Skip to content

August 14, 2017

The Morning After: Monday, August 14th 2017

by John_A

It’s Monday morning! Over the weekend you may have missed more HBO hacker leaks, and how you can now get Google’s Pixel phone’s camera tricks on other smartphones.

You won’t need to switch phones to get improved HDR photos.
Google Pixel’s camera trick comes to other phones through a mod

newsdims-1640+2.jpg

Much of the Google Pixel’s photographic prowess comes from its software — it’s particularly good at high dynamic range photos thanks to its HDR+ mode, which fills in gobs of detail while reducing the blur you sometimes see in HDR shots. But do you have to buy a Pixel phone to see the benefit? Not necessarily, if you’re willing to live life on the edge. Developer B-S-G has modified the Google Camera app to enable HDR+ on any Android phone with a Snapdragon 820, 821 or 835 processor. While your Galaxy S8 or OnePlus 3 won’t perfectly mirror the Pixel’s photo quality, this could lead to improvements when taking photos in situations with bright highlights or dark shadows, where HDR, well, shines.

It doesn’t want customers going blind.
Amazon offers refunds for dodgy solar-eclipse glasses

newsdims-3640.jpg

It cares.

The latest dump includes new ‘Curb Your Enthusiasm.’
HBO refuses to play ball with hackers as more episodes leak

newsdims-4640.jpg

HBO isn’t willing to budge. Despite hackers having already dumped episodes of its shows, plus an archive of emails from HBO VP Leslie Cohen, online, it’s not willing to pay its hacker ransomers. It doesn’t seem like they’re done yet, either. The latest leak includes episodes from the upcoming season of Curb Your Enthusiasm.

Self-driving cars could loosen up if they collide with humans.
Waymo patents cars that soften to safeguard pedestrians

The Alphabet-owned Waymo recently received a patent for technology that would soften a car’s body in the event of a collision with a pedestrian. The feature would change the rigidity of body panels, bumpers and the hood using underlying cables, rods or springs. The moment sensors detect an imminent pedestrian impact, the car would loosen those underpinnings and create a relatively gentle surface to reduce injuries. However, for now, it’s just a patent.

But wait, there’s more…

  • Facebook knew about Snap’s struggles months before the public
  • After Math: come out and burn
  • Super-thin semiconductors delay the ‘death’ of silicon
Read more from News

Leave a comment

Note: HTML is allowed. Your email address will never be published.

Subscribe to comments