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| Microsoft Releases New Windows 10 Preview With Narrator Improvements | VentureBeat | Microsoft yesterday released a new Windows 10 preview with Narrator improvements. The update bumps Windows 10 from build 18860 (made available to testers on March 20) to build 18865. These builds are from the 20H1 branch, which represents the Windows 10 update that will arrive in the first half of next year. | Samsung Really Wants You to Know the Galaxy Fold Doesn't Have a Crease Problem | Mashable | Last month, a video surfaced that appeared to show a visable fold on the screen of the new Galaxy Fold. Samsung has responded with a video showing that their new phone screens won't crease. | Outlook’s New AI Features Help You Plan for Meetings | VentureBeat | Microsoft announced that it is beefing up Outlook with new AI-driven features. In the next few weeks (in North America in English), it will roll out a trio of features in Outlook on the web to expedite meeting prep, intelligently suggest meetings, and recommending meeting venues — all powered by the new framework announced last September. | Why You Should Never Allow Your Web Browser to Save Your Passwords | TechRepublic | Passwords. They are the bane of so many users' existence. Yet, they're one of the only ways we have to secure our accounts, and those accounts are frequently compromised. IT pros always harp on users to create secure passwords—to the tune of creating password profiles that demand specific requirements. And yet, no matter how hard we try to lock down those accounts, they are still vulnerable. |
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| How to See and Remove All The Data Websites Have Saved on Your iPhone or iPad | How-To Geek | Whenever you visit a website on an iPhone or iPad, snippets of data are saved to your device. Cookies and other cached data eventually start to take up significant space, so you may want to clean them out. Here’s how. | What Is Formjacking and How Can You Avoid It? | MakeUseOf | 2019 is shaping up as the year of formjacking. Drastic decreases in the value of cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin and Monero mean cybercriminals are looking elsewhere for fraudulent profits. What better place than to steal your banking information straight from the product order form, before you even hit submit. That’s right; they’re not breaking into your bank. Attackers are lifting your data before it even gets that far. |
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