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Sunday, October 7, 2018

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Technology - Google News


Department of Homeland Security chimes in on iCloud server spy chip allegations

Posted: 07 Oct 2018 06:48 AM PDT

  The United States Department of Homeland Security has added to the growing chorus of voices siding with Apple and Amazon versus the blockbuster report that Apple's iCloud and Siri security was violated by a China-planted spy chip.


The statement, issued by DHS on Saturday doesn't delve into any detail about why it believes that the Bloomberg report from Thursday is flawed, and sides with Apple and Amazon in the matter.

The Department of Homeland Security is aware of the media reports of a technology supply chain compromise. Like our partners in the UK, the National Cyber Security Centre, at this time we have no reason to doubt the statements from the companies named in the story.

Information and communications technology supply chain security is core to DHS's cybersecurity mission and we are committed to the security and integrity of the technology on which Americans and others around the world increasingly rely.

Just this month - National Cybersecurity Awareness Month - we launched several government-industry initiatives to develop near- and long-term solutions to manage risk posed by the complex challenges of increasingly global supply chains. These initiatives will build on existing partnerships with a wide range of technology companies to strengthen our nation's collective cybersecurity and risk management efforts.

Thursday's story claimed Chinese operatives managed to sneak a microchip the size of a grain of rice onto 7000 motherboards produced by Supermicro, which supplied those compromised parts for use in Apple's iCloud data centers. The chip, supposedly designed by the Chinese military, allegedly passed the data on the servers to Chinese interests, and gave a back-door into Apple's public-facing networks to the alleged perpetrators.

After the report was published, both Apple and Amazon issued strongly worded statements very specifically refuting the claims. The denial, and continued clarifications after the fact goes well beyond anything Apple has distributed. Apple continues to categorically deny all assertions in Bloomberg's story, and offers point-by-point rebuttal to certain facts and figures.

Bloomberg is standing by its investigation —claiming 30 companies were affected, but only naming two —saying the report took more than a year to compile and involved more than 100 interviews. The publication cites 17 sources from government agencies and companies involved in the alleged hack, including senior insiders at Apple.

At least one of Bloomberg's sources appears to have changed its mind after publication.</span>

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Coming soon from Google: The Pixel 3, Google Home Hub, Pixel Slate, and more

Posted: 07 Oct 2018 08:15 AM PDT

The third annual Google hardware extravaganza is kicking off in just a few days. On October 9 at 11am, Google will show off its next flagship smartphone, the Pixel 3, along with a few other products. The new Pixel phone is usually the headline launch at these hardware events, but Google often announces four or five other products alongside the new phone.

Last year, we saw the Pixel 2, the Chrome OS-powered Pixelbook, the Google Home Mini and Google Home Max, a new version of the Daydream View VR headset, the Google Pixel Buds, and a dead-on-arrival AI camera called "Google Clips."

The year before saw the Pixel 1, Google Home, Chromecast Ultra, the first Daydream View, and Google Wi-Fi. Most of the leaks and rumors hint at sequels to some of these products.

The Pixel 3 and 3 XL

Right now, the Pixel 3 might be the tech world's worst-kept secret. There have been over 20 (!) individual leaks since June, and some sites have even done full reviews already. Apparently, Google and/or Foxconn lost an entire box of pre-production Pixel 3 XLs, and the units have been circulating on the Ukrainian black market for $2000 a pop. Other than the retail price, there's not much we don't know about the Pixel 3.

Just like last year, the big and small Pixels have wildly different front designs. The smaller Pixel 3 has straight top and bottom bezels, front-facing stereo speakers, and rounded display corners, making it look like a small version of the Pixel 2 XL. The Pixel 3 XL is following the 2018 flagship design trend by going with a notched display, but Google's notch looks about twice as tall as nearly every other phone on the market. It still has front-facing stereo speakers, so there's also a sizable bottom bezel. The back switches from metal to all-glass but keeps the Pixel's traditional two-tone design by putting some kind of coating on the bottom three fourths of the glass panel.

Google's camera setup with both Pixel 3s is definitely unique. You get one camera on the back and two on the front. Google has repeatedly turned in one of the best smartphone cameras out there with a single rear lens, but it's the dual-front camera setup that has everyone wondering. HTC—which shares more than a little DNA with the Pixel phones—recently launched a device that used dual front cameras for a front bokeh effect. It would not be surprising to see Google go with a similar solution. Google's Pixel team loves letting Apple dictate the future of smartphones, so it would also not be surprising to see the dual front cameras used for some kind of answer to Apple's Face ID and Animojis.

Specs should be a standard 2018 flagship loadout with a Snapdragon 845, 4GB of RAM, and 64GB or 128GB of storage. The display on the Pixel 3 XL is a 2960×1440 OLED. Both devices have stereo speakers and no headphone jack. The battery in the leaked Pixel 3 XL prototypes clocked in at 3,430mAh, which is smaller than the 3520mAh in the Pixel 2 XL. The smaller Pixel 3 battery should be somewhere around 2900mAh. The colors leaked so far have been black, white, and pink.

Pixel 3 is expected to have a new accessory called "Pixel Stand." With wireless charging included in the Pixel 3s, this will be a first-party wireless charging. The stand keeps the phone upright and is supposed to kick it into a special software mode that seems like something close to a Google Smart Display. Animations hidden in the Google App show a photo-slideshow mode and full-screen displays for timers, messages, calendar events, and music.

The main Pixel 3 mysteries left to be uncovered are the pricing and what new software additions Google will throw into the Pixel skin.

The Google Home Hub

Speaking of smart displays, Google launches its smart-display software this year, creating a Google Assistant-powered answer to the Amazon Echo Show. This is basically a Google Home with a screen, which has a special display used for things like smart-home functionality, photos, weather, timers, and YouTube.

Google launched its smart-display software earlier this year, but it has let third parties handle the hardware work, like Lenovo and LG. In all likelihood, Google's first hardware to use its smart-display software will be called the "Google Home Hub." Press images of the device leaked to MySmartPrice, showing a device that looks like a tablet mounted to a speaker. The design carries over a lot of Google Home motifs like the color scheme and cloth speaker cover, so it should fit in with Google's existing collection of smart speakers. The leaked renders show three features along the top bezel of the device, and it's not clear what these do. The two outside holes are presumably microphones, while the larger center hole might be a camera. On the back, you'll find the traditional Google Home mute switch, which will stop the unit from scanning for the "OK Google" hotword.

Don't expect any special software on Google's smart display compared to the LG and Lenovo models. Like the Google Home speakers, the idea is that every device has the same software and, regardless of the manufacturer, receives centralized updates from Google. The real differentiator for Google's smart display (besides looking way better than LG or Lenovo's efforts) appears to be the price. One leaked retail listing pegged the price at $149, which would undercut Lenovo's $199 device.

The Google Pixel Slate

From the Chrome OS side of the street, expect some kind of sequel to last year's Pixelbook. Again, earlier Google software releases are driving Google hardware releases at this event. Chrome OS has been slowly building up a Chrome OS tablet mode, so we should see some kind of Chrome OS tablet—detachable or otherwise—at the extravaganza.

A new Google device codenamed "Nocturne" is expected to launch as the "Google Pixel Slate." Just this weekend, MySmartPrice scored rather complete looking renders of the device, showing a tablet, pen, and keyboard cover just like the Microsoft Surface. There was also an earlier leak of the device from keyboard manufacturer "Brydge." Brydge is apparently making its own attachable keyboard with integrated hinges, which would turn the tablet into more of a laptop-style device.

The Pixel Slate is expected to be the first Chrome OS device with a fingerprint reader, and the render show a wide button on the top of the device that matches previously leaked text descriptions and images of the fingerprint reader location. The rest of the renders show, well, a big screen with a USB-C port on either side. The keyboard cover looks really strange with rounded keys, but the good news is that is has a physical connection to the tablet via pogo pins. Google's previous tablet/keyboard combo, the Pixel C, featured an awful Bluetooth connection pairing the keyboard to the tablet. The keyboard would fall asleep all the time, so typing usually meant mashing on the keyboard to wake it up, waiting five or so seconds for it to connect, and only then could you type. Bluetooth also meant the keyboard section had its own battery, which would only charge when the unit was closed. Pogo pins should mean no extra battery and no connection issues.

Specs for the Pixel Slate have popped up in Geekbench's database with configurations ranging from an eighth-gen Intel Core i7-8500Y with 16GB of RAM to an Intel Celeron 3965Y with 8GB of RAM. In total, four different CPUs have popped up in Geekbench, so expect a range of price points. Geekbench also shows the device running "Android 9," so it looks like an update for the Android subsystem in Chrome OS is in the works. Currently, Chrome OS uses Android 7.1 Nougat. Chrome OS's open-source nature means the Nocturne firmware is freely available on the Internet, and the OS shows a display with a 3:2 aspect ratio and an even 3000x2000 resolution.

An "Atlas" Chrome OS device is also out there with a 4K display and a traditional, non-detachable laptop form factor, which sounds like a possible Pixelbook 2.

A new Chromecast and new Pixel Buds?

We know a third-gen Chromecast is coming, because it's already in stock at some Best Buys. What we don't know is how big of a deal it is or if Google will even mention it at the event.

The new Chromecast sports the mysterious addition of Bluetooth, which could be used for a remote control or a game controller, or it could just be a boring addition to the initial setup process. Best Buy lists a launch date of October 9, and the happy few who have managed to buy the new Chromecast early can't set it up yet.

Interestingly, Google did just announce "Project Stream," a "test" of playable streaming video games in the same vein as GeForce Now or PlayStation Now. The test is only for the desktop Chrome browser, but if Google really is launching a commercial game-streaming service, bringing it to TVs via the dirt-cheap Chromecast seems like a great idea.

Finally, the Pixel Buds. The first ones were pretty bad. Google's first-ever earbuds connected to your phone wirelessly, but a wire between the two earbuds made them seem dated. The sound quality wasn't great, and the controls were finicky. The new Pixel Buds are rumored to be totally wireless. That's about all we know so far.

Google's event kicks off October 9 at 11am ET. We'll be there bringing you the latest news on everything Google announces.

Listing image by Google

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Google Pixel Slate Tablet Leaks In High-Res Renders With Keyboard

Posted: 07 Oct 2018 07:15 AM PDT

In short: Google’s upcoming Chrome OS tablet that’s widely expected to be called the Pixel Slate leaked in several high-resolution renders this weekend, with the images that can be seen here revealing a device that appears to resemble Microsoft’s Surface Pro lineup, featuring a detachable keyboard with a cloth finish and a stylus, albeit it also sports a blockier aspect ratio – 3:2. Google is understood to be working on several more variants of the Pixel Slate besides the dark blue one seen here.

Background: The Pixel Slate has been the subject of dozens of reports over the last several months, with the device in question only being known by its codename “Nocturne” until recently. The newly emerged images are somewhat in line with last month’s leak showing the same device, albeit that previous sighting depicted a gadget with a metallic matte finish. While Google’s first Chrome OS tablet may be positioned as a Surface Pro competitor, it’s just as likely that the company intends to use it to take on Apple’s iPads, most of which are closer to the $400 price tag that’s rumored to be attached to the Pixel Slate, whereas Microsoft’s offerings are significantly more expensive, having been design to function as full-fledged Windows laptops with a smaller form factor.

Impact: The exact specifications of the Pixel Slate remain unclear but are likely to be on the lower end of the spectrum, especially compared to the best Chromebooks on the market. Regardless, the product is significant by marking Google’s return to the tablet form factor after three years, even though the company doesn’t appear to be interested in releasing Android slates such as the Pixel C any longer. The Pixel Slate will be officially announced alongside the Pixel 3 flagships and other Google hardware at a Paris product event taking place on Tuesday, October 9.

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