The F8 of Privacy: Difference between revisions

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Latest revision as of 17:49, 31 May 2019

The F8 of Privacy
Number 3521
Broadcast Date APRIL 30, 2019
Episode Length 29:55
Hosts Tom Merritt, Roger Chang
Guests Iyaz Akhtar

We breakdown all of the important news from today’s Facebook’s F8 conference. Plus, we discuss Uber and Lyft’s decision to stop accepting new drivers and chew over quarterly numbers from Samsung and Alphabet.

Guest

Quick Hits

An updated Apple support document says its legacy photo-editing suite, Aperture will not run in versions of macOS after Mojave. The document provides steps to migrate from Aperture to Apple's Photos app or Adobe Lightroom Classic.
After two years in beta Creative Commons is officially launching its search engine at search.creativecommons.org. It lets users search for free and public domain content. It has more than 300 million images indexed at launch. It includes images from the Cleveland Museum of Art, Behance, DeviantArt and even a set of CC0 3D designs from Thingiverse and will continue to grow. It also hopes to index more than photos in the future, including CC-licensed text and audio.
Valve announced its Index VR headset. It has 1440x1600 per eye display, 144 Hz refresh rate and a 130-degree field of view. It comes with two "Knuckles" controllers and can be tracked with SteamVR tracking sensors. The Valve Index complete package sells for $999, pre-orders start tomorrow for shipping June 28.
Apple Q2: EPS $2.46 vs. $2.36 Est.; Q2 Revs. $58B vs. $57.372B Est.; $AAPL hikes dividend 5%, issues $75B buyback. EPS: $2.36, Revenue: $57.37 billion, Q2 iPhone revenue: $31.03 billion, Q2 services revenue: $11.37 billion, Projected Q3 revenue: $51.94 billion.

Top Stories

Alphabet's Q1 earnings missed expectations. The big revenue driver, ad sales revenue grew 17%, but that's slower than last year's 26% growth. Smartphones aren't expected to be the main revenue driver for Google but they added to the problem this quarter. CEO Sundar Pichai cited “year over year headwinds” when talking about the Pixel phones and CFO Ruth Porat cited industry-wide pressure on high-end smartphones. Google is expected to come out with amid-range phone at Google I/O May 7. Pichai also pointed to the new campus and engineering hub in Taipei that Google obtained from HTC. Porat said Google is pleased with the momentum of its Home devices. Overall Google's hardware sales are growing, just not from phones.
Samsung Q1 profit was down 60% year over year to become its smallest operating profit since 2016. Falling chip prices and slowing demand for display panels are the main culprit. The semiconductor division operating profit fell 64%. Samsung expects chip demand to rise in the second half. Server makers should start rebuilding inventories, needing DRAM, and new smartphone models will use it too. NAND flash memory chip prices are expected to continue to fall, but stabilize in the second half. A US-China trade deal could increase sales in China as well. Samsung's mobile business fell 40%. Again though Samsung expects demand for display panels, and its own phones to pick up in the second half, led by new models in the low-end Galaxy A series.
Garmin announced three new Forerunner smartwatches. The Forerunner 45 starts at $199 at 42mm or the 45S which is 39mm. It tracks activity, sleep, notifications, heart-rate monitor, GPS and a sun-friendly display. It promises a week of battery life in watch mode or up to 13 hours with GPS on. The Forerunner 245 adds VO2 max, aerobic and anaerobic training effects, and pulse ox and can connect to a running dynamics pod and heart-rate chest straps. The 245 starts at $299 or starting at $349 you can get the 245 MUSIC which can hold up to 500 songs. Finally the Forerunner 945 can do all of that, holds 1,000 songs and adds more workout profiles and NFC for Garmin pay. It can sort your activity into training categories and lasts two weeks in watch mode. For all its watches Garmin Connect is adding female health tracking as well as a female health app.
Bloomberg reported that software used on Vodafone's Huawei equipment in Italy in 2011 and 2012 allowed telnet access from the Internet. Vodafone denies the issues could have allowed unauthorized access to its fixed-line network there, and the issues were resolved at the time. Vodafone says it was a failure to remove a diagnostic function after development and there is no evidence of any unauthorized access.
Politico notes that Uber and Lyft have both stopped accepting new drivers in New York City starting at the beginning of April. In December the New York City Council passed rules that require ride-hailing companies to pay drivers a rate of $17.22 an hour after expenses including idle time. This results in costing the companies more money the more time cars are on the streets without passengers. This rule came a few months after rule putting a cap on the number of vehicles it can have on the roads picking up passengers at any given time.

Discussion

Thing of the Day

Nate is back with a look at what's coming up on the next Tech's Message including shouting lawmakers.

YouTube

Links



Preceded by:
"Support Cruelty Free Game Companies"
The F8 of Privacy
Followed by:
"Slackluster"