This wireless VR tech could make it easier to play with others

The next big hurdle for virtual reality is obvious to anyone who’s put on a headset: Getting rid of all of those wires. We’ve seen cordless solutions from TPCast and Intel, but now Amimon, a company best known for developing wireless video technology, is getting into the ring. Its spin on wireless VR uses the 5GHz spectrum, instead of the 60GHz band used by competitors. That allows it to work through walls and without direct line of sight, something the 60GHz frequency range can’t do. Most importantly, Amimon promises a lag-free experience. According to the company, it could even support up to 10 VR or AR headsets in the same room (either with their own computers, or a souped-up gaming server).

Amimon, which will be debuting the technology at the VRX conference in San Francisco today, says its solution has advantages over the WiGig-powered alternatives. Since it doesn’t need to be in view of a receiver, you can step outside with a pair of augmented reality glasses and still be able to connect to a computer in your home. It’ll also be able to work in a variety of spaces, from crowded rooms to huge open environments. The main reason companies are eyeing 60GHz/WiGig for VR is due to its low latency and massive data throughput, but Amimon claims its patented technology can do the same in the 5GHz spectrum.

Amimon’s wireless VR module

As you’d expect, the company’s tech is currently compatible with all of the major VR headsets: Oculus Rift, HTC Vive and PlayStation VR. It can output 2K video at 90FPS for the two PC-powered headsets, as well as 1080p at 120 FPS for the PS VR. Amimon describes it as a complete solution for wireless VR — it’s able to both transmit lag-free video, as well as all the necessary sensor data.

At this point, Amimon’s wireless module is still in its early stages. The company isn’t discussing any release timing yet, as that will depend on future partners. Similarly, pricing is still up in the air, but it expects the first generation of wireless accessories to cost around $100.

Source: Amimon

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66 Audio reveals PRO Voice wireless headphones that carries Alexa voice recognition

66 Audio reveals PRO Voice wireless headphones that carries Alexa voice recognition

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– on December 6th, 2017

While the brand name 66 Audio might not be all that famous, the company is a noted pioneer when it comes to wireless consumer audio technology. Having revealed their all-new PRO Voice Bluetooth wireless headphones, this is a special pair of wireless headphones that will be different from the rest due to its unique capability of featuring integrated Amazon Alexa voice recognition. In other words, you get a breakthrough in how one communicates in the digital world, as PRO Voice will bring Alexa outside the home in order to deliver a fluid voice experience regardless of where the user is, as long as there is Internet connectivity.

Among the list of breakthrough innovations include up to 125 feet of wireless range, 40 hours of non-stop playback, crystal clear HD sound, and the MotionControl companion app, where all of it arrives in a durable yet sporty design which allows those who are active or simply dormant office drones to find it equally useful.

With the PRO Voice, you can access tens of millions of songs via Prime Music, play games and even order a pizza, courtesy of simply asking Amazon Alexa. It will be a whole new user experience for many, where PRO Voice’s new ActiveVoice recognition technology will work in tandem with the MotionControl smart app (available on iOS and Android platforms) which enables users to customize many different kinds of headphone features. Those who reside in the US, UK, Canada and Germany are able to ask Alexa to play their favorite tracks from Amazon Music, iHeartRadio, Pandora, and TuneIn, while Alexa voice control for Spotify will also be available after its launch.

Different voice-control technology will include play, pause, next track, volume up and down functions, which means you never ever have to glance at your smartphone again to interact with your music with this $139.99 bad boy.

Press Release

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Tom Wheeler slams Ajit Pai’s plan to kill net neutrality rules

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Then-FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler with current FCC Chairman Ajit Pai testify before the House Judiciary Committee about Internet regulation on March 25, 2015 in Washington, DC.

Getty Images | Chip Somodevilla

Former Federal Communications Commission Chairman Tom Wheeler took aim at his successor’s plan to eliminate net neutrality rules today, saying that FCC Chairman Ajit Pai is selling out consumers and entrepreneurs at the behest of major Internet service providers.

“ISP monopoly carriers have been trying for four years to get to this point,” Wheeler said, pointing to a 2013 story in The Washington Post about how telecoms were trying to “shift regulation of their broadband businesses to other agencies that don’t have nearly as much power as the FCC.”

Pai’s elimination of net neutrality rules, scheduled for a vote on December 14, will also shift consumer protection responsibility to the Federal Trade Commission and forbid state and local governments from writing their own net neutrality rules.

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Snapdragon 845 unveiled with 25-percent faster CPU, 30-percent faster graphics

Qualcomm is hosting the “Snapdragon Technology Summit” in Hawaii this week, where it unveiled its flagship system-on-a-chip (SoC) for 2018: the Snapdragon 845. Qualcomm has a near-monopoly on the high-end smartphone SoC market, so unless you’re buying an iPhone or non-US Samsung phone, you can expect most 2018 flagship smartphones to be powered by Qualcomm’s latest. You might even see the chip in your next laptop, with Qualcomm breaking into the Windows 10 market.

The SoC is manufactured by Samsung on the company’s 10nm process, just like the Snapdragon 835. The Kryo 385 is once again a derivative of ARM’s Cortex CPU, with four “performance” cores (based on the Cortex A75) clocked at up to 2.8GHz and four “efficiency” cores (based on the Cortex A55) that run at up to 1.8GHz. Qualcomm is boosting the performance core clock speeds by 19 percent over the Snapdragon 835, but thanks to a CPU redesign, Qualcomm is promising a “25-percent performance uplift” over the previous generation. The CPU also gets a new 2MB L3 cache and 3MB of system cache.

The GPU is now the Adreno 630, and Qualcomm is promising “30-percent faster graphics” and “30-percent better power efficiency.” The company says a 2.5×-faster display throughput will allow for a 2K×2K display at 120Hz. Qualcomm is really pushing AR and VR with the Snapdragon 845, promising out-of-the-box support for eye tracking, hand tracking, foveated rendering (adding more detail to the part of the screen you’re looking at), multiview rendering (great for rendering the left and right eyes in VR goggles), and HTC Vive-style six degree of freedom (6DoF) tracking for headsets and controllers. In fact, the Adreno 630 GPU isn’t even called a “GPU” anymore—now it’s a “Visual Processing Subsystem.” It’s not that any of this was impossible before, but now Qualcomm is officially supporting all of these VR/AR use cases out of the box.

Qualcomm's Snapdragon 845 diagram.
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Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 845 diagram.

Qualcomm

The Snapdragon 845’s ISP (image signal processor), the Spectra 280, can now capture 4K, 60fps video in an “HDR” 10-bit color depth. Slow motion video is up to 480fps at 720p. For photos, the ISP can capture 16MP images at 60 frames per second (does it still count as a “photo” at that point?), and there’s out-of-the-box support for depth sensing.

The 845 also includes a new secure processing unit (SPU) that can handle encryption, payments, and biometric authentication in an isolated subsystem away from all your potentially nasty application code.

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Steam Drops Bitcoin, Citing Volatility And High Fees

PC gaming platform Steam no longer accepts Bitcoin as a payment method, Valve announced today. The company said it won’t accept the cryptocurrency any longer due to "high fees and volatility" in its value. Regarding the fees, Valve pointed out that the transaction fee charged to the customer using Bitcoin rose from 20 cents when Valve started accepting it to almost $20 today. Valve doesn’t control these fees, but the company is unpleased with the situation it puts its users in.

Regarding the volatility (Bitcoin stands at around $13,000 USD today but it fluctuates significantly and often), Valve said this is problematic in part because Bitcoin’s value is only guaranteed for a set period of time. "So if the transaction doesn’t complete within that window of time, then the amount of Bitcoin needed to cover the transaction can change. The amount it can change has been increasing recently to a point where it can be significantly different," Valve said.

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The way it worked in this situation was that Valve would refund the payment or charge more to cover the remaining balance. "At this point, it has become untenable to support Bitcoin as a payment option. We may re-evaluate whether Bitcoin makes sense for us and for the Steam community at a later date," Valve said.

Some believe that Bitcoin’s bubble is about to burst. "This is a bubble and there is a lot of froth. This is going to be the biggest bubble of our lifetimes," Mike Novogratz, a hedge fund manager, told Bloomberg.

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Rinspeed Snap

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Snap is a modular autonomous box from Rinspeed. A key component that helps separate Snap from other transportation boxes is that the box can be removed or reattached to the chassis easily. Snap will debut at the 2018 CES in January.

Continue reading Rinspeed Snap

Rinspeed Snap originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 06 Dec 2017 22:43:52 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Tesla gets a court win in direct-sales battle

Electric carmaker Tesla scored a victory in its ongoing battle to sell directly to consumers when the Missouri Court of Appeals dismissed a lawsuit Tuesday that had sought to revoke its vehicle dealer license in the state. A three-judge panel overturned a lower court decision last year that had directed the state to not renew Tesla’s motor vehicle license and briefly forced it to close its Missouri stores.

Tesla has been fighting state franchise laws that prohibit automakers from selling directly to consumers and instead require vehicles to be sold through independent dealers. Tesla’s model involves selling its vehicles online and through its own stores, not through franchised dealerships. It operates nearly 100 stores across the country, including in Kansas City and suburban St. Louis, plus a number of service centers and galleries, which are not able to process sales orders.

Plaintiffs including the Missouri Automobile Dealers Association and Reuther Ford, a dealer in Herculaneum, Mo., had argued that as economic competitors and taxpayers, they were entitled to challenge Tesla’s dealer license, public radio station KCUR-FM reports. The appeals court denied the plaintiff’s standing, saying that the Missouri legislature limited appeals of licensing decisions to cases where licenses were denied or revoked and adding that its ruling was “consistent with every appellate court ruling in the country that has addressed standing in similar Tesla license challenges in other states.”

Doug Smith, the president of the Missouri Automobile Dealers Association, told the station the trade group was studying whether to appeal to the state Supreme Court. If you’re an automaker in Missouri, “you’re supposed to sell vehicles through the system that was created in the early ’80s,” he told KCUR. “And until that system is modified or changed, that’s gonna be our stance.” He added that allowing Tesla to keep its license would open the door to direct sales from Chinese and Indian manufacturers and hurt existing small businesses.

A Tesla spokeswoman hailed the decision as “a victory for Missouri consumers who want the choice to learn about and purchase their Tesla in their home state.”

Tesla’s battle is far from over. It’s still fighting dealer franchise laws in states like Texas, where it operates eight non-sales galleries, and in Michigan, where it recently opened its first standalone gallery.

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