The new Moto 360 is headed to China sans Google services

The recently revealed 2nd generation Moto 360 smartwatch will be sold in China, according to a new report. The wearable making it to the country might have something to do with the fact that Motorola is now owned by Lenovo, a Chinese company.

This is a bit unexpected because Google services are effectively banned in China and thus don’t work. And the Moto 360 runs Android Wear, which is an operating system that, unlike Android for phones and tablets, is pretty much controlled by Google in its entirety. Most of what the currently outed Android Wear watches do is powered by various Google services.

So in order for the Moto 360 to launch in China, Google had to decouple its wearable OS from its dependence on Google Now and Google Play. At the same time, Lenovo partnered with a few Chinese companies to offer similar (but not identical) functionality.

For example, Mobvoi will provide search services and voice recognition. If you’re in China and buy a Moto 360, you’ll still be able to talk to it, but instead of waking it up by saying “OK Google” you’ll have to utter “Ni hao, Android” (which translates into “Hello Android”). After that you can ask for a taxi, do a search, or dictate messages. Sogou will provide the mapping functionality.

The Moto 360 in China will let you install apps on it too, but these will obviously not be offered by Google’s Play Store (which doesn’t work over there). The apps will come via local app stores, of which there are…

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Ext2Fsd, accede a tus particiones Linux desde Windows

ext2fsd

Para los usuarios de Linux, acceder a sus archivos de Windows es algo que forma parte de sus posibilidades de manera implícita con el sistema operativo. Y es que desde sus comienzos el gran sistema operativo libre ha ofrecido compatibilidad con los sistemas de ficheros fat, fat32 y nfts, con lo cual quienes lo instalan pueden acceder en forma nativa a los archivos almacenados en aquellas particiones.

Sin embargo la inversa no se cumple y Microsoft no ofrece soporte para que sus sistemas operativos puedan acceder a particiones de Linux y esto complica bastante las cosas a los usuarios de sistemas ‘dual boot’, y es que por más que preparemos las cosas para tener los documentos más importantes en la partición de Windows para así poder acceder a ellos en todo momento hay veces en que realmente necesitamos algo que únicamente tenemos en Linux.

Por suerte hay herramientas desarrolladas por terceros que nos permiten sortearnos las limitaciones que tienen los productos de Microsoft, y una muy interesante es Ext2Fsd, que nos permite acceder a nuestars particiones de Linux desde Windows. Todo en forma muy simple y con varias características adicionales y que nos permitirán potenciar nuestra actividad cuando nos vemos obligados a quedarnos durante un rato en el sistema operativo de Microsoft.

Por ejemplo, tenemos soporte para lectura y escritura en volúmenes ext2 y ext3, para varios codepage (UTF8, CP950, etc), para la asignación automática de puntos de montaje, para el indizado de directorios htree, para el uso de inodos de gran tamaño (128 en adelante), y para la gestión de archivos de tamaño superior a los 4 GB, además de permitirnos la compartición CIFS a través de una red.

Para comenzar a utilizar Ext2Fsd tenemos que descargar e instalar esta herramienta (para lo cual seguimos su sencillo wizard) y luego iniciarla, tras lo cual veremos una pantalla aproximadamente similar a la que vemos en la imagen que acompaña este post, en donde se nos mostrará la información básica de todas nuestras particiones: tipo, sistema de archivos, tamaño total, tamaño utilizado, codepage y tipo de partición. Para montar cualquiera de dichas particiones simplemente hacemos doble click en ellas y verificamos que esté marcada la casilla de verificación junto a ‘Automatically mount via Ext2Mgr’, además de tener asignada una letra de unidad (F en nuestro caso) que es donde la encontraremos en el Explorador de Windows.

Hacemos click en ‘Apply’ y ya podremos comenzar a acceder a nuestras particiones de Linux desde Windows.

Sitio Web: Ext2Fsd

Descarga Ext2Fsd

El artículo Ext2Fsd, accede a tus particiones Linux desde Windows ha sido originalmente publicado en Linux Adictos.

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BLU intros the Pure XL with 6-inch Quad HD display and 24MP camera for $349

BLU has made quite the name for itself over the years by introducing plenty of low to mid-range Android devices that pack worthwhile specifications into a package that’s not too hard on the wallet. That trend continues with the company’s latest smartphone.

BLU has just introduced the Pure XL, a smartphone that boasts a Super AMOLED display that measures in at 6-inches and offers a resolution of 256×1440. Inside the unit, there’s an octa-core MediaTek Helio X10 processor, which BLU says makes the Pure XL the first device to launch with this particular chipset in the United States. There’s also 3GB of RAM, 64GB of built-in storage with a microSD card slot, and a battery that measures in at 3500mAh. It has 4G LTE connectivity, but it doesn’t support T-Mobile’s band 12 LTE.

As far as the camera systems go, BLU has included a 24-megapixel shooter on the back, which features an f/2.0 aperture, optical image stabilization, dual-LED flash, real-time HDR support, and phase detection autofocus. BLU also included what it calls Magic Focus, which will let owners alter the focus in photos after they’ve been taken. On the front, there’s an 8MP camera.

The Pure XL also features stereo speakers with support for high-quality audio, and it rocks a metal unibody design. It’s running Android 5.1 Lollipop out of the box, all for $349.99. It launches on September 29 by way of Amazon.

What do you think of BLU’s Pure XL?

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In September, Lollipop is installed on 21% of all Android devices

Google has updated its Android platform versions statistics page today, and after a pretty uninteresting few months there’s finally a new milestone to report.

In September, Lollipop was installed on 21% of the Android devices out there. This is the first time that Lollipop is seen crossing over the 20% threshold, after having moved past 10% back in June. As can be seen from the chart below, this calculation takes into account both Android 5.0 and Android 5.1 installs, since both of those versions are named Lollipop.

KitKat still leads though, with 39.2% of installs, followed by the three Android Jelly Bean iterations which collectively have 31.8% market share. After that there’s a big abyss in terms of numbers, with Gingerbread still somehow commanding 4.1% of the market and Ice Cream Sandwich being at 3.7%. Definitely last is Froyo with a 0.2% install base.

Keep in mind that no such official reporting is possible for even older versions, since the stats come from the new Google Play Store app which is only compatible with Android 2.2 or later. Also note that any versions with less than 0.1% distribution are not shown.

So it looks like Android device makers are releasing more and more products running Lollipop from day one, while at the same time updating their older wares to the new OS. However, there’s still a long way to go, and Android still is nowhere near iOS when it comes to how many devices in use run the latest iteration.

Source |…

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I Played ‘Until Dawn’ So I Could Keep All The Women Alive

My mission in playing the new slasher-trope Playstation 4 game, Until Dawn: save all four female characters. Not just the virginal, easy-to-like woman voiced by Heroes’ “Save The Cheerleader, Save the World” Hayden Panettiere, but the slutty one and the bitchy one and the geeky one—each of whom are written as obligatory irritating movie archetypes designed to make you hate them.
That’s the cool thing about Until Dawn. It’s got everything slasher movie fans expect—eight teens alone in a cabin in the woods, complete with its own bad history. Josh (voiced by Mr. Robot’s Rami Malek), on the anniversary of his twin sisters’ mysterious disappearance, invites his hottest, horniest friends back to a cabin to … celebrate? Naturally, the cabin is so secluded, it’s reached via a cable car over a canyon the teens must operate themselves. Ultimately however, the player can subvert some of the slasher genre’s most tired tropes. I know from my share of horror that women, the more sexual and outspoken the better, are destined to end up dead before the end of a horror film. Until Dawn let me change that story.
Saving all those women wasn’t easy, mind you. Players must alternate between all eight characters as they foolishly explore their surroundings (investigate a shrieking noise in the woods? Sounds good to me! Check out the abandoned sanitorium? Don’t mind if I do!) These cerebrally challenged characters are more than game for the ride. At its heart, Until Dawn is a choose-your-own-adventure game. It’s up to the player to determine characters’ fates by making decisions and executing (or failing) skillful button-mashes.
See also: ‘Until Dawn’ Review: Scary, Cheesy, Campy, Horror Fun
Now, people who have played Until Dawn might think I’m a little crazy for wanting to try so hard to save any of these characters, much less the lives of such vapid, unlikeable women.
You’ve seen these characters in horror before: Jessica, the alpha-girl homecoming queen; Ashley, the shy but sexy geek; Sam, the frequently towel-clad ingenue who is the least sexually available (and as a result, telegraphed most strongly to survive). And then there’s Emily, the straight-A student who thinks she’s always right, whom one character flat-out labels “bitchy.”

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SPY Car Act Is Crucial First Step In Securing Our Cars From Hackers

What happens when an automaker needs to recall over half its expected annual sales? Just ask Fiat Chrysler Automobiles. Given the multitude of recalls announced by other automakers, the industry must take action. FCA’s recent 1.4 million vehicle cybersecurity-related recall is not a one-off occurrence. These types of recalls can be minimized, however, it will not be a singular effort by a single automaker. Today’s connected car includes upward of 300 million lines of code compared to a 747, with roughly 75 million lines. Automotive vulnerabilities are at an all-time high and FCA’s recent recall is perfect evidence of said vulnerabilities. The real question is, who is taking the necessary action?

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