TECH

The Google Pixel Camera Is Out Of This World, Lie?

If you have been itching to get your hands on the first “made by Google” Smartphones, the first thing is that you are not a Nigerian (recession anybody?), and the second thing is that I have got pictures for you! Google claims its new Pixel smartphone has the best camera ever, citing an 85 point DxOMark score as proof that it produces superior quality to the iPhone 7 and the Galaxy Note 7. To further prove this claim; Google released a set of new photos that got me like this at first: (more…)

TECH

Tech Alert! All The Gadgets Google Announced

  Google’s Pixel hardware event is finally over! Even if the general public did not get to hear the hype, well a handful of techies heard about it? The Google Pixel and Pixel XL, both phones sport Snapdragon 821 quad-core 2.15GHz processor, 4GB of RAM and Storage options starting at 32GB or 128GB. Both Pixel devices feature a 12-megapixel shooter in the rear with an f/2.0 aperture and a large 1.55-micron pixel sensor. Both come out of the box with Android Nougat 7.1 and are available in ‘quite’ black, ‘really’ blue, or ‘very’ silver We are looking at a $64

TECH

Twitter Up For Sale! Salesforce and Google Bidding for Twitter

In addition to the new features Twitter has rolled out in the past couple of months, it looks like more significant structural changes are on the horizon for the social media company. CNBC reports that the likes of Salesforce and Google are seriously eyeing up a bid for the ailing company, though no formal offer has been made as of yet despite Twitter’s board of directors being in favor of a deal. Its potential suitors are interested in not only its place as a media company, but also in the data that the company generates. Stay tuned for more information on ou

TECH

Google And Chrome Slowly Killing HTTP

Is HTTP about to die? We are not sure but, one thing that is true is that Google is the bounty hunter. Chrome’s security team announced today that the browser will start marking websites that use insecure HTTP connections to transmit passwords and credit card data as insecure, beginning in January 2017. The warning will appear in the address bar of the browser and will call users’ attention to the fact that their personal information could be snooped or stolen. (more…)