New ‘Megaflash Lightning’ Records Are the Definition of Extreme

The World Meteorological Organization is recognizing two new world records having to do with lightning, one for the longest duration and the other for the longest single flash.

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I Miss Electroplankton: The Nintendo DS' Weird and Wonderful Musical Toy

As a mostly passive gamer who’s never chased achievements, high scores, or actually completing most games I’ve played, it’s rare that I’ll go out of my way to hunt down a title I’m interested in. I’m more of a “hey, I guess I should play this now that it’s finally on sale” kind of gamer, but in 2005 I was obsessed…

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This Ultra-Rare Intel GPU Just Sold for $5,000 on eBay

Perhaps the only working prototype of Intel’s abandoned Larabee GPU just sold for more than scalped, pandemic-era AMD or Nvidia graphics card. This lovely blue component, one of the only remaining reminders of Intel’s failed attempt at a discrete GPU, was purchased on eBay France for €4,650, or $5,234.

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The Mercedes-AMG GT 63 S E Performance’s base price will shock you

<img width="1067" height="800" src="https://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/22C0023_001-2.v2-1067×800.jpg" class="webfeedsFeaturedVisual wp-post-image" alt="Mercedes-AMG GT 63 S E Performance" loading="lazy" style="margin: auto;margin-bottom: 5px;max-width: 100%" data-attachment-id="710146" data-permalink="https://www.slashgear.com/the-mercedes-amg-gt-63-s-e-performances-base-price-will-shock-you-02710145/22c0023_001-2-v2/" data-orig-file="https://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/22C0023_001-2.v2.jpg" data-orig-size="1440,1080" data-comments-opened="0" data-image-meta="{"aperture":"0","credit":"","camera":"","caption":"","created_timestamp":"0","copyright":"","focal_length":"0","iso":"0","shutter_speed":"0","title":"","orientation":"0"}" data-image-title="22C0023_001 (2).v2" data-image-description="" data-image-caption="

Mercedes-AMG GmbH

” data-medium-file=”https://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/22C0023_001-2.v2-960×720.jpg” data-large-file=”https://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/22C0023_001-2.v2-1067×800.jpg” />The order books are now open for Mercedes-AMG’s latest offering, the 63 S E Performance sports hybrid. We first saw the car in August 2021, and we were anticipating a shocking base price given its reputation for being the most potent Mercedes-AMG ever made. As it turns out, the word “shocking” is an understatement, and you’ll need a fat wallet … Continue reading

SpaceX reveals $500 monthly 'Premium' Starlink service with speeds up to 500 Mbps

SpaceX has revealed a new tier for its Starlink satellite internet service with higher performance but pricing that might make your eyes water, The Verge has reported. Called Starlink Premium, it offers speeds between 150 and 500Mbps with 20 to 40 milliseconds of latency, up from 50 to 250Mbps with the same latency. Upload speeds are also up, from 10 to 20Mbps on the standard plan to 20 to 40Mbps on Premium.

For a performance boost of roughly double, you’ll pay five times more, however. Starlink Premium will cost $500 a month compared to $99 per month for the standard plan. You’ll also pay $2,500 for the antenna and other hardware, compared to $499 for base plan, and will need to leave a $500 deposit to reserve the Premium dish.

SpaceX said the new service will work better in “extreme weather conditions” and customers will get priority 24/7 support. It’s likely to be the only high-speed internet option available in many remote places, where the extra weatherproofing could come in handy. 

SpaceX announced that Starlink would come out of beta last October, and recently unveiled a new rectangular satellite dish that’s much smaller and thinner than the original round one. The new Premium antenna is apparently larger than that and it supposedly “helps ensure bandwidth for critical operations even during times of peak network usage,” SpaceX said. 

Starlink has launched over 2,000 satellites as of mid-January, with around 1,500 in operational orbit. The current system is authorized for up to 4,408 satellites, around triple the current number. If you’re interested in the Premium tier, orders are now open with deliveries set to start in Q2 2022. 

The Morning After: Wordle finds a new home

Wordle, the once-a-day word game without ads, subscriptions or even a mobile app, has been purchased by The New York Times. If you haven’t played it, you have six chances to guess a five-letter word, with clues offered for correct letter guesses. In an interview with The Times earlier this month, creator Josh Wardle admitted the project was inspired in part by Spelling Bee, one of the paper’s subscription games, which Wordle will likely appear alongside shortly.

The Times didn’t disclose the exact terms of the Wordle acquisition, though the press release says it paid “in the low seven figures.” Play it while you can — or find a workaround like this, spotted by Vice.

—Mat Smith

The biggest stories you might have missed

DICE delays ‘Battlefield 2042’ season one to fix ‘Battlefield 2042’

The core game part.

Battlefield 2042 is rough. To address some of those shortcomings, DICE and EA have officially delayed the game’s first season to early summer and will use the extra time to fix the core experience. The next BF2042 update will bring a revamped, easier-to-digest scoreboard, while better player profiles and long-awaited voice chat functionality are coming “as soon as possible.”

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Google Messages begins displaying iMessage reactions as emoji

But only for beta users.

Google has started rolling out a feature for Messages that translates iMessaging Tapbacks as emoji, according to 9to5Google. The publication first discovered the experimental feature in a deep dive of the Google Messages beta app last year. It’s unclear whether the feature will come out for the stable version that most of us use, but if you’re using the beta app, you’ll get the update that enables it soon enough.

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Peloton’s $90 armband offers more comfortable heart rate tracking

It costs a little more though.

Peloton
Peloton

Peloton is once again expanding its fitness equipment range with a new heart rate tracker. Its $90 Heart Rate Band straps to your arm, which could make it more comfortable and easier to use than a chest strap, which normally needs to be placed in a specific location and often needs moistened contacts to work properly. The Heart Rate Band works with Peloton’s app and devices, including all Bike and Tread models as well as the Guide camera. The armband should work with other products that recognize common Bluetooth heart rate monitors, but there’s no ANT+ support — a standard in many gyms and fitness studios.

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Spotify’s ‘Science VS’ podcast will only fact-check misinformation spread on Spotify

The creators said Spotify’s support of Joe Rogan ‘felt like a slap in the face.’

The host and editor of Science VS, a podcast owned by Spotify, are no longer making episodes of the show — save for those “intended to counteract misinformation being spread on Spotify.” In a letter to Spotify CEO Daniel Ek, Wendy Zukerman and Blythe Terrell said their policy would remain in place until “Spotify implements stronger methods to stop the spread of misinformation on the platform.”

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Meta is winding down its low-cost Wi-Fi program for developing countries

Express Wi-Fi launched five years ago and is available in 30 countries.

Meta is ending its Express Wi-Fi program designed to provide low-cost internet in developing countries through partnerships with local communities, mobile operators and businesses. Designed to be inexpensive, starting at around 15 cents for 100MB or $5 for 20GB, Facebook partnered with satellite companies, ISPs and others in places like India, South Africa and the Philippines. 

Recently, The Wall Street Journal reported glitches in Meta’s free internet services were creating unwanted charges for users in Pakistan. Meta also reportedly favored its own content on its free-data Discover service to the detriment of other sites. Meta said it plans to focus on other projects around internet access.

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Samsung Galaxy S21 FE review: Good phone, wrong time

I’ve never really understood Samsung’s Fan Edition branding. To me, fans are the people who are first in line, first to read all the related news and rumors, and most importantly, the first to check out the latest products from their favorite device makers. So when Samsung announced the $700 Galaxy S21 Fan Edition almost a full year after the original S21 came out, it felt long overdue. What we’re looking at here is less of a phone for die-hard enthusiasts and more of a remix featuring some of the S21’s best traits for a lower price. Unfortunately, all that doesn’t solve the S21 FE’s problem of it feeling outdated essentially on day one.

Design

Look, the S21 FE might technically be a new phone, but let’s not pretend we haven’t seen it before. It’s got essentially the same shape and design queues as previous S21s, just with a slightly different size. Featuring a 6.4-inch screen, the S21 FE lands squarely between the 6.2-inch S21 and the 6.7-inch S21+. That said, at around six ounces the S21 FE feels slightly lighter than its siblings thanks to some streamlined design changes.

Review photo for Samsung's Galaxy S21 FE smartphone
Sam Rutherford/Engadget

Around back, the S21 FE still features Samsung’s Contour Cut design, but instead of having a camera bump with a metal shroud, the phone’s back is made from a single piece of matte plastic. (Samsung calls it glastic because it’s plastic that kind of feels kind of like glass.) And instead of a two-toned color scheme, the S21 FE is monotone throughout, with a color choice of blue, lavender, bronze, white, red and graphite (shown above).

Elsewhere, the S21 FE essentially has the same design as its forebears, featuring a centrally located selfie cam in front, a power button and volume rocker on the right, and a USB-C port on bottom for data and charging. There’s a speaker grille down below that works with the phone’s earpiece to provide stereo audio, which sounds fine even if it’s a little light on bass for my taste.

Display

Samsung makes the best phone displays in the industry, and even though the screen on the S21 FE isn’t quite as big or high-res as the S21 Ultra’s, there’s not much to complain about. You get strong brightness that tops out at over 700 nits, a 120Hz refresh rate, and 2,400 x 1,080 screen resolution — the same as what you get on the S21+.

Review photo for Samsung's Galaxy S21 FE smartphone
Sam Rutherford/Engadget

In front, the S21 FE’s display is protected by Gorilla Glass Victus. It also houses a handy fingerprint sensor beneath its screen. And while the S21 FE’s optical in-screen fingerprint sensor isn’t as sophisticated as the ultrasonic sensors Samsung used in the original S21 models, in my experience, it’s fast and dependable.

Android 12

While Samsung (and carriers) continue rolling out Android 12 to older S21 devices, the S21 FE comes with One UI 4.0 (which is based on Android 12) pre-installed. Visually, this doesn’t have a big impact on the S21 FE’s overall UI and layout, though the extra personalization options do make it easier to customize your home and lock screens. And because Samsung’s spin on Android has long included support for features like scrolling screenshots, the most important upgrade in One UI 4.0 is the new Privacy Dashboard. In addition to new notifications that call attention to when apps are accessing the phone’s mics or cameras, the Privacy Dashboard provides a simple and easily accessible way of managing things like permissions, data and tracking settings and more. At a time when digital privacy remains a constant concern, more control over your data is definitely a good thing.

Cameras

Review photo for Samsung's Galaxy S21 FE smartphone
Sam Rutherford/Engadget

The S21 FE’s cameras are another area where Samsung’s spec shuffle really comes into effect. The phone has a familiar wide, ultra-wide, and telephoto camera setup on its back, but with a lower-res 8-megapixel sensor compared to the 64MP sensor you get on its predecessors. You still get a 3x optical zoom, but from a camera that produces pictures that just aren’t quite as sharp or as detailed as a standard S21.

The wide and ultra-wide cameras take great photos, though the S21 FE still lags behind the Pixel 6. For example, in a shot of some toys taken outside, the Pixel 6 preserved highlights on one toy’s face, while keeping the toy sitting in the shade from looking too underexposed. In contrast, the S21 FE blew out the sunlit face and eyes without providing much in the way of extra sharpness or detail. Google’s Night Sight also consistently outperformed Samsung’s Night Mode for low-light shots, even though the S21 FE often wasn’t far behind. That said, the S21 FE’s cameras aren’t bad; they’re just not as good as the Pixel 6. And let’s not forget the Pixel 6 only has two rear cameras, lacking any sort of dedicated telephoto option like you get from Samsung.

On the flip side, Samsung actually increased the resolution of S21 FE’s front cam to 32-MP (up from 10MP on the S21), which is nice if you like a lot of selfies or videos for social media. But at the same time, I don’t really think this one upgrade is enough to change the overall impact of the device, leaving it feeling more like a nice bonus and less like a notable improvement.

Performance

At this point, the Snapdragon 888 chip inside the S21 FE is a pretty well-known quantity. It delivers speedy performance and helps support features like 4K video capture across all of the phone’s cameras (at 60 frames per second on the main wide-angle and front selfie cams and 30 fps for the rest). However, because the base S21 FE only comes with 6GB of RAM as opposed to 8GB on a normal S21, I noticed the FE felt slower at times, including when it was processing Night Mode photos.

Review photo for Samsung's Galaxy S21 FE smartphone
Sam Rutherford/Engadget

Granted, it’s a pretty minor difference, and you might not even notice unless you use the two phones side by side. But for people who do a lot of memory-intensive tasks like gaming or video editing, the FE’s lower base RAM is probably the biggest reason to pay $70 to upgrade to the 8GB model or just opt for a standard S21 or S21+.

Battery life

Another bonus of the S21 FE’s larger body is that it provides extra room for a bigger battery. So instead of a 4,000 mAh cell like you get in the S21, the S21 FE features a 4,500 mAh power pack, which provides a noticeable improvement in longevity. On our battery test, the S21 FE lasted 16 hours and 55 minutes, or a little more than an hour and a half longer than the S21’s time of 15:17. And in the real world, the S21 FE’s battery life often feels even more prodigious than that, as I often finished the day with upwards of 40 percent battery still left in the tank.

Review photo for Samsung's Galaxy S21 FE smartphone
Sam Rutherford/Engadget

It’s also worth noting that, like the standard model, the S21 FE doesn’t come with a power adapter in the box. So if you want to take advantage of the phone’s 25-watt wired charging, you’ll probably have to shell out for a separate charging brick. It’s annoying for sure, but like Apple, Google and others, Samsung says not including a power adapter with its phones should help cut down on e-waste.

Wrap-up

Review photo for Samsung's Galaxy S21 FE smartphone
Sam Rutherford/Engadget

With the supply of standard S21 models starting to dry up, the S21 FE isn’t really competing against the originals. It’s a replacement that’s sadly way past due. It’s still a solid phone, but the standard Pixel 6 shoots better photos, has a more attractive design, and if you get the unlocked model directly from Google, it costs $100 less, too. The Pixel 6 is simply the better buy unless you really care about mmWave 5G (which the unlocked Pixel 6 doesn’t support) or having access to a telephoto camera.

Hell, the S21 FE is so late Samsung is already planning to release its next big flagship in the coming weeks. So even if you’re a huge fan of Samsung’s latest FE handset, at the very least, you should wait to see what the S22 has to offer before purchasing what is essentially a year-old phone. Plus, the arrival of a brand new Galaxy S phone often means discounts are coming soon to older devices.

Review photo for Samsung's Galaxy S21 FE smartphone
Sam Rutherford/Engadget

Oh, and if Samsung wants to keep this whole Fan Edition thing going, what I’d really like to see is a device that better lives up to the branding. Instead of a repackaged year-old phone, why not make a premium remixed version sporting a microSD card slot and headphone jack? Not only would this be a welcome alternative to a lot of today’s flagships with minimal ports, but it’d also be a considerate nod to old-school Galaxy phone fans who may have felt betrayed when Samsung removed those features from the S20 in 2019. That’s the kind of customer appreciation I can really get behind.

Key specs

SpecGalaxy S21 FE
Display6.4-inch 2,400 x 1,080 (20:9) OLED. 411ppi, up to 120Hz
Dimensions6.13 x 2.93 x 0.31 inches / 155.7 x 74.5 x 7.9 mm; 6.24 oz / 177 g
Processor, RAM and StorageQualcomm Snapdragon 888;6GB DDR5 RAM;128GB / 256GB UFS 3.1 storage
Rear cameras12MP f/1.8 wide, 1.2-micron pixels, 1/1.31″ sensor and f/1.85 aperture12MP ultrawide camera, 1.25-micron pixels, 114-degree FOV and f/2.2
Front camera32MP, 1.22-micron pixels, f/2.2
Battery4,500 mAh, 25-watt fast-charging, fast wireless charging
Sensors and connectivityUnder-display fingerprint sensor, single sim, NFC, WiFi 6, Bluetooth 5.0
Water resistanceIP68

Google Maps explains how it tackles review bombing

Review bombing is a practice in which many people (or a few aggrieved folks with multiple accounts) barrage a product, business or service with negative reviews, usually in bad faith. That can severely damage a small or local business that relies on word of mouth. Google says millions of reviews are posted on Maps every day, and it has laid out some of the measures it employs to stamp out review bombing.

“Our team is dedicated to keeping the user-created content on Maps reliable and based on real-world experience,” the Google Maps team said in a video. That work helps to protect businesses from abuse and fraud and ensures reviews are beneficial for users. Its content policies were designed “to keep misleading, false and abusive reviews off our platform.”

Machine learning plays an important role in the moderation process, Ian Leader, product lead of user-generated content at Google Maps, wrote in a blog post. The moderation systems, which are Google’s “first line of defense because they’re good at identifying patterns,” examine every review for possible policy violations. They look at, for instance, the content of the review, the history of a user or business account and whether there’s been any unusual activity connected to a place (like spikes in one-star or five-star reviews).

Leader noted the machines get rid of the “vast majority of fake and fraudulent content” before any user sees it. The process can take just a few seconds, and if the models don’t see any problem with a review, it’ll swiftly be available for other users to read.

The systems aren’t perfect, though. “For example, sometimes the word ‘gay’ is used as a derogatory term, and that’s not something we tolerate in Google reviews,” Leader wrote. “But if we teach our machine learning models that it’s only used in hate speech, we might erroneously remove reviews that promote a gay business owner or an LGBTQ+ safe space.” As such, the Maps team often runs quality tests and carries out additional training to teach the systems various ways some words and phrases are used to strike the balance between removing harmful content and keeping useful reviews on Maps.

An illustration depicting user reviews on Google Maps.
Google Maps

There’s also a team of folks that manually evaluates reviews flagged by businesses and users. Along with removing offending reviews, in some cases, Google suspends user accounts and pursues litigation. In addition, the team “proactively works to identify potential abuse risks.” For instance, it might more carefully scrutinize places linked to an election.

Google often updates the policies depending on what’s happening in the world. Leader noted that, when companies and governments started asking people for proof they’ve been vaccinated against COVID-19 before being allowed to enter premises, “we put extra protections in place to remove Google reviews that criticize a business for its health and safety policies or for complying with a vaccine mandate.”

Google Maps isn’t the only platform that’s concerned about review bombing. Yelp prohibits users from slating businesses for requiring customers to be vaccinated and wear a mask. In its 2021 Trust and Safety report, Yelp said it removed more than 15,500 reviews for violating COVID-19 rules last year.

Before it killed user reviews, Netflix dealt with review bombing issues. Rotten Tomatoes and Metacritic have taken steps to address the phenomenon too.

Simon Cowell Suffers Bone-Breaking Spill In Another Bike Accident

The “America’s Got Talent” judge, who reportedly was not wearing a helmet, will have some healing to do.

The Book of Boba Fett Prepares for the End by Losing Its Way Again

When The Book of Boba Fett began, I posited that the show’s strength was that it already knew who its titular character was. But as the series sets the stage for its conclusion, it has lost that self-assurance—and almost entirely lost the point of being a series about Boba Fett.

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