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Showing posts with label tech news. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tech news. Show all posts

Friday, May 11, 2018

YouTube new tools. Help you stop watching videos.

May 11, 2018 0

Google's YouTube is the first streaming app that will actually tell users to stop watching. At its Google I/O conference this week, the company introduced a series of new controls for YouTube that will allow users to set limits on their viewing, and then receive reminders telling them to “take a break.” The feature is rolling out now in the latest version of YouTube’s app, along with others that limit YouTube’s ability to send notifications, and soon, one that gives users an overview of their binge behavior so they can make better-informed decisions about their viewing habits.
With “Take a Break,” available from YouTube’s mobile app Settings screen, users can set a reminder to appear every 15, 30, 60, 90 or 180 minutes, at which point the video will pause. You can then choose to dismiss the reminder and keep watching, or close the app.
The setting is optional, and is turned off by default, so it’s not likely to have a large impact on YouTube viewing time at this point.


Also new is a feature that lets you disable notification sounds during a specified time period each day _say, for example, from bedtime until the next morning. When users turn on the setting to disable notifications, it will, by default, disable them from 10 PM to 8 AM local time, but this can be changed.

Combined with this is an option to get a scheduled digest of notifications as an alternative. This setting combines all the daily push notifications into a single combined notification that is sent out only once per day. This is also off by default, but can be turned on in the app’s settings.
And YouTube is preparing to roll out a “time watched profile” that will appear in the Account menu and display your daily average watch time, and how long you’ve watched YouTube videos today, yesterday and over the past week, along with a set of tools to help you manage your viewing habits.
While these changes to YouTube are opt-in, it’s an interesting — and arguably responsible — position to take in terms of helping people manage their sometimes addictive behaviors around technology.
And it’s not the only major change Google is rolling out on the digital well-being front — the company also announced a series of Android features that will help you get a better handle on how often you’re using your phone and apps, and give you tools to limit distractions — like a Do Not Disturb setting, alerts that are silenced when the phone is flipped over and a “Wind Down” mode for nighttime usage that switches on the Do Not Disturb mode and turns the screen to gray-scale
The digital well-being movement at Google got its start with a 144-page Google Slides presentation from product manager Tristan Harris, who was working on Google’s Inbox app at the time. After a trip to Burning Man, he came back convinced that technology products weren’t always designed with users’ best interests in mind. The memo went viral and found its way to then-CEO Larry Page, who promoted Harris to “design ethicist” and made digital well-being a company focus.
There’s now a Digital Wellbeing website, too, that talks about Google’s broader efforts on this front. On the site, the company touts features in other products that save people time, like Gmail’s high-priority notifications that only alert you to important emails; Google Photos’ automated editing tools; Android Auto’s distracted driving reduction tools; Google Assistant’s ability to turn on your phone’s DND mode or start a “bedtime routine” to dim your lights and quiet your music; Family Link’s tools for reducing kids’ screen time; Google WiFi’s support for “internet breaks;” and more.
Google is not the only company rethinking its role with regard to how much its technology should infiltrate our lives. Facebook, too, recently re-prioritized well-being over time spent on the site reading news, and saw its daily active users decline as a result.

Sunday, February 25, 2018

Hackers infect thousand of Android phones and smart TVs to mine cryptocurrency.

February 25, 2018 0
Chinese researchers found hackers turning internet-connected devices into tools for creating caches of the digital currency Monero.
Researchers at Chinese cybersecurity firm Netlab360 found that Hackers turning internet-connected devices into tools for creating caches of the digital currency Monero and have infected thousands of Android phones and smart TVs, turning the devices into miners for a popular cryptocurrency.

The hacker affected 7,000 devices in China, which were hacked into a network that harnessed the processing power of the connected devices to mine, or digitally create, the Monero cryptocurrency, according to ZDNet. Though not as big as some recent botnets, security experts say this approach will increasingly be used by hackers looking to make money off of other people's computers, IoT devices, phones and tablets.
Attack took advantage of an open port, a part of the operating system that allows a device to communicate with the internet. They infected them with malicious software, known as a worm, that looked for more devices to infect. Hackers searched for devices connected through port 5555, which helped them find unsecured Android phones and TVs.
Google, which owns the Android mobile software, didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.
According to researchers told ZDNet the hackers weren't opening the port themselves, which would have been a much more worrying attack. "The 5555 ADB interfaces of those devices have already been opened before infected," the researchers said. "We have no idea about how and when this port was opened yet."
The hackers used the network of infected devices to run a program and botnet gives hackers the computing power of thousands of devices without the costs associated with buying hardware, power or internet access. 

Windows 10 Mobile Insider program quietly comes to an end.

February 25, 2018 0
Windows 10 Mobile Insider program quietly comes to an end
Today, we have some bad news to pass along to those few remaining Windows 10 Mobile users who have been receiving updates via the Windows 10 Mobile Insider program. A tweet from Microsoft's Brandon LeBlanc indicates that no more insider builds of Windows 10 Mobile are coming. Windows 10 Mobile phones will still receive monthly security updates from Microsoft, but nothing else is expected to be pushed out.
Microsoft has already said that it won't be adding new features to Windows 10 Mobile which means that there will be no reason to send out any updates (again, other than security updates) to either the Fast or Slow ring. If you collect trivia, you might want to know that Windows 10 Mobile ends at Redstone 2 with the feature 2 branch. Keep that in mind, and perhaps you might win some money playing HQ.
For now, updates to Universal Windows apps will still revise the same apps on a Windows 10 Mobile handset. However, there will be a time when Microsoft drops the platform completely, and you might want to get prepared mentally for that eventuality. 

Tuesday, December 19, 2017

2018 Big Updates in Youtube And Google Adsense. No Earning Show In Adsense.

December 19, 2017 0

According to Google Adsense Message "Please note that early next year AdSense will no longer show YouTube metrics. The best place to see your estimated earnings and other monetization metrics is the YouTube Analytics Revenue report".

To see your estimated earnings, use the YouTube Analytics Revenue report. You won't see your YouTube revenue in AdSense Estimated Earnings.



The Revenue report is available for YouTube Partners who have associated an AdSense account. Earnings data typically displays 24-48 hours after the end of the day, Pacific Time, but may sometimes take longer to appear.
The general trends available in Estimated earnings graph should reflect the finalised data, but we cannot guarantee that the data will not change. The latency for the most recent Estimated earnings data is approximately two days. Because the data is shown before the end of the month, there may be slight adjustments made at the end of the month.
You can find finalised YouTube earnings within your AdSense account.
Finalised earnings are not transferred to AdSense until about halfway through the following month (i.e. earnings accrued in June will be transferred to AdSense in mid-July).
Finalised YouTube earnings for the previous month are added to your AdSense account balance between the 10th and 14th of the month and paid out that month if your total balance has reached the payment threshold and if you have no payment holds.