Wednesday, October 26, 2016

Bring back the badass black MacBook. and other top stories.

  • Bring back the badass black MacBook.

    We're getting new Macs next week. And boy, are they late. It's been 520 days since Apple released the last MacBook Pro. 591 days since the last MacBook Air. The Mac Mini hasn't been refreshed for over two years. The processors inside are even older. You could point to any number of reasons as to why. Supply. Demand. Components that aren't that much more powerful than they were two or three years ago. Here's some wishful thinking: the Mac is late because Apple needed time to perfect its badass..
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  • Tapping into photo history, the £449 Kodak Ektra smartphone puts camera mechanics front and center

    Tapping into photo history, the £449 Kodak Ektra smartphone puts camera mechanics front and center
    In a week where there has been much talk about a new phone vying to have world’s best smartphone camera, another device focused on photos called the Kodak Ektra is also making its public debut (after being teased earlier this month). Launching today in the UK and initially available only in Europe for £449 ($550), the Ektra is hoping to attract photo enthusiasts — in its case by tapping into one of the more iconic brands of the medium, Kodak’s 1940s Ektra camera, alongside some more modern bel..
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  • Heard of LeEco? Well, They're About to Sell You Everything

    Heard of LeEco? Well, They're About to Sell You Everything
    If you’ve heard of LeEco, it’s either because you’ve lived in China, or you vaguely recall that it bought up US television manufacturer Vizio a few months ago. That’s about to change, because LeEco is making a play for entire US market. What are they selling? Everything. It would be helpful here to explain what LeEco (LAY-EEco) is, but easy comparisons fall short. It’s most commonly known as the Netflix of China, but its streaming services predates Netflix, and constitute just a portion of LeEc..
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  • This is the year to consider affordable smartphones

    This is the year to consider affordable smartphones
    Times have changed in the past few years for the smartphone industry. It wasn’t too terribly long ago that the phrase “You get what you pay for,” was spot on; cheap phones were pieces of junk that seemingly only worked for the first couple of weeks that you bought them, while the flagships maintained their status as high-quality smartphones that were worth the extra money. But that was a different time, and I don’t think that old phrase works for this industry anymore. 2016 has been a weird one ..
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  • Verizon, awaiting wounded Yahoo, faces its own pressures

    Verizon, awaiting wounded Yahoo, faces its own pressures
    Inside a Verizon retail store. Spencer Platt, Getty Images Is Yahoo the shot in the arm that Verizon needs?That's a debatable sentiment. In the past few weeks, Yahoo drew the kind of headlines that make you cringe. The company suffered what could be the biggest hack of all time, losing the account information of at least 500 million customers. Then came reports that Yahoo helped the government sniff through its u..
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  • 10 beloved PC programs Windows 10 renders obsolete

    10 beloved PC programs Windows 10 renders obsolete
    Let’s start with a killer that took root in Windows 8, but blossomed in Windows 10.Microsoft began baking Windows Defender—its in-house antivirus solution—into Windows 8, but that integration contained a fatal flaw. In a bid to toss PC makers a bloatware bone, Microsoft allowed them to disable Defender and include third-party AV trialware instead. The problem? You had to manually reactivate Windows Defender when that trial was up or risk your computer being vulnerable.Not in Windows 10. Now, Win..
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  • Galaxy Note 7 owners are angry Samsung is refusing to pay compensation

    Galaxy Note 7 owners are angry Samsung is refusing to pay compensation
    The Note 7 recall has already passed into Halloween costume territory, but for owners of the phone who experienced its dangers first hand, it's not as funny. According to a report from The Guardian, a number of individuals who suffered property damage when their Note 7 exploded say Samsung is resisting paying compensation. In one story in the report, Note 7 owner John Barwick was woken in the middle of the night by the smartphone bursting into flames on his nightstand. He says the resulting fir..
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  • First Click: The return of Nintendo

    First Click: The return of Nintendo
    The wait for the N64 was interminable But this practice was best illustrated by the launch of the Nintendo 64, a drawn-out process that makes the wait for the NX seem almost trivial. Picture the scene: it's 1994, and Sony's PlayStation is already on the market, but Nintendo's own machine is still years off. The company could rush production on its new console, which had been codenamed "Project Reality," or keep quiet and let Sony take an easy win. Instead, Nintendo took a different approach, se..
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  • Every Tesla car will contain the hardware to drive itself

    Every Tesla car will contain the hardware to drive itself
    Tesla Motors’ cars will come fitted with full self-driving hardware, as the company jousts with tech rivals like Google and car makers like Ford who are making a dash for the autonomous car market. Model S and Model X cars with the inbuilt hardware are already in production and customers can buy one, Tesla said Wednesday. But the features possible with the new hardware will be enabled only later through over-the-air updates after testing over “millions of miles of real-world driving,” Tesla ..
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FDA approves lower-cost alternative to biotech drug Humira .Morimoto leaving The Modern Honolulu .
Did your zodiac sign change? Don't worry, NASA says astrology is still fake .Movie pirate? Don't trust Plex Cloud .

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