Anzeige: So werden Microsoft-365-Umgebungen abgesichert

Moderne Cloudinfrastrukturen wie Microsoft 365 brauchen Sicherheitsstrategien. Wie sich Identitätsmanagement, Endgerätesicherheit und Bedrohungsschutz in die Unternehmensumgebungen integrieren lassen, zeigt dieser Online-Workshop. (Golem Karrierewelt, …

Moderne Cloudinfrastrukturen wie Microsoft 365 brauchen Sicherheitsstrategien. Wie sich Identitätsmanagement, Endgerätesicherheit und Bedrohungsschutz in die Unternehmensumgebungen integrieren lassen, zeigt dieser Online-Workshop. (Golem Karrierewelt, Microsoft)

In HBO’s The Last of Us, revenge is a dish best served democratically

Our remaining heroes (and us) come to terms with what happened last week.

New episodes of season 2 of The Last of Us are premiering on HBO every Sunday night, and Ars' Kyle Orland (who's played the games) and Andrew Cunningham (who hasn't) will be talking about them here every Monday morning. While these recaps don't delve into every single plot point of the episode, there are obviously heavy spoilers contained within, so go watch the episode first if you want to go in fresh.

Andrew: And there we are! Our first post-Joel episode of The Last Of Us. It’s not like we’ve never had Joel-light episodes before, but Pedro Pascal’s whole “reluctant uncle” thing is a load-bearing element of several currently airing TV shows and I find myself missing it a LOT.

Kyle: Yeah, I've said here in the past how the core Ellie/Joel relationship was key to my enjoyment of the first game. Its absence gently soured me on the second game and is starting to do the same for the second season.

But I was also literally mouth agape during the hospital scene, when Ellie said she had an opportunity to talk to Joel on the porch before he died but passed on it. Anyone who's played the game knows how central "the porch scene" is to recontextualizing the relationship between these two characters before they are parted forever. I was hoping that we'd still get that scene in a surprise flashback later in the series, but now that seems unlikely at best.

Andrew: (I am not watching that video by the way, I need my brain to stay pure!!)

Kyle: I suppose Ellie could have just been lying to a nosy therapist, but if she wasn't, and their final conversation has just been retconned out of existence... I don't know what they were thinking. Then again, if it's just a head fake to psych out game players, well, bravo, I guess.

Tommy is torn between love for his brother and the welfare of the community he's helped to build. Credit: HBO

Andrew: Ellie is a known liar, which we know even before Catherine O'Hara, world's least ethical therapist, declares her to be a lying liar who lies. If the scene is as pivotal as you say, then I'm sure we'll get it at a time that's engineered to maximize the gut punch. The re-strung guitar ended up back in her room in the end, didn't it?

We're able to skip ahead to Ellie being semi-functional again because of a three-month time jump, showing us a Jackson community that is rebuilding after a period of mourning and cleaning that it didn't want viewers to spend time on. I am struck by the fact that, despite everything, Jackson gets to be the one "normal" community with baseball and sandwiches and boring town-hall meetings, where every other group of more than 10 people is either a body-mutilation cult or a paramilitary band of psychopaths.

Kyle: We also saw the version of Boston that Ellie grew up in last season, which was kind of halfway between "paramilitary psychopaths" and "normal community." But I do think the Last of Us fiction in general has a pretty grim view of how humans would react to precarity, which makes Jackson's uniqueness all the more important as a setting.

We also get our first glimpse into Jackson politics in this episode, which ends up going in quite a different direction to get to the same "Ellie and Dina go out for revenge." While I appreciate the town hall meeting as a decent narrative explanation of why two young girls are making this revenge trek alone, I feel like the whole sequence was a little too drawn out with sanctimonious philosophizing from all sides.

Even after an apocalypse, city council meetings are a constant. Credit: HBO

Andrew: Yeah the town hall scene was an odd one. Parts of it could have been lifted from Parks & Recreation, particularly the bit where the one guy comes to the "Are We Voting To Pursue Bloody Vengeance" meeting to talk about the finer points of agriculture (he does not have a strong feeling about the bloody vengeance).

Part of it almost felt too much like "our" politics, when Seth (the guy who harassed Ellie and Dina at the dance months ago, but attempted a partially forced apology afterward) stands up and calls everyone snowflakes for even thinking about skipping out on the bloody vengeance (not literally, but that's the clear subtext). He even invokes a shadowy, non-specific "they" who would be "laughing at us" if the community doesn't track down and execute Abby. I'll tell you what, that he is one of two people backing Ellie's attempted vengeance tour doesn't make me feel better about what she's deciding to do here.

Kyle: I will say the line "Nobody votes for angry" rang a bit hollow given our current political moment. Even if their national politics calcified in 2003, I think that doesn't really work...
Andrew: SO MANY people vote for angry! Or, at least, for emotional. It's an extremely reliable indicator!
Kyle: Except in Jackson, the last bastion of unemotional, mercy-forward community on either side of the apocalypse!
Andrew: So rather than trying the angry route, Ellie reads a prepared statement where she (again lying, by the way!) claims that her vengeance tour isn't about vengeance at all and attempts to appeal to the council's better angels, citing the bonds of community that hold them all together. When this (predictably) fails, Ellie (even more predictably) abandons the community at almost the first possible opportunity, setting out on a single horse with Dina in tow to exact vengeance alone.
Kyle: One thing I did appreciate in this episode is how many times they highlighted that Ellie was ready to just "GO GO GO REVENGE NOW NO WAITING" and even the people that agreed with her were like "Hold up, you at least need to stock up on some better supplies, girl!"
Andrew: Maybe you can sense it leaking through, and it's not intentional, but I am already finding Ellie's impulsive snark a bit less endearing without Joel's taciturn competence there to leaven it.

Kyle: I can, and I can empathize with it. I think Tommy is right, too, in saying that Joel would have moved heaven and earth to save a loved one but not necessarily to get revenge for one that's already dead. He was pragmatic enough to know when discretion was the better part of valor, and protecting him and his was always the priority. And I'm not sure the town hall "deterrence" arguments would have swayed him.

Look on the bright side, though, at least we get a lost of long, languorous scenes of lush scenery on the ride to Seattle (a scene-setting trait the show borrows well from the movie). I wonder what you made of Dina asking Ellie for a critical assessment of her kissing abilities, especially the extremely doth-protest-too-much "You're gay, I'm not" bit...

Ellie and Dina conspire. Credit: HBO

Andrew: "You're gay, I'm not, and those are the only two options! No, I will not be answering any follow-up questions!"

I am not inclined to get too on Dina's case about that, though. Sexuality is complicated, as is changing or challenging your own perception of yourself. The show doesn't go into it, but I've also got to imagine that in any post-apocalyptic scenario, the vital work of Propagating the Species creates even more societal pressure to participate in heteronormative relationships than already exists in our world.

Ellie, who is only truly happy when she is pissing someone off, is probably more comfortable being "out" in this context than Dina would be.

Kyle: As the episode ends we get a bit of set up for a couple of oncoming threats (or is it just one?): an unseen cult-killing force and a phalanx of heavily armed WLF soldiers that Ellie and Dina seem totally unprepared for. In a video game I'd have no problem believing my super-soldier protagonist character could shoot and kill as many bad guys as the game wants to throw at me. In a more "grounded" TV show, the odds do not seem great.

Andrew: One thread I'm curious to see the show pull at: Ellie attempts to blame "Abby and her crew," people who left Jackson months ago, for a mass slaying of cult members that had clearly happened just hours ago, an attempt to build Abby up into a monster in her head so it's easier to kill her when the time comes. We'll see how well it works!

But yeah, Ellie and Dina and their one horse are not ready for the "Terror Lake Salutes Hannibal Crossing The Alps"-length military parade that the WLF is apparently prepared to throw at them.

Kyle: They're pretty close to Seattle when they find the dead cultists, so from their perspective I'm not sure blaming Abby and crew for the mass murder is that ridiculous
Andrew: (Girl whose main experience with murder is watching Abby brutally kill her father figure, seeing someone dead on the ground): Getting a lot of Abby vibes from this...

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Revisiting iZombie, 10 years later

We loved the show’s wicked humor, great characters, and mix of cases-of-the-week with longer narrative arcs.

Zombies never really go out of style, but they were an especially hot commodity on television in the 2010s, spawning the blockbuster series The Walking Dead (2010-2022) as well as quirkier fare like Netflix's comedy horror, The Santa Clarita Diet (2017-2018).  iZombie, a supernatural procedural dramedy that ran for five seasons on the CW, falls into the latter category. It never achieved mega-hit status but nonetheless earned a hugely loyal following drawn to the show's wicked humor, well-drawn characters, and winning mix of cases-of-the-week and longer narrative arcs.

(Spoilers for all five seasons below.)

The original Vertigo comic series was created by writer Chris Roberson and artist Michael Allred. It featured a zombie in Eugene, Oregon, named Gwen Dylan, who worked as a gravedigger because she needed to consume brains every 30 days to keep her memories and cognitive faculties in working order. Her best friends were a ghost who died in the 1960s and a were-terrier named Scott, nicknamed "Spot," and together they took on challenges both personal and supernatural (vampires, mummies, etc.).

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Muse Pi Pro crams a SpacemiT M1 RISC-V processor, M.2 and mPCIe sockets into a Raspberry Pi-sized computer

The Muse Pi Pro is a credit card-sized computer with a RISC-V processor, an AI accelerator, support for up to 16GB of LPDDR5x-2400 RAM, and up to 128GB of eMMC 5.1 onboard storage. But that’s just the tip of the iceberg. While the little computer…

The Muse Pi Pro is a credit card-sized computer with a RISC-V processor, an AI accelerator, support for up to 16GB of LPDDR5x-2400 RAM, and up to 128GB of eMMC 5.1 onboard storage. But that’s just the tip of the iceberg. While the little computer is the same size as a Raspberry Pi Model B, it […]

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Anzeige: Skalierbare Webanwendungen entwickeln mit React und Next.js

Moderne Webanwendungen erfordern strukturierte und performante Architekturen. Wie sich diese mit React, Typescript und Next.js effizient umsetzen lassen, zeigt ein dreitägiger Online-Workshop anhand praxisnaher Übungen. (Golem Karrierewelt, Programmier…

Moderne Webanwendungen erfordern strukturierte und performante Architekturen. Wie sich diese mit React, Typescript und Next.js effizient umsetzen lassen, zeigt ein dreitägiger Online-Workshop anhand praxisnaher Übungen. (Golem Karrierewelt, Programmiersprachen)

MINISFORUM MS-A2 goes on sale for $839 and up (mini PC with Ryzen 9 9955HX and 10 Gigabit networking)

The MINISFORUM MS-A2 is a compact desktop computer with a 55-watt, 16-core, 32-thread AMD Ryzen 9 9955HX “Fire Range” processor, and plenty of expansion options including support for up to 96GB of DDR5-5600 memory, support for up to 3 PCIe …

The MINISFORUM MS-A2 is a compact desktop computer with a 55-watt, 16-core, 32-thread AMD Ryzen 9 9955HX “Fire Range” processor, and plenty of expansion options including support for up to 96GB of DDR5-5600 memory, support for up to 3 PCIe 4.0 NVMe SSDs, and a PCIe 4.0 x8 slots for graphics or network cards. The computer […]

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Gestrandet: Cybertruck-Besitzer überschätzt Schwimmfähigkeit drastisch

Elon Musk hat den Mund etwas voll genommen und dem Cybertruck Schwimmfähigkeiten zugesprochen. Das hat ein Besitzer getestet und ist schon am Ufer stecken geblieben. (Tesla Cybertruck, Elektroauto)

Elon Musk hat den Mund etwas voll genommen und dem Cybertruck Schwimmfähigkeiten zugesprochen. Das hat ein Besitzer getestet und ist schon am Ufer stecken geblieben. (Tesla Cybertruck, Elektroauto)