Sony Smartwatch 2 with Heart Rate Monitor
Sony has officially unveiled its second generation fitness tracker, the SmartBand 2 with improved features and functionality.
Sporting a minimalistic design, neat and elegant look, along with a comfortable form factor, the Sony SmartBand 2 arrives with a silicon band, and functions as an "activity tracker with intelligent heart rate monitor." According to Sony, the SmartBand 2 will allow users to track their workouts as well as all their movements.

The Note 5 Stylus... Carefully does it!
According to a member of staff at Android Police they has discovered a major flaw with the Note 5 and the S-Pen, the issue is that if you insert the S-Pen backwards into the S-Pens' holder the phone will no longer be able to detect when the pen has been inserted or removed. This basically means that no sound or vibration will occur, and presumably (though not mentioned) and relevant software-related action that the device is set to trigger upon removal.

Top 5 Games to look forward to this September
With the summer lull coming to an end, September 2015 sees several major releases coming to the market. Here’s our top 5:

UK Tech Firm Integrates Hydrogen Fuel Cell into iPhone for week-long charge
A tech company from the UK has developed a hydrogen fuel cell that is so compact they have been able to squeeze it into a slightly modified regular iPhone 6. The technological breakthrough can allow a smartphone to run for a week on a single “charge.”

Masters of the Universe Reboot
After helping shape the world of Asgard, “Thor” scribe Christopher Yost is now ready to head to Eternia to help He-Man return to the bigscreen.
Sony Pictures and Escape Artists have tapped Yost to do a rewrite on its reboot of “Masters of the Universe.”
Terry Rossio and Jeff Wadlow wrote previous drafts of “Masters of the Universe,” which is being produced by Escape Artists principals Todd Black, Jason Blumenthal and Steve Tisch along with DeVon Franklin.
Set on the planet of Eternia, the story follows a warrior named Prince Adam who has the power to transform into the heroic He-Man. His nemesis is a villain named Skeletor who seeks to conquer a fortress known as Castle Grayskull in order to learn the secrets held within.

Will We Get to See Superman in Suicide Squad?
Even before the Comic-Con trailer for Suicide Squad officially made it online, spy photos from the Warner Bros. set had confirmed that Ben Affleck will appear in the DC Comics cinematic universe film as Batman. It only makes sense, as his arch nemesis, The Joker (Jared Leto) is a primary character in the movie.
However, what about his future opponent

Cortana for Android beta opens to the public
Just over a month ago, Android users got their first shot at trying out Microsoft’s response to the Google Nows and Siris of the world, as Microsoft got invite-only testing underway on Cortana for Android – well, that was the plan, at least, but

PlayStation Vita Prototype System Showcased By New Video
The PlayStation Vita console is far from being the more successful PlayStation console released by Sony, mostly due to the very low support by big developers and publishers. With Sony itself defining the system as a legacy system, at least in the West, it seems like the console won’t be receiving any big release from Western developers. Still, the console is a very good handheld, with more than a few good high profile games as well as several indie games having been released since its launch in all regions

Donald Trump is Batman
Over the weekend in Iowa, as you may well know, a “Batman” became a Bat-meme. The scene unfolded above the state fair, where the Des Moines airspace met the churn of the Donald’s hairspace.
Candidate Trump, as if channelling the wily senior politician opposite Robert Redford in The Candidate, as well as Burt Lancaster’s eccentric oilman mogul in Local Hero, arrived from the skies as if from Olympus descending. He landed among the fair and good people of Iowa in a Trump copter that, as the Washington Post reported, kicked up an apt metaphor of a dust storm. Then, in canny (and canned) fashion, the leading GOP contender offered rides to some of the cheering children. And one of these kids, 9-year-old William, was savvy enough (though we hope not staged enough) to be toting a GoPro camera.
“Mr. Trump?” inquired the lens-wielding William.
“Yes?” said the Helicopter Don.
“Are you Batman?”
“I am Batman.”
And with those words, and William’s subsequent Facebook clip, the Internet responded to that Bat-signal like japing crusaders, meme art and #BatTrump hashtags at the ready.
To peer beneath their masks for a moment, here are 15 Ways In Which Trump and Bruce Wayne/Batman Aren’t So Different:

Virtual reality offers tantalising taste of brave new world
Whether they're battling zombies in dark alleyways, leading classroom excursions around the globe or offering virtual front-row seats at the footy, Australians are forging the way in the brave new world of virtual reality.
The idea of donning a headset and diving into a virtual realm is no longer the stuff of science fiction. Anyone can get their first taste of virtual reality today, thanks to Google Cardboard – a cheap viewer which holds a smartphone up to your face as a window into a virtual world. Like that first glimpse of television in department store windows of the 1950s, Google Cardboard offers Australians a tantalising taste of what's to come.
A range of more advanced virtual reality headsets are due to arrive over the next year, including Facebook's highly anticipated Oculus Rift which is already available as a "developer kit" for early adopters. Like the birth of television, the technology is finally within our reach but we're still deciding how to put it to good use.
Adam Turner prepares to battle zombies at Zero Latency.
Rather than stand back and let others lead the way, three tech-savvy Melbourne friends took the plunge with the early-release Oculus Rift – working in their spare time to build a virtual reality suite in a suburban garage. Their dream became reality this month as their first "Zero Latency" virtual reality centre opened in a North Melbourne warehouse – letting architects walk through virtual skyscrapers during the day and gamers wage war against zombies after dark.
Advertisement
The Oculus Rift headset is dependent on an attached computer which means that, like Google Cardboard, you need to sit still and can only look around to explore the virtual environment. Zero Latency breaks these shackles to offer "free roam" virtual reality, thanks to whisper-quiet lightweight PCs in backpacks which drive the Oculus Rift headset and attached headphones.

Virtual reality: How Oculus Rift could change the way students learn
Why dissect a human body when you can do it virtually?
Advances in virtual reality technology will soon put questions such as this into sharp focus, with virtual reality headsets such as the Oculus Rift, set for public release next year.
The technology is sure to transform film and gaming. And it has the potential to revolutionise social networking, with Facebook buying Oculus for $2 billion in March.
Illustration: Matt Golding
Meanwhile, educators are watching closely, with some believing the technology could lead to a radically new, and powerful way to learn.
Advertisement
Indeed, the educational possibilities of virtual reality seem boundless: students could go on virtual exchange programs, or fly through space. They could experiment with dangerous chemicals, visualise complex data or dive into a human body.
"Experiential learning is a really big and exciting opportunity that has been around for a long time," said Professor Michael Phillips, who teaches about educational technology at Monash University. "But we've been restricted in what we can do, build, visit and touch. In creating virtual environments, there's no limit to what we could do with students."
The virtual reality headset immerses its user in an interactive world, so that images on the display appear life-size and 3D. The images also sync up with movements of the user's head, creating an impression that the user is moving through a virtual space.
Australian university students are already dabbling with the latest virtual reality offerings, including the Oculus Rift, after a batch was made available to developers.
At Melbourne University, agriculture students are virtually tending to cattle and crops; building design students are virtually inspecting buildings overseas and physiotherapy students are toying with virtual images of bodies to learn about posture.
Medical faculties are also showing interest, with the hope that this could lead to surgery simulations for surgery trainees.
Questions still remain over how virtual reality could be effectively used for teaching in schools.
Student teachers at Monash University are on the case, with Professor Phillips' students studying ways to use the technology in the classroom.
And developers are keenly building educational programs for schools, where there is increasing appetite for educational gadgets or video games such as Minecraft.
Monash University Professor Jon McCormack, who is the director of high-tech research hub called SensiLab, said developers in his lab were building a virtual life-size replica of Cambodia's 12th century temple Angkor Wat – a program they planned to pitch to schools teaching about the Angkor/Khmer empire.
Professor McCormack said the simulation, which is based on architectural drawings, archaeological evidence, and evidence about flora and fauna from site visits, would enable students to experience what the site might have been like as a thriving metropolis.
"You can walk around the temple, which is the real size of the temple. And when you start to see thousands of people streaming in and out, you really start to get a sense of what it must have been like then.
"It gives you a sense of realism, of what it was like to live there, that is probably unequalled to any other technology that people have made before."
But with the educational benefits for students still yet be proven, RMIT's Faculty of Education Adjunct Professor Helen McGrath questioned: is it genuinely educational or just novelty?
"I recall going to a conference 12 months ago and a presenter was waxing lyrical about the Google glass and how wonderful it will be for educational purposes," she said. "And then suddenly, it disappears."
Read more: http://www.theage.com.au/victoria/virtual-reality-how-oculus-rift-is-changing-the-way-students-learn-20150821-gj587v.html#ixzz3jdMcPFa3
Follow us: @theage on Twitter | theageAustralia on Facebook

Retailers Giving Free Copy Of MGS V: The Phantom Pain To Buyers Of Batman: Arkham Knight GeForce Bundle
Great news for players who bought GeForce GTX Batman: Arkham Knight Bundle. It's an open secret that Batman: Arkham Knight PC version was a BAD, so much so that Warner Bros was forced to pull the game down from Steam. Now, if you are among one of those buyers who bought GeForce GTX Batman: Arkham Knight Bundle from NewEgg, you can ask them for a replacement code for Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain.
This generosity of NewEgg has been confirmed by Reddit user "littlestminish" and by others in a thread titled as "PSA: For everyone who received Batman: Arkham Knight with a Nvidia GPU on Newegg, they are giving away MGSV: PP free of charge."


Cortana on Android...
When news came out that Microsoft was going to be developing Cortana for Android, I was dubious. As in, “So what?” Realistically, I just didn’t see the point. Android has a perfectly good voice assistant in Google Now – to say nothing of how awesome Now on Tap will be – so why should we care about Cortana on Android? It’ll be just another app.
But then news came out more recently thatCortana will be able to replace Google Now as the default search for Android. Whoa. Ok. Now we’re talking.


Samsung might be making a 18.4 inch tablet!
Is there such thing as too big for a tablet?? The general tablet industry generally thinks that people want two sizes ones around 7 inches and others about 10 inches across. As with their phabets Samsung apparently wants to push the boundaries in the tablet marke, according to a report from SamMobile, the company is currently working on an Android tablet with an 18.4-inch display.

