Wednesday, November 2, 2016

Microsoft and Slack set up for a showdown. It's the Daily Crunch.

THE DAILY CRUNCH
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2 2016 By Darrell Etherington

The Daily Crunch 11/02/16

Microsoft comes for Slack and Amazon looks to chat for literacy education. All that and more in The Daily Crunch for November 2, 2016. Also, ground transport just got a little more airborne.

1. Microsoft tightens the slack on Slack

Microsoft has been watching Slack slowly become the enterprise communication tool of choice, but it hasn't been sleeping; the company just debuted Microsoft Teams, a new part of its Office 365 suite of tools, which looks a lot like Slack, but has some elements from other Microsoft-owned central communication tool Socialcast.

The space is getting busy, with Facebook's Workplace launching earlier this year and now Microsoft's tool. It's probably going to get decent pickup just because of the existing Office 365 spread, but Slack is pre-empting with its own full-page ad ahead of the official announcement: Someone hears footsteps.

2. Facebook's Steam competitor is here

Or rather, it looks like it's the Steam of casual gaming, the likes of which used to fill up your Facebook feed with requests to send candy or coins or whatever other nonsense. It might work out for Facebook but I'm highly skeptical it can A) win fans away from Steam or B) convince casual players they need a dedicated portal for their gaming flings.

3. Amazon's using chat for literacy

Amazon has a new app that uses the in vogue chat-style interface to make reading easier for kids. The app, called Rapids, is based on the idea that the chat interface is already something kids are familiar with from talking to their friends online, so it'll help them gain reading skills, too. Sounds logical, and others like Duolingo are also trying to employ the chat interface for education, targeting older users. Chat all the things!

4. Adobe's all-in on the new 3D wave

Microsoft made a big deal about 3D during its event announcing the Windows 10 Creators Update, and Adobe is sounding a similar bell at its current Adobe Max conference. The company talked up 3D composition tools throughout its updates to Creative Cloud, including a way to create composite images using 2D and 3D assets, which is also something Microsoft showed off, albeit in a less impressive way. The 3D fever is probably in anticipation of mixed reality and VR becoming more important to mainstream computing, something basically everyone in the industry seems to think will happen eventually.

5. Glide's upcoming Apple Watch accessory gives you two more cameras than you actually need

Glide says it's going to make an Apple Watch accessory that supports video calling with a front-facing camera, and taking pictures with a rear-facing one. No one wants this.

6. Facebook doesn't want companies using its platform for risk assessment

A UK car insurance firm wanted to make use of Facebook to offer up discounts on premiums, provided users allowed them access to their profiles for the purposes of risk analysis. This is a bad precedent so it's good that FB shut it down, but at the same time, using social media as a way to evaluate risk for loans in countries where access to traditional measures isn't feasible can occasionally be a good thing.

7. Floating on air

Hyperloop is still a tube dream, but a new milestone from a team working on a pod for SpaceX's open competition shows a lot of promise. The University of Waterloo managed to create a sled that floats on a track using only air, instead of magnets, which is more cost-effective and easier to produce and maintain long-term. Theoretically.

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Tuesday, November 1, 2016

Google takes its Tango to the public. It's the Daily Crunch.

THE DAILY CRUNCH
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 1 2016 By Darrell Etherington

The Daily Crunch 11/01/16

Mixed reality, internet dominance and more emoji – it's a big day for mobile! All that and more in The Daily Crunch for November 1, 2016. And if you're trending on Facebook, it's probably either because you're made up or you're harmless fluff.

1. Google is ready to Tango

Google's Project Tango launched in 2014, but today marks the first time it's actually available in a shipping consumer device. The Lenovo Phab2 Pro is a giant smartphone retailing for $499 that goes on sale today, with Tango's depth-sensing sensor array included. This allows it to use special mixed reality apps built for Tango that overlay virtual objects on the real world.

Tango is an interesting project, but one that could really change the way we use our devices if it gets broader OEM and consumer pickup. That's because it contains everything you need to achieve full size degrees of freedom AR, in just a smartphone. That's some transformative stuff – again, provided it gets more buy-in.

2. Watch crowdfunding projects crumble live

I kid Kickstarter: most of the projects I've backed recently have actually turned out fine. But when there is drama, creators can now choose to share it live with their new Kickstarter Live streaming feature, supported by streaming startup Huzza. Kickstarter says it's not just riding the livestream hype wave, and this does sound like a useful thing in case you want to actually ask some questions about the theoretical things you're putting down real money for.

3. Coding without screens

Teaching kids to code can be difficult when they're very young and you don't necessarily want to set them up with Github or something. But Primo's new Cubetto playlet is designed to give them a way to learn the basics without using screens, and with using block-style toys more similar to the kinds of toys they might be using for fun anyways.

4. Emoji's ever-expanding universe

The latest beta of iOS (10.2 for those keeping count) adds a whole bunch of new emoji, thanks to full Unicode 9.0 support. The new emoji are wonderful options, and I will never be against the addition of even more pictograms to our common visual language – at least, not until we can express every possible meaning via tiny cartoon images.

5. Windows 3D explained

Why does Windows care so much about 3D? Megan Saunders, a general manager at Microsoft working on Paint 3D, can explain. Basically, though, it's about unlocking latent creativity in users, and making new memories in a way that's different from anything that's come before.

6. Mobile internet > desktop internet

And in the 2016th year of the common era, mobile internet use did pass internet use on desktop, and never was the internet the same again.

7. Facebook Trends is late to another big story

I still can't tell if Facebook Trends is worse because it's so easily duped by fake stories, or because it tends to miss controversial but important big stories like the #NoDAPL Standing Rock pipeline protest which definitely should've been trending long before it actually was. Maybe it just didn't make it because humans are awful and some pop culture crisis was going on, which is again part of the problem.

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