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- The unofficial Apple Archive is on death’s door once more
- Motorola on the Razr’s folding screen: ‘bumps and lumps are normal’
- Spree review: in search of an audience
The unofficial Apple Archive is on death’s door once more Posted: 26 Jan 2020 04:15 PM PST ![]() I hope you got your fill of the unofficial Apple Archive last week, because that expansive collection of over 15,000 classic Apple advertisements, internal training videos, and other eye-opening odds and ends from the Cupertino computer company's history has now been ripped apart — late Friday, curator Sam Henri Gold received a veritable deluge of DMCA takedown notices originating from Apple's lawyers, letting him know the vast majority of the videos he'd uploaded to Vimeo had been removed from the internet. "Do you know what it's like getting 700 email notifications on your wrist in like 2 minutes? Your wrist sorta goes numb from the vibrations," Gold tells The Verge.
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Motorola on the Razr’s folding screen: ‘bumps and lumps are normal’ Posted: 26 Jan 2020 11:01 AM PST ![]() Today's the day that the Motorola Razr is available for pre-sale for $1499, exclusively on Verizon. Motorola originally said that it should begin shipping on February 6th, but it looks like it's already backed up to the 14th on Verizon. Alongside the pre-order launch, Motorola has posted a series of videos on its YouTube channel that are somewhere between brief ads and how-tos for the folding phone. And as you might have guessed from the headline, "Caring for razr" caught our eye. In it, Motorola runs through the basics of what you need to know if you have a phone with a plastic folding screen. We thought we knew most of them already based on our experience with the Galaxy Fold, but Motorola's video has one more thing to think about:... |
Spree review: in search of an audience Posted: 26 Jan 2020 08:20 AM PST ![]() Welcome to Cheat Sheet, our breakdown-style reviews of festival films, VR previews, and other special event releases. This review comes from the 2020 Sundance Film Festival. When a real-life killer finds fame on a forum or a social network — a trend that's become depressingly frequent in recent years — there are two common conclusions. The first is that social media is some kind of new, unprecedented evil, as if the Zodiac killer never crafted an elaborate brand strategy through local newspapers, or TV news never helped turn mass shooters into celebrities. The second is that modern web platforms simply produce their own distinct kinds of nightmares, ones that twist their wholesome promises of openness and trust. Spree, a horror-comedy... |
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