Qualcomm’s Snapdragon Satellite will let Android phones text off the grid

https://www.engadget.com/qualcomm-snapdragon-satellite-messaging-android-211037007.html?src=rss

Last year, Apple introduced Emergency SOS, which allows the iPhone 14 to connect to satellites to send emergency calls and texts. Now, Qualcomm has unveiled its own satellite messaging features for Android phones. It’s called Snapdragon Satellite, and it will allow devices equipped with the company’s X70 modems to connect to satellites in order to send messages when no cellular signal is available.

The feature, which is expected to be available on phones beginning in the second half of 2023, is the result of a partnership with longtime satellite phone maker Iridium. Thanks to the partnership, Android phones equipped with the X70 modem and Qualcomm’s SOC will be able to connect to Iridium’s satellite network for off-grid texting in both emergency and non-emergency situations.

As with much of Qualcomm’s tech, exactly how these features will look and feel will largely be determined by the individual phone makers. Device makers will have considerable flexibility in terms of how they implement satellite messaging, particularly for person-to-person texts. But while we don’t know exactly how it will look when it launches, Qualcomm offered an early look at the technology at CES, which provided a pretty good idea of what to expect in terms of functionality.

A demo version of Qualcomm's satellite messaging tech.
Karissa Bell / Engadget

As with Apple’s Emergency SOS, you’ll need to be outside with a clear view of the sky in order to use satellite messaging. When enabled, an on-screen message will offer guidance for where to point your device in order to connect to a satellite.

The demo we saw wasn’t exactly an off-grid location. The desert campground about 30 minutes away from the Las Vegas Strip may have looked the part, but it had full 5G service during our visit. However, Qualcomm reps demonstrated the process for connecting to satellites and it only took a few seconds to move the phone into position. And they claimed connecting in a true off-grid environment should be nearly as seamless.

Once connected to a satellite, the demo devices were able to send text messages to a preset whitelist of contacts. Qualcomm says that feature will remain in place to ensure spam texts won’t clog up the satellite networks. However, the company noted that OEMs could make the messaging feel more like a traditional messaging app than the demo interface we previewed. 

There are a few other limitations compared with standard messaging apps. Satellite messages are limited to 140 bytes or about 160 characters, making them more like an old-school SMS than what you’d expect with modern apps. And you can’t send photos or videos via satellite.

It will guide you to position the phone in the optimal spot to connect to a satellite.
Karissa Bell / Engadget

It’s also worth noting that unlike Apple’s Emergency SOS, Qualcomm intends Snapdragon Satellite to be used for non-emergency messaging as well. That could make the Android version a little more useful as you could use satellite messaging to stay in touch with family and friends in areas where you’d normally be out of reach. However, there will likely be additional charges associated with non-emergency texts so you’ll probably still want to moderate your usage of the feature. (Qualcomm declined to speculate on how much these messages might cost, but it seems safe to assume these messages will be costlier than a typical SMS.)

Also, unlike Apple’s satellite communication features, which also allows people to make emergency voice calls, Snapdragon Satellite only allows for emergency texts, not calls. For truly urgent situations, the company has partnered with Garmin, which makes a satellite-based emergency communication device of its own called inReach. That means emergency texts will be routed to the same team that handles SOS calls from inReach devices.

Unfortunately, we didn’t get a lot of specifics about when we’ll see phones with Snapdragon Satellite hit shelves, or how many devices could have these capabilities. For now, Samsung says it expects to see satellite-ready phones from “multiple” OEMs starting in the second half of 2023. At the same time, that doesn’t mean the features are guaranteed for all Android phones with an X70 modem and Qualcomm SOC. According to Qualcomm, that’s because X70-equipped phones launching before the second half of the year don’t have all the necessary hardware to support Snapdragon Satellite connectivity.

But, now that we know the hardware requirements, in the coming months we should begin to get a better idea of which devices will have the satellite messaging capabilities.

via Engadget http://www.engadget.com

January 5, 2023 at 02:21PM

Google Voice Starts Labeling Spam Calls

https://www.droid-life.com/2022/12/30/google-voice-starts-labeling-spam-calls/

Google Voice is one of those services from Google that you never quite stop worrying about. It’s a Google product that is incredibly important to so many of us, yet Google often neglects it for lengthy periods of time, leaving us wondering if it is on the verge of receiving a major update or about to hit the Google product graveyard.

For this final week of the year, Google is giving Google Voice a much-needed new feature, so for now we can assume it’ll live on.

The big new feature is spam call labeling. Yes, this is a feature that probably should have been here a long, long time ago and is the perfect example of Google randomly showing us they care about Voice. This is a calling app, after all, and here we are days away from 2023 only now getting spam call labeling of incoming calls.

I’m not complaining! OK, I am a little, but also nodding in acceptance of this basic calling feature that I will truly now appreciate.

Google Voice Spam Call

Google detailed the new feature to Workspace customers, noting that it uses “the same advanced artificial intelligence that identifies billions of spam calls each month across Google’s calling ecosystem.” Love that.

The setting for it can be found in Settings>Security within the Voice app. In that section of the app, there is an option for “Filter spam.” Weirdly, you have to toggle that setting OFF in order for incoming calls to get a “Suspected spam caller” label. The reason is because that setting turned to ON will automatically filter a call like that and send it to voicemail.

I can tell you that I have the setting and am on version 2022.11.28.491470536. I haven’t received an update to Google Voice in a couple of weeks, so this could simple be a back-end change from Google.

Google Play Link: Google Voice

Read the original post: Google Voice Starts Labeling Spam Calls

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December 30, 2022 at 11:52AM

Fallout 2 Has Been Remade As A Doom-Style Shooter Game, And Its Demo Is Free

https://www.gamespot.com/articles/fallout-2-has-been-remade-as-a-doom-style-shooter-game-and-its-demo-is-free/1100-6510287/

Fallout 1 and 2 are two of the most beloved classic CRPGs of all time, but it’s easy to wonder what they would look like from the first-person perspective that Bethesda created for the series. Fan developer Jonasz Osmenda apparently had the same idea, as they’re working on a first-person remake of Fallout 2 that you can play for free right now.

Osmenda’s project is a very faithful rendering of the game, taking the maps and enemies from the original and translating them into a classic FPS perspective. The result looks a lot like the early days of the FPS genre, with two-dimensional models walking through basic 3D maps à la Doom. Unlike Doom, however, the game has the turn-based VATS system, and it’s more of an RPG than a pure shooter, complete with hit points and action points.

Given that this is version 0.0.23 of the project, it’s fair to say that this Fallout 2 FPS remake is in early days still. However, it’s under active development, with four updates coming in the past month, and more maps likely on the way. Currently, you can explore Klamath and Arroyo, among others. If you’re interested in revisiting Fallout 2 for yourself, a Steam pack of Fallout 1, 2, and the noncanoical spin-off Fallout Tactics are currently on sale for $5, so check it out.

Continue Reading at GameSpot

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January 4, 2023 at 01:10PM

Meet BMW i Vision Dee, the color-changing, supposedly talking BMW of the future

https://www.autoblog.com/2023/01/04/bmw-i-vision-dee-concept-digital-reality-car-changes-colors-e-ink/


LAS VEGAS – Meet BMW’s advertisement for its Neue Klasse next-generation vehicle architecture and its vision of comprehensive digital control. This is the BMW i Vision Dee concept, a midsize sedan introduced tonight at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas. “Dee” is an acronym for Digital Emotional Experience — but it also serves as the human-like name for the supposedly self-aware talking car that was the subject of the keynote presentation at CES also starring Arnold Schwarzenegger, David Hasselhoff, K.I.T.T. and Herbie the Love Bug. It was quite the performance. But let’s start with the vehicle itself.

As for the design — and we’re not saying this to be mean — if you rendered BMW’s trademark flourishes into a vehicle from the first Midnight Club game in 2000 before the cars were licensed, you’d have a good basis for explaining to someone what the i Vision Dee looks like. BMW practically said so itself about the sheetmetal, calling this a “new and pared-down design language.” Putting the brand’s fans on notice, design chief Adrian van Hooydonk said the automaker will be simplifying the visual language of its current lineup — and so quickly that BMW’s entire range will be revamped in the next three years. It’s hard to tell if that’s good news.

BMW’s always been about the big digital play, though; iDrive commenced the large-scale digitalization of the BMW occupant experience 22 years ago. On the i Vision Dee, BMW hallmarks are digitized as well. It’s a low-polygon three-box sedan. The twin circular headlights are rendered as twin diagonal stripes inside a digital kidney grille. You might recognize the stretched grille outline shape from the BMW M Hybrid V8 LMDh racer headed to the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship in 2023. The grille here is a dual screen instead of an intake, and is used to “produce different facial expressions [and] express moods such as joy, astonishment or approval visually.” We can’t say we really picked up on those emotions during the presentation (it seemed a bit random, honestly), but the taillights play the same trick. Between the futuristic ends, a Hoffmeister kink.

Now to Dee, the star of this show, a mix of “Her” and K.I.T.T. from “Knight Rider,” which again, appeared on stage with Dee along with Herbie the Love Bug as a sort of shout out to other supposedly living cars. Admittedly, the talking car bit was only part of the show; there was no talk about it in BMW’s press release, which instead detailed how Dee  showcases “what is possible when hardware and software merge.” Not only aiming to demonstrate how a car can create a stronger bond between driver and vehicle, the i Vision Dee “[exploits] the full potential of digitalization to transform the car into an intelligent companion.” Figuratively, at least. The presentation went a lot more literal. 

The front and side windows are screens. The head-up display runs the length of the windshield. The amount of information displayed there can be selected in five stages on a “mixed reality slider”: analogue; driving-related information; contents of the communications system; augmented-reality projection; and “entry into virtual worlds.” The press release didn’t explain that last bit. But the PR did reveal that dimmable windows can create an immersive digital environment, and the concept can project the owner’s avatar onto the driver’s side window “to personalize the welcome scenario.”

The interior is another helping of sleek, conceptual fare; much of it we still have questions about. The steering wheel “can be operated by moving the thumb” and “creates touchpoints that come to life when approached or touched.” We’re also not sure how far Dee can go with “integrating the customer’s everyday digital worlds into the vehicle at all levels,” only that, “Natural language is the simplest, most intuitive form of interaction, enabling perfect understanding between humans and vehicles.”

We’re a lot more in the know about the new E Ink technology. At last year’s CES, BMW brought the iX Flow concept wrapped in an ePaper film. Using the same tech as an Amazon Kindle, the film could create shifting grayscale patterns all over the body — like if Rorschach from “The Watchmen” was a car. This year’s update is color E Ink applied to the i Vision Dee using an evolution of ePaper. Up to 32 colors can be displayed on 240 E Ink segments, each segment individually controlled. BMW’s in-house engineers created animations so we can see the rainbow if not taste it, so expect video razzle dazzle incoming. And before you decide a rainbow car is too ridiculous for you to consider, imagine the last time you bought a car for a second. You probably were deciding between two or more colors. Maybe you wanted one but your wife wanted another. Maybe they didn’t have what you wanted in stock. With E Ink, you could have any of those colors, whenever you want or depending on whose driving. 

The Neue Klasse architecture will begin to “bring humans and machines closer together” starting 2025. Dee and the full-width HUD will come with it, part of the future of the BMW Group being “electric, circular, and digital.” Circular, by the way, basically means sustainable. Sounds like E Ink is going to get a bit part somewhere, but that wasn’t mentioned. We’ll be paying real close attention between now and then to understand what we’ll face when Dee and that new range of “pared-down” vehicles arrive.

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January 4, 2023 at 10:19PM

Alexa, find me an EV charging station

https://techcrunch.com/2023/01/05/alexa-find-an-ev-charging-station/


Amazon’s conversational voice assistant, Alexa, has made its way into many electric vehicles in recent years. Now, along with ordering Alexa to ‘play Despacito’ or ‘call Mom,’ EV drivers in the U.S. with Alexa-enabled cars will be able to ask Alexa to find the nearest public charging spot.

Charging network EVgo will be the first to partner with Amazon to offer this service later in 2023. Aside from a list of available public charging stations, Alexa will help drivers in the U.S. navigate to their chosen station and initiate charging. Drivers can even pay through a linked account simply by saying, “Alexa, pay for my charge,” according to Amazon, which announced the integration at CES 2023 in Las Vegas on Thursday.

“The EV charging experience is a lot more fragmented than for gas customers, who can pretty much stop at any location,” said Anes Hodžić, vice president at Amazon’s Smart Vehicles group, in a statement. Hodžić noted that EV drivers often fumble through different apps and maps to find an available charger, taking into account factors like real-time availability, distance, remaining battery, charging speed, plug type and payment options.

Alexa’s EV charging service connects drivers with Alexa-enabled vehicles and automotive accessories like Echo Auto to over 150,000 public stations in the U.S. powered by EVgo and other operators. When a driver asks Alexa to find a station, they’ll receive a list of nearby locations with availability by plug type, as well as the time and distance to arrival. Once the driver chooses a location, Alexa can provide navigational instructions.

“At EVgo, we’re committed to making EV driving infrastructure convenient, reliable, and affordable for all types of drivers,” said Cathy Zoi, EVgo’s CEO. “Mass adoption of EVs is underway, and this collaboration between EVgo and Amazon will make charging seamless for even more EV drivers.”

At present, EVgo has more than 850 fast charging stations across the country, but it’s building out more. In June, EVgo partnered with General Motors to build more than 3,250 fast chargers in the U.S. by 2025.

via Autoblog https://ift.tt/xUa7pJq

January 5, 2023 at 09:42AM