever made, for instance, you might ask people in the audience to share their stories. If you have a panel of venture capitalists and an audience of entrepreneurs, try asking a few bold entrepreneurs to deliver their elevator pitches and get the VCs to suggest ways to improve it.

    Don’t ask panelists for “one final thought.” The lamest way to conclude a panel is by giving each panelist an opportunity for a concluding oration. Typically, they’ll recap what they’ve already said, or look to their notes and cough up some uninteresting musing they didn’t have time to get to (usually for good reason.) Use the time instead for a last question from the audience, or for something forward-looking. “What important new trend will we be talking about at next year’s conference?” “What’s your counter-intuitive, half-crazy prediction about the next five years in our industry?”

    You are an airline pilot. It’s your job to land this baby on time. Once you push past your scheduled end-time, audience members will get restless, and you’ll start getting dirty looks from the conference organizer. If you don’t have anyone in the room to flash you the “five minutes left” sign, set your mobile phone to vibrate in your pocket when the end is approaching.

    If you attend enough panel discussions, you already know that the worst ones feel like a plodding public access TV show — and you can’t switch the channel. The best feel like a fast-paced, unpredictable conversation between smart people on stage and smart people in the audience. Keep that goal in mind, and you’ll soon be modeling for that heroic statue.

  • Microsoft Talks Bing On Windows 8.1

    As previously reported, Windows 8.1 is adding an updated Bing experience. Now, we have a better idea of what that entails, as Microsoft has just put out a blog post about them.

    With the new Bing experience on Windows, you’ll see rich images across your search results, and Bing will search across the web as well as your machine.

    “With search in Windows 8.1 our intent is to have one way to find what you’re looking for, no matter where it lives – whether it’s a document on your PC, a photo album in the cloud, an app, PC setting or a website. In just a tap or a click you can play, view, launch, or browse,” explains Bing Corporate Vice President Derrick Connell. “To set the course, we looked hard how people have been interacting with the new user experience introduced in Windows 8. Search has long been a part of Windows – especially powerful and useful in Windows 8 – where the Search Charm gives you a single place to find content in your apps. People told us they liked the ease of having fewer places to search. In Windows 8, people could direct their question at an app (like Travel) and have Bing bring back a beautiful, multi-faceted set of information and tools to help them plan their summer trip. But Windows 8.1 takes an even bigger step – with its new search experience, you can find your own personal stuff as well as content from the open web and the creativity of the millions of authors and developers.”

    “Imagine you’re planning a trip to Paris,” says Connell. “Simply type the name of the city and you’ll immediately see beautiful, full-bleed images, upcoming events in the city, and popular attractions. But you can also check the current weather and book a hotel in the Bing Travel app, without having to open it up and type ‘Paris’ again. In the same way, your itinerary and budget, whether they are saved on your laptop or in the cloud, are right there. And of course, we’ll show you the great web results you’ve come to expect from Bing. ‘Paris’ isn’t just a single file or a search query in an app: it is a concept, full of both meaning and context, and we’ll bring its unique meaning to your digital life, all in one place.”

    More from Connell here.

    As Greg Sterling noted at Search Engine Land, depending on user adoption, the new Bing integration could help Microsoft whittle away a bit of market share from Google. It will have to do better than Windows 8 has done so far though.

  • Apple two-factor security efforts “half-hearted,” says security researcher

    In March, Apple was praised for introducing the option of two-factor authentication for AppleIDs. But on Thursday a security researcher noted some glaring weaknesses in what Apple has implemented so far. While Apple users can require a regular password and a four-digit passcode in order to gain access to their devices and accounts protected by an AppleID, this does not cover access to iCloud, according to Vladimir Katalov, CEO of Elcomsoft Software.

    On the company’s blog, CrackPassword, Katalov writes of how he and his team were able to access a user’s backups (including photos) and documents, and were able to restore an iCloud backup onto a new Apple device without being asked for the second mode of security, the four-digit passcode, even with two-factor authentication turned on:

    In its current implementation, Apple’s two-factor authentication does not prevent anyone from restoring an iOS backup onto a new (not trusted) device. In addition, and this is much more of an issue, Apple’s implementation does not apply to iCloud backups, allowing anyone and everyone knowing the user’s Apple ID and password to download and access information stored in the iCloud.

    The Elcomsoft team used their own Phone Password Breaker software to sign into the targeted user’s iCloud account with the Apple ID and password. Then, to look at that data, they say they just used software that can browse and analyze offline iTunes backups.

    They were then able to restore an entire backup of the user’s device and iCloud data to a new iPhone without ever being asked for secondary security information — again, even though they say two-factor authentication was turned on.

    The one way the unsuspecting user whose account is being targeted would know this was happening is via an automatically generated email from Apple letting them know that their Apple ID was used to sign onto a new device.

    Apple did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    Obviously this is concerning for Apple users who assumed far more security from Apple’s recently introduced system. But the weaknesses, as Katalov points out, tend to come at the expense of convenience. Why aren’t you asked for your passcode when setting up a brand new device? Presumably so the purchase of new phones or replacement devices at Apple Stores can happen a faster and with fewer hiccups.

    He points out that Apple isn’t promising more than it’s delivering, but concludes the company has much further to go to offer real protection for users from targeted hacking.

    Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
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  • New cancer drug shows promise for treating advanced melanoma

    Researchers from UCLA’s Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center report that a new drug in preliminary tests has shown promising results with very manageable side effects for treating patients with melanoma, the deadliest form of skin cancer.
     
    The results were presented at the 2013 meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology today in Chicago by Dr. Antoni Ribas, professor of medicine in the UCLA division of hematology-oncology, who led the research. Following Ribas’ presentation, the study was published online ahead of press in the New England Journal of Medicine. 
     
    The results are from the first clinical trial of the drug lambrolizumab (MK3475), which was discovered and developed by Merck. Researchers analyzed 135 patients with advanced metastatic melanoma who were divided into three groups with different treatment regimens.
     
    Overall, 38 percent of patients taking lambrolizumab saw confirmed improvement of their cancer across all dose levels. Of those taking the lowest dose of lambrolizumab, 25 percent showed improvement, while 52 percent of those who received the highest dose improved. The rate of any tumor response across all patients was 77 percent. Researchers have not yet determined the average duration of response to the drug, because only five patients who had initial responses were taken off the study after their cancers got worse. To date, the longest response has been over one year.
     
    Side effects with lambrolizumab are usually mild and easily managed. These include fatigue, fever, skin rash, loss of skin color and muscle weakness. Thirteen percent of patients had side effects that were more severe, including inflammation of the lung or kidney, and thyroid problems.
     
    “This study is showing the highest rate of durable melanoma responses of any drug we have tested thus far for melanoma, and it is doing it without serious side effects in the great majority of patients,” Ribas said.
     
    Serving as the immune system’s soldiers, T cells find and destroy invaders that cause infections and diseases. Cancers like melanoma are usually not detected by the immune system, and they spread without T cells destroying them. One problem may be that a protein called PD-L1 on the surface of cancer cells allows them to hide from T cells that express the protein PD-1 on their surfaces.
     
    Lambrolizumab is an antibody that blocks PD-1 and reactivates an immune response to the cancer cells.
     
    “Lambrolizumab turns on the body’s immune system to attack the cancer, and the immune system seems to remember that the melanoma is the enemy and continues to control it long term,” Ribas states.
     
    These data have led to a series of additional studies testing lambrolizumab in patients with melanoma and other cancers, including lung cancer.
     
    Lambrolizumab received “breakthrough therapy” designation from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in April. Enacted as part of the 2012 FDA Safety and Innovation Act, the breakthrough therapy designation was created by the agency to expedite the development and review of a potential new medicine if it is “intended, alone or in combination with one or more other drugs, to treat a serious of life-threatening disease or condition and preliminary clinical evidence indicates that the drug may demonstrate substantial improvement over existing therapies on one or more clinically significant endpoints.”
     
    This research was supported by Merck Sharp & Dohme Corp. The UCLA authors have no financial ties to disclose.
     
    UCLA’s Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center has more than 240 researchers and clinicians engaged in disease research, prevention, detection, control, treatment and education. One of the nation’s largest comprehensive cancer centers, the Jonsson center is dedicated to promoting research and translating basic science into leading-edge clinical studies. In July 2012, the Jonsson Cancer Center was once again named among the nation’s top 10 cancer centers by U.S. News & World Report, a ranking it has held for 12 of the last 13 years.
     
    For more news, visit the UCLA Newsroom and follow us on Twitter.

  • Google makes HTC One “Nexus Edition” official, will launch in the U.S. Play Store on June 26 with stock Android 4.2.2

    HTC_One_Nexus_Edition

    Starting June 26, the HTC One “Nexus Edition” will be up for sale on the U.S. Google Play Store for $599. This price is lower than the Samsung Galaxy S 4 “Nexus Edition,” which will be on sale for $649. Interesting, especially when considering how many people prefer the HTC One’s hardware to that of the Galaxy S 4. One main reason that consumers purchase the Galaxy S 4 is for the unique user experiences provided by the software, which will obviously be entirely absent in the “Nexus Edition.” Good move by HTC here regarding pricing.

    The phone will ship with Android 4.2.2, is expected to upgrade to Android 4.3 when it is available, and will be supported on GSM networks.  More info to come.

    Source: HTC Blog

     

    Come comment on this article: Google makes HTC One “Nexus Edition” official, will launch in the U.S. Play Store on June 26 with stock Android 4.2.2

  • Google doesn’t plan to abandon its Nexus program

    Google Nexus Program
    Google’s Android and Chrome boss Sundar Pichai confirmed that Google has no plans to abandon its Nexus program. The executive confirmed at the AllThingsD: D11 conference on Thursday that Google will continue to make dedicated Nexus hardware with its manufacturing partners. He noted that the idea of the Nexus program was to not only “guide the ecosystem,” but also to push hardware to a new level. The news comes after Pichai revealed a new Google Edition of the HTC One that runs a stock version of Android. The smartphone will be the second non-Nexus device running stock Android that is offered through Google Play. The company previously announced a Google Edition version of the Galaxy S4 at its I/O Developers Conference earlier this month. Both phones will launch on June 26th.

  • HTC One Nexus Edition Is Official, Will Cost $599

    It was rumored last week that HTC would release a Nexus Edition of its popular HTC One handset after the news of a Nexus Edition of the Galaxy S4 was received with such positive buzz at Google I/O. Now HTC has went and confirmed that rumor.

    HTC announced today that a Nexus Edition of the HTC One will be available starting June 26. It will be sold exclusively in the Google Play store, and will cost $599. For those keeping track at home, that’s $50 cheaper than the HTC One Developer Edition.

    Just like the Galaxy S4 Nexus Edition, the HTC One Nexus Edition will ship with the latest version of Jelly Bean (Android 4.2.2) instead of HTC’s own Sense software. You could install your own custom stock Android ROM on the SIM unlocked or Developer Edition, but the Nexus Edition comes with the official Google support that the Nexus experience offers.

    Still, you’re free to make your own choice about which HTC One device you want. You my want to try out the new HTC Sense on the One before you make the jump to stock Android. To compare the three HTC One models available, check out this handy chart:

    HTC One Nexus Edition

  • Google Music All Access Coming to iOS in ‘a Couple Weeks’

    iOS users should expect Google Play Music All Access to arrive on their platform in the next couple of weeks.

    The news comes from Sundar Pichai, SVP Android, Chrome, and Apps at Google, who was speaking at the All Things D D11 conference Thursday afternoon.

    “In Google’s DNA, we wanted to be universally accessible. The goal with search was to make it work for everyone in the world, and I think that philosophy extends today. We brought Google Now to iOS. A couple weeks from now we will launch Google Play Music All Access for iOS, the teams are working like crazy to do it,” he said.

    TechCrunch notes that Pichai made a point to say that Google wants its services on as many devices as possible, and that mean that iOS users can then become Google users.

    “In Google’s fundamental DNA, we want [our services] to be universally accessible…for us, users on iOS who want to use Google services, we want them to be Google users.”

    On the flip side, speaking at the same conference earlier this week, Apple CEO Tim Cook suggested that Apple wasn’t against porting its own apps to Android – at least on a base level. It’s just that it doesn’t want to right now.

    “Would Apple port an app from iOS to Android? We have no religious issue,” he said. “If we thought it made sense to do that, we would do that. You can take the same philosophy and apply it to iCloud. Would it make sense for iCloud? It doesn’t today.”

    As you probably know, Google launched their new Spotify competitor Google Play Music All Access earlier this month. For $9.99 a month, you can have full streaming access to millions of songs, all of which play well with your existing Google Play music in order to deliver radio and recommendations. You can check out my full walkthrough of the service here.

  • Evernote promises improved security

    It seems that security has become a daily news story now, with multiple high-profile attacks. Evernote has had previous security problems, but today the company wishes to alleviate a few of those issues. Having already been apart of one of the headlines, the note-taking service would rather not be included as part of the crowd in the future.

    Today the company announces three new security features, beginning with two-factor verification. This requires a verification code whenever you are asked to provide your username and password. This will usually only happen when you log into Evernote Web or install it on a new device. It simply means that you will receive a new text message on your phone with a code that must be entered, in addition to your password — something that many other services like Google, Microsoft and Facebook already do, and that Twitter does poorly. The feature is optional.

    Second up is Authorized Applications. According to Evernote’s Seth Hitchings, “we want you to open an Evernote app and then quickly accomplish your task. To make that possible, we rarely ask you to sign in. That helps you get your work done, but can be a problem if you lose your phone or computer. Now, you can revoke any version of Evernote from your Evernote Web Account Settings. Once revoked, an app will request a password the next time its launched”.

    Finally, there is Access History. This shows you a running list of every time your account was accessed over the past thirty days, and includes all versions and includes locations and IP addresses.

    It seems that Evernote has all of this done right, but it will take some knocking on both from hackers and security researches to know for sure. Given that the last hack resulted in no compromised user accounts, thanks to passwords being salted and hashed, I have high confidence in the company. Let us see if it upholds my hopes.

  • Android chief not worried about Samsung clout, vows not to forget Motorola

    Google Android Boss Pichai Interview
    One potentially problematic aspect about Samsung’s rise as the world’s top Android vendor is that it has literally crowded out smaller competitors and is the only company in the world that consistently turns a profit selling Android phones. Sundar Pichai, who heads both the Android and Chrome OS divisions at Google, told the D11 conference on Thursday that he’s not concerned about the overwhelming power that Samsung wields in the Android ecosystem and said that Google and Samsung have a “symbiotic relationship” that benefits both companies.

    Continue reading…

  • Man in Florida Donates 100 Gallons of Blood

    An 84-year-old Florida man this week reached the rare milestone of having donated 100 gallons of blood over the past 36 years.

    According to a Palm Beach Post report, the man, named Harold Mendenhall, began donating blood in July of 1977. Since that time, 100 gallons of his O-positive type blood have been donated. Mendhall reportedly began donating when his wife, a nurse, was diagnosed with breast cancer.

    It might seem that Mendenhall could easily qualify for the record for most blood donated. The current Guinness World Record for blood donation belongs to another Florida man, John Sheppard of Fort Meyers. Sheppard donated 315 whole blood units, or around 30 to 40 gallons.

    Mendenhall does not qualify for the record, however, as he does not donate whole blood. Instead, the Post reports that he donates platelets. The process involves putting Mendenhall’s blood through a machine that separates out the blood platelets, and returns the remainder to Mendenhall’s body. This type of donation has allowed Mendenhall to donate two pints of blood at a time, and means he only has to wait two weeks between donations, rather than the nearly two months whole blood donors have to wait.

  • Featured Android App Review: Privacy Manager [Tools]

    Privacy_Manager_TA_Splash_Banner

    Privacy is a major buzzword these days and sometimes you want to be able to keep and/or do things on your phone that you don’t want others to know about. You will find plenty of apps that help you in this regard, but most of them only do one thing. What makes a great app is one that is not only simple to use, but also offers a lot of features, and Privacy Manager offers both. Privacy manager will do some of the simple stuff like keep certain pictures, apps, and contacts private, but it offers so much more.  Privacy manager will also block certain numbers from calling you, disguise calls or SMS messages when you don’t want others to know exactly who is calling you, Ring your phone with a fake call when you need to be “interrupted” in a meeting. It even offers a password manager and let’s not forget the ability to record from your phone’s handsfree microphone. Privacy Manager has pretty much everything you could ever want, and then some.

    The interface is very simple, straightforward, and easy to get to what you want. All the features are part of the main screen and divided into three sections. Under Lock Privacy Information you will find the Image Locker, App Locker, and Password Manager. The Disguise Private Information area has Disguise Call and Disguise SMS. Lastly, the Tools section includes Fake Call and the Recorder. You will also find a quick link to your Private Space as well as quick stats on how many calls and SMS messages were blocked.

    Private Space – This is where you can keep any SMS messages and calls that you don’t want to be seen by anyone else. You will be allowed to choose the password for this feature and once you add a contact, it will ask you if you want to move all current SMS messages and call logs for this contact. It so happens that this is the one area that I found to be a little buggy. Current text messages were properly secured, but any future messages sent to my phone from the protected contact would cause Privacy Manager to error out and result in those texts to go unprotected. This is something that will probably be fixed very shortly.

    Blocking – You can block certain numbers from calling or texting you. You can add people to either a blacklist or a whitelist by number, contacts, SMS log, call log, or SIM card. You will also find numerous settings for fine tuning things. For example, you can block text messages that contain a particular word. You can also set it to only block calls or only SMS messages. The main page of the app will always show you how many calls and SMS messages were blocked.

    The blacklist is obviously for those that you want blocked, but the whilelist feature is also very important. The whitelist are those contacts that you will always accept and can be quite useful. Lets say you are going to bed, you can change your settings from blacklist to whitelist so that only the really important people will be able to wake you up. In other words, all other contacts (including anybody in the blacklist) will be blocked.

    Image Locker – This is pretty self explanatory. You can select whatever images on your phone you want to be hidden. This area has it’s own separate password so you can make it the same as the others or completely different. If someone goes to your gallery, they will not see the image(s), and it will be as if they never existed. The only way they can be seen is from the app, and the person would need the password to access it.

    App Locker – This works the same way as Image Locker, but the only difference is the apps that you lock will still be visible on the phone. In order to open the app, the user will need to enter a password that you set. Just like Image Locker and Private Space, this password is independent. You can choose to make it the same or completely different.

    Password Manager – I always tell people to use not only use more secure passwords, but also different ones for each site or account. The only problem with that is remembering all of them. This area will keep all your account usernames and passwords for easy access. You will find options for BBS, Game, IM, Email, Bank, Others. Again, this area has its own password that you can choose.

    Disguise Call and Disguise SMS – This gives you the ability to spoof who is really calling or texting you. Say your wife might call you in a meeting, but you don’t want others to know that you will be talking to your wife. When she does call, you can make it so it shows a completely different phone number for the incoming call screen. The same goes for SMS messages.

    Fake Call – We have all been in situations in which we wish someone would call us because we really need to be interrupted. Fake Call will do that. You can set this caller to call you at whatever time you want and you can even prerecord their spoken words. You can make this caller someone from you contacts or any number of your choosing. The only issue is that if it’s from your contacts, it doesn’t grab your contact image for further embellishment, but it gets the job done.

    Recorder – You can set your phone to record the surroundings at any particular time that you want using your phone’s handsfree microphone. You will obviously need to have it out of your pocket, and it works very well. The only issue is that you can’t preset how long you want it to record for, so you are going to have to remember to stop it on your own. All recordings will be saved in the privacy recording box for future reference.

    As you can see, Privacy Manager does so many things which makes it very appealing. You can grab it for $4.99 in the Play Store, which has all the features I mentioned. They do offer a Lite version for Free that offers all of the features I mentioned, but you are limited to 10 images for the Image Locker and only one contact for disguising calls and SMS messages . These limitations aren’t all that much, and I suspect that most people can get by with this lite version.

    Check out my hands on video below as well as the download links to get started. As always, let me know what you think.

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    Click here to view the embedded video.

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    Play Store Download Link – Free

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    Play Store Download Link – Paid

    Come comment on this article: Featured Android App Review: Privacy Manager [Tools]

  • Google says All Access subscription music service coming soon to iOS

    Google Music All Access iOS
    Among the announcements Android and Chrome boss Sundar Pichai had in store for D11, he announced that Google’s new All Access streaming music service will soon be available on iOS devices. Google does not currently offer a Google Music app for iOS, and users instead rely on a variety of available third-party apps. Within the next few weeks, however, Pichai said that Google will finally be rolling out its own app for the iPhone and iPad, and it will include Google’s All Access functionality, which allows users to pay $9.99 per month (or $7.99 per month for those who started their free trials in May) for unlimited access to Google’s entire music library.

  • Google Adds Nutrition Info To Knowledge Graph

    Google announced that it is rolling out new nutrition information to search, as the latest addition to its Knowledge Graph. If you can’t already, you’ll soon be able to query things like “How much protein is in a banana?” or How many calories are in an avocado?” and get direct answers (spoken to you, if you’re using Google’s new conversational search).

    Google will provide relevant nutrition info under an expansion, and will let you switch to other related foods or serving sizes.

    “Tempted by some popcorn at the movies?” asks product manager Ilya Mezheritsky. “Ask ‘how many calories are in popcorn’ and you’ll get your answer. [Hint: it’s 31 calories per cup]. Perplexed by a food label or recipe? Ask ‘what nutrients are in breadfruit?’ or ‘is there sugar in grenadilla?’ Big on a high protein diet? Ask ‘how many carbs in corn?’ or simply search for [corn] and you’ll see detailed nutrition info.”

    Google Nutrition results

    Google Nutrition 2

    Google Nutrition Results

    Suddenly it’s starting to seem like maybe Google shouldn’t have killed Google Health. Combined with this feature and Google Now, one could imagine some powerful dietary recommendations.

    The feature will be rolling out in English in the U.S. over the course of the next ten days. Google will also be adding more foods and languages. It’s starting with over 1,000 foods.

    In related news, Google has also introduced two new tools for webmasters to provide structured data to Google, which can then be used in Google offerings like the Knowledge Graph and Google Now.

  • Here’s An Inside Look At PS4 Development From The Killzone Team

    Sony’s Conversations with Creators series has been wonderful. We’ve gotten an inside look at PS4 development from some of the most talented teams on the planet. Now Sony is giving us that same inside look at what will undoubtedly be the visual benchmark of the PS4′s launch – Killzone: Shadow Fall.

    In the video above, Guerilla reveals that Killzone: Shadow Fall will utilize the PS4′s ability to let gamers play a game while it’s still being downloaded. To be more specific, the studio says that it will download the menu and the first level and then start downloading the rest of the game while you’re playing through it. This way, gamers will no longer have to wait for the full game to download before jumping into the action.

    Killzone: Shadow Fall will be a launch title for the PS4 when it launches later this year.

  • FoundersCard brings executive-style perks to entrepreneurs — special offer for BetaNews readers

    FoundersCard is a membership-based community designed for entrepreneurs which offers access to invite-only networking events throughout the world and provides various perks. The latter includes things like discounts for airfare, postal services and VIP treatment at upscale hotels.

    The community, which boasts 11,000 members, just added complimentary Avis First memberships (premium service) with 25 percent discounts on car rentals and between five to 10 percent off for JetBlue flights.

    Some of the FoundersCard partners includes Apple, hotels like Hilton HHonors, Mandarin Oriental and Ace Hotel, services like UPS, Rackspace and MailChimp and airline companies such as Virgin Atlantic, Lufthansa, Hertz and BlackJet.

    As you may imagine, the membership comes at a considerable price — $595 per year — which undoubtedly hinders its appeal. But if you’re interested, FoundersCard now offers a 33 percent discount for BetaNews readers.

    You’ll still have to shell out $395 for a yearly membership, but if you’re the type of person who travels a lot or spends plenty of time staying in hotels it might be an interesting proposition.

    To apply for a membership click here. You have to type in the “FCBETA13” code to receive the discount.

  • Stop Work Overload By Setting These Boundaries

    Why is it that when your friends, your significant other, and especially your mom tell you, You need to stop working so much! — you hesitate? On the one hand, you know they have a point. It’s unsustainable to pull 12- to 14-hour days on a consistent basis, and you feel burnt-out and cranky. But when it comes to actually setting boundaries, you stall and tell yourself and others, “It’s just a busy time. It will get better soon…”

    But, it doesn’t. And you find yourself wedged between the fact that you can’t seem to get everything done and the feeling that maybe the problem isn’t the situation — it’s you. You feel guilty that everyone else seems to complete everything, but you can’t. You worry that if you ask for help or say, “No,” to anything that everyone will discover you’re an imposter who doesn’t add enough value.

    Although those fears are understandable, they aren’t necessary valid. As a time coach, I’ve found that one of the biggest keys to achieving balance is to start objectively evaluating the fact-based aspects of your schedule, rather than letting a vague sense of fear drive your decisions. No matter how valuable a team member you may be, no one can fit 100 hours of work into 40 hours a week, or even 60 hours. You can start to make changes once you have confidence that the expectations of yourself and others really are unreasonable and that you can set boundaries in a respectful, constructive manner.

    Here are five steps to gain that confidence, which you can apply on an individual level or a group level if you have responsibility for managing the expectations of your team:

    Step 1: Develop a Time Budget

    People who manage their finances well follow a few consistent principles. For one, they spend only what they have, so they avoid unnecessary debt and the corresponding stress and cost. They also make sure that they allocate their money correctly, so that they have sufficient funds for everything they need to buy. Finally, they cut costs where they can, without a significant negative impact, and make sure to put money into investments where they have a good probability of a return. The same principles apply with effective time investment. To have a clear sense of what you can reasonably handle, you should start out by calculating how many hours you have to “spend” each week. If you tend toward over-allocating time toward work, you can do the calculations in reverse. For example:

    Hours/Day to Work=24-(Number of Hours of Sleep)-(Commute)-(Personal Commitments)-(Exercise)-(Self Care)

    By “personal commitments,” I’m referring to items in your schedule that are an essential part of you feeling fulfilled. These vary from person to person but could include family time, volunteer responsibilities, social activities, or personal passions like playing the piano. Also, eating, showering, and getting ready fall under “self care.” Once you have a sense of your daily time budget, you can calculate your weekly time budget by adding up the totals for each day. For some people, each day will look similar. For others, their personal commitments create large variations in their day-to-day time budget.

    Once you understand the size of your time budget, then you can evaluate the different time costs during your workday. For example, you have “maintenance” activities like answering e-mail or planning, “execution” activities like attending meetings or completing a report, and “development” activities like networking or marketing. I recommend making a list of all the different elements of your workday and then either writing down an initial time estimate or percentage for each one. For instance, 20% of my workday consists of answering e-mail, 50% of project work, and 30% of development activities. Make sure to not only consider the cost for a particular item but also the associated costs. For instance, a one-hour meeting could come with the related expenses of 15 minutes of travel time each way, 30 minutes of prep, and 15 minutes of follow up. That means that the total expense comes to 2.25 hours. So if you work a 9-hour day and want to spend no more than 50% of your time in meetings, then that limits you to an average of two meetings per day and ten meetings per week.

    Step 2: Make Cuts Where You Can

    After developing a time budget, you’ll typically find that you really did expect more of yourself than you could possibly fit into the hours in a day. But that doesn’t mean it’s time to go running to your manager yet. Instead, you need to take a very careful look at how you spend your time and cut where you can, first.

    One of the readers of my book took this advice to heart when she faced a major time crunch at work. Instead of trying to fight the reality of her time budget, she took this action:

    “I was (once again) up against way too many competing projects with the same deadline and then trying to juggle other on-going & long-term projects too, which was causing lots of stress! So, I thought about what was causing the stress and tried to tackle things I had control of without just defaulting to working a lot of overtime. For example, I contacted one of the project managers with the longer-term project to see if it was possible to ‘pause’ my effort on his project over a two-week period, and he agreed with some negotiations. So that was about 24 hours saved over the two weeks. Then I attacked a few other aspects of the problem by recruiting some more part-time help from another department, adjusting the scope of one project, gaining an extension on another project, etc., etc. Instead of feeling overwhelmed and a victim of the circumstances, I felt SO powerful!”

    You may need to take such extreme measures in times of work crisis, or you may take more subtle measures, such as taking yourself out of nonessential meetings, asking your colleagues to review items with you during one-on-one meetings instead of sending you 50 e-mails throughout the week, stepping off of a committee, turning off your e-mail pop-up, or spending less time on items where spending more time to get them perfect doesn’t add value. Challenge your assumptions on what you should do and how long you should spend on different activities. If possible, only commit to putting tasks on your weekly to-do list if you have space to fit them into your schedule.

    Step 3: Compare Expected Versus Actual

    Once you’ve started to come to terms with the fact that time is limited and you’ve taken advantage of the quick wins, you’ll need to further refine your estimates to compare expected versus actual time allotments. For instance, maybe you think that e-mail should only take one hour out of your day. But when you actually look at the time you spend, you find that it always takes two. (Any sort of tracking will do, but if you want to be precise, tools like RescueTime can help you to know exactly how you spend time on your computer.) When faced with the reality of the situation, you’ll need to see if you can take time-cutting measures like writing more succinct responses, using tools like TypeIt4Me or asking for different e-mail strategies at work. If none of those reduce the time allocation, then instead of fighting the reality, you’ll need to increase your budget in that area.

    Using the 80/20 rule can also help you make everything fit within your time budget. But this will require you to more fully embrace the facts that you can’t do everything and you can’t please everyone. For instance, as you start to look at the value from different activities, you may find that declining meetings that people would like you to attend, but that keep you from your highest priority tasks, is the correct answer. Or you may discover that you need to spend less time than you might have thought to make the correct amount of impact. For example, showing up for 30-45 minutes at your company happy hour may have almost as much impact as staying for two hours. By cutting out earlier, you can have time to invest an hour in exercise or finishing a proposal, which will have a dramatic return on the time investment. Although some of these choices may make people uncomfortable — especially you — the short-term discomfort caused by changing your natural default response will have a big pay-off in the long term.

    Step 4: Ask For Direction

    If you’ve followed the above three steps and still can’t seem to accomplish everything you need to do, it’s time to take courage and ask for help. You can do so in a clear, objective way as outlined below. But before you do, bolster your confidence by looking over the facts of your time budget once more and reminding yourself that you have no reason to feel guilty or like a failure. No one can do the impossible, so the fact that you’re over your time budget isn’t a judgment about you, but a sign that you need to adjust your overall environment.

    Here’s how to approach time budget negotiations with your manager and/or people who try to put more items into your schedule:

    • Gather Your Facts: Have a concise list of projects and a rough estimate of how long the various tasks take you to do. (If you’ve followed the above three steps, you should already have this on hand.)
    • Develop a Visual: This could look as simple as printing out your weekly calendar after having filled in both meetings and times for tasks, or as complex as displaying a full-scale project plan. The form matters less than the goal of showing the incongruence between the available time and the requested activities.
    • Present the Information: Instead of seeing this as a battle between you and the people desiring work from you, approach these expectations negotiations as strategic sessions where you are working together to maximize the value you can contribute. Maybe a task could be demoted in priority, be delegated, or be simplified so that you can have more time to focus on the highest priority tasks. When done in this manner, asking for direction with setting priorities doesn’t have to come across as disrespectful or insubordinate, but as a joint effort to work within the reality of your time limitations.

    Step 5: Keep Rebalancing

    Due to the dynamic nature of life and work, you can’t simply set your schedule and then leave it for the next 10 years. Typically on a daily or weekly (or at the very least a monthly) basis, you will need to balance and rebalance your schedule. This means that if you had an under-allocation of time toward a particular activity one week, like processing e-mail, you will need to spend more time on it the following week. Or maybe one week you need to completely focus on presentation prep, so the next week you catch up on meetings. The realistic goal is to have the correct allocation of time within your workweek — and between your work and non-work time — average out correctly.

    As a final word of encouragement — and warning — practicing what I’ve outlined will not only leave you healthier and happier, but also more humble. When you start to embrace your limits, you’ll need to admit that you aren’t perfect and can’t do everything, especially all at once. If you have always been the go-to perfectionist on the team, this adjustment in your behavior could leave you feeling a bit at a loss in terms of your identity. You’ll need to redefine who you are such as “the person who remains calm and delivers on-time, quality work” instead of “the stressed-out team member who meets ridiculously short deadlines and never says, No.” This transition will take time but will ultimately empower you to enjoy the journey and make life more pleasant for those around you too.