
Drohnen-Kommunikation: Ukraine wegen Einschränkung von Starlink verärgert
Die Ukraine hat ihre Verärgerung über SpaceX Ankündigung geäußert, Starlink einzuschränken, damit es nicht mehr von Drohnen genutzt werden kann. (Starlink, Politik)
Just another news site
Die Ukraine hat ihre Verärgerung über SpaceX Ankündigung geäußert, Starlink einzuschränken, damit es nicht mehr von Drohnen genutzt werden kann. (Starlink, Politik)
Bill Gates erwartet eine massive Veränderung bei Bürojobs durch ChatGPT und sieht weniger Arbeit auf Beschäftigte zukommen. Das erfordere einen Umbau des Steuersystems. (ChatGPT, KI)
Es wird die bislang zweitgrößte Rakete überhaupt: Mit der noch in der Entwicklung befindlichen New Glenn von Blue Origin will die Nasa zum Mars. (Nasa, Jeff Bezos)
Mit der Energiewende müssen die Versorger Riesenmengen an neuen Daten verarbeiten. Gleichzeitig lanciert ihr wichtigster IT-Dienstleister SAP eine Cloudlösung. Große Versorger befinden sich an einem Scheideweg. Von Detlev Prutz (Energiewende, SAP)
Nach mehrmonatigen Ermittlungen hat Meta den Leaker gefunden, der vorab Informationen über VR-Headsets an einen Youtuber weitergereicht hat. (Meta, CAD)
Cloudschnittstellen, grundlegende technische Diagnosefunktionen: Bei Porsche und Audi kommen Funktionen von VW.OS 1.2 zum Einsatz. (Cariad, Wirtschaft)
Microsoft ist Google ausgerechnet im Kerngeschäft voraus. Wir konnten uns überzeugen, wie viel Zeit der KI-Assistent in Bing sparen kann. Ein Hands-on von Oliver Nickel (Bing, Google)
Kyle and Andrew say hello (and goodbye) to some key characters.
Enlarge / I think we all need a hug after that episode's conclusion...
Part of me tried to hold out hope that they might change that fate for the show—they've changed a lot of other stuff about the narrative, including a lot about Henry and Sam themselves. But really that was probably just wishful thinking born out of a deep connection with the characters. The specifics might change, but this plot beat needed to stay in there, precisely because it's so emotionally raw.
So, you say lots of details of the Henry-Sam story are different than in the games, and you said last week that this Kansas City story and the characters in it were different from the games. Without knowing what's coming in the next few episodes, what purpose do the changes serve? Just reformatting things to be more workable on TV or something else?
By contrast, one thing the show managed to establish quickly was the friendship between Ellie and Sam. We've talked about her "tough girl" exterior here before, but the thing this story hammers home so well is that, deep down, she's just a lonely kid who's quickly realizing that everyone she grows close to could leave her.
The point of this disease is to mindlessly spread itself at all costs, and these mushroom guys don't really have a capacity for thought or reason or strategy. With that in mind, I am not sure what the evolutionary imperative is for a "tanky" character class that rips people's heads off instead of infecting them.
I get the point of that character in a video game, and it's because sometimes you need some enemies to be bigger/harder/scarier to break up the flow of gameplay. In a TV show, the moment just played a little silly to me. The best things about this episode were subtle, and that moment was the precise opposite of subtle.
I can almost picture the story meetings where the game guys were like, 'We have to get a bloater in here somewhere!' and 'Is now the time when we can show a bloater?' and the TV people just giving up and saying 'Fine, you can have 60 seconds during the underground Infected riot!'
“One of us might not come back from this. But we have to fight.”
This time it's personal: Vin Diesel's Dom Toretto must protect his family from old enemies in Fast X.
Vin Diesel's Dom Toretto finds his peaceful family man existence violently interrupted yet again in the trailer for Fast X, the 10th main installment (and 11th full-length film) in the wildly successful Fast and Furious franchise.
(Some spoilers for prior films in the franchise below.)
This has been in the works since 2014, later divided into two films that will wrap up the main installments. Justin Lin was originally tapped to direct Fast X, but he exited the project due to "creative differences" one week after filming began in April last year, though Lin co-wrote the film and stayed on as a producer. The Hollywood gossip mill soon kicked into high gear, with reports of on-set clashes between Lin and Diesel, alleging the star was out of shape, struggled with his lines, and was often late to set. Lin also objected to some of the rewrites to his screenplay, and there were reports that after one intense disagreement with Diesel, he exclaimed that the film "is not worth my mental health."
Remove some screws and start prying.
Opening up the new HomePod is a lot easier than opening the previous model. [credit: iFixit ]
iFixit has published a short video of a teardown of the new, second-generation HomePod that launched on February 3 for $299. There's perhaps not as much to see as there is in an iPhone or Mac teardown, but the important thing is that it's relatively good news for repair shops or users who want to go the DIY repair route.
When iFixit did its first teardown of the original HomePod, it was an ugly sight—plastic pieces stuck together required prying, and pieces had to be destroyed to get in at all. The original video was a bit comical to watch for how extreme the process was—Apple clearly did not intend anyone but its own technicians to open the device.
People eventually figured out better ways to do it, but it was never simple or easy. The discontinuation of that first HomePod was surely welcome news for a lot of fixers.