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Showing posts with the label EU

Tech Review: Beats X

The Beats X is one of the newest (as of posting) wireless earbuds from the Beats lineup. Since Apple has taken over Beats, the company has only been going up. It took a pretty long for me to get my hands on this but I finally managed to. (YAY me!) I got the Beats X in blue as it’s a pretty unique colour. This is my 2nd Beats product and really, the unboxing experience was awesome!!! Straight away you are greeted by the earpiece itself and underneath it was the manuals, the extra eartips of various size, as well as earhooks of various sizes if you require a more secure fit. Behind all the eartips and earhooks was the case and a charging cable. Unlike the previous wireless products made by Beats, this charger has a lightning adapter, so all those Apple users should be glad. My only slight complain is that the case is a dust magnet and it gets dirty super easily. Now moving on to the earpiece… Syncing the Beats X to my iPhone was a breeze. The moment I turned on the Bluetooth on my phone

What is GAIA-X and Why Are AWS, Google, and Azure Involved?

GAIA-X is a European initiative intended to provide a unified ecosystem of cloud services and data centers governed by EU data laws. So why are American cloud companies rushing to sign up? Read This Article on CloudSavvy IT ›

LLVM 12 arrives with x86, AArch optimizations

LLVM 12, the latest release of the open source LLVM compiler infrastructure platform , published April 14, features optimizations for the x86 target as well as changes to the AArch64 Arm back end. For the x86 target, a new function attribute, tune-cpu, has been added to support -mtune like GCC, allowing microarchitectural optimizations to be applied independently from the target-cpu attribute or TargetMachine CPU, which will be used to select the instruction set. If this attribute is not present, the tune CPU will follow the target CPU. Also for the x86 target, the assembler now supports {disp32} and {disp8} pseudo prefixes to control displacement size for memory operands and jump placements. To read this article in full, please click here

California's net neutrality law just cost AT&T wireless customers a free streaming perk. That's a good thing

AT&T’s sponsored data service might have looked like a benefit for customers, but it carried an unacceptable price to competition and innovation.

Column: In blow to Uber, U.K. court reaches obvious conclusion that its drivers are workers

A U.K. high court ruling threatens Uber’s business model there and could be a template for regulators across Europe and beyond.

Column: Internet providers put hypocrisy on full display in challenging net neutrality

After a judge said California could proceed with net neutrality rules, industry groups said this would “confuse consumers and deter innovation.”

Column: Pandemic, not privacy, tops list of 2021 consumer trends. Let's change that

Market researcher Euromonitor predicts COVID will define 2021 consumer experiences. But their own report reveals a need for privacy safeguards.

Why these entrepreneurs created a streaming service for Black creators

Profile of Blacktag, a new streaming service backed by CAA and other investors featuring content from Black creators.