Samsung Announces The Galaxy A5 And Galaxy A3, Its “Slimmest Smartphones To Date”

 Samsung vowed to introduce more metallic devices when it revealed its disappointing Q3 2014 earnings yesterday, and it wasted no time doing so after announcing the Galaxy A5 and the Galaxy A3 — two metallic devices that it calls its “slimmest smartphones to date.” Read More

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Samsung Announces The Galaxy A5 And Galaxy A3, Its “Slimmest Smartphones To Date”

Google Calendar’s been updated so now you don’t need to refresh for new appointments to appear.

Google Calendar’s been updated so now you don’t need to refresh for new appointments to appear. Finally. Read more…

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Google Calendar’s been updated so now you don’t need to refresh for new appointments to appear.

Solid Concepts Announces Another 3D-Printed Metal Gun

 Solid Concepts, a company that specializes in 3D printing in metal and now owned by Stratasys, as announced their second 3D-printed metal gun, the Reason. Their first gun, the 1911, as well as this one were made by sintering – melting – metal powder with a laser. However, from the detail on the barrel and handle it’s clear the company has improved the technology immensely… Read More

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Solid Concepts Announces Another 3D-Printed Metal Gun

Amazon’s New Fire TV Stick Is A $39 Chromecast Competitor With A Hardware Remote

 Amazon’s connected TV plans don’t end with the Fire TV, an Apple TV-like device it launched last year – the company announced the Fire TV Stick today, a $39 dongle that resembles the Chromecast, which is only $19 for the next two days if you’re already an Amazon Prime subscriber or if you sign up as a new one. Before the Fire TV launched, we received credible reports… Read More

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Amazon’s New Fire TV Stick Is A $39 Chromecast Competitor With A Hardware Remote

The Current State Of The Apple SIM, And Its Possible Future

 Apple unveiled new gadgets on stage today, but they didn’t discuss one of its most interesting new innovations – the Apple SIM. As detailed earlier by TechCrunch, the new SIM card lets you switch between participating carriers, which include AT&T, T-Mobile and Sprint in the U.S., and EE in the U.K. So far, those are the only carriers who have signed on, but Apple is likely… Read More

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The Current State Of The Apple SIM, And Its Possible Future

Apple Built A SIM Card That Lets You Switch Between AT&T, Sprint, And T-Mobile

 Whoaaa — here’s an interesting bit that went unmentioned in today’s Apple announcement: Apple has seemingly built a SIM card that lets you swap between AT&T, Sprint, and T-Mobile without having to swap it out (or, more likely, track down/purchase a new SIM card when you want to switch carriers). Read More

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Apple Built A SIM Card That Lets You Switch Between AT&T, Sprint, And T-Mobile

Belkin Explains Why Its Routers Stopped Working

 Yesterday morning, Belkin routers stopped allowing users from accessing the Internet. In a statement provided to TechCrunch Belkin identified and outlined steps it will take to prevent it from happening again. “One of our cloud services associated with maintaining router operations was negatively impacted by a change made in our data center that caused a false denial of service.… Read More

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Belkin Explains Why Its Routers Stopped Working

Details of iOS and Android Device Encryption

swillden writes: There’s been a lot of discussion of what, exactly, is meant by the Apple announcement about iOS8 device encryption, and the subsequent announcement by Google that Android L will enable encryption by default. Two security researchers tackled these questions in blog posts: Matthew Green tackled iOS encryption, concluding that the change really boils down to applying the existing iOS encryption methods to more data. He also reviews the iOS approach, which uses Apple’s “Secure Enclave” chip as the basis for the encryption and guesses at how it is that Apple can say it’s unable to decrypt the devices. He concludes, with some clarification from a commenter, that Apple really can’t (unless you use a weak password which can be brute-forced, and even then it’s hard). Nikolay Elenkov looks into the preview release of Android “L.” He finds that not only has Google turned encryption on by default, but appears to have incorporated hardware-based security as well, to make it impossible (or at least much more difficult) to perform brute force password searches off-device. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Details of iOS and Android Device Encryption

UK Engineers 3D Print Their Own Raspberry Pi Laptop

 Is there anything a robotic system for the extrusion of plastic in to solid forms over time can’t do? We present to you today the Pi-Top, a Raspberry Pi-based laptop that is completely 3D printed and lasts for hours on a single charge. The kit, which will launch as a Kickstarter soon, offers a 13.3-inch screen and a little keyboard and trackpad combo for data entry. Viola! A little… Read More

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UK Engineers 3D Print Their Own Raspberry Pi Laptop

iPhone 6 Plus Review: The First Truly Well-Designed Big Smartphone

 Apple is launching not one, but two premium smartphones today, and the iPhone 6 Plus is the one many probably were skeptical even existed just a few short months ago. With a screen size measuring 5.5-inches across the diagonal, it’s well into the territory labeled “phablet” on the ancient sea charts of mariners who’ve braved the Android waters. However, Apple’s… Read More

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iPhone 6 Plus Review: The First Truly Well-Designed Big Smartphone