Tuesday, 30 January 2018

The Morning After: Waymo loads up on self-driving vans

Engadget Email Newsletter

Engadget Email Newsletter

Engadget Email Newsletter

Engadget Email Newsletter

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It's Tuesday, January 30, 2018.

Hey, good morning! You look fabulous.

It’s Tuesday. We have a patch to unpatch your patch, and Dell might reverse-merger itself back into existence as a publicly-traded company. Yeah, you read that correctly.

Please apply to the damaged area.

Microsoft's new Windows 10 Spectre patch disables Intel's fix

Microsoft's new Windows 10 Spectre patch disables Intel's fix

Unfortunately, Intel’s recent patch for the Spectre CPU issue caused spontaneous reboots, so now Microsoft has released a Windows patch that essentially undoes the fix. If you’ve already applied Intel’s update, it should solve the rebooting problem until Intel applies a new, better patch.

You know what a reverse merger is, right?

Dell may sell itself to VMware

Dell may sell itself to VMware

The thing is, Dell owns 80 percent of VMware. If the company takes this path, then it would let Dell become a public company again without having to go through an IPO.

Like Uber, but without the human interaction.

Waymo orders thousands of Chrysler vans for self-driving taxi service

Waymo orders thousands of Chrysler vans for self-driving taxi service

Alphabet’s self-driving-car arm already picked up 600 autonomous-ready Pacificas from Fiat-Chrysler, and last night the two announced a deal for “thousands” more. The new vans will be deployed in cities across the US later this year to support “the world’s first driverless ride-hailing service.”

Monitor your home – anytime, from anywhere
Sponsored Content by VTech

Monitor your home – anytime, from anywhere

The definitive super multi breakdown.

What is a game-of-the-year edition, anyway?

What is a game-of-the-year edition, anyway?

What, exactly, does it mean to be a game of the year? And according to who, exactly? Is there a regulating body that protects consumers from games that were not, in fact, that good? You might think of the ‘Game of the Year’ term as an implication of quality, right? It turns out that -- like most marketing -- it's largely meaningless.

Everyone thinks this is a bad idea, including, apparently, the White House.

Trump team considered a government-run 5G network

Trump team considered a government-run 5G network

A couple of days ago, documents leaked showing the Trump administration's national security team had a plan for a government-created 5G network. Now, sources tell Recode that those documents were outdated and are no longer under consideration. In between those reports, FCC Chairman Ajit Pai came out against the plan-that-apparently-isn’t. As you were.

Set your alarm.

NASA will stream Wednesday’s rare blue-moon lunar eclipse

NASA will stream Wednesday’s rare blue-moon lunar eclipse

On Wednesday, parts of the US will get to view a very special lunar eclipse -- this one combines a total eclipse with a supermoon and a blue moon. However, only Hawaii, Alaska and the west coast will get to see the eclipse since it will reach totality at 8:29 AM ET, so NASA will stream video of the event online from locations in California and Arizona.

But wait, there's more...

1. The Big Picture: 'Robotic Habitats' imagines a self-sustaining AI ecosystem

2. BMW takes full ownership of DriveNow's car-sharing service

3. What's on TV: 'Altered Carbon,' 'Super Bowl LII' and 'UFC 3'

4. Sony LF-S50G smart speaker review: a solid Google Home alternative

5. T-Mobile details plan for 100 percent renewable energy by 2021

6. Apple settles with Immersion over haptic-feedback licensing

7. Google completes its $1.1 billion HTC deal

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, 29 January 2018

Editor's Pick: The Ironic Weirdness of Apple and Intel vs. Qualcomm


Rob Enderle
Jan 29, 2018 10:48 AM PT
I am not remotely religious, but recently it has become harder and harder to ignore that things have become incredibly ironic of late -- as if a divine being with control over the world decided to prank us. For example, take President Trump. During the campaign, everything he made fun of others for doing -- including drinking water badly, playing too much golf, slacking off and slurring words -- he has done himself, in glorious living color. [More...]

More Picks:
Free Linux Tool Monitors Systems for Meltdown Attacks
SentinelOne has released Blacksmith, a free Linux tool that can detect Meltdown vulnerability exploitation attempts. The company has been working on a similar tool to detect Spectre vulnerability attacks. Though free, Blacksmith is not open source. SentinelOne decided to expedite its development in-house to save time, said Raj Rajamani, vice president of project management. [More...]
NYC Data Science Academy CTO Vivian Zhang: Do the Difficult Things First
In the data science field today, "the big problem is that the industry does not have official data science training," observed Vivian Zhang, CTO of the NYC Data Science Academy. "Their majors don't teach them anything in the industry. We've become a natural transition funnel to bring those people in. Companies know that data science is important, but they don't know how to do it." [More...]
Google's Ad Mute Option Could Be a Valuable Messaging Tool
Google on Thursday announced a new feature that will let users mute so-called "reminder ads" in third-party apps and websites that are powered by its ad engine. It plans to expand this feature to its own services, including Gmail, YouTube and Google Search, in the coming months. The new tool is the latest addition to Google's dashboard for ad controls. [More...]
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The Morning After: Elon Musk's flamethrower

Engadget Email Newsletter

Engadget Email Newsletter

Engadget Email Newsletter

Engadget Email Newsletter

eng-ces-newsletter

It's Monday, January 29, 2018.

Hey, good morning!

Welcome back to Monday. If you’ve been waiting to hear more on Samsung’s next Galaxy flagship, we’ve got you covered. As well as everything else that happened over the weekend, naturally. Like Elon Musk with a flamethrower.

Intelligent Scan would work day or night.
 

Samsung Galaxy S9 may pack more reliable face recognition
 

Samsung Galaxy S9 may pack more reliable face recognition<br />   

Samsung has hinted that the Galaxy S9 might include more advanced face recognition, but we're now getting clues of what's involved. Deep inside the Galaxy Note 8's Oreo beta software, there’s a hidden Intelligent Scan feature that uses both camera-based face detection and the iris scanner for "better accuracy and security" and improved results in "low or very bright" lighting. Given that the iris scanning on the S8 and Note 8 can be finnicky (and that’s us being kind), this could deliver a much more consistent experience when unlocking your phone. We’re still not entirely sure how: A video included suggests that both the iris scanner and camera are active at the same time, regardless of lighting conditions, but we’d still like to hear more on the finer details. And does Samsung have its own Animoji in the works? Galaxy-moji? Samsung smileys? The world must know.
 

You might want to buy a fire extinguisher while you're at it.
 

Elon Musk's Boring Company is selling a flamethrower
 

Elon Musk's Boring Company is selling a flamethrower<br />   

After weeks of teases, Elon Musk has revealed The Boring Company’s latest product: a flamethrower. That's right, the same company digging traffic-skipping tunnels is now offering something that might be better used against any aggressive aliens SpaceX comes across. Plunk down $500 for a pre-order (there's no word on when it will ship), and you can have the "world's safest" fire-breathing weapon. Just in case it isn't safe enough, though, there's also a $30 branded fire extinguisher. Musk had teased for a while that he would sell a flamethrower when Boring Company hats sold out.
 

Health apps may pose inadvertent risks to troops.
 

Strava fitness-tracking data reveals secret military bases
 

Location data in fitness apps is frequently a good thing since it helps you remember and optimize your routes. However, it's also created an unexpected security risk, revealing secret military bases. UCA analyst Nathan Ruser has discovered that Strava's publicly available activity map includes the fitness routes of soldiers and agents in sensitive locations, including American bases in Afghanistan and Syria, the UK's Mount Pleasant airbase in the Falkland Islands, a suspected CIA base in Somalia and even Area 51.
 

THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS!
 

ATM jackpotting hacks reach the US
 

ATM jackpotting hacks reach the US<br />   

For some ATM thieves, swiping card data involves too much patience -- they'd rather just take the money and run. The US Secret Service has warned ATM makers Diebold Nixdorf and NCR that jackpotting hacks, where crooks force machines to cough up large sums of cash, have reached the US after years of creating problems in Asia, Europe and Mexico. The attacks have focused largely on Diebold's front-loading Opteva ATMs in stand-alone locations, such as retail stores and drive-thrus, and have relied on a combination of malware and hardware to pull off heists.
 

But wait, there's more...

1. GM faces lawsuit over self-driving car collision

2. After Math: If I had no loot

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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