Where are all the Nintendo Switch game ports?

Despite healthy hardware sales, plenty of big-name games aren’t making the switch.

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With retailers continuing to sell out of Nintendo Switch hardware pretty much the moment it comes into stock and Nintendo promising shipments of 10 million consoles by the end of the fiscal year, you'd think third-party publishers would be falling all over themselves to port existing and upcoming games and franchises over to Nintendo's hit system.

For the most part, you'd be wrong (so far, at least).

Sure, you can find some major multi-platform ports in the Switch's list of upcoming games. Those include ports of older titles like Skyrim and Rocket League, sports games like NBA 2K18 and FIFA 18, family titles like Lego Marvel Super Heroes 2 and Just Dance 2018, and so on. And the Switch already has versions of Minecraft, NBA Playgrounds, and plenty of indie games that also appear on other consoles.

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Deals of the Day (7-07-2017)

Deals of the Day (7-07-2017)

Looking a movie to watch this weekend? Amazon is running a 99 cent sale on video rentals… but it’s exclusively available to Amazon Prime members. The deal is part of the lead-up to Amazon Prime Day on July 11th… although with deals starting a week early, I’m wondering if it’s really Prime week. Anyway, if […]

Deals of the Day (7-07-2017) is a post from: Liliputing

Deals of the Day (7-07-2017)

Looking a movie to watch this weekend? Amazon is running a 99 cent sale on video rentals… but it’s exclusively available to Amazon Prime members. The deal is part of the lead-up to Amazon Prime Day on July 11th… although with deals starting a week early, I’m wondering if it’s really Prime week. Anyway, if […]

Deals of the Day (7-07-2017) is a post from: Liliputing

Creationist sues national parks, now gets to take rocks from Grand Canyon

Park Service relented despite initial rejection based on geologists’ reviews.

Enlarge (credit: Scott K. Johnson)

“Alternative facts” aren’t new. Young-Earth creationist groups like Answers in Genesis believe the Earth is no more than 6,000 years old despite actual mountains of evidence to the contrary, and they've been playing the “alternative facts” card for years. In lieu of conceding incontrovertible geological evidence, they sidestep it by saying, “Well, we just look at those facts differently.”

Nowhere is this more apparent than the Grand Canyon, which young-Earth creationist groups have long been enamored with. A long geologic record (spanning almost 2 billion years, in total) is on display in the layers of the Grand Canyon thanks to the work of the Colorado River. But many creationists instead assert that the canyon’s rocks—in addition to the spectacular erosion that reveals them—are actually the product of the Biblical “great flood” several thousand years ago.

Andrew Snelling, who got a PhD in geology before joining Answers in Genesis, continues working to interpret the canyon in a way that is consistent with his views. In 2013, he requested permission from the National Park Service to collect some rock samples in the canyon for a new project to that end. The Park Service can grant permits for collecting material, which is otherwise illegal.

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Waymo drops most of its patent case against Uber

Judge questioned whether Waymo’s patent case is “worth the salt.”

Enlarge / Pieces of Uber's earlier lidar system, codenamed "Spider," are arrayed in a courtroom in San Francisco. (credit: Waymo v. Uber court documents)

Waymo has narrowed the claims in its lawsuit against Uber over self-driving car technology. Alphabet's self-driving car company dropped most of its patent claims in an effort to streamline a planned October trial.

Uber was sued in February, when Waymo dropped the bombshell allegation that a former Uber engineer, Anthony Levandowski, stole more than 14,000 files while working at Google. Levandowski hasn't denied the downloads, instead asserting his Fifth Amendment rights. Meanwhile, Uber fired Levandowski and defended itself, saying Waymo's trade secrets never made their way onto Uber servers.

With fiery disputes over discovery erupting practically every week, Waymo's patent case was a kind of corollary to the main show. Uber has used two different types of "lidar," the main technology at issue in the case. Lidar is a system for using lasers to allow self-driving cars to "see" the streetscape around them. Uber gave its prototypes the names "Spider" and "Fuji."

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Court Orders Advertisers to Freeze Revenue of ‘Pirate’ Sites

A federal court in Florida has granted a preliminary injunction against more than two dozen relatively small pirate sites. The order allows the media conglomerate ABS-CBN to seize the associated domain names. In addition, advertising networks including Google Adsense and MGID are instructed to freeze their funds.

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and ANONYMOUS VPN services.

When one thinks of anti-piracy efforts in the United States, the MPAA and RIAA are often the first groups that come to mind.

While that may be true, there’s another player which has made a massive impact, while barely being noticed at all.

ABS-CBN, the largest media and entertainment company in the Philippines, has filed a series of lawsuits against pirate sites in the US, with the popular streaming portal Fmovies as the biggest target.

The company has already won several cases with damages ranging from a few hundred thousand to millions of dollars. However, the associated injunctions in these cases are perhaps even more significant.

We previously covered how ABS-CBN managed to get court orders to seize domain names, without the defendants getting actively involved. This is also the case in a recent lawsuit where a Florida federal court signed a broad injunction targeting more than two dozen sites.

The websites, including dramasget.com, latestpinoymovies.com, pinoydailyshows.com, tvnijuan.org and weeklywarning.org, may not ring a bell with a wide audience but their domain names have all been suspended, linking to a takedown message instead.

And there is another interesting element to the injunction, which hasn’t been widely used in the past. Hoping for a good shot at some damages down the road, ABS-CBN put in a request to freeze the advertising revenues of these sites at Google Adsense, MGID, Popads.net, and elsewhere.

The court signed off on this, and added it to the preliminary injunction. As a result, the advertisers must freeze the funds until further notice.

“…all funds in the advertising accounts related to Defendants as identified on Schedule B, including but not limited to those which are currently held by the advertising services […] are immediately restrained from movement, transfer, or otherwise being disturbed, as opposed to ongoing activity.”

None of the funds of the defendants are allowed to be moved. Instead, the court order directs the advertising companies to transfer everything to a holding account that is known to the court.

On top of that, Google Adsense, MGID, and the other advertising companies must send the copyright holder an overview of the revenue in each account and all transactions associated with it.

“(i) an accounting of the total funds restrained and identifies the advertising/financial account(s) which the restrained funds are related to, and (ii) the account transactions related to all funds transmitted into the advertising/financial account(s) which have been restrained.”

Needless to say, this injunction will have a pretty severe effect on alleged pirate sites. Not only do they lose their preferred advertising outlets, but they also miss out on any pending revenue.

The sites that are targeted in this case are relatively small, but it could, in theory, happen to the big players as well. While the RIAA and MPAA are not involved in this case, we’re pretty confident that they are watching this case very closely.

Finally, the injunction sheds an interesting light on which registrars and registries swiftly respond to US court orders. At the time of writing all .com, .org and .net domains are suspended, but some of the .ag, .ch and .ph domains are still operational. With new ads, of course.

A copy of the preliminary injunction is available here (pdf).

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and ANONYMOUS VPN services.

More details on the demise of WDLabs (hard drives for Raspberry Pi… among other things)

More details on the demise of WDLabs (hard drives for Raspberry Pi… among other things)

Western Digital is shutting down its WDLabs division, which is responsible for selling hard drive kits intended for use with the Raspberry Pi line of products, as well as other single-board computers. We first reported on the news last month, but WD has yet to release a public statement on the matter. Now our anonymous […]

More details on the demise of WDLabs (hard drives for Raspberry Pi… among other things) is a post from: Liliputing

More details on the demise of WDLabs (hard drives for Raspberry Pi… among other things)

Western Digital is shutting down its WDLabs division, which is responsible for selling hard drive kits intended for use with the Raspberry Pi line of products, as well as other single-board computers. We first reported on the news last month, but WD has yet to release a public statement on the matter. Now our anonymous […]

More details on the demise of WDLabs (hard drives for Raspberry Pi… among other things) is a post from: Liliputing

Super-litigious patent holder ordered to pay defendant’s legal fees

Shipping and Transit has a habit of dismissing cases when defendants fight back.

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images)

Shipping and Transit, LLC is a company that has spent more than a decade filing patent lawsuits against big businesses, public transport systems, and one-man software companies. Now for the first time, the organization has been ordered to pay the legal fees of one of the companies it sued.

A federal judge has ordered (PDF) Shipping and Transit—formerly known as ArrivalStar, also known as Melvino Technologies—to pay legal fees to Logistics Planning Services (LPS), a Minnesota freight logistics company.

Shipping and Transit's business model "involves filing hundreds of patent infringement lawsuits, mostly against small companies, and leveraging the high cost of litigation to extract settlements for amounts less than $50,000," wrote US District Judge Andrew Guilford in his order, published Wednesday. "These tactics present a compelling need for deterrence and to discourage exploitative litigation by patentees who have no intention of testing the merits of their claims."

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Nintendo could have supported Super FX long before the SNES Classic

Despite rumors, Nintendo always had the rights to the chip’s architecture.

"It's the difference between looking at a picture and being there." (credit: Stone Age Gamer)

Since launching the Virtual Console in 2006, Nintendo has officially re-released dozens of Super NES games for play on modern consoles. As that emulated library has grown, though, many have noted an important gap: Nintendo hasn't re-released any SNES games that made use of the 3D-focused Super FX chip (or the improved Super FX2 follow-up).

The Super FX chip was only used in a handful of released games, and that list includes well-remembered classics like Star Fox and Yoshi's Island (which was actually re-coded with new, non-FX-powered graphics for its Game Boy Advance re-release in 2002). But while we've been able to buy and download games like SimCity and Kirby's Dream Course on the Wii for about a decade now, Nintendo has been effectively ignoring these Super FX-powered classics for just as long.

That streak of Super FX disrespect will finally end in September when Yoshi's Island and Star Fox will show up on the Super NES Classic Edition. They'll be joined by the previously unreleased, Super FX2-powered Star Fox 2, which was completed in the mid-'90s but cancelled to avoid the shadow of more powerful 3D games on the likes of PlayStation and Nintendo 64.

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Lightank W100 is a $735 mini PC-in-a-projector (for China)

Lightank W100 is a $735 mini PC-in-a-projector (for China)

Take the guts of a low-power Windows laptop, stuff them in a compact, funny looking case, and add a 1000 lumen projector and you get… the Lightank W100, apparently. This little Windows 10 PC is coming soon to China, where it will sell for ¥4999, or about $735. You can use the Lightank W100 as a […]

Lightank W100 is a $735 mini PC-in-a-projector (for China) is a post from: Liliputing

Lightank W100 is a $735 mini PC-in-a-projector (for China)

Take the guts of a low-power Windows laptop, stuff them in a compact, funny looking case, and add a 1000 lumen projector and you get… the Lightank W100, apparently. This little Windows 10 PC is coming soon to China, where it will sell for ¥4999, or about $735. You can use the Lightank W100 as a […]

Lightank W100 is a $735 mini PC-in-a-projector (for China) is a post from: Liliputing

Cable TV companies can charge higher prices thanks to new court ruling

Court upholds FCC decision that said cable TV faces competition nationwide.

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images | KLH49)

The cable TV industry has won a big victory against rate regulation via a court decision that will make it harder for cities and towns to impose price controls on pay-TV service.

Today's ruling from the US Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit upheld a June 2015 decision by the Federal Communications Commission that helped cable companies avoid local rate regulation. The FCC, under then-Chairman Tom Wheeler, ruled that cable TV providers face "effective competition" nationwide, mainly because of the widespread availability of satellite TV service from DirecTV and Dish.

Local franchise authorities are allowed to regulate the rates cable TV providers charge for basic cable services and equipment if the local cable company does not face "effective competition." Before the June 2015 FCC vote, the burden of proof was on cable companies to show that they faced effective competition. The Wheeler FCC's decision shifted the burden of proof to local authorities by adopting a "rebuttable presumption" that cable operators face effective competition.

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