Podcasts about galaxy tab

Tablet computer series

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Best podcasts about galaxy tab

Latest podcast episodes about galaxy tab

Hablando en HD
Conociendo el Samsung Galaxy S24 FE y la Galaxy Tab S10

Hablando en HD

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2024 58:01


En este episodio nos acompaña José Guerra de Samsung Dominicana para hablarnos sobre los nuevos Samsung Galaxy S24 FE y la Galaxy Tab S10. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/hipolitodelgado/support

FLASH DIARIO de El Siglo 21 es Hoy
Así es la nueva Xiaomi Pad 7 Pro

FLASH DIARIO de El Siglo 21 es Hoy

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 26, 2024 4:27


La Xiaomi Pad 7 y Pad 7 Pro ya tienen fecha de lanzamiento oficial y características clave  Xiaomi está listo para sorprender con su nueva generación de tablets, la Xiaomi Pad 7 y Xiaomi Pad 7 Pro, cuyos detalles oficiales ya han sido revelados. Se espera que ambas versiones sean presentadas el 27 de octubre, junto con los nuevos Xiaomi 15 y 15 Pro.Síguenos en Spotify: Flash Diario.Según las primeras imágenes oficiales, las tablets cuentan con un diseño elegante y moderno, además de importantes mejoras en rendimiento y pantalla. La Xiaomi Pad 7 Pro incorporará un procesador Snapdragon 8+ Gen 1, mientras que la versión estándar tendrá el Snapdragon 870. Además, ambas versiones incluirán pantallas de alta tasa de refresco y batería de larga duración.  Pero las mejoras no solo están en el rendimiento, sino también en la experiencia multimedia.  La Xiaomi Pad 7 destaca por su pantalla de 11 pulgadas con una resolución de 2880 x 1800 píxeles y una tasa de refresco de 144 Hz, ideal para disfrutar de contenido multimedia o para quienes buscan una tablet potente y asequible. La versión Pro, por su parte, ofrece aún más potencia gracias al Snapdragon 8+ Gen 1, y promete una experiencia de uso fluida incluso para tareas más exigentes, como la edición de video o la creación de contenido. Además, se espera que ambas tablets incluyan altavoces estéreo de alta calidad y compatibilidad con stylus y teclados externos, lo que las convierte en herramientas versátiles para trabajar o estudiar .  Uno de los retos para Xiaomi será destacar frente a otros gigantes como Apple y Samsung, que lideran el mercado de tablets con sus líneas iPad y Galaxy Tab. Aunque Xiaomi ofrece un excelente balance entre precio y rendimiento, la competencia en el sector es feroz. Sin embargo, la Xiaomi Pad 7 Pro apunta a captar la atención de los usuarios más exigentes, al ofrecer características premium por un precio más accesible. El verdadero desafío será si las nuevas tablets podrán competir no solo en hardware, sino también en software, optimización y ecosistema .  Con esta nueva generación, Xiaomi busca consolidarse como un actor relevante en el mercado de tablets. La Xiaomi Pad 7 y la Pad 7 Pro no solo compiten en términos de rendimiento, sino también en diseño y funcionalidad. La batería de ambas versiones promete una duración extensa gracias a sus capacidades de hasta 8600 mAh y su carga rápida de 67W, lo que permitirá horas de uso continuo. Además, se espera que su integración con el ecosistema de Xiaomi, como el uso compartido de archivos y funciones con otros dispositivos Xiaomi, sea uno de los puntos fuertes de estas tablets. A pocos días del lanzamiento oficial, la expectación es alta, y Xiaomi se prepara para sorprender .  La serie Xiaomi Pad 7 incluirá una variedad de opciones de almacenamiento que van desde los 128 GB hasta 512 GB, y se espera que ambas tablets sean compatibles con conectividad 5G. Estas características, junto con su pantalla de alta resolución, la convierten en una opción ideal para quienes buscan una tablet con rendimiento gráfico y conectividad de última generación. El modelo Pro, además, podría incluir opciones de RAM de hasta 12 GB, lo que le permitirá destacarse en tareas multitarea .  La Xiaomi Pad 7 y 7 Pro llegan con fuerza al mercado, ofreciendo un equilibrio entre potencia y precio. ¿Conseguirá Xiaomi posicionarse entre las mejores tablets del 2024? Cuéntanos qué opinas y no olvides seguirnos en Spotify para más análisis y noticias. Spotify Flash Diario.Bibliografía:La SextaMundo XiaomiNotebookCheckTopes de GamaConviértete en un seguidor de este podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/flash-diario-de-el-siglo-21-es-hoy--5835407/support.

RBB TODAY 最新IT情報
【動画】驚きの薄さと進化した使いやすさ!「Galaxy Tab S10+」が発売に

RBB TODAY 最新IT情報

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 27, 2024 0:17


SAMSUNGから新しく登場したタブレット「Galaxy Tab S10+」をレビューしました!Galaxy TabシリーズはAndroidタブレットとして完成度が高く、AI機能が充実しているので仕事でもプライベートでも活躍するタブレットです。

ITmedia Mobile
ハイスペック防水Androidタブレット「Galaxy Tab S10シリーズ」が10月3日に日本上陸 Galaxy AIとGeminiに対応して約19万円から

ITmedia Mobile

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 26, 2024 0:28


ハイスペック防水Androidタブレット「Galaxy Tab S10シリーズ」が10月3日に日本上陸 Galaxy AIとGeminiに対応して約19万円から。 サムスン電子ジャパンは9月27日、Androidタブレット「Galaxy Tab S10+」「Galaxy Tab S10 Ultra」を発表した。同社の直販サイト(Samsungオンラインショップ)での販売価格は以下の通りとなる。

@DIME
サムスンがSペンを同梱した10.4型Androidタブレット「Galaxy Tab S6 Lite」を発売

@DIME

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 23, 2024 0:24


「サムスンがSペンを同梱した10.4型Androidタブレット「Galaxy Tab S6 Lite」を発売」 サムスン電子ジャパンは、約10.4型タブレット「Galaxy Tab S6 Lite (2024)」を2024年7月31日に発売する。Samsungオンラインショップでの販売価格は53,570円。

ITmedia Mobile
Sペン対応タブレット「Galaxy Tab S6 Lite(2024)」7月31日発売 5万3570円

ITmedia Mobile

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 18, 2024 0:29


Sペン対応タブレット「Galaxy Tab S6 Lite(2024)」7月31日発売 5万3570円。 サムスン電子は、7月31日からSペン対応タブレット「Galaxy Tab S6 Lite(2024)」を発売。Samsungオンラインショップの価格は5万3570円(税込み)で、Amazonやショーケース「Galaxy Harajuku」などで取り扱う。

c’t uplink
Tablets für Freizeit und Arbeit: Neue Modelle von Apple und Samsung und Co. | c't uplink

c’t uplink

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 29, 2024 43:54


Apple hat neue iPads auf den Markt gebracht, die unter anderem mit einem M4-Prozessor satte Leistung in den Ring werfen und entspiegelten Displays auch im Garten und auf dem Balkon Spaß bereiten. Die High-End-Modelle mit Vollausstattung schlagen aber auch mit rund 3.000 Euro zu Buche. Wir sprechen deshalb darüber, mit welchen oft nur kleinen Abstrichen man ordentlich sparen kann. Zudem reden wir darüber, was die Konkurrenz im Köcher hat: Neue Android-Tablets gibt es dieses Jahr unter anderem von Huawei, Lenovo und Samsung. Mit ihnen ist man ebenfalls deutlich günstiger unterwegs als mit einem iPad Pro. Wir besprechen deshalb, worauf man beim Kauf achten soll, welche Features man unbedingt auf dem Zettel haben muss und welche zu vernachlässigen sind. In c't 16/2024 finden Sie in unserem Titelthema Tests der neuen iPads, eine Kaufberatung für das passende Tablet für Ihre Bedürfnisse und einen Test externer Tastaturen.

9to5Toys Daily
9to5Toys Daily: January 23, 2024 – Save on Apple Watch SE 2, Galaxy Tab S9, more

9to5Toys Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2024 4:45


Listen to a recap of the best deals and news from 9to5Toys each day at noon. 9to5Toys Daily is available on iTunes and Apple Podcasts, Google Play, or through our dedicated RSS feed. New episodes of 9to5Toys Daily are recorded every weekday. Subscribe to our podcast in iTunes/Apple Podcast or your favorite podcast player to guarantee new episodes are delivered as soon as they are available. Save $123 on a cellular Apple Watch SE 2 at $206 while it's lower than the GPS model Apple's FineWoven iPhone 15 cases are finally worth a try with deals from $18 (Reg. $59) New all-time low takes $275 off Samsung's 11-inch Galaxy Tab S9 256GB tablet at $645 Host Rikka Altland  Links: Subscribe to our YouTube channel! Follow us on Twitter! Like our Facebook page! Download the 9to5Toys app! Subscribe to our newsletter!

9to5Toys Daily
9to5Toys Daily: January 12, 2024 – Save on Apple Watch Series 9, Galaxy Tab A9+, more

9to5Toys Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2024 6:00


Listen to a recap of the best deals and news from 9to5Toys each day at noon. 9to5Toys Daily is available on iTunes and Apple Podcasts, Google Play, or through our dedicated RSS feed. New episodes of 9to5Toys Daily are recorded every weekday. Subscribe to our podcast in iTunes/Apple Podcast or your favorite podcast player to guarantee new episodes are delivered as soon as they are available. Save $70 on Apple Watch Series 9 styles with pinch detection starting from $329 Samsung's new Galaxy Tab A9+ begins shipping with free Book Cover from $220 ($270 value+) Who needs FineWoven when Apple's MagSafe leather wallet with Find My is $45 (Reg. $59) Host Rikka Altland  Links: Subscribe to our YouTube channel! Follow us on Twitter! Like our Facebook page! Download the 9to5Toys app! Subscribe to our newsletter!

9to5Toys Daily
9to5Toys Daily: January 2, 2024 – New Year's deals on M2 Mac mini, Galaxy Tab S9/+, more

9to5Toys Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 2, 2024 5:33


Listen to a recap of the best deals and news from 9to5Toys each day at noon. 9to5Toys Daily is available on iTunes and Apple Podcasts, Google Play, or through our dedicated RSS feed. New episodes of 9to5Toys Daily are recorded every weekday. Subscribe to our podcast in iTunes/Apple Podcast or your favorite podcast player to guarantee new episodes are delivered as soon as they are available. M2 Mac mini deals kick off the New Year starting from $499 (Reg. $599+) New Amazon lows take $100 or more off Samsung Galaxy Tab S9/+ starting from $700 Anker's MagGo Cube 15W MagSafe Charger is a 9to5 favorite at $127 (Reg. $150) Host Rikka Altland  Links: Subscribe to our YouTube channel! Follow us on Twitter! Like our Facebook page! Download the 9to5Toys app! Subscribe to our newsletter!

Tech News Weekly (MP3)
TNW 305: The Promise of Microsoft Copilot - AI & Authors, Net Neutrality, Galaxy Tab S9+

Tech News Weekly (MP3)

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 28, 2023 66:43


A searchable database to see which author's work is being used to train AI. Microsoft had its big Surface & AI event, and its AI assistant feature, Copilot, was announced. The FCC is looking to bring back net neutrality. And Jason has Samsung's Galaxy Tab S9+ tablet. Alex Reisner of The Atlantic joins the show to talk about a search tool for seeing which authors' work is contained within a Books3 AI dataset. Daniel Rubino of Windows Central stops by to chat about Microsoft's Surface and AI event, and Microsoft's Copilot service that was officially announced. Roger Cheng of Cord Cutters News shares how the FCC is looking to bring back net neutrality after then-chairman Ajit Pai dismantled it. And Jason spent time with Samsung's Galaxy Tab S9+ and shares his review on the tablet. Host: Jason Howell Guests: Alex Reisner, Daniel Rubino, and Roger Cheng Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/tech-news-weekly. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsors: ZipRecruiter.com/tnw cs.co/twit GO.ACILEARNING.COM/TWIT

Tech News Weekly (Video HI)
TNW 305: The Promise of Microsoft Copilot - AI & Authors, Net Neutrality, Galaxy Tab S9+

Tech News Weekly (Video HI)

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 28, 2023 66:43


A searchable database to see which author's work is being used to train AI. Microsoft had its big Surface & AI event, and its AI assistant feature, Copilot, was announced. The FCC is looking to bring back net neutrality. And Jason has Samsung's Galaxy Tab S9+ tablet. Alex Reisner of The Atlantic joins the show to talk about a search tool for seeing which authors' work is contained within a Books3 AI dataset. Daniel Rubino of Windows Central stops by to chat about Microsoft's Surface and AI event, and Microsoft's Copilot service that was officially announced. Roger Cheng of Cord Cutters News shares how the FCC is looking to bring back net neutrality after then-chairman Ajit Pai dismantled it. And Jason spent time with Samsung's Galaxy Tab S9+ and shares his review on the tablet. Host: Jason Howell Guests: Alex Reisner, Daniel Rubino, and Roger Cheng Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/tech-news-weekly. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsors: ZipRecruiter.com/tnw cs.co/twit GO.ACILEARNING.COM/TWIT

Tech News Weekly (Video LO)
TNW 305: The Promise of Microsoft Copilot - AI & Authors, Net Neutrality, Galaxy Tab S9+

Tech News Weekly (Video LO)

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 28, 2023 66:43


A searchable database to see which author's work is being used to train AI. Microsoft had its big Surface & AI event, and its AI assistant feature, Copilot, was announced. The FCC is looking to bring back net neutrality. And Jason has Samsung's Galaxy Tab S9+ tablet. Alex Reisner of The Atlantic joins the show to talk about a search tool for seeing which authors' work is contained within a Books3 AI dataset. Daniel Rubino of Windows Central stops by to chat about Microsoft's Surface and AI event, and Microsoft's Copilot service that was officially announced. Roger Cheng of Cord Cutters News shares how the FCC is looking to bring back net neutrality after then-chairman Ajit Pai dismantled it. And Jason spent time with Samsung's Galaxy Tab S9+ and shares his review on the tablet. Host: Jason Howell Guests: Alex Reisner, Daniel Rubino, and Roger Cheng Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/tech-news-weekly. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsors: ZipRecruiter.com/tnw cs.co/twit GO.ACILEARNING.COM/TWIT

Tech News Weekly (Video HD)
TNW 305: The Promise of Microsoft Copilot - AI & Authors, Net Neutrality, Galaxy Tab S9+

Tech News Weekly (Video HD)

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 28, 2023 66:43


A searchable database to see which author's work is being used to train AI. Microsoft had its big Surface & AI event, and its AI assistant feature, Copilot, was announced. The FCC is looking to bring back net neutrality. And Jason has Samsung's Galaxy Tab S9+ tablet. Alex Reisner of The Atlantic joins the show to talk about a search tool for seeing which authors' work is contained within a Books3 AI dataset. Daniel Rubino of Windows Central stops by to chat about Microsoft's Surface and AI event, and Microsoft's Copilot service that was officially announced. Roger Cheng of Cord Cutters News shares how the FCC is looking to bring back net neutrality after then-chairman Ajit Pai dismantled it. And Jason spent time with Samsung's Galaxy Tab S9+ and shares his review on the tablet. Host: Jason Howell Guests: Alex Reisner, Daniel Rubino, and Roger Cheng Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/tech-news-weekly. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsors: ZipRecruiter.com/tnw cs.co/twit GO.ACILEARNING.COM/TWIT

The Tech Jawn
Black Wall Street Is On A Come Back: The Tech Jawn 93

The Tech Jawn

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 1, 2023 62:57


Samsung held its Galaxy Unpacked event last week and officially announced the Galaxy Z Flip 5 and Z Fold 5, the Galaxy Watch 6 and Watch 6 Classic, and the Galaxy Tab 9 series of Tablets.TikTok is getting into the music streaming service game it isn't necessarily coming for Apple Music, Spotify, or YouTube Music.Will the Hollywood actors' and writers' strikes supercharge the Creator Economy?And Black Tech Street and Microsoft are aiming to add 1000+ Cyber Professionals to the Greenwood, a.k.a. Black Wall Street, area of North Tulsa by 2030.Link to Show Notes. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

ESMANDAU
Galaxy Watch 6 y Galaxy Tab 9 | Sony Project Q FILTRADO | REVELADAS primeras Mac con M3

ESMANDAU

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 29, 2023 50:05


En el episodio de esta semana, te hablamos del nuevo Galaxy Watch 6 y Galaxy Watch 6 Classic, con increíbles mejoras y nuevas características como el borde digital y el sistema de cambiar correas rápidamente. Además, te contamos todo sobre las poderosas Galaxy Tab 9, con sus pantallas AMOLED. Luego, hablamos sobre los más recientes rumores sobre las primeras Mac de Apple con el procesador M3, la filtración total del Sony Project Q, su consola portátil y el lanzamiento de los nuevos audífonos de Sony, los WF-1000XM5. Para finalizar, hablamos del nuevo plegable de Honor, el Magic V2, el cual busca competir directamente con Samsung y Galaxy Z Fold 5. Síguenos en las redes sociales: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/esmandau Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/esmandau/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/esmandau Suscríbete a nuestro canal de YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/esmandaucom/videos --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/esmandau/support

Click Derecho
¿Nuevo Galaxy Fold 5 o un 4 maquillado? + Nearby Share “El Airdrop de Android”

Click Derecho

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 21, 2023 57:25


Próxima semana se celebra el evento de Samsung el cual presentará nuevos dispositivos como la Galaxy Tab 9 ulta, Galaxy Fold 5, Galaxy Z Flip 5 y hablamos sobre todo lo filtrado hasta ahora, renders, especificaciones, etc… y comparamos lo que ya tenemos del 5 con el Fold 4… ¿Merecerá la pena el cambio? Hablamos de Nearby un nuevo servicio de transferencia de datos entre dispositivos Android ya disponible para windows, el cual puede ser un protocolo ideal para comenzar un nuevo ecosistema. No te lo pierdas, y en formato video para que puedas ver lo a lo que estamos reaccionando. Telegram: https://t.me/MriOStelegram Insagram: https://instagram.com/clickderecho_tech YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/vidatactil1

ITmedia PC USER
Androidタブレット「Galaxy Tab S6 Lite」は6万円弱でSペン付き コスパ良好だが悩ましい点も

ITmedia PC USER

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2023 0:29


Androidタブレット「Galaxy Tab S6 Lite」は6万円弱でSペン付き コスパ良好だが悩ましい点も。 サムスン電子ジャパンが6月23日、10.4型Androidタブレット「Galaxy Tab S6 Lite」を発売した。公式ストアでの販売価格(税込み、以下同)は、専用のスタイラスペン「Sペン」込みで5万6798円と比較的手頃である。

Salut Techie
Un écran sur la boîte des Airpods ?, Fuites sur la Galaxy Tab S9+ et la fin de uTip, c'est les news du jour !

Salut Techie

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2023 80:21


Manu et Théo, journalistes chez Frandroid, ont fait un tour de l'actualité et vous disent tout ce que vous devez retenir aujourd'hui ! Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.

Radio Giga
Die 5 besten Tablets von Samsung, Apple, Huawei & Co.

Radio Giga

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 20, 2022


Ob iPad, Galaxy Tab oder Amazon Fire HD – Tablets gibt es viele. Je nachdem, was man sucht, ordnen sich die Geräte in verschiedenen Preisklassen ein. Wir zeigen euch unsere 5 Empfehlungen.

Radio Giga
Galaxy Tab S8 für unter 500 Euro: Amazon verscherbelt Samsung-Tablet

Radio Giga

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2022


Das Galaxy Tab S8 ist die Speerspitze aus Samsungs Tablet-Palette. Entsprechend teuer sind die Preise für die Tablet-Serie. Bei Amazon ist das Galaxy Tab S8 nun aber deutlich reduziert.

Sospechosos Habituales
AS - Android 12L para las Tabletas S8 y se Presenta la Galaxy Tab Active 4 Pro

Sospechosos Habituales

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 7, 2022 11:13


Hoy les comento sobre estas 2 noticias muy interesantes sobre Tablets o Tabletas que son diferentes y para todo tipo de necesidades. GRACIAS por estar Aquí y vamos a disfrutar con este episodio sobre el gran mundo de Samsung. Gracias por COMPARTIRLO!! www.twitter.com/AutoridadSamPodcast asociado a la red de SOSPECHOSOS HABITUALES. Suscribete con este feed: https://feedpress.me/sospechososhabituales

Rede Geek podcasts
UPDATE - Novos Galaxy Tab e Galaxy Book

Rede Geek podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 17, 2022 32:29


A Samsung anunciou hoje quatro novos aparelhos para o mercado, sendo dois tablets – o Galaxy Tab S8 Ultra 5G e Tab S8+ 5G – e dois notebooks – Galaxy Book2 Pro e Galaxy Book2 360. No UPDATE desta semana, vamos falar de TODOS os detalhes desses novos produtos! Gostou do episódio? Mande um comentário em áudio pelo WhatsApp +55 11 98765-6950. Seu comentário poderá aparecer no podcast Serviço de Atendimento à Cavalaria (SAC). Saiba mais em www.redegeek.com.br

UPDATE
UPDATE - Novos Galaxy Tab e Galaxy Book

UPDATE

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 17, 2022 32:29


A Samsung anunciou hoje quatro novos aparelhos para o mercado, sendo dois tablets – o Galaxy Tab S8 Ultra 5G e Tab S8+ 5G – e dois notebooks – Galaxy Book2 Pro e Galaxy Book2 360. No UPDATE desta semana, vamos falar de TODOS os detalhes desses novos produtos! Gostou do episódio? Mande um comentário em áudio pelo WhatsApp +55 11 98765-6950. Seu comentário poderá aparecer no podcast Serviço de Atendimento à Cavalaria (SAC). Saiba mais em www.redegeek.com.br

Radio Giga
Neben Galaxy Tab S9: Neues Samsung-Tablet wird kleine Revolution

Radio Giga

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2022


Samsung arbeitet bereits seit einigen Jahren an der Revolution der Smartphones und hat damit großen Erfolg. Das reicht dem südkoreanischen Unternehmen aber nicht. Jetzt soll die gleiche Technologie auch bei Android-Tablets zum Einsatz kommen. Es geht um faltbare Displays.

9to5Toys Daily
9to5Toys Daily: June 28, 2022 – iPhone 12/Pro Max 1-day sale, Galaxy Tab S8 $587, more

9to5Toys Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 28, 2022 3:49


Listen to a recap of the best deals and news from 9to5Toys each day at noon. 9to5Toys Daily is available on iTunes and Apple Podcasts, Google Play, or through our dedicated RSS feed. New episodes of 9to5Toys Daily are recorded every weekday. Subscribe to our podcast in iTunes/Apple Podcast or your favorite podcast player to guarantee new episodes are delivered as soon as they are available. iPhone 12/Pro Max see 1-day discounts in Grade A refurb Woot sale from $480 (Save $319), moreSamsung Galaxy Tab S8 now starts at $587 on Amazon (Reg. $700), plus Galaxy Tab A8 $200Anker's Nano Pro 40W USB-C charger falls to all-time low in Gold Box sale at $27 (Reg. $36) Host Rikka Altland  Links: Subscribe to our YouTube channel!Follow us on Twitter!Like our Facebook page!Download the 9to5Toys app!Subscribe to our newsletter!

9to5Toys Daily
9to5Toys Daily: May 23, 2022 – Apple MagSafe Charger $34, Galaxy Tab S8+ $95 off, more

9to5Toys Daily

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2022 3:25


Listen to a recap of the best deals and news from 9to5Toys each day at noon. 9to5Toys Daily is available on iTunes and Apple Podcasts, Google Play, or through our dedicated RSS feed. New episodes of 9to5Toys Daily are recorded every weekday. Subscribe to our podcast in iTunes/Apple Podcast or your favorite podcast player to guarantee new episodes are delivered as soon as they are available. Apple's official 15W MagSafe charger sees first discount of the year to $34Pair your iPhone 13 with Apple's official Find My MagSafe Wallet at just $36 (Reg. $59)Samsung Galaxy Tab S8+ sees $95 discount to new Amazon low Host Rikka Altland  Links: Subscribe to our YouTube channel!Follow us on Twitter!Like our Facebook page!Download the 9to5Toys app!Subscribe to our newsletter!

Bmore Fit-Tech
Galaxy Tab S8 Ultra and iPad Pro M1 12.9 Tech Talk

Bmore Fit-Tech

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2022 13:21


What's going on? Good people? Welcome to another episode! This is a tech discussion about what's going on right now and what tech I am testing! Also a quick fitness update! Let's go! --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/michael-paige0/support

Radio Giga
Galaxy Tab S8 Ultra im Härtetest: Samsung-Tablet überrascht alle Zweifler

Radio Giga

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2022


Das Samsung Galaxy Tab S8 Ultra ist eines der größten und gleichzeitig dünnsten Android-Tablets auf dem Markt. Da lag die Vermutung nah, dass man bei der Benutzung aufpassen muss. Das Tablet könnte nämlich bei falscher Belastung einfach brechen, oder das Glas splittern. Zur Überraschung aller ist das Samsung-Tablet aber sehr robust.

Androidworld Hangout (Android-podcast)
Nieuwe streamingsdienst FIFA+, ongelukken met e-bikes en de review van de Galaxy Tab S8

Androidworld Hangout (Android-podcast)

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 13, 2022 5:13


Tech In Five brengt je elke werkdag het technieuws in vijf minuten. Twee nieuwe horloges van Polar FIFA+ is een streamingdienst met alleen voetbal Marktplaats stopt met dienst Gelijk Oversteken Techbedrijven starten Frontier Meer ongelukken met e-bikes Test met de Samsung Galaxy Tab S8

Waveform: The MKBHD Podcast
Galaxy Tab S8 Ultra Impressions and OnePlus' First Folding Phone!

Waveform: The MKBHD Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 25, 2022 59:18


Marques and Andrew give some first impressions on the new Samsung Galaxy Tab S8 Ultra before talking about a JerryRigEverything video where Zack cracks a OnePlus 10 Pro in half. They wrap up with a discussion about YouTube subscribers and whether or not they even matter in the age of algorithms. This is a quirky one with some good insights sprinkled throughout! Links: JerryRigEverything OnePlus 10 Pro video: https://bit.ly/3veysx7 JerryRigEverything Humvee video: https://bit.ly/3HjqWnd Twitters: https://twitter.com/wvfrm https://twitter.com/mkbhd https://twitter.com/andymanganelli https://twitter.com/adamlukas17 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/wvfrmpodcast/ Shop the merch: shop.mkbhd.com Join the Discord: https://discord.gg/mkbhd Music by 20syl: https://bit.ly/2S53xlC Waveform is part of the Vox Media Podcast Network. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

9to5Toys Daily
9to5Toys Daily: February 16, 2022 – M1 iMac $149 off, Galaxy Tab A8 $200, more

9to5Toys Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2022 3:16


Listen to a recap of the best deals and news from 9to5Toys each day at noon. 9to5Toys Daily is available on iTunes and Apple Podcasts, Google Play, or through our dedicated RSS feed. New episodes of 9to5Toys Daily are recorded every weekday. Subscribe to our podcast in iTunes/Apple Podcast or your favorite podcast player to guarantee new episodes are delivered as soon as they are available. Apple's latest 24-inch M1 iMac returns to Amazon lows at up to $150 off from $1,199Samsung's all-new Galaxy Tab A8 goes on sale for the first time from $200 (Save up to $50)Anker's new MagGo charging station doubles as a MagSafe Battery Pack at $84 (Save 30%) Host Blair Altland  Links: Subscribe to our YouTube channel!Follow us on Twitter!Like our Facebook page!Download the 9to5Toys app!Subscribe to our newsletter!

ESMANDAU
Galaxy S22 y S22 Ultra, Galaxy Tab S8 - Analizamos el Samsung Unpacked 2022

ESMANDAU

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2022 47:33


En esta edición especial del Podcast de Esmandau estaremos analizando todo lo nuevo que Samsung anunció en su Unpacked 2022: el nuevo Galaxy S22 y Galaxy S22 Ultra y sus nuevas tabletas bajo la familia Galaxy Tab S8. Síguenos en las redes sociales: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/esmandau Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/esmandau/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/esmandau Suscríbete a nuestro canal de YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/esmandaucom/videos --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/esmandau/support

Predicneitor Geek
Impresiones Samsung Galaxy S22 y Galaxy Tab S8

Predicneitor Geek

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 12, 2022 39:45


Impresiones de los nuevos Samsung Galaxy S22, que probamos en la presentación el día 9 de febrero. Directo presentacion Xiaomi al completo: https://youtu.be/91jOqEW4egQ Video Amazon Fire HD 10 2021: https://youtu.be/1fv3tK6u_z4 Mochila Tinder Burton: https://amzn.to/3bdgFL3 Soporte multifunción: https://amzn.to/3k5zB2A Link Wallapop: http://p.wallapop.com/p/21054033?_pid=wi&_uid=21054033&_me=s_ios Vídeo Tesla: https://youtu.be/n64ngypHm1c Link afiliados Poco M3: https://amzn.to/39mVxTe ✅ Suscríbete al podcast si te encanta la tecnología ► Link directo al podcast: https://www.ivoox.com/podcast-predicneitor-geek_sq_f1165758_1.html Bienvenido a Predicneitor Geek. Soy Eric Fernández y en este podcast encontrarás mis opiniones y experiencias personales con la tecnología. Me dedico desde 2012 a analizar móviles, tablets.. O cualquier gadget tecnológico. Recuerda que además de este podcast, puedes verme en mi canal de youtube: ► https://youtube.com/user/predicneitor1 ► Puedes ayudar al podcast comprando en Amazon desde este link: https://amzn.to/3oUxhxo 🔥 ¡PUEDES SEGUIRME Y VER MUCHO CONTENIDO EXTRA! 🔥 💬 GRUPO TELEGRAM: https://t.me/predicneitorgeek 📷 INSTAGRAM: @predicneitor https://instagram.com/predicneitor 🎙️ PODCAST: http://www.ivoox.com/s_p2_165758_1.html 📧 CONTACTO: predicneitor@gmail.com Escucha el episodio completo en la app de iVoox, o descubre todo el catálogo de iVoox Originals

Radio Giga
Samsung Galaxy Tab S8 Ultra: Auf so ein Android-Tablet habe ich gewartet

Radio Giga

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 12, 2022


Samsung bringt in regelmäßigen Abständen neue Android-Tablets auf den Markt. Vor einigen Jahren habe ich mir ein Galaxy Tab 10.1 (2019) gekauft und warte jedes Jahr darauf, es ersetzen zu können. Das Samsung Galaxy Tab S8 Ultra wäre der perfekte Nachfolger, wenn da nicht ein großer Haken wäre.

Euronicsi taskuhääling
Millal eelistada Chromebooki ja mida pakuvad Samsungi uued nutiseadmed?

Euronicsi taskuhääling

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 10, 2022 48:11


Saate teemad: • Räägime sellest, miks on just Chromebook sobiv arvuti paljudele ning jagame esimesi muljeid Samsungi uutest telefonidest ja tahvelarvutitest. - Google'i Chrome OS'i kasutavad sülearvutid on hea valik pere teiseks arvutiks, koolitöid tegevatele lastele või väga lihtsat arvutit eelistavatele vanavanematele. - Samsung tutvustas Galaxy S22 seeria nutitelefoni ja Galaxy Tab 8 seeria tahvelarvuteid. Saadet juhivad Meelis Väljamäe ja Oliver Rõõmus. Külalised Jaak Siinmaa ja Aron Koppel.

All CNET Video Podcasts (HD)
Samsung shows off new Galaxy S22 phones and Galaxy Tab S8 tablets

All CNET Video Podcasts (HD)

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 10, 2022


The company's newest phones and tablets feature upgraded processors, cameras and other improvements.

TWiT Specials (Video LO)
News 379: Samsung Galaxy Unpacked February 2022 - Galaxy S22, S22+, S22 Ultra & Galaxy Tab S8, S8+, S8 Ultra

TWiT Specials (Video LO)

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 9, 2022 75:45


At Galaxy Unpacked 2022, Samsung unveils the Galaxy Galaxy S22, S22+, and S22 Ultra, featuring a built-in S Pen, advanced Nightography, and 8K video capabilities. Also announced is the Galaxy Tab S8 series, with the S8 Ultra featuring a 14.6" Super AMOLED display and 120Hz refresh rate. Host: Jason Howell Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/twit-news. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit

All CNET Video Podcasts (HD)
Samsung's Galaxy Tab S8 looks like a promising iPad Pro alternative

All CNET Video Podcasts (HD)

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 9, 2022


With a premium design, multiple cameras and an included stylus, the new Galaxy Tab S8 could be the go-to iPad Pro alternative for Android fans.

TWiT Specials (MP3)
News 379: Samsung Galaxy Unpacked February 2022 - Galaxy S22, S22+, S22 Ultra & Galaxy Tab S8, S8+, S8 Ultra

TWiT Specials (MP3)

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 9, 2022 75:24


"At Galaxy Unpacked 2022, Samsung unveils the Galaxy Galaxy S22, S22+, and S22 Ultra, featuring a built-in S Pen, advanced Nightography, and 8K video capabilities. Also announced is the Galaxy Tab S8 series, with the S8 Ultra featuring a 14.6"" Super AMOLED display and 120Hz refresh rate. Host: Jason Howell Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/twit-news. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit

Mamoon's Gadget Talk
Ep#109, 09/02/2022 : Galaxy S22 Series, Galaxy Tab S8 Series Unveiled!

Mamoon's Gadget Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 9, 2022 40:10


In today's episode: Samsung did its Galaxy Unpacked event earlier today, showing off the Galaxy S22 series and the Tab S8 series, We talk about some of the interesting upgrades, features, the cameras, performance and that "Galaxy Note" successor, the S22 Ultra. If you like this podcast and enjoyed this episode, Subscribe to my podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts or wherever you're listening, so you don't miss another episode of Mamoon's Gadget Talk. Follow me on Twitter, Instagram and TikTok : @syed_mamoon99 . For feedback and business opportunities, Email me at tfdbh14@outlook.com

CNET First Look (HD)
Samsung's Galaxy Tab S8 looks like a promising iPad Pro alternative

CNET First Look (HD)

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 9, 2022


With a premium design, multiple cameras and an included stylus, the new Galaxy Tab S8 could be the go-to iPad Pro alternative for Android fans.

Radio Giga
Galaxy Tab S8, Plus & Ultra vorgestellt: Samsung hat ein Monster-Tablet gebaut

Radio Giga

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 9, 2022


Samsung hat mit dem Galaxy Tab S8, S8 Plus und S8 Ultra neue Android-Tablets enthüllt. Während die zwei kleineren Modelle die erwarteten Nachfolger des Galaxy Tab S7 und S7 Plus werden, ist das Galaxy Tab S8 Ultra ein echtes Monster. So ein riesiges Android-Tablet von Samsung gab es noch nie, wobei wir uns damit auch in komplett neuen Preisregionen bewegen.

The Tech Addicts Podcast
25th July 2021 - Steam Deck, Stream Deck, what the feck?

The Tech Addicts Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 25, 2021 107:31


With Gareth Myles and Ted SalmonJoin us on Mewe RSS Link: https://techaddicts.libsyn.com/rss iTunes | Google Podcasts | Stitcher | Tunein | Spotify  Amazon | Pocket Casts | Castbox |  PodHubUK Feedback: Gareth Williams Loved the podcast this week (as every week actually) particularly the chat about android in cameras. [Ref: Yongnuo YN455] Reminded me of my beloved and very much missed Samsung galaxy NX Mirrorless camera. Stupidly I got rid of mine along with a large collection of lenses a few years back and have been trying to buy another ever since. It ran android, had a sim card slot, variety of lenses and filters and gave some great images. To this day I believe it is the best incarnation of android and connectivity in a Camera. If I am lucky enough to get another I would happily send over for review. Hardline on the hardware: Steam Deck Handheld Games Console Launches Stream Deck 2 Launches + Elgato's Stream Deck MK.2 supports seven cute faceplates - What's New Anker's Magnetic Battery Bank 5K is a far cheaper version of Apple's https://9to5mac.com/2021/07/14/apple-magsafe-battery-vs-mophie-anker-iphone-12/ Pixel 6XL with a 5x Optical Zoom? Barracuda X $100 Headset Yamaha Yh-l700a Unveiled: Over Ear Headphones With ANC And Spatial Audio Knackered Samsung Screens on S20 Range Xiaomi's apparent Galaxy Tab challenger passes through the FCC Panasonic has a new fully rugged, modular Windows tablet Asus Chromebook CX9 Oppo Watch 2 Launch 27th July Samsung unveils a 1000-inch MicroLED display with up to 16K resolution Windows 10 Gets Another Five Years? Japan breaks internet speed record with a 319Tbps data transfer Flap your trap about an App: Windows 365 in the Cloud - Microsoft's ChromeOS! Netflix Announces it's Getting Into Mobile Gaming Hark Back:  Two-Way Radios (Walkie Talkies) Clippy Returns from the Dead! Bargain Basement: Best UK deals and tech on sale we have spotted Samsung EVO Select 128GB microSDXC UHS-I U3 100MB/s Full HD & 4K UHD Memory Card with SD Adapter Was: £15.99 Now: £13.59 2TB NETAC 2.5in SATA 3D SSD, £129.99 delivered LG's 2021 OLED TVs dropping to lowest ever price 2 Pack TP-Link Kasa Mini Smart Plug Works with Google/Alexa, £14.99 (+£4.49 non Prime) at Amazon - Was: £15.99 Now: £14.99 WD Blue SN550 1TB High-Performance M.2 PCIe NVME SSD - Was: £123.99 Now: £83.99 70%  Off Selected Xbox Games Samsung Galaxy S20 FE 5G - this was £699 now £475 (the 5G SnapDragon version) Xiaomi Redmi Note 10 5G £99+£10 Voda PAYG Deal (Locked to Voda) - Specs Main Show URL: http://www.techaddicts.uk | PodHubUK Contact:: gareth@techaddicts.uk | @techaddictsuk Gareth - @garethmyles | garethmyles.com Ted - tedsalmon.com | Ted's PayPal | Ted's Amazon | tedsalmon@post.com YouTube: Tech Addicts The PodHubUK PodcastsPodHubUK - Twitter - MeWe PSC Group - PSC Photos - PSC Classifieds - WhateverWorks - Camera Creations - TechAddictsUK - The TechBox - AAM - AAWP - Chewing Gum for the Ears - Projector Room - Coffee Time - Ted's Salmagundi - Steve's Rants'n'Raves - Ted's Amazon - Steve's Amazon - Buy Ted a Coffee

Nava Cast
Galaxy Tab S7 Lite, Samsung's Entrance Into The Tablet Arena, and Future Tablet Possessors

Nava Cast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2021 13:08


Samsung is making some bold moves with its tablet lineup. But can it fix Android's applications problem.

Tech Sales Insights
E15 - Purposeful Obstacles Beyond Your Comfort Zone with KC Choi, Samsung

Tech Sales Insights

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 3, 2021 37:31


As the Corporate EVP and GM of the Global B2B/B2G Team at Samsung Electronics, he is responsible for the sales and go-to-market leadership for Samsung mobility products, services, and solutions including 5G, Knox Security Galaxy, Note, Galaxy Tab, wearables and IoT to Samsung's global enterprise customers and partners. Previously, he was the SVP of Global Systems Engineering of Dell EMC's world-class technical presales engineering organization that helped its customers and partners transform their information technology capabilities to realize the best outcomes in today's digital economy. Earlier in his career, he joined Compaq/HP as Director of Americas Solutions Architecture, before being promoted to VP of Americas Solutions Architecture, Cloud and Total Customer Experience. Originally from Seoul, South Korea, he graduated from UC Irvine with a BA/BS in Economics and Electrical Engineering. Join Randy Seidl and David Nour on this episode of The Sales Community #TechSalesInsights podcast with KC Choi. Don't forget, three quick points: Seidl and Nour host each week's guest at a Twitter Chat, so search Twitter for #TechSalesInsights for the latest updates. We turn the show notes from these podcasts into more in-depth articles, so check them out at SalesCommunity.com. Our next guest will be Kevin Haverty, Chief Revenue Officer at ServiceNow - don't miss it, wherever you subscribe to podcasts or at SalesCommunity.com/Events. Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/salescommunity/message

The Daily Crunch – Spoken Edition
The 5G version of Samsung's Galaxy Tab S7 starts at $850 and arrives September 18

The Daily Crunch – Spoken Edition

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 2, 2020 3:00


2020 was going to be the year 5G went truly mainstream. Things obviously haven't gone according to plan these past several months, but this is undoubtedly the year Samsung went all-in on the next generation technology. After being one of the first to market with a 5G device, it's since made its way across the […]

Podcasts4iu
Lo nuevo de Samsung: Fold 2, Buds live, note 20 y Galaxy Tab S7

Podcasts4iu

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 6, 2020 29:30


https://chollos4iu.com/apoya-el-proyecto

TechCrunch
Daily Crunch 7/31/19

TechCrunch

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 31, 2019 4:25


Welcome to TechCrunch daily news, a round up of the top tech news of the day. Presented by Bose. Take calls, play music and enjoy your content with Bose Frames. The only sunglasses with tiny electronics that connect to your mobile device for a unique audio experience. Available in 2 timeless styles. Go to Bose.com to find out more. -- Facebook reveals its research into brain-controlled wearable devices (yes, really) -- iPhone sales dip -- and Samsung announces a new Galaxy Tab.

BSD Now
210: Your questions, part I

BSD Now

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 6, 2017 117:02


In this episode, we take a look at the reimplementation of NetBSD using a Microkernel, check out what makes DHCP faster, and see what high-process count support for DragonflyBSD has to offer, and we answer the questions you've always wanted to ask us. This episode was brought to you by Headlines A Reimplementation Of Netbsd Using a Microkernel (http://theembeddedboard.review/a-reimplementation-of-netbsd-using-a-microkernel-part-1-of-2/) Minix author Andy Tanenbaum writes in Part 1 of a-reimplementation-of-netbsd-using-a-microkernel (http://theembeddedboard.review/a-reimplementation-of-netbsd-using-a-microkernel-part-1-of-2/) Based on the MINIX 3 microkernel, we have constructed a system that to the user looks a great deal like NetBSD. It uses pkgsrc, NetBSD headers and libraries, and passes over 80% of the KYUA tests). However, inside, the system is completely different. At the bottom is a small (about 13,000 lines of code) microkernel that handles interrupts, message passing, low-level scheduling, and hardware related details. Nearly all of the actual operating system, including memory management, the file system(s), paging, and all the device drivers run as user-mode processes protected by the MMU. As a consequence, failures or security issues in one component cannot spread to other ones. In some cases a failed component can be replaced automatically and on the fly, while the system is running, and without user processes noticing it. The talk will discuss the history, goals, technology, and status of the project. Research at the Vrije Universiteit has resulted in a reimplementation of NetBSD using a microkernel instead of the traditional monolithic kernel. To the user, the system looks a great deal like NetBSD (it passes over 80% of the KYUA tests). However, inside, the system is completely different. At the bottom is a small (about 13,000 lines of code) microkernel that handles interrupts, message passing, low-level scheduling, and hardware related details. Nearly all of the actual operating system, including memory management, the file system(s), paging, and all the device drivers run as user-mode processes protected by the MMU. As a consequence, failures or security issues in one component cannot spread to other ones. In some cases a failed component can be replaced automatically and on the fly, while the system is running. The latest work has been adding live update, making it possible to upgrade to a new version of the operating system WITHOUT a reboot and without running processes even noticing. No other operating system can do this. The system is built on MINIX 3, a derivative of the original MINIX system, which was intended for education. However, after the original author, Andrew Tanenbaum, received a 2 million euro grant from the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences and a 2.5 million euro grant from the European Research Council, the focus changed to building a highly reliable, secure, fault tolerant operating system, with an emphasis on embedded systems. The code is open source and can be downloaded from www.minix3.org. It runs on the x86 and ARM Cortex V8 (e.g., BeagleBones). Since 2007, the Website has been visited over 3 million times and the bootable image file has been downloaded over 600,000 times. The talk will discuss the history, goals, technology, and status of the project. Part 2 (http://theembeddedboard.review/a-reimplementation-of-netbsd-using-a-microkernel-part-2-of-2/) is also available. *** Rapid DHCP: Or, how do Macs get on the network so fast? (https://cafbit.com/post/rapid_dhcp_or_how_do/) One of life's minor annoyances is having to wait on my devices to connect to the network after I wake them from sleep. All too often, I'll open the lid on my EeePC netbook, enter a web address, and get the dreaded "This webpage is not available" message because the machine is still working on connecting to my Wi-Fi network. On some occasions, I have to twiddle my thumbs for as long as 10-15 seconds before the network is ready to be used. The frustrating thing is that I know it doesn't have to be this way. I know this because I have a Mac. When I open the lid of my MacBook Pro, it connects to the network nearly instantaneously. In fact, no matter how fast I am, the network comes up before I can even try to load a web page. My curiosity got the better of me, and I set out to investigate how Macs are able to connect to the network so quickly, and how the network connect time in other operating systems could be improved. I figure there are three main categories of time-consuming activities that occur during network initialization: Link establishment. This is the activity of establishing communication with the network's link layer. In the case of Wi-Fi, the radio must be powered on, the access point detected, and the optional encryption layer (e.g. WPA) established. After link establishment, the device is able to send and receive Ethernet frames on the network. Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP). Through DHCP handshaking, the device negotiates an IP address for its use on the local IP network. A DHCP server is responsible for managing the IP addresses available for use on the network. Miscellaneous overhead. The operating system may perform any number of mundane tasks during the process of network initialization, including running scripts, looking up preconfigured network settings in a local database, launching programs, etc. My investigation thus far is primarily concerned with the DHCP phase, although the other two categories would be interesting to study in the future. I set up a packet capture environment with a spare wireless access point, and observed the network activity of a number of devices as they initialized their network connection. For a worst-case scenario, let's look at the network activity captured while an Android tablet is connecting: This tablet, presumably in the interest of "optimization", is initially skipping the DHCP discovery phase and immediately requesting its previous IP address. The only problem is this is a different network, so the DHCP server ignores these requests. After about 4.5 seconds, the tablet stubbornly tries again to request its old IP address. After another 4.5 seconds, it resigns itself to starting from scratch, and performs the DHCP discovery needed to obtain an IP address on the new network. In all fairness, this delay wouldn't be so bad if the device was connecting to the same network as it was previously using. However, notice that the tablet waits a full 1.13 seconds after link establishment to even think about starting the DHCP process. Engineering snappiness usually means finding lots of small opportunities to save a few milliseconds here and there, and someone definitely dropped the ball here. In contrast, let's look at the packet dump from the machine with the lightning-fast network initialization, and see if we can uncover the magic that is happening under the hood: The key to understanding the magic is the first three unicast ARP requests. It looks like Mac OS remembers certain information about not only the last connected network, but the last several networks. In particular, it must at least persist the following tuple for each of these networks: > 1. The Ethernet address of the DHCP server > 2. The IP address of the DHCP server > 3. Its own IP address, as assigned by the DHCP server During network initialization, the Mac transmits carefully crafted unicast ARP requests with this stored information. For each network in its memory, it attempts to send a request to the specific Ethernet address of the DHCP server for that network, in which it asks about the server's IP address, and requests that the server reply to the IP address which the Mac was formerly using on that network. Unless network hosts have been radically shuffled around, at most only one of these ARP requests will result in a response—the request corresponding to the current network, if the current network happens to be one of the remembered networks. This network recognition technique allows the Mac to very rapidly discover if it is connected to a known network. If the network is recognized (and presumably if the Mac knows that the DHCP lease is still active), it immediately and presumptuously configures its IP interface with the address it knows is good for this network. (Well, it does perform a self-ARP for good measure, but doesn't seem to wait more than 13ms for a response.) The DHCP handshaking process begins in the background by sending a DHCP request for its assumed IP address, but the network interface is available for use during the handshaking process. If the network was not recognized, I assume the Mac would know to begin the DHCP discovery phase, instead of sending blind requests for a former IP address as the Galaxy Tab does. The Mac's rapid network initialization can be credited to more than just the network recognition scheme. Judging by the use of ARP (which can be problematic to deal with in user-space) and the unusually regular transmission intervals (a reliable 1.0ms delay between each packet sent), I'm guessing that the Mac's DHCP client system is entirely implemented as tight kernel-mode code. The Mac began the IP interface initialization process a mere 10ms after link establishment, which is far faster than any other device I tested. Android devices such as the Galaxy Tab rely on the user-mode dhclient system (part of the dhcpcd package) dhcpcd program, which no doubt brings a lot of additional overhead such as loading the program, context switching, and perhaps even running scripts. The next step for some daring kernel hacker is to implement a similarly aggressive DHCP client system in the Linux kernel, so that I can enjoy fast sign-on speeds on my Android tablet, Android phone, and Ubuntu netbook. There already exists a minimal DHCP client implementation in the Linux kernel, but it lacks certain features such as configuring the DNS nameservers. Perhaps it wouldn't be too much work to extend this code to support network recognition and interface with a user-mode daemon to handle such auxillary configuration information received via DHCP. If I ever get a few spare cycles, maybe I'll even take a stab at it. You can also find other ways of optimizing the dhclient program and how it works in the dhclient tutorial on Calomel.org (https://calomel.org/dhclient.html). *** BSDCam Trip Report (https://www.freebsdfoundation.org/blog/bsdcam-2017-trip-report-michael-lucas/) Over the decades, FreeBSD development and coordination has shifted from being purely on-line to involving more and more in-person coordination and cooperation. The FreeBSD Foundation sponsors a devsummit right before BSDCan, EuroBSDCon, and AsiaBSDCon, so that developers traveling to the con can leverage their airfare and hammer out some problems. Yes, the Internet is great for coordination, but nothing beats a group of developers spending ten minutes together to sketch on a whiteboard and figuring out exactly how to make something bulletproof. In addition to the coordination efforts, though, conference devsummits are hierarchical. There's a rigid schedule, with topics decided in advance. Someone leads the session. Sessions can be highly informative, passionate arguments, or anything in between. BSDCam is… a little different. It's an invaluable part of the FreeBSD ecosystem. However, it's something that I wouldn't normally attend. But right now, is not normal. I'm writing a new edition of Absolute FreeBSD. To my astonishment, people have come to rely on this book when planning their deployments and operations. While I find this satisfying, it also increases the pressure on me to get things correct. When I wrote my first FreeBSD book back in 2000, a dozen mailing lists provided authoritative information on FreeBSD development. One person could read every one of those lists. Today, that's not possible—and the mailing lists are only one narrow aspect of the FreeBSD social system. Don't get me wrong—it's pretty easy to find out what people are doing and how the system works. But it's not that easy to find out what people will be doing and how the system will work. If this book is going to be future-proof, I needed to leave my cozy nest and venture into the wilds of Cambridge, England. Sadly, the BSDCam chair agreed with my logic, so I boarded an aluminum deathtrap—sorry, a “commercial airliner”—and found myself hurtled from Detroit to Heathrow. And one Wednesday morning, I made it to the William Gates building of Cambridge University, consciousness nailed to my body by a thankfully infinite stream of proper British tea. BSDCam attendance is invitation only, and the facilities can only handle fifty folks or so. You need to be actively working on FreeBSD to wrangle an invite. Developers attend from all over the world. Yet, there's no agenda. Robert Watson is the chair, but he doesn't decide on the conference topics. He goes around the room and asks everyone to introduce themselves, say what they're working on, and declare what they want to discuss during the conference. The topics of interest are tallied. The most popular topics get assigned time slots and one of the two big rooms. Folks interested in less popular topics are invited to claim one of the small breakout rooms. Then the real fun begins. I started by eavesdropping in the virtualization workshop. For two hours, people discussed FreeBSD's virtualization needs, strengths, and weaknesses. What needs help? What should this interface look like? What compatibility is important, and what isn't? By the end of the session, the couple dozen people had developed a reasonable consensus and, most importantly, some folks had added items to their to-do lists. Repeat for a dozen more topics. I got a good grip on what's really happening with security mitigation techniques, FreeBSD's cloud support, TCP/IP improvements, advances in teaching FreeBSD, and more. A BSDCan devsummit presentation on packaging the base system is informative, but eavesdropping on two dozen highly educated engineers arguing about how to nail down the final tidbits needed to make that a real thing is far more educational. To my surprise, I was able to provide useful feedback for some sessions. I speak at a lot of events outside of the FreeBSD world, and was able to share much of what I hear at Linux conferences. A tool that works well for an experienced developer doesn't necessarily work well for everyone. Every year, I leave BSDCan tired. I left BSDCam entirely exhausted. These intense, focused discussions stretched my brain. But, I have a really good idea where key parts of FreeBSD development are actually headed. This should help future-proof the new Absolute FreeBSD, as much as any computer book can be future-proof. Plus, BSDCam throws the most glorious conference dinner I've ever seen. I want to thank Robert Watson for his kind invitation, and the FreeBSD Foundation for helping defray the cost of this trip Interview - The BSDNow Crew As a kid, what did you dream of to become as an adult? JT: An Astronaut BR: I wanted to be a private detective, because of all the crime novels that I read back then. I didn't get far with it. However, I think the structured analysis skills (who did what, when, and such) help me in debugging and sysadmin work. AJ: Didn't think about it much How do you manage to stay organized day to day with so much things you're actively doing each day? (Day job, wife/girlfriend, conferences, hobbies, friends, etc.) JT: Who said I was organized? BR: A lot of stuff in my calendar as reminders, open browser tabs as “to read later” list. A few things like task switching when getting stuck helps. Also, focus on a single goal for the day, even though there will be distractions. Slowly, but steadily chip away at the things you're working on. Rather than to procrastinate and put things back to review later, get started early with easy things for a big task and then tackle the hard part. Often, things look totally chaotic and unmanageable, until you start working on them. AJ: I barely manage. Lots of Google Calendar reminders, and the entire wall of my office is covered in whiteboard sheet todo lists. I use pinboard.in to deal with finding and organizing bookmarks. Write things down, don't trust your memory. What hobbies outside of IT do you have? JT: I love photography, but I do that Professional part time, so I'm not sure if that counts as a hobby anymore. I guess it'd have to be working in the garage on my cars. BR: I do Tai Chi to relax once a week in a group, but can also do it alone, pretty much everywhere. Way too much Youtube watching and browsing the web. I did play some games before studying at the university and I'm still proud that I could control it to the bare minimum not to impact my studies. A few “lapses” from time to time, revisiting the old classics since the newer stuff won't run on my machines anyway. Holiday time is pretty much spent for BSD conferences and events, this is where I can relax and talk with like-minded people from around the world, which is fascinating. Plus, it gets me to various places and countries I never would have dared to visit on my own. AJ: I play a few video games, and I like to ski, although I don't go very often as most of my vacation time is spent hanging out with my BSD friends at various conferences How do you relax? JT: What is this word ‘relax' and what does it mean? BR: My Tai Chi plays a big part in it I guess. I really calms you and the constant stream of thoughts for a while. It also gives you better clarity of what's important in life. Watching movies, sleeping long. AJ: Usually watching TV or Movies. Although I have taken to doing most of my TV watching on my exercise bike now, but it is still mentally relaxing If FreeBSD didn't exist, which BSD flavour would you use? Why? JT: I use TrueOS, but if FreeBSD didn't exist, that project might not either… so… My other choice would be HardenedBSD, but since it's also based on FreeBSD I'm in the same dillema. BR: I once installed NetBSD to see what It can do. If FreeBSD wouldn't exist, I would probably try my luck with it. OpenBSD is also appealing, but I've never installed it. AJ: When I started using FreeBSD in 2000, the only other BSD I had heard of at the time was OpenBSD. If FreeBSD wasn't around, I don't think the world would look like it does, so it is hard to speculate. If any of the BSD's weren't around and you had to use Linux, which camp would belong to? (Redhat, SUSE, Debian, Ubuntu, Gentoo?) JT: I learned Linux in the mid 90s using Slackware, which I used consistently up until the mid 2000s, when I joined the PuppyLinux community and eventually became a developer (FYI, Puppy was/is/can be based on Slackware -- its complicated). So I'd go back to using either Slackware or PuppyLinux. BR: I tried various Linux distributions until I landed at Debian. I used is pretty extensively as my desktop OS at home, building custom kernels and packages to install them until I discovered FreeBSD. I ran both side by side for a few months for learning until one day I figured out that I had not booted Debian in a while, so I switched completely. AJ: The first Linux I played with was Slackware, and it is the most BSD like, but the bits of Linux I learned in school were Redhat and so I can somewhat wrap my head around it, although now that they are changing everything to systemd, all of that old knowledge is more harmful than useful. Are you still finding yourself in need to use Windows/Mac OS? Why? JT: I work part time as a professional Photographer, so I do use Windows for my photography work. While I can do everything I need to do in Linux, it comes down to being pragmatic about my time. What takes me several hours to accomplish in Linux I can accomplish in 20 minutes on Windows. BR: I was a long time Windows-only user before my Unix days. But back when Vista was about to come out and I needed a new laptop, my choice was basically learning to cope with Vistas awful features or learn MacOS X. I did the latter, it increased my productivity since it's really a good Unix desktop experience (at least, back then). I only have to use Windows at work from time to time as I manage our Windows Terminal server, which keeps the exposure low enough and I only connect to it to use a certain app not available for the Mac or the BSDs. AJ: I still use Windows to play games, for a lot of video conferencing, and to produce BSD Now. Some of it could be done on BSD but not as easily. I have promised myself that I will switch to 100% BSD rather than upgrade to Windows 10, so we'll see how that goes. Please describe your home networking setup. Router type, router OS, router hardware, network segmentation, wifi apparatus(es), other devices connected, and anything else that might be interesting about your home network. BR: Very simple and boring: Apple Airport Express base station and an AVM FritzBox for DNS, DHCP, and the link to my provider. A long network cable to my desktop machine. That I use less and less often. I just bought an RPI 3 for some home use in the future to replace it. Mostly my brother's and my Macbook Pro's are connected, our phones and the iPad of my mother. AJ: I have a E3-1220 v3 (dual 3.1ghz + HT) with 8 GB of ram, and 4x Intel gigabit server NICs as my router, and it runs vanilla FreeBSD (usually some snapshot of -current). I have 4 different VLANs, Home, Office, DMZ, and Guest WiFi. WiFi is served via a tiny USB powered device I bought in Tokyo years ago, it serves 3 different SSIDs, one for each VLAN except the DMZ. There are ethernet jacks in every room wired for 10 gigabit, although the only machines with 10 gigabit are my main workstation, file server, and some machines in the server rack. There are 3 switches, one for the house (in the laundry room), one for the rack, and one for 10gig stuff. There is a rack in the basement spare bedroom, it has 7 servers in it, mostly storage for live replicas of customer data for my company. How do guys manage to get your work done on FreeBSD desktops? What do you do when you need to a Linux or Windows app that isn't ported, or working? I've made several attempts to switch to FreeBSD, but each attempt failed because of tools not being available (e.g. Zoom, Dropbox, TeamViewer, Crashplan) or broken (e.g. VirtualBox). BR: I use VIrtualBox for everything that is not natively available or Windows-only. Unfortunately, that means no modern games. I mostly do work in the shell when I'm on FreeBSD and when it has to be a graphical application, then I use Fluxbox as the DE. I want to get work done, not look at fancy eye-candy that get's boring after a while. Deactivated the same stuff on my mac due to the same reason. I look for alternative software online, but my needs are relatively easy to satisfy as I'm not doing video editing/rendering and such. AJ: I generally find that I don't need these apps. I use Firefox, Thunderbird, OpenSSH, Quassel, KomodoEdit, and a few other apps, so my needs are not very demanding. It is annoying when packages are broken, but I usually work around this with boot environments, and being able to just roll back to a version that worked for a few days until the problem is solved. I do still have access to a windows machine for the odd time I need specific VPN software or access to Dell/HP etc out-of-band management tools. Which desktop environments are your favorite, and why? For example, I like i3, Xfce, and I'm drawn to Lumina's ethos, but so far always seem to end up back on Xfc because of its ease of use, flexibility, and dashing good looks. JT: As a Lumina Desktop developer, I think my preference is obvious. ;) I am also a long timeOpenBox user, so I have a soft place in my heart for that as well. BR: I use Fluxbox when I need to work with a lot of windows or an application demands X11. KDE and others are too memory heavy for me and I rarely use even 20% of the features they provide. AJ: I was a long time KDE user, but I have adopted Lumina. I find it fast, and that it gets out of my way and lets me do what I want. It had some annoyances early on, but I've nagged the developers into making it work for me. Which command-line shells do you prefer, why, and how (if at all) have you customised the environment or prompt? BR: I use zsh, but without all the fancy stuff you can find online. It might make you more productive, yes. But again, I try to keep things simple. I'm slowly learning tmux and want to work more in it in the future. I sometimes look at other BSD people's laptops and am amazed at what they do with window-management in tmux. My prompt looks like this: bcr@Voyager:~> 20:20 17-08-17 Put this in your .zshrc to get the same result: PROMPT='%n@%m:%~>' RPROMPT='%T %D' AJ: I started using tcsh early on, because it was the shell on the first box I had access to, and because one of the first things I read in “BSD Hacks” was how to enable ‘typo correction”, which made my life a lot better especially on dial up in the early days. My shell prompt looks like this: allan@CA-TOR1-02:/usr/home/allan% What is one thing (or more) missing in FreeBSD you would import from another project or community? Could be tech, process, etc. JT: AUFS from Linux BR: Nohup from Illumos where you can detach an already running process and put it in the background. I often forget that and I'm not in tmux when that happens, so I can see myself use that feature a lot. AJ: Zones (more complete Jails) from IllumOS how do you manage your time to learn about and work on FreeBSD? Does your work/employment enable what you do, or are your contributions mainly done in private time? JT: These days I'm mostly learning things I need for work, so it just falls into something I'm doing while working on work projects. BR: We have a lot of time during the semester holidays to learn on our own, it's part of the idea of being in a university to keep yourself updated, at least for me. Especially in the fast moving world of IT. I also read a lot in my free time. My interests can shift sometimes, but then I devour everything I can find on the topic. Can be a bit excessive, but has gotten me where I am now and I still need a lot to learn (and want to). Since I work with FreeBSD at work (my owndoing), I can try out many things there. AJ: My work means a spend a lot of time working with FreeBSD, but not that much time working ON it. My contributions are mostly done outside of work, but as I own the company I do get more flexibility to take time off for conferences and other FreeBSD related stuff. we know we can bribe Michael W Lucas with gelato (good gelato that is), but what can we use to bribe you guys? Like when I want to have Allan to work on fixing a bug which prevents me from running ZFS on this fancy rock64 board? BR: Desserts of various kinds. AJ: I am probably not the right person to look at your rock64 board. Most people in the project have taken to bribing me with chocolate. In general, my todo list is so long, the best way is a trade, you take this task and I'll take that task. Is your daily mobile device iOS, Android, Windows Mobile, or other? Why? JT: These days I'm using Android on my Blackberry Priv, but until recently I was still a heavy user of Sailfish OS. I would use SailfishOS everyday, if I could find a phone with a keyboard that I could run it on. BR: iOS on the iPhone 7 currently. Never used an Android phone, saw it on other people's devices and what they can do with it (much more). But the infrequent security updates (if any at all) keep me away from it. AJ: I have a Google Nexus 6 (Android 7.1). I wanted the ‘pure' Android experience, and I had been happy with my previous Nexus S. I don't run a custom OS/ROM or anything because I use the phone to verify that video streams work on an ‘average users device'. I am displeased that support for my device will end soon. I am not sure what device I will get next, but it definitely won't be an iPhone. News Roundup Beta Update - Request for (more) Testing (http://undeadly.org/cgi?action=article&sid=20170808065718&mode=flat&count=30) https://beta.undeadly.org/ has received an update. The most significant changes include: The site has been given a less antiquated "look". (As the topic icons have been eliminated, we are no longer seeking help with those graphics.) The site now uses a moderate amount of semantic HTML5. Several bugs in the HTML fragment validator (used for submissions and comments) have been fixed. To avoid generating invalid HTML, submission content which fails validation is no longer displayed in submission/comment previews. Plain text submissions are converted to HTML in a more useful fashion. (Instead of just converting each EOL to , the converter now generates proper paragraphs and interprets two or more consecutive EOLs as indicating a paragraph break.) The redevelopment remains a work-in-progress. Many thanks to those who have contributed! As before, constructive feedback would be appreciated. Of particular interest are reports of bugs in behaviour (for example, in the HTML validator or in authentication) that would preclude the adoption of the current code for the main site. High-process-count support added to master (http://lists.dragonflybsd.org/pipermail/users/2017-August/313552.html) We've fixed a number of bottlenecks that can develop when the number of user processes runs into the tens of thousands or higher. One thing led to another and I said to myself, "gee, we have a 6-digit PID, might as well make it work to a million!". With the commits made today, master can support at least 900,000 processes with just a kern.maxproc setting in /boot/loader.conf, assuming the machine has the memory to handle it. And, in fact, as today's machines start to ratchet up there in both memory capacity and core count, with fast storage (NVMe) and fast networking (10GigE and higher), even in consumer boxes, this is actually something that one might want to do. With AMD's threadripper and EPYC chips now out, the IntelAMD cpu wars are back on! Boasting up to 32 cores (64 threads) per socket and two sockets on EPYC, terabytes of ram, and motherboards with dual 10GigE built-in, the reality is that these numbers are already achievable in a useful manner. In anycase, I've tested these changes on a dual-socket xeon. I can in-fact start 900,000 processes. They don't get a whole lot of cpu and running 'ps' would be painful, but it works and the system is still responsive from the shell with all of that going on. xeon126# uptime 1:42PM up 9 mins, 3 users, load averages: 890407.00, 549381.40, 254199.55 In fact, judging from the memory use, these minimal test processes only eat around 60KB each. 900,000 of them ate only 55GB on a 128GB machine. So even a million processes is not out of the question, depending on the cpu requirements for those processes. Today's modern machines can be stuffed with enormous amounts of memory. Of course, our PIDs are currently limited to 6 digits, so a million is kinda the upper limit in terms of discrete user processes (verses pthreads which are less restricted). I'd rather not go to 7 digits (yet). CFT: Driver for generic MS Windows 7/8/10 - compatible USB HID multi-touch touchscreens (https://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-current/2017-August/066783.html) Following patch [1] adds support for generic MS Windows 7/8/10 - compatible USB HID multi-touch touchscreens via evdev protocol. It is intended to be a native replacement of hid-multitouch.c driver found in Linux distributions and multimedia/webcamd port. Patch is made for 12-CURRENT and most probably can be applied to recent 11-STABLE and 11.1-RELEASE (not tested) How to test" 1. Apply patch [1] 2. To compile this driver into the kernel, place the following lines into your kernel configuration file: device wmt device usb device evdev Alternatively, to load the driver as a module at boot time, place the following line in loader.conf(5): wmt_load="YES" 3. Install x11-drivers/xf86-input-evdev or x11-drivers/xf86-input-libinput port 4. Tell XOrg to use evdev or libinput driver for the device: ``` Section "ServerLayout" InputDevice "TouchScreen0" "SendCoreEvents" EndSection Section "InputDevice" Identifier "TouchScreen0" Driver "evdev" # Driver "libinput" Option "Device" "/dev/input/eventXXX" EndSection ``` Exact value of "/dev/input/eventXXX" can be obtained with evemu-record utility from devel/evemu. Note1: Currently, driver does not support pens or touchpads. Note2: wmt.ko should be kld-loaded before uhid driver to take precedence over it! Otherwise uhid can be kld-unloaded after loading of wmt. wmt review: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12017 Raw diff: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12017.diff *** Beastie Bits BSDMag Programing Languages Infographic (https://bsdmag.org/programm_history/) t2k17 Hackathon Report: Bob Beck on buffer cache tweaks, libressl and pledge progress (http://undeadly.org/cgi?action=article&sid=20170815171854) New FreeBSD Journal (https://www.freebsdfoundation.org/past-issues/resource-control/) NetBSD machines at Open Source Conference 2017 Kyoto (http://mail-index.netbsd.org/netbsd-advocacy/2017/08/10/msg000744.html) *** Feedback/Questions Dan - HDD question (http://dpaste.com/3H6TDJV) Benjamin - scrub of death (http://dpaste.com/10F086V) Jason - Router Opinion (http://dpaste.com/2D9102K) Sohrab - Thanks (http://dpaste.com/1XYYTWF) ***