Tuesday
May042021

Twitter users with 600+ followers can host Spaces

Twitter Spaces (Twitter)

Twitter continues to take advantage of Clubhouse's absence on Android by rolling out Spaces to all accounts with 600 or more followers. According to the company, "these accounts are likely to have a good experience hosting live conversations because of their existing audience." Spaces offers a live audio experience within the Twitter app, a market that grew during this pandemic because of the app Clubhouse.

Some of the features users can expect to come to Spaces include Ticketed Spaces, where hosts can charge for the events; schedule and set reminders for upcoming Spaces; co-hosting Spaces; improved accessibility features, like customizable live captions; and "more ways to find Spaces," which Twitter is testing already.

Source: Twitter

Tuesday
May042021

Intelligent Display Tech showcased in new TCL 20 Pro 5G and TCL 20S

TCL Communications today announced that its TCL 20 Pro 5G and TCL 20S smartphones are coming to Canada. Mixing the pricing of midrange phones with flagship features, TCL'a phones have improved each year, notably in the display and camera departments where users will find features akin to many more expensive models from the likes of Samsung.

Both the TCL 20 Pro 5G and the TCL 20S offer innovative high-resolution displays, better-than-life video visuals, a full suite of camera features and outstanding battery and storage capabilities, all at affordable price points.

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Tuesday
May042021

Epic Games pays Sony for 'Fortnite' cross-play

Epic Games

As Epic Games' challenge of Apple's 30% cut goes to court, we're learning more about the company and its popular game, Fortnite. One of the latest discoveries is that Epic reached an agreement with Sony to pay extra for cross-play support. And the developer continues to pay to this day. 

This information was revealed when Epic CEO Tim Sweeney was asked by the cross-examiner how cross-platform play works in Fortnite, especially when it comes to profits from purchases made via "cross-wallet" features (including features like skins you can buy on one platform and use on others).

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Tuesday
May042021

Samsung no longer supports Galaxy S8

Photo by Alex Blăjan on Unsplash

Samsung has finally ended support for most of the Galaxy S8 series. The exceptions are the Galaxy S8 Active and Galaxy S8 Lite, which came out months after the main S8 phones were released. It isn't surprising that Samsung halted support for these 2017 flagships. As Engadget pointed out, even Google doesn't support Pixel for that long. But Samsung has been generally good with maintaining that four-year support for its models.

The oldest Samsung models to get monthly updates now are the Galaxy S10 phones. The company has already transitioned the Galaxy S9 and S9+ to quarterly security updates, which means these will get one more year of updates before these handsets lose support.