Bungie Is About To Announce The Big Spring Update For ‘Destiny’

At long last, we’re going to know what bungie has in store for Destiny. There’s been a very long silence, with only small timed events to fill in the gaps between major updates, and a lot of players have been complaining that there just isn’t enough to do in the meantime. The company got a whole lot of goodwill following The Taken King, but it only lasted so long. Luckily, there’s a spring update on the way.

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Mystery Galaxy S7 Smartphone Could Challenge Apple’s iPhone SE

With the launch of the four-inch iPhone SE widely expected to be taking place next week, Apple will be updating the ‘mini’ handset in its smartphone portfolio. This refresh to the iPhone 5S design, with internal hardware looking to match the performance of the iPhone 6S, will be a welcome option to many iOS fans. But the competition will not be as complacent as it was last year. Samsung is tipped to be launching a rival to the iPhone SE and a return of the Galaxy Mini brand in the form of the Galaxy S7 Mini.

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Casio’s WSD-F10 rugged Android Wear smartwatch will be released on March 25

Back in January at CES Casio unveiled a new smartwatch running Android Wear. The WSD-F10 is being called a Smart Outdoor Watch by its maker, and its ruggedness certainly allows Casio to go with that moniker.

See, this device is water resistant up to 50 meters, and it’s tested to military standard specifications to ensure it can withstand many rugged activities. And today Casio announced its release date as well as how much it will cost.

The Smart Outdoor Watch WSD-F10 will be out on March 25 for $500. You’ll be able to purchase one from Casio’s online store, Amazon, the Google…

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T-Mobile brings YouTube on as a Binge On content provider, after negotiation

After Google called out T-Mobile on sneakily throttling all of YouTube’s data over T-Mobile’s towers, T-Mobile got a lot of backlash for doing so without notifying YouTube nor its customers first.

The biggest reason why YouTube raised these concerns was because T-Mobile took it upon itself to throttle all video streams without notifying the provider (in this case YouTube). Content providers shouldn’t have to let its customers’ experience suffer just because a carrier happens to lower the quality of content being provided to the customer.

After further discussions and…

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