Thursday, January 19, 2023

Latest Tech News

Your humble Wi-Fi router signal could be used to track your movements around a  room, bat style, a new report has claimed.

Researchers from Carnegie Mellon University recently published a report in which they detailed an experiment using ordinary off-the-shelf Wi-Fi routers to detect people’s locations, as well as their poses, in a room. 

The experiment, although not without flaws, was an overall success, proving that the endpoints could be used to track people. It’s being described as an ethical and privacy-sensitive way to monitor (mostly elderly and alone) individuals.

Accurate images

In layman’s terms, the Wi-Fi signal transmitted by the routers can be used as a sort of sonar, where an AI-powered program analyzes the difference in the density between outgoing and incoming signals, and comes back with wireframe images of people in the room. 

In some instances, the images came back incomplete, or showed people in weird, unnatural poses, demonstrating that the method obviously still needs work. But in many cases, the images created by the AI were quite accurate. People’s positions within a room were accurate, their dimensions were accurate, their poses were accurate. 

Besides the occasional error in rendering, another major challenge is being able to track a bigger number of people. So far, the routers are able to successfully track up to three people. 

For the experiment, the researchers used TP-Link Archer A7 AC1750 devices, which cost a measly $32. Compared to other tracking technology, such as LIDAR or radar, using Wi-Fi routers for this purpose is immensely cheaper. In some instances, the routers could even be a better solution compared to cameras, given that they work even if people are hidden behind objects such as furniture. 

It seems as if the researchers will continue their work, attempting to improve the solution via better public training data for Wi-Fi-based perception.

Via: Tom's Hardware



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5 True Wireless Earbuds Worth Buying for Under $40 - CNET

A growing number of dirt-cheap true wireless earbuds are now available. Here are the current best of the bunch.

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Nvidia announced this week that the latest version of its subscription service, GeForce Now Ultimate, has officially gone live for several cities in the US, rolling out to San Jose, Los Angeles, and Dallas, as well as Frankfurt, Germany. Areas surrounding these cities will also be able to connect to the new Ultimate tier servers.

This version upgrades GeForce Now's premier RTX 3080 tier and rebrands it to Ultimate membership, offering the same benefits of the RTX 3080 tier but upgrading the cloud rig to an RTX 4080 GPU. 

The service is powered by the Lovelace GPU architecture and, according to Nvidia, streams at up to 240 FPS with NVIDIA Reflex, up to 4K 120 FPS with support for DLSS 3 and RTX ON, and ultrawide support at up to 3,840 x 1,600p resolution at 120 FPS.

We punched in the numbers and found that if you paid for the Ultimate subscription tier in six-month increments for six years ($99.99, about £85/AU$145), it would cost the same as buying the RTX 4080 graphics card at its current MSRP. This makes it an excellent option for those with a solid internet connection who wants the performance of the current-gen graphics card without having to pay over $1,000 for it.

"After the start of the rollout of the RTX 4080 SuperPODs today, it’ll start rolling out to other regions, with wider release expected throughout Q1," an Nvidia spokesperson told TechRadar. "On our weekly GFN Thursday blog, we’ll be giving updates each week on which regions are getting RTX 4080 performance."

Could this be the future of PC gaming?

GeForce Now 4K streaming on laptop

(Image credit: Nvidia)

We previously tried out the RTX 3080 tier for our Acer Chromebook 516 GE review and found the performance on one of the best Chromebooks we've tested to be near indistinguishable from actually running a laptop with the best GPU on the market.

And when we went hands-on with the new Ultimate tier for CES 2023, we found that the performance is even better, as it addresses latency issues that have held the subscription service back. Not only would the upgraded servers bring system latency beneath that 60ms threshold, but Nvidia also claims that by incorporating Nvidia Reflex into its server-side processing, it can bring it down as low as 35ms, which is on par with an actual gaming PC running local hardware.

If this turns out to be true, that would be absolutely huge and make an already great service perfect for even hardcore and eventually competitive gaming, maybe even beating out even the best gaming PC you can get for a comparable price.



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Wednesday, January 18, 2023

The Best Outdoor Smart Plugs for 2023 - CNET

The best outdoor smart plugs bring scheduling, voice commands and more to your exterior lighting.

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WhatsApp will soon let you speak your status.

The new status update capability is nested among a rather batch of upcoming WhatsApp features. According to WABetaInfo, the company is working on 10 new tools. Most are currently available through the beta version of the Android app with one exclusive to iOS devices.

On Android, WhatsApp is currently testing voice status updates allowing users to record and share voice notes as a status instead of plain text. You will have a maximum recording time of 30 seconds, and if you don’t like what you hear, you can toss out the status before recording another update. Notes are confirmed to be end-to-end encrypted, “ensuring that only the people you choose with your privacy settings can listen to them.” They also automatically disappear after 24 hours or you can delete them yourself at any time.

There are restrictions for the current version of voice status updates, however. Not everyone who downloads the beta app will have the opportunity to record updates as it’s only going out to a select few. Plus other users will need to have the beta installed on their phones in order to listen.

Improving chat transfer

Next, the development team is working on a revamped chat transfer feature for securely moving your chat history over to a new Android device without needing to use Google Drive; effectively removing the middleman. The way the migration works is you need to open the chat transfer tool on your old phone first, then scan a QR code on the new device’s copy of WhatsApp. It appears this is exclusive to Android phones, as according to WABetaInfo, an iOS version “is not planned at the moment.”

And the final noteworthy Android changes are the new shortcut-blocking features. One will let you block a person within the chat list without having to open the whole conversation while the other allows users to block contacts from inside a notification. Be aware the latter feature only appears when you get a message from an unknown source. That way, you don’t accidentally block someone you know.

Exclusive for iPhone

For iOS, WhatsApp is adding tabs to the in-app camera so you can switch between taking photos or shooting videos on the fly instead of pressing and holding the on-screen button. It’s unknown if the video mode will continue recording after switching to photo mode or if it will stop. Hopefully, it’s the former, because it would be disappointing if the recording stops after switching.

Unfortunately, the iOS beta program for WhatsApp is full, so any new interested iPhone owners won’t be able to try out the upcoming camera mode. The latest Android beta, however, still has room for testers via the Google Play Store. Official launch dates remain unknown for everything.

While we have you, be sure to check TechRadar’s recent list of the best free Android apps available through the Google Play Store. It’s a massive list spanning 11 pages and covering education, travel, and camera apps. 



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Super Bowl Commercials: Watch All the 2023 Big Game Ads Released So Far - CNET

The teams aren't even set yet for the Feb. 12 game, but some of the planned commercials are already trickling out.

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Denon is now shipping the AVR-X4800H AV receiver it first announced back in September 2022. That’s great news for home theater fans looking to step up their cinema sound game over what’s delivered by the best dolby Atmos soundbars, and it should also be of interest to gamers seeking a receiver that’s fully compatible with PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X | S consoles.

A notable feature of the AVR-X4800H, and one that would rank it among the best AV receivers, is its support for 8K 60Hz and 4K 120Hz video pass-through on multiple HDMI 2.1 ports. Some earlier models from Denon and other AV receiver makers provided either a single full-featured HDMI 2.1 input, or even none at all, while promising a full suite of HDMI 2.1 capabilities would be added via a “future firmware update.”

The AVR-X4800H provides 8K and 4K 120Hz compatibility out of the box, and its other gaming features include support for Variable Refresh Rate (VRR), Quick Frame Transport (QFT), and Auto Low Latency Mode (ALLM). There’s also pass-through support for all key high dynamic range formats: Dolby Vision, HDR10+, Dynamic HDR, and HLG.

Denon AVR-X4800H rear panel against white background

The  AVR-X4800H offers 7 HDMI inputs and 3 HDMI outputs. (Image credit: Denon)

Denon’s latest receiver is similarly stacked on the audio side, offering up Dolby Atmos, DTS:X, IMAX Enhanced, and Auro 3D sound processing. Built-in Audyssey MultEQ XT32 room correction lets you fine-tune the interaction between your speakers and listening environment for the best sound, and a firmware update that will enable an upgrade to Dirac Live room correction (at extra cost) is promised for the future. Having used Dirac Live and experienced its sound quality benefits, we find that last feature especially compelling.

That’s not all there is to be said about the AVR-X4800H. With 9 onboard 125-watt amplifier channels, it supports Dolby Atmos configurations that use up to four overhead “height effects” speakers. It also has four subwoofer outputs that can be independently controlled. Denon’s wireless HEOS platform is used for streaming, allowing for high-res audio to be conveyed to the receiver over a Wi-Fi connection.

Analysis: Receivers with up-to-date HDMI 2.1 features have arrived (finally)

One irony concerning A/V receivers that have been released over the past few years is that many lacked HDMI 2.1 ports with comprehensive features to support the latest generation of gaming consoles, while numerous soundbars offer such support. 

Anyone buying Denon’s new receiver will be able to use it well into the future

Models like Denon’s AVR-X4800H correct that situation by letting you connect both a PS5 and an Xbox series X with full pass-through of 4K 120Hz video along with VRR and ALLM support. Oh yes, it also has both 8K video pass-through and upscaling of 4K video to 8K resolution to ensure compatibility with your future 8K TV.

AV receivers like the AVR-X4800H are pricey ($2,499 / £2,000 / AU$3,600) audio components that you’ll want to hang on to for many years – decades, even – so it’s comforting to know that they are available now with a fully up-to-date feature set. Anyone buying Denon’s new receiver will be able to use it well into the future, or at least until virtual reality replaces all other forms of entertainment.

With four independent subwoofer outputs and both Audyssey MultEQ XT32 and Dirac Live support (forthcoming), the AVR-X4800H can be used as the centerpiece of a perfectionist home theater, one with deep, perfectly tuned bass output. Those features are the ones that really make this receiver interesting and different from other options on the market, and we hope to get an opportunity to test it out in the near future.



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Best Internet Speed Tests of 2023: Where to Test Your Internet Speed - CNET

Curious to see how your internet provider stacks up? Try out some of the best internet speed tests for free.

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IT leaders are worried about the security they currently have in place to defend against cyberattacks, but are willing to splash the cash to boost their protections, new research has claimed.

The fourth annual Veeam Data Protection Trends Report surveyed over 4,000 IT leaders and those involved with implementing cybersecurity strategies at various organizations, finding that the adoption of hybrid working has contributed to this feeling of unease.

It noted how new challenges are arising with the increasing shift of digital infrastructure away from premises, as organizations look to cloud document storage and cloud hosting providers, forcing them to raise their IT budgets in response.

'Gaps' to be filled

In setting goals for the rest of this year, the survey found that IT leaders wanted to prioritize their backup implementations, as well as making sure that Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) and Software as a Service (SaaS) are just as secure as their datacenter workloads.

As for the organizations themselves, a vast majority felt there was a gap in what they wanted and what their IT teams could deliver. More specifically, there was an 'availability gap' felt by 82% between the requested and actual speeds of recovering stored data. 

Nearly 80% of organizations also complained about a 'protection gap', with the amount of potential data loss being too great for the frequency at which data was protected by IT departments. 

Such gaps are the reason why over half of the organizations surveyed wished to change their protection for this year, and serve as the justification for increased data protection spending too, expected on average to be up by 8.3% for 85% of organizations, which is considerably higher than in other areas of IT spending.

Judging by recent years, such protection is sorely needed. Cyberattacks, especially ransomware, were the biggest disrupters for organizations' systems every year since 2020, with over 80% professing to have been attacked at least once in the last year, up by a huge 76% from Veeam's previous report. 

Data recovery was of the utmost importance to them, as only 55% of stolen data was able to be salvaged. Organizations highlighted “integration of data protection within a cyber preparedness strategy” as the main focus for protection solutions. 

A corollary of ransomware attacks, in addition to their initial damage, is the drain they have on the resources and budgets of IT teams, forcing them to postpone upgrades to the digital landscape of the organization and focus on recovery efforts and the fallout from such attacks instead. 

Containers such as Kubernettes are also growing in popularity - just over half of respondents are running them, and 40% said they planned to. But the report lamented the fact that the "same kinds of data protection strategy disparities as seen in early adopters of SaaS five years ago or virtualization 15 years ago" are being repeated. 

The issue is that only the storage is being protected, whilst an overarching approach to protecting workloads is being neglected. The report noted this is typical behavior following the adoption of new platforms.

"Legacy backup approaches won’t address modern workloads - from IaaS and SaaS to containers - and result in an unreliable and slow recovery for the business when it’s needed most", said Veeam CTO Danny Allan.

"This is what’s focusing the minds of IT leaders as they consider their cyber resiliency plan. They need Modern Data Protection."



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Tuesday, January 17, 2023

Latest Tech News

There are only two ‘Friday the 13th’s in 2023, and the first has already seen Microsoft scrambling to fix an issue that affected users’ Start menus and taskbars following a botched update to its Defender antivirus.

Following the mishap, Microsoft took to the Internet to confirm that many users had experienced “a series of false positive detections” for the “Block Win32 API calls from Office macro” Attack Surface Reduction (ASR) rule, leading to many program shortcuts (.lnk files) vanishing.

Among the initially suggested fixes from the company was to turn the “Block Win32 API calls from Office macro” rule into audit mode, however Microsoft has now issued a more comprehensive fix that, after deploying, will allow users to turn the ASR rule back into block mode.

Microsoft Defender problem

The company has told users to upgrade to security intelligence build 1.381.2164.0 or later. An extract from the help page reads:

“Microsoft has confirmed steps that customers can take to recreate start menu links for a significant sub-set of the affected applications that were deleted.”

The steps have been provided as a PowerShell script on a GitHub page - a developer platform that Microsoft owns. There’s also a set of instructions for deploying the script using Intune, which many users were vocal about when it came to discussing the blunder on platforms like Reddit and Microsoft’s own Tech Community page.

One user asked Microsoft “why Defender did not record the lnk file deletions”.

As the problem continues to be an ongoing source of disruption among Microsoft users, it’s unclear whether the fix has been enough for the tech giant to restore some of its lost faith. Overall, user experiences remain a mixed bag, with some claiming successful restores, and others reporting errors.



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First National Bank of America: Banking Review 2023 - CNET

This bank offers competitive online CD rates -- but unless you live in Michigan, its other accounts aren't particularly noteworthy.

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Nvidia’s RTX 4090 and 4080 are debuting in laptops very soon, and we’ve caught another glimpse of pricing – underlining just how expensive notebooks boasting these GPUs will be, particularly the Lovelace flagship.

The new prices are from Micro Center, which is now listing MSI gaming laptops as Wccftech reports, with the top model being the MSI Titan 17 with the RTX 4090. This portable weighs in at a rather monstrous $4,700 (around £3,800, AU$6,800) in the US (also packing the mighty Core i9-13980HX processor, the Intel Raptor Lake flagship).

For the MSI Raider 17 with the RTX 4080 laptop graphics card (and same CPU), the version with 32GB of DDR5 system RAM plus 2TB SSD retails at $3,300 (around £2,700, AU$4,700), but you’ll pay $4,000 (around £3,300, AU$5,700) if you want 64GB of RAM (and the same 2TB SSD).

Remember, Nvidia said that RTX 4080 and 4090 laptops would start from $1,999 in the US, but looking at the pricing here, it’s considerably above that level if you want high-end gaming on the go with a Lovelace powerhouse GPU.

The good news, price-wise, is that for Lovelace GPUs underneath the top two – meaning RTX 4050 through to 4070 – Nvidia said pricing would start at $999, and it’s not too far off that. An MSI Katana 15 with an RTX 4060 (plus Core i7-12650H and 16GB of DDR5 RAM) sells for $1,200 (around £980, AU$1,720) at Micro Center.

The RTX 4050 spin of the new Katana 15 isn’t any cheaper, mainly because it peps up the CPU to a Raptor Lake Core i7 (and doubles the SSD size to 1TB); so the choice is GPU versus CPU plus more storage.


Analysis: MSI's pricing looks consistent with other early listings

This backs up what we’ve already seen in Europe showing the RTX 4090 as seriously pricey. If you recall, XMG’s Neo 16 gaming laptop with RTX 4090 is priced at €3,886 (around $4,200, £3,400, AU$6,000), with the GPU being €637 more expensive than the RTX 4080 as an upgrade.

So, with the 4090 being €637 dearer than the (already expensive) 4080 in Europe, and $700 more in the US, that looks pretty consistent. In short, this is likely the kind of pricing we can expect going forward from other laptop makers, at least in the near future anyway – and with those high-end cards, particularly the RTX 4090, you really are paying a huge premium.

That premium may well be worth it to some folks who simply want the most powerful laptop they can get their hands on for gaming or creative work, but it’s likely to be off-putting to some of the enthusiast community (top-end portables already being something of a niche by definition).

Particularly when, as we’ve discussed in the past, the RTX 4090 laptop GPU is only equivalent to a desktop RTX 4080 (or thereabouts). It’s simply not possible to jam the hefty, power-guzzling AD102 chip found in the desktop RTX 4090 into a notebook chassis, so Nvidia opted to use AD103 (the chip for the desktop 4080) in the laptop flagship.

At least the better news is the pricing on the lower-tier Lovelace models, with even the RTX 4070 coming in at a (relatively) much more reasonable level. The MSI Pulse 15 sporting the RTX 4070 is $1,700 (around £1,380, AU$2,440), which is not far off half the cost of the most affordable RTX 4080 model (albeit that has the top-end Core i9 Raptor Lake processor as well, compared to the Core i7 for the Pulse).

The Micro Center MSI laptop listings state that the ‘product [is] coming soon’ and indeed pre-orders are supposed to commence from February 1, so just a couple of weeks from now, before the RTX 4090 and 4080 notebooks go on sale February 8. Portables with the other lower-tier GPUs – RTX 4050, 4060, 4070 – will arrive slightly later in the month on February 22, or at least that’s what we’ve heard (add an appropriate dose of skepticism).

Of course, it makes sense that these laptops will be out soon given that we’re seeing multiple product listings pop up right now.



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Save 30% on the Gadget Wine Snobs Are Obsessed With - CNET

Coravin's preservation system allows you to taste wine without uncorking the bottle and it's down near an all-time low price.

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Following a recent update to Apple's terms and conditions, people are noticing that their Apple TV is now blocked in certain ways if they don't have an iPhone, because Apple is requiring you to approve the T&Cs on your phone, and not offering an alternative option.

One of the great things about the Apple TV 4K – and a huge part of why we're happy to rate it as the best streaming device around – is that it's never been too tied to the Apple ecosystem.

You need an Apple ID to use it, yes, but you need some kind of account for any other streaming box; more importantly, unlike the Apple Watch, you didn't need an iPhone to use it. And its best features aren't locked away if you don't have an iPhone, as is the case with the AirPods. You could sign in to your services and watch away, in some of the best quality any similar device offers.

But it appears that's started to change. You can see the least-aggressive version of this issue in the image at the top of this page – that's the message I received in the Settings app on my Apple TV 4K (2021) today on one of the user accounts, requiring the user to update their Apple ID by holding their iPhone or iPad close to their Apple TV before I can use a minor new feature.

Interestingly, I didn't see the same message on my own personal user account, which means I probably already accepted the new terms. I say "probably" because I have no memory of doing this, but I use my iPhone to control my Apple TV pretty often, so it likely popped up and I accepted without reading it, like most people do with T&C changes.

What happening there isn't stopping anyone from using the Apple TV at all right now, because it's just asking in the background and disabling a minor new feature after an update, so it's a relatively small problem – but some people report having much larger problems.

The user who posted the tweet below was prompted to accept the new T&Cs using "a device running iOS 16 or later, or iPadOS 16 or later" every time they turned on the Apple TV, and seemed to be unable to do anything else with it until they didn. Except, as they point out, then don't own any Apple devices other than their Apple TV.

See more

That's the worst-case scenario of an approach like this – an expensive device that people have paid for and rely on, rendered completely unusable. 

I called this new approach a step back in the headline, because the Apple TV finds a lot of favor with movie lovers who don't otherwise own Apple products. I've recommended it to people, and I know people who use one solely because of the quality of Apple's movie purchases and rentals. This change would be a regression, and would mean I could no longer recommend it so easily.

But if you already have an Apple TV, and are blocked from using it as in the image above, it's not a step back, it's a disaster.

However, that tweet has gone pretty viral, and has attracted the attention of an Apple Security Engineer as well as the Apple Support Twitter account, which has stepped in to respond to several people in the replies to the original tweet who are having different problems with their Apple TV.

So, it looks like Apple is paying attention to the problems this change is causing, and will hopefully provide another option in the future – of course, how long that will take is anybody's guess.

We've reached out to Apple for comment, but have yet to hear back at the time of publishing.

In the meantime, if you want more new Apple stuff, check out the 



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Monday, January 16, 2023

54 Best Star Wars Gifts for 2023: Top Picks From the Biggest Nerds in the Galaxy - CNET

Star Wars merch is everywhere, but finding the right gift to give can be a challenge. We're here to help.

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Latest Tech News

Some TV shows are like comfort food, and for me, there’s no show more comforting than Peep Show. The British sitcom from the early 2000s h...