The Morning After: 20 years of Engadget
This website first began on March 2, 2004. It's older than YouTube, the iPhone, Uber, Tesla cars, Spotify and a whole lot more. It's even roughly a month older than the word podcast.'
To mark the 20th anniversary of Engadget, we're taking a longer look at how the tech industry has changed over the past two decades. First up: streaming.
We were going to kick things off with a letter from the editor, but two weeks ago, Engadget's parent company laid off many editors, writers and videographers from our small team, including our editor-in-chief, Dana Wollman.
As Aaron Souppouris puts in his introduction to the series, it's not business as usual," but we are committed to pushing Engadget forward. What started as a grass-roots tech blog has now morphed into a media organization aiming to break news, give no-BS buying advice and highlight the stories in tech that matter."
Oh, and we have a podcast.
- Mat Smith
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No, Mark Zuckerberg isn't having a PR moment'Meta has rarely been in so much hot water.Tom Williams via Getty ImagesAxios, a site known for political analysis (and extensive use of bullet points), has joined the ranks of pundits fawning over Mark Zuckerberg's PR strategy. The Meta CEO, they claim, is (as originally headlined) having a PR moment." Should anyone be praising the PR strategy of a gigantic company credibly accused of enabling a variety of mass-scale harm? Even if that PR strategy was working - which it isn't.
Apple might announce new iPads, M3 MacBook Airs very soonNo spring event?In Bloomberg's Power On newsletter, Mark Gurman says Apple plans to announce several new products in a series of online videos and marketing campaigns" pretty much imminently. If so, that'd be two years in a row Apple has passed on a spring event. This year, it could be particularly busy: Along with an iPad Pro refresh and a new 12.9-inch iPad Air, Gurman reports that Apple is planning to announce new Apple Pencils and Magic Keyboards. (Likely with USB-C.) It's also expected to release the M3 MacBook Air in 13- and 15-inch models.
Waymo gets approval to deploy its robotaxi service in Los AngelesDespite the company getting suspended in February.The California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) has permitted Waymo to expand its robotaxi operations to Los Angeles and more locations in the San Francisco Peninsula despite opposition from local groups and government agencies. In the CPUC's decision, it admitted receiving letters of protest from the Los Angeles Department of Transportation, the San Francisco County Transportation Authority and the San Francisco Taxi Workers Alliance about Waymo's expansion.
Following an incident where two of its robotaxis collided with a backward-facing pickup truck, the agency suspended Waymo's expansion efforts in February for up to 120 days. Waymo spokesperson Julia Ilina said in a statement to Wired that the company will take an incremental approach" when deploying the service in LA.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/the-morning-after-20-years-of-engadget-121611170.html?src=rss