Staples’ Black Friday deals include deals on the Amazon Echo Dot and Windows PCs



Staples is joining the ever-increasing crowd of retailers infringing on Thanksgiving this year with early Black Friday sales announcements. The retailer has announced some appealing deals on the Amazon Echo Dot and Google Chromecast, along with discounts on the usual slate of of mid-range Windows PCs and printers that the company is known for.

Deals will be available all-day Thursday for those who prefer to do their shopping online, with the company offering next-day pickup at its physical retail locations to customers for Black Friday sales at when they open at 6AM on Friday, November 25th

Here are the highlights of what Staples is offering on Black Friday:

PCs:
Microsoft Surface Pro 4 (Intel Core i5 processor, 4GB RAM, 128GB SSD) for $799.99(usually $999.00)
HP Pavilion 15 (Intel Core i7 processor, 12GB RAM, 1TB HDD) for $499 (usually $779.99)
HP Pavilion 14 (Intel Core i5 Processor, 12 GB RAM, 1 TB for $389.99 (usually $639.99)
Lenovo Flex 4 (Intel Core i5 processor, 8GB RAM, 256GB SSD) for $499.99 (usually $749.99)

Tablets:

Kindle Paperwhite (2016) for $99.99 (usually $119.99)
Amazon Fire HD 8 (8GB) for $79.99 (usually $129.99)
Amazon Fire 7 for $33.33 (usually $49.99)
Samsung Galaxy Tab A 7.0 for $99.99 (usually $149.99)
Samsung Galaxy Tab A 8.0 for $129.99 (usually $199.99)

Other:
Amazon Echo Dot for $39.99 (usually $49.99)
Brother HL-L2320D Monochrome Laser Printer for $49.99 (usually $99.99)
Google Chromecast for $25 (usually $35)
Amazon Fire TV Stick for $29.99 (usually $39.99)
Linksys AC2600 router for $129.99 (usually $249.99)
Logitech K480 Wireless Bluetooth keyboard for $19.99 (usually $49.99)
Seagate Backup Plus Slim 2TB external hard drive for $69.99 (usually $89.99)

First Click: Playstation 4 Pro, Google Daydream View, Surface Book, and more in the week ahead


It’s November which means we’re firmly into reviews season now that all the major product announcements have been made ahead of the holiday season.



Thursday will see the release of Google’s Daydream View VR headset. The $79 Daydream View announced in October will only support the Google Pixel and Pixel XL at launch, but it’ll work with any future phones built upon Google’s Daydream VR platform. The View also ships with a custom wireless controller that hopes to become "the mouse of VR," as Google's Andrew Narkter put it. Is the Daydream VR better than the Samsung Galaxy Gear VR headset? Watch for our review to find out.


Thursday also marks the retail availability of the Playstation 4 Pro. The $399 PS4 Pro announced in September features 4K and HDR output thanks to some higher-specced guts. Both Netflix and YouTube committed to developing HDR streaming apps for the PS4 Pro as well. Mark Cerny, chief architect of the PS4, said the PS4 Pro is intended "to take the PS4 experience to extraordinary new levels." 

A limited edition New Nintendo 3DS will be just $99.99 on Black Friday

The New Nintendo 3DS is getting its cheapest price yet on Black Friday.

Nintendo will be releasing two new limited edition versions of the handheld — one black, one white — which will both be available on November 25th for $99.99. That makes it just slightly more expensive than the $79.99 Nintendo 2DS, which is missing features like glasses-free 3D visuals, and half the price of the larger New Nintendo 3DS XL. Both of the new limited edition variants feature a slick and subtle Mushroom Kingdom print.
Nintendo’s focus may be shifting to the upcoming Switch handheld / console hybrid, but now is a good time to grab a 3DS if you haven’t yet. The much-anticipated Pokémon Sun andMoon launch on November 18th, while a new handheld version of Super Mario Maker is due out on December 2nd.


You no longer have to buy a new car or stereo to use Android Auto



During Google’s annual developers conference this past spring, the company teased a version of its Android Auto software that would run entirely on an Android phone and not require a new car or aftermarket dashboard display. Now the company is starting to roll this software out to Android phone owners.The new Android Auto app, which is an updated version of the existing app, offers a completely streamlined, easy-to-navigate phone interface for when you’re driving in a car. It also limits the amount of notification alerts you see, and includes the options to have your text messages read aloud to you and to respond to them using voice.

The new app shows just four icons at the bottom of the screen for Maps, phone calls, audio listening, and an enlarged home button — which maps back to Android Auto when running, instead of to the main home screen. At the top of the interface there’s a menu tap, and a microphone icon. Even without actively tapping the icons at the bottom, Android Auto will automatically show a series of cards once you’ve launched the app: right now as I write (not from a car), the main screen of Android Auto is showing music controls for Spotify, the weather in my current location, a missed phone call, and directions to a place I recently looked up in Google Maps.

Google says that any of the apps that have been previously supported in Android Auto — and there are more than 500 of them — will work within this application interface, too. That means popular apps like WhatsApp, Spotify, Pandora, and Pocket Casts will all work in there.




The new Android Auto is free to download, and will work on any Android device running Lollipop (OS version 5.0) or newer. It will be available in 30 countries.

One of the downsides of the Android Auto mobile app is that its "always-on" mode drains your smartphone’s battery life, although Mickey Kataria, director of product management for Maps and Android Auto, insists that using Android Auto would only drain battery life a "tiny bit more" than, say, running Maps in standard mode for an extended period of time. (The app also suggests that you tether your smartphone to a power source during the initial setup process.)

And while you’ll eventually be able to say "OK Google" to trigger voice control within Android Auto, that’s not something that is available at app launch. It’s an odd exclusion from an app that is, essentially, designed to have you tap and swipe less while you’re driving, but Google has indicated that "OK Google" will be rolled out in the coming weeks.

YouTube adds support for HDR video



YouTube today announced that its platform now supports high dynamic range, or HDR, video. HDR essentially allows screens with the right hardware specifications to display a more accurate and realistic range of whites and blacks, as well as a wider range of colors. Alongside 4K resolution, HDR technology is the other big selling point of new TVs and one of the key benefits touted by Microsoft and Sony for the latest versions of their respective gaming consoles. However, there’s a critical lack of HDR content out there to watch, and a hodgepodge of different hardware and software requirements that make it difficult to know where and how to access those videos.

To view any of this content right now, you’ll need a piece of external hardware. That includesGoogle’s new Chromecast Ultra, as well as a HDR Blu-ray player or the Xbox One S. However, YouTube says Samsung’s 2016 4K TVs will support native HDR video playback from the device’s built-in app some time in the future, meaning you won’t need a separate box hooked upSo now YouTube is trying to urge both creators and viewers to start dabbling in HDR video in a central location, and its best way of doing that is by pushing the world’s largest video platform to adopt the format. YouTube has done the same in the past for 4K content, as well as for 360-degree video and live-streaming. The goal is to keep YouTube at the forefront of streaming and display technology so that it stays competitive against other video options like Netflix and Amazon. YouTube says it’s working with top channels and creators to fill out its HDR catalog in the coming months.

The Klok-01 watch turns heads and dials



It’s hard to make an original wristwatch these days. But hard doesn’t have to mean impossible, as evidenced by the Swiss-made Klokers Klok-01 that I’ve had the pleasure of testing over the past few weeks. This watch, funded on Kickstarter and costing a hefty €399 ($445) today, stands out with its eye-catching mechanism for telling the time. Instead of rotating hands pointing at the time on a circular dial, the Klok-01 inverts the whole process and rotates the dials around a fixed center point.

This is not a smartwatch, and I’m glad for it. No Bluetooth connectivity, no notification mirroring. It’s a device for telling the time, but it’s also a social instrument, as I quickly discovered during a weeklong trip to New York where everyone enquired about the Klok’s provenance and functionality. As such, it’s rather a good entry point to the whole culture that surrounds watches. Those among us who collect watches and spend large sums of money on them do so, firstly, for the knowledge of having a precise, caringly crafted timepiece, but also for the sheer glory of it.




So here’s how the Klok-01 works: there are three dials, each of them rotating with the time. Hours are on the outermost circle, minutes are in the middle, and seconds race along closest to the center. One line straight down the middle tells the time by intersecting each of the dials. It has an integrated magnifying lens, which looks like it protrudes from the watch’s domed, transparent-polymer cover, but actually sits underneath it. Is this the most efficient way of telling the time? Of course not. But it sure is an enchanting way to do it.

I think a big part of the Klok-01’s aesthetic appeal stems from the fact that its visual gimmick is also a functional thing. Those rotating dials feel alive with the motion of time, lending the whole watch a throwback feel that evokes overly complex inventions of human technological past. Who doesn’t like the charming, fairy tale images of overelaborate gizmos that make funny noises? The Klok watch only makes the steady ticking noise of a quartz movement, but you get the idea. It’s a tiny bit magical.

I don’t often like gadgets that are designed primarily to look great rather than work great. And my initial impression of the Klok-01 was not a hugely positive one. This watch has no backlight or illumination, so seeing it in the dark is a no-go. I was also disappointed that I could never, even after hours of tinkering, line up the three dials so that they corresponded perfectly to one another — the minutes would always be a little out of sync with the hour dial. But those concerns mostly faded away once I started wearing it.



The default leather strap that comes with the Klok-01 is excellent. It’s soft and supple, adapting to the contours of my wrist instead of pressing against them. Klokers offers a variety of other strap colors and materials (they all fit just as nicely), and the company has invented an effortless detachment mechanism. You just press the red button at the Klok’s lower left, and it slips on and off any compatible strap with ease. It can then just sit by itself as a standalone timepiece, and the watch-less straps are also pretty enough to be worn as bracelets by themselves.

The subtle advantage that the Klok-01 has over most other watches is its space efficiency. It has no lugs and it has practically no bezel, so all I have on my wrist while wearing it is a big, pretty display of time in motion, framed by two thin bands of leather. With a 44mm diameter, this is intended primarily to serve as a men’s watch, but I find its lightness, high degree of comfort, and unisex styling make it more versatile than the typical dress watch of this size.


New Zika treatment that protects pregnant mice could help us protect pregnant women



A new treatment that protects the babies of pregnant mice infected with Zika could help us create a similar therapy for humans.The mosquito-borne Zika virus has “spread explosively” through the Americas, leading tohealth and travel advisories in many countries. The virus can cause a severe neurological disorder called Guillain-Barré syndrome. It is especially dangerous for pregnant women whose children could be born with very small heads, a condition called microcephaly. The World Health Organization has declared Zika a global emergency.

There is currently no Zika vaccine; in the US, the FDA is trying to fight the disease usinggenetically modified mosquitoes. But a study published today in Nature suggests another avenue of research. Scientists led by James Crowe at Vanderbilt University took proteins that fight viruses, called antibodies, from the white blood cells of humans who had been infected by Zika. After testing these antibodies, they decided to focus on a specific strain called ZIKV-117 because it seemed the most effective at fighting the virus.

Next, the team put ZIKV-117 in pregnant mice. Some pregnant mice received it before they were infected with Zika, some after. In both cases, the antibody seemed to fight the Zika virus; additionally, the mice fetuses ended up bigger than without the antibodies, and the placenta was not as damaged.Pregnancy in mice is very different from pregnancy in humans, so this work is limited. A lot more research is needed, but this treatment still gives us some insight into potential ways to help pregnant women infected with the virus.