Try Galaxy relaunches for the S26 seriesThe day after Unpacked, Samsung shared a press release on its newsroom that encouraged users to check out its Try Galaxy experience on their devices. By scanning a QR code, users can launch the Galaxy UI and check out apps, photo editing tools, AI features and more. Managing editor Cherlynn Low checked it out on her iPhone 17 Pro and found the whole setup trippy but fascinating. You can also use Try Galaxy to check out the company’s foldable phones’ software on your main device. As our editor in chief Aaron Souppouris pointed out, this isn’t the first time Samsung has made it possible to emulate a Galaxy phone on your own handset, but the new iteration for Galaxy S26 certainly is new this year.
An Ars Technica colleague recently bought a new M4 MacBook Air. I have essentially nothing bad to say about this hardware, except to point out that even in our current memory shortage apocalypse, Apple is still charging higher-than-market-rates for RAM and SSD upgrades. Still, most people buying this laptop will have a perfectly nice time with it.
。服务器推荐对此有专业解读
Наука и техника。关于这个话题,51吃瓜提供了深入分析
13:05, 27 февраля 2026Бывший СССР
Notice how by step 3, the time HotAudio’s player calls appendBuffer, the data has already been decrypted by their JavaScript code. It has to be. The browser’s built-in AAC or Opus decoder doesn’t know a damn thing about HotAudio’s proprietary encryption scheme. It only speaks standard codecs. The decryption must happen in JavaScript before the data is handed to the browser.