Podcast streaming service Stitcher has released major update of its iOS app, v6.0.0. The app's interface has been redesigned not only to match iOS 7, but to streamline navigation. The front page, for example, now highlights new episodes from favorites, as well as headlines and other news stories. A new Mini Player provides constant access to what's playing, and the Now Playing screen has gained quick access to car mode and the sleep timer. Playlists can be accessed from anywhere in the app via a swipe gesture....






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Apple allegedly is trying to tap Swiss watchmakers for their technical and metallurgy expertise as the company works to brings its rumored iWatch to the market, reports the Financial Times. Though Apple is reaching out to several companies, most are not willing to work with the Cupertino company.

Swatch chief executive officer Nick Hayek confirmed the watchmaker has talked to several companies about their wearable products, but he is not interested in forging a partnership with any group.
We have been in discussions – not ever initiated by us – with practically all players in smart wearables up until today,” Swatch chief executive Nick Hayek told the Financial Times. “However, we see no reason why we should enter into any partnership agreement.”
Hayek says his reluctance to work with Apple and similar companies comes from his desire to protect Swatch's advancements in ergonomic design, longevity and battery life, but he also has been critical of the iWatch, proclaiming publicly the smartwatch won't be "the next revolution" for Apple.

iWatch concept from Hungarian freelance designer Gábor Balogh
Jean-Claude Biver, president of Watches and Jewelry at LVMH, claims Apple unsuccessfully tried to poach employees from his Hublot brand as well as from other manufacturers who make precision parts for these luxury watches.
"Apple has contacted some of my employees – I saw the emails personally," Mr Biver told a Swiss publication, claiming that all those who had been contacted refused the iPhone maker's advances.
Apple allegedly may launch the iWatch later this year as it prepares to expand its lineup of mobile devices to the wrist. The iWatch may have a fitness focus with biosensors that enable users to track vital health statistics like heart rate, blood pressure and more. It is believed the band could share this data with Apple's Healthbook app, a health and fitness title expected to debut alongside iOS 8.


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Advanced systems are needed to counter threats from adversaries, including China, lawmakers told. -- For more information read the original article here.
A new iOS app called FireChat is blowing up in the App Store. But it's not the app itself that's causing such a stir; it's the underlying networking technology it taps into.






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Today's Office news isn't all about the iPad. Microsoft now lets you use Office Mobile completely for free on both Android and the iPhone; if you're a home customer, you can both edit and read documents without paying for an Office 365 subscription.... -- For more information read the original article here.
A report on Thursday claims Amazon is planning an entry into the free streaming video sector with a new service that would go along with a rumored set-top streaming device






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In 2014, we finally have Microsoft Office for the iPad.

At Satya Nadella's first Microsoft event and public appearance since being named CEO in February, the company announced its longstanding productivity suite for Windows will henceforth be available to use on Apple's family of tablets, including the iPad mini and full-size iPad (2, 4, or Air).

Microsoft Office is now a free download from the App Store, but only for viewing Word, Excel and PowerPoint documents. For creating and editing those documents, however, you'll need to pay for Microsoft's Office 365 service, which starts at $70 per year.

It was possible to use Microsoft Office on an iPad before today's announcement. Office Mobile for Office 365 Subscribers is a free app for those already paying for the service, which is a virtualized version of Office, albeit not exactly optimized for the iPad. Furthermore, there have been a handful of available third-party tools that similarly delivered a virtualized desktop version of the productivity suite on an iPad, but perhaps that's not the best way to interact with documents, since Office wasn't optimized for a smaller screen.

Now that Microsoft finally got its act together to bring a native version of Office to the iPad, it seems like many people that would have really needed this, oh, let's say two years ago, have already moved on to other apps, or have simply given up on waiting for such a development.

There have previously been, ahem, other numerous ways to access Office and Office-like services on the iPad. One of our favorites was the release of OnLive Desktop in 2012, which was a free virtualized version of Windows 7 that included Microsoft Word, Excel and PowerPoint already installed. It didn't take long for that service to shut down, as is to expected for anyone violating Microsoft's terms of service, but now we have iPad Office, and here are five things to look forward to when it comes to that news.

  • It's Free. Office for iPad is free, but for creating and editing documents, an Office 365 subscription is needed. Subscriptions start at $70 a year.
  • Word, Excel And PowerPoint Are Included. More Microsoft apps are sure to come, but the powerhouse items are now there for the picking.
  • Word Document Formatting is Fully Enabled. Everything Word users love is right there on the iPad app, including the toolbox ribbon at the top for all of one's needed features.
  • Excel Includes Specialized Numeric Keypad. To keep formulas handy, Excel includes a special numeric keypad—just for the iPad.
  • PowerPoint Laser! While doing a PowerPoint presentation on the iPad, touch and laser pointer will appear for that crucial stage-like performance ambiance.

Lead image by Madeleine Weiss for ReadWrite; right image courtesy of Reuters

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Satya Nadella, five weeks into his new job as Microsoft's CEO, wants to wipe the slate clean. Or, at least, convince you that he can.

Even though he's a 22-year-old veteran of the software company, the view from the top is different, Nadella said Thursday morning at an event in San Francisco. Microsoft unveiled new cloud and mobile products, most notably a version of Microsoft Office for Apple's iPad.

"You see things from very fresh eyes, from a fresh perspective—you relearn the place," said Nadella.

And it makes a big statement that he said this in technology's new heartland, rather than summoning journalists and analysts to Microsoft's headquarters in Redmond, Wash.

Mobile And The Cloud

One key point Nadella is making within Microsoft is that cloud and mobile aren't two separate things—they're one and the same. Mobile devices are useless pieces of plastic and metal without cloud-delivered software and services to run. And the cloud is just code lying still on a server in a data center without devices to breathe life into.

Microsoft has a lot to prove in the cloud and mobile, where it has been slow to bring its core Office suite online and has struggled to gain market share in mobile devices. So under Nadella, it's pushing a new yet old strategy: making great software for any device.

It's new, because Microsoft has focused its efforts on selling a unified offering of operating system and applications, all from one company. That worked well up until the end of the last decade, when the rise of smartphones and tablets eroded its virtual lock on the market of computing devices.

It's old, because Microsoft was famous for making applications before it was known for operating systems. Microsoft Word for Mac came four years before Word for Windows, for example.

So Microsoft's old-but-new business of making applications for a wide range of operating systems is one way the company will find its way forward.

Managing The Cloud

The other way Microsoft will assert its relevance is by catering to information-technology professionals, who are increasingly allowing—or tolerating—the use of just about any device employees bring into the workplace. At the same time, they're still on the hook for keeping business data and documents secure and in the right hands.

Julia White, a Microsoft general manager in the Office division, showed a number of management and configuration tools that work to manage Android and IOS devices as well as ones running Windows. One linchpin is Azure Active Directory, a cloud-based login and identity service.

Nadella has talked up Azure Active Directory before, and the identity service could play a key part in Microsoft's attempts to appeal to IT professionals and app developers alike.

Beyond the wonky details of Azure Active Directory, it's important as a symbol inside and outside Microsoft: This is how the company can play on its historic strength selling to large organizations and -- For more information read the original article here.

Microsoft wants gamers build their own worlds—playable game worlds, in fact. Microsoft's Project Spark, in open beta now for Windows 8 and the Xbox One, splices together a Minecraft-like sandbox with actual developer tools, enabling budding game makers to actually build a playable game from scratch with no technical know-how whatsoever.

In other words, everyone likes to build stuff. So let's give everyone a shot, why don't we?

Developed by Team Dakota and published by Microsoft Studios, Project Spark empowers anyone (with the right hardware) to weave the sprawling interactive video game of their dreams. It doesn't matter if you're 12 years old or if you've never written a line of code in your life. Pour your imagination into Project Spark and see what happens. Awesome.

Pinning Down Project Spark

So what is it exactly? Having spent a solid chunk of hours with the “game” on Xbox One, that's still a little tricky to answer. According to an early post from the Xbox Blog:

“Project Spark” is an open-world digital canvas that enables anyone to build, play, and share whatever they can imagine. It's a powerful, yet simple way to build and play your own worlds, stories and games. Share all of your creations to a dynamic community, and play what the community makes.

That definition is on, if a bit abstract. Rather than a game-within-a-game, Project Spark is sort of a game without a game. Much like Minecraft (and the ensuing tidal wave of Minecraft-inspired titles), Project Spark is about world building.

It's an imaginative hybrid experience combining a traditional, more technical developer kit (think lines of code) with a graphical interface that plays like a game itself (think elves and goblins). The result is "user-friendly" but not by any means simple—unless you want it to be, of course.

Make your terrain (and paint it too).

Step One: Choose An Elf, Duh

Getting started with Project Spark—for the non-devs among us, anyway—begins with a fast-paced tutorial teaching you the basics of programming your very own little world. You'll choose a character, a generic foresty-type elf in my case, and learn to build conditional rules to govern gameplay mechanics.

Framed as “when x, do y,” these conditions let you program your elf to shoot a fireball when you press the A button, for example. Anything you choose to place in your game world acts as a prop awaiting your command, which you issue down through a clever system called the "brain editor."

It's simple enough so that a kid (think age 10 and up) could get the hang of it—and complex enough to keep a budding game developer plenty busy. For programming n00bs, the act of opening up a thing's brain and tinkering around is a perfect visual way to represent the conditional statements that make everything in the coding world tick.

Step Two: Whoa, I Think I Just Coded

Adding on more conditions to be met means these rule sets can gets a lot more complicated if you want them to. By the time I -- For more information read the original article here.

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