Wednesday, August 15, 2018

Apple Reportedly Developing Own Chips For Health Devices

Over the years we’ve seen how Apple has been creating separate processors for use in their devices. For example there is a separate processor designed to handle motion-based data, then there is also a chip that handles Bluetooth, then there is also a chip designed for security purposes, so to learn that Apple could be developing a new chip for health-based devices doesn’t come as a surprise.

This is according to a report from CNBC who claims that Apple has a team in place who are exploring the idea of creating a custom processor for health devices. The report is based on job listings from Apple’s Health Sensing hardware team, which according to the listing says, “We are looking for sensor ASIC architects to help develop ASICs for new sensors and sensing systems for future Apple products. We have openings for analog as well as digital ASIC architects.”

It is unclear as to what kind of information these chips would measure because as it stands, Apple’s chief health and fitness related device, the Apple Watch, comes with a bunch of sensors of its own already that does the job pretty well. It is possible that this could simply be Apple’s way of further customizing their products to their specifications, and relying less on outside help. Either way it might be too early too tell what’s going on, so take it with a grain of salt for now.

Filed in Apple >Gadgets >Rumors. Read more about Fitness, Health and Wearable Tech.

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Android Pie makes call recording impossible without root

Google giveth and Google taketh away. New software versions are often expected to bring in new features and remove bugs but it isn’t unheard of for things to happen the other way around. There are some cases that features presumed to be there forever are suddenly yanked out without as much a warning. That definitely feels like the case with the sudden inability of non-root call recording apps to work in Android 9 Pie. That said, it probably shouldn’t come as surprise despite being an unfortunate “regression”.

Recording phone calls has always been a problematic topic. Different countries have different laws that companies have to comply with. While Google has not exactly made its stance on the matter explicit, its actions speak louder than words could.

In Android 6.0 Marshmallow, Google removed the official API that enabled apps to record calls. Developers, however, were able to find a workaround that let them still do so unofficially. Now in Android 9, XDA reports that Google has closed those doors completely.

Fortunately, being Android, there is almost always a way. Yes, that means rooting your device in order to install call recorders. At that point you’ll have to ask whether that feature is enough to warrant going through the whole process and potentially closing the doors on other things (you might not be able to play Fortnite, for example).

On the one hand, you can’t exactly blame Google for trying to cover its legal bases by going for the common denominator and just blocking call recording completely. It could have probably done it better but probably didn’t consider it that high a priority. Right now, it’s in Google’s hands unless a new method that doesn’t require root is discovered.

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Karma raises $12 million for marketplace that helps restaurants and supermarkets reduce food waste

Around one third of the food produced each year — 1.3 billion tons of it — is either lost or wasted, according to data from the United Nations’ Food and Agriculture Organization. That’s the equivalent of flushing $1 trillion worth of perfectly edible food down the toilet.

Against that sobering backdrop, Karma, a marketplace that’s setting out to reduce food waste, has raised $12 million in a series A round of funding led by Swedish investment firm Kinnevik, with participation from Bessemer Venture Partners, Electrolux, and E.ventures, among others. This takes the company’s total funding since its inception to $18 million.

Karma is only available in Sweden and London for now, but with its fresh cash injection it said that it plans to hire for more than 70 new roles by the end of 2019 and expand into more international markets. The first port of call will be Europe, but the U.S. is firmly in the company’s crosshairs too.

The Karma app works similar to other food-ordering apps you have probably used. You create an account and can see what’s available in your locale. It’s basically whatever food outlets have an excess of — it could be cakes, bread, sandwiches, macarons, or freshly squeezed lemonade — so you won’t have a consistent choice of goods on a day-to-day basis.

Karma on iPhone

Above: Karma on iPhone

Founded out of Stockholm in 2015, Karma was a different proposition in its early days — it was more of a discounts and deals program, a little like Groupon. But the company pivoted to avoid confusing its users with such a broad range of offers.

“It quickly became apparent to us that all the different offers were confusing to the users of Karma, and we decided to narrow it down to just a few — or even one category,” Karma CEO and cofounder Hjalmar StΓ₯hlberg Nordegren told VentureBeat. “One of the more popular categories in that early application was food, and when looking closer at what was actually selling, it turned out to be surplus food that restaurant owners added to the platform.”

The founding team then looked into the global food waste problem, and that became the genesis of Karma in its current incarnation. It’s also another classic example of a sort of “accidental” user-led evolution within an early-stage startup — look at how users are actually using the platform, and build out from there.

Doing well by doing good

Karma is part of a global trend we’re seeing where companies are building businesses around the concept of “cutting waste.” London-based Winnow raised $7.4 million last year for a similar proposition to Karma but aimed squarely at commercial kitchens, while San Francisco-based Full Harvest raised $2 million last year to help farmers find a home for ugly fruit. Last week, Unmade — based in the U.K. capital — raised $4 million for an on-demand clothes manufacturing platform that enables brands to only produce garments that are actually sold, rather than mass-producing thousands of items in advance.

“Karma turns would-be wasted product into bargains for customers and profit for merchants — this makes way too much sense not to exist in this world,” noted Bessemer Venture Partners’ Kent Bennett. “Beyond the product today, we think owning the communication links between customers and their favorite local merchants could have enormous long-term value.”

At the time of writing, Karma has signed up more than 1,500 food outlets such as restaurants, hotels, grocery stores, cafes, and bakeries to sell their surplus goods to around 350,000 Karma users. It really is a win-win situation — retailers can monetize food that wood otherwise end up in a landfill, while consumers can land big savings. And it’s this business model that could help the platform gain steam: To make the platform more attractive to food sellers, it really has to be a for-profit initiative rather than asking them to donate.

“To have a lasting and meaningful impact companies around sustainability need to be for-profit and have an attractive business model,” added E.ventures partner Jonathan Becker.

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Tuesday, August 14, 2018

Elon Musk’s Tesla Tweets Could Spark a Fight With the SEC

Elon Musk is, if nothing else, a warrior. He has battled short sellers. He was waged war against the auto industry and the National Transportation Safety Board. He has scrapped with the media and Los Angeles traffic and, because 2018, Azealia Banks. Now, Musk may be in yet another battle, with the US Securities and Exchange Commissions.

This all started a week ago, when the Tesla CEO tweeted, “Am considering taking Tesla private at $420. Funding secured.” But as Musk revealed in a Monday blog post, that funding may not, in fact, have been all that secured. And for the agency that regulates the securities industry, that may be a problem. One that could hurt Tesla where it counts: its checkbook.

The problem is that securities law requires that public companies make certain sorts of information public to all their shareholders at the same time. And that said information be true. Anything less could be construed by courts (and juries) as fraud or market manipulation. That makes Elon’s tweet problematic. Investigators have reportedly opened a probe into the tweet, and could choose—after collecting facts—to either sue the company in a district court or bring a sanction before an administrative law judge. Tesla declined to comment.

For the SEC, Elon’s tweets have two potentially concerning elements. One is the medium. Sure, anyone investing in Tesla should know Musk says all the juicy stuff on Twitter. And the Commission has allowed companies to disclose information on social media in the past, provided other shareholders are alerted in some other way. In the eight days since Musk tweeted about taking Tesla private, the automaker has not filed paperwork to disclose a material event or disclosure, the kind of big deal happening that all shareholders need to know about.

The second concerning element of Elon’s tweet is the message, especially the “funding secured” part. From the SEC’s perspective, that should be a factual statement: Musk definitely has the $70 billion or so lined up to take Tesla private.

But the CEO’s Monday blog post wasn’t so straightforward. He writes of a July 31 meeting with Saudi Arabia’s sovereign investment fund, which recently took a 5 percent stake in Tesla. He says that the fund’s managing director “expressed regret that I had not moved forward previously on a going private transaction with him,” and that the director “expressed his support for funding a going private transaction with Tesla at this time.” Then Musk hedges: “I understood from him that no other decision makers were needed and that they were eager to proceed.”

Securing take-private funding is not that easy, says John Coffee, Jr., the director of the Center on Corporate Governance at Columbia Law School. It is an intensive process that requires a lot of financial wrangling before anything’s a done deal. “There are enough concessions in the blog post about this being subject to financial and due diligence review and final approvals to determine that Musk didn’t have funding secure,” Coffee says. “He had at best, a hope for it.”

For the SEC—which, like many enforcement agencies, enjoys making headlines with shows of force—this might be an easy win against Tesla. Its investigators don’t even have to prove that Musk meant to lie or mislead investors. “The SEC can just say there was a materially false statement,” says Coffee. “It doesn’t have to prove an intent to defraud.”

If Tesla were smart, Coffee says, it would strike a deal with the feds, and quickly. In rule violations and breaches, federal regulators generally appreciate a touch of diplomacy, or contrition. An easy settlement might only cost the electric carmaker tens or hundreds of thousands—while a loss at court could cost it millions. (Back in 2003, the SEC fined one company $25,000 for a take-private transaction gone foul.)

Fighting the SEC, on the other hand, might get the electric carmaker in to deeper trouble, for more legal headaches lurk. By Tuesday, three Tesla shareholders had filed proposed class action lawsuits against Musk and Tesla, alleging the CEO tweeted to squeeze Tesla short sellers and goose its stock price. (If that was the plot, it worked for a spell—the stock spiked, then settled back to its previous price.) To win their cases (which may be combined), the plaintiffs will have to prove Musk meant to screw with the stock price. That means they’ll have to find a paper trail, or be able to string together enough compelling evidence to convince a jury or judge of what Musk was thinking when he tweeted. But if Tesla loses a case to the SEC, Coffee says, elements of that judgement could be used during a civil case. Bad begets bad.

Musk, and Tesla by extension, have always been scrappers, and unafraid of a fight. For years, the CEO has expressed intense frustration with short sellers, and with the requirements that come with being a public company. (Recall that he called analysts’ questions “bonehead” and “dry” during a May earnings call.) But when it comes to the SEC, some contrition might be wiser. Indeed, Musk seems to have temporarily gone the more conventional CEO route, announcing Monday night that he’s working with serious financial institutions like Goldman Sachs and Silver Lake, and serious law firms, like Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz, and Munger, Tolles & Olson, on the take private transactions. Now that federal investigators are involved, the well-paid lawyers are here, too.


More Great WIRED Stories

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How to split your screen in Windows 10

Windows 10 is a great desktop operating system, and its many window management features are part of the reason why. Here’s how to divvy up windows using Snap Assist and other native tools.

The post How to split your screen in Windows 10 appeared first on Digital Trends.

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‘B*tch, I’m a Cow’ is the summer bop taking over the internet with memes

Welcome to the song of the summer. 

Even if you don’t vibe with Doja Cat’s “Mooo!” it’ll probably be stuck in your head well into 2019. The intoxicating beat, juxtaposed with catchy declarations like “Bitch, I’m a cow” and “I’m not a cat, I don’t say meow” creates a bop that you can’t help dancing along to. 

The music video’s green screen magic rivals John Mayer’s “New Light” — while his featured the artist awkwardly dancing with zebras, Doja Cat’s “Mooo!” shows her enthusiastically munching on a burger in front of the Microsoft default background. 

Doja Cat tweeted a portion of the video last week, featuring her bellowing “mooooooo” while wearing a cow printed crop top and matching pants. 

“Should I honestly post the rest of this insane shit?” she asked her followers. 

Doja Cat fans responded with their own renditions and cow-themed gifs.

The song blew up over the weekend, taking over Twitter timelines with the memes it inspired. 

Some were upset that Doja Cat, who released an album this year, was only getting recognition now. 

Doja Cat herself said she couldn’t believe the attention she was getting. She told Complex that she only made the video because she bought a cow print outfit to wear on tour, and she used old sheets she had in her room as a DIY green screen. 

“After making the song I was craving a cheeseburger so I ordered delivery and it made it to my house in time for filming,” Doja Cat told Complex. “That’s why I’m eating and drinking a strawberry milkshake throughout the video.”

She also promised to perform “Mooo!” every night of her tour. 

Https%3a%2f%2fblueprint api production.s3.amazonaws.com%2fuploads%2fvideo uploaders%2fdistribution thumb%2fimage%2f86423%2f43815ffb ca2e 4458 8824 7ef19b0d58e4

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Erik Finman is a Bitcoin millionaire: Now what?

A high school dropout, a Bitcoin millionaire, and a teenage tech entrepreneur walk into a restaurant. The host asks: “Table for one Sir?” Why? Because Erik Finman is just one person.

Finman learned to walk in a motel room his parents lived in when he was a baby, they didn’t start off rich. He mentioned this a few moments after I’d interrupted him during an anecdote about hiring people with checkered backgrounds. I become intrigued, because before he said that, I thought he was just a rich kid who got lucky.

Finman made his first million in Bitcoin BTC thanks to a $1,000 gift from his grandma. He ended up dropping out of high school, working the cryptocurrency game, and starting his own online tutoring company – which he sold for 300 bitcoins (worth approximately $60,000 at the time). Today, those same coins would be worth $1.8 million. On the surface, Finman seems like the benefactor of some incredible fortune.

He describes his parents as “two Stanford PhDs,” who’ve done well for themselves. But he points out they weren’t always so stable, hence mentioning his toddler days in a motel. “I don’t remember those days, obviously, but it’s not like I grew up incredibly rich.”

And, that seed money from grandma? He and his two older brothers, who also received a grand a piece, tried to give that back.

She thought her time was up. She was giving us money to help pay for our education because she wasn’t sure how much longer she’d be here. We tried to give it back and say we didn’t want it, but she wouldn’t take it.

His oldest brother, at the time in his early 20s, took the then 12-year-old Finman to observe a political rally decrying capitalism and government control of global financial institutions. There, they learned about Bitcoin, a new type of technology that could take the system down. “We didn’t think of it like a financial investment. We saw it as a way to fight the man,” Finman tells me.

In 2011 12-year-old Erik Finman, already feeling the sting of bullies in middle school, made a bet with his parents. If he became a millionaire before he was old enough to vote, he didn’t have to go to college. He was betting on his newfound knowledge of cryptocurrency to win that bet for him.

He was eager to escape his tormentors, “The last time I felt smart was in the third grade,” he tells me. But he admits had no idea of how much worse it would get. His tolerance of what he considered a broken educational system quickly wore thin upon the arrival of his freshman year.

His voice changes when he talks about his high school experience. I can tell he’s told these stories before – I’ve read them in other articles. A small part of me expects him to break out into an evil villain monologue, ranting about how everyone who doubted him was wrong about him.

In a way he does. He tells me about the school coach, who also taught a class, who told him he should drop out and go work for McDonald’s. But he’s not laughing. In fact a bit of the confused kid he must have been seems to come through as he reflects softly, “I don’t know what his problem was.” This doesn’t seem like the same person I just read about, who sent a former teacher an email with a link to an article about him, and the subject “Look at me now bitch.” He gets a little quieter and continues:

There was another teacher who took an entire class just to make fun of me. She was saying these mean things about me and then she went around the room and let the kids in the class raise their hands if they had something to say about me. It was like an entire class dedicated to roasting Erik Finman.

He doesn’t reflect on this with anger or arrogance. Maybe I’m editorializing or misjudging, but it seemed to me that Finman still doesn’t understand why they hated him. As he continued, I began to see Finman as a mature adult who is willing to take chances because he’s very self-aware. It was harder to see him as the “poor little rich kid” he’s been portrayed as in the media who was just in the right place at the right time.

But the media didn’t get there on its own. When he was only 15 he convinced his parents to let him drop out of high school. Somehow, they agreed, and he moved to Silicon Valley to chase his millions.

The tens of thousands he’d made in Bitcoin by that point was enough to finance his dream. But California, it turns out, wasn’t much different than high school. High powered executives told him he’d never win the bet with his parents and he suffered at least one violent criminal encounter. Finman learned the hard way that people rarely support someone who is on their way up, especially when that person takes a non-traditional approach.

Of course, anyone who follows Bitcoin knows how Finman’s financial future played out. He hung on to his Bitcoin holdings, which ended up being worth a fortune, and continued to make smart investments. Yet through it all there appeared to be two Erik Finmans.

There’s the one that, at age 12, was not only capable of understanding cryptocurrency in 2011 when most of us had never heard of it, but had enough foresight and maturity to invest every penny he had into it. This Erik, now 19, tells me that he loves his family, “my brothers are the best. I’m blessed to have such a great family.” This Erik also spent his time and money building a prototype Dr. Octopus suit for a younger teen, out of the goodness of his heart.

But then there’s the Erik who grips a nine millimeter pistol while lying on a bed of cash.

He smokes cigars and doesn’t give a damn.

I asked Finman about this fellow, the one that appears to be balling out of control and incapable of coming off as anything other than a jerk. He’s been compared to Martin Shkrelli, and that’s not a compliment by any means. Finman, in the same article, claims he enjoys being seen as edgy. In his words:

I think being a provocateur is a fun way to get people to pay attention to my ideas. You see the reaction to it, people go crazy. But that helps draw attention to the actual world-changing projects that I want to do.

I told Erik I didn’t think he was a provocateur at all. He’s got the “gangsta” pics, sure. But the gun is fake, he doesn’t really smoke, and none of those images were posted to try and convince anyone he actually lives the life of a 1990’s rapper. “It was satire. I mention it as satire,” he says, then tells me “I knew what it would look like from a marketing point of view, that’s not why I did it, but I knew. It was just fun. I wanted to recreate this imagery from 1990s hip hop that sort of made fun of certain ideas about money.”

I challenge his provocateur image further by asking him if it would be fair to describe him as someone with a lot of empathy for others. He doesn’t hesitate before telling me that he’s the kind of person who believes everyone deserves a fair shake, and that he believes in second chances – which is why he’s worked with people who have checkered backgrounds before.

I’m not interested in his thoughts on reformed drug addicts working in technology though, because, as I told him, I’ve heard that story before.

But, until I spoke with Erik Finman, I’d never heard the one about the teenage Bitcoin millionaire from an upper middle class family who turned out to be a kind, intelligent, and mature person full of drive and ambition.

What appears to be a rich kid’s arrogance is actually a young man’s confidence in himself and the ideas that have put him in a position to run his own company, Finman Technologies.

“Grandma’s fine now, by the way,” he told me while we were talking, “she was scared she didn’t have long left back then, but thankfully she’s still around.” I didn’t specifically ask him, but I would imagine she’s proud of the way he used her $1,000 gift. Because his next project involves opening a school for people who, like him, struggle to learn in the traditional high school environment.

He told me he has ideas that will revolutionize the educational system and prioritize the needs of teachers and students. “Teachers will make a lot more money at this school at very little cost to students,” he declares triumphantly. I laughed, which prompted him to say “I know, it sounds too good to be true.” I replied that it didn’t, not really.

As long as there’s someone to tell him he can’t do it, I’m sure he’ll succeed.

Published August 14, 2018 — 21:19 UTC

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