Deals of the Day (6-16-2016)

Deals of the Day (6-16-2016)

Anker makes some of the most popular smartphone accessories sold on Amazon, including Bluetooth speakers and earbuds, portable batteries, chargers, USB chargers, and other gadgets. The company even has a robotic vacuum cleaner.

Part of the reason these devices are popular is because they’re decent. But a large part of their appeal is that they’re cheap… and right now some of Anker’s products are even cheaper.

Amazon is running a Gold Box Deal on about 20 different Anker products, with discounts of up to 60 percent off their list prices (although it’s worth noting that Anker products rarely sell at their list prices).

Continue reading Deals of the Day (6-16-2016) at Liliputing.

Deals of the Day (6-16-2016)

Anker makes some of the most popular smartphone accessories sold on Amazon, including Bluetooth speakers and earbuds, portable batteries, chargers, USB chargers, and other gadgets. The company even has a robotic vacuum cleaner.

Part of the reason these devices are popular is because they’re decent. But a large part of their appeal is that they’re cheap… and right now some of Anker’s products are even cheaper.

Amazon is running a Gold Box Deal on about 20 different Anker products, with discounts of up to 60 percent off their list prices (although it’s worth noting that Anker products rarely sell at their list prices).

Continue reading Deals of the Day (6-16-2016) at Liliputing.

Quedlinburg und Großbeeren: Vectoring für weitere 15.300 Haushalte

Die Telekom hat weitere Ausbaustädte für Vectoring bekannt gegeben. Wer Vectoring will, zahlt in den ersten zwölf Monaten jeweils 39,95 Euro und danach monatlich 44,95 Euro. (Vectoring, Telekom)

Die Telekom hat weitere Ausbaustädte für Vectoring bekannt gegeben. Wer Vectoring will, zahlt in den ersten zwölf Monaten jeweils 39,95 Euro und danach monatlich 44,95 Euro. (Vectoring, Telekom)

The Last Guardian: Hands-on with a game we thought may never exist

Six years after E3 debut, Shadow of the Colossus‘ follow-up is vaporware no more.

The most adorable giant bird-dog-horse hybrid ever.

I had to wait about 30 minutes to play the E3 demo of The Last Guardian on one of the few behind-closed-doors demo stations available at this year's show. In another sense, though, I've been waiting to play Fumito Ueda's next game for seven years now, ever since its 2009 E3 debut as a PlayStation 3 game. I've been waiting even longer since Ueda's Shadow of the Colossus dazzled the gaming world in 2005.

Playing a game that has been in development that long, and with such a distinguished pedigree, it's hard to separate out the experience itself from the almost crushing weight of expectations layered on top of it. I spent a good deal of the half hour or so with The Last Guardian just in a base state of wonder that the game I was playing was actually real.

The basic gameplay in The Last Guardian demo will feel familiar to anyone who fell in love with Ueda's Ico in 2001. At its core, the game is about finding paths through intricately detailed 3D environments with light puzzle solving and navigation. In an era of sprawling, 100-hour open worlds, it's a pleasantly dated design. The Last Guardian brings an old-school focus on architectural world-building rather than endless busywork quests.

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Geforce GTX 1080/1070: Asus und MSI schummeln mit Golden Samples

Wenn Testmuster einer Grafikkarte mehr Takt aufweisen als Modelle im Laden, dann kann eine “spezielle” Firmware aufgespielt sein. Solche Versionen der Geforce GTX 1080/1070 haben Asus und MSI an die Presse verschickt. Die Beweggründe sind teilweise nachvollziehbar. (Geforce GTX, Grafikhardware)

Wenn Testmuster einer Grafikkarte mehr Takt aufweisen als Modelle im Laden, dann kann eine "spezielle" Firmware aufgespielt sein. Solche Versionen der Geforce GTX 1080/1070 haben Asus und MSI an die Presse verschickt. Die Beweggründe sind teilweise nachvollziehbar. (Geforce GTX, Grafikhardware)

Meet Deep Thunder: IBM’s next step in the automation of forecasting

Company’s new mesoscale weather model combines forecasting and machine learning.

Five months after acquiring The Weather Company, IBM continues to move toward automated forecasting. (credit: IBM)

Until recently, weather forecasting was a fairly straightforward process. Scientists and meteorologists with a government agency developed computer forecast models, collected data about current weather conditions, input that data into their models, and then ran them on government hardware. A TV forecaster would next review the output of these models and give you the weather during the 6 and 10 o’clock news.

But more recently, the private US weather industry, valued at between $3 billion and $6 billion, has gone far beyond this traditional method of forecasting. Because the National Weather Service is federally funded, the agency makes both the basic code of its model, as well as the raw output, available to both research and commercial entities. Companies have taken the government’s models and “added value” for consumer and business customers.

In late January of this year, IBM finalized its acquisition of The Weather Company, buying all of its assets except for The Weather Channel television network. Both IBM and The Weather Company had been working separately with one of the government’s most popular models, the WRF, or Weather Research and Forecasting Model. Developed in the late 1990s, the WRF is tuned to provide more accurate local forecasts rather than predicting conditions across the globe. (Other companies, such as Panasonic, have developed their own global models based upon the government's code).

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The XPS 13 DE: Dell continues to build a reliable Linux lineage

You’ll pay a premium for Linux out of the box and a great screen—for some, it’s worth it.

Behold, the latest in Linux out-of-the-box: Dell's XPS 13 Developer's Edition (2016). (credit: Scott Gilbertson)

Hardware that ships with Linux installed isn't as rare as it used to be. System 76, Purism, ZaReason, and others have been cranking out hardware with Linux pre-installed for quite a while now. But while those of us who use Linux may know these companies, there's only one household name that currently ships laptops with Linux installed—Dell.

Dell's Project Sputnik has been dedicating resources to creating a "just works" experience for Dell Ultrabooks running Ubuntu for nearly four years now. Lead developer Barton George, who leads the effort, and other developers have been writing code where necessary (and contributing that code back upstream) and refining the user experience to a point where everything does indeed just work.

The original Dell XPS 13 Developer Edition had a few rough edges. Since that first device, I sat on the sidelines watching as George and Dell polished off those rough edges and tweaked the hardware options to better meet the needs of developers. Over time, the team expanded the available RAM to 16GB, added a matte screen option (albeit only on the low-end model), and slimmed the dimensions down considerably.

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Rückrufaktion: HP tauscht entflammbare Notebookakkus aus

Wer in den Jahren 2013 bis 2015 ein HP-Notebook gekauft hat, sollte unter bestimmten Umständen den Akku tauschen lassen. Wegen Brandgefahr ruft der Hersteller zahlreiche Modelle zurück. Betroffen sind auch einzeln verkaufte Ersatzakkus. (HP, Notebook)

Wer in den Jahren 2013 bis 2015 ein HP-Notebook gekauft hat, sollte unter bestimmten Umständen den Akku tauschen lassen. Wegen Brandgefahr ruft der Hersteller zahlreiche Modelle zurück. Betroffen sind auch einzeln verkaufte Ersatzakkus. (HP, Notebook)

After Comcast complains, Verizon is told to alter deceptive “#1” speed ads

Verizon doesn’t offer fastest Internet, but it finished #1 in customer survey.

(credit: Verizon)

Verizon ads claiming that FiOS fiber service "is rated #1 in Internet speed" are misleading and should be changed, the National Advertising Review Board (NARB) said this week.

Verizon doesn't actually offer the fastest speeds, but the company justifies the claim based on PC Magazine’s Readers’ Choice Survey. NARB's decision—which came after a complaint filed by Comcast—noted that ranking "was not based on a comparison of objective Internet speed performance and/or a head-to-head comparison of different Internet service providers." Instead, it was based on customers' perceptions.

Verizon ads do note that the #1 claim is based on "customer satisfaction studies," but the board ruled that Verizon's ads made it seem as if the company actually offers the industry's fastest speeds.

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Hyperkin Smart Boy turns smartphones into Game Boys (with cartridge support)

Hyperkin Smart Boy turns smartphones into Game Boys (with cartridge support)

People have been playing Game Boy games on smartphones for just about as long as there have been smartphones. But typically that involves loading an emulator app on a phone, scouring the internet for illegal ROMs, and then using horrible on-screen buttons (or pairing an external gamepad with your phone).

But later this year you’ll be able to buy a device that pretty much transforms a phone into a Game Boy… complete with support for actual game cartridges.

Continue reading Hyperkin Smart Boy turns smartphones into Game Boys (with cartridge support) at Liliputing.

Hyperkin Smart Boy turns smartphones into Game Boys (with cartridge support)

People have been playing Game Boy games on smartphones for just about as long as there have been smartphones. But typically that involves loading an emulator app on a phone, scouring the internet for illegal ROMs, and then using horrible on-screen buttons (or pairing an external gamepad with your phone).

But later this year you’ll be able to buy a device that pretty much transforms a phone into a Game Boy… complete with support for actual game cartridges.

Continue reading Hyperkin Smart Boy turns smartphones into Game Boys (with cartridge support) at Liliputing.

Bundesnetzagentur: Vectoring für Millionen Haushalte sollte jetzt anlaufen

Die Bundesnetzagentur hat bei der EU-Kommission offenbar das exklusive Vectoring für die Deutsche Telekom durchgesetzt. Dabei wurden laut Behördenchef Homann wohl Zugeständnisse gemacht. (Vectoring, DSL)

Die Bundesnetzagentur hat bei der EU-Kommission offenbar das exklusive Vectoring für die Deutsche Telekom durchgesetzt. Dabei wurden laut Behördenchef Homann wohl Zugeständnisse gemacht. (Vectoring, DSL)