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Mobile Syrup

Ubisoft Toronto confirms it’s working on a Splinter Cell remake

Ubisoft has confirmed in a recent tweet that its Toronto-based studio is working on a Splinter Cell remake.

Little has been revealed about the title beyond the fact that the studio is currently hiring for the game (see the tweet below) and the fact that it will run on the same engine as Avatar: Frontiers of Pandora and Ubisoft’s upcoming Star Wars game.

In a blog post, Ubisoft says that the game will “deliver new-generation visuals and gameplay, and the dynamic lighting and shadows the series is known for.”

In an interview with three developers working on the project — creative director Chris Auty, producer Matt West and technical producer Peter Handrinos — revealed a few interesting facts about the title.

For instance, Ubisoft is approaching the game as a remake rather than a remaster. It’s still in the “earliest stages” of development, and the original game’s “stealth action redefined” direction will be carried forward. For the full interview, follow this link. With this in mind, it seems the Splinter Cell remake is poised to be more stealth-focused than the action-oriented Blacklist.

Given it’s been roughly 8.5 years since Splinter Cell Blacklist’s release, Sam Fisher is long-overdue for a return. The first Splinter Cell was released in 2004 across several platforms and, at the time, redefined the stealth genre.

Image credit: Ubisoft

Source: @Ubisoft

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Mobile Syrup

SaskTel brings 5G to Saskatchewan

SaskTel has begun to deploy its 5G wireless network in Saskatchewan.

The company, a crown corporation of the Saskatchewan government, said the launch is based in parts Regina. The network will be further expanded in the rest of the city and Saskatoon in Spring 2022.

The network will deliver faster internet speeds and have a larger network capacity. Connection will be “instantaneous.”

In order to use this new service, customers have to be within the 5G coverage area, have a device capable of using the service, and sign up for a plan that is compatible with 5G.

“We are thrilled to bring the next generation of wireless technology to our customers. Not only does it further enhance their ability to connect to the world around them, it also sets the stage for technological innovations that will improve the quality of life in our wonderful province,” Doug Burnett, SaskTel’s president and CEO, said in a statement.

The network is powered by Samsung. The company says 5G will help the development of technology use in agriculture, smart cities, healthcare, and many other industries. It likens this expansion to the impact 4G had on the app economy.

Image credit: SaskTel

Source: SaskTel

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Mobile Syrup

Analogue’s Pocket will soon let you dump Game Boy Camera photos to its SD card

Every few months, I think about finding a way to get photographs off my Game Boy Camera and Game Boy and onto my computer or smartphone

Why? I don’t really know, but some part of me wants to share those grainy, colourless pictures with the masses. While it is possible to get the images off the Game Boy Camera’s cartridge, the process isn’t exactly straightforward.

That will soon change.

Analogue’s Pocket, a high-end recreation of Nintendo’s classic Game Boy that recently went up for pre-order, is already capable of working with the Game Boy camera. However, according to Gizmodo, it will soon be possible to dump the low-resolution, grayscale photos that the 1998 accessory snaps, to the Pocket’s SD card.

Analogue

Image credit: Analogue

This makes moving the 30 photos (yes, the Game Boy camera could only save 30 photos) to your PC/mobile device far easier than it ever has been before. Gizmodo says that there’s no release date yet for the Pocket’s ‘1.1 firmware update’ that adds the feature.

Of course, using this method also requires you to actually get your hands on Analogue’s Pocket, which currently requires a lengthy wait period.

The $219 USD (roughly $278 CAD) handheld will be released in three waves depending on when you pre-ordered the device. The first group can expect Pocket devices to arrive sometime in Q1 2022, while the second group will need to wait until Q4 2022. Finally, those unfortunate enough to land in group three won’t get their hands on the Pocket until 2023.

Image credit: Wikipedia 

Source: Gizmodo 

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Mobile Syrup

Ookla data shows performance benefits of upgrading to a 5G phone

Ookla, the company behind the Speedtest app, has released a blog post analyzing the Q3 2021 5G performance of new devices compared to older 4G devices in several countries, including Canada. Ookla positioned the results as a way for people to see if it makes sense to fork out the extra money for 5G-capable devices, especially with the holidays approaching and smartphones potentially being on your gift list.

The data comes from Ookla’s ‘Speedtest Intelligence’ platform, which gathers data about download and upload speeds, network quality and more from consumer-initiated tests. You can learn more about Speedtest Intelligence here.

Additionally, Ookla did two main comparisons for each country included in the blog post — first, it compared the five most popular 5G Android phones and five most popular 4G Android phones in each country. Then, Ookla compared iPhone 11 and iPhone 13 performance. For the rest of this, we’ll largely focus on the Canadian results, but I do want to note that almost every other country shows a significant gap between 5G and 4G download speeds, while Canada’s data doesn’t.

Some 5G devices are a lot faster — most aren’t

Ookla’s measurements for Android phones in Canada are all Samsung devices. On the 5G side, there’s the Galaxy S21 Ultra, Note 20 Ultra, Galaxy S21, Galaxy S20 and Galaxy S20 FE. 4G devices include the Samsung Galaxy Note 10+, Galaxy S10+, Galaxy S9, Galaxy S10 and Galaxy S8.

The Galaxy S21 Ultra clocked median download speeds of 121.53Mbps, nearly twice as fast as the fastest 4G device (the Galaxy Note 10+). However, the other 5G phones don’t show as significant a jump, with the S20 FE and S20 coming in only a few Mbps faster than the Note 10+.

On the iPhone side, Ookla listed a media download speed of 163.34Mbps for the 5G iPhone 13, a huge leap from the 48.71Mbps for the 4G iPhone 11.

The charts don’t show everything

While certainly interesting, it’s also important to consider several factors these charts don’t show. For one, all we’re seeing here are average download speeds. We don’t know other information, like which networks were used or the location of tests. These can be significant factors that impact speed results — for example, a phone might have faster download speeds on one network compared to another, or in a city compared to a rural town.

For example, I’ve seen download speeds over 300Mbps on a 4G LTE connection using a Pixel 4 on Koodo in Pickering, Ontario, while a Pixel 6 on Bell 5G pulled 106 Mbps down and 104 Mbps down on 4G LTE in Whitby. That’s not to say these charts don’t matter, there’s just more to the story.

Similarly, phone hardware itself can have a significant impact on download speeds. This is particularly relevant with the iPhone comparison since the iPhone 11 — the last non-5G iPhone — was also the last iPhone to use Intel modems, which had a reputation for not being as good as Qualcomm modems. The iPhone 12 and 13 series use Qualcomm modems and have 5G, but 4G LTE speeds should be better on these iPhones too.

Most new phones include 5G hardware — it’s more about your carrier and location

On the hardware note, it’s also worth keeping in mind that if you’re buying a new phone in 2021, it probably supports 5G. Most smartphones, including flagships and mid-range options, boast support for 5G — I don’t think people will be deciding between 5G phones and non-5G phones so much as picking between carriers that offer 5G and carriers that don’t.

With that said, the carriers that do offer 5G charge much higher prices and current 5G coverage barely extends beyond major cities and hardly counts as 5G. The majority of 5G offered in Canada runs on spectrum considered to be low-band 5G, which is similar to the spectrum used in 4G. In a best-case scenario, you might see up to 15 percent faster speeds. In my experience, that’s typically not the case (and often I find 5G is actually slower than 4G LTE). That should change soon, now that carriers have bought up mid-band (a.k.a. Sub-6) 5G at the recent spectrum auction. Once carriers start rolling out service on that spectrum, people with 5G devices should start to see real benefits.

For now, however, getting a 5G-capable device likely won’t mean much for Canadians unless they’re on a 5G plan with one of the few carriers that offer 5G service (and they live in an area with 5G coverage). The benefits of upgrading to a 5G-capable device or plan depend heavily on what device you have, what you upgrade to and your carrier and location.

You can check out the full Ookla report here.

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Mobile Syrup

What’s coming to and leaving Netflix Canada in January 2022

In January 2022, Netflix Canada is set to stream several new TV shows and films, including the Snowpiercer season 3, Ozark season 4, Royal Treatment and Mother/Android.

Below is all the new content coming to the streaming service in January:

Coming Soon

  • All of Us Are Dead  — Netflix Series (South Korea) 
  • I Am Georgina — Netflix Series (Spain) 
  • Yeh Kaali Kaali Ankhein — Netflix Series (India)

January 1st

  • Chief Daddy 2 – Going for Broke  — Netflix Film (Nigeria)
  • The Hook Up Plan: season 3 — Netflix Series (France)
  • 1BR
  • 3:10 to Yuma
  • Apocalypse Now Redux
  • Argo
  • Contagion
  • Countdown
  • Masha’s Tales : season 1
  • My Best Friend’s Girl
  • Norm of the North
  • Pacific Rim
  • Saw III
  • Saw VI
  • Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows
  • The Blair Witch Project
  • The Ghost Writer
  • Waiting…
  • Why Did I Get Married

January 2nd

  • American Sniper
  • The Campaign
  • Cradle 2 the Grave
  • Exit Wounds
  • Gangster Squad
  • The Great Gatsby (2013)
  • RuPaul’s Drag Race: season 13
  • RuPaul’s Drag Race: Untucked!: season 13

January 4th

  • Action Pack — Netflix Family 

January 5th

  • Bad Boys for Life
  • Four to Dinner — Netflix Film (Italy)
  • Rebelde — Netflix Series (Mexico) 

January 6th

  • The Club: Part 2 — Netflix Series (Turkey) 
  • The Wasteland — Netflix Film (Spain) 

January 7th

  • Hype House — Netflix Series
  • Johnny Test: season 2 — Netflix Family 
  • Mother/Android — Netflix FIlm 

January 10th

  • Terminator: Dark Fate
  • Undercover: season 3 — Netflix Series (Belgium) 

January 11th

  • Dear Mother — Netflix Film (France) 

January 12nd

  • How I Feel in Love with a Gangster — Netflix Film (Poland) 

January 13th

  • Brazen — Netflix Film 
  • Chosen — Netflix Series (Denmark) 
  • The Journalist — Netflix Series (South Korea) 
  • Photocopier — Netflix Film (Indonesia) 

January 14th

  • After Life: season 3 — Netflix Series (U.K) 
  • Archive 81 — Netflix Series
  • Blippi: Adventures
  • Blippi’s School Supply Scavenger Hubt
  • The House — Netflix Seiries
  • Riverdance: The Animated Adventure – Netflix Family 
  • This Is Not a Comedy — Netflix Film (Mexico)

January 16th

  • Blow
  • Deadly Class: season 1
  • Dennis the Menace
  • Prisoners
  • Set It Off

January 17th

  • After We Fell
  • Playing with Fire

January 18th

  • Mighty Express: Train Trouble — Netflix Family 

January 19th

  • El marginal: season 4 — Netflix Series (Argentina) 
  • Heavenly Bites: Mexico — Netflix Documentary (Mexico) 
  • Juanpis González – The Series — Netflix Series (Columbia)
  • Midnight in the Switchgrass
  • The Puppet Master: Hunting the Ultimate Conman — Netflix Documentary 
  • Too Hot to Handle: season 3 — Netflix Series

January 20th

  • Midnight Asia: Eat, Dance, Dream — Netflix Documentary (Singapore)
  • The Royal Treatment — Netflix Film 

January 21st

  • Munich – The Edge of War — Netflix Film 
  • My Father’s Violin — Netflix Film 
  • Ozark: season 4, part 1 — Netflix Series
  • Summer Heat — Netflix Series (Brazil) 
  • That Girl Lay Lay — Netflix Family 

January 24th

Three Songs for Benazir

January 25th

  • Ada Twist, Scientist: season 2 — Netflix Family 
  • Neymar: The Perfect Chaos — Netflix Documentary 
  • Snowpiercer: season 3 — Netflix Series (new episode weekly) 

January 27th

  • Blumhouse’s Fantasy Island
  • Framed! A Sicilian Murder Mystery — Netflix Series (Italy) 
  • Wentworth: season 8

January 28th

  • Angry Birds: Summer Madness — Netflix Family 
  • Every Breath You Take
  • Feria: The Darkest Light — Netflix Series (Spain) 
  • Getting Curious with Jonathan Van Ness — Netflix Series 
  • Home Team — Netflix Film 
  • In From the Cold — Netflix Series
  • The Woman in the House Across the Street From the Girl in the Window — Netflix Series

January 31st

  • Horrible Bosses 2

Leaving Netflix in January

  • Mean Girls (January 1st)
  • Meet the Fockers (January 6th)
  • Meet the Parents (January 6th)
  • It Chapter Two (January 10th)
  • Top Gun (January 15th)
  • My Little Pony: Friendship in Magic: seasons 1-8 (January 31st)
  • Parks and Recreation: seasons 1-7 (January 31st)
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Mobile Syrup

Rogers starts construction of cell towers along Highway of Tears

Rogers has started building its first cellular tower along Highway 16 in British Columbia.

12 new towers will be built along the highway to serve the area between Prince Rupert and Prince George — also known as the Highway of Tears. The name is in reference to the dozens of Indigenous women and girls who went missing or were found murdered along the 720-kilometer route.

The new towers will create 252 kilometers of cellular coverage across the highway, helping to create continuous wireless coverage and creating a safer environment for travel. The company will also be providing coverage to three rest stops along the highway at Boulder Creek, Basalt Creek, and Sanderson Point.

“It means the world to me and our women to connect with others and keep in touch, especially on this highway – anything can happen at any given time,” Gladys Radek, Murdered and Missing Indigenous Women and Girls activist, said in a statement. “This tower and project will bring a lifeline to all of us who travel along Highway 16 regularly and will bring a sense of safety and security that will help us prevent future tragedies.”

The project is part of the company’s larger wireless service expansion project. Seven towers will also be built along Highway 14. While the project was expected to be completed in October of this year, it has been pushed to 2022 because of the global equipment and steel shortage.

Image credit: ShutterStock

Source: Rogers

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Mobile Syrup

Microsoft’s Xbox Fridge is now available to pre-order in Canada

Following the fridge’s release in the United States last month, Microsoft’s Xbox Series X ‘Mini Fridge’ is now available for pre-order in the Canadian Microsoft Store starting at 9am ET/6am PT on December 15th.

If U.S. pre-orders for the amusing joke that Microsoft has thankfully taken far too are any indication, the Series X Mini Fridge will likely sell out in a matter of minutes. With this in mind, if you’re interested in buying the Mini Fridge, make sure you act fast.

The Xbox Series X Mini Fridge costs $149 and is available for pre-order now in the Xbox Gear Store.

Image credit: Xbox 

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Mobile Syrup

Disney Melee Mania will hit Apple Arcade on December 17

Disney Melee Mania from Mighty Bear Games hits Apple Arcade this Friday, December 17th, allowing players to take control of notable characters like Wreck-It Ralph, Elsa, Mickey Mouse, Frozone, Moana and Buzz Lightyear in three vs three matches with friends and other players.

Each champion offers their own move sets, unlockable cosmetics and competes in five-minute matches in a battle arena where the player is tasked with trying to capture the most points possible.

Apple has also revealed that Nickelodeon Extreme Tennis is coming soon to Apple Arcade on iPhone, iPad, Mac and Apple TV.

In this tennis title, you play popular characters like Spongebob, Arnold, Michaelangelo, Garfield and more. Apple Arcade subscribers can sign up to receive a notification from the App Store when the game releases.

Apple Arcade costs $5.99 per month and is available across iPhone, iPad, Mac and Apple TV. The platform is also part of Apple One subscription bundles, starting at $14.95 per month.

Image credit: Apple

Source: Apple

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Mobile Syrup

This water bottle runs on Huawei’s HarmonyOS

Huawei’s in-house operating system HarmonyOS has made its way to a rather unconventional new device.

Chinese e-commerce platform Vmall, which Huawei operates, has listed a new stainless steel smart water bottle that runs on HarmonyOS. The Chinese listing also mentions that the bottle features an internal antibacterial lining that can kill almost 99.9 percent of bacteria.

The top cover of the bottle features a smart LED touchscreen display that shows the water’s temperature and the quantity left. Photos on the listing page show that you can add custom text to the screen using a dedicated app.

The app also reminds you to drink water throughout the day and track your water-drinking habits. The bottle also features a 250mAh battery that lasts about 20-22 hours per charge, which means you’d need to charge the water bottle at least once per day.

The smart water bottle is available in three colours, including ‘Black,’ ‘White’ and ‘Blue,’ and costs ¥159.00 (roughly $32 CAD).

Huawei hasn’t announced plans to sell the bottle in foreign markets. however, similar products from Digitek and HidrateSpark are already available on Amazon Canada.

Check out the HarmonyOS water bottle listing here.

Image credit: Vmall

Source: Vmall

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Mobile Syrup

Get six months of Amazon Music Unlimited for free with a 4th-gen Echo

Amazon is giving away six months of Amazon Music Unlimited when you purchase a 4th-gen Echo.

The smart home device costs $79.99, and Amazon Music Unlimited is available for $7.99 for Prime account members and $9.99 for those that don’t subscribe.

This deal is only available for new Amazon Music Unlimited subscribers. Additionally, the subscription features auto-renew, so you’ll have to turn it off if you don’t want to pay for the service when the free six months is over.

There’s also the option to get a free Sengled Smart Bulb instead of Amazon Music Unlimited, for the same $79.99 cost.

An Amazon Echo can use Alexa to control smart home devices, control music, ask questions, check the weather and more. And if you’d like to know more about Amazon Music Unlimted and how it compares to other music streaming apps, check out Brad Bennett’s streaming service comparison.

Source: RedFlagDeals