AV1: Dav1d deutlich schneller als Google-Decoder

Der AV1-Decoder des Videolan-Projektes macht vor allem auf Mobilsystemen große Fortschritte. Die Konkurrenz ist deutlich schlechter. (AV1, Video-Codec)

Der AV1-Decoder des Videolan-Projektes macht vor allem auf Mobilsystemen große Fortschritte. Die Konkurrenz ist deutlich schlechter. (AV1, Video-Codec)

Pixel Buds 2 review: These earbuds are “much better than OK,” Google

Enough quality, comfort, style, and usefulness to merit a $180 price—just barely.

Pixel Buds 2 earbuds

Enlarge / OK Google, try again with Pixel Buds 2. (credit: Sam Machkovech)

The 2017 Pixel Buds were one of Google's worst hardware launches in the company's history. Really, these things were an utter nightmare. Their sound quality, feature set, awkward fit, and finicky case might have been tolerable as a free pair of buds included with a Google-branded phone—but not a standalone $160 purchase.

Any hardware refresh had enough work to do to catch up to 2017's standard of quality and convenience, but Google put itself into a deeper hole by launching this month's Pixel Buds 2 nearly three years later. Lucky for us, the company's new Buds, priced at $180, have turned out to be real buds. As in, buddies, homies, the kind I wanna lug around with me on a regular basis.

Google needed some good hardware news right about now, and that news comes in the form of Pixel Buds 2: a solid, competitive option for everyday earbuds in the year 2020. "Competitive" does not mean "perfect," but it does mean they're worth considering next time you think about buying earbuds.

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The Nigerian fraudsters ripping off the unemployment system

“Scattered Canary” group is scamming vital benefits programs amid the pandemic.

A partially shredded dollar bill.

Enlarge (credit: Daniel Grizelj | Getty Images)

As millions of people around the United States scrambled in recent weeks to collect unemployment benefits and disbursements through the federal CARES Act, officials warned about the looming threat of COVID-19-related scams online. Now they're here.

Last Thursday, the Secret Service issued an alert about a massive operation to file fraudulent unemployment claims in states around the country, like Washington and Massachusetts. Officials attributed the activity to Nigerian scammers and said millions of dollars had already been stolen. New research is now shedding light on one of the actors tied to the scams—and the other pandemic hustles they have going.

The email security firm Agari today will release findings that an actor within the Nigerian cybercriminal group Scattered Canary is filing fraudulent unemployment claims and receiving benefits from multiple states, while also receiving CARES payouts from the Internal Revenue Service. So far, this has netted hundreds of thousands of dollars in scam payments. Regular unemployment, the extra $600 per week that out-of-work Americans can claim during the pandemic, plus the one-time $1,200 payment eligible adults are receiving under the CARES Act are all vulnerable targets for cybercriminals. In the midst of a pandemic and critical economic downturn, though, the theft of those benefits could have particularly dire consequences. The Secret Service warns that hundreds of millions of dollars could be lost to such scams just as states are running out of money to fund unemployment on their own.

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Thinkpad DIY: Wie ich meinen alten Laptop fit für die Zukunft mache

Mit ein paar neuen Teilen und etwas Bastelei kann mein acht Jahre altes Thinkpad wieder mit den Laptops der Kollegen mithalten. Ein Erfahrungsbericht von Moritz Tremmel (DIY – Do it Yourself, Notebook)

Mit ein paar neuen Teilen und etwas Bastelei kann mein acht Jahre altes Thinkpad wieder mit den Laptops der Kollegen mithalten. Ein Erfahrungsbericht von Moritz Tremmel (DIY - Do it Yourself, Notebook)