57957283
submission
rjmarvin writes:
OpenGL ES has taken a huge leap forward http://sdt.bz/68964. The 2D/3D graphics specification is rarely talked about outside the gaming community, and the version number of “3.1” implies a small improvement. On the contrary.The release of OpenGL ES 3.1 http://www.khronos.org/registr... optimizes mobile graphics with added features including compute shaders, separate shader objects, indirect draw commands and enhanced texturing functionality.
57951339
submission
rjmarvin writes:
NASA has challenged developers to build software that improves life on Earth and advances space exploration before, but now they're asking them to simulate cataclysmic natural disaster http://sdt.bz/68958. The space agency is partnering with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration for the third annual International Space Apps Challenge https://2014.spaceappschalleng.... Participants are tasked to create and deploy data-driven visualizations and simulations charting the impact of sea level rise and erosion on future coastal flooding.
57870873
submission
rjmarvin writes:
The Eclipse Foundation plans to integrate desktop Eclipse with the Web-based Orion IDE in a new tool initiative codenamed Flux http://sdt.bz/68947, Eclipse executive director Mike Milinkovich announced at EclipseCon in San Francisco. The Flux announcement also coincides with the release of Java 8, for which Eclipse also announced new plug-ins. EclipseCon's other big theme has been the Internet of Things, with presentations on how to program Internet of Things applications from within Eclipse using the C Development Tooling chain.
57841543
submission
rjmarvin writes:
Google has released the designs and documentation for all the upcoming features of AngularJS 2.0 http://sdt.bz/68942, still currently in the prototype phase. The new version of the open source JavaScript framework is being written entirely in ECMAScript 6 and will target all major desktop and mobile browsers. Angular 2.0's other new features, all documented on Google Drive https://drive.google.com/a/bzm..., include faster change detection, modularity, touch animations and a new persistence layer. Google engineering director Brad Green also revealed http://blog.angularjs.org/2014... that the team is building AngularDart. a new framework for Google Dart.
57706779
submission
rjmarvin writes:
Watson hasn't made many headlines since winning 'Jeopardy!' in 2011, but IBM's supercomputer has gotten faster, smarter and leaner, leaving trivia behind http://sdt.bz/68924 for forays into mobile, the healthcare industry, online shopping and even a food truck. Since dumping $1 billion into the new Watson Group in January http://tech.slashdot.org/story..., IBM has also launched the Watson Mobile Developer Challenge http://www.ibm.com/smarterplan... to bring its AI entity from desktops, hospitals, cars and cloud applications into users' hands.
57632803
submission
rjmarvin writes:
Git 2.0.0 was released yesterday http://sdt.bz/68912 with updated features and fixes from version 1.9, including making "“simple mode” the default for “git push,” which pushes only the current branch to the branch with the same name, and only when the current branch is set to integrate with that remote branch. Other UI and workflow updataes including a new "git reset -N" option and tree-wode "git add -u" and "git add -A" operations, backwards compatibility notes and fixes are detailed in the release notes https://git.kernel.org/cgit/gi....
57593311
submission
rjmarvin writes:
As the background code displayed in movies and TV, a new industry is growing around custom-building realistic software and dummy code http://sdt.bz/68898. Twisted Media, a Chicago-based design team, started doing fake computer graphics back in 2007 for the TNT show "Leverage," and is now working on three prime-time shows on top of films like "Gravity" and the upcoming "Divergent" designing and creating realistic interfaces and code bases for futuristic software. British computer scientist John Graham-Cumming has drawn attention to entertainment background code by debunking inaccurate screenshots in his blog http://entertainment.slashdot...., but more and more as the public is more aware, studios are paying for fake code that's actually convincing.
57548589
submission
rjmarvin writes:
Dutch physcist Peter Meijer has developed sensory substitution software called vOICe http://sdt.bz/68889, which converts live camera images into corresponding soundscapes to preserve pictorial information. vOICe, which runs on Windows with USB camera glasses and on Android with Google Glass, scans video frames from left to right while associating height with pitch and brightness with sound intensity, according to Meijer. In a research paper http://www.seeingwithsound.com..., Meijer and psychology professor Jamie Ward reported late-blind users who have memories of prior eyesight experienced visual sensations.
57416993
submission
rjmarvin writes:
Samsung looks to have found a way around voice commands for smart glasses by projecting an augmented reality keyboard http://sdt.bz/68883 onto users' hands. Galaxy Glass wearers' thumbs are used as input devices, tapping different areas of their fingers where various keys are virtually mapped. According to the August 2013 patent filing http://patentscope.wipo.int/se... with the WIPO and South Korea's Intellectual Property Office, Samsung states that voice controls are too imprecise a technology, which are too heavily impacted by the noise levels of the surrounding environment.
57307911
submission
rjmarvin writes:
Ring, a new wearable input device from Logbar, gives users gesture-control over devices with the flick of a finger http://sdt.bz/68858. The "Ringbearer" can control smartphone apps and home appliances through a bluetooth connection, send texts by writing letters in the air and pay bills, all using gestures. The iOS, Android and Windows Phone-compatible device, which has already far exceeded its Kickstarter goal https://www.kickstarter.com/pr..., executes unique gestures for each app and letter of the alphabet. Ring ships this July. No word yet on whether there will be a custom golden ring inscribed with the black speech of Mordor.
57193465
submission
rjmarvin writes:
The Apache Software Foundation announced the open-source cluster-computing framework for Big Data analysis has graduated http://sdt.bz/68845 from the Apache Incubator to a top-level project. A project management committee will guide the projects day-to-day operations, and Databricks cofounder and VP of Apache Spark Matei Zaharia will be appointed VP of Apache Spark.Spark runs programs 100x faster than Apache Hadoop MapReduce in memory, and it provides APIs that enable developers to rapidly develop applications in Java, Python or Scala, according to the ASF http://spark.apache.org/.
57192953
submission
rjmarvin writes:
We don't often see technologies arise that are clearly the future of software development. Git was one such piece of software. Hadoop another. This year it's Docker http://sdt.bz/68844. In a time when applications must be reworked and redeployed almost daily, Docker doesn't require everyone to write to some crazy framework, or to push all of their models into some form of PaaS. Instead, it requires developers to build in Linux http://sdt.bz/68736, and to uncouple their applications from each other. The day-to-day drudgery of keeping virtual machine OS images up to date is destroyed by Docker, and good riddance.
57123721
submission
rjmarvin writes:
A team in the MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Lab has developed an open-source programming language implemented in Python and Scala that has built-in privacy features http://sdt.bz/68831. MIT PhD student Jean Yang created a language that removes human error from code governing user privacy policies, making it easier for social app developers to enforce them in social networking apps where users upload personal information with varying levels of privacy. Jeeves uses a policy-agnostic programming process http://projects.csail.mit.edu/... to automatically label information with different privacy settings so that adding new features won't create bugs that lead to things like a leaked Facebook location.
57110221
submission
rjmarvin writes:
ArnoldC is an imperative programming language that replaces basic keywords with classic one-liners from various Arnold Schwarzenegger movies http://sdt.bz/68824. Instead of EndMain you type YOU HAVE BEEN TERMINATED, instead of CallMethod it's DO IT NOW, instead of AssignVariableFromMethodCall it's GET YOUR ASS TO MARS, etc. The language is parsed using parboiled and ASM to generate Java bytecode, and it's hosted on GitHub https://github.com/lhartikk/Ar....
56859227
submission
rjmarvin writes:
Java SE 8 and a final version of OpenJDK 8, with support for lambda expressions, are expected to be released on March 18, according to Oracle http://sdt.bz/68778. Oracle VP of software development at the Java Platform Georges Saab said that a major focus of OpenJDK 8 and Java SE 8 was “making sure the performance is still excellent. This is the largest change ever been made to Java. This is a change we made both to the languages and in the Java virtual machine.” The new Strings API is one of many new APIs added inside the core libraries, but the lambda support is the biggest functionality addition to Java since Java SE 5, and the reason Java 8's releases were delayed beyond last summer.