Month: July 2024

Save 15 percent on Disney+ streaming gift cards today only

Streaming services are expensive, especially with many companies cracking down on sharing passwords. Gift cards are a great way to help someone save some money, especially when you don’t even have to pay full price. For today only, Best Buy is running a 15 percent off sale on Disney+ gift cards.
That’s right: currently, you can get a Disney+ gift card worth $25 for $21.25, $50 for 42.50, and $100 for $85. The gift cards are only good for monthly subscriptions to Disney+ in the United States that are billed by Disney (rather than a third party). They also applies to the Disney Bundle, which includes Disney+, Hulu and ESPN+.

A typical Disney+ subscription’s price varies by tier. Disney+ Basic (with ads) is $8 per month, while an ad-free viewing experience is $14 per month. Disney+ bundles range in price from $10 monthly for the Disney Bundle Duo Basic (Disney+ and Hulu with ads) to $24 monthly for the Disney Bundle Trio Premium (Disney+, Hulu and ESPN+ with no ads). 
Follow @EngadgetDeals on Twitter and subscribe to the Engadget Deals newsletter for the latest tech deals and buying advice.This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/save-15-percent-on-disney-streaming-gift-cards-today-only-133245598.html?src=rss

Streaming services are expensive, especially with many companies cracking down on sharing passwords. Gift cards are a great way to help someone save some money, especially when you don’t even have to pay full price. For today only, Best Buy is running a 15 percent off sale on Disney+ gift cards.

That’s right: currently, you can get a Disney+ gift card worth $25 for $21.25, $50 for 42.50, and $100 for $85. The gift cards are only good for monthly subscriptions to Disney+ in the United States that are billed by Disney (rather than a third party). They also applies to the Disney Bundle, which includes Disney+, Hulu and ESPN+.

A typical Disney+ subscription’s price varies by tier. Disney+ Basic (with ads) is $8 per month, while an ad-free viewing experience is $14 per month. Disney+ bundles range in price from $10 monthly for the Disney Bundle Duo Basic (Disney+ and Hulu with ads) to $24 monthly for the Disney Bundle Trio Premium (Disney+, Hulu and ESPN+ with no ads). 

Follow @EngadgetDeals on Twitter and subscribe to the Engadget Deals newsletter for the latest tech deals and buying advice.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/save-15-percent-on-disney-streaming-gift-cards-today-only-133245598.html?src=rss

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Sybill raises $11M for its AI assistant that helps salespeople reduce administrative burden

Sybill, a startup that has built an AI assistant specifically for sales reps, has raised $11 million in a Series A round led by Greycroft.
© 2024 TechCrunch. All rights reserved. For personal use only.

Sybill, a startup that has built an AI assistant specifically for sales reps, has raised $11 million in a Series A round led by Greycroft.

© 2024 TechCrunch. All rights reserved. For personal use only.

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Sony’s NFL tech overhaul goes from the chain gang to headphones for coaches

Photo by Jamie Squire / Getty Images

As part of a new partnership with the NFL, Sony is developing a new set of headphones for NFL coaches that will debut during the 2025 season. The new headphones are being built “from the ground up,” Sony Electronics’ Matthew Parnell tells The Verge in a briefing, and Sony engineers have already started working with NFL operations teams on the product.
Sony’s new headset for coaches will be a “brand new model,” Parnell says, and the company will have to make sure it can withstand many kinds of weather and still work in loud stadiums. The headphones will also use private 5G networks from Verizon so that coaches can communicate with each other — current headphones use Verizon’s CBRS wireless connection.
It’s unclear to what extent the new headphones for coaches will borrow from products like Sony’s WH-1000XM5 and the company’s well-regarded noise cancellation tech, as the new product doesn’t actually exist today and won’t exist “until we get further along in the development process over the course of the next nine to 12 months,” Parnell says. But “it’s a collaboration to the nth-degree with the NFL team on what they want and what they need us to build,” he says.
“We are known and recognized for our noise canceling, our sound quality, all the things that make our consumer headphones so amazing,” says Sony’s Maya Wasserman. “Bringing that technology and integrating in all the really specific needs that the NFL has for this headset is very exciting for us.”
We’ll have to wait and see if Dolphins head coach Mike McDaniel will appreciate the new set or petition the league to switch back to Bose so he can hear his offensive coordinator and YG a little more clearly.
Sony will also be an official technology partner for the NFL, and as part of that, the NFL will expand its use of Sony’s Hawk-Eye tracking technology. Starting with this season’s preseason games, the NFL will test using Hawk-Eye to help measure progression toward first downs, says the NFL’s Tracie Rodburg. Hawk-Eye will be installed in all stadiums, Rodburg says. And in “coming seasons,” the Hawk-Eye team and the NFL will work together on developing a “next-generation officiating technology” that can review and make critical rulings on plays, according to a press release.

Photo by Jamie Squire / Getty Images

As part of a new partnership with the NFL, Sony is developing a new set of headphones for NFL coaches that will debut during the 2025 season. The new headphones are being built “from the ground up,” Sony Electronics’ Matthew Parnell tells The Verge in a briefing, and Sony engineers have already started working with NFL operations teams on the product.

Sony’s new headset for coaches will be a “brand new model,” Parnell says, and the company will have to make sure it can withstand many kinds of weather and still work in loud stadiums. The headphones will also use private 5G networks from Verizon so that coaches can communicate with each other — current headphones use Verizon’s CBRS wireless connection.

It’s unclear to what extent the new headphones for coaches will borrow from products like Sony’s WH-1000XM5 and the company’s well-regarded noise cancellation tech, as the new product doesn’t actually exist today and won’t exist “until we get further along in the development process over the course of the next nine to 12 months,” Parnell says. But “it’s a collaboration to the nth-degree with the NFL team on what they want and what they need us to build,” he says.

“We are known and recognized for our noise canceling, our sound quality, all the things that make our consumer headphones so amazing,” says Sony’s Maya Wasserman. “Bringing that technology and integrating in all the really specific needs that the NFL has for this headset is very exciting for us.”

We’ll have to wait and see if Dolphins head coach Mike McDaniel will appreciate the new set or petition the league to switch back to Bose so he can hear his offensive coordinator and YG a little more clearly.

Sony will also be an official technology partner for the NFL, and as part of that, the NFL will expand its use of Sony’s Hawk-Eye tracking technology. Starting with this season’s preseason games, the NFL will test using Hawk-Eye to help measure progression toward first downs, says the NFL’s Tracie Rodburg. Hawk-Eye will be installed in all stadiums, Rodburg says. And in “coming seasons,” the Hawk-Eye team and the NFL will work together on developing a “next-generation officiating technology” that can review and make critical rulings on plays, according to a press release.

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Intel could be set to announce more major job cuts, with thousands of workers potentially hit

In the face of increased pressure from AMD and Nvidia, Intel could be laying off workers to help refocus its efforts.

Intel is reportedly preparing to cut thousands of jobs in an effort to reduce costs and tackle poor revenue predictions and decreased market share.

A Bloomberg report claims the layoffs could be announced within days, according to sources familiar with the plan cited by the publication.

Intel, which has approximately 110,000 employees, is set to report its most recent quarterly earnings tomorrow. Last quarter, the company drew in $12.7 billion in revenue, up 9% year-over-year, but that same growth is not expected to continue.

Intel may lay off more workers

Under the leadership of CEO Pat Gelsinger, Intel has been heavily investing in R&D to enhance its technology, in a bid to regain lost market share in the semiconductor industry, where it has faced increased pressure from the likes of AMD and Nvidia in recent years.

Intel recently hired Naga Chandrasekaran from Micron Technology to oversee the company’s manufacturing efforts, indicating significant focus in that department. 

Intel has an estimated market cap of $128.26 billion, only a touch higher than half of AMD’s, at $223.76 billion. Nvidia, with the help of rapidly accelerated interest in AI, now stands as the world’s third-most valuable company, with a market cap of $2.551 trillion.

Analysts are now expecting that Intel will report fairly flat second-quarter revenue compared with the previous year, with some growth anticipated later in the year. The company hopes for its first annual revenue increase since 2021 when it reports its full fiscal year results in around six months time.

If the layoffs go ahead, they could be the first of this scale for the company in more than a year. While tech layoffs have slowed down globally compared with 2023, layoffs.fyi has still tracked nearly 110,000 this year to date.

Intel declined to comment.

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Date Like Goblins, a new dating platform, allows users to virtually date and play video games

Date Like Goblins is geared toward the gaming community and allows users to connect through voice chat while playing video games.
© 2024 TechCrunch. All rights reserved. For personal use only.

Date Like Goblins is geared toward the gaming community and allows users to connect through voice chat while playing video games.

© 2024 TechCrunch. All rights reserved. For personal use only.

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