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- Trump and Intel are reportedly pushing for new processor factories in the US
- Twitch roulette helps you find the loneliest streamers
- Microsoft now blocks reply-all email storms to end our inbox nightmares
- Our 16 favorite gadgets to help care for and entertain kids
Trump and Intel are reportedly pushing for new processor factories in the US Posted: 10 May 2020 02:39 PM PDT ![]() The Trump administration is reportedly in talks with major processor manufacturers to build factories in the US, according to a report from The Wall Street Journal. While the Journal's sources reference various "talks" between the administration and manufacturers, Intel reportedly has a more specific plan to run a plant that manufactures chips "securely" — playing on US fears of reliance on processor plants based overseas. Trump's record on US manufacturing is abysmal, so expecting a crop of new US processor foundries to pop up is a risky bet. Though he has boasted of achievements in the tech sector, many of these have been total whoppers, including a repeated lie about a "new" Apple factory in Texas. But the Journal's report suggests... |
Twitch roulette helps you find the loneliest streamers Posted: 10 May 2020 09:04 AM PDT ![]() A relatively small group of superstars dominate attention and money on Twitch, but it's still a place overwhelmingly populated by an underclass of lonely hearts looking for viewers. Twitch Roulette, first spotted by The Next Web, is my new favorite way to watch people on Twitch. It makes it easy to find the streamers out there searching for the 50 followers it takes to become a Twitch affiliate. After flipping through a couple of offline channels and garden-variety Fortnite streams, I found "Big Lee:" a new streamer who says he has been going hard non-stop for the past few days. When I joined the stream, Lee was playing American Truck Simulator with no audience. (As my colleague Patricia Hernandez reported, some Twitch streamers spend... |
Microsoft now blocks reply-all email storms to end our inbox nightmares Posted: 10 May 2020 05:26 AM PDT ![]() Microsoft is rolling out a new reply-all protection feature for Office 365 and Exchange Online. It's designed to prevent email storms (reply allpocalypse), when hundreds or thousands of people start replying to an email thread after someone forgot to BCC everyone or a distribution list was misconfigured. The new block feature will mostly benefit large organizations, and is initially being rolled out to detect 10 reply-all emails to over 5,000 recipients within 60 minutes. "Over time, as we gather usage telemetry and customer feedback, we expect to tweak, fine-tune, and enhance the Reply All Storm Protection feature to make it even more valuable to a broader range of Office 365 customers," explains Microsoft's Exchange transport team. |
Our 16 favorite gadgets to help care for and entertain kids Posted: 10 May 2020 04:00 AM PDT ![]() Using tech to keep children safe and occupied |
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