Friday 13 January 2017

The Morning After: Nintendo Switch details and HTC's U Ultra

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It's Friday, January 13, 2017.

Hey, good morning! You look fabulous.

Nintendo’s new home-and-away console has been unveiled in Japan. While we haven’t got to touch those unusual controllers just yet (that’ll be later today), we’ve got prices, launch titles, and a bunch of features that sound like a Nintendo fan’s wish list fulfilled. We also have HTC’s newest phone, the possibility of smartphones with folding screens, and a digital camera that leaves photo curation to AI.

$300, March 3rd

Nintendo reveals everything you want to know about the Switch

Nintendo reveals everything you want to know about the Switch

When our supercut of the press launch weighs in at 12 minutes, you know Nintendo had a lot to tell us about its new console. Where to start? We’ve already told you the price and the date, but how about no more region-locking (a Nintendo ‘tradition’), a proper touchscreen and more. While you will have to pay for online play, Nintendo is offering up some of its hits from yesteryear with online functionality -- many of which didn’t have such a thing when they launched. The two controllers will also have even higher motion sensitivity, proximity sensors and each doubles up as simplified controllers when you’re playing with someone else.

What’s up with Mario’s hat?

All the games announced for the Switch

All the games announced for the Switch

A console is nothing without games, and Nintendo had plenty to show last night. Our gallery rounded up every trailer, but highlights included Super Mario Odyssey which is due during the holiday season, the freaky Arms boxing game coming in spring, Splatoon 2, which will arrive in the summer and of course, a launch title in The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild.

Bring a calculator and a voltmeter

Tesla explains how much Supercharging will cost new buyers

Tesla explains how much Supercharging will cost new buyers

As of January 15th, Tesla’s lifetime offer of free Supercharging at its conveniently-located power stations comes off the table. Now, the company has revealed how much it will cost for future buyers of the Model S, X and 3 to top up their batteries. The plan will allow for 400kWh of charging per year for free, which Musk & Co. figure should cover 1,000 miles or most of the road trip-style access needed when drivers are away from home. After that, it’s billed per kWh or per-minute (which can vary if more cars are connected, slowing down the charger), depending on the area, with prices fixed within each state. All in all, an NY to LA trip could cost about $120.

With purposeful design, breakthrough efficiency and intelligent eco-tech, the all-new Prius Prime electric hybrid is the most advanced Prius yet.
Sponsored Content by the All-New Prius Prime

With purposeful design, breakthrough efficiency and intelligent eco-tech, the all-new Prius Prime electric hybrid is the most advanced Prius yet.

Two screens, no headphone jack

HTC’s new high-end phone is the U Ultra

HTC’s new high-end phone is the U Ultra

This year’s premium HTC phone is stealing a trick from LG’s V20, as the U Ultra features a secondary display to highlight important information. What’s different here, however, is the use of AI to try and learn which notifications are important enough to pop up there. It also follows the iPhone 7 by losing its headphone jack, while keeping an expandable microSD storage slot. 

Relonch tries selling a camera as a service

An AI camera failed to capture the magic of CES

An AI camera failed to capture the magic of CES

Instead of selling you the best camera ever, the pitch for Relonch’s 291 is a free connected camera (in exchange for your mirrorless or DSLR camera) that uploads your pics for editing and processing in the cloud. It returns the pictures to you every morning, and you pay $1 each for the ones you’d like to keep. Aaron Soupporis’ CES experience suggested it’s more interesting than useful so far, but the service is still just in beta testing.

Echo everywhere

Amazon's Alexa ecosystem is exploding, for better and worse

Amazon's Alexa ecosystem is exploding, for better and worse

In a little over two years, Amazon’s Alexa has gone from being a baffling product (a connected speaker, really?!) to an essential feature for any connected device. With more than 7,000 ‘skills’ -- what Amazon calls third-party integrations -- it's the most robust voice platform around. Which probably also explains why we saw it everywhere at CES this year. That said, one thing we know for sure about voice computing in 2017: The competition will only heat up.

Foldphones

Samsung and LG could launch foldable phones later this year

Samsung and LG could launch foldable phones later this year

While Samsung has teased them for a while, flexible-screen phones could actually arrive later this year -- and LG is in on it too. Samsung reportedly began working on a phone that folds out and turns into a 7-inch tablet in August, and it's expected to roll out over 100,000 units in the third quarter. Sources say LG is working on an identically-numbered rollout because of course it is.

But wait, there's more...

1. Google applies machine learning on your phone to massively improve image compression

2. Exxon must turn over decades of climate change research

3. FCC: Verizon and AT&T 'zero-rating' perks harm consumers

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.

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Thursday 12 January 2017

The Morning After: How the iPhone could have been very different and a lesson in high-end audio

eng-daily-newsletter

It's Thursday, January 12, 2017.

Hey, good morning! 

It’s January 12th. We tried educating one of our editors about high-end audio, Verizon tries to tackle its unlimited data plan customers (again), and we tried gadget-based emotional control during a week-long tech show. 
 

Clickwheel vs. touchscreen
 

iOS prototypes show what might have been
 

iOS prototypes show what might have been<br />   

10 years after the iPhone debuted, we have certain expectations of Apple’s mobile OS. But before it hit the MacWorld stage engineers had to make some tough choices, and a video from Sonny Dickson shows two different versions of test software. The ghost of what could have been, is a version with iPod-style clickwheel navigation. Just imagine that for a second. Or watch the video.
 

“Unlimited”
 

Verizon takes aim at its unlimited data plan customers once more
 

Once upon a time, (Engadget parent company) Verizon offered customers unlimited data. These days, with higher speeds and bigger downloads those plans are off the table, but some subscribers are still holding onto them. Now, the carrier is going after the heaviest users, saying those averaging more than 200GB of data per month will be asked to switch to a new plan. 
 

“Don't break everything!”
 

Nintendo baked a secret message into its Famicom Mini
 

Nintendo baked a secret message into its Famicom Mini<br />   

The NES Classic and its Japanese counterpart are already incredibly cool -- but you know what makes an awesome toy even better? A secret message. Apparently, developers that worked on the Famicom Mini emulator left a short, hidden message in the code: "Please," it says, "don't break everything!"

Steadicam Volt Smartphone Stabilizer blows Kickstarter goal out of the water
Sponsored Content by Steadicam

Steadicam Volt Smartphone Stabilizer blows Kickstarter goal out of the water

Internet of Things you don’t want
 

Touring the (pointlessly) connected devices of CES 2017
 

Touring the (pointlessly) connected devices of CES 2017<br />   

Connected home gadgets were everywhere at CES 2017 -- we saw WiFi cameras, smart walking canes and Echo clones aplenty. But while several of them were truly innovative, there were some that made no sense at all. This is their story.
 

Teaching the unteachable
 

Why care about high-end headphones?
 

Why care about high-end headphones?<br />   

Senior Editors Aaron Souppouris and Mat Smith explored the world of high-end audio, armed with a FLAC audio file of Mariah Carey’s All I Want For Christmas (ouch). Did the audio-uneducated Mat learn anything? Perhaps. Did Aaron learn to tolerate being around him a little more? Maybe not. This is a journey into sound.
 

Casio’s boss is Mr. Kashio
 

One smartwatch doesn’t fit all
 

One smartwatch doesn’t fit all<br />   

Casio launched its second smartwatch and it’s unapologetically not for everyone. It looks like a hardy outdoors watch, comes in bright orange, and its features revolve around hiking, fishing and other stuff that may involve rain. The Casio president (and son of founder) Kazuhiro Kashio explained that he believes aimed-at-everyone smartwatches were one of the problems with wearables.
 

Norwegians aren’t ready 
 

Norway is killing FM radio and folks aren't happy
 

Norway is killing FM radio and folks aren't happy<br />   

Norway started switching off FM transmitters yesterday, becoming the first nation in the world to dump the 80-year-old standard. The changeover to Digital Audio Broadcasting (DAB) will give citizens more stations, better coverage, program time-shifting and more, the government says. However, the majority are against the changeover, according to a recent poll. One Norwegian politician added: "We are simply not ready for this yet." Only a quarter of cars on the road are equipped for the switch. 
 

But wait, there's more...

1. Google may sell off its satellite imaging division

2. The best 'Battlefield' is finally playable on Xbox One

3. Technology helped me through the emotional roller coaster of CES

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.

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Wednesday 11 January 2017

Editor's Pick: St. Jude Medical Patches Cardiac Machine's Cybersecurity Flaw


John P. Mello Jr.
Jan 11, 2017 9:51 AM PT
Medical device maker St. Jude Medical on Monday began deploying software designed to protect its remote monitoring system for implantable pacemaker and defibrillator devices. The move came on the heels of the U.S. food and Drug Administration's warning that the company's Merlin@home Transmitter contained vulnerabilities that could be exploited by hackers. [More...]

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The U.S. Department of Defense on Monday announced a successful demonstration of one of the world's largest micro drone swarms at China Lake in California. Three F/a-18 Super Hornet combat jets launched 103 Perdix drones in the exercise, which took place last fall. The micro drones demonstrated advanced swarm behaviors such as collective decision making, adaptive formation flying and self-healing. [More...]
Eagle Creek CRM Director Sandeep Kadam: What Today's Customers Want
Twenty years ago, CRM "was more of an inside-out technology," recalled Sandeep Kadam, director of CRM at Eagle Creek Software Services. "It was about making sales calls more efficient, and giving salespeople all the tools they needed so they could achieve their numbers. From there it has become more of an outside-in technology, where the customer is impacting how CRM is going to evolve." [More...]
iPhone at 10: The Best Is Yet to Come?
It seems like yesterday -- not 10 years ago -- that Steve Jobs took the stage at MacWorld to debut Apple's latest new gadget: the iPhone. The iPhone was three devices in one, he declared. It was a widescreen iPod with touch controls, a revolutionary mobile phone, and a breakthrough Internet communications device. The iPhone went on to become a critical contributor to the company's success. [More...]
Min Browser Muffles the Web's Noise
Min is a Web browser with a minimal design that provides speedy operation with simple features. When it comes to software design, "minimal" does not mean low functionality or undeveloped potential. If you like minimal distraction tools for your text editor and note-taking applications, that same comfort appeal is evident in the Min browser. I mostly use Google Chrome, Chromium and Firefox on my desktops and laptop computers. [More...]
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