I mean, Ive been begging for a new media and gaming mode since the failed Windows XP Media Center Edition.
Came here just to say something similar.
“Going FOSS really whips the llamas ass!”
Balancing performance against power draw is tough. You’ll find diminishing returns on adding more cores when a bigger core might complete a task faster and use less power overall. Tensor 3 is also a nona-core, but in general, i think we’ll probably see companies stick with symmetrical big/little core counts.
Kinda the perfect place to start pushing app bundles more, but yeah, I’ll be really patient waiting for this one to roll out to my chromecast…
Ha! That was my favorite part of shooting the editorial. Thanks for sharing 😁
I used to game a lot on a desktop, but now that I work at home, I kinda hate sitting in front of a PC. I wasnt playing a lot, but then got a steam deck at launch, and now I’m gaming a ton again.
I like the switch, but I really like how backwards compatible PC gaming is.
I REALLY wish these companies would drop the extra sensors. It’s just for the look, to make it LOOK more expensive. It’s better than when cheap brands would put fake lenses on the back of a phone, but not by much.
If you can skip premium phones from this year, you’ll get noticably better battery life. The Samsung fabbed Snapdragon 8Gen1 is kind of a dog. 8+Gen1 and 8Gen2 were fabbed by TSMC, and deliver a significantly better performance per watt.
We keep seeing these “record breaking” articles about Samsung selling more phones than some previous high watermark, but increasingly, Samsung can’t seem to sustain interest in their products past the first surge of pre-orders.
The S8 and S8+ went on to sell 41 million units according to analysts. That doesn’t include a Note.
I’ll lay the prediction out that Samsung will sell fewer Galaxy S phones with three models this year than they did with two models back in 2017.
Always worth mentioning the free version of davinci resolve. It’s feature complete for your described needs, doesn’t hassle with things like watermarks, and the tools are great if you ever need to step up to something a little more robust.
We saw a glimpse of some great mobile awareness in Cortana. Contacts and location reminders were amazing on windows phones.
“Next time I talk to my wife, remind me to ask bout the dogs medication.” Phone call, text, or email, I’d get a reminder.
“Next time I’m at the store, remind me to buy bread.” “Which store?” “Any grocery store.”
Phone assistants have basically been going down hill since windows 10.
Google is using an order of magnitude more electricity to basically copy Siri. Neat.
I really want to try the withings. The new fossil hybrid is more like a Pebble. It’s a solid little notification machine.
Can’t blame them. Google cut mobvoi and fossil off at the knees, while courting Samsung. Why would they stay? I hope they try another hybrid watch.
Seems to me that Android as a platform was healthier when there was broader competition, and a wider range of designs and features. Samsung peaked with the S10, and sales have plummeted the more they copy Apple.
The only benefit to Netflix games is that these games have no ads or IAP.
4K120 is the most useful “extreme” video mode, and it’s a shame more companies haven’t supported it, just ZTE, OnePlus, and Sony. It’s crazy flexible. Can be easily dropped to 60 or 30 fps, and makes for absolutely stunning slow motion. It’s such an easy edit in something like LumaFusion to time stretch it. Even silly little family videos look so much cooler at that resolution in one quarter time. When done right, at a good bitrate, it looks much better than most phones’ potato quality 1080p slow motion. Sony absolutely chose right offering 4k120 over 8k24.
I have my daughter’s first steps in 4K. That was roughly seven years ago. Shot from an old LG. That little clip is amazing, and it looks so much better than what 1080p at the time would have looked like.
I honestly thought they already had…
Been using it for a bit now with the new pebblebee and chipolo trackers. Support is extended back to Android 9, but that definitely does not mean people are actively contributing to it. You have to log in to your Google account again. Then, based on my prior location settings, Find My was off and my offline tracking was off. There’s only a subtle permission nag at the top of your list of devices. I would be willing to bet a not insignificant number of folks will setup offline support with only the lowest level of tracking/contributing. A lot of folks won’t even know they haven’t completely activated it.
It’s not as forced “opt out” as Apple’s network, and you have slightly more granular controls for how much you want to share. It’s going to take a bit longer for it to match the accuracy of Apple’s network in North America, but it’s already giving me pings with better updates than Tile’s network.