Sabtu, 21 Maret 2020

The Morning After: First impressions of the new MacBook Air - Engadget

Hey, good morning! You look fabulous.

In a week where very few things felt normal, sitting down with a new laptop is one of the most regular things that happened. Our review of Apple's new MacBook Air won't be ready until next week, but even just a few hours is enough time for Editor-in-Chief Dana Wollman to have some opinions about its upgraded new keyboard.

Give that a read right here, check out the latest Ghost in the Shell SAC_2045 trailer to see if its new CG-style works and then check out other highlights from this week below.

-- Richard


Inevitable.Google I/O 2020 is canceled

After initially shifting its annual developer event to an online-only affair, Google announced Friday afternoon that "we sadly will not be holding an I/O event in any capacity this year." For the time being, Google plans to share details about upcoming Android updates in blog and community forum posts.


On non-race weekends, fans will go head-to-head with drivers.Real F1 drivers will compete in an esports series

Starting Sunday, several drivers will square off in the F1 Esports Virtual Grand Prix series, using the PC version of F1 2019 and playing remotely for safety reasons. First up is the Virtual Bahrain Grand Prix on what was supposed to be the second weekend of the actual F1 season. You'll be able to watch it all go down live on the F1 YouTube, Twitch and Facebook channels at 3PM ET.


Plus Moog and Korg synthesizer apps for free.The best deals we found this week: 'The Sims 4,' Fire TV Sticks and more

Digital deals dominated this week, but there are also numerous deals on gadgets as well. Square Enix cut the prices of all of its Nintendo Switch games, so now's the time to grab a Final Fantasy title (or three) while they are up to 50 percent off. Amazon Prime members can also snag a Fire TV Stick 4K for only $25.

Here are all the deals from this week that you can still get today.


Should've seen that coming.'Sonic the Hedgehog' movie gets an early digital release on March 31st

The new Sonic movie had an unusual path to release that included a delay to change the hedgehog's computer generated look. But the final product was better than most expected, and now the movie will be available to watch at home much sooner than expected. The digital release will come through on March 31st, just over a month after it hit theaters.


Dolores is in control.'Westworld' remembers that TV is supposed to be fun

Season two of Westworld was all over the place, and not always in a good way. Devindra Hardawar explains why the premiere of season three is a welcome return to form for HBO's robots-in-the-big-city cyberpunk tale.


Can telehealth save us?The Engadget Podcast

This week, many of us found out exactly which meetings could've been emails. On the podcast, Cherlynn and Devindra explore the rise of telehealth during the global coronavirus pandemic. It's not all serious conversation; our hosts also dive into the gaming hardware news from this week, as well as a few fun recommendations to help you hold it together.

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

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.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiQ2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmVuZ2FkZ2V0LmNvbS8yMDIwLzAzLzIxL21hY2Jvb2stYWlyLTIwMjAtbW9ybmluZy1hZnRlci_SAQA?oc=5

2020-03-21 13:29:04Z
52780677571797

Google launches Covid-19 page and search portal with safety tips, official stats and more, US-only for now - TechCrunch

Google says Coronavirus has become its biggest search topic by a country mile this year, and to continue its efforts to harness that attention in the best possible way, late on Friday the company launched a new information portal dedicated to the pandemic as well as an improved search experience for desktop and mobile.

The search experience, Google says, was updated in response to “people’s information needs expanding,” while the new information portal also provides the basic, most useful information (for example around symptoms), plus a lot of links and on-site options to explore further.

Something notably absent on Google’s page or search experience are any links to conversation forums or places to hear and talk to other average people. Google has never been particularly successful in its many efforts to break into social media and this underscores that, while also helping it steer away from the fact that many of these forums are not always well managed. I would imagine that more tools for direct communication, such as the Google Hangouts product, and possibly others in that same category, might well be added or linked to as well over time.

Let’s dive into some more details.

The new search experience now not only includes search results but also a number of additional links to “authoritative information” from health authorities and updated data and visualisations.

“This new format organizes the search results page to help people easily navigate information and resources, and it will also make it possible to add more information over time as it becomes available,” Emily Moxley, Google’s product manager for search, writes in a blog post.

The search experience now also includes links to a Twitter carousel featuring accounts from civic organizations local to you, and also a new “most common questions” section related to the pandemic from the World Health Organization and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

This is rolling out first in the US in English and Google said it would be adding more languages and regions soon.

Meanwhile, the portal — also available first for the US — features tips on staying healthy and advice for those who are concerned; links to further official resources; links to more localised resources; links to fundraising efforts; the latest statistics; and an overview of all of Google’s own work (for example, the specific efforts it’s making for educators). We have asked the company when and if it plans to cover other regions beyond the US, and we’ll update this as we learn more.

This is an important move for Google. The internet has figured as critical platform from the earliest days of the Novel Coronavirus emerging out of China, but it hasn’t all been positive.

On one hand, there has been a ton of misinformation spread around about the virus, and the internet overall (plus specific sites like Google’s search and social media platforms like Facebook and Twitter) has played a huge role in being responsible for disseminating the majority of that bad news. (Not all those searches and clicks lead to the right information, or good data, unfortunately.)

On the other hand, it’s also been an indispensable resource: in countries where health services have already become overwhelmed by the influx of people seeking help, official online portals (like this one) are serving a very important role in triaging inbound requests before people resort to physically getting themselves into the system (if they need to). And the internet is the main place people will turn in the days and weeks ahead as they are asked to socially isolate themselves to slow down the spread of the pandemic, serving its role in providing information, but hopefully also some diversion and enrichment.

Google’s site is bringing together as many of the positive and legitimate strands of information as it can.

The main page focuses on the most important basics: an brief overview of the virus, a list of the most common symptoms, a list of most common things you can do to prevent getting infected or spreading the infection and a (very brief, for now) section on treatments.

From this, it goes on to more detailed links to videos and other resources for specific interests such as advice for the elderly, a map-based data overview to monitor what is going on elsewhere; and then resources for further help for topics that are coming up a lot, such as advice for people working from home, or for how to set up self-isolation, online education advice, cooking resources and more. Relief efforts so far only has one link, to the Solidarity Response Fund started by the UN Foundation, which has had a donation of $50 million from Google. \

There are a number of other relief and fundraising efforts underway, including those to help fund the race for research to improve the medical tools and medicine we have to fight this. I think the idea is that all of these sections will grow and evolve as the situation evolves.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiiwFodHRwczovL3RlY2hjcnVuY2guY29tLzIwMjAvMDMvMjEvZ29vZ2xlLWxhdW5jaGVzLWNvdmlkLTE5LXBhZ2UtYW5kLXNlYXJjaC1wb3J0YWwtd2l0aC1zYWZldHktdGlwcy1vZmZpY2lhbC1zdGF0cy1hbmQtbW9yZS11cy1vbmx5LWZvci1ub3cv0gGPAWh0dHBzOi8vdGVjaGNydW5jaC5jb20vMjAyMC8wMy8yMS9nb29nbGUtbGF1bmNoZXMtY292aWQtMTktcGFnZS1hbmQtc2VhcmNoLXBvcnRhbC13aXRoLXNhZmV0eS10aXBzLW9mZmljaWFsLXN0YXRzLWFuZC1tb3JlLXVzLW9ubHktZm9yLW5vdy9hbXAv?oc=5

2020-03-21 12:30:35Z
CAIiEDt10XH-ACqpsv5PdpM5w88qFAgEKg0IACoGCAowlIEBMLEXMOc_

Samsung, please copy Apple's ridiculously expensive iPad Pro keyboard design - Android Central

Happy Saturday-ing at home, peeps! Today we're going to talk about tablets!

It seems like most people on the Android side of tech aren't really into tablets, not even the ones who run things at Google. I fall into that category, but a big reason why is that they really aren't that great when you try to get any work done with one. You need an external keyboard (and maybe even a mouse) to type more than a few words and tablet keyboards have a long history of being giant pieces of crap that you only used because there was no better alternative.

I get it. A tablet is designed to be light and portable and if you attach a substantial keyboard to one like ASUS did with the old Transformer series you end up with a laptop, so you might as well be using a Chromebook or a MacBook Air. Samsung must know this because it tried to address the situation with the Galaxy Tab S6's first-party keyboard that was stiff and sturdy in some of the right places and had a built-in trackpad that was good to use.

Samsung Galaxy Tab S6 review: The best Android tablet ever

Now Samsung needs to go the extra mile and just copy the hell out of Apple's new iPad Pro keyboard and call it done. Seriously — copy it, then fight about it later in court and give zero Fs about what Apple pundits have to say about it all.

Best online learning websites for kids: ABCmouse, Reading IQ, & more

As someone who has suffered through trying to use the Pixel Slate on my lap with its flimsy and very crappy keyboard, I have some authority here. If you have a Slate and have done the same, you know what I mean when I say flimsy book cover style keyboards have no business existing for any device bigger than 5-inches and if you try to use one you'll spend more time keeping it perched on your lap that you will be typing. They're awful.

What you do is make the bottom stiff enough to stay flat, which is exactly what Samsung has done with the Tab S6, and make the back stiff enough to hold the tablet in place. Samsung didn't do that second part with the Tab S6, and it will flop over on you unless you hold things fairly still. Then along comes Apple with some very pretty and seemingly gravity-defying keyboard that still uses a magnetic mounting mechanism, and the company stuck a jillion dollar (OK, $299 for the 11-inch version but I'm still close enough) price tag on it because it knows it can get away with it.

It's expensive but probably worth it for people in the Apple ecosystem. Samsung could do it better and cheaper.

I thought just like that when I first saw it, too. Then I got to thinking. What if Samsung copied that mf'er, complete with the fantastic trackpad integration, then sold it as a $179 accessory to the next Galaxy Tab S premium model? Keep the folio keyboard for everyone who almost never wants to use a keyboard (after the price is cut way down) but have this magical new accessory keyboard that does everything just as good or better than Apple's new swanky stuff.

We all know Samsung can do it. Don't look at me that way, you know damn well Samsung copied plenty of things from Apple and Apple copied plenty of things from Samsung or Android and that every company copies anything that's good. Realize that this means better products for us to buy and stop caring what company CEOs cry about; that's what lawyers are paid to do.

Anyhoo, Samsung could build and sell a new keyboard a lot lower than Apple will and people who want to try using a tablet as a real work device would benefit. Two things make that something I really want to see: Android's "openness" and Samsung's ability to make small but significant changes to its designs.

A Galaxy Tab S6 would be just as great for working as an iPad Pro if it were easier to type on the go on it.

Android has the benefit of having an open file system — meaning you can plug a device in and access actual files and folders — and uses the regular USB standards. That means you can plug an SD card or a thumb drive or a camera or whatever in and it can just work without any "Made for Samsung" BS necessary.

And Samsung is not afraid to take an existing design and tweak it with new ideas. Sometimes we hate that, but other times it makes the people at Samsung look like the crazy super-geniuses they probably really are. Samsung would identify what's wrong with the design and try to correct it with version two. And three. And four. Samsung would add new trackpad gestures and improve how Samsung DeX or Android's desktop mode works with the trackpad. Samsung would take that keyboard design and turn it into something of its own.

And that's when I'll actually want to use a Galaxy Tab S every day. Please make it happen, Samsung.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiaWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmFuZHJvaWRjZW50cmFsLmNvbS9zYW1zdW5nLXBsZWFzZS1jb3B5LWFwcGxlcy1yaWRpY3Vsb3VzbHktZXhwZW5zaXZlLWlwYWQtcHJvLWtleWJvYXJkLWRlc2lnbtIBbWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmFuZHJvaWRjZW50cmFsLmNvbS9zYW1zdW5nLXBsZWFzZS1jb3B5LWFwcGxlcy1yaWRpY3Vsb3VzbHktZXhwZW5zaXZlLWlwYWQtcHJvLWtleWJvYXJkLWRlc2lnbj9hbXA?oc=5

2020-03-21 12:15:40Z
52780671622905

Jumat, 20 Maret 2020

Microsoft Teased a Revamped UI for Windows 10 and It Looks Awesome - Gizmodo

Illustration for article titled Microsoft Teased a Revamped UI for Windows 10 and It Looks Awesome
Photo: Sam Rutherford (Gizmodo)

Microsoft has been dropping hints that it’s working on a revamped Start menu for Windows 10. But now, to celebrate Windows 10 hitting 1 billion users, Microsoft’s chief product officer Panos Panay dropped a super slick teaser for Windows 10's next UI refresh.

In the video posted to Instagram, Microsoft starts by showing the evolution of its OS throughout the years going as far back as Windows 1.01 all the way to Windows 10. However, where things start to get interesting is around 12 seconds in when Microsoft shows off a new set of updated icons followed by a redesigned look for Windows 10's Start Menu and Live Tiles.

Advertisement

Instead of a bunch of brightly color rectangles, Microsoft is implementing a more unified color scheme that can adjust automatically to match your desktop background and potentially other UI elements.

Additionally, Microsoft also showed off a wide variety of accessibility options including a range of pointers in various sizes and colors, what looks like improved support for the Xbox Adaptive Controller, a tease for a new built-in snipping tool, and more.

Here’s a look at Windows 10's new Start menu. Apologies for Instragram’s potato image quality.
Here’s a look at Windows 10's new Start menu. Apologies for Instragram’s potato image quality.
Screenshot: Sam Rutherford (Microsoft)
Advertisement

Then Microsoft capped everything off by showing light and dark themes for Windows 10 along with a bunch of windows resizing and snapping options, all designed to making multi-tasking just a bit faster and easier. Microsoft also made a point to mention support for both x86-based systems powered by chips from Intel and AMD and ARM-based systems like the Surface Pro X. That last one is a biggie. As Apple gets closer and closer to releasing an ARM-based MacBook (blurring the lines between its mobile and desktop products), it’s increasingly important for Microsoft to include full support for both platforms in future versions of Windows.

Advertisement

Overall, Windows 10's upcoming UI changes look really promising, offering a sleeker, more streamlined interface that’s more in line with Microsoft’s Fluent design language, which was first introduced back in 2017. One of the big complaints about Windows 10 right now is that its UI often seems disjointed, because depending on how deep you dive into menus, you get windows that almost look like they came straight out of Windows XP, while newer menus pack a much cleaner, more modern design.

Another important change is that it looks like Windows is de-emphasizing Live Tiles, which have been the bane of many Windows 10 users for quite a while. Live Tiles never really garnered a ton of third-party support, and while some of the built-in animations made sense for checking things like the weather, their hit-or-miss implementation tended to make the Windows 10 Start menu look somewhat cluttered. And with Microsoft having already shown off a version of Windows 10X that doesn’t have Live Tiles at all, there’s a good chance the software giant may ditch them entirely sometime in the future.

Advertisement

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiVmh0dHBzOi8vZ2l6bW9kby5jb20vbWljcm9zb2Z0LXRlYXNlZC1hLXJldmFtcGVkLXVpLWZvci13aW5kb3dzLTEwLWFuZC1pdC1sby0xODQyNDI4MDgy0gFaaHR0cHM6Ly9naXptb2RvLmNvbS9taWNyb3NvZnQtdGVhc2VkLWEtcmV2YW1wZWQtdWktZm9yLXdpbmRvd3MtMTAtYW5kLWl0LWxvLTE4NDI0MjgwODIvYW1w?oc=5

2020-03-20 17:43:42Z
52780674635188

Playing Doom Eternal Is Actually Self-Care - Kotaku

Doom Eternal
Doom Eternal
Screenshot: Bethesda

Of the two hotly anticipated games released this week, most would assume Animal Crossing: New Horizons would better fit the bill as the self-care game. It’s a peaceful, low-stakes game where the most taxing decision you make is what wallpaper you want. Perfect for these times right?

But have you considered the therapeutic benefits of Doom Eternal?

In Doom Eternal you rip and tear your way through the legions of Hell that are threatening Earth. You play as the Doom Slayer, a silent protagonist who can commit all kinds of ultra violence using a cartoonishly extravagant arsenal.

Advertisement

While I haven’t been able to get into the guts of this game, watching early release footage on YouTube and Twitch has become a destressor for me.

I find it comforting to watch the Slayer chainsaw blade an imp to death or rip an eye out of a cacodemon. That feeling doesn’t come from that ‘fake violence as an outlet for real violence’ kind of way Congress likes to scapegoat whenever there’s a new mass shooting. But watching the Doom Slayer murder a demon in the most brutal way possible is comforting the way confidence and self-assuredness can also be comforting.

Before, it was difficult to connect with the Doom Guy as a separate character. In earlier games, he had been more of an extension of the player. Aside from a little avatar that displayed how much damage you had taken, you never saw his face, nor heard his voice. You were the Doom Slayer, and he was you.

In a move that might upset diehards, Doom Eternal allows us to take a step back from the Doom Slayer and stand apart from him. Instead of being the pilot of what’s essentially a blank slate, we get to see him as a fully realized, fleshed out, armored up character with goals, motivation, and history. We aren’t the Slayer anymore; instead we become companions in the Slayer’s travels through a Hellish Earth and a stranger, arboreal Earthish Hell.

Advertisement
Doom Eternal
Doom Eternal
Screenshot: Bethesda

In a world of fear and anxiety, the Doom Slayer fears nothing. He is about his business of ridding Hell from Earth. He knows what he has to do and how to do it, and he moves with a kind of unshakeable confidence that’s so satisfying to watch.

Advertisement

The Doom Slayer has his shit together and holy shit do we need a character like that right now. As each day passes, covid-19 whittles away bits and pieces of our normalcy, weakening a foundation that we knew was imperfect but could at least always count on being there.

People need an escape. With the ever-growing threat of the pandemic and its disruption of our lives, people need something that can divert their attention for a few hours. Killing demons with the Slayer proves to be one Hell of a distraction.

Advertisement

There are about fifty ‘leven different ways to kill a demon varying by the demon’s species and type of weapon used. You can punch them into a paste with your Blood Punch, or light them on fire with your shoulder mounted flamethrower (a personal favorite). Then there’s the chainsaw, and the pulse rifle, and the oddly intimate way you can pull apart a demon with your own two hands.

The Doom Guy executes these moves not with the precision of a surgeon, but with the brutal efficiency of a guy who’s done this shit thousands upon thousands of times and you are in my way, move I got shit to do! That’s what I love about the Slayer. He’s competent—a faculty that seems in short supply as people can’t make up their minds about whether or not social distancing is something we need to be doing.

Advertisement

When nobody knows what to do and nobody knows what can happen next or just how bad it can get, the Doom Guy looks at it all and says “I have a job to do.” That kind of resilience is priceless and damned hard to find.

While I would never model myself after the Doom Guy, I can take a bit of comfort in those qualities.

Advertisement

Millennials may look to Animal Crossing to fulfill the dream of being a homeowner with good credit and a comically low interest rate. Doom fulfills the fantasy of being someone confident in their purpose. Someone unshaken by the events of the world, able to look into the maw of despair and rip out its intestines with their bare damned hands.

Advertisement

The Venn diagram for Doom fans and Animal Crossing fans is closer to a circle than you might think. The memes are right, Isabel and the Doom Guy would be friends. They’re two fiercely independent, competent, and confident people who pack one hell of a punch. And both of them, in their own way, are exactly what we need right now.

Ash Parrish is a freelance writer and a good mom to her dog and a bad mom to her plant. Read her rants about esports, video games, and her precious Shanghai Dragons on Twitter @adashtra.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiSGh0dHBzOi8va290YWt1LmNvbS9wbGF5aW5nLWRvb20tZXRlcm5hbC1pcy1hY3R1YWxseS1zZWxmLWNhcmUtMTg0MjQyNjg1NNIBTGh0dHBzOi8va290YWt1LmNvbS9wbGF5aW5nLWRvb20tZXRlcm5hbC1pcy1hY3R1YWxseS1zZWxmLWNhcmUtMTg0MjQyNjg1NC9hbXA?oc=5

2020-03-20 15:56:20Z
52780672164808

The Nokia 8.3 5G is the first truly global 5G phone, with support for bands in every country (Update: No Android One) - Android Police

In today's livestreamed event that was supposed to take place as part of the canceled Mobile World Congress show in Barcelona, HMD Global was finally able to unveil its latest Nokia-branded mobile phones. The Nokia 8.3 5G is the world's first global 5G phone, which means it supports bands in every country in which 5G is currently deployed — even the Samsung Galaxy S2o Ultra can't boast global roaming capabilities. At the same time, the Nokia 5.3, 1.3, and a new roaming data plan from HMD also made their debut.

Powered by the Qualcomm Snapdragon 765G mobile platform, the Nokia 8.3 5G promised a future-proofed experience as it supports more 5G bands across the entire range (NSA/SA/DSS) than any handset currently on the market. It features a 6.8-inch FHD+ (2400x1080p) display with a hole-punch cutout for the 24MP selfie camera, but it's a shame to see the Nokia logo plastered on the chin.

Nokia 8.3 5G

On the rear, there are four cameras including a 64MP main sensor with Zeiss optics complemented by a 12MP ultra-wide lens, plus 2MP depth and macro sensors. The fingerprint scanner lies within the power button on the side, while a USB-C port, 3.5mm headphone jack, and dedicated Google Assistant button are all onboard. Battery capacity is rated at 4,500mAh, and NFC is also included for mobile payments.

Nokia 5.3

Next up, the Nokia 5.3 is a more mid-range affair powered by the Snapdragon 665. Its quad-cam system consists of a 13MP main sensor, a 5MP ultra-wide lens, plus the same 2MP depth sensor and macro lens. The 8MP front camera sits within a waterdrop notch on the 6.55-inch 720p display. Its 4,000mAh battery should be plenty, and it's also got a USB-C port, headphone jack, rear-mounted fingerprint scanner, and Assistant button. As with all recent Nokia phones, both the 8.3 5G and 5.3 ship with Android 10 and will get a guaranteed two years of OS updates plus an extra year of security patches on top.

Nokia 1.3

HMD's budget phones have been very popular, and the Nokia 1.3 is sure to continue that success. It's the first phone to ship with Google's new Camera Go app, a lighter version of the photo-taking app usually found on Android phones. The Android 10 Go device uses a Snapdragon 215 chip and comes with 1GB of RAM and 16GB of storage. There are only two cameras — an 8MP shooter on the back and a 5MP selfie cam — and the battery is 3,000mAh. Rounding out today's other announcements were the Nokia 5310 feature phone and the HMD Connect roaming data plan that offers 1GB of data across 180 different countries for just €9.95.

The Nokia 8.3 5G starts at just €599 for the 6/64GB model, with an 8/128GB variant also available for €649 — it'll go on sale in the summer. Both available from April, the Nokia 5.3 will start at €189 for a 3/64GB model while the Nokia 1.3 will cost just €95. When the next James Bond film, No Time To Die, finally comes out, you'll see Daniel Craig running about with a Nokia 8.3 5G — isn't that exciting.

No Android One for Nokia 8.3 5G and 5.3, but the same update promise

We reached out to HMD Global to ask why there was no Android One branding on the Nokia 8.3 5G and 5.3, and while they didn't give us a direct reason, they reiterated that both phones are still subject to the same promise of two years of OS updates and three years of security patches. We're not sure why the branding partnership has ended, but it doesn't look like it will negatively affect users, thankfully.

Nokia 8.3 5G and 5.3 are Android One devices after all

What a rollercoaster of emotions. After some confusion, we have clarification that the Nokia 8.3 5G and 5.3 are indeed part of the Android One program — they simply omit the branding from the back of the phones for aesthetic reasons. As you were, everyone.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMihQFodHRwczovL3d3dy5hbmRyb2lkcG9saWNlLmNvbS8yMDIwLzAzLzIwL3RoZS1ub2tpYS04LTMtNWctaXMtdGhlLWZpcnN0LXRydWx5LWdsb2JhbC01Zy1waG9uZS13aXRoLXN1cHBvcnQtZm9yLWJhbmRzLWluLWV2ZXJ5LWNvdW50cnkv0gGJAWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmFuZHJvaWRwb2xpY2UuY29tLzIwMjAvMDMvMjAvdGhlLW5va2lhLTgtMy01Zy1pcy10aGUtZmlyc3QtdHJ1bHktZ2xvYmFsLTVnLXBob25lLXdpdGgtc3VwcG9ydC1mb3ItYmFuZHMtaW4tZXZlcnktY291bnRyeS8_YW1w?oc=5

2020-03-20 14:56:34Z
52780673256260

Forget Samsung’s Galaxy S20 And Note 10, This Is The Smartphone To Buy - Forbes

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

  1. Forget Samsung’s Galaxy S20 And Note 10, This Is The Smartphone To Buy  Forbes
  2. Samsung Galaxy S20 Review: Effortless Perfection  WIRED
  3. Hidden code reveals a mystery Samsung device and the chip that will power the Galaxy Note 20  PhoneArena
  4. Samsung Galaxy Note 20: Everything We Know So Far  Forbes
  5. Samsung Galaxy faces delays on Vietnam entry limit  Nikkei Asian Review
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiiwFodHRwczovL3d3dy5mb3JiZXMuY29tL3NpdGVzL2dvcmRvbmtlbGx5LzIwMjAvMDMvMjAvc2Ftc3VuZy1nYWxheHktczIwLXVsdHJhLWNhbWVyYS1wcmljZS1yZWxlYXNlLWRhdGUtdXBkYXRlLWdhbGF4eS1ub3RlMjAtbm90ZTEwLXVwZ3JhZGUv0gGPAWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmZvcmJlcy5jb20vc2l0ZXMvZ29yZG9ua2VsbHkvMjAyMC8wMy8yMC9zYW1zdW5nLWdhbGF4eS1zMjAtdWx0cmEtY2FtZXJhLXByaWNlLXJlbGVhc2UtZGF0ZS11cGRhdGUtZ2FsYXh5LW5vdGUyMC1ub3RlMTAtdXBncmFkZS9hbXAv?oc=5

2020-03-20 13:47:08Z
52780674472094