Canon’s New Cinema Cam Puts a 45MP DSLR and 8K Video Into a Single Chunky Body

The video capabilities of digital cameras have improved dramatically over the years, but there are still many good reasons to opt for a dedicated camcorder, including menu systems streamlined for video and longer record times. With its new EOS R5C, however, Canon takes one step closer to creating the perfect…

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Source: Gizmodo – Canon’s New Cinema Cam Puts a 45MP DSLR and 8K Video Into a Single Chunky Body

China Wants Internet Giants To Get Approval for Investments, Fundraisings

China’s cyberspace regulator has drafted new guidelines that will require the country’s large internet companies to obtain its approval before they undertake any investments or fundraisings, Reuters reported Wednesday, citing sources familiar with the matter. From the report: The proposed requirements from the Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) will apply to any platform company with more than 100 million users, or with more than 10 billion yuan ($1.58 billion) in revenue, they said. Any internet firm involved in sectors named on the negative list issued by China’s National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) last year will also need to apply for approval, the sources said. Some internet companies have already been briefed, they added, and the draft rules are still subject to changes. The proposed rules would intensify the oversight from China’s increasingly assertive regulators, who have over the past year reined in formerly freewheeling internet giants in areas from dealmaking to their handling of user data. It was not immediately clear what types of investments or fundraisings could be impacted. One senior technology industry executive said there were concerns whether it would be applied to private market investments, such as pre-IPO private funding rounds.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – China Wants Internet Giants To Get Approval for Investments, Fundraisings

I tried Silk’s dairy-inspired Nextmilk and wasn’t fooled

Ever since Impossible Foodsstole the show at 2019 with its White-Castle-burger-that-wasn’t, Engadget has been following the science of plant-based foods. Nowadays, it’s not just patties that can do a convincing impersonation of animal products, and it’s not just Impossible Foods. Between Impossible and its biggest competitor, Beyond Meat, we’ve also seen plant-based chicken nuggets, sausage, pork, “KFC” and even taco meat. But you don’t often hear about attempts to mimic a different animal-based product: milk.

And when you do hear of plant-based milks, it’s more likely to be dairy alternatives like almond milk, soy milk or oat milk. Even then, it’s rare for a dairy-free version to taste like the real thing. That’s exactly the selling point of Silk’s new line of plant-based milk, Nextmilk. It will be available in both full fat and reduced fat versions (MSRP is $4.99 for a 59-ounce carton). It’s going on sale today in grocery stores like Target, Kroger, Publix and HEB, among others.

I tried a sample of Silk’s Nextmilk last week and while it’s tasty, I wasn’t fooled into thinking it tastes like cow’s milk. It tastes more like a richer, fattier version of oat milk. It does have a similar creamy mouthfeel to regular milk and the taste is a little closer to dairy than other plant-based milks I’ve tried, but it doesn’t quite replace dairy for me.

The ingredients list reflect what I tasted: It consists primarily of oat milk, plus smaller proportions of coconut milk, coconut oil, soy protein isolate, chicory root extract, cane sugar, sunflower oil, a vitamin and mineral blend, sea salt, locust bean gum, gellan gum, sunflower lecithin, soy lecithin and “natural flavor.”

Still, it’s quite delicious, and it might be close enough to dairy for some people. When eaten with cereal or as an accompaniment to cookies, for example, I thought Nextmilk was a more than acceptable substitute. It also mixes well in coffee and tea. “Silk Nextmilk was specially formulated to meet dairy-lovers’ taste expectations through a remarkably delicious blend of plants that are designed to deliver on key attributes of dairy milk, like taste and texture,” a Danone (Silk’s parent company) spokesperson told Engadget.

Additionally, Danone says that Nextmilk can be used as a one-to-one alternative to traditional dairy milk in recipes. At the same time, however, the company is also working on another product called So Delicious Wondermilk, which arrives next month and was specifically developed for culinary purposes. 

“While Silk Nextmilk is meant for everyday dairy lovers and offers great versatility […] Wondermilk beverages were developed with culinary-focused consumers in mind and taste great in recipes,” the spokesperson said. When it arrives, Wondermilk will only be available through natural food channels like Whole Foods and Sprouts. 

Danone is not the first to attempt a dairy-free alternative that tastes closer to real milk. Impossible Foods, the company behind the Impossible Burger, is also working on this, with a product tentatively called Impossible Milk. However, its availability is still unknown.



Source: Engadget – I tried Silk’s dairy-inspired Nextmilk and wasn’t fooled

The New Lord of the Rings Show Is Called…

You’ve seen The Fellowship of the Ring, The Two Towers and The Return of the King. You might have even seen An Unexpected Journey, The Desolation of Smaug and The Battle of the Five Armies. But you’ve never seen this. In 2022, audiences are going back to Middle Earth for…The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power.

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Source: Gizmodo – The New Lord of the Rings Show Is Called…

Stop Throwing Styrofoam in the Trash (and Do This Instead)

Styrofoam remains a ubiquitous material for takeout containers, disposable coffee cups, and protective cushioning for fragile items during shipping. The material—called expanded polystyrene or EPS—keeps your food and beverages hot and your packages safe, but unfortunately, it’s pretty bad for the environment. It takes…

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Source: LifeHacker – Stop Throwing Styrofoam in the Trash (and Do This Instead)

Crowdsourced 'Adjudicators' Are Picking Up Where the Cyber Ninjas Left Off

Where the Cyber Ninjas tried to prove Donald Trump won the 2020 election and immediately faceplanted, a crowdsourced effort named Polaris Recount is bravely charging ahead. Unsurprisingly, given the complete and total lack of evidence that such fraud actually occurred during the race, history is repeating itself.

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Source: Gizmodo – Crowdsourced ‘Adjudicators’ Are Picking Up Where the Cyber Ninjas Left Off

The Backbone One made cloud gaming on the iPhone feel natural

Whether it’s Xbox Cloud gaming, Stadia, PlayStation Remote Play or just a very severe addiction to Apple Arcade, gamepads are a better way to play many games on your smartphone of choice. Normally that means using some kind of smartphone clip to attach your phone to your existing controller, propping up your phone and hoping for the best, or choosing from an increasing selection of controllers that snap directly onto your phone. Instead of demanding compatible phone cases or separate pieces that connect either side of the phone, the $100 Backbone One is a single-piece controller that extends to fit it.

Unlike the Razer Kishi, which we tested in detail here, the One is a single device with a telescopic backplate that fits around any iPhone. (With some help: the One isn’t compatible with the iPhone 13 Pro. Backbone has, however, started providing a soft rubberized adapter that slides into the controller, ensuring the latest, bigger iPhones fit snugly and securely.)

Backbone One controller review
Engadget/Mat Smith

So why invest in another controller for your phone when most mainstream console gamepads you probably already own already do the job? There are a few reasons. Backbone One, with its direct Lightning connection, sidesteps the extra jeopardy that comes with Bluetooth-connected controllers, which introduce another latency bump in the road. The company has wisely included a charger pass-through (gaming can burn through your battery) so you can keep your phone plugged in as you play.

The device has a subtle matte black finish, with two collar buttons on each side, a four-button layout on the right side (X, Y, A, B), a slightly-too-spongy d-pad on the left and an analog stick on each side. The sticks feel a little looser than others I’ve used, but they’re accurate and comfortable.

Backbone struck a deal with Microsoft, offering a one-month trial of Xbox’s Game Pass Ultimate for new Backbone owners. It said so on the box, it says it in the app, and it’ll say it in an email if you register the controller. You will get the hint.

The button layout does lean more towards Xbox gamers, but my PlayStation muscle memory meant I didn’t have too many issues using the One to play my PS5 remotely – just the usual drawbacks of playing with a controller that isn’t a DualSense, with its unique tricks and features. Using the touchpad will mean reaching for a section of the iPhone screen, while you’re not going to get any haptic feedback from the triggers or controller itself.

There are a handful of buttons in addition to the stable gaming ones. The orange button launches Backbone’s own game portal (part of the BackBone iOS app), while others offer screen and video sharing shortcuts or what you’d expect when pressing start or menu on console controllers.

Backbone One controller review

The controller’s namesake, the spring-loaded backplate, ensures that once your phone is in place, it all feels solid and unified. The controls aren’t going to pull away, nor is there a chance of your phone slipping out. The more I spent playing through Alan Wake, then Deathloop, as well as Apple Arcade titles like Fallen Knight and Fantasian, the more it started to blur into a handheld – one with a high-resolution OLED screen. Unfortunately, you will have to remove any cases to ensure it fits inside the controller chassis.

The companion app has a few useful tricks. It can capture, edit and upload gaming content, and it’s pretty intuitive. I don’t usually capture gameplay unless it’s for work, but I’ve already used Backbone’s implementation to send short clips to friends. The company has also announced a Backbone+ subscription service that integrates Twitch streaming and even enables cable connections for keyboards and more. (You’ll get a free year of the service when buying the controller.) There’s also the ability to join chat groups and lobbies, populated with other Backbone gamers, but it’s not particularly vibrant in comparison to Discord, Reddit or other existing gamer spaces.

The app also serves as a games library, of sorts, of all the games you can play with the Backbone One, across Xbox, Stadia, Apple Arcade and individual games in Apple’s App Store. Unfortunately, it’s literally all the compatible games, including unremarkable game clones, and Xbox and Stadia titles you might not even have a subscription for. It’s a shame the app couldn’t interface with which games I’d already installed – which would be impossible for PlayStation Remote Play, admittedly. Tapping the Backbone button during a game will log the title into the library for more convenient access next time, at least. There’s deeper functionality here, but your mileage may vary. It will show recommendations of popular titles, but it’s the incredibly familiar sights of Among Us, Genshin Impact and Minecraft.

Backbone One controller review
Engadget/Mat Smith

The Backbone One is a capable iPhone gamepad, so much in fact that sometimes I actively choose to play Stadia and even remote-play PlayStation when I’m in another room. It is, however, an expensive one. $100 can buy a couple of PS5 controllers, or an entire box of third-party Bluetooth gamepads and smartphone clips.

But for that price, you get a slick experience that marries well with your iPhone. Over the holidays, when I visited my family, I was able to effortlessly (aside from reading the tiny text) play Deathloop while being hundreds of miles away from my console. Like several existing split gamer pads for smartphones, it’s like a tiny Switch. The app also tries to pool together all your iOS gaming experiences in a single place, which is a nice idea, even if Backbone doesn’t quite nail the execution.



Source: Engadget – The Backbone One made cloud gaming on the iPhone feel natural

The Difference Between Cornmeal, Grits, and Polenta

I eat a lot of corn and corn products. I love cornbread, corn casserole, cornmeal-crusted catfish, grits, and polenta, and consider those last two to be distinct dishes. Much like pornography and erotica, it can be hard to delineate the differences between polenta and grits, but I can identify either on sight (or…

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Source: LifeHacker – The Difference Between Cornmeal, Grits, and Polenta

What Future DC Project Could Include a Peacemaker Star?

Halloween Ends finds itself another cast member. Shazam! Fury of the Gods producer Peter Safran teases the sequel’s bigger scope. Ming-Na Wen hopes fans will see The Book of Boba Fett’s bigger picture when it’s over. Plus, what’s coming on Superman & Lois and Naomi. Spoilers now!

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Source: Gizmodo – What Future DC Project Could Include a Peacemaker Star?

AMD Radeon Pro W6400 Flexes 6nm RDNA 2 Muscle For Budget And Mid-Range Workstations

AMD Radeon Pro W6400 Flexes 6nm RDNA 2 Muscle For Budget And Mid-Range Workstations
AMD is fleshing out its current-generation Radeon Pro lineup with RDNA 2 underneath the hood with the introduction of the Radeon Pro W6400. It slides into the lineup beneath the existing Radeon Pro W6600 for medium to high-level workloads, and the Radeon Pro W6800 designed for high to extreme workstation workloads. So what does that mean for

Source: Hot Hardware – AMD Radeon Pro W6400 Flexes 6nm RDNA 2 Muscle For Budget And Mid-Range Workstations

What Xbox will likely do with its $68B purchase of Activision Blizzard King

What Xbox will likely do with its $68B purchase of Activision Blizzard King

Enlarge (credit: Aurich Lawson)

You might have heard the news: Microsoft has announced plans to acquire gaming behemoth Activision Blizzard King and its subsidiary development studios. The deal is valued at $68.7 billion—or roughly 17 acquisitions of the Star Wars series—and that kind of money doesn’t get spent without an expectation of major moves (and revenue) going forward.

After my colleague Kyle Orland chronicled everything we know thus far about the deal, I wanted to take a deeper look at the shape these combined companies (and their expected game launches) may take going forward.

Game Pass must be fed—and Kotick is eager to offer prey

The best sellers in the console industry continue to be holiday-adjacent releases, and Activision has a long track record of topping holiday sales charts. But Microsoft has been bullish about its Xbox brand growing not because of console sales and gifts under Christmas trees, but because of the bigger profits possible when fans subscribe and spend money on the Xbox brand every single month, primarily via Xbox Game Pass. Within that business model, subscriber numbers are what matter, not breakout first-party games or console sales.

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Source: Ars Technica – What Xbox will likely do with its B purchase of Activision Blizzard King

Netflix's latest mobile games include an open-world card battler

Netflix is still relatively new to mobile gaming, but that isn’t stopping it from quickly releasing new titles. What’s on Netflixnotes the streaming service has unveiled two new titles for subscribers. The headliner, Arcanium: Rise of Akhan, is an Android and iOS card battler reminiscent of Hearthstone. Supercombo’s mobile adaptation of its Steam Early Access game may be single-player, but it adds open-world and roguelike elements you don’t often see in titles like this.

The other release, Krispee Street, is billed as a “feel-good hidden object game” for Android and iOS. FrostyPop’s newest project is effectively a Where’s Waldo?-style character and item hunt based on the Krispee Street webcomic. It’s decidedly more relaxed than Arcanium and offers both a daily puzzle and a future “Zen Mode” to help you unwind.

The Netflix game library is still relatively small (these latest additions bring it to nine), and likely won’t be a draw by itself. The collection should become more substantial over time, though, and this might reduce the temptation to skip a month when you’ve run out of things to watch.

LibreOffice Sees New Activity For Compiling To WebAssembly

Last May there was some work on compiling LibreOffice to WebAssembly as another means of getting this open-source office suite executing within the web browser and other environments. It had been quiet since on the LibreOffice WASM front but a number of new commits were merged this morning…

Source: Phoronix – LibreOffice Sees New Activity For Compiling To WebAssembly

Missing mass? Not on our watch—Dr. Paul Sutter explains dark matter

Produced and directed by Corey Eisenstein. Click here for transcript. (video link)

Greetings, Arsians! We have something special for you today: the premiere of a new science series we’re creating, called Edge of Knowledge. We’ve recruited physicist and author Dr. Paul Sutter (Google Scholar link) to be our host and guide on an eight-episode romp through the mysteries of the cosmos, touching on topics that we at Ars find fascinating. This means we’ll have episodes on black holes, the future of climate change, the origins of life, and, one of my favorite topics for our premiere: dark matter.

Dark matter: The universal majority

As Ars readers, you’re all probably familiar with Douglas Adams’ “Space is big” opening to The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, but “big” only tells part of the story. You might assume that, as a corollary to all that bigness, space should also be generally vast and empty, with just an occasional stray hydrogen atom whipping its way through an otherwise perfect vacuum of nothingness—but nothing could be further from the truth.

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Source: Ars Technica – Missing mass? Not on our watch—Dr. Paul Sutter explains dark matter

iRobot's Roomba 694 is back down to a record low of $179

A robot vacuum can help you stick to that New Year’s resolution you made to keep your home a bit more tidy — and it helps that you don’t have to spend a fortune to get one of these gadgets anymore. There are many more budget-friendly robot vacuums available today than there were even just a couple of years ago, and iRobot’s Roomba 694 is one of the better ones we’ve tried. Normally priced at $274, the affordable robo-vac is even cheaper right now on Amazon where it’s $95 off and down to $179. That’s the same price we saw during the Black Friday shopping season last year, so if you missed the gadget when it was previously on sale, you have another chance to grab it now.

Buy Roomba 694 at Amazon – $179

This is one of iRobot’s entry-level vacuums with a three-button design, mobile app connectivity and the ability to clean both hard and carpeted surfaces well. It earned a spot in our budget robot vacuum guide for those reasons — not only does it do a good job puttering around your home, sucking up dirt and debris along the way, but we also like that you can control it using the on-device buttons or the companion mobile app. iRobot’s app is pretty straightforward, so even if you’re a newbie to the world of autonomous cleaning robots, it shouldn’t be difficult to figure out. The app also lets you set cleaning schedules, which tell the Roomba to automatically clean on certain days of the week and at specific times. The Roomba 694 is also compatible with Alexa and the Google Assistant, so you can control it with voice commands, too.

The Roomba 694 is a great option if you want to introduce a robo-vac into your home without dropping too much money. iRobot also has a number of more advanced machines if you’re looking to invest in a vacuum with more power and smarts. The new Roomba j7+ is on sale for $599 right now, which is $250 off and the best price we’ve seen. It has 10x the suction power of the 694 plus Precision View Navigation with obstacle avoidance, the latter of which is the reason why iRobot dubbed the machine its “poop-detecting” robot. It also comes with a clean base, so the robo-vac will automatically empty its bin into that base after every job so you don’t have to.

Similarly, the Roomba s9+ is also $250 off and down to $849. It has 40x the suction of a standard Roomba, a design that can more easily clean in room corners and an included clean base. While it’s probably overkill for most people, it’s the model to get if you want one of the highest-end robot vacuums around.

Buy Roomba j7+ at Amazon – $599Buy Roomba S9+ at Amazon – $849

Follow @EngadgetDeals on Twitter for the latest tech deals and buying advice.



Source: Engadget – iRobot’s Roomba 694 is back down to a record low of 9

Radian announces plans to build one of the holy grails of spaceflight

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Source: Ars Technica – Radian announces plans to build one of the holy grails of spaceflight

'Valorant' will let players mute words they don't want to appear in text chat

If you’d rather not mute certain Valorant players even though they occasionally make sketchy comments in chat, a new update could solve the problem. The latest Valorant patch 4.01 is introducing a muted words list, letting you enter words or phrases “that you, personally, would not like to appear in-game,” developer Riot Games announced. 

Currently, you can only completely mute a player’s text chat. The new feature could help you avoid using that nuclear option, allowing for a more bespoke experience. It’ll also let you protect yourself based on your own tastes instead of relying on Riot’s global watchlists. 

Riot plans to use player muted word lists to “make the chat less toxic by comparing them across regions, and using the data we collect to improve our own detections of bad words.” It noted, for instance, that its own filters could catch “Riot” but not necessarily “R1ot” or “R!ot.” 

Early last year, Valorant rolled out new behavior detection and penalty updates that included measures for chat-based offenses. The rules allowed mods a bit more leeway to give warnings and comms bans, or issue game and extended game bans if required. By contrast, the muted words list feature gives the player control, even if it’s just to mute words or phrases you find annoying or repetitive. 

Along with the muted words list, the latest patch boosts the price for the Ares weapon while changing some characteristics. Riot also tweaked Melee to make aiming more reliable, while fixing some bugs around weapons, esports features and performance. Patch 4.01 is now rolling out globally. 



Source: Engadget – ‘Valorant’ will let players mute words they don’t want to appear in text chat

Doomsday Clock Panel To Set Risk of Global Catastrophe

Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists to unveil its measure of how close human civilisation is to the edge of extinction. From a report: On 24 October 1962, an American nuclear chemist, Harrison Brown, started to pen a guest editorial for the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists just as the Cuban missile crisis reached its climax. “I am writing on a plane en route from Los Angeles to Washington and for all I know this editorial … may never be published,” Brown said. “Never in history have people and nations been so close to death and destruction on such a vast scale. Midnight is upon us.” With this dire warning, he was referring to the Doomsday Clock, which has been the Bulletin’s iconic motif since it was founded 75 years ago by Albert Einstein and some of the University of Chicago scientists from the Manhattan Project. Their work had contributed to making the atomic bomb, but many of them had been outraged when the US used it against Japanese cities.

The image of the clock ticking away to midnight was intended to convey the sense of urgent peril, which Brown felt so viscerally on that 1962 flight to Washington. “He thought the world could end while he was on that flight,” said Rachel Bronson, the Bulletin’s current president. On Thursday, the Doomsday Clock will be unveiled for the 75th time, and we will find out what way the Bulletin’s panel of scientists and security experts will move the minute hand. For the past two years it has been stuck at 100 seconds to midnight. With Russia poised to attack Ukraine, it is hard to imagine the clock being set back, and that means that the experts assess we are in greater danger now than ever. The closest the clock came at the height of the cold war was two minutes to midnight in 1953 after the first detonation of a thermonuclear warhead, a hydrogen bomb. By the time of the Cuban missile crisis, the hands were at seven minutes to, but despite Brown’s apocalyptic editorial, the Bulletin decided not to move them forward because the shock of near catastrophe had given Washington and Moscow fresh incentive to work towards risk reduction and arms control.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Doomsday Clock Panel To Set Risk of Global Catastrophe