Tag: screen
‘Manufacturers will put a screen on anything’ I say staring at a distro plate with a 7-inch monitor built in
Google Pixel 7 Pro Review: You’ll Need a Screen Protector
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My relationship with the Pixel series of phones can best be described as love/hate. I adore the Pixel-exclusive features. And the Pixel 7 Pro is once again among the best smartphone cameras you can buy. But I always find a near “deal breaker.” This time it’s the easy-to-scratch screen.
Read This Article on Review Geek ›
14 Best Apple Watch Accessories (2023): Bands, Chargers, Cases, and Screen Protectors
How to screen record on an iPhone or iPad
Coldplay to screen new concert film as multi-sensory cinema experience
Movies Anywhere will soon shut down its Screen Pass content-sharing feature
Movies Anywhere announced Wednesday that it’s soon shutting down Screen Pass, its movie-sharing feature launched during COVID-19 lockdowns. The Disney-owned platform didn’t provide a reason for the closure.
“As the experience continues to evolve, we want to notify you that effective May 1 users will no longer be able to use the Screen Pass feature to send a Screen Pass,” the announcement reads. “For Screen Passes sent prior to May 1, recipients will still be able to accept and finish watching the movie before their passes expire. As of June 1, the Screen Pass feature will no longer be supported.”
Screen Pass lets users send three movie passes monthly to friends or family without sharing login info. As long as you’ve redeemed a code with the service in the past six months, it lets you send a link through text, email or instant message that gives the recipient seven days to accept and 14 days to begin watching; once the movie starts, they have 72 hours to finish.
Movies Anywhere, launched in 2014, syncs digital film and television purchases across platforms like the Apple TV app, Amazon Prime Video, Google Play, Vudu and Microsoft. Fortunately, the platform’s core service remains intact, but sharing your purchases with friends will soon require you to be in the same space (or explore alternate methods).
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/movies-anywhere-will-soon-shut-down-its-screen-pass-content-sharing-feature-181855250.html?src=rss
Microsoft Teams is going to use green screen technology to make your video calls better
TikTok Will Limit Teens To 60 Minutes of Screen Time a Day
TikTok claims these prompts increased the use of its screen time management tools by 234 percent during the feature’s first month of testing. Teens will also be sent an inbox notification each week that recaps their screen time, allowing younger users to be aware of how much time they spend on the app and requiring that they make active decisions to extend the recommended screen time. These weekly updates are available now, alongside prompts to encourage teens to use screen time tools.
TikTok says it consulted current academic research and experts from the Digital Wellness Lab at Boston Children’s Hospital when deciding how long the time restriction should be. “While there’s no collectively-endorsed position on how much screen time is ‘too much’, or even the impact of screen time more broadly, we recognize that teens typically require extra support as they start to explore the online world independently,” said Cormac Keenan, Head of Trust and Safety at TikTok, in a statement.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
What Is Screen Burn-In, and Can You Avoid It?
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The benefits of OLED are hard to overlook—its increased color accuracy and deep contrast provide a better picture quality than LCD. But as you may know, OLED TVs are susceptible to burn-in. Is this something that you should actually worry about, and how can you avoid OLED burn-in?