Tuesday 14 August 2018

The Morning After: NVIDIA's graphics upgrade and taking Tesla private

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Engadget Email Newsletter

Engadget Email Newsletter

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It's Tuesday, August 14, 2018.

Hey, good morning!

NVIDIA just launched its biggest graphical advance since 2006, and kids are well-equipped to hack election results. Also, Azealia Banks and Elon Musk have different stories to tell about last week’s surprising tweet.
 

When novel ideas get old.
 

Motorola Z3 review
 

Motorola Z3 review<br />   

This phone’s Snapdragon 835 chipset keeps things moving at a respectable pace, and Motorola's Android tweaks are as thoughtful as ever. That said, the Moto Z3 lacks some of the flourishes that made earlier Moto Z phones truly great, and the best argument for owning one -- the 5G Moto Mod -- is still months away and will only be of use to Z3 owners in select markets.
 

The future of hyper-realistic graphics is here.
 

NVIDIA's Turing-powered GPUs are the first ever built for ray tracing
 

NVIDIA's Turing-powered GPUs are the first ever built for ray tracing<br />   

At the SIGGRAPH conference, NVIDIA CEO Jen Hsun Huang revealed eighth-generation Turing-GPU hardware that's actually capable of accelerating both ray tracing and AI. Ray tracing is a technique that should usher in far more realistic computer graphics than we’ve ever seen before by simulating the way light works in the real world. Its first Quadro RTX professional cards with the technology (and super-fast Samsung GDDR6 RAM) cost between $2,300 and $10,000, but we should see consumer cards on the way soon.

Get one for $120 or a three-pack for $280.
 

Samsung's new mesh routers use Plume's WiFi optimization tech
 

Samsung's new mesh routers use Plume's WiFi optimization tech<br />   

Samsung is tackling both mesh WiFi and smart-home connectivity with its new, simply-named SmartThings WiFi mesh network system. While the integrated SmartThings hub makes this offering unique, it also has some notable features on the WiFi side as well. Samsung partnered with Plume, one of the first companies to build out mesh WiFi systems, to offer AI-based networking optimization. Once everything is set up, the network begins ‘learning’ about how a household uses the available bandwidth.

Azealia Banks tells a different story.
 

Elon Musk explains funding plans for taking Tesla private
 

Elon Musk explains funding plans for taking Tesla private<br />   

In a blog post, Musk claimed that it "wouldn't be right" to limit talks of going private to just the largest investors. The country's Public Investment Fund had brought up going private "multiple times" starting in early 2017, he said, expressing interest in the move as a way to reduce its dependence on oil. However, musician Azealia Banks said she spent the weekend with Musk and his girlfriend, Grimes, describing the CEO as “scrounging” for investors after making a tweet while on acid, and the New York Times said Tesla board members were “blindsided” by the announcement. 

The “charging rapidly” message isn’t showing up.
 

Pixel XL may lose fast charging after Android Pie update
 

Pixel XL may lose fast charging after Android Pie update<br />   

Android Pie has been out for a week; now Google's latest mobile operating system has a problem. Users of the company's own Pixel XL from 2016 are reporting issues with fast chargers after they've updated to Pie. 
 

Thieves hit the National Bank of Blacksburg for $2.4 million in a pair of attacks.
 

FBI warns banks about ATM cash-out scheme
 

The FBI is warning banks about a fraud scheme called an ATM cash-out, Krebs on Security reports. With this type of heist, attackers typically compromise a bank or payment card processor with malware, disable fraud controls and withdraw large sums of money -- sometimes millions of dollars -- with cloned bank cards. 

Zephyr flies above weather at 70,000 feet.
 

Solar-powered aircraft stays aloft for record-breaking 25 days
 

Solar-powered aircraft stays aloft for record-breaking 25 days<br />   

Airbus announced that its solar-powered Zephyr S HAPS (high-altitude pseudo-satellite) flew for 25 straight days, setting a time aloft record for any airplane, ever. It shattered the previous record of 14 days, marked by a previous prototype Zephyr aircraft.
 

Jabra's Elite 65t wireless earbuds are our go-to recommendation.
 

The nine headphones that made our back-to-school guide
 

The nine headphones that made our back-to-school guide<br />   

Whether you need a pair of earbuds, a set of sound-cancelling cans or just a pair of budget headphones that don't suck, our annual back-to-school guide has you covered.
 

But wait, there's more...

1. DeepMind AI matches health experts at spotting eye diseases

2. What we're watching: Telltale's 'The Walking Dead,' 'Sharknado' and 'Disenchantment'

3. Marvel's 'Runaways' returns to Hulu December 21st

4. Vimeo is the latest platform to remove InfoWars's Alex Jones

5. Honda adds driver assist tech to all 2019 Civic sedans and coupes

6. Dozens of kids hack election-site replicas in just minutes

7. AI-driven animations will make your digital avatars come to life

8. Volkswagen kicks off EV awareness campaign

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 13 August 2018

Editor's Pick: What Can Chrome 68 Teach Us About Election Security?


Ed Moyle
Aug 13, 2018 12:26 PM PT
If you're a technologist, you've probably noticed a few new things associated with Chrome 68's release last month. One of the more notable changes is that it now uses a "not secure" indicator for any site not using HTTPS. So instead of providing a notification when a site is HTTPS, it now provides the user with a warning when it isn't. One of those groups is users of government websites. [More...]

More Picks:
The Weird Mistakes Killing Tesla
Tesla is trending to fail spectacularly. It has been burning cash at an unsustainable rate, and it keeps making avoidable mistakes that weaken it. Here's what is weird: You'd think the firm's biggest problem would be that every large car maker was working behind the scenes to kill it. However, the car companies for the most part appear to have worked harder to emulate Tesla than to destroy it. [More...]
At-Home Eldercare Goes High Tech
The call came in less than an hour before the 8 a.m. shift was scheduled to start: A family emergency meant the regular caregiver for an elderly client couldn't make her shift that day, so a replacement caregiver was needed ASAP. Homewatch CareGivers of San Juan Capistrano had to quickly send a substitute from its pool of licensed, trained and security-bonded caregivers. [More...]
Galaxy Note9 Is Front and Center in Samsung's Connected World
Samsung unveiled its much-anticipated Galaxy Note9 Thursday at its Unpacked event in New York City. The company made several other announcements as well, as it presented its vision for a seamlessly connected world. "We are creating a galaxy of experiences that span not just devices and locations but platforms and brands," said DJ Koh, CEO of Samsung Electronics, at the event. [More...]
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The Morning After: A smart way of dealing with online trolls

Engadget Email Newsletter

Engadget Email Newsletter

Engadget Email Newsletter

Engadget Email Newsletter

eng-ces-newsletter

It's Monday, August 13, 2018.

Hey, good morning! 

Good morning! Over the weekend, scientists might have detected our solar system’s ‘wall’, Fallout 76 will have a smart in-game way to deal with trolls and Lenovo unveiled a new, slender, light professional laptop.

You can also block unwanted players, naturally.

'Fallout 76' deals with trolls by making them part of the game
 

'Fallout 76' deals with trolls by making them part of the game<br />   

When Bethesda mentioned that Fallout 76 was an online game, you could hear alarm bells ringing in fans' heads. How were they going to deal with trolls? It’s going to be baked into the game. Fallout 76-lead Todd Howard revealed that people who kill unwilling victims will get bounties on their heads, with the money coming out of their pockets and reflecting in their character level. They'll also be impossible to miss -- you'll see a red star on the map.
 

It could shed more light on the sun's reach than Voyager ever did.
 

New Horizons probe may have detected solar system's hydrogen 'wall'
 

New Horizons probe may have detected solar system's hydrogen 'wall'<br />   

Scientists have learned a bit about the edge of the solar system from Voyager 1, but there hasn't been a lot of corroborating data without follow-up spacecraft. They appear to be getting a second chance, though. NASA's New Horizons spacecraft has detected what appears to be a ‘wall’ at the edge of the solar system where interstellar hydrogen gathers as it collides with the solar wind -- in other words, the very edge of the sun's influence. 
 

Thankfully, you aren't likely to see it in the wild.
 

Elaborate hack turned Amazon Echo speakers into spies
 

Elaborate hack turned Amazon Echo speakers into spies<br />   

Just because you’re paranoid about Amazon’s Echo speakers, it doesn’t mean they’re not listening in on you. (If they’re in the hands of researchers with some hacking hardware). A team of researchers from China's Tencent has come about as close as you can get right now, however. Their attack on the Echo wasn’t simple, though: It used both a modified speaker and a string of Alexa web-interface vulnerabilities to remotely eavesdrop on regular models. The team removed a flash memory chip from the Echo, modifying its firmware to get root access and soldering it back on its circuit board. After that, the group put the speaker on the same WiFi network as untouched Echos. The researchers used Amazon's whole-home communication protocol plus the Alexa interface flaws (including address redirection, cross-site scripting and web encryption downgrades) to gain full control over victims' speakers, including silent recording and playing any sound they like.
 

Windows on your Chromebook.

Google may bring Windows 10 support to multiple Chromebooks
 

Google may bring Windows 10 support to multiple Chromebooks<br />   

It's not just for Pixelbook owners.
 

But wait, there's more...

1. Intel's first ninth-generation Core processors may arrive October 1st

2. Lenovo unveils its thinnest and lightest professional notebook

3. After Math: Space Farce

4. 'Elder Scrolls: Legends' may skip PS4 due to cross-play ban

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.

Our mailing address is:
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Saturday 11 August 2018

Editor's Pick: At-Home Eldercare Goes High Tech


Ned Madden
Aug 11, 2018 5:00 AM PT
The call came in less than an hour before the 8 a.m. shift was scheduled to start: A family emergency meant the regular caregiver for an elderly client couldn't make her shift that day, so a replacement caregiver was needed ASAP. Homewatch CareGivers of San Juan Capistrano had to quickly send a substitute from its pool of licensed, trained and security-bonded caregivers. [More...]

More Picks:
Galaxy Note9 Is Front and Center in Samsung's Connected World
Samsung unveiled its much-anticipated Galaxy Note9 Thursday at its Unpacked event in New York City. The company made several other announcements as well, as it presented its vision for a seamlessly connected world. "We are creating a galaxy of experiences that span not just devices and locations but platforms and brands," said DJ Koh, CEO of Samsung Electronics, at the event. [More...]
Oracle Releases Second Half of Autonomous DB
A lot of people might have thought Oracle's announcement of the autonomous database at last year's OpenWorld and its subsequent release earlier this year were the whole story, but there's a lot more. This week's webcast featuring Larry Ellison was proof. Ellison must find his CTO role -- since he handed the CEO reins to Safra Catz and Mark Hurd -- to be stimulating and liberating at the same time. [More...]
Follow Us

This Editor's Pick alert is a premium service provided to ECT News Network newsletter subscribers. If you wish to make changes to your subscription settings, please click to manage your account.

Copyright 2018 ECT News Network, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
ECT News Network, Inc. 16133 Ventura Blvd., Suite 700, Encino, CA 91436