ESPN’s Where to Watch tries to solve sports’ most frustrating problem

Find your game in a convoluted landscape of streaming services and TV channels.

The ESPN app on an iPhone 11 Pro.

The ESPN app on an iPhone 11 Pro. (credit: ESPN)

Too often, new tech product or service launches seem like solutions in search of a problem, but not this one: ESPN is launching software that lets you figure out just where you can watch the specific game you want to see amid an overcomplicated web of streaming services, cable channels, and arcane licensing agreements. Every sports fan is all too familiar with today's convoluted streaming schedules.

Launching today on ESPN.com and the various ESPN mobile and streaming device apps, the new guide offers various views, including one that lists all the sporting events in a single day and a search function, among other things. You can also flag favorite sports or teams to customize those views.

"At the core of Where to Watch is an event database created and managed by the ESPN Stats and Information Group (SIG), which aggregates ESPN and partner data feeds along with originally sourced information and programming details from more than 250 media sources, including television networks and streaming platforms," ESPN's press release says.

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The Commodordion is a musical instrument made from a Commode 64 (or two)

A few years ago musician and retro computer enthusiast Linus Åkesson introduced the world to The Commodordion: an accordion-like musical instrument made from two Commodore 64 computers. But despite making a fully functional computer that looks and work…

A few years ago musician and retro computer enthusiast Linus Åkesson introduced the world to The Commodordion: an accordion-like musical instrument made from two Commodore 64 computers. But despite making a fully functional computer that looks and works like an accordion while featuring the 8-bit sounds of a classic computer, Åkesson says that he put the […]

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Trying to outrun Ukrainian drones? Kursk traffic cams still issue speeding tickets.

Drones are everywhere. Traffic cameras don’t care.

Photo from a Ukrainian drone.

Enlarge / Ukrainian FPV drone hunting Russian army assets along a road.

Imagine receiving a traffic ticket in the mail because you were speeding down a Russian road in Kursk with a Ukrainian attack drone on your tail. That's the reality facing some Russians living near the front lines after Ukraine's surprise seizure of Russian territory in Kursk Oblast. And they're complaining about it on Telegram.

Rob Lee, a well-known analyst of the Ukraine/Russia war, comments on X that "traffic cameras are still operating in Kursk, and people are receiving speeding fines when trying to outrun FPVs [first-person-view attack drones]. Some have resorted to covering their license plates but the traffic police force them to remove them."

The Russian outlet Mash offers more details from a local perspective:

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Sparks are flying day and night as SpaceX preps Starship pad to catch a rocket

It’s unclear how long upgrades will take or when the FAA will approve a booster catch.

Pretty much every day for the last couple of weeks, workers wielding welding guns and torches have climbed onto SpaceX's Starship launch pad in South Texas to make last-minute upgrades ahead of the next test flight of the world's largest rocket.

Livestreams of the launch site provided by LabPadre and NASASpaceflight.com have shown sparks raining down two mechanical arms extending from the side of the Starship launch tower at SpaceX's Starbase launch site on the Gulf Coast east of Brownsville, Texas. We are publishing several views here of the welding activity with the permission of LabPadre, which runs a YouTube page with multiple live views of Starbase.

If SpaceX has its way on the next flight of Starship, these arms will close together to capture the first-stage booster, called Super Heavy, as it descends back to Earth and slows to a hover over the launch pad.

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Daily Deals (8-28-2024)

Google’s Pixel Buds Pro 2 true wireless noise-cancelling headphones are designed to offer better noise cancellation, a more comfortable fit, and a smaller and light design than the original Pixel Buds Pro. But with a $229 price tag, they’re…

Google’s Pixel Buds Pro 2 true wireless noise-cancelling headphones are designed to offer better noise cancellation, a more comfortable fit, and a smaller and light design than the original Pixel Buds Pro. But with a $229 price tag, they’re also $29 more expensive than the first-gen Pixel Buds Pro… and that’s even more true now […]

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A long, weird FOSS circle ends as Microsoft donates Mono to Wine project

Mono had many homes over 23 years, but Wine’s repos might be its final stop.

Man looking over the offerings at a wine store with a tablet in hand.

Enlarge / Does Mono fit between the Chilean cab sav and Argentinian malbec, or is it more of an orange, maybe? (credit: Getty Images)

Microsoft has donated the Mono Project, an open-source framework that brought its .NET platform to non-Windows systems, to the Wine community. WineHQ will be the steward of the Mono Project upstream code, while Microsoft will encourage Mono-based apps to migrate to its open source .NET framework.

As Microsoft notes on the Mono Project homepage, the last major release of Mono was in July 2019. Mono was "a trailblazer for the .NET platform across many operating systems" and was the first implementation of .NET on Android, iOS, Linux, and other operating systems.

Ximian, Novell, SUSE, Xamarin, Microsoft—now Wine

Mono began as a project of Miguel de Icaza, co-creator of the GNOME desktop. De Icaza led Ximian (originally Helix Code), aiming to bring Microsoft's then-new .NET platform to Unix-like platforms. Ximian was acquired by Novell in 2003.

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New AI model can hallucinate a game of 1993’s Doom in real time

“Why write rules for software by hand when AI can just think every pixel for you?”

New AI model can hallucinate a game of 1993’s Doom in real time

Enlarge (credit: Aurich Lawson | Getty Images)

On Tuesday, researchers from Google and Tel Aviv University unveiled GameNGen, a new AI model that can interactively simulate the classic 1993 first-person shooter game Doom in real time using AI image generation techniques borrowed from Stable Diffusion. It's a neural network system that can function as a limited game engine, potentially opening new possibilities for real-time video game synthesis in the future.

For example, instead of drawing graphical video frames using traditional techniques, future games could potentially use an AI engine to "imagine" or hallucinate graphics in real time as a prediction task.

"The potential here is absurd," wrote app developer Nick Dobos in reaction to the news. "Why write complex rules for software by hand when the AI can just think every pixel for you?"

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Man posing as teen YouTuber gets 17 years for horrific global sextortion scheme

Australian police called it “one of the worst sextortion cases in history.”

Man posing as teen YouTuber gets 17 years for horrific global sextortion scheme

Enlarge (credit: Artur Debat | Moment)

An Australian man who pretended to be a famous teenage YouTuber has been sentenced to 17 years for orchestrating what police are calling "one of the worst sextortion cases in history."

Twenty-nine-year-old Muhammad Zain Ul Abideen Rasheed blackmailed hundreds of victims across 20 countries, ultimately pleading guilty to 119 charges involving 286 people. Most victims were children, the Australian Federal Police (AFP) said in a press release confirming that Rasheed targeted at least 180 kids under 16.

AFP coordinated with US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and INTERPOL to catch Rasheed before more victims could be harmed. Their investigation started in 2019 when cops in Leon County, Florida, were tipped off to a sextortion scammer "masquerading as a YouTuber," an ICE press release said. He was first charged in 2020 and was then hit with more charges in 2021.

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Apple lays off employees working on Books and News

All the layoffs were in the company’s fast-moving services division.

The Apple Books icon on a Mac.

Enlarge / The Apple Books icon on a Mac. (credit: Samuel Axon)

Apple will cut 100 jobs, all in its digital services teams. Laid off employees will have 60 days to find another job in the company before it cuts ties with them altogether, according to a Bloomberg report.

Compared to some other big tech companies, layoffs are relatively uncommon at Apple. This is the fourth wave this year, but cuts so far (including this one) have been laser-focused and small in scope—a contrast with companies like Intel, Cisco, or Microsoft, which have recently made more drastic cuts of anywhere from 7 to 15 percent of their workforces.

The current set of cuts chiefly affects the Books team. Digital services like this have been a big part of Apple's financial success in recent quarters; in just the past year, services revenue is up 14 percent. However, Books has no subscription offering, and Apple was subject to a US Department of Justice price-fixing lawsuit.

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PLAUD NotePin is a $169 wearable AI gadget that transcribes and summarizes anything

Earlier this year Humane launched an AI Pin gadget that was meant to be a wearable AI assistant, but it quickly crashed and burned due to a combination of a high price tag and limited functionality and limited reliability. Now PLAUD is launching is hop…

Earlier this year Humane launched an AI Pin gadget that was meant to be a wearable AI assistant, but it quickly crashed and burned due to a combination of a high price tag and limited functionality and limited reliability. Now PLAUD is launching is hoping to succeed where Humane failed by launching a cheaper wearable […]

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