Monday 7 January 2019

The Morning After: Apple's CES ad and Amazon's Alexa army

Engadget Email Newsletter

Engadget Email Newsletter

Engadget Email Newsletter

Engadget Email Newsletter

eng-ces-newsletter

It's Monday, January 07, 2019.

Hey, good morning! You look fabulous.

Welcome to your Monday morning! Engadget is reporting live from the world’s biggest tech event, CES. We’ll be here delivering all the biggest news from the likes of Google, Samsung, Sony and the rest. Expect liveblogs and three epic days of our live stage shows, which all culminates with the official Best of CES awards on Thursday at 8pm ET / 5pm PT. Here’s the earliest CES news -- more incoming.

It's borrowing a page from 1950s sci-fi.

Elon Musk teases final look of SpaceX's Starship test vehicle
 

Elon Musk teases final look of SpaceX's Starship test vehicle<br />   

Elon Musk has posted concept artwork showing what SpaceX’s completed Starship vehicle will look like. It’s borrowing more than a few cues from 1950s sci-fi, with its gleaming stainless-steel body. The test mule will be 30 feet across like the completed Starship, but it'll be shorter and will, unsurprisingly, go without windows. It's intended to fly suborbital Grasshopper flights and prove that the basic formula is sound before moving on to orbital missions in 2020.

Apple never attends CES, but it's here in spirit.

Apple took out a CES ad to troll its competitors over privacy

Apple took out a CES ad to troll its competitors over privacy

Apple never attends CES, but it's here. Kinda. As tech companies and tech media descended on Vegas, one of the first things many saw was a multi-storey ad from Apple trumpeting its privacy credentials. 

The copy was a cheeky riff on the classic Vegas slogan: What happens on your iPhone stays on your iPhone. Apple is making the most of the fact that its phones aren’t trading on your personal data -- at a show where it doesn’t maintain a physical presence.

It's a big figure, but what does it actually mean?

Amazon reports over 100 million Alexa devices sold

Amazon reports over 100 million Alexa devices sold

Amazon is usually coy about its hardware sales, let alone how well its voice assistant Alexa is doing. Its now announced that 100 million Alexa-equipped devices have been sold to date. Although there aren’t any more details, that’s a big number. We’re just wondering exactly how many people are actively using Amazon’s voice assistant, and whether Google has its own voice-assistant numbers to boast about.

Sponsored Content by Hulu

With tons of shows & movies + Live TV for sports, Hulu is about to ruin TV for you forever.

With tons of shows & movies + Live TV for sports, Hulu is about to ruin TV for you forever.

It's the first time they're available on non-Apple living-room hardware.
 

Samsung's 2019 smart TVs will support iTunes and AirPlay 2

Samsung's 2019 smart TVs will support iTunes and AirPlay 2

Until now, using Apple's services on your TV has meant... well, buying an Apple TV. No more: Samsung has revealed its 2019 smart TVs (plus updated 2018 sets) will offer both iTunes Movies and TV shows as well as AirPlay 2 casting. Yes, you can buy or rent videos from iTunes and watch them in 4K HDR glory without buying extra Apple hardware or otherwise bending over backward. The iTunes app will even play nicely with Samsung's ecosystem, too, supporting the Universal Guide, search features and the latest version of Bixby. The features will be available beginning this spring on the 2019 sets. 

Or, if you prefer something larger, it can be a 219-inch 'The Window.' Yeah.

Samsung shows off a 75-inch 4K 'The Wall' TV made with MicroLEDs

Samsung shows off a 75-inch 4K 'The Wall' TV made with MicroLEDs

Last year, Samsung showed off the modular MicroLED panels that make up its The Wall TV technology. This year, it's updated the tech in two directions -- larger and smaller, and apparently even made it see-through. We’ve seen MicroLED panels put together to create a 219-inch 'The Wall' and 'The Window' display -- last year's massive screen measured only 146-inches. Samsung also announced a version of The Wall that might fit in more homes, with 4K resolution available in a 75-inch size. There's no word on how much that will cost, but it's more realistic for consumer use than the 34-foot movie-theater screen the tech was originally made for. 

The dream is to have this in every grocery store.

BreadBot delivers freshly baked bread every six minutes

BreadBot delivers freshly baked bread every six minutes

Robots that give the gift of carbs -- they’re the real future.

But wait, there's more...

1. Huawei P30 might revive the headphone jack

2. Watch this giant laundry-folding robot handle a stack of shirts

3. Whill's next personal electronic vehicle drives itself

4. JAXJOX's smart kettlebell is a gateway to its subscription classes

5. Moen's showers get smarter with Google Assistant

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.
engadget-twitter engadget-facebook engadget-youtube engadget-reddit engadget-instagram

Copyright © 2016 Aol Inc. All rights reserved.

Our mailing address is:
AOL
770 Broadway #4
New York, NY 10003

You are receiving this email because you opted in at engadget.com.

Not interested anymore? Unsubscribe from this newsletter.

Saturday 5 January 2019

The Morning After: Is CES another auto show?

Engadget Email Newsletter

Engadget Email Newsletter

Engadget Email Newsletter

Engadget Email Newsletter

eng-ces-newsletter

It's Saturday, January 05, 2019.

Hey, good morning! You look fabulous.

Welcome to your weekend. CES is about to start, and before we dive headlong into a series of press conferences and hands-on demonstrations, we’ll try to figure out where all these cars came from? Also, we have some stories you may have missed from earlier in the week like our review of the Switch NES gamepads.

(View in browser.)

Car companies aren’t just ‘showing up’ now.

While we were looking at 3D TVs, CES morphed into an auto show

While we were looking at 3D TVs, CES morphed into an auto show

As an increasing amount of automakers position their vehicles as more than just dumb four-wheeled machines, the CES "auto show" will grow. 

Business in the front.

Dell's Latitude 7400 2-in-1 delivers some slick XPS style

Dell's Latitude 7400 2-in-1 delivers some slick XPS style

The new Latitude 7400 2-in-1 is a sleek machine that looks more like a MacBook than a standard corporate device. It has a polished aluminum case with diamond cut edges, and it manages to cram in a 14-inch 1080p touchscreen while weighing three pounds. Unlike Apple, Dell is giving professionals plenty of port options, including two USB Type-A ports, two USB Type-C connections with power delivery, an HDMI connection and an SD card reader.

It begins.

What to expect at CES 2019

What to expect at CES 2019

We're not quite done dusting off the glitter from our New Year's Day celebrations, but it's time to turn our attention once again to that other big event in January: the Consumer Electronics Show (CES). From smart homes to the biggest of big-screen TVs, here's a brief sneak peek at what we expect from this year's show.

When quarterly sales of $84 billion just aren’t enough.

Apple knows the age of yearly iPhone upgrades is over

Apple knows the age of yearly iPhone upgrades is over

Every year when Engadget reviews a new iPhone, we note that Apple's silicon offers far more power than most users need. The good news is that a few years later, those chips are still enough for most people. And given how the pace of other innovations in smartphone hardware has slowed over the past few years, there's less reason than ever to upgrade every time a new iPhone arrives.

A dose of retro action in a pricey, wireless shell.

Nintendo’s Switch NES gamepads are an unnecessary blast from the past

Nintendo’s Switch NES gamepads are an unnecessary blast from the past

The Switch NES controllers look just like the original, with the same blocky corners, plastic-yet-solid construction and concave buttons that hold your fingers just right. They even charge by sliding onto the console while it’s docked, although playing is a wireless-only affair. However, at $60 they’re an expensive add-on for controllers that are only meant to play emulated NES titles available via the new Online service.

But wait, there's more...

1. Scarlett Johansson says fighting deepfake porn is 'fruitless'

2. Qualcomm shells out billions to uphold Apple's German iPhone ban

3. Google's Fuchsia OS will be able to run Android apps

4. Soulja Boy's emulator consoles meet their inevitable end

5. LG's 2019 TVs add HDMI 2.1 and 8K

6. 'Stranger Things' season three arrives July 4th

7. China detains scientist who claims to have made gene-edited babies

8. Massive data leak affects hundreds of German politicians

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.
engadget-twitter engadget-facebook engadget-youtube engadget-reddit engadget-instagram

Copyright © 2016 Aol Inc. All rights reserved.

Our mailing address is:
AOL
770 Broadway #4
New York, NY 10003

You are receiving this email because you opted in at engadget.com.

Not interested anymore? Unsubscribe from this newsletter.