Wednesday 7 November 2018

The Morning After: Not AirPods, 'AirDots'

Engadget Email Newsletter

Engadget Email Newsletter

Engadget Email Newsletter

Engadget Email Newsletter

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It's Wednesday, November 07, 2018.

Hey, good morning! You look fabulous.

Today we have some cheap Chinese earbuds lined up to compare with Apple’s AirPods, and you might need to save that money -- fulfilling wishlists made from Amazon’s price-less holiday toy catalog could get expensive.

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The budget buds boast a charging case and Bluetooth 5.0.

Xiaomi's true wireless 'AirDots' earbuds cost less than $30

Xiaomi's true wireless 'AirDots' earbuds cost less than $30

Xiaomi’s latest budget offering is a pair of true wireless earbuds that cost around $28 (depending on the exchange rate). They're dubbed AirDots, which sounds confusingly (or intentionally) similar to Apple's $159 AirPods. To further fuel the comparisons, they also come in white and tout a minimal design, and they have a plastic case that’ll also charge the tiny things. For now, the buds are set to launch in China, with no word on a global launch.

Because competition.

Verizon cuts the price of its unlimited prepaid plan

Verizon cuts the price of its unlimited prepaid plan

Verizon (owner of Engadget’s parent company -- you know you’re reading Engadget’s newsletter, right?) is shaking up its prepaid plans with an emphasis on better value at the high end. Responding to competition from T-Mobile’s Metro, the price of Verizon’s unlimited plan has effectively dropped by $10 to $65 when you set up Auto Pay -- it's still more expensive than Metro, but closer. You'll also get an extra gig with the $45 plan.

You can have up to 10 lines on your account instead of the earlier five, and you can add both tablets and hotspots to your account at the same prices as adding smartphone lines. That said, the Metro unlimited options start at $50 with Google One perks, and AT&T's unlimited prepaid tiers are also less expensive at as little as $45. 

You'll need to go online to find out how much each product costs.

Amazon sends out toy catalog with no prices ahead of the holidays

Amazon sends out toy catalog with no prices ahead of the holidays

The PlayStation Classic, slider phones, the resurrection of Palm. What’s next? The return of the toy catalog. Kind of. Amazon will be sending out a toy catalog, minus prices, ahead of the holidays, containing bonkers gift ideas for the Richie Richs of this world, and Fire 10 HD tabs for the rest of us. This isn’t an iPad, Mom. It’s not the same.

Sponsored Content by StackCommerce

Why you should be shooting content with Snap Spectacles

Why you should be shooting content with Snap Spectacles

There’s time.

Animated 'Super Mario Bros.' movie tentatively planned for 2022

Animated 'Super Mario Bros.' movie tentatively planned for 2022

Nintendo and Universal’s Mario anime is still a few years away from release, but the big question is how to make a movie better than the 1993 flick. According to its producer, the answer is putting his creator Shigeru Miyamoto “front and center” throughout the process. We’ll see if that works.

Trolley coming through.

Waymo blames self-driving collision on pesky human

Waymo blames self-driving collision on pesky human

Waymo has admitted in a blog post that one of its test vehicles hit a motorcycle in Mountain View. The company defended its technology in the post, though, clarifying that the event was caused by human error. Apparently, the test driver took control of the vehicle after seeing a passenger car to the left moving into their lane. 

As far as Waymo is concerned, while the situation challenged the test driver, the data suggested its autonomous tech could see the situation developing thanks to 360-degree sensor vision and would’ve responded safely.

But wait, there's more...

1. AMD's first 7nm GPUs aren't made for gaming

2. Leica's Q-P is a pricey full-frame camera with subtle refinements

3. Google's Pixel Slate is available to pre-order

4. You can only buy Hublot's $25,000 watch with Bitcoin

5. Netflix has six new animated films and series in the works

6. Microsoft's Bitlocker is undercut by bad SSD encryption

7. Facebook's cluelessness helped amplify Myanmar tensions

8. 8BitDo's Bluetooth mod kits put retired controllers back to work

9. A weekend with the new MacBook Air

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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Tuesday 6 November 2018

The Morning After: Chrome's built-in ad blocking gets stronger

Engadget Email Newsletter

Engadget Email Newsletter

Engadget Email Newsletter

Engadget Email Newsletter

eng-ces-newsletter

It's Tuesday, November 06, 2018.

Hey, good morning! You look fabulous.

It’s election day in the US, but before you head out to collect those I Voted stickers, it’s time to check out our first impressions of Apple’s new iPad Pro and MacBook Air. Plus, you should bookmark our holiday gift guide (or just go ahead and order a few things now before you forget) and get a heads-up on Chrome’s latest ad-blocking expansion.

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Apple's new tablet is a big step forward, but it has its quirks.

iPad Pro preview (2018): Early signs point to a powerhouse with potential

iPad Pro preview (2018): Early signs point to a powerhouse with potential

If nothing else, Apple built a big pro-level iPad that physically fits better into people's lives. Four days isn’t enough time to give a full impression of the new slate, but Chris Velazco is ready with some early feelings about this fully specced out 12.9-inch Pro with 1TB of storage.

The best gadgets your loved ones didn't know they needed. 

Check out Engadget's 2018 holiday gift guide

Check out Engadget's 2018 holiday gift guide

Team Engadget has been hard at work on the 2018 holiday gift guide. This year's round-up is stuffed with 126 recommendations across 16 categories and a wide range of price points, with more than four times as many products under $50. In fact, about 30 percent of the items on this year's list falls into that budget range.

Big on power and price

ThinkPad X1 Extreme review

ThinkPad X1 Extreme review

According to ThinkPad enthusiast Terrence O’Brien, this four-pound laptop is surprisingly thin and light considering it has a 15-inch 4K HDR screen and powerful desktop-caliber internals.  Just don’t plan on wandering too far from a power outlet -- its battery life is pretty mediocre.

‘Ingress Prime’ is more beginner friendly.

Niantic revives ‘Ingress’ for the post-‘Pokémon Go’ world

Niantic revives ‘Ingress’ for the post-‘Pokémon Go’ world

Niantic is taking the time to remind the world that its own original geo-game, Ingress, still exists. Launched in 2013, it was the company’s first game and one of the first to ask folks to wander around their locale and hunt for goodies. Six years and several million players later, Niantic is relaunching the game as Ingress Prime. It's hoping that a fresh start, a cleaned-up game and a deeper storyline will help coax back all those people who tried Ingress once then walked away.

A developer's conference in San Francisco is a good place to debut the software.

Samsung’s foldable phone will finally be revealed this week

Samsung’s foldable phone will finally be revealed this week

In a call with reporters after its quarterly earnings report, Samsung exec Lee Kyeong-tae explained that the company would show off some of the UI features of the long-teased device and elaborate on how it could improve multitasking and (hopefully) the entire point of the new screen format. Reports suggest we’ll see some detailed images of the device, if not the actual thing in the flesh.
 

Awkward, since advertising is such a big part of Google’s business.

Chrome will block all ads on ‘consistently deceptive’ websites

As of December, Chrome 71 will block all ads on the "small number" of sites that consistently use shady tactics like pop-ups and redirects

The company said it was tipped off by US law enforcement.

Facebook blocks 115 fake accounts ahead of midterm elections

Facebook sent out an alert that it disabled 115 accounts (30 on Facebook and 85 on Instagram) that "may be engaged in coordinated inauthentic behavior." The social network said its investigation is in a "very early stage" and that it acted on the accounts based on a tip from US law enforcement, which believes the accounts may be linked to foreign entities -- and it’s just the latest in a long string of reports following the 2016 election campaign and the role of social media played through spurious methods.

But wait, there's more...

1. FCC pushes carriers to implement caller ID authentication by 2019

2. Apple releases watchOS 5.1.1 after previous update bricked devices

3. 7-Eleven is testing a 'scan and go' mobile checkout system

4. AMC hikes prices for its MoviePass rival in 15 states

5. What's on TV: 'Tetris Effect,' 'Outlaw King' and 'Great British Baking Show'

6. Intel's 48-core Xeon will go head to head with AMD in 2019

7. Amazon's HQ2 could end up split between two cities

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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