Tuesday 9 May 2017

The Morning After: Blade Runner 2049 trailer and 'Echo Show' rumors

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It's Tuesday, May 09, 2017.

Hey, good morning! You look fabulous.

This morning we’re expecting big news from Amazon, and we have a finally have a trailer for the new Blade Runner movie. Oh, and there’s a spray that can put touch controls on anything.

Stay tuned.

Amazon’s touchscreen ‘Echo Show’ could be revealed today

Amazon’s touchscreen ‘Echo Show’ could be revealed today

If these leaks are correct, we know the name of Amazon’s “touchscreen Echo,” its price and possibly even the release date. The Wall Street Journal reports the company will announce its new device this week, with built-in intercom/video calling features. Separately, a leaked flyer on AFTVnews called the device the Echo Show, saying it will be revealed today with a $230 price tag and shipments starting June 28th.

This is becoming a habit.

John Oliver made another net neutrality plea, and the FCC’s website crashed again

John Oliver made another net neutrality plea, and the FCC’s website crashed again

Since the FCC seems poised to roll back protections on net neutrality, Last Week Tonight host John Oliver got on his soapbox again. His website GoFCCYourself gave viewers a way to easily submit comments instead of using the commission’s convoluted process, right up until the FCC page collapsed. In a statement, the FCC blamed a DDoS attack for tying up its servers. 

A pricey 5c

Senator confirms FBI paid $900k to unlock San Bernardino iPhone

Senator confirms FBI paid $900k to unlock San Bernardino iPhone

Remember early last year when Apple was embroiled in a battle with the FBI over privacy -- specifically whether it could (or would) crack an iPhone 5C following the San Bernardino terrorist attack? While questioning FBI director James Comey, Senator Diane Feinstein revealed that the agency spent $900,000 to “hack it open.”

Atari?

'Blade Runner 2049' trailer teases the replicant dilemma

'Blade Runner 2049' trailer teases the replicant dilemma

Blade Runner 2049's first real trailer has more than vanity footage of Rick Deckard's return. It leans heavily on nostalgia and some amazing visuals while setting us up for the film’s debut October 6th.

And for photos.

Qualcomm's new mid-tier mobile chips are good news for gaming

With the Snapdragon 660 and 630, Qualcomm is setting us up to expect more powerful mid-range phones later this year. High-end features like 4K video processing, dual rear cameras, speedy LTE and WiFi downloads and AI processing are all onboard. Plus, there’s an upgraded GPU to push polygons faster than mid-range buyers are accustomed to experiencing.

Iconic.

Apple wants to sell iPhones out of Washington D.C.'s Carnegie Library

Apple wants to sell iPhones out of Washington D.C.'s Carnegie Library

Apple would turn most of the Library into one of its shining beacons of modernity while (hopefully) respecting its 114-year legacy.

But wait, there's more...

1. Microsoft just fixed a serious Windows Defender bug -- update ASAP

2. 'Electrick' spray puts touch controls on anything

3. Microsoft VP says there's no Surface Pro 5 (yet)

4. Burger Clan and the weird history of awkward video game promos

5. Google's mysterious Fuchsia OS looks like an Android re-do

6. The K10000 Pro Android phone packs a massive, fast-charging battery worthy of its name

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Monday 8 May 2017

The Morning After: Self-repairing roads that also charge your EV

Engadget Email Newsletter

Engadget Email Newsletter

eng-daily-newsletter

It's Monday, May 08, 2017.

Hey, good morning! 

Monday’s back. But before dealing with that, read about how Facebook may be planning its own TV-like shows, how Android Pay might use your your face, and NASA's plans of where to go next in the Solar System.

The ridiculously sharp picture is just one reason.
 

'Guardians of the Galaxy' team explains why it used Red's 8K camera
 

'Guardians of the Galaxy' team explains why it used Red's 8K camera<br />   

Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 is the first movie shot with Red's 8K Weapon camera, but why? The camera maker has posted a behind-the-scenes look at the movie that, to no one's surprise, talks a lot about why the Vol. 2 team shot with such relatively exotic gear. As director of photography Henry Braham summarizes: the Weapon is a "large format" camera that's simultaneously "tiny." That let the crew shoot very detailed imagery regardless of the shot -- important for a CG-heavy movie, since it maintains a consistently sharp look. It meant they could use the same cameras for handheld close-ups or unusual rigs, such as a spider rig that flies along a wire. 

The mission it chooses will launch in 2024.
 

NASA is reviewing candidates for its next Solar System mission
 

NASA is reviewing candidates for its next Solar System mission<br />   

The Space Agency might be focusing on Mars recently, but it hasn't forgotten the rest of the Solar System. NASA has begun reviewing the 12 proposals it received for the New Frontiers program, the same one that gave rise to New Horizons, Juno and other notable unmanned missions. All the proposals will go through scientific and technical probing with the next seven months, with one or a few moving on to the next phase of the selection process. It will choose the best mission to develop in 2019 and will spend up to $1 billion to make it a reality.
 

It's also pushing an Autopilot update that catches up with the original.
 

Tesla collects videos from cars to improve its self-driving tech
 

Tesla collects videos from cars to improve its self-driving tech<br />   

Tesla has pushed an Autopilot update that, in addition to bringing newer vehicles up to snuff , includes a new data policy that mentions collecting "short video clips" from external cameras in the name of autonomous driving upgrades. The footage will help Tesla's systems learn how to recognize lanes, signs and other visual cues that cars need to get around. The Autopilot update itself is big news, at least if you own a recent (October 2016 or later) Model S or Model X. In many ways, these newer vehicles finally have Autopilot limits on par with earlier cars. 

Finding something to play is tricky, too.
 


 

The Nintendo PlayStation can finally play CD games

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Ah, the fabled Nintendo PlayStation: a very cool prototype of what might have been, but with a CD drive that couldn't actually play games. Until now.Professional tinkerer Ben Heckendorn (aka Ben Heck) has managed to get the CD drive working, including games. The solution, as he explains, involved replacing some "questionable" capacitors and "jiggling some things around" -- he was caught off-guard when things started working.

But wait, there's more...

1. Self-repairing roads could also charge your electric car

2. The TV industry just edged closer to a giant merger

3. Google explains how it's preventing future email phishing scams

4. San Francisco train service plans to run solely on clean energy

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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