Tag: tech
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Amazon Prime Video’s disappearing act could point to a future without the service
Prime Video is harder to find on Amazon’s website and it’s unknown if this is a new move or the cause of recent issues.Amazon Prime Video’s disappearing act could point to a future without the serviceAmazon Prime Video’s disappearing act could point to a future without the service -
Calculating the previous value in Power BI
Calculating the consumption based on meter data looks easy. However, complex situations can be challenging. Let’s see how we can solve…
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Calculating the previous value in Power BIGo Here to Read this Fast! Calculating the previous value in Power BI
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AMD’s rumored APU could have more horsepower than a PS5
Rumors about AMD’s upcoming integrated graphics are starting to take shape, and they could be mighty impressive.Go Here to Read this Fast! AMD’s rumored APU could have more horsepower than a PS5
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AMD’s rumored APU could have more horsepower than a PS5 -
3 free underrated movies you should stream this weekend (April 19-21)
From April 19-21, stream these underrated movies, including a raunchy workplace comedy, a frightening horror movie, and a little-seen romantic dramedy.Go Here to Read this Fast! 3 free underrated movies you should stream this weekend (April 19-21)
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3 free underrated movies you should stream this weekend (April 19-21) -
Wiim Ultra, a music streamer with a color touchscreen, teased ahead of May launch
LinkPlay is giving fans a sneak peek at the new Wiim Ultra, a network media streamer with a 3.5-inch touchscreen that it will officially launch May 9.Originally appeared here:
Wiim Ultra, a music streamer with a color touchscreen, teased ahead of May launch -
Prison Architect 2 is denied release until September 3
It hasn’t been a great week for Paradox Interactive, and things just got a little worse for the publisher. It has announced another delay for Prison Architect 2, the sequel to a cult hit from 2015. The game had been set to drop on May 7 (which was already a delay from March 26) but now it won’t arrive until September 3.
Though builds of Prison Architect 2 had been certified for all platforms, the developers at Double Eleven ran into some technical problems that will take some time to resolve. Some issues concerning memory usage and minimum spec configuration failures emerged. Although the team says its work on fixing those have been successful so far, some other technical challenges started popping up, leading to significantly more crashes.
Double Eleven will use the extra development time to improve the prison management sim’s stability and to refine some of its features. Paradox says it will also take the opportunity to let players get a look inside the development process via additional developer diaries and streams. A stream is set for April 25.
Paradox notes that console players who pre-ordered will automatically be refunded due to platform policies — they’ll need to buy Prison Architect 2 again to get a pre-order bonus. Steam players can request a refund if they wish.
The Prison Architect 2 delay comes one day after studio Colossal Order said it would refund all players who bought the first asset pack for Cities Skylines 2, another game Paradox is publishing. While the asset pack (which will be added to the base game for everyone) worked, there appeared to be a consensus among fans that there wasn’t enough in there to justify the $10 price. There are bigger issues at play though, as Colossal Order has more work ahead to optimize Cities Skylines 2 after a rocky debut. The studio has also delayed the console release and other DLC as it focuses on fixing the core concerns.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/prison-architect-2-is-denied-release-until-september-3-181517857.html?src=rss
Go Here to Read this Fast! Prison Architect 2 is denied release until September 3
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Prison Architect 2 is denied release until September 3 -
Ryan Gosling and Miller/Lord’s Project Hail Mary could be the sci-fi event of 2026
Do you like rip-roaring science fiction books? Do you like movies? Then you are in for a treat in, well, two years. Amazon MGM Studios just set a release date of March 20, 2026 for Project Hail Mary, according to Deadline. It’s based on the Andy Weir novel of the same name, which was one of our favorite books of the past few years, so color us excited.
The film stars honorary SNL cast member Ryan Gosling and will be directed by Phil Lord and Christopher Miller, the duo behind The Lego Movie and, allegedly, most of the good parts of Solo: A Star Wars Story. Lord also wrote a little-known movie called Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse.
The script was penned by Drew Goddard, who cut his teeth on TV shows like Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Lost before moving onto features. He directed Cabin in the Woods, which is somehow both iconic and underrated at the same time. If the name Andy Weir sounds familiar, it’s because he wrote a book called The Martian, which inspired the Matt Damon film. Incidentally, Goddard also wrote that script.
This summary of Project Hail Mary, clearly written by an AI, just gets more and more wild as you continue reading: https://t.co/XeuITzFVBG
— Andy Weir (@andyweirauthor) March 10, 2024
I’ve read the book and loved it. It’s more fantastical than The Martian, but still filled with the same science-based solutions to massive life-or-death problems. This time, the entire Earth is on the chopping block, instead of one lone astronaut. It’s also pretty dang funny, just like The Martian, so Lord and Miller are a good match to direct. The pair also signed on to direct an adaptation of another Weir novel, Artemis, but that project looks to have stalled.
Or course, a lot can happen in two years. Here’s to hoping our humble little society keeps clunking along so we can chomp down some popcorn in 2026. Speaking of, that year will also see the release of The Mandalorian & Grogu, the Rey Skywalker film, the sequel to The Super Mario Bros. Movie, Toy Story 5, The Batman Part II and, reportedly, Avengers: The Kang Dynasty.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ryan-gosling-and-millerlords-project-hail-mary-could-be-the-sci-fi-event-of-2026-174440164.html?src=rss
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Ryan Gosling and Miller/Lord’s Project Hail Mary could be the sci-fi event of 2026 -
The Future of Robotic Assembly
Since the introduction of mass production in 1913 assembly lines are still mostly human — humanoids might change this
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Use Kubernetes Operators for new inference capabilities in Amazon SageMaker that reduce LLM deployment costs by 50% on average
We are excited to announce a new version of the Amazon SageMaker Operators for Kubernetes using the AWS Controllers for Kubernetes (ACK). ACK is a framework for building Kubernetes custom controllers, where each controller communicates with an AWS service API. These controllers allow Kubernetes users to provision AWS resources like buckets, databases, or message queues […]Originally appeared here:
Use Kubernetes Operators for new inference capabilities in Amazon SageMaker that reduce LLM deployment costs by 50% on average -
How OpenAI and Microsoft reawakened a sleeping software giant
Just a decade ago, the world’s biggest tech beast was a relative minnow. Microsoft had become notorious for disappointing product launches, stagnant innovation, and losing top talent. The first true software giant was becoming a big tech dinosaur. Fast forward to 2024 and Microsoft is the planet’s most valuable business. Under the leadership of CEO Satya Nadella, stock has soared by over 1,000% in 10 years. In January, the company reached a $3 trillion market cap — larger than the whole GDP of France. At the heart of the comeback is artificial intelligence. Microsoft has embedded AI across the Azure cloud computing platform,…This story continues at The Next Web
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Go Here to Read this Fast! How OpenAI and Microsoft reawakened a sleeping software giant
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How OpenAI and Microsoft reawakened a sleeping software giant