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2
Aug

Reddit Suffers Data Breach With Hackers Obtaining Email Addresses From Some Users


Reddit this morning announced that it has suffered a data breach, with a hacker able to access email addresses from some current accounts and a 2007 database backup that included old salted and hashed passwords.

The data breach occurred between June 14 and June 18, with hackers accessing Reddit employee accounts through the company’s cloud and source code hosting providers rather than the site itself. Those systems used SMS-based two-factor authentication that failed, and the main attack happened through SMS intercept.

Reddit has a detailed list of what was accessed. A complete copy of an old database backup containing early Reddit user data was stolen, and Reddit says that the most significant data in the backup included account credentials (username and salted hashed passwords) email addresses, and public and private messages.

Email digests sent by Reddit in June 2018 were also obtained. This included usernames linked to an associated email address along with suggested posts from select subreddits.

Reddit is sending emails to users affected by the database hack, which does not impact people who signed up for reddit after 2007.

Customers who do not have an email address associated with their accounts or who did not check the “email digests” user preference are not affected by the email digest breach.

Reddit has informed law enforcement and is cooperating with an investigation and has taken measures to ensure privileged access to its systems are more secure.

Reddit says it will be resetting the passwords of affected users, but the site recommends all Redditors consider updating their passwords to something strong and unique, as well as enabling two-factor authentication. Reddit’s two-factor authentication is via authenticator app and is not vulnerable to SMS intercept.

Tag: Reddit
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2
Aug

Samsung Launches New Galaxy Tab S4 to Compete With iPad Pro


Samsung today announced the launch of its latest tablet, the Galaxy Tab S4, which, like Apple’s iPad Pro, has been designed as a computer replacement with productivity in mind.

The new 10.5-inch Galaxy Tab S4 is described as the “ultimate entertainment and multitasking assistant” thanks to the inclusion of Samsung DeX, which is the first time Samsung has built the feature into a tablet.

DeX is a docking solution that is designed to allow Samsung smartphone owners (and now tablet owners) to connect their devices to a keyboard, mouse, and monitor through a USB-C port, an HDMI port, and two USB ports. DeX on the Galaxy Tab S4 works using a simple HDMI adapter or with the DeX dock options and it offers true multitasking capabilities with users able to open multiple windows at one time.


Samsung is offering a $150 Book Cover Keyboard alongside the Galaxy Tab S4, which can be paired with DeX to transform the tablet into a PC alongside a Bluetooth mouse, but it will also work with any Bluetooth keyboard and mouse option.


Like other Samsung devices, the Galaxy Tab S4 can also be paired with the included S Pen, a stylus for taking notes, drawings, artwork, and other purposes.

Apple’s iPad Pro lineup, comparatively, includes an optional Smart Keyboard and Apple Pencil, along with the ability to pair third-party Bluetooth keyboards, but it does not support mouse functionality.

When it comes to hardware, the Galaxy Tab S4 is equipped with Qualcomm’s octa-core Snapdragon 835 processor, 4GB RAM, 64GB to 256GB of storage space that can be expanded with a microSD card, and a 7,300mAh battery that it boasts offers 16 hours of video playback, outpacing the iPad Pro’s 10 hour battery.


The tablet includes a 16:10 AMOLED display, and there is no Home button or fingerprint sensor on the device, with Samsung instead relying on facial recognition and iris scanning for biometric authentication.

Other features include quad speakers much like the iPad Pro, Bixby integration, 13-megapixel front and rear cameras, and a fast charging feature that charges the battery to full in 200 minutes.

Samsung’s new tablet is priced at $650 for 64GB of storage or $750 for 256GB of storage, which is on par with Apple’s pricing for the 10.5-inch iPad Pro. Apple charges $649 for the 64GB 10.5-inch iPad Pro, $799 for a 256GB version, and $999 for a 512GB version.


Samsung is releasing the new Galaxy Tab S4 on August 10, which is just after the company plans to unveil its new flagship Galaxy Note 9 device.

Apple also has a major tablet upgrade in the works with new iPad Pro models on the horizon, but it is not clear when the company will unveil them. The new tablets could come in September alongside new iPhones or Apple could wait until later in the fall, perhaps hosting a separate October event for new iPads and Macs.

2018 iPad Pro mockup via Álvaro Pabesio
Apple’s updated iPad Pro models are expected to offer a complete iPhone X-style redesign, doing away with the Home button, introducing slimmer bezels for more available screen space, and adopting Face ID and the TrueDepth camera system for biometric authentication.

Tag: Samsung
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2
Aug

How to Use macOS Mojave’s New Dynamic Desktop Feature


Apple in macOS Mojave introduced Dynamic Desktops, which are wallpapers that shift with the time of day, changing the lighting and look of the wallpaper with the progress of the sun across the sky.

For example, in the afternoon, the lighting in the wallpaper is at its peak brightness and the image of the Mojave desert is depicted as it would be if you visited it in the daytime with well-lit sand dunes and a bright blue sky.

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At night, the sky in the wallpaper shifts to darker blue to reflect that it’s now evening. The shift between daytime and nighttime happens gradually over the course of the day, so you’ll see subtle changes each time you look at your Mac’s display.


Dynamic Desktop is simple to enable. Here’s how:


Open up System Preferences.
Choose Desktop & Screensaver.
Select one of the options from the “Dynamic Desktop” section under “Desktop.”
Using the dropdown menu underneath the wallpaper’s name, make sure “Dynamic” is enabled.
At the current time, there are two wallpaper options in the macOS Mojave beta, which work with both Light and Dark Mode.

You can choose between the wallpaper that depicts the Mojave desert and a Solar Gradients wallpaper that shifts from a lighter sky blue in the daytime to a darker twilight blue. Apple is likely to add additional Dynamic Desktop options in the future.

Apple’s Dynamic Desktop feature relies on your location to be able to match the lighting of the wallpaper with the lighting outside, so to use it, you will need to have Location Services enabled.

Related Roundup: macOS Mojave
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2
Aug

Apple’s March to Trillion Dollar Market Cap May Take a Bit Longer Based on Latest Share Count


Apple has filed its quarterly 10-Q form with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission today, confirming that the company has a total of 4,829,926,000 outstanding shares on the stock market as of July 20, 2018. That’s down from 4,915,138,000 shares three months earlier as Apple has continued to buy back its own stock.

Based on multiplying the latest total by Apple’s closing stock price today of $201.50, the iPhone maker has a market cap of roughly $973 billion, making it ever so close to becoming a trillion dollar company.

The exact moment that Apple crosses the trillion dollar mark will be difficult to determine, as Apple continues to buy back and retire shares, reducing the number of outstanding shares. The total reflected in the 10-Q form is already nearly two weeks old, and has likely decreased over that time.

Everyone from investors to fanatical customers has been closely watching the AAPL ticker on the stock market to see if Apple will become the world’s only and arguably first publicly traded company with a trillion dollar valuation. Tech rivals Amazon, Microsoft, and Google parent company Alphabet are also in the race.

For now, the wait for $1,000,000,000,000 continues, but it doesn’t look like it will take much longer for Apple to pull off the feat.

Tag: AAPL
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2
Aug

New DHS cybersecurity command aims to protect U.S. from cyberattacks


Homeland Security is leading the charge on Apex. (Image: Modev)

In an effort to prevent and thwart cyberattacks, United States Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen announced the creation of a new National Risk Management Center to help protect the nation’s critical infrastructure. The center’s goal of protecting the banking, communications, and energy sectors was outlined at the National Cybersecurity Summit in New York.

Given the rise in cyberthreats against the United States, Nielsen wanted to create a place where private companies can get assistance if they’re experiencing a cyberattack. By creating a central authority where a company experiencing a cyberattack can seek the government’s help early on, the center hopes to be able to learn about the attack to help protect others in the same sector or industry from becoming victims.

“An attack on a single tech company can rapidly spiral into a crisis affecting the financial sector, energy systems, and health care,” Nielsen said, highlighting that the center will serve as a hub that brings together government experts and the private sector. “Our goal is to simplify the process, to provide a single point of access to the full range of government activities to defend against cyberthreats.”

DHS will begin by conducting a number of 90-day “sprints” to identify key priorities and needs. The center will eventually run simulations and cross-sector analyses to identify threats and points of weaknesses in U.S. infrastructure. The vision is to have the center be an emergency response team for public and private organizations undergoing cybersecurity threats.

In essence, the National Risk Management Center is designed to prevent a repeat of the NotPetya and WannaCry ransomware attacks in 2017. Damages from NotPetya are estimated in the billions of dollars, while WannaCry targeted infrastructure, such as airports and hospitals. “Government officials were spurred to create the new measure as security officials have warned that cyberattacks are ongoing and that a hack of key infrastructure could have disastrous effects,” CNN reported.

The center’s announcement comes as Nielsen sided with top U.S. intelligence officials in calling out Russia for meddling in the 2016 presidential elections. “Let me be clear: Our intelligence community had it right,” she said. “It was the Russians. It was directed from the highest levels.” And although the center’s purpose is to protect the financial, telecommunications, and energy industry initially, Nielsen announced that her department will also move forward with an election security task force, Wired reported.

Nielsen is also working with legislators to help expand DHS’ role in combatting cyberthreats.

“I’m working with Congress to pass legislation to establish a cybersecurity and infrastructure security agency within DHS,” Nielsen said. “This would recast what is now the National Protection and Programs Directorate, our cybersecurity arm, into an official, operational agency capable of better confronting digital threats. But we all know that waiting for Congress to act is like waiting for a new Game of Thrones book to come out.”

Editors’ Recommendations

  • Are smart cities as safe as we think they are? Security experts say not yet
  • Pay-n-pray cybersecurity isn’t working. What if we just paid when it works?
  • Duck, cover, and reboot your router? Why the FBI’s new warning is no joke
  • Microsoft stops a Russian attempt at hacking 2018 midterm elections
  • Homeland Security is worried about Gmail’s confidentiality mode



2
Aug

Samsung Galaxy Tab S4 hands-on review



Research Center:

Samsung Galaxy Tab S4

Android tablets have been floating in limbo for quite some time. Google never pushed developers to create apps designed specifically for tablets, unlike Apple did with the iPad, and that left a lackluster user experience when you wanted to get some work done. A Bluetooth keyboard or stylus never really helped. For productivity, your best bet was going the Windows route with a two-in-one like the Microsoft’s Surface line, or with Apple’s iPad range. Samsung’s trying to change all that with its latest tablet, the Galaxy Tab S4.

At a quick glance, the Tab S4 — a gorgeous device — looks like any other Android tablet. But Samsung has brought over its DeX desktop mode from its smartphones, which enables a far more productive interface. Let’s take a closer look, and we’ll explain what what we mean.

Refined design

The Galaxy Tab S4 has a much more contemporary look over last year’s Tab S3, and that’s thanks to uniform bezels around the 10.5-inch screen. The larger screen size (up from 9.7-inches last year) doesn’t mean the tablet is bigger, as the shrunken bezels helped Samsung maintain almost the same size.

Julian Chokkattu/Digital Trends

There’s no more home button or Samsung logo on the front, so it looks clean and minimal. In landscape orientation, the power button sits at the top edge, next to a volume rocker. You can double-tap the screen to turn it on, eliminating the need for a physical home button.

On the bottom edge in the same orientation is the pogo pin connector that can attach to Samsung’s keyboard cover (more on this later), and on the right edge is where you can plug a USB Type-C cable in to charge the Tab S4. There’s a headphone jack next to the charging port.

The Galaxy Tab S4 has a much more contemporary look over last year’s Tab S3.

Like last year’s Tab S3, there are four speakers tuned by AKG, the Austrian acoustics company, in the four corners of the Tab S4, but Samsung said the tablet sounds “louder than ever before” thanks to support for Dolby Atmos sound. The sound is spatial, but it didn’t get as loud as we’d like in a room with some background chatter. It doesn’t sound as good as the iPad Pro’s quad speaker setup, and we also noticed the Tab S4’s keyboard cover completely muffles the speakers, making them sound incredibly poor. It’s odd, considering you’ll likely want the tablet sitting upright with the keyboard cover when you’re playing music or videos, but we’ll have to do more testing to make sure this is a persistent problem.

The AMOLED screen is a different story — it’s absolutely gorgeous. With a 2,560 x 1,600-pixel resolution, the display is sharp, gets incredibly bright, and is vibrantly colorful. The 10.5-inch size also doesn’t feel too small. It’s lightweight and compact enough to carry around, and it will fit in your backpack or purse without any problems. There’s enough bezel around the screen to comfortably hold the tablet without touching the screen, too.

Julian Chokkattu/Digital Trends

The back of the tablet is all glass, which means you’ll want to take extra care handling it. There’s not much happening on the back — except for all the fingerprints it picks up — but the rear camera design, which seems inherited from early Galaxy devices, looks a little dated.

The Book Cover Keyboard costs $150 (although there’s a deal through September 8 that cuts the price in half), and it’s comfortable to type on. Placing the tablet inside is relatively quick and simple, though it’s due to this keyboard that the audio sounds muffled — there are bumpers covering the speakers, which seems like an oversight. Samsung also has a cover available without the keyboard.

The S Pen looks more like a fountain pen; it’s a lot more elegant.

Attached to the keyboard cover is a little cap you can slide the S Pen stylus into, which is included with the Tab S4. The S Pen looks more like a fountain pen; it’s a lot more elegant than previous iterations. It’s feels nice to hold and use, but we’d have liked if it had a bit more weight to it. It’s a little too lightweight, which makes it feel cheap and easily breakable.

Samsung has brought several S Pen features from the Galaxy Note 8 over to the Tab S4, including Screen Off Memo, which only works in tablet mode, but it lets you write on the screen without having to turn it on. There’s also Air Command, which lets you press the button on the S Pen to open up a list of apps for quick access; Live Message, where you can draw on photos and turn them into animated GIFs; and Translate, which translates text the S Pen is hovering over. In our brief time with it, we still don’t feel like the S Pen is a necessary addition to the Tab S4, and we’re more likely to utilize a Bluetooth mouse.

DeX interface

The highlight of the Tab S4 is the new DeX interface. Previously, you’ve only been able to place a Galaxy S8, S9, or Note 8 on Samsung’s DeX Station or DeX Pad docks, and connect it to a monitor to access Samsung’s DeX Android desktop interface. Now, when the Tab S4 connects to the keyboard, it automatically launches DeX.

Julian Chokkattu/Digital Trends

DeX is Samsung’s desktop Android mode, which adds a traditional operating system dock at the bottom with the Android navigation keys and an app drawer, and there’s a system tray on the bottom right so you can access settings and notifications. Apps sit on the home screen like a Windows laptop. You can open multiple app windows, and you can resize them all to your liking.

It’s immediately clear you’ll want to keep using DeX mode when this device is docked with a keyboard.

While every Android app will work in this mode, not every app will convert to a tablet interface. Almost all of Samsung’s apps will, and the company has gradually been adding support for more third-party apps. We spent a month last year using the DeX interface through a Galaxy S8 as a replacement to our laptop, and it was perfectly capable of handling most of our tasks, though we largely used Samsung’s web browser app. Things might get more tricky if you need to run specialized software, though DeX does work with virtual computers, and you still have access to every Android app available. We’ll be spending more time in this mode to see if it has improved.

Samsung Galaxy Tab S4 Compared To

Microsoft Surface Go

Apple 10.5‑inch iPad Pro

Apple iPad 9.7

Samsung Galaxy Tab S3

Apple iPad Air 2

LG G Pad 10.1

Lenovo ThinkPad 10

Microsoft Surface 2

Razer Edge Pro

Barnes & Noble Nook HD+

Dell Latitude 10

Dell XPS 10

Lenovo ThinkPad Tablet 2

Acer Iconia Tab W700

Acer Iconia Tab A700

You can switch back to the tablet interface at any time. It’s not as fast as we’d like — you need to open the quick settings menu, tap the DeX tile, and it will then take around 3 seconds to swap to tablet mode. A one-button switch on the system tray would have been a nicer alternative.

Standard Android 8.1 Oreo  is perfectly capable, though it’s immediately clear you’ll want to keep using DeX mode when this device is docked with a keyboard. We’d have liked Samsung to build a trackpad into the keyboard cover, so we wouldn’t have to rely on the touchscreen or a separate Bluetooth mouse.

Strong specs

The Galaxy Tab S4 is powered by Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 835 processor with 4GB of RAM. We haven’t done a lot of testing yet for this first look, but we didn’t run into any glaring problems with performance. It may be last year’s processor, but it should still be able to run almost everything you throw at it.

There are 64GB and 256GB models available, but a MicroSD card slot lets you add more space if you need it. The Tab S4 has a 13-megapixel camera on the rear and an 8-megapixel camera on the front, though we haven’t had a chance to test either yet.

Samsung has also thrown in a massive 7,300mAh battery inside, which the company said will make the tablet last through 16 hours of video playback. That’s quite impressive if it’s true, and we’ll certainly be testing those claims.

Price and availability

The Galaxy Tab S4 comes in Wi-Fi and LTE variants, though the latter will only be available through Verizon at launch. More carrier support will come in the third quarter, including Sprint and US Cellular.

Both models will be available for purchase starting August 10, with the Wi-Fi model up for sale through Amazon, Best Buy, and Samsung’s website. The 64GB model will set you back $650, and the 256GB version costs $750.

At $650, the Tab S4 is expensive, especially when you factor in an extra $150 for the keyboard cover. At $800, you can get plenty of other excellent Windows laptops, an iPad Pro, or almost any Chromebook. We’ll have to do a lot more testing to see if the Tab S4 is a viable laptop replacement with DeX mode, and whether it’s worth purchasing over the aforementioned products — stay tuned for a full review soon.

2
Aug

Samsung Galaxy Tab S4 hands-on review



Research Center:

Samsung Galaxy Tab S4

Android tablets have been floating in limbo for quite some time. Google never pushed developers to create apps designed specifically for tablets, unlike Apple did with the iPad, and that left a lackluster user experience when you wanted to get some work done. A Bluetooth keyboard or stylus never really helped. For productivity, your best bet was going the Windows route with a two-in-one like the Microsoft’s Surface line, or with Apple’s iPad range. Samsung’s trying to change all that with its latest tablet, the Galaxy Tab S4.

At a quick glance, the Tab S4 — a gorgeous device — looks like any other Android tablet. But Samsung has brought over its DeX desktop mode from its smartphones, which enables a far more productive interface. Let’s take a closer look, and we’ll explain what what we mean.

Refined design

The Galaxy Tab S4 has a much more contemporary look over last year’s Tab S3, and that’s thanks to uniform bezels around the 10.5-inch screen. The larger screen size (up from 9.7-inches last year) doesn’t mean the tablet is bigger, as the shrunken bezels helped Samsung maintain almost the same size.

Julian Chokkattu/Digital Trends

There’s no more home button or Samsung logo on the front, so it looks clean and minimal. In landscape orientation, the power button sits at the top edge, next to a volume rocker. You can double-tap the screen to turn it on, eliminating the need for a physical home button.

On the bottom edge in the same orientation is the pogo pin connector that can attach to Samsung’s keyboard cover (more on this later), and on the right edge is where you can plug a USB Type-C cable in to charge the Tab S4. There’s a headphone jack next to the charging port.

The Galaxy Tab S4 has a much more contemporary look over last year’s Tab S3.

Like last year’s Tab S3, there are four speakers tuned by AKG, the Austrian acoustics company, in the four corners of the Tab S4, but Samsung said the tablet sounds “louder than ever before” thanks to support for Dolby Atmos sound. The sound is spatial, but it didn’t get as loud as we’d like in a room with some background chatter. It doesn’t sound as good as the iPad Pro’s quad speaker setup, and we also noticed the Tab S4’s keyboard cover completely muffles the speakers, making them sound incredibly poor. It’s odd, considering you’ll likely want the tablet sitting upright with the keyboard cover when you’re playing music or videos, but we’ll have to do more testing to make sure this is a persistent problem.

The AMOLED screen is a different story — it’s absolutely gorgeous. With a 2,560 x 1,600-pixel resolution, the display is sharp, gets incredibly bright, and is vibrantly colorful. The 10.5-inch size also doesn’t feel too small. It’s lightweight and compact enough to carry around, and it will fit in your backpack or purse without any problems. There’s enough bezel around the screen to comfortably hold the tablet without touching the screen, too.

Julian Chokkattu/Digital Trends

The back of the tablet is all glass, which means you’ll want to take extra care handling it. There’s not much happening on the back — except for all the fingerprints it picks up — but the rear camera design, which seems inherited from early Galaxy devices, looks a little dated.

The Book Cover Keyboard costs $150 (although there’s a deal through September 8 that cuts the price in half), and it’s comfortable to type on. Placing the tablet inside is relatively quick and simple, though it’s due to this keyboard that the audio sounds muffled — there are bumpers covering the speakers, which seems like an oversight. Samsung also has a cover available without the keyboard.

The S Pen looks more like a fountain pen; it’s a lot more elegant.

Attached to the keyboard cover is a little cap you can slide the S Pen stylus into, which is included with the Tab S4. The S Pen looks more like a fountain pen; it’s a lot more elegant than previous iterations. It’s feels nice to hold and use, but we’d have liked if it had a bit more weight to it. It’s a little too lightweight, which makes it feel cheap and easily breakable.

Samsung has brought several S Pen features from the Galaxy Note 8 over to the Tab S4, including Screen Off Memo, which only works in tablet mode, but it lets you write on the screen without having to turn it on. There’s also Air Command, which lets you press the button on the S Pen to open up a list of apps for quick access; Live Message, where you can draw on photos and turn them into animated GIFs; and Translate, which translates text the S Pen is hovering over. In our brief time with it, we still don’t feel like the S Pen is a necessary addition to the Tab S4, and we’re more likely to utilize a Bluetooth mouse.

DeX interface

The highlight of the Tab S4 is the new DeX interface. Previously, you’ve only been able to place a Galaxy S8, S9, or Note 8 on Samsung’s DeX Station or DeX Pad docks, and connect it to a monitor to access Samsung’s DeX Android desktop interface. Now, when the Tab S4 connects to the keyboard, it automatically launches DeX.

Julian Chokkattu/Digital Trends

DeX is Samsung’s desktop Android mode, which adds a traditional operating system dock at the bottom with the Android navigation keys and an app drawer, and there’s a system tray on the bottom right so you can access settings and notifications. Apps sit on the home screen like a Windows laptop. You can open multiple app windows, and you can resize them all to your liking.

It’s immediately clear you’ll want to keep using DeX mode when this device is docked with a keyboard.

While every Android app will work in this mode, not every app will convert to a tablet interface. Almost all of Samsung’s apps will, and the company has gradually been adding support for more third-party apps. We spent a month last year using the DeX interface through a Galaxy S8 as a replacement to our laptop, and it was perfectly capable of handling most of our tasks, though we largely used Samsung’s web browser app. Things might get more tricky if you need to run specialized software, though DeX does work with virtual computers, and you still have access to every Android app available. We’ll be spending more time in this mode to see if it has improved.

Samsung Galaxy Tab S4 Compared To

Microsoft Surface Go

Apple 10.5‑inch iPad Pro

Apple iPad 9.7

Samsung Galaxy Tab S3

Apple iPad Air 2

LG G Pad 10.1

Lenovo ThinkPad 10

Microsoft Surface 2

Razer Edge Pro

Barnes & Noble Nook HD+

Dell Latitude 10

Dell XPS 10

Lenovo ThinkPad Tablet 2

Acer Iconia Tab W700

Acer Iconia Tab A700

You can switch back to the tablet interface at any time. It’s not as fast as we’d like — you need to open the quick settings menu, tap the DeX tile, and it will then take around 3 seconds to swap to tablet mode. A one-button switch on the system tray would have been a nicer alternative.

Standard Android 8.1 Oreo  is perfectly capable, though it’s immediately clear you’ll want to keep using DeX mode when this device is docked with a keyboard. We’d have liked Samsung to build a trackpad into the keyboard cover, so we wouldn’t have to rely on the touchscreen or a separate Bluetooth mouse.

Strong specs

The Galaxy Tab S4 is powered by Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 835 processor with 4GB of RAM. We haven’t done a lot of testing yet for this first look, but we didn’t run into any glaring problems with performance. It may be last year’s processor, but it should still be able to run almost everything you throw at it.

There are 64GB and 256GB models available, but a MicroSD card slot lets you add more space if you need it. The Tab S4 has a 13-megapixel camera on the rear and an 8-megapixel camera on the front, though we haven’t had a chance to test either yet.

Samsung has also thrown in a massive 7,300mAh battery inside, which the company said will make the tablet last through 16 hours of video playback. That’s quite impressive if it’s true, and we’ll certainly be testing those claims.

Price and availability

The Galaxy Tab S4 comes in Wi-Fi and LTE variants, though the latter will only be available through Verizon at launch. More carrier support will come in the third quarter, including Sprint and US Cellular.

Both models will be available for purchase starting August 10, with the Wi-Fi model up for sale through Amazon, Best Buy, and Samsung’s website. The 64GB model will set you back $650, and the 256GB version costs $750.

At $650, the Tab S4 is expensive, especially when you factor in an extra $150 for the keyboard cover. At $800, you can get plenty of other excellent Windows laptops, an iPad Pro, or almost any Chromebook. We’ll have to do a lot more testing to see if the Tab S4 is a viable laptop replacement with DeX mode, and whether it’s worth purchasing over the aforementioned products — stay tuned for a full review soon.

2
Aug

With Sprint’s flash sale, customers can lease an iPhone 8 for $8 per month


For those looking for a good deal on an iPhone, Sprint announced its flash sale. Until August 9, the carrier is offering the iPhone 8 for $8 per month to new and existing customers.

Of course, with any carrier deal, there are a few caveats. For starters, you have to sign up for the new line of service with the Sprint Flex lease plan. Introduced in 2017, the leasing program allows customers to lease a device for 18 months — after 12 monthly payments, you can swap it out for a new phone. If you want to own the device by the time the lease ends, you can either continue making monthly payments for an additional six months or pay off the remaining balance in one payment.

With the 64GB model of the iPhone 8, you’ll receive $21.17 per month in bill credit for the first two months and the remaining months will cost you $8 per month. In comparison, the iPhone 8 from Sprint would normally cost you $29.17 per month — making this an affordable deal.

But it’s important to note that if you plan on keeping the device at the end of the lease, you will end up paying a remaining balance of more than $500. So, you might be better off upgrading to a new device rather than shelling out a large sum of money toward the end.

In addition to the flash sale, Sprint also included its new revamped unlimited plans announced last month. While the carrier originally only offered the Unlimited Freedom Plan, it’s now offering the Unlimited Basic and the Unlimited Plus plan.

The Unlimited Basic Plan is geared for those who aren’t looking for a plan that’s too feature heavy. It costs $60 per line with a second line for $40 and every line after that will come out to $20 (with AutoPay). You will receive unlimited talk, text, and data in the United States along with unlimited talk and text in Mexico and Canada — among a few other perks, including a Hulu subscription. One downside is that your LTE hotspot data is reduced from 10GB to 500MB and video streams up to only 480p.

Meanwhile, the Unlimited Plus plan is more of an upgrade — offering a few more featured. In addition to unlimited talk, text, and data in the United States, you have 15GB of mobile hotspot data and streaming in full HD — up to 1080p. As for pricing (after AutoPay), it will come out to $70 for the first line and $50 for the second — each line after that will come out to $30 each.

As for Sprint’s flash sale, the promotion is currently going on. Customers can only sign up for it through Sprint’s site or by calling the carrier’s toll-free number.

Editors’ Recommendations

  • How to buy the Apple iPhone 8 and iPhone 8 Plus
  • 8 months after its release, the iPhone 8 outsells the new Galaxy S9
  • The best iPhone 8 Plus cases and covers
  • The 22 best iPhone 8 cases
  • The trickiest iPhone 8 problems, and advice on how to fix them



2
Aug

Possible Intel road map shows 9th-generation desktop CPUs arriving in 2018


Chinese website XFastest provides slides of what appears to be Intel’s processor roadmap for the remainder of 2018 and into 2019. Although the slides could be fake, they mirror recent rumors that Intel’s ninth-generation processors would begin to surface in the next several months. The roadmap shows the Core i7-9900K, the Core i7-9700K, the Core i5-9600K and the Core i5-9400 arriving in the third quarter.

These chips will be a refresh of Intel’s eighth-generation design for desktop chips, aka Coffee Lake-S, rather than its upcoming “true” ninth-generation “Ice Lake” design. This isn’t unusual for Intel as seen with the launch of its eighth-generation CPU family in August 2017 although those initial chips, based on a refreshed seventh-generation design, targeted thin-and-light laptops instead of desktops.

As previously reported, the Core i9-9900K will supposedly introduce an eight-core Intel chip to the mainstream market with a base speed of 3.6GHz, a maximum boost speed using two cores at 5GHz, and 16 threads. Meanwhile, the Core i7-9700K will supposedly be an eight-core chip as well but without Hyper-threading technology. It will have a base speed of 3.6GHz and a maximum boost speed of 4.9GHz using just one core.

Meanwhile, on the Core i5 front, the upcoming Core i5-9600K will supposedly be a six-core chip with no Hyper-threading, a base speed of 3.7GHz, and a maximum turbo speed of 4.8GHz using two cores. The Core i9-9400 will be a six-core chip as well, no Hyper-threading, a base speed of 2.9GHz and a maximum turbo speed of 4.1GHz using one core.

For the uninitiated, the “K” suffix means the processors will be unlocked, allowing you to overclock the chip’s speeds. The Core i9-9900K, the i7-9700K, and the i5-9600K will supposedly have a power draw of 95 watts while the “locked” Core i5-9400 will only have a power draw of 65 watts.

As for the first and second quarters of 2019, there are currently no labeled parts on the roadmap, but merely unnamed chips that will be based on the eighth-generation Coffee Lake-S refresh. Based on the slide, Intel could release another Core i9 part, a second Core i7 part, two Core i5 chips, and four Core i3 processors.

As Intel stressed during its recent 2018 second-quarter earnings call, the company is quite pleased with its 14nm product roadmap as it leads into 2019. The company’s seventh-generation “Kaby Lake” products introduced in 2016 are based on the 14nm+ process technology while the current eighth-generation chips are based on a refined 14nm++ process technology. Chips slated for 2019 are expected to use the 14nm+++ node (aka the third 14nm revision) while Intel’s 10nm process won’t mass produce chips until the end of 2019.

Intel is in dire need of an eight-core processor for the mainstream market given AMD introduced eight-core chips in 2017 with the launch of its first Ryzen processors. The only eight-core chip residing outside Intel’s server-focused processor family is the Core i7-7820X chip for enthusiasts released in 2017 packing eight cores, 16 threads, a base speed of 3.6GHz and a maximum boost of 4.3GHz. It currently sells for $400.

Editors’ Recommendations

  • Leak shows Intel’s 9th-gen Core i7 desktop CPU won’t have hyper-threading
  • Intel may debut a Core i9 desktop CPU for the general market in 2018
  • Intel’s 9th-generation processor could launch next month with 8 cores
  • Intel’s 10nm CPU finally makes it to retail in a refreshed Lenovo IdeaPad laptop
  • Intel’s 10nm ‘Cannon Lake’ processors won’t arrive until the 2019 holiday season



2
Aug

Windows 10 update adds support for continuity functions via Your Phone app


Microsoft is rolling out a new update for testers in its Windows Insiders program that delivers iOS-like continuity features to Windows 10. Windows 10 Insider Preview Build 17728 (RS5) is now available for users in the Fast ring, making it easier to access content between your Windows PC and your smartphone. Through the new Your Phone app, Microsoft will allow smartphone users to mirror content from their devices to their Windows 10 PC.

Microsoft initially announced the feature earlier this year at its Build conference, promoting features like the ability to view messages, photos, and notifications from your phone directly from your PC. However, in a blog post detailing the latest features of the 17728 release, Microsoft only mentioned a few features, and capabilities vary depending on which smartphone platform you’re using. In this build, Android users will only be able to access photos on the phone from their desktop, and iPhone owners will be able to share webpages between the phone and PC to continue the browsing experience.

“Snap a pic on your Android, see it on your PC. You can finally stop emailing yourself photos,” Microsoft detailed in its blog post. “With Your Phone app, your Android’s most recent photos sync to your PC automatically. Need to add a photo to your presentation? Want to spruce up that selfie with some Windows Ink action? Just drag and drop.”

Microsoft did not mention the ability to view notifications or messages in this Windows 10 update. In the past, various PC manufacturers, including HP and Dell, have bundled software to make it easier to interact with your phone through the Windows desktop.

To begin using the Your Phone experience, Microsoft recommends you open the app on your Windows 10 PC after you install the latest update to begin the process of linking your phone. For Android devices, Android 7.0 or higher is required. “For PCs tied to the China region, Your Phone app services will be enabled in the future,” Microsoft said.

In addition to the new Your Phone features, Microsoft also made added some improvements to Narrator and made a number of performance fixes with this latest build.

There are, however, a few notable known issues with the build. Microsoft is aware of an issue with Start reliability and performance issues, and users with Windows Mixed Reality headsets may need to re-pair their controllers for a second time before they start appearing in the handset. Developers in the Fast ring must remain in same ring to enable additional content, such as activating developer mode.

Editors’ Recommendations

  • Windows is back on your phone, and this time it’s a good thing
  • Don’t get too comfortable! At Build 2018, Microsoft showed plans to change Windows
  • SwiftKey is coming to Windows 10 to improve touchscreen typing
  • How to download the Windows 10 April 2018 Update
  • Microsoft’s latest Windows 10 Insider Preview release all about fighting malware