Resident Evil 2 for PlayStation 4: Everything you need to know
The battle of the G-Virus starts all over again
Close your eyes and imagine yourself back to 1998. You’re on the couch eating Cookie Crisp when you load up your PlayStation and Resident Evil 2 starts up. Now, you won’t have to imagine you’re playing one of your favorite childhood games, you’ll actually be able to play it in real life. This year at E3 2018 Capcom took the world by storm by showing us a trailer for their upcoming game, Resident Evil 2: the remake.
Not only will you be able to play this classic edition of Resident Evil, but you’ll be able to do so on your shiny PlayStation 4. With improved graphics and gameplay I’m ready to lose a few days out of my life to binge this game. If you’re interested in the new remake of Resident Evil 2, read on below to learn everything you’ll need to know!
What’s new with Resident Evil 2?
Ahead of the acclaimed survival horror’s anticipated remake, keep up to date on all new information that we receive, from trailers to gameplay details and everything in between.
September 18, 2018
While E3 gave us our first look at Leon’s gameplay, Gamescom 2018 graced us with new footage showing off Claire Redfield. As Claire is in the midst of a vicious boss battle, the developer also took part in an interview with IGN discussing how it felt to return to these iconic characters with a more robust engine.
For players looking to have a more difficult or easier experience, Resident Evil 2 is implementing a feature similar to that which debuted in Resident Evil 4 to do just that.
“In terms of the standard difficulty, it does adjust based on player performance,” said producer Yoshiaki Hirabayashi in an interview with VG247. “I’d like to believe that you were doing really well and so the difficulty ramped up even more. But we have it tuned so that no matter how well you’re doing, there’s always going to be that sense of dread and tension there.
“Also, we are definitely implementing things that assist the player if they choose to utilize that stuff such as auto game. If a player thinks, hey, I’d rather have an easier time going through this, we will have those sorts of options as well.”
In terms of performance, Capcom confirmed that the game would support 4K on both PlayStation 4 Pro and Xbox One X with “a stable, high-framerate experience.”
Earlier comments from brand manager Mike Lunn regarding its performance seemed to indicate that players would have a choice between either 4K or 60FPS on higher-end consoles, but could not play with both simultaneously. It’s unclear if Capcom is working to enable a 4K at 60FPS mode.
Update June 13, 2018: Capcom confirms both Fourth Survivor and Tofu modes will be included in the game.

Everyone remembers how hard and outright ridiculous it was to try beating Resident Evil 2 as a massive piece of Tofu. You read that right. After you completed the main campaign of the game you unlocked the Tofu Mode, which allowed you to take the form of a giant piece of Tofu and make all the zombies go Vegan. Another mode you could unlock if you completed both Leon and Claire’s campaigns with A rankings, was the Fourth Survivor mode. This is a mode where item boxes weren’t connected, aiming was manual and included a few proto-type only options that weren’t available on other modes. Capcom has confirmed that both of these modes will be included in the remake and I don’t think I’ve stopped screaming yet.
Gameplay
The second trailer shown at E3 gave us glimpses of gameplay. One thing that’s been confirmed from this video is that you’ll be playing from a (now) popular third person view from the perspective of over Claire or Leon’s shoulder. The old Resident Evil games were played from a fixed camera angle which was bittersweet to say the least.
During the press release Capcom confrimed we would still have some gameplay modes from the original game, but with modernized controls.
A look into the world

Another big mention during the press release was “- the characters themselves appear sharper than ever and the grotesque hordes of zombies are brought to life with a horrifyingly realistic wet gore effect. Zombies now react in real time as they take instant visible damage, making every bullet from the player count. Stunning lighting brings the familiar rooms and corridors of Raccoon City Police Department to new life.”
This means it’s not just a simple remaster where they took the told game and threw some new graphics updates on it. The remake for Resident Evil 2 is built from the groud up and I can’t wait to see what it looks like.
A few familiar faces

We’re back in Raccoon city and it looks like we’ll be revisitng our old friends Leon Kennedy and Claire Redfield as playable characters in this remake, much like we were able to in the original. Not just that, but from the looks of the trailers I see Mr. X and WIlliam Birkin as well. I know some people aren’t a fan of playing remastered or rebuilt games, but hear me out on this one.
Capcom officials have noted, “- has been completely rebuilt from the ground up for a deeper narrative experience. Using Capcom’s proprietary RE Engine, Resident Evil 2 offers a fresh take on the classic survival horror saga”
So this most certainly won’t just be another remasted game. Details are thing but I’m willing to bet with all the information we have now that you’re going to see aspect of the story you’ve never seen before. And, if that’s the case, it will have to come with all new missions that you won’t know all the answers to because you beat the game 100 times when you were twelve.
Release date and pre-order options

Mark your callenders, January 25, 2019 is the date you want to save for this game to release. If you’re interested in pre-ordering the game for yourself you can check out your options here.
Standard edition
The standard edition of the game is available for preorder for $59.99.
See at Game Stop
See at Best Buy
See on Amazon
Deluxe edition
The Deluxe edition of the game is available for preorder for $69.99 but, since there is no information on any upcoming DLC the Deluxe edition might not be worth ordering as of yet.
See at Game Stop
See on Amazon
Thoughts
What are you most excited for with this new release? What are you least excisted for? We don’t have a whole lot of information as it stands, but as soon as we get more we’ll keep this post updated. Be sure to keep checking back in for updates and, as always, tell us what you think in the comment section below!
Updated September 2018: We’ve updated this with a new gameplay demo from Gamescom featuring Claire Redfield as well as information regarding the game’s difficulty and performance.
Is the Samsung Galaxy Watch a good health tracker?

Best answer: Samsung’s Galaxy Watch is not only stuffed with health tracking features, but you have a lot of control over how you use them to benefit you every day.
Amazon: Samsung Galaxy Watch (46mm) ($349)
The flexibility to focus on specific parts of your health
Due in no small part to their enormous popularity, when most people think about fitness they think about a Fitbit or an Apple Watch. Fitbit is the original motivating fitness tracker, giving you goals to reach and making it easy to compete with friends. Apple took this concept and expanded upon it dramatically, giving its users multiple goals to reach every day even if those goals weren’t based in measurable health benefits. The entire fitness tracker industry followed suit, and for a while that included Samsung with its wearables.
If you want to control everything from your wrist, even tracking your meals, you can.
But the Galaxy Watch represents a shift in the way Samsung helps you track your health. The shift is toward flexibility, making it easy to define specific goals and control what the Watch is tracking for you. If you just want to measure how many calories (or kilojoules) you burn in a day, without counting things like steps taken or how long you were considered “active” by your heart rate, there’s a watch face for that. If you just want to count how many glasses of water you’re drinking, there’s a quick way to do that. If you want a full fitness dashboard on your wrist with every possible fitness metric there for you to see, there’s not only a watch face for that but an easy way to set your own goals.
Perhaps most importantly, if you don’t ever want your fitness tracker to tell you it’s been too long since you’ve been active, you can quickly turn that off. Galaxy Watch isn’t picky about how you adjust these settings, either. If you want to control everything from your wrist, even tracking your meals, you can. If you’d prefer to control everything from your phone, it’s just as easy.
All of this flexibility is cool, but there’s a downside. Super serious fitness buffs may notice there aren’t nearly as many popular fitness apps available on the Galaxy Watch. Samsung Health does a good job offering something for everything, but if you’re capturing a lot of specific data from an app you’re comfortable with, you may not find that app on the Watch. In some cases there are workarounds. For example, the popular cycling app Strava is not available on the Galaxy Watch but Samsung Health does a really good job sharing data to Strava after a ride. In that specific instance, the kind of information Strava gets is almost identical to the information the Apple Watch version of the app would capture in the same period. And because the Galaxy Watch has its own GPS radio, you can leave your phone at home and share that information later if you wanted.
Our pick
Samsung Galaxy Watch

$349 at Amazon
One of the most capable wrist computers you can buy today, and sometimes it’s a pretty good watch.
Samsung has crammed just about every feature you could want into this watch, including an LTE radio for when you want to leave your phone at home. As long as you don’t mind a larger watch, this will suit you well.
MrMobile on the Samsung Galaxy Watch: Buy it, but do it soon
In a sea of Gear Fit 2 Pros, Apple Watch Series 4s and Casio WSD-F30s, the name “Samsung Galaxy Watch” is something of a relief, isn’t it? It has the dual advantage of simplicity and cachet, with Samsung’s premium “Galaxy” brand not having been seen on a smartwatch since 2013. Paired with the early rumors that the Galaxy Watch would ditch Samsung’s proprietary platform for Google’s WearOS, many of us in the tech space expected it to be a real game-changer.
But the Galaxy Watch, it turns out, isn’t here to shake things up. Instead of reinventing the wheel, Samsung is content to continue leveraging it — in the form of a rotating bezel that’s become the company’s trademark. Instead of Google’s recently-revamped WearOS, the Galaxy Watch sticks with the tried-and-true TizenOS (app gap be damned). It adds features — casing sizes, battery life — and it takes some away, too (RIP, MST).
The smartwatch that arises from this amalgamation of advances and compromises is still one of the best you can buy today, but with Apple pushing the boundaries of health monitoring and Google poised for a big comeback in 2019, is it a smartwatch fit for your wrist, or too much of a Torso Twist? Watch MrMobile’s Samsung Galaxy Watch review above, then check out Android Central’s deep dive to find out!
Stay social, my friends
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Nokia 7.1 Plus appears in more renders
The phone will be known as the Nokia X7 in China.
Although its phones may not be that well-known in the States, Nokia’s been kicking out a heap of low-to-mid-range smartphones this year that have been absolutely killing it. Following up on devices such as the Nokia 6.1 and Nokia 6.1 Plus, we now have a lot of details regarding the company’s next product — the Nokia 7.1 Plus.

The Nokia 7.1 Plus is expected to be the next most powerful handset for the above two phones, and in China, it’ll be referred to as the Nokia X7. As you can see from the picture above, the phone has a notched display with a 19:9 aspect ratio and a resolution that’ll likely come in at 1080 x 2280 Full HD+.
Glass and metal are the materials of choice for the Nokia 7.1 Plus’s construction, and around back, you’ll find a Zeiss-branded dual camera system and rear-mounted fingerprint sensor.
Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 710 is expected to power the phone, there will be up to 6GB RAM, as much as 128GB of storage, and Android 9 Pie out of the box with Android One.
There’s currently no word on when the Nokia 7.1 Plus will be released, but in regards to pricing, it should come in under Rs. 25,000 in India.
Nokia 6.1 2018 review: Delivering value in simplicity
Updated September 21, 2018: Added new renders of the Nokia 7.1 Plus from @OnLeaks.
Android Central’s guide to U.S. prepaid wireless plans

Sick of committing to annual contracts? Enjoy the flexibility of a prepaid wireless plan.
The days of being locked into a lengthy wireless contract are over, as there is a plethora of prepaid options that allow you to pay for your phone service on a month-to-month basis. We’ve taken the liberty of breaking down the top prepaid wireless options for you in this handy guide.
Check your coverage
One of the first things you should consider when deciding on a prepaid carrier is the coverage provided in your area. Prepaid carriers often have a smaller coverage map than postpaid carriers because of their limited roaming agreements, so it’s good to re-check your area, even if you’ve used the carrier before. Here are the coverage maps for the carriers we will be looking at:
- MetroPCS — Map
- AT&T Prepaid — Map (make sure to check the Prepaid map)
- Boost Mobile — Map
- T-Mobile Prepaid — Map
- Mint Mobile — Map
- Straight Talk — Map (requires Zip Code, and preferred phone/carrier)
- Cricket Wireless — Map
- Virgin Mobile — Map
- Simple Mobile — Map
- GoSmart Mobile — Map
- Project Fi — Map

MetroPCS

MetroPCS uses T-Mobile’s HSPA+ and LTE network, as it is owned entirely by the larger carrier. You have the option to purchase a phone through MetroPCS, or bring your own device that’s compatible with the T-Mobile network.
Price
Plan pricing is based on how much high-speed data (LTE) you think you’ll use on a monthly basis. There are no annual contracts, and taxes and fees are included in the price.
- 2GB of high-speed data — $30/month
- 5GB of high-speed data — $40/month
- Unlimited LTE data — $50/month
- Unlimited LTE + 10GB hotspot — $60/month
All plans come with unlimited talk, text, data, Wi-Fi calling, caller ID, call waiting, 3-way calling, and Data Maximizer, a feature that helps optimize your high-speed data usage when streaming videos.
Music Unlimited is included on $40 and higher-rate plans, which allows you to stream from over 40 streaming music services including Apple Music, Pandora, Spotify, and more, without dipping into your monthly high-speed data allotment.
Note that once you’ve burned through your allotted LTE data, you’ll notice your data speeds fall to 2G.
How to reload
Log into the MetroPCS website to make a payment or set up Auto Pay. You also have the option to pay in person at a MetroPCS store.
AT&T Prepaid

AT&T’s prepaid option lets you choose from a selection of phones specifically for their prepaid plans, or you can purchase a prepaid SIM card kit if you’d prefer to bring your own device.
Price
AT&T prepaid plans include unlimited talk and text in the U.S., as well as unlimited messaging to Mexico, Canada, and over 100 countries. For data, AT&T offers several types of prepaid plans:
- Pay-as-you-go ($5 per 250MB) LTE data — $30/month
- 1GB of LTE, with rollover data — $35/month
- 8GB of LTE, with rollover data — $50/month
- Unlimited LTE data — $65/month
- Unlimited LTE + 10GB hotspot — $85/month
The 8GB and unlimited LTE plans also include unlimited talk and text within and between the U.S., Mexico, and Canada, and allow you to use your high-speed data allotment from your plan when in Mexico or Canada. You can also save $5 per month on any plan by signing up for Auto Refill.
You can also pay $2 per day for unlimited nationwide talk and text or pay $0.25 per minute and $0.20 per text message. Data is available at $2 per MB (based on their stated $0.01 per 5KB rate), or you can add on a data package that gives you 100MB for an extra $1 a day.
How to reload
Pay online via myAT&T using a credit/debit card or eCheck, buy a Refill card (available online, at AT&T wireless stores, and at more than 200,000 retail locations), or call 611 anytime from your phone (or 1-800-901-9878) and follow the prompts for Refill.

Boost Mobile

Boost Mobile uses Sprint’s nationwide LTE network. You have the option of buying a phone through Boost or bringing your own Sprint-compatible device.
Price
Boost Mobile offers four types of monthly prepaid phone plans featuring LTE high-speed data. Once your plan’s data allotment has been reached, speeds are reduced to 2G for the remainder of the plan cycle.
- 3GB of LTE + hotspot — $35/month
- Unlimited LTE + 8GB hotspot — $50/month
- Unlimited LTE + 20GB hotspot — $60/month
- Unlimited LTE + 40GB hotspot — $80/month
Boost’s unlimited plans come in different tiers; the $50 plan reduces media streaming quality with unlimited LTE everywhere else, whereas the $60 and $80 plans offer up to 1080p streaming. The Ultimate Unlimited plan included for $80 also includes bonuses like TIDAL Premium and international calling and texting.
All plans come with unlimited domestic talk and text (available even if you haven’t paid for up to 60 days), unlimited music streaming with select music partners, call waiting, voicemail, 3-way calling, as well as the ability to turn your phone into a mobile Wi-Fi hotspot.
How to reload
Pay online via My Account on the Boost Mobile site or sign up for Auto Re-Boost. Pay by phone by dialing #-A-D-D (#-2-3-3) and following the prompts to pay with your credit, debit, or Re-Boost card, text ADD and the pin on the back of your Re-Boost card to 7225 (ex. ADD 12345678912345), or text “PAY,” the dollar amount, and the last four digits of the credit or debit card associated with the account to 7225 (ex. PAY 50 1234).
Alternatively, you can pay in-store at any Boost Mobile location.
T-Mobile Prepaid

T-Mobile’s prepaid service gives you access to T-Mobile’s nationwide network without signing up for an annual contract. You have the option to buy a prepaid T-Mobile phone, or bring your own device for only the cost of the SIM card.
Price
T-Mobile offers prepaid plans for individuals and families, as well as a pay-as-you-go option.
Individual plans include:
- 4GB of LTE + hotspot — $45/month
- 10GB of LTE + hotspot — $50/month
- Unlimited LTE + unlimited 3G hotspot — $60/month
- Unlimited LTE + unlimited 3G hotspot + 5GB data in Mexico and Canada — $70/month
All plans include unlimited talk, text, and data on T-Mobile’s nationwide LTE network, with data speeds slowing to 2G upon reaching your monthly data allotment.
The only difference between T-Mobile’s $60 and $70 unlimited plans is your data speeds when internationally roaming. The former offers unlimited talk, text, and data in Mexico and Canada, but only at 2G speeds, whereas the latter offers 5GB of LTE.
If you’d rather pay as you go, T-Mobile offers a plan that starts at $3/month for any combination of 30 minutes of talk or 30 texts, with options to add a high-speed data pass with daily ($5/day for up to 500MB of LTE data) and weekly ($10/week for up to 1GB of LTE data).
How to reload
To reload your account online, go to T-Mobile’s website, either through one-time payments or by setting up recurring payments. You can also call -A-D-D (-2-3-3) from your T-Mobile phone to reload your account via credit, checking account or T-Mobile Refill card. Refill cards are available to be purchased online or in-store at a T-Mobile location.
Mint Mobile

Mint Mobile is a T-Mobile subsidiary owned by Ultra that sells its plans in multi-month bundles. You can buy a phone from Mint or bring your own T-Mobile-compatible or unlocked GSM phone.
Price
All of Mint’s plans include a 7-day money back guarantee, along with unlimited talk, text, and 2G data, international calls to Mexico and Canada, and mobile hotspot.
- 2GB of LTE per month — $45/3 months
- 5GB of LTE per month — $60/3 months
- 10GB of LTE per month — $75/3 months
- 2GB of LTE per month — $108/6 months
- 5GB of LTE per month — $144/6 months
- 10GB of LTE per month — $180/6 months
- 2GB of LTE per month — $180/12 months
- 5GB of LTE per month — $240/12 months
- 10GB of LTE per month — $300/12 months
If you try out one of the 3 month plans and decide to stick with Mint, you can retain the introductory pricing by buying a whole year at a time — otherwise, there’s a slight price increase.
How to reload
Sign into your Mint Mobile account online or download the Mint app on Android or iOS to renew your plan manually or set up automatic re-ups.
Straight Talk

Straight Talk is a prepaid carrier that doesn’t rely on just one wireless network to provide services to it’s customers. It purchases the right to use other the towers of the four major carriers — AT&T, T-Mobile, Verizon, and Sprint.
Straight Talk offers prepaid phones for purchase, and also lets you bring your own device. But just because it offers service from four carriers, that doesn’t mean you get access to all four at the same time — you get to choose between T-Mobile or AT&T if you bring your own phone, or Straight Talk may choose the right carrier based on your location when you buy a phone from it.
Price
Straight Talk has five tiers of wireless plans available for your smartphone starting as low as a dollar a day, as well as extended plans up to a one-year unlimited plan for $495.
- 100MB of data, 1500 minutes of nationwide talk, unlimited texting — $30/month
- 2GB of LTE, unlimited talk and text — $35/month
- 10GB of LTE, unlimited talk and text — $45/month
- Unlimited LTE data — $55/month
- 10GB of LTE + international talk and text — $60/month
- 3-Month Extended Plan: Unlimited talk, text, and data (10GB of high-speed data) for 90 days — $130
- 6-Month Extended Plan: Unlimited talk, text, and data (10GB of high-speed data) for 180 days — $255
- 12-Month Extended Plan: Unlimited talk, text, and data (10GB of high-speed data) for 365 days — $495
How to reload
Go to the Straight Talk site to reload your account via service card, setting up recurring automatic payments, or downloading the Straight Talk My Account app for Android or iOS.
Cricket Wireless

After being acquired by AT&T, Cricket Wireless has supported devices that use AT&T’s HSPA+ and LTE network. You can purchase a phone from Cricket, or BYOD.
Price
Cricket Wireless offers five plan levels, from talk and text to unlimited data.
- Talk & Text: Unlimited nationwide talk and text — $25/month
- 2GB of LTE, unlimited talk and text — $30/month
- 5GB of LTE, unlimited talk and text — $40/month
- Unlimited data at up to 3Mbps — $55/month
- Unlimited LTE data — $60/month
Any plans starting at $40 are eligible for a Group Save Discount when you add additional lines to your account. Save $10 when adding a second line, $20 off your third line, $30 off your fourth line, and $40 off your fifth line for a total eligible savings of $100.
Receive a $5 credit on your monthly bill by signing up for Auto Pay (not available with the Group Save Discount).
Cricket’s unlimited data plans include unlimited texts to 37 countries, as well as unlimited calls, texts, and data to and from Canada and Mexico — though Canada usage can’t exceed 50% of your overall usage for the month.
There’s also a bunch of add-on features available for each plan.
How to reload
Log in to My Account on the Cricket Wireless site to pay your bill or sign up for Auto Pay, or download the My Cricket app for Android, iOS and Windows Phone.
Virgin Mobile

Virgin Mobile uses Sprint’s CDMA and LTE networks. You have the option of buying a phone through Virgin or bringing your own Sprint-compatible device.
Price
All of Virgin Mobile’s plans are no-contract and offer unlimited talk, text, and 2G data, along with the LTE data you pay for. You also get access to Virgin’s Member Benefits, including discounts on food and merchandise.
- 5GB of LTE — $35/month
- 10GB of LTE — $45/month
- Unlimited LTE data — $60/month
Virgin’s plans don’t include mobile hotspot by default, but you can add it for $3 a day (500MB), $5 a month (1GB), or $10 a month (2GB). You can also add international calling to your plan for $5 a month — unlimited calls to Canada and Mexico, and unlimited worldwide texting.
How to reload
You can top up your Virgin Mobile account by buying a Virgin Mobile Top-Up card and entering it along with your Virgin Mobile number online, or simply pay online with your credit/debit Card or PayPal.

Verizon

Verizon’s prepaid option gives you full-access to Verizon’s nationwide network without locking you into a lengthy contract. You have the option of buying a prepaid phone from Verizon or BYOD.
Price
Verizon offers monthly smartphone plans, featuring no annual contract, no activation fee, and no credit checks.
- 500MB with data rollover — $30/month
- 3GB with data rollover $40/month
- 7GB with data rollover — $50month
- 10GB with data rollover — $60/month
- Unlimited LTE data — $75/month
Verizon’s prepaid plans all include unlimited talk and text, but it’s important to note that they don’t fall back to 2G when you run out of LTE data. On the bright side, every plan includes mobile hotspot and unlimited international texting to 200 countries, and the 10GB and unlimited data plans include unlimited calling to Mexico and Canada.
How to reload
Reload your Verizon account online, buy refill cards, or pay in-store at a Verizon Wireless location.
Simple Mobile

Simple Mobile uses T-Mobile’s HSPA+ and LTE network and offers options to purchase a new phone or bring your own T-Mobile- or AT&T-compatible GSM phone.
Price
Simple Mobile offers five prepaid plans, which all feature no contract or credit check, unlimited talk and text, unlimited international texting, international calling to 68 countries, and roaming to 16 Latin American countries.
- 1GB of up to LTE speeds + hotspot — $25/month
- 2GB of up to LTE speeds + hotspot — $30/month
- 6GB of up to LTE speeds + hotspot — $40/month
- Unlimited LTE data — $50/month
- Unlimited LTE + 10GB hotspot — $60/month
How to reload
ReUp through the Simple Mobile website via credit card or pin. You also have the option to pay in advance with Stash, allowing you to add money to your plan when you have it, so you don’t have to worry about re-upping when your service runs out.
Project Fi

Google’s first foray as a wireless carrier only charges you for the data you actually use. Sounds great, huh? The only unfortunate bit is that the service is currently limited to to a handful of Google-approved devices. You can bring your own phone if you already have one of the approved devices, or you can buy one from Project Fi with some attractive pricing incentives and financing options.
Price
Project Fi’s pricing is fairly flexible and straightforward. For $20 per month, you get unlimited domestic talk and text, unlimited international texts, mobile hotspot, and coverage in 170+ countries.
You pay for data as you use it. Featuring LTE speeds, you set your own custom data budget at $10 for every GB of data you use — but you’re refunded if you don’t reach that limit, measured down to the MB. Once you’ve hit past 6GB, you’re no longer charged for the extra data, but you may get slowed down for the month after exceeding 15GB.
In addition, you can add up to 5 people to your plan for $15 each, though the threshold to reach unlimited data increases with each user, and you all pull from the same collective data bucket.
How to reload
Everything is controlled through the Project Fi app and website.
Updated September 2018: This guide has been completely revamped for 2018. Enjoy your bargain-hunting!
Awair 2nd Edition review: Number 2, but in a good way
Air quality readings so detailed that they just may scare you into holding your breath — or doing something about it.

I checked out the Awair Glow a while back and loved its double duty as air quality monitor and smart plug. I was then asked more recently to review the Awair 2nd Edition — it’s the second iteration of the main Awair air quality monitor, and I figured I better give the bigger, better device a go. Plus, I wanted to know just how dusty my bedroom was.
Awair 2nd Edition

Price: $199
Bottom line: It tells you everything you need to know about your air quality, right down to the tiniest dust particle.
See at Amazon
The Good
- Looks great
- In-depth air quality measurements
- Excellent app
- Very easy setup
The Bad
- Temperature reading is usually a little high
- Internal fan gets kind of loud

Awair 2nd Edition What I like
The aesthetic of the Awair 2nd Edition hasn’t really changed at all from its predecessor, and that’s totally fine. It looks great — a dark wood cabinet with an off-white front and a minimalist LED display that shows readings and the time. I love that you knock twice on the top of the Awair to change the display from readings to the time. It’s simple, and it has a satisfying wood note, like a marimba.
I also love the way the Awair 2nd Edition functions. It appears to be more accurate than its Glow counterpart, and the addition of dust measurements in the 2nd Edition is huge for me, especially since I’m quite allergic. It can be kind of worrisome seeing a red indicator and an overall reading below 60 first thing in the morning, after the door’s been closed all night, but seeing bad readings ignites the desire to do something about the air.
Awair has made me care about my home’s air quality.
That’s probably the best part about the Awair line: I’ve actually started caring about the air quality in my house. Granted, it’s a double-edged sword: I’m probably a little too conscious of it now. But the suggestions in the app are practical and have helped. My wife and I went out and bought houseplant, I keep the windows open more often, and I’ve started vacuuming every week and not “leaving it ’til next week.”
In the app, you can also switch between air quality preferences, so you can set it to general, or view ratings for allergy sufferers, sleep, productivity, or babies. For example, if carbon dioxide is too high, then you’ll get a lower overall score if you have it set to monitor for productivity.

Awair 2nd Edition What I don’t like
It can be quite loud. There’s a fan that sucks in air to analyze, and I understand that it’s necessary, but it’s woken me up in the dead of night. I am, admittedly, a very light sleeper, but the noise is reminiscent of a distant car passing outside your window. It’s nowhere near as loud as an oscillating floor fan, but it’s noticeable.
Seeing a bad air reading day after day can get frustrating — even if it’s our own fault.
Integration with Google Assistant is kind of hit and miss. I linked up my Awair account, and you’re supposed to be able to say, “OK, Google, ask Awair about my air quality,” but whether or not I get a real response is kind of hit or miss. More often than not I get, “It looks like your Awair account is not linked yet.” But it totally is. Whether that’s Awair’s fault or Google’s, though, I’m not certain.
Now, this is just the nature of the beast, but sometimes having a constant air quality reading can just be a bit tedious. We, of course, choose to have these devices in our homes, but after a full week of 59 across the board, there’s almost an “Ugh, what the hell do you want me to do?!” feeling. Things should be interesting when winter hits and my windows don’t open until spring.
Awair 2nd Edition
If you want a full picture of your home air quality, then it doesn’t get much better than Awair. For $199, I feel like it’s a tad pricey, but if air quality is important to you, then it’s worth it. The app gives you great suggestions, a full reading, and the option to connect other devices that can trigger based on certain scenarios. For example, turn on the dehumidifier when humidity reaches X.
4.5
out of 5
The Awair 2nd Edition may lack a smart plug like its Glow brethren, but what it lacks in smart home control it makes up for in the addition of dust measurement, as well as seemingly accurate (I mean, how can I really know?) overall readings, and an excellent interface, both on the physical device and in the app.
See at Amazon
YouTube Music gets audio quality controls!
YouTube Music is here — and it’s packing the biggest music library in the world.

YouTube is one of the most-viewed websites on the planet, and by far the most popular video platform today, so it’s no surprise that millions upon millions of users turn to it every day for music. It’s the default platform for music videos — especially viral music videos like This is America and Girls Like You — and it’s also a place to find just about any song, remix, mashup, or fan cover you could ever want. Whether you’re looking for lyrics to a song before karaoke night, music to sleep to, or a new remix to play at your next party, YouTube has what you’re looking for.
Now, YouTube is ready to make another run at a music app built upon their video empire with YouTube Music. It’s a music app with a truly unique interface, an unparalleled selection, and more than a few kinks to work out, but YouTube Music is here to stay and here to compete.
The latest YouTube Music news
September 21, 2018 — Audio quality controls roll out to Android and iOS apps
YouTube Music has been waiting on a number of features, and none more impatiently as audio quality controls. YouTube Music has an amazing selection, but until now it’s been stuck at 128kbps. Today, YouTube Music has pushed out audio quality controls to both the Android and iOS apps, seemingly as a server-side update as they appeared without an app update in the YouTube Music app on my Galaxy S9+. There are audio quality settings in three places:
- General: Audio quality on mobile network — Low, Normal, High, Always High
- General: Audio quality on Wi-Fi — Low, Normal, High, Always High
- Downloads: Audio quality — Low, Normal, High
“If you stream at Normal quality, you are getting 128kbps AAC as your bitrate. For premium subscribers, we offer High quality which is 256kbps AAC. If you have flaky network connectivity or want to save data, you can switch to low quality which is 48kbps HE-AAC. 256kbps AAC is equivalent in audio quality to the 320kbps CBR mp3 that we had for GPM, but it uses less data. Right now we don’t have any plans for audio quality higher than 256kbps. Our deals would require us to charge more to stream FLAC, so at this point we are focused on improving performance rather than supporting lossless streaming.” — YouTube Music Product Manager Brandon Bilinski
Read more answers from the YouTube Music Q&A
September 20, 2018 — YouTube Music Product Team holding Q&A on September 21st
YouTube Music pledged to bi-weekly updates back at the beginning of August and more transparency, but 6 weeks out and very little seems to have changed. There are still tons of questions swirling around the revamped music service, and to help assuage concerns the YouTube Music Product Team is holding a Q&A session Friday morning at 9:30AM PT.
You can submit your questions for the team right now on the event thread of the official YouTube Music Help forum. There have already been a flurry of questions posted, especially around the migration of Google Play Music to YouTube, Android Auto support and library sort options, which are two features that the YouTube Music team said were coming “in the next few months” back in July.
Go ask a question for the YouTube Music team to answer
August 29, 2018 — YouTube Music Premium expands to 4 more countries
As the YouTube Music Premium rollout continues, it’s now been confirmed that the service is available in four additional countries. Specifically, Belgium, Denmark, Luxembourg, and the Netherlands!
Similar to other parts of Europe where YouTube Music Premium is available, the service costs €9.99/month and 99 kroner/month in Denmark.
August 1, 2018 — YouTube Music plans bi-weekly update schedule, reconfirms some coming features
YouTube Music has a lot of bugs to fix and features to add before it can begin to truly compete with Spotify or begin migrating Google Play Music subscribers over, and while those updates will take time, we at least have something of a timetable for when YouTube Music will be receiving updates.
YouTube Music product manager Elias Roman tells Engaget that the service plans to push out updates for the service every two weeks. Among the changes Roman confirmed:
- An album sorting option beyond recently added
- A drop-down menu option to filter out musicians you follow on YouTube Music from the main YouTube Subscriptions feed
- Low/medium/high audio quality settings for streaming and downloads (coming in a few weeks)
Roman was also quoted as saying that “We are not focused on exclusives. We don’t believe exclusives are good for the industry or good for consumers.” This makes sense for YouTube Music given that everything available on YouTube Music is available on the main YouTube app to both paid and free users, which would make exclusives available to everyone.
July 17, 2018 — Google promises Android Auto support, better sound quality, SD card support, and more with future updates
There are plenty of areas in which Google can improve YouTube Music, and thanks to the team behind the app, we now have a short list of features to expect in future updates.
Over on the YouTube Music Help forum on Google Support, the YouTube Music team says that the following features will be available in no particular order over the coming months:
- Better audio quality, and ability to select the quality for downloading and streaming
- Sonos support
- Android Auto support
- SD card support for Android
- More obvious shuffle vs. play-in-order options for playlists
It’s unclear when exactly all of this will be available, but the option to save downloaded songs to an SD card is rolling out now.
June 18, 2018 — YouTube Music is coming to 12 new countries and becoming available to all inside the original “Early Access” countries
YouTube has opened up YouTube Music to 12 new countries , as well as ending its awkward and often confusing “Early Access” period and making the service available to everyone in its original five countries.
This brings the number of countries YouTube Music serves up to 17 — Australia, Austria, Canada, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, New Zealand, Norway, Mexico, Russia, South Korea, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, the United Kingdom and the United States — and with the new YouTube Music also comes the new YouTube Premium pricing system.
May 23, 2018 — Your locally owned songs from Google Play Music will transfer over to YouTube Music… eventually

Google wants all of its Play Music subscribers to migrate over to YouTube Music at some point in 2019, and to help make that process as seamless as possible, the company’s confirmed that some of Play Music’s best features will be coming to the new YouTube Music — the biggest of which is a music locker for storing copies of song you locally own.
This news was recently confirmed by Google to The Verge, with the Head of YouTube Music saying on Twitter that “Your collection, playlists and preferences from Google Play Music will be preserved at migrated to YouTube music for a soft landing.”
In addition to having a place to store music you already own, YouTube Music will eventually allow you to buy new songs that you can add to your collection.
May 22, 2018 — The new YouTube Music is officially here!
Just like we expected, YouTube Music’s new app and desktop site officially started rolling out on May 22. Google says the new look is currently in “early access” and is gradually becoming available for folks in the U.S., Mexico, Australia, New Zealand, and South Korea.
To access YouTube Music, you can download the app from the Play Store or hit up the desktop site at music.youtube.com. If you’re not seeing the changes quite yet, be sure to check back frequently to know when you’ve been graced with Google’s good wishes.
All the big details
The service starts at $9.99/month — but no one should pay that

There’s no real sugar-coating it: using YouTube Music as a free user on Android is bad. There are ads every three to six songs, and you can’t leave the Now Playing screen, so it hogs your screen and your battery. YouTube Music is worlds better when you unlock its paid features. YouTube Premium is absolutely worth paying for.
YouTube Music Premium, however, is not.
For the love of Duarte, buy YouTube Premium instead of YouTube Music Premium
Where is YouTube Music Premium available?
If you’re still interested in checking out YouTubeMusic Premium, the service is currently available in the following countries:
- Australia
- Austria
- Belgium
- Canada
- Denmark
- Finland
- France
- Germany
- Ireland
- Italy
- Luxembourg
- Mexico
- Netherlands
- New Zealand
- Norway
- Russia
- Spain
- Sweden
- United Kingdom
- United States
What’s happening to Google Play Music? Where’s my likes and playlists?

Google wants all of its Play Music subscribers to migrate over to YouTube Music at some point in 2019. That means YouTube Music will be adding most of Google Play Music’s tentpole features — the biggest of which is Google Play Music’s free 50,000 song music locker.
What does YouTube Music mean for Google Play Music
That said, Google Play Music and YouTube Music’s libraries and catalogs at the moment are completely disconnected and there’s quite a bit that has to happen before that can change. The library migration is a long ways off, but in the meantime, Play Music users get two music apps to play with instead of one. So which one should you use?
YouTube Music vs. Google Play Music: Which should you use?
A mixtape full of promise

YouTube Music is built on a gold mine. YouTube is not only the most used video platform in the world, it might be the biggest catalog of professional, semi-professional, and amateur music available in the world. This isn’t the first time Google has tried to capitalize on this, but this time is different. YouTube’s music team has finally gotten its act together and made us all a mixtape full of promises.
But can it follow through on them?
YouTube Music review: A mixtape full of promise
Getting started

YouTube Music is an adjustment from traditional music services — especially because it is based around video rather than audio — but thanks to the Google’s search prowess and downright uncanny predictions and recommendations, getting used to Google’s newest music service should be as painless as possible. And since it’s built around years of your YouTube history, YouTube Music already knows you better than you think.
Getting started with YouTube Music
Going offline

Networks fail. Your plane says it’s going to have Wi-Fi, but nope. You get stuck in the car with your parents in the middle of nowhere, and you’re outside cell range, and the radio stations are nothing but static and muffled AM country. Having music to listen to when you offline is important, and when the music service you’re using is based around video — which eats data like nobody’s business — how you save your music for offline playback is even more important.
How to download music for offline playback in YouTube Music
What is it missing?

YouTube Music is a brand-new service — albeit one built on an old app of the same name — and like most things that are shiny, new, and different, there are a lot of bugs to be worked out. There are a lot features that are still missing — from basic audio quality settings to more complicated endeavours like gapless playback and library management — and we’ve got a handy list of what’s missing and when we could maybe see some of it.
On that note — YouTube Music’s library does not include every video on YouTube, nor does it include every song and album on Google Play Music right now.
What YouTube Music still needs
Making the most of things

YouTube Music is “Early Access” right now, which means the service is essentially a beta and it is definitely buggy. While time and updates will fix some of those bugs, there are some things you can do to make the most of its current state.
6 tips and tricks for using YouTube Music
Also, even if you’ve never used YouTube Music before, it has years and years of your YouTube history to work off of. That means that YouTube Music could already have a good idea what you like, or it could have things completely wrong because you’ve mostly used YouTube to pull up music when your nieces are over or you’re hosting a party for your country-obsessed friends. Here’s how to help YouTube help you with better suggestions.
How to improve YouTube Music recommendations
Can it dethrone Spotify?

Spotify has spent the last decade building up a loyal user base, building algorithms that few companies can even begin to touch, and building up a reputation as the best brand in streaming music. YouTube, however, is one of the most used sites on the internet, period, a selection you can’t find anywhere else — a selection that will be absolutely unbeatable in the future — and Google is bringing its best algorithmic game with YouTube Music.
It’s still early days, but YouTube Music will be enough to dethrone Spotify soon?
YouTube Music vs. Spotify
Updated August 2018: Added a new section for where YouTube Premium is available.
Google reveals new Daydream controllers for Lenovo Mirage Solo
All Daydream owners can also run any Android app/game in VR.

Google’s Daydream VR offers one of the best mobile virtual reality experiences around, and today, a few big improvements for the platform were announced to take it even further throughout 2018 and beyond.
First up, Google has some cool stuff coming for the Lenovo Mirage Solo — the first standalone Daydream headset. The Mirage Solo is capable of six degrees of freedom tracking (6DoF), meaning Daydream accounts for your motion up, down, left, right, forwards, and backward. To take advantage of all that tracking, Google’s created new 6DoF controllers.

The controllers use optical tracking to follow your movements, meaning there’s no need for external cameras or sensors of any kind. It’s possible we’ll see a consumer version of this announced at Google’s October 9 event, but for the time being, they’re only being offered to developers.
Sticking with the Mirage Solo, Google also announced a new See-Through Mode. Using Google’s WorldSense technology, See-Through Mode allows you to see everything in front of you in real-time even with the headset on. Along with the basic convenience this should bring, See-Through Mode also allows for powerful AR experiences — such as adding virtual furniture in your living room to see how it’ll look.
Last but certainly not least, all Daydream devices can run standalone Android apps and games starting today. Apps are run in a big-screen mode rather than in full 360 VR, but even so, it’s a great addition that gives users a lot more VR experiences right out of the box.
Lenovo Mirage Solo review: Two steps forward, one step back
Don’t make this mistake when preordering your Echo Plus or Show
Double check your order before checking out!
Amazon has announced a bunch of new devices and you can already pick some of them up at a discount if you bundle them. One of the deals is the inclusion of a free Philips Hue smart bulb when you purchase an Echo Plus or Echo Show, but it doesn’t just happen automatically. On the product page for each of them is three different listings, one for just the device, one bundled with other hardware, and one that says “with free smart bulb”. The Philips Hue bulb will only come included with orders placed using that listing, as it’s actually a different product as far as Amazon’s concerned.
- Pre-order an Echo Plus with free Philips Hue Bulb
- Pre-order an Echo Show with free Philips Hue Bulb
Clicking the links above will take you directly to the listing that you want to purchase, but if you somehow get mixed up and land up somewhere else, you’ll want to verify during checkout that your cart shows the inclusion of the free bulb. If you already hopped on the pre-order train and clicked the wrong listing, all hope is not lost. You can place an order for the correct bundle and then cancel your original one without any harm. Amazon doesn’t charge your credit card for anything until the order actually ships, so you won’t need to worry about extra money being held so that you can make the switch.

If you have friends or family that are looking to purchase either of these refreshed devices, be sure to share this tip with them. Both the Echo Plus and Echo Show allow you to connect smart home gadgets (like the bulb) right to it without the need of a separate hub, which saves you even more money in the long run. These discounts won’t last forever, and the products are scheduled to begin shipping on October 11.
Wireless earbuds, robotic vacuums, and more are discounted today
Whether you’re looking for new tech gear or household items, we’ve got you covered.
We found plenty of great deals today that include big discounts on Eufy’s robotic vacuum cleaner, microfiber towels, the Orbi mesh networking router, and more!
View the rest of the deals
If you want to know about the deals as soon as they are happening, you’ll want to follow Thrifter on Twitter, and sign up for the newsletter, because missing out on a great deal stinks!



