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Jumat, 21 Juli 2017

10 things in tech you need to know today

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July 21, 2017

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Good morning! Here is the tech news you need to know this Friday.

1. The biggest black market on the so-called "dark net," AlphaBay, has been taken down by authorities, Attorney General Jeff Sessions said on Thursday. AlphaBay connected drug vendors with people seeking drugs like fentanyl and heroin, authorities said.

2. Samsung sent out invitations for a product launch event for its next major smartphone, the Galaxy Note 8. The launch will take place on August 23 in New York City.

3. Google DeepMind's CEO and Uber's chief scientist backed a UK chip company in a $30 million round. It's called Graphcore and it's based in Bristol.

4. Johnson Controls, a company that develops services that manage buildings' ventilation and fire detection systems, unveiled a smart thermostat that comes with Microsoft's Cortana personal assistant built in. The company showed off the thermostat, dubbed GLAS, in a short video posted on YouTube.

5. Facebook is exploring creating a mysterious new hardware device. A patent application published by the company details a "modular electromechanical device" that can incorporate a speaker, microphone, touch display, GPS, and even function as a phone.

6. Amazon's $12 billion cloud is seeing its "first-ever downtick" in momentum, according to Deutsche Bank. Migration of existing businesses to the cloud is happening at a slower rate than originally anticipated.

7. Elon Musk says he got "verbal government approval" to build a Hyperloop between New York and DC. The Hyperloop could shuttle people between New York and Washington DC in 29 minutes, Musk said.

8. Bitcoin soared on Thursday, trading up 13.01% at $2,576 a coin. The cryptocurrency continues to rally as traders look ahead to the August 1 decision on whether or not bitcoin will be split in two.

9. The "Game of Thrones" season 7 premiere was pirated a staggering 90 million times. The figure is nearly six times as many as the official view count.

10. Apple reportedly chose LG to be the only supplier of L-shaped batteries for next year's iPhone. LG allegedly invested "hundreds of billions" of wons in the operation, which will include the construction of dedicated facilities to keep up with Apple's demand.

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