On the run in the year of 1987, Bumblebee finds refuge in a junkyard in a small Californian beach town. Charlie, on the cusp of turning 18 and trying to find her place in the world, discovers Bumblebee, battle-scarred and broken.
Director:
Travis Knight
Stars:
Hailee Steinfeld,
Jorge Lendeborg Jr.,
John Cena
The true story of Ruth Bader Ginsburg, her struggles for equal rights, and the early cases of a historic career that lead to her nomination and confirmation as U.S. Supreme Court Associate Justice.
Six strangers are given mysterious black boxes with tickets to an immersive escape room for a chance to win tons of money. Being locked in several rooms with extreme conditions, they discover the secrets behind the escape room and must fight to survive and to find a way out.
Smartphones might have more and more storage these days, but you can never have enough. Today, you can add 256GB for cheap witha 60 percent discount on Samsung’s Evo Select microSD on AmazonRemove non-product link, bringing it down to $50 from a list price of $120.
This little memory card is designed to be fast, with read speeds up to 100MB/s and write speeds up to 90MB/s, as well as the capacity to transfer and store 4K Ultra HD video content. It’s also designed to be durable, with built-in protection against extreme temperatures, water, and more. If you’re confused between this card and the Evo Plus card, we don’t blame you. They’re the same, except the Select is the Amazon-branded version.
We haven’t reviewed this exact memory card ourselves, but we’re definitely fans of it and it’s a huge hit on Amazon, with 4.6 stars out of 5 across more than 14,000 user reviews.
[Today’s deal: 256GB Samsung Evo Select SD card for $50 on AmazonRemove non-product link]
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Baker Dill (Matthew McConaughey) is a fishing boat captain leading tours off a tranquil, tropical enclave called Plymouth Island. His quiet life is shattered, however, when his ex-wife Karen (Anne Hathaway) tracks him down with a desperate plea for help. She begs Dill to save her – and their young son – from her new, violent husband (Jason Clarke) by taking him out to sea on a fishing excursion, only to throw him to the sharks and leave him for dead. Karen’s appearance thrusts Dill back into a life he’d tried to forget, and as he struggles between right and wrong, his world is plunged into a new reality that may not be all that it seems.
If you’ve bought a Blu-ray movie over the past decade and redeemed the digital download code, there’s a good chance it ended up in your Ultraviolet library. There’s an equally good chance that you’ve forgotten about it. Now that the service has announced it will be shutting down on July 31, you have six months to rescue them before they end up in digital oblivion.
The first thing you need to do is log into your Ultraviolet account. If you’ve ever redeemed an Ultraviolet code, you had to sign up for an account, so if you don’t remember it, try the “Forgot username or password” link. Ultraviolet has been around since the release Horrible Bosses in 2011, so it goes back a while.
Once you’ve logged in, you can check your library to see what’s in there. If there’s something you want to save, head over to Settings and click Linked Services to see the services you’ve previously connected. If there are any, you should already see your Ultraviolet movies in those libraries, though whether they show up depends on the studio, so it’s best to link to a couple of different sites to ensure your titles end up somewhere once Ultraviolet goes away.
Ultraviolet
You can link your Ultraviolet movie collection to other services to ensure they don’t disappear forever.
To see the available partners, click on Retailer Services. From there, you’ll be able to link your library to an external resource, which will essentially copy your library into their store. There are five services available, but we recommend Vudu above all others. Vudu is Walmart’s service and it includes every major studio, so your entire library will transfer over without a hitch. You’ll need to sign up for a Vudu account if you don’t already have one and then link your Ultraviolet library, but the whole process doesn’t take more than a couple minutes.
With your Ultaviolet library linked to Vudu, you can then link your Vudu library to Movies Anywhere so you can merge your iTunes, Google Play, and Amazon libraries into one. Vudu will also link any TV shows in your Ultraviolet library, but they won’t appear in Movies Anywhere, nor will Paramount, MGM, or Lionsgate movies.
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A mother moves in with her thirty-something son, Ramzi, and his life-long friend, Tarek. This new situation precipitates a series of events and realizations that lead the two men to … See full summary »
Will Esperanza be able to show Tom the truth about his past, present and future? Will she be able to save all the young people in the world who suffer from depression near Christmas Time? … See full summary »
Director:
Elizabeth Blake-Thomas
Stars:
Isabella Blake-Thomas,
Britt Flatmo,
Julia Parker
When valuable objects begin disappearing throughout Europe, it’s up to a band of brilliant babies to travel overseas and catch the thieves before it’s too late.
An adorable group of talking baby-detectives travel to the deserts of Egypt to track down the naughty baby-criminal mastermind, “Big Baby”, and his partner, the super-villain “Moriarty”.
A group of smart-talking toddlers find themselves at the center of a media mogul’s experiment to crack the code to baby talk. The toddlers must race against time for the sake of babies everywhere.
At the age of 35, Ece is the assistant general manager of a company that produces baby diapers. There is a happy relationship with her lover Alper. Because of Ece, they can not get married…. See full summary »
Director:
Serkan Acar
Stars:
Belçim Bilgin,
Sezai Paracikoglu,
Ata Berk Mutlu
Three talented teens enter a local competition to be the next big Girl Band, thwarted at every turn, by bad luck, bad timing, bad neighbors and bad boyfriends, but aided by a crazy uncle … See full summary »
Director:
Elizabeth Blake-Thomas
Stars:
Isabella Blake-Thomas,
Gabe Eggerling,
Jaime Adler
A horror film for children. A family of archaeologists find the fifth pendant that has been missing for centuries. Unfortunately a spirit has also been searching for this pendant. Once all … See full summary »
Director:
Elizabeth Blake-Thomas
Stars:
Richard Tyson,
Jake Brennan,
Abigail Titmuss
Extraterrestrials invade Earth and a pair of middle schoolers hold the fate of the world in their hands in Aliens Ate My Homework, a delightfully comical intergalactic adventure from … See full summary »
Director:
Sean McNamara
Stars:
London Cardinal,
Ty Consiglio,
Christian Convery
Despite the title and having the same book author, this is not sequel to A Dog’s Purpose (2017). However, Universal Pictures is planning to release a sequel to that film titled A Dog’s Journey (2019) which was released the same year as this film. See more »
Nokia may be a household name, but it’s not for anything it’s done recently. Even today, nostalgic feature phones such as the 3310 and the classic Snake game are still more likely to be associated with Nokia than the flagship Nokia 7.1 or any of the brand’s newer Android handsets.
Nokia’s newest handsets, the 2V and 3.1 Plus, probably aren’t going to change that, at least not overnight. They’re not flashy or packed with features or even all that nice looking, but they represent an important step in Nokia’s global expansion. As announced last week, parent company HMD has struck a deal with Cricket and Verizon to bring the first Nokia phones in a decade to carrier stores. And they’re definitely not premium: the 3.1 Plus costs $160, while the prepaid 2V will sell for $70).
But while the two handsets here are decidedly on the bargain and budget end of the spectrum, they just might be the thing that brings Nokia back into the mainstream. With premium smartphone fatigue becoming a real thing and people holding onto their phones for longer, Nokia’s unique proposition of “value by choice” just might be the right change of pace at just the right time.
Michael Simon/IDG
The Nokia 2V looks something like a Pixel 2 knockoff.
Specs don’t tell the story
To look at these phones on paper, they’re very much face-in-the-crowd handsets:
Nokia 2V
Dimensions: 153.6 x 77.6 x 9.67 mm
Display: 5.5-inch HD, 16:9 LCD
Processor: Snapdragon 425
RAM: 1 GB
Storage: 8 GB
Battery: 4,000mAh
Rear camera: 8MP
Front camera: 5MP
Nokia 3.1 Plus
Dimensions: 161.98 x 76.98 x 8.78mm
Display: 6-inch HD+, 16:9 LCD
Processor: Snapdragon 439
RAM: 2 GB
Storage: 32GB
Battery: 3,500mAh
Rear camera: Dual 13MP + 5MP
Front camera: 8MP
And when you hold them, they’re not all that striking either. Both phones have blue plastic backs and are extremely light to hold without feeling excessively cheap. They’re thicker than most other phones I’ve used but not excessively so, and the 1080p high-definition screens have giant bezels all around with extremely large foreheads and chins. The Nokia 2V in particular looks like a Pixel 2 knock-off, with front-facing speakers flanking the screen and faux metallic accents, while the larger Nokia 3.1 Plus is basically a larger version of the Nokia 3.1 phone.
Michael Simon/IDG
Metallic accents give the Nokia 2V a nice aesthetic.
The Nokia 3.1 Plus might be able to pass for a more expensive phone from the front, but that kind of goes away when you flip it over. It’s not just that it has a somewhat flimsy plastic back—it also has a small notch near the bottom that lets you pop the cover off and see what’s inside just like the Galaxy phones of old. But don’t get excited: You can’t replace the battery. It’s only for accessing the SIM and SD slot, which seems unnecessarily cumbersome and risky.
But you probably wouldn’t need to swap out the batteries in these phones anyway—or charge them very often. The Nokia 3.1 Plus has a 3,500mAh battery while the Nokia 2V has a 4,000mAh one, both bigger than most flagships. Nokia says they’ll last two days on a single charge, which is hard to argue given the low-level chips and screens.
Michael Simon/IDG
You can see the battery on the Nokia 3.1 Plus, but you can’t swap it out.
As you might have guessed, neither phone is rated for water resistance, and I have to assume the 3.1 Plus’s open design means it will instantly fry if it comes into contact with the slightest amount of water. And while the Nokia 3.1 Plus has a rear fingerprint sensor, you won’t find one anywhere on the 2V, a major security drawback even on an ultra-budget device.
A light carrier touch
The “V” in the 2V name obviously stands for Verizon, but even though the 3.1 Plus doesn’t have Cricket branding in its name, both of these phones are locked to their respective carriers, apps, updates, and all.
If the phones I used are indicative of the final carrier, however, the branding isn’t too terrible (other than the respective logos on the rear). Each phone had a couple of apps that couldn’t be deleted, but there wasn’t anything too heavy-handed. However, neither handset is running Android One, and it remains to be seen whether updates will arrive as quickly and regularly as they do on Nokia’s unlocked phones. Nokia says they will, but with Verizon and Cricket running the show, reality and expectations may differ.
Michael Simon/IDG
The Nokia 3.1 Plus has a dual camera and a fingerprint sensor on the back.
Even without the Android One stamp, however, the 2V and 3.1 Plus are extremely faithful to stock Android, and neither strays too far from the pure experience Nokia offers on its other handsets. The 3.1 Plus has a “best of Android” Pie skin made by Nokia while the 2V runs Android 8.1 Oreo (Go edition). Both OSes are clean and minimal, and even with limited RAM and a low-end processors, animations were quick and apps launched without any overly noticeable lag during my time with them.
That’s hardly a true performance test, of course, but I’ve used enough Android phones to know how to garner a pretty accurate first impression, and the Nokia 2V and 3.1 Plus are strong budget entries. No one’s going to mistake them for mid-range phones or few people will purposefully seek them out, but that’s not the point. Nokia’s new phones are mean to bring the “pure” Android experience to budget phones, which are all too often slathered in heavy-handed skins and bloated with unnecessary apps.
Michael Simon/IDG
Verizon’s apps are represented on the Nokia 2V, and they can’t be removed.
So while Nokia’s newest phones aren’t going to turn heads, they could turn the most important thing of all: the tide. As more buyers focus on security and longevity over premium features and prices, the value HMD is bringing isn’t in features or design, it’s in Android itself. With the 2V and 3.1 Plus, Nokia is offering the promise of a clean OS with regular updates that costs a fraction of what other phones cost. And you can get it though a carrier. So don’t pay attention to the cheap plastic back. It’s what’s on the inside that matters.
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In 1962, Tony “Tony Lip” Vallelonga, a tough bouncer, is looking for work with his nightclub is closed for renovations. The most promising offer turns out to be the driver for the African-American classical pianist Don Shirley for a concert tour into the Deep South states. Although hardly enthused at working for a black man, Tony accepts the job and they begin their trek armed with The Negro Motorist Green Book, a travel guide for safe travel through America’s racial segregation. Together, the snobbishly erudite pianist and the crudely practical bouncer can barely get along with their clashing attitudes to life and ideals. However, as the disparate pair witness and endure America’s appalling injustices on the road, they find a newfound respect for each other’s talents and heart to face them together. In doing so, they would nurture a friendship and understanding that would change both their lives. Written by Kenneth Chisholm (kchishol@rogers.com)
The film is dedicated to “Larry the Crow,” a bird that hung around the shooting location. Viggo Mortensen cared for the animal after it was hit by a car. See more »
Goofs
Tony talks to the stage manager in Indiana and complains about the piano not being a Steinway. Tony mentions Dr. Shirley’s name and tells him he is the performer. The stage manager says “who is that?” and then makes a racial slur a few seconds later, but no one told him Dr. Shirley was black. See more »
Quotes
Tony Lip:
You know, my father used to say, whatever you do, do it 100%. When you work, work. When you laugh, laugh. When you eat, eat like it’s your last meal.
“Larry the Crow” gets a mention. This was an actual crow that Viggo Mortensen found injured near the set, and tried in vain to nurse back to health. He was no doubt named for Viggo’s favorite soccer team, San Lorenzo (Saint Lawrence in Spanish). The team nickname is “The Crows”. See more »
Huawei’s Matebook 13 is an even more powerful notebook than the premium Matebook X Pro we reviewed last year—and it’s priced more cheaply than its sibling, too. Average battery life and a lack of Thunderbolt ports are the only blemishes on this well-made and well-priced 13-inch laptop…assuming you don’t mind the whiff of security concerns.
Our review unit, received just weeks after Huawei introduced the Matebook 13 at CES, is the premium configuration. It’s also the first laptop we’ve reviewed with Intel’s new Whiskey Lake Intel Core i7 processor. Whiskey Lake is yet another CPU based on the company’s aging 14nm manufacturing process; however, Intel is promising better connectivity as well as a decent speed bump of about 10 percent over the prior generation.
Add to that the Nvidia GeForce MX150 GPU, and the $1299 Matebook 13 looks like a good deal compared to the $1,499 for the Matebook X Pro. Read on for more about the specs, features, design, and performance.
Mark Hachman / iDG
The Matebook 13 squeezes a 13-inch display and current Intel Whiskey Lake processor, plus a GeForce MX150 GPU, into a compact profile.
Matebook 13 features and specs
Display: 13 inches (2160×1440), IPS, touch
Processor: Intel Core i5-8265U or Intel Core i7-8565U (tested), both quad-core Whiskey Lake chips
As we noted in our hands-on, Huawei and its rivals are working hard to shrink laptops. The Matebook 13 has a screen-to-body ratio of 88 percent, with very slender bezels. Meanwhile, the spacious keyboard spans nearly the entire 11.26-inch width of the chassis.
The result of the densely packed design can be felt when you pick up the Matebook 13. At almost 3 pounds and 0.59-inch thick, the Matebook 13 is surprisingly heavy and moderately thin, though it does seem particularly stable. There’s no discernible keyboard flex. When I wiggled the base, I was able to force just a slight wobble in the display portion of the laptop. It reclines to about 35 to 40 degrees off the horizontal—a bit further back than some, and very comfortable for taller users.
Mark Hachman / IDG
The Matebook 13’s embedded fingerprint reader within the power button is one of our favorite conveniences within Huawei’s laptop.
Huawei kept its fingerprint reader in its convenient location underneath the power button, where I’ve rarely had a problem with my finger being read, either on the Matebook 13 or its more powerful cousin, the Matebook X Pro. Huawei does an excellent job here.
Otherwise, though, the ports are rather spartan. There are two USB-C ports, one on either side of the Matebook 13, and that’s all. Unfortunately, neither are Thunderbolt-powered, and only the left-hand port can accept power. (A small pop-up in Mandarin advised me of this—I think—when I tried plugging in my review unit incorrectly.) No SD card slot, no SIM slot, though there is a headphone jack. It’s worth noting that Huawei ships its MateDock 2.0 in the Matebook 13 box, which includes a USB-A port on one side, and VGA, and HDMI (plus USB-C power) on the other side.
Mark Hachman / IDG
Huawei bundles the MateDock 2.0 with the Matebook 13, providing HDMI, VGA, and USB-A (on the other side of the device).
Huawei rates the Matebook 13’s screen at 100 percent of the sRGB color gamut, with a contrast ratio of 1,000:1. While we didn’t check the color fidelity, our light meter reported that the 2160×1440 display puts out a comfortable 323 nits of luminance. We consider about 260 nits to be satisfactory for comfortable indoor use. Note that choosing a 1440p panel as opposed to a 1080p panel does impact battery life.
Huawei’s keyboards are among the best in the business: spacious, with a comfortable amount of key travel. There are two levels of backlighting. Some of you may prefer a stiffer keyboard that provides a greater amount of tactile feedback, like the Microsoft Surface Laptop series. Personally, my fingers have become used to gliding about a keyboard, with minimal pressure. Tastes vary, but rest assured your fingers should be comfortable.
Huawei builds in support for its PC Manager utility on the row of function keys, with a dedicated key in the upper row. The included trackpad is large. Notably, it’s clickable over the vast majority of its surface. My only nitpick is that it didn’t always register three-finger swipes to flip between apps.
Mark Hachman / iDG
Huawei doesn’t offer many expansion ports on the Matebook 13, here shown at full recline.
As you might expect, the audio quality of the Matebook 13’s speakers is average, though the built-in Dolby Atmos enhancement technology improves it noticeably. (Our review unit came with the Dolby technology switched on automatically, which Windows now carves out into the separate Dolby app versus its traditional home in the Windows 10 audio settings.) With the enhancement turned on, the Matebook hits some acceptable lows, though the midrange and high notes still sound much better. The sound volume out of the Matebook’s speakers is more than acceptable.
Mark Hachman / IDG
This USB-C port allows you to charge the laptop, while the other does not. Neither of the Matebook 13’s USB-C ports include Thunderbolt I/O.
Huawei exercises restaint with extraneous apps, though it’s hard to say where Huawei’s contributions end and Microsoft’s begin. There’s a Fitbit Coach app and Cooking Fever, both of which I haven’t seen before, as well as the usual contingent of Candy Crush crapware that appears on new Windows machines. Huawei’s own PC Manager software is pretty bare-bones, offering three main functions: the ability to upgrade the hardware drivers, check the various hardware devices for problems, and provide a link to the owner’s manual.
Huawei also includes a one-year subscription to Microsoft Office 365 Personal, a $69.99 value.
Unfortunately, it’s not enough to consider the usual factors when deciding whether to buy the Huawei Matebook 13. It’s impossible to ignore reported efforts by the U.S. government to pressure other countries to block Huawei telecommunications equipment because of security concerns. On Monday, the Department of Justice alleged that Huawei Devices USA—the company responsible for the Matebook 13—tried to steal information about a T-Mobile testing robot as part of a broader indictment against the company and its chief financial officer. That case has yet to be tried, and Huawei has also denied the charges.
“Huawei executives insist that they are independent of Beijing and would never compromise customer data, though U.S. officials point to Chinese laws requiring domestic companies to cooperate with government requests as evidence that the company poses a security threat,” the Post reported.
Huawei requires you to agree to its consumer privacy policy alongside that of Microsoft when you set up your Matebook 13. The company also requires you to pass data back to Huawei to use its PC Manager software—which is, naturally, designed to push device updates to your PC. If you believe that the Chinese government could ask for and receive your personal information as set out by section I.B(10) of Huawei’s consumer privacy policy—then you shouldn’t buy the Matebook 13.
Matebook 13 performance: Top-notch
As one of the early notebooks featuring an Intel Whiskey Lake Core chip inside of it, we were eager to get a look at how Intel’s most recent chip performed. There are now a few years’ worth of Core chips that fall under the 8th-gen umbrella, though they’ve still incrementally improved performance and battery life with each iteration.
Like some other notebooks we’ve recently tested, the bottom of the Matebook 13 heated quickly when the SSD was put under load, and not the CPU. Though the Matebook 13 is not fanless, the “Shark Fin 2.0 system” cools the device by pulling air in with an 8,000rpm cooling fan and distributes it through the back of the notebook. It’s effective, and leaves the fan on for short periods before turning off. It’s also a substantial improvement over the earlier Matebook X Pro, whose fan turned on frequently. Otherwise, the Matebook 13 cools down quickly, and is never uncomfortably warm to rest on your lap.
We’ve compared the Matebook 13 (red bar in charts) to a number of rivals, including last year’s Matebook X Pro (brown bar in charts). The Matebook 13’s performance is noticeably better overall compared to the Matebook X Pro. Remember, though, that the Matebook X Pro’s screen is of a significantly higher resolution.
We begin with the PCMark 8 battery of tests: Work, Home, and Creative. The Work suite of mainstream productivity applications (word processing, spreadsheet calculations, a simulated video call) is a cakewalk for any recent Intel Core CPU, including the one in the Matebook 13. None of the scores below is anything to be ashamed of, but the Matebook 13 leads the pack.
Mark Hachman / IDG
The Matebook 13 gets off to a good start, soaring to the top of the heap.
The Home and Creative tests emphasize the multimedia aspects of daily life a bit more. The Home test measures tasks associated with content consumption, such as web browsing, writing, gaming, photo editing, and video chat. The Creative test pushes a bit deeper into content creation, measuring performance in web browsing, photo editing, video editing, group video chat, media transcoding, and gaming workloads. The Matebook 13 once again tops all the others.
Mark Hachman / IDG Mark Hachman / IDG
Again, the Matebook 13’s new Whiskey Lake processor and discrete GPU propel it to the top of the class.
We don’t have a huge collection of scores for PCMark’s more modern PCMark 10 benchmark, but the Matebook 13 scored 4,299. In our tests, Dell’s New XPS 13 9370 was a close competitor—and the XPS scored 3,737, indicating the Matebook’s strong performance in office work.
Maxon’s Cinebench benchmark is a staple of PC and component benchmarking, an offshoot of the company’s work in creating the Cinema 4D suite for computer animators. The most common test (and the one we use) applies all of the processor’s four cores and eight threads to rendering a static scene. Again, though the fan kicked in fairly early on, the scene rendered quickly, and the fan turned off shortly thereafter. Huawei’s Matebook 13 is the fastest of all of the notebooks we tested.
Mark Hachman / IDG
These systems are somewhat tightly bunched, but there’s a measurable difference between the Matebook 13 and the rest.
HandBrake, by contrast, is more of an endurance test. The open-source tool transcodes a full-length Hollywood movie into a format that’s appropriate for a tablet—a real-world test, even if one that might not be as common in an age where Netflix movies can be directly downloaded. Nevertheless, it’s representative of how well the PC will do on an application over time. With a time hovering around an hour, the Matebook 13 performs excellently.
Mark Hachman / IDG
Only the Dell outperforms the Matebook 13 in the HandBrake transcoding test.
Can the Matebook 13 serve as a gaming PC? Not exactly, though the discrete Nvidia GeForce MX150 inside of it provides far more oomph than the average integrated chip, boosting it to the top of our 3DMark Sky Diver test.
Mark Hachman / IDG
Phew! That’s what a fully-clocked GPU gets you.
It’s kind of a tweener: You may have to dial down a setting or three (and probably eliminate most top-tier, modern games from consideration), but a fair number of games should be somewhat playable.
It’s also telling how solidly the Matebook 13 blows the Matebook X Pro out of the water—and that’s because while the Matebook X Pro used a downclocked (937MHz) version of the MX150, the Matebook 13’s integrated MX150 runs at a base clock of 1,469MHz. The graphics performance increases considerably as a result.
Finally, there’s battery life. Interestingly, Huawei told us at CES that the Matebook 13 would ship with a 41.8Wh batter, but our review unit shipped with a 56Wh battery—and, at full charge, it delivered 58Wh. That’s a substantial change, and perhaps a needed one, as the bigger battery barely made it past eight hours in our video rundown test. That’s passable for a typical workday. The Matebook 13’s emphasis seems to be on performance rather than battery longevity.
Mark Hachman / IDG
Battery life is a passable eight hours-plus with Huawei’s Matebook 13.
Should you buy the Huawei Matebook 13?
While it’s tempting to call the Matebook 13 a thin-and-light PC, the combination of the discrete GPU and Intel’s latest Whiskey Lake chip help the Matebook 13 punch well above its weight class. Because of this, the lack of at least one Thunderbolt port feels a little out of character, and we’re guessing Thunderbolt will be a feature of an upcoming Matebook X Pro refresh.
But a Whiskey Lake laptop with a discrete GPU for just $1,299? That’s a fairly compelling price point, and there’s a lot to like about the Huawei Matebook 13. The Matebook doesn’t quite top the Dell XPS 13, however, which offers comparable performance, a slightly cheaper price point, and better battery life.
Should you be worried about the government’s reluctance to endorse Huawei? It’s worth a note of caution, though there’s no information publicly available to confirm either way. We can say with certainty, however, that Huawei has excelled with the Matebook 13.
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Six years after the events of “Wreck-It Ralph,” Ralph and Vanellope, now friends, discover a wi-fi router in their arcade, leading them into a new adventure.
The Incredibles hero family takes on a new mission, which involves a change in family roles: Bob Parr (Mr Incredible) must manage the house while his wife Helen (Elastigirl) goes out to save the world.
Director:
Brad Bird
Stars:
Craig T. Nelson,
Holly Hunter,
Sarah Vowell
During her family’s move to the suburbs, a sullen 10-year-old girl wanders into a world ruled by gods, witches, and spirits, and where humans are changed into beasts.
A Lion cub crown prince is tricked by a treacherous uncle into thinking he caused his father’s death and flees into exile in despair, only to learn in adulthood his identity and his responsibilities.
Directors:
Roger Allers,
Rob Minkoff
Stars:
Matthew Broderick,
Jeremy Irons,
James Earl Jones
The special bond that develops between plus-sized inflatable robot Baymax, and prodigy Hiro Hamada, who team up with a group of friends to form a band of high-tech heroes.
When Hiccup discovers Toothless isn’t the only Night Fury, he must seek “The Hidden World”, a secret Dragon Utopia before a hired tyrant named Grimmel finds it first.
Miles Morales is a New York teen struggling with school, friends and, on top of that, being the new Spider-Man. When he comes across Peter Parker, the erstwhile saviour of New York, in the multiverse, Miles must train to become the new protector of his city. Written by Tom Daly
Miles, strangely, blames himself for ‘being followed’ to Aunt May’s house, when by then it was public knowledge that May’s nephew was Spider-Man. (The memorials placed in front of her house are evidence of this ubiquity; although, as another plot hole, the obviousness of the backyard shed being a brightly glowing, emblem-showing Spider-Cave entry door would have tipped off the neighbors long before Spider-Man’s passing, that May knows Spider-Man). Either way, it makes perfect sense to assume the villains would go to May’s to find the Spider-Men they were pursuing. See more »
Quotes
[first lines]
Peter Parker:
[narrating]
Alright, let’s do this one last time. My name is Peter Parker. I was bitten by a radioactive spider and for ten years I’ve been the one and only Spider-Man. I’m pretty sure you know the rest. I saved a bunch of people, fell in love, saved the city, and then I saved the city again and again and again… And, uh… I did this.
[shot of Spidey doing the emo dance from “Spider-Man 3”]
Peter Parker:
We don’t really talk about this. Look, I’m a comic book, I’m a cereal, did a Christmas album…
SPOILER: There is a scene at the end of the closing credits: Spider-Man 2099 (Miguel O’Hara) travels to Spider-Man (1967) and has a comical encounter with the Spider-Man of that show. See more »
Familia (Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse)
Written by Nicki Minaj (as Onika Tanya Maraj), Bantu (as Tinashe Sibanda), Dr. Chaii (as Philip “Pip” Kembo), Anuel AA (as Emmanuel Gazmey Santiago) and Carlos Suarez (as Carlos A. Suarez)
Produced by Bantu and Dr. Chaii
Performed by Nicki Minaj & Anuel AA featuring Bantu
Nicki Minaj appears courtesy of Young Money/Cash Money Records See more »
Never underestimate the importance of your peripherals; you spend all day touching your mouse and keyboard, listening to music or videos, and staring at your monitor, so they’re worth investing in. And today, you can upgrade your setup without needing to invest much thanks to Amazon’s big one-day Logitech PC peripherals saleRemove non-product link. While they aren’t particularly rare, Amazon’s Logitech sales are a great time to get a headset, mouse, keyboard, or webcam at a good price. The sale ends just before midnight on Thursday Pacific time, and we’ve sifted through the 20 or so deals to find the best three.
First up is the best deal of the day by far: the C922x Pro Stream Webcam for $50, down from $72 and its all-time low price. If you regularly video chat or plan to create gaming videos, this is the camera you want—especially at this price. It supports 1080p video quality at 30fps or 720p at 60fps. The camera has a 78-degree field of view, two omni-directional microphones, and technology that can remove your background without the need for a green screen.
We haven’t reviewed the C922x variant, but we loved the C922 and the C920 before it. The biggest difference between the C922x and the C922 appears to be that the “x” version doesn’t come with a tripod in the box, and instead offers a free six-month license for XSplit, a popular (and paid) live game streaming utility.
Next up, the Logitech G910 Orion Spark RGB mechanical keyboard is on sale for $90, down from the more recent price of $120. That’s a great price for a mechanical keyboard of any stripe. When we reviewed the G910 we had mixed feelings about it, but the RGB lighting is some of the best we’ve ever seen, and the keyboard is easy to configure. The downside is that Logitech doesn’t use Cherry MX switches in favor of its own Romer-G keys, which we found to be a little mushy. Even a mushy mechancial keyboard is light years better than the cheap keyboard that came with your prebuilt PC, though.
Finally, how about paring that keyboard with the Logitech G602 wireless gaming mouse for $25 instead of $36? We haven’t reviewed this mouse, but it’s well-reviewed on Amazon. It features 2,500 DPI of sensitivity, 11 customizable buttons, and a 250 hour battery life claim via two AAs.
There’s a lot more where those came from. Head over to Amazon’s big one-day Logitech accessory saleRemove non-product link to see all your heavily discounted options.
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Ian is an independent writer based in Israel who has never met a tech subject he didn’t like. He primarily covers Windows, PC and gaming hardware, video and music streaming services, social networks, and browsers. When he’s not covering the news he’s working on how-to tips for PC users, or tuning his eGPU setup.