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- Trump will prohibit transactions with Bytedance beginning September 20 in apparent TikTok ban
- Microsoft condemns Apple’s App Store policies
- PUBG Mobile now runs at 90fps in the US, but it’s exclusive to OnePlus for a month
- AMC Theaters is learning to embrace the streaming era, not fight it
- T-Mobile isn’t necessarily bigger than AT&T, despite today’s claim
- Cadillac’s electric Lyriq SUV has a massive touchscreen and a range ‘beyond 300 miles’
- Dr Disrespect officially returns to streaming
- Apple confirms cloud gaming services like xCloud and Stadia violate App Store guidelines
- Facebook reportedly removed strikes from conservative pages after executive intervened
- Facebook extends remote work for employees through July 2021
Trump will prohibit transactions with Bytedance beginning September 20 in apparent TikTok ban Posted: 06 Aug 2020 06:23 PM PDT Photo by Scott Olson/Getty Images President Trump has signed a new executive order which will block all transactions with Bytedance, TikTok's parent corporation, in an effort to "address the national emergency with respect to the information and communication technology supply chain." It isn't effectively immediately, but has a 45 day deadline. "The spread [of apps controlled by the Chinese government] continues to threaten the national security, foreign policy, and economy of the United States," the order reads. "The United States must take aggressive action against the owners of TikTok to protect our national security." A parallel order banned transactions with WeChat, a popular texting app in China that maintains a small user base in the US. The move comes after... |
Microsoft condemns Apple’s App Store policies Posted: 06 Aug 2020 06:14 PM PDT Photo by Nick Statt / The Verge Microsoft is now rebuking Apple over its stringent developer restrictions and its stance on cloud gaming apps, which the iPhone maker does not allow on the App Store for apparent violations of its guidelines. In a statement attributed to a Microsoft spokesperson, the company tells The Verge, "Apple stands alone as the only general purpose platform to deny consumers from cloud gaming and game subscription services like Xbox Game Pass." Apple earlier today elaborated on its controversial position to not allow services like Microsoft's upcoming xCloud and the competing Google Stadia platform to exist on the App Store because the company cannot review individual games available on cloud platforms. A number of other App Store guidelines also... |
PUBG Mobile now runs at 90fps in the US, but it’s exclusive to OnePlus for a month Posted: 06 Aug 2020 06:01 PM PDT If you wanted to play PUBG Mobile at a frame rate higher than 60fps, it was a bit tricky. You either needed to live in China or download the Chinese version of PUBG Mobile (well, it's actually called Game for Peace), plus you needed a phone with a 90Hz or 120Hz refresh rate. Now, Tencent Games is finally adding support for 90fps in the US and other countries, but you'll need to wait a month unless you have some specific OnePlus phones. Specifically, if you own a OnePlus 8, OnePlus 8 Pro, OnePlus 7T, or OnePlus 7 Pro you can now run the game at a smooth 90 frames per second. After the timed exclusivity deal expires on September 7th, Tencent said that any PUBG Mobile player... |
AMC Theaters is learning to embrace the streaming era, not fight it Posted: 06 Aug 2020 05:21 PM PDT Erin Lefevre/NurPhoto via Getty Images AMC Theaters faced its "most challenging quarter in the company's 100-year history," but CEO Adam Aron is trying to look forward, using the company's second quarter earnings call today to address how AMC is going to compete in a streaming-focused world. AMC announced last week that it struck a groundbreaking deal with Universal Pictures that would let the studio place films on digital rental services like iTunes or Amazon just 17 days after they hit theaters. Aron confirmed on the call that if Universal decides to take advantage of the shorter window, those movies will continue to play in theaters. There was confusion last week as to whether AMC would pull its films completely after 17 days or just offer people both options. Prior to... |
T-Mobile isn’t necessarily bigger than AT&T, despite today’s claim Posted: 06 Aug 2020 04:20 PM PDT Illustration by Alex Castro / The Verge T-Mobile claims that it now has more customers than AT&T — at least, depending on how you count them. In its second quarter earnings report, T-Mobile announced that it now has 98.3 million total customers, saying that it has overtaken AT&T "in total branded customers across both postpaid and prepaid." The surge in subscribers is due to T-Mobile's acquisition of Sprint, as this is the first time that T-Mobile is counting Sprint subscribers following their blockbuster merger. But looking a bit more closely at the numbers, T-Mobile may not be making an apples-to-apples comparison. T-Mobile uses the term "total customers" to describe its scale, and it's comparing those to AT&T's postpaid and prepaid "subscribers and connections," as reported... |
Cadillac’s electric Lyriq SUV has a massive touchscreen and a range ‘beyond 300 miles’ Posted: 06 Aug 2020 04:00 PM PDT The Lyriq will be one of the first vehicles to feature GM's new scalable battery architecture |
Dr Disrespect officially returns to streaming Posted: 06 Aug 2020 02:57 PM PDT Photo by Bobby Quillard Guy "Dr Disrespect" Beahm has returned to streaming, this time on YouTube. His first stream goes live tomorrow at 3pm EDT. The controversial streamer was permanently banned from Twitch in late June, for reasons that are still unknown. Though he'd signed an exclusive deal with Twitch back in March, Beahm does not have a similar arrangement with YouTube. Sources close to Beahm say that he plans to experiment with other platforms like Facebook Gaming and his own personal website, the Champions Club.
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Apple confirms cloud gaming services like xCloud and Stadia violate App Store guidelines Posted: 06 Aug 2020 02:55 PM PDT Photo by Amelia Holowaty Krales / The Verge Cloud gaming is shaping up to have a big moment on mobile starting next month with the launch of Microsoft's xCloud service, but iOS users are getting left out. And now we know exactly why: Apple won't allow those products, because of strict App Store guidelines that make cloud services like xCloud and its competitor, Google Stadia, effectively impossible to operate on the iPhone. We already knew that there was some issue, likely App Store-related, as to why Stadia wasn't available for Apple devices and why Microsoft's service would likely face a similar fate. It seemed even more likely that xCloud's fate on iOS was sealed yesterday when Microsoft cut off iOS testing for its xCloud app well ahead of its September 15th launch date on... |
Facebook reportedly removed strikes from conservative pages after executive intervened Posted: 06 Aug 2020 02:48 PM PDT Illustration by Alex Castro / The Verge Facebook reportedly cleared misinformation "strikes" against several posts by conservatives in an apparent attempt to prevent them from being banned, BuzzFeed News reported. A Facebook employee reported that Joel Kaplan, the company's vice president of global public policy, flagged for review an Instagram post from conservative commentator Charlie Kirk that had earned a "partly false" rating from a third-party fact-checker, according to BuzzFeed News. The same employee also noticed misinformation strikes against conservative website Breitbart had been "cleared without explanation," although it was not clear whether Kaplan or another person was involved in that decision. "It appears that policy people have been intervening in fact-checks... |
Facebook extends remote work for employees through July 2021 Posted: 06 Aug 2020 02:09 PM PDT Illustration by Alex Castro / The Verge Facebook will let its employees continue to work from home through July 2021, the company announced today. It joins other companies like Google, will also allow employees to work remotely until next summer due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. Facebook has had nearly all of its roughly 48,000 employees working remotely since the initial wave of stay-at-home orders back in March, and it previously announced that it would have employees work remotely through the end of 2020. In a statement, Facebook spokesperson Nneka Norville commented: "Based on guidance from health and government experts, as well as decisions drawn from our internal discussions about these matters, we are allowing employees to continue voluntarily working from home... |
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