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Tag: the verge

  • Amazon Sends Out Invites to Its Annual Launch Event on September 28

    Amazon Sends Out Invites to Its Annual Launch Event on September 28

    Amazon’s annual product launch event is scheduled for September 28, with the company sending invitations to journalists.

    According to The Verge, new Echo devices are most likely to debut later this month. Unlike some past years, there haven’t been many substantial rumors about what to expect. The Echo is a logical choice, however, since it’s been two years since the last big update.

    The event is slated to begin 9 AM PT / 12 PM ET on September 28. Interesingly Amazon is reportedly planning to roll out a second Prime Day in Q4 2022. It’s possible whatever products are unveiled on the 28th will help anchor the Prime Fall Deal Event.

  • Zoom May Be Planning Email and Calendar Tools to Take On Office and Google

    Zoom May Be Planning Email and Calendar Tools to Take On Office and Google

    Zoom may be ready to move beyond video calling and collaboration, with possible plans to introduce email and calendar tools.

    Zoom is one of the leading communication platforms. Adoption of the company’s service expanded dramatically during the pandemic, and Zoom has been looking for ways to keep that momentum going and build on its existing base. According to The Information, via The Verge, the company may be planning to introduce email and calendar tools to better compete with Microsoft Office and Google Workspace.

    In many ways, the move makes sense. Slack was once the undisputed king of corporate messaging but has seen its user base eclipsed by Microsoft Teams. Much of that is due to the integration Teams offers with the rest of the Office suite. Zoom is no doubt keen to build out its own ecosystem, which would go a long way toward fending off defections to Teams or Google Meet.

    According to the report, the new features could launch as early as later this year. Needless to say, Zoom’s battle will just be getting started with the launch of those features, as neither Microsoft nor Google will take a challenge to their business lying down.

    Despite the difficulty in going up against Microsoft and Google, however, it be exactly what Zoom needs to do in order to evolve and stay relevant.

  • Google Kills the Pixelbook, Disbands the Team

    Google Kills the Pixelbook, Disbands the Team

    Google’s Pixelbook appears to be the latest victim of Google’s cost-saving measures, with the next release reportedly canceled and the team disbanded.

    Google’s Pixelbook was a high-end Chromebook that helped showcase the company’s Chrome OS. Despite its popularity, the company appears to have killed off the next generation — expected next year — and disbanded the team, according to The Verge.

    Like many companies, Google has been looking for ways to cut costs as the economy slows. CEO Sundar Pichai made it clear in mid-July that the company would be looking for areas to streamline its investments and would be pausing some projects. Despite the Pixelbook apparently being one of those projects, Google is not confirming the reports yet.

    “Google doesn’t share future product plans or personnel information; however, we are committed to building and supporting a portfolio of Google products that are innovative and helpful for our users,” Laura Breen, a communications manager at Google, told The Verge. “In regards to our people, in times where we do shift priorities we work to transition team members across devices and services.”

    It’s also possible that Google doesn’t see the need to be in the Chromebook market like it once did. As more manufacturers have begun manufacturing quality models, Google’s presence is not really necessary to help the category succeed.

    “What’s nice about the category is that it has matured,” Google hardware chief Rick Osterloh told the outlet. “You can expect them to last a long time.”

  • France Will Give People Who Trade Car for E-Bike €4,000

    France is ramping up its efforts to go green, offering individuals €4,000 to trade their car for an e-bike.

    Countries around the world are looking for ways to address climate change, with France trying to encourage individuals to give up their gasoline-powered cars in exchange for an eco-friendly e-bike. To sweeten the deal, The Times is reporting that France will give individuals €4,000 as an incentive.

    The €4,000 is the maximum amount, available to low-income families in low-emission urban areas, although The Times does say each member of a family can qualify.

    France’s plan is among the more aggressive ideas being pursued by countries. According to The Verge, Lithuania rolled out a similar plan, although that country’s incentives topped out at €1,000.

    In addition to e-bikes, traditional bikes also qualify for the incentive.

  • Corporate Code Theft From Indie Developers Likely Widespread

    Corporate Code Theft From Indie Developers Likely Widespread

    Patrick Wardle has a problem — his code keeps turning up in commercial software projects without his permission.

    Wardle is a Mac security expert who previously worked at the NSA and NASA. He’s also the founder of the Objective-See Foundation, an organization with a focus on open-source macOS security tools. Unfortunately, according to The Verge, Wardle’s code has made its way into at least three commercial software projects without any credit or compensation being given to him.

    As Wardle points out, few small developers have the resources, ability, or expertise to ascertain if their code has been stolen. Wardle’s unique skill set, however, put him in a position to do just that.

    “I was only able to figure [the code theft] out because I both write tools and reverse engineer software, which is not super common,” Wardle told The Verge. “Because I straddle both of these disciplines I could find it happening to my tools, but other indie developers might not be able to, which is the concern.”

    Wardle plans to make known his findings at the Black Hat cybersecurity conference on Thursday, where he will discuss them with Johns Hopkins University cybersecurity researcher Tom McGuire.

    Interestingly, Wardle doesn’t plan to out the companies that stole his code, as he believes the theft was probably the work of a single developer within each company rather than an organization-wide decision. In addition, all three companies he approached were very open, acknowledging the theft and taking steps to rectify the situation, including paying for the code or donating to his foundation.

    The bigger concern, however, is the state of indie software development in general. While Wardle may have the skillset necessary to determine when his code is being stolen, the vast majority of small developers do not, opening the door for widespread abuse.

  • Helium Called Out for Being Dishonest About Its Clients and Partners

    Helium Called Out for Being Dishonest About Its Clients and Partners

    **Updated with company statement to WPN.**

    Helium has been lauded as a Web3 success story, but the company has egg on its face after being dishonest about who its customers are.

    Helium is creating a decentralized wireless network that serves as a peer-to-peer network for IoT devices. One of its main selling points is that it allows customers to earn crypto. The company prominently features a number of companies as customers and partners in an effort to add legitimacy to its service. There’s just one problem: Some of them aren’t customers or partners and never have been.

    A report by Mashable found that, despite claiming Lime was one of its customers, Lime was not using Helium’s platform. In fact, other than a testing period in which it evaluated the possibility of adding Helium devices to its scooters, Lime was never a paying customer, let alone a partner.

    “Beyond an initial test of its product in 2019, Lime has not had, and does not currently have, a relationship with Helium,” Russell Murphy, Lime senior director for corporate communications, told Mashable.

    “Helium has been making this claim for years and it is a false claim,” Murphy said

    It appears Lime is finally preparing to take action and is planning to send Helium a cease and desist.

    Lime isn’t the only company Helium appears to have been dishonest about. According to The Verge, Salesforce has also denied being a Helium partner.

    “Helium is not a Salesforce partner,” Salesforce spokesperson Ashley Eliasoph told The Verge. When asked about Salesforce’s logo, which appeared on Helium’s website, Eliasoph said that “it is not accurate.”

    A spokesperson for the company reached out to WPN to provide the following statement:

    “Since the Network launched in 2019, we’ve worked with a variety of companies on various applications and pilots. In the case of the brands mentioned in recent articles, we had approvals to talk about the use cases but we’re going to be much more rigorous now about the logo approval process going forward to avoid any confusion. Both Nova and our partner the Helium Foundation have removed the reference.”

    Helium’s Financials

    Helium has already been called out for only bringing in $6,500 in revenue per month, despite receiving $365M of investment, with Andreessen Horowitz taking the lead in the fundraising. The VC firm called Helium the “fastest growing wireless network ever” at the time.

    Interestingly, according to Mashable, Helium CEO Haleem and Helium investor Kyle Samani confirmed the revenue numbers.

    For a company being held up as the poster child of Web3, Helium certainly has a lot to answer for. Only time will tell if these are the only revelations to come out or if there’s more yet to come.

  • Twitter CEO Shakes Up Executive Team Ahead of Musk Buyout

    Twitter CEO Shakes Up Executive Team Ahead of Musk Buyout

    Twitter CEO Parag Agrawal has made changes to his executive team, getting rid of two top executives.

    Kayvon Beykpour, GM of Consumer, announced in a tweet that Agrawal had asked him to leave:

    “The truth is that this isn’t how and when I imagined leaving Twitter, and this wasn’t my decision. Parag asked me to leave after letting me know that he wants to take the team in a different direction.” — Kayvon Beykpour (@kayvz) — May 12, 2022

    According to The Verge, Bruce Falck, GM of Revenue, announced in a now deleted tweet that he too was let go.

    Twitter spokesperson Adrian Zamora confirmed the changes to The Verge, saying: “We can confirm that Kayvon Beykpour and Bruce Falck are leaving Twitter. Jay Sullivan is the new GM of Bluebird and interim GM of Goldbird. Effective this week, we are pausing most hiring and backfills, except for business critical roles. We are pulling back on non-labor costs to ensure we are being responsible and efficient.”

    The last couple of months have been among Twitter’s most tumultuous, and these latest changes would seem to indicate the tumult is far from over.

  • AT&T the First Carrier to Use GPS for 911 Location

    AT&T the First Carrier to Use GPS for 911 Location

    AT&T claims it is the first US carrier to switch over to using GPS for 911 location.

    The majority of wireless carriers use cell phone towers to pinpoint the location of individuals calling 911. Unfortunately, the method isn’t always as precise as necessary. What’s more, depending on what call center receives the call, it can take longer than necessary for first responders to arrive at the scene, according to The Verge.

    AT&T is now implementing GPS location for 911, which should help address these issues. AT&T says the upgraded service won’t roll out nationwide at first, but the company already covers Alaska, Colorado, Hawaii, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Washington, Wyoming, Kansas, Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota, North Dakota, Missouri, Nebraska, South Dakota, and Guam.

    The company will continue to expand the service and says it will cover the entire nation by the end of June.

  • Apple Hires Law Firm to Crack Down on Unionizing Efforts

    Apple Hires Law Firm to Crack Down on Unionizing Efforts

    In the wake of Atlanta store employees petitioning the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) to become a union, Apple has hired a law firm to fight back.

    According to The Verge, Apple has hired lawyers at Littler Mendelson, a law firm specializing in anti-union efforts. The move is in response to employees at the Cumberland Mall in Atlanta taking steps to join the Communications Workers of America.

    Some see Apple’s decision to hire the firm as antithetical to its stated positions of listening to employees and being inclusive.

    “From the start I’ve thought unionization was a good thing,” one current retail employee told The Verge. “Pay is so unequal at the stores — there are people who’ve been in roles for less time making more than people who’ve worked in those same roles for years. They position themselves as a company that’s open to feedback but nobody acts on it. With a union backing the employees, they’ll be more pressure on them to actually act on it.”

    Littler Mendelson has quite a reputation, being hired by Starbucks and McDonald’s to fight unionization efforts among their employees.

    “By retaining the notorious union busting firm Littler Mendelson, Apple’s management is showing that they intend to try to prevent their employees from exercising their right to join a union by running the same playbook as other large corporations,” said CWA Secretary-Treasurer Sara Steffens. “The workers at Starbucks, another Littler client, aren’t falling for it and neither will the workers at Apple.”

    Apple has been struggling with employee relations of late, with many unhappy over the company’s return-to-office policies. Hiring a firm like Littler Mendelson is not likely to help the company’s image.

  • Experts Warn the EU’s DMA Will Break Encryption

    Experts Warn the EU’s DMA Will Break Encryption

    Another day, another attack on encryption, with security experts warning the EU’s DMA legislation will likely break, or severely weaken, encryption.

    The EU unveiled the Digital Markets Act (DMA) as its latest effort to crack down on Big Tech. In addition to severe fines, and even possible breakups, of companies that fail to abide by the legislation, the DMA calls for “gatekeeper companies” to make their services interoperable with smaller rivals.

    Messaging, in particular, is one of the most obvious areas impacted by this clause, with services like WhatsApp, Facebook Messenger, and Apple’s iMessage likely forced to open up and work with competitors. Unfortunately, since all of these services provide end-to-end encryption (E2EE), experts warn there is no easy way for the the services to work with each and still maintain the level of security and privacy they currently offer.

    In speaking with The Verge, one expert used a very low-tech example to illustrate the issues, especially with compatibility and accountability between various services.

    “If you went into a McDonald’s and said, ‘In the interest of breaking corporate monopolies, I demand that you include a sushi platter from some other restaurant with my order,’ they would rightly just stare at you,” Alec Muffett, former Facebook engineer and internet security expert, said. “What happens when the requested sushi arrives by courier at McDonald’s from the ostensibly requested sushi restaurant? Can and should McDonald’s serve that sushi to the customer? Was the courier legitimate? Was it prepared safely?”

    Similar questions plague potential implementation of the DMA. How will messages be securely sent across various platforms? If two different services use two different types of encryption, which company will modify its service to be compatible with the other? Will services opt to simply drop encryption when sending messages across services? Or will companies adopt some method of decrypting and re-encrypting as the message is passed from one service to another, making the communication vulnerable to interception, and thereby compromising privacy and security?

    Unfortunately, as has been stated time and time again, the encryption protocols people, companies, and governments rely on for privacy and security are not created, managed, or dictated by policies. They are, instead, bound and constrained by basic mathematics.

    Unfortunately for privacy and security, the mathematics of the DMA don’t quite add up.

  • EU Prepares to Crack Down on Big Tech, Unveils Sweeping Measures

    EU Prepares to Crack Down on Big Tech, Unveils Sweeping Measures

    The European Union has unveiled sweeping measures to crack down on Big Tech and increase competition across the industry.

    The EU has unveiled the Digital Markets Act (DMA), aimed specifically at “gatekeeper” companies, according to The Verge. Gatekeepers are companies with a market cap of at least $82 billion, at least 45,000 active users, and that run a “platform.” Such criteria would cover Amazon, Apple, Google, Meta, and Microsoft, but could also cover smaller companies and services as well.

    Messaging, in particular, is a likely focus of the DMA, with the EU looking to force services like Facebook Messenger, iMessage, and WhatsApp to “open up and interoperate with smaller messaging platforms, if they so request.”

    The DMA would include a number of other provisions, including stopping gatekeepers from preferring their own apps and services, as well as giving users the ability to uninstall default apps that come on their devices, and even choose which apps they want to use during install and setup.

    Companies that sell or do business on a given platform would be entitled to access performance metrics from that platform. Similarly, companies that advertise on a platform would be given a way to independently confirm the performance of their advertising efforts.

    The penalties for failure to comply would be severe, including up to 10% of a company’s annual worldwide revenue and periodic penalties up to 5% of its daily earnings. Most notably, the EU would also have the authority to enforce “behavioral and structural remedies.” This could including mandating that a company change how it operates its platform or service, and could even include forcing a company to spin off portions of its business, if the anti-competitive concerns cannot otherwise be addressed.

    This is why, in the Digital Markets Act, there is a full toolbox where the sanctions become more and more severe,” the EU’s Commissioner for Competition, Margrethe Vestager told The Verge. “The fines will increase if you do not implement changes. Eventually, in the toolbox, there’s also the tool that you can actually break up a company if no change is happening, or if you are a repeat offender.”

    The DMA represents the single largest effort by the EU to reign in the power and influence of Big Tech, combining a number of different efforts into one comprehensive piece of legislation. The legislation has not passed yet but, given the momentum that’s been building in the EU, it’s almost certainly going to pass sooner rather than later.

  • Google Is Crippling Recent Pixels, Refusing to Enable C-Band 5G

    Google Is Crippling Recent Pixels, Refusing to Enable C-Band 5G

    Google is refusing to update recent Pixel smartphones with C-band 5G, despite the fact the hardware can support it.

    The current generation of Google smartphone is the Pixel 6 and 6 Pro. Nonetheless, the Pixel 5a is still a very popular device, especially since Google still sells it unlocked for $449. Unfortunately, Google has said it will not activate C-band 5G on the Pixel 5a, 5, or 4a 5G, according to The Verge. All three devices have the hardware to support C-band, with the 5 even having FCC approval, and just need a software update for activation.

    The news is especially unfortunate since both Verizon and AT&T are investing heavily in C-band spectrum, considered the ideal option to provide the best combination of speed, range, and building penetration.

    Leaving recent Pixels out of the C-band upgrade is a low blow to the company’s customers, especially those that purchased brand-new 5a devices barely six months ago. Google already struggles to match Apple’s reputation for supporting iPhones six and seven years after release. Refusing to activate a critical feature a mere six months later, however, is a new low.

  • Apple’s M1 Ultra Is a CPU Beast, But GPU Not So Much

    Apple’s M1 Ultra Is a CPU Beast, But GPU Not So Much

    Apple’s latest M1 processor is an absolute beast in CPU performance, but its graphics performance doesn’t quite live up to expectations.

    Apple unveiled the M1 Ultra as part of its Peak Performance event on March 8. The new processor powers the Mac Studio, Apple’s new machine aimed at creative professionals. As part of its unveiling, Apple execs touted the Ultra’s performance, even pitting it against the Nvidia RTX 3090.

    There’s just one problem: In real-world usage, the M1 Ultra doesn’t even come close to the RTX 3090 in performance. In their comprehensive review of the new Mac Studio, The Verge delved into the chip’s performance, confirming the CPU performed every bit as good as Apple described.

    “The suite of benchmarks we ran largely backed up our team’s findings,” writes Monica Chin. “In CPU performance, the M1 Ultra is in a league of its own. Compare this to our Mac Pro model with a 16-core Intel Xeon W, and across our CPU benchmarks, there was really no contest: the Xeon is outclassed.”

    When it came to GPU performance, however, the M1 Ultra lagged behind the RTX 3090 by a wide margin, and was even bested by Apple’s Intel Xeon-based Mac Pro in some cases.

    “On the Shadow of the Tomb Raider benchmark, the RTX was also a solid 30 frames per second faster,” Chin continued. “Now, this is Apple gaming, of course, so Tomb Raider was not a perfect or even particularly good experience: there was substantial, noticeable micro stutter at every resolution we tried. This is not at all a computer that anyone would buy for gaming. But it does emphasize that if you’re running a computing load that relies primarily on a heavy-duty GPU, the Mac Studio is probably not the best choice. “

    Given the M1’s impressive performance, Apple has not had to exaggerate benchmarks, and has largely taken an understated approach to describing the M1’s performance. It’s unfortunate the company chose to pit the M1 Ultra vs the RTX 3090, a contest Apple’s latest chip isn’t quite up for.

  • Locked Out of Facebook? Blame Facebook Protect

    Locked Out of Facebook? Blame Facebook Protect

    Some Facebook users are reportedly unable to log in to their accounts, and it appears a new security feature may be to blame.

    According to The Verge, users started receiving emails in early March telling them they needed to activate Facebook Protect on their accounts, and warning they would be locked out if they did not follow through. Unfortunately, the email looked similar to a common spam message, causing many users to ignore it, and ultimately get locked out.

    Still other users did try to go through the process of activating Facebook Protect before the deadline, but were unable to successfully do so, ultimately leading to their account still being locked.

    Fortunately, the vast majority of people will likely not be impacted. According to the company, Facebook Protect is largely designed to protect the accounts of high-profile individuals, such as those involved in journalism, human rights, and more, accounts that are more likely to be targeted by hackers and bad actors.

    As part of our ongoing improvements to security, we’re expanding Facebook Protect, a program designed for people that are likely to be highly targeted by malicious hackers, including human rights defenders, journalists, and government officials.

    These people are at the center of critical communities for public debate. They enable democratic elections, hold governments and organizations accountable, and defend human rights around the world. Unfortunately this also means that they are highly targeted by bad actors.

    Facebook Protect helps these groups of people adopt stronger account security protections, like two-factor authentication, and monitors for potential hacking threats.

    The Verge reached out to Facebook to see what individuals who are locked out can do to regain access to their accounts, but has not heard back.

  • Google Cloud Issue Responsible For Discord and Spotify Outage

    Google Cloud Issue Responsible For Discord and Spotify Outage

    Discord and Spotify are back online following an issue with Google Cloud that impacted both services.

    Discord started experiencing an outage around noon on Tuesday. Despite the company’s attempts to address the problem, a new issue occurred, further extending the outage. It appears Discord wasn’t alone, with Spotify also experiencing problems Tuesday.

    According to The Verge, the common denominator was Google Cloud. On the company’s status page, a botched Traffic Director update appears to be at fault. Once Google rolled back the update, its client companies’ problems began to disappear.

    AWS experienced at least three major outages in December. With Google’s outage impacting more high-profile customers, it shines additional light on the potential pitfalls of so many companies relying on just a few cloud providers.

  • Apple Recorded Some Siri Interactions, Even If the Setting Was Disabled

    Apple Recorded Some Siri Interactions, Even If the Setting Was Disabled

    Apple has said it inadvertently recorded some customers’ Siri interactions, even when the setting was disabled.

    Apple gives users the choice to share their Siri interactions in an effort to improve the virtual assistant. If the option is enabled, Apple can store and analyze those recordings.

    Evidently, when iOS 15 was released, a bug activated the feature for some users, despite them previously deactivating it. As soon as Apple realized the issue, it took steps to rectify it.

    “With iOS 15.2, we turned off the Improve Siri & Dictation setting for many Siri users while we fixed a bug introduced with iOS 15,” Apple spokesperson Catherine Franklin told The Verge. “This bug inadvertently enabled the setting for a small portion of devices. Since identifying the bug, we stopped reviewing and are deleting audio received from all affected devices.”

    Apple has not disclosed how many users were impacted, although the company says the bug impacted “a small portion of devices.”

    As ZDNet highlights, it appears the bug fix resets the permission warning as well, with iOS 15.4 asking users for permission to use their recordings.

  • US Carriers Deny Blocking iCloud Private Relay — Mostly

    US Carriers Deny Blocking iCloud Private Relay — Mostly

    Following reports that T-Mobile was blocking Apple’s iCloud Private Relay, all three major US carriers have denied actively blocking it — for the most part.

    iCloud Private Relay is a feature introduced as a beta in iOS 15 and macOS Monterey. The feature is similar to a VPN, and hides a person’s internet traffic. Some users reported that T-Mobile was starting to block the feature, something that 9to5Mac confirmed.

    According to The Verge, all three carriers are trying to reassure users they are not intentionally or actively blocking Private Relay. Verizon and AT&T, in particular, said they are not blocking the feature in any way.

    Things are a bit more complicated with T-Mobile. The vast majority of customers will not experience any issues, but accounts that are using T-Mobile’s Family Controls won’t be able to use Private Relay.

    “Customers who chose plans and features with content filtering (e.g. parent controls) do not have access to the iCloud Private Relay to allow these services to work as designed. All other customers have no restrictions,” T-Mobile’s spokesperson The Verge.

    That explanation is inline with Apple’s own description of Private Relay:

    Networks that require the ability to audit traffic or perform network-based filtering will block access to Private Relay.

    T-Mobile also told The Verge that it discovered an issue with Private Relay that could cause it to not work, and informed Apple so they could fix it.

    “Overnight our team identified that in the 15.2 iOS release, some device settings default to the feature being toggled off. We have shared this with Apple. This is not specific to T-Mobile.” 

    A Potential Future Showdown

    Hopefully all three carriers maintain their current stance. As The Verge points out, European carriers — including T-Mobile — have been campaigning against Private Relay, even asking the EU Commission to block the feature. The carriers claim it is “cutting off other networks and servers from accessing vital network data and metadata, including those operators in charge of the connectivity.”

    There’s two issues with the carriers’ actions:

    First, should the carriers succeed in convincing the EU Commission to block the feature, it’s a reasonable assumption that VPNs will likely be next on the chopping block, given that Private Relay offers many of the same benefits.

    Successfully blocking Private Relay — let alone if the carriers target VPNs next — will significantly undermine many users’ privacy and security online.

    Second, if the EU Commission gives in and blocks Private Relay, it will essentially confirm the right of companies to mine at least some datafrom paying customers, regardless of whether the customer agrees to it.

    As we have written about before, it’s one thing for the provider of a free service to mine data from their customers. Since they’re providing a service for free, profiting from the customer’s data is often the accepted trade-off.

    On the other hand, when a customer is paying for a service, there should be an expectation that’s where the transaction ends — the company provides a service in exchange for a fair amount of money, end of story.

    If the carriers are successful in their goals, it will set a dangerous precedent that will erode privacy for everyone.

  • Microsoft Pulls Out of CES 2022

    Microsoft Pulls Out of CES 2022

    Microsoft is the latest company to pull out of CES 2022 over concerns about the omicron COVID variant.

    CES is one of the biggest electronic events and, like most large trade shows and events, has struggled to keep going during the pandemic. The shows organizers have vowed to go on with the 2022 event in January, but multiple high-profile companies have already bowed out over amid the omicron surge, including T-Mobile, Intel, Meta, Twitter, and Pinterest.

    According to The Verge, Microsoft is the latest company to pull out.

    “After reviewing the latest data on the rapidly evolving COVID environment, Microsoft has decided not to participate in-person at CES 2022,” said a company spokesperson.

    While CES organizers want to press forward, if high-profile companies keep dropping out, there may not be a conference to save.

  • AWS Experiences Third Outage This Month

    AWS Experiences Third Outage This Month

    AWS has experienced its third outage this month, impacting yet more sites and services.

    AWS has had a rough December, with outages that have impacted some of the largest online services. According to The Verge, this latest outage has hit Slack, Epic Games Store, Asana, and others.

    The company said it had fixed the issue as of 9:13 AM ET, but some customers may continue to see issues.

    A look at DownDetector shows many familiar companies — ones that were impacted by previous outages — experiencing issues again. While the issues appear to be tapering off, there’s still a ways to go before things return to normal.

  • DirecTV Prices Going Up in January

    DirecTV Prices Going Up in January

    DirecTV is raising its streaming and satellite TV packages starting in January.

    DirecTV was spun off from AT&T in August, and now competes with the likes YouTube TV, Hulu with Live TV, Sling TV, and fuboTV streaming services, while still competing with Dish Network for the satellite market. Unfortunately for DirecTV customers, the company is planning on raising prices across both of its services in January.

    According to The Verge, satellite TV customers will see their plans go up anywhere from $1 to $10. Meanwhile, streaming TV customers will see increases ranging from $4 to $10.

    Many providers often give up channels rather than increase prices. YouTube TV recently announced it would drop its price by $15 if it loses Disney-owned channels. In contrast, DirecTV said in a statement seen by The Verge that its prices were increasing because it is committed to offering the most robust packages. 

    “While competitors continue to shrink their offerings, your DirecTV team maintains a steadfast commitment to carrying the most robust channel line-up in the industry and unrivalled [sic] leadership in premium sports and news content,” the company wrote. “In addition, we continue to invest in providing better customer service, releasing new technology upgrades that will enhance our signal reliability, and launching improved features. We are also delivering greater flexibility to watch what you want, when you want it, from virtually anywhere in the U.S.”

  • Android Games Coming to Windows in 2022

    Android Games Coming to Windows in 2022

    Google is bringing a native Android gaming experience to Windows in 2022, straight from the Google Play Games app.

    Android support in Windows 11 is one of its most anticipated features. Originally scheduled to ship with Windows 11, Android support was delayed and missed the initial release date, but nonetheless remains one of the operating system’s most unique features.

    Google is looking to build on Microsoft efforts, bringing Android games to Windows 11, as well as Windows 10, via a native Google Play Games app.

    “Starting in 2022, players will be able to experience their favorite Google Play games on more devices: seamlessly switching between a phone, tablet, Chromebook, and soon, Windows PCs,” Greg Hartrell, Google’s product director of games on Android and Google Play, said in a statement to The Verge. “This Google built product brings the best of Google Play Games to more laptops and desktops, and we are thrilled to expand our platform for players to enjoy their favorite Android games even more.”

    “This will be a native Windows app distributed by Google, which will support Windows 10 and up,” continues Hartrell. “It will not involve game streaming.”