Top products from r/TechNewsToday

We found 10 product mentions on r/TechNewsToday. We ranked the 9 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

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Top comments that mention products on r/TechNewsToday:

u/t2t2 · 2 pointsr/TechNewsToday

Yes, but I've still got the feeling of BS. Currently this is only used on 3DS and Vita. On 3DS the cartridges can be up to 4GB, though at that point it is possible that they get costlier than usual 2GB. Unless microsoft either wants to stay at current (DVD) storage levels (which, really unlikely) or they're gonna bet all on making manufacturing cheaper (because they will use proprietary storage to avoid piracy), it's more likely they would go with bluray discs (or something like that, because hd-dvd didn't completely fail, right?) because flash storage isn't that cheap yet at comparable to bluray storage levels (Comparing PS3 max size of around 25-30GB (per layer) to 32GB Flash memory stick (which would be cheaper than SD-type card; but do add extra cost of the solution being most likely proprietary) you'd see it would be better for publishers to mass-print discs than buy more expensive storage)

u/emddudley · 1 pointr/TechNewsToday

Given that I can't sell or lend ebooks, I'm not willing to buy them until they cost significantly less than their physical counterparts. I mean at least 50% less than the paperback. I don't find any of the other advantages (portability, accessibility, etc.) to be worth the expense.

Some current pricing examples on Amazon:

  • Doomwyte, by Brian Jacques. $8 for ebook, $8 for paperback.
  • A Dance with Dragons, by George R. R. Martin. $15 for ebook, $21 for hardcover.
  • Quicksilver, by Neal Stephenson. $10 for ebook, $12 for paperback.
  • Coders at Work, by Peter Seibel. $14 for ebook, $18 for paperback.
u/thedeadlyrhythm · 0 pointsr/TechNewsToday

the government has tracked these for nearly a century and know they're under intelligent control. they have been tracked at nuclear sites, missile launches, bases, by pilots, all by credible military personnel, by astronauts, and for that entire time the government has treated the subject like a joke and acted like it's all fake and are only currently beginning to phase out that denial. this book is a good record of some of that:

https://www.amazon.com/UFOs-Generals-Pilots-Government-Officials/dp/0307717089/ref=sr_1_1?crid=TX7DJS240JDI&keywords=ufos+leslie+kean&qid=1572016040&sprefix=ufos+lesli%2Caps%2C125&sr=8-1

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i can tell you one thing, whatever this is is absolutely not any of the things you listed. i get it, you're conditioned to believe this is a big joke, but no one could look at the available evidence and come to that conclusion.

u/deelowe · 1 pointr/TechNewsToday

The targeting of individuals is but an infinitesimally small part of the problem. The issue is with the data that's collected and stored for later analysis, which appears to be just about everything at this point. This means what you do today can be scrutinized tomorrow. Laws are not written this way and public opinion changes over time.

Also: http://www.amazon.com/Three-Felonies-Day-Target-Innocent/dp/1594035229

u/bombpersons · 2 pointsr/TechNewsToday

So, it's basically this with a switch to short / unshort the pins? 2 for $49... such a scam >.<