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- Today I learned Google Sheets now lets you link multiple words in a single cell
- Go read this Motherboard report on what some people did with the ‘Chinese Mystery Seeds’
- Android 11 Go is available today, and it will launch apps 20 percent faster
- Google promises to remove search suggestions that might seem political — even if they’re true
- Samsung Galaxy Watch Active 2 is still missing EKG, but here’s your consolation prize
- Epic says ‘Sign In with Apple’ will keep working for Fortnite after all
- Trump eyes social media bias hawk as next FCC commissioner
- AmazonBasics products are going up in flames, but not enough for Amazon to stop selling them
- All the biggest announcements from Ubisoft’s Forward event
- With Tell Me Why on Xbox Game Pass, episodic gaming has found its moment
Today I learned Google Sheets now lets you link multiple words in a single cell Posted: 10 Sep 2020 05:39 PM PDT I find that Google Sheets can be an incredible tool for organizing projects — the endless rows and columns let me track and categorize things to my heart's content. (You should see my byzantine spreadsheet for my family's personal finances.) Until recently, though, I've run into one major limitation that irked my organizational brain. If I wanted to add hyperlinks to a cell, I could only hyperlink an entire cell instead of hyperlinking individual words inside it. That meant, for example, if I wanted to track interesting links about personal finance in my spreadsheet, I'd have to make individual cells for each one of those hyperlinks, which could quickly fill up way more cells than I'd like. But earlier this summer, while researching a b... |
Go read this Motherboard report on what some people did with the ‘Chinese Mystery Seeds’ Posted: 10 Sep 2020 04:55 PM PDT Washington State Department of Agriculture To say 2020 is a wild year is an understatement — aside from the obvious thing that's defined 2020, in July, some people across the US received an unsolicited parcel from China containing seeds. Motherboard's editor-in-chief went to great lengths to find out what people did with those seeds, and you should read his report. As you'd expect, the strange packages caught the USDA's attention, urging people to mail the seeds to the agency or to their state's plant regulator. Some people listened to the government and others, not so much. Here are some interesting details from Motherboard's report on how overwhelmed agricultural authorities were and what likely happened to people who kept the seeds:
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Android 11 Go is available today, and it will launch apps 20 percent faster Posted: 10 Sep 2020 03:18 PM PDT Image: Google Android 11 just launched this week for Pixel devices and phones from OnePlus, Xiaomi, Oppo, and Realme, and now Google has detailed its counterpart designed for low-powered devices: Android 11 (Go edition). One of the biggest new features is that Android 11 (Go edition) is supposed to work on devices with 2GB of RAM or less — a bump up from Android 10 (Go edition), which was made for devices with less than 1.5GB of RAM. But don't necessarily expect to upgrade your existing 2GB phone: Android 11 Go is only going to come out with new phones with that much memory, not earlier ones, Google tells The Verge. Also, Google says it's up to OEMs whether they want to put Android 11 Go on a device instead of Android 10 Go, contradicting what was... |
Google promises to remove search suggestions that might seem political — even if they’re true Posted: 10 Sep 2020 03:06 PM PDT Illustration by Alex Castro / The Verge Google has sometimes gotten in trouble for the phrases that automatically appear when you're trying to type in a new search. Even if some of them make for amusing celebrity interviews, others have sometimes steered users toward problematic concepts and fake news in addition to harmless things like movie and video game spoilers. The suggestions are based on what other people are searching for, after all. But in the buildup to the 2020 US presidential election, Google is changing its autocomplete policies to theoretically weed out one particular category of suggestion: "Election related predictions" that could be interpreted as favoring a particular candidate or political party. The new policy is extremely short, so I'll just give you the... |
Samsung Galaxy Watch Active 2 is still missing EKG, but here’s your consolation prize Posted: 10 Sep 2020 02:54 PM PDT Photo by Vjeran Pavic / The Verge The Samsung Galaxy Watch Active 2 was released last year, yet Samsung's promised heart-tracking EKG feature is still not available to help it compete with the Apple Watch in the US. Instead, Samsung has just released a new update to the watch that adds features that debuted in the newly released Galaxy Watch 3 to the less expensive Active 2 — including the long-rumored fall detection feature which could help if you trip and get seriously injured. When the Galaxy Watch 3 released last month with the expensive starting price of $399 compared to the Galaxy Watch Active 2's $250 price, it added some fitness features that turned out to be hit or miss, as my colleague Dan Siefert pointed out in his review (it's a recurring problem in Samsung... |
Epic says ‘Sign In with Apple’ will keep working for Fortnite after all Posted: 10 Sep 2020 02:50 PM PDT Illustration by Alex Castro / The Verge Just yesterday, Epic said that as soon as Friday, Apple would no longer let people use its single sign-on solution, "Sign In with Apple," to access their Epic Games account. That would mean that anyone who relied on their Apple credentials to log in to Epic services like Fortnite and the Epic Games Store would lose access when Apple pulled the plug, unless they changed their account first. But the game studio is now saying Apple has given Epic an "indefinite extension" on supporting "Sign In with Apple" for Epic Games accounts. Epic is still recommending that users "prepare your accounts" for a potential removal of "Sign In with Apple," however, and continues to promote an explainer on its site showing how to change your login... |
Trump eyes social media bias hawk as next FCC commissioner Posted: 10 Sep 2020 02:47 PM PDT Photo credit should read BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP via Getty Images The Trump administration is considering an unconventional pick for the next FCC commissioner, a senior adviser at the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) who has played a significant role in the agency's social media regulation agenda. The choice is still tentative, but if confirmed, the nomination would represent a significant blow to Republicans who favor a light-touch approach to telecom policy. Three sources close to the matter say Nathan Simington, a senior advisor at the NTIA within the commerce department, has emerged as a leading candidate to take over Republican Commissioner Mike O'Rielly's seat at the FCC. Simington is said to have helped draft the administration's social media executive order,... |
AmazonBasics products are going up in flames, but not enough for Amazon to stop selling them Posted: 10 Sep 2020 02:39 PM PDT Illustration by Alex Castro / The Verge Many AmazonBasics products that have been reported as fire hazards are still for sale on Amazon, according to an extensive investigation by CNN. Some of the stories about the dangerous products are harrowing. In one, a man went to the hospital after his chair caught fire while he was sleeping, apparently due to a melted USB cord. An AmazonBasics microwave caught fire when an eight-year-old heated up a macaroni and cheese cup. One man saw fire coming from an AmazonBasics surge protector while only a single phone charger was plugged into it — as his baby slept in a room nearby. Reports have apparently been piling up for years. CNN counted at least 1,500 reviews since 2016 for more than 70... |
All the biggest announcements from Ubisoft’s Forward event Posted: 10 Sep 2020 01:37 PM PDT Ubisoft just debuted another one of its Forward events, where the company previewed more upcoming titles and details on its fall lineup, including a better look at Immortals Fenyx Rising, the return of Scott Pilgrim vs. The World: The Game, and the announcement of new games like Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time Remake and the massively multiplayer Riders Republic. Here's everything you need to know: Ubisoft CEO addresses the company's problems with diversity, inclusion, racism, and sexual misconduct
The most significant announcement Ubisoft made today was notably not part of the actual Forward event at... |
With Tell Me Why on Xbox Game Pass, episodic gaming has found its moment Posted: 10 Sep 2020 12:50 PM PDT Episodic gaming has always felt like an idea that was ahead of its time. For many players, it's a compelling concept: story-driven games broken up into digestible chunks that you can play over the course of weeks or months. But the realities of game development and release schedules proved problematic. Telltale Games, the studio behind episodic hits like The Walking Dead and Batman, infamously collapsed as it struggled with the demands of releasing new episodes every month. Meanwhile, last year's Life is Strange 2 was excellent but difficult to keep up with as chapters launched at an erratic pace, releasing every few months. But with the advent of subscription services like Xbox Game Pass, episodic games may have finally found their... |
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