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Windows
Linux
For Windows
     First download Music bee and install. Then Add your playlists. Download and install Musicbee Remote Plugin.


For Linux

Install Clementine:
You can add the Clementine PPA and receive updates by running the command below in a terminal window (Press Ctrl+Alt+T to open the terminal):
sudo apt-add-repository ppa:me-davidsansome/clementine
So far, the PPA supports Ubuntu 14.04, Ubuntu 13.10, Ubuntu 12.10, and Ubuntu 12.04.
After added the PPA, install the player via the commands below or check for updates via System Updater:
sudo apt-get update

sudo apt-get install clementine
32-bit or 64-bit? Check it out at System Settings -> Details.
The downloaded package is .deb file, just double-click on it to open with Ubuntu Software Center and click install button to install the player.
Tip: Restart your computer if you were upgrading Clementine from a previous version.
2. Open the music player and go to menu “Tools -> Preferences”. Select Network Remote in the left pane, then do:
  • Enable remote control by ticking the box ‘Use a network remote control’
  • Depends on your need, leave the port default or change it.
  • Set LAN only or both LAN & WAN access
  • Set an authentication code, so that clients need to type the code to connect.
  • Tick ‘Allow downloads’ if you want to download songs from Clementine to Android.



3. Now on your Android device, install the ‘Clementine Remote’ app from Google Play.

Once installed, start the app, type in the IP of the remote machine and click connect.

Awesome Music Players that can operate Remotely.


Windows
Linux
For Windows
     First download Music bee and install. Then Add your playlists. Download and install Musicbee Remote Plugin.


For Linux

Install Clementine:
You can add the Clementine PPA and receive updates by running the command below in a terminal window (Press Ctrl+Alt+T to open the terminal):
sudo apt-add-repository ppa:me-davidsansome/clementine
So far, the PPA supports Ubuntu 14.04, Ubuntu 13.10, Ubuntu 12.10, and Ubuntu 12.04.
After added the PPA, install the player via the commands below or check for updates via System Updater:
sudo apt-get update

sudo apt-get install clementine
32-bit or 64-bit? Check it out at System Settings -> Details.
The downloaded package is .deb file, just double-click on it to open with Ubuntu Software Center and click install button to install the player.
Tip: Restart your computer if you were upgrading Clementine from a previous version.
2. Open the music player and go to menu “Tools -> Preferences”. Select Network Remote in the left pane, then do:
  • Enable remote control by ticking the box ‘Use a network remote control’
  • Depends on your need, leave the port default or change it.
  • Set LAN only or both LAN & WAN access
  • Set an authentication code, so that clients need to type the code to connect.
  • Tick ‘Allow downloads’ if you want to download songs from Clementine to Android.



3. Now on your Android device, install the ‘Clementine Remote’ app from Google Play.

Once installed, start the app, type in the IP of the remote machine and click connect.

The competition has three tracks: classification, classification with localization, and detection. The classificationtrack measures an algorithm’s ability to assign correct labels to an image. The classification with localization track is designed to assess how well an algorithm models both the labels of an image and the location of the underlying objects. Finally, the detection challenge is similar, but uses much stricter evaluation criteria. As an additional difficulty, this challenge includes a lot of images with tiny objects which are hard to recognize. Superior performance in the detection challenge requires pushing beyond annotating an image with a “bag of labels” -- a model must be able to describe a complex scene by accurately locating and identifying many objects in it. As examples, the images in this post are actual top-scoring inferences of the GoogleNet detection model on the validation set of the detection challenge.

Google Can Understand Everything of Your Image

The competition has three tracks: classification, classification with localization, and detection. The classificationtrack measures an algorithm’s ability to assign correct labels to an image. The classification with localization track is designed to assess how well an algorithm models both the labels of an image and the location of the underlying objects. Finally, the detection challenge is similar, but uses much stricter evaluation criteria. As an additional difficulty, this challenge includes a lot of images with tiny objects which are hard to recognize. Superior performance in the detection challenge requires pushing beyond annotating an image with a “bag of labels” -- a model must be able to describe a complex scene by accurately locating and identifying many objects in it. As examples, the images in this post are actual top-scoring inferences of the GoogleNet detection model on the validation set of the detection challenge.

When Google acquired Word Lens in May 2014, it was clear that it was only a matter of time until the startup’s impressive visual translation technology would be folded into Translate. That moment is coming today – Word Lens integration and improved voice translations are coming in the latest Google Translate update.
Word Lens lets you point your smartphone to a foreign language text and have it instantly replaced with your language of choice, right on the screen. Until this update, you could scan text with your device and have it translated and displayed into a text box, a clunky experience in most cases. Word Lens removes that friction, and everything happens in real time. Street signs, restaurant menus, product labels, there are tons of situations you could find it useful.
This genuinely amazing capability will be available in English, coupled with French, German, Italian, Portuguese, Russian, or Spanish. That means you will be able to translate from English to French, and the other way, but not from French to Russian, for instance. Google says more languages are coming.
The second big feature in this update is instant voice translation. Before the update, translating speech required tapping the mic button each time someone said something, as well as switching between languages in order to accommodate the other speaker. Now that all happens on the fly, because Translate understands different languages without requiring your input.

Download with Google Play

Get Smart with Google Translate: Word Lens and instant voice translations and Language Detection

When Google acquired Word Lens in May 2014, it was clear that it was only a matter of time until the startup’s impressive visual translation technology would be folded into Translate. That moment is coming today – Word Lens integration and improved voice translations are coming in the latest Google Translate update.
Word Lens lets you point your smartphone to a foreign language text and have it instantly replaced with your language of choice, right on the screen. Until this update, you could scan text with your device and have it translated and displayed into a text box, a clunky experience in most cases. Word Lens removes that friction, and everything happens in real time. Street signs, restaurant menus, product labels, there are tons of situations you could find it useful.
This genuinely amazing capability will be available in English, coupled with French, German, Italian, Portuguese, Russian, or Spanish. That means you will be able to translate from English to French, and the other way, but not from French to Russian, for instance. Google says more languages are coming.
The second big feature in this update is instant voice translation. Before the update, translating speech required tapping the mic button each time someone said something, as well as switching between languages in order to accommodate the other speaker. Now that all happens on the fly, because Translate understands different languages without requiring your input.

Download with Google Play


Many of us think of the Internet as a global community. But two-thirds of the world’s population does not yet have Internet access. Project Loon is a network of balloons traveling on the edge of space, designed to connect people in rural and remote areas, help fill coverage gaps, and bring people back online after disasters.


Google has partnered with the French space agency, the Centre National d'Etudes Spatiales, or CNES, with a goal of reaching higher ground with its Project Loon initiative.

Project Loon is essentially a program by Google to bring free Internet to developing countries through low-flying weather balloons that project Wi-Fi signals.

The two companies remained relatively quiet about their plans to partner, although CNES did reveal that Google would be taking advantage of the space agency's expertise in balloon technology. Google, on the other hand, will conduct long-running balloon campaigns as a part of CNES' study of the ozone and stratosphere.


Project Loon was first conceived by Google X, the division of the company that is dedicated to "moon shots," or projects that are ahead of their time and may not have immediate impact but have a high potential for future payout.

See More About Loon 

The partnership may have impacts beyond Project Loon, however. Google has been under increased scrutiny in Europe, with the European Parliament promoting a breakup of Google and Google chosing to shut down Google News in Spain after new laws were passed requiring the company to pay fees to the publications from which it takes news snippets.

Google X is known for a number of other interesting projects. For example, that division of Google is behind Google Glass, an augmented reality headset that allows users to perform many functions without having to reach for their phone. It's also behind Project Ara, which is a modular smartphone that allows users to remove and replace certain components of a smartphone to be upgraded as technology gets better.

Faq about Loon Project

New Technology : Global WiFi Network using Google Loon.

Many of us think of the Internet as a global community. But two-thirds of the world’s population does not yet have Internet access. Project Loon is a network of balloons traveling on the edge of space, designed to connect people in rural and remote areas, help fill coverage gaps, and bring people back online after disasters.


Google has partnered with the French space agency, the Centre National d'Etudes Spatiales, or CNES, with a goal of reaching higher ground with its Project Loon initiative.

Project Loon is essentially a program by Google to bring free Internet to developing countries through low-flying weather balloons that project Wi-Fi signals.

The two companies remained relatively quiet about their plans to partner, although CNES did reveal that Google would be taking advantage of the space agency's expertise in balloon technology. Google, on the other hand, will conduct long-running balloon campaigns as a part of CNES' study of the ozone and stratosphere.


Project Loon was first conceived by Google X, the division of the company that is dedicated to "moon shots," or projects that are ahead of their time and may not have immediate impact but have a high potential for future payout.

See More About Loon 

The partnership may have impacts beyond Project Loon, however. Google has been under increased scrutiny in Europe, with the European Parliament promoting a breakup of Google and Google chosing to shut down Google News in Spain after new laws were passed requiring the company to pay fees to the publications from which it takes news snippets.

Google X is known for a number of other interesting projects. For example, that division of Google is behind Google Glass, an augmented reality headset that allows users to perform many functions without having to reach for their phone. It's also behind Project Ara, which is a modular smartphone that allows users to remove and replace certain components of a smartphone to be upgraded as technology gets better.

Faq about Loon Project