Aug 24, 2016

LeEco Le 2s (or Le 2s Pro) allegedly portrayed showing different design


Ahead of its rumored introduction in early September, the next LeEco smartphone has allegedly been photographed in the wild somewhere. The device, which could be called Le 2s or Le 2s Pro, comes with a standard full metal design, which is quite different from what a purported back casing for it showed us a few days ago.


In these new images supposedly depicting the Le 2s, gone are the iPhone 7-like antenna bands. In their place are just your average antenna lines cutting through the phone’s back. Since there’s some confusion now as to the name of this handset, we assume it’s possible that…


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LeEco Le 2s (or Le 2s Pro) allegedly portrayed showing different design

iPhone 6 SE box photographed, raises eyebrows


Did you hear the joke that iPhone 7 has so few new features that it’s really an iPhone 6 SE? Well, get ready not to laugh because there’s photographic evidence that this may be an actual model name.


The pics reportedly come from China and show no obvious signs of Photoshopping (which doesn’t preclude skilled Photoshopping).


Most specs on the back of the box have been wiped out, so there’s no easy way to tell if this is just a followup to the iPhone SE or if it’s what the rumor mill has been calling “iPhone 7.”


Alleged iPhone 6 SE box: side view • back view • manuals


The…


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iPhone 6 SE box photographed, raises eyebrows

Windows 10 Mobile update speeds up, still on only 14% of W10 phones


Windows 10 is making strides on desktop – it already makes up for more than 20% of the desktop OS market, having surpassed all Windows versions aside from the venerable Windows 7.


Windows 10 on mobile… well, fans might want to sit down. It has reached 14% of W10 phones and half of those are up to Windows 10 Mobile Anniversary Update. Growth is accelerating too. That’s the good news.


The bad news is that Windows Phone 8.1 has 77% of the market, more if you add v8.0. The battle-hardened Lumia 520 is still one of the most popular devices out there, accounting for 10.4% of all Windows…


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Windows 10 Mobile update speeds up, still on only 14% of W10 phones

Apple accused of iPhone 6 'touch disease' defect


Apple faces claims that it is failing to address a flaw. – Source



Apple accused of iPhone 6 'touch disease' defect

Google is working on an insane navbar customizer, currently hidden in 7.0


The System UI Tuner was only introduced in Marshmallow, but it’s already got quite a few features, with one graduating to a fully-fledged feature (and others causing quite a bit of controversy). The next thing Google seems to be working on for it is a navigation bar customizer, allowing quite extreme customization of the now standard back-home-recents navbar.


The navbar customizer is currently hidden in Nougat’s code. Google’s first commit containing the code was on January 22nd – it then removed the feature on February 24th because it ‘wasn’t ready’ according to the GitHub comment.


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Google is working on an insane navbar customizer, currently hidden in 7.0 was written by the awesome team at Android Police.


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Google is working on an insane navbar customizer, currently hidden in 7.0

[Deal Alert] Up to 66% off many NVIDIA SHIELD titles like MGR: Revengeance and the new Q*Bert Rebooted


Back when I was a student, a long long time ago, “back to school” was end of September or even beginning of October. But summer school vacations here in Lebanon seem to be following the same pattern as the US recently: they’re getting shorter and thus school is starting sooner.


I’m not sure why you’d celebrate “back to school” with game discounts though — isn’t that counter-productive? Or maybe kids are going to be so taken by their studies that it’d be nice to give them a break on the cheap, especially when playing in the sun becomes less feasible as fall hits.


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[Deal Alert] Up to 66% off many NVIDIA SHIELD titles like MGR: Revengeance and the new Q*Bert Rebooted was written by the awesome team at Android Police.


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[Deal Alert] Up to 66% off many NVIDIA SHIELD titles like MGR: Revengeance and the new Q*Bert Rebooted

BBC and Finnish developer team up for a series of Top Gear mobile games


Top Gear, the famous British TV series about cars, is about to get a series of games for mobile devices. BBC Worldwide has decided to offer the Top Gear license to a Finnish developer that goes by the name of Motorious Entertainment.


The studio specialized in mobile games comprises of veterans of the gaming industry, people who worked for well-known mobile, PC and console projects like the FlatOut series, Sega Rally, Ridge Racer Unbounded and Brawl Bolts.


With the newly licensed Top Gear IP, Motorious confirmed the upcoming release of no less than three mobile … – Source



BBC and Finnish developer team up for a series of Top Gear mobile games

Advenio, GuaRented get a Kstart with Rs 67 lakh and Rs 3.4 crore


Kstart has invested $100,000 (about Rs 67 lakh) in artificial intelligence-based clinical imaging solution Advenio Technosys and $500,000 (about Rs 3.4 crore) in rental marketplace GuaRented. – Source



Advenio, GuaRented get a Kstart with Rs 67 lakh and Rs 3.4 crore

Samsung plans to share more tech to lure more semiconductor business


Its devices foothold slipping in the country, Samsung is clawing back into China’s mobile market by putting more weight behind its semiconductor arm. Its foundry business is undergoing slow growth, but Samsung is expected to heat up talks with Chinese firms to change that.


The Korean tech firm is set to host what it’s calling the Samsung Foundry Forum on August 30, during which its semiconductor chiefs will lobby representatives from roughly 100 Chinese firms. The forum will welcome the likes of ZTE, MediaTek, HiSilicon and others, according to reports.


It isn’t the creation of the event that’s telling of Samsung’s intentions here, as the company regularly engages potential customers in China. It’s the effort that’s going into this forum and what’s expected to be a slight pivot in its strategy. It plans to take on more customers instead of leaning on a handful of them.


During Samsung’s upcoming forum, the firm is expected to court new clients by offering them access to its 10nm and 14nm FinFET process designs along with its 28nm fully depleted silicon on insulator processes.


Probably one of the most infamous setbacks in Samsung’s semiconductor business was when Apple began to offload some of its orders for iPhone processors to TSMC (Taiwan Semiconductor Corporation) two years ago.


Last year Apple turned backed to Samsung for production of the iPhone’s A9 chips. But the company’s semiconductor business isn’t running as optimally as Samsung’s execs would like. And Samsung would probably not have to rely so heavily on its frenemy, Apple.


Samsung’s foundries are still growing, as evidenced by its semiconductor group’s 8 percent-quarter over-quarter growth and 6 percent year-over-year growth in operating profit last quarter. It’s just that its foundries’ older lines are stagnating because they aren’t suited for the production of newer chips its current clients want.


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Samsung plans to share more tech to lure more semiconductor business

New update to Microsoft Next Lock Screen for Android brings improved notifications, reduced memory usage


Microsoft has pushed out a new update to its Next Lock Screen Android app, bumping it to version 3.7.1. The update brings along several changes, including improved notifications, reduced memory usage, as well as some bug fixes.


Here’s the complete change-log:


1. Focus vs other notifications. Manage what notifications are important for you.


2. Fix bug for dismiss notifications.


3. Improve battery life and memory usage for Bing wallpaper service.


4. Reduce memory usage by removing unused views.


5. Fix bug sometimes wallpaper fail to show when previewing it in wallpaper…


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New update to Microsoft Next Lock Screen for Android brings improved notifications, reduced memory usage

Listen to the premiere of TCBC, a new podcast from TechCrunch


TechCrunch has a new podcast, and it’s TCBC, a show where I speak to a different writer on staff each week about their beat, the stories they’re following, and the tech news that’s most important to them right now. It’s something new we’re trying, and hopefully it helps bring home the stories we cover here at TechCrunch, giving you additional context that can be… Read More


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Listen to the premiere of TCBC, a new podcast from TechCrunch

Apple Music and Spotify tense up over music label agreements


This is not the first or last time Spotify and Apple Music will clash. Not so recently, Spotify called out Apple’s App Store revenue rules, calling the company “anti-competitive” when it came to Apple favoring its own streaming services and putting third party services down, so to speak. In response, Apple accused Spotify of asking for special treatment from other apps.


Spotify has been around for a long time, building its business model from the ground up. That is until Apple launched its own Music service just over a year ago. The Apple giant already has 15 million paid subscribers,…


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Apple Music and Spotify tense up over music label agreements

Nuclear waste accident 2 years ago may cost more than $2 billion to clean up


According to the Department of Energy, this is an exploded waste drum in the dump. “Damage can be seen to the slip sheet on top of the waste container and there are remnants of a magnesium oxide bag also visible.” (credit: Department of Energy )


The Los Angeles Times is estimating that an explosion that occurred at a New Mexico nuclear waste dumping facility in 2014 could cost upwards of $2 billion to clean up.


Construction began on the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant (WIPP) in New Mexico’s Carlsbad desert in the 1980s (PDF). The site was built to handle transuranic waste from the US’ nuclear weapons program. The WIPP had been eyed to receive nuclear waste from commercial, power-generating plants as well.


According to the LA Times, the 2014 explosion at the WIPP was downplayed by the federal government, with the Department of Energy (DoE) putting out statements indicating that cleanup was progressing quickly. Indeed, a 2015 Recovery Plan insisted that “limited waste disposal operations” would resume in the first quarter of 2016. Instead, two years have passed since the incident without any indication that smaller nuclear waste cleanup programs around the US will be able to deliver their waste to the New Mexico facility any time soon.


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Nuclear waste accident 2 years ago may cost more than $2 billion to clean up

Opera Brings Its Free and Unlimited VPN to Android


If you’ve been on the lookout for a decent VPN on Android that won’t break the bank, your wait is over. After releasing on iOS earlier this year

, Opera’s popular free and unlimited VPN is finally available for Android devices.



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Opera Brings Its Free and Unlimited VPN to Android

Hollywood’s take on cybersecurity


It can be tough going to the movies as a cybersecurity expert. Films handling the very real issues of internet security and modern computer science are overwhelmingly unrealistic. As we get our tickets and popcorn ready for “Snowden,” it’s a good time to take a look at the handful of film and TV projects that actually got hacking, and the complicated business of security in… Read More


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Hollywood’s take on cybersecurity

A look inside Hyperloop One’s wildly fast future


What’s really going on at Hyperloop One – the futuristic transportation system proposing to shoot humans from point A to B at 750 miles-per-hour? The startup changed its name from Hyperloop Transportation to Hyperloop One and began testing in the Nevada desert this spring; announced $80 million in Series B funding; suffered an executive leadership shake-up and the former… Read More


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A look inside Hyperloop One’s wildly fast future

“Samsung Scoop”—a portable Amazon Echo clone—spotted in FCC database



The Samsung Scoop. That’s a microphone!


Samsung is apparently working on an Amazon Echo clone. A circular Bluetooth-speaker-and-microphone combo called the “Samsung Scoop” was spotted in the FCC database by Android fan site Ausdroid.


The Scoop looks a lot like a mini Amazon Echo—it’s a squat little cylinder about 80mm in diameter. There’s a speaker on top with Play/Pause and volume controls around the perimeter. On the side is a power button and a flap hiding a USB plug (it looks like Type C?) and a 3.5mm headphone jack. The Scoop is so compact that it’s apparently going to be portable. Samsung gave it a big leathery carrying handle and—if the circuit board labeled “battery board” is any indication—a rechargeable battery.


What Samsung plans to do with the software on the Scoop is a bit of a mystery. The majority of the functionality in Samsung’s smartphones comes from Android, but there’s no established operating system for these Bluetooth voice command speakers. Will the Scoop run Samsung’s Tizen OS? Like “S-Voice” on a Galaxy smartphone, we’ll expect a Nuance-powered voice command system, but with Samsung shutting down its Milk Music service, we aren’t expecting too many home-grown services on the Scoop. It will be starting from scratch in the app ecosystem, too. There’s also the possibility that the Scoop is a “dumb” device and would rely on a tethered smartphone for the voice commands to work.


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“Samsung Scoop”—a portable Amazon Echo clone—spotted in FCC database