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FCC commissioner calls for crackdown on sales of phone location data

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Starks added a sense of urgency, noting that the FCC usually only has a year to do something before the statute of limitations expires.

Whether or not anything happens is far from guaranteed. Starks noted that Chairman Ajit Pai “sets the agenda” at the FCC, and it’s up to him to say if and how the agency cracks down on the sale of location data. And simply speaking, the odds of that happening aren’t great. Pai’s FCC has a poor track record with privacy and has generally shied away from strong actions against wireless providers. While we wouldn’t rule something out, the lack of policing so far doesn’t suggest the FCC chair will have a sudden change of heart.

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Nokia’s X71 phone has a hole-punch display and a 48-megapixel camera

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It’s debuting in Taiwan for around $385, but could make it to the west as the Nokia 8.1 Plus, according to GSM Arena. That price positions it between the $490 Huawei Nova 4 and Xiaomi’s $203 Redmi Note 7 Pro, both of which carry the same Sony 48-megapixel sensor featured here.

As for specs, the X71 is a mid-range Android One phone throughout, from its Snapdragon 660 processor and LCD display right down to its near-stock version of Android Pie. It also packs 6GB of RAM, 128GB of expandable storage, and a 3,500mAh battery. But the real talking point is that hole-punch display. Not only does it bestow the 6.39-inch phone with a quoted 93 percent screen-to-body ratio, but it also indicates a new direction for Nokia (albeit a route tried and tested by its rivals).

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‘No Man’s Sky VR’ is the purest way to explore the universe

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All of these games, No Man’s Sky included, were not particularly well received at launch. However, each team kept the updates rolling in, and they eventually found themselves on awards lists the world over. Fortnite added battle royale and transformed into a multi-billion-dollar franchise; Rainbow Six Siege embraced esports and DLC, and garnered 40 million registered players; Warframe chased an aggressive content-release schedule and listened to its core audience, and it’s now one of Digital Extremes’ most successful games.

No Man's Sky VR

No Man’s Sky rolled out a steady stream of updates to deliver the features that fans really wanted (and expected from day one), and climbed its way up from “cautionary indie tale” to “Best Ongoing Game award nominee” in just two years. Today, it’s a universe-sized astronaut simulator packed with quintillions of planets, absurd creatures on land and sea, plus crafting, mining, building, flying and oodles of exploration. This summer, the gigantic No Man’s Sky Beyond update goes live, bringing three major features to the game, two of which are public knowledge: MMO-style mechanics and, announced just last week, VR support.

Hello Games is bringing No Man’s Sky to every headset on the market via Steam VR and PlayStation 4 for PSVR (with an exclusive physical edition as well as a digital offering). No Man’s Sky VR isn’t a separate mode; instead, it incorporates virtual-reality players into the existing game. VR players can join games with non-VR friends, and they’ll receive all future updates. Same game, new input method.

“It feels very comfortable to me in terms of a fit for No Man’s Sky,” Murray said. “If I’m honest, we’re supporting VR because we want to. Genuinely, I think it’s creatively led more than necessarily commercially or anything like that. It just feels like a good fit.”

After spending 15 minutes with the game in full VR glory, I can’t help agreeing with Murray. No Man’s Sky makes sense in VR, putting you directly in the space suit — jetpack, multi-tool, inventory and all. The multi-tool, which mines minerals, blows holes in the terrain and builds towering structures out of nearby organic matter, lives in your right hand, while inventory can be pulled up as a hologram on your left arm, streamlining the crafting process.

Walking involves a teleportation system that serves its purpose just fine, though there are a handful of other ways to navigate new planets and the surrounding interstellar sea. First, there’s the jetpack, which is loads of fun yet slightly disorienting in VR, with the most potential to cause headset-related nausea. However, No Man’s Sky VR also has vehicles, swimming and — this is the big one — spaceships.

No Man's Sky VR

It takes two hands to steer the ship, pressing and pulling the throttle with your left hand and using a joystick to direct with your right, and the entire process is visceral in a way that only VR can provide. Flying a ship in VR — racing over mysterious planets and up, out of the atmosphere in a tunnel of light and space dust — is an absolutely fantastic feeling. Then, the hyperdrive clicks off and the galaxies finally come into focus. Asteroids loom like mountainsides, and flying between them is smooth, thrilling and profoundly peaceful. Planets sit, suspended in the ink of space, impossibly large. Everything is frightening and gorgeous in equal measure, shining a light on the incomprehensible size of the universe, the planets, the space rocks, the ship, yourself.

This sense of scale and immersion simply can’t translate on a 2D screen.

If the goal of No Man’s Sky is to make players feel simultaneously miniscule yet deeply connected to a network of atoms that stretches in all directions, forever — if the goal of No Man’s Sky is to make players feel, full-stop — then VR is the best way to play. This sense of scale and immersion simply can’t translate on a 2D screen.

Murray has had a long time to think about interstellar scale. His parents traveled a lot when he was young, and at one point they ended up running a million-and-a-quarter acre ranch in the Australian outback. At night, Murray would stare at the dense blanket of stars and dream about their depths; by day, he would play Elite, devour everything sci-fi and program his own games. No Man’s Sky VR is the unique result of decades of stargazing and coding.

“If five-year-old me could see that you’re putting on a headset and being in this world, he would be very excited about that,” Murray said.

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The meatless Burger King Whopper

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Here’s the Impossible Whopper, coming to St. Louis.
The Impossible Burger is coming to Burger King

If you’re not a fan of White Castle sliders, then how about a Whopper with a plant-based patty? That’s the latest project from Impossible Burger, which is debuting the Impossible Whopper in Missouri. Will it go elsewhere? I hope so.


The only question left is how much one will cost.
Kia crammed a lot of range and tech into its Soul EV

Kia upgraded the electric Soul with longer range, upgraded tech and a design that looks like it was pulled from The Empire Strikes Back. Having experienced the gas version, its high-level of quality is no surprise, but Roberto Baldwin didn’t anticipate how well it corners. With its 64kWh battery pack under the seats, the low center of gravity reduces the crossover’s body roll and makes for spirited driving.


You know you love reading about routers.
TP-Link’s new mesh WiFi system is big on range and low in price

For $180, you get a three-pack of white cylindrical WiFi hubs that can cover up to 5,500 square feet of space. Aside from being cheaper than offerings from Amazon-owned Eero, Samsung and Google, TP-Link is also promising ease of use. Knowing it will probably attract newbies at this entry-level price point, it says set-up is a breeze using the Deco app for iOS or Android — which can help you find the best place to put Deco nodes around your pad.


R.I.P. Inbox.
Gmail continues to define email 15 years on

On April 1st, 2004, Google debuted a product that was decidedly not a joke: Gmail. It was a service that revolutionized web mail, so much so that it has become an integral part of our daily lives. Nicole Lee takes a look at where it’s been (remember the invites?) and where it might go, beyond upgrades like scheduled send times for emails.


Time for an upgrade?
Valve’s Index VR headset will ship June 15th

While Valve didn’t provide vivid detail about the Index, it showed that the headset would include its own headphones. It also seems you’ll have the option of buying separate base stations and Knuckles motion controllers (now Valve Index Controllers) on top of any potential bundles. After Steam leaked the release date, Valve confirmed to Engadget that it will be revealed in May and start shipping June 15th.


Remember the old one? It’s just like that.
Huawei MateBook X Pro review (2019)

Huawei has delivered the tiniest of incremental updates to its winning MateBook X Pro. Offering a blend of good looks and power, it’s expensive but offers enough grunt for professionals who need an ultraportable.

But wait, there’s more…


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Netflix’s new superhero movie may star Melissa McCarthy and Octavia Spencer

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It definitely sounds like an origin story, though it’s still unclear if the two stars will get their powers from being bitten by insects, being subjected to top-secret human experimentation or being involved in vehicular accidents with truckloads of dangerous chemicals. Details are still under wraps, perhaps until Netflix is ready to announce that the award-winning actresses have truly signed on.

Entertainment Weekly has spilled one particular detail that will help you set your expectations, though: the film will not be R-rated like Falcon’s The Happytime Murders puppet comedy crime flick. It will reportedly appeal to a broader audience, so the duo’s superpowered hijinks will likely be adventures the whole family can enjoy.

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NASA says satellite that India shot down may threaten the ISS

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In the middle of an election on March 27, India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced the success of “Mission Shakti,” a missile test that destroyed one of the nation’s satellites. It’s the fourth country to have completed such a mission, after the US, Russia and China. India’s government wrote that the test was carried out low enough to ensure that any debris generated would fall back to Earth within weeks.

However, a simulation (above) shows the impressive destruction and debris field created by the test. NASA, along with the US Strategic Command’s Combined Space Operations Center, estimated that the risk to the ISS has increased by 44 percent over the last ten days. Bridenstine later said that the astronauts are still safe, and that the ISS could be maneuvered if need be to avoid the debris. “The good thing is, it’s low enough in Earth orbit that over time this will all dissipate,” he said.

China conducted probably the most infamous missile test in 2007, destroying a satellite at a much higher orbit of 537 miles. Debris from that test still circles the Earth, threatening other satellites and missions. Several nations, including China and the US, are working on various schemes to remove space junk by using lasers, harpoons and nets.

The biggest fear of space junk is “Kessler Syndrome,” a cascade of collisions that could destroy much of the infrastructure in space. That’s the disaster behind the movie Gravity that forced astronauts to evacuate the space shuttle and escape in a Chinese capsule. “At the end of the day we have to be clear also that these activities are not sustainable or compatible with human spaceflight,” said Bridenstine.

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NASA is testing Jupiter moon probe’s data-beaming antenna

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The Clipper team is assessing its performance in the electromagnetic test facility’s controlled environment, much like how the Mars helicopter team used JPL’s Space Simulator to prove their unmanned flying vehicle works. In particular, they’re making sure it’s highly accurate when it comes to pointing to its targets, since that’s the key to sending back high-resolution images and huge volumes of scientific data.

“The measurements that will be performed in the ETR will demonstrate that the Europa Clipper mission can get a large volume of scientific data back to Earth and ultimately determine the habitability of Europa,” said Thomas Magner, Europa Clipper’s assistant project manager.

Scientists believe the moon’s thick, icy crust is hiding a global salty ocean. A NASA official once said that it’s one of the “most promising places that could potentially harbor life in the solar system” outside of our own planet and is definitely worth a visit.

While the Clipper team is almost done with its current round of tests, they’re planning to conduct more in the same facility before the spacecraft blasts off. The Europa Clipper is expected to launch sometime in 2020 and will take three to seven years to reach the gas giant, depending on its launch vehicle and other factors.

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Deleted ‘Borderlands 3’ tweet suggests a September 13th release date

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In another deleted tweet, Gearbox shared a video of a few seconds from the game along with the Epic Games Store logo, which suggests Borderlands 3 will be on sale there. Gearbox CEO Randy Pitchford responded to the apparent gaffes (bearing in mind it’s April 1st) with a few tweets of his own. He noted publisher 2K/Take Two decides on distribution, but strongly hinted his studio’s return to the world of Borderlands may be a six-month exclusive on the Epic Games Store. In any case, we should find out plenty more about the Borderlands 3 release plans on Wednesday.



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What's on TV: 'Killing Eve,' 'Sabrina' and 'The Tick'

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This week is a little light on big videogame releases, but sports fans can tune into the closing rounds of the men's NCAA basketball tournament. Fans of streaming have their pick of series, with The Twilight Zone ((you can watch the first episode for…

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Cloudflare’s privacy-focused DNS app adds a free VPN

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Warp takes the next step by encrypting your connection to CloudFlare’s servers and aims to reduce data use by caching and compressing content where possible. Using it as a VPN also masks all internet traffic on your phone, including the rest of your apps.

Warp

With Warp, Cloudflare promises to keep all the privacy protections that were in place with 1.1.1.1. The company promises never to sell your browsing data, use targeted advertising or ask for any personally identifiable information such as your name or email address in order to sign-up.

The VPN will operate on a freemium model, allowing customers to upgrade to Warp+ for faster performance with a “low monthly fee.” While Warp isn’t available to all 1.1.1.1. users yet, you can place your name on a waitlist in the app.

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