Your tech digest, by way of the DGiT Daily newsletter, for Friday, January 10.
At CES, serious work gets done alongside robot toilet roll delivery robots. Apparently, and enjoyably, the serious work includes secret meetings, which have become not-so-secret; blurry photos from secret meetings included.
The first name isn’t totally unexpected. The Samsung Galaxy S11 has, for about a month, had an alternative name of the Galaxy S20 swirling around. It appears that’s now confirmed – RIP 11.
Galaxy Bloom:
2. LG V60: another dual-screen LG flagship phone coming to MWC 2020? (Android Authority).
3. The best (and worst) of the weird tech we saw at CES 2020: PhoneSoap, Mutrics Gaming Glasses, and more(Android Authority).
4. Amazon warned online shoppers using Honey, the browser extension for comparison shopping and rewards (acquired by Paypal for $4B in November), that it was a “security risk” (Axios).
5. Google’s CES booth was more show than substance (Engadget).
6. “Would you put your family on a [787] Max simulator trained aircraft? I wouldn’t,” one Boeing employee said to another in February 2018. The response: “no.” (Reuters).
7. Mark Zuckerberg’s manifesto for the year is out, and he’s ditched annual challenges, needs cynics to fix 2030 (TechCrunch). Another take on Zuck’s notes here (Engadget).
8. Vice has details about a surveillance vendor that works with US government agencies, selling surveillance products including a child’s carseat, Tombstone Cam, and the Shop-Vac Covert DVR Recording System, which houses a camera, DVR, and battery in a Shop Vac vacuum cleaner (Vice). Arguably, worse/weirder stuff is on Amazon.
9. All the movies you should give a damn about in 2020 (Gizmodo).
10. This blew me away: Installing air filters in classrooms has surprisingly large educational benefits (Vox).
11. “Why haven’t black boxes in airplanes been engineered to have real-time streaming to a remote location yet?” (r/askscience).
The DGiT Daily delivers a daily email that keeps you ahead of the curve for all tech news, opinions, and links to what’s going down in the planet’s most important field. You get all the context and insight you need, and all with a touch of fun, and the daily fun element that you otherwise miss.
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