What happens when you support a creator how to get support a creator code support a creator website cab creators see if you save their tiktoks creatures can eat anything horror manga creations cantin creatures can t have counters
Creators Can Save up to 40% on CyberLink's PowerDirector 365 Video Editor
Creators Can Save up to 40% on CyberLink's PowerDirector 365 Video Editor
Content creation can be a fun hobby or a serious business. Whatever the reason, if you enjoy video editing, you know there is a ton of editing software around to help you enhance your creations. Some of the software out there is basic, and other packages come packed with features.
Right now annual plans for CyberLink: PowerDirector 365 are already discounted by 30% for the company's Fourth of July sale. However, CNET readers can use our exclusive promo code POWER10 at checkout to save an extra 10% off the existing sitewide sale, meaning you'll get 40% off the $70 annual plan. This offer is available through July 4.
TikTok , Instagram, Twitter and YouTube are just a few of the popular social media platforms that content creators have flocked to in recent years. But if you're vying for the most views, having great software can get you a leg up over other posts.
Whether you're upgrading your current software or tying your hand at editing for the first time, consider PowerDirector 265. It's a fast video editing software subscription that uses artificial intelligence and stock footage to enhance your videos beyond basic filters. These tools can help you create better videos more quickly and easily.
You'll be able to do all the basic editing functions, like editing down the time, but you'll also be able to refine your video and add effects before you publish. But this program gives you access to intuitive editing tools, too, like distortion correction, color match, title designer and more. You'll also have the ability to use advanced features like AI-powered tools, selection mask and shape designer. It even supports 4K.
Your subscription comes with 50GB of Cloud storage, unlimited access to CyberLink premium plug-ins and effects, unlimited access to background music and sound clips, access to millions of Shutterstock video clips, background music files and stock images, access to millions of Getty stock video clips and photos and more. It imports a number of video formats, including HDR10, too. Plus, new content is added each month, so you'll have plenty of features to keep your content fresh and relevant.
Windows 11 finally adds android apps here s how awful air travel has gotten windows 11 finally adds android apps here s how roblox accounts get hacked windows 11 finally adds android apps here s my number call me maybe windows 11 finally adds android studio windows 11 finally adds android device windows 11 finally adds android file windows 11 finally adds android tablet windows 11 finally addsetting windows 11 finally found obs studio download windows 11 windows 11 reviews 7zip windows 11
Windows 11 Finally Adds Android Apps. Here's How to Download Them
Windows 11 Finally Adds Android Apps. Here's How to Download Them
Windows 11, Microsoft's latest operating system, is finally starting to roll out one of its anticipated features, Android apps for PC, according to a release from the company. The Amazon Appstore in the Microsoft Store -- where you'll be able to download Android apps -- will start in preview in the US.
Accessing Android Apps for PC with Windows 11 has a few hardware requirements, like at least 8 GB of RAM, a solid-state drive and a supported processor. Here's how to check out the preview:
1. Open the Microsoft Store (make sure it's up to date by opening the store and clicking Get updates > Library). 2. Search for your favorite apps or games. 3. Download them through the Amazon Appstore.
With the Amazon Appstore preview, users can explore an extra 1,000 apps, including Audible and Kindle, according to Microsoft, as well as a new category of mobile apps and games in partnership with Intel.
"These apps feel like a part of Windows, integrating naturally with Windows input and windowing experiences, like Snap layouts," Microsoft Chief Product Officer Panos Panay said in a statement.
Along with the Amazon Appstore preview, Microsoft is rolling out improvements to the taskbar. The enhanced taskbar adds the ability to share windows from open apps, weather reports, a clock on your second monitor and mute/unmute features to make video calls easier. Users can also explore redesigned versions of Media Player and Notepad.
Microsoft has been rolling out Windows 11 in phases, but support for Windows 10 will remain in place for a few more years (check out CNET's comparison of Windows 10 versus Windows 11). If you're still using Windows 10, you can use Android apps on your PC if you're a Samsung Galaxy owner.
For more information, check out how to tell if your device will run Windows 10 and our favorite Windows 11 features so far.
Motorola moto g60 review motorola moto g8 review motorola moto g6 play review cnet com motorola moto g5 review motorola moto g7 review motorola moto g60 review motorola moto g62 5g motorola moto g60 cena motorola moto g62 5g 4/64gb motorola moto g power 2022 motorola moto g7
Motorola Moto G6 review: A budget phone shouldn't be this good
Motorola Moto G6 review: A budget phone shouldn't be this good
How do you follow up last year's wonderful budget-friendly Moto G5 Plus? Well, you could start with the outside. Add a second rear camera for portrait mode photos. Trade that Micro-USB port for a USB-C. Get rid of the 16:9 screen ratio and go tall with a trendy 18:9 display that shows more vertically. Say bye to the metallic back side and hello to a glass back with curved edges, specifically Gorilla Glass 3.
The overall result would be a phone that looks decidedly 2018, but with pretty much everything we loved about last year's Moto G5 Plus. And that's exactly what the Moto G6 is.
Last year's Moto G5 Plus hit a sweet spot between features, design, performance and price. The Moto G6 hits most of those, but just misses with a shorter battery life than last year's Motos.
The Moto G6 looks sleek and modern. It has a groomed slicked-back hair vibe that makes it seem anything but affordable. But at $249, £219 or AU$399 it's crazy affordable compared to the $1,000 iPhone X.
Roughly the same size as the Moto G5 Plus, the Moto G6 has thinner bezels and a glass back that curves at the edge for a comfortable grip. Like nearly every phone with a glass back, it collects more fingerprints than the stars of CSI.
But the Moto G6 isn't the only affordable Motorola phone to consider. If you're outside the US and your budget has some wiggle room, the Moto G6 Plus deserves a serious look. If you're okay with last year's styling, check out the Moto G5S Plus which is still being sold.
On the left is the Moto G6 and on the right the Moto G6 Play. The dual-camera unit on the Moto G6 looks like a shocked face emoji.
Sarah Tew/CNET
Moto G6, G6 Plus, G6 Play: What's the difference?
I tested the Moto G6 with 32GB of storage, 3GB of RAM and no NFC. I bring this up because there are three new G-series phones for 2018. To confound things further, each model is tweaked a bit depending on where you live.
Moto G6 Play: This is the most affordable of the three phones. In the US, it costs $50 less than the Moto G6. The Moto G6 Play has a lower resolution display and only a single rear camera, but it also has the biggest battery of the three -- a 4,000-mAh whopper more capacious than the one found in the Galaxy S9. Read CNET's full Moto G6 Play review.
Moto G6: Though it's roughly the same size as the Moto G6 Play, the Moto G6 has a higher resolution display, dual rear cameras and a more powerful processor. In the UK and Australia, the Moto G6 comes with NFC, and there's a "step up" UK version with 4GB of RAM and 64GB of storage.
Moto G6 Plus: Despite not being available in the US, the Moto G6 Plus is the highest-end option in the Moto G family. It has a 5.9-inch display instead of the 5.7-inch ones found on the G6 and G6 Play. Its battery is slightly larger than the one in the G6. The UK model has NFC and an optional 6GB of RAM.
Moto G6, G6 Plus, G6 Play top features and prices
Key features of the Moto G phone family
Moto G6 (US, UK, Australia)
Moto G6 (UK)
Moto G6 Plus (UK, Australia)
Moto G6 Play (US, UK, Australia)
Price (without discounts)
$249, £219, AU$399
£239
£269, AU$499
$199, £169, AU$329
Screen
5.7-inch
5.7-inch
5.9-inch
5.7-inch
Processor
1.8 GHz octa-core Qualcomm Snapdragon 450
1.8 GHz octa-core Qualcomm Snapdragon 450
2.2GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon 630
1.4GHz octa-core Qualcomm Snapdragon 427
Storage
32GB
64GB
64GB
16GB (US only), 32GB
RAM
3GB
4GB
4GB, 6GB (UK only)
2GB (US only), 3GB
Battery
3,000 mAh
3,000 mAh
3,200 mAh
4,000 mAh
Rear camera(s)
12-megapixel & 5-megapixel
12-megapixel & 5-megapixel
12-megapixel & 5-megapixel
13-megapixel
NFC
Yes (UK, Australia), No (US)
Yes
Yes
Yes (UK), No (Australia)
Here's a photo of a cable car taken with the Moto G6. The photo has good dynamic range keeping the sky in-balance with the cable car.
Patrick Holland/CNET
Moto G6 has dual-rear cameras and portrait mode
The dual-rear cameras take solid photos, but your shots aren't going to be on the same level as pictures shot on the Pixel 2, iPhone X or even the OnePlus 6. You'll get the best results when taking photos under bright even light. The Moto G6 has an "active photos" mode which, like Apple's live photos and Google's motion photos, records a tiny amount of video before and after you take a picture.
It's impressive that a phone that costs $249 has a portrait mode.
Patrick Holland/CNET
Motorola added a bunch of fun modes to the camera one of which is portrait mode. The Moto G6 takes serviceable portrait mode shots. Despite the background being blurred out, portrait mode photos don't "pop" as much as they could. I like that the Moto G6 lets me change the focus point and the amount of background blur after I take a portrait mode photo. These little adjustments, like on the Galaxy S9 and S9 Plus, can turn a less-than-perfect portrait into something pretty good.
The top is a selfie taken with the Moto G6. The bottom is a "group selfie" that is kind of a mix of a selfie and panorama. In this case, it made Lexy's head double in size.
Lexy Savvides/CNET
Selfies are just OK, but there is a front-facing flash which can be handy. There's also a group selfie mode that prompts you to move the phone left and then right, like when you take a panorama photo. The phone then "stitches" the selfie panorama together. The results are hit-or-miss. For example, it "glitched" and doubled the back of my friend's making her look like an alien wearing two pairs of sunglasses on her head -- see the photo above.
The Moto G6 uses artificial intelligence (AI) to identify objects, landmarks and text and optimize things accordingly. It can record video at 1080p. But there's no 4K and no slow-motion mode. And that's fine because I'm not buying this phone to be the next Steven Spielberg. I'm buying it because it's cheap.
Here's a video I recorded with the Moto G6:
Moto G6 battery life, speed and everything else
The G6 runs Android 8.0 Oreo and has Google Assistant and the Google Lens augmented reality tool. Both of them worked well: I enjoyed pointing the Moto G6's camera at buildings and tapping the Google Lens icon to get more information about the things around me. It was like I was on my own private architecture tour.
But any phone that costs a couple hundred dollars is going to have sacrifices and the Moto G6 is no different. In speed tests, the Moto G6 was slower than the Moto G5 Plus, but not by much. In real world use, it handled everyday tasks such as messaging, Instagram, watching YouTube videos and playing games well. I was even able to play PUBG Mobile with the frame rate set at medium -- it's ridiculous that I did this on a phone that costs $250.
Geekbench v.4.0 single-core
Moto G6740Moto G5 Plus830
Note: Longer bars indicate better performance
Geekbench v.4.0 multicore
Moto G63,940Moto G5 Plus4,138
Note: Longer bars indicate better performance
3DMark Sling Shot Unlimited
Moto G6818Moto G5 Plus861
Note: Longer bars indicate better performance
3DMark Ice Storm Unlimited
Moto G612,792Moto G5 Plus13,382
Note: Longer bars indicate better performance
The Moto G6's battery fared worse than the Moto G5 and G5 Plus. During our looped video battery tests (in airplane mode), the Moto G6 lasted an average of 9 hours, 41 minutes compared to the Moto G5, which lasted 13 hours, and the Moto G5 Plus, which lasted 13 hours, 22 minutes. Though in real-world use, the Moto G6 had no problem getting through the day on a single charge even after heavy use.
Despite having a glass back, the Moto G6 doesn't have wireless charging. But to be fair, only a few super premium phones support wireless charging. It's not unusual for a budget phone to omit it.
The Moto G6 can be charged fast via its "Turbopower" charger which seems more useful than wireless charging to me. The Moto G6 has a "splash proof" coating but isn't IP rated for water resistance -- so don't drop it in a toilet. But if you do, rest assured that buying a replacement Moto G6 won't break your bank.
Spec comparison of the Moto G6, G6 Plus, G6 Play, G5 and G5 Plus
Motorola Moto G6
Motorola Moto G6 Plus
Motorola Moto G6 Play
Motorola Moto G5
Motorola Moto G5 Plus
Display size, resolution
5.7-inch; 2,160x1,080 pixels
5.9-inch; 2,160x1,080 pixels
5.7-inch; 1,440x720 pixels
5-inch; 1,920x1,080 pixels
5.2-inch; 1,920x1,080 pixels
Pixel density
424ppi
409ppi
282ppi
440ppi
424ppi
Dimensions (Inches)
6.1x2.8x0.3 in
6.3x3x0.3 in
5.1x2.8x0.4 in
5.7x2.9x0.37 in
5.9x2.9x0.3 in
Dimensions (Millimeters)
153.8x72.3x8.3 mm
160x75.5x8 mm
154.4x72.2x9 mm
144.3x73x9.5 mm
150.2x74x7.7 mm
Weight (Ounces, Grams)
5.9 oz; 167g
5.9 oz, 167g
6.2 oz; 175g
5.1 oz, 145g
5.5 oz, 155g
Mobile software
Android 8.0 Oreo
Android 8.0 Oreo
Android 8.0 Oreo
Android 7.0 Nougat
Android 7.0 Nougat
Camera
12-megapixel and 5-megapixel
12-megapixel and 5-megapixel
13-megapixel
13-megapixel
12-megapixel
Front-facing camera
8-megapixel
8-megapixel
8-megapixel
5-megapixel
5-megapixel
Video capture
1080p
4K
1080p
1080p
4K
Processor
1.8 GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon 450
2.2GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon 630
1.4GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon 427
1.4GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon 430
2GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon 625
Storage
32GB/64GB
64GB
16GB/32GB
16GB, 32GB
32GB, 64GB
RAM
3GB, 4GB
4GB, 6GB
2GB, 3GB
2GB,3GB
2GB, 3GB, 4GB
Expandable storage
128GB
128GB
128GB
128GB
128GB
Battery
3,000mAh
3,200mAh
4,000mAh
2,800mAh (removable)
3,000mAh
Fingerprint sensor
Below screen
Below screen
Back
Below screen
Below screen
Connector
USB-C
USB-C
Micro-USB
Micro-USB
Micro-USB
Headphone jack
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Special features
Dual-SIM, Splash-proof, time lapse video, Turbo Charger
Dual-SIM, Splash-proof, time lapse video, Turbo Charger
This asus zenbook is built for space heaters this asus zenbook is built for space tag this asus zenbook is built for zero this asus zenbook is built ford this asus zenbook is built for athletes this asus zenbook is built for her amber this asus zenbook is built usa this asus zenbook is built boost this asus zenbook price this asus zenbook flip about this imac
This Asus Zenbook is built for space, but you can use it in the office
This Asus Zenbook is built for space, but you can use it in the office
This story is part of CES, where CNET covers the latest news on the most incredible tech coming soon.
To commemorate the 25th anniversary of the Asus P6300 laptop's trip to space for use on the Mir space station, spending more than 600 days in orbit, Asus is releasing a Space Edition of its Zenbook 14X OLED. While the laptop might share the same shape as that model, it has a unique design and special packaging inspired by the P6300's stay on the space station. And of course it's now loaded with the latest 12th-gen Intel Core i9 H-series processors announced at CES 2022.
One of the biggest changes to the design is the addition of a 3.5-inch OLED display mounted on the lid. Asus calls it a ZenVision smart display, and it can show custom messages, different themes and animations as well as the date and time. The lid and wrist rests are finished with patterns of the Mir station and Morse code with arc lines that symbolize a space capsule, Asus said in its CES announcement for the laptop. The Morse code translates to "Ad Astra Per Aspera," which itself translates to "Through the hardships to the stars."
This laptop is a conversation starter.
Josh Goldman/CNET
The patterns continue inside to the wrist rests, though you'll probably be spending most of your time staring into the gorgeous 14-inch, 2,880x1,800-pixel OLED display. It has a 16:10 aspect ratio for a little more vertical workspace than a widescreen display. It also has a 90Hz refresh rate, it's certified as VESA DisplayHDR 500 and Pantone validated and, like most OLEDs, it covers 100% of the P3 color gamut.
The design continues to the wrist rests.
Josh Goldman/CNET
And if you have space travel in your future, you'll be glad to know this Zenbook 14X can handle it. Asus says it meets US Space Systems Command Standard SMC-S-016A testing protocols and can handle extreme vibration and climate conditions down to -24 degrees Celsius (-11 Fahrenheit) and up to 61 degrees Celsius (142 Fahrenheit).
The laptop is powered by the latest 12th-gen Intel Core i9 H-series processors and Intel Iris Xe graphics. It will be configured with up to 32GB of LPDDR5 memory and a 1TB PCIe NVMe Gen4 SSD. Support for Wi-Fi 6E and Bluetooth 5.2 is included, as are two Thunderbolt 4 USB-C ports.
The Asus Zenbook 14X OLED Space Edition is expected to be available in Q2 of this year, and pricing will be announced at that time. Also, if you're interested in the Zenbook 14X OLED but without the space theme, Asus is updating the regular 14X OLED with an Intel Core i7 P-series or i9 H-series processors and, depending on the configuration, it'll have Nvidia GeForce MX550 discrete graphics or Intel Iris Xe graphics.
Xiaomi 12 and 12 pro portable xiaomi 12 pro xiaomi 12 android 12 xiaomi 12 pro processor xiaomi 12 pro 12 android 12 for xiaomi xiaomi 12 pro google play xiaomi 12 pro android 13 update xiaomi 12 pro android 13 beta 2 oneplus 10 pro vs xiaomi 12 pro xiaomi 12 pro 5g xiaomi 12 5g
Xiaomi 12 Pro: An Android 12 Powerhouse You Might Not Have Considered
Xiaomi 12 Pro: An Android 12 Powerhouse You Might Not Have Considered
Xiaomi's latest flagship 12 Pro phone packs top-end specs, including a potent Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 processor, three 50-megapixel rear cameras, 120-watt fast charging and a large, vibrant display.
It ticks many of the boxes you'd expect of a flagship phone in 2022 and it offers some solid competition to the likes of the Samsung Galaxy S22 Ultra, Oppo Find X5 Pro and Google Pixel 6 Pro.
The Xiaomi 12 Pro will go on sale later this month in the UK and Europe, and while US and Australian availability has yet to be announced (at the time of writing), Xiaomi has confirmed that the phone will start at $999 for the 8GB RAM and 128GB storage variant (roughly £765 and AU$1,380 converted).
For sale oppo r7 bezel less tv bezel less laptop bezel less mobile bezel less meaning bezel less smartphones bezel less smart watch bezel less gaming monitor
Bezel-less Oppo R7 leaks on Chinese social media
Bezel-less Oppo R7 leaks on Chinese social media
Caught on video: Oppo's upcoming bezel-less R7. Screenshot by Aloysius Low/CNET
Chinese smartphone maker Oppo appears to be doing some magic with the design of its upcoming Oppo R7 phone, if this leaked video appears to be true.
The Android-powered handset alleged comes with almost non-existent bezels, with the large screen taking up the entire sides of the device, as you can see from the screen capture above.
The magic apparently lies in some visual trickery (which Oppo has filed a patent for) where the sides of the screen diffract the light to make it seem that the display extends all the way to the edge.
While the Sharp Aquos Crystal turned heads with its edge-to-edge display, Oppo's R7 looks even more convincing, since the Crystal still has a bit of an edge, while the R7 looks like it doesn't.
Other leaked specs of the R7 include a octa-core MediaTek processor, 4G support and a 20.7-megapixel rear camera. The phone's also rumored to be as slim as the Oppo R5 at just 4.85mm thick.
CNET has reached out to Oppo for more information. In the meantime, check out the video below. Note that it may not play for you as the video is hosted on a Chinese site that appears to have region locks for some countries.
I visited samsung s galaxy s22 metaverse event lumber i visited samsung s galaxy s22 metaverse event script i visited samsung s galaxy s22 metaverse meaning i visited samsung s galaxy s22 metaverse adalah i visited samsung s galaxy s22 metaverse news i visited samsung s galaxy s22 i visited samsung s galaxy buds pro i visited samsung support i samsung
I visited Samsung's Galaxy S22 metaverse event, but it felt rushed and incomplete
I visited Samsung's Galaxy S22 metaverse event, but it felt rushed and incomplete
Samsung's Galaxy S22 reveal event wasn't just a standard livestream this year: It also took place inside a metaverse -- and I was genuinely excited to check it out. I've attended previous Samsung events in VR and found them to be more enjoyable than most other branded virtual experiences. The infamous 2016 photo of Mark Zuckerberg walking down an aisle while everyone around him is wearing a Gear VR headset is undeniably silly, but the demonstration of what could be possible from home was actually compelling.
By comparison, this 2022 Unpacked event had surprisingly little to do with Samsung and served more as an example of what not to do when using the metaverse to host a product launch.
If you saw Samsung announce an event in the metaverse and thought it meant putting on a VR headset and sitting in an audience, you're not alone. Instead, Samsung built a version of its New York event space in Decentraland, a cryptocurrency-focused virtual playground. It's technically possible to enter Decentraland with a VR headset, but the experience is barely functional and requires a lot of technical knowledge. Using your web browser alongside your mouse and keyboard, as intended by the creators, you enter Decentraland as an animated avatar you can modify, and move yourself to the Samsung 837X space to participate.
Arriving at this space the day before the event revealed a brightly lit building and a faux pizza shop. The doors were all closed and there wasn't much to see, but there were already people lined up to see what Samsung had to offer. When I checked in again, 30 minutes before the event was to start, a handful of people waiting outside had climbed to nearly 100 that I could see. Decentraland runs 10 servers and you can only see the people on your server, but as I moved around before the event each server seemed similarly full. Roughly 1,000 people were waiting for Samsung to open the doors and show us the Galaxy S22 Ultra.
Unfortunately for a lot of those servers, the doors didn't open on time. Many people were unable to actually enter Samsung 837X before the event started. Everyone outside the metaverse was enjoying a strange crossover with the popular TV series Bridgerton at the start of this event, while I and dozens of my fellow metazens were changing servers to find one that worked. Once a server with open doors had been located, the next challenge was finding the room inside this virtual building where the announcement event was actually streaming.
The three unlockable clothing packs you could use to equip your metaverse avatar if you completed the minigame inside Samsung's event.
Russell Holly/CNET
Inside Samsung 837X, you are presented with three rooms and a host of smaller activities to enjoy. Samsung had made special clothing for your Decentraland avatar you could only get by completing a quest in this space. Most of the space was dedicated to this quest, but in the back you could find a theater with the Unpacked event streaming. The room was a fairly generic virtual theater with a big curved screen showing the event already in progress outside of the metaverse. I was nearly 10 minutes late, and now watching a smaller version of the livestream with animated characters dancing around inside of a web browser on my laptop.
A few minutes into watching this presentation, it became clear the real reason most people were here was to unlock the virtual clothes tied to the Samsung quest. The app told me there were 96 people in the space, but the room only held 37. The novelty of the Samsung-made space was much more important than the unveiling of a new phone and tablet for a majority of those who regularly visit Decentraland.
It's difficult to feel like this approach to an event is anything other than a step backward. Back in 2016, Samsung offered the ability to watch a Galaxy Unpacked event from inside its VR headset. You put the headset on, opened the app and picked one of several positions to watch the stage from a 360-degree streaming camera. Being able to turn your head and see the audience made you feel like you were actually sitting in the audience. Not a lot of people owned those headsets at the time, but it felt like you were in a packed room and could enjoy the show.
The Samsung Theater, where I could watch the Galaxy S22 Ultra unveiling.
Russell Holly/CNET
In fairness, this 2022 event was fully virtual, so there was no live space to warp into as there was during pre-pandemic product launches. But Samsung could have made it possible to walk through a virtual store, get a closer look at the phone from every angle, or maybe even preorder the next phone using cryptocurrency. There could have been Samsung staff on hand in the space to answer questions or talk to people about what they're upgrading from and how the cameras on this new phone might have been better.
Samsung had an opportunity to make this space actually feel like a virtual version of its 837 store, but instead built a terribly rendered virtual forest to showcase its intent to plant 2 million trees as part of its sustainability efforts. For comparison's sake, the real Samsung 837 store not only sells Samsung devices but opened with a cafe on site and, at least pre-pandemic, held a running club that promoted its fitness trackers.
This could have been a lot of fun, but instead felt rushed and incomplete. It was a halfhearted attempt in a long line of cultural zeitgeist moments from Samsung, and felt more like an online version of the Yo! Noid game from Pizza Hut in 1990 than it does a glimpse at an often-promised metaversal future.