A Samsung Galaxy S21 Plus review is out for some reason, and more tech news

Publish date: 2022-07-02

☕ Good morning! I finally struck gold on my Secret Santa this year, just as time ticked down to one week until Christmas. Phew.

December 18, 2020

In the last 24 hours, the Samsung Galaxy S21 cat has come out of the bag completely. 

And, there’s a review on YouTube, somehow. 

💸 Cyberpunk 2077 pulled from PlayStation Store until further notice, refunds to be offered (Sony). Huge moment, the first time Sony has done this. Meanwhile, the PC version and Stadia versions are fine, but the console release is a disaster and patches are required to fix it properly. What will Xbox do? (CD Projekt Red stocks fell as much as 23% at the time of writing.)

🔓 The SolarWinds hack continues to grow towards being the most serious cybersecurity event ever: Microsoft software contained malicious SolarWinds code, with 40 plus customers targeted. The attack is “ongoing”. It’s not over the top to say this is chilling. Read Microsoft president Brad Smith’s post (blogs.microsoft.com) — the US Energy Department and National Nuclear Security Administration, which maintains the US nuclear weapons stockpile, show evidence of network access. Is this the tip of the iceberg? (Ars Technica).

Here’s the third antitrust lawsuit against Google from 38 states: The latest both echoes previous allegations brought by the Feds, and goes further, by seeking to stop Google from becoming dominant in the latest generation of technology: voice-assistant devices and internet-connected cars, and more (AP).

😬 There’s a startling and lengthy new report about how toxic jet fumes can leak into the air on planes, and that the likes of Boeing know about it. One pilot who passed out on a Spirit Airlines flight after an event like this told other pilots, “this the tobacco and asbestos of aviation.” (LA Times).

Friday Fun

What could be more fun than The Great Conjunction happening in the skies above us?

From our perspective on Earth, Saturn and Jupiter are drawing closer, and they’ll be closest on December 21st, appearing as a double planet, despite being hundreds of millions of miles apart. (It’s also called a “Christmas Star” due to the late-December timing.)

This celestial happenstance between these two gas giants isn’t exactly common: last occurring at night about 800 years ago, and set to happen again in 2080. 

Thanks,

Tristan Rayner, Senior Editor.

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