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- Google Chrome 76 beta makes it harder to use Flash, easier to dodge paywalls
- E3 proved that video game publishers want to become Netflix
- Microsoft xCloud and Google Stadia hands-on: Why I can’t compare them yet
- Huawei is apparently showing ads on lockscreens for some of its phones
- Man of Medan’s creators hold ‘death meetings’ to find the best way to kill characters
- Valve announces Underlords, a standalone Auto Chess clone for Steam, Android, and iOS
- Target is now offering same-day delivery directly through its website
- Apple’s Logic Pro X update shows just how powerful the new Mac Pro is
- How to find your downloaded music in Spotify
- Bethesda’s Fallout Shelter and YouTube streaming are coming to Tesla cars
Google Chrome 76 beta makes it harder to use Flash, easier to dodge paywalls Posted: 13 Jun 2019 04:59 PM PDT Google Chrome's last big feature was dark mode in Chrome 73 and 74, and version 75 didn't bring much of note, but Chrome 76, in beta today, has some sneaky features you may want to know about. While Adobe Flash won't truly die till 2020 and has been blocked by every major browser in one way or another for several years now, Chrome 76 is taking it one step further. Not only are individual Flash items blocked by default, but now the entire browser feature is off by default as well. If you opt into the beta and head over to chrome://settings/content/flash, you should see the with the little "Ask First" setting flipped off instead of on, according to 9to5Google. Another somewhat covert tweak: Google Chrome developer Paul Irish says that... |
E3 proved that video game publishers want to become Netflix Posted: 13 Jun 2019 02:53 PM PDT With the first details coming out around the next Xbox and PlayStation, you might expect those upcoming consoles to be the buzz of this year's E3. But instead, subscription services have become the talk of the show, as seemingly every console maker and game publisher looks to shift the way that games are sold. Every major publisher is racing to offer the first real "Netflix for games," selling games to players via a monthly subscription service. Ubisoft is launching its own subscription service, UPlay Plus, and Final Fantasy publisher Square Enix is also looking to launch one too. That's on top of Microsoft spending millions of dollars acquiring game studios in an attempt to fill out its catalog for Game Pass subscribers; EA's Origin... |
Microsoft xCloud and Google Stadia hands-on: Why I can’t compare them yet Posted: 13 Jun 2019 02:31 PM PDT Cloud gaming is the undeniably industry-altering shadow looming over this year's E3 video game conference. Paired with the rise of subscription services, the idea of running games from remote servers could not only change how they're are played, distributed and sold, but even how games are developed, thanks to the promise of running software off the equivalent of multiple consoles strung together. The two frontrunners in the race are Google and Microsoft, two of the tech industry's most powerful companies and two of the largest players in the existing cloud computing market. Both have the infrastructure, the expertise, and the resources to get cloud gaming off the ground, and we're seeing that right now as Microsoft's xCloud and Google... |
Huawei is apparently showing ads on lockscreens for some of its phones Posted: 13 Jun 2019 02:31 PM PDT A number of Huawei phone owners have noticed that their devices have suddenly begun displaying ads in their lockscreens, according to Android Police. Users began complaining yesterday that ads from Booking.com have appeared on their phones. 9to5Google notes that a variety of phones appear to be displaying them, and that Huawei appears to have slipped them into the phone's Magazine Unlock feature. That feature allows users to have a rotating set of images on their lockscreen, which change every time they unlock their phone. We've reached out to Huawei and Booking.com for comment, and will update this post if we hear back.
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Man of Medan’s creators hold ‘death meetings’ to find the best way to kill characters Posted: 13 Jun 2019 02:14 PM PDT Supermassive Games has a unique problem. As with its horror game Until Dawn, where every character could die a horrific death, Man of Medan — the first in its Dark Pictures Anthology — will carry on that tradition. Keeping those deaths fresh, however, keeps the team on its toes. "It's s a real big problem because killing people — it's easy to just kill people," says game director Tom Heaton. 'We have to kill people in really entertaining ways." Man of Medan is a riff on ghost ship stories, in which a group of friends wind up trapped on a haunted vessel in the South Pacific. The choices players make will decide who survives the trip, and who dies in one of the developer's unique gruesome deaths. That may sound slightly deranged, but... |
Valve announces Underlords, a standalone Auto Chess clone for Steam, Android, and iOS Posted: 13 Jun 2019 01:57 PM PDT Valve has just announced Underlords: its own version of the popular Auto Chess mod for Dota 2. Underlords will be a standalone game for Windows, Mac, Linux, iOS, and Android. Valve says it has been running a "friends and family" beta of the game for the past few weeks, and will be expanding the test today to all Dota 2 Battle Pass owners. A free open beta of the game will then launch after a week of preview stress testing. Underlords is the second breakout title from the company's Dota 2 portfolio after 2018's release of Artifact, which was met with mediocre reviews. (Artifact dropped off sharply on Twitch, only to be resurrected as a meme for facilitating streaming piracy.) Unlike Artifact, Auto Chess already has a strong following.... |
Target is now offering same-day delivery directly through its website Posted: 13 Jun 2019 01:48 PM PDT Target announced today that US customers — with some geographic exceptions — can now select same-day delivery for orders placed directly through its website that total more than $35 for a flat fee of $9.99, or for free if they're already a member of shopping app Shipt. It's part of the company's integration with Shipt (which it acquired in 2017 for $550 million) to take on competing retailers like Amazon and Walmart. Shipt costs $99 per year, and with its app, customers can place and pay for someone to pick up their order and bring it to them — orders that fall below $35 incur a $7 delivery fee, while orders above $35 are free. Shipt would deliver Target orders to customers if they were also members, but now, any customer can take... |
Apple’s Logic Pro X update shows just how powerful the new Mac Pro is Posted: 13 Jun 2019 01:43 PM PDT Apple has released an updated version of Logic Pro X, its professional music production software. The software is now souped up to show off the capabilities of the new Mac Pro, with improved responsiveness and a huge increase in the amount of tracks it can support in a project file. This is a significant upgrade for Logic — it's gone from support for 255 stereo audio tracks, 255 software instrument tracks and 255 aux channels to 1,000 for each, and now also supports 1,000 external MIDI tracks. Other DAWs already have some of these functions — Ableton supports unlimited audio and MIDI tracks, for example, and Pro Tools has 512 aux channels — but now Logic benchmarks or outpaces these DAWs in other areas. Additionally, this new version of... |
How to find your downloaded music in Spotify Posted: 13 Jun 2019 01:09 PM PDT Perhaps I'm in the minority, but I still download a lot of music from Spotify. It's really handy to have tunes stored locally on my phone for a multitude of reasons. I can listen without buying on-flight Wi-Fi, and every day during my commute on the NYC subway when the Wi-Fi and LTE signals inevitably cut out underground. Having easy access to these downloaded songs and albums is important to me, but the latest Spotify update that's rolling out now (version 8.5.9.737 for Android and 8.5.7.601 for iOS) makes them harder to find for premium users. The "Your Library" section of the app not only looks different, but Spotify has eliminated the "Songs" section, leaving just "Playlists," "Artists," and "Albums." Don't worry, all your songs are... |
Bethesda’s Fallout Shelter and YouTube streaming are coming to Tesla cars Posted: 13 Jun 2019 12:52 PM PDT The latest game to come to Tesla's massive touchscreen infotainment center is Bethesda's Fallout Shelter, the free-to-play post-apocalyptic spinoff title that came out for mobile devices back in 2015. The announcement was made this afternoon by Bethesda Game Studios' Todd Howard, the director of Fallout 4 and Fallout 76 and the executive producer of Fallout Shelter. The game joins indie platformer Cuphead, announced for Tesla earlier this month, and a series of Atari classics that came to the electric vehicle last August. Howard spoke today alongside Tesla CEO Elon Musk live during Geoff Keighley's E3 Coliseum event, where Musk made a few other entertainment-related Tesla announcements. Musk said YouTube is coming to Tesla vehicles. He... |
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