Monday 16 March 2020

Airbnb and Apple Card both affected by coronavirus

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It's Monday, March 16, 2020.

Hey, good morning! 

Beyond getting Stadia working in 4K, I hope everyone is exercising restraint and good judgment as the effects of coronavirus continue to grow. Unsurprisingly, from our perspective, the effects have gone far beyond canceled trade shows and delayed briefings.

Monday has only just begun, and Airbnb has expanded its cancellation policy, Apple Card delays March payments, anti-terrorist tracking tech has been tapped to help halt the spread of the virus and Google’s sister company, Verily, has now launched its site to gauge possibly infected adults and offer free testing.

That last one came after President Trump blindsided Google when he announced the company was launching a screening site. The scale is a little different: This isn’t the full might of Google, but a healthcare-tech company owned by Alphabet. You can check out the site here and register if you’re California based.
 

-Mat

(Read in browser)

Social distance before sampling.

Moog and Korg make synth apps free to help musicians stuck at home
 

Moog has made its Minimoog Model D iOS synth app available for free. It wasn't hugely expensive to start, but this could make it easy to recreate the first portable synth and slip some Kraftwerk- or Dr. Dre-inspired sounds into your latest track. Moog didn't say how long the price change would last, but you might want to act quickly.

Not to be left out, Korg is doing the same for its Kaossilator apps, which normally cost close to $20. Android artists can grab the software for no charge until March 20th, 2020, while the iOS crowd has until March 31st to get iKaossilator -- ensuring that once the effects of the coronavirus have run their course, you’ll have epic new material for your triumphant return gig.
 

It may have to scale back its lunar ambitions.
 

NASA warns of delays to its Moon base plan
 

Dreams of returning to the Moon with a permanent presence might have been overly ambitious. NASA’s human exploration lead, Doug Loverro, has warned that plans for the Lunar Gateway could be set back by a year or more as NASA reworks its design and intended uses. Loverro also told an advisory committee that costs and technical challenges would force NASA to revise and streamline its objectives for the Moon. This was highly likely to happen: Critics have argued that the White House's timetable, including a Moon landing by 2024, were arbitrary targets set more for political gain than advancing space exploration. 

Wall Street Journal sources claim the Trump administration chose the 2024 timing to dovetail with the end of a theoretical second presidential term. 

It's a little more complicated for Macs.

Google explains exactly what you need to play Stadia games in 4K on the web
 

Now that 4K gaming on Stadia is possible, what do you need to stream it to your PC? Well, the main requirement is a Chromebook or Windows PC that can decode video in Google's preferred VP9 format, a 4K display (naturally) and enough internet bandwidth to handle the "best visual quality" option. Stadia doesn’t demand the best and most-powerful processors.

Note the lack of Mac support. Much like YouTube in Safari, Apple's resistance to VP9 over patent issues makes official 4K support unlikely.
 

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Movies, music and other art can qualify under a new test program.
 

'Dreams' creators can apply to sell their work beyond the PS4
 

'Dreams' creators can apply to sell their work beyond the PS4<br />   

The PS4’s Dreams is a surprisingly powerful creative tool for both hobbyist game creators and artists, and Media Molecule wants to reward at least some of those people for their talent. The studio has launched a beta evaluation program that will let creators sell their work "off PlayStation" -- say, to produce a music video or poster. 

Importantly, creators and artists own the rights to original creations in Dreams, Media Molecule said, and the company wants to "make it easier" for them to profit from that work -- and get creations out in the world beyond a games console.

The beta is only open to Early Access members that already have a body of work in Dreams, and the developer will want to know what they’re planning, when they hope to finish it and whether or not they’re willing to provide feedback.

A computer triggered auto-abort during the final engine power check.
 

SpaceX aborts Falcon 9 launch with rare 'Liftoff! Disregard' sequence
 

It's not unusual for SpaceX to abort a launch. However, yesterday a Falcon 9 rocket stopped at literally the last second, confusing even the countdown commentator. As the clock hit zero, the operator enthusiastically shouted "Liftoff!" but quickly added "Disregard. We have an abort" once it was clear the rocket wasn't getting airborne. Last minute nerves? Nope, the Falcon 9's onboard computer detected an engine issue and automatically aborted the launch. During the commentary, SpaceX supervisor Michael Andrews noted that it had a "condition regarding engine power that caused us to abort today's launch." 
 

But wait, there's more...

1. The Wirecutter: How to reduce your energy bill (in any season) with a single device

2. Hitting the Books: Disney's influence on America's first stealth planes

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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Saturday 14 March 2020

Apple Stores close worldwide and 'Rise of Skywalker' arrived early

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It's Saturday, March 14, 2020.

Hey, good morning! You look fabulous.

As if this week didn’t have enough happening (check below for a few highlights) Friday tossed in enough groundbreaking events for an entire week. At a White House press conference, the president announced Google would make a screening site for people in the US with COVID-19 symptoms to determine if they need testing, find a drive-thru test and later, receive their results. 

Shortly after, it became apparent this website won’t do all of that, won’t work for everyone in the US when it launches and is the work of a small Alphabet subsidiary named Verily, not 1,700 Google engineers. According to a report by Wired, Google execs didn’t even know the announcement was part of the plan.

Meanwhile, other companies responded to the growing pandemic in their own ways. Comcast decided to back off of bandwidth caps for two months and open up its WiFi hotspots for free use by all, mobile carriers banded together with a pledge to suspend cancellations and even Disney got into the act.

It’s promising to release Frozen 2 on Disney+ early this weekend (you’ll have to wait until Tuesday to watch in 4K) to give families stuck at home something to enjoy, and it already released Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker on video-on-demand several days earlier than expected.

I haven’t mentioned the two most surprising stories from Friday afternoon and evening yet -- look below.

-- Richard

(View in browser.)

He’s a little busy elsewhere at the moment.

Bill Gates steps down from Microsoft's board of directors

If you checked out of keeping up with the news a little early on Friday, you may have missed Bill Gates’ announcement. The Microsoft co-founder and Engadget reader has been increasingly focused on public health issues (like pandemics, for example) and decided it’s time to step away from his seat on the board of directors at both Microsoft and Berkshire Hathaway.

Gates handed over control as CEO of Microsoft to Steve Ballmer in 2000, left day-to-day operations at Microsoft back in 2008 and stepped down as chairman of its board six years ago. He’s still attached to the company as a technical advisor. On LinkedIn he wrote, “With respect to Microsoft, stepping down from the board in no way means stepping away from the company. Microsoft will always be an important part of my life's work and I will continue to be engaged with Satya and the technical leadership to help shape the vision and achieve the company's ambitious goals.”

All shopping and customer support is going online, for now.

All Apple Stores outside of Greater China are closing until March 27th

All Apple Stores outside of Greater China are closing until March 27th

The other news wasn’t quite as surprising given all that’s going on, but the timing was interesting. Just before midnight on the west coast, Apple CEO Tim Cook revealed his company’s stores worldwide will close for the next couple of weeks (with the exception of China, where they just reopened, along with Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan).

This is all a part of Apple’s push to prevent accelerating the spread of COVID-19, and the stores won’t reopen until at least March 27th. Cook committed to paying hourly workers through the shutdown and said Apple would expand its leave policies for employees affected by the virus, whether directly or due to the need to take care of others.

From overpriced accessory to go-to device.

Apple’s iPad and Keyboard Folio is all I need

Apple’s iPad and Keyboard Folio is all I need Six months ago, Dan Cooper was outraged at the prospect of Apple charging $160 for a keyboard folio add-on to its seventh generation iPad. Then it went on sale for $100 on Black Friday (it’s currently available on Amazon for about $144), and he bought one. Now Dan can explain why it’s the physical keyboard that “fixes the iPad.”

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It showed a sports car could be powerful and sustainable.

BMW will discontinue its iconic i8 hybrid in April

BMW will discontinue its iconic i8 hybrid in April BMW has sold more than 20,000 i8s since 2014 -- no mean feat considering the $147,500 starting price. The company says that the model outsold all competitors in its class, combined. That said, the i8 is getting long in the tooth. Its core technology is outdated and the company is transitioning to newer designs like the all-electric i4. So after six years of success, the BMW factory in Leipzig, Germany, will halt production of the company's best-selling sports car in April.

Erasing the edges is one way to show off tech leadership.

Why the tech world is waging war on bezels

Why the tech world is waging war on bezels We live in an age of disappearing borders -- on our screens. Devindra Hardawar takes a look at the design trends on TVs, laptops, tablets and phones to see where all that extra plastic is going and why manufacturers keep pushing for seamless screens.

It took a global pandemic to make companies see the downsides of offices.

Engadget Podcast: Coronavirus and our remote work future

Engadget Podcast: Coronavirus and our remote work future

This week, Devindra and Cherlynn chat about how coronavirus is pushing many companies towards remote work and better employee support. (It's just too bad it took a widespread illness to make those things happen.) Will this be the norm moving forward for white-collar jobs?

And for a change of pace, they chat about the tech world's war on bezels and the state of software in folding phones. Be sure to stay tuned for some quarantine viewing recommendations too!

Listen on Apple Podcasts, Google Play, Spotify, Pocket Casts or Stitcher.

But wait, there's more...

1. Motorola's first high-end phone in years may have a 'bezel-free' display

2. E3 2020 is officially canceled

3. Tesla's one-millionth car is a Model Y

4. EU plans to introduce sweeping 'right to repair' legislation for electronics

5. Users tell us what keeps the XPS 15 from being the perfect laptop

6. 'Call of Duty: Warzone' is a serious contender to Fortnite's throne

7. Nintendo prevails in lawsuit over Switch console and JoyCon design

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.

Now available on your smart speaker and wherever you get your podcasts:
Apple Podcasts  |  Spotify  |  Google Play  |  iHeart Radio

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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