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Samsung actually fixed the Note 5’s silly stylus problem

Samsung actually listened . After some Note 5s were damaged by people storing their S Pens the wrong way – causing approximately two minutes of internet commotion – the company appears to have gone and redesigned the pen slot to prevent people from damaging their devices.

Previously, if you were fumbling about in the dark or otherwise not paying attention, you could insert the stylus the wrong way and find it stuck inside the phone. If you tried to remove it, you’d damage the mechanism that detects when the pen has been ejected.

That meant losing many of the Note 5’s most useful features, including the ability to start writing on the screen as soon as you remove the pen.

While Samsung first simply tried to provide a clearer warning , Phandroid notes that newer shipments of the phone actually include a completely new eject mechanism:

To be clear, the change doesn’t stop you from inserting the stylus backwards; it simply lets it slide back out without breaking anything.

It’s nice to see Samsung fixed the problem without waiting for the next model. While you probably shouldn’t have inserted your pen backwards in the first place, this should provide a little extra peace of mind.

➤ Samsung seems to have quietly fixed the Galaxy Note 5’s S-Pen issue

Synology is testing the first hardware integration of Let’s Encrypt’s free SSL certificates

The Let’s Encrypt project, which just came out of beta, is one of the first real free ways to get a valid security certificate for your site without paying any money.

Now, just a few weeks after it became generally available, Synology is about to become the first hardware manufacturer to integrate it into its platform.

As part of the company’s DSM 6.0 beta , it’s added the ability to secure your NAS device with a Let’s Encrypt free security certificate rather than Synology’s own self-signed one.

It’s a great step forward for both security and for the legitimacy of the Let’s Encrypt project. Integration with a major hardware partner shows just how important making free SSL certificates widely available is, and how easy it can be for anyone to set one up.

➤ Synology DSM 6.0 Beta 2 [Synology]

This electronic guitar will let even the most musically-challenged learn to play

Some people are just not born to be musicians, but you can’t blame us for at least trying to learn to play an instrument. For most adults, it immediately becomes clear that without hours of daily practice, there’s little chance you’ll ever get good.

That’s why Magic Instruments ‘ Brian Fan came up with the Rhythm Guitar , a full-sized electronic device that lets you play any guitar songs without learning how to adjust finger positions. Instead, you just push buttons, Guitar Hero-style, to land the chords you’re looking for.

Fan, a pianist, said he tried learning to play a traditional guitar but found moving his fingers along the frets difficult to master. With Rhythm Guitar, he can focus on strumming and jamming along to the tunes.

“For many people, moving your fingers, strumming, and singing along can be hard to do simultaneously,” he told TNW. He also said older guitarists with arthritis have difficulty picking and playing like they used to.

Magic Instruments is currently headed to Y Combinator having just graduated from hardware-focused incubator Highway1 .

I gave Rhythm Guitar a demo and it sounds pretty close to a classic guitar. The device comes with an accompanying app that has a list of songs you can choose from and it displays the tabs like a Guitar Hero game. This made it especially easy to play a song just a minute after getting used to where each buttons are.

My hands are pretty small, so I’ve had a hard time playing a full-sized guitar in the past, but Rhythm Guitar made it easy to focus on strumming correctly than placing fingers on the right frets. I don’t feel like a rockstar, but it was extremely fun.

Fan says the company is currently working with record labels to license more music on the app, and doesn’t foresee having trouble because the tabs are in Rhythm Guitar’s own language, thus not competing with songbooks these companies release.

When it launches, users will be able to purchase the tabs per song, or subscribe to an unlimited catalog by the month. You can also pick and play your own songs without the app if you play often enough to remember which button corresponds to which chord.

I asked Fan how he feels about musicians who may see the Rhythm Guitar as a cheap way to master a skill, but he says he’s not concerned because the device was never meant to replace a guitar.

“If anything, it could be an introductory device to starting to learn a traditional guitar,” Fan said. “A lot of music gadgets out there are designed for people who already know how to play. We’ve designed this for beginners and people who just want to pick up and start playing.

“When Guitar Hero was popular, sales of traditional guitars went up. This could be a way for people to ease into learning a traditional guitar.”

I’ll admit, it was cool to play a song I struggled to hard to play previously because of my short fingers, but it still felt like I cheated. However, I can see how this device would be great for quick jam sessions with friends, or using it to master the strumming portion first.

Rhythm Guitar debuts on Indiegogo today with early bird pledges starting at $299. Each guitar comes with output jacks and can run wirelessly for a few hours on eight AA batteries.

The device won’t ship until Q1 2017, and will only come in a right-handed version first. The lefty version is in the works; when it hits the market, Fan estimates the retail value to be around $399.

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