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A Tiny Bubble Display Alarm Clock

LED

For one reason or another, we’re starting to see a lot of projects featuring some old seven-segment HP bubble displays. Yes, those displays once relegated to ancient electronic calculators are making a comeback for reasons we can’t understand why, other than speculation that someone found a bunch of NOS displays. [Markus] picked up a few of these olde tymie displays and built a very nice bubble display alarm clock.

To keep things simple, [Markus] didn’t go the usual ATMega with RTC route. Instead, he’s using an MSP430, a 32kHz crystal, and a few buttons to construct this tiny alarm clock. It’s powered by a single AAA battery, and in a nice change of pace from fancy, professionally made boards, [Markus] built this on some perfboard with a little bit of enameled wire.

It’s a neat little clock, and with the speaker and most likely extreme battery life thanks to the MSP430, a wonderful portable, classic-looking alarm clock. Video of [Markus] manipulating the time below.


Filed under: clock hacks

Extending EagleCAD With Python

eagleAlthough it’s derided for not being open source, EagleCAD is an extremely popular piece of schematic and PCB layout software. Most of the popularity is probably due to the incredible amount of part libraries – it’s certainly not the features Eagle has to offer or its horrible scripting capabilities. [Rob] had enough of the lack of good scripting support in Eagle, so he’s been spending his time making Eagle’s ULP work with Python. He’s only been at it a short time, but already it’s much more usable than the usual Eagle scripts.

Below you can check out a pair of videos of [Rob]‘s Python tools for Eagle in action. The first video goes through aligning a few symbols and creating a board outline (with proper curves!) from a DXF file. The second video shows exactly how valuable these tools are when laying out a board: imagine hundreds of LEDs and resistors automatically aligned to each other with a single click of a mouse. Beautiful.

All the PyEagle stuff is available on [Rob]‘s github, with a DXF importer, group manager, and alignment tool included. Now that everything’s Python, it’s easy to build your own tools without relying on Eagle’s odd ULP language.

Thanks [John] for the tip.


Filed under: tool hacks

Good news, iOS Spotify listeners: You can now search for tracks while offline

Good news, iOS Spotify listeners: You can now search for tracks while offline
Image Credit: VentureBeat/RicardoBilton

Well, it was about time: You can finally search downloaded music on Spotify’s iOS apps while offline.

While not a seemingly huge update, anything adding to the mobile experience is a win when it comes to Spotify. Rumors that the company was finally making music streaming available on mobile to its free listeners surfaced this past December, and it finally overhauled its Windows phone app in May.

Interestingly, it looks like the feature was part of the iOS app until Spotify pulled it back in December, according to a Spotify community thread. The return of more mobile features and capabilities for nonpaying users is likely welcome news to those listeners.

Rdio, a similar service to Spotify, only offers offline search on mobile for its paying customers.

Via 9to5 Mac. 



Spotify is a Swedish DRM-based music streaming service offering streaming of selected music from a range of major and independent record labels, including Sony, EMI, Warner Music Group, and Universal.[ Launched in October 2008 by Swedi... read more »








Yodlee files for a $75M public offering

Yodlee files for a $75M public offering
Image Credit: herval via photopin

Yodlee, a company with cloud-based financial-services software for banks and other finance companies, began the process of going public today.

The company aims to raise $75 million in an initial public offering, according to the S-1 document Yodlee filed today with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

The company will be the latest cloud software company to head for public markets. Veeva Software and Tableau had successful IPOs last year, and this year has business-to-business companies like Arista, oPower and Paycom have gone public.

Companies like Dropbox, Box, New Relic, AppDynamics, and Cloudera have been in a position to go public this year, although some have taken on financing rounds that could help them put off such an event.

Yodlee claims 750 organizations use its tools — including most of the 15 largest banks in the United States — and pass them on to their consumers. The company collects subscription fees for 15.7 million of consumers.

At one point, Yodlee served up data for Mint before Intuit bought Mint.

Last year Yodlee launched Active Commerce Exchange, a bevy of applications that banks can plug in.

With the exception of 2010, Yodlee has taken a loss every year since it started in 1999.

Last year Yodlee reported a $1.18 million net loss on $70.1 million in revenue. Most of the revenue came from subscriptions and support, although some also came from professional services.

Yodlee, based in Redwood City, Calif., had 780 full-time employees as of March 31. Most are based in Bangalore, India.

Investors include Accel Partners, Institutional Venture Partners, and Warburg Pincus.



Yodlee is a provider of financial applications that aims to make online banking more profitable. Yodlee's personal financial management, payments, and customer acquisition solutions unify all personal financial account information to... read more »








A new (legal) Aereo? FilmOn launches in 18 cities

A new (legal) Aereo? FilmOn launches in 18 cities
Image Credit: http://www.shutterstock.com/pic-65189710/stock-photo-a-hdtv-television-with-the-words-as-seen-on-tv-on-the-screen.html

The idea that virtually no live and local TV is available on the web suggests a sector that’s ripe for disruption.

Aereo was to be that disruptor, but the Supreme Court cut it down in its prime last week.

Now, another company with novel streaming technology hopes to step in to fill the void: FilmOn

FilmOn is an online TV and movie service, but the company has now announced that it’s going to be a virtual cable company that also offers live and local TV over the Web.

The company says it will (legally) deliver a paid TV package in 18 cities that includes programming from broadcast channels like ABC, NBC, CBS and Fox. The service will stream to phones and tablets, too.

The service is the creation of Nigeria-born Greek billionaire Alki David, who has challenged broadcasters in court numerous times to win the right to license and stream broadcast TV.

FilmOn’s alleged secret is something it calls “Teleporter.” FilmOn claims that Teleporter enables a person in one city to watch programming broadcast in another city via a "splitscreen" or a "mini-computer" attached to a thousand-mile long cord.

Wait. What?!? This technology probably exists in word only — words chosen to fit neatly through a legal loophole.

Where Aereo just captured and streamed the content of TV programmers, David is offering to pay for the content. He has done this numerous times before, but broadcasters have always turned him down.

But when the Supreme Court effectively shut down Aereo last week, it gave the opinion that steaming services like Aereo should be treated like cable companies. So David now says his company is a cable company, and he believes the court’s language also means that TV broadcasters are now obliged to sell their programming to FilmOn for a fair loyalty rate.

Some legal observers are already saying David is just headed for another court appearance versus the broadcasters, where he will lose.

Actually, it’s not quite clear if David is an entrepreneur or an activist — or just a rich wacko.

Via: Gigaom








MonkeyParking founder to arrive in San Francisco — and take on city hall

MonkeyParking founder to arrive in San Francisco — and take on city hall

Above: MonkeyParking chief Paolo Dobrowolny

Image Credit: MonkeyParking

How can you leverage mobile to increase profitability for your company? Find out at MobileBeat, VentureBeat's 7th annual event on the future of mobile, on July 8-9 in San Francisco. Register now and save $200!

MonkeyParking founder Paolo Dobrowolny will soon board a flight from Rome to San Francisco to take on city hall.

When he lands at San Francisco International Airport, Dobrowolny, the baby-faced cofounder of the app whose controversy has engulfed gentrification-sensitive San Francisco, will begin to launch his counterattack against the ambitious city attorney Dennis Herrera, who deemed MonkeyParking illegal and threatened to sue if the firm doesn’t remove the iOS app from the App Store by July 20.

Dobrowolny has lawyered up and vows to fight.

“I want to work with the city, but I will not take the app down,” Dobrowolny told VentureBeat on Monday.

Dobrowolny admits that what started out as the development of an app to address the headache of parking in Rome and San Francisco has turned into a firestorm, with journalists calling him round the clock at his flat in Italy’s capital. He has received hundreds of email, too, both from supporters and those who hate him.

The story, as they say, has gone viral.

“I am worried about the angry people. So many people are angry out there. I don’t even think they know how the app works,” he said.

Dobrowolny sighed and regained his composure.

“But I will tell you, we’re going to push this thing forward.”

More than anything, the 29-year-old programmer and his two colleagues that comprise MonkeyParking want to explain themselves to a skeptical public, and, as they say, set the record straight. Indeed, Dobrowolny heatedly denied that his app auctioned off pubic parking spaces on public streets.

MonkeyParking is all about exchanging information, he said. He doesn’t sell anything, he added.

“Hopefully, we will provide a picture of how it works. It’s hard to explain what is really happening to MonkeyParking,” he said.

Herrera sent MonkeyParking a cease-and-desist letter last week, demanding that the company remove the app or face a lawsuit. Dobrowolny, for his part, said Herrera is more or less clueless.

MonkeyParking has drivers leaving a public parking space on city streets and holding it for others, Dobrowolny said. If they do, they'll reap a cash reward. Geolocation features help drivers vector in on the parking spaces they crave. Open parking spaces get monkey-face icons in the app.

On the other hand, the outcry from the American press has created an ideal marketing opportunity for the young Italian, who said he’s confident the MonkeyParking app will be a home run.

“Many developers will sell their own mother for media exposure. I am happy,” he said, “to optimize the product even more.”








One handy chart shines light on all of the NSA’s once-secret spy programs

One handy chart shines light on all of the NSA's once-secret spy programs

Above: NSA matrix by ProPublica

Image Credit: ProPublica

If you’ve been flummoxed by the unrelenting stream of stories and scope of the National Security Agency’s metadata collection programs, you’re not alone.

American online investigative reporting site ProPublica in New York has created a fun and engrossing colorful graphic outlining most of the programs thus far that have come to light by NSA leaker extraordinaire Edward Snowden, who remains holed up in a Moscow flat with a bounty on his head.

The graphic is all the more timely since the office of the Director of National Intelligence, a potential sinkhole of larded bureaucracy, released the NSA’s first ever “transparency” report that begs more questions than it answers. In fact, two U.S. senators blasted the report Monday as anything but transparent.

“Just as with the New York Magazine approval matrix that served as our inspiration, the placement of each program is based on judgments and is approximate,” ProPublica wrote in a post.

You can use the graphic to test your NSA knowledge. Learn about alleged NSA programs like Prism, Squeaky Dolphin, and HappyFoot. Learn about NSA honey traps, foreign embassy targeting, hacking Anonymous and the Ant Catalog. Learn how they loosed Trojan Horse’s into Apple and Google’s user streams.

The graph is easy to navigate and again. But remember, some of the programs that Snowden outed no longer exist. That’s because many received new acronyms, according to former intelligence officials. And its likely the programs divulged in the leaks are more powerful than before.

For years, the NSA operated on the maxim that deploying the best technology kept them 10 years ahead of their rivals, or 10 years ahead of commercial technology available to the public.

That maxim is no longer valid, as the NSA has had to keep up with developers who need weeks or months to develop apps that takes the agency, and its bureaucracy, months or years to build.

Check out the graphic. Move the cursor over cartoon-like characters that disclose the programs in question. And remember, the NSA really stands for “No Such Agency.”








Grindr just got sexier thanks to its new Android design, hits iOS later

Grindr just got sexier thanks to its new Android design, hits iOS later
Image Credit: via Grindr

How can you leverage mobile to increase profitability for your company? Find out at MobileBeat, VentureBeat's 7th annual event on the future of mobile, on July 8-9 in San Francisco. Register now and save $200!

Mens mobile dating app Grindr plans to launch a redesign tomorrow that may make its available men even more appealing.

The new design showcases profile pictures more prominently, so you’ll have to work a little harder to get to a person’s profile stats. And not only can you see how far away other users are, but now Grindr will calculate travel time—so you’ll know exactly how long it will take you to go the 240 feet to your next hook-up. A company spokesman says this is to “help [users] to determine if a rendezvous is worthwhile.”

As an added bonus all Grindrers will now be able to quickly switch between both profiles and chats—navigation that was previously available only to Grindr Xtra users.

For now the updated app will only be available on Android phones, with an iOS version in the works. Grindr continues to streamline its process of getting single men set-up. Hopefully, other dating apps are taking notes.