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New Intel chips want to make your laptop connect, work and play better


New Intel chips want to make your laptop connect, work and play better

Intel is adding six new laptop CPUs to its lineup, the company announced at this year's IFA technology trade show in Germany. Three new U-series and three new Y-series processors are joining Intel's 8th generation of Core i-series parts. Previously, these chips were known by the code names Whiskey Lake and Amber Lake. 

These are for laptops, tablets and two-in-one devices that range from mainstream clamshells to thin, fanless designs, and include support for integrated gigabit Wi-Fi, which Intel says is a first for this class of consumer PC. Those system will be labeled as "Optimized for Connectivity."

intel-aug
Intel

The six new CPUs are in the Core-m and Core-i families and include:

  • 1.1GHz Core m3-8100Y
  • 1.3GHz Core i5-8200Y
  • 1.5GHz Core i7-8500Y
  • 2.1GHz Core i3-8145U
  • 1.6GHz Core i5-8265U
  • 1.8GHz Core i7-8565U

In introducing the new CPUs, Intel says that its goal was to address pain points like low-battery anxiety. By encouraging further power efficiencies, newer laptops can hit up to 16 hours of battery life. The U and Y-series chips may also provide enough of a performance boost to convince people holding into older computers to upgrade. Intel claims there are a large number of users still working on PCs more than five years old, and that the latest 8th-gen CPUs can usually double the performance of that 5-year-old system.

Intel is also focused on gaming, which is somewhat surprising, as the integrated graphics chips in Intel platforms have not kept up with PC gaming needs over the years. For most gamers, low-cost laptops and desktop with Nvidia graphics hardware for as little as $799 have filled some of that performance gap.

But Intel says it wants to support casual gaming, which the company defines as games like World of Warcraft or World of Tanks. To help buyers figure out what games they can play, and what settings to use, check out Intel's existing gameplay.intel.com website, which provides a list of compatible games, and suggested resolution and detail level settings based on your exact hardware, including updated setting for these new CPUs. 

intel-gameplay
Intel

More importantly, although these new CPUs don't offer any new integrated graphics hardware, Intel says the overall efficiency of these chips, especially compared to the laptops of a few years ago, will offer smoother pen and inking performance and near-real-time 4K video rendering.

Look for laptops and tablets with these latest 8th-gen Intel CPUs to be announced at IFA and shipping soon after. 

Laptops with the best battery life : See the top 25 laptops and 2-in-1 PCs with the longest battery life. 

Great games for your non-gaming laptop : No GPU? No problem. The best games to sneak onto your work laptop.  


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Upgrade Your Backyard With Patio Furniture, Gas Grills and More During Home Depot's Memorial Day Sale


Upgrade Your Backyard With Patio Furniture, Gas Grills and More During Home Depot's Memorial Day Sale

With summer almost starting, now is the best time to prep your backyard (or living space) for entertaining family and friends. Starting today, Home Depot's Feels Like Memorial Day sale is offering dozens of deals to help you improve the inside and outside of your home through May 30.

So, what can you get at this sale? If you need a gas burner, Nexgrill's 4-Burner gas grill is on sale for $300 (a savings of $50). Gardeners can pick up essentials such as Miracle-Gro fertilizer in a 4-for-$10 deal, while Smart Patch seed fertilizer is $20 off. You can even save $30 on Ryobi's soil cultivator, which is currently $159.

There are also outdoor furniture sets. Get a $100 discount on this $600 Hampton Bay Riverbrook espresso brown 5-piece steel outdoor patio set and the Hampton Bay Laurel Oaks 7-piece patio dining set for $799. The Riverbrook has four chairs and a circular table, while the Laurel Oaks set includes two motion chairs, four stationary chairs with cushions and a rectangular table. 

As for other items in this sale, you can grab power tools, paint, ceiling fans and more -- everything you need to redesign, upgrade and make your space ready for summer. If you want to see the full deal, head over to Home Depot.


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WhatsApp co-founder Brian Acton to leave company


WhatsApp co-founder Brian Acton to leave company

Brian Acton, a co-founder of the popular messaging app WhatsApp, said Tuesday he will leave the Facebook-owned company to launch his own foundation.

Acton, who founded the popular messaging app with WhatsApp CEO Jan Koum in 2009, said in a Facebook post his foundation will focus on the intersection of nonprofit, technology and communications.

"It's something I've thought about for a while, and now it's time to just focus and execute," Acton said. "I'll have more to share in the coming months."

Acton, a graduate of Stanford University and former employee of Apple, met Koum while both were working at Yahoo. The pair left Yahoo in 2007 and launched WhatsApp two years later.

The app, which lets users send missives to one another over the internet rather than using traditional SMS messages through a phone carrier, reaches a billion customers each month. It's growing particularly fast in Brazil, Mexico, Russia and India.

Facebook bought the company for $19 billion, helping to give the 45-year-old Acton a net worth of $6.5 billion, according to Forbes.

Facebook didn't immediately respond to a request for comment on Acton's departure.

Special Reports: All of CNET's most in-depth features in one easy spot.

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Snapchat expands efforts to protect teens from drug deals on its app


Snapchat expands efforts to protect teens from drug deals on its app

Snapchat is ramping up its efforts to combat illicit drug deals on its app. Parent company Snap on Tuesday shared an update about its latest efforts to stop the push of narcotics on the platform with a greater focus on teens. 

Among the changes, Snapchat is updating its Quick Add suggestion feature to reduce interactions between kids and strangers. "In order to be discoverable in Quick Add by someone else, users under 18 will need to have a certain number of friends in common with that person," the company said in a blog post. Previously, the app would recommend possible friends based on mutual connections, regardless of whether you know the person in real life.

Additionally, the company is working on new parental tools that will roll out in the upcoming months, enabling parents to monitor some of their teens' communication habits. 

Last October, the app faced backlash following an NBC News report that examined the deaths of teens and young adults who were suspected of buying fentanyl-laced drugs through Snapchat. Fentanyl is a synthetic opioid that is 50 to 100 times more potent than morphine and can be deadly even in small quantities. Synthetic opioids are currently the main driver of drug overdose deaths in the US, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 

Snapchat has also partnered with several nonprofit agencies for its Heads Up portal to deliver anti-drug use resources. Two new additions to the portal include the Community Anti-Drug Coalitions of America and the Truth Initiative, which focuses on preventing nicotine use. 

The social media company also said it has measures in place to identify drug slang and content on the app, and is working with law enforcement to report potential cases and to comply with information requests. Snapchat said that it's committed to help in the fight against the illegal online drug trade.


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Verizon Isn't the Fastest Internet Provider Anymore, and a New Winner Has Been Crowned


Verizon Isn't the Fastest Internet Provider Anymore, and a New Winner Has Been Crowned

What's happening

Every three months, Ookla announces the results it gathers from info pulled from millions of customer uses of its Speedtest.net tool. Consider it a quarterly checkup on Americans' speeds from their internet service providers.

Why it matters

We've grown increasingly reliant on our home broadband connections for work and play, so the actual performance of those internet services is vital information.

Verizon has been knocked off the mountain. The latest Ookla Speedtest Intelligence report, released in late July, named Cox Communications as the fastest fixed broadband provider among top US internet service providers during the second quarter of 2022. To qualify as a top provider, a company must account for 3% or more of Ookla's total test samples. Verizon had finished on top in the first three months of 2022. 

In fact, Verizon had captured the top spot every quarter since the start of 2020. However, Ookla's report, which uses data from customer-run queries on Speedtest.net, now uses the median instead of the mean. So we're not exactly comparing apples to apples. The below image from Ookla's site gives an example of the difference.

Chart showing the difference between median and mean
Ookla

As an Ookla spokesperson told me via email: "We implemented this change to more accurately represent the typical performance that consumers actually experience on a network."

That means for the second quarter of 2022, Cox finished decisively on top with a median download speed of approximately 197 megabits per second. Xfinity, the runner-up, scored a median download speed of 184Mbps. Spectrum was third at 183Mbps, Verizon was next at 171Mbps, and AT&T capped off the top five at nearly 147Mbps.

Cox also did well regionally. It was the fastest fixed broadband provider in 14 of the 100 most populated cities in the country, including the fastest city in the US -- Gilbert, Arizona -- as well as Las Vegas, Phoenix and San Diego.

Additionally, it was the fastest ISP in four states: Arizona, Arkansas, Nevada and Oklahoma. Not bad, for sure, but Xfinity was top dog in 12 states, Spectrum in seven and Google Fiber and Verizon each won five states.

Despite its dominating performance at the top of the speed chart, Cox completely missed the top five regarding the fastest upload speeds. It registered a median upload speed just shy of 11Mbps. That was well below the top three providers of Frontier (113Mbps), Verizon (112Mbps) and AT&T (112Mbps). It also couldn't measure up to Xfinity (19Mbps), CenturyLink (12Mbps) or Spectrum (11.7Mbps).

That's not completely unexpected. The cable connections of Cox, Spectrum and Xfinity (or the DSL network of CenturyLink, for that matter) won't be able to compete with the higher upload speeds you can find with a fiber-optic internet connection, which AT&T, Frontier and Verizon all boast to a decent percentage within their respective footprints.

As Ookla continues its reporting throughout the year, it'll be interesting to see if any trends develop as it establishes the use of the median as its primary performance metric moving forward.


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Adobe Tool Makes it Easier to Post Videos to Instagram, Facebook, Twitter


Adobe Tool Makes it Easier to Post Videos to Instagram, Facebook, Twitter

Adobe's Creative Cloud Express tool , originally geared for people who want to create punchy videos for social media, now is good for posting those videos, too.

A Tuesday update to Creative Cloud Express adds a feature called Content Scheduler that allows influencers, small businesses and others who want to post graphics and videos to Instagram, Twitter and Facebook in one single action. The tool, available only through the Creative Cloud Express web app for now, also lets you preview posts and schedule them to publish in the future.

The tool handles some of the more complicated aspects of social media publishing, such as character-count limits and autocompleting usernames. It's available as a free tool, but a $10 per month subscription adds more fonts, templates, online storage, editing tools and stock photos.

Adobe has profited handsomely from its shift from licensing individual versions of software packages such as Photoshop and Lightroom to its Creative Cloud subscriptions. Free versions of some of its tools, like Lightroom and Creative Cloud Express, can lure people into subscription plans.

Creative Cloud Express is geared for an era when publicity no longer means just buying advertisements, said Scott Belsky, Adobe's chief product officer for Creative Cloud.

"Marketing budgets are being shifted from print and traditional TV into social media quickly," Belsky said.


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Facebook-owned WhatsApp extends message deletion time


Facebook-owned WhatsApp extends message deletion time

Facebook-owned WhatsApp is changing the amount of time you have to delete messages you've sent for all recipients. According to WABetaInfo, since the release of WhatsApp beta for Android 2.18.69, the messaging app allows users 2¹² seconds (4,096 seconds, which is 68 minutes, 16 seconds) to take back a message you didn't want to send. It replaces it with a "this was deleted" message. The feature has since been added to the iOS and Windows Phone apps via updates.

First released last October, the "delete for everyone" feature used to allow you only 7 minutes to delete a message. The app had a flaw though, allowing people with modified versions of the app from third-party sites to delete messages as far back as three years.

This has been fixed as well, and when a revoke request comes in, it will make sure the message was sent within 24 hours. This time limit was decided in case the recipient of the message that is being deleted didn't have their phone on. If they don't turn their phone on in 24 hours, the message will not be deleted.


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