Many have questioned the famous show’s place in the Me Too Era.
The “Saved By The Bell” star appeared on right-winger Candace Owens’ podcast.
Woods opened up about her relationship with former BFF Kylie Jenner in an interview this week.
If there was any doubt that Netflix was hunting for awards with Martin Scorsese’s The Irishman, it just got erased. The streaming service has released a teaser (really, a first trailer) for the mob epic, and it’s clear the movie is a callback to Scor…
If you surf, there’s a good chance you use Surfline. The call-in swell forecasting service started in the ’80s and has blossomed into a video-streaming source of information that surfers rely on to plan trips and or just hit their local break. But th…
Back to school: The audio gear you need in the dorm, library and everywhere else
Posted in: Today's ChiliPlease enjoy this guide to the speakers, headphones and streaming apps we recommend to students, just one part of our larger 2019 back-to-school series. In addition to top picks in 11 categories — everything from laptops to smartphones to gaming and…
Last year, reports emerged Facebook was working on a video chat camera you’d plug into your TV. It sounds a bit like its Portal smart display, albeit without the need for a dedicated screen. One reported aspect of the device is that it’d offer video…
UC Santa Barbara has had enough of retailers selling its patented LED light bulb technology without authorization. This week, the university filed a lawsuit charging Amazon, IKEA, Walmart, Target and Bed Bath & Beyond with infringing its patents….
Sex tech companies and advocates protest unfair ad standards outside Facebook’s NY HQ
Posted in: Today's ChiliA group of sex tech startup founders, employees and supporters gathered outside of Facebook’s NY office in Manhattan to protest its advertising policies with respect to what it classifies as sexual content. The protest, and a companion website detailing their position we reported on Tuesday, are the work of ‘Approved, Not Approved,’ a coalition of sex health companies co-founded by Dame Products and Unbound Babes.
These policies are applied have fallen out of step with “the average person’s views of what should or shouldn’t be approved of ads,” according to Janet Lieberman, co-founder and CTO of Dame Products.
“If you look at the history of the sex toy industry, for example, vibrators were sexual health products, until advertising restrictions were put on them in the 1920s and 1930s – and then they became dirty, and that’s how the industry got shady, and that’s why we have negative thoughts towards them,” she told me in an interview at the protest. “They’re moving back towards wellness in people’s minds, but not in advertising policies. There’s a double standard for what is seen as obscene, talking about men’s sexual health versus women’s sexual health and talking about products that aren’t sexual, and using sex to sell them, versus taking sexual products and having completely non-sexual ads for them.”
It’s a problem that extends beyond just Facebook and Instagram, Lieberman says. In fact, her company is also suing NYC’s MTA for discrimination for its own ad standards after it refused to run ads for women’s sex toys in their out-of-home advertising inventory. But it also has ramifications beyond just advertising, since in many ways what we see in ads helps define what we see as acceptable in terms of our everyday lives and conversations.
“Some of this stems from society’s inability to separate sexual products from feeling sexual, and that’s a real problem that we see that hurts women more than men, but hurts both genders, in not knowing how to help our sexual health,” Lieberman said. “We can’t talk about it without being sexual, and that we can’t bring things up, without it seeming like we’re bringing up something that is dirty.”
“A lot of the people you see here today have Instagrams that have been shut down, or ads that have been not approved on Facebook,” said Bryony Cole, CEO at Future of Sex in an interview. “Myself, I run Future of Sex, which is a sex tech hackathon, and a podcast focused on sex tech, and my Instagram’s been shut down twice with no warning. It’s often for things that Facebook will say they consider phallic imagery, but they’re not […] and yet if you look at images for something like HIMS [an erectile dysfunction medication startup, examples of their ads here], you’ll see those phallic practice images. So there’s this gross discrepancy, and it’s very frustrating, especially for these companies where a lot of the revenue in their business is around community that are online which is true for sex toys.”
Online ads aren’t just a luxury for many of these startup brands and companies – they’re a necessary ingredient to continued success. Google and Facebook together account for the majority of digital advertising spend in the U.S., according to eMarketer, and it’s hard to grow a business that caters to primarily online customers without fair access to their platforms, Cole argues.
“You see a lot of sex tech or sexual wellness brands having to move off Instagram and find other ways to reach their communities,” she said. “But the majority of people, that’s where they are. And if they’re buying these products, they’re still overcoming a stigma about buying the product, so it’s great to be able to purchase these online. A lot of these companies started either crowdfunding, like Dame Products, or just through ecommerce sites. So the majority of their business is online. It’s not in a store.”
Earlier this year, sex tech company Lora DiCarlo netted a win in getting the Consumer Technology Association to restore its CES award after community outcry. Double standards in advertising is a far more systemic and distributed problem, but these protests will hopefully help open up the conversation and prompt more change.
Samsung Galaxy Tab S6
Posted in: Today's ChiliAhead of its Galaxy Unpacked 2019 event in New York, Samsung has announced its new flagship Android tablet, the Galaxy Tab S6, the successor of the Galaxy Tab S4. This high-end 10.5-inch tablet aims to complete Samsung’s Android tablet portfolio, that comprises the entry level Tab A 10.1 and the mid-range Tab S5e.
Featuring top hardware performance (Snapdragon 855, 6Gb/128GB storage base), a WXQGA Super AMOLED display with in-screen fingerprint sensor, a dual rear shooter with ultrawide, a new keyboard cover with touchpad, a redesigned S Pen, high-end audio, and an improved DeX experience, the Tab S6 is positioned as a high-end tablet, ideal both for productivity and immersive entertainment.
The Samsung Galaxy Tab S6 comes in LTE and Wi-Fi versions and in three color flavors: Mountain Gray, Cloud Blue and Rose Blush. The Wi-Fi edition will be available in stores and online on September 6, starting at $649.00. You can pre-order starting from August 23 at Samsung.com. The LTE model is expected later this year.
Latest Gen Processor for top performance in an ultra-compact design
At 5.7mm and 420g, the new Samsung tablet is thinner and lighter than its predecessor (7.1mm/483g) while pushing better performance and new hardware features such as a dual rear camera.
The Galaxy Tab S6 features Qualcomm’s most powerful processor, the Snapdragon 855, which delivers 81% faster CPU and 68% faster GPU than the Tab S4 according to Samsung.
Since the new 10.5-inch tablet is designed for productivity and aims at replacing a PC laptop, the Korean manufacturer decided to go with the current top of the line processor, unlike the S4 which featured an older generation 800-series Snapdragon (835).
Display
Similar to the Galaxy Tab S4, the Galaxy Tab S6 comes with a 10.5-inch WXQGA (2560×1600) Super AMOLED display. For the first time in a Samsung tablet, the display encloses an optical in-screen fingerprint sensor, a technology introduced this year in Samsung’s mobile devices with the Galaxy S10.
Audio
Like the Galaxy Tab S4, the Tab S6 is equipped with four speakers tuned by AKG and delivers Dolby Atmos sound.
Dual Rear Camera with Ultra-wide angle – a first in a tablet
Touted to be the 10-inch iPad Pro competitor, the Galaxy Tab S6 is the first tablet to feature a dual 13MP+5MP camera on the back, equipped with a secondary 123-degree ultra-wide-angle lens. Surprisingly, Samsung noticed that 87% of the Galaxy Tab S4 users were snapping photos on a regular basis, with 55% using the camera weekly, most people like to leverage the image editing features on the device. The camera captures 4K (3840×2160) video at 30 fps.
Thanks to the Snapdragon 855, the camera delivers AI capabilities including ton mapping and scene optimization.
The front shooter gets an 8 MP sensor, and we have no information about the field og view for that one.
New Book Cover Keyboard with Touchpad and new S Pen
Besides the new processor, what sets the Galaxy Tab S6 apart from its predecessor is the newly designed keyboard cover with the new S Pen. According to the manufacturer, 60% of Tab S4 buyers use their keyboard, and almost 30% attach a mouse. Samsung added a touchpad and a DeX button to the optional detachable keyboard.
You can now charge the S Pen wirelessly on the back of the tablet where it is magnetically attached. A feature introduced with the Galaxy Note 9 last year, the new S Pen acts as a Bluetooth remote control for various applications such as Powerpoint, shooting selfies, navigating multimedia content or media playback.
DeX improved – PC-like experience for multitasking
DeX is Samsung’s PC-like interface for Android, also called desktop mode, with a multi-window interface that prevents app switches and enables a real desktop experience. Samsung integrated S pen with DeX, you can now use Air command with DeX. As mentioned above, for faster access Samsung added a physical DeX button to the keyboard.
Battery
At 7040 mAh, the battery delivers a lower capacity than the 7300 mAH battery of the Galaxy Tab S4.
Conclusion
On the paper, the Samsung Galaxy Tab S6 looks like a beast packaged in a stylish body, and we cannot wait to put our hands on the device to confirm our first impressions. We will see the Tab S6 very soon, and if you have the chance to go to IFA in Berlin (Sept 6 to Sept 11) you can check out the demos at the Samsung booth, the day it hits the stores in the U.S.
Specifications
- Display 10.5” WQXGA, Super AMOLED
- Dimension, Weight 244.5 x 159.5 ×5.7mm, 420g
- Camera 8MP(Front), 13MP + 5MP (Rear)
- Memory + Storage 6GB + 128GB or 8GB +256GB
MicroSD (Up to 512GB) - Processor Qualcomm 855 processor (1×2.84GHz, 3×2.41GHz , 4×1.78GHz)
- Battery Tablet 7,040mAh7, Fast Charging
- Battery S Pen 0.35mAh
- Connectivity Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n/ac 2.4G+5GHz, MIMO, Wi-Fi Direct, Bluetooth 5.0
- GPS GPS + GLONASS, Beidou, Galileo
- Sensors Optical on-screen Fingerprint Scanner, Accelerometer, Gyro Sensor, Geomagnetic Sensor, Hall Sensor, RGB Light Sensor
- MIC 2 MIC
- Audio 4 speakers sound by AKG, Dolby Atmos
- Accessories Book Cover Keyboard, Book Cover, POGO Charging Dock
Samsung Galaxy Tab S6 , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.