Google mocks Epic’s proposed reforms to end Android app market monopoly

Google should be barred from “treating Epic differently,” Epic Games says.

Google mocks Epic’s proposed reforms to end Android app market monopoly

Enlarge (credit: SOPA Images / Contributor | LightRocket)

Epic Games has filed a proposed injunction that would stop Google from restricting third-party app distribution outside Google Play Store on Android devices after proving that Google had an illegal monopoly in markets for Android app distribution.

Epic is suggesting that competition on the Android mobile platform would be opened up if the court orders Google to allow third-party app stores to be distributed for six years in the Google Play Store and blocks Google from entering any agreements with device makers that would stop them from pre-loading third-party app stores. This would benefit both mobile developers and users, Epic argued in a wide-sweeping proposal that would greatly limit Google's control over the Android app ecosystem.

US District Court Judge James Donato will ultimately decide the terms of the injunction. Google has until May 3 to respond to Epic's filing.

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Google mocks Epic’s proposed reforms to end Android app market monopoly

Google should be barred from “treating Epic differently,” Epic Games says.

Google mocks Epic’s proposed reforms to end Android app market monopoly

Enlarge (credit: SOPA Images / Contributor | LightRocket)

Epic Games has filed a proposed injunction that would stop Google from restricting third-party app distribution outside Google Play Store on Android devices after proving that Google had an illegal monopoly in markets for Android app distribution.

Epic is suggesting that competition on the Android mobile platform would be opened up if the court orders Google to allow third-party app stores to be distributed for six years in the Google Play Store and blocks Google from entering any agreements with device makers that would stop them from pre-loading third-party app stores. This would benefit both mobile developers and users, Epic argued in a wide-sweeping proposal that would greatly limit Google's control over the Android app ecosystem.

US District Court Judge James Donato will ultimately decide the terms of the injunction. Google has until May 3 to respond to Epic's filing.

Read 22 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Daily Deals (4-12-2024)

Best Buy is running a 3-day sale on a wide range of products including laptops, tablets, phones, headphones, TVs, and appliances. Some of the best laptop deals in the sale are for HP Envy and Spectre notebooks… but it turns out HP is also runnin…

Best Buy is running a 3-day sale on a wide range of products including laptops, tablets, phones, headphones, TVs, and appliances. Some of the best laptop deals in the sale are for HP Envy and Spectre notebooks… but it turns out HP is also running its own Spring Sale this weekend, with deals on select […]

The post Daily Deals (4-12-2024) appeared first on Liliputing.

The DiskMantler violently shakes hard drives for better rare-earth recovery

A nifty HDD disassembly tool, sure, but we also have a larger global need for magnets.

From magnets we came, to magnets we return.

Enlarge / From magnets we came, to magnets we return. (credit: Garner Products)

There is the mental image that most people have of electronics recycling, and then there is the reality, which is shredding.

Less than 20 percent of e-waste even makes it to recycling. That which does is, if not acquired through IT asset disposition (ITAD) or spotted by a worker who sees some value, heads into the shredder for raw metals extraction. If you've ever toured an electronics recycling facility, you can see for yourself how much of your stuff eventually gets chewed into little bits, whether due to design, to unprofitable reuse markets, or sheer volume concerns.

Traditional hard drives have some valuable things inside them—case, cover, circuit boards, drive assemblies, actuators, and rare-earth magnets—but only if they avoid the gnashing teeth. That's where the DiskMantler comes in. Garner Products, a data elimination firm, has a machine that it claims can process 500 hard drives (the HDD kind) per day in a way that leaves a drive separated into those useful components. And the DiskMantler does this by shaking the thing to death (video).

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The DiskMantler violently shakes hard drives for better rare-earth recovery

A nifty HDD disassembly tool, sure, but we also have a larger global need for magnets.

From magnets we came, to magnets we return.

Enlarge / From magnets we came, to magnets we return. (credit: Garner Products)

There is the mental image that most people have of electronics recycling, and then there is the reality, which is shredding.

Less than 20 percent of e-waste even makes it to recycling. That which does is, if not acquired through IT asset disposition (ITAD) or spotted by a worker who sees some value, heads into the shredder for raw metals extraction. If you've ever toured an electronics recycling facility, you can see for yourself how much of your stuff eventually gets chewed into little bits, whether due to design, to unprofitable reuse markets, or sheer volume concerns.

Traditional hard drives have some valuable things inside them—case, cover, circuit boards, drive assemblies, actuators, and rare-earth magnets—but only if they avoid the gnashing teeth. That's where the DiskMantler comes in. Garner Products, a data elimination firm, has a machine that it claims can process 500 hard drives (the HDD kind) per day in a way that leaves a drive separated into those useful components. And the DiskMantler does this by shaking the thing to death (video).

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SpaceX’s most-flown reusable rocket will go for its 20th launch tonight

Remarkably, SpaceX has launched a Falcon 9 rocket almost every day over the last week.

File photo of a Falcon 9 rocket rolling out of its hangar at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, Florida.

Enlarge / File photo of a Falcon 9 rocket rolling out of its hangar at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, Florida. (credit: SpaceX)

For the first time, SpaceX will launch one of its reusable Falcon 9 boosters for a 20th time Friday night on a flight to deliver 23 more Starlink Internet satellites to orbit.

This milestone mission is scheduled to lift off at 9:22 pm EDT Friday (01:22 UTC Saturday) from Space Launch Complex 40 (SLC-40) at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, Florida. Forecasters from the US Space Force predict "excellent" weather for the primetime launch.

Falcon 9 will blaze a familiar trail into space, following the same profile as dozens of past Starlink missions.

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AnberDeck mod turns Anbernic RG353V game system into a handheld Linux terminal

The Anbernic RG353V/S is a handheld game system with a 3.5 inch, 640 x 480 pixel display, a 1.8 GHz Rockchip RK3566 quad-core ARM Cortex-A55 processor, and support for dual-booting Android and Linux-based operating systems. So while it’s made fo…

The Anbernic RG353V/S is a handheld game system with a 3.5 inch, 640 x 480 pixel display, a 1.8 GHz Rockchip RK3566 quad-core ARM Cortex-A55 processor, and support for dual-booting Android and Linux-based operating systems. So while it’s made for gaming and has a Game Boy-inspired design, with game controllers below the screen, the handheld can […]

The post AnberDeck mod turns Anbernic RG353V game system into a handheld Linux terminal appeared first on Liliputing.

Google kills “One” VPN service, says “people simply weren’t using it”

Did anyone want a VPN from the Internet’s largest data collector?

Google kills “One” VPN service, says “people simply weren’t using it”

Enlarge (credit: Aurich Lawson)

Another day, another dead Google product. The Google One VPN service we complained about last week is headed to the chopping block. Google's support documents haven't been updated yet, but Android Authority reported on an email going out to Google One users informing them of the shutdown. 9to5Google also got confirmation of the shutdown from Google.

The Google One VPN launched in 2020 as a bonus feature for paying Google One subscribers. Google One is Google's cloud storage subscription plan that allows users to buy extra storage for Gmail, Drive, and Google Photos. In 2020, the plan was exclusive to the expensive 2TB tier for $10 a month, but later, it was brought down to all Google One tiers, including the entry-level $2-per-month option.

By our count, Google has three VPN products, though "products" might be too strong a word since they are all essentially the same thing—VPN market segments? There's the general Google One VPN for Android, iOS, Windows, and Mac—this is the one that's dying. There's also the "Pixel VPN by Google One," which came with Pixel phones (the "Google One" branding here makes no sense since you didn't have to subscribe to Google One) and the Google Fi VPN that's exclusive to Google Fi Android and iOS customers.

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Netzebene 4: Vodafone riskiert, Hunderttausende Kabelkunden zu verlieren

Regionale Kabelnetzbetreiber fühlen sich von Vodafone abgehängt und ignoriert. Mit dem Ende des Sammelinkassos werde man selbst Kopfstellen betreiben. Doch Vodafone widerspricht. (Vodafone, Kabelnetz)

Regionale Kabelnetzbetreiber fühlen sich von Vodafone abgehängt und ignoriert. Mit dem Ende des Sammelinkassos werde man selbst Kopfstellen betreiben. Doch Vodafone widerspricht. (Vodafone, Kabelnetz)

Palestina-Flagge: Apples Emoji-Vorschlag für Jerusalem sorgt für Kontroverse

Ein Fehler bei Apple hat für Aufsehen gesorgt, nachdem bei der Eingabe nach dem Begriff Jerusalem in bestimmten Sprachen die palästinensische Flagge als Emoji vorgeschlagen wird. (Apple, Betriebssysteme)

Ein Fehler bei Apple hat für Aufsehen gesorgt, nachdem bei der Eingabe nach dem Begriff Jerusalem in bestimmten Sprachen die palästinensische Flagge als Emoji vorgeschlagen wird. (Apple, Betriebssysteme)