The first foldable PC era is unfolding

Lenovo launched the first foldable laptop in 2020, but the first real era of foldable PCs is only starting to unfold now. Today, LG became the latest OEM to announce a foldable-screen laptop, right after HP announced its first attempt, the Spectre Foldable PC, earlier this month.

LG only announced the Gram Fold in South Korea thus far. LG didn’t immediately respond when I asked if it has plans to release the machine in the US.

A Google translation of LG’s Korean announcement said the laptop is 9.4-mm (0.37-inches) thick when unfolded and used like a 17-inch tablet. Alternatively, the OLED PC can be folded in half to use like an approximately 12.2-inch laptop. In the latter form, a virtual keyboard can appear on the bottom screen, and you can dock a Bluetooth keyboard to the bottom screen or pair a keyboard with the system wirelessly. The screen has 1920×2560 pixels for a pixel density of 188.2 pixels per inch.

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Source: Ars Technica – The first foldable PC era is unfolding

ChatGPT update enables its AI to “see, hear, and speak,“ according to OpenAI

An illustration of a cybernetic eyeball.

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images)

On Monday, OpenAI announced a significant update to ChatGPT that enables its GPT-3.5 and GPT-4 AI models to analyze images and react to them as part of a text conversation. Also, the ChatGPT mobile app will add speech synthesis options that, when paired with its existing speech recognition features, will enable fully verbal conversations with the AI assistant, OpenAI says.

OpenAI is planning to roll out these features in ChatGPT to Plus and Enterprise subscribers “over the next two weeks.” It also notes that speech synthesis is coming to iOS and Android only, and image recognition will be available on both the web interface and the mobile apps.

OpenAI says the new image recognition feature in ChatGPT lets users upload one or more images for conversation, using either the GPT-3.5 or GPT-4 models. In its promotional blog post, the company claims the feature can be used for a variety of everyday applications: from figuring out what’s for dinner by taking pictures of the fridge and pantry, to troubleshooting why your grill won’t start. It also says that users can use their device’s touch screen to circle parts of the image that they would like ChatGPT to concentrate on.

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Source: Ars Technica – ChatGPT update enables its AI to “see, hear, and speak,“ according to OpenAI

Pixel 8 leak promises 7 years of OS updates—even more than an iPhone

Leaked pictures from Google's promo site show off the Pixel 8 Pro in a lovely blue.

Enlarge / Leaked pictures from Google’s promo site show off the Pixel 8 Pro in a lovely blue. (credit: Kamila Wojciechowska )

The Pixel 8 is rapidly approaching its October 4 unveiling, but before then there are a bunch of leaks out there. Reliable leaker Kamila Wojciechowska has a whole list of Pixel 8 and 8 Pro specs over at 91mobiles, along with some Pixel market materials. The big news is that Google is finally giving its Pixel phones a longer support window. Pixel phones are getting seven years of updates, which is longer than Apple. Google pitches the Pixel phones as the flagship of the Android ecosystem, and now, if this spec sheet pans out, the OS maker is finally giving them an update plan to match.

Currently, Pixel phones have three years of OS updates and five years of security updates, which is not only beaten by Apple’s update policy but is also inexplicably worse than many of Google’s Android partners. For instance, Samsung and OnePlus offer four years of OS updates, albeit with some caveats around arrival times and the security update cadence. Apple doesn’t have a policy written in stone anywhere, but with the iPhone X not making the jump to iOS17, that makes for a five-year major OS update policy if you’re counting to 2022’s iOS16, though with some point updates in 2023 you could argue six years.

Google has messed around in the past by calling its current “three years of major OS updates and five years of security updates” plan “five years of updates,” but this spec sheet very clearly says “seven years of OS, security, and feature drop updates.” That would comfortably lead all major manufacturers, leaving only Google and Fairphone at the top of the charts.

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Source: Ars Technica – Pixel 8 leak promises 7 years of OS updates—even more than an iPhone

Supreme Court considers limits on White House contacts with social media

The United States Supreme Court building seen during daytime.

Enlarge / The Supreme Court. (credit: Getty Images | Douglas Rissing)

The Supreme Court on Friday extended a stay of a lower-court order that would limit the Biden administration’s contacts with social media firms, giving justices a few more days to consider whether to block the ruling entirely. The court could rule by the middle of this week on the Biden administration motion in a case in which the states of Missouri and Louisiana allege that speech related to COVID-19 and other topics was illegally suppressed at the behest of government officials.

A stay issued September 14 was scheduled to expire on Friday, but Justice Samuel Alito ordered that it be extended until Wednesday, September 27, at 11:59 pm ET. Alito is the justice assigned to the 5th Circuit, the circuit in which an appeals court ruled that the White House and FBI likely violated the First Amendment by coercing social media platforms into moderating content and changing their moderation policies.

The 5th Circuit appeals court ruling wasn’t a total loss for the Biden administration. Appeals court judges threw out the majority of a district judge’s preliminary injunction that ordered the Biden administration to halt a wide range of communications with social media companies.

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Source: Ars Technica – Supreme Court considers limits on White House contacts with social media

The 2024 BMW i7 M70—electric luxury turned up to 11

A dark blue BMW i7 seen with some poplar trees in the background

Enlarge / The i7 M70 features new mirrors and side skirts to go with new suspension and brakes and a more powerful rear motor. (credit: Jonathan Gitlin)

LISBON, PORTUGAL—Driving BMW’s new electric 7 Series was one of the true automotive surprises of 2022. The automaker rolled out electric and combustion-tech versions at the same time, with the electric i7 bettering the gas-burning 760i in just about every way. Now, BMW has sent its biggest and boldest EV off to its M division, the in-house tuning and motorsport people. The resulting car is the fastest-accelerating and most expensive electric BMW to date.

I’ve long been an advocate for putting electric motors in luxury cars, especially big onesthe combination of instant torque and near-silence is ideal for that application. Automakers both new and established also like the idea of big, luxury EVs because they can charge plenty for the privilege, so it’s a crowded field. Some cars in this class target rollercoaster-like acceleration; for example, Porsche, Tesla, and Lucid will each sell you a four-door EV capable of a 0–60 time that’s around two seconds.

The i7 M70 is not as fast as those EVs, and it’s not the kind of luxury EV you might use to wipe the smiles off some faces at the local drag strip’s “run what ya brung” night. Instead, in keeping with BMW’s old “ultimate driving machine” slogan, it’s a rather engaging driver’s car, one that belies its size and mass remarkably well.

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Source: Ars Technica – The 2024 BMW i7 M70—electric luxury turned up to 11

Donna Noble is back and ready for a fight in trailer for Doctor Who specials

Doctor Who returns with three specials starring David Tennant as the Fourteenth Doctor, reunited with Donna Noble (Catherine Tate).

Doctor Who marks its 60th anniversary this year with three specials featuring David Tennant as the Fourteenth Doctor, with the first slated to air in November. The latest trailer shows the good Doctor reunited with his former companion Donna Noble (Catherine Tate) and facing off against two classic adversaries from the Whovian archives: an alien race called the Meeps and a celestial being known as The Toymaker, played by Neil Patrick Harris.

(Spoilers below for prior seasons of Doctor Who.)

When the BBC announced that Ncuti Gatwa would succeed Jodie Whittaker’s Thirteenth Doctor as the new incarnation of Doctor Who, fans naturally expected Gatwa to make his first appearance in the traditional regeneration sequence. Instead, in the 2022 special “The Power of the Doctor,” Whittaker’s Doctor regenerated into an incarnation bearing a striking similarity to the Tenth Doctor—both played by Tennant. It was a savvy marketing move, given the enormous popularity of Tennant’s Doctor. With showrunner Chris Chibnall stepping down and Russell T. Davies re-assuming the reins for the show’s 60th anniversary, what better time to revisit that character, along with my personal favorite of the companions, Donna Noble?

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Source: Ars Technica – Donna Noble is back and ready for a fight in trailer for Doctor Who specials

Getty Images subscribers to get access to AI image generator

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Source: Ars Technica – Getty Images subscribers to get access to AI image generator

A partial car substitute? Trek’s new cargo bike, reviewed

Image of a red bicycle with large plastic tubs flanking its rear wheel.

Enlarge (credit: John TImmer)

As I watched a few berries I had just carted home roll gently down my driveway and into the road, it was hard to escape the sense that my plan to use nothing but a cargo bike for two weeks might have been overly ambitious. Several weeks filled with Canadian wildfire smoke and tornado warnings later, it was pretty clear that I had greatly underestimated the complexities involved.

The e-bike I used for my testing, the newly introduced Trek Fetch+ 2, is very good, and it readily hauled whatever I asked of it. But using a cargo bike is very different from any other biking experience I’ve had—and that’s saying something, given the large range of bike styles I’ve now had the pleasure of sampling.

So this review will be divided into two parts. In the first, I’ll talk a bit about the cargo bike experience; if you already know what that’s like, you can skip ahead to the second half, where we’ll go in-depth on the Fetch+ 2.

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Source: Ars Technica – A partial car substitute? Trek’s new cargo bike, reviewed

NASA spacecraft returns to Earth with pieces of an asteroid

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Source: Ars Technica – NASA spacecraft returns to Earth with pieces of an asteroid

Inside the race to stop a deadly viral outbreak in India

Road blockade due to Nipah affected areas at Chathamangalam panjayat on September 8, 2021, in Kozhikode, India.

Enlarge / Road blockade due to Nipah affected areas at Chathamangalam panjayat on September 8, 2021, in Kozhikode, India. (credit: DeFodi Images News / Getty)

On the morning of September 11, critical care specialist Anoop Kumar was presented with an unusual situation. Four members of the same family had been admitted to his hospital—Aster MIMS in Kozhikode, Kerala—the previous day, all similarly sick. Would he take a look?

He gathered his team of doctors to investigate. Soon they were at the bedsides of a 9-year-old boy, his 4-year-old sister, their 24-year-old uncle, and a 10-month-old cousin. All had arrived at the hospital with fever, cough, and flu-like symptoms. The 9-year-old was in respiratory distress, struggling to breathe properly, and had needed to be put on a noninvasive ventilator, with air pumped through a mask to keep his lungs expanded.

Their symptoms were concerning and mysterious—none of the team could pinpoint what was wrong. But delving into their family history, Anoop and his colleagues soon uncovered a clue. The father of the two young siblings, 49-year-old Mohammed Ali, an agriculturalist, had died less than two weeks previously. And when the team at Aster MIMS got in touch with the hospital that had treated Ali, they found that he had been admitted with similar symptoms, pneumonia and fever.

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Source: Ars Technica – Inside the race to stop a deadly viral outbreak in India

The history of syphilis is being rewritten by a medieval skeleton

Illustration of bone

Enlarge

In the last days of the 1400s, a terrible epidemic swept through Europe. Men and women spiked sudden fevers. Their joints ached, and they broke out in rashes that ripened into bursting boils. Ulcers ate away at their faces, collapsing their noses and jaws, working down their throats and airways, making it impossible to eat or drink. Survivors were grossly disfigured. Unluckier victims died.

The infection sped across the borders of a politically fractured landscape, from France into Italy, on to Switzerland and Germany, and north to the British Isles, Scandinavia, and Russia. The Holy Roman Emperor declared it a punishment from God. “Nothing could be more serious than this curse, this barbarian poison,” an Italian historian wrote in 1495.

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Source: Ars Technica – The history of syphilis is being rewritten by a medieval skeleton

NASA’s asteroid sampling mission is on course for landing this weekend

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Source: Ars Technica – NASA’s asteroid sampling mission is on course for landing this weekend

3 iOS 0-days, a cellular network compromise, and HTTP used to infect an iPhone

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Source: Ars Technica – 3 iOS 0-days, a cellular network compromise, and HTTP used to infect an iPhone

RSV vaccine during pregnancy gets seasonal sign-off from CDC

An intensive care nurse cares for a patient suffering from respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), who is being ventilated in the children's intensive care unit of the Olga Hospital of the Stuttgart Clinic in Germany.

Enlarge / An intensive care nurse cares for a patient suffering from respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), who is being ventilated in the children’s intensive care unit of the Olga Hospital of the Stuttgart Clinic in Germany. (credit: Getty | picture alliance)

A Pfizer vaccine designed to protect newborns and infants from severe RSV illness won a recommendation from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Friday—but only for seasonal use.

The vaccine is Pfizer’s bivalent RSVpreF vaccine, called Abrysvo, and is administered to pregnant people late in gestation, between 32 and 36 weeks.

RSV, or respiratory syncytial (sin-SISH-uhl) virus, is the leading cause of hospitalization for infants in the US. Each year, 1.5 million children seek out-patient care for RSV, with 58,000 to 80,000 ending up in the hospital and 100 to 300 tragically dying from the infection.

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Source: Ars Technica – RSV vaccine during pregnancy gets seasonal sign-off from CDC

Unity exec tells Ars he’s on a mission to earn back developer trust

Unity exec tells Ars he’s on a mission to earn back developer trust

Enlarge (credit: Unity)

If there’s one thing Unity Create President and General Manager Marc Whitten wants to make clear, it’s that he appreciates your feedback.

“It’s been a very feedback-giving week for Unity,” Whitten told Ars, possibly the biggest understatement he made during an interview accompanying the new, scaled-back fee structure plans the company announced today. “There was a lot more [feedback than we expected] for sure… I think that feedback has made us better, even though it has sometimes been difficult.”

But Whitten was also quick to find the bright side of the tsunami of backlash that came Unity’s way in the week since the company announced its (now outdated) plans for per-install fees of up to $0.20 on all Unity games starting in 2024. That’s because that anger reflected “the extraordinary passion that our community has for their craft, their livelihoods, and their tools, including Unity,” Whitten said. “When Unity disappoints them, in a way where they’re overly surprised or whatever, they give very, very critical feedback. I don’t love hearing every single one of those pieces of feedback—sometimes they can be pretty pointed—but I love that that passion exists.”

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Source: Ars Technica – Unity exec tells Ars he’s on a mission to earn back developer trust

Android phones get PC webcam capabilities in the latest beta

The Pixel 7 Pro camera layout. Between the first two lenses, you can make out sensors for laser autofocus and a color sensor.

Enlarge / The Pixel 7 Pro camera layout. Between the first two lenses, you can make out sensors for laser autofocus and a color sensor.

Here’s a fun new use for your Android phone: A PC webcam! In the latest Android beta, plugging a phone into a PC will reveal a new option in the USB Preferences menu for webcam functionality. Just pick that option instead of the default “file transfer,” and the phone camera will register itself as a webcam. Then you can fire up Zoom and start video calling.

The Android build with this feature is “Android 14 QPR1 Beta 1.” Android’s getting confusing with all these overlapping betas, but the current stable version is still Android 13. Android 14, currently on its 10th beta/developer preview, will most likely be out alongside the Pixel 8 in October. Android 14 QPR1 is the quarterly release after the first stable build of Android 14, and it should be out around December. (QPR stands for quarterly platform release.) These happen between major releases, often marketed as “feature drops.” Right now, Android 13 is technically “Android 13 QPR3.”

Android is technically copying this feature from iOS. In Apple land, this is called the “Continuity Camera,” and will work wirelessly between an iPhone and a Mac, which is pretty cool. As usual, the Android version is much more flexible since the feature presents as a generic USB webcam. It should work on almost everything, like Windows, Mac, Chrome OS, and probably Linux. You can even plug an Android phone into another Android phone and use the first phone’s camera as the webcam for the second phone.

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Source: Ars Technica – Android phones get PC webcam capabilities in the latest beta

Worm that jumps from rats to slugs to human brains has invaded Southeast US

Adult female worm of <em>Angiostrongylus cantonensis</em> recovered from rat lungs with characteristic barber-pole appearance (anterior end of worm is to the top). Scale bar = 1 mm.

Adult female worm of Angiostrongylus cantonensis recovered from rat lungs with characteristic barber-pole appearance (anterior end of worm is to the top). Scale bar = 1 mm. (credit: Lindo et al.)

The dreaded rat lungworm—a parasite with a penchant for rats and slugs that occasionally finds itself rambling and writhing in human brains—has firmly established itself in the Southeast US and will likely continue its rapid invasion, a study published this week suggests.

The study involved small-scale surveillance of dead rats in the Atlanta zoo. Between 2019 and 2022, researchers continually turned up evidence of the worm. In all, the study identified seven out of 33 collected rats (21 percent) with evidence of a rat lungworm infection. The infected animals were spread throughout the study’s time frame, all in different months, with one in 2019, three in 2021, and three in 2022, indicating sustained transmission.

Although small, the study “suggests that the zoonotic parasite was introduced to and has become established in a new area of the southeastern United States,” the study’s authors, led by researchers at the University of Georgia College of Veterinary Medicine, concluded. The study was published Wednesday in the journal Emerging Infectious Diseases.

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Source: Ars Technica – Worm that jumps from rats to slugs to human brains has invaded Southeast US

Apple’s new iPhone 15 and 15 Pro reach doorsteps and store shelves

iPhone 15 in all of its colors

Enlarge / All the colors of the new iPhone 15. (credit: Apple)

Today marks the in-store launch of the iPhone 15 and iPhone 15 Pro, plus the likely delivery date for at least the earliest preorders. Preorders went live a week ago, on September 15.

You’ll be waiting for a while if you want the Pro model and didn’t preorder, though.

In Chicago, Illinois, in the United States, delivery dates for new orders of the iPhone 15 Pro and iPhone 15 Pro Max from the online Apple store are currently estimated to be between October 23 and 30—more than a month from now. Next-day in-store pickup is still a possibility for most configurations, except for the 1TB iPhone 15 Pro Max.

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Source: Ars Technica – Apple’s new iPhone 15 and 15 Pro reach doorsteps and store shelves

Unity makes major changes to controversial install-fee program

Unity is hoping you will see this logo in a better light after today.

Enlarge / Unity is hoping you will see this logo in a better light after today.

Unity has made major changes to the per-install Runtime Fee program it announced last week and made apologies for a policy that united large swathes of the game development community in anger.

In a new blog post, Unity now says that projects made on current and earlier versions of Unity will not be subject to the new runtime fee structure. Only projects that upgrade to a new “Long Term Support” (LTS) version of Unity starting in 2024 and beyond will have to pay the charges, the company says.

This change should eliminate at least some of the legal confusion over projects started under one set of terms being moved to a new set unilaterally. Unity has also restored a Github page that was set up in 2019 to help developers track Terms of Service changes and reinstated its commitment that “you can stay on the terms applicable for the version of Unity editor you are using – as long as you keep using that version.”

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Source: Ars Technica – Unity makes major changes to controversial install-fee program

Depredations and depravities reign in this week’s Wheel of Time

Still no safeword in Tel'aran'rhiod, Rand.

Enlarge / Still no safeword in Tel’aran’rhiod, Rand. (credit: Amazon Studios)

Andrew Cunningham and Lee Hutchinson have spent decades of their lives with Robert Jordan and Brandon Sanderson’s Wheel of Time books, and they previously brought that knowledge to bear as they recapped each first season episode of Amazon’s new WoT TV series. Now they’re doing it again for season two—along with insights, jokes, and the occasional wild theory. These recaps won’t cover every element of every episode, but they will contain major spoilers for the show and the book series. We’re going to do our best to not spoil major future events from the books, but there’s always the danger that something might slip out. If you want to stay completely unspoiled and haven’t read the books, these recaps aren’t for you.

New episodes of The Wheel of Time season two will be posted for Amazon Prime subscribers every Friday. This write-up covers episode six, which was released on September 22.

Andrew: As usual for an episode of Wheel of Time, this one does a bunch of things and goes a bunch of places, but the episode’s centerpiece will be very familiar to book readers: Egwene’s capture by the Seanchan.

The Seanchan believe that channelers are too dangerous to be left to their own devices. They’re captured and leashed and generally treated as beloved pets at best or monsters at worst. Egwene’s capture and torment in the books is a cornerstone of her character, and this episode is tough to watch in places. It’s also one of the first times that the show’s version of events is clearly more effective and impactful for me than the version in the books—the benefit of doing things in a visual medium.

Lee: Oh yeah, absolutely—this episode definitely ratchets things up a notch or five. No more Bel Tine presents for Egwene or dancing with Aram—it’s straight-up torture time, courtesy of our friends from beyond the western sea. We will likely (eventually) learn at least the broad outlines of Seanchan culture, but the important bit is the one we’re being shown right off the bat: to the Seanchan, channelers are sub-human. “You are not a woman,” Egwene is told. “You are a damane.”

Egwene spends the episode trapped in a cell—in “the kennels,” as they’re called—learning about all the quirks and features of the Seanchan a’dam. It would be fascinating if it weren’t so gruesome and awful. The a’dam’s creator (an Aes Sedai, though we hear much more about her in the books) seems to have put considerable effort into thinking of all the potential ways a damane might fight back and then programmed around them. The a’dam can’t be removed by the damane. The damane cannot touch the wristband control leash, even if it’s not being held by anyone. The device even prevents the damane from touching other objects that the damane perceives to be weapons—which is just downright insidious, because it turns new damane into active participants in their own breaking. Egwene cannot even pick up a water pitcher to drink, because she can’t stop thinking about smashing the sul’dam’s head with it. She only gets to drink water after she has convinced herself that she won’t attack the Seanchan.

It’s rough. It’s really rough. In between the put on the glasses pour the water scenes, we get to see Egwene convulsing repeatedly as she fights with the a’dam—so much so that she ruptures blood vessels in both eyes. And this takes up about half the episode.

As you point out, though, this is an absolute cornerstone of Egwene’s character. It’s the honing that will shape her into—well, into what she eventually becomes. (It’s not a spoiler, I don’t think, to say that the POV characters of an epic fantasy series all have Important Destinies™ laid on them, and Egwene wouldn’t be able to inhabit the role—roles, even—she ends up having to inhabit without this shaping.)

Things are not going great for Egwene.

Things are not going great for Egwene. (credit: Amazon Studios)

Andrew: My “this is true to the books” brain appreciates these scenes a lot but there is a fine line to walk; Game of Thrones became infamous for how frequently it brutalized its female characters. This almost always took the form of sexual assault, perpetrated by men in positions of power against women who lacked it. Wheel of Time hasn’t gone to that well, and if it stays in any way true to the events and themes of the books, it won’t. But it’s something I hope the show is conscious of.

Moving on to other characters, we get a good bit of Mat and Min for the first time in a couple of episodes. Show-Min has made a deal with the devil (one of them, anyway) to bring Mat back into Rand’s orbit, because Min has had a vision that Mat will kill Rand, and Ishamael has a vested interest in Rand being dead. Mat and Rand meet and have a genuinely touching reunion here, and I’ll say I also think the show is handling their relationship a bit better than the books here. Book-Mat, especially at this stage in the story before we had ever entered his perspective, is honestly just kind of a dick?

Maybe it’s because he picked up a dagger that makes him permanently suspicious of everyone around him, but his response to finding out what is going on with Rand is not to help him but to be a distant jerk. Of all the things not to like about the books, you almost never get a good sense of Rand and Mat and Perrin as actual friends rather than People Whose Fates Are Intertwined By Destiny. We’re told that they’re friends. Their actions usually imply some degree of loyalty to one another. But very rarely do you just get to see two dudes have a hug and a beer because they’re genuinely happy to see one another.

Lee: We do indeed have yet to hear any one of the Two Rivers Bros lament that the other Two Rivers Bros are so much better with the ladies, if nothing else. I do wish that the show had time to let that friendship breathe a little more, but alas. And where is that dagger, anyway? I know where it’s supposed to be in the books at this point—I don’t want to say, in case it spoils something for someone, but it’s addressed early on in The Great Hunt and in fact is one of the things that is being hunted for by our main characters—but I can’t recall if we’ve seen where it currently is in the show.

I want to spend a moment on Rand and Logain, too—if for nothing else than to call out the first on-screen image of someone playing “stones,” the in-universe name for what we’d recognize as Go. Stones is a game played in Randland by intellectuals and generals, and it’s a given that if you see a character playing stones, that character is supposed to be super smart and brilliant and possibly an authorial self-insert. (“Take a shot every time someone is playing stones” is almost as popular a casual WoT drinking game as “Take a shot every time Nynaeve tugs her braid” or—my personal favorite—”Take a shot every time someone says something about the Dark One’s taint.”)

Logain is once again brought in to teach Rand—but really, to teach us—how channeling works for men. (I hope we still get you-know-who teaching Rand later, but Logain is definitely stepping into that other fellow’s shoes here.) In a nice little compact scene, the false Dragon manages to teach the true Dragon three important facts about the One Power: women “surrender” to saidar, but men “seize” saidin; if you take too much in, you’ll burn yourself out; and that Rand is incredibly powerful, capable of doing “anything” and fighting “anyone.”

Upon releasing the source, Rand then learns a bonus #4 fact: the Dark One’s corruption suffuses saidin. The book makes it sound like channeling the corrupted male half of the power is sort of like railing ultra-heroin while simultaneously chugging down raw sewage, and when Rand releases the source, he also releases his lunch. Ew.

"UNLIMITED POWER!!!!"

“UNLIMITED POWER!!!!” (credit: Amazon Studios)

Andrew: Yeah, the show has visually referenced the Dark One’s taint (on saidin! His taint on saidin!) before, back when Logain could still channel. Women get to weave sparkly strands of light and men have to channel this inky black stuff. But now Rand is getting a big dose of it for the first time and it doesn’t go great for him. Rand’s sanity and the degree to which he is still “himself” will become major concerns.

The show’s treatment of what happens to channelers after they can no longer channel is still pretty inconsistent with the books; former channelers in the books are no more capable of seeing weaves or teaching a channeler than a non-channeler would be, but Logain is still fully aware of what Rand is doing and what he can do.

On that topic, let’s talk about something I am less enthusiastic about: we’re at episode six, and I’m still not really sure where Moiraine or Lan’s plotlines are going, and the decision to take Moiraine’s channeling ability away and have her spend half the season sniping with her sister in their big stuffy house just feels like it was done so both Moiraine and Lan could mark time while things happened to the other characters. Maybe something stunningly explosive will come from it, and I am glad to see that Siuan Sanche is back in the action, but give me “scenes of Rand bargaining with Lanfear in the dream world” or “scenes of Nynaeve and Elayne trying to save their friend while doing some true-to-the-book bickering” over “scenes of a woman trying to write a letter while her nephew gives her a sandwich.”

Lee: But Barthanes Damodred makes the best sandwiches. Moiraine said so and Aes Sedai cannot lie.

Yeah, I agree that parts of the season feel kind of interminable, in spite of how bloody short it is. I too could have done with maybe a bit less Moiraine-arguing-with-her-sister and also a bit less of whatever the hell it is Lan has been doing with Alanna and the Funky Bunch, but I’ve been pretty happy with the World of Dreams bits.

Speaking of: I want to ask a question that my wife and I both feel pretty unified on, and I’ll give you my answer after I hear yours, but: when Lanfear banished Ishamael from Rand’s dreams, was she really banishing him? Because it seems much more Lanfear-like for that entire bit to have simply been Lanfear conjuring and then de-conjuring an imaginary Dream Ishy. It seems like the kind of thing she’d do.

Perfection.

Perfection. (credit: Amazon Studios)

Andrew: OK, so, hear me out—I think it’s really Ishamael, and it’s because of a super subtle but-obviously-meant-to-be-noticed thing about how he appears in the World of Dreams.

Look at scenes early in the episode where Ishamael is communicating with Min in her dreams. Occasionally he “freezes,” like you would on a Zoom call where Your Internet Connection Is Unstable. In the scene where he’s tormenting Rand before Lanfear sends him away, he’s doing the same thing. The visions Rand is getting from Ishamael occasionally freeze-and-jump in the same kind of way, something I thought was just a way to creep out the viewer until you made me start thinking about it.

But Lanfear, someone known for her mastery of the World of Dreams, doesn’t move like this. I think the show is trying to use this to communicate that Ishamael can operate in the world of dreams, but he’s not particularly adept at controlling it, and he can easily be booted by someone more talented than he is.

It does seem Lanfear-ish to try to earn Rand’s trust this way, by constructing a scenario that makes her seem more trustworthy. But remember, book-Lanfear is the one who hooked Rand up with his book-channeling teacher. She’s got her own motivations and delusions of grandeur, and the Forsaken often work at cross-purposes.

Lee: Ahhh, that is an excellent catch—I’d noticed Ishy’s freezing but hadn’t made the link to it maybe being tied to his World of Dreams mastery level. And Ishamael & Lanfear are already colluding, as we saw last episode, so it’s not like Lanfear having Ishamael stop by Rand’s dream for a minute so she can “vanquish” him would be a difficult ask. Hell, having Ishamael in on the deal would fit pretty well with both his and Lanfear’s plans—at least for now. Good call.

One way or another, though, Rand just can’t catch a break. He finds Mat again, but rather than leaving town with Rand to escape, he chooses to heed Min’s warning and stay away. Rand then decides to depart Cairhien on his own but gets stopped by Lan and Alanna. What are they going to do with him?

Our answer lies in the arrival of the Amyrlin Seat and fourteen other Aes Sedai (including several familiar faces, like Liandrin and Verin). A similar situation plays out in the novel—Rand delays leaving Shienar for too long and gets stuck having to talk to the Amyrlin, recently arrived in the Borderlands with her retinue. Here, it looks like Rand delayed leaving Cairhien for too long and is stuck having to do the exact same thing. The Amyrlin and Moraine are old schemers when it comes to the subject of the Dragon Reborn, so the plots are all twisting back together. (As they should, since next week is the season’s penultimate episode.)

Andrew: I’d talk to someone for a long time about the process of adapting this season. Season one was, for all its departures, more or less a heavily compressed version of The Eye of the World with a bunch of stuff cut for time. For season two, it’s like they wrote every single plot from book two (and parts of three) on a big whiteboard and then Tetris’d the story blocks around over and over again, shaving them down until they would fit in the amount of space that the show had to give. As different as the show seems to be, you’re always running into recognizable bits, just moved around and recontextualized.

It certainly seems like most of our heroes are converging on Cairhien, before what I’m assuming will be a cataclysmic season-ending confrontation in Falme.

That’s where Nynaeve and Elayne are still camped out, trying to figure out how to free Egwene and any of the other Ars Sedai-affiliated channelers who have been captured by the Seanchan. Nynaeve and Elayne are very true to their book-selves here as “powerful women who respect each other but would basically never hang out if they weren’t both friends with the same person.” Right now, it’s on them to free Egwene and expose Liandrin, who just happens to be part of the Amyrlin’s posse in Cairhien.

It does seem like the show is going to be less patient than the books about resolving Nynaeve’s “block,” where she can only channel under specific emotionally heightened circumstances. Leave it to Ryma (Nyokabi Gethaiga), a member of the healing-focused Yellow Ajah, to break it down in terms Nynaeve can understand: when someone is hurt, you don’t decide to help them, you just help them.

Lee: That’s a solid characterization of Nynaeve and Elayne’s relationship. My wife said that Nynaeve calls Elayne “princess” with about the same level of contempt that Han uses with Leia in Empire Strikes Back. And poor Ryma—she’ll now be joining Egwene and Maigan (the former Blue sitter, played by Sandy McDade) in the kennels.

Your description of playing Tetris with the plots is also spot on—that feels exactly like what’s happening. I like some of it, and I don’t like some of it, but I don’t think I’d be able to do any better as a writer if faced with the same length and episode count constraints as the show is having to operate under. If there is a villain here, it’s not really the Seanchan, or the Forsaken, or even the Dark One himself—it’s whatever bean counters in the programming department decided on those constraints. (There is an obvious “a’dam around the neck of the show” metaphor that I could draw here, but I won’t. Though I guess I just did.) Regardless, we’re reviewing the show we’ve been given to work with, rather than the longer show we perhaps wish we had.

I have one additional note from my wife that I need to read into the record: “Ingtar has better smoky eye than Lanfear and Egwene’s sul’dam put together.” No argument from me there.

Anything else from your notebook, Andrew, or have we reached the end for this week?

Andrew: “Wheel of Time? More like Wheel of Prime!”
Lee: Hah, yes, I suppose that does mean we are indeed done for this week. With only two episodes left, I’m expecting a lot of big things very soon. Big important things. Big important giant flaming things, in the sky. Because it would be silly to show us a horn in act one and not have someone blow it by act three, right?

We’ll see you back here next Friday. Until then, may you all find water and shade.

(credit: WoT Wiki)

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Source: Ars Technica – Depredations and depravities reign in this week’s Wheel of Time