Fossil's first Wear OS 3 smartwatch is a mild refresh of last year's model

Fossil is acting on its promise to release Wear OS 3 watches, but you might want to temper your expectations. The fashion brand has introduced its first Wear OS 3 model, the Gen 6 Wellness Edition, and the name says a lot about it — it’s a refresh of last year’s smartwatch that focuses on software. Google’s new software promises an easier-to-navigate interface with improved health tracking, including through Fossil’s in-house Wellness app. You’ll also get relevant watch faces, including a device-exclusive “Wellness Gauge” to monitor your vitals.

There are a few physical changes. The Wellness Edition includes a tweaked 44mm case in rose gold- or silver-hued steel with 20mm straps. Apart from that, though, it’s effectively the Gen 6 you saw in 2021. That means a 2020-era Snapdragon Wear 4100+ chip, a 1.28-inch circular display, 1GB of RAM, 8GB of storage and 3ATM water resistance. You’ll be disappointed if you were expecting a Snapdragon W5+ or more space for your apps and music.

Existing Gen 6 owners should be receiving Wear OS 3 as an update, and they’ll get much of the experience from the Wellness Edition. Gen 6 watches from Michael Kors, Razer and Skagen should also get the new software. Just be warned that you’ll need to erase your device data as part of the upgrade.

The Gen 6 Wellness Edition is available now for $299. Silicone straps to customize the look are available for $30 each. Fossil still makes some of the better-looking Wear OS watches outside of luxury models like the Montblanc Summit 3, but this is undoubtedly a tough sell if you’re looking for something genuinely new. Samsung’s Galaxy Watch 5 family offers a wider range of cases and more up-to-date processing power, while Google’s Pixel Watch compensates for its aging chip with Wear OS 3.5 and a truly stand-out design. If you weren’t thrilled by Fossil before, the refresh won’t change your mind.



Source: Engadget – Fossil’s first Wear OS 3 smartwatch is a mild refresh of last year’s model

Apple May Beat Google's Pixel Tablet to the Smart Home Punch

The best kind of drama starts with iOS and Android. That’s why our ears perked up at the latest Power On newsletter on Bloomberg over the weekend. A report from author Mark Gurman suggests Apple is coming directly for Google with an iPad that docks just like the recently teased Pixel Tablet.

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Source: Gizmodo – Apple May Beat Google’s Pixel Tablet to the Smart Home Punch

New Kids’ Privacy App Teaches Digital Privacy While Blocking Trackers

There’s a law in the United States that says companies aren’t supposed to track young children, but they do it anyway. More than two thirds of the most popular kids’ iPhone apps collect and share personal information, according to a recent study from Pixalate. By some estimates, digital ad firms have collected an…

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Source: Gizmodo – New Kids’ Privacy App Teaches Digital Privacy While Blocking Trackers

Thermalright's AM5 Secure Frame Is A Functional And Stylish Cover For AMD Zen 4 CPUs

Thermalright's AM5 Secure Frame Is A Functional And Stylish Cover For AMD Zen 4 CPUs
AMD’s Socket AM5 is a notable improvement over Socket AM4 in that it’s impossible (or at least, much more difficult) to accidentally yank your CPU out of the socket when you’re changing heatsinks. However, it does have its own share of annoyances. Chief among them is the cut-out design of the CPU IHS, which could allow difficult-to-clean thermal

Source: Hot Hardware – Thermalright’s AM5 Secure Frame Is A Functional And Stylish Cover For AMD Zen 4 CPUs

Yes, Harrison Ford Is Joining the Marvel Cinematic Universe

There had been speculation that the upcoming fifth Indiana Jones movie could be Harrison Ford’s last film role. Not only is that untrue, Ford is jumping from that franchise into the biggest one in all of modern Hollywood: the Marvel Cinematic Universe.

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Source: Gizmodo – Yes, Harrison Ford Is Joining the Marvel Cinematic Universe

Hacker gets discontinued P.T. running on unmodified PS5

Loading this onto a PS5 requires jumping through quite a few hoops.

Enlarge / Loading this onto a PS5 requires jumping through quite a few hoops.

For years now, Hideo Kojima’s cult classic P.T. (or “Playable Trailer” for a canceled Silent Hills project) has only been playable on the million or so increasingly hard-to-find PS4 consoles that downloaded the free demo (and didn’t delete it) before it was completely removed from the PlayStation Network. Now, one hacker has gotten the game to run on an unmodified PlayStation 5 by using a second, jailbroken PS5 as a go-between.

Streamer Lance McDonald demonstrated his P.T.-on-PS5 method in a stream early Monday, detailing several prerequisites and steps that will make it difficult for many interested players to copy. Chief among them is McDonald’s access to a second PS5 system that he said he hadn’t plugged in for over a year, when he used it to try the Elden Ring Network Test. That means the console was still running an old version of the PS5 firmware and was thus susceptible to the recently revealed PS5 jailbreaking method that Sony patched after firmware version 4.3.

Using that jailbroken system, McDonald says he could log in to the system from a PC using an FTP client and “edit the list of games you’re allowed to run on your PS5.” That’s important, because even users who have previously managed to transfer a legitimate PS4 copy of P.T. to their PS5 have been faced with a message saying: “You can’t use this PS4 game or app on the PS5.”

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Source: Ars Technica – Hacker gets discontinued P.T. running on unmodified PS5

NASA's Earth-Bound Asteroid Probe Successfully Performs First Course Correction Maneuver

NASA’s OSIRIS-REx spacecraft has a special package for Earth: rocky samples from one of the most ancient objects in the universe. The probe snagged a sample from asteroid Bennu in October 2020 and has been making its way for an Earth drop-off ever since. To keep it on track, NASA recently executed the spacecraft’s…

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Source: Gizmodo – NASA’s Earth-Bound Asteroid Probe Successfully Performs First Course Correction Maneuver

Your Cheesecakes Demand One of These Cookie Crusts

Cheesecake might be one of my favorite desserts. It foregrounds a top-tier food group (dairy) and it doesn’t require me to make a pastry crust, something I hate doing with every fiber of my being. The iconic cake of cheese typically rests on a crumbled crust, usually made of graham crackers. But it can be nice to…

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Source: LifeHacker – Your Cheesecakes Demand One of These Cookie Crusts

In Praise of FFmpeg

Drew DeVault, prolific FOSS blogger and hacker behind SourceHut, Sway, wlroots, and many other projects, writes in a blog post: I have relied on ffmpeg for many tasks and for many years. It has always been there to handle any little multimedia-related task I might put it to for personal use — re-encoding audio files so they fit on my phone, taking clips from videos to share, muxing fonts into mkv files, capturing video from my webcam, live streaming hacking sessions on my own platform, or anything else I can imagine. It formed the foundation of MediaCrush back in the day, where we used it to optimize multimedia files for efficient viewing on the web, back when that was more difficult than “just transcode it to a webm.”

ffmpeg is notable for being one of the first large-scale FOSS projects to completely eradicate proprietary software in its niche. Virtually all multimedia-related companies rely on ffmpeg to do their heavy lifting. It took a complex problem and solved it, with free software. The book is now closed on multimedia: ffmpeg is the solution to almost all of your problems. And if it’s not, you’re more likely to patch ffmpeg than to develop something new. The code is accessible and the community are experts in your problem domain.

ffmpeg is one of the foremost pillars of achievement in free software. It has touched the lives of every reader, whether they know it or not. If you’ve ever watched TV, or gone to a movie, or watched videos online, or listened to a podcast, odds are that ffmpeg was involved in making it possible. It is one of the most well-executed and important software projects of all time.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – In Praise of FFmpeg

Gas: The App for Teens That Is Refreshingly Positive

Social media has fostered expectations of maximalism, hyper-beauty, and happiness, but this digital veneer has left some users craving connection over aesthetics. Gas is an app for teenagers that peels back the previous tropes of social media by focusing on cultivating positivity in a smaller social network.

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Source: Gizmodo – Gas: The App for Teens That Is Refreshingly Positive

Comcast raises speeds for most of its Xfinity internet plans

Comcast’s recent speed upgrades now extend beyond the high end. The cable giant is increasing speeds for most of its Xfinity tiers across the US. The entry-level Performance Starter (aka Connect) plan is bumping up from 50Mbps to 75Mbps, while the biggest relative gains come to regular Performance (Connect More) customers climbing from 100Mbps to 200Mbps. Performance Pro/Fast service is increasing from 300Mbps to 400Mbps, while Blast/Superfast users will get 800Mbps instead of the previous 600Mbps. And you no longer need Comcast’s absolute best plans to cross the gigabit threshold — Extreme Pro and Ultrafast (now Gigabit) customers have upgraded from 900Mbps to 1Gbps.

The flagship Gigabit Extra/x2 plan still peaks at 1.2Gbps for many customers. Comcast is in the midst of deploying 2Gbps service to more states, and in some cases offers 6Gbps access. The telecom hopes to cover over 50 million homes and offices with 2Gbps by the end of 2025, and plans to offer “10G” and next-gen DOCSIS 4.0 service in the future.

These upgrades aren’t dramatic in most cases, but they could make a difference at the lower end by enabling higher-quality streaming and better service for multi-person households. The challenge, of course, is that rivals aren’t sitting idle. AT&T is deploying 2Gbps and 5Gbps fiber to dozens of urban areas, and Google Fiber will soon provide 8Gbps service on top of restarting expansion. Comcast may be more competitive, but it won’t always have the fastest options.

The entry-level increase might also irk regulators. FCC Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel recently proposed raising the definition of broadband to 100Mbps. A Performance Starter or Connect customer would fall short of that new goal. If that baseline takes effect, Comcast would have to increase speeds again to satisfy the Commission and help fulfill goals of improving internet access for rural and low-income Americans.



Source: Engadget – Comcast raises speeds for most of its Xfinity internet plans

Smithsonian's Baby Cheetah Cam Is the Warmest and Fuzziest Stream on the Internet This Week

Two newborn cheetah cubs at the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute in Virginia are the latest stars of the Cheetah Cub Cam, a 24/7 stream of adorable spottedness and big cat cuddles.

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Source: Gizmodo – Smithsonian’s Baby Cheetah Cam Is the Warmest and Fuzziest Stream on the Internet This Week

Razer's Edge Android Gaming Handheld Is Unveiled Along With Specs, Pricing And More

Razer's Edge Android Gaming Handheld Is Unveiled Along With Specs, Pricing And More
Back in September, Razer stated it wanted a piece of that sweet sweet cloud-gaming pie. Now, it looks like the new Razer Android gaming handheld is on its way and we have to admit, it looks pretty cool. Razer CEO Min-Liang Tan unveiled the product during RazerCon 2022 along with a plethora of other products, and updates.
Razer pitches it

Source: Hot Hardware – Razer’s Edge Android Gaming Handheld Is Unveiled Along With Specs, Pricing And More

libcamera Celebrates Its First Release As Camera Support Library For Linux

Libcamera has been in development for several years now as an open-source camera support library that works across Linux, Android, and Chrome OS platforms. Due to interest from seeing tagged releases, the libcamera crew has published their first official release of this open-source camera stack…

Source: Phoronix – libcamera Celebrates Its First Release As Camera Support Library For Linux

All DisplayPort 2.0 products are now DisplayPort 2.1, VESA says

Cable Displayport on isolated white background

Enlarge / VESA released the DisplayPort 2.1 specification today. (credit: Getty)

VESA released the DisplayPort 2.1 specification today. Typically when an industry group announces a new standard, it takes months or even years for products supporting the spec to be available to consumers. But DisplayPort 2.1 products are already available today; in fact, you may already own some. With a flick of its magic specs wand, VESA also declared today that any product that was already DisplayPort 2.0-certified before today’s announcement is now DisplayPort 2.1-certified, too.

“VESA has been working closely with member companies to ensure that products supporting DisplayPort 2.0 would actually meet the newer, more demanding DisplayPort 2.1 spec,” the announcement from VESA, which also makes DisplayHDR, AdaptiveSync/MediaSync, Clear MR, and monitor-mounting specs, said.

“Due to this effort, all previously certified DisplayPort 2.0 products including UHBR (Ultra-high Bit Rate) capable products—whether GPUs, docking station chips, monitor scalar chips, PHY repeater chips, such as re-timers, or DP40 / DP80 cables. (including both passive and active and using full-size DisplayPort, Mini DisplayPort, or USB Type-C connectors)—have already been certified to the stricter DisplayPort 2.1 spec.”

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Source: Ars Technica – All DisplayPort 2.0 products are now DisplayPort 2.1, VESA says

Do These Things Now to Make Your Ladder Safer and Easier to Use

It’s ladder season: It’s time to clean your gutters and soon enough, you’ll be putting up holiday lights or even taking on some snow removal. During the fall and winter, you probably spend more time on your ladder, but your high-flying home repairs should be as safe and easy to complete as possible all year round.…

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Source: LifeHacker – Do These Things Now to Make Your Ladder Safer and Easier to Use

UK Holds Talks on How To Avoid Blackouts at Major Data Centers

UK government officials held detailed discussions with some of the biggest data center operators about ways to keep those businesses running through any potential power shortages in coming months, Bloomberg News reported Monday, citing people familiar with the matter. From a report: The talks focused on allocating diesel for backup generators if Britain’s energy infrastructure operator, National Grid, needed to cut power, the people said, asking not to be named because the discussions are private. The sides also discussed whether data centers should be considered critical national infrastructure. There are between 400 and 600 commercial data centers in Britain, and they account for about 2.5% of the country’s electricity demand, according to the National Grid. Operators often have their own backup generators that can run for as many as 72 hours, but businesses and officials have discussed the security of supplies in scenarios where disruptions worsen. Slough, west of London, is one of Europe’s biggest hubs for server farms and would need more fuel for backup than other areas.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – UK Holds Talks on How To Avoid Blackouts at Major Data Centers

Former Rooster Teeth Director Says She Was Underpaid And Called Slurs

Iconic Halo-inspired web series Red vs. Blue put online content company Rooster Teeth on the map. Over a decade later it’s branched out into gaming Let’s Plays, reality TV shows, and even anime, but it’s also increasingly the subject of allegations over an internal frat boy culture and toxic working conditions. Over…

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Source: Kotaku – Former Rooster Teeth Director Says She Was Underpaid And Called Slurs