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Mobile Syrup

TD app’s Mobile Payment to shutdown November 1

TD plans to shut down the Mobile Payment service in its mobile app despite still not supporting Google Wallet.

Per an email sent to customers late last week, TD said it would discontinue Mobile Payment on November 1st:

“On this date, you will no longer be able to pay for purchases using TD Mobile Payment but your physical TD Credit Card and any pre-authorized payments set up with your card will continue to work,” the email read.

TD cited the “growing popularity of other digital wallets” for the shutdown of Mobile Payment. However, TD still doesn’t support Google Wallet for payments. A Google Wallet help page listing supported Canadian banks and cards doesn’t include TD. Moreover, a Reddit post about the email received several complaints from users who still can’t add TD cards to Google Wallet.

It’s worth noting that TD supports Apple Pay. Oddly, TD’s U.S. subsidiary supports Google Wallet.

TD added Mobile Payment to its app back in 2016 as a way for people with NFC-capable smartphones to make payments with TD-issued cards. Hopefully, now that Mobile Payment is leaving the TD app, the bank will finally add Google Wallet support.

(Thanks Bob!)

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Mobile Syrup

Popular gaming account leaves Twitter, citing Elon Musk’s ‘immaturity’ as factor

Nibel, one of the most prominent gaming news accounts on Twitter, has announced that he’s leaving the platform.

In a statement posted to his now-private account, Nibel said he’s decided to “focus my time and energy elsewhere and move on from Twitter.” Over the years, Nibel — most recognized through profile pictures from anime like Mob Psycho 100 — grew in popularity for sharing gaming news from a variety of outlets, and with nearly 450,000 followers at the time of writing, he has had a significant reach.

In a post on Patreon, Nibel elaborated on the decision to leave Twitter. The first factor was that he was “not able to create an interesting and sustainable Patreon, which is evident in the number of Patrons stagnating during the first weekend and the first (of many) pledges being deleted in the first week.” Thanking Patrons for the support, he said he’ll look into refunds for recent payments and has already deactivated billing.

He went on to say that Twitter itself has also compelled him to step away from his work.

“I don’t think Twitter has yet experienced good leadership, and this trend will not change with Musk either,” referring to Tesla CEO Elon Musk, who officially took control of Twitter last week following his $44 billion USD (about $60 billion CAD) acquisition of the social media giant. “I do not trust the platform. I do not trust Musk and his seemingly infinite immaturity. I do not think Twitter will fall apart instantly but that it could be die a slow death. Why waste more time?”

Nibel ended his post by noting that he’ll keep the Twitter account up (“at least for now”) so that people can’t cause issues with the handle. Indeed, Nibel has criticized Twitter for difficulties in getting verified, as this lead to many accounts sharing fake news while posing as him.

Nibel is the latest person to announce a Twitter departure following Musk’s takeover. Other notable figures to do so include Grey’s Anatomy creator Shonda Rhimes, singer-songwriter Sara Bareilles and Bill & Ted star Alex Winter.

Musk’s first weekend in charge of Twitter has already been met with multiple controversies. Over the past few days, Musk shared a fake news story about the recent attack on Paul Pelosi, U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. Musk quietly deleted the tweet without taking accountability for sharing a conspiracy theory to his more than 110 million followers.

Meanwhile, Musk is reportedly planning to charge $20 USD (about $27.31 CAD) per month for Twitter verification, and has threatened to fire employees if they don’t implement the change by November 7th.

Image credit: One

Source: @Nibel Via: GamesRadar

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Mobile Syrup

Bell offering $10/mo discount for 12 months when you bring your own phone

Bell is offering a $10/mo bill credit for 12 months when customers bring their own phone, and the carrier has a new ‘Essential 10’ $60/mo plan.

While neither offer is outright bad, it’s worth noting that there are better value options out there. The $10/mo bring your own phone (BYOP) credit is a nice little bonus, but it’s too bad it doesn’t last longer than 12 months. That makes Bell’s $85/mo 25GB ‘Essential’ plan a better option by dropping the price to $75/mo. In other words, it’s $10 more than the $65/20GB plan available from flanker brands like Bell’s own Virgin Plus.

Bell’s $10/mo BYOP discount.

An extra $10/mo for 5GB more data and 5G access isn’t terrible if you really need 5G or live in an area with 3,500MHz. That said, if you don’t care about 5G or if 20GB is enough data for you, save some money and get the $65 plan.

Finally, it’s worth noting that Bell’s $10/mo discount is only available online. Online orders can also save the $50 connection fee, which comes as a bill credit applied to customers’ second or third bill.

Bell’s plans as of October 31st, 2022.

As for the new ‘Essential 10′ plan from Bell, the value is a little less clear. It costs $60/mo and includes 10GB of data. While the plan includes 5G access, Bell caps the data speed at 250Mbps and locks video streaming quality to standard definition (which, according to Bell, is 480p). Put another way, the limits on the plan effectively make 5G access pointless.

Plus, when other providers offer a $65/mo 20GB plan, it’s hard to argue that the $60/10GB plan is a good option. That said, Virgin Plus, Koodo, and Fido also offer $60/10GB plans capped at 4G speeds (which range from 100-150Mbps depending on the provider), so Bell’s $60/10GB is better than the flanker brands’ $60/10GB. And to be fair, if you bring your own phone to Bell, then that $60/10GB becomes a $50/10GB, which is better.

You can check out Bell’s plans here. Plan pricing may differ depending on which province you live in.

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Mobile Syrup

Elon Musk wants Twitter to charge $20/mo USD for verification

Tesla CEO and now “Chief Twit” Elon Musk wants Twitter to revamp its subscription service ‘Blue’ to include a higher price tag and verification status.

According to internal correspondence and people familiar with the matter who spoke to The Verge, the plan is to raise the cost of Twitter Blue from $4.99 USD to $19.99 USD per month. (In Canada, Twitter nearly doubled the price of Blue to $6.49/mo in July — it’s not clear how much the new, more expensive Blue will cost in Canada, but $19.99 USD is about $27.34 CAD.)

Beyond the price increase, the new Blue subscription would include verification. Currently, verified Twitter users (shown with a blue check mark) must get verification by applying for it. Verification is intended as a tool for authenticating accounts that are of public interest, such as accounts for political leaders, journalists, and celebrities. Under the new verification system tied to Blue, currently verified Twitter users would have 90 days to subscribe or lose their blue checkmark.

The Verge also reported that Musk gave Twitter employees an ultimatum: meet his deadline to introduce paid verification or leave the company. Musk reportedly has Twitter employees working late into the night and over the weekend while managers are drawing up lists of people to fire. Employees working on paid verification were given a deadline of November 7th to launch or be fired.

Considering Blue wasn’t worth the cost at $6.49, raising the price significantly and only adding verification as a benefit seems like a poor choice. Moreover, the implementation may harm the verification status if anyone can just pay for a blue check.

Blue’s other features include the ability to edit tweets, as well as access to ad-free articles from some publishers, customizations in the app and more. However, Musk apparently wants to grow subscriptions to become half of Twitter’s overall revenue — forcing people who need a verification badge to pay for it is certainly one way to push that agenda.

Of course, if you’d rather not deal with Twitter under Musk, there are some people who have jumped ship to other platforms like Mastodon — learn more here.

Source: The Verge

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Mobile Syrup

Ye’s Essentials playlist pulled from Apple Music

After being kicked off of Twitter and Instagram (although he’s unbanned from Twitter now), American rapper Ye, better known as Kanye West, has had his Apple Music Essentials playlist removed by the Cupertino-based company, as reported by Rolling Stones. This comes as a result of Ye’s recent antisemitic statements and anti-black rhetoric.

It’s worth noting that only the ‘Kanye West Essentials’ artist playlist and the ‘Kanye West Video Essentials’ playlist have been removed by Apple Music. Artist-specific essential playlists feature the most prominent and influential songs from the artist’s entire career. His full discography remains intact on the music streaming platform.

The move from Apple makes its music streaming service the first to take action against Ye’s comments and might pave the way for other music streaming services to follow suit. Spotify, however, has made it clear that it wouldn’t remove the artist’s music, “unless his label requested it,” according to Reuters. “It’s really just his music, and his music doesn’t violate our policy,” said Spotify CEO Daniel Ek. “It’s up to his label if they want to take action or not.”

West has spent most of his career with Def Jam Recordings, concluding his contract with the Donda album last year. While he is no longer signed to Def Jam, the label and its parent company Universal Music Group remain responsible for maintaining his catalogue of music.

“There is no place for antisemitism in our society. We are deeply committed to combating antisemitism and every other form of prejudice,” said Universal Music Group in a statement following Ye’s antisemitic statements.

Image credit: Shutterstock

Source: Rolling Stones

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Mobile Syrup

Ontario’s Phantom Compass teases new spooky Lovecraftian game for Halloween

St. Catharines, Ontario-based indie developer Phantom Compass has teased its next game to coincide with Halloween.

The teaser trailer doesn’t reveal much besides hinting at some of the eerie Lovecraft-inspired creatures the roguelite game will feature.

A title, platform(s) and release window were not revealed. For now, Phantom Compass says those interested in learning more can sign up for updates here.

Phantom Compass is best-known for the well-received Rollers of the Realm, which mixes RPG and pinball mechanics in a medieval setting.

If you’re looking for scary games to play for Halloween, though, we just put out a list of nine such titles.

Image credit: Phantom Compass

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Mobile Syrup

Anker heavily discounts portable chargers and cables

Staring off the week correctly is Anker with a few wild discounts on cables and chargers.

MobileSyrup utilizes affiliate partnerships. These partnerships do not influence our editorial content, though we may earn a commission on purchases made via these links that helps fund the journalism provided free on our website.

Source: Amazon Canada

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Mobile Syrup

Two key tips for making videos with Apple’s iPhone

There’s no doubt that the iPhone is a phenomenal video-making tool, but there are a few small tips you need to learn before fully integrating the iPhone camera into your workflow.

This article features just two tips for any iPhone video makers, but if you want to learn more about making content on the iPhone 14 Pro, check out this full video shot exclusively using the iPhone’s cameras and microphones.

Turn off HDR

HDR looks excellent in isolation, but it starts to look bad once you take that incredibly bright footage outside of the Apple ecosystem. Traditional videos you watch are in the REC 709 colour space because that’s what most TVs and screens are tuned for.

However, as phones get more powerful and mobile screens brighter, we’re starting to experiment with HDR footage. However, this footage only looks good on HDR displays, so as a rule of thumb, if you plan to edit your footage on a computer and distribute it on anything other than phones, turn off HDR to save yourself a lot of work.

The phone still records a video with the sky, your face and background exposed correctly. It just does it in a slightly less dynamic/bright colourspace.

You can turn off HDR by opening your iPhone Settings app and navigating to the Camera area. Tap on the Record Video section, and you can disable HDR video.

AirDrop has settings?

If you shoot Cinematic mode on the new iPhones and AirDrop those videos to your iPhone, you might notice that you can no longer adjust the digital blur. This is because you need to enable metadata when sharing Cinematic mode videos.

To do this, open the Photos app, tap on a Cinematic mode video and then open the share sheet. I never noticed that at the top of the screen, there’s a small ‘Options’ button and taping on that allows you to attach advanced metadata to your photos and videos.

You can enable all the data on any photo/video, but I only want it with Cinematic mode video so I can edit those files in Final Cut.

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Mobile Syrup

Did you pre-order PlayStation’s DualSense Edge gamepad?

PlayStation recently unveiled the DualSense Edge, its new ultra-customizable high-end controller. With the gamepad, you’re able to change joystick caps, remap buttons, and adjust trigger lengths. Additionally, it offers mappable back buttons and an on-controller user interface, and it also comes with a braided USB-C.

With all this in mind, this is the most customizable PS5 controller that Sony has released. However, it also comes with an expensive price tag. In Canada, you’ll have to pay a whopping $269.99 for this controller.

While I like the idea of a high-end PS5 gamepad, the cost is too steep for me, especially considering it’s half the cost of the PS5 Digital Edition.

So, my question this week is: did you pre-order the DualSense Edge, or are you interested in PlayStation’s latest controller?

Let us know in the comments below.

As a side note, here’s a story that outlines 10 things you can buy instead of the DualSense Edge.

Image credit: Sony

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Mobile Syrup

People are fleeing Musk’s Twitter for Mastodon, but what is it?

With Elon Musk’s ascent to ‘Chief Twit’ on Friday, some joined an exodus from the platform in search of less racist greener platforms. Over the last couple of days, you may have heard talk of ‘Mastodon,’ which seems to be the landing place for many former tweeters. But what is Mastodon, and how does it work?

What is Mastodon?

In short, Mastodon is free and open-source software for self-hosted social networking services. On the surface, Mastodon seems a lot like Twitter, offering similar microblogging features with a 500-character limit on posts (called toots instead of tweets) that appear in a real-time feed. Mastodon says on its website that the timeline shows posts chronologically with “no algorithms or ads to waste your time,” which feels like a shot at Twitter’s much-maligned algorithmic feed.

However, Mastodon isn’t just an open-source Twitter-like social network. When you dig in a little more, there are quite a few differences. Most notable (and likely most confusing for newcomers) are servers. Mastodon isn’t a centralized social network like Twitter, where everyone goes to the same place. Instead, it’s a ‘federated network’ consisting of various servers (also called instances) that represent different communities.

Mastodon likens servers to email address domains like Gmail, Outlook, etc. Users pick a server to host their account, but can still interact with people on other servers as long as they know their address. There are a bunch of different servers available to pick from — some are centred around shared interests, like gaming, or places.

The server approach also means that moderation on Mastodon differs significantly from Twitter and other social networks. Each server handles its own moderation, enabling a more local, community-driven approach to content moderation. Mastodon suggests people join servers with rules they agree with, or host their own server.

One other interesting note about Mastodon is that it’s interoperable with other social platforms based on ActivityPub, an open and decentralized social networking protocol. Mastodon says one account grants access to the “fediverse,” a group of independently hosted social networking apps that can communicate with each other (imagine if one account let you seamlessly post to Twitter, Facebook, Instagram and more).

How to get started with Mastodon

If you’re interested in making the jump from Twitter to Mastodon, here’s how to go about it. To start, you’ll need to pick a server — you can find a list of options here. Since servers have different focuses and rules, Mastodon recommends picking a server that aligns with what you’ll be posting about the most. For example, someone passionate about climate justice may want to join the ‘climatejustice.social‘ server. If you want to post about various topics, a general server (like the Mastodon-operated ‘mastodon.social‘ server) may be a better fit.

You can check a server’s rules by clicking the server, then clicking the ‘Learn more’ button on the left side and reading through the ‘About’ and ‘Server rules’ sections.

Ultimately, which server you pick isn’t a huge deal since you’ll still be able to chat with people on other servers. If you find another server you like, you can always create a second account for that server, or migrate your profile to that server without losing followers.

Once you’ve selected a server, you can create your account (you’ll need to make a display name and username, password, and add an email address). You’ll get an email with a confirmation link to activate your account. Once that’s done, you’re good to start following other Mastodon users and posting toots.

If you want to learn more about getting started with Mastodon, check out Mastodon’s full guide here. If you want to get Mastodon apps for your phone or other devices, check out the apps page here.