We’ve already heard of some changes that Google’s planning to make to boost app purchases in the Android Market, and it looks like it’s now also undertaking a considerable in-house effort to increase the number of quality apps that are available. According to The Wall Street Journal , Google is planning to hire “dozens” of software engineers, product managers, user-interface experts and “others who have ideas for mobile apps,” and it’s apparently already shifted some of its current employees to work in this new “apps lab.” As you might expect, that’s being done at least in part to close the so-called “app gap” with Apple, and it looks like the new apps will reach far beyond Google’s usual properties — the WSJ even specifically mentions games as one area they’ll focus on. The apps would also apparently all be free (but possibly ad-supported), and Google is said to be trying to woo developers with its distribution power, noting that it will be able to promote the apps in the Android Market and even have them pre-installed on many phones. Google said to be hiring ‘dozens’ to boost Android app development originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 01 Feb 2011 13:54:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Jordan’s Royal Palace says the king has sacked his government in the wake of street protests and has asked an ex-army general to form a new Cabinet. (Feb. 1)
Continue reading …Since it first caught the world’s attention at NAMM ’09, Native Instruments’ Maschine has made quite a stir in the world of electronic music production and performance. A modern re-imagining of Akai’s legendary sampling sequencers, it takes the MPC’s raison d’
Continue reading …Young men who left Cairo in search of work in Red Sea resort talk about their frustrations with life under Hosni Mubarak Rachel Stevenson
Continue reading …Photo credit: / Creative Commons In Australia, a number of introduced plant species have adapted to become more like natives, a new study reveals. A full 70 percent of the 23 species of invasive plants studied showed significant changes in height as well as leaf size and shape. The surprising thing, researchers said, was not that the plants had changed, but that they had made such
Continue reading …Crowds continue to fill Tahrir square, with prayers interrupting through the demonstrations
Continue reading …Playwright Simon Stephens is right – writers should take to the stage and make their voices heard, no matter how ugly it gets “The Bruntwood prize is a clarion call to all playwrights throughout the country,” declared playwright Simon Stephens in Manchester last night at the launch of the 2011 Bruntwood competition and the premiere of Vivienne Franzmann’s Mogadishu , one of the winners of the competition, open to all UK and Irish-based writers to write on any subject they choose. Stephens continued: “This year there is a real urgency to it. It’s the first time the award has been given under this new government and conditions of work for playwrights have changed. No government in my memory has taken such a sudden, clinical, brutish attitude towards arts funding. I can’t remember any government having such an attitude towards financial restrictions across the economy. I am fascinated to see the way playwrights throughout the country will use image and idea, irony, language, content and form to make sense of and dramatise this changed landscape.” Questions of how playwrights and theatre-makers can and should respond to the current political situation were also very much to the fore at last weekend’s Devoted & Disgruntled , which took place against the unfolding dramas on the streets of Cairo and – nearer to home for those attending – in Oxford Street, where police used CS spray on those protesting against corporate tax avoiders. With so much theatre taking place on our streets in protests over tuition fee rises (one of the sessions at D&D discussed whether a performing arts degree was worth £40,000), and with UK Uncut cleverly using situationist-style playful interventions to draw attention to tax avoidance, how is theatre to respond urgently and incisively to the times – particularly when plays take time to get written and productions must find a slot? The Royal Court’s Dominic Cooke may talk of “a desire for stories that address where we are now”, but the truth – with rare exceptions such as Caryl Churchill’s Seven Jewish Children – is that the journey from page to stage often takes months, if not years. If playwrights are going to stay on top of the times, they often have to be prescient rather than thoughtfully responsive. There are some signs of movement, with initiatives such as Theatre Uncut at Southwark Playhouse in March, which will offer a number of plays on the spending cuts by writers including David Greig, Lucy Kirkwood, Dennis Kelly, Mark Ravenhill and Jack Thorne, among others. The plays are available free to download from the Theatre Uncut website, and the idea is that productions will be staged all over the country, not just in theatre spaces, on 19 March. Theatre Uncut sounds like a terrific idea and I’m very much looking forward to seeing the plays, but Stephens may be right when he highlights that one of the good things about the Bruntswood is that it allows playwrights complete freedom to write the play they want to write, rather than the play a theatre tells them they should write, or one they feel gives them a better chance of getting a production. The rise of playwriting schemes and professionalised literary management over the last 15 years means that many writers are caught in a culture that encourages them to write in order to please rather than to please themselves. Not long ago a major mid-career playwright said to me that “we have a generation of playwrights so infantalised by theatre managements I worry that they won’t protest against the cuts”. I hope he’s wrong. If students can take to the streets to protest then playwrights should be able to take both to the streets and our stages to make their voices heard, but it’s a concern that the careerist nature of modern theatre – where writers are treated like cogs in a machine, and the small company hopes to become a larger company slowly but surely climbing the funding ladder – creates a passivity to the often deeply conservative management systems and structures that have become the norm in theatre. As the playwright Naomi Wallace has suggested: “theatre, embroiled as it is in mainstream cultural and economic pressures, tends to reward and applaud those who ask questions that allow for its continued existence, albeit it with a few adjustments here and there. But overall the status quo stands largely untouched: heterosexuality continues to be foregrounded; white privilege continues to go unquestioned; writing against injustice continues to be sidelined; and to question our most deeply felt assumptions is, finally, deemed unproductive, not to mention impolite.” I hope that playwrights and other theatre-makers will heed Stephens’s clarion call, and that they will do so in the most impolite fashion possible. Theatre Arts funding Protest Egypt Students UK Uncut Tax avoidance Lyn Gardner guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …New data in from the UN FAO on the state of the world’s fisheries . The verdict: Global consumption of fish reached an all time high in 2008 (the stats in these sort of reports are always a few years behind…) and about one-third of all the world’s fisheries are overfished, depleted or in need of recovery. Oceana sums it up well : “The… Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …An Australian zoo is keeping their animals hydrated and cool with iced treats and cold showers. (Feb.1)
Continue reading …Just in Chicago alone, hundreds of flights have already been cancelled as a massive winter storm rolls through the midwest. (Feb. 1)
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