The Morning After: Thursday, November 9th 2017
Hey, good morning! You look fabulous.
If you like retro-inspired things, you might like the first new manual SLR in decades. If you'd rather keep your eye on the future, take a look at Uber's plans (with NASA) to get its flying taxis off the ground. (Not sorry about that pun.) Also: Niantic Labs, the team behind Pokemon Go, is making a Harry Potter game. Get excited.
Apple may be working on an AR headset for 2020
Apple has been talking a lot about AR lately. Its recent ARKit allows developers to create augmented reality apps for iOS devices, but that's just the first step. The company is reportedly developing an AR headset that will be ready by 2019 -- a device that may change the game as much as the iPhone did back in 2007.
EPA approves good guy mosquitoes to battle Zika
MosquitoMate will be releasing a plethora of mosquitoes across the US -- not to start a bug-pocalypse, but to prevent it. The US Environmental Protection Agency has just approved the use of the startup's mosquitoes as a biopesticide against their Zika-, dengue- and other disease-carrying counterparts in 20 states and Washington DC. The company's insects carry a common bacterium called Wolbachia pipientis, which infects a wide range of invertebrates. By releasing them, they can spread bacteria to the wild population of Aedes albopictus or Asian tiger mosquitoes -- and stop the spread of those aforementioned diseases.
Aluminum foil can actually improve your wireless signal
Lifehack.
Amazon Cloud Cam review: a Nest Cam rival with Alexa smarts
Amazon's first home-security camera offers great value for money. Not only is it cheaper than comparable rivals by $80 or more, it stores recorded events for up to 24 hours without requiring a subscription. Subscriptions buy you more storage space, and you also get the benefit of extra features like person detection and setting up zones for the camera to ignore (which we wish were available by default). The Cloud Cam's geofencing feature does get a little temperamental but its other qualities more than make up for it.
Uber works with NASA to get flying taxis ready by 2020
At a speech at the Web Summit in Lisbon, Uber's Head of Product Jeff Holden revealed the company has signed a Space Act Agreement with NASA to create the air traffic control system that will manage its low-flying taxi fleet, which it aims to have in the air by 2020. The company also announced that a third test city, Los Angeles, joins Dallas-Fort Worth and Dubai. According to Uber, its UberAIR service could compress a one-and-a-half-hour journey from LAX to the Staples Center during rush hour to under 30 minutes. We can't wait for E3 2020.
But wait, there's more...
- The FCC is helping cable companies evade consumer protection rules
- Apple offered to help FBI unlock Texas shooter's phone
- Engadget Experience: 'Dinner Party' relives an interracial couple's alien abduction in VR
- A SpaceX rocket engine exploded during a qualification test in Texas
- 'Harry Potter' AR game is coming from the makers of 'Pokémon Go'
- The Reflex 1 is the first manual film SLR in decades
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