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Saturday, September 03, 2016

Huawei MediaPad M3 is a stunning 8.4-inch tablet with optional 4G LTE video - CNET



Huawei MediaPad M3 is a stunning 8.4-inch tablet with optional 4G LTE video - CNET

Samsung Gear S3 All FEATURES + Full REVIEW - Official Video | First Hand...




Published on Aug 31, 2016

The classic watch just turned smarter.
Introducing the new Gear S3 Frontier and Classic.
Timeless outside. Revolutionary inside.

The Gear S3 has the aesthetics of a truly premium watch with advanced features built right into the watch design. That's why it's so easy and effortless to use the Gear S3. It's also built for you to go days without needing your phone or to recharge. You get to feel free with the Gear S3.

The Gear S3 looks and feels like a real watch, but does more than a regular watch and without requiring any extra effort on your part. The features that already exist on a watch, the bezel, the crown and the crystal, can be turned, pressed or tapped for convenience, fun and pure freedom from your phone.

Transform the appearance of your Gear S3 just by changing the watch face. With 15 preloaded designs and more available at the Gear App Store, it's really a matter of choice. Each one comes with a corresponding Always on Display version so you get a seamless look through and through. For something more personal, design your own watch face and Always on Display and make it truly yours.

Watches serve a functional purpose, but they're also valuable accessories. Meet the occasion by dressing up, dressing down or going all out with a watch band of your choice. And since the Gear S3 is compatible with standard 22 mm bands, lack of choice is not an option.

Steal My Gadgets

What the SpaceX Explosion Means for Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg - The New Yorker

The combustion of the AMOS-6 satellite is bad for Facebook’s Internet.org initiative, but not fatally so. The prospects for Elon Musk’s galactic ambitions are less clear.



“Space is hard.” It’s a common refrain among the orbitally inclined. The billionaire Richard Branson said it when Virgin Galactic’s SpaceShipTwo crashed in the Mojave Desert in the fall of 2014, killing one test pilot and seriously injuring another. The astronaut Scott Kelly said it last June, when a SpaceX rocket carrying supplies to him and his colleagues aboard the International Space Station disintegrated in midflight. Charles Bolden, the administrator of NASA, said it this April, in a speech about the challenges of space exploration in the twenty-first century. On Thursday, the moment was right to spit-polish the adage and trot it out once again. At 9:07 A.M. that morning, during a pre-flight test, a rocket designed and built by SpaceX, a private aerospace company, exploded at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, in Florida. A fireball emanated from the rocket’s second stage—the narrow neck just below the bulging payload at the top—and, fed by kerosene and liquid oxygen, consumed the rest of the vehicle. The area was clear of personnel at the time, as protocol requires, so there were no injuries. In the footage of the mishap, which SpaceX has called an “anomaly,” birds wheel through the sky and sing brightly as the rocket burns. Cape Canaveral abuts several wildlife refuges; presumably the fauna there have become accustomed to the thundering sound of human failure."



What the SpaceX Explosion Means for Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg - The New Yorker

New Samsung Gear VR review with the Note 7 ( the evolution of the Gear VR)

Wednesday, August 31, 2016

Samsung Gear S3 Hands-on: Beauty Takes Over Geeky

The Country’s Worst Voting Restrictions Won’t Be In Effect This November | The Nation

North Carolina vote sign





"On July 29, the US Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit struck down North Carolina’s sweeping voting restrictions, saying they targeted black voters “with almost surgical precision.” The decision was the most significant victory for voting rights since the Supreme Court gutted the Voting Rights Act.



Today the Supreme Court declined to reinstate three key voting restrictions that had been appealed by North Carolina—the state’s voter-ID law, cutbacks to early voting and elimination of preregistration for 16- and-17-year-olds. The Court deadlocked 4-4, which upholds the Fourth Circuit ruling. The death of Justice Scalia left conservatives short of the five votes they needed—Justice Thomas would’ve reinstated all of the restrictions, while Justices Roberts, Kennedy, and Alito would’ve reinstated everything except the elimination of preregistration."



The Country’s Worst Voting Restrictions Won’t Be In Effect This November | The Nation

Samsung Gear S3 is a supersized smartwatch that brings Spotify and GPS to your wrist (hands-on) - CNET



Samsung Gear S3 is a supersized smartwatch that brings Spotify and GPS to your wrist (hands-on) - CNET

HP Spectre x2 Six Months Later: Is it Still Worth It? Vol. 2

Apple, Congress and the Missing Taxes - The New York Times

"Apple and the United States are crying foul over the ruling in Europe that Apple received illegal tax breaks from Ireland and must hand over 13 billion euros ($14.5 billion), a record tax penalty in Europe.



But Apple and the United States have only themselves to blame for the situation.









"Apple has engaged in increasingly aggressive tax avoidance for at least a decade, including stashing some $100 billion in Ireland without paying taxes on much of it anywhere in the world, according to a Senate investigation in 2013. In a display of arrogance, the company seemed to believe that its arrangements in a known tax haven like Ireland would never be deemed illegal — even as European regulators cracked down in similar cases against such multinational corporations as Starbucks, Amazon, Fiat and the German chemical giant BASF.



Congress, for its part, has sat idly by as American corporations have indulged in increasingly intricate forms of tax avoidance made possible by the interplay of an outmoded corporate tax code and modern globalized finance. The biggest tax dodge in need of reform involves deferral, in which American companies can defer paying taxes on foreign-held profits until those sums are repatriated.



Initially, deferral was a convenience for multinationals, as they sought investment opportunities abroad. Today, it is the taproot of global tax avoidance. Financial engineering has let American companies shift profits into foreign accounts, while they lobby Congress for tax-rate cuts in exchange for repatriating the money. Currently, there is some $2 trillion in corporate profits in offshore tax-deferred accounts; besides Apple, Microsoft, Google, Cisco and Oracle also have large stashes. Apple is one of nearly two dozen major corporations pushing Congress for a “tax holiday,” which would let companies bring back foreign-held money over the course of a year at a discounted tax rate, rather than the current rate, 35 percent."



Apple, Congress and the Missing Taxes - The New York Times

Tuesday, August 30, 2016

LIFX vs Philips Hue

LIFX Color 1000 Review - 6 Months Later!

Samsung Notebook 9 laptop review

Samsung's pricey new Ativ Book 9 Pro and Spin look like worthy MacBook competitors - CNET




Samsung's pricey new Ativ Book 9 Pro and Spin look like worthy MacBook competitors - CNET

Google discontinues the Chromebook Pixel 2 without replacing it | Ars Technica





"Since it was introduced in 2013, Google's Chromebook Pixel line has always been an option for people who love Chrome OS and high-quality hardware and aren't worried about paying money to get both. But according to a statement from Google given to VentureBeat, Google has discontinued 2015's Chromebook Pixel 2, and there's no replacement in sight.



“We’re committed to the Pixel program but we don’t have plans to restock the Pixel 2,” a Google spokesperson said.



The team that developed the Pixel and Pixel 2 also designed the more recent Pixel C, an Android tablet that almost definitely began life as a Chrome OS device. It's possible that Google intends to refocus the Pixel brand around Android rather than Chrome OS, given that Android will soon have a very desktop-y windowed multitasking mode. Google is also said to be merging Android and Chrome OS at some point in the future.



People looking for a high-quality Chromebook in the same general neighborhood as the Pixel should look to HP's Chromebook 13, an all-aluminum Chromebook that starts at $499 for a dual-core Pentium CPU, 4GB of RAM, 32GB of storage, and a 3200×1800 display. An $819 version with 8GB of RAM and a Core m5 CPU will come closer to the Pixel's performance."



Google discontinues the Chromebook Pixel 2 without replacing it | Ars Technica

BEDDI - Intelligent Alarm Clock. Features Highlight

The Anthropocene epoch: scientists declare dawn of human-influenced age | Science | The Guardian

Nuclear test explosion in Mururoa atoll, French Polynesia, in 1971.



"Humanity’s impact on the Earth is now so profound that a new geological epoch – the Anthropocene – needs to be declared, according to an official expert group who presented the recommendation to the International Geological Congress in Cape Town on Monday.



The new epoch should begin about 1950, the experts said, and was likely to be defined by the radioactive elements dispersed across the planet by nuclear bomb tests, although an array of other signals, including plastic pollution, soot from power stations, concrete, and even the bones left by the global proliferation of the domestic chicken were now under consideration."



The Anthropocene epoch: scientists declare dawn of human-influenced age | Science | The Guardian

Nasa: Earth is warming at a pace 'unprecedented in 1,000 years' | Environment | The Guardian

climate change



"The planet is warming at a pace not experienced within the past 1,000 years, at least, making it “very unlikely” that the world will stay within a crucial temperature limit agreed by nations just last year, according to Nasa’s top climate scientist.



This year has already seen scorching heat around the world, with the average global temperature peaking at 1.38C above levels experienced in the 19th century, perilously close to the 1.5C limit agreed in the landmark Paris climate accord. July was the warmest month since modern record keeping began in 1880, with each month since October 2015 setting a new high mark for heat.



But Nasa said that records of temperature that go back far further, taken via analysis of ice cores and sediments, suggest that the warming of recent decades is out of step with any period over the past millennium.



Nasa: Earth is warming at a pace 'unprecedented in 1,000 years' | Environment | The Guardian

Samsung ATIV Book 9 Spin laptop -- Unboxing, Key Features, and Comments

Why Intel's new Kaby Lake processors won't make your computer much faster - CNET



"Intel's seventh-gen Core processors, codename Kaby Lake, are now official -- but they aren't as big an upgrade as you'd expect from Intel.



Sure, they're a little bit faster and a little bit more power-efficient. But the best thing about Intel new CPUs might actually be this: the deals you'll find on PCs with last year's chips.



Here's why Kaby Lake isn't such a big deal.



What's a Kaby Lake?



Intel's seventh-generation Core processors, the latest and greatest CPUs the company has to offer. They're the successor to Intel's sixth-gen "Skylake" processors from 2015.



But Kaby Lake isn't a true successor to Skylake. It's more like Skylake+.



Usually, Intel creates a powerful new processor architecture, then the following year shrinks down the circuits for better efficiency. (Intel, much like Ke$ha, is industry-famous for that "Tick-Tock" product cycle.)



Kaby Lake isn't huge. It's about twice the size of California's Lake Tahoe -- a popular vacation spot for Silicon Valley residents.



Google Maps



But Kaby Lake doesn't do either of those things. The circuits are the same 14 nanometer size as Intel's earlier Skylake and Broadwell chips, and it's not a new architecture either. Intel had been trying to shrink down to 10nm with a processor called Cannonlake, but those chips were delayed.



So for now, we're stuck at Tock.



No, really, what's a Kaby Lake? Is "Kaby" a kind of fish?



Oh. No, it appears to be an actual lake in Canada. Maybe the CEO enjoys hunting moose in his spare time?



Is Kaby Lake any better than my existing computer processor?



Intel thinks so! The company says its thin laptop chips are 12 percent faster than Skylake in raw performance, and far more efficient at decoding 4K video.



In fact, Intel claims you could get 3 more hours of battery life while streaming YouTube 4K videos (7 vs. 4 hours) compared to last year's chips.



And for gamers, the company even showed an incredibly thin laptop playing fast-paced shooter Overwatch reasonably well.



That sounds great, no?



Sure -- until you take a hard look at how Intel generated those numbers.



It's not too surprising that Intel's Kaby Lake CPU ran 12 percent faster than the comparable Skylake -- because the new chip is clocked 12 percent faster anyhow! Which could be a problem, because faster clock speeds tend to generate more heat and consume more battery as well.





intel-7th-gen-core-perf-gain.jpgEnlarge Image







Intel shows performance gains of 12 percent. Perhaps it's because the chip is working 12 percent harder?
Intel



And while Intel's battery life numbers for 4K video are hard to ignore, Intel tells me that battery life should be "similar" -- not necessarily better than Skylake -- across other kinds of workloads.



We could easily be in a situation like Intel's Broadwell vs. Haswell, where the company claimed better performance with the same battery life, but devices actually consumed a bit more battery in real-world use. I'm optimistic, though, and we'll need to test for sure.



What about the gaming performance?



I wouldn't get too excited just yet. We took a closer look at Overwatch on a Dell XPS 13 with the new Intel chip, and it ran pretty smooth...but with a few caveats. Judge for yourself:









Also note that Intel may still have some more powerful graphics in the near future: we haven't yet seen how far the company's souped-up Intel Iris graphics have come.




Why Intel's new Kaby Lake processors won't make your computer much faster - CNET

Tablet Wars Continue Between Microsoft And Apple | Tech Bet | CNBC

Apple said to be planning Mac lineup refresh, iPad upgrades - CNET

"Would you like to use Apple's stylus with your iPad? That is one of the planned software updates that will accompany hardware improvements already in development, sources tell Bloomberg.



The updated iPad software, which is designed to cater to the needs of professionals, is expected to ship in 2017, the unidentified sources told the news outlet.



The tech titan, which will be making product announcements at an iPhone event on September 7, is also working on a new line of Mac laptops and desktops, Bloomberg reported. The new lineup, which could debut as soon as this year, will include new versions of the iMac desktop, MacBook Air laptop, and a thinner MacBook Pro laptop, according to Bloomberg. With the exception of its 12-inch MacBook, Apple has not updated its Mac lineup since last year.



The company also is planning to launch a 5K standalone monitor in collaboration with LG Electronics. News of a new monitor emerges roughly two months after Apple announced plans to discontinue its Thunderbolt display, a well-liked but aging monitor. The monitor was introduced in 2011 but never updated."



Apple said to be planning Mac lineup refresh, iPad upgrades - CNET

Apple Must Pay Billions for Tax Breaks in Ireland, E.U. Orders - The New York Times

"Europe’s antitrust enforcer ordered Ireland on Tuesday to claw back billions from Apple over illegal tax breaks, a move that will ramp up trans-Atlantic tensions over how much global companies should pay to countries where they do business.

The decision by Margrethe Vestager, the European Union commissioner for competition, is the culmination of a two-year investigation into whether Ireland gave preferential treatment to Apple, part of a broader crackdown on corporate tax avoidance.
The clawback from Apple, which covers 10 years of back taxes of up to 13 billion euros, or about $14.5 billion, from Apple, is the largest of its kind since the European Commission, the executive arm of the 28-member union, started going after member states that favored selected companies.
The ruling adds to a strained relationship between the United States and the European Union over who has the right to regulate tax payments by some of the world’s largest companies."


Apple Must Pay Billions for Tax Breaks in Ireland, E.U. Orders - The New York Times