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Samsung's flagship being announced Feb. 25 seems familiar on the outside, but there are some key differences. Samsung's next big phone could look a lot like the last one.. at least on the front. But on the back, it could end up fixing one of the S8's biggest annoyances. Frequent Twitter leaker Evan Blass posted what looks like a clear photo and details on the upcoming Samsung Galaxy S9 and S9 Plus at VentureBeat. The phones, which are expected to be unveiled at Samsung's Feb. 25 event in Barcelona, don't look different on the outside: they seem identical in design to Galaxy S8 and S8 Plus.
Qualcomm talked up 5G at CES earlier this month, Under the "5G Pioneer" initiative, Qualcomm will help create a platform for the companies to build phones running on 5G, the next generation of wireless technology that promises more speed and better coverage, 5G, one of the hottest trends in tech, is considered the foundation for a number of growing segments such as self-driving cars and artificial intelligence, Qualcomm also said Lenovo, Oppo, Vivo and Xiaomi signed a deal to use Qualcomm radio technology worth a total of $2 billion cat in flower garden iphone case over three years..
It's a win for Qualcomm at a time when the company has been defending itself from an unsolicited bid from rival Broadcom. Qualcomm has rejected Broadcom's $130 billion bid to combine the companies, asserting the Qualcomm that is worth more than the offer. Qualcomm and some of the hottest Chinese manufacturers will work together to build phones with next-generation wireless technology. The reality of a 5G phone is closer than you think. Mobile chip giant Qualcomm on Thursday announced a partnership with several of the largest Chinese phone manufacturers, including Lenovo (Motorola's parent), Xiaomi, ZTE, Oppo (OnePlus' owner) and Vivo, to build 5G phones as early as 2019.
This is the Puffco Peak "smart-rig."Despite being held in "Sin City," where legalized cat in flower garden iphone case recreational marijuana sales started six months ago, CES 2018 was practically a desert for consumer cannabis tech, unless you went out of your way to find it, However, the few companies that made it to the biggest tech trade show optimistically shed a small light on the cannabis-centered tech thriving in the margins of the mainstream, patiently waiting in the wings for consumers to wake up and smell the weed, Puffco made an impression with the Peak, and inspired a timely conversation about the complex public place a concentrate vaporizer occupies at a tech trade show that's caught in the desert crosshairs of federal prohibition and the swiftly developing marijuana industry emerging in Nevada following local legalization..
Peak is the first "smart rig," or at least that's what Puffco is calling it. The creative minds behind the company's award-winning vaporizer pens pivoted to transforming a previously cumbersome (and sometimes dangerous) process into a sleek and streamlined experience. It's as easy to work as a Keurig coffee maker. Simply add water, load the ceramic bowl with the concentrate then cover with the cap, press the (only) button, wait 20 seconds, then inhale from the narrow end of the lava lamp-shaped tube. It has four heat settings that automatically adjust and calibrate for consistent results every draw.
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