Sunday, July 1, 2018

ReadItToMe reads and lets you respond by voice to your Whatsapp, Telegram, and Hangouts messages

readittome

Part of the beauty of Android is that you can pretty much make an application for anything, though sometimes that does require root access. ReadItToMe reads your WhatsApp, Telegram, and Hangouts messages out loud for you when enabled, allowing you to respond entirely with your voice as well. It means that you won’t have to look away from what you’re doing. That’s without even mentioning the potential accessibility improvements. We saw the application released way back in 2012, and since then it hasn’t had much done by the way of updates.

XDA Senior Member crazyfool_1 has updated the application yet again, bringing a ton of bug fixes, a lot more stability and a much more intuitive UI and setup process. Another neat new feature is that you can have it switch on when connected to your home network. It should also be easier for him to add new features in the future as well! If you’re interested, you can check out the Google Play Store link below along with his own thread here on XDA.

ReadItToMe - read sms, voice reply, handsfree (Free+, Google Play) →


ReadItToMe XDA Thread



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Sunday Debate - Are sliders cool or just a hassle?

Oppo and vivo found an innovative way to avoid having a notch on their flagships. But is that the most amazing piece of innovation lately or are these sliders just an unnecessary complication of the smartphone design? Ivan: "A Slider creates more issues than it solves." Sliders - as in sliding mechanisms to hide the selfie or main camera, as seen in the vivo NEX S and Oppo Find X - are cool. Of course they are. They're innovative and they're out of the box. They've allowed Oppo and vivo to avoid using a notch on their flagship phones and as popular opinion dictates, notches are...



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Tech in a time of travesties

“Violence is like XML,” a hacker friend once said to me sardonically, re the USA’s endless flailing military presence in Afghanistan, “if it doesn’t work, you’re obviously just not using enough of it.”

This is true of the tech and Valley attitude towards life in general. When all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail; when all you have is increased transistor density and Metcalfe’s Law, everything looks like a software problem; when all you have are VCs and incubators, everything just needs a little startup disruption.

This same attitude makes engineers discount the importance of sales; makes Hacker News commenters contemptuously dismiss the notion that their self-proclaimed hyper-rational arguments might actually be skewed rationalizations of their own emotional bias; and makes the tech world assume that better technology automatically makes the world better, and if it isn’t measurably better yet, well, that means we just need even better tech yet.

The problem is that none of this is necessarily so. To quote the great Maciej Ceglowski: technology concentrates power. This is not particularly controversial. It’s obvious that as software eats the world, and everything is networked together, s/he who wrote the software and has root on the networks controls everything. This is why any list of most valuable public companies in the world is now dominated by tech companies. This is why Uber shot to a $50 billion valuation in ten years.

But it’s painfully obvious that the concentration power is frequently a terrible thing. Democracy has long been prone to lies and manipulation, but technology’s theoretical ability to concentrate power over elections in the hands of a few is a new and horrifying prospect.

Anti-immigrant hysteria is as old as mass immigration. The idiotic hatred aimed at Central Americans and Maghrebians today is almost word-for-word identical to that which targeted Irish and German immigrants in 19th century New York City. But the prospect of enforcing that hatred wholesale, rather than retail, with, say, a police-state dystopia “wall” of drones and automatic facial-recognition checkpoints enveloping the southern borders of Europe and America — that is something entirely new and terrible.

So it’s reassuring to see Google’s employees rise up and veto the idea of selling AI tech for drone targeting. It’s reassuring to see Amazon employees push back against the idea of selling facial-recognition technology to governments. It’s reassuring to see Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter employees begin to uneasily realize that what they do is often a catastrophic source of anxiety and bullying, and that their apparent destruction of traditional media-gatekeeper power centers may have created space for a new kind of centralized power, one which subtly, maliciously manipulates users’ beliefs, and/or even the whole concept of a consensus reality.

But maybe that’s not enough. Maybe the centralization of power by technology has become profound enough that the whole Valley / startup mentality — the idea that you take a new idea, launch a startup, get some funding, and build a rocket-ship company which is worth billions and wields enormous power within a decade — has become dangerous and wrong. Maybe the mere existence of powerful, centralized tech companies has become problematic, never mind adding to their number.

I’m not entirely convinced of this, at least not yet. But at the same time I am less convinced than ever by the fundamental Valley mindset: that success for startup founders and employees will ultimately lead to bettering the rest of the world. This is still true for (most) foundational, frontier-science, deep-tech startups. But for software? (Including/especially that which takes advantage of new hardware breakthroughs?) Not so much.

Blockchains were supposed to turn Ceglowski’s truism on its head, to technology dissipates power, and maybe they yet will — but right now blockchains are mostly overhyped money, and while their permissionlessness is a genuine dissipation of power, their “meet the new oligarchs, same as the old oligarchs” concentration of crypto wealth is anything but. “Fat protocols” won’t change much, except the faces on magazine covers and the names on Forbes lists, if most of their tokens are owned by a tiny minority.

But at least it’s a new mindset, a new approach, a new way of thinking, one still ripe with possibility and the promise of emergent properties. Too much of the tech industry keeps grimly trying to work the buttons and levers of that increasingly rusted engine, the clanking gears of the startup-disruption machinery, convinced that if it doesn’t seem to measurably be making things better any more, then that just means they’re not doing enough of it. Maybe what we really need is a different machine.



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Counterclockwise: celebrating the weird form factors of yesteryear

A couple of weeks ago we look at weird ways to mount a phone's camera. That inspired us to dive into weird form factors this week. Phone form factors generally fall into four categories - static, slider, flip and swivel. Static is the simplest, but that certainly doesn't mean boring. The Nokia 7280 is a favorite to bring up in this tip of articles - look at it - like a prop from a sci-fi TV show. Not that the 3650 or 7600 are any saner. Or the Siemens SX1. Nokia 7280 • Nokia 3650 • Nokia 7600 • Siemens SX1 The flip form factor is home to some of the most popular to some of...



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OpenPhone lets you get a business phone number with an app

Meet OpenPhone, a startup in the current Y Combinator batch. The company has been working on an app to make it easier to get and use a business phone number. You don’t need a second phone, you don’t need to get an expensive solution designed for big teams.

“Both my cofounder and I grew up in families were all of our income was dependent on the businesses our parents were running. Later, I joined a software company building back office tools for home improvement contractors,” co-founder and CEO Mahyar Raissi told me.

“There I noticed two important things. First, most of our users were using their personal phone numbers for business and they absolutely hated that. They'd have to put their numbers online or give it out to strangers. This meant getting constant calls when they were spending time with their families or when they were busy doing work. Second, contractors who communicated more professionally and were more responsive had more successful businesses and earned more money.”

OpenPhone is an app for iPhone, iPad and Android. After downloading the app, you can get a second phone number for $9.99 per month. It can be a local or a toll-free number in the U.S. or Canada. You can also port an existing phone number and get rid of your second phone.

After that, you can receive calls and messages in the OpenPhone app. Your professional and personal calls and texts will get a clear separation.

There are many advantages in having a second phone number. You can set up a different voicemail, you can also set your availability to control your business hours. You also get voicemail transcription through the OpenPhone app.

OpenPhone uses VoIP and routes all your calls and texts through your internet connection. You get unlimited calls and texts in the U.S. and Canada as part of your subscription.

Eventually, OpenPhone wants to add new features to make it more collaborative. You could imagine sharing your phone number with other team members in your company. It sounds a bit like Aircall, but OpenPhone wants to focus on small companies with less than 20 employees.



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Top 10 fan favorite phones of H1 2018

Mid-range phones are becoming increasingly popular for the last couple of years and it shows in our statistics. For the first half of 2018, five out of ten phones in our top 10 favorite smartphones are affordable devices. High-value offers have always generated a lot of sales, but they are now starting to earn the love of a lot of people, which is a whole different level. Interestingly, Xiaomi seems to be dominating the table with four handsets, three of which are budget-oriented. As expected, the Redmi Note 5 Pro is one of them due to its outstanding value. For about €200, you get big...



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Weekly poll results: the Oppo Find X proves that fans love innovation

The Oppo Find X is awesome, that's the consensus from last week's poll. Even though we put an opponent in its way, the new flagship rose to the challenge thanks to its pop-up mechanism that lifts not only the selfie camera and 3D face scanning hardware, but also the dual camera on the rear. The Lamborghini Edition of the phone - the first phone ever with Super VOOC - got a respectable number of votes, just enough to push it over the vivo NEX S. The vivo flagship is a sibling to the Oppo phones and has its own strengths, including an under display fingerprint reader. However, its pop-up...



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