Monday, 5 November 2018

The Morning After: 5G iPhones?

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It's Monday, November 05, 2018.

Hey, good morning! You look fabulous.

Good morning! Your 5G iPhone is unlikely to appear until 2020, an asteroid mining company gets some help from a new Blockchain owner, and drones get smarter at search and rescue.

It's a match made in 2018.
 

Blockchain company buys asteroid mining firm Planetary Resources
 

Blockchain company buys asteroid mining firm Planetary Resources<br />   

Planetary Resources just took an unusual turn on its path to asteroid mining -- selling itself to a blockchain company founded by Ethereum’s Joe Lubin. Planetary Resources' Brian Israel said that Blockchain was a "natural solution" for commerce in space and an ideal way for people from various countries to coordinate efforts. It also adds some crucial funding to the space mining company, which had recently laid off employees. 

Intel's 2019 hardware supposedly runs too hot.
 

Apple’s first 5G iPhone will reportedly be ready by 2020
 

Apple’s first 5G iPhone will reportedly be ready by 2020<br />   

A Fast Company source claims Apple intends to use an Intel 5G modem in its 2020 batch of iPhones. Apple apparently had issues with older Intel hardware, but it’s not turning back to Qualcomm any time soon. The takeaway is that the newest iPhones may not be ready for 5G when it launches soon on major carriers globally. But given that coverage is going to be modest at the start, iPhone owners might not be missing out on too much.
 

They'd use the same technology that guides self-driving cars.
 

Drone fleets could find lost hikers in forests without using GPS
 

Drone fleets could find lost hikers in forests without using GPS<br />   

Drones can be put to work as some very effective search-and-rescue tools, but forests are hard as they interfere with GPS. MIT has a clever solution: use the same technology that guides self-driving cars. The drones use LIDAR to map forests without any use of GPS, then create a 2D map that also includes the orientations of trees, making it easy to tell where the robotic aircraft have already been as they search through a specified area. Search-and-rescue teams could then merge maps from an entire drone fleet and comb large swaths of forest in record time. There are limitations. The current system still needs an external ground station to merge maps, and it would need an object recognition system to identify people. MIT envisions future versions sharing maps when they come in contact, though, and object recognition is entirely realistic. 
 

But wait, there's more...

1. YouTube might come to Nintendo Switch this week

2. 'Fortnite' ends Halloween event with an in-game bang

3. Sears hopes to sell its home improvement business to Service.com

4. The best vacuum cleaners

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Saturday, 3 November 2018

The Morning After: 'Diablo' goes mobile and Google employees walk out

Engadget Email Newsletter

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It's Saturday, November 03, 2018.

Hey, good morning! You look fabulous.

Welcome to your weekend! While Google employees got in formation, Blizzcon 2018 kicked off, and we reviewed RED’s Hydrogen One smartphone. We’ll also take a look back at other big stories from the last week including what we think of Apple’s newest Macs and iPads, plus an impress electric race car concept that’s on display at SEMA.

(View in browser.)

Read the room.

'Diablo Immortal' brings Blizzard's action RPG to iOS and Android

'Diablo Immortal' brings Blizzard's action RPG to iOS and Android

The big Diablo announcement from Blizzcon is the first mobile game in the series, dubbed Immortal. Blizzard working on the game with China’s NetEase, and pre-registration for a beta is open now. There’s already a gameplay trailer, and the team seems to be blending traditional gameplay with that of various action RPG clones already available on mobile. The only problem? Fan reaction. While Blizzard has said it’s working on multiple Diablo projects, a mobile launch isn’t exactly what people were expecting to see first.

Nearly 4,000 at its Mountain View HQ alone.

Google Walkout protest included 20,000 participants Friday

Google Walkout protest included 20,000 participants Friday

According to its organizers, a protest put together over the last week pulled together 20,000 workers in 50 Google offices around the world who walked out at 11:10 AM local time yesterday. Open Research Group founder Meredith Whittaker said: "Google paying $90M to Andy Rubin is one example among thousands, which speak to a company where abuse of power, systemic racism, and unaccountable decision-making are the norm." Google CEO Sundar Pichai will meet with his leadership team Monday "to review a plan that would address the demands."

Hope you like USB-C -- because that’s all this one has now.

Apple finally put a retina display in the MacBook Air

Apple finally put a retina display in the MacBook Air

First and foremost, the new MacBook Air has a retina display. The giant aluminum bezel is gone, but the screen remains 13.3 inches. The full resolution is four times what the original Macbook Air had, which works out to 2,560 by 1600. According to Dana Wollman, “The new Air is basically a mash-up between the 12-inch MacBook and the larger MacBook Pros.” With those changes comes a bump in price -- these start at about $1,200 to get a Core i5 processor, 8GB of RAM and (sadly) only 128GB of storage, and they will arrive November 7th.

Bad Password

Dear tech: Stop doing business with Nazis

Dear tech: Stop doing business with Nazis

It only takes 4chan haters telling PayPal that ASMR creators might be making sex noises to get their accounts instantly banned. And yet, despite nearly a year of warnings from groups like Deplatform Hate, it continued doing business with “Gab” until last week.

Remember the EVO 3D?

RED Hydrogen One review: Mediocre cameraphone, extraordinary price tag

RED Hydrogen One review: Mediocre cameraphone, extraordinary price tag

This is an Android phone all about 3D. There are 3D cameras on the front and back, and you can watch 3D movies on what the company calls a “4V” display. Unfortunately, it also has 2017-era specs, bloatware and unfinished camera software to go with a $1,295 price.

Even with new vapor chamber cooling, the phone itself still gets pretty hot.

Razer Phone 2 review: Strictly for gamers

Razer Phone 2 review: Strictly for gamers

If you prioritize gaming above all else, then Razer’s Phone 2 is worth a look. Others, however, might want to look elsewhere.

But wait, there's more...

1. The latest 'Overwatch' hero is gunslinging gang leader Ashe

2. Why the new MacBook Air isn't 'a bigger MacBook'

3. NASA says goodbye to its Dawn spacecraft after 11 years of service

4. Apple: Build me an iPad XR, please?

5. NASA and the ESA release first 8K video from space

6. PlayStation Classic game list revealed

7. Chevrolet's eCOPO Camaro drag racer packs an 800-volt battery

8. 'Super Mario Flashback' is a stunning pixel art fan game

9. Intel i9-9900K explained: The road to 5GHz

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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Have a suggestion on how we can improve The Morning After? Send us a note.
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