Monday, 2 December 2019

‘There are definitely registered sex offenders’ using Tinder, PlentyofFish, OkCupid says Match Group rep


A recent investigation found more than 150 instances of sexual assault involving dating apps. Approximately 10 percent involved users being matched with dates who had previously been accused or convicted of sexual assault. The investigation — a joint effort by ProPublica, BuzzFeed, and Columbia Journalism Investigations — (CJI) popular free dating apps owned by Match Group do not have clear policies or screening practices that would prevent accused or convicted sex offenders from using the products. These apps include Tinder, OkCupid, and Plenty of Fish. Match Group does require background checks for its premium services, like Match.com, but doesn’t offer…

This story continues at The Next Web

Or just read more coverage about: Tinder


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Vivo Y9s announced in China, packs a 6.38-inch AMOLED screen, 48MP quad-cam

In China, Vivo launched the Y9s, a mid-ranger packed with similar specs to the S1 Pro in the Philippines.
Vivo Y9s announced in China, packs a 6.38-inch AMOLED screen, 48MP quad-cam
Vivo Y9s

Rebranded S1 Pro

Like the S1 Pro, it boasts a diamond-shaped camera hump at the back in Blue, Black, and Pink colors. The pink color is the new one here as the S1 Pro in PH only comes in Knight Black and Fancy sky colorways.

The rest are super identical. It also uses a 6.38-inch FHD+ Super AMOLED screen with an In-Display fingerprint reader, 11nm SD665 octa-core chip, 8GB RAM, 128GB expandable storage, 4,500mAh battery, 48MP quad-cam, and 32MP selfie cam.

Vivo Y9s Specs

Display: 6.38-inch 2.5D curved Schott Xensation UP glass + Gorilla Glass protected Super AMOLED screen w/ FHD+ 2340 x 1080 resolution at 404 ppi
CPU: 2.0GHz 64-bit Snapdragon 665 octa-core processor
GPU: Adreno 610
RAM: 8GB LPDDR4X
ROM: 128GB expandable via microSD card slot up to 256GB (dedicated)
Back Camera: 48MP Samsung ISOCELL Bright GM1 f/1.8 w/ AF + 8MP f/2.2 ultra wide-angle + 2MP f/2.4 4cm macro + 2MP f/2.4 depth w/ LED Flash
Selfie Camera: 32MP f/2.0 OV32A sensor
Battery: 4,500mAh w/ 18W Dual Engine fast charging 
OS: Android 9.0 Pie w/ Funtouch OS 9.2
Connectivity: WiFi 802.11 a/b/g/n/ac (2.4GHz/5GHz), 700MHz 4G LTE, Bluetooth 5, OTG, FM Radio, GPS, A-GPS, dual SIM (nano) 
Sensors: Accelerometer, light, orientation, proximity, gyroscope, sound, magnetic 
Others: In-Display fingerprint sensor, IPX2 water splash resistance, dual mic, USB-C, Colors: blue, black, pink
Dimensions: 159.25 x 75.19 x 8.68 mm
Weight: 186.7 g
Price: TBC

In China, it is now available at CNY 1,998 or about PHP 14.5K out of straight conversion.

Here in PH, you can get a similar device for PHP 15,999.

Source: Vivo


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Discord Nitro giveaway!

Hello! In order to say goodbye to many people’s childhood, I am giving away a code to discord nitro on New Years! Please read the following: Prize: 1 month of Discord Nitro Instructions: - Comment down below to enter - 1 month signed up Note: Only one entry per member will be counted and the winner will be contacted here on the forum via PM or mentioned on the topic. End date/time: January 1st, 2020 Good luck!

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Imagination’s new GPU takes the fight to Apple, Qualcomm, and Arm

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CiNEtcRl_cY

A new mobile GPU has been launched by Imagination, and it is set to bring some welcome competition to the mobile GPU arena. Lots of attention is given to Qualcomm’s Adreno GPUs — found in its Snapdragon processors — and to Arm’s Mali GPUs found in Samsung’s Exynos processors and Huawei’s Kirin processors. But, as I have written previously, those two aren’t the only mobile GPU makers out there. There is another.

Imagination’s PowerVR GPUs are currently found in processors from MediaTek, Unisoc, Allwinner, and Rockchip. I say “currently” because alliances are fluid in the world of mobile processors. Up to and including the release of the Apple A9 processor, Imagination was the sole supplier of GPU tech to Apple. That deal went sour, causing Imagination to regroup and find new partners. MediaTek is one of those partners, but the relationship isn’t exclusive. For example, MediaTek’s new Dimensity 1000 5G SoC uses Arm’s Mali GPU.

While Imagination’s management team has been looking for new markets and new partners, it seems that its engineers just got on with the job at hand, namely developing a next-gen GPU. The new IMG A-Series GPU has the potential to become a serious contender — not only in smartphones, but also in other mobile devices like Chromebooks.

IMG A Series perf graph

When it comes to GPUs, there are three key metrics: performance, power, and compute. In other words, how fast will 3D games run? How much battery will it use? And can it be used for other tasks like machine learning? According to Imagination, the A-Series delivers significant improvements, at the same clock frequencies and using the same manufacturing process. It offers 2.5x the performance and 8x faster machine learning, all while using 60% less power than current PowerVR devices that are currently shipping. Those are some impressive numbers! The only fly in the ointment is that this specific comparison is with devices that are shipping in the real world, not with all existing GPU designs from Imagination. Still, these gains are not to be disregarded.

GPU designers need to offer their customers (i.e. the chip makers) lots of flexibility. That means being able to configure the same basic GPU design in different ways depending on the market. For example, Imagination offers the high end IMG AXT 64-2048. It delivers 2.0 TFLOPS, 64 Gpixels, and 8 TOPS of AI performance. This would be an ideal GPU for Chromebooks or even as an integrated GPU in a server.

The combination of possible configurations continues with the IMG AXT 48-1536 for premium mobile (1.5 TFLOPS, 48 Gpixels and 6 TOPS) through to the IMG AXM 8-256 for mid-range mobile. There are even variations for entry-level TVs and low-end smartphones with the IMG AXE 2-16 (2 PPC, 16 GFLOPS, and 2 Gpixels) and the IMG AXE 1-16 (1 PPC, 16 GFLOPS, and 1 Gpixels). The latter, Imagination claims, is the fastest Vulkan-capable GPU in its class.

IMG A Series 64 2048 GPU

As with previous PowerVR GPUs, the new A-Series uses tile-based deferred rendering technology, which means it only draws what is visible on the screen. To help deliver sustained performance, the IMG A-Series incorporates Pro-Active DVFS (Dynamic Voltage and Frequency Scaling) and Deadline Scheduling algorithms, which means that if parts of the GPU aren’t fully utilized or needed for processing, they are immediately slowed down or even put to sleep to ensure optimal power efficiency.

Design

IMG A Series uses a 128 wide ALU

The internal design of the A-Series is quite different from previous PowerVR GPUs. At the heart of a GPU is a fast and efficient multiply-add unit for doing fused multiply and add (FMA) operations. These units perform a multiply and then an add, all in one step. Previous PowerVR GPUs used a 32 wide set of FMA units in a logical component known as the ALU (Arithmetic Logic Unit). The new A-Series widens the ALU to 128 operations. That is 256 lots of 32-bit floating-point multiply-add operations per clock cycle (256 because it multiplies two FP32 numbers).

The result of this new design is that the ALU pipelines are simplified while increasing the thread-level parallelism. The previous design relied more on instruction-level parallelism, which in turn required a more complex ALU and a more complex compiler.

The IMG A-Series uses Imagination’s HyperLane technology. With it, individual hardware control lanes allow memory isolation, meaning different tasks can be submitted to the GPU simultaneously for secure GPU multitasking. The GPU can be divided up according to raw power (i.e. one quarter for one task, three quarters for a different task) or dynamically with set levels of performance per task. For automotive applications, this could mean that the infotainment unit would get the lowest priority compared to the digital dashboard. This not only applies to traditional graphics processing, but also to machine learning tasks running on the GPU.

To handle the concurrency aspects of the GPU, the A-Series includes a built-in microprocessor, based on an unspecified architecture. In the past Imagination would have used a MIPS based microprocessor for such a task. However, after the Apple episode, MIPS was sold off. One thing we do know is that Imagination has been getting very cozy with various RISC-V chipmakers over the last 12 months. I will leave you to draw your own conclusions.

IMG A Series hyperlane

Transferring data inside of a GPU uses energy. The less data you transfer, the more efficient the GPU. Most GPUs use some form of internal compression because, for large streams of data, it is actually more power efficient to compress the data and then send it rather than sending it raw. The IMG A-Series GPUs use PVRIC4.1 lossless or visually lossless image compression for bandwidth reduction all of the time. The new compression technique is lossless in most cases, or visually lossless in exception cases. On the plus side, a 50% compression ratio is guaranteed, regardless of the data.

When can we expect these to come to market?

IMG A Series ray tracing coming

Announcements are nice, but when we will see a system-on-a-chip with an IMG A-Series GPU? The answer is sooner rather than later. The IMG A-Series has already been licensed in multiple markets and the first SoCs are expected in 2020. Also in 2020 Imagination will release its next GPU, the successor the A-Series, the cleverly named B-Series. It will deliver a 30% performance improvement compared to the Series-A and should come with hardware ray tracing!


A new powerful GPU has the potential to really mix things up in the mobile processor market. What do you think? Can Imagination break Qualcomm’s stronghold? Can it persuade any of Arm’s customers to switch? Let me know in the comments below.



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Samsung’s clamshell foldable could be actually affordable

new samsung galaxy foldable smartphone flip phone samsung developer conference 2019 open vs closed

A few months ago, we got word that Samsung was working on a new flip phone-style foldable slated to launch next year. Later, we caught a potential glimpse of the device at Samsung’s Developer Conference. Now, thanks to The Korea Herald, we’ve learned a couple more details about the device.

Unlike Samsung’s first foldable — the Galaxy Fold — next year’s vertical clamshell foldable shouldn’t break the bank. Industry sources expect the device to retail for around $845 instead of the Galaxy Fold’s near-$2,000 price tag in an effort to increase device sales.

Samsung is aiming this clamshell model at the mass market, and we expect it to launch February 2020, presumably at Mobile World Congress. The Korean tech company also seems to be planning a global release of the Galaxy Fold by then.

Related: Samsung foldable devices with glass displays hinted by new supplier investment

Samsung will likely launch the Galaxy Fold in approximately 60 more countries, including Vietnam, New Zealand, Brazil, Chile, Italy, the Netherlands, and Greece, with a potential follow-up device coming Q3 2020. Samsung hopes this strategy will earn it around 6 million foldable device sales next year and 20 million by 2021.

If Samsung ends up releasing its clamshell-style foldable for sub-$900, it will massively undercut the Motorola Razr, a similar style foldable device that will retail for around $1,500. We expect these two devices will provide some stiff competition for each other, especially since many people seem to prefer clamshell-style foldable design over the horizontally folding one.

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