Got a (likely) refurbished Samsung Galaxy S8+ from Carphone Warehouse as part of my insurance policy when I broke my own one over the weekend. I eventually discovered it failed SafetyNet and thus Google Pay was not working. KNOX was not tripped. It is not rooted. As far as I can tell it is stock firmware. A factory reset did not fix this.
Therefore my concern is that there might have been some malware/tampering at a system level.
My question is, if I use Odin to reflash stock firmware, is that likely to overwrite any possible system malware? Secondly, is SafetyNet like KNOX, where once you trip it it's permanently tripped, or does it pass once the offending problem is removed?
If there is any doubt about these things I might just ask for another replacement, but that means another three days with no phone.
Ordered the Pixel3 XL. Not excited about the notch, but we'll see how annoying it really is in person. The rest of the featureset looks cool. Interesting fine print about the Pixel/Pixel2 Google Photos support: apparently the "unlimited storage in original format" for pictures ends in 2020, whereas Pixel3 owners get that support extended through 2022. After the expiration date, your photos are automatically downgraded to "high-quality", whatever that means.
On October 10 2018 07:55 Excalibur_Z wrote: Ordered the Pixel3 XL. Not excited about the notch, but we'll see how annoying it really is in person. The rest of the featureset looks cool. Interesting fine print about the Pixel/Pixel2 Google Photos support: apparently the "unlimited storage in original format" for pictures ends in 2020, whereas Pixel3 owners get that support extended through 2022. After the expiration date, your photos are automatically downgraded to "high-quality", whatever that means.
I *believe* the expiration applies to *new* photos uploaded after that point. Photos taken/uploaded prior to that date would remain full quality forever without counting against quota. Don't quote me on that though, I'll try and find the clarification they made around the time the Pixel 2 came out...
I mean... it is just unbelievable, it almost seems like a rush job. How the hell did they think this would be ignored. Does a notch hold the phone together or something.
Google has announced that Duplex — the incredible AI system that allows Google Assistant to make real world calls on users’ behalf for things like restaurant reservations — will be available starting next month on a city-by-city basis for Google Pixel users, with Wired reporting that the service is planned to hit New York, Atlanta, Phoenix, and San Francisco by the end of this year.
First announced at Google I/O earlier this year, Duplex uses an incredibly, almost uncannily natural-sounding human voice, complete with with “umms” and “ahhs,” to intelligently handle real-world tasks for you that Google Assistant otherwise couldn’t manage through the internet.
Back at I/O, Google said that it was working on testing Duplex over the summer in three specific areas: calls about holiday hours, restaurant reservations, and hair cut appointments, but according to Wired’s report, Duplex will only call restaurants that don’t already take online reservations to start. Additionally, Wired notes that Google now has a policy that Duplex will always reveal that it’s not actually a real person when calling, which should help assuage concerns over the bot’s potentially deceptive nature.
But there’s still a lot we don’t know about Duplex’s rollout, including which devices (will Google be enabling it for just the Pixel 3, or all Pixels?) or when it’s rolling out, but Google did promise that more details would be forthcoming, so hopefully it won’t be long before we know more.
I love how there's a HUGE NOTCH + a BIG BEZEL at the bottom
I mean, what's the point... The idea of a notch is to cram everything needed there and have the biggest screen possible, android notched phones (and ESPECIALLY the Pixel 3 XL) added a notch for no reason it seems as they all have a notch + bezels
And $800 for a pixel 3 64gb.... Not to mention $80 for their charging stand lol
If you can't do a notch without bezels rather follow the S8/S9 design...
On October 10 2018 23:25 aseq wrote: Why does anyone want a glass back on a smartphone? I can't think of any reason. It's heavy, slippery and can break?
On October 10 2018 23:25 aseq wrote: Why does anyone want a glass back on a smartphone? I can't think of any reason. It's heavy, slippery and can break?
Wireless charging.
Plastic is RF transparent too. I'd rather have a plastic back than glass that I have to put a plastic case around because it's so damn slippery.
On October 12 2018 02:50 Firebolt145 wrote: Yeah but there were years of people reviewing plastic as 'cheap feeling' and we tend to reap what we sow.
As someone that had a Samsung Galaxy S4 back in the days, yeah I can understand why people feel this way.
For me personally anyway, wireless charging is a must-have feature for new phones. Yes it is not as fast as normal charging, but I do almost nothing when I get home from work anyway so it doesn't really matter for me. Plus it makes live easier when you need to adress a call or whatever.