
The crypt doors are about to be kicked open with the release of Disney’s Haunted Mansion, helping to usher in spooky season at the movies.
Source: Gizmodo – Haunted Mansion Director Justin Simien on Honoring the Ride, the Cast, and New Orleans

The crypt doors are about to be kicked open with the release of Disney’s Haunted Mansion, helping to usher in spooky season at the movies.
Source: Gizmodo – Haunted Mansion Director Justin Simien on Honoring the Ride, the Cast, and New Orleans
Twitter’s rebrand to X is well underway. The name and iconic bird logo have been (mostly) stripped from the company’s San Francisco headquarters, and an “X” has replaced the blue bird atop twitter.com. Elon Musk has said the change is about more than just the name. He wants to turn the service formerly known as Twitter into an “everything app” that also encompasses banking and financial services.
But the rebrand could pose significant legal and financial challenges to the company, which has struggled since an advertiser exodus cut the company’s ad revenue by more than 50 percent. To start, there are hundreds of companies, including Microsoft and Meta, that own trademarks for variations of “X.” That could open the door to lawsuits and other legal headaches for Musk.
Shubha Ghosh, a law professor at Syracuse University, says that lawsuits are “quite common” when major companies rebrand and change their names and logos. “I’m kind of surprised he picked X because it’s not that distinctive,” he says. “It’s problematic in the sense that it’s not something you can just suddenly do without anybody noticing and possibly suing.”
Trademark attorney Josh Gerben told Reuters that he counted almost 900 other companies with trademarks on “X.” And while not all of them will be able to credibly claim that the company formerly known as Twitter is interfering with their brand, it makes X an easy target.
“There is about a 100% probability that Twitter/X will be sued by both opportunistic and legitimate plaintiffs over the new name,” Gerben tweeted. “The company could easily spend tens of millions (if not $100+ million) in legal fees and settlement costs attempting to acquire trademark registrations for ‘X’ and in dealing with the litigation that is likely to result from the rebrand.”
For the same reasons, Twitter’s new X branding could also prove difficult to defend, especially internationally. “The chance that @elonmusk will be able to successfully register a trademark for ‘X’ for all the services he intends to provide, in every country he wants to provide them in, is very low,” Gerben wrote.
Even if Twitter is able to fend off legal challenges, there are serious business risks to doing away with a brand as globally recognizable as Twitter’s. Bloombergreported that some analysts have estimated the name change could wipe out billions of dollars in value from a brand that’s already been damaged by Musk.
Ari Lightman, a professor of digital media marketing at Carnegie Mellon University, says Twitter’s problems go far beyond potential legal headaches brought on by its rebrand. “There’s a lot going on that is diminishing the value, the utility, the uniqueness, that Twitter, now X, has in the space,” he says pointing to the rise of Threads and other Twitter competitors. “Tweets are synonymous with this idea of blogging, or microblogging, it’s going to be very difficult to resocialize a concept with the global population.”
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/twitters-rebrand-to-x-could-worsen-its-legal-and-financial-problems-233914973.html?src=rss
Source: Engadget – Twitter’s rebrand to X could worsen its legal and financial problems
Guide on installing Python on Pop!_OS with various methods, along with tips on switching between various Python versions.
Source: LXer – How to Install Python on Pop!_OS

When the covid-19 pandemic delayed the releases of major movies, there was nothing the studios could do to stop it. Genuine health risks meant theaters had to close and without theaters, there wasn’t anywhere to screen new movies. Now movie delays are starting to happen again—only this time, the studios could very…
Source: Gizmodo – Disney Seems to Be Preparing for a Long Strike

There comes a time when the long-suffering parent just can’t read The Little Blue Truck one more time. Or My First Farm Book, with its disturbing implication that there will be more farm books to come. Or even Blueberries for Sal, my favorite for the preschool crowd, but one I’ve now read so many times I want to rip…
Source: LifeHacker – The Best Chapter Books for Preschoolers, According to NYPL Librarians
Inkscape 1.3 introduces a new tool called Shape Builder, which lets you create new shapes by combining and building new paths.
The post Inkscape 1.3 Is Out With New Shape Builder Tool, Many Changes appeared first on Linux Today.
Source: Linux Today – Inkscape 1.3 Is Out With New Shape Builder Tool, Many Changes
While Samsung already revealed its flagship Galaxy S23 phones earlier this year, summer is reserved for its foldable devices. This year, that event is taking place in South Korea, with the company teasing not just the latest Galaxy Z Fold 5 and Galaxy Z Flip 5 devices, but smartwatches and tablets as well — for more, check out our preview and video on what to expect. You’ll have a couple of ways to follow along, so keep reading to find out more.
Unpacked 2023 takes place in Samsung’s home country of South Korea for the first time, and will be streamed live on July 26th at 7AM ET.
If yu can get up that early, Samsung is streaming the event on its website and YouTube channel and we’ve embedded the livestream above. If you’d rather have some in-depth commentary (or both), Engadget will be liveblogging the event starting at 7AM ET / 4AM PT / 11AM BST, and we have a reporter on the ground in South Korea. Follow all the activities by bookmarking our liveblog here, which will go live tomorrow morning.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/samsung-galaxy-unpacked-july-2023-how-to-watch-220014632.html?src=rss
Source: Engadget – Samsung Galaxy Unpacked July 2023: How to watch

There are some incredible games in this week’s issue, and I’d like to point out a couple of my favorites. Likeness Machine by Pearse Anderson is about what happens when corporations take the likeness of actors and use AI to replace their performance (all proceeds go to the Entertainment Community Fund!). There’s also …
Source: Gizmodo – The Gaming Shelf Carves Out the Garden

The supernatural mockumentary What We Do in the Shadows follows the misadventures of four vampire roommates living in Staten Island, New York. The laughs come from just how out of touch they are with the modern world, and how their human companion begrudgingly helps them navigate. The show is based a 2014 New Zealand…
Source: LifeHacker – Where to Watch ‘What We Do in the Shadows’ Season 5 (and What You Should Know About It)

New research funded by the Pentagon suggests that artificial intelligence can scan and analyze blocks of text to discern whether the humans who wrote it have done something wrong or not.
Source: Gizmodo – Pentagon-Funded Study Uses AI to Detect ‘Violations of Social Norms’ in Text

I’m an image goblin. I can’t help it: I see something funny or cute, and I’ll scrape it from the internet to share with friends and family, far and wide. But I often forget that I saved the image to a particular phone until the next day, and by then, I’m usually at my PC, working with another batch of devices.
Source: Gizmodo – Android’s Nearby Share Lets You ‘AirDrop’ Files Between Phones and PCs
It’s a debate that’s been going on since Android came onto the scene: Does simple use of the Linux kernel qualify an operating system to be a bona fide Linux operating system?
The post The Paradox of Being (or Not Being) a Linux Operating System appeared first on FOSS Force.
Source: FOSS Force – The Paradox of Being (or Not Being) a Linux Operating System

After a 10-year hiatus, Futurama is back once again, this time as a soft reboot. Futurama has been canceled and renewed several times before (and the show does a great job of making jokes about it), but this time we’ll get at least two more seasons out of the deal: It was ordered by Hulu for not only an 11th season,…
Source: LifeHacker – Where to Watch ‘Futurama’ Season 11 (and What You Should Know About It)
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When you read that headline, you’re probably thinking it’s like Doom on the NES, or like running GTA V on the OG Game Boy—a trick, or “hack” that doesn’t really use the original hardware. Well, you’d be mistaken. This is the real PC version of GTA V running on real Nintendo Switch hardware, albeit one that’s been heavily modified and had its
Source: Hot Hardware – Watch GTA V For The PC Run On A Modded And Heavily Overclocked Nintendo Switch
Debian Linux officially announced support for open-source architectures RISC-V64, promising a better and open future.
Source: LXer – Debian Welcomes the Future: RISC-V64 Now an Official Architecture!

Garlic is great in any of its many forms but, like most plant parts, it is at its absolute best when roasted. Roasting garlic mellows its pungency and tempers its aggressive bite, but it also intensifies its sweetness and creates new, deeper flavors through caramelization and that lovely little Maillard reaction.…
Source: LifeHacker – You Should Roast a Whole Head of Garlic

Every time I watch Twister, Jan de Bont’s 1996 film about a ragtag group of storm chasers trying to figure out how to better predict tornadoes, I think to myself: “Boy, do I wanna do that.”
Source: Kotaku – You Can Be An Extreme Storm Chaser In This Game

AMD is reportedly releasing a new China-exclusive RX 7900 series graphics card known as the Radeon RX 7900 GRE — Golden Rabbit Edition. The new GPU appears to be a modification of the current RX 7900 XT, but with 25% less memory bandwidth due to a 256-bit memory interface and 16GB of GDDR6 memory. Pricing is currently unknown, but reports
Source: Hot Hardware – AMD Radeon RX 7900 Golden Rabbit Edition Design And Specs Break Cover
Following two years of testing, The Browser Company’s Arc is graduating from its waitlist phase, launching its version 1.0. Arc, the Mac and iOS browser, aims to redefine online interaction by incorporating tools for note-taking, collaboration, webpage personalisation, among others. The Verge adds: We’ve covered Arc a lot in recent months, both because it’s a good browser and because it’s a big new idea about how you use the internet. The Browser Company’s ultimate plan is to build “the operating system for the internet.” Arc isn’t just a place to see webpages; it has tools for taking notes, making visual and collaborative easels with others, redesigning webpages to your liking, and more. (Personally, I love Arc’s picture-in-picture mode above everything else, especially now that it works with Google Meet calls.)
Arc 1.0 doesn’t seem to come with any splashy new features. Rather, The Browser Company seems to just feel like it’s ready to launch more widely. Arc has been pretty stable for me in recent months, though it does run into some of the same performance issues you’ll find with any browser based on the Chromium engine — you can always open a couple dozen tabs and watch your computer grind to a halt.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – The Arc Browser is Now Available for All iOS and Mac Users