Xorte logo

News Markets Groups

USA | Europe | Asia | World| Stocks | Commodities



Add a new RSS channel

 
 


Keywords

2024-09-12 18:00:46| Engadget

Chrome is getting a series of safety updates that could improve your security while browsing online. In a release, Google announced the new features, which include protecting against abusive notifications, limiting site permissions and reviewing extensions.    Safety Check, Chrome's security monitor, will now run continuously in the background to more readily take protective steps. The tool will let you know what steps it's taking, which should include removing permissions from sites you no longer visit and ones Google Safe Browsing believes are deceiving you into giving permission. It will also flag any alerts it deems you might not want and notify you of issues that require attention, like security issues. Plus, Safety Check on your desktop should alert you to any Chrome extensions that might pose a risk.  Google is also reducing the number of permissions that last for sites on Chrome for desktops or Android devices. The new feature will allow you to approve mic or camera access for one time only instead of always for the site. Instead, they will have to request your permission again on the next use. Plus, Google is also expanding the ability to unsubscribe from a site on Chrome with one button beyond Pixel devices to more Android ones.   This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/chromes-latest-safety-update-will-be-more-proactive-about-protecting-you-160046221.html?src=rss


Category: Marketing and Advertising

 

LATEST NEWS

2024-09-12 17:27:37| Engadget

Roland just released the Aira Compact P-6, a battery-powered sampler with a built-in microphone for capturing ideas quickly. Theres also a USB-C port and analog inputs for plugging in a higher-grade mic, a smartphone or an actual computer for even more sampling opportunities. Roland calls it a roving recorder, likely because it's nearly small enough to fit inside of a pocket. The P-6 can hold up to 48 samples at once, split across eight banks of six pads. There are four available sampling rates to suit different tastes, though the internal memory is on the smallish side. The keyboard lets you chop up and trigger these samples on the fly, in addition to playing samples polyphonically. Like many modern musical gadgets, the Aira Compact P-6 is something of a jack of all trades. Sampling is the main feature, of course, but this thing includes a granular synthesis engine and a 64 step sequencer. This sequencer is fairly feature-rich, with neat options like off-grid sequencing, sub-steps, micro-timing and a lot more. You can even manipulate samples in real time during the sequence, for improvisation purposes. There are also plenty of effects to make each sample your own. These include a vinyl simulator, a looper, a phaser, a resonator and a lo-fi emulator, among others. The granular synthesis engine allows for even more microscopic sound design" opportunities, with the ability to detune samples and adjust the grain shape. Roland If the idea of manipulating samples on a tiny device gives you the sweats, Roland offers a dedicated software suite called SampleTool. This brings even more features to the table, like downsampling, click removal and precise editing. The battery should get around three hours of use per charge, so make sure to bring along a charger while out and about. The Aira Compact P-6 costs $220 and is available now. As the name suggests, this sampler is a sibling product to the rest of the Aira Compact line, which are all fairly diminutive gadgets. Theres a drum machine, some synths, a vocoder and more.This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/audio/roland-just-released-an-almost-pocket-sized-sampler-with-a-built-in-mic-152737594.html?src=rss


Category: Marketing and Advertising

 

2024-09-12 16:27:56| Engadget

A decade after its untimely demise and countless clones later, the original Flappy Bird is coming back. Under the banner of the Flappy Bird Foundation, some dedicated fans acquired the rights to the viral mobile hit, per a press release. Flappy Bird will return to iOS and Android as native mobile apps in 2025. But you'll be able to play it elsewhere before then. The team is planning to bring the game to other platforms, such as desktop and the mobile web, starting this fall. The Flappy Bird Foundation has some big plans for the revived title, and it showed off some of those in a trailer. While maintaining the original game design is key, you can also expect new modes, characters, progression and multiplayer challenges. A blend of difficult gameplay and a crude art style (including pipes that seemed very inspired by Mario games) helped Flappy Bird become a sensation. The challenge posed by tapping the screen to flap the birds wings and squeeze through gaps between pipes caught the imagination of legions of gamers more than 100 million of them, according to the Flappy Bird Foundation. Flappy Bird debuted in May 2013 but it didn't blow up until the following January. Developer Dong Nguyen soon revealed that the game was raking in $50,000 per day from advertising. However, Flappy Bird's success was all too much for its creator. Nguyen removed it from the App Store and Google Play in February 2014 for seemingly altruistic reasons (though he brought another version to Amazon Fire TV later that year). Flappy Bird was designed to play in a few minutes when you are relaxed, he told Forbes. But it happened to become an addictive product. I think it has become a problem. To solve that problem, it's best to take down Flappy Bird. It's gone forever." Thankfully for fans (but maybe not people who were reselling old phones with the original game still installed), "forever" isn't necessarily permanent.This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/flappy-bird-is-finally-returning-10-years-after-its-demise-142756765.html?src=rss


Category: Marketing and Advertising

 

Latest from this category

20.09Qualcomm is reportedly eyeing a takeover of Intel
20.09From Within: How Marketing Employee Improvement Drives Business Success
20.09The Power of Lotteries in Advertising: Stunning Success Stories Revealed
20.09Twitch will do a better job of telling rulebreakers why their accounts were suspended
20.0928 Years Later was partially shot on an iPhone 15 Pro Max
20.09Cards Against Humanity is suing SpaceX for trespassing and filling its property with space garbage
20.09A PS5 system update squashes those pesky Final Fantasy XVI bugs
20.09Here's what a TV show based on Untitled Goose Game could have been like
Marketing and Advertising »

All news

21.09These 5 BSE smallcap stocks see price and volume jump in last 3 days
21.09Life Insurance sector has strong growth potential amid regulatory changes; HDFC Life, SBI Life top picks
21.09Wall St Week Ahead: Investor focus turns to data, election, earnings after Fed cut
21.09Evening Headlines
21.09Stocks Slightly Lower into Final Hour on Escalating Mid-East Regional War Fears, Earnings Outlook Jitters, Technical Selling, Transport/Homebuilding Sector Weakness
20.09Qualcomm is reportedly eyeing a takeover of Intel
20.09Afternoon Market Internals
20.09Monday's Earnings/Economic Releases of Note; Market Movers
More »
Privacy policy . Copyright . Contact form .