Wednesday 22 November 2017

The Morning After: The dismantling of net neutrality

Engadget Email Newsletter

Engadget Email Newsletter

Engadget Email Newsletter

Engadget Email Newsletter

eng-daily-newsletter

It's Wednesday, November 22, 2017.

Hey, good morning! 

The plan for the end of net neutrality is coming. We’ll hear all the details later today, but let us distract you with cigar-shaped asteroids, and ooh, Animal Crossing on your smartphone.
 

Happy Thanksgiving.
 

FCC chairman reveals plan to kill net neutrality
 

FCC chairman reveals plan to kill net neutrality<br />   

Tomorrow, the FCC will release its plan to undo the net neutrality protections put in place during the Obama administration. Chairman Ajit Pai said “Today, I have shared with my colleagues a draft order that would abandon this failed approach and return to the longstanding consensus that served consumers well for decades. Under my proposal, the federal government will stop micromanaging the internet.” The ACLU, EFF and so many others are against the move, but before the details are posted later today, we can get you up to speed on what to expect.

The first interstellar object we’ve ever seen.
 

This speedy, cigar-shaped asteroid came from beyond our solar system
 

This speedy, cigar-shaped asteroid came from beyond our solar system<br />   

Meet Oumuamua, a weirdly shaped (about 1,300-feet long and around 130-feet wide) asteroid spotted by the Pan-STARRS 1 telescope in Hawaii. Its name means “messenger from afar arriving first,” which is fitting since astronomers say this is the first confirmed sighting of an interstellar object. They estimate it’s already been traveling for hundreds of millions of years, and when it exits our solar system it will proceed toward the constellation Pegasus.
 

The game was originally supposed to launch today.
 

‘Animal Crossing: Pocket Camp’ is out now
 

‘Animal Crossing: Pocket Camp’ is out now<br />   

Animal Crossing: Pocket Camp was meant arrive on iOS and Android devices later today, but, surprise, it’s already out. Despite the fact that you can download it from both the App Store and Google Play, servers supporting the game were overwhelmed earlier yesterday, but things appear to have settled down now.

Win a Trip to Day for Night, Houston's Experiential Art & Music Festival (featuring NIN, Thom Yorke, Solange, Justice, St. Vincent, and more...)
Sponsored Content by Hyperallergic

Win a Trip to Day for Night, Houston's Experiential Art & Music Festival (featuring NIN, Thom Yorke, Solange, Justice, St. Vincent, and more...)

Apple seems very interested in wearable AR and VR tech.
 

Apple buys the creator of a seamless mixed reality headset
 

Those rumors of Apple making an augmented reality headset just got a little more fuel. TechCrunch sources say that Apple has acquired VRvana, a startup that crowdfunded (but hasn’t shipped) a unique camera-based AR and VR headset, the Totem. Unlike Microsoft’s Hololens and Windows Mixed Reality headsets, Totem promises a “seamless blend” between augmented and virtual worlds. It can display fully opaque images on its OLED display, letting it transition gracefully from AR to VR. Also, it eliminates the potentially disorienting lag that’s characteristic with camera-based approaches to mixed reality -- prototypes have cut the delay down to just 3ms.
 

The Command promises to look good while it tracks your fitness.
 

Misfit’s latest hybrid smartwatch focuses on classic style
 

Misfit’s latest hybrid smartwatch focuses on classic style<br />   

If it wasn't already evident that Misfit is on a fashion kick with its smartwatches, here’s further proof. The Fossil-owned badge has unveiled a new hybrid smartwatch, the Command, that promises to track your fitness while looking just about appropriate for formal wear. It delivers notifications and tracks activity (including step count, calories, distance and sleep) much like the Phase did, just without screaming “I am tech.”
 

Somebody set us up the (review) bomb
 

Steam tweaks community reviews to fight spam
 

For various reasons, people have periodically spammed certain games with bad reviews, and Valve hasn’t done enough to stop it. Now it’s beta testing a new system that’s supposed to minimize the impact of review bombing. It will take into account whether a game’s reviews are mostly positive or negative in determining which ones to display, and track accounts to reduce the effect of votes from accounts that mass-downvote games.
 

But wait, there's more...

1. Android has tracked location info regardless of privacy settings

2. Surface Book 2 can't stay charged during gaming sessions

3. Interactive 'Minecraft' streams are live in Mixer

4. The unconventional analogies of 'Your Hands Are Feet'

5. Facebook Messenger will now send your photos in 4K

The Morning After is a new daily newsletter from Engadget designed to help you fight off FOMO. Who knows what you'll miss if you don't subscribe.

Craving even more? Like us on Facebook or follow us on Twitter.

Have a suggestion on how we can improve The Morning After? Send us a note.
engadget-twitter engadget-facebook engadget-youtube engadget-reddit engadget-instagram

Copyright © 2016 Aol Inc. All rights reserved.

Our mailing address is:
AOL
770 Broadway #4
New York, NY 10003

You are receiving this email because you opted in at engadget.com.

Not interested anymore? Unsubscribe from this newsletter.

No comments:

Post a Comment