Ghost of Tsushima Director’s Cut: Reflections, both literal and physical

Not worth the tech upgrade alone, but the story is a thoughtful character study.

Ghost of Tsushima's Iki Island expansion, included in the new Director's Cut version of the game, presents an even better narrative than what we saw in the base game. The Director's Cut, which releases on August 20, also brings new armor sets, a director's commentary, and a digital art book. The PlayStation 5 edition costs $69.99, and the PlayStation 4 version is $59.99—though you can upgrade a PS4 copy of the base game to the Director's Cut for $19.99. (Note: A co-op multiplayer mode was not available in the prelaunch review code.)

The Iki content is separate from the stories and characters of the original game, which took place on the mainland. Ghost of Tsushima's protagonist, Jin, is still the main character, and as he travels to the island of Iki, he encounters an isolated people who resent outside influence, especially from samurai like him.

Jin is viewed with suspicion, even as the Mongols—the primary antagonists of Ghost of Tsushima—continue their raids on Iki's outnumbered pirate population. The islanders' distrust of outsiders is explained as the plot unfolds, and the new material explores themes ignored by the original game. The expansion focuses on Jin's propensity for violence and gives thematic weight to the frequent battles that result in ludicrous body counts. Ghost of Tsushima retains its brutal gameplay, but the narrative forces players to consider the downside of cutting down anyone who looks at you funny.

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Facebook’s “Metaverse” gets a bit closer today with Horizon Workrooms

Horizon Workrooms is a major step toward Zuckerberg’s vision of a VR “metaverse.”

On Thursday, Facebook launched Horizon Workrooms—its first major step toward CEO Mark Zuckerberg's imagined metaverse, an all-encompassing alternate reality that blends the real world with digital imaginations and enhancements.

Zoom for nerds in goggles

This isn't the most flattering way to describe Horizon Workrooms, but it's not exactly inaccurate. The basic concept is that instead of videoconferencing with a webcam, participants use virtual reality gear—like Facebook's own Oculus Quest 2—to meet up in a VR workspace.

We haven't been able to run the app yet; my own Oculus Quest is an original model, sadly unsupported for Horizon Workrooms. (We don't know why the OG Quest isn't supported but suspect it has something to do with enhanced controller-less hand tracking on the newer model.) Two-dimensional recordings almost certainly don't do the experience justice—they look like Habbo Hotel and Bitmoji got together and had a baby.

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Mele Quieter2D is a tiny fanless PC with Intel Celeron N4020 for $179

The Mele Quieter2D is a pocket-sized desktop computer with two HDMI 2.0 ports, four USB 3.0 ports, a Gigabit Ethernet port, and a microSD card slot. Powered by a 6-watt Intel Celeron N4020 dual-core processor, it’s not exactly a high-performance…

The Mele Quieter2D is a pocket-sized desktop computer with two HDMI 2.0 ports, four USB 3.0 ports, a Gigabit Ethernet port, and a microSD card slot. Powered by a 6-watt Intel Celeron N4020 dual-core processor, it’s not exactly a high-performance PC, but it should be a silent computer thanks to its fanless design. Mele’s latest mini PC […]

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Old Steve Jobs email finally confirms Apple was working on an “iPhone nano”

The name appeared in an email about planning Apple’s 2011 product strategy.

The back of the iPhone 12 mini

Enlarge / The iPhone 12 mini. (credit: Samuel Axon)

Last year, the iPhone 12 mini flopped—a setback for lovers of small flagship phones designed for one-handed use. But as anyone who has been following Apple for years knows, former CEO Steve Jobs was an advocate for small phones. Now, thanks to an email written by Jobs in 2010, we know that Apple was at one time working on an "iPhone nano."

This year, Epic Games and Apple have been locked in a legal battle over the future of the iPhone's app ecosystem. During those legal proceedings, several emails sent within Apple over the years have been made public. Most of the press coverage about these emails so far has focused on various statements by Apple executives decrying sideloading, but we all knew Apple leaders' feelings about that subject already.

Now, though, we've learned something about the company's one-time product plans in an email first discovered and analyzed this week by The Verge. Jobs wrote and sent the email, which shows an agenda for an executive meeting about Apple's 2011 product plans, in 2010. Here's the relevant excerpt, with an explicit reference to an iPhone nano at the end:

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OnlyFans bans sexually explicit content to appease banks and payment services

Upcoming ban harms sex workers who helped OnlyFans become a big moneymaker.

The OnlyFans website seen on a laptop web browser.

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images | Bloomberg )

OnlyFans today announced an upcoming ban on "sexually explicit" material in a move that will affect a large amount of the content that creators post on the platform. Nudity will still be allowed, but OnlyFans has yet to detail where it will draw the line between acceptable and unacceptable content.

Critics of the move pointed out that it will reduce income for sex workers who helped make the site popular. OnlyFans said in a statement that it is making the change "to comply with the requests of our banking partners and payout providers." The new strategy also seems to be part of OnlyFans' attempt to attract investors at a valuation of $1 billion, a project that has reportedly hit a roadblock because of the site's racy content.

"Effective October 1, 2021, OnlyFans will prohibit the posting of any content containing sexually explicit conduct," OnlyFans said in a statement the company provided to Ars. "In order to ensure the long-term sustainability of the platform, and to continue to host an inclusive community of creators and fans, we must evolve our content guidelines. Creators will continue to be allowed to post content containing nudity as long as it is consistent with our Acceptable Use Policy."

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The new Motorola Edge comes to the US (108MP camera and Snapdragon 778G)

The new Motorola Edge is a smartphone with a 6.8 inch, 2460 x 1080 pixel display with a 144 Hz refresh rate and 576 touch latency, a large 5,000 mAh battery, 8GB of RAM, 256GB of storage, 30W fast charging, and triple cameras including a 108MP primary…

The new Motorola Edge is a smartphone with a 6.8 inch, 2460 x 1080 pixel display with a 144 Hz refresh rate and 576 touch latency, a large 5,000 mAh battery, 8GB of RAM, 256GB of storage, 30W fast charging, and triple cameras including a 108MP primary camera. But the phone is positioned as more of […]

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Charter Patents Technology That Can Ban Piracy Devices on Its Network

Charter Communications has filed a patent application for a technology that can detect and ban rogue devices on its network. This can help to block orphan and cloned modems, which connect without permission. However, the ISP notes that the same technology can also be used to ban piracy-linked devices, such as illicit streaming boxes.

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

With dozens of millions of subscribers, Charter is one of the largest Internet providers in the United States.

Most people use their Internet connections for legitimate activities. However, similar to other ISPs, there are pirating subscribers as well.

These pirates are causing quite a bit of trouble for Charter. The company is involved in two lawsuits where prominent music outfits accuse it of failing to disconnect repeat copyright infringers.

The ISP previously defended itself by arguing that it can’t monitor or control how subscribers use the Internet. However, a new patent application suggests that this could change in the future.

Patent Detects Theft

The proposed patent titled “System And Method For Detecting And Responding To Theft Of Service Devices” describes a technology to ban rogue devices. The legitimacy of devices is ‘predicted’ based on information from DHCP logs, which can point to rogue activity.

charter patent

This technology can be used for a wide range of purposes. It can help to ban cloned, rogue or orphan modems. These connect to Charter’s network without paying and are increasingly used by malicious actors.

“[T]hese unauthorized or illegitimate devices are being increasingly used by hackers, thieves, organized fraud rings, and other nefarious actors to launch cyber-attacks, gain remote control of devices, steal private or sensitive information, hide their true identities, or engage in other malicious activities,” Charter writes.

Banning Pirate Devices

Stopping this type of activity is in the best interest of Charter as well as the public at large. However, the patent also comes with some good news for copyright holders, as it can be used to ban piracy-related devices as well.

In recent years pirate streaming boxes and illegal IPTV devices have been selling like hotcakes. This is a problem for rightsholders, especially because these pirates can’t be tracked down easily, as opposed to torrent-based piracy.

The patent application notes that a specific set of rules could be set up to target a wide variety of illegal devices, including those that are likely linked to piracy.

“For instance, devices that associate with other perceived threats, such as video piracy, may be marked in a database for further monitoring and behavior surveillance,” the patent application reads.

“These operations may be performed in real-time or near-real time so that model scoring runs before a lease is granted by the DHCP server. These operations are also effective for devices that have already been granted a prior lease.”

Blacklisting MAC Addresses

When a device is flagged as problematic it can easily be banned from the network by putting its MAC address on a blacklist. This list is connected to the cable modem termination system, which will then ignore all flagged devices.

The patent has yet to be granted and whether Charter has concrete plans to use the system as an anti-piracy tool is unknown.

That said, it’s interesting to see that Charter is considering monitoring and blocking piracy at the network level. In theory, that could come in handy as a bargaining chip in the ongoing piracy lawsuits the company is involved in.

Below is a technical drawing of a potential implementation of the detection and blocking system. A full copy of the patent application from Charter Communications Operating is available here.

charter patent

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

FTC: Facebook was bad at business, so it “illegally bought or buried” competition

FTC chair Lina Khan cast deciding vote in decision to refile.

Extreme close-up photograph of smartphone.

Enlarge / Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp are the three largest parts of Facebook's sprawling empire... for now. (credit: Rafael Henrique | SOPA Images | LightRocket | Getty Images)

The Federal Trade Commission has refiled its lawsuit against Facebook and has included additional data that it hopes will bolster its case.

The refiling is a response to the FTC’s initial case, which was thrown out in June by US District Judge James Boasberg, who did not think the agency provided sufficient data or a sharp enough definition of Facebook’s market in its first filing. Judge Boasberg also dismissed a similar lawsuit against Facebook brought by 40 states on similar grounds.

“No other personal social networking provider in the United States remotely approaches Facebook’s scale,” the FTC said in its lawsuit.

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Intel leaks show next-gen desktop CPUs with hybrid “big.little” design

Leaked specs show performance and efficiency cores in 12th- and 13th-gen CPUs.

It's a bit too early for photos of Alder Lake-S CPUs, much less Raptor Lake-S—so here's a gorgeous photo of an alder tree on the shore of Llyn Gwynant, in North Wales' Snowdonia National Park.

Enlarge / It's a bit too early for photos of Alder Lake-S CPUs, much less Raptor Lake-S—so here's a gorgeous photo of an alder tree on the shore of Llyn Gwynant, in North Wales' Snowdonia National Park. (credit: R A Kearton via Getty Images)

It looks like big.little CPU design—an architecture that includes both fast, power-hungry cores and slower, more power-efficient cores—is here to stay in the x86_64 world, according to unverified insider information leaked by wccftech and AdoredTV.

Intel’s big/little designs enter round two

At Intel's 2021 Architecture day, the company confirmed that its upcoming Alder Lake (12th generation) processors will use a mixture of performance and efficiency cores. This brings the company's discontinued 2020 Lakefield design concept firmly into the mainstream.

Big.little designs run time-sensitive tasks on bigger, hotter performance cores while running background tasks on slower but much less power-hungry cores. This architecture is near-universal in the ARM world—which now includes Apple M1 Macs as well as Android and iOS phones and tablets—but it's far less common in the x86_64 "traditional computing" world.

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Final Eternals trailer is heavy on the exposition, eye-popping visuals

“This is what the end of the world looks like. At least we have front-row seats.”

Plot details have been scant to date for Eternals, Marvel's forthcoming film based on the comic book series of the same name created by Jack Kirby in 1976. We now have the final trailer, and it's a doozy: nearly three full minutes of mostly new footage, heavy on exposition and the striking CGI-heavy visuals Marvel is known for. The trailer also answers one obvious burning question: just where were these incredibly powerful eternal beings when all the action with Thanos wiping out half of humanity was going down? I mean, humanity really could have used their help.

As I've written previously, the comic book storyline tells of alien Celestials who visited Earth a million years ago, creating two divergent races—the Eternals and the Deviants—by way of genetic experiments. Those experiments were also responsible for the rare emergence of mutations in certain humans, giving them super powers. The Eternals protect the human race from the Deviants, and the two races engage in recurrent violent clashes. The Eternals' immortality and powers come from cosmic energy and their ability to channel it. A new Eternals comic series was launched in January of this year, written by Kieron Gillen with art by Esad Ribić. 

We know the film takes place after the events of Avengers: Endgame and that an unexpected tragedy will force the Eternals out of hiding to join forces with humans to fight their ancient enemy, the Deviants. An extended teaser dropped in May, set to a mournful cover of "The End of the World." The teaser didn't convey much information in terms of plot, but it did give us glimpses of our primary characters over the course of centuries.

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