President Trump Holds First Cabinet Meeting with New Chief of Staff John Kelly

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President Trump Holds First Cabinet Meeting with New Chief of Staff John Kelly


President Donald Trump holds his first cabinet meeting with new Chief of Staff General John Kelly 🇺🇸

@White House July 31, 2017.


President Trump Holds First Cabinet Meeting with New Chief of Staff John Kelly


[embedyt] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9akh3p6h8xg[/embedyt]


Video Credit: Based Patriot



President Trump Holds First Cabinet Meeting with New Chief of Staff John Kellyhttps://goo.gl/bcfmS2

Trump Presents Medal of Honor to Heroic Vietnam Army Medic

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Trump Presents Medal of Honor to Heroic Vietnam Army Medic


President Donald Trump tells the heroic story of Vietnam Army Medic James McCloughan and presents him with the Medal of Honor during a very moving ceremony 🇺🇸 at White House.


Trump Presents Medal of Honor to Heroic Vietnam Army Medic


[embedyt] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rWPvLwbs1GQ[/embedyt]


Based Patriot



Trump Presents Medal of Honor to Heroic Vietnam Army Medichttps://goo.gl/UC6jtT

Top 10 trending English Movies Of the Week 30th Jul'2017-5th Aug'2017

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Top 10 trending English Movies Of the Week 30th Jul'2017-5th Aug'2017


Following are the top 10 trending movies of the week 30th Jul’2017-5th Aug’2017. This week number one searched and watched movie is Dunkirk – 2017.


Watch the full movie trailers from below.


1 – Dunkirk – 2017


[embedyt] https://youtu.be/XRtZUkAR2u4[/embedyt]


 


2 – Avengers: Infinity War – 2018


[embedyt] https://youtu.be/3PyrgGTFp0E[/embedyt]


 


3 – It – 2017


[embedyt] https://youtu.be/xKJmEC5ieOk[/embedyt]


 


4 – Atomic Blonde – 2017


[embedyt] https://youtu.be/8USk21Lt0f4[/embedyt]


 


5 – Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets – 2017


[embedyt] https://youtu.be/NNrK7xVG3PM[/embedyt]


 


6 – Baby Driver – 2017


[embedyt] https://youtu.be/D9YZw_X5UzQ[/embedyt]


 


7 – Justice League – 2017


[embedyt] https://youtu.be/DblEwHkde8U[/embedyt]


 


8 – Thor: Ragnarok – 2017


[embedyt] https://youtu.be/ue80QwXMRHg[/embedyt]


 


9 – Ready Player One – 2018


[embedyt] https://youtu.be/LiK2fhOY0nE[/embedyt]


 


10 – The Emoji Movie – 2017


[embedyt] https://youtu.be/o_nfdzMhmrA[/embedyt]



Top 10 trending English Movies Of the Week 30th Jul'2017-5th Aug'2017https://goo.gl/MW26t1

Top 10 English Songs of the Week 30th July-5th August 2017

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Top 10 English Songs of the Week 30th July-5th August 2017


Following are the top trending 10 english songs of the Week 30th July-5th August 2017. Watch the full music videos from below.


1 – Despacito – Luis Fonsi & Daddy Yankee Featuring Justin Bieber


[embedyt] https://youtu.be/kJQP7kiw5Fk[/embedyt]


 


2 – Wild Thoughts – DJ Khaled Featuring Rihanna & Bryson Tiller


[embedyt] https://youtu.be/fyaI4-5849w[/embedyt]


 


3 – That’s What I Like – Bruno Mars


[embedyt] https://youtu.be/PMivT7MJ41M[/embedyt]


 


4 – I’m The One – DJ Khaled Featuring Justin Bieber, Quavo, Chance The Rapper & Lil Wayne


[embedyt] https://youtu.be/weeI1G46q0o[/embedyt]


 


5 – Unforgettable – French Montana Featuring Swae Lee


[embedyt] https://youtu.be/CTFtOOh47oo[/embedyt]


 


6 – Shape Of You – Ed Sheeran


[embedyt] https://youtu.be/JGwWNGJdvx8[/embedyt]


 


7 – Believer – Imagine Dragons


[embedyt] https://youtu.be/7wtfhZwyrcc[/embedyt]


 


8 – There’s Nothing Holdin’ Me Back – Shawn Mendes


[embedyt] https://youtu.be/dT2owtxkU8k[/embedyt]


 


9 – Body Like A Back Road – Sam Hunt


[embedyt] https://youtu.be/Mdh2p03cRfw[/embedyt]


 


10 – Attention – Charlie Puth


[embedyt] https://youtu.be/nfs8NYg7yQM[/embedyt]


 



Top 10 English Songs of the Week 30th July-5th August 2017https://goo.gl/bRpbtL

Facebook 'dark ads' can swing political opinions, research shows

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Facebook 'dark ads' can swing political opinions, research showsblish this post.)



Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Facebook ‘dark ads’ can swing political opinions, research shows” was written by Alex Hern in Las Vegas, for theguardian.com on Monday 31st July 2017 09.07 UTC


Using “psychographic” profiles of individual voters generated from publicly stated interests really does work, according to new research presented at the Def Con hacking conference in Las Vegas, Nevada.


The controversial practice allows groups to hone their messages to match the personality types of their targets during political campaigning, and is being used by firms including Cambridge Analytica and AggregateIQ to better target voters with political advertising with so-called “dark ads”.


“Before the referendum results, the concern we had was that people’s biases were being manipulated, either intentionally or unintentionally,” said Chris Sumner, research director and co-founder of the not-for-profit Online Privacy Foundation, who led the research. “Now we’ve seen this [research], I’m as concerned as I was before.


“It’s not a surprise, it’s what we expected to see. People on one side, whichever side happens to be winning at the time, are going to say ‘no, it’s not a problem’, while people who have just lost are going to see it as a big problem.”


Psychographic profiling classifies people into personality types using data from social networks such as Facebook. Sumner’s research focused on replicating some of the key findings of psychographic research by crafting adverts specifically targeted at certain personality types. Using publicly available data to ensure that the adverts were seen by the right people at the right time, Sumner tested how effective such targeting can be.


Would-be voters were sorted into two groups of people, those with high and low authoritarian tendencies, using a mixture of age, gender, location and interest targeting: younger women score low on authoritarian rankings, while older men score highly.


Geographically, Sumner selected five local areas which have been found in previous research to have low authoritarian attitudes – Cambridge, Liverpool, Manchester, Edinburgh and Hackney – and seven with high – Basildon, Chelmsford, Dudley, Thurrock, Mansfield, Rotherham and Swindon.


But the most important factor was the use of publicly stated interests to derive a psychographic profile of the recipients. Using information Facebook already knows about its users, Sumner created a high-authoritarian group of people the site has identified as being interested in conservatism and the Daily Mail, and a low-authoritarian group interested in liberalism and the Guardian.


To test the groups were accurately sorted, they were asked whether they agreed with the statement “with regards to internet privacy: if you’ve done nothing wrong, you have nothing to fear”. When randomly sorted, 38% of people agreed with the statement; but once all the psychographic signifiers were incorporated, the low authoritarian group fell to just 25% agreement, while the highly authoritarian group rose to 61%.


Knowing the psychographic profiles of the two groups is more useful than simply being able to accurately guess what positions they already hold; it can also be used to craft messages to specifically target those groups, to more effectively shift their opinions. Sumner created four such adverts, two aimed at increasing support for internet surveillance and two aimed at decreasing it, each targeted to a low or high authoritarian group.


For example, the highly authoritarian group’s anti-surveillance advert used the slogan “They fought for your freedom. Don’t give it away!”, over an image of the D-Day landings, while the low authoritarian group’s pro-surveillance message was “Crime doesn’t stop where the internet starts: say YES to state surveillance”.


Sure enough, the targeted adverts did significantly better. The high-authoritarian group was significantly more likely to share a promoted post aimed at them than a similar one aimed at their opposites, while the low authoritarian group ranked the advert aimed at them as considerably more persuasive than the advert that wasn’t.


Psychographic targeting is allowed on Facebook, and the company advertises the platform to politicians as the perfect way to “persuade voters” and “influence online and offline outcomes”.


But the ability for campaigns to perfectly target different messages to different groups has been described by some as a concern for democracy itself, allowing politicians to appeal to the worst side of voters in an almost undiscoverable manner.


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010


Published via the Guardian News Feed plugin for WordPress.




Facebook 'dark ads' can swing political opinions, research showshttps://goo.gl/vfSciw

Apple’s next iPhone: facial-recognition and all-screen design, leaks suggest

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Apple’s next iPhone: facial-recognition and all-screen design, leaks suggest



Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Apple’s next iPhone: facial-recognition and all-screen design, leaks suggest” was written by Samuel Gibbs, for theguardian.com on Monday 31st July 2017 10.18 UTC


The next version of Apple’s iPhone will have infrared-based facial recognition unlocking – eliminating need for a passcode or fingerprint – and will have an almost all-screen design on the front, say developers digging into the pre-release of firmware distributed by Apple.


The firmware for the upcoming HomePod smart speaker, which is due for release at the end of the year, was pushed out via Apple’s developer system last week. It was found to contain references to other devices in its code, including the next version of the iPhone. It is unclear whether the HomePod firmware was distributed intentionally for developers to start building systems to interact with the speaker ahead of release or leaked by accident by Apple.


The code references a device codenamed “D22”, which developers Steve Troughton-Smith and Guilherme Rambo say is the next big revision of the iPhone, which may or may not be called the “iPhone 8”, “iPhone X” or “iPhone 10” and is expected to be announced as soon as September but potentially not released until the end of the year or later.



The developers say that Apple’s codename for the face recognition feature is “Pearl ID” and that there are references to it throughout the HomePod firmware, which contains much of the next version of iOS 11 due to be released later this year.


Further probing of the firmware found an icon used to represent the D22 device, which shows a smartphone without Apple’s traditional home button and a screen that almost entirely fills the front of the device with only a cut out at the top for the front-facing camera, sensors and speaker.



The near bezel-less design has long been expected, with leaks and rumours suggesting that Apple was following Samsung’s design moves with the Galaxy S8 and producing a smartphone that resembles Android-creator Andy Rubin’s upcoming Essential phone.


Apple is not the first company to use IR-based face recognition as a means of unlocking devices and authenticating users. Microsoft’s Windows Hello IR-based face recognition is found in its Surface line as well as Windows 10 computers from other manufacturers.


Samsung’s ill-fated Galaxy Note 7 introduced IR-based iris scanning to a mass-market device in August 2016, and was later introduced on the Galaxy S8, along with camera-based face recognition – a feature that has been built into Android since 2011, but has yet to be perfected on a mobile device.


Should a version of the next iPhone be released with the new facial recognition features and new, all-screen design, it will mark the biggest change to Apple’s smartphone since the introduction of larger screens in 2014 with the iPhone 6 and 6 Plus. That same design was then used for the iPhone 6S and iPhone 7 released in 2015 and 2016 respectively.


What form the D22 iPhone device takes will be key to ensuring Apple’s continued dominance at the high-end of the smartphone market. The 10-year-old brand faces fierce competition from Samsung and others in a field increasingly dominated by the look and feel of devices, following the stagnation of feature innovation.


Apple did not immediately respond to a request for comment.


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010


Published via the Guardian News Feed plugin for WordPress.




Apple’s next iPhone: facial-recognition and all-screen design, leaks suggesthttps://goo.gl/SMZSS7

President Trump Full Speech To Police On Long Island

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President Trump Full Speech To Police On Long Island


“It is the policy of this administration to dismantle, decimate, and eradicate MS-13”: President Donald Trump gives a speech to law enforcement on cracking down on gang violence, illegal immigration and destroying MS-13. Long Island, New York


President Trump Full Speech To Police On Long Island


[embedyt] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q9TBMA-vHn8[/embedyt]


Video Credit: Based Patriot



President Trump Full Speech To Police On Long Islandhttps://goo.gl/MwCH77

Breakthrough Starshot successfully launch world's smallest spacecraft

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Breakthrough Starshot successfully launch world's smallest spacecraft



Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Breakthrough Starshot successfully launch world’s smallest spacecraft” was written by Nicola Davis, for theguardian.com on Friday 28th July 2017 16.32 UTC


The smallest spacecraft ever launched are successfully travelling in low Earth orbit and communicating with systems on Earth, scientists have announced.


Known as “Sprites”, the miniature satellites are just 3.5cm x 3.5cm and carry radios, sensors and computers, with each device powered by sunlight and weighing just four grams.


While nanosatellites known as CubeSats have previously been sent into space, such systems have a mass thousands of times that of the Sprites, weighing more than 1kg.


Scientists say the latest development is an important a precursor to an ambitious attempt to send space probes to planets beyond our solar system, dubbed Breakthrough Starshot.


“This is a new frontier of tiny, gram-scale spacecraft” said Professor Avi Loeb of Harvard University, chair of the advisory committee for the Breakthrough Starshot Initiative.


The Sprites, Loeb adds, are also cheap. “Each of them is only tens of dollars in cost,” he said.


Announced last year by Stephen Hawking and Russian entrepreneur Yuri Milner, who has put $100m into funding the first five years of the project, Breakthrough Starshot’s goal is to develop chips with a weight of roughly one gram and fit them to a lightweight sail before propelling them through space with a 100-billion watt laser.


“The reason one needs to push the weight down is because in order to reach the nearest stars within our lifetime, the spacecraft needs to move at a fraction of the speed of light – a fifth of the speed of light or so,” said Loeb.


While Sprites have previously been carried on board the International Space Station, this is the first demonstration that it is possible to launch such a lightweight miniaturised satellite into space and communicate with it.


The Sprite project is led by Zac Manchester, now a researcher working with Loeb at Harvard University, who began work on the spacecraft almost a decade ago, before the project became part of the Breakthrough Starshot effort.


Two Sprites are currently glued to the outside of the Latvian Venta satellite and the Italian Max Valier satellite, small systems built by the Germany-based company OHB System AG and launched together in June.


“I actually ended up flying to Germany with these things in my carry-on,” said Manchester.


Four Sprites are also travelling inside the Max Valier satellite and are designed to be released into space – although that plan is up in the air given a technical hitch in communication with the Italian satellite.


Michael Garrett, director of Jodrell Bank Centre for Astrophysics, welcomed the success of the Sprites.


“I find it quite surprising but exciting as well,” he said, pointing out that the Sprites show such chips are stable in space, can harness solar energy, and are able to communicate. “Normally this is happening with satellites which are the size of a big mini-van, or even bigger than that,” he added


The Breakthrough Starshot project relies on the miniaturisation of technology, and plans to use a tiny chip to host a number of instruments, including navigation equipment and a camera. However, the communication system on the device will be laser-based, rather than relying on radio-waves as the Sprites do.


“If someone had talked to me two years about sending anything to the nearest star I would have thought that was a bit of a joke to be honest,” said Garrett. “I suppose I had never really grasped the concept that nowadays we can put lots and lots of complexity onto just a computer chip that weighs hardly anything.”


The idea is that by sending such tiny spacecraft to planets orbiting nearby stars, it will be possible to collect data which could help to shed light on the possibility of life beyond Earth.


The top destination for such a mission is our nearest star system, Alpha Centauri, within which is the star Proxima Centauri which is orbited by the planet Proxima b.


Not only is Proxima b thought to be a rocky planet, but it is also within the so-called “habitable zone”, the distance from a star at which liquid water might exist, which has caused much excitement in the search for extraterrestrial life.


Martin Rees, astronomer royal and emeritus professor of cosmology and astrophysics at the University of Cambridge, described the success of the Sprites as a huge development for miniaturised spacecraft.


While Rees believes sending tiny space probes to nearby star systems is “very futuristic”, he says the satellites could open the door to new miniature devices to probe our own planet – and the solar system.


“You [could] have very large numbers of tiny probes monitoring Saturn and its moon etc in more detail than we have done up till now, simply because of the advances we are familiar with every day from mobile phones,” he said, pointing out that the technology on board the Cassini spacecraft currently studying the planet is decades old.


Loeb believes it will take 20 years for the Breakthrough Starshot space probes to be developed, and another 20 for them to reach the Alpha Centauri system, but he says the wait will be worth it.


“You can think of it as the modern incarnation of building the pyramids,” he said. “My personal hope is that once we have a spacecraft leaving the solar system we get a message back saying ‘welcome to the interstellar club’.”


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Breakthrough Starshot successfully launch world's smallest spacecrafthttps://goo.gl/qEau98

Apple kills off iPod Nano and Shuffle, marking the end of an era

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post.)



Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Apple kills off iPod Nano and Shuffle, marking the end of an era” was written by Samuel Gibbs, for theguardian.com on Friday 28th July 2017 09.10 UTC


Apple has killed off the last remaining app-free music players in its roster, the iPod Nano and iPod Shuffle, leaving nothing but multi-use, connected devices in the brave new world of streaming, apps and games.


From the moment the iPhone was launched in 2007 the writing has been on the wall for Apple’s iPod line, and by extension, every other dedicated music player out there. For Apple, in the era of streaming music and smartphone ubiquity, now is the time to put its legacy players to bed, with the wifi-enabled iPod Touch the last remaining member of a once dominant gadget line.


The iPhone and other modern smartphones were capable of playing music, not quite as well as dedicated hardware, but good enough and while doing so many other things at the same time.


The Nano and Shuffle came out in 2005, two years before the introduction of the iPhone, as less expensive and smaller alternatives to Apple’s standard iPod, which was launched by Steve Jobs in 2001 with space for “1,000 songs in your pocket”.


The Nano replaced the popular iPod mini, introducing the company’s first flash-based iPods, which until 2005 had used small hard drives like shrunken versions of those available in computers at the time. Music was loaded onto them via iTunes, either from the store or ripped from CDs, but they were unable to access content without a computer.


Apple stopped updating the Nano and Shuffle in 2012 and 2010 respectively, and killed the direct descendent of the original 2001 iPod, the iPod Classic, in 2014 at the same time as launching the iPhone 6 and Apple Watch.


Smartphone dominance


woman listening to smartphone in coffee shop
In a space where flexibility is essential and good enough is the key metric, the smartphone rules as the most flexible and capable device in the modern era. Photograph: Michael Hitoshi/Getty Images

The iPod Nano and iPod Shuffle are just the latest in a long line of single-use devices killed off by the multitalented smartphone. The iPhone launched with an iPod app, which effectively did everything an iPod would, but with a touchscreen interface and smaller storage than a hard drive-based iPod.


As the cost of flash chips decreased, the storage capacity of smartphones increased, slowly removing all relevance for even the largest-capacity music players. But it was the dawn of streaming music that was the nail in the coffin for the dedicated, offline iPod.


Spotify was launched in 2008 and gave access to millions of tracks without the user having to own a vast library of music. The trouble was, only computers – and by extension smartphones – could really handle the task, with connectivity and application support.


Apple’s iTunes and downloaded music continued to be popular, with iPod sales peaking in 2008, but with the acquisition of Beats Music and electronics from rapper Dr Dre and music mogul Jimmy Iovine in 2014 for $3bn and the launch of Apple Music in 2015, even the mighty iTunes Store took a back seat in the subscription-based streaming world.


As Carolina Milanesi, consumer tech analyst with Creative Strategies, puts it: “Makes sense: No place for iPod Nano & Shuffle when music means Apple Music.”


In a space where flexibility is essential and good enough is the key metric, the smartphone rules as the most adaptable and capable device in the modern era. Before music players, compact cameras were killed off by the smartphone. The rolodex, calendar book, portable gaming machines (with the exception of the Nintendo powerhouse) and even the humble alarm clock have been all but wiped out by the march of the smartphone.


As camera quality and advanced computational photography steadily improve, from the likes of Apple’s dual-camera iPhone 7 Plus to Google’s advanced HDR+ camera processing, the next on the chopping block could be the digital SLR camera. Once the domain of anyone serious about photography, from hobbyists to professionals, the pro camera market is being threatened by the smartphone, with journalists switching to smartphone cameras to capture world events.


In fact, one of the only single-use devices seemingly left untouched is the Amazon Kindle – an ebook reader that pretty much does nothing else. But if you look deeper, even the Kindle is becoming subsumed into the smartphone with Amazon’s Kindle app available for all good platforms. And don’t mention the mobile tablet, which was once the future of computing but is slowly being killed off by ever-bigger smartphone screens.


So we bid farewell to the iPod Nano and Shuffle, many people’s first taste of portable music. It is the end of an era, but it wasn’t the first and it won’t be the last long-standing device to fall in the face of the all-conquering smartphone.


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010


Published via the Guardian News Feed plugin for WordPress.




Apple kills off iPod Nano and Shuffle, marking the end of an erahttps://goo.gl/RdAZsK

Coming Soon! It (2017) Watch Trailer Now

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Coming Soon! It (2017) Watch Trailer Now


Watch below the It (2017) movie trailer starring  Bill SkarsgårdJaeden LieberherFinn Wolfhard. Drama & Horror Movie is directed by Andrés Muschietti.


It (2017 is expected to be released on 8 September (USA).


Watch the official trailer from below.


Coming Soon! It (2017) Watch Trailer Now


[embedyt] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xKJmEC5ieOk[/embedyt]


Video Credit: Warner Bros. Pictures.



Coming Soon! It (2017) Watch Trailer Nowhttps://goo.gl/nzwS62

Bug in top smartphones could lead to unstoppable malware, researcher says

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Bug in top smartphones could lead to unstoppable malware, researcher says



Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Bug in top smartphones could lead to unstoppable malware, researcher says” was written by Alex Hern in Las Vegas, for theguardian.com on Thursday 27th July 2017 22.22 UTC


A recently patched bug found in the chips used to provide wifi in iPhones, Samsung Galaxies and Google Nexus devices could be used to build malware which jumps unstoppably from device to device, according to Nitay Artenstein, the researcher who discovered the flaw.


Affected users should update their phones’ operating systems immediately, to iOS 10.3.3 (released 20 July) or the July security update for Android, which contain fixes for the flaw.


Dubbed Broadpwn, the vulnerability was revealed in detail for the first time on Thursday at the Black Hat information security conference in Las Vegas. It works by taking advantage of a number of specific flaws in wifi chips made by the component company Broadcom, ultimately allowing an attacker to write programs directly on to the chip, seizing control of it.


The vulnerability was particularly special, interesting and powerful, Artenstein said, because of its rare status as a truly remote exploit. That means the victim doesn’t have to do anything to be infected, the attacker doesn’t need to know anything about the device they’re targeting, and the system being targeted can be taken over without crashing.


On stage at the conference, Artenstein, who works for the infosec firm Exodus Intelligence, demonstrated a proof-of-concept for what an attacker could do with the bug: infecting a Samsung Galaxy with his custom “worm” (the name for a self-replicating piece of malware), and then watching as the Galaxy phone proceeded to infect another Samsung phone – no intervention required.


“When I started working in this field, we had worms,” said Atenstein: “self-propagating malware which could be run across the network. There were quite a few in the good old days. They died out, together with remote exploits: worms pretty much need them to propagate.


“But Broadpwn is a perfect bug for this kind of thing. A pretty good location to make the first wifi worm and the first network worm in a few years.”


A well-executed wifi worm would spread almost like a real virus, requiring two vulnerable devices to simply be near each other to jump from one to another. But even before the vulnerability was fixed in software updates from Apple and Google, the Broadpwn bug still had limitations: chiefly, it couldn’t make the leap from the wifi chip’s firmware to the actual device.


A second vulnerability would be needed for it to do damage beyond breaking the wifi of affected users. And with the proof-of-concept that already exists, being infected is more embarrassing that anything else: your phone constantly shouts “I’m pwned” into the ether, for anyone listening with the right tools to pick up on.


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010


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Bug in top smartphones could lead to unstoppable malware, researcher sayshttps://goo.gl/6qgd9d

Exclusive Jigsaw (2017) Movie Trailer

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Exclusive Jigsaw (2017) Movie Trailer


One of the highest grossing horror franchises of all time is back, taking the Jigsaw killer’s signature brand of twisted scenarios to the next level.


Watch below the Jigsaw (2017) movie trailer starring Laura VandervoortTobin BellCallum Keith Rennie . Movie is directed by Michael SpierigPeter Spierig.


Jigsaw (2017) is a Horror, Thriller movie and expected to be released in 27 October 2017 (USA).


Watch the official trailer from below.


Exclusive Jigsaw (2017) Movie Trailer


[embedyt] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vPP6aIw1vgY[/embedyt]


Video Credit – Lionsgate Movies


 


 



Exclusive Jigsaw (2017) Movie Trailerhttps://goo.gl/qtgZgk

President Trump Delivers A Vital Speech On Repealing & Replacing Obamacare

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President Trump Delivers A Vital Speech On Repealing & Replacing Obamacare


President Donald Trump gives a speech alongside Obamacare victims calling for Senate Republicans to act now and repeal and replace Obamacare 🇺🇸


President Trump Delivers A Vital Speech On Repealing & Replacing Obamacare


[embedyt] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uDGENNkQ7k4[/embedyt]



President Trump Delivers A Vital Speech On Repealing & Replacing Obamacarehttps://goo.gl/9QRrd1

President Trump's Massive Speech at Boy Scout Jamboree

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President Trump's Massive Speech at Boy Scout Jamboree


President Donald Trump gives a speech to a record-breaking crowd of 45,000 at the 2017 National Boy Scout Jamboree. MAGA 🇺🇸West Virginia  on July 24 2017.


Watch the full speech from below.


President Trump’s Massive Speech at Boy Scout Jamboree


[embedyt] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=16Ge_HEeIuI[/embedyt][embedyt] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=16Ge_HEeIuI[/embedyt]



President Trump's Massive Speech at Boy Scout Jamboreehttps://goo.gl/bSRRka

Microsoft Paint saved after outpouring of love – sort of

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Microsoft Paint saved after outpouring of love – sort ofhttps://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg2Vq5bpi93cCyl3lGgbFgUQ2japZvccQRA9RoZc-EkoBNjSJwlwO-ZZ79rytao9Jd81l8P_l8aWt7N6SA3R2jGyQ0fhhnusaeoRKpGyZPFjewLy5WYGoQNxz22-pGYvI1MNz5TpsdA6QI/s1600/Microsoft+Paint+saved+after+outpouring+of+love+%25E2%2580%2593+sort+of.png



Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Microsoft Paint saved after outpouring of love – sort of” was written by Samuel Gibbs, for theguardian.com on Tuesday 25th July 2017 09.04 UTC


After the tremendous outpouring of love across the internet for arguably the greatest Windows program ever, Microsoft has announced that it will save MS Paint by putting it on the Windows Store.


Following the company’s announcement that the 32-year-old Paint is now deprecated, meaning that it is “not in active development and might be removed in future releases”, Microsoft put out a blogpost in response to the anguished outcry at the potential removal of an old friend.


Megan Saunders, Microsoft’s general manager of the 3D for Everyone initiative, said: “MS Paint is here to stay, it will just have a new home soon, in the Windows Store where it will be available for free.


“Today, we’ve seen an incredible outpouring of support and nostalgia around MS Paint. If there’s anything we learned, it’s that after 32 years, MS Paint has a lot of fans. It’s been amazing to see so much love for our trusty old app.”


Saunders also took the opportunity to push Paint 3D, which came with the Windows 10 Creators Update, is also in the Windows Store and Microsoft hopes you will you use instead.


Saving Microsoft Paint by putting it into the Windows Store instead of being a default part of Windows going forward is good, but it’s quite not the same as actually maintaining it in its current state as a core part of Windows like Notepad or Snipping Tool. The biggest difference is that Paint will no longer be installed by default with Windows and on work and enterprise machines, it is unlikely that system administrators will allow employees to install apps from the Windows Store in most situations.


So while home users will be free to download Microsoft Paint from the Windows Store and put it back where it belongs, office workers around the world will be deprived of their impromptu creative sessions once Paint is severed from Windows as standard.


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Published via the Guardian News Feed plugin for WordPress.




Microsoft Paint saved after outpouring of love – sort ofhttps://goo.gl/c2u4Aj

Top 10 English Songs of the Week 23-29 July 2017

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Top 10 English Songs of the Week 23-29 July 2017


Following are the top trending 10 english songs of the Week 23-29 July 2017. Watch the full music videos from below.


1 – Despacito – Luis Fonsi & Daddy Yankee Featuring Justin Bieber


[embedyt] https://youtu.be/kJQP7kiw5FkDespacito[/embedyt]


 


2 – Wild Thoughts – DJ Khaled Featuring Rihanna & Bryson Tiller


[embedyt] https://youtu.be/fyaI4-5849wWild Thoughts[/embedyt]


 


3 – I’m The One – DJ Khaled Featuring Justin Bieber, Quavo, Chance The Rapper & Lil Wayne


[embedyt] https://youtu.be/weeI1G46q0oI’m The One[/embedyt]


 


4 – That’s What I Like – Bruno Mars


[embedyt] https://youtu.be/PMivT7MJ41MThat’s What I Like[/embedyt]


 


5 – Shape Of You – Ed Sheeran


[embedyt] https://youtu.be/JGwWNGJdvx8Shape Of You[/embedyt]


 


6 – Humble. – Kendrick Lamar


[embedyt] https://youtu.be/tvTRZJ-4EyIHumble.[/embedyt]


 


7 – Believer – Imagine Dragons


[embedyt] https://youtu.be/7wtfhZwyrccBeliever[/embedyt]


 


8 – There’s Nothing Holdin’ Me Back – Shawn Mendes


[embedyt] https://youtu.be/dT2owtxkU8kThere’s Nothing Holdin’ Me Back[/embedyt]


 


9 – Unforgettable – French Montana Featuring Swae Lee


[embedyt] https://youtu.be/CTFtOOh47ooUnforgettable[/embedyt]


 


10 – Body Like A Back Road – Sam Hunt


[embedyt] https://youtu.be/Mdh2p03cRfwBody Like A Back Road[/embedyt]


 



Top 10 English Songs of the Week 23-29 July 2017https://goo.gl/FCWCtL

Anya Shrubsole's bowling in WWC17 Final

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Anya Shrubsole's bowling in WWC17 Final


Anya Shrubsole was named Player of the Match after a devastating spell that decimated India and helped England claim the 2017 ICC Women’s World Cup.


Anya Shrubsole’s bowling in WWC17 Final


[embedyt] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MqCAyMqJXSE[/embedyt][embedyt] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MqCAyMqJXSE[/embedyt]


Video Source: ICC



Anya Shrubsole's bowling in WWC17 Finalhttps://goo.gl/aD6C1Z

2017 ICC Women's World Cup Winning Moment

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Anya Shrubsole bowls Rajeshwari Gayakwad to take her sixth wicket of the match and deliver the Women’s World Cup to England.


2017 ICC Women’s World Cup Winning Moment


[embedyt] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_GAS8INc-jI[/embedyt]


Video Source: ICC 



2017 ICC Women's World Cup Winning Momenthttps://goo.gl/QfzDEQ

First Transatlantic Telegraph Cable

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First Transatlantic Telegraph Cable


A transatlantic telegraph cable is an undersea cable running under the Atlantic Ocean used for telegraph communications. The first was laid across the floor of the Atlantic from Telegraph Field, Foilhommerum Bay, Valentia Island in western Ireland to Heart’s Content in eastern Newfoundland. The first communications occurred August 16, 1858, reducing the communication time between North America and Europe from ten days – the time it took to deliver a message by ship – to only 17 hours. Transatlantic telegraph cables have been replaced by transatlantic telecommunications cables.



Cyrus West Field was an American businessman and financier who, along with other entrepreneurs, created the Atlantic Telegraph Company and laid the first telegraph cable across the Atlantic Ocean in 1858.


Watch the full documentary from below.


First Transatlantic Telegraph Cable


[embedyt] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EzlnT6TdjcA[/embedyt]



First Transatlantic Telegraph Cablehttps://goo.gl/rEWFYQ

The Incredible Hands - Tsukiji Worlds Largest Fish Market

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The Incredible Hands - Tsukiji Worlds Largest Fish Market



Tsukiji fish market is located in Tsukiji in central Tokyo, between the Sumida River and the upmarket Ginza shopping district. While the inner wholesale market has restricted access to visitors, the outer retail market, restaurants and associated restaurant supply stores remain a major tourist attraction for both domestic and overseas visitors.



It is not just an ordinary fish market. It is the BIGGEST in the world with a traffic of 100,000 people going in and out of 850 stalls. 50,000 tons of fish is traded daily with hundreds of millions of dollars changing hands. Its famous auctions have attracted millions of tourists worldwide. But what lies beneath the surface of this amazing market? This episode is a visual feast of never –before –filmed sequences on how a 300-kg tuna is cut, and all the the unique skills of the fishmongers and the myriad varieties of seafood available.


The Incredible Hands – Tsukiji Worlds Largest Fish Market


[embedyt] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NqbWUO5_MeU[/embedyt]


Video Credit: Culture Documentary hosted by Chris Kent, published by NHK broadcasted as part of NHK Tsukiji :World’s Largest Fish Market series in 2009



The Incredible Hands - Tsukiji Worlds Largest Fish Markethttps://goo.gl/JjK7P5

BMW 520D SE review: ‘One of the most complete cars you can buy’

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BMW 520D SE review: ‘One of the most complete cars you can buy’



Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “BMW 520D SE review: ‘One of the most complete cars you can buy’” was written by Martin Love, for The Observer on Sunday 23rd July 2017 05.00 UTC


Price: £36,025
Top speed: 146mph
0-62mph: 7.5 seconds
MPG: 68.8
CO2: 108g/km


It’s unnerving being in the presence of an intellectual superior – especially when it’s a car. It’s something we are going to have to get used to. This latest 5-Series is the smartest and most technological BMW yet. Its neuro-robotic mind, or central computer, relentlessly anticipates, responds and adapts to everything you’ll ever encounter on the road… well, almost everything. We drivers haven’t quite yet been reduced to mere spectators in our own cars.


This car, for instance, features “intelligent parking” – a sophisticated update of the auto-park package which first appeared on the revolutionary i8. The idea is you arrive at your destination, step out of the car, flash a smile at your neighbours, and then casually ask it to park itself. Using the key fob, you stand on the pavement and watch nonchalantly as it drives on its own into your garage. What a trick, eh! But as with so much of this sort of futuristic gadgetry, it doesn’t really work. I stood on the pavement and watched in horror as the car crept slowly forward before suddenly lunging to the right and coming to a standstill halfway across the road. I tried it several more times, before a tiny screen flashed up the helpful message: “Park the car yourself.”


Ground control: the luxurious and driver-centred cockpit of the new 5-Series.
Ground control: the luxurious and driver-centred cockpit of the new 5-Series. Photograph: Daniel Kraus

The car boasts a host of other technologies which create one of the most advanced “autonomous driving” set-ups yet. This 5-Series can, apparently, accelerate, brake and steer itself at speeds of up to 130mph. Well, we can all do that. I ask my wife if we should give it a go, but she doesn’t fancy it. “What if it swerves across the road again?” she asks not unreasonably. “Then it’ll tell you to ‘Drive the car yourself!’”


Ignoring these tech temptations (I’ve yet to meet a driver who actually uses self-park on their car), this is an astonishingly brilliant vehicle. It rides incredibly, intoxicatingly well. With more than 40 years’ development behind it, each new iteration gets better and more accomplished.


From the outside it’s subtly softened compared to the outgoing model. The corners have been smoothed to create a smoother and less aggressive profile. It now looks less formal; more smart casual.


Inside, it’s classy and a pleasure to sit in. Controls and handling are so intuitive and entertaining that when you drive to the shops you have an overwhelming desire to just keep on going. Faster, lighter and more efficient than before, the 5-Series is now one of the most complete all-round cars you can buy. Just don’t ask it to park itself.


Motorway madness: watch out for jams


Ready for summer: a family get packed up. But take care to avoid the worst of the traffic.
Ready for summer: a family get packed up. But take care to avoid the worst of the traffic. Photograph: Getty Images

With the start of the school holidays, parents brace themselves for traffic jams and endless queues as we set off for a great British staycation and, sadly, the last week of July is predicted to be the busiest of the year, while 1 August is set to be the single busiest day on the road.


Surveying parents across the nation, car part supplier Euro Car Parts found that as many as 30% will be leaving home and hitting the roads between 24 and 31 July.


Martin Gray from Euro Car Parts said: “Family holidays are something to cherish, but getting stuck in traffic is a surefire way of spoiling the trip from the off. It looks like families are planning on leaving early in the morning to avoid traffic, which ironically causes traffic. Our research shows that late at night, or mid afternoon, are the best times to set off.


Euro Car Parts has also compiled some tips on how to avoid traffic, no matter what day you drive.


  • Download a GPS tracking map, such as Mapon or Waze, which identifies traffic volume and lets you avoid routes with high levels of traffic

  • Set off with plenty of time around rush hours; late at night or in the very early hours (before 6am) tend to be quietest

  • Avoid urban areas and main roads when possible. While choosing back roads and driving through villages may take you out of the way slightly, reduced congestion can speed up your journey and makes for a much less frustrating drive.

  • And don’t forget to enjoy yourself. Remember you are going on holiday!

Email Martin at martin.love@observer.co.uk or follow him on Twitter @MartinLove166


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Published via the Guardian News Feed plugin for WordPress.




BMW 520D SE review: ‘One of the most complete cars you can buy’https://goo.gl/zzAy1L

Nasa needs you: space agency to crowdsource origami designs for shield

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Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Nasa needs you: space agency to crowdsource origami designs for shield” was written by Nicola Davis, for The Guardian on Thursday 20th July 2017 17.19 UTC


If you know your crane from your bishop’s mitre, Nasa needs you. The space agency is launching a challenge to crowdsource origami-inspired ideas for a foldable radiation shield to protect spacecraft and astronauts on voyages to deep space, such as missions to Mars.


“Origami is a natural fit to many problems involving deployability in space,” says Robert J. Lang, origami artist and former Nasa physicist.
“Origami is a natural fit to many problems involving deployability in space,” says Robert J. Lang, origami artist and former Nasa physicist. Photograph: Mark Bolitho

With the challenge open for entries from 26 July, innovative designs can be submitted through the website, Freelancer.


“The theory is that there will be a lot of people who have expertise in folding techniques or origami and [Nasa] want to find a very efficient way to pack a radiation shield,” said Matt Barrie, founder and CEO of Freelancer.


Helen O’Brien, a space engineer from Imperial College London who is not involved in the project, said that radiation shields – typically made of aluminium – are a crucial component of both manned and unmanned spacecraft.


“Essentially cosmic rays and other solar radiation can be very damaging to both people and electronics,” she said, pointing out that it can cause cancer, as well as triggering faults in circuits.


But, she noted, mass means money when it comes to space missions, and bulky items take up space that could be used for instruments – or people.


“Nasa want something that is sufficiently packed and compact so that when you actually land on a planet you can expand it and it will provide maximum efficiency and protection from radiation,” said Barrie.


As well as the radiation shield challenge, two other projects have been announced, one of which is asking for animation storyboards to help the space agency explain its experimental system for keeping track of objects inside the International Space Station (ISS). The other is to create a badge, known as a mission patch, for the space agency’s 3D printer-cum-recycling project, the “In Space Manufacturing Refabricator”.


The challenges are the latest in a series of conundrums posed to the public by the Nasa Tournament Lab and Freelancer. Previous challenges have ranged from suggestions for an app interface for astronauts’ smartwatches, to designing an arm for the Astrobee robot, that will help with tasks on the ISS.


“The whole premise is that by tapping into the minds of millions of people we will hopefully find unexpected solutions to problems that Nasa internally couldn’t come up with,” said Barrie.


It is not the first time space engineers have turned to the Japanese art for inspiration.


Among previous projects, earlier this year Nasa announced it had joined forces with researchers at Brigham Young University to create an origami-inspired folding radiator that allows the rate of heat loss to be controlled by changing its shape.


Origami designer Mark Bolitho points out that from heart stents to folding at a molecular level, origami has many scientific applications beyond space.
Origami designer Mark Bolitho points out that from heart stents to folding at a molecular level, origami has many scientific applications beyond space. Photograph: Mark Bolitho

Robert J. Lang – an origami artist, world expert on the mathematics of origami and a former Nasa physicist – said that he was not surprised that Nasa was looking to the art for inspiration.


“Origami is a natural fit to many problems involving deployability in space, and Nasa has worked with origami artists – myself and others – over the years,” he said.


Mark Bolitho, a professional origami designer and an organiser of the international meeting on Origami in Science, Mathematics and Education to be held at the University of Oxford next year, added that applications extend beyond space.


“There have been many advances in the application of folding in science,” he said, citing innovations such as heart stents, car air bags, “and even experiments to fold at a molecular level.”


O’Brien, too, welcomed the use of origami in space engineering. “Origami is fantastic – the way that the intricate structures can be produced in such a small volume, but then also can be deployed to something that is really huge,” she said. “There is no reason why that kind of [approach] cannot be used to provide innovative and low mass shielding for space missions in the future.”


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010


Published via the Guardian News Feed plugin for WordPress.




Nasa needs you: space agency to crowdsource origami designs for shieldhttps://goo.gl/2mDY2H

Google to radically change homepage for first time since 1996

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Google to radically change homepage for first time since 1996



Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Google to radically change homepage for first time since 1996” was written by Samuel Gibbs, for theguardian.com on Thursday 20th July 2017 12.37 UTC


Google’s famously simple homepage with its logo and single search box on a white background is set to undergo a radical change for the first time since its launch in 1996, with the addition of Google’s interest and news-based feed.


The feed of personalised information, which has been a mainstay of Google’s mobile apps for Android and iOS since 2012 along with a home-screen page on Google’s Nexus and Pixel smartphones and tablets, will become part of the main web experience in the near future, the Guardian understands.


On Wednesday Google announced it was deploying further customisation to the feed, which took over from its Google Now personalisation in December, using the company’s “advanced machine-learning algorithms”.


Shashi Thakur, vice president of engineering at Google said: “You’ll see cards with things like sports highlights, top news, engaging videos, new music, stories to read and more. And now, your feed will not only be based on your interactions with Google, but also factor in what’s trending in your area and around the world.”


Users will also be able to follow topics straight from search results for things such as sports, movies, music and celebrities, showing updates on those topics in the feed.


Google said the new additions to the feed would roll out to US users immediately and internationally in the next couple of weeks.


google feed
The existing Google feed on an Android device. Photograph: Samuel Gibbs for the Guardian

While most of the new features are iterative, with some form of them available in the Google search apps already, the addition of the Google feed to the main desktop sites will mark one of the biggest changes to Google’s approach to search.


Google once had a personalised homepage called iGoogle, which resembled other web portals of the day and was available from May 2005 and discontinued in November 2013. But iGoogle was only shown to those who were logged in and had selected to use iGoogle, rather than the default simple search box Google homepage.


How it will look and work on the web and whether it will include the search company’s voice assistant Google Assistant is not yet known. The feed is likely to require users to log into Google to see it, and will probably resemble the tablet experience of the Google feed, with multiple card-containing columns with news posts, event updates and more. The mobile app feed also contains things such as boarding passes and calendar events based on things taken from Gmail and Google calendar.


Google already had an experience for Google Now on its Chromebooks, which included the search box and the feed containing everything that’s currently displayed on mobile devices. Rolling out that experience to the main Google.com homepage would almost instantly turn it into the biggest web portal available, dwarfing stalwarts Yahoo and Microsoft’s MSN and Bing.


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Google to radically change homepage for first time since 1996https://goo.gl/F5SmDx

Galaxy Note 8: Samsung's follow-up to exploding Note 7 to be unveiled on 23 August

https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgHh7O0o3o13QA2LjrDd5Wqr-ogifaaXJ6Kkl4We2sLyhfcCAwZywJoNHvVFn3TXYSnDIuzi7nRxzEFD63LOe7sLilTEOGHnaZBtNR3mFrpXDL4AN3llEF7yoIY2_6XzTomkFAzrYisT0g/s1600/Samsung%2527s+follow-up+to+exploding+Note+7+to+be+unveiled+on+23+August.jpg



Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Galaxy Note 8: Samsung’s follow-up to exploding Note 7 to be unveiled on 23 August” was written by Samuel Gibbs, for theguardian.com on Friday 21st July 2017 10.44 UTC


Samsung is to unveil the follow-up to its exploding Galaxy Note 7, expected to be called the Galaxy Note 8, on 23 August.


The South Korean electronics firm posted to Twitter a “save the date” for the unveiling of the Note 8 at one of the company’s “Unpacked” events, complete with a gif showing a representation of the new design.



The Note 8 is expected to take the design of the Samsung Galaxy S8 and S8+, which feature curved screens and minimal bezels both on the sides and at the top and bottom of the devices, to the next extreme.


The Note series has typically been the biggest of the top-end Samsung devices, with the Note 7 having a 5.7in screen with a 16:9 ratio, making it 0.2in bigger on the diagonal than last year’s 5.5in Galaxy S7 Edge. The Galaxy S8+ features a 6.2in screen with a longer screen format than previous Samsung devices, which means the Note 7 could have a screen even larger than that.


The Note series originally defined the large-screens smartphone “phablet” category in 2011, a device formfactor that has slowly moved from a niche product to the mainstream, with the majority of smartphones available with screens larger than 5in on the diagonal, and many larger than 5.5in, which was long considered gigantic.


But the Note 8 has some catching up to do. The Galaxy Note 7 launched to critical acclaim which didn’t foresee issues with the battery design that caused overheating and the phones to catch on fire. Samsung did not one, but two recalls as it attempted to fix the issues and resell the devices, but the problems forced it to be discontinued.


The company released results of an investigation that blamed flaws in design and production of batteries supplied by two battery makers. The recalls and brand damage limitation cost Samsung billions of pounds.


At the beginning of July, Samsung took reclaimed Note 7 devices and repackaged them with a smaller, safer battery to sell in limited quantities within South Korea as the Galaxy Note Fan Edition as a part of its efforts to minimise waste. Those efforts also include recycling recalled Note 7 handsets for materials.


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Galaxy Note 8: Samsung's follow-up to exploding Note 7 to be unveiled on 23 Augusthttps://goo.gl/X2LgsJ

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