Your tech news digest, by way of the DGiT Daily tech newsletter, for Wednesday, June 17.
Early 2020 high-end smartphones offered 5G as one of their main differentiators to older devices, tempting those thinking about upgrading, despite the costs to jump from 4G to 5G speeds.
But! No longer will 5G just be part of higher-cost Snapdragon 865 and Snapdragon 765 series processors that support Qualcomm’s 5G modems. Now, the company has announced the new Snapdragon 690, a much more mainstream, low-cost SoC that will likely bring 5G to phones as cheap as $300 or so. And that means widespread 5G adoption, almost by default rather than a feature you need to pay more for.
What matters here:
2. There’s a huge battle brewing between hot new email app Hey, made by Basecamp, and Apple, focused on the App Store on iOS (Wired).
Hey says Apple has stopped letting it update its iOS app because it refused to offer in-app purchases of subscriptions, where Apple takes a 15%-30% cut, and only offers subscriptions made through its site. In response, Apple says it was mistaken in allowing Hey onto the App Store in the first place. The problem? Loads of other apps, including Basecamp itself, can already do exactly what Hey is trying to do. Apple has its reasons, but applying its policies case-by-case and enforcing them with wild inconsistencies is creating real problems. This happens to be a super high-profile case that won’t go away.
Also, John Gruber: “The flimsiness of Apple’s rejection of Hey”. (Daring Fireball), and don’t miss Basecamp founder David Heinemeier Hansson’s Twitter explosion, calling Apple mafia and gangsters (Twitter).
3. Samsung Galaxy Watch 3 images leak: What to expect from new watch (Android Authority).
4. The HTC U20 5G shows a tragic lack of ambition (Android Authority).
5. Fairphone: A tiny smartphone company managed to bring a new Android version to a 2015 device (Android Authority).
6. Apple News algorithms pick more celeb stories than human editors, study finds (The Guardian).
7. Facebook will soon let users switch off political ads, US first (CNBC).
8. Google is bringing Microsoft Office and other Windows apps to Chromebooks (The Verge).
9. Humble’s racial justice bundle offers $1,200 in games and books for $30 (Engadget).
10. You can now buy Boston Dynamics’ Spot, the robot dog, if you’ve got $74,500 (Wired).
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