Toshiba teases 8K TV on a budget

TV used to be the entertainment center of the home, but as mainstream technology has evolved to include smartphones, streaming, and smart speakers, the television has become less essential for many consumers. 

This is something Toshiba hopes to rectify with its latest range of high-spec TVs, including its first ever 8K TV concept model. 

Although it

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Google Pixel 3 XL supposedly photographed after being left in a taxiGoogle Pixel 3 XL supposedly photographed after being left in a taxi

The Google Pixel 3 XL has been leaked so much at this point that it almost seems like it must be intentional. Assuming this isn’t some elaborate ploy by Google to throw us off the scent, we now have no doubt as to the design of the phone, especially as it's been leaked again, this time after being left in a Lyft.

The driver of the vehicle snapped

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iPhone users plagued by irritating iOS 12 update notification about download that doesn't actually exist
The notification pops up frequently - for some users, every time the phone is unlocked - and will reappear even when after it has been dismissed

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Microsoft has quietly ended its Surface Plus financing program about a year after it launched. In a message on its site, the company said it stopped taking new enrollments on August 31 &after much thought and consideration.& The change does not affect existing customers, however, who will still be covered by their current financing plans.

Financed by Klarna, a Stockholm-headquartered online financial services provider, the Surface Plus financing program launched in August 2017. It targeted students and other people who wanted an affordable way to own a Surface device, allowing them to spread payments over 24 months. The Surface Plus plan also enabled customers to upgrade to the latest device after 18 months, as long as they returned their previous device in good working condition.

In a FAQ, Microsoft said existing customers will still be able to upgrade their Surface under the planterms. The programend also does not affect existing warranty plans.

MicrosoftSurface Plus for Business payment plans launched around the same time as the Surface Plus program and it looks like it will continue. TechCrunch has contacted Microsoft for more information.

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Karen Lewis knows about water problems. The 67-year-old lives in Compton, where the water coming out of her tap is tinged brown by manganese, a metal similar to iron, from old pipes.

The water is supplied by the troubled Sativa Los Angeles County Water District. The district has been plagued by administrative scandal and charges of mismanagement, and it hasn&t been able to generate the money needed to fix the brown water.

Lewis has sat through innumerable community meetings and heard years& worth of explanations, and shehad enough. &Nothingbeen changed,& she said. &They&re not going to change.&

Lewis is one of an estimated 360,000 Californians who can&t safely drink the water that flows to their homes. Itnot a new issue. In the Central Valley, in particular, excess amounts of arsenic, nitrates and other substances that can cause cancers and birth defects have tainted drinking water. In Compton, residents have been living with foul-smelling brown water because the cost of fixing the pipes is high, and many can&t afford to buy a constant supply of bottled water.

Now, in the wake of the stateprolonged drought and the notorious water crisis in Flint, Mich., a number of new solutions have been proposed in California.

How to help Californians whose tap water is tainted

  • On Friday, lawmakers shelved two bills that supporters said would have helped. Under one voluntary measure, nearly all water districts in the state would have charged customers an additional 95 cents a month, unless the customers opted out of paying it. First proposed by Democratic state Sen. Bill Monning of Carmel as a mandatory tax, it didn&t muster the necessary two-thirds vote for passage, and Monning scaled it back.
  • Monning also advanced a tax on dairies and fertilizer makers, industries that are heavy contributors to the nitrates found in some of the stategroundwater. Associations representing those industries endorsed the bill, in part because the paying companies would have been protected from having to clean tainted water of nitrates. Legislators estimated that together the two bills could have raised more than $100 million a year. Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon, a Democrat from Paramount, declined Friday to put the two measures to a vote.
  • In November, California voters will decide on Proposition 3, which would permit the state to borrow almost $9 billion to help fund all kinds of water infrastructure projects: storage, dam repairs, watershed improvements and restoration of fisheries and other habitat. Voters in June approved a bond measure for more than $4 billion, some of it for waterway cleanup.
  • In this summerstate budget agreement, more than $23 million was set aside for safer drinking water, with another $5 million to address lead in water at child-care centers.

This week, activists rallied outside CaliforniaCapitol, trying to build support for the two Monning bills. The measures wouldn&t have solved all the statedrinking-water problems, but money from both could have been used for operations, not just infrastructure projects, said Phoebe Seaton, co-director of the nonprofit Leadership Counsel for Justice and Accountability, based in Fresno .

&The reason they&re so important is they provide the revenue necessary for operations maintenance,& Seaton said. The ballot measure bond money could be spent only on infrastructure improvements.

&That means helping … some districts get solvent so they can apply for grants,& she said. &They complement the bond funds.&

That was music to the ears of Compton residents. Their water district was the poster child for Monningbills. One crucial step for that district, Seaton said, is to get financially straight so it can secure the grants necessary to make improvements. Without the operational funding from the bills, she said, the Sativa district will continue to founder.

Cindy Tuck, deputy executive director of the Association of Water Agencies, a statewide trade group, said another tax is not the way to go and might cause more problems than it would solve.

&This is a social issue for the state of California, and the state should do something about it,& Tuck said.

The opt-out provision of the voluntary fee, she said, could have caused chaos in water companies& billing systems.

&Water agencies have automated electronic systems,& Tuck said, and giving people a choice about paying one part of their bill runs counter to that. &I had one city tell me it would be over a million dollars just to change their system.&

Many customers might not even have known they&d paid an additional fee, she said, particularly if they used an auto-pay feature.

And if customers paid the voluntary charge without meaning to, they could have had their money refunded, setting off another complicated accounting procedure, Tuck said.

&Itjust a logistical nightmare,& she said.

Seaton had a different view: &There has been a lot of thinking on this. Thatwhy (there would have been) a notification period beforehand to include people.&

And the bill wouldn&t have gone into effect until 2020, she noted—enough time for some of those logistical details to be ironed out.

Lewis just wants relief from the brown stuff dribbling from her faucet.

&Itnot safe,& she said. &It can&t be safe.&

CALmatters.org is a nonprofit, nonpartisan media venture explaining California policies and politics.

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&Evil Genius: The True Story of AmericaMost Diabolical Bank Heist& is a tough title to live up to, but the Netflix docuseries pulls it off.

Thatbecause the story that &Evil Genius& retells is full of impossible-seeming details — it starts out with a botched bank robbery committed by a man with a bomb attached to his neck and gets stranger from there.

In the latest episode of the Original Content podcast, we talk about our reactions to the show — it tells an unforgettable story, but might have benefited from tighter editing.

We also mull over the growing genre of true crime miniseries, covering &The Staircase,& plus fictionalized depictions of real-world events like &Mindhunter& and &Manhunt: Unabomber.&

And we go over some recent streaming headlines, including Hulurumored revival of &Veronica Mars& and Netflix picking up the U.S. rights to &The Great British Baking Show&.

You can listen in the player below, subscribe using Apple Podcastsor find us in your podcast player of choice. If you like the show, please let us know by leaving a review on Apple. You also can send us feedback directly. (Or suggest shows and movies for us to review!)

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