One Mix Yoga is a 7 inch, pocket-sized laptop… and tablet

GPD isn’t the only company making mini laptops with 7 inch displays. A company called One Netbook has a new mini notebook that looks suspiciously similar to the GPD Pocket at first glance, but the One Netbook One Mix Yoga has a few distinguishing chara…

GPD isn’t the only company making mini laptops with 7 inch displays. A company called One Netbook has a new mini notebook that looks suspiciously similar to the GPD Pocket at first glance, but the One Netbook One Mix Yoga has a few distinguishing characteristics… Including a touchscreen display, a convertible design that lest you […]

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Bandwidth is the techno-thriller novel that we need right now

Review: what does fake news even mean when you can no longer distinguish reality?

Enlarge (credit: Cyrus Farivar)

I have a love-hate relationship with Twitter.

As I write these words, I have deliberately quit out of the app on my laptop so that I don’t have the temptation to toggle over to it, indulging an eight-second distraction between typed lines of this book review. In fact, in recent months I’ve tried to become more conscious of how and where I use Twitter.

It’s just so fun and so damned useful. Twitter mainlines breaking news for addicted journalists. It’s also freakin’ hilarious at times. (I can’t get enough of @RikerGoogling, and I have a penchant for @BodegaBot, too.) But I also know that it’s a RT-laden, hashtag-driven, self-indulgent miasma that I will certainly get sucked into if I’m not careful.

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Guitar-maker Gibson files for bankruptcy to leave its electronics ambitions behind

Don’t worry though—the famous guitars will survive to jam another day.

Enlarge / A Gibson Les Paul Standard with a "desertburst" finish from 2006. (credit: Freebird / Flickr via Creative Commons)

Other than the Fender Stratocaster, there are few electric guitars more steeped in blues and rock history than the Les Paul. It has famously been played by Eric Clapton, Jimmy Page, and Pete Townshend, among many others. It might seem like cause for alarm, then, that that guitar's 116-year-old manufacturer, Gibson Guitar Corp., is filing for bankruptcy protection because its additive attempts to make waves in the consumer electronics business have landed it in as much as $500 million in debt.

Fortunately, there looks to be a viable path to survival for the Nashville-based company. That path involves liquidating the consumer electronics business, which is the work of a soon-to-be-defunct division called Gibson Innovation. The division's products have included headphones, speakers, and other audio equipment. If the company's plan is successful, Les Pauls and other guitars—along with the company's other professional studio audio equipment products and instruments, like Epiphone guitars and Baldwin pianos—could continue to be sold to future generations of musicians.

Despite Gibson's historic role in the music industry, chief executive Henry Juszkiewicz (who joined the company to save it from another bankruptcy scare in 1986) sought to turn the company into a "music lifestyle brand" in response to slowing guitar sales, according to a report in The New York Times. That's where the Innovation division and the tech products came into play. Juszkiewicz also began pushing new technologies like self-tuning guitars which didn't appeal to musicians who play in styles that are all about tradition. Ultimately, those bets have not paid off.

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Deals of the Day (5-06-2018)

Mother’s Day is a week away, and Amazon is kicking off a sale in hopes that you were planning on giving mom an eReader, smart speaker, tablet, or media streamer this year. There’s nothing stopping you from buying one (or two) yourself. You can pick up …

Mother’s Day is a week away, and Amazon is kicking off a sale in hopes that you were planning on giving mom an eReader, smart speaker, tablet, or media streamer this year. There’s nothing stopping you from buying one (or two) yourself. You can pick up an Amazon Echo Dot for $40 or a 2-pack […]

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Vodafone: Smartphone-Tarif mit echter Datenflatrate kostet 80 Euro

Vodafone zieht nach und bietet in Kürze ebenfalls einen Smartphone-Tarif mit einer echten Datenflatrate ohne Drosselung an. Vor anderhalb Monaten hatte die Deutsche Telekom einen solchen Tarif gestartet. (Vodafone, Mobilfunk)

Vodafone zieht nach und bietet in Kürze ebenfalls einen Smartphone-Tarif mit einer echten Datenflatrate ohne Drosselung an. Vor anderhalb Monaten hatte die Deutsche Telekom einen solchen Tarif gestartet. (Vodafone, Mobilfunk)

Vodafone: Callya-Flex-App funktioniert wieder nicht

Erst sind nur iOS-Kunden betroffen gewesen, jetzt auch Android-Kunden. Die Callya-Flex-App funktioniert derzeit auf Android- und iOS-Geräten nicht. Bis Vodafone den letzten Ausfall behoben hatte, vergingen drei Wochen. (Vodafone, Mobilfunk)

Erst sind nur iOS-Kunden betroffen gewesen, jetzt auch Android-Kunden. Die Callya-Flex-App funktioniert derzeit auf Android- und iOS-Geräten nicht. Bis Vodafone den letzten Ausfall behoben hatte, vergingen drei Wochen. (Vodafone, Mobilfunk)

YouTube Won’t Put Up With Blatant Piracy Tutorials Forever

There are countless piracy-focused tutorials on YouTube, a number that’s growing every single day. At the moment the video platform seems to tolerate these fairly well but that’s not likely to be the case forever. Mostly thanks to YouTubers with significant followings that are becoming increasingly blatant, wings are going to get clipped – sooner or later.

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and more. We also have VPN reviews, discounts, offers and coupons.

Once upon a time, Internet users’ voices would be heard in limited circles, on platforms such as Usenet or other niche platforms.

Then, with the rise of forum platforms such as phpBB in 2000 and Invision Power Board in 2002, thriving communities could gather in public to discuss endless specialist topics, including file-sharing of course.

When dedicated piracy forums began to gain traction, it was pretty much a free-for-all. People discussed obtaining free content absolutely openly. Nothing was taboo and no one considered that there would be any repercussions. As such, moderation was limited to keeping troublemakers in check.

As the years progressed and lawsuits against both sites and services became more commonplace, most sites that weren’t actually serving illegal content began to consider their positions. Run by hobbyists, most didn’t want the hassle of a multi-million dollar lawsuit, so links to pirate content began to diminish and the more overt piracy tutorials began to disappear underground.

Those that remained in plain sight became much more considered. Tutorials on how to pirate specific Hollywood blockbusters were no longer needed, a plain general tutorial would suffice. And, as communities matured and took time to understand the implications of their actions, those without political motivations realized that drawing attention to potential criminality was neither required nor necessary.

Then YouTube and social media happened and almost overnight, no one was in charge and anyone could say whatever they liked.

In this new reality, there were no irritating moderator-type figures removing links to this and that, and nobody warning people against breaking rules that suddenly didn’t exist anymore. In essence, previously tight-knit and street-wise file-sharing and piracy communities not only became fragmented, but also chaotic.

This meant that anyone could become a leader and in some cases, this was the utopia that many had hoped for. Not only couldn’t the record labels or Hollywood tell people what to do anymore, discussion site operators couldn’t either. For those who didn’t abuse the power and for those who knew no better, this was a much-needed breath of fresh air. But, like all good things, it was unlikely to last forever.

Where most file-sharing of yesterday was carried out by hobbyist enthusiasts, many of today’s pirates are far more casual. They’re just as thirsty for content, but they don’t want to spend hours hunting for it. They want it all on a plate, at the flick of a switch, delivered to their TV with a minimum of hassle.

With online discussions increasingly seen as laborious and old-fashioned, many mainstream pirates have turned to easy-to-consume videos. In support of their Kodi media player habits, YouTube has become the educational platform of choice for millions.

As a result, there is now a long line of self-declared Kodi piracy specialists scooping up millions of views on YouTube. Their videos – which in many cases are thinly veiled advertisements for third party addons, Kodi ‘builds’, illegal IPTV services, and obscure Android APKs – are now the main way for a new generation to obtain direct advice on pirating.

Many of the videos are incredibly blatant, like the past 15 years of litigation never happened. All the lessons learned by the phpBB board operators of yesteryear, of how to achieve their goals of sharing information without getting shut down, have been long forgotten. In their place, a barrage of daily videos designed to generate clicks and affiliate revenue, no matter what the cost, no matter what the risk.

It’s pretty clear that these videos are at least partly responsible for the phenomenal uptick in Kodi and Android-based piracy over the past few years. In that respect, many lovers of free content will be eternally grateful for the service they’ve provided. But like many piracy movements over the years, people shouldn’t get too attached to them, at least in their current form.

Thanks to the devil-may-care approach of many influential YouTubers, it won’t be long before a whole new set of moderators begin flexing their muscles. While your average phpBB moderator could be reasoned with in order to get a second chance, a determined and largely faceless YouTube will eject offenders without so much as a clear explanation.

When this happens (and it’s only a question of time given the growing blatancy of many tutorials) YouTubers will not only lose their voices but their revenue streams too. While YouTube’s partner programs bring in some welcome cash, the profitable affiliate schemes touted on these channels for external products will also be under threat.

Perhaps the most surprising thing in this drama-waiting-to-happen is that many of the most popular YouTubers can hardly be considered young and naive. While some are of more tender years, most – with their undoubted skill, knowledge and work ethic – should know better for their 30 or 40 years on this planet. Yet not only do they make their names public, they feature their faces heavily in their videos too.

Still, it’s likely that it will take some big YouTube accounts to fall before YouTubers respond by shaving the sharp edges off their blatant promotion of illegal activity. And there’s little doubt that those advertising products (which is most of them) will have to do so sooner rather than later.

Just this week, YouTube made it clear that it won’t tolerate people making money from the promotion of illegal activities.

“YouTube creators may include paid endorsements as part of their content only if the product or service they are endorsing complies with our advertising policies,” YouTube told the BBC.

“We will be working with creators going forward so they better understand that in video promotions [they] must not promote dishonest activity.”

That being said, like many other players in the piracy and file-sharing space over the past 18 years, YouTubers will eventually begin to learn that not only can the smart survive, they can flourish too.

Sure, there will be people out there who’ll protest that free speech allows citizens to express themselves in a manner of their choosing. But try PM’ing that to YouTube in response to a strike, and see how that fares.

When they say you’re done, the road back is a long one.

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and more. We also have VPN reviews, discounts, offers and coupons.

Navigation: Auch Telekom-Edition der Navigon-App verschwindet

Eigentlich sollte zumindest die Telekom-Edition der Navigon-App weiterhin angeboten werden. Aber das geschieht nicht. Ab dem 1. Juni 2018 wird auch die spezielle App für Telekom-Kunden nicht länger erhältlich sein, nachdem Navigon kürzlich den Rückzug …

Eigentlich sollte zumindest die Telekom-Edition der Navigon-App weiterhin angeboten werden. Aber das geschieht nicht. Ab dem 1. Juni 2018 wird auch die spezielle App für Telekom-Kunden nicht länger erhältlich sein, nachdem Navigon kürzlich den Rückzug aus dem Markt für Navigations-Apps bekanntgegeben hatte. (Navigon, Navigationssystem)

Apples iPhone 7: Mikrofon kann nach Update auf iOS 11.3 kaputt sein

Das Update auf iOS 11.3 macht bei einigen Besitzern eines iPhone 7 oder iPhone 7 Plus Probleme. Das Mikrofon am Smartphone funktioniert dann nicht mehr einwandfrei. In einem solchen Fall kann eine Reparatur notwendig sein. (iPhone 7, Smartphone)

Das Update auf iOS 11.3 macht bei einigen Besitzern eines iPhone 7 oder iPhone 7 Plus Probleme. Das Mikrofon am Smartphone funktioniert dann nicht mehr einwandfrei. In einem solchen Fall kann eine Reparatur notwendig sein. (iPhone 7, Smartphone)

4.1 pound Asus ZenBook Pro 15 with Core i9 CPU + NVIDIA graphics on the way

It looks like Asus is getting ready to update its laptop lineup, with a number of new models on the way including a few low-cost notebooks with entry-level, low-power specs and a few high-end models with premium hardware and design elements. One of the…

It looks like Asus is getting ready to update its laptop lineup, with a number of new models on the way including a few low-cost notebooks with entry-level, low-power specs and a few high-end models with premium hardware and design elements. One of thee most impressive could be the updated Asus ZenBook Pro 15. It’s […]

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