Posts Tagged ‘Uncategorized’

Robert Scoble on the startups that cross the ‘freaky line’, at TNW2012 [Video]

sabato, aprile 28th, 2012

In his role as Startup Liaison Officer at Rackspace, Robert Scoble gets to travel the world, meeting and interviewing the startups that are shaping the future.

At The Next Web Conference 2012 this week, Scoble discussed a range of startups that are building products that may well be perfectly accepted in the future but currently freak people out. From Placeme‘s location tracking, to PrimeSense‘s next-generation gesture and body language interpretation, these are the startups and technologies that cross the ‘freaky line’.

Follow all our coverage of The Next Web Conference here.

From Amazon to YouTube: This Week’s Media News in Review

lunedì, aprile 9th, 2012
amazon kindle 2 by madaise 520x245 From Amazon to YouTube: This Weeks Media News in Review

Let’s start our weekly media roundup with two shows that we look forward to watch. While much has been written on Steve Jobs’ upcoming biopic and its lead actor Ashton Kutcher, we are perhaps just as curious to discover the Angry Birds’ animation series, on which additional details were revealed during MIPTV.

However, we will still have to wait before any of them hit ours screens; in the meantime, here are the other media-related news that caught our attention over the last few days.

A busy week for YouTube

The least we can say is that it has been a paradoxical week for YouTube. On one hand, Google’s video platform announced a content deal with Paramount, which means it is now in business with five out of the six major Hollywood studios. On the other hand, we have learned that Viacom’s $1 billion lawsuit against YouTube is being resurrected.

As you may know, Viacom is the parent company behind Paramount. However, YouTube insists that what was once a wide dispute is now limited to “a tiny percentage of videos long ago removed from YouTube.”

“Nothing in this decision impacts the way YouTube is operating,” the company adds. As a matter of fact, it seems difficult to imagine what could stop a platform that has taken such an important place in our daily lives. Earlier this week, Read It Later revealed an interesting ‘secret’; besides articles, its users are increasingly saving videos they want to watch later. As you can see on this graph, YouTube is by far the leader when it comes to video saves through Read It Later’s app:

ReaditLater2 520x5201 From Amazon to YouTube: This Weeks Media News in Review

As for YouTube’s co-founders Chad Hurley and Steve Chen, they are now working on a new service called Zeen, which aims to lets users “discover and create beautiful magazines.” While we don’t have many details about the project at this stage, we will definitely ask Chad Hurley for additional information during his panel at The Next Web Conference 2012 later this month.

The Next Web has news too

Talking about The Next Web, we also had our fair share of news on our own this week. As you may have heard, Mark Zuckerberg’s sister Randi is producing a reality TV show about Silicon Valley for US network Bravo, and our very own Hermione Way is part of the cast.

If you have already subscribed to The Next Web iPad Magazine, you may also have noticed that we have launched a partnership with 22tracks, a music curation startup that will let us share a handpicked selection of DJ tracks.

tnwmagcover3 520x390 From Amazon to YouTube: This Weeks Media News in Review

As for the personalized magazine app Zite, it has announced a brand new publisher program. Following its launch, it will let a carefully selected list of media outlets deliver targeted news sections – and we are very excited about the fact that The Next Web is one of them.

Amazon thinks global

Besides magazines, tablets and e-readers are increasingly popular for book reading. According to a study by the Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project, over 20% of American adults have read an e-book since last year.

Yet, it remains to be seen what this will mean for independent authors and publishers; a few days ago, Google announced the cancellation of its e-book reseller program for next year. More generally, not all authors are as lucky as JK Rowling, whose platform Pottermore sold over $1.5m worth of Harry Potter e-books in three days.

One thing is for sure, this trend clearly benefits Amazon, and its decision to lend e-books hasn’t had a negative impact on its sales. On the contrary, the company noticed that its Kindle Owners’ Lending Library now drives 229% more sales in backlist e-book titles.

As for its Kindle Store, it is also becoming more global; earlier this week, Amazon launched a Kindle Store targeted at Spanish speakers in the US.

amazon tienda 520x314 From Amazon to YouTube: This Weeks Media News in Review

If the Brazilian press is to be believed, the company is also working on plans to offer more books in Portuguese, although it remains to be seen whether it will launch before Apple’s iBookstore lands in Brazil.

On the video front, Amazon’s streaming services Instant Video and Prime are now available on the PS3 in the US, which will likely help them attract more users and subscribers. As for its European film streaming platform LoveFilm, it is expanding its programming in Germany, where it will offer video-on-demand content from the BBC.

The rise of second screens

While tablets are great for reading, they also make for a very popular second screen. As Nielsen pointed out a few days ago, a growing number of viewers are using their tablets while watching TV.

simultaneous tablet 520x383 From Amazon to YouTube: This Weeks Media News in Review

As a result, second screen content is also on the rise, and a growing number of players are getting involved. For instance, the French telecommunications company Orange is about to launch its entertainment check-in app TVCheck in the UK. As for Shazam, which was initially focused on music recognition, it is now broadening its scope to let users find and buy American Idol’s songs during live broadcast.

While it uses a different technology, which belongs to the UK startup WireWAX, the Canadian retailer SSENSE is hoping to fulfill the same need, by letting fashionistas shop directly from a music video:

“The integration we are introducing between technology, entertainment and retail with this video not only creates a unique experience for the audience, but also has utility. People often wonder what performers are wearing, where they can purchase that item – we have bridged that gap,” its CEO Rami Atallah said.

BSkyB on a new path

Finally, the phone hacking scandal keeps on giving in the UK, and has recently led Rupert Murdoch’s son James to step down as BSkyB chairman. As our editor Paul Sawers pointed out, this is actually good news for the company, which “is gearing up for what’s looking to be a monumental year” on the video front.

Yet, the scandal surrounding News Corp is far from over, and we will definitely follow the Leveson inquiry closely over the next few weeks.

The iPad is growing up, and iPhoto is its puberty

domenica, aprile 8th, 2012
Screen Shot 2012 04 08 at 1.04.00 PM 520x245 The iPad is growing up, and iPhoto is its puberty

iPhoto for iOS has some issues. Everyone seems to agree on this topic, even those who feel that it’s a pretty decent photo editing app. Its use of non-standard gestures, inconsistent buttons and heavy-handed visual elements has engendered confusion in many as to what exactly Apple was thinking when it decided to release the app.

After having played with it for a few weeks, I’ve come to the conclusion that iPhoto, especially on iPad, is actually a sign that the iPad is about to grow up.

The hardware of the iPad has matured to the point where it is almost transparent. This means that the most interesting signs of its growth and maturity as a platform come in the apps that we’re seeing for it. And those apps are largely boring slaves to the standard touch gestures and interface conventions that Apple released with the iPhone back in 2007. It’s now 5 years after multitouch and it’s time for the iPad to move beyond those basic interface tricks into uncharted interface territories. iPhoto for iOS is here to help us realize that there is more to touch than pinch, swipe and tap, and that we’re just seeing the tip of the iceberg in touch control.

Screen Shot 2012 04 08 at 1.05.40 PM 520x197 The iPad is growing up, and iPhoto is its puberty

Releasing an app in order to push the boundaries and move the platform forward is nothing new for Apple. Just look at Garage Band and iMovie from last year. They’re still arguably some of the best and most feature-rich apps on the App Store and they proved that there was room for serious creative apps on the tablet.

This trend will likely continue, as Erica Ogg points out at GigaOM in an excellent piece about the next wave of iPad apps aimed at creatives. She profiles Snapguide and Paper, saying that both of these apps are ‘deceptively simple’ to use and aimed at creation. “I think it’s these qualities that are going to provide a roadmap for more iOS apps to come that will appeal to the artsy, creative side of people,” Ogg writes, “rather than the traditional consumption-oriented theme of what have so far been the most popular types of apps on Apple’s platform.”

This is probably true, but it’s just a continuation of the trend that Apple itself started with iMovie and Garageband. Those apps were pioneers that demonstrated the level of effort and polish developers would need in order to transmute the iPad into a creative platform. We’re just seeing some of these apps appear from third parties now and I agree with Ogg that it will continue.

But, for all of the creative spark that Garage Band and iMovie had, they are still fairly ‘traditional’ in their execution. They used standard conventions in buttons, UI design and gestures. Those apps were about legitimizing the iPad as a creative platform, not slicing open the envelope of touch interaction.

Screen Shot 2012 04 08 at 1.07.13 PM 520x196 The iPad is growing up, and iPhoto is its puberty

This is where iPhoto for iOS comes in. Actually, lets narrow this down a bit further and talk about iPhoto for iPad specifically. There are enough differences and UI inconsistencies between iPhoto for iPhone and iPhoto for iPad that make them impossible to treat identically. It seems that a lot of concessions were made to fit iPhoto onto iPhone and it’s very much an ‘iPad app’. Regardless, we’ll leave the discussion of the iPhone version’s issues for another day and talk about the iPad edition for now.

Software engineer Lukas Mathis had an interesting take on iPhoto for iPad in which he dissects its “mystery meat gestures”. Mathis argues that the app over-uses gestures that offer no feedback and aren’t discoverable for the user. I agree on some of those fronts. Many of the gestures in the app offer no immediate feedback when you begin them, this makes it difficult to determine the action that you are initiating.

Screen Shot 2012 04 08 at 1.03.12 PM 520x192 The iPad is growing up, and iPhoto is its puberty

Imagine a book page in iBooks. When you begin pulling at the page, the corner follows the tip of your finger until you let it go and, provided that it has passed a certain threshold, it flips once you’ve released it. The feedback, however, begins right away as the page curves away under your finger. This is important in gestural interfaces because it provides two-way communication between the app and the user.

So iPhoto could absolutely be better in this respect, but I’m not surprised with the fact that it uses so many gestures in its interface instead of triggering those actions more traditionally with buttons. Mathis points out that the gestures that you are familiarized with over the course of using iPhoto are like nothing else on the iPad, even the stock Photos app. “Almost nothing you learn in iPhoto can be applied to Photos, or to any other iOS app,” says Mathis. “In fact, being proficient at using iPhoto will probably make you worse at using Photos.”

This is an interesting observation, but I draw different conclusions than Mathis does from it. I think that iPhoto for iPad intentionally pushes the bounds of ‘acceptible’ use of gestures purposefully, in order to prepare tablet users for the next generation of gesture-heavy apps.

The next decade or more of personal computing will be defined by its use of touch and gestures as the primary way we interact with apps.

Apps for the iPad up until now have largely been a training exercise. The next generation of apps will push those boundaries, opening up a new, more complex gestural language that will expand the horizons of what these apps are capable of doing and how we, as users, interact with them. iPhoto for iPad is about pushing those boundaries, perhaps a bit too far, in the name of opening up the language of touch for the next few years.

Screen Shot 2012 04 08 at 1.03.21 PM 520x208 The iPad is growing up, and iPhoto is its puberty

To illustrate, give a toddler an iPad to play with and watch them discover the gestures. At first, they paw and slap, but eventually they touch, tap, swipe and pinch their way into the standard interactions. Once they discover one gesture, they work their way outwards in complexity, finding others.

To a new generation, growing up used to touching their computers, rather than typing and pointing with a mouse, iPhoto for iPad will feel natural and comfortable.

This next era of apps with complex touch interactions isn’t made for users of ‘traditional’ computers, it’s made for the generation that is coming. We, as users of computers now, are actually at a disadvantage when it comes to touch interfaces, as we have to break with those old conventions.

And it’s not just gestures and touch, the interfaces of these new apps will reflect the fact that they are less beholden to emulation of older paradigms. Expect to see apps that are less about making people feel comfortable with the transition from, say, a book to a tablet. the recent Wonders of the Universe app is a great example of this.

Wonders uses a new engine called Glide Publishers, created by the developers behind the app, to present the content in an extremely simple and fluid fashion. You navigate through a series of thumbnails that, when swiped, expand into text, videos and more in one simple stream. The entire book can be navigated with the upward swipe of a finger.

It looks nothing like an iBook, or even one of Apple’s new fancier textbooks, but it provides an interactive learning experience that is stunningly good. It breaks with both the traditional textbook structure, but also with the entire textbook metaphor, allowing it to deliver a more effective experience on a touch-based tablet. I think that apps like this will become more common as developers and designers are able to leverage more of the gestural language in their apps, unfettered by the UI conventions of the past.

 The iPad is growing up, and iPhoto is its puberty

The Wonders app also holds a lesson when it comes to using touch interfaces to create. I spoke to Other Media’s Chris Harris about how they developed it and he shared an anecdote that I found interesting. Because they wanted to get a realtime look at exactly how the universe was shaping up, they actually built the engine so that the planets could be modeled and placed right on the iPad itself in a special developer mode. ”The next time someone tells you that the iPad isn’t for creating,” Harris told me, “just point them at Wonders, because we made pretty much everything right within the app.”

But, despite the success of Wonders, there is a way to go. iPhoto for iPad flies in the face of the prevailing wisdom, which Daring Fireball’s John Gruber summed up well by saying that Apple’s highest priority is obviousness. “That’s why I like the analogy that gestures are to iOS what keyboard shortcuts are to Mac OS,” Gruber writes, “an alternative way to do something as a convenience for advanced users.”

This is absolutely true for much of what Apple does, but it’s definitely not true for iPhoto. Many of its gestures often don’t have any button analogue and don’t act as shortcuts, but instead as the only way to access a feature, like the loupe.

Screen Shot 2012 04 08 at 1.03.01 PM 520x344 The iPad is growing up, and iPhoto is its puberty

There are some serious problems with the user experience of iPhoto for iPad. It’s awkward in a lot of ways. There are a ton of buttons, for one, and they’re not very well labeled. While the gestures are often cool once you’ve found them, they can be hard to discover. That’s why I think that an app like iPhoto for iPad represents the ‘puberty’ phase of gesture interface maturity. Apple is figuring this thing out along with the rest of us. But I feel that, as an official app, it does show some of that “skating to where the puck will be, not where it is” mentality that we’ve come to expect from them.

Gesture-only or gesture-primary interfaces are a rarity now, a curiosity. But at some point they will be the de-facto standard. Apple knows this, and toddlers prove it. It’s just a matter of time.

I stand by the statements that I made in an article last week about the iPad’s need for a home button. But after thinking about iPhoto for iOS a bit more, I find myself being more friendly to Nick Bilton’s thoughts on Apple’s multitasking gestures taking a larger role in the future. I also saw my two-year-old nephew use the ‘close’ gesture on his dad’s iPad, without having been taught it.

The transformative period, when touch and gestures were new and novel, is coming to an end. We’re beginning to turn the corner in the maturity of touch interfaces and their users both. The language needs to be pushed along, advanced to take full advantage of the familiarity that future generations will have with touch. iPhoto and other apps like it that push the boundaries of how far we can take touch control are a part of that.

22tracks brings expert music curation to The Next Web Magazine

domenica, aprile 8th, 2012
turntable 520x245 22tracks brings expert music curation to The Next Web Magazine

The latest issue of The Next Web iPad Magazine (it was released two days ago; if you’ve got an iPad – subscribe today!) sees the launch of a partnership with music startup 22tracks that will see us share five of the hottest tracks selected by DJs in its community each month.

22tracks focuses on expert music curation by well-known DJs. It’s a hit service in the Netherlands, is also active in Belgium, and has recently expanded to feature the UK too. 22 DJs from Amsterdam, Brussels and London, each specializing in a different genre – from afrobeat to grime and house to jazz – share their 22 favorite tracks for your listening pleasure.

The startup won both the Best Business To Consumer and Public Vote awards at The Next Web Conference 2010 Startup Rally, prompting us to take an in-depth look at its product and business model back then.

With our new partnership, each month five artists get selected, with a beautifully presented page, including a photo, a sprinkling of information for flavor, and of course the track itself. This month’s selection spans house, minimalist electronic music, soul and pop.

Being a music-loving bunch, we’re going to share the five tracks from our iPad Magazine here, too. Each track has been handpicked by the expert community of DJs involved in 22tracks.

Here’s this month’s selection:

1: Jessie Ware – Running (Disclosure Remix)

2: Burial & Four Tet – Nova

3: Robert Glasper Experiment – Afro Blue feat. Erykah Badu

4: Miike Snow – Paddling Out

5: Marvin Belton – Find A Way

The Next Web Magazine for iPad features articles you’ll love, beautifully presented, every month.

Why we get so angry online, and how to deal with the rage

domenica, aprile 8th, 2012
grrrr 520x245 Why we get so angry online, and how to deal with the rage

Part of launching products and running services online is the interactive element of facing customers, clients or an audience. But not all fans of a product are following brands to hurl bouquets and compliments. When a service goes wrong and customers get angry, the Web can turn pretty nasty very quickly.

So why are audiences so angry and how can this be managed if you’re a small company or a sole trader? Let’s take a look at some of the causes and how to handle being flamed online.

developers Why we get so angry online, and how to deal with the rage

Hiding behind a computer

One of the well-known explanations for the high levels of reaction on the Web is the sense that people cannot be held to account for their actions. Extreme cases of abuse can of course lead to punishment, but more generally when angry mobs register their displeasure online, the worst can come out with little thought to possible consequences.

It’s an activity that can be more easily identified in younger sections of society such as high-school students and their interactions on Facebook.

nathalie Why we get so angry online, and how to deal with the rageNathalie Nahai is a psychologist who specialises in activity on the Web, she says that anonymity makes it easy to not have to consider the results of saying something mean when you’re not in front of someone. “There’s been a lot of press in the psychological outlets about bullying and how it is alienating entire sections of students in schools,” says Nahai. “On a platform like Facebook, social proof happens quite quickly. Someone can make a remark, others ‘like’ that post and then it is shared and fleshed out. The impact can be very damaging.”

When this translates into a professional sphere amplifying a complaint through the use of abusive language can lead to attention for the aggressor as well as leading a pack to follow or join a cause.

For a startup this can be overwhelming and it is not easy to ignore this type of contact. “There is no filter for this,” says Nahai. “Social platforms provide one of those modes of communication where you can be absolutely horrendous and not worry about it. When we talk to someone on the phone we are primed to respond to voices and it’s a much more intimate way of communicating. When you remove social cues and reactions, it becomes easier to not think about it. So you can have a one directional rant and it’s easy not think about the reaction at the other end. We are social creatures and any form of rejection is painful and upsetting. I don’t think that we will evolve psychologically to be resilient to that sort of attack. We respond very strongly and emotionally.”

Why is this all the rage?

There’s a standard saying online that time passes more quickly, a lot can happen in an Internet minute. Part of the issue with rage online is that it may pass very quickly for a person who is angry, but the effects of their actions may last longer.

“People are just very reactive online,” says Nahai. “Things happen very quickly and we expect to get quick results. In reality things take time. Our expectations of the speed at which things happen online is not matched by reality.”

When a service has let customers down, or an audience is feeling less than appreciative, reactions can range from a reserved note of disappointment to all out cursing and swearing at those responsible.

ysomad Why we get so angry online, and how to deal with the rage

When we receive messages that are overtly aggressive, it is sometimes hard to not react in kind. But learning to keep calm and respond in a sophisticated manner goes a long way to calm down a correspondent.

Nahai notes, “Being polite but firm goes a long way. It’s hard to want to reply to someone who is being offensive or aggressive. Bring your response back to the core values of the brand and lay down some rules of engagement. You can ask for clients to respond in particular ways. Like on the London Underground, they have notices that say they will not tolerate violence and abuse towards its staff and customers.”

Protected and angry

There is still a sense of relative safety when it comes to hurling abuse from a keyboard though, and it is this sense of protection that makes angry customers feel they can overstep the line when it comes to interaction. Nahai says, “In any place where people feel protected, like people in a car, they feel that they are entitled to their rage and that they are protected in some ways. Anonymity online provides a similar sense of protection.”

thissucks Why we get so angry online, and how to deal with the rage

Getting very angry is not a good idea for your health if it is consistent. But as with the upset we see online every other day, it is often forgotten by the next week. Nahai says the this is a good thing as being consistently angry is not very good for your health, “When you get angry your cortisol levels rise and when you are very angry you can end up in a fight or flight mode. Physically it’s not good for people to be in a prolonged state of rage and anxiety. I wonder if online rage tends to be so reactive that it flares up and dissipates quite quickly.”

Getting good and angry may provide a sense of catharsis for some, but to continually stamp and holler on the web has the effect of ‘crying-wolf’, you do it too often and your credibility comes into question and fewer people will listen to your hue and cry.

“When people systematically express rage they are labelled a troll and this points to the fact that this is still socially unacceptable,” says Nahai. Thank goodness there is still a sense of society that helps to keep this in check.

twitter2 Why we get so angry online, and how to deal with the rage

Trust and assumption

The web has simplified the way we do many things. We now expect speedier results and for everything to work exactly as we want them too. The fact of the matter is that humans work with machines and we are still fallible. Things can still go wrong.

But when we want everything to be just-so, levels of frustration can rise far more quickly, especially in a generation that assumes that all things will be equally efficient.

People have the right to self-expression and the right to get angry – but how we express this to one another, to companies and organisations in our feedback is not always how we would react to a real live person, face to face.

As the XKCD standard runs, when “someone on the Internet is wrong”, it’s easy to lose a sense of perspective and react in ways that will not be helpful, nor will it elicit a desired response. Taking a moment to check your frustration and learning to manage the outbursts of others goes a long way in an environment where most of us are guilty at some point of losing our temper at the speed of the Web.

There’s no Draw Something for Google+, but Scoot & Doodle for Hangouts fills that need

giovedì, marzo 29th, 2012
123860685 9524269cfd z 520x245 Theres no Draw Something for Google+, but Scoot & Doodle for Hangouts fills that need

Now that Google+ has fully unleashed its Hangouts API to developers, we’re going to start seeing more apps that use the video conferencing platform.

The cooler part about the announcement from Google today is the special apps section, where the company will be showing off some of the more innovative uses for the Hangouts platform, which lets up to ten people talk and chat over video.

One of the apps that is featured is called “Scoot & Doodle” and it lets you scribble and draw with a group of your friends. While it’s not a game, it’s definitely a nice white board that lets you do whatever you want, be it help someone with a math problem or start your own game of pictionary.

The cool part about Scoot & Doodle is that multiple people can draw at the same time, which makes a game like tic-tac-toe possible:

Convofy 171 Theres no Draw Something for Google+, but Scoot & Doodle for Hangouts fills that need

If parents are away from their kids on a business trip, this kind of app is a great way for them to interact through more than just video. A child could draw a picture for their mom or dad, or an artist could host a Hangout and draw a picture in real-time.

While it might not seem like much right now, the Hangouts platform will offer a lot of opportunities for developers to build games and interactions that we’ve never had before. Up until now, something like Scoot & Doodle was a standalone site or app which required us to sign-up. The fact that it’s using the Google+ Hangouts API means that none of that is necessary and you can use the app right within Google+ rather than being sent somewhere else.

Skype is definitely the king of business and casual video conferencing, but when it comes to interaction and fun, Google+ might just have a hit on its hands.

Scoot & Doodle

iTunes 10.6.1 fixes super annoying TV show episode order bug when using Apple TV

giovedì, marzo 29th, 2012
IMG 6064 520x245 iTunes 10.6.1 fixes super annoying TV show episode order bug when using Apple TV

Earlier this month, just after the iPad launch event, Apple released iTunes 10.6 to support the new 1080P Apple TV and the new Retina tablet. Unfortunately, when it did so it also introduced a nasty bug with the ordering of TV shows when using the Apple TV to view them.

Complaints started popping up on the Apple Support Forums stating that people’s TV shows were being displayed all jumbled when viewed on their Apple TVs. It was confirmed to be an iTunes issue as even those who had updated to the 5.o version of the Apple TV software previously had seen the issue appear only when they upgraded to 10.6.

The issue was that the files were being sorted in season groupings, but chronologically according to file date, rather than episode date, causing problems galore, especially for those who have ripped their own collection of shows.

Screen Shot 2012 03 28 at 4.56.08 PM 520x113 iTunes 10.6.1 fixes super annoying TV show episode order bug when using Apple TV

The new software update for iTunes, version 10.6.1, offers up a fix for the issue, restoring the listings to their proper order.

  • Resolves an ordering problem while browsing TV episodes in your iTunes Library on Apple TV.

The rest of the list seems to be some minor bug fixes and improvements, rather than anything major. But the return of proper ordering of shows should come as welcome relief for many Apple TV users.

You can grab the new update directly from Apple.com or via Software Update.

Google begins pushing Android 4.0.4 ICS to GSM Nexus S and GSM Galaxy Nexus, but not Verizon edition yet

mercoledì, marzo 28th, 2012
Screen Shot 2012 03 28 at 2.36.47 PM 520x245 Google begins pushing Android 4.0.4 ICS to GSM Nexus S and GSM Galaxy Nexus, but not Verizon edition yet

Google has posted a notice on its Android Google+ page that it has begun rolling out Android version 4.0.4 Ice Cream sandwich to several devices. Interesting in its absence is the Galaxy Nexus LTE device for Verizon networks, which currently has the 4.0.2 software as its latest officially supported version.

Google says that it is currently getting the GSM Nexus S, Xoom WiFi and GSM(HSPA+) Galaxy Nexus devices up to date, but will be rolling out the update to more devices in the coming weeks. Some of those devices will be ones that did not have ICS support at all previously.

Some of you will be receiving Ice Cream Sandwich for the first time, while others will be receiving an update to your existing Ice Cream Sandwich experience with stability improvements, better camera performance, smoother screen rotation, improved phone number recognition and more.

The comments section below the post immediately began filling up with requests for ICS to come to the Verizon LTE edition of the Galaxy Nexus, as well as other Android devices like the HTC Thunderbolt and Samsung Galaxy S II, which have yet to get the latest version.

ICSv3 520x942 Google begins pushing Android 4.0.4 ICS to GSM Nexus S and GSM Galaxy Nexus, but not Verizon edition yet

Although the two operating systems cannot be compared directly because of the wide disparity in Android hardware, you can bet that the far greater adoption of newer versions of iOS by iPhone and iPad users is something that Google would love to see happen with Android.

ICS adoption among Android devices still hovers around the 1.6% mark, well behind Gingerbread, which still accounts for 62% of all devices running Google’s OS. Hopefully rolling it out to older devices will help to alleviate the slog and get the actually pretty great ICS out to more users.

H/t Chad Catacchio

Watch what it’s like to be behind the wheel of Google’s self-driving car [video]

mercoledì, marzo 28th, 2012

The self-driving car experiment from Google is probably one of the coolest things out there as far as technology goes. The idea that cars could route themselves based on a number of factors such as traffic patterns and weather is something that could not only be cool, but could save lives.

Google shared that the project has hit the milestone of 200,000 miles tested, and had this to say about it:

We announced our self-driving car project in 2010 to make driving safer, more enjoyable, and more efficient. Having safely completed over 200,000 miles of computer-led driving, we wanted to share one of our favorite moments. Here’s Steve, who joined us for a special drive on a carefully programmed route to experience being behind the wheel in a whole new way. We organized this test as a technical experiment, but we think it’s also a promising look at what autonomous technology may one day deliver if rigorous technology and safety standards can be met.

I haven’t been behind the wheel of one of these badboys yet, but Google has published a video that’s just as cool. Watch this and then try to tell me you don’t want one of these things:

Yep, Steve is legally blind. Amazing, huh?

Twitter story building tool Storify adds search for easier surfacing of topics

mercoledì, marzo 28th, 2012
 Twitter story building tool Storify adds search for easier surfacing of topics

The clever tool Storify, which lets you build a story out of social media posts on Twitter and your own editorial, has added a search function to its site. This should help to surface older Storify bundles that have been put together on various topics.

We’re big fans of the tool here at The Next Web and have used it to storify events like the death of Apple founder Steve Jobs. In good form, Storify announced the addition using its own tool on the blog, we’ve embedded their story below:

You can check out the new search function on the Storify site here. The search function has yet to be added to the brand new iPad app, but that should show up at some point soon.