Apple is looking to make its own Netflix-beating TV shows
Apple is planning on investing in original TV shows, according to a report by The Wall Street Journal. With iPhone sales on the decline, people close to the company have revealed that it will attempt to gain Apple Music subscribers by adding original video content to the service. While this move has been rumoured since the relaunch of Apple TV, the company has apparently now started reaching out to Holywood producers, planning to offer original video content by the end of 2017.
Instead of investing in a full library of scripted content, however, Apple is initially setting its sights on a few high-quality original concepts. The same sources claim that Apple is seeking to rival the quality of shows like HBO’s Westworld and Netflix’s Stranger Things, with original movies possibly coming further down the line.
The report claims that Apple is still yet to buy any scripts due to internal debates about how to handle its business model. While Netflix refuses to share any kind of viewer figures or demographic data, Holywood producers believe that Apple will be far more open about how its original content performs.

While surprising, this wouldn’t be Apple’s first foray into publishing video content. Seeing the phenomenal success of James Corden’s Carpool Karaoke, Apple Music recently bought the rights to broadcast its own 30 minute version of the series. The company also revealed that it’s creating a semi-autobiographical documentary series called ‘Vital Signs’ starring Dr. Dre, due to premiere on Apple Music later this year.
While significant, both confirmed shows are firmly rooted in music. This rumoured expansion could mark Apple’s first step into non-music-related video content. Despite that, this seems to be a way to lure subscribers away from Apple Music competitor Spotify, rather than serving as a rival to purely video streaming services like Netflix. At last count, Apple Music had 20 million subscribers and Spotify double that.
Source: Wall Street Journal
These companies are banking on your fear of radiation
Imagine if, next week, every Best Buy in the land began selling a Dan Cooper-branded Fluorocarbon detector for $99.99. There’d be a big cardboard cutout on each aisle end, with my stern-looking face advising you to protect your family with this product. Even if you didn’t instantly lay down a Benjamin for Dan Cooper’s Lean, Mean, Fluorocarbon Detectin’ Machine, you’d probably think about it. Maybe you’d do a cursory Google to learn more — since they wouldn’t sell the equipment for no reason, would they?
For the record, Fluorocarbons are generally harmless, odorless and don’t, in their natural state, cause any environmental damage. But no matter how reassuring the science is, you’ll remain puzzled by the existence of that product in Best Buy. You’ll start to wonder if you’re being lied to, and maybe you should begin to worry anyway because of what you don’t know. It’s exactly this sort of anxiety that companies like to prey upon — and you’ll always see a few of these turn up to CES.
This year’s preoccupation was with radiation — that most silent of killer — in at least two different forms. The first was ionizing radiation, the sort that you’ll find in an X-ray machine or if you stand too close to a nuclear reactor.
Dosime was at the show hawking a consumer version of the clip-on radiation meter (dosimeter) you’d need to wear if you actually worked at a nuclear power plant or in a hospital. The company’s pitch was that everyone should be worried about getting a fatal dose of radiation while they’re out and about. Dosime also doubles as a home monitoring device, and can be used to sniff out any X or Gamma radiation in your local area.
But there wasn’t just one dosimeter at CES, and the second that we stumbled across came in the form of Ruim from French inventor Gael Patton. Much like Dosime, Ruim is designed to monitor the local environment and warn you about potential health risks. Unlike its competitor, Ruim also uses that data to build a crowdsourced map of radiation hotspots across the world. That way, you can check for risks of irradiation before your morning run or when you’re buying a new home.
If you live in the shadow of a nuclear power plant or on an estate that hosted a nuclear test, then it’s reasonable to worry about radiation. I’m not looking to demean or trivialize the small subset of people who have legitimate concerns about what’s in their locale. Same goes for Radon, a naturally-occuring ionizing radiation that can harm your health if your home is poorly ventilated. But in the US, residents of every state bar New Jersey can pick up an EPA-approved radon detector for $25 — ten times less than the price of Dosime.
I haven’t tested these products and can’t comment as to their efficacy, but I have no reason to believe that they don’t do the job that they’re advertised to do. But that doesn’t mean it’s ethical to market them to the public, especially if the vast majority of them will never need to worry about radiation. It’s the same laissez-faire attitude that enables companies to peddle nonsense about how smartphone signals cause cancer or deplete your sperm count.
Speaking of which, Franco-American outfit Spartan has created a pair of boxer briefs with silver woven into the fabric. The idea is to protect your genitals from the imagined horrors of the smartphone that sits in your pants pocket. After all, that device is pumping out harmful radiation that’ll cook your sperm and give you all sorts of cancers. A single pair costs around $50 with shipping from France to the US, so you can imagine how well the company’s creators sleep at night.
Let’s be clear, your smartphone emits radio frequency (RF) radiation, a non-ionizing form of radiation that is also generated by microwaves and radio signals. The only time that you’re likely to suffer any harm from RF is if you burn yourself on an overheated TV dinner. But Skimguard and MJoose would prefer it if you didn’t know that, because they’re selling phone cases designed to block phone radiation.
When asked why their product existed, Skimguard’s Con Samios said that “there are people who are worried about radiation from their phones. I know for me, whenever I talk on my phone, it gets really hot. It can be worrying.”
A smartphone gets hot for a variety of reasons, but an excess of radiation isn’t one of them — just ask Samsung. But these companies have no guilt about hawking their products on the back of false premises. MJoose’s Chase Schumcher explained it perfectly when he said that these products are for people “concerned with(sic) radiation.”
But let’s be honest, we know why these products exist, and it’s not to improve your health or protect your family. It’s to exploit ignorance and and use technology as a smokescreen for bullshit, same as those hologram energy bands. Dosimeters and radiation shields may very well do what their creators claim, but that doesn’t make them necessary. If you’re worried about Radon, spend $25 on a survey kit, don’t get conned into buying an expensive smartphone accessory that you don’t need.
Additional photography by Jessica Conditt, Chris Velazco and Nicole Lee.
Click here to catch up on the latest news from CES 2017.
Rudy Giuliani will advise Trump on cybersecurity
During an appearance on Thursday’s Fox & Friends talk show, former NYC mayor Rudy Giuliani announced that he would be forming a cybersecurity team for President-elect Trump. According to the Trump Transition’s official announcement, the team would advise the President-elect on issues “concerning private sector cyber security problems and emerging solutions developing in the private sector.” Presumably, this will entail more than simply writing things down on paper and having them delivered by courier.
“The President-elect decided that he wanted to bring in, on a regular basis, the people in the private sector, the corporate leaders in particular, the thought leaders, who were working on security for cyber,” Giuliani said during the show. “Because we’re so far behind.”
“It’s his belief, which I share, that a lot of the solutions are out there, we’re just not sharing them,” he continued. “It’s like cancer. You know, there’s cancer research going on all over the place—you’d almost wish they’d get together in one room and maybe we’d find a cure.” That’s right folks, Giuliani thinks that both information security and cancer can be “cured” simply by putting a bunch of people in the same room together. Golly, how has nobody ever thought of that before? It’s like he’s never heard of DefCon or the American Society of Clinical Oncology’s (ASCO) annual summit.
It’s questionable whether Giuliani will bring much more than access to the table in his new role. The former mayor’s first position after leaving public office was as a partner in a newly formed consulting firm which provided “management consulting service to governments and business,” according to the letter he wrote to NYC’s Conflicts of Interest Board shortly before leaving office. Giuliani Partners proceeded to earn more than $100 million between 2001 and 2005 and transform Rudy into a globetrotting multimillionaire. However, given the firm’s secretive nature and stringent use of nondisclosure agreements with its clients, it’s not clear how much, if any, cybersecurity-related advising Giuliani Partners actually did. In January of 2016, Giuliani signed on to be the global chairman of Greenberg Traurig’s cybersecurity and crisis management group.
Giuliani went on to explain to Fox & Friends that the task force would act as middlemen, connecting the President-elect “as well as anybody else in the administration” with “corporate leaders and their technological people.” In essence it would give the Trump and his crew direct line access to the technology and expertise they need to, say, build a Muslim registry. At the same time it would grant quid pro quo access to any organization willing to put company above country and fall in line with the new regime.
Via: Gizmodo
Source: Fox News (Twitter)
Apple’s Lisa Jackson Joins Federal Committee Advising on Vehicle Automation
Lisa Jackson, Apple’s vice president of environment, policy, and social initiatives, has been named as a member of the new Federal Committee on Automation. Announced by the U.S. Department of Transportation, the committee will act as an advisory panel to discuss and look into “some of the most pressing and relevant matters facing transportation today.”
These matters are said to mainly include the development and deployment of automated vehicles. Additionally, the committee will act as a resource for the Department of Transportation as it continues to provide research, policy updates, and regulations on transportation in the U.S., while also helping “advance life-saving innovations.”
Its members consist of “leading professionals and experts” in a multitude of fields.
“During my time at the Department, we have fostered some of the most significant technological changes to ever take place in transportation, and we did so while keeping our focus on the safety of the American people,” said U.S. Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx. ”This new automation committee will work to advance life-saving innovations while boosting our economy and making our transportation network more fair, reliable, and efficient.”
In addition to Lisa Jackson, the Federal Committee on Automation will include Gloria Boyland (FedEx VP), Robin Chase (Zipcar Co-Founder), Rachel Holt (Uber Regional General Manager), Gerry Murphy (Amazon Senior Corporate Council), and various other technology executives, university professors, and automotive industry professionals.
Each member of the committee is said to contribute the “best practices, challenges, and opportunities” they have knowledge of in regards to the future of automation in vehicles. Apple’s own interest in autonomous cars was made official in a letter to federal regulators last month, and now it appears that the company will be willing to share its knowledge for the betterment of vehicle automation across the industry.
As technology develops, automation may play a larger role in a number of modes of transportation, including cars, buses, trains, planes, and UAS (drone) systems. This committee will play a critical role in sharing best practices, challenges, and opportunities in automation, and will open lines of communication so stakeholders can learn and adapt based on feedback from each other.
The full list of committee members can be found on the U.S. Department of Transportation’s official website.
Related Roundup: Apple Car
Tag: Lisa Jackson
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Akitio Launches 2.5″ Quad Thunderbolt 3 Storage Device for New MacBook Pro
Akitio has announced the release of the its Thunder3 Quad Mini, a 2.5″ four-bay Thunderbolt 3 external storage solution for the latest MacBook Pro.
The aluminum storage device has removable trays designed to house up to four 2.5″ SATA SSDs or hard drives purchased separately. The device is equipped with two Thunderbolt 3 ports—the first one connects to the MacBook Pro, and the second one can be used to connect or daisy chain Thunderbolt 3 or USB-C peripherals.
With Software RAID, Akitio said four striped SSDs can reach data transfer speeds of up to 1375 MB/s, while four striped hard drives max out at around 400 MB/s. Thunderbolt 3 provides sufficient bandwidth to connect dual 4K displays to the latest MacBook Pro and complete other data transfers simultaneously.

A dedicated DisplayPort 1.2 video output provides connectivity to the 4K displays at 60Hz, while supporting Power Delivery up to 15W to notebooks that support charging from a 5V/3A power source. 15W is hardly sufficient wattage for the latest MacBook Pro, which fully charges at up to 85W with Apple’s own charger.
Akitio said the Thunder3 Quad Mini will be available in March for $329 alongside five other Thunderbolt 3 storage devices it sells.
Related Roundup: MacBook Pro
Tag: Thunderbolt 3
Buyer’s Guide: MacBook Pro (Buy Now)
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A 10.5-Inch iPad Pro Could Match the 12.9-Inch Model’s Resolution and the iPad Mini’s Pixel Density
Apple is rumored to be working on a new iPad Pro that adopts an edge-to-edge display, and while it’s said to be somewhere around 10 inches, there are a lot of mixed rumors about the specific size of the tablet.
Studio Neat designer Dan Provost yesterday wrote a post on Medium (via Daring Fireball) making the case for a 10.5-inch iPad. His math is solid and his argument makes sense, framing all of the iPad Pro rumors in a new light.
When introducing the 12.9-inch iPad Pro in 2015, Apple marketing chief Phil Schiller explained that Apple settled on that size because the width of the tablet matched the height of the existing 9.7-inch iPad. The 12.9-inch iPad Pro, he said, was similar to having two 9.7-inch iPads side-by-side.
A 9.7-inch iPad Pro with a 10.5-inch piece of paper over it, via Provost
Provost takes this concept and applies it to the iPad mini. The width of a 10.5-inch iPad would match the height of the iPad mini screen, and furthermore, a 10.5-inch iPad would use the same resolution as the 12.9-inch model, with the same pixel density as the iPad mini.
The math works out perfectly. This new 10.5″ iPad would have the exact same resolution as the 12.9″ iPad Pro (2732 x 2048), but the same pixel density of the iPad mini (326 ppi instead of 264 ppi). Crunch the numbers, do a little Pythagorean Theorem, and you end up with a screen 10.5″ diagonal (10.47″ to be precise, but none of Apple’s stated screen sizes are exact). In terms of physcial dimensions, the width of this 10.5″ screen would be exactly the same as the height of the iPad mini screen.
Existing rumors all agree that the upcoming iPad Pro will be in the neighborhood of 10 inches, but we’ve heard everything from 10.1 inches to 10.9 inches, suggesting Apple could be testing multiple prototypes.
KGI Securities analyst Ming-Chi Kuo originally suggested the tablet would be 10.5 inches, but recently revised his statement to say that it could be anywhere from 10 inches to 10.5 inches.
Japanese site Mac Otakara has released two separate reports, one mentioning a 10.1-inch tablet and the other suggesting the display will measure in at 10.9 inches, while rumors from the Taiwanese supply chain suggest a 10.5-inch display.
While we can’t yet say for certain the iPad Pro will feature a 10.5-inch display, it’s the size that makes the most sense and fits well into Apple’s lineup.
The upcoming iPad Pro is said to be a new flagship model that will be sold alongside the 12.9-inch iPad Pro. It’s said to feature an edge-to-edge display with no Home button and a small top bezel.
Related Roundup: iPad Pro
Buyer’s Guide: 12.9″ iPad Pro (Caution)
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Apple Seeds Fourth Beta of macOS Sierra 10.12.3 to Developers
Apple today seeded the fourth beta of an upcoming macOS Sierra 10.12.3 update to developers, a few days after seeding the third 10.12.3 beta and more than a month after releasing macOS Sierra 10.12.2, the second update to the macOS Sierra operating system.
The macOS Sierra 10.12.3 update is available for download through the Apple Developer Center or through the software update mechanism in the Mac App Store.
According to Apple’s release notes, the 10.12.3 update “improves the stability, compatibility, and security of your Mac.” No specific changes, bug fixes, or feature additions were discovered in the first three betas, but we’ll update this post should any new features be found in the fourth beta.
With bug fixes, it’s often hard to determine exactly what’s included in an update until Apple supplies detailed release notes with a release. We do, however, know that this update fixes a Safari bug that caused battery life problems during the MacBook Pro testing conducted by Consumer Reports.
Available since September, macOS Sierra is the latest Mac operating system. It includes Siri support, Apple Pay for the web, Universal Clipboard, Apple Watch auto unlocking, improved iCloud Drive integration, Picture-in-Picture multitasking, and dozens of smaller features that can be found in our macOS Sierra roundup.
Related Roundup: macOS Sierra
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Sony VPL-VZ1000ES Release Date, Price and Specs – CNET
Big TVs are getting cheaper all the time, but 100 inches still costs a bundle unless you want to muck around with a projector, a screen and a dark room.
Sony has a couple of solutions for rich buyers who want a TV that big. One is the XBR-100Z9D, a 100-inch
LCD TV
that costs a cool $60,000 if you can find one. Another is the VPL-VZ1000ES, a relative bargain at $25,000. It’s available for preorder now and ships in April.
It’s not exactly a TV, but it comes close enough. It’s a short-throw projector, meaning it can sit within inches of the wall and still project a huge image (you could get up to 120 inches or more if you wanted). It can blend seamlessly into a cabinet and the whole system can disappear entirely if you spring for a motorized screen. Of course the price is well beyond most people’s budgets, but it still represents a cool concept and a different take on traditional TVs and projectors.
One downside with projectors is that the image washes out in bright light, but the VZ1000ES has a couple of fixes for that. One is sheer light output: its laser light engine puts out 2500 lumens, very respectable for any projector. Combined with a specialized screen designed to only accept light coming from below, as demonstrated in Sony’s booth at the Consumer Electronics Show, you get a massive picture that’s bright enough for most rooms.
Specs and features
- Short-throw projector (screen not included)
- 4K resolution
- HDR compatible
- SXRD laser light engine
- 2500 lumens light output
Android’s progress lives and dies by Samsung

Google makes Android, but Samsung increasingly owns Android. And that’s a problem for updates.
In Canada, we have seasons. It’s currently winter, and therefore cold. Not so cold, but enough to change the snow to rain and back again, and it’s been doing a fair amount of both lately.
But aside from cold hands and wet feet, this type of weather isn’t great for most Android phones, and only one in my lineup right now is IP68 water resistant: the Samsung Galaxy S7 edge. But as wonderful and beautiful as that phone is — and despite the presence of a Micro-USB, it’s barely aged a day — its success is actively being undermined by the fact that it’s running Android 6.0.1 Marshmallow, and has been since I got it in March.
The problem

More than ever Google’s Android strategy is permanently and inextricably aligned with Samsung’s
With Samsung officially rolling out Nougat to its GS7 lineup, the time is ripe for talking about how much influence the company has over how Android’s update-reliant fragmentation is seen by the world. But this is not just about Samsung’s flagships, either. No, looking at this month’s Android version distribution numbers, it occurred to me that more than ever Google’s Android strategy is permanently and inextricably aligned with Samsung’s as long as the former develops the OS for free and the latter keeps building the world’s most popular phones on top of it.
And while we’ve heard rumors for years that Mountain View will take Android updates into its own hands, the most likely scenario is one that’s playing out already: Google releasing annual updates to its Pixel line and keeping those running the latest version of its mobile OS for as long as possible.
In the meantime, it’s hard to look at the paucity of phones out there running Nougat without levelling some of the blame directly at Samsung. While the Korean giant has certainly had a tough few months, potentially pushing back the release of Android 7.0 for its non-exploding phones, there’s no question Samsung has a dubious track record for expeditious updates. A flick of the switch on a couple of generations of handsets would singlehandedly quintuple the number of phones running the latest version of Android.
It’s going on six months since Android 7.0’s official release on Nexus devices.
This time, Samsung did do things a little differently by offering a public (though hard-to-sign-up-for) beta of Nougat for the Galaxy S7 and S7 edge, but as valuable as such a process will be to the overall stability and performance of the phone’s eventual release candidate, it will be nearly a full year after Android N was announced, and going on six months since Android 7.0’s official release on Nexus devices.
The cold hard data

Even though Samsung begins its Nougat trickle next week, it will be months before all 50 million or so units get it — the majority will have been sold through carrier channels, most of whom perform their own extensive quality control — and many of those may receive the older Android 7.0 instead of the more recent Android 7.1.1. Again, this is nothing new. But based on new data from Kantar WorldPanel, Samsung’s latest phones captured 28.9% of holiday sales, sitting closely behind the iPhone as the most popular devices in the U.S. That’s millions of phones unboxed during the busiest season of the year running year-old Android software.
That same data from Kantar claims Google’s Pixel phones accounted for just 1.3% of the smartphones sold in the same period, and more than half of that business was done from a single carrier, Verizon. Most people in the U.S. still buy their phones through carriers, and thanks to the longevity of hardware, last-generation devices are still being offered at tremendous discounts to people who just want something that works.
Devices like the Galaxy A and Galaxy J are the devices sold and forgotten, never receiving the upgrades us early adopters so crave.
Moving down the line, Samsung’s A and J series are competent devices that, according to IDC, comprise the majority of the company’s smartphone shipments every quarter. These are the devices sold and forgotten, never receiving the upgrades us early adopters so crave. But the longer replacement cycle of smartphones coupled with the fact that Samsung has little incentive to invest the considerable engineering time to even issue security updates to those entry-level and mid-range phones, let alone the updated Android code, means that we’ll likely see slower uptake of Google’s latest Android versions unless the cycle is broken. Same goes for older flagships like the Galaxy S6, Galaxy S5 — even the Galaxy S4, which Verizon still sells — which are still being purchased in the millions.
This isn’t really Samsung’s fault, either. The company has a right to support or neglect its phones as it sees fit, and millions of customers are obviously speaking with their wallets by continuing to purchase Galaxys over competing Android devices, most of which have better update track records. But that Android’s long-term health is so caught up in Samsung’s own update strategy can’t sit well with Google, and the Pixel’s modest success hasn’t, and likely won’t for some time, positively impact Mountain View’s own desire to get the Platonic ideal into as many pockets as possible.
Well, I guess there’s always next year.
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Video: HTC U Ultra + U Play first impressions!
Just a week removed from the end of CES, we already have our first major Android launch of 2017 — from HTC. The Taiwanese company has just unveiled the HTC U Ultra and U Play — a pair of new phones pitched as “flagship” devices.
But while both pack the same impressive metal-and-glass construction, the Ultra is the handset you’ll want to get more excited about. It’s got top-tier internals, an upgraded version of the camera from the HTC 10, Android 7.0 Nougat out of the box and AI smarts thanks to the new “Sense Companion.” It’s early days for both these phones: so early, in fact, that HTC isn’t allowing live hands-on video. But we’re still able to give you an early sneak peek at both phones. You’ll find everything you need to know compressed into four minutes in our first look video!
- Android Central on YouTube
- HTC U Ultra + Play hands-on!
- HTC U Ultra specs
- HTC U Play specs



