Asus takes a page from Lenovo with new foldable PC

It’s like a 17.3-inch OLED tablet that can fold in half.

Asus Zenbook 17 Fold OLED in four different setups

Enlarge / The Asus Zenbook 17 Fold OLED can take many forms. (credit: Asus/YouTube)

When Intel unveiled its 12th-gen mobile CPUs on Tuesday, the company pointed to the chips' suitability for use in foldable PC designs by showing unidentified concept images. It didn't take long to figure out what Intel was talking about. On Wednesday, Asus announced a foldable PC—think of it as a 17.3-inch OLED tablet that can fold in half.

In addition to a 12th-gen i7 CPU, the Asus Zenbook 17 Fold OLED comes with 16GB of RAM and a 1TB PCIe 4.0 SSD. The components live in a device measuring 14.9 x 11.32 x 0.34–0.46 inches when open and housing an OLED touchscreen with a 2560 x 1920 resolution and a 0.2 ms GTG response time.

The display has a 4:3 aspect ratio, making it tall when fully open. If you fold it down the middle, the screen will act as two 12.5-inch displays with 1920 x 1290 resolutions and 3:2 aspect ratios. When you're done, you can fold the device shut so that it's "smaller than a sheet of photocopier paper," measuring 11.69 x 8.27 inches, according to Asus' announcement. And if you're worried about how many times you can fold the device, Asus claims the hinge lasts for at least 30,000 cycles.

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GM readies Qualcomm-powered Ultra Cruise driver assistance for 2023 launch

The Snapdragon Ride Platform uses Qualcomm’s 5 nm SoCs.

A closer look at the hardware inside the Ultra Cruise computer.

Enlarge / A closer look at the hardware inside the Ultra Cruise computer. (credit: General Motors)

General Motors has partnered with Qualcomm to provide the computing power for its next-generation hands-free driver-assistance system. First announced in October 2021, the new system is called Ultra Cruise, and it one-ups the (already very competent) GM Super Cruise in terms of performance and operational design domain.

Whereas Super Cruise is limited to restricted access, divided-lane highways, Ultra Cruise will at first operate on more than 2 million miles of roads in the US and Canada. An Ultra Cruise-equipped car will sense its environment using a mix of lidar, optical cameras, and radar to generate a sensor-fused 360-degree view of the world around it. It will recognize and react to permanent traffic control devices like stop signs and traffic lights, and it will even handle left-turns, albeit with a little driver input.

Like Super Cruise, Ultra Cruise is a driver-assistance system (it falls under the SAE's level 2), and the human driver is still responsible for providing situational awareness (with a driver-monitoring system making sure that's happening).

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Samsung foldable display concepts include tri-fold and slideable screens

Samsung has been selling smartphones with foldable OLED displays since 2019, but so far the company has basically stuck with phones that fold in half either vertically or horizontally. But now the company is showing off prototypes of devices that use flexible display technology in different ways. At CES 2022, Samsung is demonstrating four new […]

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Samsung has been selling smartphones with foldable OLED displays since 2019, but so far the company has basically stuck with phones that fold in half either vertically or horizontally. But now the company is showing off prototypes of devices that use flexible display technology in different ways.

At CES 2022, Samsung is demonstrating four new concepts it calls Flex S, Flex G, Flex Note, and Flex Slideable.

Samsung Flex S and Flex G (tri-fold)

These displays are both designed to fold at two points rather than one, effectively breaking the screen up into three parts. When unfolded you have a wide-screen tablet. Folded up, you have a pocket-sized device.

Samsung’s Flex S is designed to fold… like the letter S, with an accordion-like design where you fold one edge so that it covers a portion of the screen, leaving just one third still visible. Then you can fold that backward and hold the device like a phone with a single screen exposed.

Flex G, meanwhile, is a screen where both edges fold inward, resulting in a smaller, pocketable device with the entire display covered and protected (although I suppose this sort of design could also work with a secondary cover display that you could use when the main screen is folded.

Samsung Flex Slideable

The Flex Slideable display is more of a rollable screen than a foldable. A portion of the screen is hidden behind the primary section and slides out when you want the extra screen space.

We’ve seen this sort of technology before – LG was developing a phone with a slide-out display in 2020, but it was scrapped when the company decided to shut down its smartphone business entirely. And Oppo actually built a fully functional phone with a slideable display in 2021, but it was only a “concept handset” and it was never released as a commercial device.

There’s no word on if or when Samsung’s Flex Slideable will become a real thing you can buy, but Samsung’s demo does hint at the technology being used for more than just a bit of screen space. For example, it could allow you to access an app launcher or shortcut keys when extended, without losing your view of the app that was already on your screen.

Samsung Flex Note

This 17 inch flexible OLED display folds in half, making it possible to use it as a large-screen tablet or a 13 inch laptop, where the bottom portion is used for a virtual keyboard or other application controls.

You should also be able to hold it in the center with a slight fold inward to use the display like a book.

And if that sounds familiar, that’s because this concept is strikingly similar to the Asus Zenbook 17 Fold that was announced this week, and which is supposed to come to market in the second quarter of 2022.

via SamMobile and MySmartPrice

The post Samsung foldable display concepts include tri-fold and slideable screens appeared first on Liliputing.

Samsung foldable display concepts include tri-fold and slideable screens

Samsung has been selling smartphones with foldable OLED displays since 2019, but so far the company has basically stuck with phones that fold in half either vertically or horizontally. But now the company is showing off prototypes of devices that use flexible display technology in different ways. At CES 2022, Samsung is demonstrating four new […]

The post Samsung foldable display concepts include tri-fold and slideable screens appeared first on Liliputing.

Samsung has been selling smartphones with foldable OLED displays since 2019, but so far the company has basically stuck with phones that fold in half either vertically or horizontally. But now the company is showing off prototypes of devices that use flexible display technology in different ways.

At CES 2022, Samsung is demonstrating four new concepts it calls Flex S, Flex G, Flex Note, and Flex Slideable.

Samsung Flex S and Flex G (tri-fold)

These displays are both designed to fold at two points rather than one, effectively breaking the screen up into three parts. When unfolded you have a wide-screen tablet. Folded up, you have a pocket-sized device.

Samsung’s Flex S is designed to fold… like the letter S, with an accordion-like design where you fold one edge so that it covers a portion of the screen, leaving just one third still visible. Then you can fold that backward and hold the device like a phone with a single screen exposed.

Flex G, meanwhile, is a screen where both edges fold inward, resulting in a smaller, pocketable device with the entire display covered and protected (although I suppose this sort of design could also work with a secondary cover display that you could use when the main screen is folded.

Samsung Flex Slideable

The Flex Slideable display is more of a rollable screen than a foldable. A portion of the screen is hidden behind the primary section and slides out when you want the extra screen space.

We’ve seen this sort of technology before – LG was developing a phone with a slide-out display in 2020, but it was scrapped when the company decided to shut down its smartphone business entirely. And Oppo actually built a fully functional phone with a slideable display in 2021, but it was only a “concept handset” and it was never released as a commercial device.

There’s no word on if or when Samsung’s Flex Slideable will become a real thing you can buy, but Samsung’s demo does hint at the technology being used for more than just a bit of screen space. For example, it could allow you to access an app launcher or shortcut keys when extended, without losing your view of the app that was already on your screen.

Samsung Flex Note

This 17 inch flexible OLED display folds in half, making it possible to use it as a large-screen tablet or a 13 inch laptop, where the bottom portion is used for a virtual keyboard or other application controls.

You should also be able to hold it in the center with a slight fold inward to use the display like a book.

And if that sounds familiar, that’s because this concept is strikingly similar to the Asus Zenbook 17 Fold that was announced this week, and which is supposed to come to market in the second quarter of 2022.

via SamMobile and MySmartPrice

The post Samsung foldable display concepts include tri-fold and slideable screens appeared first on Liliputing.

France orders Google and Facebook to offer one-click cookie rejection

France fines Google and Facebook €210M, says complex cookie opt-outs are illegal.

A computer cursor hovering over an

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images | Sean Gladwell)

French regulators today ordered Google and Facebook to make rejecting cookies as simple as accepting them and fined the companies a total of €210 million for failing to comply with France's Data Protection Act.

The CNIL (Commission Nationale de l'Informatique et des Libertés) said that "facebook.com, google.fr and youtube.com offer a button allowing the user to immediately accept cookies" but "do not provide an equivalent solution (button or other) enabling the Internet user to easily refuse the deposit of these cookies. Several clicks are required to refuse all cookies, against a single one to accept them."

The process making it harder to reject cookies than to accept them "affects the freedom of consent of Internet users and constitutes an infringement of Article 82 of the French Data Protection Act," the CNIL said. The agency announced fines of €150 million for Google and €60 million for Facebook and said it "ordered the companies to provide Internet users located in France with a means of refusing cookies as simple as the existing means of accepting them, in order to guarantee their freedom of consent, within three months. If they fail to do so, the companies will have to pay a penalty of 100,000 euros per day of delay."

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Konami looks to cash in on NFT mania with digital collectible collection

14 crypto-signed Castlevania curios in honor of the series’ 35th birthday.

No, see, <em>this</em> copy of the image isn't worth anything, because it's not on signed on the blockchain...

Enlarge / No, see, this copy of the image isn't worth anything, because it's not on signed on the blockchain...

Konami became the latest gaming company to jump on the non-fungible token bandwagon Thursday with the announcement of the Konami Memorial NFT Collection. But rather than focusing on in-game cosmetics or supply-constrained virtual land as some other publishers have, Konami is simply offering a small set of NFT-backed artwork and music drawn from the Castlevania series in honor of its 35th anniversary.

Konami's collection includes 14 individual NFTs representing five songs from the NES Castlevania games, six short videos showing off special item use in the first Castlevania, two pieces of hand-drawn promotional art from Circle of the Moon, and a unique piece of "Dracula's Castle" pixel art inspired by the games. Each item in the collection is a "one of one" cryptographic signature that will be posted on the Ethereum blockchain after an OpenSea auction set to start on January 12. Those auctions have an effective reserve price of one "wrapped Ethereum," or about $3,350 at today's market value.

The NFTs will represent the associated digital collectible, whose "minting" is linked to Konami's verified account to help establish provenance. Konami also promises that an "NFT with the exact same data will not be resold, but similar NFTs tied to the same game title may be resold in the future," making them "unique" on the blockchain (even if the underlying images and sounds are endlessly copiable).

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Daily Deals (1-06-2021)

2022 may be here, but Walmart is running an “end of year” clearance sale. And Lenovo is too, even if the company’s not using the end of year terminology. Anyway, it’s not a bad time to save a few bucks on a Chromebook or Windows tablet or notebook. Meanwhile, the Epic Games Store’s latest free […]

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2022 may be here, but Walmart is running an “end of year” clearance sale. And Lenovo is too, even if the company’s not using the end of year terminology. Anyway, it’s not a bad time to save a few bucks on a Chromebook or Windows tablet or notebook.

Meanwhile, the Epic Games Store’s latest free game of the week is Gods Will Fall.

Here are some of the day’s best deals.

Chromebooks

Windows PCs

Wireless audio

Other

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Two research teams independently used vacuums to measure biodiversity

Collecting environmental DNA in water has become common—can we do it in air now?

Two research teams independently used vacuums to measure biodiversity

Enlarge (credit: Surapong Thammabuht / EyeEm)

Just as the pandemic hit, Christina Islas Lynggaard—a postdoc researcher at the University of Copenhagen’s Globe Institute—sat in her apartment surrounded by vacuums and filters. She tested them, eventually landing on a water vacuum, which was, for her purposes, pretty good. The rest didn’t quite make the cut—they had good suction, but the second you put a filter in them, it messed with their power supplies. “It just dies, and then the motor comes to overheat, and it was very difficult,” Lynggaard said.

All this testing was done for an interesting case, one that seems obvious in hindsight but could have valuable ecological applications. In short, Lynggaard and other researchers on her team were looking for a way to collect environmental DNA (eDNA) from the air to measure biodiversity or look for the presence of rare or invasive species.

Out of thin air

“We had no idea the best way to collect DNA from air,” Kristine Bohmann told Ars. Bohmann is an associate professor at the Globe Institute and one of the researchers involved in the effort.

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FBI Arrests Man For Fraudulently Obtaining Leaks of 100s of Pre-Release Books

The FBI has arrested a man who impersonated publishers and literary agents in order to fraudulently obtain hundreds of pre-release novels and other books in electronic form. Filippo Bernardini, 29, who worked at UK publisher Simon & Schuster, was detained upon arrival at JFK International Airport yesterday.

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

Department of JusticeOver the years there have been many schemes to obtain movies and TV shows before their commercial release. A notable example includes members of the MiLLENiUM Release Group who were sentenced in 2019.

But while pirates who obtain video content in advance of its official release tend to grab the most headlines, a case developing in the United States reveals that valuable literary content such as pre-release novels can be targeted too.

FBI Arrests Italian Man at JFK Airport

Late Wednesday the Department of Justice revealed that the FBI had arrested Italian citizen Filippo Bernardini at John F. Kennedy International Airport for wire fraud and aggravated identity theft. He was detained in connection with a years-long scheme to obtain novels and other literary works in electronic form before their commercial release.

“Filippo Bernardini allegedly impersonated publishing industry individuals in order to have authors, including a Pulitzer prize winner, send him prepublication manuscripts for his own benefit. This real-life storyline now reads as a cautionary tale, with the plot twist of Barnardini facing federal criminal charges for his misdeeds,” said U.S. Attorney Damian Williams.

According to US authorities, the scheme to obtain the pre-release content had been running for at least five years.

Indictment Unsealed

The indictment, unsealed Wednesday in Manhattan federal court, alleges that beginning in August 2016, Bernardini – who was based in London and worked in publishing for Simon & Schuster – began impersonating agents, editors and other individuals in the industry to obtain pre-release literary manuscripts from his targets.

This type of content is considered extremely valuable within the industry. As the indictment explains, should an unfinished work leak out to the public, any piracy can dramatically undermine the economics of publishing, undermine an author’s reputation, and interfere with secondary markets such as film adaptations.

According to court records, Bernardini obtained hundreds of such works from hundreds of individuals.

Sophisticated Phishing Operation

It’s alleged that in order to carry out the scheme, Bernardini registered more than 160 domains that impersonated real entities and individuals involved in publishing, such as talent agencies, publishing houses, and literary scouts. The domain names were designed to be confusingly similar to real entities by including subtle typographical errors (such as replacing ‘m’ with the letters ‘rn’) that were difficult to spot.

In tandem with these domains, Bernardini allegedly created email addresses in the names of actual people who worked at the corresponding entities and used them to contact authors, managers, agents, publishers, and editors to solicit unpublished books, novels and other content. One of his targets was an unnamed Pulitzer Prize-winning author who handed over the requested manuscript.

Email records held by the defendant show that he impersonated hundreds of people and engaged in hundreds of attempts to obtain electronic copies of unreleased content. In addition, Bernardini also lured unsuspecting targets to at least two fake websites where they were prompted to enter their usernames and passwords. These credentials were later used to gain unlawful access to a database maintained by a New York-based scouting company.

Statutory Allegations

According to the indictment the scheme ran from August 2016 to around July 2021 and was designed to obtain money and property under false and fraudulent pretenses, causing valuable and unpublished literary manuscripts to be sent and received by means of wire, contrary to the law. The Grand Jury charges also contain allegations of aggravated identity theft.

For the wire fraud charge, Bernardini, 29, of London, United Kingdom, faces a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison. For the aggravated identity theft charge he faces a possible mandatory consecutive sentence of 2 years in prison.

Simon & Schuster, which is not accused of wrongdoing, said it was “shocked and horrified” to learn of the allegations against Bernardini.

“The safekeeping of our authors’ intellectual property is of primary importance to Simon & Schuster, and for all in the publishing industry, and we are grateful to the FBI for investigating these incidents and bringing charges against the alleged perpetrator,” the company said.

The indictment can be found here

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

Volvo’s 2023 electric SUV will use lidar to drive itself

Automaker will initially restrict Level 3 autonomy to roads within California.

Volvo Concept Recharge lidar

Enlarge / Volvo's future SUV will probably resemble something like the Concept Recharge first introduced in June 2021. (credit: Luminar)

Level 3 autonomous driving appears poised to debut in the US as soon as next year.

At the 2022 Consumer Electronics Show yesterday, Volvo announced that it intends to offer its Ride Pilot feature to customers in California, pending regulatory approval. The automaker has been testing the system in Sweden, and it will begin testing in California later this year. It plans to ship the feature with its forthcoming all-electric SUV, due in 2023.

Volvo chose California because “the climate, traffic conditions, and regulatory framework provide a favorable environment for the introduction of autonomous driving,” the company said.

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