Daily Deals (2-18-2022)

It’s a time-honored tradition for retailers in the US to honor the national Presidents’ Day holiday by trying to clear out old inventory with sales. After all, what’s more American than capitalism and consumerism? Anyway, I guess there are worse times to be in the market for a laptop, tablet, TV, or other gadgets and […]

The post Daily Deals (2-18-2022) appeared first on Liliputing.

It’s a time-honored tradition for retailers in the US to honor the national Presidents’ Day holiday by trying to clear out old inventory with sales. After all, what’s more American than capitalism and consumerism?

Anyway, I guess there are worse times to be in the market for a laptop, tablet, TV, or other gadgets and accessories.

Acer Chromebook 311

Here are some of the day’s best deals.

Presidents’ Day sales

Laptops

Tablets 

Digital media

Other

The post Daily Deals (2-18-2022) appeared first on Liliputing.

Google.com tests a busier homepage with a row of info cards

Google Search’s stark, white homepage could be in for some big changes.

Whoa, there are cards at the bottom of the Google homepage!

Enlarge / Whoa, there are cards at the bottom of the Google homepage! (credit: 9to5Google)

Check out this totally wild Google homepage experiment spotted by 9to5Google: the search page suddenly has a row of cards at the bottom. If this design is widely adopted, it would easily be the biggest google.com design change ever.

In the experiment, Google.com has a row of six cards at the bottom of the page. There's weather, trending searches, "what to watch," a stock card, local events, and COVID news. Clicking on a card will either expand it or load a search-results page. There's also a "hide content" switch, which will turn the cards off. All of this seems very similar to the Google.com app, which has a scrollable list of "discover" cards.

One of the reasons Google Search initially became popular was because the search page was plain and easy to use. The competition at the time included search engines like Yahoo and Alta Vista, which presented users with a massive wall of ads and content. Google's starkness was a major differentiator in the early days, and it's interesting to see the company toy with moving a little closer to the days of Yahoo, even if it's presenting a more modern take on the idea.

Read 1 remaining paragraphs | Comments

These are the hardest Wordle puzzles (so far)

Crunching the Twitter data to find trends in the popular puzzle.

The future is now.

Enlarge / The future is now. (credit: Aurich Lawson | Getty Images)

Anyone who has been on Twitter in recent weeks is probably intimately familiar with the grids of Wordle solutions clogging up everyone's timelines. But those tweets give more information than it would seem. Collecting and analyzing data from millions of these Wordle result tweets can give us some interesting insights into aggregate play patterns and the relative difficulty of daily Wordle puzzles.

The Wordle Stats Twitter account has done a lot of the heavy lifting here. Since January 7, the bot account has used the Twitter API to sort through the public timeline for every tweet formatted as a Wordle result, tracking the total number of players and how many guesses each player needed to complete the puzzle. That account shared its underlying data with Ars to power a deeper analysis of daily play patterns.

This isn't a perfectly random sample of Wordle players, of course—it's limited to the group of players who use Twitter and choose to share their results publicly. The vast majority of what The New York Times said were millions of daily players at the end of January are not reflected here.

Read 17 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Lenovo Legion Y90 could be the first phone with SSD & UFS RAID 0 storage

Lenovo’s next gaming phone is expected to be a beast with premium features including a 6.92 inch AMOLED display with a 144 Hz refresh rate and 720 Hz touch-sampling rate, dual USB-C ports, active cooling, and optional accessories including detachable game controllers. Now it looks like the Lenovo Legion Y90 could also be the first […]

The post Lenovo Legion Y90 could be the first phone with SSD & UFS RAID 0 storage appeared first on Liliputing.

Lenovo’s next gaming phone is expected to be a beast with premium features including a 6.92 inch AMOLED display with a 144 Hz refresh rate and 720 Hz touch-sampling rate, dual USB-C ports, active cooling, and optional accessories including detachable game controllers.

Now it looks like the Lenovo Legion Y90 could also be the first phone to feature UFS 3.1 and SSD storage paired in a RAID 0 configuration for faster speeds.

Lenovo has posted a short teaser video to Chinese social media site Weibo confirming that the phone will have a Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 processor and LPDDR5 memory, as well as that dual storage system with a RAID 0 configuration that the company says improves random write performance by 50 percent.

There are some down sides with RAID 0 storage – there’s no fault tolerance or redundancy, so if one drive fails it can take the entire storage array down with it, resulting in complete loss of all your data. But for as long as it’s working, you should get a speed boost. And to be fair, most phones have just a single storage chip, which means that all your eggs are usually in one basket anyway.

More details should be available later this month – Lenovo plans to officially unveil the Legion Y90 in China on February 28, 2022. The phone will likely be called the Lenovo Legion Phone 3 Elite or Legion Phone 3 Pro if and when it goes on sale outside of China.

via GSM Arena and WinFuture

The post Lenovo Legion Y90 could be the first phone with SSD & UFS RAID 0 storage appeared first on Liliputing.

Facebook misled investors on scope of misinformation problems, whistleblower says

Meta made “material representations and omissions,” complaint alleges.

Facebook misled investors on scope of misinformation problems, whistleblower says

Enlarge (credit: Jaap Arriens/NurPhoto)

Since filing whistleblower complaints against Facebook last year, Frances Haugen hasn’t been sitting still. A report today says the Facebook (now Meta) whistleblower has filed two new complaints with the Securities and Exchange Commission that allege the company internally acknowledged it was struggling with misinformation even while telling investors it had a handle on the problem.

Meta made “material misrepresentations and omissions in statements to investors” regarding its attempts to fight misinformation on its platforms, according to redacted complaints that a congressional staffer shared with The Washington Post and other news outlets.

“Some investors simply will not want to invest in a company that fails to adequately address such misinformation and then engages in misstatements and omissions on the topic,” one complaint says.

Read 10 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Intel Arc desktop GPUs are coming in Q2, but don’t expect them to end the GPU shortage

Intel plans to ship 4 million+ GPUs in 2022, but that’s a drop in the bucket.

Intel Arc GPUs.

Enlarge / Intel Arc GPUs. (credit: Intel)

Intel's Arc GPUs continue to creep closer to release. At an investor meeting yesterday, Intel reiterated that it would be shipping mobile Arc GPUs based on its Alchemist architecture in the first quarter of 2022 and that desktop GPUs would follow at some point in Q2. Workstation GPUs would follow afterward in the third quarter.

Intel has released few official details about any of the Arc GPU configurations or performance targets, though leaked specs and benchmarks have given us a very broad idea of what we can expect. Intel graphics VP Raja Koduri tweeted a picture of an Arc GPU in a "Beast Canyon" NUC enclosure running 2018's Shadows of the Tomb Raider, which means at least one of the GPUs will be physically small enough to fit inside that case. But pricing, availability, and even what the cards will look like are unknown.

The company plans to ship at least 4 million GPUs across its desktop, laptop, and workstation product lines in 2022, but that would represent only a sliver of the dedicated GPU market. Data from Jon Peddie Research (as compiled by Tom's Hardware) suggests that Nvidia and AMD sold some 47 million desktop GPUs in the calendar year between Q4 of 2020 and Q3 of 2021, and that's before you count laptop GPUs. Having another viable option in the GPU market will be good, but this small number won't put much of a dent in the current GPU shortage.

Read 2 remaining paragraphs | Comments