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Virgin Plus launches weekly offers through Member Monday

Virgin Plus has rolled out a new addition to its benefits program — Member Mondays.

The Bell flanker brand will offer limited-time deals through its partners for members to access every Monday. The deals will only be available for a one-week period.

It’s unclear if any of these offers will focus on discounts on services Virgin Plus offers.

The first Member Mondays see the company partner with New York Fries for its members in Ontario, B.C., Manitoba, Alberta, Saskatchewan, NWT, Nunavut and Yukon. Members in Québec, Nova Scotia, Newfoundland and Labrador, New Brunswick and P.E.I will see an offer from Pizza Salvatoré.

Frank & Oak, G Adventures, and Vivid Seats are some of the other partners the company is working with.

While weekly offers are new for Virgin, the Bell flanker isn’t the first to offer them. Fido rolled out its Xtra program in 2018 with a focus on weekly rewards for customers.

More information is available on Virgin Plus’ website.

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Mobile Syrup

Fitbit is planning a smartwatch for kids, and this is what it might look like

Fitbit, one of the leading names in fitness wearables, has been rumoured to be working on a kid-friendly smartwatch design. Now, the first alleged images of the watch have begun to surface online.

In leaked photos sent to 9to5Google, the front of the watch looks to take inspiration from the Fitbit Versa, with the main difference being a camera located on the top bezel. Cosmetics-wise, the watch looks to be blue throughout, including on the band, with red and yellow side buttons.

While the Google-owned company has made fitness trackers geared toward kids, such as 2018’s Fitbit Ace, those models we’re stripped-down versions of previous wearables. The upcoming Fitbit looks to be its own creation that’s specifically designed for kids.

It will be interesting to see how Fitbit incorporates the new camera, as even higher-end smartwatches such as Samsung’s Galaxy Watch line don’t include a built-in camera. Meta had also been working on a smartwatch featuring a camera, but the project was eventually scrapped.

Fitbit is even rumoured to include cellular connectivity on the watch, opening up possibilities for video calling on the device.

Questions are also being asked about what operating system the watch is set to feature, with leaks of the setup screen showing what looks to be Fitbit OS rather than Wear OS. Despite being a property of Google, Fitbit has stuck with its own OS, a trend that looks to be continuing on the newest model.

Although there has been no word of availability yet, the kid’s smartwatch is rumoured to release sometime in 2024.

Source: 9to5Google Via: Android Police

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Montreal’s Nuvei Corp. gains celebrity investor Ryan Reynolds

In February, Canada’s very own Ryan Reynolds and his production and advertising company, Maximum Effort, invested in a 1.2 million-square-foot studio in Markham, Ontario.

Now, Reynolds is investing in a Canadian fintech firm called Nuvei.

Reynolds, who has a reputation for investing in successful high-growth businesses, commented on the announcement, “I know about as much about fintech as I did about gin or mobile a few years ago. But Nuvei is impressive.” This comes soon after T-Mobile acquired Reynold’s Mint Mobile in a deal estimated to be around $1.35 billion USD (about $1.86 billion CAD). Reynolds’ other high-profile investments include American Aviation Gin and Wrexham Football Club.

Based in Montreal, Nuvei is a global payments technology company that offers card-acquiring services in more than 200 markets, including direct local acquiring in over 47 countries, as well as access to more than 600 alternative payment methods.

Nuvei’s acquisition of leading B2B and Integrated Payments Technology provider, Paya, earlier this year has helped the company become a preeminent payment technology provider in Global eCommerce, Integrated Payments, and B2B.

“We’re thrilled to welcome Ryan to the Nuvei family,” Nuvei Chair and CEO Phil Fayer. “We’re a global company but extremely proud of our Canadian roots and values, so to have one of the most internationally recognizable Canadians, as well as an entrepreneur with such renowned business acumen, join our investors is a privilege.”

It is currently unclear what amount Reynolds invested in the fintech firm.

Image credit: Mint Mobile

Source: Nuevi

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Mobile Syrup

Rogers moving Shaw’s outsourced customer service jobs back to Canada

Rogers says it’s moving customer service jobs Shaw once redistributed back to Canada.

A press release detailing the announcement doesn’t say where the jobs are moving back from, just that they’re “currently based outside of Canada.” The relocation will bring the positions to B.C., Alberta, and Manitoba.

Back in 2018, more than 3,000 Shaw employees took the company up on a buyout program. The focus was to make its customer delivery model more digital facing. Speculation about the company outsourcing customer service jobs was high, but Shaw said little about the matter.

The press release further details the service roles focus on phone calls and online chats with customers. The company says customer care roles will be implemented by Canada Day, and all jobs will officially be moved back by the third quarter.

Rogers completed its acquisition of Shaw on April 3rd after it received final approval from Innovation Minister François-Philippe Champagne.

Image credit: Shutterstock 

Source: Rogers

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Twitter slaps CBC with ‘government-funded media’ label

The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) is protesting Twitter’s move to label it as “government-funded media.”

CEO Elon Musk introduced the label last week, which was initially named “state-affiliated media,” to the Twitter accounts of news outlets receiving some form of funding through the government.

The CBC appears to be the first Canadian outlet to get the label. Musk labelled other public outlets, like NPR and PBS, last week, promoting the companies to stop tweeting. The BBC also received a label. However, unlike the others, it reads “publicly-funded media.”

 

In a letter it shared last week, the CBC said it’s never been a secret that it’s publicly funded. The letter came in response to  Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre’s request to label the outlet with the “government-funded media” tag.

CBC/Radio-Canada is publicly funded through a parliamentary appropriation that is voted upon by all Members of Parliament,” the CBC tweeted Sunday night. “Its editorial independence is protected in law in the Broadcasting Act.”

It’s unclear if the CBC will take actions similar to NPR and PBS and stop tweeting.

Image credit: CBC/ Twitter

Source: @CBCRadioCanada/Twitter

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Mobile Syrup

Android could soon get better call quality on Bluetooth devices

If you do a lot of Bluetooth calling, you might be aware of just how mediocre your call audio sounds to the person on the receiving end. However, that may soon be a thing of the past — Android could soon gain support for a wider frequency band, boosting the quality of hands-free devices.

Android expert Mishaal Rahman, with a hat tip to Luca Stefani, highlighted a recent patch to the Android Open Source Project (AOSP) that implements features connected to Super Wideband (SWB) Speech as outlined in version 1.9 of Bluetooth’s Hands Free Profile (HFP).

In other words, Android will support a wider range of frequencies reproduced through hands-free devices. Currently, Android uses HFP version 1.8 with wideband support, covering frequencies from 50Hz to 7kHz (called HD Voice). SWB would support 50Hz to 14kHz through the LC3 codec, falling just short of ‘fullband’ reproduction at 20Hz to 20kHz.

Of course, it’s worth keeping in mind that HFP 1.9 hasn’t officially been adopted yet and remains a work in progress. Still, it looks like the way is paved to better Bluetooth call quality. All that remains is how long it will take to hit Android devices, which will likely depend on device manufacturers.

Source: Mishaal Rahman Via: Android Police

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Save up to 31 percent on select Amazon Fire TVs

If you’re in the market for a new TV, specifically an affordable one, then check out these deals on select Amazon Fire TVs:

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

How to create and customize Memories on your iPhone

As an Apple iPhone user, you have the ability to create and customize your own memories in photos with music, different filters and looks.

Regularly, the Photos app automatically compiles photos from significant people, places, and events in a user’s library and organizes them into collections called memories. However, you can also personally choose a set of photos to make a memory out of, allowing you to revisit your favourite moments.

If you’re looking to create your own memories and share them with your loved ones, follow these steps:

Launch the Photos app on your iPhone. From here, proceed to add all the photos you want in the memory to a new album. I’ve named the new album ‘Moments,’ as seen in the screenshots below.

Tap and hold on the album until you see a pop-up, and tap on ‘Play Memory Video.’

Tap on the screen to pause the memory video from playing, and begin the customization by tapping the music note icon on the bottom left, marked with an arrow in the screenshot below.

You can now just swipe to change the memory mix, which includes random colour filters and background audio. If you don’t want to use random audio and filters, you can tap the audio note and filter button on the bottom right (marked with arrows in the screenshots below) to use music and filters of your choice.

Tap ‘Done’ once you’re happy with your selections. Press the ‘x’ button to close the memory. It will automatically be added to the ‘For You’ section in Photos.

Alternatively, you can follow along the instructions in the video below:

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Mobile Syrup

Toronto-based Nanoleaf’s Nathan Dyck is hyped for Matter — you should be too

If you follow developments in smart home technology, you’ve likely heard of Matter and Thread, though you might not fully understand them.

The duo represents a big shift in how smart home devices connect to and communicate with each other and has been the basis of much hype from the companies that make smart home tech and the enthusiasts who use it.

Over the last few months, the first trickle of Matter and Thread devices have emerged. Big names like Google, Apple and Amazon have pushed updates to products to enable Matter and/or Thread support. But with all the buzz, should you buy into the hype?

I sat down with Toronto-based Nanoleaf’s CPO Nathan Dyck to get to the bottom of that question and figure out whether Matter matters and what it means for the home of the future.

Explain it like I’m five

When I asked Dyck to explain Matter to me like I’m five, he started by comparing it to language.

“Everyone in the smart home world, moving forward, is kind of looking at Matter to be that one language that everyone is speaking,” Dyck explained.

Matter isn’t a language, per se — Dyck said the technical term is “application layer” — but the concept holds. The idea is that, through Matter, everything ends up using the same foundation to communicate. For example, something simple like turning a light on or off will work across a variety of products from different manufacturers because they all work from the same foundation.

If Matter is the language devices use to communicate, Dyck says Thread is the vehicle for that communication, like the telephone is to speech.

“The purpose of Thread is it’s a low-powered mesh technology. That is really, really important for battery-operated sensors,” Dyck said. “That’s where [Thread] exceeds Wi-Fi and why it’s really important for the smart home.”

“The mesh part of it is also quite useful, especially when you’re talking about covering any sort of space that’s more than just a single room… That’s actually a really good reason to have [Nanoleaf] light bulbs because they actually extend your mesh so you can have something that covers a very large home.”

Thread has the added benefit of shifting all these smart home devices off your Wi-Fi network, which should help performance on both sides.

While both sound important, it’s worth noting you don’t necessarily need both technologies (though you probably should use both if you’re serious about your smart home).

“I think Matter and Thread [are] kind of complementary technologies. You don’t, technically, need Thread to have certain Matter products,” Dyck said. “But when you put them hand-in-hand and couple them with automation… that’s the recipe for future use cases and future experiences.”

Lots to be excited about, but automation is the big one

While speaking with Dyck about Matter and Thread, he kept circling back to automation as a major benefit. Automating lights has been around for years, but Matter and Thread are set to really expand the capabilities while also making it much, much simpler for people to set up.

“When I was a kid… we’d have these little dials that you plug into your socket and connect it to your lamp, and it was scheduling your light for you,” Dyck said. “It was like, 30 years ago, so obviously schedules evolved, moved into the actual products themselves or the platforms that control them.”

But all these things are still somewhat separate, although there are tools to bring these disparate systems together. Anecdotally, I use smart products from Nanoleaf, LIFX and Aukey in my home and use Google Home to control them rather than jumping between each platform’s app. But if I go too far beyond simple on/off commands, things start to fall apart, even if the products themselves are capable of much more.

“You can pick and choose products from different companies, you can build some automations through various platforms… you can actually do that really effectively once you spend the, say, three months or three years of your life trying to figure them all out,” Dyck said.

“My desire is to make that super, super simple.”

Automation extends beyond just scheduling when your lights turn on or off. Dyck discussed a vision of a future home where lights were responsive to the environment, adjusting to the brightness of a room or turning off if a room was empty, adjusting colour throughout the day to better match people’s circadian rhythms.

The curse of commodification?

It’s ambitious, but with Matter and Thread, the hope is that automated lighting becomes accessible to the average person. But for all Dyck’s optimism about the future of lightning, not everyone shares the view.

In recent weeks, some smart home companies have pulled back from Matter over concerns of commodification. Notably, Belkin’s Wemo smart home brand paused the development of Matter devices in March, telling The Verge it would launch new Matter products when it finds a way to differentiate them.

“If your product doesn’t know how to differentiate itself except for the fact that it can connect to all these different platforms and basically have seven different ways to turn on the light bulb, yeah I would expect you’re scared of that commodification,” Dyck said.

“On the flip side… Those seven different ways to turn off the light bulb is what we’ve had to spend so much of our time doing in the past. So we’ve invested a lot of time into Matter as an eighth way… but I think it is the final one. I’m confident of that.”

Confident as Dyck is, he also referenced this XKCD comic about standards development that pokes fun at how efforts to make one universal standard proliferate standards.

Either way, Dyck isn’t concerned about Nanoleaf here. “Once we hit on, what we originally called the Aurora, the Light Panels, which is now evolved into our Shapes and Elements… that’s a differentiated experience.”

Getting started with Matter and Thread

To wrap things up, Dyck outlined the basics people need to get started with Matter and Thread.

“There are two main components for Matter and for Thread,” Dyck explained. “For Matter, generally speaking, you’ll need what’s called a Matter controller or a hub.”

Dyck said Matter controllers are built into a variety of products, typically smart speakers. Moreover, the controller is pretty important because, according to Dyck, it’s kinda like the “brain” of the operation.

On the Thread side, you need a border router — these often live in smart speakers as well, and in other products. Border routers are essentially the interface between your Thread mesh and the devices connected to it and the wider internet. Dyck says the border router is used to relay messages to Thread devices.

“The border router… is built on the same technology [as] the internet and your home router, the internet protocol,” Dyck said. “That makes it really flexible.”

“I think that openness is… a really important piece that I think differentiates Matter from previous applications or languages,” Dyck said.

Matter and Thread certainly seem different, and everything sounds promising so far. But it remains to be seen how the standard evolves going forward and if, as Dyck believes, it ushers in a simpler connected home.

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Here are the Pixel Fold, Pixel 8 series and 7a leaks from this week

Over the past week, we learned a lot of information about several upcoming smartphones, including the Pixel Fold, Pixel 8 series and the Pixel 7a.

Below is a collection of all of this week’s reports and rumours surrounding the smartphone and tablet world:

Google

This past week we’ve seen a leak about the Pixel 7a’s various colour variants. Now, the handset has been spotted in white, grey and blue.

The leak also indicates that the smartphone sports a 64-megapixel primary shooter and a 12-megapixel ultra-wide camera sensor, 256GB of internal storage, up to 8GB of RAM and more.

You can learn more about the leak here.


Another leak indicates that the Pixel Fold will feature a better display than the Z Fold 5. Despite Samsung making both screens, the Z Fold 5 will use the same material panel as the Z Fold 4, while the Pixel Fold will feature newer material.

This leak also indicates that the iPhone 15 models will also use the same material as the Z Fold 5.

You can learn more about the leak here. 


The Pixel 8 will reportedly have a smaller display compared to the Pixel 7. According to a report from DSCC, the Pixel 8 will offer a 6.16-inch display, down from the Pixel 7’s 6.32-inch screen. The Pixel 8 Pro, however, will feature the same 6.7-inch screen.

You can learn more about the leak here. 


It looks like the Pixel Tablet might include a privacy switch of some sort.

In this leak, you can see the front and back of the Pixel Tablet, including a switch on the top left above the volume control.

You can learn more about it here.


Samsung

It looks like we’re getting close to the reveal of a Samsung foldable tablet, according to a new leak. The leak suggests Samsung’s Galaxy Z Tab could launch alongside the Tab S9.

You can learn more about the leak here.


Apple

It looks like Apple might launch a new iPhone SE. The handset will release in 2025 and include a 5G modem and the same ancient, but familiar, home button.

You can learn more about the leak here.

Image credit: MySmartPrice