Amazon is developing a new ‘Conan the Barbarian’ series
Conan the Barbarian is getting new TV treatment. As part of Amazon’s push into the fantasy genre, the company is developing drama series Conan, based on the books by Robert E. Howard. This literary retelling of the classic 1932 tale will see our unlikely hero searching civilisation to find a place and purpose in a world that rejects him as a savage.
There are already a host of respected TV names attached to the project, including Ryan Condal from Colony, Miguel Sapochnik from Game of Thrones, and Warren Littlefield from Fargo and The Handmaid’s Tale. There’s no word yet on when it’s likely to hit our screens, nor who will take the role of the iconic character. He’s most famously been played by Arnold Schwarzenegger, so whoever it is will have some big furs to fill.
Source: Deadline
Watch SpaceX’s Falcon Heavy launch today at 1:30 PM ET
Today, SpaceX will attempt to launch the Falcon Heavy rocket for the first time. The launch window is between 1:30 PM ET and 4:00 PM ET. If you’d like to watch the launch (and trust me, you definitely want to), then you can livestream it below. The stream will go live about 15–20 minutes before the launch window opens. Because this is a demo flight of a new rocket, though, delays can and should be expected.
The payload for the rocket’s demo launch will be a red Tesla roadster, complete with a SpaceX spacesuit in the front seat. Because this is a test launch, there is no official payload; two more Falcon Heavy launches are scheduled for later this year. SpaceX will try to land all of the Falcon Heavy’s boosters; the two flanking boosters will attempt a landing near the launch pad, while the middle booster will head for a drone ship. Whether SpaceX encounters success or failure, tomorrow’s launch should be a thing to behold.
Twitter’s AR boss departs after 18 months
Twitter’s head of AR/VR, Alessandro Sabatelli, has announced he’s leaving the company after just 18 months with the site. His departure comes during a period of AR activity for Twitter’s competitors — Apple, Google and Facebook have all been busy showing off their AR/VR development platforms — while things have been relatively quiet for Twitter, whose most significant work in the area was its work on Live 360 video in Periscope in December 2016. With no word yet on Sabatelli’s replacement, or if he will be replaced at all, it seems likely that Twitter is now revisiting its plans for, and position within, the AR space.
After three and a half years I’m moving on from Twitter (actual elapsed time 18 months). It’s been an incredible ride and I’ve had the great pleasure to work alongside some amazing people! Together we managed to ship product while having fun. Thanks everyone #👊 pic.twitter.com/i0v9P9clrK
— Alessandro Sabatelli (@s4l4x) February 6, 2018
Via: TechCrunch
Source: Twitter
Apple’s Planned Flagship Store in Melbourne, Australia Faces Backlash From City Council Over its Design
In December, Apple announced its plans to open a new flagship retail location at the Federation Square shopping center in Melbourne, Australia in 2020. Since that announcement, many locals have come out against the store and the demolition of the existing Yarra building, arguing that the public space in Federation Square should stay that way and not be “given up” to a corporation.
This week, Apple’s planned store has faced new backlash in regards to its design, coming from the Melbourne City Council (via the Australian Broadcasting Corporation). During a city council meeting on Tuesday it was reported that Apple’s design proposal for the location was “overwhelmingly” rejected by the community through about 800 public submissions disliking the look of the store.
Image via Federation Square’s website.
Melbourne councillors then “unanimously backed” a motion to lobby the government for a new store design and public consultation on the project, and now await to see if the government will accept or reject its proposal. Councillor Nicholas Reece was said to have described the proposed store as a “Pizza Hut pagoda.”
If the Government rejects the council’s proposal, then the administration will encourage Upper House MPs to disallow the planning scheme amendment enabling the project.
Councillor Leppert said the council lacked the power to block the development from going ahead. “This is one of the strongest positions we have taken,” he said.
“It reminds me of a Pizza Hut pagoda and I just think it’s like something that’s rolled off an Apple Store production line,” Cr Reece said.
Apple last month said the Federation Square location “respects the original vision for the plaza, with a bespoke design concept and extensive landscaping bringing increased opportunities for the community to enjoy this renowned cultural hub.”
Despite uniting against the design of the store, Melbourne councillors are reportedly divided regarding further commercial development in Federation Square. Councillor Reece mentioned “with the right design,” Apple’s appearance in the area “could be a good thing.” As pointed out by ABC in December, before becoming favored by the community today, Federation Square itself was a “controversial piece of architecture” when it was first built in 2002, “with many people dismissing it as ugly and strange.”
Tags: Australia, Apple retail
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HomePod Availability is Tightening Ahead of Friday’s Launch
HomePod supply is beginning to dwindle ahead of the speaker’s launch this Friday across the United States, United Kingdom, and Australia.
Apple Store pickup is now unavailable for the HomePod in all three countries, following several days of launch day availability, while delivery estimates for online orders of the speaker in Space Gray and White have been pushed back to February 12 in both Australia and the United Kingdom.
HomePod orders placed today on Apple’s online store are still estimated for delivery on February 9 in the United States, when limited quantities of the speaker will be made available to walk-in customers at select Apple Stores and resellers, including Best Buy, John Lewis, Harvey Norman, Telstra, and EE.
Apple still lists most orders in the “Preparing for Shipment” stage, but that should soon change to “Shipped” as Friday draws closer. As noted in our forums, some customers have already been able to obtain a UPS tracking number.
HomePod sales will long be a subject of debate, as Apple’s delivery estimates only serve as anecdotal evidence of exact supply and demand. We’ll likely never know for certain, as the speaker will be grouped under “Other Products” in Apple’s earnings results alongside products like the Apple TV and Apple Watch.
The embargo for HomePod reviews has just lifted this morning, with articles from The Verge, The Wall Street Journal, CNET, TechCrunch, iMore, and others. We’ll have a more in depth roundup to share shortly.
Related Roundup: HomePodBuyer’s Guide: HomePod (Buy Now)
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Snapchat redesign adds colorful text, while all users can mute specific chats
Snapchat’s Stories format, as well as several other features like augmented reality masks, have been widely imitated. But this time Snapchat could be the one doing the imitating. Snapchat recently confirmed that, for users already using the big redesign in the U.K., Australia, and Canada, new type designs are beginning to roll out. The update comes on the heels of Instagram’s Type Mode that allows users to add text photo-free to Stories.
When typing on a Snap, the update allows users to choose from the classic option, big text or a glow or rainbow effect, bringing more options into the way the text looks over that image. The update expands options inside the existing type tool.
Unlike Instagram’s version, there doesn’t appear to be a way to type without a photo. Instagram’s Type Mode only launched last week — though tests of the feature leaked prior to that — so Snap Inc. and Instagram could have been working on similar features simultaneously with only a few days between the launches.
Snapchat confirmed to TechCrunch that the new type options are rolling out, but only to users that already have access to the big redesign. Announced in 2017, the design overhaul attempts to make the app easier to understand for newbies as Snapchat tries to expand its user base. The update’s global rollout has been delayed, however, with the changes only available in Australia, Canada, and the U.K.
Another recent update is accessible to users that haven’t seen Snapchat’s new look yet — a Do Not Disturb mode for temporarily muting conversations. The feature rolled out a few weeks ago, but without any formal announcement and only gesture controls to access the tool, the feature has gone largely unnoticed. Users need to tap and hold on a friend or a group and tap settings to turn the mode on.
Snapchat says that the person on the other end of the Do Not Disturb won’t receive a notification that they have been silenced. Users can still go in and participate in the conversation, see Snaps and send them — they just won’t receive a notification for every new message.
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Hours before launch, SpaceX posts Falcon Heavy animation with Bowie soundtrack
We’re just hours away from SpaceX attempting the debut launch of its huge Falcon Heavy rocket, an event that’ll make it “the most powerful operational rocket by a factor of two,” as SpaceX CEO Elon Musk once pointed out.
A new video animation released on Monday shows how the SpaceX team would love the test launch to go, but as Musk has said on several occasions over the last year, there’s a good chance the whole thing could quite literally go up in smoke. Following the mother of all explosions, that is.
With Bowie’s Life on Mars (the mission is heading there, y’see) as its soundtrack, the animation begins with the almighty Falcon Heavy — essentially three Falcon 9 rockets strapped together — ready to launch at the Kennedy Space Center. Just before the 27 Merlin engines fire up, we glimpse the rocket’s Tesla Roadster payload (well, they wanted to send something) at the tip of the Heavy. Musk said he loves “the thought of a car drifting apparently endlessly through space and perhaps being discovered by an alien race millions of years in the future.”
With the countdown complete, the Heavy roars into life, generating 5 million pounds of thrust, equal to 18 Boeing 747 aircraft, as it lifts off the ground. As with the previous Falcon 9 launches, the Heavy’s boosters will return to Earth for reuse — part of SpaceX’s plan for lowering the cost of space travel.
The animation shows the two side boosters returning pretty much at the same time, landing back at the Kennedy Space Center. The center core, however, travels on further and so comes back a little later, touching down on a SpaceX drone ship in the Atlantic Ocean.
If all goes to plan with the second stage, “at max velocity the Roadster will travel 11 km/s (7mi/s) and travel 400 million km (250 million mi) from Earth,” passing Mars and entering into an orbit around the sun.
Musk’s private space company points out that despite the new rocket on this occasion carrying a car instead of a crew, the “Falcon Heavy was designed from the outset to carry humans into space and restores the possibility of flying missions with crew to the moon or Mars.”
So, fingers crossed for Tuesday’s much-anticipated mission. And here’s hoping Musk won’t have to add it to his rocket booster bloopers video.
The launch window is between 1:30 p.m. and 4:30 p.m. ET on February 6. Check out the live feed for something truly spectacular. Because it will be, whatever happens.
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iPhones are now part of cops’ crime-fighting kit in New York City
The cops of New York City have a new crime-fighting tool — the iPhone.
Having finally decided that Windows-based phones aren’t the future, the New York Police Department is now in the process of ditching its Lumia handsets and replacing them with thousands of Apple-made devices.
The iPhones-for-cops plan was first revealed last summer, and this week the New York Daily News reported that the transition is now well and truly underway.
Officers have been dropping by an old police academy in Manhattan to swap their Lumia for an iPhone 7 or 7 Plus. With some 36,000 officers waiting to get their hands on the new phone, it’s clearly going to take some time to complete the changeover, though police in the Bronx and Staten Island are already getting to grips with their new device.
NYPD Deputy Commissioner for Information and Technology Jessica Tisch told the Daily News they’re giving out around 600 iPhones a day, adding that they’re seeing “a lot of excitement” among cops collecting their new handset.
New York’s finest are using their smartphones for a number of tasks, including filling out crime reports and receiving videos and surveillance pictures of wanted suspects. When responding to calls, the device also provides officers with any criminal history connected to an address, which may give them a better idea of what to expect when they arrive.
Officer Christopher Clampitt told the Daily News that these days, 911 dispatches often come over the phone before the department radio, adding that an alert to his 911 app last year helped him and his partner to reach a robbery that was in progress, enabling them to stop it and make an arrest. Clampitt said that if they’d waited for the radio, the response time would’ve been slower and the suspect could’ve escaped.
The police department won’t be forking out any extra cash for its new handsets as it’s defined as a hardware upgrade, according to the terms of its AT&T contract.
While the cops seemed happy with the way the Lumia 830 and 640 XL phones helped them with their daily duties, Microsoft last year ended support for the Windows Phone 8.1 operating system that powered them, prompting the NYPD to consider an alternative device.
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Honor 9 Lite unveiled for UK, starts at just ÂŁ199 for a quad-shooter

The Honor 9 Lite offers some impressive features at an affordable price.
Huawei has unveiled the Honor 9 Lite, the latest of its “Lite” series of phones, with a focus on photography at a low price point. Delivering a sleek, premium design in a budget package, the handset packs impressive features for the price, including an 18:9 full HD display, dual rear and front-facing cameras, and a premium glass finish.
The Honor 9 Lite is powered by the company’s own Kirin 659 chipset and 3GB RAM, with 32GB of internal storage. This accompanies the device’s 18:9 full HD edge-to-edge display, coming in at 5.65 inches. Dual rear and front-facing cameras are also onboard, at 13 MP and 2 MP respectively, with software improvements that follow. Other highlights include a 3,000 mAh battery, a rear fingerprint reader and Android 8.0 Oreo with EMUI 8.0.
The Honor 9 Lite comes with a premium finish, sporting a “mirror-like” glass design rivaling higher-end phones. This finish will be offered in Sapphire Blue, Midnight Black, and Glacier Gray variants. The device also retains the beloved 3.5 mm headphone jack, however at the trade-off of a Micro USB port.
The Honor 9 Lite starts at ÂŁ199, available on February 9, 2018. The device will be available across various leading retailers, including Amazon, Argos, and Very.




Updated, February 6, 2018: New images obtained at the Honor 9 Lite launch event.
Chromebook vs. Android tablet: Which is best?

Sometimes, even the biggest smartphone isn’t big enough.
Mobile means more than just phones. Since the first Android tablet back in 2011, plenty of us have found that things, like watching videos or playing a game, can be better on a bigger display and there are some great tablet options to choose from, both cheap and expensive. Ask anyone with a Galaxy Tab S3 and they’ll tell you about the incredible display and how thin and light it is. Or talk to people who are still using the trusty Shield Tablet and they’ll let you know it’s dependable, great for gaming, and NVIDIA just keeps updating it and updating it.
The Best Android Tablet
But there is another way to have Android apps — the same apps as you would find on your phone or tablet — on a big screen. Google has doubled down on Chromebooks and after a sluggish start, pretty much every Chromebook you can buy new today will be able to install Android apps through Google Play. This makes a Chromebook a lot more attractive for many of us.
The Best Chromebook
But which should you choose if you want the big-screen experience from the apps you use now and the apps you’ll want to use? Form factor plays a part in your choice, but there are some other considerations, too.
Convertibles can feel clunky, but so are tablet keyboards

Soon some company will make a Chromebook with a detachable keyboard; it has to happen. In the meantime, most Chromebooks have a hinge system that allows you to fold the keyboard back under the display and use it as you would a tablet.
This works and also lets you stand your Chromebook like an easel for watching a video or sharing a presentation. But it’s not the most svelte-feeling experience you’ll ever find. Even the Pixelbook, which is paper thin and still nice and light when in “tablet mode” leaves you with an exposed keyboard on the back. A Chromebook will shut down the keyboard so you’re not pressing keys willy-nilly, but it doesn’t compare to a tablet when you’re holding it in your hands. And unless a case company gets really creative, it never will.

At the other end of the experience, using a tablet with a Bluetooth keyboard can often be frustrating. You have one more thing to charge, Bluetooth can be finicky and connection issues are common, and if you’re a fast typist you’ll quickly notice the intermittent input lag. The keys themselves won’t have the “action” of a laptop keyboard and there’s no trackpad. It’s obvious from the start that even the best tablet keyboard is an accessory, not part of the experience.
How you want to use your big-screen Android makes a lot of difference here. If you want something you can hold in your hands that’s super-thin and will be using it this way most of the time, a tablet might be a better choice. That’s how they are designed to be used, and a good keyboard folio or case will be there for the odd times when you need to do a lot of typing.
Android and Chrome is a software masterpiece

Android itself is mostly the same on a tablet and a Chromebook. Android apps designed for the home screen or the interface being the exception; icon packs, widgets, wallpaper apps, and the like aren’t available for a Chromebook because they won’t have anything to do. But you can find themes from the Chrome Store to spiffy up the desktop.
You’ll also run across apps that won’t work with your particular model because of hardware or software version. That goes for both tablets and Chromebooks and with well over a million apps in one place they will always be there. Other than these differences, apps look, work, and feel mostly the same.
A huge advantage for a Chromebook though is the web browser. Chrome OS has a fantastic desktop web browser. Even better than Chrome on Windows or a Mac. It’s fast, efficient, and there are thousands and thousands of extensions and apps that can plug into it.

It’s also completely siloed from any other app, which means there’s no way for an Android app from Google Play to get to the private data — passwords, credit card info, or anything else — you have stored in Chrome. Android apps run natively on a Chromebook, but they are in what’s called a “container” that can run independently from other parts of the software. This does have one drawback because for now, Android apps don’t have access to SD card data. that’s a solvable issue and we’re pretty sure Google is working on a way to securely share the SD card with Android apps. Once that happens, you’ll also be able to use an external hard drive or networked hard drive as SD storage for almost unlimited space.
So ask yourself, how important is the browser? If being on the web — and that includes things like the full interface for Facebook, YouTube, or Reddit — is important, the Chromebook is clearly superior when it comes to the software. You’ll be able to play the same games, use the same social apps or work apps, and have the whole web available instead of the mobile-optimized web. Until the internet catches up and optimizes everything for mobile, that’s a pretty big difference.
It’s all about how you use it

Android isn’t perfect on a big screen, and companies like Samsung have done what they can to make it better for their tablets, but for the most part, Android on a Chromebook gives you a better software experience than Android on a tablet.
Tablets were designed to be held and used, while a Chromebook is a laptop with a keyboard attached. That makes a difference if you plan to keep it in your hands while you’re doing your thing. Tablet makers have some nice keyboards you can pair, but they don’t offer the seamless experience a laptop will. And folding the screen over the keyboard can make a Chromebook into a tablet, but it’s usually thick, can be a little heavy, and you’re holding on to the keyboard around the back.
Decide how you’ll be using it and what you want to do with it, and the answer becomes obvious.
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