Saturday
Nov062021

Alexa lets you transfer music from one Echo device to another with your voice

Nicolas J Leclercq/Unsplash

Amazon has pushed a new update to its Alexa-enabled devices that brings many new features to its devices. One of the new features is being able to move music from one Echo device to another. You can say things like "Alexa, move my music to the kitchen," or "Alexa, move my music here" when you put on Echo Buds. Or say, "Alexa, pause" on the device playing in your bedroom, but then say "Alexa, resume music" when you're in your living room.

You can also use Alexa to play a show or film on Netflix through Fire TV devices. Just say, "Alexa, play something on Netflix," and then the streaming service will launch a show or film for you. The TikTok TV app is also available exclusively on all Fire TV devices now. Both these features are currently rolled out to Canadian and US users. You can check out the other new features here.

Via: Engadget

Friday
Nov052021

Meta reportedly plans to have physical stores for its hardware

Meta, a.k.a. the company previously known as Facebook, might be looking at opening brick-and-mortar shops. The New York Times reported that the company had been discussing this option since last year and before it rebranded into Meta. Nothing has been finalized about the plans, though, and Meta could still scrap it.

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Friday
Nov052021

Twitter lets even those without accounts listen to Spaces audio

Twitter

Twitter is rolling out a new feature for Spaces that will let non-Twitter users access the audio conversations. Hosts and listeners can now send anybody a link to a broadcast. And these users can listen in via the web without needing to sign in or register. Of course, they can't participate or use the features, but it expands the feature's reach. And perhaps even entice these people to start using the app.

Source: Twitter | Via: Engadget

Thursday
Nov042021

Rumoured Google Pixel foldable tipped to get four cameras, expected to launch in 2022

Mitchell Luo/Unsplash

Google's first foldable device is expected to arrive in 2022, but it might not get the camera setup you'd want. 9to5Google reported in a recent APK teardown that the rumoured device will most likely get four cameras. A 12.2-megapixel IMX363 primary lens, 12-megapixel IMX386 ultrawide camera, and two 8-megapixel IMX355 front-facing cameras. The identical sensors are said to be for the outer and inner display, probably to offer the same camera quality whether the phone is folded or not.

That primary sensor isn't what you see on the new Pixel 6 series. Instead, this foldable Pixel phone (codenamed "Pipit") will reportedly use the Pixel 5's camera. The existing Pixel flagships have a larger sensor, which led to that distinctive camera bar on the Pixel 6. But with foldables that are typically built to be slim, that extra millimetre for the camera bump might not be the best idea.

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