Saturday, July 16, 2022

Amazon Drone Deliveries Coming to Texas City as Prime Air Expands - CNET

It's the second Amazon Prime Air location after Lockeford, California, that will get drone delivery service later this year.

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'Zack Snyder's Justice League' Messy Superhero Epic Coming to Digital on Tuesday - CNET

Finally you can buy a digital version of the Snyder Cut for DC's team-up with Batman and chums.

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Your TV Could Look Even Better: 9 Setting Adjustments to Give You the Best Picture - CNET

Adjusting your TV's picture mode, brightness and color settings can make it look better than its out-of-the-box settings do. We'll explain.

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Friday, July 15, 2022

Latest Gadgets News

Tesla Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk said on Friday the electric automaker could lower prices for cars if inflation calms down. Musk, who has over 100 million followers on Twitter, was replying to a tweet on Friday that asked if the company had any plans to lower prices that it had raised to beat the pandemic and supply chain woes.

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The 15 Best RPGs on Nintendo Switch - CNET

Our picks for the best role-playing games on Nintendo's system.

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Latest Gadgets News

Bharti Airtel on Friday announced the successful trial of 5G private network at Bosch Automotive Electronics India facility in Bengaluru. Airtel's on-premise 5G captive private network was built over the trial spectrum allocated by the Department of Telecom (DoT), according to a statement.

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Latest Gadgets News

The United States' NASA said on Friday it would resume flights to the International Space Station with Russia, despite its attempts to isolate Moscow over the invasion of Ukraine. NASA said that astronaut Frank Rubio would fly with two Russian cosmonauts on a Soyuz rocket scheduled to launch on September 21 from Kazakhstan, with another astronaut, Loral O'Hara, taking...

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Social Security Checks Could Increase $180 a Month Next Year. Here's What the Experts Say - CNET

If inflation continues to climb, beneficiaries could see another record increase.

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Latest Tech News

In a bid to bring people back, Facebook is letting a limited number of users have up to five different profiles as part of a new test.

Initial reports come from Bloomberg where it says the test is only available to certain users in a select few countries, including the United States. One profile on the account will need to serve as the core with the user’s real name attached to it. The additional four profiles won’t need to use your person’s real name as they can have their own unique username. Plus, they all have a unique news feed. It should also be noted that multiple accounts are still not allowed on Facebook. Profiles are considered different from accounts.

We reached out to Meta for more information and a spokesperson got back to us detailing the test. They said it's “to help people tailor their experience based on interests and relationships.” 

Better organization is the focus as users can create different profiles for different purposes. For example, you can have a profile for work, family, a gaming community, a cycling group, or to plan a vacation. With these different profiles, Meta also hopes to alleviate account clutter.

The spokesperson went into detail concerning account safety and community standards. If you violate the rules on one profile, it'll affect the rest. Say you impersonate someone. This may result in getting that particular profile removed or having the entire account banned. Facebook has a Counting Strikes system in place to judge which profiles get banned. Usernames must still follow Community Standards and not have numbers or special characters within them.

As for availability, that’s still unknown as Meta “may roll out this feature more broadly in the future.” We also asked the spokesperson for a full list of countries that have the multiple profile test.  All the spokesperson said was they had no information to share.

Analysis: Stagnating userbase

Facebook's popularity has been on the wane due to a number of missteps. In fact, the platform reported a decline in users back in February when Facebook saw its first drop in daily users. It went from 1.93 billion users down to 1.929 billion daily users. While the drop may seem laughably minuscule, that’s still a million people leaving. It’s also important to take into account that Facebook is not exactly winning with teenagers, either. Younger users seem to prefer Snapchat and TikTok.

And on top of all that, you can’t ignore Facebook’s numerous data leaks that have stained the company’s reputation. The platform has tried to improve user security with Facebook Protect and 2-Factor Authentication. However, all the changes in the world don’t matter if a tech giant like Meta can get tricked into coughing up sensitive user data to hackers.

Best of luck to Facebook in regaining user trust. It’ll be interesting to see if the multiple accounts feature will be enough to bring people back.

If you’re curious about beefing up your online protection, TechRadar has a list of the best internet security suites for 2022



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Thursday, July 14, 2022

Nintendo Switch Online Is Adding Pokemon Puzzle League This Friday - CNET

The classic N64 puzzler joins the Switch Online plus Expansion Pack service on July 15.

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Latest Tech News

Burning ammonia could help power data centers worldwide, however doing so with current ammonia production technology could leave a catastrophic carbon footprint - a fact Fujitsu believes it can change.

Fujitsu is working with Icelandic start-up Atmonia, providing high-performance computing and AI muscle to support its research into producing sustainable ammonium.  

Access to high-performance computing is one area in which Fujitsu is definitely not lacking; the company operates the Fugaku supercomputer, currently considered the second most powerful worldwide.

How will the partnership work?

The Icelandic firm will use Fujitsu's computing might for uncovering new materials and catalyst candidates for ammonia synthesis. Fujitsu Research senior director Surya Josyula told the Register.

Atmonia announced in April that it has been conducting research on new methods to produce ammonia by only using water, nitrogen from air, and clean electricity. 

Atmonia aims to further expand and improve the efficiency of its research in catalysts for ammonia production by conducting various tests to simulate chemical reactions using quantum chemical calculations.

You can see why so much effort is being placed into making ammonia production less environmentally harmful.

The Haber-Bosch process, where nitrogen and hydrogen are converted into ammonia, reportedly accounts for around 1% of global annual CO2 emissions, more than any other industrial chemical-making reaction.

However, if sustainable ammonia could be used to used to power data centers it could go a long way toward reducing IT's carbon footprint. 

Data centers currently use nearly 1% of global electricity demand or 0.3% of all global CO2 emissions, according to research from the International Energy Agency.

"Retrofitting the industrial process to use hydrogen sourced from electrolysis of water is possible," said Atmonia in the April announcement. "However, this is a more energy intensive route and does not fit well with the intermittent nature of renewable sourced electricity (such as solar/wind) as the Haber-Bosch process requires a continuous source of hydrogen to maintain operation of the downstream processes, which in turn requires uninterrupted source of electricity."

  • Want to run scientific workloads in the cloud? Check out our guide to the best cloud hosting


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Latest Gadgets News

Telecom operator Bharti Airtel on Thursday said it has allotted over 7.1 crore equity shares to internet major Google for Rs. 730 apiece. The allotment is part of Google's commitment to invest $1 billion (nearly Rs. 8,000 crore) with Airtel, which included equity investment in the company worth $700 million (nearly Rs. 5,600 crore), Airtel said in a regulatory filing...

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Abortion Laws in Every State: Where Is Abortion Banned? - CNET

According to a new poll, more than half of Americans disagree with the Supreme Court's decision to overturn Roe v. Wade.

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Latest Tech News

Perhaps I expected too much from Twitter's CoTweeting feature. It's easy enough to use, but delivers far less than I anticipated.

When CoTweeting showed up in my mobile Twitter app a day or so ago, I pushed it aside as a curiosity to be dealt with later. At the time, I didn't realize that it was a limited test. In other words, I was among a small set of Twitter users who had access to Twitter's latest collaboration tool.

It's a little surprising that in the face of a legal battle with "will he or won't he" suitor Elon Musk, Twitter is still working on new products, rather than shoring up the battle lines with sandbags. 

CoTweeting is not, obviously, editable Tweets, a feature I'd much rather be trying out. But it is interesting, unusual… and a bit disappointing.

I decided to give it a try when I noticed a few other Twitter users diving in. Creating a CoTweet is easy. When I compose a tweet on Twitter on iOS, there's a new icon next to Tag Location that looks like a little person. I can start by composing a tweet, and then select CoTweet to initiate an invite to other Twitter users, as long as it's a public account that also follows me. So, no, you can't invite Elon Musk to CoTweet if he isn't following you.

You search for an account in the CoTweet interface, select one (for the moment, the limit is one collaborator), and then return to compose the CoTweet. However, the Tweet will not go live until your invited CoTweeter accepts the collaboration invite.

Twitter CoTweet process

The Twitter CoTweet alert (far right), new icon (middle) and the invite screen. (Image credit: Future)

For my first CoTweet collaborator I chose my friend, Canadian comedian, influencer, and media star Brittlestar (Stewart Reynolds), who got a notification in his DMs that he'd been invited to "tweet together." Brittlestar immediately agreed and we were off to do… something.

The CoTweet looks like a regular tweet, but with one distinct difference: both my and Brittlestar's handles and profile pictures appear at the top with an "&" between them.

See more

That co-created tweet now appears on both of our timelines as an original tweet. That makes sense, but everything that happens after doesn't. All my replies to the original co-Tweet look like replies to myself. There's no interface where cotweeters can manage the replies, reactions, and additional tweets on the thread. I think all replies in the thread are part of the cotweet, but it's not clear that they're coming from Brittlestar and me; in fact, I think they're purposely not set up to look that way. 

The question is whether replies from each of the cotweeters should be attributed to both parties or, as they are now, remain assigned to the original tweeters. Twitter may have made the right choice here, but I would suggest an option that asks if you also want to "cotweet" a reply.

I also don't see a way of disentangling yourself from a cotweet, aside from deleting the tweet.

We had a lot of fun with the concept (Brittlestar is a comedian, after all), but I just didn't understand the point of cotweeting. I guess there is that "speaking with one voice" thing, but isn't it just as easy to like something that someone else tweeted or, better yet, retweet it?

I can see the benefit for brands that want to have guests, maybe celebrities, cotweet promotional tweets, and people who, perhaps, want to simultaneously share good or bad news as a pair, but even then, the interface does little to support this new form of Twitter conversation beyond the very first tweet.

Twitter should keep trying experiments like this, but I hope it's also listening to feedback. CoTweets feels like half of a good idea – perhaps we can fill in the rest by cotweeting about it.



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Wednesday, July 13, 2022

The $58 Prime Day Headphones Deal That Lured Me From My AirPods Pro - CNET

Sometimes, you just have to take a risk and try something new. This 42% discount makes it a lot easier to do.

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Latest Tech News

Nvidia acquires SchedMD and launches Nemotron 3 open models, providing datasets, AI tools, and libraries for multi-agent workflows. from L...