Tuesday 28 November 2017

The Morning After: The Substitute Phone

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It's Tuesday, November 28, 2017.

Hey, good morning! You look fabulous.

Tuesday has arrived, and as you await delivery on any Cyber Monday splurges, we’ve got a substitute phone for app detox and an otherworldly combination of lightning and a volcano. Airbnb is also accused of involvement with money laundering.

It doesn’t seem like Epic knew it was trying to sue a 14-year-old.
 

Alleged ‘Fortnite’ hacker’s mom fights anti-cheating lawsuit
 

Alleged ‘Fortnite’ hacker’s mom fights anti-cheating lawsuit<br />   

Don’t mess with mom. Epic Games is suing 14-year-old Caleb Rogers for allegedly modding the game and causing the developer to lose profits from his activity in Fortnite’s free-to-play Battle Royale mode. Rogers’ mother filed a letter with North Carolina’s US District Court saying that Epic “has no capability of proving any form of modification” because her son merely installed cheats he downloaded from Addicted Cheats and didn’t alter the game’s source code himself.

Swipe, pinch and scroll your way to a smartphone-free future.
 

Kick your smartphone habit with the Substitute Phone
 

Kick your smartphone habit with the Substitute Phone<br />   

Cigarettes are hard to kick not just because of the nicotine but because they give you something to do with your hands. The Substitute Phone from Vienna-based designer Klemens Schillinger works on the same principle, if you think of content as the drug and your phone’s touchscreen as the tactile addiction. The five models look and feel like phones, but instead of a screen, there are stone beads embedded in slots at various angles. You can just grab it and swipe, pinch and scroll, satisfying that physical need without the nicotine/content.
 

Boom.
 

The Big Picture: Catching lightning in a volcanic bottle
 

The Big Picture: Catching lightning in a volcanic bottle<br />   

Lightning and volcanoes, together at last.
 

TUMI Global Locator: The wireless tracking device designed to take the hassle out of travel.  Shop all tech gifts from TUMI.
Sponsored Content by Tumi

TUMI Global Locator: The wireless tracking device designed to take the hassle out of travel. Shop all tech gifts from TUMI.

It must be coming soon, surely?
 

‘Black Mirror’ trailers preview episodes, leave out release date
 

‘Black Mirror’ trailers preview episodes, leave out release date<br />   

Netflix continues to drive internet fans of Black Mirror crazy by releasing buzzy new trailers, while still not saying when we can actually watch the damn thing. The first one is for Arkangel, an episode directed by Oscar-winner Jodie Foster, showing the hazards of trying too hard to protect your precious snowflakes.

One more thing to watch out for.
 

Airbnb is reportedly being used to launder money
 

According to a Daily Beast report, Russian scammers are leveraging Airbnb to launder dirty cash from stolen credit cards with the help of corrupt hosts. After creating or purchasing the Airbnb accounts, the scammers use them to request bookings from colluding hosts, who then send back a cut of the profits despite no one staying at the property. Sneaky

It called record Black Friday sales ‘a testament to the free and open internet.’
 

Over 200 companies including Twitter and Reddit warn against undoing net neutrality 
 

Over 200 companies including Twitter and Reddit warn against undoing net neutrality <br />   

FCC chairman Ajit Pai seems determined to go ahead with his plan of removing net neutrality protections, but many businesses that depend on internet connections are speaking out against the move. Twitter, Pinterest, Reddit and Airbnb were among hundreds of firms that signed a letter which said “This would put small- and medium-sized businesses at a disadvantage and prevent innovative new ones from even getting off the ground.”
 

Sync your scribbles wirelessly.
 

Moleskine’s smart notebook will work with Microsoft Office
 

Moleskine’s smart notebook will work with Microsoft Office<br />   

Now there’s a Windows 10 app for Moleskine’s Smart Writing System, a quill with a tiny camera that tracks your scribbles on specially marked paper. It sends a digital version to the PC via Bluetooth, where the app converts your charts, ramblings and doodles into a Word document. Assuming you have a Surface, adding on the pen will cost $100.
 

But wait, there's more...

1. What's on TV: 'Vikings,' 'Easy' and 'Curb Your Enthusiasm'

2. Bungie's free trial for 'Destiny 2' opens today

3. New in our buyer's guide: Apple, Google and a little Sonos

4. The best audio gear to give as gifts

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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Monday 27 November 2017

The Morning After: Wait, Cyber Monday isn't a holiday?

Engadget Email Newsletter

Engadget Email Newsletter

Engadget Email Newsletter

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It's Monday, November 27, 2017.

Hey, good morning!

Welcome back from what was hopefully a nice long weekend. We’ve got our verdict on Google’s Pixel Buds, more news on that massive Yahoo data breach, and Time Inc.’s further struggles. Oh, and some new NASA tires inspired by chainmail.
 

He won't fight charges that he helped swipe 500 million accounts.

Hacker in massive Yahoo breach expected to plead guilty

The US may find it hard to catch the Russians accused of participating in the massive 2014 Yahoo breach, but a third culprit appears ready to cooperate. Canadian citizen Karim Baratov is slated to appear for a “change of plea” hearing on November 28th, indicating that he’s likely to plead guilty to helping Russian officers (Dmitry Dokuchaev and Igor Sushchin) swipe 500 million Yahoo accounts. 
 

You can do better.

Google Pixel Buds review

Google Pixel Buds review

Chris Velazco ended up unimpressed by Google’s $159 Pixel Buds, even with good results from their built-in translation feature and solid four- to five-hours of battery life. Finicky touch controls, an inability to block out ambient noise and hit-or-miss access to Google Assistant resulted in a package that’s promising, but still experimental.
 

Superelastic tires can deform down to the axle and retain their shape.

NASA goes back to the Middle Ages for rover tire inspiration

NASA goes back to the Middle Ages for rover tire inspiration

NASA’s modern tech couldn’t save the Mars Curiosity rover’s tires from breaking down in the harsh conditions of Mars. For future missions, the agency has gone back to the age of knights. Based on the principles of chainmail armor, the Superelastic tires can withstand more deformation than any other non-pneumatic tire. At the same time, they could potentially withstand extraplanetary abuse and provide better traction for next-generation rovers.
 

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...)

Not that the current leadership is likely to take action.

Over 1.3 million anti-net neutrality FCC comments are likely fakes

It's no secret that bots flooded the FCC with comments supporting its plans to kill net neutrality. But just how many comments were fraudulent? All too many, according to data scientist Jeff Kao. He recently conducted a study that used natural language processing to conclude that “at least” 1.3 million of the anti-net neutrality comments were fakes originating from a central source. 

The actual number of fake grassroots (aka astroturfing) comments is likely to be considerably higher, Kao added. Out of 22 million total comments, only 800,000 appear to be genuinely original -- and 99 percent of them support net neutrality. There were form letter campaigns on both sides, but anti-neutrality comments were more likely to be duplicates and submitted in large blocks, which suggested targeted spamming efforts instead of real submissions from concerned Americans.

Third time’s the charm.
 

Time’s struggle to adapt to digital results in its sale

Time’s struggle to adapt to digital results in its sale

Meredith Corp. has announced a $2.8 billion acquisition of Time Inc., finally closing the deal after buyout attempts in 2013 and earlier this year were unsuccessful. With financial backing from billionaires Charles and David Koch, this combines the publisher of Better Homes & Gardens and Family Circle with the Time brand that includes Sports Illustrated, People, Fortune and… MySpace.
 

But wait, there's more...

1. Microsoft Office is now available for all Chromebooks

2. FBI failed to warn officials about Russian email hackers

3. 'Flying Lotus in 3D' concert is a jam session between music and holograms

4. Quantum encryption is fast enough for voice calls

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.
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Copyright © 2016 Aol Inc. All rights reserved.

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Friday 24 November 2017

Editor's Pick: Offsetting Asymmetry With Automation


Ed Moyle
Nov 24, 2017 6:00 AM PT
In the security world, there is a truism that defense is harder than offense because it's an asymmetric playing field. The bad guys need only find one path into an environment -- one place where everything hasn't been done exactly "just so" and perfectly -- while those charged with securing that environment need to protect against intrusions everywhere they have a technology footprint. [More...]

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Everybody Talks About CX, but Nobody Does Anything About It
Customer experience quality didn't improve in the retail industry this year, despite keen competition among online retailers, according to Forrester's U.S. 2017 Customer Experience Index. The three top-ranked etailers came within fractions of a point of each other. Among the industries Forrester examined, online retail was the only one in which no brands kept the same position as last year. [More...]
Trump Puts Federal Cloud Investments on Front Burner
One of the few policies that President Donald Trump's administration has carried over from his predecessor is that the federal government needs to make vast information technology performance upgrades -- especially to cloud-based platforms. That should comfort vendors seeking business in the federal market at all levels of cloud offerings -- hardware, software or services. [More...]
Facebook Messenger Promises Speedy Delivery of 4K Pics
Facebook on Tuesday raised the ante for messaging apps photo quality with the announcement of 4K support for Messenger. Starting Tuesday, "people can send and receive photos in Messenger at 4K resolution -- or up to 4,096 x 4,096 pixels per image -- the highest quality many smartphones support," wrote Facebook Messenger product managers Sean Kelly and Hagen Green. [More...]
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