
This is the monitor that slips into your bag and goes everywhere with you.
The post Amazon Is Going Nuts, This 15″ Gaming Portable Monitor for Xbox and Switch Is Selling for Pennies appeared first on Kotaku.

This is the monitor that slips into your bag and goes everywhere with you.
The post Amazon Is Going Nuts, This 15″ Gaming Portable Monitor for Xbox and Switch Is Selling for Pennies appeared first on Kotaku.
I was looking through Apple’s App Store when I spotted something called Out There with a five star rating across 121 reviews.
Given how small the market is for Apple Vision Pro software that’s actually quite a significant number of ratings. On Quest 3, where it launched as a room scale application in 2024 during Meta’s push toward Horizon Worlds, it found just 24 ratings after one year on the store.
I downloaded and watched the five minute experience. And then I watched it three more times, moved more by Vanessa Williams’ voice on each listen. Creators Wilkins Avenue Immersive deliver a full three-act tale here that feels like a successor to last decade’s Henry from Oculus Story Studio.
I’ll walk you through the achievement and ask that you make time for Out There soon on your headset of choice.
The opening act of this story begins with swirling lights and a spinning storybook opening on its own to reveal in melancholy song a family broken by space. The curtain opens into this world with a child left behind.
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Out There on Apple Vision Pro. Capture by Ian Hamilton.
Are three walls, a roof, and a floor enough? The framed pictures of family caring for this child sing that it is. We see through the fourth wall, though, a bit like The Doctor from the fireplace, and from a perspective outside her world through a portal we dare not cross, we feel what is out there for her just beyond.
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Out There On Apple Vision Pro. Capture by Ian Hamilton.
Vanessa Williams’ soaring voice picks up this story into its final act, revealing to us what the lost child already knows. The world must be larger than this. She breaks the fourth wall and soars into our space, uplifting us rather than scaring us the way a giant creature does in Encounter Dinosaurs.
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Out There on Apple Vision Pro. Capture by Ian Hamilton.
On Quest 3 and Quest 3S, Out There is built a little differently so that “users can move through the scene, interacting with objects and characters.” It’s a room-scale project, and it works with both hand tracking and controllers. I asked my colleague Don Hopper to jump in and capture video so you could see the difference in execution.
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Out There on Quest 3. Captured by Don Hopper.
Was Don’s experience of this story any better because he was inside the scene on Quest 3? Or was mine better because I was always outside of it on Apple Vision Pro? It’s too easy a way out to both sides this by just saying each approach has its benefits.
The themes of this story presented first as a storybook and then as a portal hit exceedingly well in visionOS. Both Out There and Encounter Dinosaurs follow the same basic three-act story structure in roughly the same amount of time, featuring interaction so light you might not even realize it’s there.
To me the lesson from Henry to Out There is that a story in virtual reality need not take up your whole environment to be just as impactful. Whether starting in a black void or your physical environment on the outside of the headset, building up a digital world piece by piece is a much more comfortable journey than suddenly swapping out all the rules all at once.
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Here we go again. After hiking the price of Xbox consoles earlier this year, Microsoft just announced it is already raising prices again—the second price hike in four months. Now, even Microsoft’s cheapest console, the Xbox Series S, will cost at least $400.
As someone who got an Xbox Series S for $150 a few years back, that stings. (Granted, I got a really good deal. Still.) Microsoft is blaming “changes in the macroeconomic environment” for the new prices, so read into that what you will.
Here is what Microsoft’s consoles will cost after the new pricing takes effect:
Xbox Series S (512GB): $400 (was $380)
Xbox Series S (1TB): $450 (was $430)
Xbox Series X Digital Edition: $600 (was $550)
Xbox Series X: $650 (was $600)
Keep in mind that even after Sony’s own price hikes, U.S. gamers can still get a PS5 for $550 and a PS5 Digital Edition for $500. Yes, Microsoft’s consoles technically start cheaper, but the Series S is more comparable to the original Nintendo Switch than an Xbox Series X or a PS5, and $400 is a lot to pay for it—although the original Switch also got its own price hike just last month, and the OLED model of that machine will also now run you $400. If you’re comparing apples to apples, though, Sony’s console is about to be a good bit cheaper than Microsoft’s.
Gamers who prize physical media will be the hardest hit, as to get a disc drive on your machine, you have to opt for a non-digital Xbox Series X, which means you’re going to get a bigger price increase than your peers. The last jump bumped the Xbox Series S up by $80 and the Series X by $100, while this one increases the Xbox Series S by $20 and the Xbox Series X by $50.
On the plus side, Microsoft said pricing for controllers and headsets “will remain the same,” which isn’t how it went last time around. Maybe that’s a hint at the overall console strategy: Microsoft has been investing a lot in cloud gaming recently, and you technically don’t even need a console to play its games. In that case, upping pricing on its hardware is maybe a bit less risky for the Halo folks than the God of War ones.
And I haven’t even touched on Microsoft’s most expensive machine. If you’re an Xbox loyalist and you want to go all-in on its 2TB Xbox Series X Galaxy Black Special Edition, that will now run you $800, a $70 bump in the price tag. Honestly, at that point, you could probably just get a PC instead.
There is something you can do about these price increases, even if it kind of feels like giving in to a ransom: They won’t go in effect until Oct. 3rd, so if you were still on the fence about getting an Xbox, now is the time to act. You’ll still have to deal with the price hike from May, but at least you’ll save between $20 and $70.

You can run and hide but you don’t have to play along
The post I Know What’s Going On And So Does Everyone Else appeared first on Kotaku.

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Did you know you can customize Google to filter out garbage? Take these steps for better search results, including adding my work at Lifehacker as a preferred source.
The Apple Watch Series 11 is now available, and just a few days into using a review unit, I’m happy with the upgrade. But whether it’ll be worth it to you is a different story entirely.
Before the Series 11, I was still using a first-generation Apple Watch SE. Since I don’t need much from my smartwatch, the SE was enough for me: basic media playback with heart-rate tracking and tap-to-pay. What more could I want?
But the Series 11 taught me that I could want much more. Its bigger screen with an always-on display is a nice bonus, as is the thinner and lighter design. The problem is that the Apple Watch Series 11 isn’t the first Apple Watch with those bonuses. If you’re like me and haven’t upgraded in a while, the Apple Watch Series 11 is a great pick. But those with a newer Apple Watch may want to hold off and save their money.
While the Apple Watch Series 11 comes with a new chip and upgrades to both battery life and wireless connectivity, I’ve already mentioned what I value most about it. Essentially, I just like that this thing is super comfortable to wear. At its release, the Series 10 was Apple’s thinnest and lightest smartwatch, but since the Series 11 has inherited its design, it’s now tied with its successor.
Both hardly feel like you’re wearing anything at all (while I don’t use the Series 10 on a day-to-day basis, my husband has one that he’s letting me borrow to write this). While my SE’s circular sensor bump often feels like it’s jutting into my wrist, both the Series 10 and 11 feel flat on my wrist, thanks to their thinner bodies. It’s a huge relief over an extended period, and it only gets better with the few grams Apple’s knocked off the weight.
The display also contributes to the comfort. Both the Series 10 and the Series 11 have an always-on display, and while an always-on display has been available as far back as the Series 5, this is my first time using one on a watch. The Apple Watch display also got 9% bigger starting on the Series 10, so the Series 11 screen is a bit more luxurious than anyone on a Series 9 or before will be used to.
The bigger, always-on display helps with comfort because it’s much more glanceable. With my SE, I had to raise my wrist to see my watch screen, and the 10 and 11 don’t need that. At 2,000 nits of brightness, they’re easy to see even if your wrist is at your side and slightly turned, and with OLED and a 1Hz refresh rate, the always-on display is able to update every second without wasting unnecessary battery life. Having my screen turn off was probably the biggest annoyance of using a smartwatch over a traditional watch for me, and now it’s something I don’t have to worry about at all.
I’m pleased enough with the improved comfort to shell out money for a Series 11 after returning this review unit. I was worried that, because the Series 11 starts at 42mm while my first-gen SE is 40mm, it might feel a bit too big. In actuality, while I still prefer a small watch, it’s turned out to be the better size for me.
If you’re upgrading from an older watch, the Series 11 also gives you access to a lot more sensors. But to be honest, most are overkill. For instance, you can use it as a dive computer down to 6 meters (or about 20 feet), which isn’t particularly handy for most people. But there are some advanced features worth caring about.
First, it’s easier to control this smartwatch than older Apple smartwatches. With watchOS 26, the Series 9, 10, and 11 got support for both the wrist flick and double tap gestures, and they’re both pretty convenient. Think of them as “dismiss” and “confirm,” respectively. You can use wrist flick to turn down notifications, and while you can customize double tap a bit more, the idea is that you’ll use it to start a song or navigate your smart stack without using your hands.
Essentially, the goal is that these features keep you from having to fumble with your watch screen if you’re otherwise occupied. For instance, I got a phone call while working out with the Series 11 this morning (where it was much more comfortable on my wrist than my SE), and quickly rotating my wrist away from my body was all I needed to do to decline the call. Normally, I would have just let it ring until it went to voicemail, so this was a nice way to save myself the distraction.
Aside from the new gestures, the Series 11 also has a few new health features. Like with the depth meter, whether you’ll actually use them depends on who you are, but there are a few in particular that I’m happy to have. For instance, like my colleague Beth Skwarecki, I’m not too enthused about Sleep Score, which tries to break down your sleep quality into one number but seems too generalized for me to get much use out of. Hypertension notifications, on the other hand, are a big deal to me. Hypertension notifications weren’t available on my SE (and still aren’t on any SE, for that matter). Instead, you need an Apple Watch Series 9 or above. What these notifications do is passively track how your blood vessels respond to your heart rate using a PPG, then send you a notification if your watch notices significant irregularities over a 30-day period.
One of the reasons my husband picked up an Apple Watch Series 10 was so he could use the ECG to track his heart rate over time, rather than just when he was working out. This helped him figure out that his heart rate would sometimes be way too high after drinking caffeine or while going to bed, which his doctor eventually diagnosed as AFiB. He might have missed out on this if he didn’t have the data to back it up, but he’s now gotten it treated, and says he feels a lot more stable across the day, with no random spikes (plus, AFiB has the potential to get pretty serious if left untreated, so his doctor is glad he was able to catch it early).
If these Hypertension Notifications, which do a similar thing but for high blood pressure, can help my husband keep his heart healthy, then I’m all for them. He does have to regularly check his blood pressure as part of his ongoing treatment, and while the Apple Watch can’t give him specific numbers, it should help him passively determine what his numbers mean and if he needs to be worried. Plus, I’m interested in trying them, too. The CDC says that “of the 75 million Americans who have hypertension…about 11 million of them don’t know their blood pressure is too high and are not receiving treatment to control it.” Given how well my husband’s Apple Watch helped him diagnose his AFiB, it brings a little extra peace of mind to have it checking for high blood pressure, too.
The catch is that the Apple Watch Series 11 isn’t the only way to get these new features. The thin and light display is on the Series 10, “wrist flick” and “double tap” are on the Series 9 and above, and so are Hypertension Notifications. The Series 11 is a great upgrade over my SE, but if you’ve been more up to date with your Apple Watch, you might not want to get the newest model at all. You’d likely be buying Series 11 for only three things.
First, the Apple Watch Series 11 has a 5G modem. Currently, the Apple Watch Series 11, SE 3, and Ultra 3 are the only Apple Watches with 5G connectivity, whereas older models use LTE, which is a type of 4G. That means these watches are faster, but because 5G is also more efficient than 4G, will also save some battery life when using online features.
Second, the Series 11 has an improved Ion-X glass display. This uses proprietary tech, and Apple says it’s two times more scratch resistant than the Series 10. It’s only available on aluminum models, as titanium models use a slightly less durable sapphire crystal display instead, but it’s also on the SE 3 (the Ultra 3 instead opts for sapphire crystal).
And third, the Series 11 has a longer battery life. While I haven’t had the Series 11 long enough to test its longevity, Apple is claiming 24 hours of battery life on the Series 11 (or 38 in Low Power Mode) versus 18 hours on the Series 10 (or 36 in Low Power Mode). I have a trip coming up, and I’m curious to see how these claims hold up while I’m adventuring away from a plug for a long period of time.
Still, while all of these are nice-to-haves, none of them are as flashy as, say, the thin new body that came with the Series 10. Additionally, if you have a Series 10 and are already careful about scratching your watch or don’t have a cellular plan for it, then you’re not going to get use out of anything but the improved battery life.
Which brings me to my final point. The Apple Watch Series 11 is a great watch if you’re a few years behind on upgrades, but it’s probably worth skipping if you have a Series 10. It’s been a major quality of life improvement for me over my first-gen SE, which came out in 2020, but if it weren’t a different color than the Series 10, my husband might not have been able to tell it apart from what he already has.
That’s why, once I have to return this review unit, I’ll probably spend the $400 to get one. That’s the same price that the Series 10 has been at until now, and while you can currently find the Series 10 at a mild discount at third-party retailers, the new battery life is probably worth the extra $40-50 for me. But my husband, on the other hand, will keep kicking with what’s already on his wrist.
I assume that’s what a lot of other people will do: Upgrade if you’re a few years behind, but otherwise wait. But there’s one other option. (Well, OK, two options if you want to go premium and get the $800 Apple Watch Ultra 3). You could just get an Apple Watch SE 3 instead. Releasing alongside the Series 11, this is a major upgrade over the SE 2, starting at $250 and upgrading that model to include an always-on display, sleep apnea notifications, temperature sensing, 5G, fast-charge, and both the wrist flick and double tap notifications. But it’s not quite as thin as the Apple Watch Series 11, the screen isn’t as big, and it can’t do ECG tracking or Hypertension notifications. I’ve been so thoroughly spoiled by the Series 11 that I’m not sure I can settle for that, but for others, it might be just the sweet spot.

This week we’re enjoying rhythmic strategy, a quest to save some puppers, some chill potion brewing, and ripping apart zombies in beast mode
The post <i>Kotaku’</i>s Weekend Guide: 4 Great Games We Can’t Wait To Get Back To appeared first on Kotaku.

These days, every laptop really needs a multiport adapter to be complete.
The post Two USB-C Ports, Two USB-A Ports and an HDMI: This 7-in-1 Adapter Is Going for Pennies on Amazon appeared first on Kotaku.

A single Discord ping on Friday afternoon caused a few minutes of complete and utter chaos
The post Rockstar Just Made 65,000 <i>GTA</i> Fans Panic For No Reason appeared first on Kotaku.
The PCLinuxOS Magazine staff is pleased to announce the release of the PCLinuxOS Recipe Corner Special Edition, Volume 2 of the PCLinuxOS Magazine.
Since July, the state of Oklahoma has been consumed by important investigative questions, including:
We now have answers to all of those questions.
After a lengthy investigation by the Oklahoma County Sheriff’s Office and the State Bureau of Investigation, and then a lengthy consideration of their reports, the Oklahoma County District Attorney this week announced that “there is insufficient evidence to file criminal charges.”
Less than a month ago, we looked at how current game console prices were historically high due to price increases from all three major console makers. Today, that analysis is already a bit out of date, as Microsoft has announced its second set of Xbox price increases this year in the US.
The new Xbox price hikes, which will go into effect on October 3, or roughly five months after the last set of Xbox price hikes, are as follows:
In an Xbox Support post, Microsoft cited the now-standard “changes in the macroeconomic environment” for the decision to move pricing yet again. “We understand that these changes are challenging, and they were made with careful consideration,” the company wrote. “Looking ahead, we continue to focus on offering more ways to play more games across any screen and providing value for Xbox players.
U.S. President Donald Trump plans to impose a new $100,000 application fee for H-1B worker visas, a White House official said, potentially dealing a big blow to the technology sector that relies heavily on skilled workers from India and China. From a report: As part of his broader immigration crackdown, the Republican president was expected to sign a proclamation as early as Friday restricting entry under the H-1B visa program unless the application fee is paid, the official said.
The H-1B program has become critical for technology and staffing companies who rely on foreign workers to fill a variety of technical roles. Amazon had over 10,000 H-1B visas approved in the first half of 2025, while Microsoft and Meta had over 5,000 H-1B visa approvals each, according to U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services. Roughly two-thirds of jobs secured through the visa program are computer-related, according to U.S. government figures, but employers also use the visa to bring in engineers, educators and healthcare workers.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

This is the ultimate power bank built to keep all your devices running.
The post This 140W Laptop Power Bank Is a Dream Buy Now That Amazon Has It Back at Black Friday Price appeared first on Kotaku.
In 2014, University of California, Berkeley biologist Robert Dudley wrote a book called The Drunken Monkey: Why We Drink and Abuse Alcohol. His controversial “drunken monkey hypothesis” proposed that the human attraction to alcohol goes back about 18 million years, to the origin of the great apes, and that social communication and sharing food evolved to better identify the presence of fruit from a distance. At the time, skeptical scientists insisted that this was unlikely because chimpanzees and other primates just don’t eat fermented fruit or nectar.
But reports of primates doing just that have grown over the ensuing two decades. Dudley co-authored a new paper published in the journal Science Advances reporting the first measurements of the ethanol content of fruits favored by chimps in Ivory Coast and Uganda, finding that the chimps are consuming 14 grams of alcohol every day, the equivalent of a standard alcoholic drink in the US. After adjusting for the chimps’ lower body mass, the authors concluded the chimps are consuming nearly two drinks per day.
Earlier this year, we reported that researchers had caught wild chimpanzees on camera engaging in what appears to be sharing fermented African breadfruit with measurable alcoholic content. That observational data was the first evidence of the sharing of alcoholic foods among nonhuman great apes in the wild. They recorded 10 instances of selective fruit sharing among 17 chimps, with the animals exhibiting a marked preference for riper fruit. Between April and July 2022, the authors measured the alcohol content of the fruit with a handy portable breathalyzer and found almost all of the fallen fruit (90 percent) contained some ethanol, with the ripest containing the highest levels—the equivalent of 0.61 percent ABV (alcohol by volume).
Meta’s CTO explained the technical reasons why the key Connect keynote live demos failed.
If you missed it: during the Connect 2025 main keynote on Wednesday, the live on-stage demos of two of Meta’s biggest smart glasses features failed.
In both cases, Mark Zuckerberg blamed the conference Wi-Fi. But now, in an Instagram ask-me-anything session, Meta CTO Andrew Bosworth has provided a different technical explanation for what caused each failure.
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The Ray-Ban Meta Live AI demo failure.
The first failure was the demo of the Live AI feature.
Available in the US & Canada on all Meta’s AI-capable glasses, Live AI lets you have an ongoing conversation with Meta AI without having to keep saying “Hey Meta”, and the AI gets a continuous stream of what you’re seeing.
I tried Live AI while in the US, and I can confirm it works as described. But it definitely did not in the Connect demo.
Influencer chef Jack Mancuso, who was in a kitchen on Meta’s campus, was able to start the session by saying “Hey Meta, start Live AI”. Meta AI responded “I love the setup you have here with soy sauce and other ingredients.” But when Mancuso asked what he should do first to make a Korean-inspired steak sauce for his sandwich, Meta AI simply kept repeating “You’ve already combined the base ingredients”.
According to Bosworth, when Mancuso said “Hey Meta, start Live AI”, because it was broadcast on the venue’s speakers, it started Live AI on every Ray-Ban Meta in the building. And since Meta had rerouted campus Live AI traffic to a development server, in theory to isolate it and ensure the demo went well, the traffic from all those smart glasses overwhelmed the server.
Bosworth doesn’t explain why this caused the AI to repeatedly think the ingredients were already mixed. The charitable explanation could be that the failing server started serving cached responses from a rehearsal. Alternatively, it could have exposed that Meta partially faked the demo.
Of course, what would prevent something like this from happening at all would be for Meta to implement voice authentication. Alexa, Google, and Siri all support only executing sensitive commands when they recognize your unique voice, but Meta AI does not yet have such a feature.
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The Meta Ray-Ban Display video call demo failure.
The other major Connect demo failure happened when Mark Zuckerberg, wearing the Meta Ray-Ban Display glasses and Meta Neural Band, tried to answer an incoming WhatsApp video call from Bosworth.
In theory, he should have been able to accept the call and see the caller’s camera stream on the heads-up display. And several mainstream tech news outlets, including The Verge, have confirmed that they tried the video calling functionality and that it worked. But in the demo, it did not.
Instead, Zuckerberg was unable to accept Bosworth’s incoming call four times in a row, despite Meta AI announcing it, and the WhatsApp call sound playing. The CEO seemed visibly frustrated.
According to Bosworth, what happened here is that the display went to sleep at the exact time the incoming call notification came in, which caused a race condition in the system software, preventing that call and any future calls from coming through. Bosworth says Meta had never run into that bug before, despite running video call tests “a hundred times”.
“That’s a terrible, terrible place for that bug to show up”, Bosworth remarked, noting that it has now been fixed.

Reactions to the Connect live demo failures across social media have been mixed. While many people engaged in the expected schadenfreude at seeing Meta’s CEO squirm, others saw Meta’s approach of raw, unfiltered demos as a refreshing contrast to the highly produced infomercial-style events of Tim Cook era Apple.
Further, many within the tech industry sympathized with Meta’s plight, knowing just how cursed pre-launch tech demos often are – and how rarely this reflects whether a shipping product will have the same issues.
In his AMA session, Bosworth was also asked whether he still thought live demos were the right approach. Here’s what he replied:
0:00
“I’m not sure what people think the risk really is. I mean this, seriously, again, It was great. And go read the articles and the press and the people who sat down with the glasses who are critics a lot of times, and if they didn’t work they wouldn’t write nice things, you know, they’re under no obligation to do so.
They put them on and they used them, and they’ll tell you it’s legit and it works just fine. So I think people actually would – underselling our audiences – audiences understand, both in the room and on the broadcast, why live demos don’t represent real world scenarios.
You’re not usually in a room with, I don’t know, 2500 radios, 3000 radios, all going at the same time on different devices. People understand that. So, again, obviously I didn’t want it to go that way. But it wasn’t that bad and I thought it came out great and I think people trust us and know the product’s real, and you can read the reviews about it and try it for yourself if you’re not sure”
Neuralink plans to begin another US clinical trial in October, using the implant to translate thoughts into text. The study will be held through an FDA investigational device exemption. “If you’re imagining saying something, we would be able to pick that up,” Neuralink president DJ Seo said this week.
The idea is to help people with speech impairments communicate through thought. Neuralink is among the companies testing implants that help patients control a computer with their minds. That can include using virtual keyboards. Translating thought directly from the patient’s speech cortex could speed things up by cutting the middleman.
The company already has five other clinical trials underway. The first was in the US. It has since added studies in Canada, the UK and the United Arab Emirates.
Neuralink’s plans for people with severe impairments sound like utopian sci-fi. Regardless of anything else, success in this field could be beyond life-changing for them. Still, this is a commercial company in which Elon Musk owns a majority share. Neuralink’s long-term plans are where it’s hard not to worry a little.
“We’re currently envisioning a world where in about three to four years, there will be someone who’s otherwise healthy who’s going to get a Neuralink,” Seo said. The company president hinted at what that might look like. “We think that it’s actually possible to demonstrate abilities to speak to the latest AI model, or LLM models, at the speed of thought, even faster than how you’re speaking, and being able to potentially get that information back through your AirPods, effectively closing the loop,” he said.
Our world today has revealed where things can go wrong when we turn too much of our humanity over to technology. You can start with smartphone addiction and social media algorithms and quickly move on to (alleged) AI-enabled suicide. Consumer brain implants can conjure the darkest images painted by our great sci-fi works. Think Neuromancer, Star Trek’s Borg or Cyberpunk 2077‘s cyberware.
Add what we know about Musk’s ideas about politics, and it’s hard not to be at least a little cynical. Is it too much to hope that the technology will advance enough to help those in need, but not so much that it devours humanity?
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/science/elon-musks-neuralink-plans-a-brain-speech-trial-in-october-194004627.html?src=rss
Two of the Kremlin’s most active hacking units recently were spotted collaborating in malware attacks that compromise high-value devices located in Ukraine, security researchers said Friday.
One of the groups is Turla, which is easily one of the world’s most-sophisticated Advanced Persistent Threats (well-organized and well-funded hacking groups, many backed by nation states, that target specific adversaries for years at a time). Researchers from multiple security firms largely agree that Turla was behind breaches of the US Department of Defense in 2008, and more recently the German Foreign Office and France’s military. The group has also been known for unleashing stealthy Linux malware and using satellite-based Internet links to maintain the stealth of its operations. The group conducts narrowly-targetted attacks on high-value targets and keeps a low profile.
Gamaredon, meanwhile, is a separate APT known for conducting much wider-scale operations, often targeting organizations in Ukraine. Whereas Turla takes pains to fly under the radar, Gamaredon doesn’t seem to care about being detected and linked to the Russian government. Its malware generally aims to collect as much information from targets as possible over a short period of time. Both Turla and Gamaredon are widely assessed to be units of Russia’s Russian Federal Security Service (FSB), the country’s chief security agency and successor of the Soviet Union’s KGB.

he robot vacuum plus its docking station is the dream team of cleaning.
The post Roborock Doesn’t Want You Struggling With Housework, It’s Selling Its Latest Model With No Margin appeared first on Kotaku.
Starting on October 3, Microsoft says Xbox consoles will be getting yet another price bump, this time ranging anywhere from a $20 increase on the company’s entry-level model to $70 for a special edition model with 2TB of storage. If all of this sounds familiar, there’s a good reason, the last time xbox prices were raised was only a few months ago in May.
The price increases breakdown as follows:
Xbox Series S (512GB): $400, up $20 from $380
Xbox Series S (1TB): $450 up $20 from $430
Xbox Series X Digital: $600, up $50 from $550
Xbox Series X: $650, up $50 from $600
Xbox Series X 2TB Galaxy Special Edition: $800, up $70 from $730
Those are fairly significant increases, especially when you start comparing Microsoft’s higher-end Xbox Series X consoles to the competition. For example, the Series X Digital (which doesn’t have a disc drive) now costs $50 more than a PS5 Digital Edition. For the $800 Xbox Series X 2TB Galaxy Special Edition price comparisons are even worse. It’s now more expensive than the $750 PS5 Pro, and at least Sony’s console gets you better performance for its high price.
Developing…
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/xbox/microsoft-is-making-xbox-consoles-even-more-expensive-in-the-us-192443699.html?src=rss