TimeLine Layout

October, 2017

  • 20 October

    iPhone 8 Plus vs 7 Plus camera, photo and video comparison

    The iPhone 7 Plus takes great photos and video. But now it has a new younger sibling, the iPhone 8 Plus, with larger camera sensors, a faster processor and new software tricks including Portrait Lighting Mode. But just how much better is the 8 Plus at shooting pchotos and videos? Can you even really tell …

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  • 20 October

    Apple gets sued over animoji trademark

    Apple‘s animojis were a key part of the company’s iPhone X announcement last month — and are also key to a trademark lawsuit filed against the company this week. Japanese company Emonster filed a suit claiming it had already invented the term “animoji” back in 2014 and registered it with the US Patent and Trademark Office in 2015, The Recorder first …

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  • 20 October

    Chinese phone maker Vivo entering Hong Kong, Russia and beyond

    You may not have heard of Vivo, but you would have seen its phones in “Captain America: Civil War.”  Besides making product placement cameos, the Chinese company is actually the world’s fifth largest phone maker, as well one of the big four in China alongside Huawei, Xiaomi and Oppo. The company is set to become even bigger, with the announcement …

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  • 20 October

    Andy Rubin’s Essential sued over modular connector tech

    Andy Rubin’s Essential Products has slipped right back into hot water. Keyssa, a wireless technology company backed by iPod co-creator Tony Faddell, is suing Essential, founded by Android co-creator Rubin, in a lawsuit filed on Monday that alleges the company stole trade secrets, according to Reuters. Keyssa alleges that Essential for 10 months considered using the company’s wireless tech for …

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  • 20 October

    Lights, camera, livestream: How anyone can make it big

    Walking into Tomás Puig’s San Francisco apartment, I notice something is a little unusual.  There are three cameras in the kitchen and what looks to be a TV switcher sitting against the wall. Rather than hosting a handful of guests for dinner, twice a week Tomás opens his home to thousands who watch his cooking show on Facebook Live. “Tomás’ …

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  • 20 October

    Facebook Messenger now lets you pay pals with PayPal

    Facebook Messenger can make payments to friends, and has already worked with Paypal. But it can now make payments to people using Paypal using peer-to-peer, too (in the US, for now). The service is live on iOS, and is coming to Android soon. The service connects its 2.5 million customers in the US to make the same payments to friends …

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  • 20 October

    Project Loon brings limited internet access to Puerto Rico

    Alphabet, Google’s parent company, is hoping its high-flying internet balloons can help the people of Puerto Rico, about a month after Hurricane Maria made landfall. On Friday, the search giant announced some balloons from its Project Loon program had been deployed over Puerto Rico, in an effort to provide people with limited internet access. That will allow for basic activities …

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  • 20 October

    Apple Watch 3 in the UK: What you need to know about using 4G LTE

    Apple‘s latest smartwatch has plenty to be excited about, but it’s the addition of 4G connectivity that makes this version stand out above its predecessors. Here’s what you need to know about using LTE on the watch.  The 4G connectivity on the Apple Watch ($199 at Best Buy) works exclusively with the EE network. While you can pair the watch …

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  • 20 October

    4 simple, legit ways to find hidden money

    Everyone wants to make money with little to no effort. It may seem like a faraway dream, but there are a few ways you can make a few bucks while you’re already goofing off online. Here are four legit money makers to add to your cash flow. Ask the government You may have some money out there just waiting for …

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  • 20 October

    Equifax hack may shake up US consumer data laws

    There’s nothing like a disaster to prompt a call for change.In early October, Congress grilled Equifax’s former CEO, Richard Smith, in four separate committee hearings about how his credit reporting agency put the consumer records of over 145 million people in jeopardy.How bad was the hack? Pretty bad. We’ll be feeling the effects for “essentially a hundred years, until everybody …

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