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Updated 2024-10-08 02:47
Irish finance minister stands firm on Apple tax deal in budget speech
Michael Noonan pledge that Ireland’s 12.5% corporate tax rate ‘will not be change’ goes down well in Cork, home to Apple’s HQIreland’s finance minister has acknowledged a torrid year for the country’s much-criticised corporate tax regime with a robust defence of Apple’s taxation deals with the Irish state.
Supreme court suspicious of Samsung's defense of copying iPhone design
Though their final ruling will not be known for months, justices have expressed limited patience for arguments defending patent infringements against AppleA terrible week for consumer electronics firm Samsung got significantly worse on Tuesday as the US supreme court expressed limited patience for arguments defending patent infringements against Apple’s iPhone.The hearing – which is the culmination of a five-year legal showdown between two of the world’s most powerful technology rivals – coincided with news that Samsung has had to abandon production of its new flagship Note 7 smartphone due to a safety crisis. Continue reading...
Amazon reportedly planning to build a series of physical stores selling groceries
The $397bn internet retailer is said to be building a chain of stores and drive-through locations where customers can pick up groceries ordered onlineAmazon’s next step in its global domination of commerce could be much closer to home. The internet retailer, which has grown into a $397bn company in the 22 years since its founding, is reportedly planning to build a series of bricks and mortar corner stores selling milk, meat, orange juice and newspapers to further cement its recent expansion into the grocery market.
Hinge app founder hopes $7 and no swiping can avert the dating apocalypse
Justin McLeod has updated the dating app he launched in 2011 that matches users with friends of friends, to eliminate swiping and encourage conversationIt has been more than a year since Vanity Fair bemoaned the dating apocalypse, blaming it on apps and triggering a Tinder tweet-storm that sarcastically claimed: “Sex was invented in 2012 when Tinder was launched.”Most people are no strangers to the futile swiping and exchanged messages that lead to nowhere. It’s not uncommon for my friends to start conversations about dating by asking: “Are you still swiping? How is it going?” and compare horror stories, maybe swap phones and swipe for each other, contributing to the collective despair of online dating. Continue reading...
Self-driving car tested for first time in UK in Milton Keynes
Driverless LUTZ Pathfinder shares streets of Buckinghamshire town with cyclists and pedestrians, reaching speeds of 15mphA driverless car has been tested for the first time on UK streets in the latest development in self-driving technology in Britain.The trial saw a two-seater LUTZ Pathfinder travel 1.25 miles (2km) through pedestrianised areas of Milton Keynes, reaching speeds of up to 15mph while having to cope with walkers and cyclists for the first time. A driver was on board to take over in case of emergency.
Samsung Galaxy Note 7 production permanently ended following battery explosions
South Korean electronics company to kill off its flagship smartphone after failing to fix problems with batteries catching fireSamsung has confirmed that it is permanently stopping production of the Galaxy Note 7 smartphone after it was involved in dozens of fires and explosions worldwide.In a regulatory filing in South Korea late on Tuesday, the firm said it had made the decision to stop production, for the sake of consumer safety. Continue reading...
The chatbot that lets you talk to the dead
When one developer lost a friend in an accident she created a robot using his old texts that she could talk to. Are these griefbots the key to life after death?
Is our world a simulation? Why some scientists say it's more likely than not
A swath of technologists and physicists believe that ‘simulation theory’ will be proved, just as it was proved that the Earth was not the center of the universeWhen Elon Musk isn’t outlining plans to use his massive rocket to leave a decaying Planet Earth and colonize Mars, he sometimes talks about his belief that Earth isn’t even real and we probably live in a computer simulation.“There’s a billion to one chance we’re living in base reality,” he said at a conference in June. Continue reading...
Can Resident Evil 7 save survival horror games?
The latest instalment in Capcom’s horror series breaks with many of its own conventions to provide a new whole new scare storyOne of the most brilliant and unexpected treats of recent years was Konami’s PT, a “playable teaser” for an unreleased and possibly cancelled reboot of the horror series Silent Hill. Directed by the great Hideo Kojima, alongside the film maker Guillermo del Toro, PT is notable not just for moving a third-person series into a first-person perspective, but also for offering an ingenious solution to a problem that faces every high-end developer of video games. As game assets become even more expensive and time-consuming to produce, how do you squeeze the most out of them?PT’s solution was a small but detailed house interior which plays out repeatedly, a snack-sized Groundhog Day. The player wakes afresh in the same room, explores the house and, depending on their actions, small details change. If you experiment enough, mysteries are solved and new secrets are uncovered. As an experience it has issues, primarily that it’s too obtuse, but as a proof-of-concept, PT is exceptional, even if Konami’s may never follow it up. Continue reading...
Sales of Galaxy Note 7 halted as users warned to 'turn it off'
Samsung has been forced to suspend production and global sales of both the faulty smartphones and their replacements after devices caught fireSamsung has withdrawn all of its Galaxy Note 7 smartphones from sale globally after a spate of fires involving “safe” replacements.Related: Galaxy Note 7: what to do with Samsung's potentially exploding phone Continue reading...
Galaxy Note 7: what to do with Samsung's potentially exploding phone
Samsung have advised Note 7 owners to power off. Find out who is affected, what happens next – and if you should be worried about other people’s phones explodingOnly if it’s a Galaxy Note 7. You can tell it’s a Galaxy Note 7 because it says, on the back of the phone, “Galaxy Note 7”. Continue reading...
Trolls review – a candy-coloured return for the famed ugly-lovable creatures
Anna Kendrick voices princess Poppy, the heroine of the resilient frizzy-haired toys, in this funny, kidult animation that will rival ShrekHere is an eye-popping, candy-coloured, MSG-fuelled and cyclamate-powered new animation from Dreamworks – it does not, as may one day happen, laud those cute little critters that lurk angrily in online political chatrooms, tweeting Pepe the Frog memes. Instead, Dreamworks is attempting to take a leaf out of its own Shrek manual and build a monster hit out of an ugly-lovable creature: the frizzy-haired toys that never seem to have disappeared since the first fad erupted in the 1960s. It seems that Dreamworks has bought the entire Trolls brand, so stands to make more money than usual if it all takes off.Related: Trolls: does DreamWorks have a Shrek-sized hit? Continue reading...
Samsung Note7 customer shows charred remains of phone after it caught fire – video
YouTube footage posted by Ariel Gonzalez shows his new Samsung Note7. He says the phone caught fire and and melted only two weeks after purchase. Samsung has withdrawn all of its Galaxy Note 7 smartphones from sale globally and advised consumers to turn off the power and seek a refund or exchange them for different phones
Power, secrecy and cypherpunks: how Jacob Appelbaum ripped Tor apart
Once part of Julian Assange’s inner circle, the prominent tech activist is facing a slew of troubling allegations that has left the Tor community dividedEdward Snowden’s face seems ever present in Berlin, where stickers on doors and lamp-posts promise there’s always “A bed for Snowden” and posters plug Oliver Stone’s eponymous film.The whistleblower’s explosive 2013 revelations about international government surveillance generated some good advertising for Berlin, cementing its reputation as hipster technology activist capital of the world. The city’s cheap lifestyle and post-second world war aversion to surveillance, as well as sympathetic Germany residency rules, have created a powerful network of support and infrastructure for its dedicated cyberactivism community. We are “poor, but sexy”, its residents like to say. Continue reading...
On Ada Lovelace Day, we break down how diverse tech companies actually are
A woman helped create and program the world’s first general purpose computer. How much progress has there been since Ada Lovelace Day began in 2009?It is eight years since journalist and software activist Suw Charman-Anderson founded Ada Lovelace Day, aiming to raise the profile of women in science, technology, engineering and mathematics and celebrate their achievements.The day is named after Lord Byron’s daughter Ada, a mathematician who worked with Charles Babbage to create and program the world’s first general purpose computer, the analytical engine, creating the precursor to modern programming. Continue reading...
The eight technologies every entrepreneur should know about
Rapid technological change can be hard for small businesses to track. We speak to the experts about the trends shaping the futureEntrepreneurs need little convincing that technology is important, rapidly evolving, and likely to have a profound impact on their businesses. But keeping track of developments, and knowing where to focus one’s attention, is anything but straightforward. Analysts at PricewaterhouseCoopers (pdf) say the impact of constant technological breakthroughs represent a “megatrend” – a change so big that “every business should develop an emerging technology strategy”. They have highlighted eight key areas that all businesses should pay attention to.
Crash: how computers are setting us up for disaster | Tim Harford
We increasingly let computers fly planes and carry out security checks. Driverless cars are next. But is our reliance on automation setting us up for disaster?When a sleepy Marc Dubois walked into the cockpit of his own aeroplane, he was confronted with a scene of confusion. The plane was shaking so violently that it was hard to read the instruments. An alarm was alternating between a chirruping trill and an automated voice: “STALL STALL STALL.” His junior co-pilots were at the controls. In a calm tone, Captain Dubois asked: “What’s happening?”Co-pilot David Robert’s answer was less calm. “We completely lost control of the aeroplane, and we don’t understand anything! We tried everything!” Continue reading...
Samsung Galaxy Note 7: US cellphone carriers suspend replacement efforts
AT&T, T-Mobile, Verizon and Sprint have stopped providing the phones pending new investigation of most recent safety concernsAll four of the US’s big mobile phone providers have stopped providing replacement Samsung Galaxy Note 7 smartphones due to concerns that the new phones are still overheating and, in some cases catching on fire.
Workplace: now you can use Facebook at work – for work
The company’s office communication platform, a competitor to marketplace leader Slack, gets a makeover and a pricing structureImagine a world where your boss tells you you’re not using Facebook enough at the office.Facebook’s business platform will get an official pricing structure and a new name, Workplace by Facebook, on Monday. The service, a Facebook-hosted office communication tool, has been in the works for more than two years under the name Facebook at Work, but now the company says its enterprise product is ready for primetime. Continue reading...
Samsung Galaxy Note 7 crisis deepens with reports of production halt
The decision reported by South Korean news agency Yonhap follows repeated problems with the new deviceSamsung’s smartphone recall crisis has deepened after South Korean media said the tech giant had suspended production of its troubled Galaxy Note 7 model amid reports that replacement devices had caught fire.
Twitter shares dive 14% after potential bidders reportedly lose interest
Google-owned Alphabet, Walt Disney and tech firm Salesforce were working a on a potential acquisition, but it’s rumored that all have opted not to press aheadShares in Twitter fell more than 14% on Monday following reports that all of its rumoured potential bidders have lost interest in buying the struggling social media company.
Drone sightings near Heathrow prompt police inquiry
Calls for stronger regulation and enforcement amid concern about risk of a collision following rise in incidentsPolice are investigating reports of two drone sightings near Heathrow airport.
Samsung must act fast to keep an exploding phone from blowing up its brand
Galaxy Note 7-maker faces questions over its response to defects with its devices that could tarnish the company in the long-termThe saga of the exploding Galaxy Note 7s has turned into a fully-fledged crisis for Samsung.First released in August, the phone initially received rave reviews for the extent to which it pushed the envelope on what a phablet-sized smartphone could do. It shipped with wireless charging, a battery that lasted well over a day and charged to 70% in less than an hour, and a USB-C connector – Samsung’s first phone to use the next-generation port. Continue reading...
This Columbus Day, let’s lose the phones and celebrate getting lost
Centuries after Christopher lost his way, today is an opportunity to defend our need for privacy and solitude – increasingly difficult in the age of GPSColumbus Day, we are told, commemorates a discovery – but of what, exactly?Not the American continent, upon which human civilisation was already flourishing before any doughty Genoan ever set boot on the Bahamas. Nor was it a new transatlantic route: Columbus was beaten to that particular punch by a Swede, several Vikings and possibly even an Irish priest named Brendan. Continue reading...
Mafia III review: how can a super stylish 1960s shooter be this boring?
Excellent script, great voice acting and convincing animations bring the game to life – but they can’t redeem the terminal repetitiveness of the gameplayAmerica in the 1960s: a presidential assassination, landmark rights movements, a nuclear arms race, the birth of modern music, man landing on the moon, the beginning of Star Trek, and a controversial war abroad. This is a remarkable era – one barely seen in video games – and Mafia III makes good use of its cultural backdrop. It tells its story well, with smart writing and some superb characterisation that elevate its simple revenge plot. Ultimately, however, it never capitalises on its open world potential, instead succumbing to an almost constant lull of tediously unimaginative repetition that makes for a boring and dated open-world shooter.The game starts relatively strongly. Developer Hangar 13 successfully captures the distorted soul of the 1960s and places us in the rugged boots of Lincoln Clay – a bi-racial orphan and Vietnam veteran recently returned home to the Big Easy inspired city of New Bordeaux. He’s the archetypal Henry Hill protagonist; a likeable, loyal young guy who you root for despite his penchant for murder, torture and other reprehensible hobbies. His closest colleagues are similarly personable despite their illegal activities. Sammy, leader of the Black Mob, raised Lincoln as one of his own, while Father James Ballard is Lincoln’s go-to for advice and help whenever he’s in need of moral guidance. Continue reading...
Charged issue: how phone batteries work – and why some explode
Batteries fuel modern life, from smartphones to electric cars. But how do they store electricity and why don’t they last long enough? And, as Samsung might be asking itself, why do they blow up?Battery life is an explosive issue. Literally, as Samsung is discovering to its dismay. The company’s Galaxy Note 7 smartphone was praised upon release for best-in-class battery life, far outpacing its key competitor, the iPhones 6S and 7 Plus. Then it started blowing up. Samsung issued a recall and replace programme, and the replacements also started blowing up, forcing the company to suspend production entirely.The affair marks the latest road block on the long fight to improve the batteries that power our electronics. While processing speed doubles around every 18 months, battery capacity takes almost a decade to improve to the same degree. That gap is starting to cause problems, but as Samsung has found to its cost, it’s not easy to fix. Continue reading...
Facebook enjoys £11m UK tax credit despite £5bn global profit
Credit, which can be offset against future tax bills, may raise further questions about whether US group is paying its fair shareFacebook’s UK business generated an £11.3m tax credit last year, despite the world’s largest social network making a global profit of $6.19bn (£4.97bn), according to the latest company accounts.The credit at Facebook UK Ltd can be offset against future tax bills and is likely to raise further questions about whether the $370bn US company is paying its fair share towards Britain’s public finances. Continue reading...
Chatterbox: Monday
The place to talk about gamesIt’s Monday. Continue reading...
PlayStation VR review – if this is the future of virtual reality, sign me up
The new PS4-compatible system offers a beautifully realised middle ground between smartphone headsets and top-of-the-range kitPS4, Sony; out 13 October Continue reading...
The US-Russia discord will be an ugly fact for the next president | David Klion
Now that the US has officially accused Russia of hacking the DNC, cyberwarfare between the two powers could become the new normalIf this were any other weekend, the US intelligence community formally accusing Russia of hacking the Democratic National Committee and meddling in the presidential race would be the dominant story. But before anyone had time to process the implications on Friday, another story broke, and the immolation of Donald Trump’s campaign became the only subject anyone wanted to discuss.Related: US officially accuses Russia of hacking DNC and interfering with election Continue reading...
Clinton campaign fends off questions about WikiLeaks 'speech excerpts'
Facebook revenge pornography trial 'could open floodgates'
Case of 14-year-old taking social network to court over naked picture has already resulted in others seeking legal adviceA legal case against Facebook, which will involve a 14-year-old taking the company to court in Belfast over naked images published on the social network, could open the floodgates for other civil claims, according to lawyers who work with victims of revenge pornography.Facebook’s forthcoming trial, which centres on the claim that it is liable for the publication of a naked picture of the girl posted repeatedly on a “shame page” as an act of revenge, has alarmed the tech world and could have a seismic impact on how social media companies deal with explicit images. Continue reading...
Boffins are doing my head in | Victoria Coren Mitchell
Scientists now pooh-pooh brain-training exercises. Have they lost their marbles?Pesky scientists! They’re always causing trouble. Last Tuesday, they were in the newspapers with a report that “brain-training games” do not make the brain better at anything except playing the games themselves. There’s no evidence of real-world benefits, sharpened memory or improved cognitive function.Is this news? In my experience, scientists never say anything else. I can remember several previous reports that scientists have found brain-training games to be useless. Continue reading...
US officially accuses Russia of hacking DNC and interfering with election
Administration says ‘only Russia’s senior-most officials’ could have signed off on cyber-attacks and urges states to seek federal security aid for voting systemsThe US government has formally accused Russia of hacking the Democratic party’s computer networks and said that Moscow was attempting to “interfere” with the US presidential election.Hillary Clinton and US officials have blamed Russian hackers for stealing more than 19,000 emails from Democratic party officials, but Friday’s announcement marked the first time that the Obama administration has pointed the finger at Moscow. Continue reading...
Machine logic: our lives are ruled by big tech's 'decisions by data'
Aiming at population-level predictive gambles, they filter who and what counts – including who is released from jail and the news that you see, researchers warnIn the early 1970s, Hannah Arendt wrote a devastating critique of the Pentagon’s Vietnam-era penchant for policy by counting. “The problem-solvers did not judge,” she wrote. “They calculated.”Exuding the spirit of gamblers rather than statesmen, the decision-makers played “the percentage game”, counting whatever could be counted and ignoring the rest, or the underlying problems, with “an utterly irrational confidence in the calculability of reality”. Continue reading...
VW California Ocean campervan review: ‘This van is amazing’
We spent a mind-bending amount of time just playing. It was like being an incredibly spoilt womanchild with a doll’s house
FBI is trying to hack Minnesota mall stabbing perpetrator's iPhone
FBI says it is reviewing ‘digital footprint’ of Dahir Adan, who was shot dead after stabbing 10 people in a knife attack for which Isis later claimed creditThe FBI is trying to crack open another password-locked iPhone, this time belonging to Dahir Adan, the perpetrator of a knife attack on a Minnesota mall in which 10 people were stabbed.
Virtual reality for the masses is here. But do the masses want VR?
The next six months are of crucial importance for the future of VR, if products such as Oculus Rift are to avoid being remembered as yesterday’s tomorrowAt an Oculus Connect event this week, Facebook chief Mark Zuckerberg announced a small change to the Oculus Rift, his company’s virtual reality headset, which will have massive repercussions for the technology over the next year of its life.It wasn’t the news that the company is working on a standalone VR headset, nor that it’s now selling in-ear headphones for $49 to go with your rift. Instead, its a small technique added to the Oculus development kit with the odd name of “asynchronous spacewarp”. Continue reading...
Facebook invests $250m more in VR as Zuckerberg shows off wireless Oculus
The company’s virtual reality wing will spend another $250m to develop new content, as CEO says the future of VR will be socialFacebook is to invest another $250m in developing content for virtual reality (VR) applications, founder Mark Zuckerberg announced at its Oculus Connect 3 developer conference in San Jose on Thursday.Facebook has already invested $250m in developing VR content, and said his goal was to quickly bring about his vision of the future connecting people all over the world through virtual experiences. Continue reading...
Can Duolingo's chatbot teach you a foreign language?
The less embarrassed you are, the better you tend to be at learning languages. The answer? ChatbotsChatbots suck. We all know it. If you want to get something done with a computer, it turns out, there are better ways to do it than laboriously type out conversational sentences to be read by a programme with a shaky grasp of the language and a gratingly affected sense of humour.So I’m as surprised as anyone that for the past week, I’ve started every morning with a 10 minute conversation with a chatbot. In French. Continue reading...
Chatterbox: Friday
The place to talk about games and other things that matterIt’s Friday. Continue reading...
Snapchat company's planned IPO could put value at $25bn – report
The share sale of Snap Inc, which owns the popular picture and video-sharing app, would be largest on US stock exchange since 2014, if report proves trueSnap Inc, the company that owns picture- and video-sharing app Snapchat, is planning an initial public offering that could value the company at a minimum of $25bn, according to a report in the Wall Street Journal.If the report proves true, the share sale would be the largest on a US stock exchange since 2014, when Chinese e-commerce service Alibaba was first listed at a value of $168bn. Continue reading...
Theranos to close its labs and blood-testing centers and lose 340 staff
Embattled founder Elizabeth Holmes once boasted her $9bn business would change the world, but Theranos’s decline is now a cautionary taleElizabeth Holmes, the embattled founder and chief executive of Theranos, said late on Wednesday that the company will close its clinical labs and Walgreens testing centers in the US.In an open letter posted on the company’s website, Holmes praised the consumer-facing business that she once boasted would change the world with its inexpensive pinprick blood test, and was once the toast of Silicon Valley. Continue reading...
Gears of War 4 review – a shot in the arm for a fading series
A coherent single-player campaign and excellent online options bring this Xbox stalwart right back into the battleDepending on your outlook, the fourth title in this muscle-bound sci-fi series could easily look like an anachronism. It’s a single-path third-person cover-shooter that pays no heed to modern demands for open worlds, and belongs to a franchise that has looked somewhat jaded over the last few iterations. But Microsoft has cannily brought in a new developer, the Coalition, and it has administered a much-needed injection of fresh ideas, without compromising the core appeal.After a brief nostalgic prologue, Gears of War 4 takes place 25 years after the Locust were (apparently) finally defeated in Gears 3. The planet Sera has changed massively in that quarter-century; the COG have become the baddies, exercising fascistic control over the populace with the help of a robotic army known as DBs, even though the authoritarian female first minister (remind you of anyone?), Jinn, begins by paying lip-service to Marcus Fenix at a commemorative rally. You play as James “JD” Fenix, son of Marcus, who has gone Awol from the COG and hooked up with a bunch of “outsiders” living off-grid in a country village. Along with sidekick Del and Kait, the franchise’s first properly central female character, JD embarks on a raid of a COG establishment with the aim of stealing a Fabricator – essentially a 3D printer with knobs on, which can make weapons and fortifications. Continue reading...
Yahoo email surveillance: who approved the secret scanning program?
Neither the tech company nor the government will say who greenlighted custom program to scan users’ emails, but secret Fisa court and FBI are possibilitiesBy what legal authority do the National Security Agency and the FBI ask Yahoo to search its users’ emails? Neither the government nor the tech company would say, after Reuters first reported on Tuesday that Yahoo “secretly built a custom software program” it used on behalf of the NSA and CIA to scan customer emails.Related: Yahoo 'secretly monitored emails on behalf of the US government' Continue reading...
PlayStation VR review – there's magic, but the mainstream is a way off
Sony’s entry into the world of consumer virtual reality is an impressive start but it’s not yet the affordable high-end VR experience some are dreaming ofSince the phenomenally successful crowd-funding campaign for Oculus Rift in 2012, the idea of an affordable – and functional – virtual reality headset has obsessed the consumer technology industry. Afterwards, we saw video game publisher Valve partner with phone manufacturer HTC on the high-end Vive headset; we saw the smartphone-powered Gear VR and the budget priced Google Cardboard – and most recently the arrival of Daydream VR as a major element of Google’s own Pixel phone offering.And of course, the games industry has been watching too. In 2014, Sony announced Project Morpheus, the codename for its own PlayStation 4-compatible VR headset, promising an affordable high-end and easy-to-use solution. Now named PlayStation VR, that headset is ready to launch, with an impressive range of games and applications. But can it really cross the difficult divide between specialist geek toy and mass entertainment proposition? Continue reading...
'The silly game helped me walk again': readers on Pokémon Go three months on
We asked whether you’re still catch ‘em all crazy three months since the game’s release. Here’s what some of you said
Spotify hit by 'malvertising' in app
A malicious advert pushed through the free tier of the music streaming site has opened ‘questionable’ pop-ups” for some usersSpotify has become the latest service to be hit by “malvertising”, after a malicious advert pushed through the free tier of the music streaming site started opening “questionable” website pop-ups for some users.The attack was reported by multiple users on social media throughout Wednesday morning. For most, it simply resulted in pop-up windows opening, but a few users reported attempted malware installations further down the chain. Continue reading...
What’s the best software for editing drone videos?
Paul’s company wants to create professional-looking videos from drone camera footage. What are the options?We produce drone shoots of luxury properties, and I would like to edit the raw footage and add graphics in-house. Please can you suggest which software is the easiest to use and most intuitive to create professional videos on both Windows and Mac? Paul ColemanBad news I’m afraid. No serious video editing program is intuitive or easy to use, and the more power you need, the harder things get. Continue reading...
Samsung shares rise to record high as activist investor calls for reforms
Electronics company beset by problems with its Galaxy Note 7 smartphone says it will carefully review restructuring proposalSamsung shares have risen to a record high after an activist investor proposed major restructuring.The suggestion of a corporate makeover came as Samsung continued to face problems with its flagship Galaxy Note 7 smartphone, following a global recall of 2.5m devices last month. Continue reading...
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