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  • ✇NekoJonez's Gaming Blog
  • Gamer’s Thoughts: Let’s Find The Difference Extreme EditionNekoJonez
    Today I wanted to talk about a totally new type of game that’s gaining a lot of popularity. In late 2018, a totally new type of game called I’m on Observation Duty got released on Steam. Recently, these type of games are exploding on Steam. A spin-off called The Exit 8 gave a totally new spin on the formula. The games are actually a scary spin on the spot the difference style of gameplay. But, what does attract players so much into this formula? Let’s talk about a few titles, and maybe we fi
     

Gamer’s Thoughts: Let’s Find The Difference Extreme Edition

Od: NekoJonez
11. Listopad 2024 v 18:34

Today I wanted to talk about a totally new type of game that’s gaining a lot of popularity. In late 2018, a totally new type of game called I’m on Observation Duty got released on Steam. Recently, these type of games are exploding on Steam. A spin-off called The Exit 8 gave a totally new spin on the formula. The games are actually a scary spin on the spot the difference style of gameplay. But, what does attract players so much into this formula? Let’s talk about a few titles, and maybe we find an answer to that in this article. Now, feel free to leave a comment in the comment section down below with your thoughts and/or opinions on these games, similar games and/or the content of this article.

Two main gameplay styles

There are actually two major styles in this genre. A lot of streamers call, one style Observation Duty and the other style Exit 8. Both styles have the same core concept. You need to first look at a room and then notice if anything changes or anomalies appear. The way how you deal with these anomalies differs in both styles.

In Observation Duty style games, the idea is mostly always that you are a security guard watching camera’s. You have to flip through camera’s and report the anomalies before there are too much present in the area. In Exit 8 type games, you play through them while walking through the rooms themselves. You have to walk one direction when there is no difference and another direction when there is a difference. The difference is that you have to make a certain amount of correct judgements in a row. One wrong judgement and you are sent back to level 0.

The gameplay is tricky to explain in words and in an article. I wanted to write this article several times, but I was unable to describe it properly. The best way to describe it in my opinion is a non casual spot the difference game.

Ever since, “I am on Observation Duty” and “The Exit 8” hit the scene… A lot of horror game streamers played through them. They gained a lot more popularity. A lot of new titles came out in a rapid pace with different spins on the genre and interesting innovations. I think it will become more clear when I talk about the games I played through or watched my favorite streamers play through.

The Exit 8The Platform 8

During the summer of this year, Klamath and I streamed through these two titles. The Exit 8 is one of the earliest games to my knowledge in the 3D style.

The idea is that you are trapped in a looping metro hallway where you have to reach the 8th exit. Travelers are advised to continue walking when nothing out of the ordinary happens. But when suddenly a poster changed or something else changed, you need to turn back.

Like I said in the introduction, when you make one mistake, you start at level 0 again. The first passage through the hallway is always safe. After that, you have to do 8 correct answers in a row. Now, at least 8, since if your 8th run has an anomaly, you need to turn back. You can only win if you have a hallway that has no strange thing, and you are above the 8th hallway.

Something really nice that this game does is, it doesn’t repeat anomalies. When you defeat a certain anomaly, it won’t repeat until you see all of them or reset the game. This makes the game more unpredictable and replayable.

The anomalies in this game range from extremely obvious like suddenly the hallway flooding… But others are sneaky, like a camera that moved location to the other side of the hallway. So, it was a puzzle. Is this room really the same, or did something change. Since you couldn’t go back to check. And there were various details that added to the complexity of the game.

In May of this year, we got the follow-up to this game called The Platform 8. If you thought that was more of the same, think again. This time, you are in the actual metro, and you have to survive 8 carts. The big change is that you can’t fail with an anomaly this time around since the exit door is locked if you need to find the anomaly first.

It’s a change that didn’t sit well with me at first, but I totally understand why. This game is now turned into a more tense game where you have to survive the crazy things that the game throws at you. The game is shorter than The Exit 8, but I’ll say… This game had me spooked and jump several times.

That’s Not My Neighbor

At it’s core, this game is an Observation Duty game. But with a big twist. You are a security guard at the entrance of a building. There are imposters out there, trying to look like your neighbor, and you have to keep them out.

This game tests your reasoning skills and tests you if you can look at all the clues. The best I can describe this game is: a mixture between Papers Please, and I am on Observation Duty. The added layer of difficulty is that you have a lot to keep track of. Who did you let already inside? Who is on the list and for who do you better call their apartment first?

This game is getting frequent updates with more lore and more modes. Each time I see this game being played by the streamers I watch, the new update impresses me. And I totally understand why this game got so big.

There is this extremely catchy song by longestsoloever. The amount of times I played it on repeat is just getting silly. Give it a listen if you like electronic music, but I warn you. It’s an earworm.

Confabulation

Confabulation, noun. Confabulation is a memory error consisting of the production of fabricated, distorted, or misinterpreted memories about oneself or the world.

This game does a very interesting take on the actual formula. Instead of explaining the differences and anomalies with unexplained events, in this game it’s caused by a mental illness.

The flow of each play trough of this game is the same. But, the puzzles, the changing objects amongst other things are randomized. It’s up to you to make sure that you avoid you going insane and finding the truth of what happened.

This is an Observation Duty style game, but you can walk around in the area instead of watching at camera feeds. There is an extra layer added with the puzzles that add more information and lore of what happened.

I could talk about it more, but I highly recommend you play this game as blind as possible. The story, scares and impact is that much stronger when you don’t know what’s coming and let yourself be surprised. Watch the candles since they give you amazing hints on where to look next.

ATTA -Spot the Oddities in the Strange Hotel-

What if you have to count the amount of differences in a hallway instead of deciding there is a difference or not? Well, then you describe “ATTA, -Spot the Oddities in the Strange Hotel-“.

This game is an Exit 8 type of game with multiple rooms, where you have to count all the errors in a hallway… While various strange things happen. Like a train suddenly appearing and you have to duck for cover.

The atmosphere this game has, where it leaves you with an open ending that raises more questions than it answers, is the cherry on the cake. It’s a more intense game than your usual games. It may be a short run, but it’s a wild and pleasant ride all the way through.

Hospital 666

The final game I want to talk about today is called Hospital 666. In this game, you try to escape a cursed hospital. The first level has you running down a looping hallway. The second level, has one side room open.

Now, an impressive option that the game gives you is that you can choose if you want anomalies in the hallway or not. So, if you are in the second level, you can choose if you want things in the hallway to change or only focus on the new room.

Something impressive that this game does as well, is when you make a mistake, you can go back to the hallway to see what the mistake was that you made. You still start from the lowest floor of that level, but being able to see what got you is amazing. Since this game has very crazy anomalies but also various very sneaky ones. Like one is that some smiles faces appear on the wall.

In between the levels, there is a boss fight/puzzle that separates the floors from each other. They can be a bit janky, but the developer has updated and optimized the game quite a lot, and it is a lot better. Now, he is currently creating a sequel taking place in a school. And as somebody who works in education, I can’t wait to play through that.

Final thoughts

These games are only a handful of games in the genre. I have given a quick rundown of the games mentioned in this article, but if you are interested, I’m willing to talk more in depth about these titles. My intention with this article is to promote these titles.

Each game listed here is between 5 to €10 and is an amazing ride. These games are short little romps but are bursting to the seams with creativity. I always think, now, I have almost seen everything this genre has to offer. But, then I’m surprised with a new gameplay mechanic or a new setting that changes the atmosphere completely.

So, depending on how well this article does… I might write more of these. If you found amazing titles like this, feel free to send them my way or leave them in the comment section down below. But, for now, I’m going to leave you with my usual outro. Thank you so much for reading this article and I hope you enjoyed reading it as much as I enjoyed writing it. I hope to be able to welcome you in another one, but until then, have a great rest of your day and take care.

  • ✇CGMagazine
  • Fan Expo Canada 2024: Cosplayers & Special Guests GaloreRidge Harripersad
    Fan Expo Canada 2024 had a great variety of cosplayers, activations, shopping, panels and guests throughout the convention weekend. This year was star-studded and packed with so many great guests! Fan Expo Canada 2024 kicked off with many attendees flocking to the Toronto Metro Convention Centre. CGMagazine was able to capture the most important part of the show: the fans! The fans brought a great assortment of cosplay clothing, offering both sophisticated looks and zany ones. Many of them r
     

Fan Expo Canada 2024: Cosplayers & Special Guests Galore

25. Srpen 2024 v 16:00
Fan Expo Canada 2024: A Gallery of Cosplayers & The Con

Fan Expo Canada 2024 had a great variety of cosplayers, activations, shopping, panels and guests throughout the convention weekend.

This year was star-studded and packed with so many great guests! Fan Expo Canada 2024 kicked off with many attendees flocking to the Toronto Metro Convention Centre. CGMagazine was able to capture the most important part of the show: the fans! The fans brought a great assortment of cosplay clothing, offering both sophisticated looks and zany ones. Many of them ranged from some of the hottest anime series, TV/film, comics, video games and more.

Fan Expo Canada 2024 comes back back swinging harder than ever post-pandemic, even bringing back the Xbox exhibit! There are many new and returning celebrities and special guests too, such as Barbie and Shang-Chi and the Ten Rings star Simu Liu, Emily Swallow, Giancarlo Esposito and Temuera Morrison from The Mandalorian/The Book of Boba Fett, and so much more. On top of that many installations and fun prizes are to be won throughout the con. This collection captures the general minutiae of the whole convention across the whole weekend.

Fan Expo Canada 2024 Thursday Kick-Off

Fan Expo Canada 2024: The Gallery of Cosplayers
Fan Expo Canada 2024: The Gallery of Cosplayers
Fan Expo Canada 2024: A Gallery of Cosplayers & The Con
Fan Expo Canada 2024: The Gallery of Cosplayers
Fan Expo Canada 2024: The Gallery of Cosplayers
Fan Expo Canada 2024: The Gallery of Cosplayers
Fan Expo Canada 2024: A Gallery of Cosplayers & The Con
Fan Expo Canada 2024: The Gallery of Cosplayers
Fan Expo Canada 2024: The Gallery of Cosplayers
Fan Expo Canada 2024: The Gallery of Cosplayers

Fan Expo Canada 2024 Friday Rush

Fan Expo Canada 2024: A Gallery of Cosplayers & The Con
Fan Expo Canada 2024: A Gallery of Cosplayers & The Con
Fan Expo Canada 2024: A Gallery of Cosplayers & The Con
Fan Expo Canada 2024: A Gallery of Cosplayers & The Con
Fan Expo Canada 2024: A Gallery of Cosplayers & The Con
Fan Expo Canada 2024: A Gallery of Cosplayers & The Con

Fan Expo Canada 2024 Saturday Bonanza

Fan Expo Canada 2024: A Gallery of Cosplayers & The Con
Fan Expo Canada 2024: A Gallery of Cosplayers & The Con
Fan Expo Canada 2024: A Gallery of Cosplayers & The Con
Fan Expo Canada 2024: A Gallery of Cosplayers & The Con
Fan Expo Canada 2024: A Gallery of Cosplayers & The Con
Fan Expo Canada 2024: A Gallery of Cosplayers & The Con
Fan Expo Canada 2024: A Gallery of Cosplayers & The Con
Fan Expo Canada 2024: A Gallery of Cosplayers & The Con
Fan Expo Canada 2024: A Gallery of Cosplayers & The Con
Fan Expo Canada 2024: A Gallery of Cosplayers & The Con
Fan Expo Canada 2024: A Gallery of Cosplayers & The Con
Fan Expo Canada 2024: A Gallery of Cosplayers & The Con
Fan Expo Canada 2024: A Gallery of Cosplayers & The Con
Fan Expo Canada 2024: A Gallery of Cosplayers & The Con
Fan Expo Canada 2024: A Gallery of Cosplayers & The Con
Fan Expo Canada 2024: A Gallery of Cosplayers & The Con
Fan Expo Canada 2024: A Gallery of Cosplayers & The Con
Fan Expo Canada 2024: A Gallery of Cosplayers & The Con
Fan Expo Canada 2024: A Gallery of Cosplayers & The Con
Fan Expo Canada 2024: A Gallery of Cosplayers & The Con
Fan Expo Canada 2024: A Gallery of Cosplayers & The Con
Fan Expo Canada 2024: A Gallery of Cosplayers & The Con
Fan Expo Canada 2024: A Gallery of Cosplayers & The Con
Fan Expo Canada 2024: A Gallery of Cosplayers & The Con
Fan Expo Canada 2024: A Gallery of Cosplayers & The Con
Fan Expo Canada 2024: A Gallery of Cosplayers & The Con
Fan Expo Canada 2024: A Gallery of Cosplayers & The Con
Fan Expo Canada 2024: A Gallery of Cosplayers & The Con
Fan Expo Canada 2024: A Gallery of Cosplayers & The Con
  • ✇Android Authority
  • Here are Google’s new wallpapers for Pixel devices (and UK football fans)C. Scott Brown
    The newest update to the Wallpaper & Style service on Pixels shows two sets of new Pixel wallpapers. The wallpapers center on two UK football clubs: Liverpool FC and Arsenal FC. We have the wallpapers here for you to download if you don’t own a Pixel or don’t want to wait for the update. On Pixel devices, there’s a service called Wallpaper & Style that gives you a lot of personalization control. Along with the usual smattering of default Android wallpapers, Google will sometimes load
     

Here are Google’s new wallpapers for Pixel devices (and UK football fans)

20. Srpen 2024 v 22:05

  • The newest update to the Wallpaper & Style service on Pixels shows two sets of new Pixel wallpapers.
  • The wallpapers center on two UK football clubs: Liverpool FC and Arsenal FC.
  • We have the wallpapers here for you to download if you don’t own a Pixel or don’t want to wait for the update.


On Pixel devices, there’s a service called Wallpaper & Style that gives you a lot of personalization control. Along with the usual smattering of default Android wallpapers, Google will sometimes load in Pixel-exclusive wallpapers that are only around for a short period of time. Today, we saw two new sets of Pixel wallpapers landing, both related to football teams (aka soccer) in the United Kingdom.

The Liverpool and Arsenal football clubs are represented here with eight wallpapers each, for a total of 16 new wallpapers. You can see all of them below. However, please don’t download the wallpapers from these galleries, as they have been heavily compressed and won’t look great on your phone. Instead, scroll down to the bottom of the article and find a button to download all of them in full quality.

Arsenal FC Pixel wallpapers

Liverpool FC Pixel wallpapers

Download these wallpapers for yourself

Don’t own a Pixel or haven’t seen the update yet? You can simply download these wallpapers for yourself and use them on any device you like. Click the button below to get them all in their high-resolution form.

  • ✇Android Authority
  • The Pixel 9 chip isn’t for benchmark obsessives, and we’re not surprisedHadlee Simons
    Credit: Robert Triggs / Android Authority A Google executive has claimed that the Pixel 9’s Tensor G4 chip isn’t designed for benchmarks and speed. Instead, the new smartphone processor is apparently designed for Google’s own use cases. This echoes previous comments from the company about the chip family’s performance. Google’s Pixel phones have been powered by semi-custom Tensor processors since 2021, but these chips have never really been a major threat to rival flagship processors in
     

The Pixel 9 chip isn’t for benchmark obsessives, and we’re not surprised

20. Srpen 2024 v 11:12

Google Tensor G4 logo

Credit: Robert Triggs / Android Authority

  • A Google executive has claimed that the Pixel 9’s Tensor G4 chip isn’t designed for benchmarks and speed.
  • Instead, the new smartphone processor is apparently designed for Google’s own use cases.
  • This echoes previous comments from the company about the chip family’s performance.


Google’s Pixel phones have been powered by semi-custom Tensor processors since 2021, but these chips have never really been a major threat to rival flagship processors in most benchmarks. Now, a Google executive has reportedly claimed that the Tensor G4 in the Pixel 9 series isn’t designed for benchmarks.

“When we are designing the chip, we’re not designing it for speeds and feats. We’re not designing it to beat some specific benchmark that’s out there. We’re designing it to meet our use cases,” Google Pixel product manager Soniya Jobanputra told the Financial Express.

The executive also noted that improving app launch speeds were a priority with the new chip:

We knew that we had a pain point with opening apps. And so as we built G4, we really focused on, okay, what do we need to do to make sure that experience is better for users.

Google Tensor: A history of AI over benchmarks?

This isn’t a new stance from Google, though. Company representatives have long asserted that the Tensor chips weren’t designed with raw horsepower in mind. Google Silicon executive Monika Gupta noted back in 2022 that the company was “comfortable” not winning benchmarks because the Tensor chips were built for AI features.

Fellow Google Silicon executive Phil Carmack also told Ars Technica back in 2021 that they opted for two big CPU cores in the original Tensor chip as it was the best solution for efficiency. He claimed that one big CPU core — seen in rival chips of the era — was only useful for winning single-thread benchmarks. So there’s a clear history of Google dismissing benchmarks as a consideration, subsequently lagging behind rivals in this category.

However, Google’s claim that it prioritizes efficiency and AI use cases does deserve closer scrutiny. For one, owners of Tensor-powered Pixels have complained about battery life for years, although the Pixel 8 series seemed like a step in the right direction. Furthermore, we’ve seen phones with non-Tensor chips offering impressive AI features too, such as the Samsung Galaxy S24 series. So you clearly don’t need a Tensor-powered phone if you want nifty AI use cases.

There’s also evidence that the Tensor G4 in the Pixel 9 series was supposed to be a more ambitious chip. According to previous reports, Google initially wanted the Pixel 9 chip to be a fully custom design manufactured by TSMC instead of long-standing partner Samsung. However, these same reports suggest that Google missed a deadline for this ambitious chip and decided to go for a Tensor G4 chip that was an incremental upgrade over the Tensor G3. These claims seem to bear out as the Tensor G4 shares plenty in common with the Tensor G3 (i.e. GPU, media decode blocks, TPU), with the exception of the CPU and modem.

  • ✇Android Authority
  • You can finally enable astro mode manually on Pixels, and here’s how to do itHadlee Simons
    Credit: Rita El Khoury / Android Authority Google now lets you manually activate astrophotography mode in the latest version of the Pixel Camera app. Astro mode can now be activated via the Night Sight duration slider. Previously, astrophotography mode could only be triggered by the viewfinder being dark enough in Night Sight mode. Google Pixel phones were the first to offer an astrophotography mode, letting you take hitherto unprecedented images of the night sky. One notable downside i
     

You can finally enable astro mode manually on Pixels, and here’s how to do it

19. Srpen 2024 v 15:48

pixel 6 pro astrophotography

Credit: Rita El Khoury / Android Authority

  • Google now lets you manually activate astrophotography mode in the latest version of the Pixel Camera app.
  • Astro mode can now be activated via the Night Sight duration slider.
  • Previously, astrophotography mode could only be triggered by the viewfinder being dark enough in Night Sight mode.


Google Pixel phones were the first to offer an astrophotography mode, letting you take hitherto unprecedented images of the night sky. One notable downside is that you couldn’t actually activate this mode manually, but that’s changing this week.

The Google News Telegram channel spotted the ability to manually activate astrophotography mode in version 9.5.118 of the Pixel Camera app. Unfortunately, this update isn’t available on the Google Play Store just yet, but you can grab it via APKMirror as a split APK bundle. If you’re not experienced with sideloading then we suggest waiting for the updated app to arrive on the Play Store.

Nevertheless, activating astrophotography mode in the updated Pixel Camera app is pretty easy:

  1. Launch the camera app and swipe to the Night Sight mode.
  2. Tap the duration icon and then adjust the resulting slider from “auto” to the new “Astro” option (to the right of “Max”).
  3. You’ll then have a five-second timer by default before the astrophotography mode starts capturing exposures.

In other words, you can now activate astro mode via the slider normally used to adjust the capture time for Night Sight images.

The five-second timer can be adjusted (to three seconds or 10 seconds) or even disabled by visiting the Night Sight settings page. It’s also worth noting that the old method of activating astro mode is still available. That means launching the Night Sight mode in the Pixel Camera app, placing your phone on a stable surface or tripod, and waiting for the shutter button to display a star icon.

We’re glad Google now offers a way to manually activate astrophotography mode, even if it’s still not a discrete mode in the Pixel Camera app. Nevertheless, I’d definitely like to see a handheld astro mode in the near future as this is already a thing on some Chinese flagship phones.

  • ✇Android Authority
  • No, you aren’t getting a worse Pixel 9 Pro, Pro XL if you buy it in these marketsHadlee Simons
    Google has clarified that all Pixel 9 Pro and Pro XL models around the world have Super Actua displays. This comes after a spec sheet on a Google support page noted that models in India, Malaysia, and Singapore lacked this feature. The spec sheet has also been updated to confirm that these regional models offer LTPO tech as well. Google says the Pixel 9 phones have better screens compared to the Pixel 8 series, and it specifically offers so-called Super Actua screens with LTPO technology
     

No, you aren’t getting a worse Pixel 9 Pro, Pro XL if you buy it in these markets

19. Srpen 2024 v 13:56

  • Google has clarified that all Pixel 9 Pro and Pro XL models around the world have Super Actua displays.
  • This comes after a spec sheet on a Google support page noted that models in India, Malaysia, and Singapore lacked this feature.
  • The spec sheet has also been updated to confirm that these regional models offer LTPO tech as well.


Google says the Pixel 9 phones have better screens compared to the Pixel 8 series, and it specifically offers so-called Super Actua screens with LTPO technology for the Pro models. Unfortunately, the company’s own support page suggested that Pro and Pro XL phones in India, Malaysia, and Singapore lacked Super Actua displays and LTPO tech.

Now, a Google representative has clarified to Android Authority that all Pixel 9 Pro and Pro XL models actually have Super Actua screens:

 I can confirm that both Pixel 9 Pro and Pixel 9 Pro XL have Super Actua displays across all regions.

Google’s Super Actua branding debuted on the Pixel 8 Pro and refers to the screen’s ability to get incredibly bright without compromising color accuracy. So the lack of Super Actua branding on some Pixel 9 Pro series models would’ve implied that these devices have worse screens than variants in the US, Europe, and other markets. We’re, therefore, glad that Google has effectively confirmed that this was an error. For what it’s worth, the Pixel 9 Pro and Pro XL tout 2,000 nits of HDR brightness and 3,000 nits of peak brightness.

The original spec sheet didn’t list LTPO screens for Pixel 9 Pro series phones in India, Malaysia, and Singapore. Google didn’t specifically tell us that these variants actually have LTPO tech, but the company’s spec sheet has since been updated to note as such. Check out the original spec listing and the updated listing below.

LTPO technology enables more granular screen refresh rates, down to 10Hz or even 1Hz. By comparison, phones without LTPO screens usually offer a minimum refresh rate of 60Hz. The ability to dip far below 60Hz opens the door to improved battery life, especially when reading, viewing pictures, or using an always-on display.

Either way, we’re glad Google has clarified this situation. So you don’t have to worry about getting an inferior phone if you’re in India, Malaysia, or Singapore.

  • ✇Android Authority
  • It finally feels like Google is ready for a Pixel Flip… next yearRyan Haines
    If you didn’t already know, I like flip phones. I’ve been using the Motorola Razr Plus (2024) and Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 6 since they came out, and I’ve already theorized about what a flippable iPhone would look like. Now, it’s Google’s turn for my elevator pitch. I think it’s finally time for a Google Pixel Flip, but I think Google should probably wait until 2025 to launch it, and here’s why. Finally, cooler under pressure Credit: C. Scott Brown / Android Authority If you’ve ever used a f
     

It finally feels like Google is ready for a Pixel Flip… next year

18. Srpen 2024 v 16:00

If you didn’t already know, I like flip phones. I’ve been using the Motorola Razr Plus (2024) and Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 6 since they came out, and I’ve already theorized about what a flippable iPhone would look like. Now, it’s Google’s turn for my elevator pitch. I think it’s finally time for a Google Pixel Flip, but I think Google should probably wait until 2025 to launch it, and here’s why.

Finally, cooler under pressure

Google Pixel 9 Pro Fold in hand

Credit: C. Scott Brown / Android Authority

If you’ve ever used a flip phone, be it a Galaxy Z Flip 6, Razr, or even OPPO’s Find N3 Flip, you know that the form factor has its limitations. You end up searching for the perfect mix of battery capacity, a capable chipset, and ample cooling power and find that you can only choose two of the three. Add one of Google’s roasty, toasty Tensor chips to that mix, and you’ve got a recipe for a flip phone that’s dead by noon — at least for now. Alright, I’m exaggerating, but only by a little bit.

I think 2025 will be the perfect time to put that Tensor heat under some flip phone pressure, though, because Google is finally changing its process. After four generations of Samsung-made Tensor chips, all signs point to Google switching to TSMC for what should become known as the Tensor G5. And, if you remember what happened when Qualcomm did the same thing when it moved from the Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 (made by Samsung) to the Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 (made by TSMC), you’ll know that the change in process should come with much better thermal performance.

Qualcomm switched from Samsung to TSMC for better thermals, and it sounds like Google's next.

Of course, that change may or may not come with a boost to raw performance power, but we know that’s not really Google’s priority. The current Tensor lineup already benchmarks behind Qualcomm’s top-tier Snapdragon 8 Gen 3, but we’re usually willing to give it at least somewhat of a pass because of all the AI features it has to power. Would I love to see the Tensor G5 bring a little more power to Pixel? Sure, but I’m happy to settle for better thermals in the meantime.

Once Google controls that heat, it will probably feel a bit more comfortable tackling the other limitations of the flip form factor. As soon as it settles on a chipset that doesn’t chew through the battery like it’s going out of style, it will be able to work out a battery capacity and cooling system that can fit within the pocket-friendly confines I’m looking forward to. And if Google is after a flip phone as thin as the Pixel 9 Pro Fold, it might be a true feat of engineering.

Third time’s the charm (seriously, though)

Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 6 vs Motorola Razr Plus cover screens

Credit: Ryan Haines / Android Authority

I’m also perfectly happy for Google to wait another year before launching its first Pixel Flip because that’s about when the best foldable phones hit their stride. It usually takes one or two tries before the hinge feels locked in and the crease begins to shrink. Think about it — the OnePlus Open is OPPO’s Find N3, the Galaxy Z Fold 3 is when Samsung finally started using tougher materials, and we’re kind of on the third Motorola Razr redesign as long as we don’t count the 2022 model that only came to China.

So, in 2025, Google will also be developing its third generation of foldable phones. By then, I think it will have learned a thing or two (if it hasn’t already). We’ve already seen quite the design evolution from the first Pixel Fold to the Pixel 9 Pro Fold, and now all Google has to do is find a way to scale it down. Its revamped hinge is a solid improvement over the original, opening easier and settling flatter after just one year of development. Google has also swapped from the sizable top and bottom bezels on its first Pixel Fold to thin ones with a punch hole selfie camera on its second, bringing it in line with most other book-style foldables.

I was also somewhat worried about how Google would combine its signature camera bar with a compact flip form factor, but it seems to have handled that on the Pixel 9 Pro Fold, too. The simple answer is that it’s not as married to the camera bar as I initially expected — which is good news for a flip phone. Instead of stretching its sensors across the back panel, it cut the camera bar in half and stacked two sensors on top of each other. So, if I had to guess, a Pixel Flip would then cut that modified camera bar in half again, giving us a two-camera setup similar to what is already on the Pixel 9 — complete with the excellent image processing that we already know it’s capable of.

Perhaps the biggest mystery after that is what Google would do with its cover screen (other than call it the Pixel Window, of course). It could either copy Samsung with an oddly shaped panel, mimic Motorola with one that stretches around the cameras (I doubt it), or follow OPPO with a narrower, phone-shaped display that sits next to the panels instead. I’m not sure which one I’d want, but I know that the revamped Pixel Weather widget would be a must-have, as would flexible app support — please don’t give me a Good Lock-like experience, Google.

Let’s face it: flip phones are just easier

Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 6 vs Motorola Razr Plus Motorola weather widget

Credit: Ryan Haines / Android Authority

On top of it all, flip phones (like blondes) have more fun. Whereas book-style foldables tend to get lumped in as super-expensive devices for power users, flip phones are usually more affordable and seen as fashion statements. I think Google’s clean, colorful flavor of Android falls into the latter more than the former. Material You is loaded with color-matching options, and its large, relatively simple widgets seem like they’d flow perfectly across a relatively compact cover screen. Oh, and Google’s straightforward Gmail, Google Photos, and Messages interfaces should be easy enough to scale down for a pocket-friendly experience.

The fact that flip phones are typically more affordable should help Google’s chances, too. Unless you’re committed to a book-style foldable, it’s probably impossible to imagine spending $1,800 on your next phone. Dropping around $1,000, on the other hand, is somehow much more acceptable. Google has already bumped the price of its Pixel 9 Pro (the smaller one) to a grand, and the Galaxy Z Flip 6 now costs more than that at $1,100. So, if Google can ready up a Pixel Flip that undercuts Samsung, it might be onto something.

Google's Pixel UI and Gemini features are just the right kind of fun for a flip phone.

Even if Google launches a Pixel 10 Pro Flip (or some equally convoluted name) that matches the Galaxy Z Flip 7 dollar for dollar, I think it’ll be on the right track. Currently, Samsung’s expensive flip phone only really has to compete with the Motorola Razr Plus (2024), which it largely beats by offering longer software support, more reliable cameras, and a few Galaxy AI features ready ahead of the Moto AI rollout. Google can easily roll in with a matching seven years of updates, pack in its Magic Editor and Add Me features, and put Gemini in every last piece of Pixel UI. Once it does, Samsung will finally have to worry about someone not named Apple.

That is, of course, my dream for 2025. It feels like Google should be ready by then, and it all hinges on the switch from Samsung to TSMC for the Tensor G5 chip. If that happens and it works out like I think it will, I’ll carry a Google-branded flip phone for a long time to come.

  • ✇Boing Boing
  • Inside the struggle to unionize the animation industryThom Dunn
    In the wake of the recent unionization efforts, such as the Writer's Guild strike, the Animation Guild is also pushing for more power in the industry. Production houses such as Dreamworks and Pixar—once celebrated for their revolutionary in-house work and style—have increasingly outsourced their once-award-winning animation labor. — Read the rest The post Inside the struggle to unionize the animation industry appeared first on Boing Boing.
     

Inside the struggle to unionize the animation industry

Od: Thom Dunn
19. Srpen 2024 v 22:43
Image: Los Angeles Times Photographic Collection at the UCLA Library / Wikimedia Commons (CC-BY 4.0

In the wake of the recent unionization efforts, such as the Writer's Guild strike, the Animation Guild is also pushing for more power in the industry.

Production houses such as Dreamworks and Pixar—once celebrated for their revolutionary in-house work and style—have increasingly outsourced their once-award-winning animation labor. — Read the rest

The post Inside the struggle to unionize the animation industry appeared first on Boing Boing.

A little more on another Intel executive departure

18. Červenec 2024 v 20:42

SemiAccurate has a little more on Intel executive departures even though this one is half known.
Read more


The post A little more on another Intel executive departure appeared first on SemiAccurate.

Microsoft Absolutely Screws Intel and AMD Over AI PCs

8. Květen 2024 v 16:32

It looks like Microsoft is turning on Intel and AMD over AI PCs.
Read more


The post Microsoft Absolutely Screws Intel and AMD Over AI PCs appeared first on SemiAccurate.

  • ✇Mobile semiconductors blog
  • Smartphone and tablet processor market share in 2014Vegator
    Strategy Analytics has published its yearly report detailing global smartphone application processor market share in 2014. The total market had sales of about $21 billion with robust growth of 21%. The report shows that Qualcomm continued to lead the market in terms of revenue share with 52%, followed by Apple with 18% and MediaTek with 14%. The Apple number most likely reflects an estimate because Apple does not sell its chips to third parties. In fourth and fifth place were Speadtrum and Samsu
     

Smartphone and tablet processor market share in 2014

Od: Vegator
7. Květen 2015 v 14:22
Strategy Analytics has published its yearly report detailing global smartphone application processor market share in 2014. The total market had sales of about $21 billion with robust growth of 21%. The report shows that Qualcomm continued to lead the market in terms of revenue share with 52%, followed by Apple with 18% and MediaTek with 14%. The Apple number most likely reflects an estimate because Apple does not sell its chips to third parties. In fourth and fifth place were Speadtrum and Samsung LSI. The report mentions that HiSilicon, Intel and MediaTek had bigger growth than Qualcomm in 2014.

Qualcomm's strength based on Snapdragon 800 series wins in higher-tier phones


According to the report, Qualcomm's leadership was largely based on design wins for its Snapdragon 801 and Snapdragon 805 SoCs in the higher-tier market. Examples of this include the Samsung Galaxy S5 and LG G3. However, as I have previously reported Samsung has increased its use of in-house application processors starting from the second half of 2014, culminating in the exclusive use of Exynos 7420 in the Galaxy S6 in 2015, putting pressure on Qualcomm.

Baseband share in 2014


Strategy Analytics has also published a report with details about baseband (modem) market share in smartphones. According to the report, LTE (4G) basebands accounted for 50% of cellular baseband share in 2014, and the figure is likely to increase significantly in 2015. Qualcomm led in LTE basebands, but HiSilicon, Intel, Marvell, MediaTek and Samsung also increased LTE baseband shipments.

In terms of revenues in the overall baseband market, Qualcomm, MediaTek, Speadtrum, Marvell and Intel had the top positions in 2104. Qualcomm had 66% revenue share, followed by MediaTek with 17% and Speadtrum with 5% sare. Given the product lines of the respective companies in 2014, Qualcomm's revenues are based on both integrated SoC and separate modems, while Intel's sales were mostly separate modem chips, while the other players mostly shipped a mix of integrated SoCs and modem chips.

Comparison with 2013


Comparing with the reports that Strategy Analytics issued for 2013, Qualcomm saws it baseband revenue share remain relatively stable at 66% compared to 64% in 2013. MediaTek saw its AP market share increase from 10% in 2013 to 14% in 2014, and its baseband share increased.

Tablet processor market in 2014


According to another report issued by Strategy Analytics, the market for tablet processors grew 18% in 2014 to $4.2 billion. The top-five revenue share positions were occupied by Apple, Intel, Qualcomm, MediaTek and Samsung LSI. Apple led with 27% share (which must be an estimate), followed by Intel with 17% and Qualcomm with 16% share.

Notable is the absence among the top five of traditional leaders in the Chinese white-box market such as Rockchip and Allwinner. This most likely reflects in increase in brand name tablet shipments at the expense of the white-box tablet market, the low selling prices of white-box tablet processor and the encroachment of MediaTek and Intel into that segment.

Source: Strategy Analytics (Smartphone AP market share), Strategy Analytics (cellular baseband market share), Strategy Analytics (Tablet processor market share)
  • ✇Mobile semiconductors blog
  • China tablet processor market declines in Q1Vegator
    According to a recent article published by DigiTimes Research, tablet applications processor unit shipments to Chinese manufacturers grew by 4.7% in Q4 2014 to reach 34.7 million units. However, shipments are estimated to decline by 24% in Q1 2015 when compared to Q4 2104. Year-over-year, shipments are expected to drop by about 8%, which marks the first time quarterly tablet processor shipments in China experience a year-over-year decline. Excess inventory from Q4 2014 is given as a cause for th
     

China tablet processor market declines in Q1

Od: Vegator
6. Březen 2015 v 10:08
According to a recent article published by DigiTimes Research, tablet applications processor unit shipments to Chinese manufacturers grew by 4.7% in Q4 2014 to reach 34.7 million units. However, shipments are estimated to decline by 24% in Q1 2015 when compared to Q4 2104. Year-over-year, shipments are expected to drop by about 8%, which marks the first time quarterly tablet processor shipments in China experience a year-over-year decline. Excess inventory from Q4 2014 is given as a cause for the decline in shipments.

MediaTek leads Chinese tablet market in Q1 2015


Based on information published by DigiTimes Research, MediaTek, Rockchip, Allwinner and Intel were the top four providers of tablet processors in China, in that order, in Q4 2014. For Q1 2015, MediaTek is estimated to expand it market share by about 1% to reach 28.5%, although absolute shipments will decline significantly due to the overall market decline.

Rockchip, who was the market share leader for most of 2014, is estimated to see its market share remain stable in Q1 2015, registering a 0.6% increase according to DigiTimes Research, who did not supply a market share figure for Rockchip, although it is probably in the region of 25%. DigiTimes mentioned that Rockchip's new chips launched at the end of 2014 (which includes the Cortex-A7-based RK3126 and RK3128) have not yet reached strong shipments.

Meanwhile, Allwinner continues the trend of a steady decline a market share, being expected to have a share of 15.6% compared to 17.6% in Q4 2014. This allows it to be passed by Intel in terms of market share, with Intel's market share estimated to rise from 15% to 16.3% in Q1 2015.

Intel's global market share has increased and is significant, especially revenue share


It should be noted that in terms of global market share, Intel has a stronger position than what would be inferred just from the Chinese market due to a strong position at brand-name tablet manufacturers outside of China, such as Asus and Acer. The other chip players in the Chinese tablet processor market, especially Rockchip and Allwinner, have a weak position outside of China. Due to the higher-end nature of Intel's product mix, Intel also has a higher revenue share, whereas the sales of companies such as Allwinner are mostly concentrated in low-end processors. It has been reported that Intel is abandoning its "contra-revenue" strategy of subsidizing tablet processor sales, which it probably can afford to do because its chip solutions are fairly competitive on their own.

Global brand names gain share, use different chip suppliers


In the global tablet marker, brand name manufacturers are gaining share and dominate the dollar value of the market, also for semiconductor content. Apple and Samsung, who lead the global tablet market, use a lot of in-house chip solutions (100% in the case of Apple). Samsung also uses suppliers like Qualcomm and Marvell, who otherwise do not have a strong position in the Chinese tablet market.

MediaTek used to have strong market share among Taiwanese tablet manufacturers such as Asus and Acer. However, its market share their seems to have been eroded significantly by strong adoption of Intel's Atom SoCs at these manufacturers (who have strong ties with Intel through PC manufacturing).

Popular tablet SoCs as of Q1 2015


By analyzing the tablet models offered on Chinese e-commerce portals, one can get some idea of what SoCs are currently used the most in tablets from China. I took a look at the tablet offerings on Banggood.com.

Rockchip's RK3188 (which probably means the RK3188T variant in most cases) is still widely used. Originally a mid-range performance segment SoC, there are indications that Rockchip built a significant inventory of this SoC (which is not particularly cheap in terms of manufactuing cost) last year, and the chip has been used in cheaper models as well. Rockchip's RK3126, which is more cost-effective than RK3188, is slowly starting to appear in new tablet models.

Meanwhile, Rockchip's high-end RK3288 is used in several models from Pipo, Teclast and FNF, and these seem to be reasonably popular for a high-end product. I have some concerns about power consumption and battery life regarding these products due to the processor cores used in the SoC.

The most popular MediaTek chips used in tablets are SoCs with 3G connectivity such as the low-end dual-core MT8312 and quad-core MT8382 (the equivalent of the MT6572 and MT6582 smartphone SoCs), as well as the more performance oriented octa-core MT6592/MT8392, which provides good performance and battery-life and has moved down to lower-priced tablet models. Additionally, the new 64-bit MT8752 with 4G (equivalent to the MT6752 smartphone SoC) is starting to appear in new models (Cube, Teclast). For WiFi-only tablets, the MT8127 (which has a relatively powerful GPU for a cheap SoC) is used in some low-to-mid-range tablets.

Allwinner's A31s, which was released in 2013 but perhaps its last successful product introduction, appears to be still used for production. Low-end tablets are available with the A23 and A33 SoCs, although the A33 does not seem to have been very successful and has been affected by weakness in the low-end segment of the tablet market.

Allwinner's new octa-core A83T has started to appear in a few new models, and is probably replacing the high-end A80 Octa which is likely to have had low profit margins.

Finally, Intel's Z3735F, Z3735G and Z3736F Atom SoCs are widely used in tablets, although most prominently in higher-prices models that come equipped with Microsoft Windows.

Update (15 March): 3G smartphone chip inventory unloaded onto Chinese tablet market


In an article published on 13 March 2015, DigiTimes Research reported that due to a high inventory level of 3G smartphone solutions in China, such chips will be unloaded onto the Chinese tablet market by players such as MediaTek, Qualcomm and Spreadtrum.

3G-enabled chip solutions for tablets are usually very similar to similar solutions for smartphones. For example, MediaTek's smartphone solutions have commonly been used in tablets, while MediaTek's official 3G-enabled tablet solutions most likely consist of a chip virtually identical to the smartphone version, with the main difference being a different model number (e.g. MT6582 vs MT8382). That MediaTek would target any excess inventory of 3G smartphone chipsets at the tablet market is not surprising.

However, I am little sceptical about the volume that may be involved. The Chinese tablet market is clearly contracting in the near term, and the volumes in the tablet market are considerably smaller than the smartphone market, even the declining 3G part of the smartphone SoC market. To put things into perspective, MediaTek's quarterly 3G smartphone chip shipments were on the order of 70 million in Q4 2014, while its 3G tablet chip shipments were probably in the range of 5 to 10 million.

The article also mentions Qualcomm, which in the past has not been a major player in the Chinese white-box tablet market. It mentions rumours that Qualcomm may form a partnership with Allwinner (which has been consistently losing market share) to penetrate the tablet market in China. The article also states that while Intel has introduced 3G tablet solutions, Intel's solutions are unlikely to be widely adopted until Intel introduces the 4G version of its Atom x3 (formerly SoFIA) platform.

Sources: DigiTimes (Q1 2015 China tablet AP market article)DigiTimes Research (smartphone chips inventory unloaded to tablet market)

Updated 15 March 2015.
  • ✇Mobile semiconductors blog
  • New mobile SoCs announced at MWCVegator
    At the Mobile World Congress this week, several new mobile SoCs are being announced. MediaTek announces cost-reduced MT6753 for smartphones MediaTek anounced two mobile SoCs, the MT6753 for smartphones and the MT8173 for tablets. The MT6753 appears to be a cost-reduced version of the successful MT6752, equpped with "WorldMode" modem technology. By offering compatibility with the CDMA2000 standard, it gives customers worldwide greater diversity and flexibility in their product layouts, accord
     

New mobile SoCs announced at MWC

Od: Vegator
2. Březen 2015 v 11:41
At the Mobile World Congress this week, several new mobile SoCs are being announced.

MediaTek announces cost-reduced MT6753 for smartphones


MediaTek anounced two mobile SoCs, the MT6753 for smartphones and the MT8173 for tablets.

The MT6753 appears to be a cost-reduced version of the successful MT6752, equpped with "WorldMode" modem technology. By offering compatibility with the CDMA2000 standard, it gives customers worldwide greater diversity and flexibility in their product layouts, according to MediaTek. Features include an octa-core Cortex-A53 CPU up to 1.5 GHz and a Mali-T720 GPU with an unspecified number of cores. ARM's Mali-T720 GPU is positioned at a significantly lower performance bracket than the Mali-T760 used in the MT6752, positioning the MT6753 below the MT6752 in terms of cost and performance.

The MT6753 is described as being compatible with the previously announced MT6735 for entry-level smartphones. The MT6735 has four Cortex-A53 cores instead of eight but otherwise has a similar configuration with a Mali T720 GPU.

High-performance MT8173 tablet SoC uses small big.LITTLE clusters with Cortex-A72


The MT8173 is a high-performance tablet processor (without integrated modem) that utilizes ARM's new Cortex-A72 core in a big.LITTLE configuration. By using only two Cortex-A72 cores (clocked up to 2.4 GHz) as well as two Cortex-A53 cores, the chip has a lower cost than would be the case with the four-by-four core configuration commonly used for big.LITTLE designs, while still providing good performance.

The Cortex-A72 core, the successor of Cortex-A57, appears to be seeing quick adoption as Qualcomm has already announced performance-segment smartphone SoCs (Snapdragon 618 and 620) featuring the core.

MediaTek has previously used a similar two-by-two big.LITTLE configuration in its MT8135(V) tablet SoC, which has two Cortex-A15 cores and Cortex-A7 cores. This chip was used in Amazon tablets but otherwise did not see much adoption.

Other features include a PowerVR GX6250 GPU, which is part of Imagination's Series 6XT family, with higher performance and efficiency than the G6200 GPU used in chips such as the MT8135 and MT6595.

Other tablet SoCs not yet publicly announced by MediaTek


Meanwhile, tablet product announcements by Lenovo also refer to the MT8161 and MT8165 SoCs, which have not been announced. From the specifications of the Lenovo Tab 2 A8 which is using it, the MT8161 appears to be a tablet SoC without modem with quad-core Cortex-A53 CPU running up to 1.3 GHz, while the MT8165 (used in the Tab 2 A10) is a similar SoC with the CPU running up to 1.5 GHz. The 4G version of the Lenovo tablets come equipped with the MT8735 (Tab 2 A8) and MT8732 (Tab 2 A10). These chips are the tablet versions of the MT6735 and MT6732 smartphone SoCs.

MT6795 renamed to Helio X10


In a closed-door presentation at MWC, MediaTek also presented the Helio X10 smartphone SoC, featuring a 64-bit octa-core CPU up to 2.2 GHz, 120 Hz display refresh rate and H.265 video encode up to 4K2K @ 30 fps. A photograph of a slide taken at the presentation strongly suggests that Helio X10 is nothing other than the delayed MT6795 SoC, whose specifications closely match. Devices using this chip are likely to have already started production. MediaTek also talked about the Helio P series, a high-performance platform, which will make its way into devices before the end of the year.

Qualcomm gives preview of next-generation Snapdragon 820 SoC


In a press release, Qualcomm has given a preview of the Snapdragon 820, which utilizes Qualcomm's new custom 64-bit CPU architecture for mobile devices called Kryo. The chip will start sampling in the second half of 2015 according to Qualcomm, with devices becoming available in 2016. It will be manufactured on a next-generation FinFET process (which probably means TSMC's 16FF+, but Samsung cannot be excluded). In the press release, Qualcomm does not mention whether the chip will conform to ARM's ARMv8 instruction set architecture.

In conjuction with the Snapdragon 820, Qualcomm also announced the Zeroth hardware/software platform focusing on device intelligence features including video and audio recognition techniques (such as visual object and face recognition).

Intel introduces tablet and smartphone SoCs with integrated modem


Intel has finally introduced SoCs with an integrated cellular modem in its Atom system-on-a-chip product line. The former SoFIA platform has been renamed to Atom X3 and features multi-core 64-bit Atom processors with integrated 3G or 4G LTE modem technology. The following products are available:
  • Atom X3-C3130, which has dual-core Atom CPU running up to 1.0 GHz and integrates a 3G modem. It features Mali-400 MP2 GPU. Maximum display resolution is 1280x800. It appears to be in the same market segment as MediaTek's previous-generation 3G SoCs such as MT6572 and MT6582 and other SoCs that are already on the market.
  • Atom X3-C3230RK, which was developed by Intel partner Rockchip following the agreement announced last year. It has quad-core Atom CPU, integrates a 3G modem and features a Mali-450 MP4 GPU.
  • Atom X3-C3440, a quad-core Atom CPU platform that integrates a Cat 6 LTE 4G modem. It has an Mali-T720 MP2 GPU. This product appears to be one that is most likely to succeed in the market.
All feature a 32-bit memory interface with support for LPDDR2 (and DDR3/DDR3L with the X3-C3230RK). These are the first Intel products that have features (such as the integrated modem) that make them specifically suitable for the smartphone market. They also target cellular-enabled tablets.

The 3G products are a little behind the times, and their success is uncertain. It will be interesting observe whether Rockchip was able to develop the X3-C3230RK in time (one would expect Intel to have greater expertise/resources so that the other products will appear on the market first).

One notable fact is that these are among the first SoCs to integrate an ARM GPU core with a non-ARM CPU.

Intel announces first 14 nm Atom SoCs for tablets and all-in-ones


Intel also rolled out its first 14 nm Atom SoCs, the Atom x5 and x7 processor series (formely codenamed Cherry Trail) with  Intel Gen 8 graphics, targeting tablets and small screen all-in-ones.

Intel has also introduced a new stand-alone modem chip, XMM 7360, which support LTE Cat 10 and download speeds up to 450 Mbps, as well as wireless connnectivity products (including WiFi/Bluetooth, GNSS/GPS and NFC solutions).

Sources: MediaTek (MT6753 announcement), MediaTek (MT8173 announcement), Qualcomm (Snapdragon 820/Zeroth platform preview), Intel (MWC announcements), Intel Atom x3 Processor Series Brief
  • ✇Pocketables
  • Zoom Enhance (still) rolling out to Pixel 8 seriesPaul E King
    Using generative AI to zoom in and enhance something is no longer the sole domain of Photoshop and bad CBS detective shows, it’s now on device in the two latest Pixel phones. Being as this is Google, the option to use Zoom Enhance is rolling out and there’s no good way to force it to work. I highly suspect the role out is both anti-needs based, and based on who’s been a critic of Google in the past, because as with other updates it’s not on my device nearly a week after announcement. Zoom
     

Zoom Enhance (still) rolling out to Pixel 8 series

19. Srpen 2024 v 23:57

Using generative AI to zoom in and enhance something is no longer the sole domain of Photoshop and bad CBS detective shows, it’s now on device in the two latest Pixel phones.

Being as this is Google, the option to use Zoom Enhance is rolling out and there’s no good way to force it to work. I highly suspect the role out is both anti-needs based, and based on who’s been a critic of Google in the past, because as with other updates it’s not on my device nearly a week after announcement.

Zoom Enhance was first detailed in an August 13th Google Blog post about the Pixel 9, and stated it’s rolling out that day, but after forcing updates to the current Google Photos version and even rebooting my phone it’s still locked behind a rollout schedule somewhere.

Once it rolls out it appears it will show under the Tools section of Google Photos.

On a side note I went to the Play Store, manage apps and devices and was assured there were no updates available and given no option to check for updates. Clicking Manage, then selecting Updates available allowed me to refresh and surprise surprise 19 updates were there. So don’t believe you’re completely up to date because Google is telling you you are.

I am highly looking forward to the horrors of Google’s AI Zoom Enhance – because you know it’s going to be as amusing as Photoshop’s generative fill failures.

[9to5Google]

Zoom Enhance (still) rolling out to Pixel 8 series by Paul E King first appeared on Pocketables.

  • ✇Pocketables
  • A whole new generation of Pixel products is dropping, and I’ll probably skip this roundPaul E King
    Looking for an angry rant? Look elsewhere. This year will see the release of the Pixel 9, Pixel 9 Pro, Pixel 9 Pro XL, and the Pixel 9 Pro Fold as well as a range of accessories involving new watches and earbuds. While the Pixel 9 Pro Fold is eye catching, the price tag just hurts. The rest of the phones are, by specs, a decent upgrade from the 8 series, and the satellite SOS is a feature I’d love so have in my back pocket but man. The zoom enhance looks like it’s going to be great, I c
     

A whole new generation of Pixel products is dropping, and I’ll probably skip this round

16. Srpen 2024 v 17:12

Looking for an angry rant? Look elsewhere.

This year will see the release of the Pixel 9, Pixel 9 Pro, Pixel 9 Pro XL, and the Pixel 9 Pro Fold as well as a range of accessories involving new watches and earbuds.

While the Pixel 9 Pro Fold is eye catching, the price tag just hurts. The rest of the phones are, by specs, a decent upgrade from the 8 series, and the satellite SOS is a feature I’d love so have in my back pocket but man.

The zoom enhance looks like it’s going to be great, I could put that to use every day.

But here’s the kicker – it’s just not enough of an upgrade over my currently great Pixel 8 Pro to ease $1799 out of my hands (the Fold) even with an estimated $699 trade in on my phone.

They also include a Gemini Advance for a year and 2TB of storage… a 239 value… what… ok that intrigues me. $200 store credit on Pixel 9 Pro or Pro XL. Which would lock me into their ecosystem further.

Man their larger phones are pricy this year and their biggest hurdle to me upgrading has been placed by Google by having a really good Pixel 8 experience (with Assistant).

Maybe once they have the Gemini experience not feel like a totally chopped up barely working Assistant I’ll look at it, but I generally felt the Tensor chips for AI purposes barely got used, and generally performed slower than my old Samsung Galaxy S21 Ultra.

No hate, just not enough bait to lure me this time, and too many half finished Google projects sitting on the 8 that were rolled out half ready for me to be enthused at a hardware upgrade dedicated for Gemini and AI when it barely functions as an Assistant replacement.

A whole new generation of Pixel products is dropping, and I’ll probably skip this round by Paul E King first appeared on Pocketables.

  • ✇Semiconductor Engineering
  • 3.5D: The Great CompromiseEd Sperling
    The semiconductor industry is converging on 3.5D as the next best option in advanced packaging, a hybrid approach that includes stacking logic chiplets and bonding them separately to a substrate shared by other components. This assembly model satisfies the need for big increases in performance while sidestepping some of the thorniest issues in heterogeneous integration. It establishes a middle ground between 2.5D, which already is in widespread use inside of data centers, and full 3D-ICs, which
     

3.5D: The Great Compromise

21. Srpen 2024 v 09:01

The semiconductor industry is converging on 3.5D as the next best option in advanced packaging, a hybrid approach that includes stacking logic chiplets and bonding them separately to a substrate shared by other components.

This assembly model satisfies the need for big increases in performance while sidestepping some of the thorniest issues in heterogeneous integration. It establishes a middle ground between 2.5D, which already is in widespread use inside of data centers, and full 3D-ICs, which the chip industry has been struggling to commercialize for the better part of a decade.

A 3.5D architecture offers several key advantages:

  • It creates enough physical separation to effectively address thermal dissipation and noise.
  • It provides a way to add more SRAM into high-speed designs. SRAM has been the go-to choice for processor cache since the mid-1960s, and remains an essential element for faster processing. But SRAM no longer scales at the same rate as digital transistors, so it is consuming more real estate (in percentage terms) at each new node. And because the size of a reticle is fixed, the best available option is to add area by stacking chiplets vertically.
  • By thinning the interface between processing elements and memory, a 3.5D approach also can shorten the distances that signals need to travel and greatly improve processing speeds well beyond a planar implementation. This is essential with large language models and AI/ML, where the amount of data that needs to be processed quickly is exploding.

Chipmakers still point to fully integrated 3D-ICs as the best performing alternative to a planar SoC, but packing everything into a 3D configuration makes it harder to deal with physical effects. Thermal dissipation is probably the most difficult to contend with. Workloads can vary significantly, creating dynamic thermal gradients and trapping heat in unexpected places, which in turn reduce the lifespan and reliability of chips. On top of that, power and substrate noise become more problematic at each new node, as do concerns about electromagnetic interference.

“What the market has adopted first is high-performance chips, and those produce a lot of heat,” said Marc Swinnen, director of product marketing at Ansys. “They have gone for expensive cooling systems with a huge number of fans and heat sinks, and they have opted for silicon interposers, which arguably are some of the most expensive technologies for connecting chips together. But it also gives the highest performance and is very good for thermal because it matches the coefficient of thermal expansion. Thermal is one of the big reasons that’s been successful. In addition to that, you may want bigger systems with more stuff that you can’t fit on one chip. That’s just a reticle-size limitation. Another is heterogeneous integration, where you want multiple different processes, like an RF process or the I/O, which don’t need to be in 5nm.”

A 3.5D assembly also provides more flexibility to add additional processor cores, and higher yield because known good die can be manufactured and tested separately, a concept first pioneered by Xilinx in 2011 at 28nm.

3.5D is a loose amalgamation of all these approaches. It can include two to three chiplets stacked on top of each other, or even multiple stacks laid out horizontally.

“It’s limited vertical, and not just for thermal reasons,” said Bill Chen, fellow and senior technical advisor at ASE Group. “It’s also for performance reasons. But thermal is the limiting factor, and we’ve talked about many different materials to help with that — diamond and graphene — but that limitation is still there.”

This is why the most likely combination, at least initially, will be processors stacked on SRAM, which simplifies the cooling. The heat generated by high utilization of different processing elements can be removed with heat sinks or liquid cooling. And with one or more thinned out substrates, signals will travel shorter distances, which in turn uses less power to move data back and forth between processors and memory.

“Most likely, this is going to be logic over memory on a logic process,” said Javier DeLaCruz, fellow and senior director of Silicon Ops Engineering at Arm. “These are all contained within an SoC normally, but a portion of that is going to be SRAM, which does not scale very well from node to node. So having logic over memory and a logic process is really the winning solution, and that’s one of the better use cases for 3D because that’s what really shortens your connectivity. A processor generally doesn’t talk to another processor. They talk to each other through memory, so having the memory on a different floor with no latency between them is pretty attractive.”

The SRAM doesn’t necessarily have to be at the same node as the processors advanced node, which also helps with yield, and reliability. At a recent Samsung Foundry event, Taejoong Song, the company’s vice president of foundry business development, showed a roadmap of a 3.5D configuration using a 2nm chiplet stacked on a 4nm chiplet next year, and a 1.4nm chiplet on top of a 2nm chiplet in 2027.


Fig. 1: Samsung’s heterogeneous integration roadmap showing stacked DRAM (HBM), chiplets and co-packaged optics. Source: Samsung Foundry

Intel Foundry’s approach is similar in many ways. “Our 3.5D technology is implemented on a substrate with silicon bridges,” said Kevin O’Buckley, senior vice president and general manager of Foundry Services at Intel. “This is not an incredibly costly, low-yielding, multi-reticle form-factor silicon, or even RDL. We’re using thin silicon slices in a much more cost-efficient fashion to enable that die-to-die connectivity — even stacked die-to-die connectivity — through a silicon bridge. So you get the same advantages of silicon density, the same SI (signal integrity) performance of that bridge without having to put a giant monolithic interposer underneath the whole thing, which is both cost- and capacity-prohibitive. It’s working. It’s in the lab and it’s running.”


Fig. 2: Intel’s 3.5D model. Source: Intel

The strategy here is partly evolutionary — 3.5D has been in R&D for at least several years — and part revolutionary, because thinning out the interconnect layer, figuring out a way to handle these thinner interconnect layers, and how to bond them is still a work in progress. There is a potential for warping, cracking, or other latent defects, and dynamically configuring data paths to maximize throughput is an ongoing challenge. But there have been significant advances in thermal management on two- and three-chiplet stacks.

“There will be multiple solutions,” said C.P. Hung, vice president of corporate R&D at ASE. “For example, besides the device itself and an external heat sink, a lot of people will be adding immersion cooling or local liquid cooling. So for the packaging, you can probably also expect to see the implementation of a vapor chamber, which will add a good interface from the device itself to an external heat sink. With all these challenges, we also need to target a different pitch. For example, nowadays you see mass production with a 45 to 40 pitch. That is a typical bumping solution. We expect the industry to move to a 25 to 20 micron bump pitch. Then, to go further, we need hybrid bonding, which is a less than 10 micron pitch.”


Fig. 3: Today’s interposers support more than 100,000 I/Os at a 45m pitch. Source: ASE

Hybrid bonding solves another thorny problem, which is co-planarity across thousands of micro-bumps. “People are starting to realize that the densities we’re interconnecting require a level of flatness, which the guys who make traditional things to be bonded are having a hard time meeting with reasonable yield,” David Fromm, COO at Promex Industries. “That makes it hard to build them, and the thinking is, ‘So maybe we’ve got to do something else.’ You’re starting to see some of that.”

Taming the Hydra
Managing heat remains a challenge, even with all the latest advances and a 3.5D assembly, but the ability to isolate the thermal effects from other components is the best option available today, and possibly well into the future. Still, there are other issues to contend with. Even 2.5D isn’t easy, and a large percentage of the 2.5D implementations have been bespoke designs by large systems companies with very deep pockets.

One of the big remaining challenges is closing timing so that signals arrive at the right place at the right fraction of a second. This becomes harder as more elements are added into chips, and in a 3.5D or 3D-IC, this can be incredibly complex.

“Timing ultimately is the key,” said Sutirtha Kabir, R&D director at Synopsys. “It’s not guaranteed that at whatever your temperature is, you can use the same library for timing. So the question is how much thermal- and IR-aware timing do you have to do? These are big systems. You have to make sure your sign-off is converging. There are two things coming out. There are a bunch of multi-physics effects that are all clumped together. And yes, you could traditionally do one at a time as sign-off, but that isn’t going to work very well. You need to figure out how to solve these problems simultaneously. Ultimately, you’re doing one design. It’s not one for thermal, one for IR, one for timing. The second thing is the data is exploding. How do you efficiently handle the data, because you cannot wait for days and days of runtime and simulation and analysis?”

Physically assembling these devices isn’t easy, either. “The challenge here is really in the thermal, electrical, and mechanical connection of all these various die with different thicknesses and different coefficients of thermal expansion,” said Intel’s O’Buckley. “So with three die, you’ve got the die and an active base, and those are substantially thinned to enable them to come together. And then EMIB is in the substrate. There’s always intense thermal-mechanical qualification work done to manage not just the assembly, but to ensure in the final assembly — the second-level assembly when this is going through system-level card attach — that this thing stays together.”

And depending upon demands for speed, the interconnects and interconnect materials can change. “Hybrid bonding gives you, by far, the best signal and power density,” said Arm’s DeLaCruz. “And it gives you the best thermal conductivity, because you don’t have that underfill that you would otherwise have to put in between the die, which is a pretty significant barrier. This is likely where the industry will go. It’s just a matter of having the production base.”

Hybrid bonding has been used for years for image sensors using wafer-on-wafer connections. “The tricky part is going into the logic space, where you’re moving from wafer-on-wafer to a die-on-wafer process, which is more complex,” DeLaCruz said. “While it currently would cost more, that’s a temporary problem because there’s not much of an installed base to support it and drive down the cost. There’s really no expensive material or equipment costs.”

Toward mass customization
All of this is leading toward the goal of choosing chiplets from a menu and then rapidly connecting them into some sort of architecture that is proven to work. That may not materialize for years. But commercial chiplets will show up in advanced designs over the next couple years, most likely in high-bandwidth memory with a customized processor in the stack, with more following that path in the future.

At least part of this will depend on how standardized the processes for designing, manufacturing, and testing become. “We’re seeing a lot of 2.5D from customers able to secure silicon interposers,” said Ruben Fuentes, vice president for the Design Center at Amkor Technology. “These customers want to place their chiplets on an interposer, then the full module is placed on a flip-chip substrate package. We also have customers who say they either don’t want to use a silicon interposer or cannot secure them. They prefer an RDL interconnect with S-SWIFT or with S-Connect, which serves as an interposer in very dense areas.”

But with at least a third of these leading designs only for internal use, and the remainder confined to large processor vendors, the rest of the market hasn’t caught up yet. Once it does, that will drive economies of scale and open the door to more complete assembly design kits, commercial chiplets, and more options for customization.

“Everybody is generally going in the same direction,” said Fuentes. “But not everything is the same height. HBMs are pre-packaged and are taller than ICs. HBMs could have 12 or 16 ICs stacked inside. It makes a difference from a co-planarity and thermal standpoint, and metal balancing on different layers. So now vendors are having a hard time processing all this data because suddenly you have these huge databases that are a lot bigger than the standard packaging databases. We’re seeing bridges, S-Connect, SWIFT, and then S-SWIFT. This is new territory, and we’re seeing a performance gap in the packaging tools. There’s work that needs to be done here, but software vendors have been very proactive in finding solutions. Additionally, these packages need to be routed. There is limited automated routing, so a good amount of interactive routing is still required, so it takes a lot of time.”


Fig. 4: Packaging roadmap showing bridge and hybrid bonding connections for modules and chiplets, respectively. Source: Amkor Technology

What’s missing
The key challenges ahead for 3.5D are proven reliability and customizability — requirements that are seemingly contradictory, and which are beyond the control of any single company. There are four major pieces to making all of this work.

EDA is the first important piece of the puzzle, and the challenge extends just beyond a single chip. “The IC designers have to think about a lot of things concurrently, like thermal, signal integrity, and power integrity,” said Keith Lanier, technical product management director at Synopsys. “But even beyond that, there’s a new paradigm in terms of how people need to work. Traditional packaging folks and IC designers need to work closely together to make these 3.5D designs successful.”

It’s not just about doing more with the same or fewer people. It’s doing more with different people, too. “It’s understanding the architecture definition, the functional requirements, constraints, and having those well-defined,” Lanier said. “But then it’s also feasibility, which includes partitioning and technology selection, and then prototyping and floor-planning. This is lots and lots of data that is required to be generated, and you need analysis-driven exploration, design, and implementation. And AI will be required to help designers and system design teams manage the sheer complexity of these 3.5D designs.”

Process/assembly design kits are a second critical piece, and this is likely to be split between the foundries and the OSATs. “If the customer wants a silicon interposer for a 2.5D package, it would be up to the foundry that’s going to manufacture the interposer to provide the PDK. We would provide the PDK for all of our products, such as S-SWIFT and S-Connect,” said Amkor’s Fuentes.

Setting realistic parameters is the third piece of the puzzle. While the type of processing elements and some of the analog functions may change — particularly those involving power and communication — most of the components will remain the same. That determines what can be pre-built and pre-tested, and the speed and ease of assembly.

“A lot of the standards that are being deployed, like UCIe interfaces and HBM interfaces are heading to where 20% is customization and 80% is on the shelf,” said Intel’s O’Buckley. “But we aren’t there today. At the scale that our customers are deploying these products, the economics of spending that extra time to optimize an implementation is a decimal point. It’s not leveraging 80/20 standards. We’ll get there. But most of these designs you can count on your fingers and toes because of the cost and scale required to do them. And until the infrastructure for standards-based chiplets gets mature, the barrier of entry for companies that want to do this without that scale is just too high. Still, it is going to happen.”

Ensuring processes are consistent is the fourth piece of the puzzle. The tools and the individual processes don’t need to change. “The customer has a ‘target’ for the outcome they want for a particular tool, which typically is a critical dimension measured by a metrology tool,” said David Park, vice president of marketing at Tignis. “As long as there is some ‘measurement’ that determines the goodness of some outcome, which typically is the result of a process step, we can either predict the bad outcome — and engineers have to take some corrective or preventive action — or we can optimize the recipe of that tool in real time to keep the result in the range they want.”

Park noted there is a recipe that controls the inputs. “The tool does whatever it is supposed to do,” he said. “Then you measure the output to see how far you deviated from the acceptable output.”

The challenge is that inside of a 3.5D system, what is considered acceptable output is still being defined. There are many processes with different tolerances. Defining what is consistent enough will require a broad understanding of how all the pieces work together under specific workloads, and where the potential weaknesses are that need to be adjusted.

“One of the problems here is as these densities get higher and the copper pillars get smaller, the amount of space you need between the pillar and the substrate have to be highly controlled,” said Dick Otte, president and CEO of Promex. “There’s a conflict — not so much with how you fabricate the chip, because it usually has the copper pillars on it — but with the substrate. A lot of the substrate technologies are not inherently flat. It’s the same issue with glass. You’ve got a really nice flat piece of glass. The first thing you’re going to do is put down a layer of metal and you’re going to pattern it. And then you put down a layer of dielectric, and suddenly you’ve got a lump where the conductor goes. And now, where do you put the contact points? So you always have the one plan which is going to be the contact point where all the pillars come in. But what if I only need one layer and I don’t need three?”

Conclusion
For the past decade, the chip industry has been trying to figure out a way to balance faster processing, domain-specific designs, limited reticle size, and the enormous cost of scaling an SoC. After investigating nearly every possible packaging approach, interconnect, power delivery method, substrate and dielectric material, 3.5D has emerged as the front runner — at least for now.

This approach provides the chip industry with a common thread on which to begin developing assembly design kits, commercial chiplets, and to fill in the missing tools and services throughout the supply chain. Whether this ultimately becomes a springboard for full 3D-ICs, or a platform on which to use 3D stacking more effectively, remains to be seen. But for the foreseeable future, large chipmakers have converged on a path forward to provide orders of magnitude performance improvements and a way to contain costs. The rest of the industry will be working to smooth out that path for years to come.

Related Reading
Intel Vs. Samsung Vs. TSMC
Foundry competition heats up in three dimensions and with novel technologies as planar scaling benefits diminish.
3D Metrology Meets Its Match In 3D Chips And Packages
Next-generation tools take on precision challenges in three dimensions.
Design Flow Challenged By 3D-IC Process, Thermal Variation
Rethinking traditional workflows by shifting left can help solve persistent problems caused by process and thermal variations.
Floor-Planning Evolves Into The Chiplet Era
Automatically mitigating thermal issues becomes a top priority in heterogeneous designs.

The post 3.5D: The Great Compromise appeared first on Semiconductor Engineering.

  • ✇Techdirt
  • Jimmy Kimmel’s Use Of George Santos’ Cameo Videos Found To Be Fair UseMike Masnick
    Would you believe that Disney’s famously copyright-maximalist lawyers have just brought us a nice victory for fair use? Earlier this year, we wrote about disgraced former Congressman George Santos suing Disney and Jimmy Kimmel after Kimmel used some of Santos’ Cameo videos (that Kimmel had secretly requested) in a, well, somewhat trollish fashion. Santos, who was drummed out of Congress after facing a bunch of charges regarding questionable handling of campaign funds, started promoting that he w
     

Jimmy Kimmel’s Use Of George Santos’ Cameo Videos Found To Be Fair Use

20. Srpen 2024 v 21:02

Would you believe that Disney’s famously copyright-maximalist lawyers have just brought us a nice victory for fair use?

Earlier this year, we wrote about disgraced former Congressman George Santos suing Disney and Jimmy Kimmel after Kimmel used some of Santos’ Cameo videos (that Kimmel had secretly requested) in a, well, somewhat trollish fashion. Santos, who was drummed out of Congress after facing a bunch of charges regarding questionable handling of campaign funds, started promoting that he would record Cameo videos for between $350 and $500 a video.

At one point, he had bragged about how many people had paid him for Cameo videos. This resulted in Kimmel having his staff purchase some Cameo videos, which made Santos look silly. The videos were then played on Kimmel’s ABC late night show. Santos claimed that the videos were purchased under a “personal” use license, which was a lot less expensive than a commercial use license.

The argument was that the videos were used “commercially,” which meant that the license had been violated, and the videos infringed on Santos’ copyright. In my initial write-up of the case, I pointed out that Kimmel had a very strong fair use claim. Some commentators felt that Santos’ argument was a bit stronger than I made out, but it appears the judge in the case, Denise Cote, who has been involved in a number of high-profile copyright cases, agreed with me that it was fair use.

Notably, she granted Disney and Kimmel’s motion to dismiss on fair use grounds. That’s important because some people believe that fair use shouldn’t be decided so early in a case. Either it should go to the summary judgment stage or (much worse) is an issue for a jury to decide.

However, Cote says here that Kimmel’s use was pretty obviously fair use. She notes that the Second Circuit has said that in obvious fair use cases, you can find fair use at the motion to dismiss stage:

The Second Circuit has specifically acknowledged “the possibility of fair use being so clearly established by a complaint as to support dismissal of a copyright infringement claim.”

As in most fair use cases, the court went through the basic four factors test required to determine fair use. The court awarded the first factor (purpose of the use) to Disney/Kimmel because it was clearly about commentary on Santos:

In short, a reasonable observer would understand that JKL showed the Videos to comment on the willingness of Santos — a public figure who had recently been expelled from Congress for allegedly fraudulent activity including enriching himself through a fraudulent contribution scheme — to say absurd things for money. Thus, the Videos were used for political commentary and criticism, purposes that do not supersede the “objects” of the original Videos.

The fact that the use of the videos made Santos look bad doesn’t matter:

Santos’s argument that the defendants should not be able to “seek refuge in the fair use concept of transformation that they themselves manufactured through deceit” finds no support in copyright law. Defendants’ conduct may have been deceptive and unkind, but the Supreme Court in Warhol emphasized that whether a work is transformative turns on neither the “subjective intent of the user,” 598 U.S. at 544, nor the “stated or perceived intent of the artist.” Id. at 545 (citation omitted). A court must instead conduct “an objective inquiry into what use was made, i.e., what the user does with the original work.” Id. Here, the purpose of the defendants’ use was clearly for criticism and commentary of the Videos themselves and their author.

While not always true, the first factor is often the key to winning fair use. The fact that it was found to be favoring Kimmel here basically makes the rest of the analysis less important, but even so, the rest of the factors either favor no one or Kimmel anyway.

On the second factor, the nature of the work, the court says this is mostly neutral, but perhaps favors Kimmel/Disney slightly. The third factor, how much of the work was used, is also deemed to be neutral. It did use the entirety of the work, as other courts have found, but that’s fine if you need to use the entirety of the work for the fair use at hand.

Copying “the entirety of a work is sometimes necessary to make a fair use.” Swatch Group Management Services Ltd. v. Bloomberg L.P., 756 F.3d 73, 90 (2d Cir. 2014). The “ultimate question under this factor is whether the quantity and value of the materials used are reasonable in relation to the purpose of the copying.”….

…. The use of the Videos to criticize and comment on a public figure would have been undermined by showing less than the entirety of the Videos, because the audience would not know whether Santos had indeed said everything in the requests.

Then there’s the fourth factor: the effect on the market. As I had noted in my original piece about the complaint, it would be difficult to argue that Kimmel’s use would harm the market. And, indeed, that’s what the court found as well:

Santos argues that defendants’ use devalued the market for Cameo videos, including Santos’s, by “undermining the integrity” of the Cameo.com platform. Santos does not explain how any impact on the popularity of the Cameo platform — which is entirely speculative — impacts more specifically the public interest in the creative production of new expression. Moreover, the FAC identifies no harm to the potential or existing market for the Videos that Santos created for the defendants, other than the “very use at bar.” Swatch, 756 F.3d at 91 (citation omitted). Thus, this factor weighs in favor of fair use.

Put it all together and you have two mostly neutral factors and two that weigh towards fair use, and thus: fair use.

Taking all four factors into consideration, the defense of fair use is clearly established by the FAC and documents integral to it. The defendants’ use of the Videos was transformative; “transformative uses tend to favor a fair use finding because a transformative use is one that communicates something new and different from the original or expands its utility, thus serving copyright’s overall objective of contributing to public knowledge.”

The court also rejects the breach of contract claims, saying that those are basically arguing the same thing as the copyright claims, and are thus pre-empted.

It wouldn’t surprise me if Santos appeals, but this is a good clean, fair use win. Disney’s copyright lawyers aren’t regularly known for arguing on behalf of fair use, but in this case they were right to, and it’s nice to see the court agree.

Update: And, yup, Santos has already told the court that he’s appealing.

  • ✇Classic-Games.net
  • Marvel Super Heroes in War of the Gemslordmrw
    Developer: Capcom    Publisher: Capcom    Release: 10/18/96   Genre: Action Marvel Super Heroes in War of the Gems has to be one of my biggest gaming disappointments in 1996. I joined the 32-bit generation a few years late due to being... The post Marvel Super Heroes in War of the Gems appeared first on Classic-Games.net.
     

Marvel Super Heroes in War of the Gems

Od: lordmrw
16. Srpen 2024 v 14:17

Developer: Capcom    Publisher: Capcom    Release: 10/18/96   Genre: Action Marvel Super Heroes in War of the Gems has to be one of my biggest gaming disappointments in 1996. I joined the 32-bit generation a few years late due to being...

The post Marvel Super Heroes in War of the Gems appeared first on Classic-Games.net.

  • ✇Gamecritics.com
  • TimeMelters ReviewJeff Ortloff
    A Witch In Time HIGH Fast action. Intense enemy design. Impressive visuals. LOW Puzzles can be offputtingly difficult in single-player. WTF There are challenge modes to make things harder??? Teagan wasn’t expecting to start her morning tied to a stake and being burnt as a witch. She certainly wasn’t expecting to be rescued by the spirit of a deceased witch and forced to run for her life without time to mourn her fallen brother, Edwin.  Finding out that she is descended fr
     

TimeMelters Review

18. Srpen 2024 v 13:00

A Witch In Time

HIGH Fast action. Intense enemy design. Impressive visuals.

LOW Puzzles can be offputtingly difficult in single-player.

WTF There are challenge modes to make things harder???


Teagan wasn’t expecting to start her morning tied to a stake and being burnt as a witch. She certainly wasn’t expecting to be rescued by the spirit of a deceased witch and forced to run for her life without time to mourn her fallen brother, Edwin. 

Finding out that she is descended from a line of witches tasked with maintaining the flow of time and preventing the fall of mankind was almost too much to bear.  Now she must master her newfound powers, attempt to save Edwin by going back in time, and also defeat hordes of enemies under the thrall of the mysterious Dark Puppeteer. 

TimeMelters is a game that nearly defies genre classification. 

It’s partially an action title where players control Teagan from a third-person perspective as she navigates through a fantasy equivalent of the Scottish Highlands while battling foes with an array of magic bolts and life-draining powers. 

However, it’s also something of a strategy/tower defense hybrid.  Teagan gains the ability to go into spirit form, allowing her to fly above the map for a quasi-bird’s eye view to activate summoning and infusing powers while time slows to a crawl. 

Alas, the Dark Puppeteer’s forces are legion, and Teagan, while powerful, is a glass cannon. It takes only one enemy slipping through her defenses to kill her.  This is where TimeMelters debuts its game design coup-de-grace in the form of a third aspect — a time rewinding feature that grants the ability to reverse the flow of time and create copied echoes of herself. These echoes will repeat Teagan’s previous actions exactly, up until the moment that echo would have been killed. 

For instance, the player can move Teagan past a group of enemies the previous version of her has already have killed (tenses are hard when it comes to time travel!) allowing her to concentrate on other foes or achieve other objectives the first echo wasn’t able to. It’s even possible to further alter the timeline by using an echo to distract an enemy that the player can now ambush or lead in yet another direction towards a trap.  It’s astonishing to watch in action. 

I know how this sounds, but read it all again — it makes sense, even if it makes one’s head hurt — but the brilliance of this design cannot be understated.  Using time manipulations and copies of Teagan to defy the odds and solve puzzles that would otherwise be impossible made me feel like a genius. However, therein lies the rub.  I am not super-great at three-dimensional, multi-linear thinking, so this was a real challenge. 

Thankfully, handy markers display the numbers of enemies in a group and the route they are currently taking, which then help the player plan the best use of the limited mana and small number of clones Teagan has at her disposal. For instance, she can kill enemies closing in on her position to gain mana, then switch to spirit mode to scour the map for groups she can ambush so she doesn’t have to deal with them later.  While this all takes a little bit of getting used to, it becomes second nature far more quickly than I would have believed when I first started playing. 

…Then I discovered the co-op campaign. 

With a friend joining in via the Playstation Network, two people can take control of Teagan and her brother, traversing the many levels in TimeMelters‘ campaign, though with slight adjustments in the storyline, dialogue and mission structure. 

For instance, Edwin starts one mission at the opposite end of the map from Teagan, providing cover for an NPC who needs to be protected as he slowly meanders towards the mission goal — a task which Teagan had to coordinate on her own alone in the singleplayer version. 

Players share a mana pool and the rewind feature but they otherwise act independently, so planning and coordination are a must. However, this is offset by bringing double the firepower, which makes battles and puzzles much more manageable than in the single-player campaign.

Despite the fact that I was being pushed to creatively think and temporally strategize in ways that games have rarely asked me to, TimeMelters is a must play — especially for players who have someone to share the cognitive load with. 

Even at its most frustrating, the brilliance on display here is addictive. It would be goofy to say TimeMelters is the best action/strategy/time clone hybrid involving witches I’ve played all year, so let me broaden it a bit and say that it’s one of the best games I’ve played this year, bar none.

Rating: 8.5 out of 10


Disclosures: This game is developed and published by Autoexec Games.  It is currently available on PS5 and PC. This copy of the game was obtained via publisher and reviewed on the PS5. Approximately 12 hours of play were devoted to the single-player mode, and the game was not completed. Three hours of play were spent in multiplayer modes.

Parents: According to the ESRB, this game is rated T and contains Blood and Violence. This game features witches using magical forces to kill both human and non-human enemies.  The protagonist absorbs the souls/spirits of dead opponents to power further magical attacks.  The game features heavy occult themes and not-for-kids moments like burning suspected witches at the stake as well as necromancy used as a secondary attack for the protagonist.  There is blood, but not excessive amounts, and most players have seen far worse in other games.

Colorblind Modes: There are no colorblind modes available.

Deaf & Hard of Hearing Gamers: This game offers subtitles. The subtitles cannot be altered and/or resized. All story-based dialogue during cutscenes is fully subtitled. The majority of in-game dialog is fully subtitled, with occasional declarations by the main character(s) being voice-only.  These additional declarations do not cause the player to miss anything plot specific, but they do add flavor to the moment. I’d say the game is fully accessible.

Remappable Controls: No, this game’s controls are not remappable.

  • ✇GamesIndustry.biz Latest Articles Feed
  • Intel sells share stake in ArmSophie McEvoy
    Intel has sold its 1.18 million share stake in British semiconductor company Arm.Disclosed in a regulatory filing, Intel reportedly raised an estimated $146.7 million from the sale based on Arm's average stock price between April and June, according to calculations by Reuters.Arm debuted on the Nasdaq Fund Network in September last year, ending its first day of trading at $63.59 following an IPO price of $51. It was the fifth most traded stock in the world during its debut. Read more
     

Intel sells share stake in Arm

Intel has sold its 1.18 million share stake in British semiconductor company Arm.

Disclosed in a regulatory filing, Intel reportedly raised an estimated $146.7 million from the sale based on Arm's average stock price between April and June, according to calculations by Reuters.

Arm debuted on the Nasdaq Fund Network in September last year, ending its first day of trading at $63.59 following an IPO price of $51. It was the fifth most traded stock in the world during its debut.

Read more

  • ✇The Escapist
  • FromSoftware’s Armored Core To Make TV Debut With Amazon Anthology SeriesRyan Galloway
    Elden Ring might not be getting the TV spotlight that some fans have been hoping for, but FromSoftware’s other franchise Armored Core certainly is. Amazon’s upcoming anthology series Secret Level will include an episode based on the mech battling series Armored Core. This animated series takes viewers on a journey inside the universe of a selection of games, that have never been shown before. Fans can get a glimpse at what’s to come thanks to a trailer revealed on day one of Gamescom.
     

FromSoftware’s Armored Core To Make TV Debut With Amazon Anthology Series

21. Srpen 2024 v 01:08

Elden Ring might not be getting the TV spotlight that some fans have been hoping for, but FromSoftware’s other franchise Armored Core certainly is.

Amazon’s upcoming anthology series Secret Level will include an episode based on the mech battling series Armored Core. This animated series takes viewers on a journey inside the universe of a selection of games, that have never been shown before. Fans can get a glimpse at what’s to come thanks to a trailer revealed on day one of Gamescom.

The animated show is from the producers of Netflix’s Love + Death & Robots which was a breakout hit for the streaming platform showing breathtaking animation with unique stories. That means Secret Level is in great hands, and fans would want it to be given the popularity of these franchises.

Alongside Armored Core, Secret Level will include episodes that feature Dungeons & Dragons, Mega Man, Pac-Man, and Warhammer 40,000 among others. These are some of the most popular gaming franchises ever, and now they’re getting a fresh animated take for viewers to dive into.

Season one of Secret Level will include 15 episodes, however, the length of each episode is unknown. Just know that they will be shorts so don’t expect full-length episodes, or complete seasons for any of these franchises. 

Secret Level is set to premiere on Dec. 10, 2024, so fans don’t have too long before they get to see these loved franchises on screen. It isn’t clear whether all episodes of the show will be shared at once or if it will be weekly, but expect that information to surface closer to its release.

If you want to get your Armored Core fix in before the show gets here you can purchase and play Armored Core VI: Fires of Rubicon on Xbox, PlayStation, and PC right now.

  • ✇TheSixthAxis
  • Prime Video’s Secret Level anthology series is a love letter to gamingTuffcub
    Gamescom Opening Night Live has taken a short break from game trailers to preview a new anthology series coming to Prime Video which is a love letter to gaming. Created by the same team behind the excellent Love, Death, and Robots it features stories set in the worlds of some of our favourite games. That includes (deep breath) Armored Core, Concord, Crossfire, Dungeons & Dragons, Exodus, Honor of Kings, Mega Man, New World: Aeternum, PAC-MAN, Sifu, Spelunky, The Outer Worlds, Unreal Tourname
     

Prime Video’s Secret Level anthology series is a love letter to gaming

Od: Tuffcub
20. Srpen 2024 v 21:37

Gamescom Opening Night Live has taken a short break from game trailers to preview a new anthology series coming to Prime Video which is a love letter to gaming. Created by the same team behind the excellent Love, Death, and Robots it features stories set in the worlds of some of our favourite games.

That includes (deep breath) Armored Core, Concord, Crossfire, Dungeons & Dragons, Exodus, Honor of Kings, Mega Man, New World: Aeternum, PAC-MAN, Sifu, Spelunky, The Outer Worlds, Unreal Tournament and Warhammer 40,000.

It also includes “various PlayStation Studios games” and you can see from the header image that includes God of War! It seems this will be a special “PlayStation” episode that features our favourite characters, so Kratos may finally get to meet Nathan Drake, Aloy, Joel and Ellie and Ratchet and Clank. That’s just a guess by the way, but wouldn’t that be awesome?

“Secret Level weaves a tapestry of iconic games across multiple mediums, to tell a series of unique and captivating stories,” said Vernon Sanders, head of television, Amazon MGM Studios. “Created and led by Tim Miller, Blur Studio, and Supervising Director Dave Wilson, each episode will take our global Prime Video customers on a brand new journey with breath-taking animation and imaginative storytelling.”

Source: YouTube

New World will be a featured IP in Amazon’s new Secret Level animated series

20. Srpen 2024 v 23:00
During this afternoon’s Opening Night Live at Gamescom in Cologne, Germany, Amazon’s Prime Video label announced Secret Level, a “new adult-animated anthology series” specifically featuring video games. And naturally, among those video games is New World. “Part of our vision from the beginning is to develop and publish fantastic IPs that immerse and excite players […]

Gamescom 2024 Opening Night Live(blog): Dune Awakening launches on PC early next year

20. Srpen 2024 v 19:55
Gamescom 2024 in Cologne, Germany, is about to begin with Geoff Keighley’s Opening Night Live spectacle, a two-hour parade of trailers, advertisements, and ideally, new game announcements that kick off the show and set the stage for the event… oh yeah, and give those of us back home some distraction. Thanks to public hints and […]

Fight or Kite: Necesse is a cute retro survival game for Minecraft and Terraria fans

Od: Sam Kash
20. Srpen 2024 v 18:00
I’ve never been one to make very good use of Steam wishlists – or any wishlists, for that matter. I’m weird in that way, I suppose. But I’ve been trying to be a more organized adult by making better use of notes and lists and all that jazz, even though it’s a slow process. And […]

Choose My Adventure: Fractured Online starts off unremarkably but comfortably

20. Srpen 2024 v 17:00
I always start off with a lot of concern whenever I enter a sandbox MMORPG for Choose My Adventure. Mostly because these games are almost always murder blenders and having to look over my shoulder with every step isn’t what I’d call my idea of fun. Luckily, Fractured Online has, at least in the interim, […]

Guild Wars 2’s Janthir Wilds expansion officially launches with player housing today

20. Srpen 2024 v 15:00
Fellow MMO housing fans, furbish up your design skills because we’re going to Janthir Wilds today. Yes, Guild Wars 2’s latest expansion officially rolls out today. Janthir Wilds is B2P for a one-time fee of $24.99 (on up if you want a loaded pack), which includes all four major patches as they roll out over […]

Elder Scrolls Online’s update 43 is here and we are so ready to tour all of your homes

19. Srpen 2024 v 22:00
Elder Scrolls Online players, set your launcher patchers to go because update 43 is officially live as of this afternoon – at least if you’re on PC or Mac, anyway. U43 is a free base-game update that’s going to appeal to fans of player housing in particular. “Update 43 introduces one of the most anticipated […]

Dual Universe’s myDU private server functionality is officially available today

19. Srpen 2024 v 19:30
It’s all of the great taste of Kickstarted sci-fi MMORPG Dual Universe but with your own personal spin: It’s myDU, the standalone version that offers private server hosting Novaquark announced in July, which has gone live today, August 19th. As we reported previously, this is a separate purchase that will set players back $35 (though […]

Wisdom of Nym: Speculating on Final Fantasy XIV’s Allied Societies for Dawntrail

19. Srpen 2024 v 18:00
We’ve gone through a lot of different names for what are now being called Allied Societies in Final Fantasy XIV, but I think this one finally captures both what the idea is for these quests and the space that FFXIV has narratively staked out for these quests. It was one thing when it was Amalj’aa […]

Ashes of Creation boosts its alpha access bundle offerings following gamer uproar

19. Srpen 2024 v 16:00
If you were among those who raised your eyebrows at the three-figure prices that Ashes of Creation was charging for access to its upcoming Alpha Two test, then you might be interested to read through a synopsis post about the earlier announcement, which features some updates thanks to the “glorious feedback” players have provided. The […]

Make My MMO: Ashes of Creation’s alpha 2, Dual Universe’s player hosting

18. Srpen 2024 v 18:00
It’s been an interesting summer for crowdfunded MMOs. Ashes of Creation has hit August running, first with a preview of the Bard class, then with a formal announcement of its paid alpha 2 starting October 25th, which as you can imagine has gamers grumbling. Meanwhile, Star Citizen continued teasing alpha 4, Dual Universe continues its […]

The best Borderlands games, ranked from best to worst

16. Srpen 2024 v 15:48
What are the best Borderlands games? What should you play first? Let's rank the Borderlands games from best to worst and see what comes out on top.

  • ✇Ars Technica - All content
  • Windows 0-day was exploited by North Korea to install advanced rootkitDan Goodin
    Enlarge (credit: Getty Images) A Windows zero-day vulnerability recently patched by Microsoft was exploited by hackers working on behalf of the North Korean government so they could install custom malware that’s exceptionally stealthy and advanced, researchers reported Monday. The vulnerability, tracked as CVE-2024-38193, was one of six zero-days—meaning vulnerabilities known or actively exploited before the vendor has a patch—fixed in Microsoft’s monthly update release last
     

Windows 0-day was exploited by North Korea to install advanced rootkit

20. Srpen 2024 v 01:37
Windows 0-day was exploited by North Korea to install advanced rootkit

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images)

A Windows zero-day vulnerability recently patched by Microsoft was exploited by hackers working on behalf of the North Korean government so they could install custom malware that’s exceptionally stealthy and advanced, researchers reported Monday.

The vulnerability, tracked as CVE-2024-38193, was one of six zero-days—meaning vulnerabilities known or actively exploited before the vendor has a patch—fixed in Microsoft’s monthly update release last Tuesday. Microsoft said the vulnerability—in a class known as a "use after free"—was located in AFD.sys, the binary file for what’s known as the ancillary function driver and the kernel entry point for the Winsock API. Microsoft warned that the zero-day could be exploited to give attackers system privileges, the maximum system rights available in Windows and a required status for executing untrusted code.

Lazarus gets access to the Windows kernel

Microsoft warned at the time that the vulnerability was being actively exploited but provided no details about who was behind the attacks or what their ultimate objective was. On Monday, researchers with Gen—the security firm that discovered the attacks and reported them privately to Microsoft—said the threat actors were part of Lazarus, the name researchers use to track a hacking outfit backed by the North Korean government.

Read 6 remaining paragraphs | Comments

  • ✇Ars Technica - All content
  • Lufthansa is using artificial sharkskin to streamline airplanesJonathan M. Gitlin
    Enlarge (credit: Aurich Lawson | Getty Images) Companies are often caught between wanting to cut emissions but also grow profits. But for airlines, these two different imperatives actually align. Cutting carbon emissions means burning less fuel and spending less money buying fuel. This is why Lufthansa has been copying a trick from the animal kingdom: applying a special film that mimics sharkskin to parts of its aircraft. When it comes to decarbonization, reducing the emissio
     

Lufthansa is using artificial sharkskin to streamline airplanes

An outline of an airplane going through the water with its wing mimicking a shark fin

Enlarge (credit: Aurich Lawson | Getty Images)

Companies are often caught between wanting to cut emissions but also grow profits. But for airlines, these two different imperatives actually align. Cutting carbon emissions means burning less fuel and spending less money buying fuel. This is why Lufthansa has been copying a trick from the animal kingdom: applying a special film that mimics sharkskin to parts of its aircraft.

When it comes to decarbonization, reducing the emissions of air travel is both a high priority and something of a difficult task. Globally, air traffic accounts for about 2.5 percent of carbon emissions, but since those emissions are emitted at altitude, studies have found that the warming effect may be almost twice as large.

The problem is that it's extremely difficult to rival the volumetric energy density of jet fuel, which contains almost 50 times as many megajoules per liter than alternatives like hydrogen, ethanol, or lithium-ion batteries. That's less of a problem for ground or sea transportation, where weight and volume is less important, but it's a real stumbling block for switching jet airliners to a different fuel source.

Read 6 remaining paragraphs | Comments

  • ✇Latest
  • The Anarchist Dreams: Dispatch From the DNCNancy Rommelmann
    Full disclosure: I got into a little physical altercation yesterday with the Chicago police and lost my notepad in the scuffle. We'll get to that, but for now please forgive any errors in the timeline. The first march organized by the March for the Democratic National Convention was set to take off from Chicago's Union Park at 1 p.m. Reporters were invited to get there at 7 a.m; I have no idea if any did, but at 10:30 a.m. a friend texted to say,
     

The Anarchist Dreams: Dispatch From the DNC

20. Srpen 2024 v 17:40
DNC protest 2024 | Nancy Rommelmann

Full disclosure: I got into a little physical altercation yesterday with the Chicago police and lost my notepad in the scuffle. We'll get to that, but for now please forgive any errors in the timeline.

The first march organized by the March for the Democratic National Convention was set to take off from Chicago's Union Park at 1 p.m. Reporters were invited to get there at 7 a.m; I have no idea if any did, but at 10:30 a.m. a friend texted to say, "Union Park right now is very underwhelming." This seemed to be the consensus going in; that the anticipated 30,000 marchers would come nowhere near, and that the press would be overrepresented, which turned out to be the case—while reporting I ran into seven journalists in I know, when the average is about zero. But some of the protesters were also following the trend of pasting "PRESS" across their chests. A young woman I met on the bus around noon did the same. When I asked who she was reporting for, she looked confused; it was just a shirt. Okay, but why?

2024 DNC protests | Nancy Rommelmann
(Nancy Rommelmann)

Those entering Union Park were handed a gazillion pamphlets with slogans like "NO WAR BUT CLASS WAR SMASH IMPERIALISM WITH COMMUNIST REVOLUTION," "12 ESSENTIAL FACTS FOR UNDERSTANDING THE CURRENT ISRAEL-GAZA CONFLICT," "WORKERS STRIKE BACK, WHEN WE FIGHT—WE CAN WIN," and "NEITHER PARTY REPRESENTS THE WORKING CLASS—CLASS WAR 2024,"—the all-cap emphasis conveying the commitment of the pamphlet distributors. Nearly everyone at the rally turned out to be in their 20s, dressed in today's radical chic—keffiyeh as cape, keffiyeh as neck scarf,  keffiyeh as headwrap. There were a few women in full Handmaid's Tale regalia, many young people in pro-Socialist red, and one dude wearing, refreshingly, an old Star Wars t-shirt. There was no police presence inside the park proper, but just outside there were at least 100 officers, half of them on bicycles, all of them waiting in the shade for something to happen. When I asked whether they'd be accompanying the marchers on their 1.1-mile city-approved route, I was given two short nods.

Protesters at the 2024 DNC | Nancy Rommelmann
(Nancy Rommelmann)

Before any marching began, there were speeches from the stage—speeches about genocide in Palestine, abortion, student debt, colonial settlers, Black Lives Matter, and cops being bastards. On and on it went, past 1 p.m.; the chanting the speakers requested was rarely very chanty. It was hot and people were thirsty and the line for the porta-potties stretched over 200 people long. 

"Can someone help me spread this out so it can be seen by the helicopter?" asked a young man, unfurling a 50-foot sheet painted with the words, "LOOK UP 'NAKBA.'"

Nancy Rommelmann
(Nancy Rommelmann)

"Would you like to carry a sign?" asked another young man, trying to offload one of the 400 or so signs strewn across the field. The sign-makers had been industrious, affixing emphatic messages like "STOP THE CRIME—FREE THEM ALL" and "GENOCIDE JOE'S LEGACY: BUTCHER OF GAZA" to wooden stakes. The problem was, there weren't nearly enough takers. How many people did the guy next to me estimate were actually here?

"Five hundred," he said, after a beat, just before someone on stage shouted into the microphone how great it was to see 15,000 people in attendance. The guy adjusted his estimate to 1,500, which I'd say was about right.

2024 DNC protests | Nancy Rommelmann
(Nancy Rommelmann)

What they lacked in numbers they made up for in enthusiasm, waving Palestinian flags, communist flags, anarchist flags, "land back" flags, and a flag whose exact origin the person holding it said he did not really know. Someone mentioned they'd seen some Israeli flags earlier but I didn't see any. As for American flags, I saw exactly one, carried by a veteran named Shawn, who said he had not liked seeing American flags burned during Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's visit to Congress.

"I think that's greatly deplorable," he said, as several young men with their faces covered moved close to him. But when they noticed that several members of the press also wanted to talk with the one dude carrying an American flag, they backed off. 

"Earlier they were saying derogatory things towards me like, 'get that shit out of here. What the fuck's wrong with you?'" he said. "But at the end of the day, nobody's going to intimidate me. Nobody's going to prevent me from voicing my opinion."

2024 DNC protests | Nancy Rommelmann
(Nancy Rommelmann)

If there was a similarity in the way the crowd looked and behaved, their many and multiple demands were perhaps what gave the gathering a lack of cohesion and group energy. That changed at 2:02 p.m., when it was announced that there was a special guest speaker.

However you feel about independent presidential candidate Cornel West, you would have been as energized by his 5-minute speech. He roared and he cooed, talking about "our profound love for our Palestinian brothers and sisters" and how we must extend that profound love to all our brothers and sisters. It was the adrenaline shot everyone needed to get through the next hour. With the bike police edging closer, the marchers funneled out of the park and into the streets. Messages were shouted into bullhorns, girls danced, boys drummed— they were on the move to Park 578 a mile away. The sun was still shining and the press—there must have been one for every three marchers—walked on the sidewalks. Between them and the marchers were the bike police, pushing their bikes in formation, and astride yellow-vested "safety team" members, who kept themselves between the marchers and the police. It was all very choreographed, and one would not be faulted for thinking that this whole thing would go off without a hitch.

But of course, there would be a hitch, and it came in the form of young men with their heads and faces covered. Though they may have had no affiliation with them, they marched beneath an Anarcho-brat flag and a People's Defense Units (YPG) flag, representing the Kurdish militant group in Syria. A colleague mentioned he'd seen maybe eight of the men trying to start something earlier but they had not gained purchase, the other marchers not wanting to be part of whatever mayhem they might want to commit. But now we were at the mouth of Park 578, the turnaround spot for marchers and the closest point to the United Center, where the DNC was taking place.

"That way!" one of the young men shouted, pointing toward the United Center, trying to get the group, which had grown to maybe 15 men, to make a break for the tall barrier fences. It was not going to happen—not with the cops forming a triple-line barrier of bikes and other marchers yelling for the YPG brats to stop, shouting that the march had been planned for nearly a year! It was supposed to be peaceful! Stop fucking it up! At least that's what I imagined the girl in the keffiyeh was yelling at the young men, her voice so hoarse with emotion I could not make out the words.

My colleague and I tried to interview the young men, but they had the same response to every question: "We don't talk to media." It's a catchall phrase common among young protesters, the eyes above their masks growing not bolder but shakier with each iteration. You could see them thinking it was better to stonewall than risk having one's responses scrutinized and memorialized.

But this is not always the case! As I would find ten minutes later, when some of the protesters had had enough of longingly looking at the United Center and decided to breach an exterior fence. Pop pop clang, down went the barriers, in went maybe 75 protesters. Busting shit down was an exciting change, if entirely predictable, meanwhile, a gentler strain of protesters, mostly women, were shouting from the other side, "Come back!" It was time to march back to Union Park, they said. They did not like the risks people were taking, and they were not going to do their many causes any good.

I followed the protesters over the fence.

"Come on everybody! Come on!" shouted a tall lanky guy all in black, with a garbage can lid painted with the anarchist A strapped to his back. What was he wanting everyone to do?

Dreamy anarchist | Nancy Rommelmann
(Nancy Rommelmann)

"I want to get all the way inside the DNC!" he said, pointing toward the United Center. "I mean what are we doing here? Isn't this what we came here to do?"

Maybe not everybody; maybe not the 70-year-old lady peace activist who I'd watch gasp as the fence came down. Maybe this kind of bravado was not for her.

"I've seen 70-year-olds do it!" he said. "We can do it if we do it together. If we can dream it, we can do it!"

He was clanging his garbage can lid when someone shouted, "Cops on all sides!" We turned toward the phalanx of blue uniforms, in the jubilation no one had seen them form a walking line, or I hadn't seen it. Shouts of "Nazi motherfuckers" and "Fuck you!" lasted maybe 30 seconds before the cops were on us. I did my best to duck into a little alcove in the fencing. Yeah, that didn't work.

"Move it! Move it!" cops shouted, as people fell down or were grabbed; when they were variously combative or trying to flee.

"You're in a restricted area!" an officer shouted at me. Another prodded me with her nightstick.

"Don't hurt her!" a protester shouted, which I thought was kind of adorable and which I caught on video, just before finding a small egress to the other side. Two men pulled me through—thanks guys—and into the waiting path of another journalist pal calmly taking in the proceedings.

"Hello Nancy," he said, adding that he thought things were about to calm down—and they did. The bulk of protesters marched back to Union Park, perhaps unaware of the side streets lined with hundreds of waiting officers, who (I'm told) were instructed to pull down their face shields, in case they needed them. On this night, they did not.

The post The Anarchist Dreams: Dispatch From the DNC appeared first on Reason.com.

  • ✇Latest
  • Muted Outrage and Aspirational Crowds: Dispatch From the DNC Nancy Rommelmann
    Depending on how you feel about protesters, there's good news or bad news about the estimated number expected to converge on Chicago this week for the 2024 Democratic National Convention: 30,000. Either way, you would not be faulted for thinking the number is possibly aspirational, based on the fewer than 50 who showed up yesterday for an outdoor event and press conference organized by the Coalition to March on the Democratic National Convention.
     

Muted Outrage and Aspirational Crowds: Dispatch From the DNC 

19. Srpen 2024 v 23:55
krtphotoslive944294 | Stacey Wescott/TNS/Newscom

Depending on how you feel about protesters, there's good news or bad news about the estimated number expected to converge on Chicago this week for the 2024 Democratic National Convention: 30,000. Either way, you would not be faulted for thinking the number is possibly aspirational, based on the fewer than 50 who showed up yesterday for an outdoor event and press conference organized by the Coalition to March on the Democratic National Convention.

Coalition to March on the Democratic National Convention | March on the DNC 2024; Nancy Rommelmann
(March on the DNC 2024; Nancy Rommelmann)

"Almost 270 organizations from across the U.S. have joined the Coalition to March on the DNC. And tens of thousands will be out on the streets starting tomorrow," Hatem Abudayyeh, coalition spokesperson and U.S. Palestinian Community Network national chair, told the assembled, who politely took notes and asked him to repeat the marching schedule. They nodded in commiseration at the city's "approved march route," a 1.1-mile stretch that threatened to become a human parking lot and did not take marchers past the United Center, where the DNC is taking place.

"Which means that the thousands do not get their First Amendment rights upheld," he said. "They do not get to be within sight and sound [of United Center] to say, end Israeli occupation, end U.S. aid for Israel, end U.S. support of the genocide."

Abudayyeh vowed to keep pressure on the city until the very last minute, hoping that after months of legal wrangling, it would allow the 2.4-mile route they had originally hoped for. It sounded rather self-limiting and not perhaps in the spirit of the protests that have roiled the country since October 7, a refashioning perhaps of rage into something potentially more politically expedient.

Coalition to March on the Democratic National Convention march. | Nancy Rommelman; Google Maps
(Nancy Rommelman; Google Maps)

There was no rage at yesterday's event, no black hoodies or keffiyeh-shrouded faces, no shouting or snapping when Faayani Aboma Mijana, a spokesperson for the coalition, cited the "horrific genocide of Palestinians that's being aided and abetted by the Democratic leadership and its representatives, Genocide Joe Biden, Killer Kamala Harris, Baby Killer Blinken." Even when Mijana enjoined the crowd to chant "From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free," the response was muted.

Maybe it was activism fatigue. Maybe the long run-up to the convention—the march had been in the planning stages since before October 7—had sapped some spontaneity. Maybe the multifariousness of those looking to coalesce under the coalition's umbrella—Abudayyeh mentioned "the Black Liberation Movement and the Immigrant Rights Movement and the Women's Rights Movement and the LGBTQ Movement and the Workers' Rights Movement and the Reproductive Rights Movement"—rendered the movement more PTA, less punk rock.

Protests ahead of 2024 DNC | Nancy Rommelmann
(Nancy Rommelmann)

Not that the event was without anger. Mijana, an organizer also for the Chicago Alliance Against Racist and Political Repression, was especially critical of the Chicago Police Department, claiming that "the same Israeli occupation forces that are committing the genocide in Gaza, train police departments like the Chicago Police Department, who then implement the offensive tactics they learn onto our communities."

Still, no one anticipated any violence and certainly would not be participating in it. "We intend to have a family-friendly, peaceful march," Mijana told me. "That's why we're fighting for the permits, because we know that will keep the police away from us and allow us to march on our own with our own people."

But any movement of size creates a collective effervescence that can spill over and attract people outside the cause, including bad actors and those seeking a perverse type of heroism. This was evident when James Alex Fields Jr. drove his car into a group of counter-protesters during a 2017 "Unite the Right" protest in Charlottesville, killing Heather Heyer, and when Michael Reinoehl, in an effort to prove his commitment to Black Lives Matter, shot Jay Danielson point blank during a 2020 protest in Portland. 

This suggests DNC protesters might welcome some police protection, if only for themselves.

"I'm from Minneapolis, so I know a little something about some mayhem," said Jess Sundin, of the Twin Cities Coalition for Justice. "Every time I've seen that on any significant scale, it's been police attacking demonstrators, is what starts it. I am not trying to be dismissive, but my experience is that if the police refrain from using violence against the demonstration, we won't see any sort of significant no mayhem, no significant outbreaks of drama."

Perhaps. And if Sunday's event was a foretaste, the protests will be disciplined, even mild. But I wouldn't count on it.

The post Muted Outrage and Aspirational Crowds: Dispatch From the DNC  appeared first on Reason.com.

  • ✇Latest
  • DNC Readies for ProtestersLiz Wolfe
    Gird your loins, it's DNC time: The Democratic National Convention starts today in Chicago, and the Israel/Palestine-related tensions that have been coursing through the left since October 7 may very well come to a head this week. Tens of thousands of protesters are expected to set up right outside of security to protest the party's support of Israel; presumptive nominee Kamala Harris' husband, Doug Emhoff, who is Jewish, is expected to speak abo
     

DNC Readies for Protesters

Od: Liz Wolfe
19. Srpen 2024 v 15:30
DNC | Brian Cassella/TNS/Newscom

Gird your loins, it's DNC time: The Democratic National Convention starts today in Chicago, and the Israel/Palestine-related tensions that have been coursing through the left since October 7 may very well come to a head this week.

Tens of thousands of protesters are expected to set up right outside of security to protest the party's support of Israel; presumptive nominee Kamala Harris' husband, Doug Emhoff, who is Jewish, is expected to speak about Judaism on stage; and, just like during the Republican National Convention, some families of hostages taken by Hamas will plead onstage for the return of their loved ones.

Some delegates who eschewed voting for Kamala Harris, calling themselves the Uncommitteds, have broken from the party pick precisely because they do not support U.S. support for Israel in the Gaza war. The Uncommitted factor is especially relevant to Michigan, a swing state with a large Middle Eastern population, and Democratic officials have been attempting to make inroads with the vocal disgruntled in recent weeks; they want a DNC that signals unity, and the likelihood that massive protests will be taking place just outside the gates undermines this.

"The key question for Democrats this week is whether the demonstrators represent a meaningful group of voters who could swing the election in November, or if they are outliers on the left who should be resisted in an appeal to the center," sums up The New York Times. 

Hamas rejects latest ceasefire proposal: On Sunday, following days of tense negotiating and Secretary of State Antony Blinken shlepping to Israel believing an agreement was imminent, Hamas rejected a proposed ceasefire deal with Israel.

"After being briefed by the mediators about what happened in the last round of talks in Doha, we once again came to the conclusion that Netanyahu is still putting obstacles in the way of reaching an agreement, and is setting new conditions and demands with the aim of undermining the mediators' efforts and prolonging the war," declared Hamas in a statement, adding that the U.S.-brokered ceasefire "aligns with" Israel's demands.

At issue is the fact that the ceasefire did not force full a Israeli withdrawal from the entirety of the Gaza Strip. Israel had proposed maintaining a large security presence on the border between Egypt and Gaza, as well as maintaining control over the Netzarim Corridor, which divides the Gaza Strip's north from its south.

Blinken has called this round of negotiations a "decisive moment" for Israel and Hamas. In the last few weeks, Iran and its proxies, including Hezbollah, have vowed to strike Israel in retaliation for its July assassinations of Hezbollah official Fuad Shukr in Beirut and Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran. Thus far, wider war has been staved off, but it's unclear for how much longer that will last; the fact that negotiations were in progress may have played a contributing role. Now that may not be so.


Scenes from New York: One of the New York City hospital systems, Northwell Health, is starting a studio to make its own movie and TV shows following the success of the Netflix show Lenox Hill, which followed doctors and patients within the system. But just a few years ago, NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center had to pay out a more than $2 million settlement to federal regulators for failing to protect patient privacy when a television crew was filming inside the hospital. Expect more issues, both ethical and legal, to arise.


QUICK HITS

  • "The ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach, which account for roughly a third of all US container imports, had their third-strongest month ever in July, just shy of an all-time high reached in May 2021. Back then, a wave of inbound consumer goods caused supply bottlenecks on land and a queue of cargo ships waiting for a berth offshore was getting longer by the day," reports Bloomberg. "Demand now is driven by retailers and other importers that are stocking up ahead of US tariffs on Chinese goods and a possible strike by a large group of American dockworkers—adding to the usual frenzy of pre-holiday ordering that occurs this time of year."
  • Planned Parenthood Great Rivers is offering free vasectomies and abortions for DNC attendees at a van near the convention center, which seems a little self-defeating if the idea is to grow your political party.
  • Also in DNC abortion news: Some protesters have dressed up as abortion pills.
  • Officials in Georgia "like the prosperity that could come with making [electric vehicles], but not the California-style mandates that prop them up. They like the jobs but agree with many of their voters who think electric vehicles are a sheet metal-clad tenet of the Democrats' woke ideology," reports Politico. 
  • Donald Trump's running mate, J.D. Vance, responded this weekend to news of a Kamala Harris poll bump by saying the "media uses fake polls."

The post DNC Readies for Protesters appeared first on Reason.com.

  • ✇GAME PRESS
  • Microsoft chce obnovit licence na Deadpoola a Marvel Ultimate AllianceAdam Jacik
    Herní aktivity Marvelu se v posledních letech výrazně rozšířily, ale existuje spousta starších licencovaných titulů Marvelu, na které se s láskou vzpomíná, ale které jsou nyní díky vypršení licencí téměř zcela nedostupné. Některé z těchto fanoušky oblíbených her se však možná vrátí. Tvrdí to spoluzakladatel společnosti XboxEra Nick Baker, který nedávno v podcastu XboxEra prohlásil, že se Microsoft snaží získat obnovení licencí pro porty her Deadpool a Marvel Ultimate Alliance pro Xbox One, které
     

Microsoft chce obnovit licence na Deadpoola a Marvel Ultimate Alliance

19. Srpen 2024 v 10:16

deadpool image 2

Herní aktivity Marvelu se v posledních letech výrazně rozšířily, ale existuje spousta starších licencovaných titulů Marvelu, na které se s láskou vzpomíná, ale které jsou nyní díky vypršení licencí téměř zcela nedostupné. Některé z těchto fanoušky oblíbených her se však možná vrátí.

Tvrdí to spoluzakladatel společnosti XboxEra Nick Baker, který nedávno v podcastu XboxEra prohlásil, že se Microsoft snaží získat obnovení licencí pro porty her Deadpool a Marvel Ultimate Alliance pro Xbox One, které původně vydala společnost Activision.

Oba tituly se samozřejmě v posledních letech shánějí velmi obtížně, protože byly vyřazeny ze seznamu po vypršení licencí, ale vzhledem k popularitě postav v těchto hrách by dávalo smysl, kdyby se je Microsoft pokusil vrátit zpět.

Zda to k něčemu skutečně povede, se teprve uvidí, ale obě tyto hry jsou přinejmenším oblíbené u fanoušků, takže nebude nouze o to, aby obě znovu spatřily světlo světa.

Článek Microsoft chce obnovit licence na Deadpoola a Marvel Ultimate Alliance se nejdříve objevil na GAME PRESS.

  • ✇GAME PRESS
  • Intel nyní stojí jen tolik jako OpenAIMobile Press
    Zatímco posledních několik let nebylo k Intelu nakloněno, poslední týdny byly pozoruhodné svou zvláštní brutalitou, kdy někdejší procesorový gigant stihl jeden neúspěch za druhým. Konečný výsledek: Intel má nyní stejnou hodnotu jako nezisková organizace. Ostatně OpenAI uzavřelo své poslední kolo financování v únoru 2024, které ocenilo neziskovou organizaci na 80 miliard dolarů. Dnes akcie Intelu uzavřely s tržní kapitalizací 81,19 miliardy dolarů, což se zhruba rovná ocenění startupu zaměřeného
     

Intel nyní stojí jen tolik jako OpenAI

8. Srpen 2024 v 07:16

intel-nyni-stoji-jen-tolik-jako-openai

Intel

Zatímco posledních několik let nebylo k Intelu nakloněno, poslední týdny byly pozoruhodné svou zvláštní brutalitou, kdy někdejší procesorový gigant stihl jeden neúspěch za druhým. Konečný výsledek: Intel má nyní stejnou hodnotu jako nezisková organizace.

Ostatně OpenAI uzavřelo své poslední kolo financování v únoru 2024, které ocenilo neziskovou organizaci na 80 miliard dolarů. Dnes akcie Intelu uzavřely s tržní kapitalizací 81,19 miliardy dolarů, což se zhruba rovná ocenění startupu zaměřeného na umělou inteligenci.

It’s wild that Intel’s valuation is similar to that of OpenAI.

— The AI Investor (@The_AI_Investor) August 8, 2024

Intel utrpěl na akciovém trhu zuřivý výprask, když vykázal ve srovnání s konsensuálními očekáváními pro druhé čtvrtletí roku 2024 značně negativní výsledky. Výrobce čipů nejenže nesplnil konsensuální očekávání analytiků ohledně svého top- řádkové a spodní metriky, ale také selhaly v klíčovém segmentu DCAI, což naznačuje, že se ještě musí skutečně propojit se širokým zadním větrem zaměřeným na umělou inteligenci.

Je kritické, že Intel výrazně minul svůj vlastní návod na hrubou marži v právě skončeném čtvrtletí a navedl jej na další sekvenční oslabení.

Aby ušetřil hotovost, výrobce čipů nyní snížil dividendu a formalizoval další plán hromadného propouštění ve výši  15 000 zaměstnanců, neboli 13,6 procenta jeho současné pracovní síly přibližně 110 000, čímž se přidal k pětiprocentnímu propouštění, které společnost zavedla teprve minulý rok.

Jako by věci nebyly dost špatné, procesory Intel 13. a 14. generace nadále trpí problémy s oxidací vyvolanými nadměrným napětím. Společnost plánuje vydat aktualizaci, která zabrání další degradaci dosud neovlivněných CPU. Prodloužila také standardní záruku na nezabalené procesory 13. a 14. generace ze 3 let na 5 let.

TSMC alone cannot handle the production volume. $NVDA


According to Taiwanese media, Nvidia and other major U.S. tech companies are considering outsourcing packaging solutions to Intel.

Currently, TSMC virtually monopolizes the production of Nvidia products, which dominate… https://t.co/WqsbkQsVSZ

— The AI Investor (@The_AI_Investor) August 8, 2024

Uprostřed všech těchto nepříznivých událostí se zdá, že NVIDIA přišla na záchranu Intelu. NVIDIA by mohla využít IFS Intelu, aby splnila potřeby balení H100, které TSMC nemůže splnit. Nyní tchajwanská média zdvojnásobují zprávy, že velké americké technologické společnosti by mohly outsourcovat řešení CoWoS-S společnosti Intel.

Jak se z toho nakonec Intel vyhrabe se teprve uvidí, ale je jisté, že podnikne veškeré kroky k tomu, aby se společnost vrátila zpět na výsluní.

Článek Intel nyní stojí jen tolik jako OpenAI se nejdříve objevil na MOBILE PRESS.

Článek Intel nyní stojí jen tolik jako OpenAI se nejdříve objevil na GAME PRESS.

  • ✇Destructoid
  • Sizzle reel shows off game anthology series Secret Level – wait, was that Mega Man?Zoey Handley
    In what will likely be the most memorable moment of Gamescom Opening Night Live, a very emotional Tim Miller, co-founder of Blur Studios and director of Deadpool, has shown of footage of the upcoming Amazon Prime video game anthology series, Secret Level. This is coming so fast, but I definitely saw Mega Man in there. Secret Level is supposedly a series of original short narratives set around various video games. It’s an incredibly eclectic mix including Armored Core, Sifu, and Spelunky alon
     

Sizzle reel shows off game anthology series Secret Level – wait, was that Mega Man?

20. Srpen 2024 v 21:37

Secret Level Mega Man

In what will likely be the most memorable moment of Gamescom Opening Night Live, a very emotional Tim Miller, co-founder of Blur Studios and director of Deadpool, has shown of footage of the upcoming Amazon Prime video game anthology series, Secret Level. This is coming so fast, but I definitely saw Mega Man in there.

Secret Level is supposedly a series of original short narratives set around various video games. It’s an incredibly eclectic mix including Armored Core, Sifu, and Spelunky alongside more mainstream stuff like Concord and God of War. Maybe also Pac-Man.

There's also Mega Man, but he's doing that really cliche gear-up sequence. Like, it's so ubiquitous that Doom Eternal even opened with it.

https://youtu.be/gLihxsmI_OU?feature=shared

I am entirely unable to process what’s going on. I’m not sure if there’s some sort of metanarrative here. As I mentioned, it’s reportedly going to be a series of short narratives (via Deadline), but the sizzle reel doesn’t exactly clarify that.

The introduction by Tim Miller was especially interesting. I mentioned to my colleagues that he sounded like he was on the verge of tears before he seemed to break further and admit his emotions. Some sounded cynical about the sincerity, but as a prolific crier, it seemed genuine. Listen, it’s sometimes easy to get emotional about stuff. I can cry pretty easily on some days. Dude might just really love showing off his team’s efforts.

Secret Level airs December 10, 2024 on Amazon Prime.

The post Sizzle reel shows off game anthology series Secret Level – wait, was that Mega Man? appeared first on Destructoid.

  • ✇CGMagazine
  • Inside Intel’s CNE Gaming Garage: Level Up Your CNE ExperienceCGMagazine
    There’s nothing better than gaming with a group of friends, especially in the sweltering heat of Toronto’s late summer. That’s where the Intel-sponsored Gaming Garage at the CNE makes an ideal spot for anyone looking to beat the summer heat for the second year in a row! The Canadian National Exhibition (CNE), affectionately known as “The Ex” to locals, is once again hosting Intel’s CNE Gaming Garage. This year, it’s bigger, better, and more immersive than ever. Now in its second year, the In
     

Inside Intel’s CNE Gaming Garage: Level Up Your CNE Experience

9. Srpen 2024 v 20:00
Inside Intel's CNE Gaming Garage: Level Up Your CNE Experience

There’s nothing better than gaming with a group of friends, especially in the sweltering heat of Toronto’s late summer. That’s where the Intel-sponsored Gaming Garage at the CNE makes an ideal spot for anyone looking to beat the summer heat for the second year in a row! The Canadian National Exhibition (CNE), affectionately known as “The Ex” to locals, is once again hosting Intel’s CNE Gaming Garage. This year, it’s bigger, better, and more immersive than ever.

Now in its second year, the Intel-sponsored Gaming Garage has expanded from a modest 6,400 square feet to a sprawling 9,800 square feet of pure gaming excitement. It’s a testament to the success of last year’s debut and the growing appetite for interactive tech experiences at one of Canada’s largest annual fairs.

Inside Intel's CNE Gaming Garage: Level Up Your CNE Experience
Images taken at Intel’s CNE Gaming Garage 2023

Intel’s Marketing Director for the Americas, Asma Aziz, explains: “Intel’s involvement in the CNE Gaming Garage is about showcasing the power of our technology, from the hardware to what it enables as a platform. Gamers will have the chance to see how the latest Intel processors, graphics cards, and other high-performance components ensure a seamless, immersive gaming experience, forming the backbone of the gaming setups and premium PCs available in the Gaming Garage.”

The Gaming Garage is packed with the latest Intel-powered gaming rigs, lifestyle PCs and AI-enhanced machines from a who’s who of tech giants. Acer, ASUS, Dell, HP, iBUYPOWER, MSI, Lenovo and Samsung have all brought their A-game, giving visitors the chance to get their hands on hardware many have only dreamed of.

But perhaps most exciting of all is the massive 2,100-square-foot free-play area at the heart of Intel’s CNE Gaming Garage. Here, visitors can sit down and immerse themselves in their favourite titles, all running on systems that would thrill even the most hardcore PC gamer, and it’s all powered by Intel. It’s the perfect respite for parents needing a break from the carnival atmosphere or for kids wanting to show off their skills on machines that don’t require a pocketful of change—bringing back memories for those who recall the joys of arcades.

Inside Intel's CNE Gaming Garage: Level Up Your CNE Experience
Images taken at Intel’s CNE Gaming Garage 2023

Speaking of arcades, for those who prefer their gaming with a side of nostalgia, the GOES Retro Arcade is back. It offers a trip down memory lane with classic consoles and, for the more adventurous, Virtual Reality stations that promise to transport players to whole new worlds. It’s a range of gaming that goes beyond the typical PC experience, and Intel’s CNE Gaming Garage manages to pack it all into one place, ready for families and friends to enjoy.

As if that were not enough, Intel has you covered for those who love competitive play as well. Esports takes center stage—literally—on a 54-foot-wide main stage that dominates the space. This year, over $25,000 in prize money is up for grabs across three tournaments, including the new CNE Master Clash featuring TEKKEN 8. It’s a national throwdown that’s seen preliminary bouts in Calgary, Vancouver, Edmonton, and Montreal, with the finals set to electrify the CNE crowd on August 25th.

TEKKEN 8 isn’t the only game being showcased. The CNE Gaming Garage powered by Intel will also host The CNE Showdown. Sixteen teams will compete for a chance at part of the $8500 prize pool. You can sign up for the The CNE Showdown: League of Legends brought to you by Alienware and The CNE Showdown: VALORANT hosted by ASUS ROG at their respective links.

Inside Intel's CNE Gaming Garage: Level Up Your CNE Experience
Images taken at Intel’s CNE Gaming Garage 2023

The CNE Gaming Garage is designed to appeal to people of all ages. New for 2024 is a dedicated 1,500-square-foot Kids Zone featuring child-friendly games on Intel-powered laptops and a variety of tech-focused activities. Open daily from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m., it provides a much-needed digital playground for tech-savvy tykes. This is the perfect way to introduce your kids to the joys of PC gaming without concerns about games being too adult or worries about the internet and its many issues.

For those more interested in the creative side of gaming, the Student & Indie Game Showcase offers a glimpse into the future of the industry. Local student developers and independent creators will be showcasing their latest projects, giving attendees a chance to play tomorrow’s hits today. It’s a heartening display of grassroots innovation that stands in stark contrast to the polished AAA titles running on nearby machines.

For those who love tech beyond PCs and gaming, the annual FIRST Robotics competition returns to Intel’s CNE Gaming Garage for the Robots@CNE weekend with this year’s game, CRESCENDO. Teams work together to collect note rings, amplify their speakers, and harmonize by hanging on an elevated chain to score points. It sounds like an exciting showcase—who can say no to robots?

Inside Intel's CNE Gaming Garage: Level Up Your CNE Experience
Images taken at Intel’s CNE Gaming Garage 2023

Perhaps the most intriguing aspect of the Gaming Garage is its “try before you buy” concept, which goes well beyond what you’d find at a typical store. Attendees who get excited about a particular setup can purchase it on the spot from Canada Computers and Best Buy booths conveniently located within the Garage. It’s a savvy move that transforms the space from a mere exhibition into a potential launching pad for back-to-school shopping or holiday wish lists.

As the CNE prepares to welcome hundreds of thousands of visitors from August 16 to September 2, the CNE Gaming Garage powered by Intel stands as an oasis of digital entertainment amidst a sea of traditional fair attractions. It’s a bold statement about the evolving nature of public events and the increasing integration of technology into our leisure activities. This is an opportunity to explore gaming in a safe, controlled environment and see first-hand “Why Intel?” when it comes to gaming laptops, PCs and more.

To celebrate Intel’s second year at the CNE Gaming Garage, we’re teaming up with them to give away five pairs of tickets to the CNE in Toronto so you can check out the Intel Gaming Garage for yourself. Head over to Gleam via this link for multiple ways to enter, and don’t forget to come back every day for daily entries! Tickets include one day’s admission to the CNE between 16th August and 2nd September, including all-day ride passes! Good luck to all!

Inside Intel's CNE Gaming Garage: Level Up Your CNE Experience
Images taken at Intel’s CNE Gaming Garage 2023

As summer winds down and the back-to-school season looms, the CNE Gaming Garage offers one last hurrah for tech enthusiasts, young and old. Whether you’re there to compete, play, shop or simply marvel at the wonders of modern computing, Intel’s digital playground promises to be a highlight of this year’s CNE. Just remember to save some energy for the midway—after all, you can’t spend the whole day gaming. Or can you?

  • ✇1TO1GAMES
  • Demirose beautiful pictures || Demirose photoshoots || Demirose HD wallpaper[email protected] (gaming expert)
    Demi Rose is leading the way for a new generation of digital consumer marketing with an impressive 19 million followers on Instagram. Demi rose beautiful and hot photoshootsAs his impressive career began at the age of 18, his films gained a huge amount of traction, following him around the world. Demi has garnered outstanding campaigns, international media attention and brand support. Demi Rose is an established British Model, Social Media Influencer and Global Ambassador for the women-centric w
     

Demirose beautiful pictures || Demirose photoshoots || Demirose HD wallpaper

1. Září 2022 v 14:10

Demi Rose is leading the way for a new generation of digital consumer marketing with an impressive 19 million followers on Instagram. 

Demi rose beautiful and hot photoshoots

As his impressive career began at the age of 18, his films gained a huge amount of traction, following him around the world. Demi has garnered outstanding campaigns, international media attention and brand support. Demi Rose is an established British Model, Social Media Influencer and Global Ambassador for the women-centric website PrettyLittleThing.


Demi rose hot photoshoots

Demi Rose wins the hearts of people with her captivating pictures and photoshoots. See pictures of Demi Rose in the next slides...




Demi rose HD wallpaper





Demi Rose Photoshoots


Model Demi Rose is definitely an internet sensation because of her stunning photoshoots on Instagram. She is an inspiration to many emerging models. Telling about her fitness, Demi  said, "I try to be as fit as possible. With travel, working out is tough, I travel all over the world but I try to maintain my routine." I do... Everyone says I'm the healthiest person they know. The fattest thing I'll ever eat is peanuts and peanut butter." She keeps on creating panic on social media with her attractive pictures. One of the top models, Demi is quite popular on social media and has more than 19 million followers on Instagram. 


Apart from modeling, stunning model Demi has appeared in many music videos. She has appeared in music videos with well-known personalities such as Chris Brown and DJ Khaled. Born in Birmingham, UK, Demi is of British and Colombian descent and has a college-level degree in beauty therapy and Spanish. Her mesmerizing pictures have taken the internet by storm. (All photos: Demi Rose/Instagram)

http://feeds.feedburner.com/blogspot/TmtTz

  • ✇Finding God in Video Games
  • Giving Away The Plot?: Watching Our WordsFinding God in Video Games
    Stop me if you have heard this one before… you see a trailer or watch a publicity appearance for an upcoming movie that you are excited about, and in the course of about sixty seconds the entire plot of the movie and half of the cool surprises the movie contained are completely spoiled for you. “Teaser” trailers have become less of a taste of what a film has in store for us and more of a full meal, giving away their secrets like a classic movie villain who falls prey to their need to expla
     

Giving Away The Plot?: Watching Our Words

Stop me if you have heard this one before… you see a trailer or watch a publicity appearance for an upcoming movie that you are excited about, and in the course of about sixty seconds the entire plot of the movie and half of the cool surprises the movie contained are completely spoiled for you. “Teaser” trailers have become less of a taste of what a film has in store for us and more of a full meal, giving away their secrets like a classic movie villain who falls prey to their need to explain their entire evil plot to the one person in a position to stop them. We leave the experience feeling like we have a pretty good idea of who will win, who will lose, who will show up, and even what the “second act plot twist” will be. While I am no stranger to the importance of advertising and marketing products to support the largest possible audience for a movie, television show, video game, book, or any other form of consumable entertainment, I think we can all safely say that much of the mystery that exists in these media formats has moved from simply attracting fans with a slice of what they have in store for us to giving away the entire story.

But before I am too hasty in judging these companies, marketers, and publicists for doing their job, I have to reconcile another reality that I have found present in my own life more than I care to admit… I too have fallen pray to some “monologues” myself that have exposed some of the things to the wrong audience that should have been kept between me and the Lord. And if I give you a few examples, maybe you will find some of these in common as well. Have you ever caught yourself saying the words, “You know what I’m afraid of” to someone? Or perhaps share some personal information followed by sharing the knowledge that “if this happened, it would completely destroy me?” or “the only thing that will stop me from doing this is…”? While we might think we are simply having a conversation with a friend or a loved one about a personal concern or struggle we are dealing with, there is a sinister presence eavesdropping on these weaknesses we are exposing… and we just gave them the key to defeating us.

The tendency to give our enemy the most direct path to taking us out is certainly nothing new… over the years many of us have taken a turn at becoming the architects of our own demise, giving away our deepest fears and sharing our weaknesses with perhaps positive intentions but disastrous results. In my own life, I have made the mistake of giving my enemy the exact information that would destroy a relationship or pull me away from serving the Lord many times by speaking those words to a friend or trusted confidante… only to be faced with that exact combination of scenarios and attacks at a later time. And as I find myself reeling from what has occurred, I find myself feeling much like Job did when after he experienced an enemy attack like no other and he said, “The thing I greatly feared has come upon me, and what I dreaded has happened to me”. In a moment of “sharing”, I exposed my deepest fears and vulnerabilities to more than simply my target audience… I gave my enemy the most direct path to shattering my world without even making them work for it.

Job 3:25 For the thing I greatly feared has come upon me, and what I dreaded has happened to me.

One of the saddest stories in all of Scripture is the fall of Samson, a man of exceptional physical power but very limited spiritual restraint. The climax of his story comes as we find him in the hands of Delilah… someone he had placed his trust in who was working for the other side. After years of waging war with the Philistines and being used by God to deliver his people, in a moment of weakness and frustration Samson exposed his only weakness to her… and within hours he found that his confidence had been misplaced. His head was shaved, his power removed, and the man who had withstood hundreds of soldiers single-handedly in combat was now over-powered in a living room… all because he gave away the plot to his story to an audience that couldn’t be trusted with it.

Judges 16:15-20 Then she said to him, “How can you say, ‘I love you,’ when your heart is not with me? You have mocked me these three times, and have not told me where your great strength lies.” And it came to pass, when she pestered him daily with her words and pressed him, so that his soul was vexed to death, that he told her all his heart, and said to her, “No razor has ever come upon my head, for I have been a Nazirite to God from my mother’s womb. If I am shaven, then my strength will leave me, and I shall become weak, and be like any other man.” When Delilah saw that he had told her all his heart, she sent and called for the lords of the Philistines, saying, “Come up once more, for he has told me all his heart.” So the lords of the Philistines came up to her and brought the money in their hand. Then she lulled him to sleep on her knees, and called for a man and had him shave off the seven locks of his head. Then she began to torment him, and his strength left him. And she said, “The Philistines are upon you, Samson!” So he awoke from his sleep, and said, “I will go out as before, at other times, and shake myself free!” But he did not know that the Lord had departed from him.

The Scriptures are clear that we have an active enemy in life (1 Peter 5:8) who seeks nothing more than to steal, kill and destroy (John 10:10), but while the enemy of our soul is incredibly intelligent, they can’t read our minds. Our deepest concerns and fears are things that should be brought to the Lord in prayerful surrender so He can guide us through them (2 Corinthians 10:4-5), and when we open that door through casual conversation with others we are handing that key off to the very presence that has been trying to figure out the best way to break in, destroy us, and shipwreck our faith from day one.

1 Peter 5:8 Be sober, be vigilant; because your adversary the devil walks about like a roaring lion, seeking whom he may devour.

Proverbs 10:19 In the multitude of words sin is not lacking, but he who restrains his lips is wise.

Proverbs 21:23 Whoever guards his mouth and tongue keeps his soul from troubles.

I wish I could take back the things I have said and shared that exposed my deepest fears and created the opportunity for them to be used against me, but unfortunately that isn’t possible. But in the stories of both Job and Samson we find that even after the enemy’s most brutal attacks, the faithfulness of the Lord was present to provide both restoration of their mission in the case of Samson (Judges 16:28-30) as well as what was lost in the case of Job (Job 42:12-13). And if we will yield our fears, concerns, and broken places to the Lord He will be faithful to not only restore them, but to rebuke the enemy and run them out of the space that we inadvertently gave them access to in the first place. Our words are more powerful than we realize, and they can and WILL be used against us by the enemy who is bent on destroying us. Let’s not make his job any easier by giving him the combination to the safe… let’s guard our words and give every concerning or fearful thought to the Lord in prayer… He is the only one who can help us overcome them.

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