Thursday, August 6, 2015

Trending: The Future of Urban Transportation

Urban Travel - let's limit ourselves to discussing 350 mile range at most and mainly Intra-State. Beyond that there are complications due to refueling.

Resiliancy
- Earthquake
-- repairs to rails / rail-like systems before use ; long delays
- Flood / Tsunami
-- shutdown of powered "third-rail" systems; self-contained energy vehicles appear better but require re-fueling
-- repairs might be necessary; "rusting" or washed away track
- Tornado / Hurricane
-
Autonomy
Independence
Cleanliness
Maintenance


Airplanes
Advantages

Disadvantages
Heavy leveraged
Special Fuel needed
Highly scheduled
Requires 3 operators and 2 attendants
Cramped spaces for passengers
Limited entertainment options
No ability to recharge personal devices
Many extra fees; some hidden
Porters sometimes steal personal items or luggage (more so on International to poorer nations, but we're talking intra-national)

Cars
Lyft, Uber will be replaced! How ironically fitting on what they did to the taxi industry by usurping them!
Will the car be there when I need it? How long a wait time?
The car will need to know when to refuel / recharge and go put itself out of service.
What if the car needs to refuel on a long trip? Will it refuse to go? Or re-route you to a second vehicle to continue your journey?
Will I be able to get a car with trunk space when I need to go home with a big load of shopping bags? How about when going to the airport with alot of baggage?
When I get a car, will it be filthy? Smell like smoke or some other nasty odor?
Prevent crime done in vehicle or used for getaway?
Accident - who is the responsible party and how does insurance work? No Fault? Both parties at fault? Company who made AI at fault? Need to prove AI system was engaged at the time leading up to and during the accident?

What happens if cars become autonomous? What happens to taxis?
To Truck Drivers? To Train Conductors?  Mass layoffs? More unemployment? Or do these vehicles require a licenced operator to take over manual control?  Airplanes already have auto-pilot and a captain and co-captain / navigator / communications officer.  Will that still be necessary to have a human near the "wheel" just in case?

Corsucant - 3d Stack lanes; people driving themselves
Minority Report - ground based lanes
Jetsons - only one level flying lanes?

What about drone interference?  

GPS usage for waypoints? What if GPS goes out or is inaccurate? Need fall back for computer assisted travel.

Complexity when discussing InterState Travel
For example, take the proposed Mag Lev (Musk) -
Advantages
Faster than plane?
No security checks?
Faster than Amtrak?
Faster than Greyhound?
Price?
Power Usage?
Power distribution?
Disadvantages
- Fixed and Closed circuit; Hub, need second leg journey to real destination
- Natural Disasters

Wednesday, August 5, 2015

The Submit Button

With all the social justice warriors and politically correct people out there, forcing these new multi colored and ethnic(?) emojis on the world (wide web of Apple iOS), for the last time, when your web page button says "Submit", I wholeheartly refuse to do so!

Stagnation of the high end CPU? (August 2015)

Used to be the day that every 3 years I would be ready to take the plunge and upgrade my main desktop rig (mo' powa! Arr Arr Arr).  This August, with the coming of Skylake, I do not feel any urge. It appears the i7-3770 has been ageing well.  The i7-4770 is not much improvement (maybe 5%) and Skylake is for the ULV crowd.  Looking at benchmarks for the i7-6700K, it's best improvement is around 8% over the 3770K and sometimes loses.  And games run better on Haswell, the last generation. Skylake's TDP is 91 W vs 3770 Ivy Bridge's 77 W.  Color me unimpressed. What does this mean?  Moore's Law slowing down? Yes.
Intel had a bear of a time wrestling with the 14 nm node according to reports. With 10 nm two years out and 7nm maybe four years out, miniaturization is all about power conservation than more super power.  Sure if you want to go Xeon and pay thousands, there is raw crunching potential to be had.  But sadly, last years (state of the art 2013) computers are "fast enough" and even our mobile devices feel "fast enough".  My iPhone 6 feels blazingly fast and that's fine.  So how do you get consumers to upgrade?
  More flash and mirrors.

So what's in it for consumers with Haswell for 2015? For starters there's the enthusiast crowd where entering is only just under $400 with the i7-5820K. Then the middle, but not that middling,  processor is the i7-5930K is nearly double at $600 but the bump is not that much in speed but in using multiple graphics cards win tandem (your pick of Nvidias SLI or AMD's Crossfire implementations).  This is for the workhorses of driving Virtual Reality at 4KUHD. Last up is the ultimate extreme 5960X (X is bigger and badder than K! It's exXxtra better!) at the cornerstone $1000 which is for the people with too much money to spend and don't care saying they are future proofing or the small home server cruncher. This Haswell platform brings a new socket type and so this means a new motherboard. Adding insult to injury is that your RAM sticks for DDR3 are not usable, thus consumers must purchase new DDR4 memory sticks. Also, to get the biggest bang for your buck for memory bandwidth, it's four channel so get those four RAM sticks. What's even cooler is you can say you have a hexacore, and evoke your inner Wicca. The top end can say octocore (can you say Octocore? I thought you could!) and bring your inner Chuck Norris kung fu grip (sorry Bruce Lee fans).  Trade blows with your friends who have the Xeon processors (the point of the Xeon is to have multiple processors on your motherboard and wan too own a rack server in your computer room at home!).


The next phase of computing is wearables.  Oculus Rift 3D vision, Microsoft's HoloLens, Google's pounced on googly-eyed Glass (and the horde of glassholes) are coming in 2016. Will it be like the Wii storm?  Everyone laughing at the name and then it takes off like a rocket ship or a repeat of the Glass?  I think the majority does not want to be the Borg or Cyberdyne or implanted like Cyberpunk or ShadowRun.  Mr. Data is cool and all that, but is the world ready for a computerized companion / assistant (Her), a super Roomba (the Maid from the Jetsons), or Augmented (enhanced) Reality (HoloLens / Glass / Terminator HUD)? Well, the military does I'm sure - look at the Air Force training for pilots with the assisted reality and nomenclature symbology they use.  It's going to be special cases for wearables.  Possibly for consumers it will be medical advances for the Fit Bots.  Then as it becomes more germaine, the masses will want their turn for implants or their "Predator" holographic bracer with a built-in touch screen as the next iWatch 2025. Wearables right now bave terrible battery life, so how are they going to power implants? Can't use solar power where the sum don't shine.  Have nanobots metatasize sugar and fate in your blood stream? Body thermal heat like in the Matrix? Thermal transfer and conversion is abysmal. Just look at efficiencies of internal combustion engines. How many geothermal energy plant do you know of?  Less than .3% of total power production is generated by thermals in the USA. How about a tiny nuclear battery inside you like the Six Million Dollar Man? What, no takers?

Tuesday, August 4, 2015

Trending: The NUC - shrinking the HTPC and upcoming UHD content

With all the HTPC variants of the AppleTV, ChromeCast, Roku, Amazon FireTV, Fire TV Stick, Nvidia Shield Android TV (their naming department needs some cleaning up; but that's been obvious ever since they name their discrete graphics cards), Intel is starting to throw it's hat in the ring.  They've been building NUCs for a while now, as has Gigabyte (Brix) and Zotac, and tossed in the Intel Compute Stick.  Do you leverage Windows? Or do you try to use Android or some Linux variant? Then we have Raspberry Pi for the ultra cheap DIY crowd, but it appears to be a bit too scaled down for 1080p HD home theater (especially the networking 802.11n without 5 GHz band and triple antennaes). With the cusp of 4KHD (here's where it gets messy with specs) is now becoming UHD because its not really 4096 scan lines - it's actually 2106 lines.  Even the new AMD Fury cards fall short for home theater usage since it lacks HDMI 2.0. And then there are the decoders needed because Google is fighting the hEVC (h.265) consortium for the 4K standard with its codec VP9.  Amazon is going with hEVC as well with the major Smart TV players like Sony and Samsung.  So most major companies are betting on hEVC but we have not heard from the cable companies like Comcast, TWC, Charter, or Verizon.  Will they roll out UHD channels?  Will iTV-UHD steamroll past the old bundled giants and give cord-cutters what they need a'la carte?
  So do we want to constantly replace our televisions in order to play UHD content?  Why should the decoder be built into the TV? That's what the cable box or HTPC is for.  You rent the cable box so when the cable company decides to upgrade the codec you just replace it.  You could buy the DVR outright, but why? Most people buy TiVo for that. And as for the HTPC, the idea here is to bring a lower powered solution with enough power to decode the newest codec.  And if you are doing it wirelessly, the HTPC needs 802.11ac for the bandwidth (minimum of 25Mbps with 3 antennas having throughput of 1.3GB - see Netgear's Nighthawk 7000 router).  So at this point, all the original gadgets I mentioned up front are dead in the UHD waters.

Min-Maxing your game theory; or: How to Stop Worrying and Suck every Last Bit of Fun out a simulation

Take for example one of those factory assembly games; you know the ones like SimCity BuildIt, Hay Day, Clash of Clans or Boom Beach.  You have raw material and factories - you create and then assemble, trying to fill in the pipeline efficiently to keep the machines thrumming along.  Now, how about we take out the guess work? It takes 3 minutes to build this X widget, but I need X and Y widgets, and Y widget is made out of A and B widgets, and so on.  It's an automation directed graph problem, and one that should lend itself to a program that could be coded to solve the problem. 


1. We have a list of raw materials and each has its own time of creation
2. We have a list of each factory and how many of type widget it can create, how long, and how many parallel queue(s)
3. We can state end goals for our problem solver - I want to make a # batch of X, Y and Z widgets and in the shortest amount of time with instructions to maximize output. Aha! The concept of min-max-ing!


This is a bit involved to be an ACM competition question and a bit complex and convoluted to solve in Excel (but I'm sure it's possible).  Most games don't have that many tiers of products and materials, but when you get past that third layer, my brain starts to melt and I'm not having fun - it's a chore.
Imagine Diner Dash with Cooking Mama where you get an order, then have to go prepare dishes and combine ingredients and other intermediary products to finally produce a meal.  It's bad enough the game gets hectic just doing the greet - sit - order - queue up - pick up - clean up - collect $$ interspersed with crying babies and mop up spills and requests for drinks or napkins or desert as extras (which effect the final collection $$ in how important is this distraction compared to what it will cost me if I don't attend to it).  As an aside, maybe someone will create a Diner Dash / Cooking Mama multi-player online (local net or extranet) co-op game experience so people can simulate working at a restaurant in a group! Sounds like fun -- just as much fun as grinding 80 levels in World of Warcraft and pay 15$ a month for the effort (Yes, you know you play WoW (or SWTOR, EQ, etc.), you know it's a hamster wheel and you tell yourself -- yes, I'm having fun dammit!).


So anyway, back to the topic and shooting down tangent man.
Tier 0 : Factories
Type | Queue Depth


Tier 1 : Ingredients, Intermediate and Final Products
Output Type | Ingredient list | Factory Type Required | Time Manufacturing | Cost


For SCB, all costs are 0. Most games have a money sink and this one uses it for erecting factories and buildings.




To be continued...

Install Windows 10 and roll back if you dare

Whenever upgrading to a new operating system (O/S), one should be able to roll back easily to the prior version.  Windows 10 finally builds in an easy mechanism.  But the trade-off is using your disk space -- about 10 GB worth.  What if you are running low on your windows boot partition?  Use a partition backup program like Easus Backup or Macrium Reflect (or any other) to "ghost" your data.  Get a backup disk ready with plenty of space, and make a bootable USB stick or CD/DVD in case you need to re-image from scratch without an operating system should all things fail.  After verifying your image backup, it's time to upgrade or fresh install.  Upgrade is the path of least resistance and should be done first.  If that is a disaster, you can quick format the partition and try a fresh install of the operating system. 
  With Windows 10, you have 30 days to roll back or you keep it forward and reach the point of no return.  That Windows key is now linked to Windows 10 and no longer can be used to activate Windows 7 / 8 / 8.1.  Maybe you can talk to Microsoft Tech Support to wrangle the key back to downgrade.
  Next when Windows 10 is running along spiffily, make another backup of that partition to an image.  Store in a safe place.  If you want to rollback, just install the partition backup application and restore your image. 
  For my 100 GB SSD, backing up an image was about a 30 minute activity.  Well worth the time & cost for insurance in the worst case scenario.

  Another late posit in regards to DirectX 12.  I can't wait to try it! Let me install it now and... oh gee, there's no software except a demo written for DX 12.  Nevermind!

Trending: The modular phone

Why toss out a perfectly good mobile phone? Or donate it or trade-in for peanuts? Or try to find some child who doesn't already have a tablet or phone hand-me down? Or repurposed for a exercise mp3 player?  Google bought into Project Ara, as others have kickstarters for PhoneBloks and Nexpaq.  Will they work together to be truly interchangeable and have a common standard? The big issue here is probably with standardizing to the cellular carriers to have a cellular chip implementatio that they would approve. It also probably cuts into their margins in the fact consumers will spend less upgrading.  And it also frees up people to have freedom to switch carriers since you bring your own device (an outright pre-purchase in full to a third party entity that's not a cellular company) which is also a threat since they can't lock people down for 2 years. laughably, AT&T Next program is the worst by renting your phone with a full purchase price with 0% financing over 12-18-24 months but payments are spread for 6 more months than the upgrade in order to keep the customer (fish, sheeple, ahem) hooked into their ecosystem and captivated and fearful of jumping out with the big scary balloon payment to actually own your phone at the end of the contract.  AT&T wants to scare and entice customers to upgrade and hand over their phone for the next latest and greatest shiny device. The smart customer will pay out the terms of the contract monthly and then own the phone and upgrade someone in the family with a lesser device (slower, less memory, tiny screen, etc.) or "EBay" the device after requesting a free IMEI unlock to move to another carrier.  Possibly, AT&T is nervous at Cricket nipping at its heels and introduced a $40 plan to combat slippage of customer retention.


Or do we go to a full independent core stick (just the brains, memory, battery, wi-fi, BT, and wireless video to a touch screen (with its own battery and mic, stereo jack, volume controls).  This way we could pair the "core" stick with any display we want, when we want to.  Say I'm on the road.  I would use my "core" with a 5" display and act like a phone.  If I'm in the car, the "core" would link to the auto's infotainment system and run the show. If I'm commuting, I would link the "core" to my tablet sized screen for reading articles, watch video, visit web pages and play games in 10-14" glory.  When I'm home, and I want to kick back and relax in the living, I can link the "core" to my TV (LCD/LED/OLED, etc.) much like the auto experience but with a richer UX/UI in 36-80" (I can dream 100+") and my handheld display device of the tablet (10") or phone (5") pad can act as the remote with a split UI and / or mirror the big screen (extend as a 2nd screen like Windows (or Linux) can for example or clone).  TV's need to be built in the future with the docking port to supply power and the HDMI connection simply with a standard to the "core" stick.  Also, a hard-wired video interface connector should be available to dock the "core" to the handheld tablet or phone pad.


I want to mention this nit: every mobile O/S should have built in networking to mount uPNP devices already! Why do I need install drivers or an app to get SAMBA, DLNA connectivity when these devices are broadcasting.  I have a Seagate WirelessPlus  Drive, a Plex Server, an uPNP Windows Media Server, an iTunes media server, a NAS with uPNP support, and the list goes on. I want to host my own cloud; I don't want to relegate or give up ownership and then have to rent my media.  This is just extra money grabbing from corporations to lease stuff to us and leech monthly payments.  Back in the day we had free TV reception and AM/FM reception.  Now we have to be spoiled and subscribe to cable TV for hundreds of channels to surf?  Or need to pay monthly fees to Spotify, iTunes Beats, Rdio, Rhapsody, Pandora, Google Music, Amazon for the luxury and not even owning anything at the end of the day?  Surfing through ads and playlists and trying to find an artist or a song is cumbersome with these apps.  I want to do a search and start playing.  If I want to tag music to a playlist, I just tap a button and link it to an existing or start a new playlist that fits my mood and build my own.


In the end, it's all about the control and consumption of media. Even your texts belong to a third party and can be gotten without your permission.  Think about that!  All these people posting photos to Instagram! Or think SnapChat really deletes your photos and won't spy on you! That should be a good example to shake them down and prove it.  Guess law enforcement won't like that (and you can trust SnapChat; they don't have a back door that funnels the images elsewhere to another third party!)

Oct 2015: Microsoft introduces the Lumia 950/950XL
Pro: SD card support
Cons: Runs ARM instruction set so Windows 10 Continuum is basically Windows RT all over again. Only Universal Apps can run and not full blown Win32 Legacy Apps. 
There is a portable dock unit to allow more USB ports to attach external storage devices, HDMI and / or displayport monitors, Bluetooth keyboard & mouse. 
However, is OneDrive cloud service worth anything? Will Microsoft rifle through your files that you store on OneDrive and report to law enforcement upon subpoena? If using a Windows Live account for Windows 10 does that mean there is backdoor synchronization of local files to OneDrive that cannot be opt-out (the whole Telemetry argument)?

Future: Multi-SIM phones; the ability to roam on multiple LTE/4G/5G/etc. networks regardless of carrier.  All the cellular carriers become aggregated and bandwidth is negotiated by a third party overseer.  Users pay into the collective with one price for data / voice usage (text messaging unlimited is status quo by now with any data plan just because at this point its small beans). Phones scan the collective networks and lock on to whatever carrier is broadcasting with available bandwidth and negotiates the traffic.  The third party overseer / aggregator collects fees and distributes money to carriers for bandwidth served.  End of worrying about wireless dead-spots and fault tolerance in case one network is shut down or if new carriers want to come in to the game and provide more bandwidth.  Will this make tracking users easier with LE Agencies?  Getting IP addresses for a particular SIM for when and where? What data was sent over the line? Note the stingray device; does it require to know the cell phone carrier to track the SIM or does it even care? I doubt it matters as its a huge siphon and uses the middleman attack vector acting like an invisible agent. Our digital privacy is moot unless cell phone makers (along with the modem makers) introduce encryption without backdoors so no one can eavesdrop for MITM attacks.  But the governments of the world will probably not allow that as they always appear to want the keys to the digital kingdom. Do governments inspect and log everyone's letters sent via snail mail?  Imagine taking x-ray images, opening and scanning the contents, then sealing it closed so the recipient does not suspect tampering.  If this is done without a warrant, then it's an invasion of privacy and according to U.S. law a breach of a citizen's rights (unless of course the sender or recipient is not a U.S. citizen - got to love that slippery slope excuse).  Think of PRISM with it's capabilities of capturing and collecting metadata of who the sender and receiver is with the telltale signs of the addresses of each phone or email.  There is no way to obscure the receiver.  There are a few ways to fake out the sender email, but requires a VPN service to ensure that the IP address is obscured from the originator.  Email and texts are sent via plain text, stored on servers in plain text (so anyone can use discovery and read everything easily).   Just like voice is carried and intercepted as native audible data.  Why isn't voice "data" encrypted end to end?  It is all could be controlled by the carrier; request it be implemented by modem chip manufacturers and then enabled by the cellular carrier.  Why doesn't Joe Citizen demand encryption so he is safe from search and seizure?  I wonder how good the iCloud service encrypts photos and texts from iPhone users if LFA want to dig in without the original device?  They claim if a user backups their iCloud account with encryption on then they are safe from intrusion unless the password is discovered, as well as getting into the iCloud account.

Which brings me to security of fingerprint sensors.  So far there are clever tricks to deceive the detection of an authentic print to only allow the proper authorized user.  However, if you're asleep, someone could unlock your device by trying out all your fingers and, bingo!, there are in.  Since you cannot change your fingerprints, that biometric data that has been captured and seized from you by LFAs can be used against you to unlock your device with modern technology as well without your consent.  A court doesn't have to require you to unlock your own device when they can impound it and just hack away until they find a method to beat the fingerprint sensor.  This is not the same with a combination lock or password.  Safes with combination locks can be bypassed as well by experts and agents with sufficient funding and tools, or just drilled into or hinges blown off, and neither requires one to be compelled to testify against oneself to open the safe.  Password cracking can be done and usually takes longer so that encrypted hard / flash drive might be safer for awhile, but at least so far people are compelled to incriminate themselves by divulging their password.  Fingerprint scanners are for convenience and about as useful as a 2 digit (not even alphanumeric) password.  After all, every has to sleep sometime so they confiscate the device, wait for the subject to pass out and fiddle away with fingers on the device until it unlocks.  The one saving grace is powering off an iPhone completely so upon starting up it requires the passcode.  Hopefully you have a sufficiently long alphanumeric passcode that defies cracking for your lifetime or the statute of limitation.


Modules needed:
1. Upgrade your cpu - Samsung Exynos or Apple ARM variant or Qualcomm's Snapdragon or Intel's ULV
2. O/S allowed? Android or Windows mobile or Apple's iOS
3. Core memory for running O/S and apps
4. Main eMMC memory for storing O/S, apps and data
5. Wi-Fi/BT/Cellular (need proper GSM / CDMA band to support network for Verizon, AT&T, T-Mobile, Sprint, U.S. Cellular, Cricket, MetroPCS, etc.
6. Battery
7. Touch Screen
8. Stereo jack, Mic, Micro USB (To-Go) / Power port



Trending: The automotive infotainment system meets iOS or Android

It's been a long time coming but automotive manufacturers finally get it that they won't be able to shove a built-in all-you-can-eat dashboard system with its own OS. The technology of the smartphone changes too fast (as with tablets - too bad most don't have mobile broadband - it's a necessity to kill off OnStar and alternatives). Manufactorers solutions as way too slow, take too long to develop, and this is how Apple CarPlay and Google's Android Auto come into the show. There was a play by Microsoft and Ford to have their attempts, but the systems was just not very good for he consumer. The price for even the GPS baked in (typically on a DVD drive) is prohibitively expensive when compared to using a smartphone's maps app (apple's or Google's or Waze or TomTom or Garmin or OSmAnd or Sygic - some free, some subscription or one time fee, some offline with limited download of maps - space limiting).

1. Hands free link voice activation -- can't be done in call
2. Voice activation button on left side of steering wheel to wake up Siri or Ok, Google
3. Integration with car stereo system for station changing -- hasn't been done yet
4. Mute button on left side of steering wheel
5. Mute all stereo playing when voice activation active
6. 8" in-dash display with large fonts and large buttons touch screen -- no typing needed nor squinting
7. D-pad on right side of steering wheel for dash cursor navigation
8. Volume controls on back of left side of steering wheel
9. Start call, hang up call
10. Play/pause button for music player on BYOB device

Trending: Windows 10 Desktop with touch screen monitor

When looking at all those 10" and 12" tablets and light weight 14" and 15" laptops and now the MS Surface ( & Pro), desktop users feel left out of being able to use multi-touch screens. A touch pad (like a Logitech) doesn't work effectively since you can't see what your touching immediately, glancing back and forth to ground yourself. Also, reaching out to touch your monitor 2 feet in front of you brings back memories of jokes like gorilla arm pain and first finding out using a wiimote can be taxing on your muscles.
  So what's a technocrat to do?
1. Must be IPS screen
2. Must be fast for gaming with sub 6ms response time (the downfall of IPS panels)
3. Must have good color gamut near 90% Adobe/RGB (the bane of TN panels)
4. Must have good viewing angles over 120* (Second bane of TN panels)
5. Support HDMI 2.0 and display port
6. Not curved (this new gimmick in helping fix your focal point on the edges for super wide screens of 16:9)
7.  Be able to mount on an incline (imagine the monitor in the place of your keyboard) The original huge MS tabletop Surface demos almost have it right, but in my opinion the monitor view should be  merged with Star Trek TNG console panel layout for ergonomics (around 30* incline)

Some technologies have come close -- the Big Tab from Nabi, the Surface demo table (seen in some movies) the WiiU tablet controller... We're on the cusp. Putting it all together is the issue. Is the market there for such a product?

Oct-2015: Microsoft reveals the SurfaceBook.  Apple reveals the iPad Pro.
Cons: SurfaceBook converts to a tablet and lasts 3 hours on battery.

Cons: iPad Pro has a stylus but no mouse.  Still not OS X variant, and still Apple's own ARM CPU implementation, compared to Intel CPU.  When will OS X support touch features?   When can OS X scale apps to smaller screens 5", tablets 10" and laptops 13", etc. like Windows 10 Continuum?

Open up your Amazon Kindle Fire 7 HDX to Google Store & Play

Why stay locked into Amazon's walled garden? It's your device, you bought it. If you want to void your warranty then by all means, feel free to do so knowing the consequences.  The reason is that you have to root your Kindle device in order to do so.


Having used DuOS, Bluestacks, Genymotion, and Andy for Android emulation on my desktop and laptops, access to Google's Play Store is a must.  There is just too many apps missing from Amazon's curated App Store -- after all they are not a software juggernaut -- Google is!  Why is a book seller and middleman marketer deciding what I do with technology?  Maybe they are using technology to improve their profits and bedazzle everyone, but they can curate their bookstore and leave the App Store to the software development professionals.  Why be redundant? You can sideload apps (APK files) onto the Kindle anyway. Who will be thwarted from side-loading if they are determined? Install ES File Explorer, connect to the web in the browser, download an APK, flip the unknown sources switch, and persistence is rewarded. But it's still light years easier to just browse the Google Play Store and install what you want.  However, the barrier to entry is a bit harder, but the payoff is even larger because you get Google Play Services.  Some games refuse to work unless you have Play Services. And try to buy anything off the Play Store without that installed...


Currently, one Kindle Fire HDX is working flawlessly with Google Play Service 7.099.  However, the other Kindle continues to vex me by constantly being overwritten and updating.  I've looked around the 'net and followed directions and even tried to apply my computer savvy and intuition to no avail.


1. Download Google Play Services APK 7.099 and store it in a safe place
2. Install ES File Explorer
3. Change permissions on com.google.play.services-2.apk to r--r--r-- lockdown (chmod 444 for you *nix buffs)
4. Create a folder for com.google.play.services-2 and change permissions r--r--r-- lockdown
5. Turn off wi-fi
6. Delete / Uninstall existing Google Play Services APK greater than 7.099
7. Reboot the device
8. Install the Play Services APK 7.099
9. Success!
10. Device goes to sleep, come back in 12 hours or so, and :( -- Play Services updated to latest and greatest


Obviously, the read-only lockdown is not being honored even though it is preserved (scratching head).

Turn your Amazon FireTV Stick into an HTPC

No Need for Root

ADB side load
from PC

ADB install
ADB uninstall
ADB shell
pm list packages

Install KODI Client

Install Plex Client

Install Time Warner TWCTV app
- Use a BT mouse to open up the hidden menus
 -- Menu #1 is on the bottom left edge: Press both the LMB and RMB at the same time and pull from the bottom upward and reveal the TV channel list
 -- Menu #2 is on the far right: Press both LMB and RMB at the same time and pull from the right edge toward the left

Install Food Network App

Install FiredTV app
- Setup bluetooth mouse device - best to use BT keyboard + pad device Logitech 410, etc.
- Setup bluetooth gamepad;  G910, etc.

Install RetroArch

Optional Sling Player if you have a SlingBox

Amazon Prime users have Prime Video and Music built-in (bonus add-on of $99/yr)

Optional monthly fees for:
NetFlix $7.99/mo
Hulu Plus $7.99/mo ("basic" Live network TV channels and some On-Demand)
- ShowTime package $8/mo extra
Sling TV (HD signal rebroadcasting of Live "basic" network TV)  $20/mo
- HBO package $15/mo extra
- Sports package $5/mo extra
HBO Now (if you don't have HBO [use free HBO Go instead] with your cable subscription) $15/mo
CBS All Access $5.99/mo

Chromecast Audio
Cons: Same price as the HDMI version of Chromecast and does not support multi-point broadcasting.  Airplay clients can do this from the Airplay server, so this is a non-starter.  Just as useful as a Bluetooth receiver, except the wi-fi gives it better range. I don't think you can expose Chromecast Audio devices beyond the LAN and make them internet devices, but I suppose NAT junkies / router jockies can figure our port forwarding and expose them. I did not see anywhere that Chromecast has password authentication to allow users in to control the device.

Turn your Android Tablet into an Arcade Machine

No Need for Root

Get a tablet with SD slot
Buy a slim 2.5" external HDD with USB To Go

Setup Bluetooth gamepad

Install RetroArch app (1.2.2)
-- Load your cores

Mount external memory device

Install PPSSPP
Install ePSXe
-- get your bios (own a PS1)
Install UAE4All
Install DOSBox

-- get your kickstart (own a A500/A1000/A500+/A600)

Install KODI client

Install Plex client

Install Time Warner TWCTV app

Install Food Network app

Miracast vs. direct HDMI (mini plug) with cable



Turn your iPad into an Arcade Machine

On an iPad Mini 2 (Retina)
Jailbreak with Pangu
Currently on iOS 8.4

Install iDOS
Install Plex
Install KODI
Install RetroArch 1.0.0.1

From Cydia
Install Controllers For All (replaces your bluetooth stack)
Get a PSX gamepad

Install PPSSPP
Install iUAE - Amiga Emulator; requires KickStart 1.3 512K ROM version
Can run under KickStart 3.1 ROM, but nothing runs and gives the infamous Guru Meditation Errors

Having a whale of a time configuring the PSX gamepad within RetroArch.  Have been able to remap all the buttons in the Android 1.2.2 version with a regular G910 BT gamepad, but it's been a nightmare so far under iOS.