domingo, 21 de junho de 2020

Dicas de como fazer!

Dicas de como fazer!


First ARM Macs will be MacBook Pros and an all-new iMac: report

Posted: 21 Jun 2020 08:51 PM PDT

A 2020 Apple MacBook Pro 13-inch with the display on and keyboard visible Photo by Dieter Bohn / The Verge

Apple is set to unveil its long-awaited Mac transition from Intel to ARM processors today at its online WWDC 2020 keynote, and analyst Ming-chi Kuo has issued his predictions for the first Macs that will use the new Apple-designed processors. His research note was reported on by MacRumors, 9to5Mac, and AppleInsider.

First of all, Kuo says the last new Intel-based Mac ever will be a brand new iMac design with thinner bezels and a 24-inch display. This iMac is said to be planned for a release in Q3 2020, but an ARM version will follow it in the first quarter of next year.

The first ARM Mac is likely to be a 13-inch MacBook Pro in Q4 2020 or Q1 2021, Kuo says; the form factor is believed to be similar to the current model. Production of...

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Android’s AirDrop-style file sharing feature may be available for more than just mobile devices

Posted: 21 Jun 2020 05:34 PM PDT

Illustration by Alex Castro / The Verge

Android's upcoming AirDrop-style sharing feature, called Nearby Share (and referred to also as Nearby Sharing), may also come to Chrome on numerous other platforms, 9to5Google reports. The feature will allow Android users to directly share photos, links, and other files with other devices, similar to how AirDrop works across macOS and iOS.

The feature has apparently started to show up in the settings of the latest build of Chrome OS Canary:

Originally called "Fast Share," Android's answer to AirDrop has been in development for more than a year, according to XDA Developers. It's expected to be available through Google Play,...

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Go read this Daily Beast story about Sergey Brin’s secret disaster relief team

Posted: 21 Jun 2020 10:51 AM PDT

Sergey Brin poses for a picture on the red carpet for the 6th annual 2018 Breakthrough Prizes at Moffett Federal Airfield, Hangar One in Mountain View, Calif., Photo by MediaNews Group/Bay Area News via Getty Images

[extreme Stefon voice]: This story has everything: A high-speed super-yacht, a secret disaster strike force, a Google co-founder, and strawberry ice cream.

The Daily Beast's Mark Harris has a wild story about Global Support and Development (GSD), a disaster charity founded by Sergey Brin that's being run by his former bodyguards. The story opens detailing how GSD provided disaster relief in the form of medical care and road-clearing crews after Hurricane Dorian hit the Bahamas last year.

For the past five years, GSD has been quietly using high-tech systems to rapidly deliver humanitarian assistance during high-profile disasters, including the COVID-19 pandemic. These range from drones and super-yachts to a gigantic new airship that the...

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Read the letter Snap’s head of diversity sent to staff about its offensive Juneteenth filter

Posted: 21 Jun 2020 09:39 AM PDT

Illustration by Alex Castro / The Verge

Snap's vice president of diversity and inclusion apologized this weekend for the distribution of a Juneteeth filter that many people found offensive and offered new details about the how it was created. In an email distributed to the company, Oona King said the filter released Friday was a collaboration between black and white employees — and pushed back against criticism that the company had been culturally insensitive.

The filter — Snap calls them "lenses" — asked users to "smile and break the chains" of slavery. King, who is black, said that "in hindsight, we should have developed a more appropriate lens."

"Speaking on behalf of my team, clearly we failed to recognize the gravity of the 'smile' trigger," King wrote in a letter to the...

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K-pop fans and TikTok teens say they reserved tickets for Trump’s Tulsa rally to leave seats empty

Posted: 21 Jun 2020 09:24 AM PDT

Trump Tulsa June 2020 The upper section is seen partially empty during President Trump's campaign rally June 20 at the BOK Center in Tulsa. | Photo by Nicholas Kamm/AFP via Getty Images

As part of a coordinated effort, K-pop fans and teenage TikTok users scooped up tickets to President Trump's Saturday rally in Tulsa, potentially leaving at least hundreds of empty seats, The New York Times reported. A tweet from the Trump campaign June 11th urged people to use their phones to register for the free tickets. The K-pop fans shared the information and encouraged their followers to get tickets, and then not show up for the rally. The plan quickly caught on on TikTok, where people followed the K-pop fans' lead.

CNN credited Iowa grandmother Mary Jo Laupp with leading part of the charge on the video platform. She posted a TikTok video last week encouraging people to "go reserve tickets now and leave him standing alone there...

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Amazon is ending support for the Dash Wand barcode scanner

Posted: 21 Jun 2020 08:16 AM PDT

The Dash Wand on a fridge Photo by Amelia Holowaty Krales / The Verge

Amazon is ending support for its Dash Wand, an Alexa-enabled device that let shoppers scan grocery barcodes and order household essentials from their homes. In an email to users, the company said the devices will no longer be supported as of July 21st. Shoppers can still use other Alexa-enabled devices to add items to a shopping list, the company noted.

Released in 2017, the Wi-Fi-enabled Dash Wand was a few inches long and made out of white and black plastic, an update to Amazon's original Dash devices. In a 2017 product review, Verge editor Nilay Patel said the Dash Wand was "a fun toy and it certainly makes adding things to your Amazon cart easier." After giving them away to Prime members practically for free, however, Amazon didn't...

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Five features to hope for at WWDC

Posted: 21 Jun 2020 08:00 AM PDT

Illustration by Alex Castro / The Verge

On Monday, Apple will kick off its annual developer conference in the strangest and most contentious climate it has faced in many years. Not only does Apple have to hold all of its presentations online, it's doing so to a developer audience that has become aware of a collective, unspoken discontent.

Chaim Gartenberg has posted our long list of features you should expect to come to Apple's operating systems this year. The short version: what's most likely is a smattering of feature updates for the iOS-based platforms like iPadOS, tvOS, watchOS, and iOS and then a potentially massive shift for macOS from Intel to ARM.

That's what you should expect, but there are five things that I've been wanting Apple to deliver for years. Some of these...

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Perry Mason doesn’t quite justify its lavish reboot

Posted: 21 Jun 2020 07:00 AM PDT

Matthew Rhys in Perry Mason Photo: HBO

In an era where everything is up for grabs for rebooting, Perry Mason is one of the strangest. The show takes its name from a 1957 CBS series that focused on the eponymous criminal defense attorney from author Erle Stanley Gardner's detective stories. Perry Mason ran for nine years in its initial run, followed by an ill-fated '70s revival and a more successful stretch of TV movies throughout the '80s and '90s. HBO's new Perry Mason miniseries, however, has little in common with these previous iterations — it's less a legal drama and more an old-school hard-boiled detective story with a prestige TV sheen.

And what a sheen it is: Perry Mason is gorgeous to look at and sink into. Its portrayal of 1930s California is beautifully shot and...

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