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Audio-Technica ATH-CK3TW review: Decent, affordable true wireless earbuds

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For those touch controls, Audio-Technica put volume adjustments on the left side and track controls on the right. A single tap on the left earbud increases volume while a double tap will lower it. This sounds simple enough, but when you want to turn the audio way down, and you’re in a hurry to do so, it feels like you’re tapping forever. Not to mention that you have to be careful to double tap each time. On the right side, single tap for play/pause, double tap to skip tracks forward and triple tap to skip tracks backwards. This works better than the volume control, but mastering that triple tap takes some practice. A long press on the right earbud will activate you voice assistant of choice.

Audio-Technica did include one feature I don’t always see on mid- to low-priced earbuds: automatic pausing/ear detection. For some reason it isn’t enabled by default, and turning it on is a guessing game that took me a few tries, but it’s there and it works well. If earbuds don’t automatically pause when you remove them, it usually means you have to scramble for your phone or deal with the low hum of audio while you have a conversation. It’s not ideal, so I’m glad to see a handy feature like this make the cut on a $119 set.

In terms of sound quality, the ATH-CK3TW is a mixed bag. There is some of the “trademark” Audio-Technica audio profile here: great clarity and a warm overall tone. Treble, mids and bass stand on their own, but never overpower one another. Unlike the ATH-CKS5TW, that remains consistent even at high volumes. In other words, treble doesn’t begin to dominate the mix to the point of becoming unpleasant. My main gripe with the sound on the ATH-CK3TW is that it feels flat. The audio doesn’t have the openness or depth that the best true wireless earbuds offer. Here, bombastic metal like Gojira or ambient rock like Caspian loses its teeth, and it’s left sounding compressed, lacking the energy or texture I know the music exhibits.

Audio-Technica ATH-CK3TW review

Audio-Technica is promising six hours of battery life on the buds themselves here. In 2020, that’s … fine. A lot of the competition now offers around 10 hours, and A-T itself has a model that can manage over 15. Of course, these are firmly a budget option, so I’m willing to forgive this figure a bit. Indeed, the ATH-CK3TW lasted just over seven hours during my tests. What’s more, the included charging case holds 30 additional hours of play time. That’s five full charges. Most of the competition only offers two or three. Based on my experience, you won’t be reaching for a cable very often.

At $119, Audio-Technica is offering a much more affordable option than many of the big names in headphones. Before now, its cheapest set was the ATH-CKS5TW at $169. Those earbuds do have insane battery life, but as I’ve already mentioned, the overall audio quality was disappointing. Jabra’s Elite 75t is another great option, but they’re even more expensive at $180. And the best is still Sony’s WF-1000XM3, which goes for around $230 (unless you can find a deal). There are clear caveats with the ATH-CK3TW, but if other companies follow suit, hopefully we’ll see some compelling mid-range options from the likes of Sony, Sennheiser and others.

The Audio-Technica ATH-CK3TW has a very important thing working is its favor: price. Even though Apple has helped make true wireless earbuds a popular accessory, the cheapest AirPods still start at $159 (barring a sale). If a company can knock an additional $40 or more off the asking price and still muster good sound, solid features and decent battery life, that’s huge. Audio-Technica gave that endeavor a valiant effort, but unfortunately you’ll have to decide which, or how many, sacrifices you’re willing to live with in the interest of saving money.

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Engadget giveaway: Win a Google Pixel 3a courtesy of TurboTax!

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It’s tax time again, and while Intuit’s TurboTax has free filing options, it also offers online services with premium support from credentialed CPAs, tax attorneys and advisors. If you’re curious about going beyond a basic W2-and-done filing and would like to leverage informed assistance without office visits, TurboTax Live could be a helpful option. The service can save you a lot of research and also guide you towards maximizing your income, especially if you’re self-employed. You can scan and upload documents, file from your computer or mobile device and chat with tax pros on-demand or at scheduled times. If you’re not that chatty, there are even expert offline reviews via email.

This week, Intuit has offered us a Google Pixel 3a for one lucky reader, along with a TurboTax Live code to enjoy filing and credentialed support to help you cruise through this year’s taxes with confidence. The Pixel 3a continues to be a solid smartphone with an especially good camera for taking everyday snaps or capturing your W2 in a click to save yourself some data entry. All you need to do is head to the Rafflecopter widget below for up to four chances at winning. Good luck and get those taxes done!

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Dehydrated food goes from hiking to haute cuisine

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After we finished hacking up herbs, I went on my merry way. I’d bought a Nesco dehydrator (at only 1/5 of the cost of a restaurant-quality device), and it was all pristine and white at home, just waiting for me to mess it up.

Whereas Price’s looked like a run-of-the-mill wine fridge, mine resembled a small igloo for a miniature sled dog or a plastic version of Amy Winehouse’s beehive hairdo. He’d recommended pouring the tomato and chili purees into two pans then placing them in the dehydrator, but my round receptacle wouldn’t accommodate that plan.

Why not use foil, then? I layered a few pieces on to two levels of the Winehouse beehive, then carefully dribbled in the purees I’d made from canned, diced tomatoes and chipotle peppers in adobo. Those ingredients are practically the same as heirloom tomatoes and fresh chilies that have been fermented in salt and water, right?

I turned on the dehydrator and let a wave of noise wash over me — I hadn’t expected this, but it was louder than the grinder I use to make chocolate at home. I usually stow that in my NYC-sized closet for 24 hours or so when it’s working away, but the Winehive was much too large.

Six ear-splitting hours later, I decided I couldn’t wait the 16 hours Price had instructed. I turned off the dehydrator and opened it up, hoping to find thick pastes of both ingredients. Instead I’d made… paint! Van Gogh himself would have been envious of the texture of this substance, which had shellacked itself on to the foil as if it were the makings of a masterpiece.

Abandoning one disaster for another, I moved on to the flowers. Like my canned ingredients, who needed fresh hibiscus or peonies from local farms when I could get perfectly nice bouquets at my local bodega, flown in straight from Central and South America? Front and center in the bouquet bloomed a red rose, and since rose was one of the first prized flavorings in the history of the world (along with salt, sugar and, eventually, vanilla), it called out to me.

Before I dehydrated them, the rose petals tasted a bit like chewy plastic, but three hours at 95 degrees really concentrated the aroma of my great grandma Sara, with more than a hint of bitterness from the pesticides most likely used on the crops. (I’d washed them as Price had instructed, gently in a bowl of cool water, but alas.)

I’d made… paint!

Honestly, I’m amazed I let the whole thing brew for three hours, because half an hour in, the pollen being distributed throughout my house via the dehydrator’s open-air tunnel gave me the wickedest allergy attack I’ve had since I put my face in a litter of kittens. I’m also pretty sure I dislocated something with the force of my sneezes. But once my eyes had dried, I powdered the petals in a coffee grinder, which, with its stale bean crumbs, added a nice depth of flavor.

Then it was time to try the tomatoes and the chilies once again, making sure that I put much thicker scoops into the machine this time. And it worked! After only three hours in the Winehive, the pastes were ready to blend with the powdered flowers and the almost two dozen other ingredients in the recipe, including urfa biber, a kind of Turkish chile that can only be found at approximately one and a half spice shops in New York City. Price’s recipe makes boatloads of harissa, but after combining everything, I had a scant cup.

Sure, I could have made a dish imitative of Il Fiorista’s, but since I’d mastered the art of dehydration, I wanted to push it to the next level. So if my neighbors smell something funny in the hallway, it’s probably the last piece of my magnum opus: dehydrated prawn strips for my ingenious harissa “fruit” leather over polenta pellets. Truly high class.

Images: Il Fiorista (flowers spread, prawn and harissa); Megan Giller (dehydrator, contained flowers)

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Pinterest lets users virtually try on makeup

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With the launch, Pinterest joins dozens of other brands and platforms offering similar virtual beauty offerings. IL MAKIAGE rolled out its shade-matching algorithm last year, while YouTube and Amazon both now offer similar try-on features. L’Oreal, Benefit and Neutrogena are also on board.

Unlike some other tools, though, Pinterest says it wants shoppers to celebrate their “authentic selves” and as such, Try On doesn’t come with any skin smoothing or image altering effects. It’s also integrated the tool with its skin tone range feature, so Pinners can see similar lip shades on skin tones that match their own.

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The Morning After: How Billie Eilish made that Grammy-winning album

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Meet DoubleTake.FiLMiC’s multi-camera video tech comes to the iPhone 11

Ever since Apple’s big mobile launch event, fans have been waiting for the software that will allow them to use all of the iPhone’s cameras to record video at once. Just choose which lenses you want to capture footage with (you’ll need a Pro model to use both the wide- and ultra-wide rear cameras at the same time), set focus and you’re ready to go. It can format the various inputs as a split screen or as picture-in-picture. Oh, and did we mention that the DoubleTake app is free?


Where’s Scarlett Johansson?Netflix’s ‘Ghost in the Shell: SAC_2045’ trailer reignites the CG vs. hand-drawn debate

Take a look for yourself and decide if it’s worthy of standing next to the originals.


‘This is for all the kids who make music in their bedrooms.’Billie Eilish proved anyone can access Grammy-winning gear

Cherlynn Low recounts how Billie Eilish recorded her multiple-Grammy-winning album with equipment that costs a lot less than what’s used for most productions of that caliber. According to her brother/producer, FINNEAS, Billie used a pair of $200 Yamaha HS5 nearfield monitors with an H8S subwoofer ($450), a Universal Audio Apollo 8 interface and Apple’s Logic Pro X.


The plant will build trucks and SUVs.GM spends $2.2 billion to set up an EV-only plant in Detroit

On Monday morning, GM revealed plans for a $2.2 billion investment that will turn the Detroit-Hamtramck facility into its first assembly plant completely devoted to EVs. GM is planning to start building an all-electric truck in late 2021, followed soon after by the Cruise Origin ride sharing vehicle.


The Elite line means business, but in this case, it offers stylish mainstream looks.Review: HP’s Elite Dragonfly laptop

Cherlynn gives her verdict on the Elite Dragonfly, which is a business laptop in name only. With its light weight, small size and attractive design, the Dragonfly looks more like a stylish ultraportable than a clunky notebook your company’s IT department handed to you. It offers powerful multitasking chops, though you won’t be able to play many games on it. The Dragonfly’s battery life may also lag behind some of its rivals, but is still long enough to get you beyond a work day.


Featuring! Esports studios! Gaming playgrounds! And! Complimentary breakfasts!Atari-themed gaming hotels are coming to eight US cities

Atari might not have the cultural cachet it used to, but that isn’t going to stop it cashing in on brand recognition and nostalgia. Next challenge? The hospitality industry. Atari will license its name and branding to a real estate developer, which will build eight hotels across the US. The first location will break ground this year in Phoenix. Others in Austin, Chicago, Denver, Las Vegas, San Francisco, San Jose and Seattle will follow.

The main draw of the Atari hotels will likely be their esports studios. There are no details about what these will include, but each hotel will also have an “Atari gaming playground.” Assuming the esports studios are venues where pros compete, the “playgrounds” could be guest lounges equipped with gaming PCs. The hotels will have a few accoutrements beyond the standard pool and gym — restaurants, bars, bakeries and movie theaters will also feature, according to plans.

But wait, there’s more…


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Amazon workers risk their jobs to attack the company over climate policies

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The company changed its rules on external communications in September 2019 after the Amazon Employees For Climate Justice group revealed that it intends to walk out in support of the youth-led Global Climate Strike. Jeff Bezos listened and announced that Amazon will work towards relying solely on renewable energy by 2030 and having net zero carbon emissions by 2040. Shortly after that though, the tech giant introduced a policy that prohibits employees from publicly talking about the company’s business without prior approval from management.

Earlier this month, Amazon told at least two employees that they could be fired for publicly criticizing the company’s environmental policies. They were accused of violating the company’s external communications policy, because they provided quotes to The Washington Post about how Amazon’s cloud computing business contributes to oil- and gas-company exploration. Members of the Amazon Employees For Climate Justice group asked their peers to speak up in support of those employees and to protest the company’s communications rules.

They wrote in their letter calling for action:

“Don’t get us wrong: some comms policies make a ton of sense (i.e. for confidential projects). But allowing a corporation to silence us on its contribution to the climate crisis is a clear overreach of comms policy, and effectively demands we give up our basic humanity and integrity in order to be employees. And, it’s not just about climate: it’s also about our ability to speak up on other issues like racism and sexism in tech, treatment of warehouse workers, donations to anti-LGBTQ politicians, and complicity with ICE.”

Amazon says employees are free to talk about these issues with other employees and that they can voice their opinions at all-hands meetings and at lunches with executives. However, the company seems to be set on enforcing its external communications policies. Spokesperson Jaci Anderson told CNBC:

“While all employees are welcome to engage constructively with any of the many teams inside Amazon that work on sustainability and other topics, we do enforce our external communications policy and will not allow employees to publicly disparage or misrepresent the company or the hard work of their colleagues who are developing solutions to these hard problems.”



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FiLMiC’s multi-camera video tech comes to the iPhone 11

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You read that right: A new app. The company’s press release doesn’t make clear when or if this multi-camera recording feature will wind up in its flagship FiLMiC Pro app, but DoubleTake works well enough as a standalone that it’s well worth installing anyway. There are, however, a few caveats to keep in mind: The maximum resolution of your DoubleTake recordings tops out at 1080p thanks to some internal limitations, and if you’re using an iPhone XS, XS Max or XR, you can’t use the app to record with both of the rear cameras — only one or the other, plus the front-facing camera. (iPhone 11 Pro and Pro Max users, meanwhile, can shoot video with the wide and ultra-wide cameras at the same time.)

iPhone 11 Pro cameras
Apart from all that, the biggest shift in FiLMiC’s approach here is that DoubleTake is remarkably easy to use. Just select the cameras you want to capture footage with, pick your frame rate from three options (24, 25 and 30FPS), set focus and let ‘er rip. All you really have to do from that point is choose how you want to see the inputs from the cameras you’re recording from — split-screen is an option, as is picture-in-picture. The resulting h.264 files can be exported to your Camera Roll for further editing, and, well, that’s about it.

The app itself lacks many of the fine-grained controls found in the FiLMiC Pro app, but that just means it’s much easier to pick up and start using — the company is pitching it as a tool for everything from “professional broadcast-style news interviews to YouTubers capturing multiple angles during live events.” We’ll see about that, but one thing already seems clear: Content creators just got a fantastically flexible tool at a crazy bargain.

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Karma will unveil an electric pickup truck in late 2020

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This could be an important move for Karma. It has remained a niche brand ever since Chinese car part maker Wanxiang Group revived the original Fisker in 2014, selling roughly 1,000 Reveros in 2019. Lower-priced electric trucks would give it a much wider audience, especially in North America where pickups are popular.

It’s going to face stiff competition, however. The most conspicuous challenger is Tesla’s Cybertruck, but Karma will also have to challenge Rivian’s R1T, GM’s still-mysterious pickup and the eventual electric Ford F-150. These are mostly big names that have extensive experience with EV technology and large-scale truck manufacturing, and it’ll be no mean feat to compete on both fronts.

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Google launches #AndroidHelp hashtag for tech support on Twitter

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Google will now answer your Android-related problems on Twitter, and you don’t even have to slide into its DMs. The company has announced that it’s now assisting users who tweet their issues with the hashtag #AndroidHelp. Google has also provided some additional information about its new tech support method on Reddit, noting that its responses will come from the official @Android Twitter handle. Further, the tech giant said you can use the hashtag to get a response for most Android-related concerns, including general troubleshooting, identity and authentication, accessibility and security.



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What’s on TV: Super Bowl LIV, ‘Terminator: Dark Fate’ 4K and ‘Uncut Gems’

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Obviously the big event this week is Super Bowl LIV, but it’s not the only thing coming to your TV screen. Two shows coming to an end with series finales are The Good Place, Arrow and Bojack Horseman. Bong Joon-Ho’s Parasite is available on Blu-ray, while Terminator: Dark Fate is available in 4K on disc this week, and Adam Sandler’s last movie Uncut Gems will make its Netflix premiere on Friday morning. Look after the break to check out each day’s highlights, including trailers and let us know what you think (or what we missed).

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