Nvidia announces a community-made RTX remaster of Half-Life 2

PBR materials, full ray-tracing, and DLSS are coming to Half-Life 2.

A teaser for Half-Life 2's RTX conversion.

First it came to Portal, now it's coming to the Source engine's other big classic: Half-Life 2 is getting a ray-tracing remaster thanks to the efforts of a community modding superteam with support from Nvidia.

Awkwardly titled Half-Life 2 RTX: An RTX Remix Project, the remaster is currently in development with no set release date. Nvidia announced it today as part of its pre-Gamescom presentations. The remaster will use RTX Remix, Nvidia's toolkit, for bringing ray-tracing to classic PC games. RTX Remix was previously announced using The Elder Scrolls III: Morrowind as an example; it seeks to give community modders and hobbyists the ability to do ray-tracing conversions for old games, but it's still only available to a few people.

The people, in this case, are a group of modders from multiple community projects who have banded together under the name Orbifold Studios. The team includes modders who worked on VR Half-Life 2 project Project 17, asset remastering project Half-Life 2 Remade Assets, total conversation mod Raising the Bar: Redux, and another VR mod simply called Half-Life 2 VR, among others.

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Meta’s “massively multilingual” AI model translates up to 100 languages, speech or text

Meta aims for a universal translator like “Babel Fish” from Hitchhiker’s Guide.

An illustration of a person holding up a megaphone to a head silhouette that says

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images)

On Tuesday, Meta announced SeamlessM4T, a multimodal AI model for speech and text translations. As a neural network that can process both text and audio, it can perform text-to-speech, speech-to-text, speech-to-speech, and text-to-text translations for "up to 100 languages," according to Meta. Its goal is to help people who speak different languages communicate with each other more effectively.

Continuing Meta's relatively open approach to AI, Meta is releasing SeamlessM4T under a research license (CC BY-NC 4.0) that allows developers to build on the work. They're also releasing SeamlessAlign, which Meta calls "the biggest open multimodal translation dataset to date, totaling 270,000 hours of mined speech and text alignments." That will likely kick-start the training of future translation AI models from other researchers.

Among the features of SeamlessM4T touted on Meta's promotional blog, the company says that the model can perform speech recognition (you give it audio of speech, and it converts it to text), speech-to-text translation (it translates spoken audio to a different language in text), speech-to-speech translation (you feed it speech audio, and it outputs translated speech audio), text-to-text translation (similar to how Google Translate functions), and text-to-speech translation (feed it text and it will translate and speak it out in another language). Each of the text translation functions supports nearly 100 languages, and the speech output functions support about 36 output languages.

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Dealmaster: Labor Day sales, Star Wars merchandise, Apple gear, and more

You can add to your Star Wars collection with some of these deals.

Dealmaster: Labor Day sales, Star Wars merchandise, Apple gear, and more

Enlarge

From Apple gear to Google Pixel phones and tablets, there are plenty of tech deals to help you celebrate (or mourn) the end of long summer days. But we won't blame you if you'd rather not spend the final few days of your vacation shopping for tech gear. For Star Wars fans, there are better things to do, like watching the series premiere of Ahsoka on Disney+. And to prep you for the famed Ahsoka Tano Jedi launch, we found plenty of discounts and sales on Star Wars merchandise. So whether you want to catch up on the franchise, add to your collection of memorabilia, or exercise your cognitive skills by building a Star Wars-themed LEGO set after having relaxed your mind this summer, there is plenty to choose from for Star Wars fans.

Apple

  • Apple AirTag 4 Pack for $89 (was $99) at Amazon
  • Apple MacBook Air 13-inch M1 for $750 (was $1,000) at Amazon
  • Apple MacBook Air 15-inch M2 for $1,229 (was $1,299) at Amazon
  • Apple MacBook Pro 13-inch M2 for $1,099 (was $1,299) at Best Buy
  • Apple MacBook Pro 16-inch M2 Pro for $2,299 (was $2,499) at Amazon
  • Apple 10.2-Inch iPad (9th Generation) for $270 (was $330) at Best Buy
  • Apple Pencil (2nd Generation) for $89 (was $129) at Best Buy
  • Apple Pencil (2nd Generation) for $89 (was $129) at Amazon
  • Apple Magic Keyboard: iPad Keyboard case for iPad Pro 11-inch (1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th Generation) and iPad Air (4th, 5th Generation) for $249 (was $299) at Amazon
  • Apple Magic Keyboard: iPad Keyboard and case for iPad Pro 12.9‑inch (3rd, 4th, 5th, and 6th Generation) for $289 (was $349) at Amazon
  • Apple Magic Keyboard with Touch ID for $134 (was $149) at Amazon
  • Apple Magic Trackpad Black for $135 (was $149) at Amazon
  • Apple Magic Trackpad White for $115 (was $129) at Amazon
  • Apple Magic Mouse for $69 (was $79) at Amazon
  • Apple Watch SE (2nd Gen) [GPS 40 mm] for $219 (was $249) at Amazon
  • Apple Watch SE (2nd Gen) [GPS 44 mm] for $249 (was $279) at Amazon
  • Apple Watch SE (2nd Gen) [GPS + Cellular 40 mm] for $269 (was $299) at Amazon
  • Apple Watch SE (2nd Gen) [GPS + Cellular 44 mm] for $299 (was $329) at Amazon
  • Apple Watch Series 8 [GPS 41 mm] for $329 (was $399) at Amazon
  • Apple Watch Series 8 [GPS 45 mm] for $359 (was $429) at Amazon
  • Apple Watch Series 8 [GPS + Cellular 41 mm] for $429 (was $499) at Amazon
  • Apple Watch Series 8 [GPS + Cellular 45 mm] for $459 (was $529) at Amazon
  • Apple Watch Series 8 [GPS + Cellular 41 mm] Smart Watch w/Silver Stainless Steel Case for $629 (was $699) at Amazon
  • Apple AirPods Pro (2nd Generation) Wireless Earbuds for $199 (was $249) at Amazon
  • Apple AirPods Max Wireless Over-Ear Headphones for $477 (was $549) at Amazon
  • Apple AirPods (3rd Generation) for $150 (was $169) at Amazon

Audio: Headphones, speakers, and soundbars

  • Bose Smart Soundbar 600 with Dolby Atmos for $450 (was $500) at Best Buy
  • Bose TV Speaker Bluetooth Soundbar for $220 (was $280) at Best Buy
  • Bose Smart Soundbar 900 With Dolby Atmos for $700 (was $900) at Best Buy
  • Go Hearing Go Lite OTC Hearing Aids for $169 (was $199) at Best Buy
  • Samsung Galaxy Buds2 for $110 (was $150) at Best Buy
  • Samsung Galaxy Buds Live for $90 (was $150) at Best Buy
  • Poly Voyager 4320 for $146 (was $170) at Best Buy
  • JBL Tune 235NC True Wireless Noise Cancelling In-Ear Earbuds for $70 (was $100) at Best Buy
  • Jabra Elite 7 Pro in Ear Bluetooth Earbuds for $120 (was $200) at Amazon
  • Jabra Elite 4 Active in-Ear Bluetooth Earbuds for $80 (was $120) at Amazon
  • Sony WHCH720N Wireless Noise Canceling Headphones for $130 (was $150) at Best Buy
  • Sony WF-C700N for $99 (was $120) at Best Buy
  • Sony LinkBuds Truly Wireless Earbud Headphones for $128 (was $180) at Amazon

Health, personal care, and fitness

  • Beurer Insect Bite Healer for $23 (was $30) at Best Buy
  • Beurer Pulse Oximeter for $31 (was $40) at Best Buy
  • Beurer 18-piece Manicure/Pedicure Device for $51 (was $60) at Best Buy
  • Beurer TENS Device Knee/Elbow for $50 (was $60) at Best Buy
  • Beurer Upper Arm Blood Pressure Monitor for $25 (was $35) at Best Buy
  • Beurer Bluetooth Wrist Blood Pressure Monitor for $42 (was $60) at Best Buy
  • Beurer Bluetooth Body Fat Scale for $44 (was $50) at Best Buy
  • Beurer Wake Up Light for $75 (was $90) at Best Buy
  • Beurer Abdominal Muscle EMS Belt for $46 (was $60) at Best Buy
  • Beurer Ultra-Soft Heating Pad for $36 (was $40) at Best Buy
  • Beurer TENS Back Belt for $55 (was $65) at Best Buy

Google Pixel phones and tablets, Samsung Galaxy phones and tablets

(credit: Google)

  • Google Pixel 7 for $449 (was $599) at Best Buy
  • Google Pixel 7a for $444 (was $499) at Best Buy
  • Google Pixel 7 Pro for $699 (was $899) at Best Buy
  • Samsung Galaxy Tab S9 with free keyboard case ($170 value) for $800 at Best Buy
  • Samsung Galaxy Tab S9+ with free keyboard case ($190 value) for $1,000 at Best Buy
  • Samsung Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra with free keyboard case ($230 value) for $1,200 at Best Buy

Star Wars merchandise

  • Lego Star Wars The Mandalorian Helmet 75328 for $54 (was $70) at Amazon
  • Lego Star Wars Captain Rex Helmet Set 75349 for $56 (was $70) at Amazon
  • Lego Star Wars Darth Vader Helmet 75304 for $69 (was $80) at Amazon
  • Lego Star Wars Luke Skywalker Red 5 Helmet for $54 (was $70) at Amazon
  • Tamagotchi nano x Star Wars - R2-D2, Classic for $16 (was $20) at Amazon
  • Star Wars: Inquisitor: Rise of the Red Blade hardcover for $21 (was $30) at Amazon
  • Star Wars - Remote Control BB-8 Droid - 2 Speed for $13 (was $14) at Amazon
  • IITaozi Transparent Creative Whiskey Decanter Set Stormtrooper Bottle with 2 Glasses for $46 (was $60) at Amazon
  • Star Wars Luke Skywalker Lightsaber Floor Lamp for $150 (was $168) at Amazon
  • Lightsaber Chopsticks Light Up - LED Glowing Light Saber Star Wars Chop Sticks for $10 after coupon (was $11) at Amazon
  • Manco 3 Pattern 16 Colors 3D Star Wars Night Light for $20 (was $25) at Amazon
  • Bitty Boomers Star Wars: The Mandalorian - Grogu in Pram - Mini Bluetooth Speaker for $8 (was $20) at Amazon
  • Mattel Star Wars Grogu Plush 8-Inch Character Figure from Star Wars the Mandalorian for $6 (was $15) at Amazon
  • Funko Pop! Advent Calendar: Star Wars for $40 (was $60) at Amazon
  • Star Wars: Where's the Wookiee? Deluxe: Search for Chewie in 30 Scenes! hardcover for $10 (was $12) at Amazon
  • Star Wars Hasbro L0-LA59 (Lola) Animatronic Edition, Obi-Wan Kenobi Series-Inspired Electronic Droid Toy for $37 (was $90) at Amazon
  • Potato Head Hasbro Mr The Yamdalorian and The Tot for $15 (was $17) at Amazon
  • Mandalorian Helmet Neon Sign, Star Wars Mask Neon Light for $43 (was $50) at Amazon
  • Star Wars The Mandalorian Darksaber 24-Inch LED Desk Light Lamp for $60 (was $72) at Amazon
  • Mattel Star Wars Plush 8-Inch Figure 3-Pack, Return of the Jedi Endor Celebration Set for $17 (was $30) at Amazon
  • Science Fiction Film Themed Clock Vinyl Record Silent 12-Inch LED Wall Clock for $33 (was $41) at Amazon
  • Lego Star Wars Boba Fett's Starship Microfighter 75344 for $9 (was $10) at Amazon
  • Star Wars Character Encyclopedia, Updated and Expanded Edition hardcover for $12 (was $20) at Amazon
  • NINOSTAR StarWar Squishy Balls Set - Super Soft Version for $14 (was $15) at Amazon
  • Funko Pop! Star Wars: Return of The Jedi 40th Anniversary, Wicket for $10 (was $13) at Amazon
  • Funko Pop! Star Wars: Star Wars New Classics - Darth Vader for $9 (was $13) at Amazon
  • Star Wars Music Box for $12 (was $13) at Amazon
  • Lego BrickHeadz Star Wars The Mandalorian & The Child 75317 for $16 (was $20) at Amazon
  • Star Wars Toys Mission Fleet 2.5-Inch-Scale Action Figure 10-Pack for $40 (was $48) at Amazon
  • Lego Star Wars Imperial TIE Fighter 75300 for $36 (was $45) at Amazon
  • Funko Pop! Star Wars: Book of Boba Fett - Boba Fett Vinyl Bobblehead for $10 (was $13) at Amazon
  • Bioworld Star Wars Multi Character AOP 17-inch Laptop Backpack for $28 (was $30) at Amazon
  • Funko Pop! Star Wars: Pride 2023 - R2-D2 for $10 (was $13) at Amazon
  • Star Wars: The Thrawn Trilogy - Legends paperwork for $33 (was $51) at Amazon
  • The Star Wars Archives. 1977–1983. 40th Ed. hardcover for $25 (was $30) at Amazon
  • Funko Pop! Something Wild! Star Wars Classic - Boba Fett Card Game for $6 (was $9) at Amazon
  • Lego Star Wars OBI-Wan Kenobi's Jedi Starfighter 75333 for $24 (was $30) at Amazon
  • Lego Star Wars Dark Trooper Attack Set, Mandalorian Building Toy 75324 for $27 (was $35) at Amazon
  • Funko POP Star Wars: Concept Series - Han Solo for $6 (was $13) at Amazon
  • Funko Pop! Star Wars: The Mandalorian for $10 (was $13) at Amazon
  • Lego Star Wars 501st Clone Troopers Battle Pack 75345 for $16 (was $20) at Amazon
  • Star Wars The Clone Wars Board Game for $30 (was $60) at Amazon
  • Star Wars: The Last Jedi DVD for $11 (was $20) at Amazon
  • Star Wars: The DeckBuilding Game for $31 (was $38) at Amazon
  • Star Wars Lightsaber Forge Inquisitor Masterworks Set Double-Bladed Electronic Lightsaber for $19 (was $67) at Amazon
  • Lego Star Wars Luke Skywalker's X-Wing Fighter 75301 for $40 (was $50) at Amazon
  • Star Wars The Black Series HK-87 Toy 6-Inch-Scale for $20 (was $25) at Amazon
  • Star Wars: Darth Vader Vol. 1 - Vader paperback for $17 (was $19) at Amazon
  • Star Wars The Black Series Luke Skywalker & Grogu for $36 (was $45) at Amazon
  • Lego Star Wars The Mandalorian's N-1 Starfighter 75325 for $48 (was $60) at Amazon
  • Star Wars The Vintage Collection Endor Bunker, Return of The Jedi 3.75-Inch Collectible Playset for $48 (was $60) at Amazon
  • Northwest Star Wars Showdown Oversized Silk Touch Sherpa Throw Blanket for $42 (was $55) at Amazon
  • Northwest Star Wars Woven Tapestry Throw Blanket for $28 (was $35) at Amazon
  • STAR WARS The Vintage Collection Han Solo, Return of The Jedi 40th Anniversary 3.75-Inch Action Figure for $11 (was $17) at Amazon
  • Star Wars: Troopers Deluxe Figure Play Set of 10 for $36 (was $45) at Amazon
  • Funko Pop! Star Wars: Across The Galaxy - Moroff Vinyl Bobblehead for $5 (was $13) at Amazon
  • Star WarsThe Black Series Wicket, Return of The Jedi 40th Anniversary 6-Inch Collectible Action Figures for $22 (was $25) at Amazon
  • Lego Star Wars Death Star Trench Run Diorama 75329 for $57 (was $70) at Amazon
  • Pictionary Air Star Wars Family Game for Kids & Adults with R2-D2 Light Pen and Themed Picture Clue Cards for $11 (was $27) at Amazon
  • Luxxis Metal Star Wars Bookend - The Force Yoda Book Holder for $25 (was $40) at Amazon
  • Royal Selangor Star Wars Pewter Yoda Figurine for $99 (was $135) at Amazon
  • Northwest The Company Wearable Blanket for $41 (was $50) at Amazon
  • Star Wars The Book of Boba Fett Shaped Decorative Pillow for $25 (was $30) at Amazon
  • Royal Selangor Hand Finished Star Wars Collection Pewter Boba Fett Figurine for $99 (was $165) at Amazon
  • Star Wars: Galactic Baking: The Official Cookbook of Sweet and Savory Treats from Tatooine, Hoth, and Beyond hardcover for $13 (was $23) at Amazon
  • Star Wars Retro Collection Biker Scout for $10 (was $12) at Amazon
  • Star Wars Micro Galaxy Squadron Starship Class Razor Crest - 7-Inch Vehicle with 1-Inch Mandalorian for $27 (was $30) at Amazon
  • Lego Star Wars Dark Trooper Attack Set, Mandalorian Building Toy 75324 for $27 (was $35) at Amazon
  • Lego Star Wars At-ST 75332 for $23 (was $35) at Amazon
  • Lego Star Wars Dagobah Jedi Training Diorama 75330 for $72 (was $90) at Amazon
  • Lego Star Wars Obi-Wan Kenobi vs. Darth Vader 75334 for $35 (was $50) at Amazon
  • Funko Pop! Star Wars: Across The Galaxy - Qui-Gon Jinn Vinyl Bobblehead for $11 (was $13) at Amazon
  • The Star Wars Archives. 1999–2005. 40th Ed. hardcover for $23 (was $30) at Amazon
  • Age of Sage Grogu Starbucks Baby Yoda Tumbler for $15 (was $16) at Amazon
  • Star Wars: A Jedi You Will Be hardcover for $10 (was $18) at Amazon

DeWalt, Fluke, and Greenworks tools

  • Greenworks 170 mph 730 CFM Cordless Handheld Blower for $190 (was $250) at Best Buy
  • Greenworks 16-inch Cutting Diameter Brushless Straight Shaft Grass Trimmer for $220 (was $250) at Best Buy
  • Greenworks Electric Pressure Washer up to 1900 PSI at 1.2 GPM for $130 (was $150) at Best Buy
  • Greenworks 26-inch Cordless Brushless Hedge Trimmer for $220 (was $250) at Best Buy
  • Greenworks 18-inch 80 Volt Cordless Brushless Chainsaw for $340 (was $400) at Best Buy
  • Greenworks 10-inch Brushless Cordless Pole Saw for $263 (was $300) at Best Buy
  • Greenworks 80 Volt 2 Ah Battery for $132 (was $150) at Best Buy
  • Greenworks 42-inch CrossoverZ Electric Zero Turn Riding Lawn Mower for $4,500 (was $5,500) at Best Buy
  • Greenworks 80 Volt Pro Rapid Battery Charger for $61 (was $100) at Best Buy
  • Greenworks 12-inch Pro 80 Volt Cordless Brushless Snow Shovel for $304 (was $350) at Best Buy
  • Greenworks 110 MPH 450 CFM Cordless Handheld Blower for $140 (was $150) at Best Buy
  • Greenworks 8-inch Cordless Pole Saw for $128 (was $150) at Best Buy
  • DeWalt 20V MAX Cordless Drill and Impact Driver, Power Tool Combo Kit with 2 Batteries and Charger for $159 (was $239) at Amazon
  • DeWalt 20V Max Powerstack Gfn Compact Battery for $100 (was $139) at Amazon
  • DeWalt 20V MAX Cordless Impact Driver Kit, Brushless, 1/4-inch Hex Chuck, 2 Batteries and Charger for $159 (was $169) at Amazon
  • DeWalt 20V MAX Right Angle Cordless Drill/Driver Kit for $176 (was $205) at Amazon
  • DeWalt XTREME 12V MAX* Impact Driver Kit, 1/4-Inch for $97 (was $159) at Amazon
  • DeWalt 20V MAX Cordless Impact Wrench, 1/2-inch Hog Ring for $185 (was $279) at Amazon
  • DeWalt 20V MAX Impact Driver Kit, 1/4-Inch, Battery and Charger for $99 (was $179) at Amazon
  • DeWalt ATOMIC 20V MAX* Cordless Drill, 1/2-Inch, Tool Only for $70 (was $119) at Amazon
  • DeWalt 20V Max Cordless Drill / Driver Kit, Compact, 1/2-Inch (DCD771C2) for $99 (was $179) at Amazon
  • Fluke 117/323 Kit Multimeter and Clamp Meter Combo Kit for $300 (was $445) at Amazon
  • Fluke 3000 FC Wireless Digital Multimeter for $275 (was $380) at Amazon
  • Fluke 1587 FC 2-in-1 Insulation Multimeter for $800 (was $1,039) at Amazon
  • Fluke Networks 11293000 Pro-Tool Kit IS60 with Punch Down Tool for $178 (was $209) at Amazon

Vacuums and robot vacuums

  • Dyson V8 Cordless Vacuum Cleaner for $365 (was $470) at Amazon
  • iRobot Roomba s9+ (9550) Self-Emptying Robot Vacuum for $650 (was $1,000) at Amazon
  • iRobot Roomba Combo™ j7+ Self-Emptying Robot Vacuum & Mop for $799 (was $1,100) at Amazon
  • iRobot Braava Jet m6 (6113) Ultimate Robot Mop for $350 (was $500) at Amazon
  • iRobot Roomba i4 EVO (4150) Wi-Fi Connected Robot Vacuum for $284 (was $365) at Amazon
  • Dyson V12 Detect Slim Cordless Vacuum Cleaner for $604 (was $650) at Amazon
  • roborock Q5 Robot Vacuum Cleaner for $300 after coupon (was $430) at Amazon
  • roborock Q7 Max+ Robot Vacuum and Mop with Auto-Empty Dock for $520 (was $870) at Amazon
  • roborock Q5+ Robot Vacuum with Self-Empty Dock for $480 (was $700) at Amazon
  • Shark AV911S EZ Robot Vacuum with Self-Empty Base for $330 (was $500) at Amazon
  • Shark CH964AMZ 2-in-1 Cordless & Handheld Vacuum Ultracyclone System for $100 (was $150) at Amazon
  • Shark WS632GNBRN WANDVAC System Ultra-Lightweight Stick Vacuum for $160 (was $220) at Amazon
  • Shark IQ Robot Vacuum AV970 Self Cleaning Brushroll for $320 (was $400) at Amazon
  • Dyson V12 Detect Slim Absolute for $450 (was $650) at Dyson
  • Dyson Outsize Plus for $500 (was $600) at Dyson

Amazon Kindle, Echo, and Fire TV hardware

  • Kindle Scribe (16GB) for $280 (was $340) at Amazon
  • Kindle Paperwhite Kids for $120 (was $170) at Amazon
  • Echo Pop for $25 (was $40) at Amazon
  • Echo Dot (5th Gen) for $35 (was $50) at Amazon
  • Echo Show 8 for $75 (was $130) at Amazon
  • Echo Show 5 for $65 (was $90) at Amazon
  • Echo Show 5 Kids for $75 (was $100) at Amazon
  • Echo Studio for $160 (was $200) at Amazon
  • Echo (4th Gen) for $65 (was $100) at Amazon
  • Amazon Fire TV Stick 4K Max streaming device for $27 (was $55) at Amazon
  • Amazon Fire TV Stick with Alexa Voice Remote for $25 (was $40) at Amazon
  • Amazon Fire TV 65-inch Omni Series 4K UHD for $600 (was $760) at Amazon

Kitchen, home, office, and personal care

  • Herman Miller Embody Gaming Chair for $1,356 (was $1,695) at Herman Miller
  • Herman Miller Vantum Gaming Chair for $636 (was $795) at Herman Miller
  • Herman Miller Eames Lounge Chair and Ottoman for $5,916 (was $7,395) at Herman Miller
  • Vitamix 15255 Tritan Copolyester Containers with Wet Blade and Lid for $131 (was $139) at Amazon
  • Vitamix Professional Series 750 Blender for $569 (was $630) at Amazon
  • Vitamix Immersion Blender, Stainless Steel for $125 (was $150) at Amazon
  • Nespresso Vertuo Coffee and Espresso Maker, 1597 ml, by De'Longhi for $168 (was $219) at Amazon
  • Nespresso Vertuo Coffee and Espresso Maker for $141 (was $209) at Amazon
  • Nespresso VertuoPlus Coffee and Espresso Machine by De'Longhi for $150 (was $199) at Amazon
  • De'Longhi ENV155SAECA Nespresso VertuoPlus Coffee & Espresso Maker with Aeroccino for $175 (was $184) at Amazon
  • Nespresso Vertuo Next Premium Coffee and Espresso Machine by Breville with Milk Frother for $205 (was $240) at Amazon
  • Amazon Basics Rechargeable AA NiMH Batteries, pack of 16 for $18 (was $25) at Amazon
  • Brita Insulated Filtered Water Bottle for $14 (was $23) at Amazon
  • Braun Series 9 9370cc Rechargeable Wet & Dry Men's Electric Shaver for $250 (was $300) at Amazon
  • Braun All-in-One Style Kit Series 7 7410 for $60 (was $70) at Amazon
  • Braun Electric Razor for Men, Waterproof Foil Shaver, Series 9 Pro 9477cc for $340 (was $380) at Amazon
  • Ninja BL660 Professional Compact Smoothie & Food Processing Blender for $113 (was $120) at Amazon
  • Hyperice Venom Go Pack for $179 (was $187) at Hyperice
  • Theragun PRO 4th Gen for $399 (was $599) at Therabody
  • Theragun mini 2nd Gen for $179 (was $199) at Therabody
  • Theragun Prime 4th Gen for $229 (was $299) at Therabody
  • Theragun Elite 4th Gen for $329 (was $399) at Therabody
  • TheraCup for $119 (was $149) at Therabody
  • RecoveryTherm Hot Vibration Back and Core for $199 (was $249) at Therabody
  • RecoveryTherm Hot and Cold Vibration Knee for $319 (was $399) at Therabody
  • Wave Roller for $129 (was $149) at Therabody
  • Wave Duo for $89 (was $99) at Therabody
  • Fab totes 4-Pack Clothes Storage for $29 (was $34) at Amazon
  • UREVO Under Desk Treadmill for $250 (was $310) at Amazon
  • Crest 3D Whitestrips with Light Kit for $60 (was $70) at Amazon
  • Contigo West Loop Stainless Steel Vacuum-Insulated Travel Mug with Spill-Proof Lid 2-pack for $33 (was $47) at Amazon
  • Contigo Cortland Chill 2.0 Stainless Steel Vacuum-Insulated Water Bottle for $18 (was $25) at Amazon
  • Contigo Jackson Chill 2.0 Vacuum-Insulated Stainless Steel Water Bottle for $15 (was $19) at Amazon
  • Bio Bidet Discovery DLS Elongated Smart Ultra Low-Profile Self-Rising Bidet Toilet Seat for $539 (was $899) at Amazon
  • Bio Bidet by Bemis Slim Three Smart Bidet Toilet Seat, Round for $224 (was $249) at Amazon
  • Bio Bidet Ultimate BB-600 Bidet Toilet Seat, Round for $321 (was $448) at Amazon
  • Bio Bidet Bliss BB2000 Elongated White Smart Toilet Seat for $494 (was $699) at Amazon
  • Bio Bidet Bliss BB2000 Round White Smart Toilet Seat for $477 (was $699) at Amazon
  • FelixKing Office Chair for $140 (was $190) at Amazon
  • ThermoPro Twin TempSpike 500FT Truly Wireless Meat Thermometer for $130 (was $200) at Amazon
  • Hamilton Beach Electric Pasta Maker & Noodle Machine for $104 (was $160) at Amazon
  • Hamilton Beach Electric Automatic Ice Cream Maker for $38 (was $50) at Amazon
  • M MCIRCO 30 Pieces Glass Food Storage Containers with Upgraded Snap Locking Lids for $45 (was $50) at Amazon
  • TEMPUR-Adapt, various sizes starting at $1,499 (was $1,699) at Tempurpedic
  • Acebeam Pokelit AA Ti for $68 with "arstech15" coupon code (was $80) at Acebeam
  • Acebeam Pokelit AA for $30 with "arstech15" coupon code (was $35) at Acebeam
  • Acebeam E70 MINI TI High-CRI EDC Flashlight for $93 with "arstech15" coupon code (was $110) at Acebeam
  • Acebeam P15 EDC Tactical Light for $98 with "arstech15" coupon code (was $115) at Acebeam
  • Acebeam E75 High-performance Flashlight for $85 with "arstech15" coupon code (was $100) at Acebeam
  • Acebeam DEFENDER P17 GREEN for $102 with "arstech15" coupon code (was $120) at Acebeam
  • TEMPUR-Adapt Topper mattress topper, various sizes starting at $255 (was $319) at Tempurpedic
  • KitchenAid Burr Coffee Grinder for $160 (was $200) at Amazon

Routers and mesh networking

  • Amazon eero 6+ mesh Wi-Fi system 2-pack for $190 (was $240) at Amazon
  • Amazon eero 6+ mesh Wi-Fi system 3-pack for $240 (was $300) at Amazon
  • Amazon eero 6+ mesh Wi-Fi router for $110 (was $140) at Amazon
  • Amazon eero Pro 6E mesh Wi-Fi router for $200 (was $250) at Amazon
  • Amazon eero mesh Wi-Fi router for $50 (was $70) at Amazon
  • Amazon eero mesh Wi-Fi system (3-pack) for $130 (was $170) at Amazon
  • Amazon eero Pro 6E mesh Wi-Fi System 2-pack for $320 (was $400) at Amazon
  • Amazon eero Pro 6E mesh Wi-Fi System 3-pack for $440 (was $550) at Amazon
  • Google Nest Wi-fi Pro 6e AXE5400 Mesh Router (3-pack) for $320 (was $400) at Best Buy

Laptops and desktops

  • Dell Inspiron 15 (15-inch, Intel Core i3-1115G4) for $300 (was $480) at Dell
  • Dell XPS 13 (13-inch, Intel Core i5-1230U) for $849 (was $949) at Dell
  • Dell Inspiron 16 (16-inch, Intel Core i7-1360P) for $800 (was $1,100) at Dell
  • Dell XPS 13 2-in-1 (13-inch, Intel Core i7-1260U) for $1,249 (was $1,449) at Dell
  • Dell XPS 15 (15-inch, Intel Core i5-12500H) for $1,099 (was $1,849) at Dell
  • Lenovo Legion Pro 5i Gen 8 (16-inch, Intel Core i5-13500HX and RTX 4050) for $1,100 (was $1,480) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo LOQ (16-inch, Intel Core i5-13500H and RTX 4050) for $850 (was $1,200) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Yoga Gen 7 (14-inch, Intel Core i5-1240P) for $1,110 (was $3,099) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen 11 (14-inch, Intel Core i5-1335U) for $1,530 (was $2,609) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad T14 Gen 4 (14-inch, Intel Core i7-1365U) for $1,600 (was $2,859) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo Yoga 7 (16-inch, AMD Ryzen 7 7735U) for $750 (was $1,150) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo IdeaPad Slim 5i (16-inch, Intel Core i7-1355U) for $770 (was $1,130) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkBook 15 Gen 4 (15-inch, Intel Core i7-1255U) for $934 (was $1,639) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo IdeaPad Slim 3 (15-inch, AMD Ryzen 5 7530U) for $410 (was $700) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo IdeaPad Flex 5i (16-inch, Intel Core i5-1335U) for $555 (was $860) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo Legion Slim 5i Gen 8 (16-inch, Intel Core i5-13500H and RTX 4050) for $1,050 (was $1,350) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo Legion Slim 5 Gen 8 (16-inch, AMD Ryzen 5 7640HS and RTX 4050) for $1,020 (was $1,300) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad T16 Gen 2 (16-inch, Intel Core i5-1345U) for $1,400 (was $2,559) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo Yoga 6 (13-inch, AMD Ryzen 5 7530U) for $555 (was $860) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo Legion Tower 5 Gen 8 (AMD Ryzen 7 7700 and RTX 3060 Ti) for $1,180 (was $1,580) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkBook 14 Gen 4 (14-inch, Intel Core i7-1255U) for $900 (was $1,579) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkBook 14 Gen 4 (14-inch, Intel Core i7-1255U) for $906 (was $1,589) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad L13 Gen 3 (13-inch, AMD Ryzen 7 Pro 5875U) for $1,322 (was $2,319) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad E16 Gen 1 (16-inch, AMD Ryzen 5 7530U) for $755 (was $1,259) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad E16 Gen 1 (16-inch, Intel Core i7-1355U) for $1,145 (was $1,909) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad E14 Gen 4 (14-inch, AMD Ryzen 7 5825U) for $1,248 (was $2,189) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad E14 Gen 5 (14-inch, Intel Core i5-1335U) for $845 (was $1,409) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo Legion Tower 5 Gen 8 (AMD Ryzen 5 7600 and RTX 3050) for $950 (was $1,270) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen 6 (16-inch, Intel Core i7-13800H and RTX 4080) for $3,199 (was $5,519) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad P16v (16-inch, Intel Core i7-13700H and RTX A1000) for $2,279 (was $3,939) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad O16 Gen 2 (16-inch, Intel Core i7-13700H and RTX A2000) for $2,599 (was $4,479) at Lenovo
  • Dell Inspiron 2-in-1 OLED Touch Laptop (16-inch, 12th Gen Intel Core i7, MX550) for $1,101 (was $1,550) at Best Buy
  • Dell Inspiron Touch Laptop (15-inch, Intel Core i5-1135G7) for $402 (was $600) at Best Buy
  • Dell Inspiron 3420 Touch Laptop (14-inch, Qualcomm Snapdragon 8cx Gen 2) for $350 (was $550) at Best Buy
  • Dell XPS 15 OLED Touch Laptop (15-inch, Intel Core i7-12700H, RTX 3050 Ti) for $1,801 (was $2,500) at Best Buy
  • Dell XPS 15 Laptop (15-inch, Intel Core i7-12700H, RTX 3050 Ti) for $1,500 (was $2,050) at Best Buy
  • Dell Inspiron 2-in-1 Touch Laptop (16-inch, Intel Core i5-1235U) for $700 (was $1,000) at Best Buy
  • Dell XPS 13 Plus OLED Touch Laptop (13-inch, Intel Core i7-1260P) for $1,700 (was $2,100) at Best Buy
  • Dell XPS 13 Plus Touch Laptop (13-inch, Intel Core i7-1260P) for $1,304 (was $1,650) at Best Buy
  • HP Laptop (15-inch, AMD Ryzen 3 5300U) for $380 (was $480) at Best Buy
  • LG UltraPC (16-inch, Ryzen 7 7000) for $820 (was $1,000) at Amazon
  • LG gram (16-inch, 12th Gen Intel Core i7) for $997 (was $1,700) at Amazon
  • LG gram Style OLED (16-inch, 13th Gen Core i7) for $1,697 (was $2,000) at Amazon
  • Microsoft Surface Pro 9 save up to $300, starting at $1,000 at Microsoft
  • Microsoft Surface Laptop 5 save up to $400, starting at $900 at Microsoft
  • Microsoft Surface Laptop 4 save up to $800, starting at $700 at Microsoft
  • Microsoft Surface Go 3 save $88, starting at $400 at Microsoft

Storage and memory

  • Samsung Type-C USB Flash Drive, 128GB for $16 (was $23) at Amazon
  • Samsung MUF-256AB/AM FIT Plus 256GB for $24 (was $26) at Amazon
  • Samsung BAR Plus 3.1 USB Flash Drive, 128GB for $14 (was $40) at Amazon

Ars Technica may earn compensation for sales from links on this post through affiliate programs.

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T-Mobile unveils $100 phone plan, topping AT&T and Verizon’s highest prices

T-Mobile isn’t trying to beat AT&T and Verizon on price anymore.

In this photo illustration a T-Mobile logo is displayed on a smartphone while a laptop screen displays a stock market chart.

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images | SOPA Images)

T-Mobile yesterday announced a phone plan called "Go5G Next" that costs $100 a month for a single line, more expensive than the highest-tier wireless plans offered by AT&T and Verizon.

In a notable development for a carrier that spent years blasting its rivals' prices, T-Mobile issued a press release with a chart showing that its new plan costs more than the top-tier unlimited plans sold by AT&T and Verizon. AT&T's Unlimited Premium is $85 for a single line while Verizon's Unlimited Plus is $80 unless you add optional perks like the Disney Bundle.

T-Mobile's Go5G Next will be available on August 24 and come with unlimited phone data, 50GB of high-speed mobile hotspot data, and the ability to upgrade to a new phone once a year. It will also come with Apple TV+ and a Netflix subscription. T-Mobile points out that the similar AT&T and Verizon plans don't have streaming services included.

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3D printers printing without consent is a cautionary tale on cloud reliance

Bambu Lab says it will help with repairs, replacement parts.

Bambu Lab P1S 3D Printer

Enlarge / Bambu Lab's P1S 3D printer. (credit: Bambu Lab)

Imagine waking in the middle of the night to the sound of your 3D printer, printing away. You know you didn't request a print. In fact, you're sure of it, because your previous project is still on the printer. It sounds like an eerie technological haunting or as if the machines have finally become self-aware. Thankfully, the problem stems from something less creepy but perhaps just as scary: a cloud outage.

As reported by The Verge, on August 15, numerous owners of Bambu Lab 3D printers reported that their device started printing without their consent. It didn't matter if said printing resulted in bent or broken nozzles or other components or if it involved printing a project on top of another. It didn't matter if it was an ungodly time, like 4 in the morning; the printers, which cost anywhere from $599 to $1,449, were printing.

"Started a print @ 11 PM. Time-lapse shows it finish successfully at just before 2 AM. At ~2:30 AM while I slept, the machine started itself again with the last print still on the bed. I see a timestamped time-lapse video that starts at about 2:30 AM," a Reddit user going by u/beehphy complained on the r/BambuLab subreddit.

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Daily Deals (8-22-2023)

Today’s deals include a 14 inch FHD+ Acer Chromebook with an AMD Mendocino processor for $299, a MINISFORUM mini PC with a Ryzen 9 6900HX chip for $415, and a 7-in-1 USB-C dock for $14 (when you use the coupon code DEHT01 at checkout). Here are …

Today’s deals include a 14 inch FHD+ Acer Chromebook with an AMD Mendocino processor for $299, a MINISFORUM mini PC with a Ryzen 9 6900HX chip for $415, and a 7-in-1 USB-C dock for $14 (when you use the coupon code DEHT01 at checkout). Here are some of the day’s best deals. PCXs MINISFORUM UM690 […]

The post Daily Deals (8-22-2023) appeared first on Liliputing.

Kim Dotcom’s Bitcache a US$13.5m Failure, Liquidator Report Reveals

Founded by Kim Dotcom in 2016, Bitcache was marketed as a groundbreaking blockchain microtransaction solution set to revolutionize a lot of very important crypto stuff; so invest now, before it’s too late. Last month Bitcache Limited was put into liquidation. According to Dotcom, the company collapsed because a lawyer sent an invoice for the work he did for the company.

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

blackholeOn July 23, 2023, the High Court in Auckland, New Zealand, put a company called Bitcache Limited into liquidation.

Founded on July 28, 2016, Bitcache Limited was the legal entity behind Kim Dotcom’s Bitcache, an upcoming blockchain/crypto solution set to revolutionize the utility of Bitcoin through the introduction of cost-effective microtransactions. That was more than seven years ago; almost a lifetime in whatever unit crypto-years are measured in these days.

The Greatest Thing Since Sliced Bread

During the summer of 2016, Kim Dotcom was teasing fresh information about the imminent debut of Megaupload 2.0. Set to launch in January 2017, every file transfer on the platform would be linked to a bitcoin transaction, taking “decentralization, anonymity & encryption to the next level. A nightmare for those who want to mass surveil & censor,” Dotcom said.

The technology making all of this possible was Dotcom’s groundbreaking Bitcache; unseen in public but allegedly capable of eliminating all blockchain limitations.

“Nobody will upload to any other cloud after Megaupload’s Bitcache goes live,” Dotcom declared.

Just Wait For It

In October 2016, with the launch of Megaupload 2.0 and Bitcache just a few months away, ‘MU2’ secured its first investment round. Through the online investment platform BnkToTheFuture, 354 investors committed over a million dollars to the project, one that would not be ready for launch on January 20, 2017, as previously announced.

Dotcom said that a timely launch was “unlikely” so there would be an MU2/Bitcache announcement on that day instead.

With the launch suddenly and inexplicably back on, January 20, 2017, spectacularly failed to deliver. With just 90 minutes left before the official power-up of both Megaupload 2.0 and Bitcache, Dotcom said that the launch had “hit a roadblock” and he couldn’t comment further.

New Zealand companies MU2 Ltd, Bitcache Technologies Ltd, and Bitcache Ltd, did not comment either, and the same held true for their trust company owners registered in the Cook Islands and Cayman Islands.

Details of the last-minute ‘hiccup’ emerged on January 24, 2017. In an effort to raise capital, Megaupload 2.0 and Bitcache had reportedly struck a stock and cash merger deal worth $100m with a publicly listed company on the Canadian stock exchange. Dotcom said the Canadian Securities Exchange raised objections, and that ruined everything.

“Bitcache feels it is important as a technology startup to stay nimble and reduce corporate complexity in favor of technology development,” Dotcom said at the time.

With the benefit of foresight, Bitcache Limited’s liquidator might’ve nodded in agreement.

“There Are Fees Owed and Not Paid”

The day before Megaupload 2.0/Bitcache hit the roadblock in 2017, Kim Dotcom’s directorship in Bitcache Limited came to an end. Auckland lawyer Phil Creagh, who according to his bio was involved in all Kim Dotcom-related litigation matters since 2014, was a Bitcache director until September 2020. On May 24, 2023, Creagh filed an application to have the company liquidated.

“It’s pretty straightforward, there are fees owed and not paid. The company has not taken any steps so far to avoid being placed in liquidation,” Ceagh told Newsroom. “We’ll put it in liquidation and see what, if anything, can be recovered.”

bitcache liquidate

Local company Insolvency Management Limited was appointed as liquidator on July 13, 2023. On the same day, Dotcom said Bitcache was in the hands of the liquidator because it had received an invoice for work carried out by a law firm.

NZ Herald reported that Creagh’s law firm, Anderson Creagh Lai, said the application was filed over “unpaid director’s fees in the sum of $231,653.”

Liquidator’s First Report

On August 18, 2023, Insolvency Management Limited filed its first report regarding Bitcache’s demise, which includes a list of shareholders, the most prominent shown below.

bitcache-shares

“The company traded as a software developer of a crypto currency scheme and was set up in 2016 by Kim Dotcom who acted as a director for some 7 months,” the report reads.

“Subsequently 2 professional directors were appointed although the Liquidator is advised Mr. Dotcom still held an active interest in the running of the business. Currently the Liquidator is not aware when the company ceased to trade.”

The liquidator “is not aware” of any physical assets owned by the company but notes that a trademark exists, value to be determined.

Bitcache owes NZ$1.2m (US$713K) to three creditors including Creagh and his law firm. With a share capital of NZ$21.5m, the total deficit is an estimated NZ$22.7m (US$13.5m).

“Potentially Serious Questions Raised”

An article published by NZ Herald says that the liquidator’s report raises “potentially serious questions” about Bitcache.

“The Companies Office listed 10 shareholders in Bitcache before its liquidation – all based in the Cook Islands, Cayman Islands or Hong Kong,” NZ Herald reports.

Insolvency Management principal Ian Nellies told the Herald that the shareholding companies were trusts.

“I’m still investigating who has ultimate ownership,” Nellies said.

The liquidator’s report also identified “some early developed software that may or may not have some value” but Dotcom was keen to distance Bitcache replacement ‘Fileshop’ from that discovery.

“The good news is that the project is now called FileShop, has been developed from scratch with a completely new code base and without any of the Bitcache IP,” Dotcom recently wrote on X.

“Very happy to announce that friendly previous investors and partners have not been forgotten and that this app is coming.”

business-gamer-failure

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

Excel gets containerized, cloud-based Python analytics and visualization powers

Visualization and analytics tools available in preview, but may be paywalled.

Excel sheet showing advanced data visualizations

Enlarge / If this kind of thing raises your eyebrows, there's a whole lot more inside a ribbon bar for you. (credit: Anaconda)

If you’re decent in Python (or aspire to be) but don’t have the chops for advanced data work in Excel, Microsoft now offers the kind of peanut butter-and-chocolate combination that you may consider a gift. At least until it goes behind the paywall.

Microsoft's Stefan Kinnestrand, writing about “the best of both worlds for data analysis and visualization,” writes that this public preview of Python in Excel will allow spreadsheet tinkerers to “manipulate and explore data in Excel using Python plots and libraries and then use Excel's formulas, charts, and PivotTables to further refine your insights.”

Microsoft partnered with Python analytics repository Anaconda to bring libraries like Pandas, Statsmodels, and Matplotlib into Excel. Python in Excel runs on Microsoft’s cloud servers, and the company is touting the security that should offer. Python runs in isolated containers, with no access to devices, your network, or user tokens, Microsoft states. Python and Excel can only really talk to each other through limited functions—xl() and =PY()—that can only return code results, not macros, VBA code, or other data, Microsoft claims.

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The first 4×4 mini PCs with Core i9 chips are coming soon

Intel may not be making mini PCs under the NUC brand anymore, but the 4×4 form factor the company pioneered continues to live on in products from other companies. And two of the those companies are vying to be the first to launch a mini PC that s…

Intel may not be making mini PCs under the NUC brand anymore, but the 4×4 form factor the company pioneered continues to live on in products from other companies. And two of the those companies are vying to be the first to launch a mini PC that stuffs a 13th-gen Intel Core i9 processor onto […]

The post The first 4×4 mini PCs with Core i9 chips are coming soon appeared first on Liliputing.

Passenger seat belt warnings should be mandatory, say feds

The rule would apply to cars, trucks, and smaller buses.

A woman sitting in the back seat of a car fastens her seatbelt

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images)

Not all vehicle occupants are protected equally when it comes to car crashes. Until 2017, cars weren't even routinely crash-tested on the passenger side, just the driver's. There's still other low-hanging fruit, too; thousands of rear-seat passengers die in cars each year in the United States because they're not wearing seat belts, despite decades of evidence on the effectiveness of buckling up. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has now had enough and has proposed a new rule that would mean new cars, trucks, and even some buses would need to have seat belt warning alerts for all occupants, not just the driver.

Seat belts have been mandatory equipment for all seats in cars and trucks (but not buses) since 1968, thanks to the US Department of Transport. But the US has lagged behind much of the world when it comes to requiring their use; this is determined at the state level, and it wasn't until 1984 that New York became the first US state to require seat belt use.

Since then, 48 other states, along with the District of Columbia, now require front seat occupants to wear belts—New Hampshire remains unconvinced—but a total of 10 states don't require rear passengers to wear seat belts by law.

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