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Mobile Syrup

Get Apple’s MagSafe Duo Charger for $154.99 today

If you’re deep in the Apple ecosystem, you might want to check out Amazon’s discount on the MagSafe Duo charger, as shared by RedFlagDeals user ‘guikaltner636862321696654696’

Regularly available for $169, the 20W Duo charger is currently available for $154.99.

The Duo Charger can charge two Qi-enabled devices, including iPhone 12 and later smartphones, all Apple Watches, AirPods Pro and the latest 3rd-gen AirPods quickly and at the same time

When not in use, the charger can be folded in half for easy storage.

It’s worth noting that the charger comes with a USB-C to USB-C cable only, and you’ll have to purchase a charging brick separately.

Follow the link to purchase the Apple MagSafe Duo Charger from Amazon for $154.99.

MobileSyrup utilizes affiliate partnerships. These partnerships do not influence our editorial content, though MobileSyrup may earn a commission on purchases made via these links.

Source: RedFlagDeals, Amazon

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Mobile Syrup

Bezos’ dream for the first commercial space station is a suburban nightmare

Jeff Bezos’ aerospace company Blue Origin has unveiled its initial plans for the world’s first-ever commercial space station.

While specifics are still scarce, the space station will be modeled after “business parks,” i.e. the blight of the suburbs.

As Mashable wearily reports, “a business park is a collection of office buildings, with some grass or hey even a water feature or two in between structures, if you’re lucky.”

For context, the first-ever business park has its roots in segregation, wealth and white flight, opening in “an upper-class white suburb of Birmingham, [Alabama], in the early 1950s as commuters became uneasy with simmering racial tension in city centers.”

In the years that followed, business parks received further criticism for their negative impact on surrounding communities and suburban sprawl, and tendency towards being abandoned and left in vacant disrepair.

For its part, Blue Origin says that its bold creative vision for humanity’s first permanent steps into that hallowed final frontier will “provide the essential infrastructure needed to scale economic activity and open new markets in space.” Yikes.

The station, tentatively named the “Orbital Reef”, is scheduled to be up and orbiting sometime between 2025-2030.

Blue Origin has so far completed two successful tourist flights into space — or more specifically, into low Earth orbit.

Passengers have included Bezos himself, naturally, and Canadian sci-fi legend William Shatner.

Source: Mashable

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Mobile Syrup

Nintendo Switch Online datamine lists nearly 100 more N64, Genesis games

Now that Nintendo’s Switch Online + Expansion Pack has been released, dataminers have naturally already gotten to picking it apart.

Interestingly, what they’ve found is listings for numerous N64 and Sega Genesis titles beyond the initial launch lineup, which includes the likes of The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time, Super Mario 64 and Sonic the Hedgehog 2. Specifically, there’s mention of “at least 38 N64 titles,” as well as “at least” 52 Sega Genesis/Mega Drive games.

Specific titles aren’t listed, but the chart does have games organized alphabetically, which does help narrow down what they could be.

Of course, it’s important to stress that what’s found in a datamine doesn’t guarantee what will actually be publicly released, but it’s nonetheless an interesting look at what could be to come for Expansion Pack.

As it stands, we know that Nintendo is planning to add new games on a regular basis, including The Legend of Zelda: Majora’s Mask, F-Zero XBanjo-Kazooie and Paper Mario. This also applies to Genesis titles, but specific ones have not yet been confirmed.

Nintendo Switch Online + Expansion Pack costs $63.99 CAD/12 months for an Individual Membership or $99.99/12 months for a Family Membership.

It should be noted, however, that it hasn’t exactly been a completely smooth launch for Expansion Pack. Over the past 24 hours, Switch owners have taken to social media to share their frustrations with the technical performance of some of the N64 games. Certain titles, including Ocarina of Time, have reportedly suffered from input lag, odd graphical glitches and inelegant controller layouts.

It remains to be seen whether Nintendo will fix these issues.

Image credit: Flickr — Chris Chrisostomou

Via: Destructoid

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Mobile Syrup

HBO has renewed Succession for Season 4

After only two episodes of Season 3, HBO has already renewed Succession for a fourth season.

Season 3 hit the air on October 17th and hits HBO and Crave weekly.

Succession follows the story of the media titan Roy family as the head of the family’s three offspring all aim to take control of the family business.

The series stars Nicholas Braun, Sarah Snook, Jeremy Strong, Brian Cox, Matthew Macfayden and, my favourite personal favourite, Kieran Culkin’s Roman Roy.

standard Crave subscription is priced at $9.99/month and HBO costs an additional $9.99/month.

Source: HBO Canada 

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Mobile Syrup

Palm is back with wireless earbuds

If you were alive during the hotbed of tech that was 1995 to 2011, you likely remember Palm. The somewhat short-lived American tech brand best known for making PDA devices, was bought by HP back in 2010 and then buried in a shallow grave a year later.

Then in 2019, it sort of reemerged as a startup with a new phone. The new device was a tiny companion smartphone for your real phone, and while I assumed no one purchased it, I guess I’m wrong because Palm is back with a pair of wireless earbuds.

Palms’ new wireless earbuds, called the Palm Buds Pro, can be pre-ordered now for $99 USD (roughly $122 CAD).

The Palm Buds Pro feature active noise-cancelling and a three-mic per earbud design that aims to improve audio quality. Like many other popular earbuds, the Palm Buds Pro feature an ambient mode, roughly 24 hours of total battery and touch controls for playback.

They feature an IPX4 rating, ensuring they can survive light rain or a sweaty workout. The case also features USB-C charging.

While I’m not expecting anything phenomenal from these buds, it’s cool to see the Palm brand back from the dead in some form

Source: Palm

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Mobile Syrup

Apple has several refurbished iPhones, iPads and Macs in stock

After being limited to the U.S. market, refurbished iPhones officially surfaced on Apple’s Canadian website last month. Along with iPhones, Apple’s refurbished store currently has several discounted iPads and Macs in stock.

Check out all refurbished offerings below:

iPhone

Find all refurbished iPhones here.

iPad

Find all refurbished iPads on sale here.

Mac

Apple TV

As expected, the discounts only amount to about $240 to $300, but this is a solid deal given Apple’s stellar reputation when it comes to its used devices. Find all of Apple’s refurbished products here.

MobileSyrup utilizes affiliate partnerships. These partnerships do not influence our editorial content, though MobileSyrup may earn a commission on purchases made via these links.

Source: Apple

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Mobile Syrup

It’s official: Vidéotron wants to expand into Western Canada

Vidéotron’s CEO has confirmed that the Montreal-based cable, wireless and internet company intends to expand its business into the provinces of Alberta, Saskatchewan and British Columbia.

In an interview with Postmedia’s editorial board, Pierre Karl Péladeau announced that his company will in fact use the 3,500 MHz radio spectrum it purchased at the federal government’s summer auction to enter the telecom market in Western Canada.

While refusing to give a firm number, Péladeau suggested that a fourth national competitor in that market could result in 15 to 30 percent lower prices for consumers.

The announcement comes the day after the Federal Court rejected a request from Telus that would have temporarily blocked Quebecor — Vidéotron’s parent company — from using the spectrum it purchased in Canada’s western provinces.

Telus and Bell are currently taking Quebecor to court, arguing that those spectrum purchases should not have been permitted because Vidéotron does not currently offer services in that part of the country.

However, Péladeau is now countering that his company intends to do just that.

The interview quotes him saying that Quebecor scooped up spectrum in Western Canada not “to flip an asset,” but to “build a business” in the region.

For context, Vidéotron has previously sold spectrum for profit. However, its reasoning at the time seemed less to do with hoarding resources and more to do with the high barrier to entry for mid-sized carriers hoping to step foot into Canada’s highly concentrated national telecom market, where Bell, Rogers and Telus have a legally-questionable stranglehold.

Case in point: Vidéotron sold that spectrum to Shaw Communications in 2017, and now Shaw is being gobbled up by Rogers.

Moreover, as the Vancouver Sun article notes, Vidéotron “still needs to strike deals with the existing carriers to piggyback on their networks to launch initially” — a process made all the more tricky by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission’s decision to backpedal on lowered wholesale rates that would have evened the playing field for small-and-medium-sized internet service providers.

Source: The Vancouver Sun

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Mobile Syrup

Testing out the Google Pixel 6’s Real Tone feature

I reviewed Google’s new Pixel 6 Pro and it’s honestly one of my favourite phones I’ve used ever. And my favourite feature of this new handset, is its camera’s ‘Real Tone’ functionality.

Real Tone recognizes darker skin tones and complements, rather than brightens, them. All smartphone cameras on the market are designed for people with lighter skin tones, and thankfully, the Pixel 6/Pixel 6 Pro aim to change this.

In this video, we asked a few people with darker skin, “how do you think the phone’s camera handled your skin tone?” Take a look at the video below to see some reactions.

TL;DR: While the device didn’t automatically brighten darker skin tones, it did often add highlights to the subject’s face. Although not perfectly replicating what the subject looks like in real life, this isn’t necessarily a bad thing, as it adds a subtle model-like beauty to shots.

Some may dislike the highlight, which is why I’m flagging it here, but everyone I asked appreciated the additional glow.

For skin tones similar to mine, the phone did a really good job at matching the colour, they were near-perfect.

While filming the video I noticed that the phone does a lot better at taking pictures of tones with a user’s face in the picture. Simply taking a picture of my arm, the colour tone was a bit off. But photos with my face involved the colour accuracy was just about perfect.

Check out my full review of the Pixel 6 Pro, here. 

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Mobile Syrup

Sony’s Xperia Pro-I sports a variable aperture and an 1-inch sensor

Is Sony’s Xperia Pro-I a smartphone or a camera?

The new device features a 1-inch camera and an f/2-f/4 variable aperture lens. Sony’s phone/camera device also features an RX100 VII’s 1-inch sensor that can shoot 12-megapixel photos with a 2.4µm pixel pitch (which refers to the density of pixels).

Additionally, the phone brings together phase-detect autofocus with real-time eye autofocus, and it offers high-speed continuous shooting with both AF/AE tracking at 20 frames per second.

The Pro-I also features a 16mm f/2.2 12-megapixel ultra-wide and a 50mm f/2.4 12-megapixel telephoto sensor. Moreover, the phone offers a two-stage shutter key as well as a shortkey with a circular button that opens a Videography Pro app that controls white balance, exposure and focus.

Alongside all this camera business, the Pro-I features a 6.5-inch 4K HDR OLED display with a 120Hz refresh rate, 240Hz touch sampling rate, Snapdragon 888 processor, 12GB of RAM and 512GB of UFS 3.1 storage. It also sports a microSD expansion port, a 4,500mAh battery and 30W fast charging with 3.5mm audio jack, stereo speakers and Dolby Atmos alongside IP68 water and dust resistance.

The device retails at $1,800 USD (about $2,229 CAD) and like all of Sony’s recent Xperia devices, will not release in Canada.

Via: Android Police

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Mobile Syrup

Crave launches $9.99 mobile-only plan, includes most content

Bell has launched a new, lower-cost tier for Crave that is exclusively available for mobile devices.

Appropriately titled Crave Mobile, this plan costs $9.99 and offers all of the content offered in Crave’s base tier and HBO + Movies tier. Starz content remains a separate $5.99 add-on. This means that Crave Mobile includes Crave originals like Letterkenny, standard Crave titles like Star Trek: Picard and Warner Bros./HBO titles as Succession, EuphoriaZack Snyder’s Justice League and Tenet.

Meanwhile, Crave has renamed Crave + Movies + HBO to ‘Crave Total,’ although the price and its exact catalogue and features remain the same. That plan is priced at $19.99/month, making Crave Mobile a more affordable way of accessing all of that content.

The trade-off is that only a single device is supported and streaming functionality is locked to the Crave mobile app or a web browser. Casting is not available, nor is the ability to download content. Finally, the Crave website notes that streaming resolution with Crave Mobile is “good,” while Crave Total resolution is “best.” We’ve reached out to Bell to confirm the exact resolution for Crave Mobile and will update this story once a response has been received.

For now, the only way to sign up for Crave Mobile is through Crave.ca, although Bell says it will also be offered in the future through “participating wireless carriers.” You can also sign up for a 12-month membership there for $99.90.

In other Crave news, Bell just revealed what’s coming to the service in November — read more on that here.

Source: Bell