Tuesday, March 10, 2015

"Spot" Is a Smaller (More Kickable) Version of Boston Dynamic's Big Dog [feedly]

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"Spot" Is a Smaller (More Kickable) Version of Boston Dynamic's Big Dog
// Gizmodo

We haven't seen much of Boston Dynamic's four-legged self-balancing Big Dog robot since it was last spotted hurling cinder blocks in a lab. And that's maybe because the company's robotic geniuses have been hard at work building a smaller more agile version called Spot that weighs just 160 pounds so it can safely operate both indoors and out.

Powered by an electric motor that keeps a series of hydraulic actuators moving, Spot also features built-in sensors allowing it to automatically navigate difficult terrain. And because Spot is significantly smaller and lighter than Big Dog, it's able to jog along at an impressive pace. It doesn't look like it would be able to carry as much gear and equipment as Big Dog, which is why the quadruped was originally built. But that's probably because Boston Dynamics has built it for different purposes, like search and rescue or scouting, instead of just back-breaking labor.

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Clean Out All Your Old Text Messages on iOS and Android [feedly]

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Clean Out All Your Old Text Messages on iOS and Android
// Gizmodo

Those long-winded SMS/iMessage/Hangouts conversations filled with emoticons and pictures and GIFs aren't doing the storage space on your smartphone any favors. And the clutter in your messaging app isn't too much fun either. Fortunately, you can get your iOS or Android-powered mobile to erase older messages automatically. Here are the settings to use if you can live without your text history.

Before you get started you might want to review some of the most important conversations in your messaging app to make sure there's nothing you want to keep hold of. Any declarations of true love? Or, more likely, important addresses that you haven't written down yet? If you're looking for something that can back up your messages somewhere else, there are a few options to pick from.

After that it's deletion time. In iOS, open the Settings app then tap Messages and Keep Messages to choose from 30 days, one year or forever. This is a new feature introduced with iOS 8 and can be particularly helpful if you've activated iMessage, complete with its more advanced media capabilities. Any messages older than the stated timeframe are purged, no questions asked.

Over on Hangouts in Android, head to the Settings screen and choose SMS. Check the box marked Delete old messages and the app automatically clears out the oldest texts when necessary; there's no option to set a limit as there was in earlier versions of the default Android texting app, and there's no such option in the new Messenger tool from Google (somewhat strangely). You just sort of have to trust it. Of course, as this is Android so you can install another, more feature-rich SMS app if you want to take more control over how older messages are handled if you really, really want to.

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The Apple Watch Will Bring Glucose Tracking to Your Wrist [feedly]

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The Apple Watch Will Bring Glucose Tracking to Your Wrist
// Gizmodo

With Apple Watch quickly approaching its April release month, app developers are giving us a better sense of the wearable's capabilities than the designers at Cupertino. For instance, we know how the watch will work with your car or draw up a to do list. Now its health merits are getting some attention.

With help from DexCom, a company that makes monitors for diabetics, the Apple Watch will be one of the first wearables to bring glucose tracking to your wrist. The Apple Watch itself will only act as a display for the information being pumped out every five minutes by DexCom's continuous glucose monitor or CGM, a hair-thin sensor embedded under the skin.

DexCom teased its intentions to bring glucose monitoring to the Apple Watch at CES 2015, as pictured below with the company's current iPhone app. Diatribe, who originally reported the CES news, also says that DexCom's new CGM will also integrate with Apple's Healthkit platform, which until now has largely been associated with fitness apps. Doctors may also benefit from the partnership as Apple's Healthkit adoption rate in hospitals is outpacing Google Fit and Samsung's S Health.

The Apple Watch isn't the first smartwatch to bring CGM monitoring to a wrist wearable. The Nightscout CGM system, which is an open source project that allows remote access to DexCom sensors, has already developed an app for Pebble. It's been hoped since the Apple Watch was announced that the wearable would follow in Pebble's footsteps, and that seems to be what's happening.

Last summer Reuters reported that Samsung, Apple, and Google are all investigating how to incorporate glucose monitoring into wearables. The one hurdle being that any device marketed for diabetics would fall under the Food and Drug Administrations stringent regulations on Class III medical devices. The CGM sensor in this case is still considered a Class III device, but because of a recent rule change, any apps or software associated with the wearable device only needs to be registered with the FDA, meaning DexCom's Apple Watch app can bypass the agency's tortoise-speed approval process and be ready to go when the wearable ships in April, according to The Wall Street Journal.

So it seems the FDA's relaxed regulations on diabetes software has given developers some room to work, and they're taking advantage. [The Wall Street Journal]

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Thursday, March 5, 2015

Seeing a GoPro video of a roller coaster might be scarier than riding it [feedly]

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Seeing a GoPro video of a roller coaster might be scarier than riding it
// Gizmodo

Somehow, it's almost scarier to watch a GoPro video of a roller coaster than to ride the roller coaster itself in real life. I don't know why that works but it's like you get none of the thrills and all of the fear when you see the first person point of view, it's just terrifying dizziness mixed with a constant sinking feeling of plummeting to the ground.

SPLOID is delicious brain candy. Follow us on Facebook or Twitter.

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Here Is a Magnificent Feathered Dinosaur [feedly]

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Here Is a Magnificent Feathered Dinosaur
// Gizmodo

Complain all you want about how scientifically-accurate pictures of dinosaurs with feathers aren't as cool as the fake bald dinos in Jurassic Park. This image of a feathered tyrannosaur by Chris Masna makes the great beast of the Cretaceous look awe-inspiring.

Masna is an artist in Argentina, and he's working on an incredible-looking videogame called Saurian. You can see more of his work on his Deviant Art page. [via FuckYeahDinosaurArt]

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