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World's third largest smartphone maker Xiaomi made just $56 million profit last year


        Xiaomi Technology, often referred to as the ‘Apple of China’, made just 347.48 million yuan ($56.15 million) of profit
    on 26.58 billion yuan ($4.30 billion) in revenue last year, according to Reuters. The information was obtained from the financial results
    that the company disclosed after it purchased a 1.3 percent stake in home appliance maker Midea for 1.27 billion yuan ($205 million).
        The numbers are particularly interesting as they are in contrast with a recent Wall Street Journal report which claimed that Xiaomi’s net
    profit nearly doubled last year, rising 84 percent to 3.46 billion yuan ($566 million) from 1.88 billion yuan in 2012. The paper called it "a lucrative
    business in an industry where most players selling cheap handsets struggle to break even.”
        The numbers also underline the fact that despite being the number one smart phone manufacturer in China, the four-year-old startup, which
    recently became the world’s third largest smart phone company, still lags far behind the likes of Samsung and Apple in terms of revenue and profits.
    Just to give you an idea, Apple made around $25.4 billion (nearly six times) in revenue in Greater China during the same period.
        Xiaomi is famous for selling smart phones with killer specs at ridiculously low prices, an apparent attempt by the company to increase its
    market share at the expense of profit. Its cheapest smart phone, the Redmi 1S, starts at 699 yuan ($114), and its latest flagship model, the Mi4,
    retails at 1,999 yuan ($327). The company also manages to keep its marketing costs low by counting on fans for social-media PR.
    The Reuters report also reveals that 77.6 percent of the company is owned by chairman and CEO Lei Jun, while the rest is split among unnamed shareholders.

    Source from: http://www.techspot.com/

Our connection to content

It’s often said that humans are wired to connect: The neural wiring that helps us read the emotions and actions of other people may be a foundation for human empathy.
    But for the past eight years, MIT Media Lab spinout Innerscope Research has been using neuroscience technologies that gauge subconscious emotions by monitoring brain and body
    activity to show just how powerfully we also connect to media and marketing communications.
        “We are wired to connect, but that connection system is not very discriminating. So while we connect with each other in powerful ways, we also connect with characters on
        screens and in books, and, we found, we also connect with brands, products, and services,” says Innerscope’s chief science officer, Carl Marci, a social neuroscientist
        and former Media Lab researcher.
            With this core philosophy, Innerscope — co-founded at MIT by Marci and Brian Levine MBA ’05 — aims to offer market research that’s more advanced than traditional methods,
        such as surveys and focus groups, to help content-makers shape authentic relationships with their target consumers.
        “There’s so much out there, it’s hard to make something people will notice or connect to,” Levine says. “In a way, we aim to be the good matchmaker between content and people.”
        So far, it’s drawn some attention. The company has conducted hundreds of studies and more than 100,000 content evaluations with its host of Fortune 500 clients, which
        include Campbell’s Soup, Yahoo, and Fox Television, among others.
    And Innerscope’s studies are beginning to provide valuable insights into the way consumers connect with media and advertising. Take, for instance, its recent project to
    measure audience engagement with television ads that aired during the Super Bowl.
    Innerscope first used biometric sensors to capture fluctuations in heart rate, skin conductance, breathing, and motion among 80 participants who watched select ads
    and sorted them into “winning” and “losing” commercials (in terms of emotional responses). Then their collaborators at Temple University’s Center for Neural Decision
    Making used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) brain scans to further measure engagement.
        Ads that performed well elicited increased neural activity in the amygdala (which drives emotions), superior temporal gyrus (sensory processing),
        hippocampus (memory formation), and lateral prefrontal cortex (behavioral control).
    “But what was really interesting was the high levels of activity in the area known as the precuneus — involved in feelings of self-consciousness — where it is believed
    that we keep our identity. The really powerful ads generated a heightened sense of personal identification,” Marci says.
        Using neuroscience to understand marketing communications and, ultimately, consumers’ purchasing decisions is still at a very early stage, Marci admits — but the Super
    Bowl study and others like it represent real progress. “We’re right at the cusp of coherent, neuroscience-informed measures of how ad engagement works,” he says.
   
    Capturing “biometric synchrony”
        Innerscope’s arsenal consists of 10 tools: Electroencephalography and fMRI technologies measure brain waves and structures. Biometric tools — such as wristbands and
    attachable sensors — track heart rate, skin conductance, motion, and respiration, which reflect emotional processing. And then there’s eye-tracking, voice-analysis,
    and facial-coding software, as well as other tests to complement these measures.
        Such technologies were used for market research long before the rise of Innerscope. But, starting at MIT, Marci and Levine began developing novel algorithms,
    informed by neuroscience, that find trends among audiences pointing to exact moments when an audience is engaged together — in other words, in “biometric synchrony.”
        Traditional algorithms for such market research would average the responses of entire audiences, Levine explains. “What you get is an overall level of
    arousal — basically, did they love or hate the content?” he says. “But how is that emotion going to be useful? That’s where the hole was.”
        Innerscope’s algorithms tease out real-time detail from individual reactions — comprising anywhere from 500 million to 1 billion data points — to locate instances
    when groups’ responses (such as surprise, excitement, or disappointment) collectively match.
        As an example, Levine references an early test conducted using an episode of the television show “Lost,” where a group of strangers are stranded on a tropical island.
    Levine and Marci attached biometric sensors to six separate groups of five participants. At the long-anticipated moment when the show’s “monster” is finally revealed,
    nearly everyone held their breath for about 10 to 15 seconds.
    “What our algorithms are looking for is this group response. The more similar the group response, the more likely the stimuli is creating that response,” Levine explains.
    “That allows us to understand if people are paying attention and if they’re going on a journey together.”

    Getting on the map
        Before MIT, Marci was a neuroscientist studying empathy, using biometric sensors and other means to explore how empathy between patient and doctor can improve patient health.
            “I was lugging around boxes of equipment, with wires coming out and videotaping patients and doctors. Then someone said, ‘Hey, why don’t you just go
            to the MIT Media Lab,’” Marci says. “And I realized it had the resources I needed.”
        At the Media Lab, Marci met behavioral analytics expert and collaborator Alexander “Sandy” Pentland, the Toshiba Professor of Media Arts and Sciences, who helped
    him set up Bluetooth sensors around Massachusetts General Hospital to track emotions and empathy between doctors and patients with depression.  
    During this time, Levine, a former Web developer, had enrolled at MIT, splitting his time between the MIT Sloan School of Management and the Media Lab. “I wanted to
    merge an idea to understand customers better with being able to prototype anything,” he says.
        After meeting Marci through a digital anthropology class, Levine proposed that they use this emotion-tracking technology to measure the connections of audiences to media.
    Using prototype sensor vests equipped with heart-rate monitors, stretch receptors, accelerometers, and skin-conductivity sensors, they trialed the technology with students
    around the Media Lab.
        All the while, Levine pieced together Innerscope’s business plan in his classes at MIT Sloan, with help from other students and professors. “The business-strategy
    classes were phenomenal for that,” Levine says. “Right after finishing MIT, I had a complete and detailed business plan in my hands.”
        Innerscope launched in 2006. But a 2008 study really accelerated the company’s growth. “NBC Universal had a big concern at the time: DVR,” Marci says. “Were people who
    were watching the prerecorded program still remembering the ads, even though they were clearly skipping them?”
        Innerscope compared facial cues and biometrics from people who fast-forwarded ads against those who didn’t. The results were unexpected: While fast-forwarding,
    people stared at the screen blankly, but their eyes actually caught relevant brands, characters, and text. Because they didn’t want to miss their show, while fast-forwarding,
    they also had a heightened sense of engagement, signaled by leaning forward and staring fixedly.
    “What we concluded was that people don’t skip ads,” Marci says. “They’re processing them in a different way, but they’re still processing those ads. That was one of those
    insights you couldn’t get from a survey. That put us on the map.”
        Today, Innerscope is looking to expand. One project is bringing kiosks to malls and movie theaters, where the company recruits passersby for fast and cost-effective results.
    (Wristbands monitor emotional response, while cameras capture facial cues and eye motion.) The company is also aiming to try applications in mobile devices, wearables,
    and at-home sensors.
        “We’re rewiring a generation of Americans in novel ways and moving toward a world of ubiquitous sensing,” Marci says. “We’ll need data science and algorithms and
        experts that can make sense of all that data.”

    Source from: http://newsoffice.mit.edu/

Manual control

When you imagine the future of gesture-control interfaces, you might think of the popular science-fiction films “Minority Report” (2002) or “Iron Man” (2008).
        In those films, the protagonists use their hands or wireless gloves to seamlessly scroll through and manipulate visual data on a wall-sized, panoramic screen.
    We’re not quite there yet. But the brain behind those Hollywood interfaces, MIT alumnus John Underkoffler ’88, SM ’91, PhD ’99 — who served as scientific advisor for both
    films — has been bringing a more practical version of that technology to conference rooms of Fortune 500 and other companies for the past year. 
    Underkoffler’s company, Oblong Industries, has developed a platform called g-speak, based on MIT research, and a collaborative-conferencing system called Mezzanine that allows
    multiple users to simultaneously share and control digital content across multiple screens, from any device, using gesture control.
    Overall, the major benefit in such a system lies in boosting productivity during meetings, says Underkoffler, Oblong’s CEO. This is especially true for clients who
    tend to pool resources into brainstorming and whose meeting rooms may remain open all day, every day.
    “If you can make those meetings synthetically productive — not just times for people to check in, produce status reports, or check email surreptitiously under the table — that
    can be electrifying force for the enterprise,” he says.
    Mezzanine surrounds a conference room with multiple screens, as well as the “brains” of the system (a small server) that controls and syncs everything. Several Wii-like wands,
    with six degrees of freedom, allow users to manipulate content — such as text, photos, videos, maps, charts, spreadsheets, and PDFs — depending on certain gestures they make with the wand.
    That system is built on g-speak, a type of operating system — or a so-called “spatial operating environment” — used by developers to create their own programs that run like Mezzanine.
    “G-speak programs run in a distributed way across multiple machines and allow concurrent interactions for multiple people,” Underkoffler says. “This shift in thinking — as if
    from single sequential notes to chords and harmonies — is powerful."
    Oblong’s clients include Boeing, Saudi Aramco, SAP, General Electric, and IBM, as well as government agencies and academic institutions, such as Harvard University’s Graduate
    School of Design. Architects and real estate firms are also using the system for structural designing.

    Putting pixels in the room
        G-speak has its roots in a 1999 MIT Media Lab project — co-invented by Underkoffler in Professor Hiroshi Ishii’s Tangible Media Group — called “Luminous Room,” which
    enabled all surfaces to hold data that could be manipulated with gestures. “It literally put pixels in the room with you,” Underkoffler says.
    The group designed light bulbs, called “1/0 Bulbs,” that not only projected information, but also collected the information from a surface it projected onto.
    That meant the team could make any projected surface a veritable computer screen, and the data could interact with, and be controlled by, physical objects.
    They also assigned pixels three-dimensional coordinates. Imagine, for example, if you sat down in a chair at a table, and tried to describe where the front,
    left corner of that table was located in physical space. “You’d say that corner is this far off the floor, this far to the right of my chair, and this much in front of me,
    among other things,” Underkoffler explains. “We started doing that with pixels.”
        One application for urban planners involved placing small building models onto a 1/0 Bulb projected table, “and the pixels surrounded the model,” Underkoffler says. This
    provided three-dimensional spatial information, from which the program casted accurate, digital shadows from the models onto the table. (Changing the time on a digital clock
    changed the direction of the shadows.)

    In another application, the researchers used a glass vase to manipulate digital text and image boxes that were projected onto a whiteboard. The digital boxes were linked to
        the vase in a circle via digital “springs.” When the vase moved, all the graphics followed. When the vase rotated, the graphics bunched together and “self-stored” into
    the vase; when the vase rotated again, the graphics reappeared in their first form.
        These initial concepts — using the whole room as a digital workplace — became the foundation for g-speak. “I really wanted to get the ideas out into the world in a
    form that everyone could use,” Underkoffler says. “Generally, that means commercial form, but the world of movies came calling first.” “The world’s largest focus group”

    Underkoffler was recruited as scientific advisor for Steven Spielberg’s “Minority Report” after meeting the film’s crew, who were searching for novel technology ideas at
        the Media Lab. Later, in 2003, Underkoffler reprised his behind-the-scenes gig for Ang Lee’s “Hulk,” and, in 2008, for Jon Favreau’s “Iron Man,” which both depicted
    similar technologies.
        Seeing this technology on the big screen inspired Underkoffler to refine his MIT technology, launch Oblong in 2006, and build early g-speak prototypes — glove-based
    systems that eventually ended up with the company’s first customer, Boeing.
        Having tens of millions of viewers seeing the technology on the big screen, however, offered a couple of surprising perks for Oblong, which today is headquartered in
    Los Angeles, with nine other offices and demo rooms in cities including Boston, New York, and London. “It might have been the world’s largest focus group,” Underkoffler says.
        Those enthused by the technology, for instance, started getting in touch with Underkoffler to see if the technology was real. Additionally, being part of a big-screen
    production helped Underkoffler and Oblong better explain their own technology to clients, Underkoffler says. In such spectacular science-fiction films, technology competes
    for viewer attention and, yet, it needs to be simplified so viewers can understand it clearly.
        “When you take technology from a lab like at MIT, and you need to show it in a film, the process of refining and simplifying those ideas so they’re instantly legible on
    screen is really close to the refinement you need to undertake if you’re turning that lab work into a product,” he says. “It was enormously valuable to us to strip away
    everything in the system that wasn’t necessary and leave a really compact core of user-interface ideas we have today.”
        After years of writing custom projects for clients on g-speak, Oblong turned the most-requested features of these jobs — such as having cross-platform and multiple-user
    capabilities — into Mezzanine. “It was the first killer application we could write on top of g-speak,” he says. “Building a universal, shared-pixel workspace has enormous
    value no matter what your business is.”
    Today, Oblong is shooting for greater ubiquity of its technology. But how far away are we from a consumer model of Mezzanine? It could take years, Underkoffler admits:
    “But we really hope to radically tilt the whole landscape of how we think about computers and user interface.”

        Source from: http://newsoffice.mit.edu/

Hewlett Foundation funds new MIT initiative on cybersecurity policy

MIT has received $15 million in funding from the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation to establish an initiative aimed at laying the foundations for a smart, sustainable
cybersecurity policy to deal with the growing cyber threats faced by governments, businesses, and individuals.
The MIT Cybersecurity Policy Initiative (CPI) is one of three new academic initiatives to receive a total of $45 million in support through the Hewlett Foundation’s Cyber
Initiative. Simultaneous funding to MIT, Stanford University, and the University of California at Berkeley is intended to jump-start a new field of cyber policy research.
The idea is to generate a robust “marketplace of ideas” about how best to enhance the trustworthiness of computer systems while respecting individual privacy and free expression
rights, encouraging innovation, and supporting the broader public interest.

With the new awards, the Hewlett Foundation has now allocated $65 million over the next five years to strengthening cybersecurity, the largest-ever private commitment to
this nascent field. “Choices we are making today about Internet governance and security have profound implications for the future. To make those choices well, it is imperative
that they be made with a sense of what lies ahead and, still more important, of where we want to go,” says Larry Kramer, president of the Hewlett Foundation. “We view these grants
as providing seed capital to begin generating thoughtful options.” “I’ve had the pleasure of working closely with Larry Kramer throughout this process. His dedication and the
Hewlett Foundation’s remarkable generosity provide an opportunity for MIT to make a meaningful and lasting impact on cybersecurity policy,” MIT President L. Rafael Reif says.
“I am honored by the trust that the Foundation has placed in MIT and excited about the possibilities that lie ahead.”
Each of the three universities will take complementary approaches to addressing this challenge. MIT’s CPI will focus on establishing quantitative metrics and qualitative models
to help inform policymakers. Stanford’s Cyber-X Initiative will focus on the core themes of trustworthiness and governance of networks. And UC Berkeley’s Center for Internet
Security and Policy will be organized around assessing the possible range of future paths cybersecurity might take.

Interdisciplinary approach
The Institute-wide CPI will bring together scholars from three key disciplinary pillars: engineering, social science, and management. Engineering is vital to understanding
the architectural dynamics of the digital systems in which risk occurs. Social science can help explain institutional behavior and frame policy solutions, while management
scholars offer insight on practical approaches to institutionalize best practices in operations.
MIT has a strong record of applying interdisciplinary approaches to large-scale problems from energy to cancer. For example, the MIT Energy Initiative has brought together
faculty from across campus — including the social sciences — to conduct energy studies designed to inform future energy options and research. These studies include technology
policy reports focused on nuclear power, coal, natural gas, and the smart electric grid.
“We’re very good at understanding the system dynamics on the one hand, then translating that understanding into concrete insights and recommendations for policymakers.
And we’ll bring that expertise to the understanding of connected digital systems and cybersecurity. That’s our unique contribution to this challenge,” says Daniel Weitzner,
the principal investigator for the CPI and a principal research scientist in MIT’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL).
Developing a more formal understanding of the security behavior of large-scale systems is a crucial foundation for sound public policy. As an analogy, Weitzner says, imagine
trying to shape environmental policy without any way of measuring carbon levels in the atmosphere and no science to assess the cost or effectiveness of carbon mitigation tools.
“This is the state of cybersecurity policy today: growing urgency, but no metrics and little science,” he says.
CSAIL is home to much of the technology that is at the core of cybersecurity, such as the RSA cryptography algorithm that protects most online financial transactions,
and the development of web standards via the MIT-based World Wide Web Consortium. “That gives us the ability to have our hands on the evolution of these technologies to learn
about how to make them more trustworthy,” says Weitzner, who was the United States deputy chief technology officer for Internet policy in the White House from 2011 to 2012,
while on leave from his longtime position at MIT.

First steps
In pioneering a new field of study, CPI’s first challenge is to identify key research questions, select appropriate methodologies to guide the work, and establish
patterns of cross-disciplinary collaboration. Research challenges include:

How policymakers should address security risks to personal health information;
How financial institutions can reduce risk by sharing threat intelligence;
Developing cybersecurity policy frameworks for autonomous vehicles like drones and self-driving cars; and
How to achieve regional and even global agreements on both privacy and security norms in online environments.
To address these issues, CPI will not only bring to bear different disciplines from across MIT — from computer science to management to political science — but also
engage with stakeholders outside the Institute, including government, industry, and civil society organizations. “We want to understand their challenges and work with
them on formulating solutions,” Weitzner said.
In addition to research, a contribution of the CPI in the long run will be to create a pipeline of students to serve as the next generation of leaders working at
this intersection of technology and public policy.
The mission of the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation is to “help people build measurably better lives.” The Foundation concentrates its resources on activities in
education, the environment, global development and population, performing arts, and philanthropy, as well as grants to support disadvantaged communities in the
San Francisco Bay Area.
The Foundation was established by the late William Hewlett with his wife, Flora Lamson Hewlett, and their eldest son, Walter B. Hewlett. William Hewlett, who earned an
SM degree in electrical engineering from MIT in 1936, was co-founder, with David Packard, of the Hewlett-Packard Company, a multinational information technology company.

Source from: http://newsoffice.mit.edu/

Best Light Laptop/UltraBook WINNER: Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon (3rd Generation)

A familiar sight on traveling execs’ wish lists, Lenovo’s 14-inch ultrabook got a whole lot more desirable for 2014. In the refreshed X1 Carbon, the advent of Intel
4th-generation Core “Haswell” power, Lenovo claims, will boost battery life from about five to about nine hours. Plus, the physical redesign made the laptop 2mm thinner and
trimmed its weight to 2.8 pounds. Its New Year’s resolution is a super-sharp 2,560x1,440 pixels in some of the upper-shelf configurations. (Base models will still show 1,600x900.)
The biggest change you will see, though, is north of the keyboard row. The usual function keys are gone; to show off, a row of electroluminescent “adaptive keys” change from
ho-hum function keys to multiple other modes, depending on the active application. Plus, you can lay the X1 flat, opening the screen all the way, and have the onscreen
image flip a 180 to orient itself to someone across the table.

Source from: http://www.computershopper.com/

New Windows 10 leak (build 9901) highlights more polished Cortana and new apps

As Microsoft prepares to detail new features coming to Windows 10 at a January press event, pre-consumer builds have already given us some
glimpses at the next-gen OS. The latest, build 9901, includes a more refined design for Cortana and a number of other tweaks and new apps.
Microsoft’s answer to Siri and Google Now first appeared in a video demo earlier this month, but that particular build had a pretty barebones UI.
The most recent implementation looks far more polished and is likely much closer to what it will look like in Windows 10. Namely, Cortana sits at
the top of the search interface for Windows 10, which itself has a new home in the task bar.
Microsoft’s assistant will respond to text and voice commands and overall it works very similar to the Windows Phone version, with the ability
to summon it with the words “Hey Cortana”. Needless to say it’s not 100% functional yet.
There are several new and updated Modern UI apps such as Camera, Calculator, Alarms, Remind Me, Photos, Contact Support and a Getting Started app.
Also in build 9901 is a new Xbox app that appears to work as a central hub for achievements, friends lists, activity feeds, and the Store.
Paul Thurrott has a detailed changelog of the new build over at WinSupersite, while the video above from WinBeta shows some of the new features in action.

Source from: http://www.techspot.com/

Solar sunflower inspired by nature could bring clean energy anywhere

Imagine a transportable solar power station that tracks the sun like a sunflower and cools itself by pumping water through its veins just like a plant.
The Sunflower Solar Harvester, developed by the Swiss company Airlight Energy, can do all that and in the process produce heating, desalinated water, and
refrigeration from the 12kW of energy it provides from just 10 hours of sunlight - enough to power several households.
Aimed at off-grid communities in remote regions, the all-in-one 10m-high system -- whose components can be transported in a single container and reassembled in
situ - has been in development for more than two years and could be on sale as early as mid-2017.

Integrated system
"It's an integrated system so it supplies both electricity and heat," head of research at Airlight Energy, Gianluca Ambrosetti, told CNN. "You can use this heat to
drive a cooling system too, if you need refrigeration."
He said the system will appeal to those that have multiple requirement and a lot of sunlight.
"It's not going to work so well if you have a lot of requirements and you have the climate of, say, Germany."
Nevertheless, off-grid regions from as disparate and far-flung places as North Africa, the Middle East, the United States, Chile and Australia have expressed an interest
in the technology.
"Then there are those regions that have good solar radiation and high fossil fuel prices such as Japan which is not an obvious place for this sort of system, but where
we see a lot of potential," Ambrosetti said.

Water-cooled
At the core of the technology are IBM-designed water-cooled solar panels whose microchannels carry away the heat produced by the reflector mirrors. The flower-like array
of reflectors concentrate the sun's energy more than 2,000 times onto the six panels which each hold 25 photovoltaic chips.
The heat is carried away by the water at a rate that keeps the microchips at their optimum temperature, making the Sunflower Solar Harvester one of the most efficient
solar energy producers around.
Developers say that it needs just a quarter of the panels to produce the same amount of power as conventional systems.
Everything about its design is aimed at bringing down costs; what would normally require large and expensive solar mirrors is achieved with metallised foil of the type found in
food packaging like potato chips.
The concave shape of the reflectors is kept in place by a light vacuum, a useful failsafe if the cooling system fails. Rather than overheating the solar cells, the operator
can simply release the vacuum to diffuse the reflected sunlight.

Remote appeal
While the company is not claiming the technology will completely replace fuel-powered generator sets -- which can often produce 10 times the power of one solar sunflower --
Ambrosetti said it could be possible to run some remote facilities with an array of the parabolic mirrors.
"You would, of course, not have just one Sunflower but several so you can scale it up quite easily," he said. "Hospitals, for instance, are quite energy intensive -- if you
needed 1.2mW to run a hospital you'd need 100 sunflowers.
"But if you were in a small camp hospital with minimal refrigeration requirements for medicines, it could be set up in a remote location and just one dish could satisfy
quite a lot of those needs."
The system produces around 20kW of thermal power from 10 hours of sunlight, enough say the developers to power a low-temperature desalinator in coastal regions. Sea water
vapor would pass through a polymer membrane and condense in a separate chamber, to produce as much as 2500 liters of fresh water per day.

Vascular system
Ambrosetti said the cooling system drew its inspiration from nature where vascular systems operate to carry away excess heat.
"We are still a long way from commercialization, but what we can do is to tap into its potential. We plan to set up early adopter projects that would be running by 2016,"
he said. "We aim to have four or five dishes in various locations around the world to show the potential of the system so people can really start to touch it with their hands."
Ambrosetti said the system was likely to appeal commercially to green residential and commercial developments.
"It's biggest potential is in making integrated systems where you can provide several things at once such as heating, cooling and electricity," he said.

Source from: http://edition.cnn.com/

Why Apple is defending Microsoft in court

When are your private emails really out of the U.S. government's reach?
Microsoft thinks it knows the answer and is fighting in court to prove its point.

At a press gathering in New York on Monday, Microsoft (MSFT, Tech30) laid out its case for why it is refusing to comply with a federal subpoena and search warrant for
some customers' emails. The emails live in a data center in Ireland. And Microsoft argues they should be off-limits to the U.S. government until Ireland gives the OK.
Apple (AAPL, Tech30) and 18 other tech rivals, as well as 16 media organizations, including CNN, have filed or said they will file court briefs in support of Microsoft's position.
Microsoft's argument basically boils down to this: Data stored overseas is not subject to U.S. law enforcement. If Uncle Sam wants information that lives in a foreign server
farm, it has to go through a legal channel known as a mutual legal assistance treaty.

Related: Microsoft begins accepting Bitcoin
For example, just because Hilton is a company based in the United States, the U.S. government couldn't search a Hilton hotel room in England. Items in that room would be
covered by U.K. laws, noted Ed Lazowska, computer science professor at the University of Washington, who spoke during the briefing. (Lazowska's department is sponsored by Bill
Gates, Microsoft's founder).
But in August a federal trial judge rejected Microsoft's argument. The judge's reasoning: Since the emails can be instantly transferred to the United States with a click of a
button, the search would actually occur here. Microsoft has appealed the decision.
Details about the criminal case have been sealed, but Microsoft hinted that the customers in question are not American. The company noted that it typically houses data in
server farms that are close to the customers themselves in order to minimize upload and download lag times.
"If this were a matter of Americans trying to evade U.S. law, that would be a different question," Brad Smith, Microsoft's chief counsel, said Monday. "Should we tell
Europeans that they are now subject to U.S. law? That doesn't seem like the right precedent."

Related: Microsoft kills off iconic product
Smith acknowledged that Microsoft's bottom line is at stake. The cloud computing business is booming. People and corporations around the world are increasingly storing
their data in server farms owned by Microsoft, Google (GOOGL, Tech30), Apple and others. Customers must believe that their emails are secure.
But Smith also said Microsoft believes it is being principled about the matter. If Ireland were to give the OK, Microsoft would turn over the data without question, he said.
So why haven't U.S. prosecutors just asked Ireland for the emails. Too much red tape, the U.S. government argued. In addition, Ireland is a U.S. ally -- what happens when the
servers are in countries with unfriendly governments?

Source from: http://money.cnn.com/

Apple Announce iPad Air


Apple has just announced an all new iPad – the iPad Air. This all new model will be replacing the current generation iPad.
It essentially looks exactly like the current iPad Mini but with a larger 9.7-inch screen. It now has the all new A7 64-bit chip, found in the iPhone 5S,
and the all new M7 motion processor chip. Battery life will now go up to 10 hours.
Instead of calling it just the iPad, Apple has now attached Air on the end. This may be to cause less confusion between the two models of iPads available.
The iPad Air will be available on the 1st of November.
Source from: http://theultralinx.com/

Russian malware targets WordPress users, over 100,000 sites infected

A Russian malware dubbed SoakSoak has infected nearly 100,000 WordPress websites since Sunday,
prompting Google to blacklist over 11,000 of those domains (the number is increasing), according to a report from cybersecurity firm Sucuri.
The malware exploits a previously-known vulnerability in a WordPress plugin called Slider Revolution to modify the file wp-includes/template-loader.php,
causing the wp-includes/js/swobject.js to be loaded on every page on the site, which in turn loads the malware from a russian website.
The malware campaign is targeting WordPress users running Internet Explorer on Windows and is also making use of a number of new backdoor payloads,
some of which are being injected into images to further assist evasion while others are being used to inject new administrator users into vulnerable
WordPress installs.
Replacing the aforementioned files is not a permanent solution as it doesn't address the leftover backdoors and initial entry points, the report notes.
The only way to remove the infection is to make sure that the Slider Revolution plugin you are using is up to date, although Sucuri says it won’t be easy.
“The biggest issue is that the RevSlider plugin is a premium plugin, it’s not something everyone can easily upgrade and that in itself becomes a disaster
for website owners,” the report said, adding that some websites don’t even know they have the plugin as it’s been bundled into their themes.

Source from: http://www.techspot.com/

Google Now on iOS and Android gets voice controls, notification cards for Nest thermostat

Nest thermostat owners can now use Google’s iOS and Android apps to control their home’s temperature. The feature will support over two dozen
voice commands for controlling the smart thermostat via Google Now, either using the official app or through the microphone or search box on Chrome.
Google Now will also bring up card notifications to let you know when Nest is changing things up based on your presets. It’s also appears to use
location-based actions to deliver the right temperature at the right time -- to pre heat or cool down home when you’re coming back from work.
If you own a Nest thermostat, you’ll need to authorise your account first by opting into the voice commands and the Google Now card here.
Nest launched its Works with Nest program back in June, opening up its platform to developers and other home automations devices. The integration
with Google Now shouldn’t come as a surprise considering the search giant spent upwards of $3 billion for the smart-devices company.

Source from: http://www.techspot.com/

How To Shop Online Safely

You’ve been eyeing something all year long, and you finally have an excuse to buy it. It’s the holiday season — and at least in this house –it’s the season of buying and
wrapping things I really want and putting them under the tree with my own name on it. Really, I can’t leave these things to other people, I’ll never get what I really want
that way. In all the hustle and bustle of the holiday season, it’s easy to let your guard down and make some poor choices in your rush to snap up a fabulous deal. A little bit
of caution can go a long way. Here’s how to get everything on your list without sacrificing your safety and identity, and how to avoid the crowded stores by getting it done online.

1. Speed up your PC. Some online retailers offer special deals right at certain dates and times. If your computer stumbles even just a little bit, it may be the difference
between securing the deal and being left in the cold. This is especially true when bidding on items on ebay — you can miss out on a great deal if your computer starts acting up
or going slow at exactly the moment you need it to be speedy. Don’t let someone swoop in and outbid you at the last minute!

-Use ChicaPC-Fix™ to optimize your computer’s speed.

2. Clean up your PC. If you are going to be doing any shopping online, it is a very good idea for you to make sure your computer is free of any spyware or viruses
BEFORE you start entering your credit card information into websites. Some malicious programs that could already be on your computer can steal this information, even
if the site you are entering it into is a trusted and secure page.

-Use ChicaPC-Shield™ to rid your computer of the nasty programs on your computer before you unwittingly hand over all of your credit card information to the virus
sitting on your computer.

3. Get Secure. In your rush to score a terrific sale item, you may not pay attention to the URL (the address at the top of the screen). Instead of amazon.com you
could have been redirected to amaz0n.com (a zero instead of an o).  Someone could have set up this page to look exactly like amazon, but it’s not really the true site.
You enter your username and password into the page, you may even enter some credit card or bank account information. Later you check the real Amazon site and they have no
record of your order, because it was with a fraudulent page.

-Use Chica Password Manager™ to verify the validity of a website before you enter personal. information. Click here to hear what others are saying about Chica Password Manager™.
ChicaLogic is your one stop shop to get FAST and SECURE access to the best deals the web has to offer this holiday season. With many features not even listed here such as
automatic form filling for super fast checkouts and automatic blocking of malicious programs, you won’t have to worry about a thing when ChicaLogic has your back!

Source from: http://www.chicalogic.com/

How to Manage Your Privacy Settings on Facebook Timeline

Facebook is always changing, whether we like it or not. As we all make the change over to the new Timeline kicking and screaming, this is a great
time to go through your privacy settings and make adjustments as needed.

It’s also important to remember that by default, Facebook wants to make you a very social person and wants you to share share share. If you
aren’t comfortable with that, it’s time to get into your privacy settings and get busy. Look at the top right-hand corner of your Timeline for the
upside down triangle, click it, select Privacy Settings, and let’s go.

How You Connect. This is where you decide who is able to look you up on your Timeline by your name or your contact information, as well as who
can send you friend requests, Facebook messages, and post on your Timeline. Decide between Everyone/Friends of Friends/Friends.

How Tags Work. You have the power to determine what happens when someone wants to tag you in a photo, post, or Check-In. Allow it anytime, or
get notified on a per tag basis if you want to decide before manually allowing or denying the tagging. Handy if you don’t want pictures a friend
took of you dancing drunkenly on a bar finding their way to your Timeline, or if you don’t want people knowing exactly where you are or where you were.

Apps and Websites. This is where you decide how to edit your settings for what is shared on applications and websites. By default Facebook wants you
be social and share a lot here, so if you aren’t comfortable, it may be best to stay away from most of these. Under this header, you’ll want to decide
whether or not you want to enable the Public Search function. This controls if people can see a preview of your Timeline from search engines.

Limit the Audience for Past Posts. If you overshared in the past and want to try to clean the slate a bit, go here. Any content you shared with
Friends of Friends or Public will change to Friends only. I’m not sure how effective this is, because once a post is out there it’s out there, but it
can’t hurt if you are seriously cleaning house.

Blocked People or Apps. Go here if you want to keep certain people far, far away from you and your Timeline, or if you want to make sure you are
never bothered with another application request.

Clean Up Your Timeline. When you make the big switch from the old profile page to the Timeline, Facebook gives you a couple weeks to clean house.
Do it. Facebook takes it upon itself to post various pictures and posts from recent years – many of which you may not want to see making a reoccurrence.
All you need to do is go through and if you want something gone, click in the upper right-hand corner and either hide it from your Timeline or delete it
entirely.

Miscellaneous Tips. You decide how much you want to share with each and every post too – just hover and click in the upper right-hand corner and select.
You can click in the upper right-hand corner of other people’s posts as well to decide if you want to see all updates from that person, most of them,
or only the important ones. You can also unsubscribe completely from someone’s status updates – which I am sure will come in handy during this election
year with any friends you have that are highly opinionated and don’t share your views.

Source from: http://www.chicalogic.com/

Facebook Bug Posting Private Messages on Timelines – Real or Hoax?

This week, there were many reports that Facebook had a new bug – one that was allowing old private messages (!) to be posted to one’s Timeline.
It was quickly dismissed as a hoax, but many people have insisted that they were indeed affected.

Representatives for Facebook assure us that there is no hoax, and that the confusion lies with people mistaking wall posts between friends for
actual private messages. Here’s what the rep had to say to CNET:

“Every report we’ve seen, we’ve gone back and checked,” the spokesperson to CNET. “We haven’t seen one report that’s been confirmed. A lot
of the confusion is because before 2008 there were no likes and no comments on wall posts. People went back and forth with wall posts instead of
having a conversation.”

Seems plausible, but the ruckus hasn’t quite died down yet. It never hurts to check out your page and make sure all looks well, and periodically
review your Privacy settings. Here are some how-to tips to get your Facebook Privacy settings in tip-top shape and control who-sees-what on your postings:

Hide a particular post, or delete it completely. Hover over the right-hand side of the post and click on the pencil icon. Select Hide from Timeline
or Delete.

Update your privacy settings. From your profile page, click on Privacy Settings from the little arrow next to Home,  in the upper right-hand corner
of the page. Select Timeline and Tagging, Edit Settings. Decide now who you want to be able to see your postings.

Control privacy from even old postings. While in Privacy Settings, select Limit the Audience for Past Posts. Even if you had made old postings
public – or let Friends of Friends see them – you can now edit permissions to only Friends.

Source from: http://www.chicalogic.com/

How to Clean Your Devices

Recently, my husband and I took the family for a weekend getaway to San Diego to hit up Legoland. Halfway there – my daughter started throwing up.
By the time we got to the hotel, my son was down. We laid low at the Embassy Suites for a night, became the guests from hell (sorry!) and then made
a recovery fast enough to hit up the park right on schedule.

During the ride back home, my kids immediately asked to use my tablet and my smartphone. And it got me thinking…how germy are these devices? I had
neurotically cleaned everything in that hotel room with sanitizing wipes, trying to keep myself and my hubby healthy — except my phone. My tablet. The DSi’s
and iTouches.

There are other things that are quite the germ magnets too. Computer keyboards. The television control. Video game consoles. Things I didn’t think much
about until I read that 16% of cell phones have POOP on them. Wash your hands people!

Unfortunately, it’s not so simple to completely sanitize most devices. You can easily take a Clorox or Lysol wipe and wipe down the TV remote, video game
consoles, keyboards (not the screens please) and even the Balance Board for the Wii (think about it). For more delicate devices, your best bet is to use a
microfiber cloth and gently rub. It’s been said that the germs will be swept away as you wipe, and I certainly hope that is true. Anything harsher can
really damage your device. You don’t want to use rubbing alcohol or water.
Source from: http://www.chicalogic.com/

You Can Charge Your iPhone 6 Quicker With An iPad Charger

The iPhone 6 and 6 Plus this year come with larger batteries compared to last year’s 5S. Larger batteries also usually mean longer charging times.
However there is a neat trick to charge your phone quicker.
MacRumors tested the standard iPhone charger and iPad charger and found that the iPhone 6 is now able to draw 12W instead of the regular 5W. This means it
can charge at a quicker rate and draw more power.
I’ve been using the iPad charger myself and have found that it charges at a noticeably quicker rate when compared to the standard charger that
comes with the phone.
The iPad charger costs only £15 but you could use other 12W chargers that are cheaper. However you run the risk of using an unauthorised charger then that
could destroy your battery or even your device.
Source from: http://theultralinx.com/

Google's Pichai to oversee major products and services

(Reuters) - Google Inc Chief Executive Officer Larry Page has put Sundar Pichai, one of his key lieutenants, in charge of the Internet company's products.

The India-born executive will have oversight over products such as search, maps, Google+, commerce, advertising and infrastructure, according to a Google spokesman. Six executives who previously reported to Page, including the heads of research, social media and search, will now report to Pichai, according to Re/code, which first reported the change on Friday, citing an internal memo.

The change will free Page from having as many direct reports and product units to oversee so that he can better focus on "the bigger picture," according to the Re/code report, which also cited anonymous sources.

YouTube, Google's popular video website, will be unaffected by the new structure and will continue to report directly to Page.

The move puts Pichai, 42, in charge of many of Google's main services, including its core search and advertising units, which generate the bulk of the company's revenue.

Google, the world's No.1 Internet search engine, has experienced several high-level management changes this year. Chief Business Officer Nikesh Arora departed unexpectedly in July to become Vice Chairman of Japan's SoftBank Corp and was replaced by longtime Google executive Omid Kordestani. Vic Gundotra, the head of Google's social networking services, left in April.

Pichai, who has risen rapidly through the ranks since joining Google in 2004, is viewed by many industry insiders as potential CEO material. In addition to his duties overseeing the various products, Pichai will continue to lead Google's Android and Chrome software operating systems as well as Google's Apps business.
Source:http://in.reuters.com/

Powerful new software plug-in detects bugs in spreadsheets

An effective new data-debugging software tool dubbed "CheckCell" was released to the public this week in a presentation by University of Massachusetts Amherst computer science doctoral student Daniel Barowy. He spoke at the premier international computer programming language design conference known as OOPSLA, in Portland, Ore.
CheckCell, which automatically finds data errors in spreadsheets, was developed as a plugin for Microsoft's popular Excel program. Its release at the highly respected Object-Oriented Programming, Systems, Languages and Applications (OOPSLA) conference this week signals that it is now freely available to anyone who wants to use it.
Spreadsheet data errors can be consequential, Barowy says. "Consider the case of a paper written by Harvard economists Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff a couple of years ago. The paper was influential, lending credibility to government austerity measures in Europe and the United States. But in 2013, UMass Amherst economist Thomas Herndon and colleagues found, in combing through the data by hand, that methodological errors undermined Reinhart and Rogoff's argument. In particular, Reinhart and Rogoff exaggerated the impact of key data values in a spreadsheet."
The CheckCell group wondered whether software might be developed to find these kinds of errors automatically. The answer is a definite yes, says UMass Amherst School of Computer Science professor Emery Berger, Barowy's advisor. CheckCell successfully found a number of the same errors as had Herndon.
Berger explains, "Our work for the first time combines data analysis and program analysis. Poor quality data costs everyone money. CheckCell helps users avoid costly mistakes."
He adds, "Basically, CheckCell identifies data points that have a big impact on the final result, even if the impact is super subtle and difficult to detect. CheckCell immediately flags data points that are very suspicious, the ones that deserve a second look. It's like having a helper who says, 'pay attention to these cells, they really matter.'"
For example, if a teacher has an "A" student who would be expected to get a 94 on a test and the spreadsheet says that student got a 49, CheckCell will flag it, the computer scientist says. "It tells you that you need to make sure this value is correct."
To develop CheckCell, Berger and graduate students Barowy and Dimitar Gochev used a combination of statistical analysis and data flow analysis to flag inputs that have an unusual impact on the program's output. They evaluated the procedure against a collection of real-world spreadsheets such as budgets and student grades. They introduced common errors into the spreadsheets, then asked the plug-in tool to find them.
The technique uses what Berger calls "a threshold of unusualness." CheckCell marks hidden, high-impact data points in red and asks the spreadsheet designer to check them. If they are indeed correct, they turn green and will not be flagged in subsequent analyses, he notes.
In the future, his team, working with UMass Amherst computer science colleague Alexandra Meliou, plan to extend CheckCell's use to large-scale data sets.
Source:http://phys.org/

Apple Pay tops Tim Cook's to-do list in China

Apple CEO Tim Cook says bringing the recently launched Apple Pay system to China is his top priority for doing business the country.

Apple Pay launched on Monday in the U.S. and allows iPhone 6 users to make “tap-and-go” payments at compatible terminals in retailers. It hasn’t expanded outside the U.S. yet, but international expansion is on the cards. The NFC (near-field communication) technology it uses is already standard in some countries.

Cook made his remarks about China in an interview with the country’s Xinhua News Agency on Friday at the conclusion of a four-day trip to the country. During his visit, he met business partners, toured a Foxconn factory that makes Apple products, and met with a government official regarding “strengthening” cooperation in the telecommunication sector.

Xinhua said that Cook wants to understand the Chinese payment system before asking banks and retailers to sign on to the service, but he placed a high priority on launching the service locally.

“China is a really key market for us,” Cook told Xinhua, “Everything we do, we are going to work it here. Apple Pay is on the top of the list.”

For Apple Pay to be successful in China, it will almost certainly require cooperation with Union Pay. Many of the country’s biggest banks are part of the Union Pay system, which links more than a million ATMs and is accepted in around 12 million stores both across China and often foreign destinations popular with Chinese tourists.

Union Pay launched an NFC payment card last year called Quick Pass that is based on the same underlying standard as Apple Pay. However, the Union Pay system doesn’t currently allow credit transactions. It allows consumers to make purchases with money already stored and loaded into the card.

The payment network signed a deal in 2013 with China Mobile to offer NFC payments on smartphones. Unlike Apple Pay, which relies on a chip inside the phone, the China Mobile system uses an NFC chip embedded in the phone’s SIM card.
Source:http://www.pcworld.com/

No bones about it: Comical, creative 'Baxter Skeletons' rule Halloween

If you pass by a certain porch in the Baxter neighborhood in Fort Mill, South Carolina this month, you're sure to see some rattly inhabitants. They might be enjoying a bubble bath, scarfing down ice cream cones, playing soccer or even carving a pumpkin of their own.
They're the "Baxter Skeletons," two plastic dime-store skeletons who change their costumes and backdrop daily in October, much to the delight of neighborhood residents.
The skeletons, owned by Steve Miller and Tracy Adams, were originally a one-shot joke that began in 2013. Miller and Adams often sat out on their porch, and as the weather got colder, they thought it would be funny to set the skeletons where they used to sit.

Then, when Miller shifted the skeletons' location one day, a neighbor noted out loud, "They move!"

To keep up the game, Miller decided to keep on relocating the skeletons, and when he ran out of places to move them around the porch, he started giving them daily tasks. Now it's a treasured neighborhood tradition.
"A lot of our neighbors thought all this was quite spectacular," Miller told TODAY.com. "We are now known as 'The Skeleton People' and live in 'The Skeleton House.'"

Those who don't live near the house can follow the bony bunch's adventures on Facebook or Instagram.
Miller and Adams, both graphic designers, don't just throw sweaters on the skeletons and call it good. They plan out each scenario and work for hours to get them right. For the ice cream day, they fashioned cones using Styrofoam balls covered with spray insulation foam, with colorful rubber bats replacing rainbow sprinkles. There's even a plop of spilled "ice cream" near one of the skeletons' bony feet.
A scene showing the skeletons breaking up a sidewalk was Miller's favorite so far this year. He'd originally planned to draw a realistic hole on the sidewalk with chalk, but shifted gears when that didn't work out and instead piled up broken chunks of concrete and drew cracks on the ground. He placed the chalk in a box and invited visitors to sign in. "The sidewalk was soon covered with names of all the visiting kids," he said. "It was the interaction that made it cool."
Miller works from home, and enjoys watching the reaction of those who pass by. "The scenes are never gory or macabre," he said. "I love it when we are surrounded by kids and they are all yelling out what their favorite (scenes) were."

Neighbors like to offer suggestions or props — if you're the person who volunteered to loan Miller some kayaks so the skeletons can go paddling, he'd still love to take you up on that. But the work and expense mainly falls to Miller and Adams, who find it worthwhile and plan to continue it every October for as long as they can.
"We go out and talk to visitors and they tell us how much they love that we do this," Miller said. "Or that they send (photos) to their son in Afghanistan and to sick children at St. Jude's Hospital. That's what keeps us going. Doing this every day takes its toll, but we just remember how much joy these two little dime-store skeletons bring to people."
Source:http://www.today.com/

Facebook will gain out of Internet.org initiative

After Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella and Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, it is Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg 's turn to visit India. And why not? India is the world's fastest growing Internet consumer base with more than 240 million Internet users. The social network 's founder was in New Delhi to launch the Internet.org initiative-where companies like Facebook, Samsung, Qualcomm, Ericsson, Opera Software, Media Tek and Nokia are looking at connecting billions of people who are not yet using the Internet around the world.
After his keynote address to a broader audience, where industry leaders from companies like Microsoft, Tata Motors and PepsiCo participated, Zuckerberg took questions from the media in a closed door meeting. In response to a question on "creating monopolies" which opposes the concept of net neutrality by offering free services, Zuckerberg said: "We are trying to pioneer this model where an operator can offer free basic services-is way to make people understand why is the Internet valuable for them… There is no such rule that Facebook or any other company has to be included in this."
"There is a huge correlation in how many people can have Facebook on the Internet…," says telecom analyst Kunal Bajaj.
He also said Facebook and the other partners would "absolutely" gain out of this but, "there is nothing wrong with it. There is no guarantee that they will use a Samsung handset with a Qualcomm chipset."
Zuckerberg also agreed to long-term benefits: "We are optimistic that by getting more people on the Internet, it will help Facebook in the long term, too."
Through the initiative, other partners also stand to gain. With more people accessing the Internet, it will help Samsung and Nokia to sell more smartphones, Ericsson will be able to deploy more network equipment and telecom solution, Qualcomm and MediaTek will get mobile makers to buy more chipsets and Opera Software will be the preferred browser on these phones.
Internet.org was launched last year in August. A year later, a partnership was done with Sunil Bharti Mittal-promoted Airtel in Zambia in Africa, to offer free basic services like Facebook, Google search, Wikipedia, weather, among others.
Members of Internet.org are also talking to telecom operators in Indonesia, Tanzania and Paraguay to offer free basic services, says Zuckerberg.
The Facebook founder also said last year through the initiative three million people got connected, but then there is another two-third of the world which is still not connected.
Zuckerberg will also meet Prime Minister Narendra Modi to discuss how Facebook can help in digitising India, a subject which is close to Modi's heart.
Source:http://businesstoday.intoday.in/

Disney pens love letter to Japan with robot film

TOKYO —
Disney executives call their next film “a love letter to Japanese culture.” No wonder: This nation can’t get enough of animation, especially Disney’s.

Walt Disney Animation Studios is practically bending backward to woo Japanese moviegoers after the stupendous success of “Frozen.” The fifth-highest-grossing movie of all time made more than $250 million of its total in Japan alone, nearly a third of its overseas numbers and more than five times what it made in France, according to Box Office Mojo.

“Frozen” is third of all time in Japan, behind “Titanic” and Japanese animation classic “Spirited Away,” delivering success that even Disney executives acknowledge was surprising.

Following “Frozen” into theaters in the country that is the birthplace of manga and Hello Kitty is “Big Hero 6,” which stars a Japanese whiz kid as its hero, aptly named Hiro.

Disney shows its love for Japan by setting the story in a picturesque town that’s a cross between Tokyo and San Francisco, San Fransokyo, complete with cable cars and futuristic trains.

“Big Hero 6” opened the Tokyo Film Festival on Thursday night — the first Disney animation film to have its global premiere in Japan. It opens at theaters around the world in November and December.

Its directors, Don Hall of “Winnie the Pooh” and Chris Williams of “Bolt,” did a lot of research and tapped Japanese sources to help make San Fransokyo authentic, down to signposts, manhole covers and faces of passersby.

Williams said the world they created was inspired by Hayao Miyazaki, the animation legend who won an Oscar for “Spirited Away.”

Hall said the mouth-less face of Baymax, the inflatable marshmallow-like robot, was inspired by a bell he saw at a Japanese temple.

“I saw a smile,” Hall told reporters recently while in town for the Tokyo Film Festival. “I thought it would be the perfect face for Baymax.”

The rubbery Baymax, designed to be a health care robot by Hiro’s older brother Tadashi, becomes a companion for Hiro, and an embodiment not only of Tadashi’s charming and loving persona but also of his message of peace, even after Tadashi dies in an explosion.

Despite Tadashi’s intentions to devote Baymax to healing and cuddling, Hiro adds some of his own more conventional robotic-design touches, such as a powerful fist, metallic ware and sky-soaring rockets, as Hiro embarks on his mission of solving the mystery of Tadashi’s death.

It’s a safe bet that Japanese are enamored of all things Disney — and that they are willing to spend.

Disneyland and DisneySea parks, outside Tokyo, had 31 million visitors last year, up 14 percent from the previous year, nearly all Japanese. Each spent an average of about $100, or 10,000 yen, on admission tickets, eating out and goods purchases.

Mickey Mouse is so popular here the rodent’s image is sold as traditional festival dolls, is a mascot wearing the blue uniform of the World Cup soccer team and is a familiar pattern on fashionable clothing in collaboration with design brands.

But can the new film duplicate the success of “Frozen”? It might take a super-Hiro.

“Big Hero 6” features fantastic music by Henry Jackman but not a potential smash single like “Let It Go.” It also lacks fairy-tale princesses, which were a big part of the “Frozen” merchandising frenzy.

The new film is about brotherly love and a little boy’s perennial fantasy, a loyal robot friend. But even in robot-innovator Japan, Disney half-heartedly showed a fluffy stuffed doll in Baymax’s likeness. It wasn’t even inflatable.

Roy Conli, who also produced “Frozen,” was unfazed, emphasizing “Big Hero 6” was “a love letter to Japanese culture.”

“We hope that Japan loves it,” he said.
Source:http://www.japantoday.com/