[Engadget The Morning After logo]( Now available on your smart speaker and wherever you get your podcasts [Apple Podcasts]( | [Spotify]( | [Google Play]( | [iHeart Radio]( It's Friday, March 12, 2021. Welcome to Friday morning. As some email subscribers may have noticed, the daily newsletter has been on hiatus for several weeks as we contended with a persistent technical issue. Weâve now figured out a fix, so weâre back to our regularly scheduled newsletter. Thanks for your patience and if you have any more feedback, you can get in touch with us at themorningafter(at)engadget.com. (And if youâre reading this on the site, you can subscribe [right here.]() Today's edition includes a smartphone with a âmicroscopeâ camera, Tenet on a Game Boy Advance, an explanation of exactly what NFTs are and how to digitally organize your Mac, as our [Spring Cleaning series]( goes beyond simply cleaning your keyboard. Thatâs where my spring cleaning typically ends. â Mat Smith [A YouTuber crammed 'Tenet' on to Game Boy Advance cartridges out of spite]( Just because you can do something doesnât mean you should.
[[The Morning After]
Bob Wulff, YouTube]( Proving old devices never really die, some enterprising crafters keep squeezing functionality out of yesteryearâs gadgets. That includes a horrifically compressed version of Tenet for Game Boy Advance, and a wildly unnecessary Twitter client for the[Handspring Visor](.[Continue reading.]( [The NFT craze: How to spend millions on something both priceless and worthless]( The cryptocurrency offshoot presents a jumble of contradictions.
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NBA]( Non-Fungible Tokens, or NFTs, are the cryptocurrency off-shoot that has, all of a sudden, burst into the mainstream. Theyâre essentially a way of tying a certificate of authenticity to a digital file, among other things, like a contract, video clip or even a still image. The possibilities for NFTs are still to be explored, but theyâre booming right now like Bitcoin did through much of 2020. Yesterday, a digital artwork by Beeple and associated NFT sold at auction for nearly $70 million. For what essentially amounted to a copy of a still image someone could have printed at home for free and a signed receipt. If youâre wondering what exactly all of this means, and whatâs going on, then Dan Cooper has written a lengthy explainer to get you up to speed on what this is, even if you still have trouble understanding why someone would spend so much money on it. [Continue reading.]( [Oppo's Find X3 Pro has a 30x 'microscope' camera]( And both its wide and ultra-wide cameras have the same sensor.
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Engadget]( Oppoâs new flagship phone, the Find X3 Pro is entirely focused on photography â the giant sensor array on the back kind of gives that away. The headline feature has to be its "microscope" camera. The 3-megapixel f/3.0 microscopic camera delivers 30x magnification natively and can handle 1080p video recording. As you have to get close â the focal distance is between only 1mm and 3mm â this camera even has a small ring light to illuminate your subject. The results make for a unique camera phone. Itâs an Oppo device, so thereâs also lightning-fast charging with the bundled 65W SuperVOOC charger and speedier wireless charging with compatible docks, which can fully charge your phone in 80 minutes. Given past form, chances are the Find X3 Pro won't head to the US, but the company has announced it'll be available in the UK on April 14th, starting at £1,099, which is around $1,250. [Continue reading.]( [GM unveils plans for lithium-metal batteries that could boost EV range]( It aims to have a high-capacity pre-production battery by 2023. GM is elaborating on its next-generation Ultium batteries, which sound like something from the Marvel Cinematic Universe, but are not. The company plans to use lithium-metal (Li-metal) technology to boost performance and energy density. Li-metal batteries replace carbon anodes with lithium metal, allowing for lighter and more powerful cells. The challenge with the technology is increased resistance and "dendrite" filaments that tend to form on the anodes, making batteries short-circuit and heat up. âWith this next-generation Ultium chemistry, we believe weâre on the cusp of a once-in-a-generation improvement in energy density and cost," said GM President Mark Reuss, adding that there was also âstill room for improvementâ. [Continue reading.]( [How to clean and organize your Mac]( Taking care of your computer doesnât need to be complicated.
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Engadget]( Once youâve dusted the cookie crumbs from your MacBook keyboard, itâs time for a digital clean. Associate Editor Igor Bonifacic reveals his fastidious Mac cleaning techniques, encompassing hard-drive organization, keeping your desktop clean going forward and even how to purloin the best organization features from Windows 10 for your Mac. [Continue reading.]( [Netflix 'test' pushes password sharers to get their own account]( Do you remember whose account youâre streaming on? [[The Morning After]
Getty]( For years, Netflix has looked the other way on people sharing passwords to their streaming accounts with folks that may not quite meet the definition of a âmember of the household.â As its streaming audience has grown into the hundreds of millions, allowing easy access has been more important than triple-checking credentials. But those days may be coming to an end. The company confirmed a test itâs running that prompts suspected freeloaders to get their own accounts and then asks to verify their access with a code sent to the registered account holderâs phone number or email address. Now that Netflix has hiked its prices for several years in a row, and growth in some countries is slowing, it looks like this is a way to find a few more paying customers.[Continue reading.]( [20 Bethesda games will be available on Xbox Game Pass tomorrow]( Nearly every addition is coming to play on Xbox, PC and mobile. Now the deal is done, Microsoft-owned game publisher Bethesda has announced 20 of its games are xton Xbox Game Pass, starting today. In all, Microsoft is [adding 12 new titles](, including Fallout 4, Morrowind and The Evil Within, for people to check out. They'll join eight other Bethesda games, like Dishonored 2, Fallout 76 and Doom Eternal, that were already available through the service, making a total of 20 titles. Check the full list of titles [here](. But wait, thereâs more... [US lawmakers introduce bill to make high-speed internet available to all]( [Chrome for Android lets you preview web links]( [SSL's UF8 DAW controller is a luxury in search of an audience]( [Google Meet update crams more people into your mobile video calls]( [EA opens probe into claims that staff are selling rare âFIFA 21 Ultimate Teamâ cards]( [Apple's MagSafe Duo Charger is 22 percent off at Best Buy]( [Netflix's 'Resident Evil' CG anime leans on familiar voice actors]( [The best white noise machines for babies]( The Morning After is a new daily newsletter from Engadget designed to help you fight off FOMO. Who knows what you'll miss if you don't [subscribe](. Now available on your smart speaker and wherever you get your podcasts:
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