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Teknologiateollisuuden pääekonomisti: Koronakuoppa kysyntäryöpsähdyksen taustalla – Ongelmia välituotteiden saamisessa ja raaka-aineissa
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Keskipohjanmaan pääkirjoitus: Pandemia jyllää edelleen maailmalla, vaikka Suomessa tilanne on oleellisesti parantunut
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Lukijoilta: Vapun valot ja varjot
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Apple AirTag Review: A Humble Tracker With Next-Generation Tech
Don’t let its familiar look fool you. Apple’s new tracking accessory is a precursor to better wireless gadgets to come.
The author’s dog, Max, wearing an Apple AirTag.Credit.Jim Wilson/The New York Times
April 28, 2021, 5:00 a.m. ET
On the outside, Apple’s new AirTag looks like a ho-hum product that we have all seen before. It’s a disc-shaped tracking gadget that can be attached to items like house keys to help you find them.
But inside, the story gets far more interesting.
The AirTag, which Apple introduced last week, is one of the first consumer electronics to support a new wireless technology, ultrawideband, which lets you detect precise proximity between objects. Using ultrawideband, your iPhone can sense whether an AirTag is an inch or dozens of feet away from it. It’s so accurate that its app will even show an arrow pointing you in the direction of the AirTag.
Ten Years Ago, Ed Balls Tweeted ‘Ed Balls.’ How Is It Still Funny?
A decade is an eternity in internet years. But people still haven’t forgotten the British politician’s errant tweet, and he’s still playing along.
“If my name was Ed Smith it wouldn’t have been the same amusement in there,” Ed Balls said.Credit.Suzanne Plunkett/Reuters
April 28, 2021Updated 5:05 a.m. ET
LONDON Ten years ago on Wednesday, a politician who was a significant figure in British politics but hardly an international star followed an aide’s suggestion: He loaded the Twitter app on his BlackBerry and searched for his own name to see what people were saying about him.