Month: October 2016

Amazon.com launches “Amazon Music Unlimited”

amazonmusicunlimited
Early Wednesday, Amazon.com launched Amazon Music Unlimited.

Amazon Music Unlimited offers tens of millions of songs anytime, anywhere with one low price for Prime and non-Prime members.  All prices can be seen at the end of this article.

The monthly memberships also offers skip and commercial free listening.

Use the Amazon Echo (or other devices) to gain access to content such as music and other content.

The pricing plans are as follows:

  • Individual (one account for all of your devices):
    $7.99 / Month or $79.00 / Year.
  • Amazon Echo Plan (all of the benefits of the above on a single Echo, Echo Dot, and others):
    $3.99 / Month.
  • Family Plan (all of the benefits of the above for up to six family members):
    $14.99 / Month or $149.00 / Year (coming soon).

For more information, click here.

Comcast hit with the biggest FCC fine in history

comcastlogo2The U.S. Federal Communications Commission is leveling cable operator Comcast with the biggest fine the Government agency has ever given to a U.S. company.

Comcast is being fined $2.3 million for charging customers hardware and services that those customers did not receive or want.

Comcast has to submit a "compliance plan," in which Government regulators will monitor the company to make sure it cleans up its act.

Travis LeBlanc, chief of the FCC's Enforcement Bureau, said in a statement:

"It is basic that a cable bill should include charges only for services and equipment ordered by the customer -- nothing more and nothing less."

The FCC said it received over 1,000 complaints from customers, who said Comcast charged them for premium channels, cable boxes, DVRs or other products that they never ordered.

In many cases, the FCC said, customers expressly told Comcast that they didn't want the add-on options, but they were charged anyway.

Complaints also describe how customers spent "significant time and energy to attempt to remove the unauthorized charges" and get refunds, the commission said.

The complaints spurred the FCC to launch an investigation nearly two years ago. Today's settlement marks the conclusion of the probe.

Under the five-year compliance plan, Comcast must begin sending customers special notifications every time a new charge or service is added to their bill. The company also has to add a way for customers to easily "block the addition of new services or equipment to their accounts," according to an FCC press release.

Comcast will also be required to compensate or address complaints from customers who have disputed charges, and it will be barred from referring an account to collections or suspending an account that has a disputed charge.

Comcast agreed to the fine without admitting any guilt.

The company did say Tuesday that the complaints stemmed from poor customer service or human error, and not a "problematic policy or intentional wrongdoing."

Comcast added that the issues were due to "isolated errors or customer confusion," according to a statement. "We agree those issues should be fixed and are pleased to put this behind us and proceed with these customer service-enhancing changes."

iOS 10 shows faster adoption than any other previous iOS

ios10custlogo“iOS 10 is now installed on more than two thirds of the active iOS device install base, recording 66.7% twenty-seven days after iOS 10 was released according to Fiksu,” Benjamin Mayo reports for 9to5Mac. “Mixpanel is also recording iOS 10 adoption topping 66% since Sunday.”

“iOS 10 has the fastest adoption rate than any previous update, a month after release.,” Mayo reports. “These metrics from Fiksu and Mixpanel measure the adoption rate of the active iOS install base, as they track any iPhones and iPads in use on the web.”

“Before iOS 10 was released, iOS 9 was installed on 88% of the active device base,” Mayo reports. “Less than a month later, iOS 10 is already on the majority of iPhone, iPad and iPod touch devices. There are now more devies in use running iOS 10 than iOS 9. This is unprecedented uptake outside of Apple’s ecosystem.”

Read more in the full article here.

Samsung officially kills the Galaxy Note 7

samsunglogoSamsung has permanently stopped all production of its Galaxy Note 7 aimed reports of the device not only catching fire, but injuring dozens of users along the way.

The loss of the smartphone is not only an embarrassment for the company, but it also makes customers question the safety of its other products too.  Just last month, their were reports of its washer not only catching fire, but also causing the hardware to explode.

Samsung began to see the writing on the wall last Monday as major cell phone carriers stopped selling the device altogether and also stopped Samsung's device exchange program.

On Monday, Samsung issued a plea to all current Galaxy Note 7 customers to stop using the phone immediately.

You may have Missed:

Verified by MonsterInsights