Amazon’s Echo Show 8 hits new record low of $75 for Prime Day

Aside from Black Friday, Amazon Prime Day is the best time of year to pick up an Echo device since most of them are deeply discounted. Amazon didn’t disappoint this year — all of its Echo Show smart displays are on sale for Prime Day, key among them being the Echo Show 8 for $75. That’s $55 off its usual price and a new record low, and we’re calling it out at the top because it’s one of the better choices for most people. Also on sale are the Echo Show 5 for only $35, the swiveling Echo Show 10 for $180 and the Echo Show 15 for $180 as well.

Buy Echo Show 8 at Amazon – $75Buy Echo Show 5 at Amazon – $35Buy Echo Show 10 at Amazon – $180Buy Echo Show 15 at Amazon – $180Shop Echo deals at Amazon

It’s the second-generation Show 8 that you can get for $75, and we gave it a score of 87 when it came out last year. We like its 8-inch, 1,280 x 800-resolution touchscreen, minimalist design and solid sound quality. Since it’s larger than the Echo Show 5, you’ll get strong sound overall with surprisingly powerful bass and volume. This version of the Echo Show 8 only differs from the first-generation device in a couple of ways, with the most important being its updated video camera. The 13-megapixel camera digitally pans and zooms to keep you in frame when you’re video chatting with apps like Zoom. It’s a relatively small feature (which is why you could safely go for the first-gen Echo Show 8 to save some money), but it’ll be useful for those who constantly use their smart display as a stationary video-chatting device.

While the Show 8 could make a good kitchen or office device, the Echo Show 5 is one of the best “smart alarm clocks” you can get right now. We like its compact size, tap-to-snooze feature and its decent sound quality. Despite being the latest generation Show 5, this one doesn’t have the advanced video chatting features that the Echo Show 8 has, but you’ll still be able to use it for basic video calls.

If you prefer big screens, the Echo Show 10 or the Show 15 will be good options. The former automatically swivels to follow you when you’re on video calls, so you’re always in frame and you can also always see the screen. It also has the auto-framing features that the Echo Show 8 has, making it one of the best options for those who video chat often. We also like that the Show 10 has a built-in Zigbee smart home hub, letting you connect things like smart lights, locks and more directly to the display without needing an extra hub to make everything work.

The Echo Show 15 is the most niche of the bunch, by far. It’s a wall-mountable, Alexa-enabled touchscreen, allowing you to use it almost like a digital cork board of sorts. You can customize it to have notes, to-do lists and more on widgets on the display, or use it to watch recipe videos or even shows and movies on Netflix, Prime Video and more. It also uses a “visual and voice ID” feature to recognize who’s looking at the screen or who’s giving an Alexa command, so it can then display the most relevant information to that person on the screen.

Get the latest Amazon Prime Day offers by following @EngadgetDeals on Twitter and subscribing to the Engadget Deals newsletter.

President Biden will reveal the first James Webb Space Telescope image today at 5PM ET

NASA has decided to reveal the first James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) image today rather than waiting until tomorrow as planned, it announced in a tweet. President Joe Biden will do the honor at 5PM ET, with a live stream of the event available on NASA TV and images available simultaneously on NASA’s website

Anticipation has been building for the first images, to say the least. NASA stoked that on Friday by announcing the targets to be shown, including the Carina and Southern Ring Nebulae, the gas exoplanet WASP-96b and a deep field view of the SMACS 0723 galaxy clusters. Only a select group of scientists and administrators have viewed the images so far. “What I have seen moved me, as a scientist, as an engineer, and as a human being,” said NASA deputy administrator Pam Melroy.

It appears that just a single image will be revealed today, but NASA didn’t say which one. The rest are still slated to arrive tomorrow, starting at 9:45 with remarks by NASA and Webb leadership. That’ll be followed by live coverage of the image release slated for 10:30 AM ET on NASA TV, YouTube, Facebook, Twitter, Twitch and Daily Motion

ARRC 首枚可導控混合式火箭試射成功

在昨日(10 日)清晨 6 時 12 分,台灣陽明交通大學前瞻火箭研究中心(ARRC)成功發射了其 HTTP-3A 火箭的上級部份至 3 公里的高度,成為全球第一枚可導控的混合式火箭。這也是隸屬科技部的「短期科研探空火箭發射場域」啟用以來的首次發射活動。…

小行星 Bennu 的表面像「塑膠球池」一樣鬆散

科學家原本預期 Bennu 的表面材質應該和沙灘差不多,也就是說雖然表面上佈滿了沙塵,但整體來說是實心的。然而當 OSIRIS-REx 真正靠上去時,才發現它更像小朋友的球池一樣的感覺,除了石粒要大得多之外,OSIRIS-REx 差不多立即就陷了進去,完全沒有受到任何阻力。…

Uber co-founder Travis Kalanick reportedly saw violence against drivers as a tool for growth

A new trove of leaked documents has shed an unfavorable light on the early days of Uber. Dubbed the Uber Files, the leak consists of approximately 124,000 internal company documents, including more than 83,000 emails and text messages exchanged between former CEO Travis Kalanick and other executives, that date to a period between 2013 and 2017. The latter marks the year Kalanick stepped down as CEO of Uber amid mounting controversy.

Working with the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ), The Guardian shared the trove with 180 journalists at 40 outlets across 29 countries. The documents show a company willing to do things many of its own executives thought were “f***ing illegal.” 

In 2016, for instance, Kalanick reportedly ordered French employees to encourage local Uber drivers to counter-protest the taxi strikes that were underway in Paris at the time. When one executive warned Kalanick that “extreme right thugs” were part of the protest, the former CEO pushed back. “I think it’s worth it,” he said. “Violence guarantee[s] success. And these guys must be resisted, no?”

One former senior executive told The Guardian that Kalanick’s response was consistent with a strategy of “weaponizing” drivers and a playbook the company returned to in other countries.

Another selection of documents details the lengths the company went to escape regulatory scrutiny. In at least 12 instances, Uber ordered staff at local offices in six countries, including France, the Netherlands and India, to employ the “kill switch,” an internal tool the company developed to protect its data.

“Please hit the kill switch ASAP,” Kalanick wrote in one email shared by The Washington Post. “Access must be shut down in AMS,” he added, referring to the company’s Amsterdam office. In two cases involving Uber’s Montreal office, authorities entered the building only to see all the computers and tablets before them resetting at the same time. The company told The Post “such software should never have been used to thwart legitimate regulatory actions,” and that it stopped using the system in 2017.

“We have not and will not make excuses for past behavior that is clearly not in line with our present values,” said Jill Hazelbaker, Uber’s senior vice president of marketing and public affairs, in a statement the company issued after The Guardian published its findings on the Uber Files. “Instead, we ask the public to judge us by what we’ve done over the last five years and what we will do in the years to come.”

In a statement published by the ICIJ, Travis Kalanick’s spokesperson said any suggestion the former executive “directed, engaged in, or was involved” in “illegal or improper conduct” is “completely false.”

“The reality was that Uber’s expansion initiatives were led by over a hundred leaders in dozens of countries around the world and at all times under the direct oversight and with the full approval of Uber’s robust legal, policy, and compliance groups,” they added.