
Nintendo: Die zehn besten Indiegames aus fünf Jahren Switch
Die Nintendo Switch feiert Geburtstag. Golem.de stellt die besten Titel jenseits von Mario und Zelda vor – auch für andere Plattformen. Von Rainer Sigl (Nintendo Switch, Spieletest)

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Die Nintendo Switch feiert Geburtstag. Golem.de stellt die besten Titel jenseits von Mario und Zelda vor – auch für andere Plattformen. Von Rainer Sigl (Nintendo Switch, Spieletest)
Der Mac Studio im Test und Intels neue Mega-Fab: die Woche im Video. (Golem-Wochenrückblick, Intel)
Bemerkungen zur derzeit vorherrschenden vorgeblichen Friedensliebe in Öffentlichkeit und Politik
Mehrere Fälle von tödlicher Überarbeitung in der IT-Branche alarmieren Behörden und Öffentlichkeit
FDA says it has received reports that people are injuring themselves with the tests.
Enlarge / A woman takes a swab as part of a COVID-19 antigen rapid test. (credit: Getty | NurPhoto)
The Food and Drug Administration is alerting Americans to the potential dangers of at-home COVID-19 tests after receiving reports of people egregiously misusing them, resulting in injuries.
In a safety communication released Friday, the FDA said it had received reports of injuries after people used the kits' liquid test solution as eye drops or stuck the solution up their noses. "The liquid test solution is not supposed to touch your body," the FDA wrote sternly. The agency also reported that some children had been injured after putting test components in their mouths and swallowing the solution.
"The liquid solutions may include chemical ingredients, such as sodium azide, that help the test work properly or act as preservatives," the FDA wrote. "The test chemicals can be irritating or toxic if they get on your skin, nose, or eyes or if they are swallowed."
Tablets get an apps button in the taskbar and what sounds like a smart-display mode.
Check out the right side of the taskbar—it's an app drawer! [credit: Ron Amadeo ]
Android 13 Developer Preview 2 is out, and with it come a bunch of changes for the next version of Android. Preview 2 is still a very early look at Android 13, and most of the big feature reveals for these Android previews come during Google I/O. The good news is that Google just set a date for that event: May 11–12.
First up, if you're disappointed at the relatively tame tablet changes brought about by Android 12L, know that Google is still working on tablet features. The latest Android 13 preview adds an app drawer button to the taskbar, letting you easily access all your apps from any screen. It's a great addition, and it's hopefully a sign of things to come for the brand-new taskbar added in Android 12L.
Next, it would be great if the Android taskbar worked more like a Windows or Mac taskbar. The Android taskbar shows the bottom row of home-screen icons, and that's it. Instead, it should show pinned apps on one side and recently opened apps on the other. Other operating systems work like this because it makes sense. Google officially calls this a "Taskbar," so shouldn't current tasks appear in it?
Anti-piracy company MarkMonitor is a trusted partner of the major record labels. Among other things, the company provided evidence and testimony for the ongoing piracy lawsuit against Internet provider Bright House. This week, MarkMonitor asked the court to keep this information confidential, fearing that TorrentFreak will share it with the broader public, which could include pirates.
From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.
At TorrentFreak we do our best to keep readers updated on the latest copyright and piracy news, highlighting issues from different points of view.
We report on the opinions and efforts of copyright holders when it comes to online piracy and have active dialogues with anti-piracy outfits. At the same time, we also make room for those who oppose them. That’s how balanced reporting works in our view.
There is probably no site on the Internet that reports on the negative consequences of piracy as much as we do and but for some reason, the term “pro-piracy” is sometimes attached to our reporting.
In most cases we shrug off these characterizations, concluding that those who portray us in this light are simply uninformed. However, when these words are part of a court filing intended to keep information from the public, we have to respond.
This week, anti-piracy MarkMonitor sent a request to a federal court in Florida, asking for the option to file some evidence under seal. This information includes documents, source code, and witness testimony regarding the company’s efforts to track online pirates.
The filing is part of the legal battle between several record labels and ISP Bright House, which is accused of failing to terminate repeat copyright infringement. This accusation is based on evidence from MarkMonitor.
MarkMonitor believes that the requested information is confidential and asks the court to keep it out of the public’s view. This isn’t an unusual request as sealed filings are quite common. However, the argumentation certainly stands out.
The anti-piracy outfit informs the court that it’s particularly concerned about a particular news site named TorrentFreak.
“The designation and maintaining the confidential nature of this information by keeping it filed under seal also helps avoid unrestricted publication of the Confidential Information by Torrent Freak,” MarkMonitor writes.
The request explains that TF and others share news with the public at large, including people who may be involved in hacking or piracy. That can potentially reach the pirating subscribers who are at the center of the lawsuit.
Later on in the filing, MarkMonitor’s legal team uses the term “pro-piracy”, without giving any further explanation of how TorrentFreak would fit into this category.
“[T]he Confidential Information here is proprietary in nature […] with the public’s interest being low, but for competitors who wish to gain an unfair advantage over MarkMonitor or others that wish to publicize or exploit MarkMonitor’s highly sensitive technical information in the pro-piracy sector of the general public.”
MarkMonitor’s filing is in support of a sealing request by the two main parties in the lawsuit. In the original motion, the record labels clarify that some of the MarkMonitor evidence could help pirates to evade detection.
Needless to say, we are perplexed after reading this filing. While it is totally understandable that MarkMonitor and the record labels don’t want to share proprietary or confidential information in public, singling out TorrentFreak is completely unnecessary.
Even worse, using the “pro-piracy” term is wholly inaccurate. Judging from the responses we get, our readership is rather diverse. In fact, copyright holders often approach us with news and regularly cite our independent reporting, even MarkMonitor did so in the past.
While it’s certainly true that we report on these types of lawsuits in detail, we cover the good and the bad for all sides. This also includes positive news for MarkMonitor and the record labels.
This isn’t the first time that the name of this publication has shown up in court filings. The record labels previously portrayed TorrentFreak as an unreliable source. In addition, the music companies were particularly interested to know whether potential jurors in these cases read our news coverage.
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A copy of MarkMonitor’s filing in support for the joint motion to file under seal is available here (pdf)
From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.
Researchers split up a big, reliable data set to find out where things go wrong.
(credit: Deanna Barch)
One of the unfortunate realities of science is that small data sets often produce unreliable results, as any minor, random fluctuations can have a large impact. One solution to this issue has been building ever-larger data sets, where these fluctuations tend to be small compared to any actual effects. One of the notable sources of big data is the UK Biobank; brain scans from people in the Biobank were recently used to identify changes in the brain driven by SARS-CoV-2 infection.
Now, a large team of researchers has turned this idea upside down in a new paper. They took some of the biggest data sets and divided them into smaller pieces to figure out how small data sets could go before things got unreliable. And for at least one type of experiment, the answer is that brain studies need thousands of participants before they're likely to be reliable. And even then, we shouldn't expect to see many dramatic effects.
The research team behind the study termed the type of work they were interested in "brain-wide association studies," or BWAS. It's a pretty simple approach. Take a bunch of people and score them for a behavioral trait. Then give them all brain scans and see if any brain structures have differences that consistently correlate with the behavioral trait.
Ever since Valve announced it was developing a handheld gaming PC, it’s been hard to resist comparing other handhelds from companies like GPD, One Netbook, and AYA to the Steam Deck. Now that the Steam Deck has actually begun shipping and the first reviews are in, those comparisons have become inevitable. And it’s obvious why: the […]
The post Lilbits: Another Celeron N5105 mini PC, variable refresh rates for Chrome OS, and all handheld gaming PCs now face Steam Deck comparisons appeared first on Liliputing.
Ever since Valve announced it was developing a handheld gaming PC, it’s been hard to resist comparing other handhelds from companies like GPD, One Netbook, and AYA to the Steam Deck. Now that the Steam Deck has actually begun shipping and the first reviews are in, those comparisons have become inevitable.
And it’s obvious why: the Steam Deck has the highest-performance GPU of any handheld to date, and it also has one of the lowest price tags: you can easily spend 2-3 times more on an AYA Neo Next or ONEXPLAYER than you’d spend on a Steam Deck. But that doesn’t mean there aren’t still some good reasons to spend the extra money… they just probably aren’t going to be good enough reasons for most people to justify paying the premium
The Verge’s review of the AYA Neo Next is a prime example. What’s ostensibly a review of AYA’s second-gen handheld is as much about how it stacks up against the Steam Deck as it is an article about what you can actually do with the AYA Neo Next itself. The review is still worth a read though, as it really does make a case that there’s room for niche devices like the Next.
In other recent tech news from around the web, the list of mini desktop PCs powered by a 10-watt Intel Celeron N5105 Jasper Lake processor continues to grow, another sign that Google is taking gaming on Chromebooks seriously arrives (Chrome OS 101 adds support for variable screen refresh rates), and Microsoft has released a new preview build of Windows 11 for Insiders on the dev channel.
The @verge review of the AYA Neo Next is probably indicative of what we’ll see from every handheld gaming PC from now on: you can’t avoid Steam Deck comparisons. Here you pay a lot more for better game compatibility, more storage, and less performance. https://t.co/96PT8fdrHM
— Liliputing (@liliputingnews) March 18, 2022
The Bewinner mini PC is yet another compact computer with an Intel Celeron N5105 Jasper Lake processor. This model sells for about 399 Euros (in Europe) and has 8GB of RAM, and an M.2 2280 slot for an SSD. https://t.co/AwLdgTD9RZ
— Liliputing (@liliputingnews) March 18, 2022
Chrome OS is getting support for variable screen refresh rates, which could come in handy now that gaming on Chromebooks is becoming a thing. So far no Chromebooks have displays that would support this, but external monitors should. https://t.co/piXHQi6pYl
— Liliputing (@liliputingnews) March 18, 2022
Windows 11 preview build 22579 lets you name Start Menu folders, support for switching apps with a three-finger swipe, Run New Task button on all pages of Task Manager, and a bunch of bug fixes. https://t.co/9o2X07BDoM
— Liliputing (@liliputingnews) March 18, 2022
Keep up on the latest headlines by following Liliputing on Twitter and Facebook and follow @LinuxSmartphone on Twitter and Facebook for the latest news on open source mobile phones.
The post Lilbits: Another Celeron N5105 mini PC, variable refresh rates for Chrome OS, and all handheld gaming PCs now face Steam Deck comparisons appeared first on Liliputing.
Tests confirm: What’s good for Xbox Game Pass is good for Stadia.
Enlarge / Web-based cloud-streaming is now live and awesome on Steam Deck, courtesy of... Microsoft? Sure. We'll take it. (credit: Aurich Lawson)
The Steam Deck's viability as an all-in-one portable gaming machine just became stronger, as it now formally supports a one-click option to get any web-based cloud gaming service working—including Stadia and Xbox Cloud Gaming.
While the Deck comes with both Firefox and Chrome pre-installed, this update does not work with either of those browsers. Rather, Steam Deck owners will need to install and configure the latest Linux beta of Microsoft Edge. Yes, Linux users, Microsoft has come to your rescue.
The process, as detailed on the official Microsoft Edge Reddit community, requires jumping through a few hoops in the Deck's Arch Linux environment, but it's a mostly painless way to get a web browser to recognize and translate the Steam Deck's buttons, triggers, and joysticks as video game input—something the other browsers haven't gotten around to yet.
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