Jumat, 20 September 2019

Leaked screenshots show how Apple's tracker tags might work - Engadget

Sponsored Links

Apple

New screen shots have revealed more evidence of Apple's possible tracking tag system and how it might work. iOS 13 might feature a tab called "Items" within the "Find My" app that will display a map and list of items you've set up to track, according to MacRumors. When opened, the tab declares you can use the app to "Tag your everyday items with B389 and never lose them again."

Apple tag tracking app

MacRumors

"B389" apparently refers to Apple's rumored tracking tag hardware that will work much like the Bluetooth tags from Tile. By tapping the "Add B389" bar, you'll be able to tag and track your bicycle, briefcase, keys or any other objects you want to keep safe. The physical tags could be simple white disks with an Apple logo in the center, according to a previous MacRumors article.

iOS 13 users will be notified when they part ways with a tagged item, according to code in the iOS 13 build. To find it, they can tap a button that will make the Apple tag beep loudly. If that doesn't work, the item can be placed into "Lost Mode." If another iPhone user finds it, they'll be able to see the owner's contact information and phone or text them. Users can set up "Safe Locations" where an item can be left without the need to notify the owner.

Previous reports show that the Apple's tracking tags might be powered by a new co-processor in the iPhone 11, and use a combination of ultra-wideband and Bluetooth LE to narrow down search areas. It might also let you find devices using AR, and show red and orange balloons to indicate when you're getting close. "Walk around several feet and move your iPhone up and down until a balloon comes into view," a prompt from an internal iOS 13 build reads.

MacRumors notes that the build containing all these features is from June, so the final version of the app might be quite different. Apple might not even release the app or tags, though at this point, it seems more likely than not to become a product. If so, we're likely to find out when Apple officially launches iOS 13.

Source: MacRumors
In this article: apple, ARKit, FindMy, gear, iOS13, iPhone, Items, mobile, Tags, Tracking
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.
Comment
Comments
Share
Tweet
Share
Save

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.engadget.com/2019/09/20/apple-tracking-tag-screenshot-leak/

2019-09-20 10:02:01Z
52780387901664

Apple’s location tracking Tags detailed in new leak - The Verge

Details about Apple Tags, the company’s Tile-like location trackers you can attach to things like your keys, bag, or bike, have leaked again. The latest screenshots come courtesy of MacRumors, and show a new “Items” tab, that replaces the “Me” tab in the new Find My app that rolled out yesterday with the global release of iOS 13.

”Keep track of your everyday items,” reads the Items tab when clicking in. “Tag your everyday items with B389 and never lose them again.” B389 is the internal Apple codename for Apple Tags, first mentioned by 9to5Mac back in April. The screenshots were sourced from an internal build of iOS 13 released in early June, according to MacRumors.

As long as we’re here, let’s go ahead and round up what else we think we know about Apple Tags at this point:

  • The Apple Tags resemble circular discs, as revealed by both 9to5Mac and MacRumors.
  • The Tags will likely be fitted with Apple’s new U1 locator chip that’s already in the iPhone 11. The chip uses ultra-wideband which can point new iPhone owners in the right direction of a missing Tag and then guide them to within centimeters of it, according to Sixcolors.
  • 3D balloons will provide the visual cues to pinpoint the location of lost items, likely via an AR interface. “Walk around several feet and move your iPhone up and down until a balloon comes into view,” reads a string of code in the internal iOS 13 build.
  • Like AirPods, Apple Tags can be forced to emit a chime to help in recovery.
  • The Tags can be paired to a user’s iCloud account by proximity to an iPhone, just like AirPods.
  • Owners can be alerted if they venture too far from a tagged object, to prevent them from forgetting it. This feature can be overridden in “safe” locations like the home or office.
  • If a tag is set to lost mode by the owner, any iPhone user that seems to be in possession of the tagged item will receive a notification to return it to the rightful owner, according to 9to5Mac, with detailed instruction provided by the owner if they choose.

Since the Apple Tags weren’t announced at the iPhone 11 event as expected, there’s a good chance we might see them launch at a special event in October. Apple needs a venue to launch those new Pro iPads and 16-inch MacBook Pro, after all.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.theverge.com/2019/9/20/20875341/apple-tags-location-rumor-roundup

2019-09-20 07:33:17Z
52780387901664

Kamis, 19 September 2019

The Legend of Zelda: Link's Awakening Switch Video Review - GameSpot

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JELkJdyQcvo

2019-09-19 12:00:06Z
52780387985664

Facebook is learning that hardware is hard - The Verge

Meet me at our first-ever Interface Live on Tuesday, October 22nd! I’ll be chatting with misinformation researcher Renee DiResta. Get tickets.

One of the first adages I heard as a tech reporter is a three-word refrain uttered by anyone who’s ever sought to make something with atoms rather than bits: Hardware is hard. Make a mistake in software and you can push out a fix more or less immediately; make a mistake with hardware and the phones explode. In the old days, a tech company typically made software or hardware, but these days that or has been replaced with an and. After Apple’s outsized success with the iPhone, all the other tech giants got religion on the value of software and hardware working together. And suddenly companies like Microsoft, Google, and Facebook, who once limited themselves to high-margin software businesses, had to invest untold billions in figuring out to make and sell physical objects.

Facebook first dipped a toe in these waters when it bought Oculus, maker of virtual reality hardware, in 2014. Since then, as Salvador Rodriguez recounts in CNBC today, the company has struggled to gain traction in hardware markets. It spun up a research and development lab called Building 8 in 2016, making sci-fi promises about technologies that would let us hear with our skin and type with our minds. But Building 8 was reorganized into nonexistence just two years later — with its only lasting contribution to Facebook’s product lineup being the video-chat device Portal.

Portal launched last year to a tech press skeptical that consumers would welcome into their homes a camera and microphone from a company that has spent the past few years battered by data privacy scandals. The skepticism appears to have been warranted, Rodriguez reports:

It’s unclear how the new Portal products will fare, but the first generation released in 2018 shipped only 54,000 units, according to IDC. Facebook disputes that estimate, but the company has never offered its own figure and declined to do so at the second-generation Portal unveiling on Tuesday.

(Another estimate puts the figure at somewhere under 300,000 units, or less than 1 percent of the market.)

At the same time, it can take a brand years to build market share. There was never a question in my mind whether Facebook would build a second generation of Portal devices — only what they would look like when they arrived, and how the world would react when they did.

On Wednesday we found out. The company introduced three new version of Portal: an 8-inch and a 10-inch version that look like less functional iPads, and an accessory called Portal TV that plugs into your television. As before, a major theme of coverage was the privacy risks associated with the device. And analysts remain fairly bearish on Portal in the near term, Heather Kelly reports in the Washington Post:

Portals will account for just 4 percent of smart-display shipments in 2019, says David Watkins, an analyst at market research firm Strategy Analytics. He cites high prices and privacy concerns as reasons the smart displays haven’t taken off more.

The most popular smart display in North America is Google’s Nest Hub, with Amazon’s Echo Show in second place, according Strategy Analytics. It estimates the smart-display market will hit 31 million devices globally in 2019. (The devices are especially popular in China, where companies like Baidu and Xiaomi sell inexpensive versions of their own.)

So why keep going?

Andrew “Boz” Bosworth, the longtime Facebook executive who now runs the hardware division, says Portal is a quintessential Facebook product. “This product is the very core essence of what Facebook does,” he said Tuesday at a product demonstration I attended in San Francisco. “It connects you meaningfully with the people you care most about.”

The way it connects people is largely through video calls, which it spiffs up with augmented reality features, a camera that tracks people around the room, and other enhancements. To me it all feels like a lot of work to make video calls marginally better, but Bosworth told me that Portal is something different.

“Video calling on the phone always felt very transactional,” he told me. “Your left hand is sacrificed to the call until you’re done. [You’d think] ‘how can I get off this call as politely as possible? Whereas Portal is a lot more like hanging out. You don’t have to be doing anything. That, I think, is something that is interesting.”

Sure, I said. But why not just buy an iPad and use Skype or FaceTime?

“Right now those are not good experiences,” Bosworth said. “Go set an iPad up and spend a ton of time video-calling people you care about. See how enjoyable it, is or how annoying it is. And then do it with Portal.

“This is where I think people go wrong,” he continued. “People just look at the features on the box … That’s not there this lives. This lives in the experience.”

It remains to be seen how many more people will sign up for that experience than did last year. In the meantime, it’s clear that the story over privacy and in-home displays doesn’t begin and end with Facebook. On the same day news of Portal came out, the Washington Post reported on how your smart TV is monitoring what you watch to target ads at you, and the Financial Times reported that your smart TV is sending market research data to Netflix and personally identifying information to Google.

The Ratio

Today in news that could shape public perception.

Trending up: Google and Facebook might begin paying publishers directly to license their content, as antitrust probes into their allegedly monopolistic business practices move forward. I’ll take it!

Trending up: Twitter is dismantling an effort to discredit Hong Kong protesters that likely originated in China, and Facebook and YouTube followed it.

Trending down: Facebook faces new charges from a human rights nonprofit that its ad engine was used for housing discrimination.

Oversight

A couple follow-up notes from yesterday’s column about Facebook’s forthcoming judicial branch. One, I’m told that the current working name is the “oversight board,” rather than the “independent oversight board,” even though that language was in yesterday’s blog post. The board will eventually be able to amend its bylines to change the name if it wants, Facebook told me.

Of more consequence: Evelyn Douek has a good post at Lawfare in which she explores how a recent update to Facebook’s values could affect how the board ultimately makes its decisions. Notably — if inevitably — the new values weigh the importance of “voice” above that of “safety,” she writes:

Therefore, in cases of ambiguity, when the extent of risk posed by a certain category of speech is not necessarily clear, Facebook will not—and, if the Oversight Board project works, cannot—err on the side of caution and simply take that content down “just in case.” This reflects a certain degree of risk tolerance on Facebook’s part—which will no doubt be praised by those committed to a robust marketplace of ideas. It also perhaps reflects the changing role of these private companies that facilitate so much public discourse: They are not literally, technically or legally a new public square, but their systemic importance means that society is coming to have expectations of their responsibility to the public that go beyond mere consumer satisfaction.

Douek also had a nice gloss on yesterday’s big charter reveal at The Atlantic. Yes to all this:

The Oversight Board is fundamentally a bet by Facebook that the legitimacy of its decisions matters—and matters more than getting its way on every question. As other platforms seem to double down on the idea that they do not need to publicly explain their decisions or abide by their own rules when it does not suit their short-term interests, Facebook appears to be making a different wager: Accountability and legitimacy can reassure users—and regulators—of the value of its product. Acting in bad faith would undermine Facebook’s own gamble. Legitimacy, Facebook hopes, will become part of its value proposition.

Governing

Congress is drafting a bill to create a national commission that will study the ways social media can be weaponized. The commission will also assess how effective tech companies are in protecting users from harmful content. The news comes after a hearing in which members questioned Google, Facebook, and Twitter about the connection between social networks and real-world violence. Tony Romm and Drew Harwell at The Washington Post:

The draft House bill obtained by The Washington Post is slated to be introduced and considered next week. If passed, the commission would be empowered — with the authority to hold hearings and issue subpoenas — to study the way social media companies police the Web and to recommend potential legislation. It also would create a federal social media task force to coordinate the government’s response to security issues.

People with Amazon Alexa speakers can start making campaign donations to 2020 presidential candidates using their devices starting tomorrow. But the rules say you can only donate to “principal” candidates, and Amazon hasn’t yet clearly defined who falls into this category. (Makena Kelly / The Verge)

At least 75 countries, including the U.S. and Germany, have adopted China’s surveillance strategies, using facial recognition software to track citizens. Much of the software comes from Chinese telecom company Huawei. (Ryan Tracy / The Wall Street Journal)

The Chinese government ran a Russian-style disinformation campaign on Twitter in an effort to discredit Hong Kong protestors. Twitter has taken down 1,000 fake accounts linked to this operation, and suspended 200,000 more. (Raymond Zhong, Steven Lee Myers, and Jin Wu / The New York Times)

Hong Kong protesters make clever use of tools including Telegram, Twitter, and live maps. The entrepreneur and social critic Maciej Cegłowski shares characteristically sharp notes . (Maciej Cegłowski / Idle Words)

London’s Met police force is teaming up with Facebook in an effort to prevent live streaming terrorist attacks around the world. The Met will give Facebook video footage from officer trainings to help the company develop technology that can detect when someone is live-streaming an attack. (Metropolitan Police)

Industry

Amazon is tightening its control over the third-party apps used by many businesses to sell products on the platform. The apps have access to customer data, and some have been violating Amazon’s privacy policy by advertising to customers on Facebook. Louise Matsakis report at Wired:

To streamline their operations, many sellers rely on specialized business apps that tap into the Amazon Marketplace Web Service APIs, which can integrate data including sensitive customer information like names, emails, and delivery addresses. There are tools that automate simple tasks, like printing shipping labels, as well as apps that monitor key metrics like user reviews and sales volumes, which determine whether products appear higher in Amazon’s search results—the most popular way to shop on the site. While Amazon has multiple policies governing the use of these apps and their data, the cottage industry that sprung up around Amazon MWS has been relatively decentralized. Amazon only launched its Marketplace Appstore in May 2018.

Now Amazon is cracking down on third-party apps that accessed customer information through MWS and are in violation of its policies. Earlier this year, the company began emailing developers that they had to submit information about their apps in order to continue using Amazon MWS. Seller forums are full of posters wondering when they’ll finally regain access. WIRED spoke with three Amazon developers who received warnings or had their API access revoked in recent months. One enabled Amazon sellers to create targeted advertisements on Facebook using customer data for over a year, in violation of Amazon’s privacy policy.

Instagram is cracking down on posts related to diet products and cosmetic surgery. Under the new rules, posts promoting weight-loss products or miracle cures will be hidden from users under the age of 18 — or removed altogether. (PA Media / The Guardian)

Instagram influencers making money by charging fans to see their “Close Friends” posts. It’s unclear what Instagram itself thinks of the practice, though among other things it illustrates how few legitimate ways that the platform’s stars currently have to make money there. (Kaitlyn Tiffany / The Atlantic)

Facebook is pouring money into AI research to teach chatbots to converse like humans. Facebook’s virtual assistant M may have flopped, but it continues to invest heavily in chatbot research. (Mark Sullivan / Fast Company)

After a CNBC article yesterday described Facebook’s plans to develop augmented-reality glasses, Alex Heath reports there are actually two projects underway. The company’s reported partnership with Ray-Ban is for glasses similar to Snap’s Spectacles, he writes. (Alex Heath / The Information)

A report from Data and Society raises doubts that AI can fix deepfakes. Facebook has recently been promoting AI solutions to doctored videos, but the report argues it won’t be enough. (Zoe Schiffer / The Verge)

Youtube added a big giant advertisement at the top of its TV app. The desktop site site already has ads in this spot, and it’s considered premium real estate for advertisers. (Julia Alexander / The Verge)

An inside look at the history behind Google’s race to become the leader in AI, featuring interviews with CEO Sundar Pichai and AI chief Jeff Dean. The company’s next big project: quantum computing. (Katrina Brooker / Fast Company)

Google’s screen time manager for parents, Family Link, added new features that allow them to limit screen time for individual apps, instead of the device as a whole. It also allows people to extend screen time as needed. (Sarah Perez / TechCrunch)

LinkedIn introduced Skills Assessments: short, multiple-choice tests to let users show off their computer science know-how, along with other work-related skills, to potential employers. (Ingrid Lunden / TechCrunch)

Fortnite added cross-platform voice chat — another step toward making the popular free-to-play game a full-fledged social network. It’s based on a similar feature developed by Houseparty, the group video chat app that Fortnite maker Epic acquired in June. (Casey Newton / The Verge)

And finally...

They Are What You Eat

Caity Weaver visits the headquarters of your favorite mall food court brands and, among other things, chats with their social media teams:

“If you jump in inappropriately, you will get roasted,” he said, reflecting on the recent Twitter storm over Popeyes’ Spicy Chicken Sandwich. “Like Zaxby’s jumped in, they got roasted. Boston Market jumped in. Chick-fil-A took a lot of L’s.”

Mr. Ayala’s job is, essentially, to talk about Moe’s in a brief, hilarious and charming way, without stopping, forever. He found delirious success one day this summer when his tweet combining a meme about aliens in Area 51 with the very notion of Moe’s burritos received roughly 2,100 retweets. But then he had to tweet again.

Relatable as hell, honestly.

Talk to us

Send us tips, comments, questions, or call us from your Facebook Portal: casey@theverge.com and zoe@theverge.com.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.theverge.com/interface/2019/9/19/20872532/facebook-portal-hardware-sales-tv-privacy

2019-09-19 10:00:00Z
52780387562849

How to delete apps on iOS 13 for iPhone and iPad - 9to5Mac

iOS 13 changes how the Home Screen works a bit. Accessing jiggle mode is slightly different than how it worked on iOS 12 and earlier versions. Here’s how to delete apps on iPhone and iPad, now that you have updated to iOS 13.

Try Amazon Prime 30-Day Free Trial

Apple has deprecated 3D Touch and added special home screen quick action context menus for all devices with iOS 13, whether you are using a 3D Touch capable device or not.

This means the new context menu behavior appears on iPod touch, all models of iPhone and all models of iPad — including the new iPhone 11.

A simple long press on an app icon now triggers this new action menu. In supporting apps, you will see features like quick shortcuts to things inside the app. But if you just want to delete an app you’ve downloaded, it might not be completely obvious how to do it.

How to delete an app on iOS 13

  • Long-press on the icon of you want to delete.
  • When the context menu appears, tap the ‘Rearrange Apps’ button.
  • This will enter into ‘jiggle’ mode, where the familiar close buttons will appear.
  • Tap on the ‘x’ close button and a confirmation dialog will appear.
  • Tap the red delete button to confirm and the app will be deleted.

There is also a second way to enter Home Screen editing mode. When you long-press on the icon, keep your finger down. The context menu will appear, but ignore it. Press and hold for about five seconds. This will take you directly into jiggle mode and the close buttons will be visible.

These instructions apply to iPhone and iPad devices running iOS 13 or later.

Spigen iPhone 11 case

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://9to5mac.com/2019/09/19/how-to-delete-apps-on-ios-13-for-iphone-and-ipad/

2019-09-19 09:30:00Z
52780387901664

Galaxy Fold: My first day with Samsung's new and improved foldable phone - CNET

samsung-galaxy-fold-update-uk-2019-22

The new Galaxy Fold has been redesigned to keep out dust -- and keep you from peeling off any essential parts.

Andrew Hoyle/CNET

I like the Galaxy Fold more than I thought I would. I unboxed it this morning, after having waited in line at Samsung's London store since 5:30 a.m. Now, after having spent the day playing about with its jazzy hinge design, I've noticed a few things about this updated version of the Fold.

First of all, there's no noticeable protective layer that you might be wrongly tempted to peel off. This was one of the major errors in the first design; a film was laid over the top of the display that looked just like one of those layers you happily peel off when you get a new phone. It was actually a crucial part of the design, and some journalists who had early review samples of the Fold peeled it off, which ruined the display. 

The lack of visible film on the updated version means there's less chance of you wrecking your pricey phone on Day 1. Samsung has also more securely sealed the edge of the display with plastic caps at the two points where it folds, which hopefully will stop dust particles getting under the surface (another pain point from round one). 

The original design had a gap between the hinge where the Galaxy Fold does its folding, and the two arms of the screens. This is now diminished. Also, you can't see an additional metal plate beneath the display, which is meant to reinforce the fragile plastic screen, but Samsung assures us it's there.

But beyond those design tweaks, the phone remains unchanged. The hinge feels smooth to use and the phone snaps shut satisfyingly like those snappy cases you get with your glasses. 

But what about the crease in the display? Well, it's there and there's no getting away from it. Catch reflections from overhead lights in the right way and you can easily see ripples across the surface, instead of the smooth expanse of glass you'll see on any other smartphone. 

It can be a little off-putting at times. I found that it's mostly a problem when you're watching a dark video, which makes overhead light reflections -- and therefore, the crease -- more obvious. But it's only the reflections that make you notice; the display itself doesn't warp and there's no change in color or brightness where it folds. 

If you watch a bright video -- or you're in a dark room with no reflections from ambient light -- you won't notice. I certainly didn't when I watched several Carfection YouTube videos in our dimly lit studio. The same was true for an episode of Breaking Bad on Netflix. I honestly couldn't see any kind of crease and could instead just enjoy the content on a massive screen.

Now playing: Watch this: Every way Samsung improved the Galaxy Fold

3:54

There is, of course, a cut-out notch in the top left corner (assuming you're holding it in landscape orientation, and in the upper right corner when it's in portrait mode). I'm quite used to notches and cut-outs now from the recent iPhones and the Galaxy S10 Plus, so this really wasn't a problem for me and it didn't spoil my viewing. If you don't like notches on other phones, odds are you won't love it here either. At least there's so much screen that the notch takes up relatively less space than on other devices. 

Later on in the day, I was navigating my way through London's maze-like Soho district, trying to find an office for a meeting. In the taxi on the way there it was great seeing Google Maps displayed on that massive screen. Out on the street, however, I didn't want to gingerly carry a massive -- and expensive -- device so openly, so I snapped it shut and used the 4.6-inch outer display. 

For me, this display is just a little too small. It's fine for seeing incoming calls, changing music on Spotify or using as the camera viewfinder instead of looking like a buffoon who takes pictures on a tablet. But its small size means you have to have accurate fingers to type on it. Sending a quick reply to an email or a WhatsApp message is tough, particularly if you're walking, but opening up the phone to its full tablet mode often isn't convenient either. 

samsung-galaxy-fold-update-uk-2019-6

The Galaxy Fold is best used in tablet mode.

Andrew Hoyle/CNET

It's frustrating, as that outer screen looks squashed in. I'd have loved to have seen it go further to the edges, giving enough room to make it usable as a standalone device. Right now, it's best thought of as a stopgap until you can find a moment to unfold it into true tablet mode. 

It's my first day with the phone, so I'll reserve judgment on the processor performance, camera quality and battery life until I've done a lot more testing, but make sure you keep your eyes peeled on CNET's YouTube channel for a lot more Fold videos. 

And here's our review of the Galaxy Fold's original design, with many more details about what it's like to use a foldable phone.

Top stories

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.cnet.com/news/galaxy-fold-my-first-day-with-samsungs-new-and-improved-foldable-phone-hands-on/

2019-09-19 08:45:03Z
52780387808681

Pocket Casts changes subscription plans after user backlash - The Verge

Pocket Casts is making a change to its recently announced subscription plans after a backlash from users who were angry about losing access to apps they’d previously paid for.

The company is now giving free lifetime access to Pocket Casts Plus, its premium subscription service, to anyone that paid for the service’s web or desktop apps before the pricing changes. These apps were previously available to purchase and use via a one-off fee of $9, but now require a paid subscription of $0.99 a month or $10 a year to use.

Prior to Tuesday, Pocket Casts proudly touted its subscription-free offering. “No monthly subscriptions or freemium hoo-ha,” one of its promotional messages read, “We’ll ask you for $9. Just once.” However, it seems the reality of running an ongoing cloud-based service has now caught up with the company.

When it first announced the changes, Pocket Casts had offered users three years of access to the premium subscription service if they’d paid for these apps under the old purchase model. However, users were angry that their lifetime access had been changed into a three year subscription overnight. “Yup, what I thought to be my lifetime pocketcasts web purchase just turned into a three year rental. Exactly what I wanted,” read a heavily-upvoted Reddit comment.

In his blog post, Pocket Casts CEO Owen Grover notes that the company is trying to make this change “as soon as we can.” When I checked my own Windows 10 Pocket Casts app, it seems that the change has already taken effect. My own account is now listed as having lifetime membership of the premium service.

Outside of the changes in access to its web and desktop apps, Grover doesn’t mention rollbacks to any of its other initiatives, which include making its mobile apps completely free, and offering 10GB of cloud storage to let you upload your own audio and video content with the premium service.

It might not be hoo-ha, but Pocket Casts is definitely a freemium service now.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.theverge.com/2019/9/19/20873611/pocket-casts-plus-premium-web-desktop-apps-changes-rollback

2019-09-19 09:08:06Z
CAIiEJDCut55pxSORLfM_V7CErgqFwgEKg4IACoGCAow3O8nMMqOBjDe1egF