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Deal: This car mount can charge your smartphone wirelessly, and it’s 60% off!

Credit: Scosche via Best Buy I don’t know about you, but when I hop in my car, I just want to buckle up and go with as little friction as possible. I’d rather not fumble with cables whenever I get in and out of my vehicle! With the Scosche 10W Qi smartphone car mount, you can just dock your handset and go, and the accessory will charge your phone wirelessly! While usually $49.99, you can get it on sale for a mere $19.99 right now. Buy the Scosche 10W Qi smartphone car mount for just $19.99 ($30 off)

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Deal: This car mount can charge your smartphone wirelessly, and it’s 60% off!

Credit: Scosche via Best Buy I don’t know about you, but when I hop in my car, I just want to buckle up and go with as little friction as possible. I’d rather not fumble with cables whenever I get in and out of my vehicle! With the Scosche 10W Qi smartphone car mount, you can just dock your handset and go, and the accessory will charge your phone wirelessly! While usually $49.99, you can get it on sale for a mere $19.99 right now. Buy the Scosche 10W Qi smartphone car mount for just $19.99 ($30 off)

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Deal: This car mount can charge your smartphone wirelessly, and it’s 60% off!

Credit: Scosche via Best Buy I don’t know about you, but when I hop in my car, I just want to buckle up and go with as little friction as possible. I’d rather not fumble with cables whenever I get in and out of my vehicle! With the Scosche 10W Qi smartphone car mount, you can just dock your handset and go, and the accessory will charge your phone wirelessly! While usually $49.99, you can get it on sale for a mere $19.99 right now. Buy the Scosche 10W Qi smartphone car mount for just $19.99 ($30 off)

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Deal: This car mount can charge your smartphone wirelessly, and it’s 60% off!

Credit: Scosche via Best Buy I don’t know about you, but when I hop in my car, I just want to buckle up and go with as little friction as possible. I’d rather not fumble with cables whenever I get in and out of my vehicle! With the Scosche 10W Qi smartphone car mount, you can just dock your handset and go, and the accessory will charge your phone wirelessly! While usually $49.99, you can get it on sale for a mere $19.99 right now. Buy the Scosche 10W Qi smartphone car mount for just $19.99 ($30 off)

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Deal: This car mount can charge your smartphone wirelessly, and it’s 60% off!

Credit: Scosche via Best Buy I don’t know about you, but when I hop in my car, I just want to buckle up and go with as little friction as possible. I’d rather not fumble with cables whenever I get in and out of my vehicle! With the Scosche 10W Qi smartphone car mount, you can just dock your handset and go, and the accessory will charge your phone wirelessly! While usually $49.99, you can get it on sale for a mere $19.99 right now. Buy the Scosche 10W Qi smartphone car mount for just $19.99 ($30 off)

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Deal: This car mount can charge your smartphone wirelessly, and it’s 60% off!

Credit: Scosche via Best Buy I don’t know about you, but when I hop in my car, I just want to buckle up and go with as little friction as possible. I’d rather not fumble with cables whenever I get in and out of my vehicle! With the Scosche 10W Qi smartphone car mount, you can just dock your handset and go, and the accessory will charge your phone wirelessly! While usually $49.99, you can get it on sale for a mere $19.99 right now. Buy the Scosche 10W Qi smartphone car mount for just $19.99 ($30 off)

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Google has fixed the Pixel 9a’s wonky camera viewfinder

A recent update to the Pixel 9a caused the front-facing camera to glitch out during preview. Users observed a “flickering” effect where the camera seemed to jump between exposure levels. Now a new Pixel Camera update appears to fully resolve the issue. Google’s Pixel 9a may be the company’s new smartphone hotness, but earlier this week we shared an odd problem with you that new owners of the phone were experiencing. When attempting to take photos with the 9a’s front-facing camera in lower-light environments, the in-app preview they’d see would flicker and jump back and forth between two brightness levels. And while it didn’t impact the pictures you actually took, and you could roll back your phone’s software to avoid it entirely, it was nonetheless a little annoying and a small blemish on the phone’s launch. But today we can share that Google has finally sorted this one out. There’s a new version 9.8.102.748116395.16 release of the Pixel Camera app out now, and after ChromeUnboxed brought it to our attention, we decided to put it to the test. While we were easily able to recreate the flicker problem on our Pixel 9a handset earlier this week, after installing this new update we can confirm that it’s no longer happening. The image in the viewfinder preview maintains its expected exposure, and pics still look just as good as ever. Despite that positive change, some users are still running into odd behavior during macro photography, so Google’s work may not yet be complete.

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Google has fixed the Pixel 9a’s wonky camera viewfinder

A recent update to the Pixel 9a caused the front-facing camera to glitch out during preview. Users observed a “flickering” effect where the camera seemed to jump between exposure levels. Now a new Pixel Camera update appears to fully resolve the issue. Google’s Pixel 9a may be the company’s new smartphone hotness, but earlier this week we shared an odd problem with you that new owners of the phone were experiencing. When attempting to take photos with the 9a’s front-facing camera in lower-light environments, the in-app preview they’d see would flicker and jump back and forth between two brightness levels. And while it didn’t impact the pictures you actually took, and you could roll back your phone’s software to avoid it entirely, it was nonetheless a little annoying and a small blemish on the phone’s launch. But today we can share that Google has finally sorted this one out. There’s a new version 9.8.102.748116395.16 release of the Pixel Camera app out now, and after ChromeUnboxed brought it to our attention, we decided to put it to the test. While we were easily able to recreate the flicker problem on our Pixel 9a handset earlier this week, after installing this new update we can confirm that it’s no longer happening. The image in the viewfinder preview maintains its expected exposure, and pics still look just as good as ever. Despite that positive change, some users are still running into odd behavior during macro photography, so Google’s work may not yet be complete.

Uncategorized

Google has fixed the Pixel 9a’s wonky camera viewfinder

A recent update to the Pixel 9a caused the front-facing camera to glitch out during preview. Users observed a “flickering” effect where the camera seemed to jump between exposure levels. Now a new Pixel Camera update appears to fully resolve the issue. Google’s Pixel 9a may be the company’s new smartphone hotness, but earlier this week we shared an odd problem with you that new owners of the phone were experiencing. When attempting to take photos with the 9a’s front-facing camera in lower-light environments, the in-app preview they’d see would flicker and jump back and forth between two brightness levels. And while it didn’t impact the pictures you actually took, and you could roll back your phone’s software to avoid it entirely, it was nonetheless a little annoying and a small blemish on the phone’s launch. But today we can share that Google has finally sorted this one out. There’s a new version 9.8.102.748116395.16 release of the Pixel Camera app out now, and after ChromeUnboxed brought it to our attention, we decided to put it to the test. While we were easily able to recreate the flicker problem on our Pixel 9a handset earlier this week, after installing this new update we can confirm that it’s no longer happening. The image in the viewfinder preview maintains its expected exposure, and pics still look just as good as ever. Despite that positive change, some users are still running into odd behavior during macro photography, so Google’s work may not yet be complete.

Uncategorized

Google has fixed the Pixel 9a’s wonky camera viewfinder

A recent update to the Pixel 9a caused the front-facing camera to glitch out during preview. Users observed a “flickering” effect where the camera seemed to jump between exposure levels. Now a new Pixel Camera update appears to fully resolve the issue. Google’s Pixel 9a may be the company’s new smartphone hotness, but earlier this week we shared an odd problem with you that new owners of the phone were experiencing. When attempting to take photos with the 9a’s front-facing camera in lower-light environments, the in-app preview they’d see would flicker and jump back and forth between two brightness levels. And while it didn’t impact the pictures you actually took, and you could roll back your phone’s software to avoid it entirely, it was nonetheless a little annoying and a small blemish on the phone’s launch. But today we can share that Google has finally sorted this one out. There’s a new version 9.8.102.748116395.16 release of the Pixel Camera app out now, and after ChromeUnboxed brought it to our attention, we decided to put it to the test. While we were easily able to recreate the flicker problem on our Pixel 9a handset earlier this week, after installing this new update we can confirm that it’s no longer happening. The image in the viewfinder preview maintains its expected exposure, and pics still look just as good as ever. Despite that positive change, some users are still running into odd behavior during macro photography, so Google’s work may not yet be complete.

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