Monday 9 October 2017

The Morning After: RIP AOL Instant Messenger

Engadget Email Newsletter

Engadget Email Newsletter

Engadget Email Newsletter

Engadget Email Newsletter

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It's Monday, October 09, 2017.

Hey, good morning!

Welcome to your week! Over the weekend, we mention a few ghosts from smartphone past, we pour one out for the end of AIM, and there’s the return of our robotic table-tennis rival.

It’s a KEYOne for the less-traditional crowd.

BlackBerry Motion arrives with no keyboard and a giant battery

BlackBerry Motion arrives with no keyboard and a giant battery

That didn’t take long. Mere days after images emerged, BlackBerry has launched the Motion. As expected, it’s effectively a KEYone without the keyboard... and a couple of extra perks. You’re still looking at a mid-range device with a Snapdragon 625 chip, 4GB of RAM, 32GB of storage and a 12-megapixel rear camera, just with a 5.5-inch 1080p display taking up most of the front (there’s still a fingerprint reader). However, it’s what you can’t see that makes the difference. The Motion is IP67 water-resistant, and it packs a whopping 4,000mAh battery. Given the middling processor, this likely translates to a phone that can easily handle a full day off the charger.

He’s confirming that Windows for phones is basically on life support.
 

Microsoft exec says Windows 10 Mobile is no longer a ‘focus’
 

Microsoft exec says Windows 10 Mobile is no longer a ‘focus’<br />   

It’s no secret that work on Windows 10 Mobile has wound down given the lack of new devices, but what's happening with it, exactly? Well, Microsoft’s Joe Belfiore has just settled the matter. The Windows VP (and former Windows Phone program manager) informed Twitter users that new features and hardware for Windows 10 Mobile “aren’t the focus” anymore. There will be fixes and security patches, of course, but you shouldn’t expect more than that.
 

And it's probably not too late to apply for the 2020 Olympics.
 

OMRON’s updated ping-pong robot can serve and handle smashes
 

OMRON’s updated ping-pong robot can serve and handle smashes<br />   

At Japan’s eccentric tech show, CEATEC, we knew OMRON would once again bring out its massive table-tennis robot to belittle us humans, but what Senior Editor Richard Lai didn’t expect was a significant performance jump this time. FORPHEUS, now in its fourth generation, features improved AI to boost its responsiveness -- so much that it can now predict and attempt to deal with smashes. Better yet, there’s now a companion robot arm that throws a ball up and lets FORPHEUS serve. Which should mean less mid-training ball chasing, right?
 

Where words are not, feeling remains.
 

AIM: AFK 4EVA
 

AIM: AFK 4EVA<br />   

For the better part of two decades, AIM (previously AOL Instant Messenger) was the way to communicate online. For a certain generation, which most of the Engadget staff happens to be a part of, it defined their youth. We made friends from across the globe, and a few of us even found love. Now the OG of instant messaging apps is being put out to pasture. On December 15th, AIM will finally shut down. But first the Engadget staff wanted to give it a proper send off.
 

But wait, there's more...

1. Recommended Reading: The 'Blade Runner' effect on electronic music

2. MLB fines coach for wearing an Apple Watch during a game

3. Casio's 2.5D printer can mimic leather and fabric

4. Facebook aims to balance its fact checking with a right-wing magazine

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