Google Hardware’s latest weird defect: Quickly deteriorating phone cases

Reddit and Amazon users say the expensive phone cases haven’t held up.

This is a "pink" case after a few months.

Enlarge / This is a "pink" case after a few months. (credit: A_Giant_Baguette)

Google Hardware's products aim to bring the best of Google's software prowess to the market, but the division sure does have a lot of quality control issues. The latest weird Google Hardware defect is yellowing, warping phone cases. As The Verge reports, Google's pricey, translucent plastic cases aren't living up to their $30 price tag.

Numerous reports on Amazon and Reddit list all kinds of problems with these cases. One post on Reddit, titled "Pixel 6 case Made by Google is trash," has 500 upvotes and contains several pictures of what these official cases look like after a few months. The cases apparently quickly turn yellow or brown from UV degradation. That's a common problem with cheap transparent cases, but it's not something you would expect from an official $30 case from a major manufacturer.

Another continually cited problem is that the cases don't fit correctly, either straight from the factory or due to warping over time. Images show waggly edges around the power and volume buttons.

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Lidar reveals networks of pre-Columbian cities and towns in Bolivia

The western Amazon basin was home to its own pre-Columbian civilization, the Casarabe.

Cotoca, a 125 hectare settlement, sits at the center of a network of causeways linking it to smaller communities.

Enlarge / Cotoca, a 125 hectare settlement, sits at the center of a network of causeways linking it to smaller communities.

An airborne lidar survey recently revealed the long-hidden ruins of 11 pre-Columbian Indigenous towns in what is now northern Bolivia. The survey also revealed previously unseen details of defensive walls and complex ceremonial buildings at 17 other settlements in the area, built by a culture about which archaeologists still know very little: the Casarabe.

In the last few years, lidar—which uses infrared beams to see what lies beneath dense foliage—has helped archaeologists map a long-hidden, long-forgotten landscape of towns, fortresses, causeways, canals, terraced fields, and ceremonial sites left behind by the Maya and Olmec civilizations across a huge swath of modern Belize, Guatemala, and Mexico. Those cultures are fairly well-known to archaeologists and historians, but lidar surveys have still revealed some huge surprises. And we know far less about the Casarabe culture, as it hasn’t been the subject of as many surveys and excavations as bigger, more famous civilizations like the Maya.

But a recent lidar survey, led by Heiko Prümers of the German Archaeological Institute, shed more light (infrared, specifically) on the Casarabe culture’s network of towns and cities, linked by hundreds of kilometers of causeways and canals. The survey also revealed a thriving urban culture in an area where historians once assumed very few people lived before Spanish colonization.

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Sick of picking up toys? Dyson’s future robots want to do it for you

Company expects its robots to be doing your household chores in a decade.

Dyson is trying to get a grasp on home robotics.

Enlarge / Dyson is trying to get a grasp on home robotics. (credit: Dyson)

Dyson today shared its ambitious plans to sell robots that can do your household chores. The company best known for vacuums is in the midst of a massive hiring push as it looks to make consumer robots that roam homes and do more than suck up dust. The company wants to put these robots in homes within 10 years.

For 20 years, Dyson has been making puck-format robot vacuums that move around homes sucking up dust and dirt. But for the last 10 years, Dyson has also been researching autonomous robots with grasping hands.

In a video, Dyson showed robot prototypes performing house tasks, including putting away dishes and helpfully placing bleach on a countertop.

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Sick of picking up toys? Dyson’s future robots want to do it for you

Company expects its robots to be doing your household chores in a decade.

Dyson is trying to get a grasp on home robotics.

Enlarge / Dyson is trying to get a grasp on home robotics. (credit: Dyson)

Dyson today shared its ambitious plans to sell robots that can do your household chores. The company best known for vacuums is in the midst of a massive hiring push as it looks to make consumer robots that roam homes and do more than suck up dust. The company wants to put these robots in homes within 10 years.

For 20 years, Dyson has been making puck-format robot vacuums that move around homes sucking up dust and dirt. But for the last 10 years, Dyson has also been researching autonomous robots with grasping hands.

In a video, Dyson showed robot prototypes performing house tasks, including putting away dishes and helpfully placing bleach on a countertop.

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Cerebras WSE-2: München verbaut riesigen KI-Chip

Als erster Standort in Europa hat das Leibniz-Rechenzentrum (LRZ) ein CS-2-System mit Cerebras’ WSE-2 gekauft, welches effizient und schnell ist. (Supercomputer, KI)

Als erster Standort in Europa hat das Leibniz-Rechenzentrum (LRZ) ein CS-2-System mit Cerebras' WSE-2 gekauft, welches effizient und schnell ist. (Supercomputer, KI)

Dell’s first XPS-branded detachable tablet leaked (Dell XPS 9315t)

Dell may be planning to launch a new 13 inch tablet with a detachable keyboard and a folio case/kickstand that allows you to use the computer as a pseudo-notebook. While the company hasn’t made an official announcement yet, Evan Blass has publis…

Dell may be planning to launch a new 13 inch tablet with a detachable keyboard and a folio case/kickstand that allows you to use the computer as a pseudo-notebook. While the company hasn’t made an official announcement yet, Evan Blass has published a set of leaked images at 91mobiles showing the upcoming Dell XPS 9315t 2-in-1 tablet. […]

The post Dell’s first XPS-branded detachable tablet leaked (Dell XPS 9315t) appeared first on Liliputing.

Earth’s orbital debris problem is worsening, and policy solutions are difficult

“Who’s responsible? Who pays? How much do they pay?”

Dave Hebert, Caleb Henry, Therese Jones, and Eric Berger at Ars Frontiers 2022 on the growing problem of orbital debris. Click here for transcript. (video link)

One of the greatest threats to humanity's ongoing expansion into space is the proliferation of debris in low Earth orbit. During a panel discussion at the Ars Frontiers conference earlier this month, a trio of experts described the problem and outlined potential solutions.

The issue of debris is almost as old as spaceflight, explained Caleb Henry, a senior analyst at Quilty Analytics. During the Space Race in the 1960s, the Soviet Union and the United States often launched rockets without regard for the trajectory of the upper stages.

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