Virtual reality fans who also happen to carry iPhones are in for a treat, after Google released an updated version of its YouTube app that supports the company's virtual reality viewer, Cardboard.
Final versions of tvOS 9.2.1 for Apple TV 4 and watchOS 2.2.1 for Apple Watch are available to download right now. Here are the details.
Google is rumored to have an Android VR headset ready to be announced at its upcoming developer conference known as Google I/O, with the device claimed to be a better choice than the current Samsung Gear VR.
Apple Watch users, you can now simply shake your wrist to take a selfie from a connected iPhone using a free app called RemoteCam.
How much money would you pay to relieve aches and pains in your back at just the touch of a button? How much money would you pay for a new hoodie that may come with a little additional bulk, but can help improve your posture and target muscles and pain points to release tension? And finally, how much would you pay for a connected wearable that offers all of the above through an integration with a mobile app that lives on your smartphone? After first being teased at this year's Consumer Electronics Show, the AiraWear Massage Hoodie now exists as a Kickstarter campaign, and offers all of the above for those with back discomfort, and willing to embrace technology as part of the solution.
VRidge app for Android is a cost-effective solution for playing VR games designed for Oculus Rift or Steam in virtual reality using Google Cardboard headset.
Just when you think you've seen it all, and you start to wonder about the direction of future technology and where the innovation is going to come from, the Future Interfaces Group out of Carnegie Mellon University pops up to blow your mind. As part of research into trying to solve the problem of how to efficiently interact with the very small screen of a smartwatch, the group has unveiled a rather impressive interaction solution that demonstrates a method of using the skin on arm as a touchscreen to interact with a smartwatch.
Did you know you can install Windows 95 on your Apple Watch? Check out this video of a developer demonstrating the full port of the old operating system onto Apple's first smartwatch.
Taking the so-called Apple Watch 2 and kitting it out with a built-in cellular data functionality that could allow it to operate independently of a connected iPhone would certainly be an appealing prospect for consumers.
Check out this 3rd-party Milanese Loop band for Apple Watch which costs just $16 and looks and feels almost same as the official version from Apple. You can get this band in Space Black, Gold, and Silver colors.
















