It’s getting too hot to play the Steam Deck or Switch outside, makers warn

Nintendo, Valve say not to use their products above 35° C (95° F).

Even the shade may not be enough to save your Nintendo Switch in extreme temperatures.

Enlarge / Even the shade may not be enough to save your Nintendo Switch in extreme temperatures. (credit: Nintendo UK / YouTube)

One of the main perks of portable consoles is the ability to play them outside the house, a use we've seen emphasized in multiple marketing campaigns over the years. But as countries around the world have suffered through record-breaking heat waves in recent weeks, two major portable console makers are warning players that their products don't function well in ambient temperatures in excess of 35° C (95° F).

Nintendo of Japan led off the warnings last week, tweeting that "if you use the Nintendo Switch in a hot place, the temperature of the main unit may become high," according to a machine translation. "If the temperature of the main unit becomes too high, it may sleep automatically to protect the main unit." The company also urged players to make sure the vents on the console and docking unit are not blocked by dust or debris, and to install that dock "in a location that does not retain heat."

Valve joined in with a public heat warning yesterday, tweeting a reminder that the Steam Deck "may start to throttle performance to protect itself" in high ambient temperatures. The Steam Deck's internal APU starts scaling back performance when the chip itself hits a temperature of 100° C (212° F), and will shut down if it tops 105° C (221° F), Valve said. After that, the system can limit battery charging rates, download speeds, and even SSD speeds to keep the GPU running as steadily as possible.

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Xbox becomes first game console to formally support Discord voice chat

Rolling out to “Xbox Insiders” today; will (for now) require pairing with smartphone.

Discord and Xbox, seen here getting chummy by way of cute cartoon avatars attached to Discord iconography.

Enlarge / Discord and Xbox, seen here getting chummy by way of cute cartoon avatars attached to Discord iconography. (credit: Aurich Lawson | Discord)

After trying, and failing, to acquire the popular chat platform Discord for $10 billion, Microsoft has opted for the next-best thing: directly integrating Discord's voice-chat capabilities into Xbox consoles.

The news arrived on Wednesday on Xbox Blog, and it clarified that for the time being, Discord access would be exclusive to the optional "Xbox Insider" tier of early, beta, and preview console OS updates. That update is already going live in waves to Xbox Insiders today, and it adds a new tooltip to the system's "chat" sidebar: "Try Discord Voice on Xbox today!"

Simplifying your Discord life adds a few complications

Since its debut in 2015, Discord has exploded in popularity as a gaming-friendly chat platform on computers and smartphones. One major differentiator over a service like Slack, which looks and operates similarly, is Discord's clever ties into existing gaming networks. The idea being, wherever you're playing a game, Discord can broadcast that status to friends via ties to other platforms' APIs ("playing Stray on PlayStation," "LFP in World of WarCraft," "streaming a session of Peggle 2 on Twitch"). Users can switch between direct messages, game-specific text chat rooms, real-time voice channels, and even video-sharing services to coordinate their next online gaming sessions.

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Meet Qikiqtania, a fossil fish with the good sense to stay in the water

Fossil provides glimpse of lifestyles among fishes during water-to-land transition.

An artist’s vision of Qikiqtania enjoying its fully aquatic, free-swimming lifestyle.

Enlarge / An artist’s vision of Qikiqtania enjoying its fully aquatic, free-swimming lifestyle. (credit: Alex Boersma/CC BY-ND)

Approximately 365 million years ago, one group of fishes left the water to live on land. These animals were early tetrapods, a lineage that would radiate to include many thousands of species including amphibians, birds, lizards, and mammals. Human beings are descendants of those early tetrapods, and we share the legacy of their water-to-land transition.

But what if, instead of venturing onto the shores, they had turned back? What if these animals, just at the cusp of leaving the water, had receded to live again in more open waters?

A new fossil suggests that one fish, in fact, did just that. In contrast to other closely related animals, which were using their fins to prop their bodies up on the bottom of the water and perhaps occasionally venturing out onto land, this newly discovered creature had fins that were built for swimming.

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Today’s best deals: Apple iPad Mini, Eufy security cameras, and more

Dealmaster also has a new PlayStation sale, Half-Life: Alyx, and PCIe 4.0 SSDs.

Today’s best deals: Apple iPad Mini, Eufy security cameras, and more

Enlarge (credit: Ars Technica)

It's Wednesday, which means it's time for another Dealmaster. Our latest roundup of the best tech deals from around the web includes a discount at Best Buy that brings Apple's iPad Mini down to $400. While this deal is only around $25-30 lower than the 8.3-inch tablet's average price on Amazon over the last couple of months, it's still $100 off Apple's MSRP, and it matches the all-time lowest price we've tracked.

We gave the Mini itself a positive review when it launched last September. It's still a somewhat niche device, in that you really have to find value in owning a small tablet, and not just a larger phone, for it to be worth it. The iPad Air and iPad Pro models have faster M1 SoCs and bigger displays better suited to productivity, while the 10.2-inch iPad still provides the essentials at a lower price, even if its design is dated by comparison. We wish the base model here had more than 64GB of storage, too. But if the idea of a one-handed tablet for reading, watching videos, Apple Pencil doodling, and doing other iPad things is specifically what you're after, the iPad Mini is still the best one of those. Its A15 chip remains plenty performant for mainstream tasks, its display is accurate, and its iPad Air-like redesign, complete with squared edges and a USB-C port, makes better use of its available space.

It's worth noting that the previous-gen iPad Mini started at $399, but this newer model is a fairly significant upgrade all the same. If you want cellular connectivity, meanwhile, the model that supports that is on sale for $550, which also matches the lowest price we've seen. There's a chance Apple introduces a new iPad Mini later this year, too, potentially with the M1 chip, though we haven't seen many reports suggesting as much (unlike other Apple products), and any new model is unlikely to reach this deal price soon after launch.

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After MPA Chopped Off PrimeWire’s Head, HydraWire.tv Grew Back

After filing a copyright lawsuit in 2021, this April several Hollywood studios and Netflix won a broad injunction to shut down illegal streaming site PrimeWire. It will come as no surprise to learn that is more easily said than done. The MPA says that after the head of PrimeWire was chopped off by an injunction, a new site called HydraWire emerged to mock both Hollywood and the court.

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

mpaIn the content protection arena, the term ‘whac-a-mole’ is known all too well. When pirates or their links appear in one place, they can quickly reappear in another.

Another term referencing a similar problem relates to piracy platforms. When a lawsuit directly attacks a site’s ability to operate using specific domains or branding, for example, the ‘hydra effect’ comes into play. Mimicking the creature of the same name in Greek mythology, when one head is chopped off, two more grow back to take its place.

In April 2022, several Hollywood studios and Netflix won an injunction to shut down PrimeWire, a long-standing illegal streaming site that had evaded ISP blocking injunctions all over the world.

The MPA should’ve been given control of all PrimeWire domains within days but the response from registrars ranged from slow to none, meaning that some PrimeWire domains are still operational. Further hindering MPA enforcement measures is the reported growth of a new head on the PrimeWire hydra.

HydraWire.tv is The New PrimeWire, MPA Says

While the MPA has a clear legal win over PrimeWire and its operator, the case thus far shows that when a defendant cannot be physically identified, nothing is straightforward, especially when there’s a determination to continue business as usual.

According to the MPA, a new streaming site called HydraWire.tv claims to be PrimeWire’s successor. The MPA’s anti-piracy team became aware of the site around May 31, 2022, and they’re convinced that PrimeWire’s operators are involved.

The site’s domain was registered on April 21, 2022, one day after the PrimeWire injunction was handed down, and the site’s visual aspects are strikingly similar to those seen on PrimeWire.

hydrawire

Of course, websites are easily copied so the MPA’s investigation went beyond graphics and text.

Too Many Coincidences

Like PrimeWire’s domains, HydraWire’s has hidden registration details and sits behind Cloudflare. Both platforms have the same domain registrar (Sarek Oy) and the same host (FlokiNet) For those out of the loop, these two companies have a reputation for not rolling over easily in response to information requests.

The MPA says that HydraWire mostly uses the same cyberlocker services as PrimeWire to source its video content. HydraWire also has a feature that allows former PrimeWire users to ‘restore’ their PrimeWire libraries on the new platform using CSV files.

hydrawire import

The MPA’s investigators have also been monitoring the /r/primewireli sub-Reddit where posts advertising HydraWire as the PrimeWire alternative were left up and those referring to competing services were taken down.

In summary, the MPA believes that HydraWire is strongly connected to PrimeWire and therefore covered by the existing injunction. As a result, the HydraWire.tv domain should be added to the growing list of enjoined PrimeWire domains.

“Defendants’ choice to name this site ‘HydraWire’ mocks the Injunction and Plaintiffs’ diligent efforts to enforce it. Plaintiffs request that the Court modify the Injunction to add www.hydrawire.tv to the list of enjoined domains,” the MPA informs the court.

The Studios Are Still Entitled to Damages

While the injunction is a valuable tool for enforcement, the MPA also wants damages from the operator of PrimeWire.

The Hollywood group has been conducting damages discovery for some months with the goal of filing a motion for default judgment. It has served subpoenas on third parties to hand over information about PrimeWire’s business dealings, but more time is needed.

“Plaintiffs’ meet-and-confer efforts with subpoena recipients remain ongoing,” the MPA informed the court this week.

“Subpoena recipients have requested extensions in order to provide notice to third parties and to deal with the complexity of searching for advertising revenue associated with particular URLs, as online advertising often involves multiple levels of intermediaries or brokers.”

Efforts thus far haven’t been futile, however. The MPA says that information received suggests that PrimeWire may have been generating “at least five-figures in monthly advertising revenue”, a not insignificant amount – especially to those looking forward to reappropriation.

Finally, the MPA says that HydraWire.tv has at times gone down, only to come back up again. This shouldn’t fool the court into thinking it’s not operational. At the time of writing, the domain is indeed down.

Documents including the proposed amended injunction can be found here (1,2,3, pdf)

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

Daily Deals (7-20-2022)

Music streaming service Tidal is offering a $3 for 3-month subscription deal that lets you save $17 per month for the first three months of ad-free, high-quality music streaming (or $27 if you opt for the family plan). Just keep in mind that the deal …

Music streaming service Tidal is offering a $3 for 3-month subscription deal that lets you save $17 per month for the first three months of ad-free, high-quality music streaming (or $27 if you opt for the family plan). Just keep in mind that the deal is only available for new subscribers. Here are some of […]

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Qualcomm jumps back into the smartwatch market with 4 nm “W5+ Gen1” SoC

Qualcomm’s new chip sounds like it will be competitive with Samsung’s best.

Qualcomm jumps back into the smartwatch market with 4 nm “W5+ Gen1” SoC

Enlarge (credit: Qualcomm)

Qualcomm's long-awaited update to its smartwatch SoC line is official. These chips have typically been called "Snapdragon Wear," but it sounds like that brand is dead, so it's time to meet the "Qualcomm Snapdragon W5+ Gen1" and "Snapdragon W5 Gen1." Qualcomm promises that the chips provide the company's "most advanced leap yet," which is not saying much for a company that previously went six years between major smartwatch chip releases.

The W5+ does seem like a major update, though. Compared to 2020's Wear 4100, Qualcomm is promising "2X performance across CPU, GPU, camera, memory, and video/audio," "50 percent longer battery life" providing "days of use," and a "30 percent smaller" chip for sleeker designs.

Unlike the Wear 4100 at its time of release, the W5 is built on a state-of-the-art 4 nm manufacturing process. Qualcomm outfitted the chip with four ARM Cortex A53 CPUs running at up to 1.7 GHz and an Adreno A702 GPU. The "plus" version includes a second 22 nm SOC based on the Cortex M55 for screen-off background processes, like keeping the watch face updated, staying on top of notifications, and tracking fitness stats. Qualcomm promises low-power islands for Wi-Fi, GPS, and audio so that those features can be used without lighting up the whole chip. The SoC has support for an LTE modem, Wi-Fi 802.11n (aka Wi-Fi 4), and Bluetooth 5.3

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Netflix loses 970,000 subscribers, says ads and new fees are key to recovery

Subscribers fell in consecutive quarters, but Netflix had expected a bigger drop.

A person's hand holding a TV remote control with a Netflix button.

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images | Christopher Ames)

Netflix yesterday reported a loss of 970,000 paid streaming subscribers in its Q2 earnings after having lost 200,000 customers in the first quarter of 2022. The company's worldwide paid memberships decreased from 221.64 million to 220.67 million in Q2, and revenue growth has slowed dramatically.

It's the first time in Netflix's history that the company reported consecutive quarters of subscriber losses, The Wall Street Journal wrote. But the result was better than forecasted, as Netflix had told investors to expect a second-quarter loss of 2 million subscribers.

Netflix co-CEO Reed Hastings said in a call with analysts yesterday that "losing 1 million and calling it a success" is "tough," but he added that Netflix is "set up very well for the next year," according to a Seeking Alpha transcript. The newest season of Stranger Things apparently helped prevent larger subscriber losses.

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Makers of the ill-fated Eve V tablet rebrand as Dough

A few years ago a company called Eve introduced an unusual Windows tablet called the Eve V that was packed to the gills with enthusiast-level specs in an effort to give the Microsoft Surface line of products a run for the money. And for the most part,…

A few years ago a company called Eve introduced an unusual Windows tablet called the Eve V that was packed to the gills with enthusiast-level specs in an effort to give the Microsoft Surface line of products a run for the money. And for the most part, the Eve V tablet delivered on that promise… […]

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The SLS rocket finally has a believable launch date, and it’s soon

The major remaining task? Arming the rocket’s flight termination system.

NASA's Space Launch System rocket is seen on the launch pad at Kennedy Space Center in April.

Enlarge / NASA's Space Launch System rocket is seen on the launch pad at Kennedy Space Center in April. (credit: Trevor Mahlmann)

NASA officials said Wednesday that the space agency continues to make progress preparing the massive Space Launch System rocket and Orion spacecraft for a launch later this summer. Moreover, they now have enough confidence to set a launch date: August 29.

Under the agency's current plans, the stacked SLS rocket and Orion spacecraft will roll out to its launch site at Kennedy Space Center on August 18. Then, there would be three opportunities—August 29, September 2, and September 5—to launch the vehicle before the window closes.

"These are the dates we are working toward today," said Jim Free, the chief of NASA's human exploration systems development program.

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