Weekly Bytes | Microsoft Edge Kids Mode, Epic Games’ $1 billion funding round, and more
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Here s our curated list of important tech news from this week in byte size.
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Here s our curated list of important tech news from this week in byte size.
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Microsoft Edge gets Kids Mode
Microsoft has introduced Kids Mode in its Chromium-based browser – Edge, to help parents, by offering a safe online environment for children when they browse the internet on shared devices. Users can access Kids Mode by clicking on the profile icon in the upper right corner of the browser and selecting “Browse in Kids Mode.” Next, they will have to select the child’s suitable age range: 5-8 or 9-12 years. After this, parents can let their children browse the web. Both age groups are defaulted to the strictest tracking prevention level, blocking the m
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15 April, 2021
Formula 1 director of data systems Rob Smedley has said that the sport is using Amazon Web Services to tell the “hidden story” behind each race.
When each car generates more than a million data points per second, teams need serious computing power to trawl through the data to help them make split-second decisions.
Enter AWS, whose complex algorithms convert data to produce relevant information, which is now being presented to racing enthusiasts tuning in so they can delve into various insights in what is essentially a data-driven sport.
“What we’re trying to do with AWS insights is to tell some part of the hidden story of Formula 1, use the data to tell that technical back story which fans never get to see,” Rob Smedley, F1’s director of data systems, told Reuters.
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