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2
Oct

Best iOS app deals of the day! 6 paid iPhone apps for free for a limited time


Everyone likes Apple apps, but sometimes the best ones are a bit expensive. Now and then, developers put paid apps on sale for free for a limited time, but you have to snatch them up while you have the chance. Here are the latest and greatest iOS app deals available from the iOS App Store.

These apps normally cost money and this sale lasts for a limited time only. If you go to the App Store and it says the app costs money, that means the deal has expired and you will be charged. 

Jotalicious

Jotalicious is a beautifully designed shopping assistant that turns plain text lists into awesome color-coded checklists.

Available on:

iOS

Wonder Notes

Need to make a to-do list? Capture ideas at a board meeting? Plan next week’s blog post? With Wonder Notes you can do it all quickly, easily, and powerfully. Simply create as many notes as you want by populating them with text, pictures, maps, and URLs.

Available on:

iOS

Recapify

If you’re in the sales industry, this could be the app for you. Recapify helps sales reps communicate meeting results faster through integrations with Salesforce and Evernote.

Available on:

iOS

Translator

With Translator, you can translate any text between 58 world languages. All you have to do is select your source and target languages, type your text, and click on the translation button.

Available on:

iOS

Flashlight

This app promises to give you the easiest-to-use and fastest flashlight around. Just tap on it for instant bright light.

Available on:

iOS

iSurvival

This app contains a Military Grade Wilderness Survival Manual. This is the Army Survival manual (FM 21-76) used to teach soldiers basic survival and evasion techniques.

Available on:

iOS




2
Oct

The Morning After: Monday, October 2nd, 2017


This Monday morning, we’re getting surprise deep-space photos, laying out the struggles in getting power back in Puerto Rico and juggling our favorite Switch games in a bid to play… more Switch games.

ESA discovered that the last few packets of data it sent make up an image.

Rosetta probe’s last surprise: a photo of its landing site

newsRosetta_s_landing_site_to_scale640.j

It’s been a year since Rosetta landed on the comet it orbited for a couple of years, so you’d think ESA had already decoded everything the vessel sent back before its demise. Apparently, the probe has one last surprise for all of us: a close-up photo of its final landing site. The team keeping an eye on the probe’s OSIRIS camera thought they’d already downloaded all the images Rosetta took during its descent. Turns out the last photo’s transmission got interrupted before it was done.

What happened and how it’s likely to play out.
How Puerto Rico’s power crisis ends

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When Hurricane Maria crashed into Puerto Rico on September 20th, it found a vulnerable target. The country’s power plants are an average of 44 years old and rely on outdated oil-fired systems, while most plants in the United States are about 18 years old and use newer natural-gas generators. PREPA filed for bankruptcy in July, calling its own infrastructure “degraded and unsafe.”

Hurricane Maria made its way up the Caribbean on September 20th, bringing winds of 140 MPH and dumping 25 inches of rain on Puerto Rico. It devastated the island. Maria knocked out PREPA’s electrical systems, leaving 3.4 million people in the dark, with little hope of a quick recovery. Officials have suggested it will take four-to-six months for power to be restored.

And I still haven’t bought an SD card.
It took six months for my Nintendo Switch to run out of space

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When Nintendo announced its next game console was going to come with just 32GB of internal storage, Sean Buckley’s hopes for an all-digital Nintendo Switch weren’t looking good. However, between the tedium of swapping game cards and my fear of losing them, he wound up going all digital anyway. And, within six months, his Nintendo Switch ran out of space.

However, he didn’t buy a microSD card. Instead, he’s spent the last few months using Nintendo’s built-in data-management tool — a pop-up menu prompt that helps you clear out space for a new game by automatically culling your unplayed library.

(You could still just buy a card, Sean.)

In which we answer your burning tech questions.
Ask Engadget returns (and you should send us your questions)!

A long time ago in a far-away land called 2013, we used to run a feature called Ask Engadget, where you — our readers, fans, followers and critics — could ask our advice, opinions and recommendations on everything from cheap laptops and starter cameras to routers and email clients. We’re bringing it back, starting this month. If you’ve got questions, send ’em along to ask@engadget.com.

But wait, there’s more…

  • Smart tattoos turn your skin into a health tracker
  • After Math: Fly me to the Moon (and then on to Mars)
  • US pressured North Korea by overwhelming hackers with data traffic
2
Oct

Facebook hands over Russia-linked ads to Congress


Facebook is handing over evidence of 3,000 Russia-linked advertisements to congressional investigators today, following weeks of pressure from Congress to reveal details about its advertising system. The ads in question — which ran between June 2015 and May 2017 — are said to have been paid for by a Russian entity known as the “Internet Research Agency” with the apparent intention of fuelling political discord and exacerbating divisiveness, particularly during the presidential election.

Facebook isn’t planning on releasing the ads to the public, nor will it share further information about the details of the ads and who they were seen by. However, according to CNN, sources familiar with the issue claim they include Black Lives Matter posts, adverts promoting gun rights and posts depicting refugees as rapists. CNN also reported last week that at least one Black Lives Matter post was targeted at the cities of Baltimore and Ferguson, and that at least one campaign has attempted to incite outrage over police shootings.

In a live video address on Facebook, Mark Zuckerberg said, “It is a new challenge for internet communities to deal with nation-states attempting to subvert elections. But if that’s what we must do, we are committed to rising to the occasion.” In this instance, however, it seems that Facebook is largely rising to the pressure applied by Congress — the onus will now be on Congress, not Facebook, to release the ads to the public. Facebook has pledged to change its advertising systems to give more insight into the identity of those purchasing political advertisements in the future, but given the current political landscape, some might say that’s too little, too late.

Via: CNN

2
Oct

iPhone Movie ‘The Great Buddha+’ Receives Ten Golden Horse Nominations


Taiwanese movie “The Great Buddha+”, a dark comedy shot extensively on an iPhone 6 Plus, has picked up ten nominations in the Golden Horse Awards, including best feature film and best new director (via Variety).

Directed by Huang Hsin-yao and produced and lensed by acclaimed photographer Chung Mung-hong, the black-and-white film follows the voyeuristic antics of a pair of small-town Taiwanese nobodies, highlighting Taiwanese social issues in the process.

The Golden Horse Awards, which will be announced on November 25 in Taipei, are often considered one of the most prestigious film awards for Mandarin-language cinema, with movies from Taiwan, China, and Hong Kong regularly vying for honors.

In the running for the best film prize this year are “The Great Buddha+”, “The Bold, The Corrupt, and The Beautiful”, “Free and Easy”, “Love Education”, and “Angels Wear White”, which played recently in Venice and Toronto.

Tags: China, Taiwan
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2
Oct

Samsung Expected to Earn $4B More Making iPhone X Parts Than Galaxy S8 Parts


Samsung looks on course to earn around $4 billion more in revenue making parts for the iPhone X than from the parts it makes for its own flagship Galaxy S8 handset, according to new research revealed on Monday.

An analysis conducted by Counterpoint Technology for The Wall Street Journal based its prediction on projected sales in the 20 months after the new iPhones go on sale November 3. According to CounterPoint, the reason for the chosen time window is that the majority of sales for a new smartphone typically occur in the first 20 months after its debut.

Counterpoint expects Apple will sell 130 million iPhone X units, earning Samsung $110 on each through the summer of 2019, while Galaxy S8’s global sales are expected to be 50 million, earning Samsung $202 each from components such as displays and chips in its first 20 months of sales, according to estimates based on a projected bill of materials. The Counterpoint analysis includes parts sales from Samsung Electronics plus two Samsung affiliates that make batteries and capacitors.

Apple and Samsung are expected to be the world’s two most profitable companies in 2017, excluding Chinese banks, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence. Samsung’s components operation stands to make billions of dollars supplying the OLED screens and NAND flash memory chips for the new iPhone. Meanwhile, Apple hopes its new iPhone 8 and iPhone X range will boost its smartphone sales, which accounted for two-thirds of the company’s $215.64 billion revenue in fiscal 2016, according to investment bank CLSA.

WSJ reports that Apple and Samsung’s close association can be traced back more than a decade to when Lee Jae-yong — the grandson of Samsung’s founder — personally negotiated with Apple co-founder Steve Jobs to provide flash memory for iPods, according to people familiar with the matter.

That enduring relationship has strengthened in recent months, but mostly out of pure necessity. Samsung is one of only a small number of semiconductor makers that can make large amounts of NAND flash memory, and remains the only significant manufacturer of the OLED displays adopted by Apple for the iPhone X, tightening the dependence of the two companies on each other.

At meetings, Samsung executives are known to tell attendees who pull out iPhones: “It’s OK. They’re our best client,” according to people familiar with the matter.

Samsung employees often refer to Apple with code names. One of the most popular is “LO,” short for “Lovely Opponent,” people familiar with the matter said. Apple’s descriptor for Samsung, meanwhile, is Samsung, according to people with knowledge of the situation. Employees at the iPhone maker are often critical of its rival’s devices, pointing out software and hardware flaws behind closed doors.

The business relationship, however, hasn’t been without its ups and downs. In 2011, Apple sued Samsung over alleged patent infringement of its smartphones, leading Samsung to counter-sue with its own infringement allegations. Steve Jobs famously called the dispute – which remains unresolved to this day – a “thermonuclear” legal war.

KGI Securities analyst Ming-Chi Kuo has claimed OLED iPhone panel supply is “controlled wholly by Samsung”, which may have contributed to the $999 iPhone X’s high price. In a bid to reduce its dependency on Samsung parts going forward, Apple has recently encouraged OLED production by rival suppliers like Sharp and Japan Display, while also pursuing alternative sources of NAND flash, most recently by agreeing with Bain Capital and others to acquire Toshiba’s chip plant in a deal reportedly worth $17.7 billion.

Related Roundup: iPhone X
Tags: Samsung, OLED
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2
Oct

Suppliers Expect Rising Revenues in Q4 2017 from Sales of AirPods and Apple Watch S3


Upstream suppliers are expected to see strong growth in wearable product operations in the fourth quarter of this year thanks to rising sales of Apple’s AirPods and Apple Watch range, according to sources in the supply chain (via DigiTimes).

Quanta, Iventec, Universal Scientific Industrial (USI), as well as Foxconn subsidiaries Shunshin Tech and Luxshare-ICT are all expected to benefit from increased sales in Q4 2017, as Apple achieves supply/demand balance for its AirPods and consumer interest in the latest Apple Watch models increases into the holiday season.

Quanta and USI have been long-term supply-chain partners of the Apple Watch series and are expected to see a significant revenue contribution from the orders, while Shunsin has just recently joined the supply chain to provide SiP services and will begin processing related orders in February or March 2018, the sources noted.

As for the AirPods, the sources pointed out that the shortages have already eased and Apple has also increased its orders for the device.

Inventec is the manufacturer of the AirPods, while the device’s proprietary W1 chip that allows seamless pairing is supplied by Luxshare-ICT. In addition to the orders, Luxshare-ICT also supplies connectors, cables and antennas for Mac and iPhone products.

AirPods now ship from the online Apple Store in just three to five business days in the United States, Canada, U.K., Australia, and several other countries around the world. Prior to August, the popular earphones had been in extremely short supply, with a typical wait time of six weeks from order to delivery.

Meanwhile, Apple has been getting backordered Apple Watch Series 3 LTE models out quicker than expected, with several customers who expected their devices in mid-October already receiving shipment confirmations.

All Apple Watch Series 3 models with LTE connectivity list shipment dates of at least three to four weeks when purchased online in the United States, and availability is similarly limited in other countries, but indications are that the wait could in fact be shorter. Non-LTE Series 3 Apple Watch models are readily available in stores and will ship out right away, while Nike+ models won’t start arriving to customers until Thursday, October 5.

Related Roundups: Apple Watch, watchOS 4
Tag: AirPods
Buyer’s Guide: Apple Watch (Buy Now)
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2
Oct

Google Photos eases video sharing on slow connections


With Google pre-loading Google Photos on a range ofAndroid devices, it’s no wonder the app has racked up 500 million users. The search giant is already capitalizing on its success using AI-assisted tools that pester you to share more visuals. Now, it’s hellbent on eradicating any mobile signal barriers that could hinder your sharing pleasure. The app’s latest update builds on a feature unveiled earlier this year. Back in March, Photos began backing up images in a lower resolution when it detected weak connectivity, later giving the pics a high-res bump via Wi-Fi. That way you could upload and share lightweight preview pics on the go, without worrying about a signal dropout ruining your progress. Video fans will be happy to hear that same functionality is now available for recorded clips.

Download version 3.6 of Google Photos for Android and you should notice the change immediately. “We’ve reduced the wait time for sharing videos in Google Photos by uploading low-res copies for sharing, and later replacing them with the high-res versions,” reads the description on the Play Store. For now, the fun is limited to Android users.

There’s no mention of the exact resolution of the low-res copy the app generates. But, it should still prove a boon for sharing video files (which tend to be large) while traveling, or when your bandwidth isn’t up to scratch. As with images, your friends and family won’t be stranded with a pixelated clip, as Google will replace the copy with the high-res video.

Source: Google Photos (Play Store)

2
Oct

Sony’s updated PlayStation VR won’t block HDR


It’s been almost a year since Sony formally entered the virtual reality arena with the launch of the PlayStation VR (PSVR) headset. In that time, the unit has remained unchanged, but its pricing has slipped slightly, allowing gamers to enjoy popular titles like Superhot VR, Robinson: The Journey and Farpoint. Seemingly out of nowhere, Sony announced today that it’s working on an updated version of the headset and that it will come with integrated headphones and HDR passthrough support.

If you own or have worn a PSVR headset, you’ll know that the headphones need to be connected via the 3.5mm port on the side of the inline “remote.” It’s not particularly taxing, but it does mean there’s another cable loosely dangling around as you’re moving about a room. To improve this, Sony has updated the design of the headset to integrate the stereo headphones at the back of the unit, while simultaneously making the connection cable slimmer to reduce its overall profile.

In order to enable HDR passthrough, Sony’s new headset will ship with an updated PSVR Processor Unit. This will allow headset owners to enjoy HDR-compatible content on their TV without having to unplug the unit first. The PlayStation 4 got an HDR update last year, but it required manual disconnection to enable it.

Sony doesn’t say when we can expect the new headset to launch, but it did note that pricing would stay the same. The company has also warned existing owners that they will not be able to hotswap the Processor Unit in order to enjoy HDR content as the cabling is different. However, all PSVR games will operate as normal, so if you do upgrade from the CUH-ZVR1 to the CUH-ZVR2 model, nothing will change on that front.

Source: PlayStation Blog

2
Oct

Rosetta probe’s last surprise: a photo of its landing site


Since it’s been a year since Rosetta landed on the comet it orbited for a couple of years, you’d think the ESA had already decoded everything the vessel sent back before its demise. Apparently, the probe has one last surprise for all of us: a close-up photo of its final landing site. The team keeping an eye on the probe’s OSIRIS camera thought they’d already downloaded all the images Rosetta took during its descent. Turns out the last photo’s transmission got interrupted before it was done.

[Image credit: ESA/Rosetta/MPS for OSIRIS Team MPS/UPD/LAM/IAA/SSO/INTA/UPM/DASP/IDA]

OSIRIS principal investigator Holger Sierks said they found the last few packets of data the probe sent on their server and realized that they could make up another image. While Rosetta only managed to send over half the full photo’s data, the scientists were able to assemble a picture showing a patch of Comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko that’s about 3 feet across taken from 65 feet above the surface. As you can see above, it’s a bit blurry, but it still shows you what the probe’s final resting place looks like.

Source: ESA

2
Oct

World View successfully launches near-space balloon from its new HQ


World View’s dreams of replacing satellites with edge-of-space balloons have been long in the making, and not without some hiccups: its initial flight, which included KFC chicken in a publicity stunt,ended prematurely thanks to a leak. Things are going more smoothly this weekend, though. The startup has completed the first launch of a Stratollite balloon from its new headquarters in Tucson, where it hopes to turn balloon launches into a routine occurrence.

Right now, the balloons don’t exactly last long — World View’s longest-lasting flight was 27 hours, which would only be useful for the briefest of uses. However, the Tucson launch lays the groundwork for much more. It’s where World View will both launch and manufacture many of its balloons, and starts a new phase of refinement that could lead to balloons which stay afloat for months. That, in turn, could lead to balloons that replace satellites for long-term science experiments, weather tracking and observation (including for the military). There are even hopes for passenger pods that could enable everything from manned science missions to not-quite-space tourism.

Source: TechCrunch