Plex will stop supporting Amazon Cloud Drive after December 31st
You won’t be able to stream movies or songs on Plex straight from Amazon Cloud Drive the moment the year changes. Plex Cloud, the company’s service that gives you a way to play media saved in the cloud, will no longer support Amazon after December 31st. When the media player’s developers first announced the feature, which is still in beta, they named the e-commerce giant’s product as the first storage option it supports. Unfortunately, the Plex team started having issues integrating Amazon into the offering shortly after that introduction. “[T]he challenges with Amazon Drive have proven insurmountable at this time,” they wrote in their announcement.
You can still cancel Amazon Cloud if you’re within its 90-day free trial period and don’t need it for anything else. And if you’d still like to keep using Plex Cloud despite this development, you can always move your files to the other services it supports, including Google Drive, OneDrive and DropBox.
Here’s a copy of the email the company sent out to its users:
“A few weeks ago we shared with you that we’ve had challenges integrating Amazon Drive as a storage option for Plex Cloud. The team has worked tirelessly to address these issues, improve the scalability and performance of our infrastructure, and to expand storage options by introducing support for Google Drive, Dropbox, and Microsoft OneDrive, all of which are working great. Unfortunately, the challenges with Amazon Drive have proven insurmountable at this time, so we have decided to remove Amazon Drive as a storage option for Plex Cloud for the foreseeable future.
Current beta users with a linked Amazon Drive account will no longer be able to use Amazon with Plex Cloud after December 31st.
If you signed up for an Amazon Drive account specifically to use with Plex Cloud on or after our original announcement, you should still have time to cancel while you are in their 90-day free trial. We realize some of you have uploaded lots of media to Amazon Drive to work with Plex Cloud and the transition to another Cloud storage provider is easier said than done. This was a tough call for us to make, but a necessary one made with our users’ best interests in mind. If you already have content on Amazon Drive, there’s info on options for migrating data to a supported provider in our forum. We look forward to coming out of the beta with multiple popular storage options that provide a simple, seamless, and beautiful Plex experience.”
Source: Plex
Verizon Decides to Support Galaxy Note7 Brick Update, But Not Until After Holidays
Verizon has announced that it will support an incoming update for potentially dangerous Galaxy Note7 devices that will effectively render the smartphones useless, after originally stating that it would not roll out the update “because of the added risk this could pose to Galaxy Note7 users that do not have another device to switch to” (via The Verge). Samsung’s update is aimed at the remaining Note7 smartphones only within the United States.
The carrier believed the holiday season was reason enough to prevent remaining Galaxy Note7 users from having a bricked smartphone, and its support of Samsung’s software update is keeping that in mind: Verizon will introduce the update after the holidays, on January 5. Verizon joins a staggered release of the update by most of the other major U.S. carriers, including T-Mobile on December 27, AT&T on January 5, and Sprint on January 8.
In its new statement, Verizon still urges remaining Galaxy Note7 owners — which reportedly total less than 10 percent of the owners for the recalled device — to stop using the smartphone immediately.
Verizon will not be pushing this software update to your device until January 5, 2017. We want to make sure you can contact family, first responders, and emergency medical professionals during the holiday travel season.
However, we urge you to stop using your Note7, upgrade it to another device, and return the Note7 to us.
Samsung’s update will effectively prevent any Galaxy Note7 from being able to charge, as well as “eliminate their ability to work as mobile devices.” The decision by Samsung is the company’s attempt to finally put the infamous months-long coverage of exploding Note7 devices behind it for good, while moving forward into 2017 and the Galaxy S8.
Tags: Samsung, Verizon, Galaxy Note 7
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LG Said to Supply Apple With Foldable Displays for Future iPhones
LG’s display division is developing and will start mass-producing foldable displays for smartphones in 2018, and supply them to Apple, Google, and Microsoft, according to South Korean website ETNews.
LG has shown off various futuristic-looking curved and foldable display prototypes over the past three years, including one with a book-like design and another that can be rolled up like a newspaper. Both designs take advantage of the flexible property of OLED displays, compared to rigid LCD displays in current iPhones.
LG curved and foldable display prototypes
Multiple rumors point towards Apple releasing a new iPhone with an OLED display and glass casing at the high end of its smartphone lineup next year, but the reports suggest the display will be curved rather than foldable. With more than ten iPhone prototypes in testing, however, the exact design remains to be seen.
The all-new premium model is expected to have at least a 5-inch display, with early rumors claiming it could be up to a 5.8-inch device. Samsung is expected to be the primary—and possibly sole—supplier of OLED displays for Apple, at least until LG joins the mix in 2018 or later if today’s report proves to be accurate.
Next year’s iPhones could have bezel-free designs and no physical Home buttons, as some reports claim Touch ID will be integrated directly into the display as now possible. Apple has filed patents for flexible OLED displays with both curved and foldable designs, confirming it has at least explored both sides of the coin.
Apple’s foldable display patent describes how the display could fold outward, allowing both halves of the screen to remain accessible when the phone is closed shut. The two sides would connect via a clamshell-like hinge that allows them to rotate relative to each other, while flexible printed circuit boards keep the connection intact.
Tag: LG Display
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Sony A99 ii preview: Full frame and fast shooting
As time passes, Sony’s Alpha family of cameras have evolved from slightly chunky offshoots of the remnants of the Konica Minolta legacy – still seen in the A7 models – into something all the more conventional.
The Sony A99 ii is the replacement for, you guessed it, the Sony A99 and even evolves that design slightly, to make it rather more conventional. The Sony A99 ii might look closer to some of the high-end Canon or Nikon models it rivals, but this is still a unique camera, offering some features you won’t find elsewhere from other manufacturers’ DSLRs.
Despite carrying the A99 name, there’s a lot to this camera that’s new and a lot that loads it with potential.
Sony A99 ii preview: Design and build
Pitched at the enthusiast and pro photographer, the Sony A99 ii offers a substantial build. It’s water and dust resistant with seals on all the buttons and openings and a magnesium alloy body, designed to stand up to the rigours of daily use.
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As we’ve just mentioned, the design looks a little sharper, we think, than the model it replaces. Sony tells us its 8 per cent smaller, but this a body that weighs 849g before you add the lens. As a full-frame camera that’s to be expected, but there’s also plenty of space to grip and manipulate the A99 ii.
High points on the design include easy access to the controls with those front and rear dials making it really easy to adjust aperture and shutter speed without taking the camera from your eye, and the top ISO button brings the same advantage for making changes on the fly.
The layout of controls is broadly the same as the previous model, as is the design of the vari-angle display, pulling out from the body with a swivel point at the bottom. This adds a great deal of flexibility for composition, especially for tight spaces where using the viewfinder might be awkward, but in terms of mechanism design, it doesn’t feel quite as accessible as some of the displays you’ll find on some mid-range cameras.
There’s still an electronic viewfinder, with a 2.4 million dot OLED display inside. This is sharp and bright and looks great, although we’ve not had the chance to use it in a wide range of conditions yet.
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There’s also that front controller that was so revolutionary on the A99. This in the right sort of location so that your supporting left hand can operate it. There’s a silent mode for video or a clicking mode for still shooters, which is a new adaptation. It can be assigned to change a number of functions, such as ISO, aperture, shutter speed or AF area. After a brief familiarisation, this controller is easy to tweak with your thumb, giving yet more seamless control.
- Sony A99 review: This 99 is all cone and Flake
Naturally there’s an A mount on the front, with a wide range of Sony lenses available, as well as adapters for common formats.
Sony A99 ii preview: Full frame, full blast
- 42.4-megapixel Exmor R CMOS sensor, 34.9 x 24mm
- 12fps shooting at full resolution
- 4K video at 100Mbps
The thing that stands the A99 ii aside from many other full-frame cameras is what you can do with it. For straight still shooting, it’s a given that you have a potent 42.4-megapixel CMOS sensor at 35mm size with no low-pass filter. But it’s Sony’s translucent mirror system that makes this different from a DSLR.
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Using a translucent mirror technology has enabled Sony to bring speed and flexibility to its models that makes them unique, avoiding the mechanical intervention that other DSLR cameras rely on. You can shoot at 12 frames per second with full focus and exposure tracking at full resolution. This is a big advancement over the 6fps offered by the predecessor: while that model was an interesting step forward – pairing a full frame sensor with the translucent mirror system – it’s really in the A99 ii that it gets super-charged with the potency you’d expect.
New on this camera is Bionz X image processing engine and front-end LSI. If this sounds familiar, that’s because Sony has also added this powerful hardware to the recent A6500 and Cyber-shot RX100 V. It’s all about giving the camera the power it needs to process all that data and let you grab those action sequences with blistering pace.
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The buffer is large enough for 60 images and switching to the Hi+ mode that enables this pace, you can squeeze off a mass of shots with a press of the shutter button. As with those other two models we’ve just mentioned, you also get an indicator to display that these images are being processed and saved to the card.
The A99 ii will also capture 4K video and it does so without pixel binning, so you’re getting the full readout from the sensor. The A99 ii will give you 100Mbps 4K footage, but also offers a full range of high speed and other video options. The A99 ii offers an HMDI connection, so you can rig-up an external monitor, as well connections for mic and headphones, all of which will appeal to those with a more serious eye on video capture.
Sony A99 ii preview: Sharp shooting
- 5-axis SteadyShot image stabilisation
- 79 Hybrid cross phase points, 399 focal-plane phase points
Sony’s SteadyShot image stabilisation has been deployed across a wide range of devices from smartphones to its cameras and video equipment. Looking to aid you in handholding those slightly longer exposures, the 5-axis image stabilisation (in body) claims to give you as much as 4.5 steps advantage, removing hand tremors so you can get the shot you want.
That should aid those shooting in low light or murky conditions, or anyone wanting to avoid boosting the ISO too high, although you should also get high ISO shots that are nice and clean, partly through the new power on offer from the new image processing hardware.
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Sony is also making great claims about the focusing system. This is where the unique nature of this camera plays its part, with the new AF sensor offering 79 phase points and a further 399 focal-plane PDAF points on the sensor. Because of the translucent mirror, it’s a hybrid system, something that we weren’t totally sold on in the original A99, but the new system is now a lot more all-encompassing.
The promise is for speed of focusing, ensuring that those constantly captured images remain sharp, with subject tracking. Using both sets of points it should be able to more accurately track moving images, which Sony is calling 4D Focus.
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We’ve not had the chance to test much of the potential that this camera offers from a very brief session on a dull wet day, but we’ve already enjoyed the speed of shooting, even if, sometimes, that focusing system seems to adopt and track something you weren’t actually looking at, like an obvious leading edge of an object, rather than the centre of its body.
First Impressions
On paper, at least, the new Sony A99 ii looks like the camera we wanted the 2013 model to be. A lot has changed over those years, with a number of Sony’s cameras delivering outstanding performance in a number of areas.
The Sony A99 ii looks to boost the focusing, it boosts the speed of capture and it offers a serious collection of capture tools for those interested in video too.
Priced at £2999, the Sony A99 ii is a serious piece of kit. It’s available for pre-order at Jessops and Wex Photographic and we’ll be taking a long, hard, detailed look at it as soon as we can.
TCL now officially makes BlackBerry phones
It’s not exactly the most shocking news of the year to find out Chinese electronics manufacturer TCL has signed a licensing agreement with BlackBerry that will see the former design and produce phones for the latter.
- BlackBerry confirms decision to ditch hardware division, all phones to be made by third-parties in the future
We already had our suspicions a deal was on the way after the recently released DTEK50 and DTEK60 BlackBerry smartphones were essentially rebranded Alcatel handsets, also made by TCL. BlackBerry also announced back in September it was stopping all hardware manufacture, but at the time, no official announcement had been made to say which company would make phones going forward.
The deal doesn’t spell the end for BlackBerry however, as the Canadian company will continue to “develop its security and software solutions”, which run alongside Android in recent phone releases, and it’s these security features that help BlackBerry devices to separate themselves from the competition.
TCL will handle all other aspects of smartphone production: design, manufacture, sales and distribution.
Nicolas Zibell, CEO of TCL Communication said of the deal: “We [TCL Communication] are committed to creating the best portfolio solutions, while ensuring the quality support to consumers and enterprise users who trust the integrity of the BlackBerry device and the brand’s security leadership, coupled with the Android platform”,
“Together with BlackBerry’s smartphone software platform, this partnership will strengthen our position in the global mobile market”.
Ralph Pini, COO of Mobility Solutions at BlackBerry added: “TCL Communication is the natural choice to license BlackBerry’s software and brand on a global scale. We successfully partnered with them on the DTEK series of secure smartphones and we’ve been impressed with their excellence in hardware design, development and manufacturing.
“We are confident that BlackBerry-branded products developed and distributed by TCL will address the needs of BlackBerry users and expand the availability of BlackBerry Secure products throughout the world”.
eHarmony is trying to play catch up with Tinder
These days, the term “dating app” is pretty much synonymous with Tinder. eHarmony wants to remind everyone that it’s still around, though, and it’s willing to make big changes to get with the times. Starting in January, the dating service is getting rid of its lengthy questionnaire that asks you 150 or so multiple choice questions to get your matches. You can still take the personality survey, but it’s no longer a compulsory part of signing up. Now, you only need a few minutes to set up a new profile and answer some basic questions about yourself.
The company’s new CEO Grant Langston admitted to TechCrunch that the service needs a refresh to be able to cater to a new era of singles looking for dates. “Science tells us that our product works, and we don’t want to change that,” he said. “But the way we deliver it feels a bit dusty to me.”
In addition to the new onboarding process, you’ll now be able to see the top three attributes that make you and a match compatible in a new feature called “The Two of You Together.” Plus, the platform now has the ability to send texts to other users in real time. These features will also be available on eHarmony’s iOS and Android app, though you’ll have to wait till February next year to find the one — or your next ex — on mobile.
Source: eHarmony
MLB and Disney pick up ‘League of Legends’ streaming rights
BAMTech, the Major League Baseball- and Disney-owned streaming tech company, has signed a deal with Riot Games for the rights to League of Legends tournaments.
According to The Wall Street Journal, the agreement calls for BAMTech to “pay a minimum $300 million through 2023” to Riot Games. In return, it’ll get the exclusive rights to “stream and monetize” the company’s popular multiplayer online battle arena game (MOBA).
BAMTech plans to launch a League of Legends streaming service with apps for smartphones, PCs and “other devices,” and will also handle distribution on existing streaming portals like Twitch and YouTube Gaming. The deal goes a way to explaining the rumor that ESPN was set to invest hundreds of millions to pick up the game’s broadcast rights. While the deal appears to be about streaming, rather than broadcasting, ESPN is owned by Disney.
League of Legends is a giant in the world of eSports, with individual tournaments watched by tens of millions worldwide. Its popularity has led to Riot Games (which makes no other video games) bringing in over $1 billion in revenues per year. BAMTech and Riot will aim to make (even more) money on the deal through advertising and sponsorship, which the streaming company will oversee.
The deal is akin to videogame publishing, in so much as the $300 million is an advance, rather than a direct payment. Initial revenue generated will go to BAMTech, in order to cover its investment, but The Wall Street Journal says that takings beyond that will be shared with Riot Games at an unspecified rate.
BAMTech, previously part of Major League Baseball’s MLB Advanced Media (MLBAM), was spun out into its own company earlier this year. MLBAM still owns a majority share in the company, Disney acquired around a third in a $1 billion deal and the National Hockey League also has a stake.
Source: The Wall Street Journal
Apple will replace a lost AirPod for $69
Following a slightly delay, Apple’s wireless AirPods are ready to order. They’re small and sleek, but the lack of cords has put a nagging thought in the back of my mind: I am guaranteed to lose one, if not both within a few weeks. If you’re equally forgetful, or happen to commute in jam-packed subway carriages, you’ll be happy to hear that Apple will replace a single AirPod for $69 (£65). Given a fresh pair costs $159 (£159), that seems like a reasonable fee. Similarly, a new AirPod charging case will set you back $69 (£65), for the inevitable “I threw it out thinking it was floss” stories.
To Apple’s credit, your music will stop as soon as one AirPod leaves your earhole. It serves two purposes: so you don’t have to press pause when someone starts talking to you, and to give you a heads-up whenever one AirPod drops out of your ear. If you’re somewhere busy, like a crowded train platform, that immediate notification could be vital to retrieving it. Otherwise, the allure of Apple’s AirPods is a tangle-free lifestyle, convenient pairing and charging. It’s doubly useful if you have the iPhone 7 with its non-existent 3.55mm jack. (Yeah, I’m still annoyed about it.)
Via: TechCrunch
Source: Apple (US), (UK)
Apple’s ‘Notify’ Feature for the Release of Super Mario Run Was Far Too Late for Users
Shortly after Apple first revealed that Nintendo was bringing Super Mario Run to the iPhone and iPad, many users discovered that Cupertino was also using the game’s highly anticipated release as a test run for a new “Notify” system in the App Store.
Upon searching for the title on their devices before it was available, users were given the option of tapping an orange “Notify” button where the Get button or price usually appears.
Undoubtedly many users tapped or clicked the button thinking they would be first to play Nintendo’s debut title on iOS. But the delay between the game’s appearance in the App Store and the actual delivery of notification prompts has left many users skeptical of the feature.
Scumbag Super Mario: Asks you a million times to be notified for the app release.
Doesn’t notify you when app releases.#SuperMarioRun
— Jared Mecham (@jaredmecham) December 15, 2016
For many, the notification came the day after the game had been officially released. Large numbers of people received it long after they had downloaded and purchased the full game. Others are apparently yet to receive the prompt they signed up to receive.
It’s possible that the sheer volume of users visiting the App Store in excitement for Super Mario Run caused a system-wide lag that prevented the notifications from being pushed to end-users’ devices. If so, some may wonder why Apple chose to test the Notify service on such a hugely anticipated title in the first place.
Conversely, Apple may have intentionally staggered the notifications to ease the load on its systems as gamers raced to download the app. In that case, the feature could prove a smart move on Apple’s part for when big-name game publishers stoke up excitement for upcoming titles in the future.
Tags: App Store, Super Mario Run
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How to change display scaling on the Huawei Mate 9

The Huawei Mate 9 has a great big screen. Make the most of it by seeing more at once.
Being able to change display scaling (also known as DPI scaling) is a standard feature in Android 7.0 Nougat, and the Huawei Mate 9 lets you choose between three different scaling options. On a big-screened phone like the Mate 9, this “View Mode” option is a great way to choose between seeing more on-screen, or getting a larger view of what’s going on.
First things first, there are three view modes to choose from on the Mate 9 — large, medium and small
Left-to-right: Large, medium and small view modes.
Finding the View Mode setting screen is easy.

Drag down the notification pulldown from the top of the screen and tap the cog icon.
Tap Display.
Tap View mode.
Choose Small, Medium or Large. You’ll see an on-screen preview as you tap each item, giving you a rough idea of how things will look on your phone.
Hit Apply to confirm. You’ll need to undergo the minor inconvenience of rebooting your phone to apply the new settings.
“Large” is the default for the Huawei Mate 9, while “Small” gives you a more information-dense setup, like the Google Pixel. “Medium,” as you might expect, is a happy medium between the two.
Note: You can also control your font size through a separate menu under Settings > Display. This gives you more granular control over how text appears on-screen, but doesn’t affect the scaling of menus, buttons and other on-screen items.
So that’s it — you can stick with the default magnified view on the Mate 9 if you like, or see more at once with smaller items on screen thanks to the View Mode control.



