Huwebes, Abril 30, 2015

Rangers’ Task Before Game 2: Forget Game 1

After losing on a late goal that left Coach Alain Vigneault enraged, the team focused on tying their series against the Capitals.






Clipppers 102, Spurs 96: Clippers Force a Game 7 Against the Spurs

Facing elimination, the Clippers fought back every San Antonio rally and won Game 6 behind Blake Griffin and Chris Paul.






TSA: photo of real gun hidden in a toy police officer kit

screenshot

According to the Transportation Security Administration's Instagram, back in 2012 "a traveler at the Jacksonville International Airport (JAX) placed his firearm in a toy police officer kit. He even went as far as sticking a dart in the barrel." (more…)

A Draw Lifts Valencia Above Sevilla

Valencia managed only a 1-1 draw on the road to 10-man Rayo Vallecano in the Spanish league, but the point was enough to lift the team back into the top four above Sevilla.






Spieth Makes a Big Adjustment on the Greens

A chat with his father and a couple of overtime matches that delayed the start of Jordan Spieth's second day at TPC Harding Park might have paid off Thursday in the Match Play Championship.






Capitals 2, Rangers 1: Late Goal Lifts Capitals Over Rangers in Opener

Alexander Ovechkin scored a power-play goal late in the first period and then set up Joel Ward’s buzzer-beater with 1.3 seconds remaining.






Giants Draft Ereck Flowers, Not the Offensive Lineman They Wanted

After Brandon Scherff, the top-rated lineman, was picked by the Redskins, the Giants decided to stick with their plan.






Good N.F.L. Draft Show or Good Journalism? League Makes Its Choice Clear

The league has used its clout to secure agreements with networks that reporters would not report who was being drafted in advance.






TENSIONS RISE WITH IRAN Navy vessels to accompany US-flagged ships in region

COSMIC CRASH NASA’s Messenger slams into Mercury

Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin just launched its New Shepard spaceship almost as high as outer space

Amazon.com billionaire Jeff Bezos' space venture, Blue Origin, launched its New Shepard spaceship on a test flight today. Read the rest

Brace Yourself: Tag Heuer's $1,400 Android Wear Watch Is On Its Way

If really want a smartwatch that costs as much as a compact car, but don't have an iPhone, Tag Heuer will have a deal for you.

Its forthcoming Android Wear smartwatch—a partnership between the Swiss watchmaker and Google—will offer comparatively long 40 hours of battery life. It's not clear whether that figure accounts for the always-on display or not, but so far Android Wear devices can manage a day and a half with the display turned off.

In either case, that battery life comes with a hefty fee: a whopping $1,400 price tag. It's due to launch in October or November, Jean-Claude Biver, who heads the watch division of Tag Heuer’s parent company LVMH, told Bloomberg.

See also: With The Tag Heuer Deal, Google Needs To Step Up Its Smartwatch Game

Biver provided the details while attending the Dubai Mall opening of a Hublot Boutique, another LVMH watch brand. When asked about the Android Wear watch’s competition with the Apple Watch, Biver expressed nothing but confidence:

I hope they sell millions and millions and millions of them. The more they sell the more a few people will want something different and come to Tag Heuer.

Android Wear In The Stratosphere

Tag Heuer announced its team-up with Google and Intel at a ceremonial cheese-cutting in March. At the time, I noted that Google would need to revamp and revise its Android Wear operating system to bring it up to par with Apple’s premium-looking Apple Watch OS.

The team that cuts cheese together makes smartwatches that please together. Or something.

Since then, Google has unveiled the latest version of its wearable operating system, Android Wear 5.1, which is slowly rolling out to smartwatches. While it adds a more intuitive UI, some neat gesture-based controls, and some form of pop-up notifications, you still have to wonder about how it’ll look and feel on a $1,400 watch. To my eyes, the OS still feels like it’s in the experimental phase, and it might not be able to live up to Tag Heuer’s presumably refined standards.

Since Tag Heuer’s rubber watch straps seem to cost around the same amount as entire Android Wear watches, it’s not too surprising that the fruits of its Google partnership will have a high price tag, commensurate with its other traditional watch offerings. And a 40 hour battery life is certainly impressive considering the power consumption required for most other smartwtaches running the Android Wear OS.

It’ll be interesting to hear what else—if anything—sets the Tag Heuer Android Wear watch apart from its cheaper brethren. Perhaps in addition to having a bigger battery, it’ll sport larger internal storage, a faster processor—maybe even a SIM card. With such a high price, I’d hope that this thing not only tells time, but also makes me breakfast.

Lead image courtesy of Tag Heuer; cheese photo courtesy of Intel