Sunday
Aug092020

Reports claim TikTok might soon sue White House over ban

Embed from Getty Images

TikTok might be taking legal action against the White House over the ban of its service, and it might do it soon. According to an NPR source, the company plans to file a lawsuit against the Trump administration as early as August 11, contending the executive order to ban "transactions" with TikTok's parent company ByteDance unconstitutional. TikTok argues it violated its due process right to respond, and that the national security rationale used for justifying the order is "pure speculation and conjecture."

According to the unnamed source, the White House didn't have investigators contact the company ahead of an enforcement action, as is the standard process with companies. And so, TikTok's team reportedly believes it's a breach of procedure. The social media company hasn't commented yet on the possibility of an impending lawsuit. Still, it has acknowledged beliefs that the order was issued "without any due process" and "no substantiation" regarding the security allegations.

Source: Engadget

Sunday
Aug092020

Huawei Mate 40 to be last Kirin-powered model

Embed from Getty Images

The Trump administration's ban on Huawei has now affected who supplies the company's chipset. Huawei has confirmed that the upcoming Huawei Mate 40 smartphone will be the last model to be powered by a Kirin processor. Because of the ban, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) concluded its business with Huawei, which affects its HiSilicon subsidiary behind its Kirin chips.

With the company still banned from conducting business with US companies, they find themselves losing TSMC, who gets some of its equipment from US suppliers. TSMC opted to wrap up its chip production orders from Huawei, but it won't be producing anymore. Huawei has focused on designing its processors but not manufacturing them, so now it finds itself in a tight spot. The company hasn't revealed what it plans to do moving forward.

Source: SlashGear

Saturday
Aug082020

Canadian Reviewer Weekly Roundup – 8/2 – 8/8

Saturday
Aug082020

Samsung Galaxy Buds Live retails for $249 in Canada, available for pre-order

 

Pre-orders for Samsung's new bean-like wireless earbuds are now, well, live. The Samsung Galaxy Buds Live costs $249.99 on the Samsung Canada store. Those who pre-order between August 5 until September 3 get a chance to take home a free wireless charger pad.

The Galaxy Buds Live are the more premium alternative to the Samsung Galaxy Buds+ It comes with features like active noise-cancellation and six-hour battery life from the earbuds plus an extra 29 hours from the charging case. The earbuds come in Mystic White, Mystic Bronze, and Mystic Black.