Sunday, August 23, 2020

The Snyder Cut of Justice League on HBO Max gets first trailer at DC FanDome - CNET

After all the mini teases, director Zack Snyder drops longer, specially prepared footage of his version of Justice League.

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Latest Tech News

After plenty of delays, the Google Pixel 4a was finally released in early August, and we rejoiced to see the follow-up to one of our favorite mid-range phones of all time. But now that the dust has settled, we have to ask: what’s coming in the Google Pixel 5a?

It’s too early to form a cohesive idea of what Google’s next affordable smartphone will be – not just because the Pixel 4a just came out, but because the mid-year phone typically inherits new features introduced in the previous flagship phone. The Pixel 4a inherited from the Google Pixel 4; to get an idea of the Pixel 5a, we’ll have to see what the upcoming Google Pixel 5 brings to smartphones.

That means we’ve got a bit of a wait on our hands until Google debuts its next flagship. But until then, we can look at what the Pixel 4a didn’t incorporate and list which features we would be truly excited to see in its successor. Read on for the few rumors we’ve already heard, along with what we want to see in the Pixel 5a.

Google Pixel 4a

(Image credit: TechRadar)

Google Pixel 5a price and release date

  • What is the Google Pixel 5a? The next mid-range Google smartphone 
  • When will the Google Pixel 5a come out? Probably May 2021 
  • How much will the Google Pixel 5a cost? At or above $349 / £349 / AU$599 

The Google Pixel 5a release date hasn’t been announced, and we’re too far off to guess when it will be released, which is unusual for big-brand smartphones. Why? Because its predecessor’s release was delayed multiple times due to the coronavirus outbreak.

We initially expected the Google Pixel 4a to be announced at the Google IO 2020 keynote on May 12, but when that event was cancelled amid the outbreak, we didn’t hear anything official about the new phone. Months passed, with rumored release dates coming and going, until Google finally announced the phone and quickly released it at the beginning of August 2020. 

If things return to normal next year, we could expect the Google Pixel 5a release date to be sometime after a Google IO 2021 in May 2021. But as with many things in the phone industry, we aren’t sure whether the outbreak will continue to impact phone launches going forward.

What we do have a good idea of is price. The Google Pixel 3a, the first mid-range phone in the series, was released at $399 / £399 / AU$649. The Pixel 4a went even lower, costing $349 / £349 / AU$599 at launch. While the cost could go higher – especially if 5G is included, and we expect the upcoming Pixel 4a 5G to be pricier – we wouldn’t expect it to drop any lower. But we have been wrong before…

Here's  Pixel 4a prices in your region:

Google Pixel 5a news and rumors

The lone rumor we’ve heard...is that the Google Pixel 5a exists. Really! A supposedly official document listed the Pixel 5a by name, along with codenames for what we expect are future Pixel phones – including the Google Pixel 6 and 6 XL, as well as what could be the rumored Google foldable phone. 

Google Pixel 5a what we want to see

We’re still enamored with the Pixel 4a, but even more eager to speculate how it could be improved in the next affordable Pixel phone.

Google Pixel 4a

(Image credit: TechRadar)

1. More rear cameras

We’ve wanted more rear cameras on the entire Pixel line for years, and were hoping the Pixel 4a would inherit the telephoto lens of the Pixel 4. Since that didn’t happen, our hopes shift to the Pixel 5a, which we’d love to see with a zoom and ultrawide lens (and heck, why not a macro while we’re at it). 

Google Pixel 4a

(Image credit: TechRadar)

2. 5G connectivity standard

While the Pixel 4a 5G will define how viable the mid-range 5G phone is in a market that seems happy enough with 4G LTE cheap phones, we’d love to see the Pixel 5a pack 5G as a standard feature. This might be dependent on whether 2021 phones that connect to the advanced networks come any cheaper, given the price hike that this year’s 5G-capable phones experienced, but even an affordable 5G phone would be a stellar option.

Google Pixel 4a

(Image credit: TechRadar)

3. Better battery life

The Pixel 4a didn’t quite suffer the Pixel 4’s abysmal battery life, but it wasn’t spectacular, either, often with single-digit capacity left at the end of a single day. Given many budget phones have 4,000mAh batteries or larger, we’d love to have the mid-range Pixel 5a last as long as the competition.

Google Pixel 4a

(Image credit: TechRadar)

4. Metal and glass body

Yes, the mid-range line has had a polycarbonate plastic body since it debuted in the Pixel 3a – but it’s the biggest budget compromise on a device with incredible software and a reliable camera. We’d love to see the Pixel 5a step up its game, especially since other equally-priced phones like the iPhone SE 2020 with glass backs and metal frames.

Google Pixel 4a

(Image credit: TechRadar)

5. A micro SD slot

Google. Please. If you’re not going to ship your Pixel 4a with more than 128GB of storage, at least let us expand it on our own. Here's hoping that's amended in the Pixel 5a.



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Latest Tech News

While businesses are largely committed to cybersecurity initiatives, workers have little faith in the ability of their employers to safeguard critical data and other assets, according to data gathered by TechRadar Pro.

A survey of our readers found the majority (70.70%) of staff believe cybersecurity is a central focus for their business, yet half (44.97%) of the same group also feel ill-equipped to handle the cyberthreats their company faces.

Many employees (66.43%) are also skeptical about the preparedness of their colleagues to adapt to changes in the cybersecurity landscape, such as the evolution of new attack vectors or emergence of novel malware strains.

Cybersecurity landscape

The transition to remote working has raised a number of questions about the ability of businesses to deal with cybersecurity threats and adapt to techniques employed by the most sophisticated cybercriminals today.

With many employees now operating out of their home offices, the traditional security perimeter has expanded by magnitudes in a matter of months - and the addition of shadow IT to the mix has made security oversight near-impossible.

Companies are also faced with a litany of potential consequences in the event of a cyber incident, ranging from financial to reputational and operational.

In the last two weeks alone, for example, both health giant Garmin and camera manufacturer Canon have fallen victim to damaging ransomware attacks.

The former suffered a week-long service outage as a result and ended up paying the ransom fee in exchange for the safe return of stolen data. While the latter managed to restore its systems relatively quickly, the attackers leaked stolen information online in response to the firm’s refusal to pay the ransom.

Both examples illustrate the range of potential consequences that could arise as a result of  chinks in the cybersecurity armor - and also the highly disruptive qualities of ransomware in particular.

Respondents to our survey highlighted insufficient training as one possible problem area, as well as a lack of clear accountability and lines of command.

Roughly a quarter (26.12%) said current cybersecurity training is not up to standard, and the majority of this sub-group (73.38%) suggested their business is poorly placed to handle evolving threats as a result.

Meanwhile, almost one third (29.49%) said they had no idea who is responsible for handling cybersecurity issues in their organization, which should set alarm bells ringing in the CISO’s office.

While cyber awareness levels are higher than ever, it is clear businesses need to take material action - and they are not lacking economic incentive to do so.

Beyond the threat of financial penalties issued by data protection watchdogs (which can reach millions of dollars depending on the severity of the incident and size of the business), almost half (42.30%) of those surveyed also said superior cybersecurity capabilities would make their company more profitable in the long run.



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After some relatively understated teasing at the start of August, Rocksteady’s Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League has finally been revealed in more detail during DC FanDome

In a dedicated panel hosted by Will Arnett an official reveal trailer was shown for the game, featuring four of its playable antiheroes: Harley Quinn, King Shark, Deadshot and Captain Boomerang. Together, they're fighting off bad guys in a Metropolis that’s being torn apart by Brainiac. At the trailer’s end, a not-so-friendly version of Superman makes an appearance and the game’s “Kill the Justice League” title becomes a lot more clear.

Following the trailer, Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League’s creative director, Sefton Hill, gave more detail on the game and explained that it’ll feature an open world with one to four player co-op. 

Players will be able to switch between characters as they please and it’ll be possible to play the game in single player mode, with AI taking control of the other characters as needed.

Coming to next-gen consoles

Kill the Justice League will be developer Rocksteady’s first title since Batman: Arkham Knight in 2015 and Arkham VR in 2016 so it’s safe to say there’s some anticipation for this game. It was confirmed by Hill that the game will be a continuation of Rocksteady’s Batman: Arkham-verse.

Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League will launch on PS5, Xbox Series X and PC in 2022. Watch the trailer for yourself below.

DC FanDome, which also saw the reveal of Warner Bros Montreal's Gotham Knights, has now come to an end. But there will be another more on-demand style event called Explore the Multiverse on September 12 2020.



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Saturday, August 22, 2020

Latest Tech News

BlackBerry, FIH Mobile, and OnwardMobility have signed an agreement to deliver a new BlackBerry-branded smartphone in the first half of 2021. 

The new handset will support 5G connectivity, come equipped with a physical keyboard, and provide class-leading security, a unique combination of features for governments and enterprises. 

But apparently there is one feature that tops all of them.

The handset

Under the terms of the agreement, OnwardMobility will plan and sell the upcoming 5G BlackBerry smartphone, FIH Mobile will engineer and produce the device, whereas BlackBerry will provide enterprise and government level security technologies for the upcoming handset. The product will be available in North America and Europe, so for other markets BlackBerry might choose another manufacturing partners. 

The press release issued by the three companies does not disclose any details about the upcoming BlackBerry 5G smartphone other than saying that it will feature a QWERTY keyboard, a 5G-enabled mobile platform, use Google’s Android operating system, and support enhanced security technologies. Meanwhile, the PR states that the product will become available in the first half of 2021, which may indicate that development of the handset is well underway. 

“Enterprise professionals are eager for secure 5G devices that enable productivity, without sacrificing the user experience,” said Peter Franklin, CEO of OnwardMobility. “BlackBerry smartphones are known for protecting communications, privacy, and data. This is an incredible opportunity for OnwardMobility to bring next-generation 5G devices to market with the backing of BlackBerry and FIH Mobile.” 

(Image credit: BlackBerry)

Uneasy business 

Historically, businesses, governments, and enterprises were happy-enough with their BlackBerry smartphones offering secure communication services, a physical keyboard, and other advantages premium handsets featured at the time. But it is not going to be easy to make a 5G BlackBerry smartphone popular.  

Firstly, most people these days are used to touchscreen handsets, but not to physical keyboards, it is not like the latter are less comfortable to use, people are just fine with virtual ones. Secondly, there are not so many loyal BlackBerry owners left, which means that OnwardMobility might have to address a niche market. Thirdly, if OnwardMobility and FIH Mobile manage to come up with a unique selling feature, it will have to be a feature that will outshine capabilities offered by tens of smartphones available today.   

“Assuming they are in the £500 – £800 space, they are going to facing phones like the iPhone 11, and devices packing six cameras and the latest Qualcomm chipset,” Ben Wood, an analyst with CCS Insight, told The Register. “That's a very, very tough space, and they're going to need something extraordinary.” 

Apparently, there is such a feature 

(Image credit: BlackBerry)

FIH Mobile is a subsidiary of Foxconn Technology Group, the world’s largest contract maker of electronics. One important thing to note about FIH Mobile is that its owns a former Nokia manufacturing facility in Hanoi, Vietnam. Keeping in mind tensions between the USA and China, Foxconn’s base of operations, producing BlackBerry 5G smartphones in Vietnam makes a lot of sense, especially considering that natural customers for BlackBerry handsets are governments and corporations working in various regulated industries. 

Governments tend to impose additional regulations quickly, lifting them is a different matter and may take years. Therefore, if at some point the US government and its allies in Europe decide not to use smartphones made in China for sensitive communications, this is where OnwardsMobility and FIH Mobile may win big. 

FIH specifically noted in the press release that it would manufacture the 5G BlackBerry devices ‘under strict guidelines to ensure component, device as well as supply chain integrity.’  

Not using Chinese parts is relatively easy: there are chips and displays produced in South Korea and Taiwan, there are smaller components made elsewhere. Meanwhile, ensuring a very strict integrity and an end-to-end protected supply chain is complicated. So far, OnwardMobility and FIH have said nothing about following US Department of Commerce’s NIST SP 800-193 platform firmware resiliency guidelines or the latest international Common Criteria standard (ISO 15408, CC Version 3.1) for manufacturing secure products. 

Meanwhile, while not stated directly, it is completely possible that the two companies have plans to build BlackBerry smartphones following all the security standards. Certifications of production facilities take time, but OnwardsMobility and FIH have months before announcement of the first BlackBerry 5G handset (which is likely going to take place at Mobile World Congress 2021) and over half of a year before shipping it.

If this is the case, the two companies might capture a very lucrative market segment by offering unique products featuring extended security. 

“As an exclusive supplier to OnwardMobility, we’re committed to delivering new BlackBerry 5G devices to market, utilizing our deep expertise in design, manufacturing, component supply and logistics management,” said Dr. Wen-Yi Kuo, Executive Director, FIH Mobile. 

Another win for Foxconn 

At present, FIH Mobility produces Nokia-branded smartphones developed by HMD Global. The deal with BlackBerry and OnwardMobility gives FIH Mobile an additional brand and a new market segment to address, which lowers reliance of Foxconn on Apple, its largest customer, a win for the company. 

Sources: OnwardMobilityThe Register



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Latest Tech News

Lenovo knows a thing or two about modular design; iconic brand Motorola tried to popularize the concept, first as part of Google with Project Ara then as a Lenovo subsidiary with the Moto Z range and its Moto Mods

Now, Lenovo has submitted a modular laptop concept, called Rapid, to the prestigious Red Dot design award (via another subsidiary, Hefei LCFC Information Technology).

It was commended by the judging panel for setting "standards in terms of sustainability" thanks to its "intelligent modular concept, [which] makes an important contribution to the conservation of resources.”

According to the blurb, the Rapid features core components that can be easily exchanged, such as the processor, memory and I/O ports. “This allows the user to adapt the device to increasing demands without having to replace the entire laptop," explains the rundown.

A USB module can also be swapped for an HDMI or Thunderbolt 3 version. Whether this is more practical or faster than having a many-ports-in-1 USB hub remains to be seen.

That said, the wedged design of the Rapid is jaw droppingly beautiful and, while we hate the fact it has no visible webcam, we can only applaud the bold decision to include a touchpad…on the right of the keyboard.

Many before have tried to launch a modular laptop (and failed miserably), so while the concept is interesting, the commercial and practical reality is likely to be a bit less earth-shattering.

Via Red Dot



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Latest Gadgets News

The Batman trailer has rolled in. At DC FanDome, Robert Pattinson the new Batman and The Batman writer-director Matt Reeves showcased the first proper look at the upcoming standalone reboot of the Dark Knight.

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The Batman unveils first trailer featuring Robert Pattinson at DC Fandome - CNET

Director Matt Reeves storms DC FanDome with the first, full look at his cast, including Colin Farrell as Penguin and Zoe Kravitz as Catwoman.

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Apple says WordPress doesn't have to add in-app purchases - CNET

A WordPress developer had tweeted that Apple was going to cut off updates to the open-source iOS app unless it committed to supporting in-app purchases.

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Latest Games News

Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League trailer is live. At DC FanDome, Rocksteady Studios unveiled its next DC game, which will be available in 2022 on PC, PS5, and Xbox Series X.

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Latest Gadgets News

Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League trailer is live. At DC FanDome, Rocksteady Studios unveiled its next DC game, which will be available in 2022 on PC, PS5, and Xbox Series X.

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Latest Gadgets News

Shazam! 2 now has a title — Shazam! Fury of the Gods. The cast and crew of Shazam! revealed the title for the Shazam! sequel at DC FanDome.

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Latest Tech News

We all know that antivirus software is designed to keep your device protected - but have you ever wondered exactly how it does so?

In this article, we’re going to look at the way antivirus apps actually work, and the main pillars of protection that these pieces of software are built around.

Watchful eye in real time

When it comes to defending your PC and policing the files on your system, antivirus apps have a few different methods of doing so.

The first is a manual scan of all the files on your system, looking for anything suspect. These scans can be quite lengthy to start with, although over time, the use of clever routines to skip over any files that haven’t been changed since the last scan considerably shortens those initial long waits. Also, most apps offer some kind of ‘quick scan’ mode, which as the name suggests is just a swift manual check-up.

The second pillar of an antivirus app’s defenses is the real-time component, which examines files being introduced to your system, and processes that are fired up – everything happening on your PC right now, in real-time, in other words. Again, if it detects something bad cropping up on your system, it’ll intervene.

Malware warning

(Image credit: Pixabay)

With both methods, the antivirus application relies on what are known as 'definitions': a library of signatures of existing malware. These definitions are kept as current as possible with updates piped to the antivirus software usually on a daily basis (or even hourly).

That said, no matter how quick definition updates might be delivered, there are always freshly introduced pieces of malware out there that have never been seen before, which is why any good antivirus will also use heuristic technology. This simply means monitoring for suspect or malware-like behavior in the processes or files on the host PC, in order to catch something new which isn’t yet present in the program’s definitions.

Manual scanning

Real-time protection is really the key to defending your PC, aiming to ensure that malware doesn’t get onto your machine as you go about your daily computing usage.

That said, it can be worth running a manual system scan with your antivirus now and then (or scheduling one to happen), because there’s a chance it might just pick up something that was previously missed (due to subsequently updated definitions).

In truth, that’s probably not a likely scenario, and strictly speaking, you may not ever want to run manual scans – indeed many folks don’t bother – but it doesn’t hurt to do so occasionally as a kind of ‘safety net’ measure.

Bound for quarantine

When a piece of malware is found on your PC, the antivirus will take immediate action, hopefully stopping any malicious processes in their tracks there and then, while quarantining the malware so it can’t harm your system.

As we’ve seen in our antivirus reviews, when it comes to particularly dangerous malware like, for example, ransomware, sometimes the process isn’t quite stopped immediately, which may mean the ransomware manages to encrypt (hopefully only) a small number of files. Some packages will (again hopefully) be able to recover those files (fingers crossed).

The point here being that in some rarer cases, the damage isn’t stopped immediately, but the antivirus should step in very swiftly and any casualties should be minimal.

Of course, as part of looking after your system, a good antivirus will bring in extra layers of defense – such as a ransomware shield to defend against that particularly nasty strain of malware.

BullGuard Antivirus web protection

(Image credit: BullGuard)

Commonly, an antivirus app will also protect your surfing with specific web protection measures, popping up warnings and preventing you from landing on any web pages which might carry malware, or are phishing vehicles, for example.

How does antivirus software work?

Antivirus apps use multiple layers of defense to guard against all the bad stuff which is floating around out there online. The key elements are real-time protection and heuristic technology, which should catch existing and as-yet-unknown threats respectively, helping to make your PC a safer and more secure place.

Of course, we have to bear in mind that nothing is completely bullet-proof in the security world –even the best antivirus apps aren’t infallible – and common sense plus good practice on the part of the user will always play an important role.



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Latest Gadgets News

Wordpress for iOS finally received a new update yesterday after a period of almost a month. Turns out, the Automattic team that runs the app as well as popular Wordpress.com blogging service was blocked by Apple from pushing new app updates as it was not offering an in-app purchase option for Wordpress.com’s paid plans and domain purchases, the c...

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Friday, August 21, 2020

Latest Gadgets News

Redmi Note 8 Pro MIUI 12 update has started rolling out, the development team shared the update on its social media handles. The Redmi Note 8 series including the Pro and the vanilla variant are part of the first wave of phones to start receiving MIUI 12 and the company seems to have delivered on its promise of rolling out the update this month.

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Today's Wordle Hints, Answer and Help for May 10, #1786

Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for May 10, No. 1,786. from CNET https://ift.tt/FztnkY5