Canon Goes Hybrid – DTNS Photography News Monthly for Jan 2022

DTNS producers Anthony Lemos and Rich Stroffolino condense the month’s photography news in this seven minute audio show.

This episode Canon releases a hybrid mirrorless, the Associated Press dips into NFTs, and Nikon reaches for your wallet.

Hosted by Anthony Lemos

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Live With It – The Remarkable 2

Sarah Lane gives her thoughts about the Remarkable 2, an e-ink tablet for writing and reading.

Starring Sarah Lane and Jenn Cutter.

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$299 (was $399 at time of purchase)
Marker Plus (pencil) – $129

*If you buy with Connect, you get a $150 discount on the hardware and 2 months free service, worth checking out.

Several subscription options:
No subscription plan will sync between Remarkable and docs on computer. The Remarkable 2 has 8 gb internal storage which might be enough for some folks.

Connect Lite – adds unlimited Cloud storage for $5/month

Connect – $8/month for cloud storage + Google Drive, Dropbox, and OneDrive integration, Handwriting conversion, and Screen Share.

* I have been grandfathered into Connect for free as an early adopter because of when DTNS bought the unit last year. That’s an expense I’d be reluctant to pay otherwise. But it’s pretty great if you use any/all of these services regularly and want to read or annotate them on the Remarkable 2.

Remarkable calls itself the only tablet that feels like paper, I think that’s accurate. The Marker Plus, which is what I have, is as close of a feeling to writing on paper I’ve ever experienced. The regular Marker ($49) doesn’t include the pencil-like erase function which wouldn’t be a deal breaker but it sure is nice to have. However, there is undo and erase functionality on the tablet already, so the Marker Plus does feel like a splurge.


Marker Plus highlights:

An actual highlighter pen option!

Several different types of pens: ballpoint, calligraphy, pencil, mechanical pencil… all have slightly different feels on the tablet.

Easy tap to navigate – you can use a finger tablet-style, but the Marker feels more efficient.

Erase tool is just cool. The Remarkable is smart enough to know when you haven’t totally erased something and will clean up the rest.


Protective Cover aka Folio:

I have the Book Folio in polymer weave for $119. There are two pricier leather options for $169. There’s a sleeve polymer weave option for $69, and there’s a huge after market for Remarkable 2 covers if you want to save money and/or want something Remarkable isn’t providing (Etsy, etc).


Initial thoughts:

I don’t use a physical pen anymore, in fact I always struggle to find a pen in my house on the rare occasion I need one. But physically writing things down has always helped my memory retention, and the Remarkable 2 taps into that as an extremely polished writing tablet.

I’m not much of a drawer/doodler/etc. There are plenty of really good use cases for Remarkable 2 that I won’t take advantage of.

Holy crap, signing documents is so easy!

The amount of document templates is impressive, I don’t know how you’d ever need something not in this library.

Navigation takes a little getting used to, but it’s simple once you know what your options are.

Syncing with my Google Drive is a game changer. I have so many docs I either need to read and/or sign, the integration works great (on supported files, of course).


E-Reader capability:

At first glance the Remarkable 2 isn’t a great e-reader. Despite the nice book size, it doesn’t have any sort of backlight… you really do have to be under a lamp as if it were an actual book. You’re not going to take this tablet camping.

It also doesn’t support DRM-ePUB. You can find non-DRM ebooks online, but not a Kindle type library.

You can use Calibre (free ebook organizer software) + a plugin to strip DRM from an ePUB book, then it shows up on the Remarkable 2 just fine. I tried this with a couple library e-books. This process is not very intuitive, but it’s possible. However, it’s also illegal, so there’s that.


Nitpicks:

Last year I was gifted a Kindle Oasis, which has an adjustable backlit screen. It makes the Remarkable 2’s screen seem pretty dim. I wish there were a way to punch up brightness a bit.

The pencil does snap onto the magnetized sides of the Remarkable 2 but not always in the place I think it should be. For such a pricey add-on, I’m always worried it’ll go missing.

There are times I wish I had better internet integration. You can print anything online to PDF and sync from there, but that takes a few steps. I tried to use the Remarkable 2 for DTNS prep and it just didn’t make any sense.


OVERALL:

The Remarkable 2 is powerhouse for anyone annotating documents, sketching, freeform stuff. Although you can sync over WIFI and email documents easily from the tablet, it’s not really “online”.

Love the form factor, I don’t think it would work at a smaller size.

If you reach for your notepad regularly, you will love this tablet.

Pricing feels high, especially for the subscription options.

FIN

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Big thanks to Dan Lueders for the headlines music and Martin Bell for the opening theme!

Big thanks to Mustafa A. from thepolarcat.com for the logo!

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Link to the Show Notes.

Dr. Susan Leemburg – Scientists In Tech 3


Dr. Susan Leemburg, a neuroscientist at Charles University in the Czech Republic, tricks rats into thinking they’ve been teleported to measure their brainwaves to see how these basic brain functions work!

Hosted by Dr. Nicole Ackermans

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Big thanks to Dan Lueders for the headlines music and Martin Bell for the opening theme!

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Week in Review for the Week of 1/24/22 – DTH

DTH-6-150x150Nvidia may abandon ARM acquisition over regulatory issues, The EU General Court overturned a 2009 Intel antitrust fine, and AGs sue Google over misleading users on location data.

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Google Actually Listened to Us – DTNS 4201

Google revises its policy on forcing free tier Google Workspace to transition to a paid tier. Rob brings the heat on Sonos vs Google decision and a potential Sonos vs Amazon dustup. Apple Q1 financial results are in and we examine the success Apple+.

Starring Tom Merritt, Sarah Lane, Rob DeMillo, Roger Chang, Joe, Amos


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Show Notes
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Nvidia abandona la adquisición de Arm – NTX

NTX_JPG

Nvidia abandona la adquisición de Arm, Substack planea lanzar una plataforma de video y Google cambia la manera en que te rastrea para mostrarte anuncios.

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Show Notes
Para leer las notas del episodio en una ventana aparte, ¡haz click aquí!

Azure Reports 3.47 Tbps DDoS Attack – DTH

DTH-6-150x150A new report from Microsoft Azure details a massive 3.47 Tbps DDoS attack, Microsoft makes changes to Xbox auto-renewal subscriptions in the UK, and Google invests in Bharti Airtel.

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The Q Commerce Continuum – DTNS 4200

Q-commerce is taking off, especially in India, but now that it’s obtained a snappy nickname, it’s worth looking at again. Bloomberg’s sources say “in the coming months” small businesses will be able to use iPhones to accept payments, without requiring extra hardware.” And the United States Office of Management and Budget sent a memo to federal agencies calling for new security strategies including moving to a zero-trust model.

Starring Tom Merritt, Sarah Lane, Justin Robert Young, Len Peralta, Roger Chang, Joe, Amos

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A special thanks to all our supporters–without you, none of this would be possible.

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Big thanks to Dan Lueders for the headlines music and Martin Bell for the opening theme!

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Roger’s $0.02: The Drone Wars

This content is provided free as part of DTNS’s free content week. All Patreon exclusive content will be made available to everyone for one week only. Enjoy! And if you like what you hear or read please consider supporting us at Patreon.com/dtns.

Roger’s $0.02: The Drone Wars

Ever since Russian-backed troops entered and annexed the territory of Crimea from Ukraine in 2014, the country has invested heavily in the modernization of its armed forces. One of those investments has been the acquisition of twelve Bayraktar TB2 drones from Turkish defense firm Baykar. Traditionally combat drones or UCAV has been the domain of highly industrialized countries like the US or the UK that could afford the infrastructure needed to deploy and operate them. The Bavaktar TB2 represents the commodification of that capability. It’s part of a new generation of combat drones that are smaller than American Reaper or Predator drones, cheaper and easier to deploy, and most of all affordable in significant numbers.

In 2020 Armenia and Azerbaijan went to war over the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh. Although the two nations eventually signed a cease-fire agreement after six weeks of fighting many considered Azerbaijan the victor. The crucial factor to this outcome used the widespread use of Israeli and Turkish-made combat drones by Azerbaijan. Through the use of these combat drones, Azerbaijan was able to disable or destroy Armenian armored vehicles and some air defense systems. When they ran out of high-value targets the Azeris focused on infantry. What was illuminating about Azerbaijan’s use of drones was they were employed. Instead of employing combat tactics meant for manned planes, the Azeri took advantage of what makes drones so compelling. They flew at altitudes so low that the enemy’s radar, anti-aircraft guns, and SAM systems were rendered ineffective. Using a variety of ordnance like guided bombs, missiles, or even kamikaze attacks Azerbaijan claimed to have taken out 250 armored vehicles and artillery pieces and 39 air-defense systems including Russia’s potent S-300 SAM system. The Armenian military was able to neutralize the threat of tanks, artillery, and SAM installations with very little risk to their assets. A bargain for any wartime commander. And because drones are significantly lighter and smaller than a combat plane they can stay over or loiter over the battlefield longer than a fighter bomber with its thirsty jet engines and pilot that will fatigue. This high endurance translated into an always-available asset commander to call upon when the needs arose. Finally, the drone could be launched out of the back of the truck like a missile obviating the need for runways or vulnerable air bases.

In the immediate future conflicts, both local and regional will feature drones as keystone weapon systems. Their relative affordability will assure that. Even more concerning will be the ability of non-state actors to purchase and use them as well. Whether for terror attacks, assignations, intelligence operations or even harassing civilians out of a disputed area drones will become a prominent feature in conflict areas. That means more hazards not only for the opposing army but also civilian groups like international monitors, NGOs, and political actors.

 

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Amazon ends “Sold By Amazon” and Amazon Ambassador programs – DTH

DTH-6-150x150Amazon shuts down the “Sold By Amazon” and Amazon Ambassador programs, iPhones may be able to accept payments in the coming months, and Substack plans to launch a video player.

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Show Notes
To read the show notes in a separate page click here.