Lenovo announced a new ThinkPad X1 Carbon that's lighter and thinner, but won't come out until mid-2019. They also showed off a really nice copy of Microsoft's Surface Studio (the desktop PC with a big touch screen that can fold down) that'll come out "later this year".
Lexar is selling 1TB SD cards now, so that's a thing that's happened. Has a minimum sequential write speed of 30MB/sec, which is pretty good for such a big card. Will go on sale "in coming weeks" for US$499.99.
The Verge goes over the plethora of stuff at CES getting Alexa and Google Assistant support. There's loads of gear for all you smart home aficionados that I couldn't give a rats arse about.
Part of CES is awards and a fancy women's sex toy won of those coveted CES Innovation Awards. But at the last minute, just days before the show, the award was taken away. In a statement, CES said the product "should not have been accepted for the Innovation Awards Program" because it "does not fit into any of our existing product categories". But sex toys have won in the past and there's male sex toys on the expo floor, soooo, yeah, that's kinda fucked.
This 12.5" portable monitor plugs directly into a USB-C port for both power and video. Dual screen laptop action on the go! Thin too, so it slides right in to any bag or sleeve. Sells for US$200 and is available now.
Samsung's announced an event for the 20th of February over in San Francisco. They'll reveal the Galaxy S10, which is rumoured to have a "punch-hole" front camera so the entire front of the device is nothing but screen with the narrowest of bezels possible. Dunno what else will be in the S10 besides that. It'll probably be a specs beast. There should also be a prototype 5G phone (or maybe the S10 will have native 5G??) and hopefully more info on that crazy foldable device Samsung showed off in November. Samsung confirmed at CES it'll be out 1st half of 2019, so you'd hope they'd have more info for us at this event in February.
The Intercept has info claiming that the popular Ring doorbell's "artificial intelligence" features like motion detection are actually powered by a bunch of Ukranians "data operators" paid fuck all to manually watch the videos and mark events. Of course, Ring provides no warning that if you turn the motion detection features on it's actually Oleksiy or Ivan over in Ukraine watching you go about your business. This is fucked up on so many levels. First of all, Ring are selling a feature that doesn't work, but to make it seem like it's working, they're paying humans to act as literal mechanical turks. Then there's the whole privacy thing - who knows what sort of secret stash of footage some pervert is collecting from these cameras?!
Remember that bullshit with Andy Rubin and Google from last year? Where he was using his (sometimes consensual, sometimes not) sexual relationships with people he worked with to harass them and just be a really nasty dude? Then when Google found out, they covered it up and paid Rubin a massive chunk of money to go away? James Martin, a Google shareholder, has "filed suit in the San Mateo Superior Court Thursday morning, alleging the company's leaders deployed massive allowances to poor-behaving executives to cover up harassment scandals" and that is a "breach of fiduciary duty, unjust enrichment, abuse of power and corporate waste". Will be interesting to see how the court goes with this case, as if it's found that Google was negligent, it could be a big wake up call for the wider tech industry and how they treat arsehole "rockstar" developers.
Oh look, another Queensland police officer has been busted using the police database "inappropriately". It's unknown at the moment what the 33-year old accessed and why (I'm guessing an ex-partner), they've been charged with "Computer Hacking and Misuse", which carries a maximum of 10 years in jail. This officer won't get 10 years in jail, or maybe any jail time at all. Going by previous occurrences (there's at least 3 others outlined in this article), it seems like all that happens is you get "stood down from active duty". Not even sacked from the police force, let alone a criminal punishment.
Check out this absolutely ratshit job an NBN installer did at this Whirlpool user parent's home. The coax cable for the HFC install is dangling through a plasterboard cornice and you can see daylight through it! There's an internal conduit!! Looks like this installer puffed a bit of shard before rocking up to this unsuspecting person's home. To make it even worse, the installer is begging the homeowner to claim it on their house insurance instead of dobbing them in to NBN because they're afraid of getting sacked. I reckon this bloke getting sacked would do everyone a favour. Time for a new trade mate.
The dream TV for most of us would be pretty much a large monitor with heaps of HDMI inputs. No smart bullshit, maybe not even a tuner in it - surely not including that stuff would reduce the price of the TV right? So why aren't TV makers doing it?! The Verge talked to Vizio (kinda like the USA's Kogan) and asked him what the deal is. His response was that the TV market is so cut-throat, with margins so slim, that the analytics TV makers get from users (e.g: data on what you watch) is an important revenue stream. Surely someone could stand out from the crowd and release a TV with none of that shit for like $50-$100 more than a regular TV and it would find enough of a market to justify existing?
No bargains today (they all expired by the time I sent this out damn it), so here's some weird/cool wireless phone chargers I've seen on Aliexpress that you might want:
That's it, see ya tomorrow!
--Anthony
Aussie Broadband is the best ISP I've used since Internode's glory days. Their CEO gives talks at AUSNOG about their network and they even have network utilisation charts for every NBN POI. Their pricing isn't the cheapest, but if you want an ISP that's fast & reliable, give them a shot. Use my affiliate link and we both get $50 credit on our next bill.
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