Sabtu, 22 Juni 2019

Korg made a golf putting board with built-in metronome - Engadget

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Korg

Japanese company Korg doesn't just make your typical synths, tuners and various electronic musical instruments: it also offers some pretty specialized and unusual devices. It has a line of in-ear metronomes that can help you dance or play golf better, for instance. Now, it has introduced another golf-related product called PuttRhythm that's meant to make you a putting expert...or at least help you train until you can sink a putt every now and then.

PuttRhythm is pretty much a putting board equipped with a metronome. When you switch it on, an audible count begins in sync with the blinking of a red light and a meter appears on the display. You can adjust the tempo as you see fit and find the right rhythm that can help you swing better. The board itself has a couple of protrusions where the ball is supposed to exit, so you can practice hitting it in a straight line. Whether a putting board with a built-in metronome can actually help you sink a putt likely depends on how you use it and how often you practice, though. Hey, it's still just a high-tech putting aid, not magic.

Via: musicradar
Source: Korg
In this article: gadgetry, gadgets, gear, korg, puttrhythm
All products recommended by Engadget are selected by our editorial team, independent of our parent company. Some of our stories include affiliate links. If you buy something through one of these links, we may earn an affiliate commission.
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https://www.engadget.com/2019/06/22/korg-golf-putting-board-metronome/

2019-06-22 22:43:57Z
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'Harry Potter: Wizards Unite' rolls out to 25 more countries - Engadget

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If you were disappointed at being left out of the initial Harry Potter: Wizards Unite launch, don't worry -- there's a good chance you can play now. Niantic's augmented reality sorcery is now available on Android and iOS in 25 more countries. This includes Canada and Mexico in the Americas as well as several European and Scandinavian countries, including France, Ireland, Germany, Norway and Sweden. You can also expect to play in a handful of other places around the world, such as India, Indonesia and the Philippines.

This still leaves many countries out of the loop in the near term, although that's not surprising. The company is using a strategy similar to what it tried with Pokémon Go, where it staggered the release so that servers wouldn't bog down as millions of players hopped online at the same time. It's just that Niantic is likely better-prepared this time around -- it can introduce more countries knowing just how much it can handle.

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https://www.engadget.com/2019/06/22/harry-potter-wizards-unite-25-more-countries/

2019-06-22 20:26:41Z
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Microsoft’s new browser is just like Chrome, so why switch from Chrome? - MSPoweruser

Microsoft has a new Edge browser, and it’s pretty great. No, not that Microsoft Edge. The old Microsoft Edge, which you’re probably familiar with is the one that shipped with Windows 10. It was one of those newfangled Universal Windows apps Microsoft used to talk about (but we don’t talk about those anymore) and had all sorts of nifty features like a powerful reader mode and capabilities to highlight on the desktop. It is still on your Windows PC right now, and it’s still the default and official Microsoft Edge browser, but the firm isn’t pushing it anymore. After years of trying to get people to use Edge, Microsoft has submitted to giving the people what they want and has built a new version of Edge. This version of Edge runs on the Chromium engine, the same one that powers Chrome. It can do everything Chrome can do but with a Microsoft twist, and it’s not immediately clear why you should use it. Ok, wait, let’s back up there? Why am I implying that giving the people what they want is a bad thing?

So let’s talk about the first Microsoft built Edge. You see, with Windows 10, Microsoft had its Edge browser as one of its flagship apps. It integrated a lot with the Windows 10 and Cortana, used Microsoft’s EdgeHTML engine, and was light on battery. You could even stream Apple events and watch Full HD Netflix on it. As a browser, it was great — eventually. At this point, there was only one problem with Edge — no one was using it. Edge never hit the 10% mark on windows. Unlike Interner Explorer which was popular at one point, Edge never even got off the ground. Microsoft had to change it somehow. The firm added extensions, they also added a whole lot of reading and inking features in what may have been the most misguided prioritisation of features ever. Edge didn’t really have a strong reputation for things that mattered.These included broad extension support and access to websites. As it happened, Edge’s small user base meant that developers didn’t build for it and sites would often ask users to download Chrome instead. In the end, Microsoft recognised it was simply throwing good money after bad and that’s how we got here.

The new Edge is pretty much Chrome with an Edge skin. It does all the fancy Chrome syncing, it integrates with your browser extensions and it works with websites as well as Chrome does. Now, here’s where it gets dicey on the appeal. See, let’s say you have two products. Product A which you’ve used for a long time and like, and Product B, which is new. Product B is the same as Product A, this is good for Product B, but now you have no incentive to change. If Microsoft Edge is now Google Chrome, then Chrome users have no reason to switch to Edge. It’s a bit worse if Product B is a rebranded version of a Product C which you tried and now actively dislike. Edge is Pepsi, and Chrome is Coke except Edge also used to taste like dollar store cola before so you’re not really sure you’d want to risk it again.

Here’s where it gets a little worse for Microsoft’s new Edge browser. One of Chrome’s most useful features is its syncing functionality. It syncs all your details across all your devices and provides access to other services like Google Pay. If you’ve got an Android phone, using Chrome offers a lot of benefits. If you’re using Edge, you lose some of their convenience as you move from device to device. Sure, you can use mobile Edge — but Edge doesn’t have Google Pay integration for making quick and easy payments.
So, with those points stacked against it, why would anyone even use Edge at this point? It’s quite simple. Edge is the default. Yes, Edge has always been the default and users have gone out of their way to download Chrome. But Edge has sucked in the past, and it doesn’t suck now. If a user’s initial Edge experience is good enough, there’s no incentive to go out of their way to download Chrome anyway.

There’s also an argument to be made for user privacy. All of that Chrome sync stuff that’s really cool and convenient at first can also be really invasive, especially for privacy-minded folks. “Seen from the inside, [Google’s] Chrome browser looks a lot like surveillance software,” The Washington Post’s Geoffrey Fowler argued this week, “Lately I’ve been investigating the secret life of my data, running experiments to see what technology really gets up to under the cover of privacy policies that nobody reads. It turns out, having the world’s biggest advertising company make the most popular Web browser was about as smart as letting kids run a candy shop.”

In contrast, Microsoft’s Edge isn’t about selling your data and takes a more Apple-esque approach to privacy. “Microsoft also wants to position the new Edge as a privacy focussed browser. In the interest of giving customers more choice and transparency, It will be offering additional privacy controls. The new Microsoft Edge will introduce three levels of privacy: Unrestricted, Balanced and Strict,” We noted earlier this year. “As the name suggests, changing the privacy to Unrestricted will allow third parties to collect as much data as they want, while switching to Strict means that you are not interested in giving away your data to unknown third parties. This will enable Microsoft Edge to adjust how third parties can track you across the web.”

So while at first Microsoft’s own variant of the Chrome browser seems like a pointless endeavour that’s doomed to failure, it really isn’t. On the one hand, you get all the goodness of Chrome, on the other hand, you gain access to a whole bunch of privacy features you didn’t have before. If you want, you can also use the Edge mobile browser to keep the same syncing features that make Chrome great without necessarily handing over your data to Google and every other third party on the internet.

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https://mspoweruser.com/microsofts-new-browser-is-just-like-chrome-so-why-switch-from-chrome/

2019-06-22 15:00:00Z
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The Morning After: The problem with the PlayStation Classic - Engadget

Hey, good morning! You look fabulous.

Welcome to your weekend! We'll recap a few highlight stories from the last week, plus some new items like our thoughts on Google getting out of the tablet business and a hands-on test of Tesla's latest in-car games. Oh, and if you prefer to read this recap in the afternoon, it's alright -- we understand.


Users who found value in the system were collectors or had low expectations going in. Why is the PlayStation Classic so unpopular?

Readers tell us why they liked it even less than we did.


'Beach Buggy Racing 2' is playable with the car's steering wheel and pedal.Control a fake Tesla while charging your real Tesla

Tesla's vehicles have an array of goofy Easter Eggs. From fart noises to Atari video games, the company isn't afraid to fly its freak flag. So it was no real surprise when the world found out that Tesla would be adding more games and that an SDK would be available for developers to port their titles to the cars.


Give the people what they want.Google getting out of the tablet game was inevitable (and smart)

When Google announced it was working on bringing Android apps and the Play Store to Chromebooks in 2016, it was pretty clear that Android tablets as we knew them were dead. And while Android apps on Chromebooks are still far from perfect (they're still somewhat buggy and often not optimized for keyboard and mouse), a Chrome OS device with Android apps is far more useful than any Android tablet ever was. That's why Nathan Ingraham calls the news that Google will no longer build its own tablets "logical."


Find the answers when it launches July 5th.'Sea of Solitude' looks like a brilliant, emotional horror show

Faith is the soul of EA's Sea of Solitude. Who can you trust, when you can't believe the reality your brain is presenting? When your mind has spiraled into paranoid, depressed delusion and nothing makes sense? Who, and what, can you trust, when you're at your most vulnerable? According to Jessica Conditt, Sea of Solitude asks these questions in a poignant, beautiful game filled with spatial puzzles and giant beast battles.


Like an El Cami-Nikolai.YouTuber known for 'shitty robots' turns Tesla Model 3 into a pickup truck

YouTuber and inventor Simone Giertz needed a truck to carry materials for her creations but didn't want a gas-guzzling pickup. So the 28-year-old robotics enthusiast decided to buy herself a brand spanking new Tesla Model 3, carve out the back seat and the trunk, and perform a bunch of other mods to the $35,000 vehicle that will make some of the Musk faithful wince. Fortunately, she documented the entire messy process in a 31-minute YouTube video. Look on with horror or admiration. And if you're not into hacking apart your beloved ride, you can always play a game on the dash screen.


Most viewers ever for a Netflix flick on its first weekend.Adam Sandler's 'Murder Mystery' breaks Netflix viewing records

Apparently what people want is more Adam Sandler, and Netflix gave it to them.

But wait, there's more...


The Morning After is a new daily newsletter from Engadget designed to help you fight off FOMO. Who knows what you'll miss if you don't Subscribe.

Craving even more? Like us on Facebook or Follow us on Twitter.

Have a suggestion on how we can improve The Morning After? Send us a note.

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https://www.engadget.com/2019/06/22/the-morning-after/

2019-06-22 14:20:43Z
CAIiEOTlYesp1MzNPeqDzwDSElUqGAgEKg8IACoHCAowwOjjAjDp3xswtuSvAw

The Morning After: The problem with the PlayStation Classic - Engadget

Hey, good morning! You look fabulous.

Welcome to your weekend! We'll recap a few highlight stories from the last week, plus some new items like our thoughts on Google getting out of the tablet business and a hands-on test of Tesla's latest in-car games. Oh, and if you prefer to read this recap in the afternoon, it's alright -- we understand.


Users who found value in the system were collectors or had low expectations going in. Why is the PlayStation Classic so unpopular?

Readers tell us why they liked it even less than we did.


'Beach Buggy Racing 2' is playable with the car's steering wheel and pedal.Control a fake Tesla while charging your real Tesla

Tesla's vehicles have an array of goofy Easter Eggs. From fart noises to Atari video games, the company isn't afraid to fly its freak flag. So it was no real surprise when the world found out that Tesla would be adding more games and that an SDK would be available for developers to port their titles to the cars.


Give the people what they want.Google getting out of the tablet game was inevitable (and smart)

When Google announced it was working on bringing Android apps and the Play Store to Chromebooks in 2016, it was pretty clear that Android tablets as we knew them were dead. And while Android apps on Chromebooks are still far from perfect (they're still somewhat buggy and often not optimized for keyboard and mouse), a Chrome OS device with Android apps is far more useful than any Android tablet ever was. That's why Nathan Ingraham calls the news that Google will no longer build its own tablets "logical."


Find the answers when it launches July 5th.'Sea of Solitude' looks like a brilliant, emotional horror show

Faith is the soul of EA's Sea of Solitude. Who can you trust, when you can't believe the reality your brain is presenting? When your mind has spiraled into paranoid, depressed delusion and nothing makes sense? Who, and what, can you trust, when you're at your most vulnerable? According to Jessica Conditt, Sea of Solitude asks these questions in a poignant, beautiful game filled with spatial puzzles and giant beast battles.


Like an El Cami-Nikolai.YouTuber known for 'shitty robots' turns Tesla Model 3 into a pickup truck

YouTuber and inventor Simone Giertz needed a truck to carry materials for her creations but didn't want a gas-guzzling pickup. So the 28-year-old robotics enthusiast decided to buy herself a brand spanking new Tesla Model 3, carve out the back seat and the trunk, and perform a bunch of other mods to the $35,000 vehicle that will make some of the Musk faithful wince. Fortunately, she documented the entire messy process in a 31-minute YouTube video. Look on with horror or admiration. And if you're not into hacking apart your beloved ride, you can always play a game on the dash screen.


Most viewers ever for a Netflix flick on its first weekend.Adam Sandler's 'Murder Mystery' breaks Netflix viewing records

Apparently what people want is more Adam Sandler, and Netflix gave it to them.

But wait, there's more...


The Morning After is a new daily newsletter from Engadget designed to help you fight off FOMO. Who knows what you'll miss if you don't Subscribe.

Craving even more? Like us on Facebook or Follow us on Twitter.

Have a suggestion on how we can improve The Morning After? Send us a note.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.engadget.com/2019/06/22/the-morning-after/

2019-06-22 14:04:56Z
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One of the creepiest series in YouTube history is now a decade old and can’t seem to die - The Verge

Ten years ago this week, a video appeared on the Something Awful forum describing a trove of unlabeled tapes that had been recorded as part of a student film project. The director had supposedly instructed for the tapes to be burned. But years after the project was suddenly ended, the video’s narrator reveals that he kept them intact and decided to parse through the footage.

“Should I find anything in any of them I will upload it to keep as a permanent record,” the narrator wrote. Within a few uploads, the audience was subjected to a slew of clues as to what drove the director to cancel the project. The tapes were filled with shots of eerie symbols and a tall, creeping figure without a face and dressed in a suit.

These videos were some of the first entries into Marble Hornets, an early fictional YouTube horror series that garnered a cult following and boasts a vibrant fandom across platforms even today. The series ran for five years, finishing on June 20th, the same date it began. Uploads were sporadic, some only a few seconds long. Others stretched out to the 15-minute length that’s popular with creators today. The series is a beloved relic of old YouTube and early internet culture.

“In internet years, 10 years is ancient. Like, might as well be Ancient Greece almost,” Tim Sutton, one of the series’s writers and actors, told The Verge. “We’re only a couple years removed from the land of flash videos and ‘You’re the Man Now, Dog’. We’re vintage internet.”

The series follows a character named Jay Merrick, played by Troy Wagner, as he attempts to understand what happened during the creation of a student film being shot by his friend, Alex Kralie. As he watches the tapes, Jay learns that Alex was being tormented by a figure known as “The Operator,” a version of the mythical creature Slenderman that was popularized in the Something Awful forums. Forum members would Photoshop the creature into photos and share their creations with each other. This community-generated content inspired Marble Hornets’ creators to craft an entire video series dedicated to the fandom.


YouTube was an entirely different world then; monetizing content was more difficult, and the site was oftentimes a secondary platform for popular Newgrounds creators to publish their animations. It wasn’t the corporate beast that it is today, filled with full-time creators, sponcon, and the late-night television clips that plague the Trending tab.

It was this YouTube that I grew up with. I spent countless hours sitting in front of my family’s boxy Dell desktop in our “office,” which was really just a room with my grandpa’s old rocking chair, framed quilts, and a faux-wood desk that could fit a computer. But it was at that computer where I would celebrate reaching the level necessary on World of Warcraft to purchase a crummy mount for the first time with my guildies over Ventrilo. It’s where my friends and I would circle up to watch Weebl’s Stuff and Salad Fingers, and it was also where I would binge Marble Hornets, unsure if it was a work of fiction or a real lost-footage investigation playing out in real time on YouTube.

In high school, I would find myself sitting in this dark office, chatting with friends over ooVoo and watching the series together. By then, it had trickled out of the Something Awful forums and onto other platforms like Reddit and Tumblr, which is likely where my friends and I were able to find it. Marble Hornets was detached from the original forum source and left me, a naive and easily persuadable 15-year-old girl, terrified that Slenderman might be real. I was so naive and persuadable, in fact, that one night while chatting, my older friends were able to convince me to toss salt over my shoulders and spin around a few times to ensure the lanky, faceless freak wouldn’t kill me in my sleep.

It was the mystery and ambiguity of Marble Hornets that drew me in at a time when the internet and YouTube weren’t overrun by brands and 4K, forty-minute vlogs. Myspace and Facebook had been around for some time, but my platforms of choice, Tumblr and Reddit, were less popular and baby websites in comparison. The space felt personal, and algorithms had yet to determine all of the content I consumed. Marble Hornets traveled to me, and likely many others, by word of mouth and niche online communities where people would discuss the series like they were investigating it alongside Jay.

“The rise of social media made it easier to share,” Sutton said. “There were still a couple of forums, which I guess are sort of old-fashioned now at this point. Having those tools to share those things hadn’t been around all that long.”

Marble Hornets felt like the Evil Dead cult, horror classic of the internet to me. But instead of picking up a VHS tape at a dinky video store, I discovered it through threads and posts from other die-hard fans.

Wagner told The Verge he was grateful for the fans who have been around all ten years, but also said new, younger kids are still finding it today. “There’s new people coming into it always it seems,” Wagner said. “Something like TV might have a problem with this because shows go off TV when they end. Whereas this is always on YouTube.”

The series transcends generations; many Gen Z kids are friending and following the Marble Hornets creators today. “The fan base has been getting gradually younger,” Sutton said. “I get a lot of messages from kids that are like 14 and under. I got a comment on one of my Instagram posts the other day that said they were 11, and I was like, ‘Are you kidding me?’”

When I asked Sutton why he thought kids continue to follow and even cosplay as his character on contemporary apps like TikTok to this day, he offered an explanation that spoke to my past experience. On the internet, Marble Hornets appears to be a universal, hidden treasure.

“It feels kind of like you’re investigating something. You still feel like you’re in on the mystery a little bit,” Sutton said. “Especially because it never got like a huge, huge, huge following.”

He continued, “It feels like people are stumbling on something kind of secret. Especially if you’re younger, because it’s scary. It is sort of PG-13, but I would still imagine if you’re like 12 or 13, it would be something you’d hide from your parents. I think that’s part of the draw.”

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https://www.theverge.com/2019/6/22/18701350/youtube-creepypasta-marble-hornets-slenderman

2019-06-22 14:00:00Z
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Microsoft bans Slack and discourages AWS and Google Docs use internally - The Verge

Microsoft has banned the use of the free version of Slack for its 100,000+ employees. GeekWire reports that Microsoft has a list of prohibited apps and services, and even Amazon Web Services (AWS) and Google Docs are “discouraged for use” inside the company. The Slack ban isn’t primarily driven by Microsoft’s competing Teams product, though. Microsoft is reportedly concerned about the security aspects of Slack Free and Slack Plus. An internal entry describes the situation:

“Slack Free, Slack Standard and Slack Plus versions do not provide required controls to properly protect Microsoft Intellectual Property (IP). Existing users of these solutions should migrate chat history and files related to Microsoft business to Microsoft Teams, which offers the same features and integrated Office 365 apps, calling and meeting functionality. Learn more about the additional features that Teams can provide your workgroup. Slack Enterprise Grid version complies with Microsoft security requirements; however, we encourage use of Microsoft Teams rather than a competitive software.”

Microsoft Teams stock

That means employees can use Slack Enterprise Grid, but given the costs involved it’s far more likely that most groups in Microsoft will be using the preferred Microsoft Teams option. AWS and Google Docs usage will reportedly “require a business justification” for employee use, and even Microsoft-owned GitHub is discouraged for “Highly Confidential types of information, specs or code.”

Microsoft has also banned Grammarly inside the company, which is a writing and grammar-checking app that can monitor every keystroke. “The Grammarly Office add-in and browser extensions should not be used on the Microsoft network because they are able to access Information Rights Management (IRM) protected content within emails and documents,” according to the leaked list.

Microsoft’s prohibited list makes a lot of sense for security-related matters, but employees still need to use these competing services to further their own products and understand the broader market. That would be a key part of any business justifications to get access to services like AWS or Google Docs.

Microsoft has been competing with Slack aggressively, but the messaging service recently launched apps and integrations for Slack and Office 365 to bridge the gap. Microsoft also launched its free version of Teams to rival Slack earlier this year, just weeks after the company unveiled creative new conference call features for its Slack competitor.

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https://www.theverge.com/2019/6/22/18713270/microsoft-slack-ban-aws-google-docs-prohibited-list-details

2019-06-22 13:06:01Z
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