Sunday
Dec132020

Samsung has a 110-inch MicroLED Wall TV for your home

Source: Samsung

In the last couple of years, Samsung has been showing off its MicroLED technology using massive displays. There was the 146-inch The Wall TV showcased at CES 2018 and a 75-inch model and a 219-inch display at CES 2019. But these displays are modular and required installation. What Samsung is offering now is prefabricated and can be put up your wall like any traditional TV.

As seen in the different sizes, the MicroLED TV is scalable, but Samsung hasn't mass-produced it before in screen size as "small" as a 110-inch model for home use. Samsung needed to develop a new surface mount technology and manufacturing process derived from its semiconductor business, allowing them to produce smaller MicroLED displays for consumer use in the future.

Click to read more ...

Sunday
Dec132020

Canadian Reviewer Weekly Roundup – 12/6 – 12/12

Saturday
Dec122020

'Wonder Woman 1984' will be available for VOD rental in Canada alongside theatrical release

Even if you can't come to theatres to watch Wonder Woman 1984 this Christmas Day, you'll still be able to watch it at home. Warner Bros. Pictures is pushing through with its "hybrid release strategy" in Canada as it'll be available for video-on-demand rental the same day it will debut in movie theatres. This move comes after Warner initially announced that WW84 would only be available in Canadian cinemas, even though many of them are closed because of COVID-19 restrictions.

Due to "varying market restrictions," Warner decided to go with this new release option so it can reach more viewers. Wonder Woman 1984 will come with a $29.99 rental price for 48 hours. But Warner hasn't mentioned which platforms will carry the film. The studio shifted the movie's December 25 premiere to its HBO Max streaming service in the US, causing quite a stir there. HBO Max isn't available here, though.

Source: The Canadian Press

Saturday
Dec122020

Twitter to shut down Squad app on Dec. 12 following acquisition

Source: Squad

Twitter has just purchased Squad, an app that lets you share your screen and video chat with others simultaneously. And with the acquisition, the social media company plans to shut down the app today, December 12. Squad's entire team will join Twitter as part of the deal. Squad co-founder Esther Crawford writes in a Medium post that Twitter wants her company's audio and video expertise. Twitter didn't reveal the acquisition terms, and we don't know if it includes Squad's tech.

Squad gained popularity at the start of the pandemic when its usage increased by 1,100 percent. TechCrunch speculates that Twitter's decision to shutter the app might have something to do with how it was built with Snap's developer tools. That porting Squad to Twitter's backend might not be possible because of this. The move might be for the best as Twitter isn't the best with managing apps outside its core app. Twitter shuttered Vine in 2017 and has seen TikTok rise from its ashes as one of the most popular social media apps right now.

Source: Engadget