Senin, 10 Februari 2020

Amazon, Sony and Ericsson pull out of Mobile World Congress over coronavirus fears - CNN

Amazon (AMZN), Ericsson (ERIC) and Sony (SNE) are withdrawing from this year's Mobile World Congress because of the risk that attendees could catch the coronavirus that originated in the Chinese city of Wuhan.
The event, scheduled to take place in Barcelona from February 24-27, is one of the tech industry's most important annual gatherings. It typically draws more than 100,000 attendees and over 2,400 companies, including the sector's biggest players who use it to launch new products and showcase their latest innovations.
But this year it will be missing some of its headline exhibitors including Amazon, one of the world's handful of $1 trillion companies, in yet another example of the impact that the coronavirus outbreak is having on businesses globally.
"Due to the outbreak and continued concerns about novel coronavirus, Amazon will withdraw from exhibiting and participating in Mobile World Congress 2020," the company said in a statement. Amazon's cloud computing arm, Amazon Web Services, was due to host a dozen sessions covering topics such as 5G connectivity and artificial intelligence.
The summit will go ahead as planned, event organizer and mobile operator lobbying group GSMA said in a statement, but it will be restricting access for visitors from China. Despite the withdrawal of "some large exhibitors ... we remain more than 2,800 exhibitors strong," it said.
The association said it would carry out temperature screening and increased cleaning of "high-volume touchpoints," such as catering areas, bathrooms, speaker microphones, handrails and public touch screens. It said it would double medical support at the venue and won't admit anyone who has been in China during the two weeks prior to the event.
The coronavirus outbreak has already led to a number of sporting events in Asia being canceled, postponed or relocated. Art Basel Hong Kong, scheduled for mid March, has also been canceled.
Qualcomm warns that 'uncertainty' about coronavirus could hit the smartphone industry
This year's Mobile World Congress comes as countries in Europe and elsewhere prepare to roll out 5G wireless technology amid an intense debate over the role that China's Huawei should play in building the super-fast networks.
The United States has been pressuring allies to drop Huawei as a supplier over national security concerns; Huawei denies that its products pose a risk. A spokesperson for Huawei confirmed that the company will attend the conference as planned.
Ericsson is one of Huawei's few rivals in the supply of telecoms network equipment and will be giving up an important opportunity to promote its products in Barcelona.
"Ericsson appreciates that GSMA have done everything they can to control the risk. However, as one of the largest exhibitors, Ericsson has thousands of visitors in its hall each day and even if the risk is low, the company cannot guarantee the health and safety of its employees and visitors," the company said.
It said it will host events in its customers' home markets to showcase the demos and content that it had created for Mobile World Congress.
Sony said its press conference will now take place on YouTube.

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2020-02-10 17:46:00Z
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Samsung teases Galaxy Z Flip for first time in Oscars commercial (Update: Luxury edition fever-dream ad leaks) - Android Police

Samsung's next foldable phone, the Galaxy Z Flip, has already been leaked quite a bit. The company has yet to say anything about the Z Flip publicly... until now, anyway. A commercial for the device aired during the Oscars Academy Awards show tonight, giving us a first look at the phone outside of leaked images and videos.

The below ad shows off the folding screen of the Galaxy Z Flip, and shows off some of Samsung's built-in applications that have been modified to work better with the super-tall layout. The small display on the front is also shown providing information about an incoming call.

While the commercial doesn't actually mention the Z Flip by name, it does say that more will be revealed at Samsung's Unpacked event later this week.

Thom Browne Z Flip fever dream

Another Galaxy Z Flip ad has appeared, this time leaked by @h0x0d. The two-minute-and-twenty-second advertisement has about three seconds of useful information as we see a soulless, corporate-looking drone walk for a small eternity down a monolithic outdoor space, repeatedly mumbling an echoed "I'm not ready" and laughing to himself in Joker-fashion disturbingly.

He stops before a sheet of water, pocketing a floating Galaxy Z Flip with racing stripes. Finally stating simply, "I'm ready," the sky-spanning waterfall parts at his touch, the gray corporate din broken by light on the other side, and he walks through — good thing it does, because I doubt that Z Flip in his pocket is water-resistant.

The ad is for a Thom Browne Edition Z Flip that will probably cost an additional arm and leg above the base phone, which Max Weinbach claimed would be around $1,300. Images of the box and its contents imply it will come with a pair of Galaxy Buds (probably the leaked upcoming ones), a watch with matching stripes, and some cases/straps/accessories for the included bits.

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2020-02-10 18:24:00Z
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More Companies Cancel MWC Plans Over Coronavirus Concerns - Droid Life

At the end of last week, we learned that NVIDIA had pulled out of MWC. This follows LG’s decision to do the same. Over the weekend, Amazon announced the same thing, followed by Sony. Now, the MWC 2020 field is looking very thin and we’re left wondering why the GSMA, the body that governs the event, is going forward with it.

According to a recent update from the GSMA, they are implementing a few additional checks to ensure the safety of attendees. For starters, all attendees from the Hubei province will not be permitted access. Following that, all attendees will need to check-off the following.

  • All travellers who have been in China will need to demonstrate proof they have been outside of China 14 days prior to the event (passport stamp, health certificate)
  • Temperature screening will be implemented
  • Attendees will need to self-certify they have not been in contact with anyone infected.

While I’m not a fan of “self-certify,” I suppose there really is only so much precaution you can take. We have to hope that no one will willfully put others at risk. Wait, these are humans we’re talking about, they absolutely would do that.

Here are the statements from the three latest companies to pull out of MWC. If you’re still attending, please stay safe and wash your hands!


NVIDIA’s Statement

We’ve informed GSMA, the organizers of MWC Barcelona, that we won’t be sending our employees to this year’s event.

Given public health risks around the coronavirus, ensuring the safety of our colleagues, partners and customers is our highest concern.

MWC Barcelona is one of the world’s most important technology conferences. We’ve been looking forward to sharing our work in AI, 5G and vRAN with the industry. We regret not attending, but believe this is the right decision.

We’re grateful for GSMA’s leadership and continued efforts to ensure the safety of all attendees.

Amazon’s Statement to TechCrunch

Due to the outbreak and continued concerns about novel coronavirus, Amazon will withdraw from exhibiting and participating in Mobile World Congress 2020, scheduled for Feb. 24-27 in Barcelona, Spain.

Sony’s Statement

Sony has been closely monitoring the evolving situation following the novel coronavirus outbreak, which was declared a global emergency by the World Health Organization on January 30th, 2020.

As we place the utmost importance on the safety and wellbeing of our customers, partners, media and employees, we have taken the difficult decision to withdraw from exhibiting and participating at MWC 2020 in Barcelona, Spain.

The Sony press conference will now instead take place at the scheduled time of 8:30am (CET) on February 24, 2020 as a video via our official Xperia YouTube channel to share our exciting product news.

Sony would like to thank everyone for their understanding and ongoing support during these challenging times.

// NVIDIA | Sony | TechCrunch | GSMA

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2020-02-10 16:48:00Z
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Leak shows Samsung's fashionable Galaxy Z Flip Thom Browne Edition - Engadget

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Walking Cat, Twitter

At this rate, there will be very little mystery left when Samsung takes the stage at its Unpacked event on February 11th. WalkingCat, normally known for Windows leaks, has posted a leaked promo video for the previously teased Thom Browne Edition of the Galaxy Z Flip. The fashion-oriented foldable is, apparently, all about Thom Browne's signature stripes. The phone, its case, and bundled versions of the Galaxy Buds+ and Galaxy Watch Active 2 all have hard-to-miss red, white and blue bars on top of a silver background.

It's not certain just where the Thom Browne model will sell besides "certain countries," but it could make an already expensive phone (reportedly close to $1,500) that much costlier. Reports have claimed this variant will cost upward of 3 million won in South Korea, or about $2,500 -- you'll have to be very, very committed to stylish tech to pick this up.

This isn't even the only big last-minute leak. WinFuture's Roland Quandt managed to buy the Galaxy Buds+ in advance and posted a lengthy hands-on video for the true wireless earbuds. He found them to be a "decent upgrade" overall, with a clear improvement in battery life -- he had half a charge left after roughly 3.5 hours of "loud punk rock." While the lack of active noise cancellation won't make AirPods Pro or WF-1000XM3 owners envious, Samsung's updated buds appear to address some of the complaints from the originals.

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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2020-02-10 15:26:53Z
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Leak shows Samsung's fashionable Galaxy Z Flip Thom Browne Edition - Engadget

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Walking Cat, Twitter

At this rate, there will be very little mystery left when Samsung takes the stage at its Unpacked event on February 11th. WalkingCat, normally known for Windows leaks, has posted a leaked promo video for the previously teased Thom Browne Edition of the Galaxy Z Flip. The fashion-oriented foldable is, apparently, all about Thom Browne's signature stripes. The phone, its case, and bundled versions of the Galaxy Buds+ and Galaxy Watch Active 2 all have hard-to-miss red, white and blue bars on top of a silver background.

It's not certain just where the Thom Browne model will sell besides "certain countries," but it could make an already expensive phone (reportedly close to $1,500) that much costlier. Reports have claimed this variant will cost upward of 3 million won in South Korea, or about $2,500 -- you'll have to be very, very committed to stylish tech to pick this up.

This isn't even the only big last-minute leak. WinFuture's Roland Quandt managed to buy the Galaxy Buds+ in advance and posted a lengthy hands-on video for the true wireless earbuds. He found them to be a "decent upgrade" overall, with a clear improvement in battery life -- he had half a charge left after roughly 3.5 hours of "loud punk rock." While the lack of active noise cancellation won't make AirPods Pro or WF-1000XM3 owners envious, Samsung's updated buds appear to address some of the complaints from the originals.

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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2020-02-10 15:06:32Z
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Leak shows Samsung's fashionable Galaxy Z Flip Thom Browne Edition - Engadget

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Walking Cat, Twitter

At this rate, there will be very little mystery left when Samsung takes the stage at its Unpacked event on February 11th. WalkingCat, normally known for Windows leaks, has posted a leaked promo video for the previously teased Thom Browne Edition of the Galaxy Z Flip. The fashion-oriented foldable is, apparently, all about Thom Browne's signature stripes. The phone, its case, and bundled versions of the Galaxy Buds+ and Galaxy Watch Active 2 all have hard-to-miss red, white and blue bars on top of a silver background.

It's not certain just where the Thom Browne model will sell besides "certain countries," but it could make an already expensive phone (reportedly close to $1,500) that much costlier. Reports have claimed this variant will cost upward of 3 million won in South Korea, or about $2,500 -- you'll have to be very, very committed to stylish tech to pick this up.

This isn't even the only big last-minute leak. WinFuture's Roland Quandt managed to buy the Galaxy Buds+ in advance and posted a lengthy hands-on video for the true wireless earbuds. He found them to be a "decent upgrade" overall, with a clear improvement in battery life -- he had half a charge left after roughly 3.5 hours of "loud punk rock." While the lack of active noise cancellation won't make AirPods Pro or WF-1000XM3 owners envious, Samsung's updated buds appear to address some of the complaints from the originals.

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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2020-02-10 14:33:08Z
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What do you want to know about the new Motorola Razr? - Engadget

Back when it was unveiled, Motorola's new Razr seemed like it might be the foldable to beat. (I was in that camp, too.) Now, after a questionable Verizon launch and a concerning test, people are starting to see the Razr for what it is: A phone that costs as much as a flagship but doesn't always act like one.

The phone has been on sale for about four days now, and I've been testing a review unit for about as long. That's enough time to get started on a full review, but certainly not enough to actually live with this thing -- an important prerequisite, I think you'll agree. So, like we did with that second go-around with the Galaxy Fold, we're turning to you. If you have you lingering questions, specifics you want us to test, or well, whatever really, be sure to let us know by emailing me (v@engadget.com), sliding into my DMs (@chrisvelazco) or leaving a comment below.

As companies pour more of their resources into building the future of smartphones, it feels less appropriate to whip up half-baked stories to grab early eyeballs. I hope you'll indulge us as we take a little time to write a review that's worth your attention.

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2020-02-10 14:00:39Z
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