Miscellaneous Tech News
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@hobbit666 said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@DustinB3403 said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
Quibi streaming service shutting down after less than 1 year
#notsurprised
Never heard of it might be part of the problem lol
Exactly
It was meant to be 10 minute movies for the moble platform only, subscription based. I saw a few commercials for it, but wasn't at all interested.
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@DustinB3403 said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@hobbit666 said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@DustinB3403 said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
Quibi streaming service shutting down after less than 1 year
#notsurprised
Never heard of it might be part of the problem lol
Exactly
It was meant to be 10 minute movies for the moble platform only, subscription based. I saw a few commercials for it, but wasn't at all interested.
yeah, the idea of watching a movie or much of anything on my phone is a no go.. but then again, this service wasn't for me... it was for youngin's.. and millennials
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@Dashrender said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
it was for youngin's.. and millennials
The group of people who have the least expendable cash of any group!
I wonder how that project planning meeting went.
"I have an idea, lets make a platform for 10 minute studio quality movies, but designed for the mobile platform, broke millennials will gobble it up, we'll charge only $5/month"
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@DustinB3403 said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@Dashrender said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
it was for youngin's.. and millennials
The group of people who have the least expendable cash of any group!
I wonder how that project planning meeting went.
"I have an idea, lets make a platform for 10 minute studio quality movies, but designed for the mobile platform, broke millennials will gobble it up, we'll charge only $5/month"
No different than any other platform that makes billions off that same group - the parent pay for it.
Look at all of the micro payment games... again for youngin's and millenials - yet they make bank!
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@Dashrender said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@DustinB3403 said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@Dashrender said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
it was for youngin's.. and millennials
The group of people who have the least expendable cash of any group!
I wonder how that project planning meeting went.
"I have an idea, lets make a platform for 10 minute studio quality movies, but designed for the mobile platform, broke millennials will gobble it up, we'll charge only $5/month"
No different than any other platform that makes billions off that same group - the parent pay for it.
Look at all of the micro payment games... again for youngin's and millenials - yet they make bank!
Except this one didn't work, obviously.
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@DustinB3403 said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@Dashrender said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@DustinB3403 said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@Dashrender said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
it was for youngin's.. and millennials
The group of people who have the least expendable cash of any group!
I wonder how that project planning meeting went.
"I have an idea, lets make a platform for 10 minute studio quality movies, but designed for the mobile platform, broke millennials will gobble it up, we'll charge only $5/month"
No different than any other platform that makes billions off that same group - the parent pay for it.
Look at all of the micro payment games... again for youngin's and millenials - yet they make bank!
Except this one didn't work, obviously.
LOL - obviously.
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Huawei Mate 40 phones launch despite chip freeze
Huawei has unveiled its Mate 40 smartphones claiming they feature a more "sophisticated" processor than Apple's forthcoming iPhones.
The component was made using the same "five nanometre" process as its US rival's chip, but contains billions more transistors. As a result, the Chinese firm claims its phones are more powerful. However, Huawei has had its supply of the chips cut off because of a US trade ban that came into effect in September. That means that once its stockpile of the new Kirin 9000 processors runs out, it faces being unable to make more of the Mate 40 handsets in their current form. -
The Fedora 33 Final RC1.2 compose [1] is GO and will be shipped live
on Tuesday, 27 October 2020. -
Rashford's free meal tweets made into Google map
Footballer Marcus Rashford's campaign to provide free meals for children over half term has been turned into an interactive Google Map.
Joe Freeman has so far been manually inputting each individual venue offering to help provide food. He is using tweets by Rashford, who is sharing messages from local businesses which have pledged to support his campaign. Ministers have ruled out extending free meals beyond term time. "I was eating my lunch, reading Marcus Rashford's tweets and thinking, 'This is amazing, wouldn't it be great if we could see them all in one place,'" Mr Freeman said. "It was easy to do - I started off just by searching by each restaurant and the place they were from." -
Pop_OS! 20.10 is out now, go updated.
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@scottalanmiller said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
Pop_OS! 20.10 is out now, go updated.
They are doing an excellent job making it convenient for hybrid graphics cards.
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Facebook avoids Apple with cloud-gaming launch
Facebook has launched its first "cloud-streamed" video games but is not offering them to iPhones or iPads.
Initially, only five titles already available as standalone smartphone apps will be accessible - via the main Facebook and Facebook Gaming apps on Android and Facebook's website on PCs. Later, it may add "all types of games". But it is not offering the product on Apple's iOS mobile operating system because "we don't know if launching on the App Store is a viable path". The two US technology giants clashed earlier this year, when Apple prevented Facebook from offering more basic "mini-games" via the iOS version of its Facebook Gaming app on the grounds this broke its App Store rules. -
Social media: Is it really biased against US Republicans?
Wednesday promises to be another stressful day for Facebook, Google and Twitter.
Their chief executives will be grilled by senators about whether Big Tech has too much freedom and abuses it. For Republicans, this is the opportunity they've been waiting for. Two weeks ago, Twitter prevented people posting links to a critical New York Post investigation into Joe Biden. It then apologised for failing to explain its reasoning before ditching a rule it had used to justify the action. For many Republicans, this was the final straw - incontrovertible evidence that social media is biased against conservatives.The accusation is that Silicon Valley is at its core liberal and thus a bad arbiter of what's acceptable on its platforms. -
Google SMTP Relay Service appears to be down, at least in NY.
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Brexit border software developers warn of delays
Essential post-Brexit freight software is unlikely to be ready on time for 1 January, those building it have warned.
A delay could hinder efforts to get products on to shop shelves and might push up prices. The Association of Freight Software Suppliers (AFSS) said its members could not guarantee delivery because officials had failed to give it details and direction for the project. But the government insisted the work was still "on track" for 1 January. Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs (HMRC) is the department involved. The software is supposed to help transport companies submit their paperwork digitally, which is necessary for relevant taxes to be calculated. The idea is to "minimise the time the vehicles, which currently move seamlessly across the border, would need to be stationary while checks are made on the goods inside them", explained Kevin Green, marketing director at Logistics UK. -
Facebook, Twitter and Google face questions from US senators
The chief executives of Facebook, Twitter, and Google faced more than three and a half hours of questions from US Senators on Wednesday.
At present, the firms cannot be sued over what their users post online, or the decisions they make over what to leave up and take down. But some politicians have raised concerns that this "sweeping immunity" encourages bad behaviour. The three CEOs say they need the law to be able to moderate content. Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg, Twitter's Jack Dorsey and Google's Sundar Pichai were summoned before the Senate after both Democrats and Republicans agreed to call them in for questioning. But some Democrats used their time to question that decision, so close to election day, and decried it as a political ploy. -
Spotify and Joe Rogan under fire over Alex Jones role
Spotify is facing criticism from anti-misinformation groups and its own staff over the appearance of conspiracy theorist Alex Jones on the Joe Rogan show.
Rogan's hugely popular podcast signed an exclusivity deal with Spotify earlier this year for $100m (£77m). But Spotify staff have expressed concerns internally about the appearance of Jones as a guest. Spotify banned Jones' own podcast two years ago over hate speech.The tech firm, however, declined to comment about Mr Rogan's broadcast. Over the course of a three-hour podcast, Jones discussed a range of topics, including how effective mask wearing was against Covid-19, and the risk of vaccines making people sick. Mr Rogan did fact checks of his own during the show. -
Raspberry Pi 400: A computer for the coronavirus age?
A whole computer contained in a keyboard - just connect it to a monitor and you are ready to go.
It sounds like an idea from the 1980s. Remember the ZX Spectrum, the Commodore Amiga or the BBC Micro? Well, the 2020 version is the Pi 400. It's the latest product from Raspberry Pi, the organisation founded to get children coding. And the £67 device - or £95 with a mouse and cables - may help answer the challenge of getting cheap computing to youngsters affected by the coronavirus pandemic. The idea, says the organisation's founder Eben Upton, is to mirror the simplicity of those 1980s devices. "It gets into your life as a utility device, as a thing that you buy to do your schoolwork or play games on," he explains. -
@mlnews said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
Raspberry Pi 400: A computer for the coronavirus age?
A whole computer contained in a keyboard - just connect it to a monitor and you are ready to go.
It sounds like an idea from the 1980s. Remember the ZX Spectrum, the Commodore Amiga or the BBC Micro? Well, the 2020 version is the Pi 400. It's the latest product from Raspberry Pi, the organisation founded to get children coding. And the £67 device - or £95 with a mouse and cables - may help answer the challenge of getting cheap computing to youngsters affected by the coronavirus pandemic. The idea, says the organisation's founder Eben Upton, is to mirror the simplicity of those 1980s devices. "It gets into your life as a utility device, as a thing that you buy to do your schoolwork or play games on," he explains.Dash and I were discussing this this morning. It's really cool, like Commodore 64 throwback cool. Biggest problem is... when keyboard computers were a thing they only plugged into a monitor. One power plug, one monitor cable, and it was still annoying. Today we are used to keyboards being a single small wire, or none at all. But suddenly to have power, two HDMI, mouse and maybe networking all plugged into your keyboard, not to mention external hard drive(s) and more, talk about cumbersome unless your keyboard is totally tied down and can't be pulled around by the weight of the cables.