Rabu, 30 Oktober 2019

Apple’s 5G iPhones will reportedly be powered by its first 5-nanometer chips - The Verge

Three of Apple’s phones will release with 5G connectivity next year with Qualcomm’s X55 5G modem, Nikkei reports. This modem will reportedly be paired with a new Apple chipset — likely to be called the A14 Bionic — that’ll be the first from the company to be built using a 5-nanometer process. In general, moving to smaller manufacturing processes makes chips more efficient while allowing more processing power to be packed into a smaller space.

This isn’t the first time we’ve heard rumors that Apple is planning on releasing its first 5G phones in 2020, nor is it the first time we’ve heard there’ll be three of them. Apple analyst Ming-Chi Kuo made a similar prediction back in July. What’s new are the reports of the exact Qualcomm modem Apple plans to use after the two companies settled their ongoing legal dispute back in April. In the longer term, Apple is thought to be working on its own in-house modems having acquired the majority of Intel’s smartphone modem business in July.

The report also corroborates previous rumors that Apple is planning to switch to a 5nm fabrication process for its chips next year, moving away from the 7nm process that it’s used since the A12 Bionic chip debuted in 2018. Apple rival Huawei is also thought to be working on a 5nm chip of its own that’s set to launch in a similar period next year.

As well as 5G connectivity and a new chip fabrication process, next year’s iPhones are also expected to be Apple’s first redesign of its flagship phones since 2017, and could feature an in-display fingerprint sensor. In addition to its three flagship devices, Apple could also release a low-cost successor to the iPhone SE towards the beginning of the year.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.theverge.com/2019/10/30/20939686/apple-iphone-2020-qualcomm-x55-5g-modem-5nm-chipset-process

2019-10-30 11:06:36Z
52780422853301

Snapchat now lets you 3D Paint faces and pretty much anything else - The Verge

Today, Snapchat is introducing a new 3D Paint feature that lets you draw in augmented reality. You can use it to draw on your own face using your phone’s front-facing camera, and it’ll also work with your rear-facing camera to let you to draw on objects in the environment. One video produced by Snap shows the feature being used to draw a pair of eyes and a mustache on the front of a van.

The functionality looks similar to Samsung’s “AR Doodle” feature which it introduced with the Galaxy Note 10. However, Samsung’s feature has the added benefit of using the phone’s S Pen stylus, which should be more precise than drawing with your finger on the screen.

If you want to give the feature a go yourself, then Snapchat’s 3D Paint is rolling out starting today. You’ll be able to find the feature within the Create section of the iOS app’s AR Bar. Unfortunately, the feature isn’t available on Android at launch, but Snapchat says that it will be coming to the platform in the coming months.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.theverge.com/2019/10/30/20939665/snapchat-augmented-reality-drawing-lens-ar-bar

2019-10-30 09:00:30Z
52780422852965

The PS4 has outsold the original PlayStation and the Wii - The Verge

Sony has announced as part of its second-quarter earnings report that it sold 2.8 million PlayStation 4 consoles between July and September. Since the company hit exactly 100 million sales three months ago, the total is now at 102.8 million, meaning the PS4 has outsold the original PlayStation.

The PlayStation, as you may remember, was an enormous success. It sold 102.5 million units, vastly more than competitors like the Sega Saturn and the Nintendo 64, and until now it was the second best-selling home console of all time behind the PS2, which sold a probably unrepeatable 155 million. Also of note: the Nintendo Wii’s total of 101.6 million has been surpassed this quarter as well.

It’s a huge achievement for Sony to attain this level of popularity with the PS4, but this console cycle is clearly winding down. Sony’s gaming revenue is down 17 percent year on year, with profit down 28 percent, which isn’t a surprise given that the company plans to release the PlayStation 5 next holiday season. But Sony has revised its PS4 hardware sales forecast for the fiscal year down to 13.5 million units, a reduction of 1.5 million.

The PS4 isn’t done quite yet, however. Major exclusive games on the calendar include The Last of Us Part II, Ghost of Tsushima, and next week’s long-awaited Death Stranding.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.theverge.com/2019/10/30/20939639/ps4-lifetime-sales-vs-ps1-wii-sony

2019-10-30 06:55:43Z
52780419621448

AirPods Pro: Should you upgrade? - CNET

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gc1zve4ITT8

2019-10-30 04:05:39Z
CCAiC0djMXp2ZTRJVFQ4mAEB

Selasa, 29 Oktober 2019

The Moto 360 smartwatch is back... well, sort of - The Verge

Motorola backed out of the smart watch market way back in 2016, after releasing two versions of its Moto 360 smartwatch, the first all-touchscreen smartwatch with a round display. At the time, the company indicated there just wasn’t enough interest in wearable devices for the company to continue investing in the category. Fast forward three years and the Moto 360 smartwatch has returned, though not in the way you might expect.

The new Moto 360 is made by a company called eBuyNow, which describes itself as “an independent, data-driven consumer electronics company” that “work[s] with proprietary tools to identify precise gaps in the consumer electronics industry, and then proceed to build, market, and distribute promising consumer electronics goods with a strictly results-oriented approach.”

Apparently, that means licensing and resurrecting a dead smartwatch brand from Motorola and releasing a new product under its name.

The Moto 360 third-generation, as eBuyNow is referring to the product, will cost $349.99 when it ships in December. It runs Wear OS, and like Fossil’s fifth-generation Wear OS watches, the new Moto 360 has a fully circular display, Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 3100 processor, 1GB of RAM, and 8GB of storage. It also has a heart rate monitor, GPS, and NFC for mobile payments. You’ll be able to get it in silver, gold, or black stainless steel finishes.

The 1.2-inch, fully-circular (no “flat tire” here) 360 x 360 pixel touchscreen is an OLED panel with an always-on option, and there are two buttons on the side of the watch. The top button also rotates, letting you scroll through the interface with a twist, just like the rotating crowns on Fossil watches or the Apple Watch. The lower button can be customized to launch an app of your choice.

The Moto 360’s 355mAh battery charges on the included cradle, and eBuyNow says it can go from dead to fully charged in just sixty minutes, which is considerably faster than most other smartwatches on the market right now.

In terms of design, the 52g Moto 360 is smaller than some other Wear OS watches, but it’s not as compact as the smaller Samsung Galaxy Watch Active 2 or the 40mm Apple Watch. It’s design is modern, but it’s still chunky and thick and will dwarf smaller wrists. The lugs in particular remind me of the 2nd-gen Moto 360 that Motorola produced. The latest model also suffers a bit from a generic look — it’s hard to tell that this is any different from the many Fossil smartwatch designs unless you notice the Motorola batwing logo on the crown.

The OLED display is also not as vibrant or bright as Samsung or Apple’s. Despite it having a relatively high resolution, the screen looks visibly pixelated compared to the others. It also has a significant border around it that makes the screen look smaller than it actually is. The unit that we were able to use for a few days before the official announcement is a pre-production model, but performance is on par with other Wear OS devices that have 1GB of RAM. It’s certainly not as responsive as an Apple Watch or Galaxy Watch, but it’s not frustratingly laggy to use either.

At $350, the Moto 360 is one of the most expensive Wear OS watches on the market, and it costs more than Samsung’s latest models. It does come with two straps — a leather one and a rubber one — and its fit and finish is good. But at its core it’s still a Wear OS device, which puts it at a disadvantage compared to other smartwatches. It’s not really pushing the envelope with new technology or a fresh design, but if you were hoping the Moto 360 would rise from the grave as an updated Wear OS watch, you won’t be hugely disappointed.

The new Moto 360 will be available for preorder in November at moto360.com and will hit retailers in December.

Vox Media has affiliate partnerships. These do not influence editorial content, though Vox Media may earn commissions for products purchased via affiliate links. For more information, see our ethics policy.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.theverge.com/2019/10/29/20936958/moto-360-third-gen-smartwatch-ebuynow-licensing-price-specs-features

2019-10-29 12:00:00Z
52780422170395

The Morning After: Apple's AirPods Pro - Engadget

Sponsored Links

AirPods Pro Apple

Hey, good morning! You look fabulous.

This morning, we're learning the punctuation for Apple's most professional set of AirPods and preparing for the launch of Apple TV+ on Friday. We have another new Star Wars trailer to watch for The Mandalorian, and Uber's speedy food delivery drone is ready to show off all of its rotors.


And the 'Game of Thrones' pair won't make a new Star Wars trilogy after all.New 'The Mandalorian' trailer looks like the Star Wars we're used to

Later today we'll learn more details about HBO Max, and Apple TV+ launches November 1st, so how can Disney keep our attention on its streaming service? A flashy new The Mandalorian trailer with even more rambling voiceover from Werner Herzog will just about do it and provide a good reminder that Disney+ is about to launch on November 12th.

In other Star Wars news, the team of David Benioff and D.B. Weiss is officially off a planned trilogy of movies. We were expecting to see the first one in 2022, but the former Game of Thrones showrunners are apparently far too busy with work related to their $200+ million Netflix deal.


And they go on sale October 30th.Apple's $249 AirPods Pro pack noise cancellation and hands-free Siri

To little fanfare, Apple has snuck out its AirPods sequel, and they're shorter with even more features crammed inside. The main one is noise cancellation, with two microphones on each earbud, and software that continuously adapts the level of active noise cancellation to your ears -- monitoring up to 200 times per second. One microphone keeps tabs on ambient noise, and the other faces inward to pick up any additional sound that may remain. These upgraded buds are also IPX4 rate, so they should hold up just fine to sweat during your workouts. The AirPods Pro will ship on October 30th for $249.


Android TV isn't dead.NVIDIA's new Shield TVs start at $149 with Dolby Vision and Atmos

After a slew of leaks, the $149 Shield TV and $200 Shield TV Pro are on sale for you to buy right now. Besides an odd cylindrical shape for the cheaper device and a funky triangular remote, they feature Dolby Vision and Atmos decoding support plus AI-powered upscaling, all powered by a Tegra X1+ chip inside.


And AirPods Pro support.iOS 13.2 arrives with Deep Fusion photography

The latest update to iOS 13 is here, and it adds the "computational photography" feature, Deep Fusion, which is Apple's answer to Google and Night Sight. It takes advantage of machine learning and image stacking to render each pixel of a photo optimally. You'll likely see the benefits of Apple's new approach most in less-than-ideal lighting conditions, but it should help to improve all your photos. The update also adds 70-or-so new emoji, and if you have a HomePod, it's ready to recognize voices for multiple people in the home and handle audio Handoffs with iPhones.


The only one with mostly good reviews is the space drama 'For All Mankind.'Early Apple TV+ reviews show a lineup lacking hits

With Apple TV+ set to launch this Friday, initial reviews have come out for the original shows that will premiere alongside the platform. And it's probably safe to say Apple won't be happy with how things have turned out so far.


More turbos than a Taycan.Intel's 5GHz-capable Core i9-9900KS arrives October 30th

Intel has revealed that its special edition Core i9-9900KS processor will be available on October 30th at a recommended price of $513. If you recall, this is really a top-binned version of the 9900K, which can reach a 5GHz turbo speed across all eight cores rather than one and hit a base speed of 4GHz instead of 3.6GHz.


Don't expect to see this six-rotor beast landing in your yard.Uber Eats' delivery drone is a VTOL speedster

The ride-hailing company, which has been expanding its repertoire recently, unveiled a new design for its food-delivery drone at the Forbes 30 under 30 Summit. Uber's drone design has rotating wings with six rotors "for increased speed and efficiency" and can carry meals for up to two people. The idea is that it would carry food quickly from a kitchen to somewhere else (like the conveniently located and easily accessible parking lot that so many restaurants lack) where a driver would grab the package and complete the delivery.

But wait, there's more...


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.

All products recommended by Engadget are selected by our editorial team, independent of our parent company. Some of our stories include affiliate links. If you buy something through one of these links, we may earn an affiliate commission.
Comment
Comments
Share
Tweet
Share
Save

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.engadget.com/2019/10/29/airpods-pro/

2019-10-29 11:44:19Z
52780419114159

Buying Fitbit won’t help Google overcome Apple’s biggest smartwatch advantage - The Verge

Google is reportedly looking to buy Fitbit as a way to bolster its wearables strategy. Trying to suss out what this could mean for Google, its Wear OS platform, and Fitbit’s customers is (pardon the fitness pun) exhausting.

Here’s where I landed: Assuming it bears out, I think that this acquisition portends a wearables reboot instead of shoring up Google’s current smartwatch strategy. I think that mainly because Google’s current smartwatch strategy isn’t helped by Fitbit — at all. Unless Google has completely lost the thread, this acquisition only makes sense if the company is ready to try something completely different.

It certainly should be.

Let’s just recap how poorly things are going for Wear OS. Google’s most prolific partner in making Wear OS watches, Fossil, had a sub-five-percent marketshare in North America in Q2. Even if you give Google credit for some piece of the “Others” in Canalys’ estimates, that leaves Wear OS’ marketshare hovering somewhere between wince and woof.

Taken simply as a piece of software, Wear OS itself is actually better than many (including me!) have given it credit for, but it’s languished for so long that its software ecosystem bears all the hallmarks of a platform in decline. Even so, in terms of basic usability and features, Wear OS is a fairly solid platform on which to rebuild — if only there were hardware to go with it.

That hardware is not imminent. The best Wear OS watch hardware currently available is Fossil’s latest generation. Reviewing one of those watches, I discovered that many of Wear OS’ performance problems are solved simply by adding more RAM, though that doesn’t necessarily make it very fast.

But even with enough RAM to run (which few Wear OS watches have), the convolutions the new Fossil watches go through to get through a full day of use are amongst the silliest I’ve seen on any device. There are settings on settings, none of which should ever be visible on a smartwatch, much less necessary.

Those convolutions are necessary because Qualcomm has yet to provide a processor for smartwatches that is worth a damn. We spent years waiting for the Snapdragon 3100 that powers the Fossil I cite above, but it is still outdated at its core in terms of both speed and battery management.

A more recent rumor from XDA suggests that Qualcomm is developing a new chip that would represent a significant step forward — but that just puts us back to where we started. Do we — and does Google — really want to wait (again) for Qualcomm to come through?

Back when it first launched Android Wear, Google made a bet that it could replicate the Android model with watches: distribute free software to companies that could use readily-available components to create their own devices. LG, Motorola, and even Samsung all took a chance on that vision and it didn’t go well for any of them.

That model just didn’t pan out. I could be convinced that’s because the only way to make a great smartwatch is to be vertically integrated from silicon to software. You don’t need to just cite the Apple Watch to make that case, either. Samsung’s Galaxy Watch Active line is successful not because the Tizen OS is great (though it’s not bad), but because Samsung is nearly Apple-esque in its vertical integration on the smartwatch.

I could just as easily be convinced that Google’s original bet could have led to good smartwatches in the same way that it led to good Android phones. The problem in that scenario is that since the ecosystem didn’t develop, there was no incentive for component makers to support smartwatches. You could call it it a chicken and egg problem, but it’s actually simpler than that. There’s no reason for Qualcomm to raise chickens if nobody’s buying the eggs.

There’s only one way to fix Google’s current smartwatch woes: it’s the silicon, stupid. And while Google’s lack of control over processors didn’t hurt Android phones, it sure does seem to be holding back Android smartwatches.

I don’t blame Qualcomm entirely — from where I’m sitting, the company has acted rationally. It surely makes much more money focusing on smartphone chips, high-end chips that could lead to Windows on ARM, and tiny chips that are about to power an entire generation of noise-cancelling earbuds to compete with the just-announced AirPods Pro.

All of this history leads us to 2019 and the Fitbit rumor. I sincerely doubt that Fitbit is sitting on a revolutionary processor that can save Google’s smartwatch efforts. Google’s current smartwatch problems can’t be solved with Fitbit.

I think it’s much more likely that Google intents to just pivot to where Fitbit already is: selling cheaper, lower-end fitness trackers and basic smartwatches.

It’s a much better strategy than trying to take on the Apple Watch — or heck, even the Galaxy Watch — head on. Maybe Qualcomm will come through with that new chip, but Google would be silly to bet its entire wearables future on it. (If you’re wondering where that mysterious $40 million Fossil smartwatch technology acquisition fits into all this, join the club. We have hats!)

There’s another reason Google might want Fitbit: its dedicated user base. Hopefully Google sees them as a core group of customers to serve well with expanded, improved fitness offerings, so that they might evangelize Fitbit again. Hopefully it’s not to take whatever fitness data Fitbit has collected and collated and use it to troubling ends. Even with the rumors of a buyout still very fresh, that’s something that Fitbit users are already worried about.

I can’t entirely blame them. Since it’s so hard to know what exactly Google would do with Fitbit, it’s easy to assume the worst. If the acquisition turns out to be real, I hope Google will do a better job communicating its intentions than it did with Nest.

And I hope Google knows its intentions better than it did with Nest, too.


More from The Verge

One quick note about the newsletter. Apologies for not sending one out Monday morning — or more specifically, not warning you on Friday that I might not. As always, I welcome your feedback - dieter@theverge.com

+ Apple announces AirPods Pro with noise cancellation, coming October 30th

$249 seems like quite a premium, especially compared to Amazon’s forthcoming Echo Buds. I am sure a bunch of people will just up and buy them and be very happy with them — especially since the W1 chip will make them integrate better with Apple’s products than non-Apple Bluetooth headphones can. I’d recommend holding off to see if the sound quality justifies anything close to that price point, though.

+ Apple’s HomePod now supports multiple users with HomePod 13.2 update. Now do iPadOS.

+ iOS 13.2 reveals Apple’s Tile-like device could be called AirTag

It seems possible that we could be in for a week of “surprise” Apple announcements. Back in March it had a week of press release announcements for relatively minor product updates. Today’s AirPods Pro announcement is more than minor, but it could foretell other stuff like the above AirTags.

Sure looks like we’re not getting another Apple keynote this fall, though. To me the big question is whether or not Apple puts out that long-rumored 16-inch MacBook Pro via press release so as to avoid the embarrassment of talking about keyboards on stage. As I wrote before, that would be a choice and one I don’t think Apple should make. It would not, as they say, be courageous.

+ A summit in Egypt will decide the future of 5G and weather forecasts

What if instead of treating 5G like a race, we slowed the hell down and thought about the repercussions a bit more. In the US, at least, these are our airwaves, not the carriers’, and their desire to open up new business lines isn’t the same thing as the public interest.

The worry is that the rollout could inadvertently throw off weather forecasting, they say, because 5G networks are planning to use a frequency band very close to the one satellites use to observe water vapor. That interference could cost lives and fortunes when it comes to preparing for disastrous weather events.

+ Smart home platform Wink is dying as Will.i.am’s tech company is low on money

+ The first widely available electric Mini will start at $29,900

That range, though :(

+ Uber unveils a new look for its food delivery drones

Maybe it’s not possible to make one of these things not look ominous, but it’s like they didn’t even try.

+ DJI Mavic Mini images and specs leak in new retailer listing

Releasing a drone that weighs literally one gram less than the cutoff for required FAA registration is incredible.

+ Microsoft leak reveals Windows 10X will be coming to laptops

The below quote threatened to turn into an entire other essay for this newsletter. Suffice to say I’ll revisit it later, but the TL;DR is nobody knows how to move the desktop forward. Apple with Catalyst, Google with Android on Chrome OS, and Microsoft with ...whatever this is — all of them are flailing in the dark, hoping to grab hold of something solid.

On the Office side, it appears Microsoft is prioritizing traditional Win32 versions of Office and the PWA web versions from Office.com for Windows 10X over UWP. Microsoft does have UWP versions of its Office Mobile apps, but the company put the development of those on hold last year. We’ll likely see a significant investment in the web versions of Office over the coming year before Windows 10X ships on the Surface Neo for holiday 2020.

Reviews

+ Nvidia Shield TV (2019) review: totally tubular

Color me surprised: I did not expect that 4K upscaling could actually be good, but Chris Welch was impressed.

Nvidia’s system makes a noticeable difference, and it’s not just blanketing everything with a coat of sharpening. The AI upscaling doesn’t work for 60fps video, nor does it run when you’re playing games. But for everything else, you can have it optimizing the on-screen picture at all times. And I came away very impressed.

+ Microsoft Surface Laptop 3 13.5-inch review: have a normal one

+ Beats Solo Pro review: beat the noise

Definitely watch the video on this one. The lack of a 3.5mm headphone jack on these things means I will never ever buy them. The cable to connect 3.5mm audio to the lightning port is $35 (thirty five dollars). It would be insulting if it weren’t so crassly audacious.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.theverge.com/2019/10/29/20937257/google-fitbit-wear-os-qualcomm-processors-fitness-strategy-acquistion

2019-10-29 11:00:00Z
52780421509455