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16
Aug

17 tips and tricks to get you started in No Man’s Sky – CNET


No Man’s Sky, the open space exploration game which launched last week, is one of the most intriguing and vast games ever created. In this procedurally generated universe, there are over 18 quintillion planets to explore with unique lifeforms and flora on each. The goal is to survive and make it to the galactic core.

The problem with that is, from the beginning, you’re on your own with very little guidance. There are no tutorials and very few instructions at all. It’s up to you to figure everything out on your own. For diehards, this might be a welcomed change of pace. For the rest of you, we’re here to help you get off the first planet and navigate space like a veteran.

Here are 17 tips to get you started.

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Everything you can do in No Man’s Sky
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Take your time, it’s not a race

While some people have already “finished” No Man’s Sky, the game can go on forever. It would take several lifetimes to visit every planet in the game.

While you’re likely to grow tired of the repetition long before that ever happens, No Man’s Sky isn’t meant to be a sprint to the galactic core. The point is to explore and discover things no one else has. So take your time, breathe in the air of as many planets in a system as you want and move forward when you’re ready. There is literally no rush.

Mind the storage space

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Screenshot by Taylor Martin/Hello Games

One of the scarcest resources in No Man’s Sky is storage space. From the very beginning of the game, you’ve got to dedicate quite a bit of effort to inventory management.

First, keep the essentials in stock. You need plenty of Carbon, Plutonium and Thamium9 to keep your gear and ship fueled and powered.

  • Carbon is plentiful in almost every place you will visit, so you’ll rarely need to take up more than one slot in your suit’s inventory for Carbon.
  • Plutonium is scarce on some planets, and without it, you’ll have a hard time getting your ship off the ground (unless you find a landing pad). Keep one or two slots of your ship inventory designated to Plutonium.
  • Thamium9 is hard to come by on the surface of some planets, but it’s plentiful in open space. Most of the asteroids you see are made entirely of Thamium9. Shoot them with your Photon Cannon to harvest the Thamium9 to fuel your Pulse Engine to travel long distances within a system more quickly.

Secondary resources you’ll want for open-space exploration are Oxides, such as Titanium and Iron. These can recharge your Photon Cannon or Deflector Shield, which will definitely come in handy when you’re inevitably raided by some bandits for your loot.

The rest of your storage space in your suit and ship should be reserved for valuables like Gold or Emeril, resources for crafting or technology upgrades.

Upgrade your gear whenever possible

Your tight storage space can be increased rather quickly in-game by finding or purchasing suit and ship upgrades.

Suit upgrades can be found on the surface of planets in special buildings near Outposts or at Space Stations, locked behind doors which require the Atlas Pass v1. The first upgrade is free, but additional storage slots will soon cost you 10,000 units a pop. These upgrades are well worth the investment.

Purchasing a new ship, however, is a tougher pill to swallow, ranging anywhere from 200,000 units to upwards of 3 million units. When you can afford it, it’s best to invest that money you’ve earned. After all, what else are you going to spend your cash on? And more storage slots means more room for loot, which you can sell for more units. Wash, rinse, repeat.

You can also upgrade your Multi-Tool along the way at random outposts — also a sound investment. It allows you to install more technology upgrades to your Multi-Tool, such as a Boltcaster for combat or coolant systems and beam intensifiers.

Look for crashed ships

If you don’t have the cash to upgrade your ship, you can always be on the lookout for crash sites. You’ll have to search around for the materials to make some repairs, but you can claim abandoned, crashed ships as your own, leaving your current ship behind. Just remember to transfer your stash over to the new ship before confirming the swap.

Install new technologies for efficiency

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Screenshot by Taylor Martin/Hello Games

Technology upgrades are a trade-off. They make your ship’s Photon Cannon more powerful, help your Jetpack fly longer or make your Mining Beam last longer without overheating. However, each technology you add will take up a storage slot for that device.

As you gain more storage space, this is easier to deal with, but some of the technology upgrades are worthwhile early on, such as Stamina Enhancement, which helps you sprint for longer distances.

Log everything

An easy way to make some spending money in No Man’s Sky is to use the Analysis Visor to log new discoveries. Animals, plants, planets and new planet systems can all be logged. But simply logging these items doesn’t earn a large paycheck — just a few hundred units per item. To earn more, open the settings menu and upload each of your discoveries to receive some units in return.

Before you upload your findings, however, don’t forget to give them each a special name.

Mine for fast money

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Screenshot by Taylor Martin/Hello Games

A faster way to earn money is to mine for different elements, such as Gold or Emeril. If you come across a planet flush with valuable resources, it’s wise to use that to your advantage and get ahead financially in the game. Empty all the unnecessary items from your inventory, mine all you can and make a trip to the nearest Space Station to sell your loot and make a fortune.

I mined Gold for a few hours over the weekend and amassed over 2 million units. This allowed me to upgrade my ship, repeat the process and make even more money on the next run.

Just beware the bandits. If they detect you have valuable possessions on your ship, they will attack, so be ready to fight to keep your hoard.

Scan to find what you need faster

If you need to repair your ship or gather resources for crafting or new technology, use the Scanner. It scans your nearby surroundings and will show you where resources and other items are nearby. It will display the icon for Oxides, Isotopes, Silicates, Neutrals or Precious elements, not which specific elements there are. Scanning will also reveal the location of nearby Knowledge Stones and cargo drops.

Using this, you can more quickly find the resources you need, rather than wandering aimlessly in search of something specific.

Save often

Be it bandits, a sour encounter with an alien or a massive glitch that sets you back, plenty can go wrong in No Man’s Sky. As such it’s wise to save often. You can do this by discovering new outposts and activating the waypoints.

Arguably, a better and easier way to save is by entering and exiting your ship. Each time you exit the ship, the game saves.

If for any reason you need to reload one of the previous two saves, open the settings menu and navigate to the Options tab. Your most recent and the previous saves are there and you can load either one by clicking and holding on it.

Feed animals for their help

Most of the wildlife you encounter in No Man’s Sky are friendly. They’re skittish, but if you can get close to a non-aggressive species and you have the right resources on hand, you can feed the animal. This can sometimes encourage them to show you the location of special resources, mine resources for you or even defend you from a threat.

Trade with other ships at Space Stations

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Screenshot by Taylor Martin/Hello Games

When you visit Space Stations, you may see other travelers come and go from the landing strip. If you approach those ships, you can actually trade with other aliens or make an offer on their ship.

You can often get a better (and sometimes worse) deal by selling valuables to travelers rather than traders or the Galactic Trade Network. You can also make a quick buck playing the middle man between two travelers at the same Space Station if you see one is paying above the average price for a resource another traveler is selling.

Make friends with the locals

You will often find three main races in your journey across the universe: Gek, Kvorax and Vy’keen. Getting on their good sides can afford you several perks, such as Vy’keen warriors giving you a new Multi-Tool. Keeping each race happy isn’t very difficult once you get the swing of things — but don’t be surprised when one race pits you against the other.

Sentinels will wreck you

Sentinels are basically the police of space. Normally, they’re harmless and passive (depending on the planet). But if you’re mining too many resources, killing animals or trying to break into abandoned buildings, they will attack.

Think of this situation as a wanted level, sort of like from Grand Theft Auto. If you don’t stop after they attack the first time, an Elite Sentinel (a four-legged walking robot) will be dispatched. Early on in the game, this is difficult to defend yourself against, so it’s best to flee the area. Simply fleeing doesn’t always work, however. Sentinels may attack wherever you land next.

Underwater and underground have secrets, too

Some planets in No Man’s Sky have large bodies of water, some of which are toxic. It’s easy to forget to look underwater, and it’s also easy to avoid deep caverns, as they can quickly turn into a maze you can’t find your way out of.

But if you brave the depths of water and caves, you can find loot that you may not find roaming the open world.

Flying is easier than walking, always

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Screenshot by Taylor Martin/Hello Games

The first four or five hours of No Man’s Sky, I was afraid to fly, worried that resources for powering the ship were in short supply. Turns out, I was just on a barren planet and if I had taken to the sky sooner, I would have found a plentiful patch of Plutonium and Thamium9 asteroids just outside the planet’s atmosphere.

After learning this, I’ve become much more accustomed to jumping in my ship to travel short distances on a planet, rather than hoofing it for 3 minutes to a nearby ruin. Just make sure to grab Plutonium when you can, and you won’t get stuck on a planet. You can almost always find Thamium9 as soon as you leave it.

Save your Atlas Stones

Along the Atlas Path, you will come across Atlas Stones. Without spoiling anything, you’re going to want to make room in your inventory for them and resist the urge to sell them. You’ll find out why when you make it to the center of the universe.

Your Jetpack packs some neat tricks

If you find yourself needing to climb out of a cave but it looks too tall, walk up to the wall and activate your Jetpack. As long as you’re against a wall, it will not deplete your Jetpack.

Also, if you want to move more quickly without sprinting, press the melee button while activating the Jetpack to spring forward. Then pulse the Jetpack (rather than holding it) while moving forward to travel on foot much faster.

16
Aug

​Download free ebooks from your local library — here’s how – CNET


If you are an insatiable reader and you want as many ebook as you can get for free, look no further than the library. Recently, the New York Public Library put 300,000 books on an app called SimplyE. The app is available for Android and iOS, but is only available to those with a NYPL library card.

Don’t live in New York? No worries.

Other libraries are offering ebook apps

SimplyE

A sample of books from the SimplyE app.


Alina Bradford/CNET

The NYPL isn’t the only library jumping on the app train, though. The San Diego Public Library, the Brooklyn Public Library and other metropolitan areas also have apps. All you need to check out books with these apps is the barcode number from your library card and your PIN number.

To find your city’s app, type in the name of your city’s library into the search in your app store.

Some of these apps offer more than just free ebooks through your library, too. You can also get access to movies and audio books, see which real books you have checked out and more.

Help for small towners

The big problem with these apps is if you don’t live in big city, your library probably doesn’t have an app. There are apps, though, connect to your local library so you can download ebooks. For example, when you sign up with Hoopla, it will search for your local library and connect to your library’s ebook, movie and audio book collection using your library card number. 3M Cloud Library works on the same concept.

Last ditch effort for free ebooks

If your town doesn’t have an app, and those like Hoopla and 3M Cloud Library can’t find your library, don’t give up hope. Many small-town libraries offer access to ebooks through special websites. The best way to find out about these sites is by contacting your library.

Have a Kindle? Here’s how to check out library e-books on your Kindle Fire.

16
Aug

Instagram Stories’ camera controls catch up to Snapchat


Instagram isn’t shy about wanting to go toe-to-toe with Snapchat through Stories, and that now includes camera features, too. Updates for both the Android and iOS versions of Instagram let you swipe up and down to zoom while you’re recording a video, much as you would in that other social app. The iOS version, at least, also lets you double-tap to switch cameras in mid-clip like its Snapchat counterpart. No, it’s not exactly a subtle tweak — but it makes sense if Instagram is going to poach Snapchatters that may take their camera controls for granted.

Source: App Store, Google Play

16
Aug

WikiLeaks released a cache of malware in its latest email dump


In its rush to let information be free, WikiLeaks has released over 80 different malware variants while publishing its latest collection of emails from Turkey’s ruling AKP political party. In a Github post, security expert Vesselin Bontchev has laid out many of the instances of malicious links, most of which came from “run-of-the-mill” spam and phishing emails found in the dump. While WikiLeaks has claimed the emails shed light on corruption within the Turkish government, New York Times reporter Zeynep Tufekci has pointed out that the materials have little to do with Turkish politics and mostly appear to be mailing lists and spam.

This claim is false. These emails have little to do with “Turkey’s political structure.” Mostly mailing lists+spam. pic.twitter.com/F7905JUg6z

— Zeynep Tufekci (@zeynep) August 15, 2016

In July, WikiLeaks also came under fire for publishing “private, sensitive information of what appears to be every female voter in 79 out of 81 provinces in Turkey,” including some home addresses and phone numbers, immediately after a bloody coup attempted to overthrow the AKP. As Tufekci noted at the time, WikiLeaks has been reckless with data as well as personal information. At one point, the WikiLeaks Twitter account claimed over 1,400 emails in the earlier leak were related to Fethullah Gülen — a cleric the Turkish government has blamed for the coup. In truth, “gülen” also means “smiling” in Turkish and many of those 1,400 emails containing the word “gülen” were actually advertisements for Mediterranean vacation destinations. In other words: it would appear someone had searched the dump for instances of the word, without actually checking their context.

When he launched the WikiLeaks project nearly 10 years ago, founder Julian Assange pledged to bring about a safe era of “ethical leaking.” The group’s recent approach, however, stands in stark contrast to their peers at The Intercept, which has pledged to allow media outlets and other third-parties to vet the Snowden archive before unleashing it on the public.

Via: Gizmodo

Source: Github

16
Aug

Google to move Hangouts On Air to YouTube Live


Several years ago when Google+ launched, one of its key features was Hangouts, a video chat program that allowed several people to chat online at once. Hangouts grew so popular that it eventually spun off a public-facing option called Hangouts On Air, where would-be stars could interact with their adoring fans. Indeed, actual public figures like Tyra Banks, Brad Pitt and even the President have taken to Hangouts On Air in the past to answer queries. But come September 12th however, that option will be no longer, at least on Google+. Instead, users will be prompted to use YouTube Live, Google’s other live video product, to broadcast in real-time.

According to a Google support document, you can set up the new Hangouts On Air by creating either a “Quick event” or a “Custom event” using YouTube Live’s Creator Studio tool. You can either go live immediately or schedule a YouTube Live broadcast for later. As with the version on Google+, you can have the Hangout be public, unlisted or private to just a select group of invited guests. Unfortunately, Hangout On Air apps like Q&A, Showcase and Applause aren’t currently available on YouTube Live, though they might be in the future.

The move to YouTube is yet another sign that the company is moving away from Google+. Last year, it moved Google Photos to its own product and even completely redesigned Google+ to be more of a community site than a social network. It also retired the G+ account as a requirement to register for services like Google Play Games and YouTube.

Via: VentureBeat

Source: Google

16
Aug

What’s on your HDTV: Olympics, ‘Bound,’ ‘Fear the Walking Dead’


This week we’re kicking back and enjoying the second week of Rio 2016, complete with track and field action, at last. Other notable options for our TVs this week include Bound and Inversus on PS4, while AMC brings back Fear the Walking Dead Sunday night, and Netflix premieres a couple of documentaries with Fearless and I’ll Sleep When I’m Dead. On Blu-ray, one of my favorite movies is finally available on Blu-ray in the US: The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across the 8th Dimension. Look after the break to check out each day’s highlights, including trailers and let us know what you think (or what we missed).

Blu-ray & Games & Streaming

  • The Angry Birds Movie (4K, 3D)
  • The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across the 8th Dimension
  • Gotham (S2)
  • Once Upon a Time (S5)
  • God’s Not Dead 2
  • Session 9
  • American Ninja
  • Elvis
  • Patch Adams
  • The Vampire Diaries (S7)
  • Hell on Wheels (S5)
  • Bound (PS4)
  • Inversus (PC, PS4)
  • Return Zero VR (PC)
  • F1 2016 (PC, PS4, Xbox One)

Monday

  • 2016 Summer Olympics, NBC, 8PM
  • So You Think You Can Dance, Fox, 8PM
  • WWE Raw, USA, 8PM
  • The Fosters, Freeform, 8PM
  • Chris Harris on Cars, BBC America, 9PM
  • Guilt, Freeform, 9PM
  • Rizzoli & Isles, TNT, 9PM
  • The Making of the Mob, AMC, 10PM
  • Are You the One? (season finale), MTV, 10PM
  • Full Frontal with Samantha Bee, TBS, 10:30PM

Tuesday

  • Difficult People, Hulu, 3AM
  • Casual, Hulu, 3AM
  • 2016 Summer Olympics, NBC, 8PM
  • WWE Smackdown, USA, 8PM
  • Pretty Little Liars, Freeform, 8PM
  • Zoo, CBS, 9PM
  • Dead of Summer, Freeform, 9PM
  • Music Moguls (season finale), BET, 9PM
  • Hard Knocks: Training Camp with the LA Rams, HBO, 10PM
  • Scream (season finale), MTV, 10PM

Wednesday

  • Chelsea, Netflix 3AM
  • Penn & Teller: Fool Us, CW, 8PM
  • 2016 Summer Olympics, NBC, 8PM
  • Unsung: Monifah (summer premiere), TV One, 8PM
  • Big Brother, CBS, 8PM
  • Suits, USA, 9PM
  • American Gothic, CBS, 9PM
  • Dating Naked, VH1, 9PM
  • My Last Days (series premiere), CW, 9PM
  • The Night Shift, NBC, 9PM
  • Catfish, MTV, 10PM
  • Mr. Robot, USA, 10PM
  • Tyrant, FX, 10PM
  • Any Given Wednesday with Bill Simmons, HBO, 10PM
  • Another Period (season finale), Comedy Central, 10PM
  • American Gothic, CBS, 10PM
  • Unlocking the Truth (series premiere), MTV, 11PM

Thursday

  • 2016 Summer Olympics, 8PM
  • Big Brother, CBS, 9PM
  • My Last Days, CW, 9PM
  • Ripper Street, BBC America, 10PM
  • Lip Sync Battle, Spike TV, 10PM
  • Sex & Drugs & Rock & Roll, FX, 10PM
  • Queen of the South, USA, 10PM

Friday

  • I’ll Sleep When I’m Dead, Netflix, 3AM
  • Fearless, Netflix, 3AM
  • Bottersnikes and Gumbles, Netflix, 3AM
  • 2016 Summer Olympics, NBC, 8PM
  • Big Brother, CBS, 8PM
  • My Last Days (season finale), CW, 9PM
  • Killjoys, Syfy, 9PM
  • Dark Matter, Syfy, 10PM
  • Ridiculousness, MTV, 10PM
  • Superstore, NBC, 10:30PM
  • The Eric Andre Show, Cartoon Network, 12AM

Saturday

  • 2016 Summer Olympics, NBC, 8PM
  • Boy in the Attic, Lifetime, 8PM
  • Rush Hour (series finale), CBS, 8PM
  • Boston EMS, ABC, 10PM

Sunday

  • 2016 Summer Olympics, NBC, 8PM
  • Celebrity Family Feud, ABC, 8PM
  • Big Brother, CBS, 8PM
  • $100,000 Pyramid, ABC, 9PM
  • Fear the Walking Dead (summer premiere), AMC, 9P<
  • Inspector Lewis (series finale), PBS, 9PM
  • The Night of, HBO, 9PM
  • Ray Donovan, Showtime, 9PM
  • Power, Starz, 9PM
  • Survivor’s Remorse, Starz, 10PM
  • Braindead, CBS, 10PM
  • Ballers, HBO, 10PM
  • Roadies, Showtime, 10PM
  • The Jim Gaffigan Show (season finale), TV Land, 10PM
  • The Tunnel (season finale), PBS, 10PM
  • Murder in the First, TNT, 10PM
  • Talking Dead, AMC, 10:30PM
  • Geeking Out, AMC, 11:59PM
  • Vice Principals, HBO, 10:30PM
  • Tunnel, PBS, 10:30PM
  • Last Week Tonight with John Oliver, HBO, 11PM

(All times listed are ET)

16
Aug

Battlefield 1 public beta: EA announces when you can play


Electronic Arts has announced Battlefield 1 will have a public beta, meaning you’ll get to play and test the game before it launches this autumn.

The public beta will kick off 31 August for Xbox One, PlayStation 4, and PC players. All you need to do to play the beta is become a Battlefield Insider, which is free to join before 21 August, and then you’ll be granted access to the beta when it launches. In the first-person shooter’s beta, you’ll experience historical combat and play popular game modes like Rush and Conquest.

Battlefield 1 follows Battlefield 4 but is confusingly titled Battlefield 1. It will release for Xbox One, PlayStation 4, and PC on 21 October and is set during World War I, allowing you to fight in the air and on the ground in countries like France, Italy, and elsewhere. If you recall, the Battlefield franchise began as a World War II fighting game when it was launched in 2002, so EA is basically taking things back with Battlefield 1.

In a blog post, EA described why it chose World War I as the setting for the game: “With Battlefield 1 we set out to create some of the largest create, most dynamic battles in FPS history while continuing to tap into what fans love most about the franchise. One of the things that makes World War I such an amazing era is just how advanced it really was […] Tanks, planes, machine guns, artillery – a lot of the tech you’ve used in other Battlefield games was perfected during this era, letting the classic Battlefield DNA shine through.”

Battlefield 1 has a single-player mode as well as online multiplayer, and it will let you join 64-player battles. Watch the game’s latest trailer below to see all sorts of World War I horror featured throughout, including global-scale conflict, tanks, trucks, and plenty of zeppelins.

16
Aug

Samsung Galaxy Note 7 pre-orders open: £699 SIM free and more


The time has come to get your pre-order in for the Samsung Galaxy Note 7, the phone tipped to be one of the hottest that 2016 has on offer. 

With the UK missing out on the Note 5, there are plenty of people eagerly awaiting the arrival of Samsung’s latest. While the Samsung Galaxy S7 edge is tempting, the lure of USB Type-C, an HDR display at 5.7-inches and the flexibility of the S Pen, takes the Note 7 to a new dimension. 

Pre-orders for the Galaxy Note 7 have now opened, so you can get in line to  secure one of the hottest phones of the year.

  • Samsung Galaxy Note 7 vs Galaxy Note 3: What’s the difference?
  • Samsung Galaxy Note 7: Release date, specs and everything you need to know
  • Samsung Galaxy Note 7 vs Note 5 vs Note 4: What’s the difference?
  • Best Galaxy Note 7 cases: Protect your new Samsung device
  • 5 reasons why the new Samsung Gear VR (2016) is the best mobile headset by far

Carphone Warehouse has confirmed that the Samsung Galaxy Note 7 will be available for £699 SIM free, but you’ll get a free Gear VR headset with that. This is the new Gear VR, designed for this new handset and powered by Oculus. If you pre-order from Carphone Warehouse, you’ll get your handset 3 days early. Click here for all the details on the Carphone Warehouse offer.

Carphone Warehouse has confirmed that they will be demoing the Note 7 in store for those who want to know more and that it will be hitting shelves on 2 September.

We’ll update you with any other Samsung Galaxy Note 7 deals that appear during pre-order.

16
Aug

Snapchat buys a search and discovery app for $100 million


Snapchat has grown up quite a bit in the past year, from adding original content from the likes of NBC to introducing Memories, an option for a more permanent archive of photos. Now it could be venturing into search as well. The Information has reported that the company is in the middle of acquiring Vurb, a search and recommendation app, for more than $100 million.

Vurb works with a slew of third parties like Fandango and Uber to ramp up the traditional search and discovery experience. So, for example, searching for a nearby restaurant will bring up a Yelp review along with a link to Uber so you can order a car to get there. It can even tie in recommendations based on the time of day, the weather and your location.

It’s unclear on what Snapchat plans to do with the acquisition, but a Snapchat take on search and discovery could potentially be pretty powerful. The Information theorizes that Vurb could let users link in media and maps in their Snaps or recommend Stories and media to each other. One of the biggest complaints against Snapchat is that discovery — finding people to follow — is pretty difficult, so Vurb could be a way to improve that.

Source: The Information

16
Aug

HTC’s Nexus phone efforts show up at the FCC


If there was any doubt that HTC is working on at least one Nexus phone this year, the FCC (and a handful of leaks) just erased it. The regulator has received an HTC filing for smartphones that will be explicitly branded as a Nexus — a letter says you’ll find the user manual on Google’s Nexus page. The entries don’t really show the devices or say exactly what they can do, but the hardware should have full network support for all major North American carriers and beyond. Not that there’s much mystery as to what one of those devices looks like, as you’ll soon see.

Leaks from both Android Police and @Usbfl on Twitter show photos of what’s believed to be the 5-inch Marlin, the smaller of two Nexus devices that HTC is reportedly making this year (the other is the 5.5-inch Sailfish). They line up with a previous render AP made based on a source’s description, and support earlier rumors that both HTC Nexus devices would have a metal-and-glass design, not just the larger one like last year.

Assuming the images are accurate, they also suggest that earlier spec leaks are on the mark. Whether you choose Marlin or Sailfish may depend entirely on your preferred screen size. Both would have a higher-end Snapdragon processor (most likely the 820 or 821), 4GB of RAM, a 12-megapixel rear camera, an 8-megapixel front shooter and at least 32GB of built-in storage. Logically, 2015-era perks like a rear fingerprint reader and USB-C would carry over. There’s still no definitive release window for either Nexus, but they won’t necessarily launch at the same time as the Android Nougat upgrade arrives. Most likely, you’ll have to wait until sometime after LG unveils the first Nougat phone on September 6th.

The 2016 HTC Nexus looks like a cross between the Nexus 4 & iPhone with glass and fingerprint scanner on the back. pic.twitter.com/7pm9fhszki

— nexus (@usbfl) August 14, 2016

Via: The Next Web

Source: FCCID.io, Android Police, Usbfl (Twitter)