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  • Samsung

    Samsung's Galaxy Note 8 packs a giant display and a smarter pen

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    08.23.2017

    It's been a long, long year for Galaxy Note fans. The Note 7 launched with much fanfare last summer, only to die in spectacular fashion as systemic battery flaws (not to mention hasty decision-making) forced Samsung to recall the fire-prone handset twice and eventually kill it off. Unless you went out of your way to get the Fan Edition, you've had to go without a modern Note for a long time. At last, though, a replacement is here: Samsung has unveiled the Galaxy Note 8, and it might finish the redemption process that started with the Galaxy S8.

  • Home and factory robots can be hacked to harm humans

    by 
    Mallory Locklear
    Mallory Locklear
    08.22.2017

    Last month, cybersecurity firm IOActive let everyone know that Segway MiniPro hoverboards were vulnerable to hacks and outside control via their Bluetooth connections. Now it has revealed that industrial robots from Universal Robots and consumer models from Softbank Group and UBTech Robotics also have some troubling security flaws that can allow hackers to "modify safety settings, violating applicable safety laws and, consequently, causing physical harm to the robot's surroundings by moving it arbitrarily," according to a report published by the company today.

  • AOL

    Solar eclipse gives NASA a rare opportunity to study Mercury

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    08.21.2017

    While you're stuck on Earth during today's solar eclipse, NASA jets will be performing a tricky science experiment on the Sun and its closest companion, Mercury. A pair of them will take off this morning from Houston's Johnson Space Center and follow the path of of the eclipse, allowing them to see "totality" for three and half minutes, nearly a minute longer than Earth observers. Equipped with a pair of infrared telescopes each, they'll examine the sun's corona and Mercury's chemical signatures to find out what lies below its surface.

  • Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg via Getty Images

    HBO hacking woes continue: this time on social media

    by 
    Mariella Moon
    Mariella Moon
    08.17.2017

    HBO just can't catch a break. The cable network got hacked again, though this time, the perpetrators targeted its social media accounts. A hacker group called OurMine took over the company's Facebook and Twitter accounts not to ask for millions or to steal more GoT episodes, but to "test [their] security." OurMine is known for targeting high-profile social accounts and even got Netflix's and Mark Zuckerberg's Twitter accounts in the past.

  • FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP/Getty Images

    AMC wants to opt out of MoviePass' one-movie-a-day deal

    by 
    Mariella Moon
    Mariella Moon
    08.16.2017

    You and your friends might be thrilled at MoviePass' new $10-a-month subscription service, but AMC sure isn't. According to Variety and Deadline, the theater chain is trying to find a way to block the service's users from using their subscription at its cinemas. MoviePass' revamped plan allows subscribers to watch one 2D flick a day in participating theaters, which the company says covers 91 percent of all theaters in the US. The service previously cost between $15 to $21 per month, depending on location, for only two movies a month.

  • Ken Jack - Corbis via Getty Images

    A drone landed on Britain's biggest warship and nobody cared

    by 
    Mariella Moon
    Mariella Moon
    08.15.2017

    The Pentagon has already approved a policy giving military bases the right to shoot down drones that get too close. A lot of other countries' governments and militaries, however, are still in the midst of figuring out how to deal with them as they become more common. A photographer operating under the name "Black Isle Images," for instance, landed a drone aboard Britain's biggest warship, the HMS Queen Elizabeth, and nobody seemed to care.

  • GoDaddy

    GoDaddy dumps white supremacist site 'Daily Stormer' (updated)

    by 
    Saqib Shah
    Saqib Shah
    08.14.2017

    White supremacist website Daily Stormer just lost its web domain. In a tweet, GoDaddy claims it's giving the site "24 hours" to move to another domain provider, having found it to be in violation of its terms and services. The announcement came in response to a Twitter appeal from The New Agenda co-founder Amy Siskind, who pointed out an article by the neo-Nazi publication. In the piece, Daily Stormer used obscene language in regards to Heather Heyer -- the woman who was killed in Charlottesville on Saturday after a man rammed his car into a crowd of people. Heyer was among those protesting against the Unite the Right white supremacist rallies over the weekend.

  • Getty Images/iStockphoto

    FCC wants mobile data to count as broadband internet

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    08.10.2017

    The FCC under Chairman Ajit Pai is signaling new broadband policy changes that can only be described as friendly to ISPs and hostile to consumers. In a "Notice of Inquiry," a public comment step often taken ahead of rule changes, the commission proposes that both fixed and mobile can be counted as broadband under Section 706 of its rules. That differs from the current standard, developed under Tom Wheeler, that requires timely deployment of both wired and wireless networks in the US.

  • Tesla

    EPA docs reveal how Tesla's long-range Model 3 covers 310 miles

    by 
    Mariella Moon
    Mariella Moon
    08.09.2017

    Elon Musk once said that Tesla couldn't fit a 100kWh battery into the Model 3, but he didn't specify what kind of battery the car will have. Now, a bunch of EPA certification documents have finally revealed that the long-range version of the all-electric sedan is equipped with a 350-volt, 230-amp-hour battery pack. If you compute for the battery's kilowatt-hour value using those numbers, you'll get 80.5kWh of max capacity. That's what gives the long-range Model 3 variant the power to travel 310 miles between charges, only 5 miles shorter than the 315-mile range of the Model S and X. Tesla upgraded those vehicles' batteries to 100kWh in late 2016.

  • Shutterstock / leungchopan

    The man who put us through password hell regrets everything

    by 
    Swapna Krishna
    Swapna Krishna
    08.08.2017

    If you rue the inevitable day when IT makes you change your password, you're not alone. It is incredibly frustrating to constantly think of new passwords with a capital letter, a special character and numbers that isn't a variation on your old password. And it turns out that we're pretty bad at it, which is why the man responsible for the password hell we've been in this past decade has recanted his recommendations.

  • AOL

    Faraday Future leases new California plant amidst financial uncertainty

    by 
    Cherlynn Low
    Cherlynn Low
    08.07.2017

    After seemingly abandoning its plans to open a manufacturing plant in Las Vegas, electric car maker Faraday Future has found a new home. The company has signed a lease for a 1,000,000-square foot facility in Hanford, California, and more than 500 employees were already onsite last Saturday decorating the building.

  • Facebook

    Facebook's related articles will add fact to fake news shares

    by 
    Mariella Moon
    Mariella Moon
    08.03.2017

    Facebook's related articles section can now help you determine whether a story that's being shared on the website is nothing but a hoax. After hearing from users about how related articles give them more perspectives and additional info, the social network has decided to use it to help people figure out which stories are real or fake. Going forward, the company will be using an updated algorithm that can pinpoint potential fake news based on users' comments and reports. It will then send those stories to third-party fact checkers.

  • Hyperloop One

    Hyperloop One's passenger pod takes its first ride

    by 
    Daniel Cooper
    Daniel Cooper
    08.02.2017

    Just weeks after Hyperloop One demonstrated a working, albeit slow, version of its levitating sled, the company has made another leap forward. This time around, the startup has successfully tested its XP-1 passenger pod, reaching speeds of up to 192 mph and levitating off the track as it accelerated.

  • Engadget

    Your face might do more than just unlock the new iPhone

    by 
    Mat Smith
    Mat Smith
    08.01.2017

    Apple's latest secret leak was from its own documentation -- and it's given plenty for developers to chew over. The latest code snippets shared by Guilherme Rambo and Steve Troughton-Smith offer all kinds of tantalising details that may (almost certainly) come with that new iPhone -- whichever model that may be. Not only are there further suggestions that the physical Home button will be ditched, but according to Troughton-Smith, some pointers inside the firmware for Apple's incoming HomePod suggest that a new iPhone could have a screen with a resolution far beyond that found existing models, as well as mentions of facial expression detection.

  • Marisa Allegra Williams for Twitter

    Over a million Americans quit Twitter in just three months

    by 
    Daniel Cooper
    Daniel Cooper
    07.27.2017

    Controversial presidential announcements and celebrity revenge porn are all in a day's work for the social network everyone loves to hate. Now, Twitter has announced its most recent financial results and things aren't looking good for the microblog beloved by the leader of the free world.

  • REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin

    Kaspersky launches its free antivirus software worldwide

    by 
    Mariella Moon
    Mariella Moon
    07.26.2017

    Kaspersky has finally launched its free antivirus software after a year-and-a-half of testing it in select regions. While the software was only available in Russia, Ukraine, Belarus, China and in Nordic countries during its trial run, Kaspersky is releasing it worldwide. The free antivirus doesn't have VPN, Parental Controls and Online Payment Protection its paid counterpart offers, but it has all the essential features you need to protect your PC. It can scan files and emails, protect your PC while you use the web and quarantine malware that infects your system.

  • Business Insider

    Musk and Zuckerberg bicker over the future of AI

    by 
    Tom Regan
    Tom Regan
    07.25.2017

    It's easy to imagine the world's most powerful people as being mysterious and aloof, but thanks to the wonders of Twitter, we can now regularly witness them being just as petty as the rest of us. Everyone's favorite eccentric billionaire Elon Musk is the latest example of this, publicly slamming Mark Zuckerberg with a tweet stating that the Facebook CEO's understanding of AI "is limited."

  • Reddit / @nique0201

    Galaxy S8 Active ditches the curved display in leaked images

    by 
    Mallory Locklear
    Mallory Locklear
    07.24.2017

    Samsung has been putting out Active versions of its S line since the S4 and this weekend, some images and specs of the upcoming Galaxy S8 Active leaked on Reddit. The leaker supposedly got ahold of the phone from a pal who works for Samsung. Internally, the phone is pretty similar to the standard S8 and has a Snapdragon 835 CPU, 4GB of RAM and 64GB of storage. The phone also has a 12-megapixel rear camera and an 8-megapixel front-facing camera. However, the S8 Active has a 4,000mAh battery, larger than the 3,000mAh and 3,500mAh batteries of the S8 and S8 Plus, respectively.

  • Disney/Marvel

    VFX company files injunction to block three Disney blockbusters

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    07.20.2017

    You probably haven't heard of a special effects company called MOVA, but you've seen its Contour facial-capture technology in films like Guardians of the Galaxy and Beauty and the Beast. It could also have a big impact your entertainment choices. The company behind the tech, Rearden LLC, has filed an injunction against Walt Disney Co. to block those two films, along with Avengers: Age of Ultron, from sales or distribution.

  • JeShoots

    Apple could let you discreetly call 911 with your fingerprint

    by 
    Rachel England
    Rachel England
    07.19.2017

    Calling the emergency services is a deliberately easy process -- just three digits in most countries, simple enough for a child to learn. But Apple may have plans to make it even more straightforward, after patenting a new way of calling for help using just your fingertips. The patent describes how the user could program different fingerprints, patterns and even the amount of force required to switch the phone into 'panic mode'. This would result in the phone calling the emergency services, and could activate a live-stream of video, or provide location data via GPS. Personal safety smart jewelry -- already on the market -- works in a similar way.