Black Friday deals seem to be appearing earlier than ever, but are they really deals? Here are some Black Friday tech deals I’ve found so far.
Articles by Andrew Orr
Unlock Your Volkswagen With Siri
Volkswagen is now letting iPhone users unlock their car with Siri. The VW Car-Net app has support for shortcuts.
iOS users can now use Siri to lock and unlock their car, check estimate mileage with the fuel or charge left in their vehicle, and enable alarms. Cart-Net isn’t free to all VW owners, though: the app costs a specific subscription fee per month. It allows vehicle owners to pinpoint their car’s location, set a geofence for it, and access diagnostics remotely.
Apple Offering Free iPhone X Screen Replacements
A support document from Apple found a problem with certain iPhone X models that may cause a certain component of the display module to fail.
Bitwarden Passes Third Party Security Audit
During the tests performed by Cure53, five vulnerabilities were found. Only one vulnerability needed immediate action.
Kids Are Being Raised in a Cashless Society
Contactless payments and bank apps are introducing kids to a cashless society. Some parents are using these apps instead of forking over cash allowances.
“Young people are seeing less and less cash transactions, which just means that we have to be even more careful to talk about what is happening at each of those stages, because it has become more abstract,” said Winnard.
This is also how Apple seems to be marketing Apple Pay Cash in part. Parents can use iMessage to give their kids money.
Tests of a Cheaper Netflix Subscription in the Works
The company wants to experiment with a fourth subscription tier in an effort to increase its user base.
Does Wiping an iPhone Count as Destroying Evidence?
An iPhone X seized as part of an investigation was remotely wiped by its owner. This begs the question: Does wiping an iPhone count as destruction of evidence?
Police believe Juelle L. Grant, 24, of Willow Avenue, may have been the driver of a vehicle involved in an Oct. 23 drive-by shooting on Van Vranken Avenue, near Lang Street, so they obtained her phone, according to police allegations filed in court.
No one was injured in the shooting. After police took her iPhone X, telling her it was considered evidence, “she did remotely wipe” the device, according to police.
This will be an interesting case to watch, and could set the tone for future phone-related incidents.
A Couple of Alternatives to That CloudFlare App
Named after the DNS address it uses—1.1.1.1—it promises a quick and easy privacy fix.
Sprint Might Be Throttling Skype, Say Researchers
An ongoing study by Northeastern University and the University of Massachusetts claims that Sprint is throttling Skype without telling customers.
Choffnes and his team analyzed more than 719,417 tests conducted by 100,000 users across 135 countries, and discovered that wireless carriers routinely throttle streaming video applications. While carriers often claim this kind of throttling only occurs in response to network congestion, evidence suggests the practice is often tied to efforts to upsell users to pricier plans.
We need net neutrality more than ever.
Looking for Amazon Apple Products? Soon It Will Sell More
The online shopping giant recently signed a deal to expand the selection of Apple offerings in its store.
Apple Face ID Supplier Acquired for $3.2 Billion
Finisar, an Apple Face ID supplier that makes laser scanners, has been acquired by optical system producer II-VI, Inc. worth US$3.2 billion.
USPS Informed Delivery Vulnerable to Identity Thieves
The USPS Informed Delivery Service is vulnerable to identity thieves. The services lets you see a preview of your mail on the web and mobile, and this week the U.S Secret Service issued a warning about it.
The internal alert — sent by the Secret Service on Nov. 6 to its law enforcement partners nationwide — references a recent case in Michigan in which seven people were arrested for allegedly stealing credit cards from resident mailboxes after signing up as those victims at the USPS’s Web site.
According to the Secret Service alert, the accused used the Informed Delivery feature “to identify and intercept mail, and to further their identity theft fraud schemes.”
Ugh, why can’t we have nice things?
To be a Computer, iPad Pro Needs a Computer OS
Writing in his iPad Pro Diary series, Ben Lovejoy argues that the iPad needs a computer OS in order to be closer to a computer. He calls it “padOS.”
But while the iPad Pro isn’t trying to be a Mac, it is a grown-up device and it needs a grown-up operating system. Not macOS, but rather a tailored version of iOS, designed to take advantage of the additional capabilities of the iPad. What some people have termed padOS.
To Mr. Lovejoy I say this: Have no fear, this is what iOS 13 will be. *crosses fingers*
Can Film Emulator Apps Like VSCO Replace Actual Film?
The Phoblographer writes about why film emulator apps like VSCO and iPhone don’t replace traditional film photography. My argument is that yes, they have. Film isn’t dead just like vinyl isn’t dead, but both have been relegated to a small group of people. I’ve tried to use VSCO as an editor for years, but I never stuck with it until they VSCO. Now I use VSCO for 90% of my own editing. You can write about how things like film and vinyl make you feel all artsy-fartsy, and how iPhone photographers aren’t real photographers. But the photographer’s goal is to capture the world, and you should use the best tools you can in service of that goal. Whether those tools are film, a DSLR, or a disposable camera, the end result is that you created something.
Google Cloud Adds Science Tool to Share Scientific Models
Google wants to make it easier for scientists to share scientific models, so today it announced Kubeflow pipelines and AI Hub to help.
To help fix that, Google is announcing Kubeflow pipelines, which are an extension of Kubeflow, an open source framework built on top of Kubernetes designed specifically for machine learning…The company is also announcing AI Hub, which as the name implies is a central place where data scientists can go to find different kinds ML content including Kubeflow pipelines, Jupyter notebooks, TensorFlow modules and so forth.
Wemo Smart Light Switch Adds HomeKit Support
The Wi-Fi Smart Dimmer can be controlled via Siri and the Home app.
App Sale: Pixomatic Photo Editor Now Free
Usually US$4.99, Pixomatic photo editor is free, and I’m not sure how long it will last. Pixomatic is the first-ever mobile app that brings desktop level quality for selecting and masking images. Now, you have no problems with cutting out even the most difficult picture elements, including hair. Smoothly select and mask even the trickiest hair edges. Also, they introduced hundreds of photo stickers that you can add to your photos with a single tap. In just a few minutes create funny pranks, visual art and social media posts for your business or stunning photo manipulations, viral memes and selfies to share with friends. Pixomatic has a full range of amazing photo editing tools for creative minds. Use smart cutout, add layers, apply blending modes and unique filters to create epic masterpieces. Let Pixomatic be your only all-in-one photo editor. App Store: Pixomatic – Free
iMovie Update Adds Facebook Video Export
Apple’s iWork suite of apps were updated yesterday. Among them was an iMovie feature that added Facebook video export.
New MacBook Air Battery Can Be Replaced Yourself
In an unusually repair-friendly move by Apple, you will be able to replace the new MacBook Air battery yourself.
“This is a huge step forward,” said Kyle Wiens, CEO of iFixit, a popular website dedicated to repairing Apple products. “Apple’s glued-down battery design has been a challenge for consumers, recyclers, and for Apple’s own technicians. Preserving the removability of the MacBook Air’s battery is really important.”
Anand Shimpi, Phil Schiller Explain A12X Chip
The latest Apple interview is with Anand Shimpi and Phil Schiller who explained the A12X chip.
DJI Security Flaw Could Have Exposed Accounts
Consumer drone manufacturer DJI fixed a security flaw in its website and apps. The DJI security flaw—revealed today—could have been bad.
The vulnerability, revealed Thursday by researchers at security firm Check Point, would have given an attacker complete access to a DJI users’ cloud stored data, including drone logs, maps, any still or video footage — and live feed footage through FlightHub, the company’s fleet management system — without the user’s knowledge.
It doesn’t sound like any customer data was actually accessed, but DJI and CheckPoint say it would be difficult to know for sure.
Drone icon made by Roundicons from www.flaticon.com.
Artifact Uprising Offers 10 Free Photo Prints
Photo company Artifact Uprising is offering customers a chance to print ten photos for free. It only lasts a week.
SALE: 12-Inch MacBook With 512GB SSD for $999
Amazon has some early Black Friday deals going on, and one of them is a refurbished 12-inch MacBook with a 512GB SSD for only US$999.
How Apple Magnets Work in Products
Apple magnets are inside iPhones, iPads, and Apple Watches. But how do they work, and what functions do they have?
That brings us to the new iPad Pro, with 102 magnets spread all around. On the new iPad, Apple’s using magnets in four primary ways: As a way to firmly attach accessories to the device’s back, as an Apple Pencil attachment, to attach the Smart Connector, and to attach a screen cover while locking or unlocking the device.