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Firefox

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Firefox Testing Snooze Tabs Feature, Lets You Snooze Tabs Until You Need Them Mozilla is testing a new feature for Firefox that lets you manage tabs better. The Snooze Tabs feature essentially just shuts a tab, only to open it back later. Using this new feature, the Firefox User can snooze any tab up to a specified time, and this tab will then open in the background at the mentioned time. Mozilla is testing Pulse, a developer feedback tool for Firefox. The Firefox Snooze Tabs feature helps in managing your tabs better and is useful for those users who work with multiple tabs on their browser. This feature will also allow you to remember important chores that you want to keep for later (but tend to forget at most times). Snooze Tabs lets a tab disappear for a while, and appear back on the browser once the snooze time ends. There's a bell icon that appears on the top-right of Firefox, clicking which will allow you to choose a time when you want the tab to return. There are

CES 2017: The 5G future will support up to 22 million jobs, Qualcomm says

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By 2035, when 5G's full economic benefit should be realised, a broad range of industries supported by 5G could produce up to $12 trillion worth of goods and services, according to a survey from Qualcomm.            At CES 2017, Qualcomm has exhibited various ways its innovation will bolster the 5G future, from driving self-ruling automatons to associated medicinal services. Offering weight to its ventures and developments, Qualcomm CEO Steve Mollenkopf on Friday shared new research dispatched by Qualcomm to demonstrate the effect 5G will have on the future economy. By 2035, when 5G's full financial advantage ought to be understood, an expansive scope of ventures upheld by 5G could create up to $12 trillion worth of products and enterprises, as indicated by the review - about as much as all shoppers in the US spent in 2016. Furthermore, by 2035, 5G ought to bolster up to 22 million occupations - that is more than the number of inhabitants in Beijing - and create
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Microsoft, Qualcomm Tuck Windows 10 Into ARM Devices By Peter Suciu   Dec 8, 2016 3:07 PM PT               Microsoft on Wednesday announced the compatibility of Windows 10 and native Windows apps with ARM-based processors, including Qualcomm's Snapdragon, which currently powers a large percentage of Android devices.      One of the highlights at this year's Windows Hardware Engineering Community (WinHEC) event in Shenzhen, China, the new partnership will make it possible for Windows applications, peripherals and enterprise solutions to run on new mobile, power efficient and always-connected cellular PCs.      Through the collaboration, the companies aim to encourage hardware partners to develop Qualcomm Snapdragon-powered Window 10 devices that run x86 Win32 and universal Windows apps. In addition to Microsoft's own productivity applications, such as Microsoft Office, they could include third-party programs such as Adobe Photoshop, as well as Windows games, w