Gaming: Sony entlässt 900 Angestelle in Playstation-Sparte
Trotz guter Verkaufszahlen verlieren Entwickler bei Insomniac Games, Naughty Dog und weiteren Teams ihren Job. Ein Studio wird ganz geschlossen. (Playstation, Sony)
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Trotz guter Verkaufszahlen verlieren Entwickler bei Insomniac Games, Naughty Dog und weiteren Teams ihren Job. Ein Studio wird ganz geschlossen. (Playstation, Sony)
The results and analysis for DVD, Blu-ray and Ultra HD Blu-ray sales for the week ending January 27, 2024, are in. A DC animated film is the sole new release in the top 10. Find out what movie it was in our weekly DVD, Blu-ray and Ultra HD Blu-ray sale…
The results and analysis for DVD, Blu-ray and Ultra HD Blu-ray sales for the week ending January 27, 2024, are in. A DC animated film is the sole new release in the top 10. Find out what movie it was in our weekly DVD, Blu-ray and Ultra HD Blu-ray sales stats and analysis feature.
In einigen Ländern gibt es schon Verbote für Mentholzigaretten. Eine Meta-Analyse zeigt, dass ein Viertel der Mentholraucher danach komplett aufhört zu rauchen. (Wissenschaft, Medizin)
Microsoft Power Automate vereinfacht die Geschäftsprozessautomatisierung durch die Integration verschiedenster Productivity-Awendungen. Den praktischen Umgang mit dem Tool vermittelt dieser virtuelle Intensiv-Workshop. (Golem Karrierewelt, Microsoft)
Nintendo is “basically taking the position that emulation itself is unlawful.”
Nintendo has filed a lawsuit against Tropic Haze LLC, the makers of the popular Yuzu emulator that the Switch-maker says is "facilitating piracy at a colossal scale."
The federal lawsuit—filed Monday in the District Court of Rhode Island and first reported on by Stephen Totilo—is the company's most expansive and significant argument yet against emulation technology that it argues "turns general computing devices into tools for massive intellectual property infringement of Nintendo and others' copyrighted works." Nintendo is asking the court to prevent the developers from working on, promoting, or distributing the Yuzu emulator, and requesting significant financial damages under the DMCA.
If successful, the arguments in the case could help overturn years of legal precedent that has protected emulator software itself, even as using those emulators for software piracy has remained illegal.
Nintendo is “basically taking the position that emulation itself is unlawful.”
Nintendo has filed a lawsuit against Tropic Haze LLC, the makers of the popular Yuzu emulator that the Switch-maker says is "facilitating piracy at a colossal scale."
The federal lawsuit—filed Monday in the District Court of Rhode Island and first reported on by Stephen Totilo—is the company's most expansive and significant argument yet against emulation technology that it argues "turns general computing devices into tools for massive intellectual property infringement of Nintendo and others' copyrighted works." Nintendo is asking the court to prevent the developers from working on, promoting, or distributing the Yuzu emulator, and requesting significant financial damages under the DMCA.
If successful, the arguments in the case could help overturn years of legal precedent that has protected emulator software itself, even as using those emulators for software piracy has remained illegal.
We drive the new Sports Activity Coupe, but there’s no EV version for the US market.
Last week, we told you about our first drive in the new Mini Countryman John Cooper Works, Mini's new little crossover. This week, it's the turn of a related model, built on the same vehicle architecture: BMW's new X2 crossover, or "Sports Activity Coupe" in BMW-speak. As we'll find out, the BMW shares more than one trait with the Countryman JCW.
BMW had an array of X2 M35is, all painted the same "Frozen Tampa Bay" shade of green, which starts in the US at $51,400. There's a less-powerful $42,000 X2 xDrive28i coming here as well, but North American customers will not be offered the battery-electric iX2—BMW's product planners evidently didn't think importing the diminutive EV would be profitable. Outside the US, BMW expects 1 in 5 X2s to be electric.
The first-generation X2 (and the more upright-looking X1) were divisive cars even by BMW standards. The new one is slightly bigger than before, at 179.3 inches (4,554 mm) long, 72.6 inches (1,844 mm) wide, and 62.6 inches (1,590 mm) tall. That translates to more rear legroom and more cargo volume at the back, but it's not a massive machine—a touch bigger than the Audi Q3 but a bit smaller than a Mercedes-Benz GLB.
We drive the new Sports Activity Coupe, but there’s no EV version for the US market.
Last week, we told you about our first drive in the new Mini Countryman John Cooper Works, Mini's new little crossover. This week, it's the turn of a related model, built on the same vehicle architecture: BMW's new X2 crossover, or "Sports Activity Coupe" in BMW-speak. As we'll find out, the BMW shares more than one trait with the Countryman JCW.
BMW had an array of X2 M35is, all painted the same "Frozen Tampa Bay" shade of green, which starts in the US at $51,400. There's a less-powerful $42,000 X2 xDrive28i coming here as well, but North American customers will not be offered the battery-electric iX2—BMW's product planners evidently didn't think importing the diminutive EV would be profitable. Outside the US, BMW expects 1 in 5 X2s to be electric.
The first-generation X2 (and the more upright-looking X1) were divisive cars even by BMW standards. The new one is slightly bigger than before, at 179.3 inches (4,554 mm) long, 72.6 inches (1,844 mm) wide, and 62.6 inches (1,590 mm) tall. That translates to more rear legroom and more cargo volume at the back, but it's not a massive machine—a touch bigger than the Audi Q3 but a bit smaller than a Mercedes-Benz GLB.
OpenAI “bizarrely” mischaracterizes hacking, NYT lawyer says.
OpenAI is now boldly claiming that The New York Times "paid someone to hack OpenAI’s products" like ChatGPT to "set up" a lawsuit against the leading AI maker.
In a court filing Monday, OpenAI alleged that "100 examples in which some version of OpenAI’s GPT-4 model supposedly generated several paragraphs of Times content as outputs in response to user prompts" do not reflect how normal people use ChatGPT.
Instead, it allegedly took The Times "tens of thousands of attempts to generate" these supposedly "highly anomalous results" by "targeting and exploiting a bug" that OpenAI claims it is now "committed to addressing."
Jahrelang gab es Gerüchte, dass Apple ein eigenes Elektroauto auf den Markt bringen will. Nun sollen die Entwickler offenbar zu KI-Projekten wechseln. (Apple Car, Apple)