Tuesday 29 May 2018

The Morning After: The boring reality of the flux capacitor

Engadget Email Newsletter

Engadget Email Newsletter

Engadget Email Newsletter

Engadget Email Newsletter

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It's Tuesday, May 29, 2018.

Hey, good morning! 

Good morning! Welcome back to work if you got Monday off. And sorry if you didn’t. 
 

The company's games have correctly predicted several major sporting events.
 

EA Sports has already picked the winner of this year's World Cup
 

EA Sports has already picked the winner of this year's World Cup<br />   

EA, with one eye on an attention-grabbing headline, has predicted which nation will win this year's World Cup -- and it’s not Earth shattering. According to EA Sports, the eventual winners will be France, who will face Germany in a final that will be decided on penalties. However the games maker comes to these conclusions, it’s guessed results right in the past.
 

More quantum computing than time travel.

Scientists ruin the flux capacitor by building a real-life one
 

Scientists ruin the flux capacitor by building a real-life one<br />   

The device is a new type of electronic circulator which can control the directional movement of microwave signals. The scientists, who published their research in Physical Review Letters, have proposed two potential circuits, with one of them borrowing the design of the three-pointed flux capacitor Doc Brown and Marty McFly used to travel through time. In fiction.
 

Up to six members can use it, and you can try it free for 60 days.
 

Pandora unveils a $15-a-month unlimited family plan
 

The streaming business is a tough game. Mid-tier player Pandora recently announced it had signed up six million subscribers so far compared to 75 million for Spotify, but it's trying to boost that number with a new Premium Family plan, with unlimited streaming with no ads for up to six family members at $15 per month. That would put it right alongside Apple and Spotify's pricing.
 

Sponsored Content by Beacon Technology Partners

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The Big Picture.
 

Plasticine circuits show how today's tech is tomorrow's art
 

Plasticine circuits show how today's tech is tomorrow's art<br />   

Making electronics crude again with plasticine.
 

But wait, there's more...

1. Things-to-do app gets a big keyboard-focused iPad update

2. Watch a medevac drone perform a simulated rescue

3. Snapchat launches its first Lens that reacts to sound

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