Friday, March 25, 2022

Latest Tech News

On this edition of the TechRadar Pro Tech Talk, AVNation’s Tim Albright chats with Martin Fishman, Director of Strategic Alliances and Enterprise at Joan, about the return to offices for employees, and how the Joan 6 Pro display device can make the transition smoother for SMB and enterprise clients.

About Joan 6 Pro

The next generation, ultra low-power, touch screen ePaper device, designed for advanced meeting room management of enterprises. Mount it wirelessly with the Smart magnet or use a fully wired PoE dock.

Learn more about Joan by visiting GetJoan.com



from TechRadar - All the latest technology news https://ift.tt/puy96R1

Mario Kart 8 Deluxe DLC - Booster Course Pass Price, New Courses, and More - CNET

Here's everything you need to know about Mario Kart 8's new DLC.

from CNET https://ift.tt/dYPVpqm

Latest Tech News

Imagine if your iPhone setup started by asking if you want Siri, Alexa, or Google Assistant.

It could happen. Maybe.

The European Union's Digital Marketing Act (DMA), a set of rules targeting so-called digital gatekeepers like Amazon, Microsoft, Facebook, and Apple, could have wide-reaching implications for everything from search and browsers to messaging services across multiple platforms. 

Now it also seems to target your favorite digital assistants.

Policymakers in the EU have been working on the DMA for almost two years with the goal of "ensuring fair and open markets." It targets companies and digital services that have huge userbases (45 million monthly active users) and significant revenues (75B Euros).  If enacted in October of this year, it enforces:

  • Interoperability between these large companies and third-party providers
  • Customer access to data generated in these company's services
  • It would give advertisers the ability to use their own tools to measure ad performance on these large company platforms (think Google AdSense)
  • Opening proprietary messaging services to interoperation with third-party messaging services
  • Open the platforms to promotions and use of third-party transaction services

This week, however, the EU committees met again to further negotiate the DMA, and hidden among the laundry list of new requirements is this:

"...a requirement to allow users to freely choose their browser, virtual assistants or search engines."

Browser choice and search engine selection are already a given on Apple's iOS, macOS and iPadOS, as it is on Microsoft's Windows, and browsers like Microsoft Edge and Google Chrome.

What no one really asks us about and is often baked into hardware is our virtual assistants.

Every iPhone arrives with Siri built-in at a system level. Siri is the assistant that responds when you hold the power sleep button. It's the digital voice that responds when you say, "Hey Siri." In Google devices, Google Assistant is the default. More crucially, there isn't an Echo device sold with the option to switch from Alexa to another assistant.

As written, this DMA opens Apple, Amazon, and, possibly, Google up to violations and fines if they do not allow consumers to choose between, say, Siri and Alexa or Google Assistant and even Samsung's Bixby. Individual violations for any of the DMA rules would result in fines equal to 10% of overall worldwide revenue and could grow to 20% of revenue for repeat violations.

It's worth noting that the EU Commission, which has oversight over the European Union and not worldwide operations for Apple, Facebook, Microsoft, and other qualifying companies is going after each firm's global earnings.

It further raises the question of the actual teeth of these potential rules.

Developed with an aim of protecting small businesses, tinier companies, and especially the interests of European companies and customers, there is a chance that rules enacted in the EU could affect customers around the world.

Google and Apple released statements that, while appearing to support the sentiment of the DMA, both expressed concern about how the rules could impact innovation, choice, privacy, and security.

An Apple spokesperson shared this statement with TechRadar on the latest provisions:

"Apple has always been committed to creating the best, most innovative products for our customers, and to ensuring that their privacy and security are always protected. We remain concerned that some provisions of the DMA will create unnecessary privacy and security vulnerabilities for our users while others will prohibit us from charging for intellectual property in which we invest a great deal. We believe deeply in competition and in creating thriving competitive markets around the world, and we will continue to work with stakeholders throughout Europe in the hopes of mitigating these vulnerabilities.”

The company is not, for now, talking about virtual assistants.

The voice assistant question

For Google, Apple, and Amazon, Google Assistant, Siri, and Alexa represent important connective tissue across their ecosystems of connected devices and services.

Apple lets Siri talk through and control iPads, iPhones, Macs, HomePods, and control services like Apple Music and Maps. Google Assistant threads throughout almost all of Google's Knowledgebase-driven systems. Alexa is an interesting case because, perhaps even more than Google Assistant, it weaves through all Amazon hardware and services and, as an open service, lives across countless third-party hardware. Plus, unlike Apple's Siri, it allows you to embed third-party service control. Mabe the EU will look more kindly on Alexa.

If in October, the EU is able to enact the full scope of the DMA, its impact will be felt well beyond the EU's borders. It's likely Congress and The Whitehouse, which have been thinking through and discussing regulation and big-tech breakup for years, could use the DMA as a quick-fix stop-gap template until it can come up with its own rules (I won't hold muy breath).

If all that comes to pass, it will be a reckoning day for Apple, Google, Amazon, Facebook, and other big tech companies that meet the threshold. It could also be a sea-change for your favorite virtual assistant.

"Hey Siri, are you worried?"



from TechRadar - All the latest technology news https://ift.tt/LZprqaJ

Thursday, March 24, 2022

Apple Plans Subscription Model for iPhone, Other Hardware Products, Report Says - CNET

Owning Apple products could be a thing of the past.

from CNET https://ift.tt/vig5Lck

What's Next For Samsung? 6 Exciting Gadgets We Want to See in 2022 - CNET

Commentary: From a completely new foldable phone to an upgraded Galaxy Watch, these rumored Samsung devices are on my wish list.

from CNET https://ift.tt/k0wuaxh

Oscars 2022: How to Watch Every Nominated Movie - CNET

Best Picture nominee King Richard returned to HBO Max today. Here's how to stream every film that's up for awards.

from CNET https://ift.tt/1GerPFm

US Jobless Claims Hit Five-Decade Low - CNET

It's a tight labor market, indeed.

from CNET https://ift.tt/IBHXzC2

Latest Tech News

Google Cloud customers will now be able to suspend their virtual machines (VMs) when not in use which will help lower their cloud spending.

The software giant's cloud computing division has announced that its new Suspend/Resume feature for VMs is now generally available after launching in alpha several years ago.

The new feature works in a similar way to closing the lid of your laptop or putting your desktop PC to sleep. By suspending a Google Compute Engine VM, the the state of your instance will be saved to disk so that you can pick up later right where you left off.

The best part about Suspend/Resume in Google Cloud though is that customers will no longer need to pay for cores or RAM when their VMs are in a suspended state. However, they will still need to pay the cloud storage costs of their instance memory as well as other VM running costs like OS licensing but these may be reduced.

Suspending and resuming VMs

When a Google Cloud customer suspends an instance, an ACPI S3 signal is sent to the instance's operating system just like when you close a laptop's lid or put a PC to sleep.

The company makes the case that using this type of signal allows for broad compatibility with a wide selection of OS images so that customers don't have to use a cloud specific OS image or install daemons. At the same time, undocumented and custom OS images that respond to the ACPI S3 signal may also work with Google Cloud's Suspend/Resume feature.

It's also worth noting that storage is dynamically provisioned when Suspend is requested and is separate from the instance's boot disk. Other cloud providers require users to ensure that they have sufficient space in their boot disk to save instance states which may increase the costs of running VMs.

In a new blog post announcing the general availability of Suspend/Resume, Google Cloud also pointed out that the feature can be used by organizations to deal with demand spikes as they can initialize instances with their critical applications and then suspend them so that they can be resumed later. Although Compute Engine instances can be created quickly, resuming an instance is much faster than creating an entirely new instance.



from TechRadar - All the latest technology news https://ift.tt/lBUTwbv

OnePlus 10 Pro Camera Test: Photos Look Great From the Main Lens - CNET

I put the OnePlus 10 Pro up against the iPhone 13 Pro, Pixel 6 Pro and Galaxy S22 Ultra to see how its new camera compares.

from CNET https://ift.tt/ROJQzIT

Latest Tech News

 Internet technology pioneer Stephen Wilhite passed away on March 14 from COVID-related complications. He was 74 and he leaves behind an incredible legacy, the GIF, a game-changer for the blossoming World Wide Web in the 1990s.

Wilhite, who was interested in compression technology, created the GIF at his home in 1987. “I saw the format in my head and then started programming,” he told the New York Times. He then brought the technology to his job at CompuServe, the first major Internet service provider in the US, where he made finalizing tweaks.

In addition to his passion for technology, post-retirement Wilhite was an avid outdoorsman and enjoyed building model trains in his basement.

GIFs made the Internet

The GIF or Graphics Interchange Format has been a massive component of the Internet since its inception. TechRadar’s US Editor-in-Chief, Lance Ulanoff noted in 2016 that “for webmasters in the 1990’s, GIFs were as crucial to the site-building process as HTML….if HTML was the skeleton of our websites, then GIFs were the skin and blood.”

Per his obituary, Wilhite received a Webby Lifetime Achievement Award in New York in 2013 for his invention, during which he reiterated the correct pronunciation of GIF via, naturally, a GIF that simply stated: “it’s pronounced ‘JIF’, not ‘GIF’”. The crowd roared with excitement in response as Wilhite walked wordlessly off the stage.

In further response to the never-ending debate about the pronunciation, a somewhat annoyed Wilhite told the New York Times “The Oxford Dictionary accepts both pronunciations. They are wrong. It is a soft ‘G,’ pronounced ‘JIF’. End of story.”

While today you may associate GIFs with short animations that you see in memes or send in group chats to your friends, the early days of the format were much smaller in scale, usually consisting of just a few low-resolution frames at a time or even single-pixel spacers to help prop up complicated HTML designs.

From humble beginnings to humor

Being the building blocks of the early Internet, it’s almost surprising to observe how they're used today for comedy purposes, displaying fan-made excerpts of classic shows like Friends, or even in some cases, severely compressed, yet full episodes of Spongebob.

GIFs like those blew up on Tumblr and Reddit in their early days despite being regarded as jokes before the heydays of the sites; “No serious web developer or artist would use GIFs,” noted Lance.

These days, we all look upon GIF endearingly; they have withstood the test of time and prospered despite new technologies sprouting around them. Platforms like Giphy were created by people who love the format, and others like Tenor have followed in its wake.

GIFs are a critical component of the Internet that will likely never be replaced, so may Wilhite rest in peace knowing that the Internet will always celebrate his invention.

While the correct pronunciation may be dismaying for some, a commenter on The GIF Pronunciation Page says that the pronunciation may be an homage to peanut butter being “one of the principal three programmer foods”, with the other two being Doritos and Pepsi.



from TechRadar - All the latest technology news https://ift.tt/EPWpFaI

Wednesday, March 23, 2022

How to Find a Wi-Fi Password of Any Network You've Connected To - CNET

You can retrieve Wi-Fi passwords for any network you've logged in to before using your laptop.

from CNET https://ift.tt/XEK2kBw

Pokemon Go April Community Day: Stufful, Event Move, Bonuses and More - CNET

Players will have their first chance to catch a new Alola Pokemon during Pokemon Go's April Community Day.

from CNET https://ift.tt/PzeAXMN

Latest Tech News

If you were looking at the teaser image for The Witcher 4 and thinking, “That’s not like any Witcher medallion I know,” then you were right on the money - publisher CD Projekt has revealed that it has created a whole new Witcher school for the new game.

We still know very little about The Witcher 4 beyond the fact that it’s in active development. CD Projekt put out a short announcement earlier this week confirming the open-world PRG was in the works and that the team had swapped from its own REDengine to Unreal Engine 5. Beyond that, all we have to go on is the teaser image – a Witcher medallion half-covered in snow.

The Witcher 4

(Image credit: CD Projekt Red)

While the medallion looks similar to the one we’ve come to know across The Witcher trilogy, that of the School of the Wolf, it is a narrower face with pointier ears.

Fans weren’t sure if they were looking at a redesigned medallion, either of the School of the Wolf, another canon Witcher School, or an entirely new medallion.

Our own Jessica Weatherbed called it, saying that not only was it a new medallion, but that it would be an entirely new school that didn’t feature in the games, books, or television series.

See more

"I can confirm that the medallion is, in fact, shaped after a lynx," global communication director Robert Malinowski told Eurogamer

However, while the School of the Lynx doesn’t appear in official Witcher fiction, there are stories about the school elsewhere on the internet – on a Witcher fan fiction wiki.

On the fan wiki, the School of the Lynx forms after the School of the Wolf dissolves. Founded by the surviving members – including Geralt – the school eventually departs its homeland and explores the Western continent. However, remember that this is all fan-fiction and unlikely to be similar to the story that CD Projekt is working up for its new RPG. For a start, Geralt may not even feature in the new game. Indeed, the developer was talking about having a different protagonist for future games. 

Also, we have no guarantees that the new Witcher game is set after the events of the original Witcher trilogy. To avoid the difficulties of picking which possible ending to the games is canon, CD Projekt may make the new game a prequel to the old trilogy.

While we are still likely years away from playing The Witcher 4, we now know a little more about the world that CD Projekt is developing.



from TechRadar - All the latest technology news https://ift.tt/64jathf

Latest Gadgets News

YouTube is bringing two new features to provide more context on the health content on the platform. The company has unveiled health source information panels and content shelves in India to assist users in finding videos from authoritative sources.

from Gadgets 360 https://ift.tt/zgQ5F7X

Okta Says Hundreds of Customers May Have Been Exposed by January Breach - CNET

The authentication company says the January incident was contained and that it found no evidence of malicious activity.

from CNET https://ift.tt/Hz39GgJ

Heat Domes and Surging Grid Demand Threaten US Power Grids with Blackouts

A new report shows a sharp increase in peak electricity demand, leading to blackout concerns in multiple states. Here's how experts say ...