Lenovo announces consumer AR glasses that can tether to iPhones

Lenovo dangles a platform-agnostic carrot in front of AR hopefuls.

After pushing augmented reality (AR) glasses to businesses for years, Lenovo will finally sell AR glasses for consumers, the company announced today—and I briefly got to demo the lightweight Lenovo Glasses T1. With their Micro OLED displays and required tether to Windows, macOS, Android, or iOS devices, they bring some notable features to a space that has piqued industry-wide interest but is still likely far from becoming ubiquitous.

The early version of the T1 I tried had limited features; I was mostly only able to view a homepage with basic menu options and a desktop with icons for apps, like web browsing. Although the glasses weren't ready for me to watch a movie or hop around apps, I was impressed at how clear text and menu items were. This was in a sunny room with exceedingly tall windows. Even when facing sunlight, the few colors on display seemed vibrant and the text legible.

Lenovo specs the displays with 10,000:1 contrast and 1920×1080 pixels per eye. The glasses are also TÜV-certified for low blue light and flicker reduction, according to Lenovo. Much more time is needed to explore and challenge the Micro OLED displays before I pass final judgment. But the combination of smaller pixels and, from what I saw thus far, strong colors, should accommodate screens so close to the eyes. More broadly speaking, brightness can be a concern with OLED technologies, but the small demo I saw fared well in a sun-flushed room.

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State forces Frontier to stop charging $7 “Internet Infrastructure Surcharge”

Users won’t get refunds for hidden fee, but deal in Conn. imposes other conditions.

A Frontier Communications service van parked in front of a building.

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images | jetcityimage)

Frontier Communications has agreed to stop charging its sneaky $7-per-month "Internet Infrastructure Surcharge" as part of a settlement with Connecticut Attorney General William Tong. Frontier also agreed to spend $42.5 million to expand fiber deployment in Connecticut, make a payment to the state, and improve customer service.

Unfortunately for most Frontier Internet users in the US, the pending settlement only requires changes in Connecticut. We asked Frontier if it will continue charging the $7 monthly Internet Infrastructure Surcharge in other states and will update this article if we get an answer.

Frontier claims the $7 fee, which isn't included in advertised rates, is necessary to cover "maintenance and other costs associated with our network infrastructure and your continued access to high-speed Internet service." One might assume the cost of maintaining the network would be covered by the standard price users pay for Internet service, but Frontier has used the fee to raise its actual prices above advertised rates.

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Cloudflare Rejects Role as Internet or Piracy Police

Cloudflare suggests that it made a mistake by terminating the accounts of The Daily Stormer and 8Chan. These decisions made it harder for the company to defend itself against overbroad termination requests and invited a wave of follow-up demends, from activists to copyright holders. This isn’t a position Cloudflare wants to be in.

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

cloudflare logoIn 2017, Cloudflare CEO Matthew Prince decided to terminate the account of the controversial neo-Nazi site Daily Stormer.

“I woke up this morning in a bad mood and decided to kick them off the Internet,” he wrote at the time.

The company’s lawyers later explained that the move was meant as an “intellectual exercise” to start a conversation regarding censorship and free speech on the internet. However, external parties took this discussion in a different direction than the one Prince had planned.

For years, Cloudflare had a policy not to remove any accounts without a court order, so when it kicked out Daily Stormer and later 8Chan as well, eyebrows were raised. For example, copyright holders wondered why the company could terminate these accounts but not those of the most notorious pirate sites.

Cloudflare’s seemingly arbitrary termination choices were repeatedly cited in policy discussions and copyright litigation. In addition, it triggered an ongoing wave of termination requests.

Over the past few days, Cloudflare found itself in the midst of a ‘cancel’ discussion again, with people calling on the company to disconnect the harassment-linked forum Kiwi Farms. This prompted Matthew Prince to clarify the company’s stance on offensive, abhorrent, and copyright-infringing content.

No More Voluntary Terminations

The company makes a clear distinction between the various services it offers. When Cloudflare is the primary hosting platform it leaves plenty of room for voluntary terminations. For its CDN, security, and core Internet infrastructure services, voluntary actions will no longer happen.

This strict line in the sand is the result of discussions with policymakers worldwide. Cloudflare sees itself as an Internet utility that should remain as neutral as possible, even when its customers do despicable things.

“Just as the telephone company doesn’t terminate your line if you say awful, racist, bigoted things, we have concluded in consultation with politicians, policy makers, and experts that turning off security services because we think what you publish is despicable is the wrong policy.

“To be clear, just because we did it in a limited set of cases before doesn’t mean we were right when we did. Or that we will ever do it again,” Prince adds, referring to the earlier terminations.

Wave of Requests

While many people applauded Cloudflare for booting out The Daily Stormer and 8Chan, these decisions were actively used against the company. Not just by copyright holders, but also by authoritarian regimes.

“In a deeply troubling response, after both terminations we saw a dramatic increase in authoritarian regimes attempting to have us terminate security services for human rights organizations — often citing the language from our own justification back to us.”

As we suggested back in 2017, Cloudflare essentially handed out free ammunition to adversaries, who could use the voluntary terminations as an argument to request more restrictions. That includes kicking out pirate sites.

Cloudflare is clearly uncomfortable with this position. The company stresses that voluntary terminations will no longer happen for sites that use its CDN or security services. Instead, those demanding action will need to get a court order.

Slippery Termiation Slope

In recent years various courts have already ordered Cloudflare to block pirate sites. The company has complied with these orders. However, it vows to fight cases where core infrastructure is at play with tooth and nail. This includes a recent order in Italy, that required the company to block pirate sites on its public DNS resolver 1.1.1.1.

“Unfortunately, these cases are becoming more common where largely copyright holders are attempting to get a ruling in one jurisdiction and have it apply worldwide to terminate core Internet technology services and effectively wipe content offline,” Prince writes.

These global injunctions would set a dangerous precedent, Cloudflare’s CEO says, as it would allow the most restrictive regimes to control what content should be available online. Preventing bad precedents is the prime reason why Cloudflare believes it is important not to intervene voluntarily in the future.

“Holding this line we believe is fundamental for the healthy operation of the global Internet. But each showing of discretion across our security or core Internet technology services weakens our argument in these important cases.”

In other words, Prince doesn’t want another Daily Stormer or 8Chan that can come back to haunt the company in the future. This means that The Pirate Bay and other pirate customers have little to worry about, at least for the time being.

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

Sony Xperia 5 IV is a “compact” flagship (by 2022 standards)

The Sony Xperia 5 IV is a smartphone with a 120 Hz OLED display, a Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 processor, and three rear cameras, all of which can capture 4K video at up to 120 frames per second. Sony refers to the phone as a “compact” dev…

The Sony Xperia 5 IV is a smartphone with a 120 Hz OLED display, a Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 processor, and three rear cameras, all of which can capture 4K video at up to 120 frames per second. Sony refers to the phone as a “compact” device… and I suppose that’s at a time […]

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Lenovo’s Glasses T1 let you strap a 1080p display to your face

A decade after Google Glass debuted, augmented reality smart glasses still haven’t really caught on with consumers. But there’s a growing market for VR headsets like the Meta Quest 2 and PlayStation VR. Now Lenovo has developed something a…

A decade after Google Glass debuted, augmented reality smart glasses still haven’t really caught on with consumers. But there’s a growing market for VR headsets like the Meta Quest 2 and PlayStation VR. Now Lenovo has developed something a little different. The Lenovo Glasses T1 aren’t virtual or augmented reality glasses. Instead they’re just a pair of […]

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Daily Deals (9-01-2022)

The Epic Games Store is giving away Shadow of the Tomb Raider for free this week. And if you have an Amazon Prime membership, you can score five free PC games this month, including Assassin’s Creed Origins, but you’ll need to link your Ama…

The Epic Games Store is giving away Shadow of the Tomb Raider for free this week. And if you have an Amazon Prime membership, you can score five free PC games this month, including Assassin’s Creed Origins, but you’ll need to link your Amazon account to Ubisoft Connect to snag that one. Here are some of the day’s […]

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USB4 v2 will support speeds up to 80 Gbps

The next generation of USB devices might support data transfer speeds as high as 80 Gbps, which would be twice as fast as current-gen Thunderbolt 4 products. As promised at the start of September, the USB Promotor Group has published the new USB4 Vers…

The next generation of USB devices might support data transfer speeds as high as 80 Gbps, which would be twice as fast as current-gen Thunderbolt 4 products. As promised at the start of September, the USB Promotor Group has published the new USB4 Version 2.0 specification with support for speeds up to 80 Gbps (or […]

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Kobo Clara 2E is a waterproof eReader with WiFI 5, USB-C, and 16GB storage for $130

Kobo’s latest eReader features a 6 inch E Ink display with 300 pixels per inch and battery life measured in weeks. The new Kobo Clara 2E also has twice as much storage as the Kobo Clara HD, faster WiFi, and support for Bluetooth audio, allowing …

Kobo’s latest eReader features a 6 inch E Ink display with 300 pixels per inch and battery life measured in weeks. The new Kobo Clara 2E also has twice as much storage as the Kobo Clara HD, faster WiFi, and support for Bluetooth audio, allowing you to use the device for listening to audiobooks as well […]

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Lenovo Tab P11 Pro (2nd-gen) is a $400 tablet with a 120 Hz OLED display and MTK Kompanio 1300T

The Lenovo Tab P11 Pro (2nd-gen) tablet features an 11.2 inch, 2560 x 1536 pixel OLED display with a 120 Hz refresh rate and 360 Hz touch sampling rate, a speedy octa-core processor from MediaTek, and support for up to 8GB of RAM and 256GB of storage….

The Lenovo Tab P11 Pro (2nd-gen) tablet features an 11.2 inch, 2560 x 1536 pixel OLED display with a 120 Hz refresh rate and 360 Hz touch sampling rate, a speedy octa-core processor from MediaTek, and support for up to 8GB of RAM and 256GB of storage. It carries over a few key features from the […]

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