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- Watch Mark Zuckerberg’s surprise public Q&A with employees
- T-Mobile will stop selling the OnePlus 7 Pro
- We now know even more about the Pixel 4, the most-leaked phone ever
- Vaping lung injury toll tops 1,000 as CDC investigation continues
- Rudy Giuliani was briefly kicked off Twitter for tweeting a Ukrainian official’s phone number
- Google Shopping gets a new design with price tracking and a personalized homepage
- The Void’s new Avengers VR experience lets people control new Iron Man suits
- How this week’s net neutrality ruling can move the fight for an open internet forward
- You can now buy a 13-inch laptop with a six-core processor
- Zoox says it will launch a robot taxi service in Las Vegas
Watch Mark Zuckerberg’s surprise public Q&A with employees Posted: 03 Oct 2019 05:33 PM PDT Image: The Verge Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg broke with a longstanding tradition today and decided to live stream one of his company's routine Q&A sessions he hosts with employees, ones where anyone is free and supposedly even encouraged to ask the chief executive a tough question. The decision was made as a direct response to leaked audio obtained by The Verge and published earlier this week of a previous, private Q&A that detailed Zuckerberg's candid and unscripted views on everything from Sen. Elizabeth Warren's plans to break up Big Tech to the harrowing working conditions of contract content moderators. You can read the full transcript of Zuckerberg's leaked internal Facebook Q&A sessions here. |
T-Mobile will stop selling the OnePlus 7 Pro Posted: 03 Oct 2019 05:20 PM PDT Photo by Vjeran Pavic / The Verge The new OnePlus 7T isn't even out yet in the US, but T-Mobile has confirmed it's already pulling its more expensive predecessor, the OnePlus 7 Pro. That's apparently because OnePlus "wants to focus on a single model" in the US, according to a report from Wave7 Research (via PCMag). Though that's disappointing if you wanted to buy the OnePlus 7 Pro in the US — T-Mobile is the carrier partner for OnePlus here — it seems that T-Mobile is realizing something similar to what my colleague Dan Seifert concluded in his review: most people would be better served buying the 7T, which shares many features with the 7 Pro but offers them at a cheaper price. T-Mobile confirmed to PCMag that has pulled the 7 Pro from its website "due to low... |
We now know even more about the Pixel 4, the most-leaked phone ever Posted: 03 Oct 2019 04:28 PM PDT It's coming October 15th |
Vaping lung injury toll tops 1,000 as CDC investigation continues Posted: 03 Oct 2019 02:53 PM PDT Illustration by Alex Castro / The Verge More than 1,080 people have come down with a serious lung injury related to vaping, as government researchers continue to investigate the cause of the outbreak. That's an increase of 275 reported cases since last week. "We are concerned — with hundreds of new cases reported each week — that we're looking at a very concerning outbreak, very difficult to control," Anne Schuchat, principal deputy director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), said in a press call today. "The data that we're getting does not suggest this has peaked. It doesn't suggest this is declining." The CDC also announced that there have now been 18 deaths related to the outbreak. Researchers found that about 70 percent of individual injuries were to... |
Rudy Giuliani was briefly kicked off Twitter for tweeting a Ukrainian official’s phone number Posted: 03 Oct 2019 02:27 PM PDT Photo by Aaron P. Bernstein/Getty Images On Thursday, President Donald Trump's personal lawyer and confidant, Rudy Giuliani, was locked out of his Twitter account for a brief period of time after posting a Ukrainian official's phone number. A Twitter spokesperson told The Verge that Giuliani's tweets, which included screenshots of text conversations with Andriy Yermak, violated the platform's rules on posting private information. Those screenshots did not censor Yermak's phone number, essentially doxxing the Ukrainian official to Giuliani's followers. At roughly 3:40PM ET, Giuliani told Fox News reporter John Roberts that his account had been locked, although he resumed tweeting shortly afterward. In accordance with Twitter policy, Giuliani's account would have remained locked... |
Google Shopping gets a new design with price tracking and a personalized homepage Posted: 03 Oct 2019 02:20 PM PDT Google has launched a redesign of Google Shopping in the US across both the online and mobile sites, featuring a new personalized homepage, price tracking, and new Google Lens features for building outfits. The new homepage is now more personalized to your specific shopping preferences, and will automatically suggest reordering products you've previously bought and recommendations based on your Google activity. The redesign also integrates Google's local delivery service, Google Express, (which was absorbed into Google Shopping earlier this year) to offer a single, unified place to shop. The idea is that now, you'll simply search for whatever it is you're looking for, and then order it from wherever most makes sense, be it online, from... |
The Void’s new Avengers VR experience lets people control new Iron Man suits Posted: 03 Oct 2019 01:55 PM PDT Marvel Studios Avengers: Endgame gave Marvel Cinematic Universe diehards plenty of reasons to not want to be Tony Stark, but that film can't entirely dispel the fantasy of taking on the Iron Man role. Avengers: Damage Control is a new VR experience from ILMxLAB and Marvel Studios that was produced for The Void, a high-powered virtual reality experience that has also been the platform for Ghostbusters and Star Wars VR experiences. In the new experience, Marvel fans take control of a new suit, which is seemingly inspired by the nanotech Iron Man suits seen in Infinity War and Endgame but designed by Wakanda's most brilliant engineer, Shuri. A trailer for Avengers: Damage Control takes players to Wakanda where people are being recruited to pilot new Iron... |
How this week’s net neutrality ruling can move the fight for an open internet forward Posted: 03 Oct 2019 01:52 PM PDT Illustration by Alex Castro / The Verge Earlier this week, a District of Columbia appeals court said the Federal Communications Commission could legally repeal net neutrality — removing rules that prevented internet service providers from throttling specific sites or services. The ruling was a blow to activists who have been fighting to preserve the internet's status as a telephone service-like "common carrier." But it handed them one major victory: the FCC can't preemptively stop states from adopting their own, stricter rules. And by doing so, it may be opening a new chapter in the fight for net neutrality. The Mozilla v. FCC ruling slogs through a vast range of frequently convoluted arguments, sometimes hinging on strange questions like "Can a smart washing machine make... |
You can now buy a 13-inch laptop with a six-core processor Posted: 03 Oct 2019 01:38 PM PDT Image: Dell Ahead of IFA 2019 in August, Dell announced a refresh of its XPS 13 laptop with Intel's 10th Gen Core processors — and now the Intel Core i7 model with six cores is available for purchase starting at $999. With those six cores, you can likely expect to see better performance while multitasking, though apps will need to be optimized to take advantage of the additional processing power. It's impressive to see a six-core processor in a laptop of this size. Apple, for example, offers 15-inch MacBook Pros in six- and eight-core variants, but its smaller 13-inch MacBook Pros max out with four-core processors. The six-core processor seems like it will be a nice upgrade to the previous-generation Dell XPS 13 earlier this year, which had a... |
Zoox says it will launch a robot taxi service in Las Vegas Posted: 03 Oct 2019 01:33 PM PDT Photo by Andreas Hoenig/picture alliance via Getty Images Self-driving startup Zoox announced it is testing its fleet of autonomous vehicles in Las Vegas. It's the second test city for the five-year-old company, which has been testing its self-driving cars exclusively in San Francisco and the surrounding communities. Zoox, which is based in the Silicon Valley town of Foster City, Calif., will start by testing its vehicles on Las Vegas roads, with the goal of ultimately launching an autonomous taxi service there. The company received permission from the Nevada Department of Motor Vehicles for public testing in early 2019. Driving in diverse environments is seen as a crucial element in preparing autonomous vehicles for wider-scale launch. Zoox says that Las Vegas offers "an opportunity to... |
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