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13 votes
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Apple updates 13-inch MacBook Pro with Magic Keyboard, double the storage, and faster performance
15 votes -
Why is TV 29.97 frames per second?
10 votes -
Recommendation request: Modern wifi routers
I'm running out of time to finish the spend requirements on a credit card promotion. I was planning on buying a VR headset, but I realized there was something that would actually be much more...
I'm running out of time to finish the spend requirements on a credit card promotion. I was planning on buying a VR headset, but I realized there was something that would actually be much more useful; a new router.
The market for consumer routers has been really strange; We are on the sixth generation, yet it's super common for consumer routers to be two or three generations behind, especially the less expensive ones. So much of the stuff on the market only goes up to 802.11n, and half of the time the firmware they include is halfway broken or is missing important features.
So I'm looking for a router that is relatively future-proof. I want Wifi 6. I want something that won't be interrupted by the microwave. Open source firmware would be excellent, but not a requirement. I don't need mesh networking; my house is not that big. I do want it to be relatively inexpensive; I'd consider $300 to be a hard limit unless someone has a persuasive arguement to justify the cost.
I would also prefer to avoid Netgear. I have no idea how they stay in business with the mountains of problems I have had with their products and their horrible support. The last time I owned a Netgear product, I was forced to give them my email address to download the driver and they illegally added it to their marketing mailing list without my permission. I don't do business with people who betray me.
18 votes -
iPhone SE (2020) review
22 votes -
John Gruber reviews the iPad Magic Keyboard
5 votes -
Video of a still functioning 1958 FACOM 128B Japanese Relay Computer
7 votes -
Nintendo Switch is sold out everywhere, so this guy built one himself
11 votes -
LIDAR: Peek into the future with iPad Pro
6 votes -
Google has made significant progress toward developing its own processor to power future versions of its Pixel phones and Chromebooks
11 votes -
Recommendations for a simple video chat system for Grandma
Grandma is understimulated in assisted living, and while Mom is looking into ways to either bunk with her, or drag her back to our place, I'm exploring other options. Her apartment does have...
Grandma is understimulated in assisted living, and while Mom is looking into ways to either bunk with her, or drag her back to our place, I'm exploring other options. Her apartment does have wireless internet, so we could set up some sort of telepresence or video calling device, but even something as simple as a Relay or a KC2 isn't great, because it loses power, and needs to be explained to her.
I'm thinking that we might have better luck with a Tablet or a PC solution, and I do have a Kindle Fire (5th Gen?) and an off brand Windows 10 tablet around, and I am open to a Pi Project or speciality devices, but it has to be simple enough to plug and play, and the dream would be if it could start a video chat without the receiver having to pick up, or at least as simple as a nurse being able to come in and start a call. Any suggestions?
18 votes -
The ancient computers in the Boeing 737 Max are holding up a fix
10 votes -
Report from Ming-Chi Kuo: Apple to launch several Macs with Arm-based processors in 2021, USB4 support coming to Macs in 2022
5 votes -
Alternatives to desktop speakers
For the past few years I haven't had any speakers connected to my PC due to a lack of space in my room and on my desk. For the most part I have been using a pair of headphones which are great, but...
For the past few years I haven't had any speakers connected to my PC due to a lack of space in my room and on my desk. For the most part I have been using a pair of headphones which are great, but they aren't the most comfortable thing when I just want to watch YouTube on my second monitor and keep my ears available for my significant other.
So now I am looking for alternatives to desktop speakers. Right now I am either thinking of:
I think the bone conduction headphones would give me a ton of options to use while I am biking and sitting at my desk. The Bose on the other hand have excellent sound quality. A small, discrete speaker bar may also fit my needs if there are any good ones that can be recommended. Any thoughts? Have I missed an audio product that may fit my needs that you could recommend?
6 votes -
John Gruber reviews the new 2020 MacBook Air
5 votes -
Inside PlayStation 5: The specs and the tech that deliver Sony's next-gen vision
15 votes -
Inside Xbox Series X: The full technical specs
5 votes -
Inexpensive, reusable electrodes for EMG
3 votes -
How bad is this $20 FATTYDOVE "Racing" 120GB SSD?
6 votes -
Official Raspberry Pi 4 Desktop Kit - Is it worth the price?
6 votes -
New ThinkPads with Ryzen 4000 announced
13 votes -
Steam hardware & software survey: January 2020
11 votes -
Feeding an ebook addiction
I read a lot (my wife gets mad at me because I read so much faster than her), and these days I do most of my reading on Kindle. Fortunately there are ways to do this for little or no money. If...
I read a lot (my wife gets mad at me because I read so much faster than her), and these days I do most of my reading on Kindle. Fortunately there are ways to do this for little or no money. If you're interested here are some ways to get more ebooks without spending a lot of money:
- Project Gutenberg is the grandparent of free book sites, with 60K+ public domain works.
- MobileRead has an entire forum for fresh uploads of public domain works in Kindle format (they have other formats too).
- The Libby app (iOS/Android) makes it trivially easy to borrow ebooks from your local library.
- The Hoopla app (iOS/Android) is another way to borrow from your local library.
- The Library Extension browser add-on (Chrome/Firefox) will alert you when a book that you're looking at online (say, on an Amazon product page) is available at your local library. (This covers print as well as ebooks)
- BookBub will send you a daily email with books that are currently on sale at the major ebook stores.
- I'm not sure how I got into this one; I think it was when I registered a new Kindle for Christmas. But in any case, Amazon is currently in the mode of offering me a $1 ebook credit on every order I have shipped, as long as I'm willing to take non-prime shipping and wait a few days. As far as I can tell this option is available on every Prime order, so I shamelessly take advantage. Need a $4 USB-C cable to replace one that's fraying? Hey, I can get it a few days later and add $1 to my credits. Until they stop this, I'll keep breaking every order up into individual single-item orders. It's not even worse for the planet, because their warehouse software recombines everything into as few boxes as it can anyhow.
17 votes -
Budget wireless mechanical keyboard round-up 2020
5 votes -
What I want to see from 2020 ThinkPads
18 votes -
Why I won't buy an iPad – ten years later
13 votes -
MNT Reform open source, modular laptop crowdfunding campaign launches in February
9 votes -
AirPods Pro owners complain of worse noise cancellation after firmware updates—some people are convinced Apple’s latest earbuds worked better at launch
7 votes -
Raspberry Pi 4 CRT-based VR Headset
15 votes -
The story of how Microsoft's Kinect grew from a skunkworks motion-controller project into a company-wide effort with massive resources, and was eventually abandoned
6 votes -
Apparently Samsung just put a removable battery in one of it's new phones
6 votes -
CES2020: Cyrcle Phone is round and has two headphone jacks
8 votes -
Alienware’s Concept UFO prototype imagines a gaming PC that’s shaped like a Nintendo Switch
12 votes -
Information, photos, and demo of Intel's first discrete graphics card: the DG1, based on Xe graphics architecture
9 votes -
The Light Phone
20 votes -
Choosing a new printer
I'm thinking about getting a new printer. My needs are basically to print out textual documents 2-3 times per month from macOS. I don't need to print photos. I will not buy an inkjet because of...
I'm thinking about getting a new printer. My needs are basically to print out textual documents 2-3 times per month from macOS. I don't need to print photos. I will not buy an inkjet because of the outrageous price of the ink. I would like to have fax support (my spouse sees a lot of doctors and they still use fax machines a lot, and we're not comfortable sending personal medical info via a fax service on the web), and it would be nice if we could also scan documents. So I'm thinking a multi-function device.
We currently have a Brother 7840W MFC with print, fax, copy, and scan. It's over 10 years old (maybe 15?) and I dislike it. It's been slowly losing functionality over the past 5+ years. The WiFi went out, but I was able to connect it via wired ethernet to a computer and share it from there. The drivers insist that there's a paper jam, but there isn't and it prints just fine (but sounds like some of the internal mechanical components are going to die any day now.) The UI of the printer is awful. I recall having to use the phone pad to enter my WiFi password, and it was like texting on a Motorola StarTAC. (Like if you want the letter "C" press the number "2" three times, etc.) The drivers and related software don't work like normal macOS software. (Disclosure: I also once wrote a scanner driver for Brother and it was horrible, but they shipped it, so I'm not real comfortable putting their software on my computer. But that was 25 years ago, so maybe they're better now?)
I've heard horrible things about the drivers and software of most other major printer makers - HP, Epson, Lexmark, etc. I'm guessing what I'm looking for doesn't exist, but I just want a multi-function device in as small a package as is reasonable, and with a UI on the device and software that doesn't suck and that won't die on me in < 5 years. Does such a thing exist?
17 votes -
AirPods Pro Bluetooth audio latency analysis
7 votes -
PinePhone: Everything you need to know about the $150 Linux-powered phone
25 votes -
Angela Sheehan is developing wearable tech with whimsy
5 votes -
Apple's modular Mac Pro now available to order
13 votes -
Apple will reportedly release an iPhone without any ports in 2021
22 votes -
Pour one out for the Steam Controller, now on closeout sale for just $5 plus shipping
27 votes -
MacBook Pro 16" 2019 teardown
8 votes -
Tilt Five: Holographic Tabletop Gaming - Augmented Reality glasses that open up a whole new holographic game space
12 votes -
How to find AV hardware for specific requirements?
Apologies if this belongs in ~tech, that group is more on topic than ~talk but I think it’s for news and links more than open questions. (Edit: Looks like it's been moved to ~comp, I guess that...
Apologies if this belongs in ~tech, that group is more on topic than ~talk but I think it’s for news and links more than open questions. (Edit: Looks like it's been moved to ~comp, I guess that works too.)
I’m looking for an HDMI switch. It needs to support at least 4K resolution and have at least 10 input ports. It also needs to have Toslink audio out. Remote control support is a “nice to have” but physical buttons are fine too.
I’m having trouble locating a product like this online. Not sure if I’m just using the wrong terms or if it doesn’t actually exist. Can any Tildes gearheads give me a pointer here?
8 votes -
The best game controller buttons of all time
9 votes -
Steve Guttenberg: ”Apple AirPods Pro, it's $249, but sounds like a cheap, throwaway headphone“
19 votes -
Apple reveals new AirPods Pro, available October 30
9 votes -
Google Pixel 4 and 4XL review: More than the sum of its sensors
5 votes -
Announcements from Google's 2019 "Made by Google" event
14 votes