Month: August 2024

Meta Cancels High-End Mixed-Reality Headset

Meta Platforms has canceled plans for a premium mixed-reality headset intended to compete with Apple’s Vision Pro, The Information reported Friday, citing sources. From the report: Meta told employees at the company’s Reality Labs division to stop work on the device this week after a product review meeting attended by Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg, Chief Technology Officer Andrew Bosworth and other Meta executives, the employees said. The axed device, which was internally code-named La Jolla, began development in November and was scheduled for release in 2027, according to current and former Meta employees. It was going to contain ultrahigh-resolution screens known as micro OLEDs — the same display technology used in Apple’s Vision Pro.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Meta Platforms has canceled plans for a premium mixed-reality headset intended to compete with Apple’s Vision Pro, The Information reported Friday, citing sources. From the report: Meta told employees at the company’s Reality Labs division to stop work on the device this week after a product review meeting attended by Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg, Chief Technology Officer Andrew Bosworth and other Meta executives, the employees said. The axed device, which was internally code-named La Jolla, began development in November and was scheduled for release in 2027, according to current and former Meta employees. It was going to contain ultrahigh-resolution screens known as micro OLEDs — the same display technology used in Apple’s Vision Pro.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Blink Twice is a glitzy thrill ride that gets lost in the darkness of its own ideas

Image: Amazon MGM Studios

Zoë Kravitz’s directorial debut has Get Out aspirations, but it lands somewhere closer to Don’t Worry Darling. Zoë Kravitz’s passion for making movies is written all over Blink Twice, Amazon MGM’s new psychological thriller starring Naomi Ackie and Channing Tatum. You can see it in the feature’s meticulously crafted shots and hear it in every carefully placed needle drop. Blink Twice is a promising directorial debut from Kravitz — especially when the film is focused on enchanting you with its glamorous depiction of celebrity. But an impressive eye for the aesthetic can only do so much to carry a story that’s as thorny and difficult as Blink Twice’s. And while many of the movie’s core ideas about sex and power are potent, Blink Twice struggles to explore them in a way that feels substantive or original.
Aside from the fact that she has an unusually good memory for faces, there doesn’t seem to be that much out of the ordinary about cater waiter Frida (Naomi Ackie) as Blink Twice opens the night before she and her roommate Jess (Alia Shawkawt) are meant to be working at a big gala. Under any other circumstance, spending an evening waiting hand and foot on boozed-up, uber-wealthy elites might sound like a nightmare to Frida, who dreams of being able to quit and pursue her passion for nail art. But with the big party being a celebration for embattled billionaire Slater King (Channing Tatum), Frida — one of many people smitten with the famous tech bro — can’t help but get excited at the possibility of seeing him. And when their paths do eventually cross, it isn’t long before he invites both women to his private island for a vacation getaway.

Though there’s a frenzied, rushed quality to Blink Twice’s opening act, Kravitz and cinematographer Adam Newport-Berra cleverly use that energy to establish the film as one that’s trying to channel the disorienting experience of being pulled into a superstar’s orbit. Everything about the champagne-soaked world of excess that King and his elite friends / employees (Simon Rex, Geena Davis, Haley Joel Osment, Christian Slater, Levon Hawke) exist in is strange to Frida and Jess. But the undeniable beauty of it all — the private jet, the island, the elaborate multicourse dinners chased with premium drugs — is enough to convince Don’t Blink’s heroines that King has welcomed them to a wonderland.
Kravitz, who cowrote Don’t Blink’s script with High Fidelity’s E.T. Feigenbaum, wants you to feel the fantasy, too, as Frida’s days on the island start blending together into a dreamlike blur of lazy afternoons by the pool and drunken nights running under the stars. Because Don’t Blink takes so many cues from recent horrors like The Menu and Ready or Not, though, it’s hard not to see the film’s dark twists coming from a distance.
Part of the problem is that few of Don’t Blink’s characters have all that much texture to them aside from Tatum’s King and Sarah (Adria Arjona), a former contestant on a Survivor-like show who also shows up on the island looking to party. Aside from one important monologue that falls rather flat, Tatum does a serviceable job of embodying King as an eccentric, yet charming recluse laying low to rehabilitate his image after a very public scandal. And Arjona’s Sarah — a professional celebrity famous for her ability to survive in stressful situations — is a surprise delight whose performance brings some much-needed levity to the film as things start to turn sinister.
But there is so little substance to Frida’s personality outside of her infatuation with King that the character often feels two-dimensional save for a handful of moments when the movie abruptly shifts gears just long enough for her to point out (more for the audience’s benefit) how weird being on the island feels. Those fleeting scenes give Ackie a chance to show off her range, and you can almost feel how much more unnerving Don’t Blink might be if the film showed us more of its heroine’s complexity before she loses it to the island’s strange magic. But for narrative reasons, Kravitz saves Frida’s interiority for Don’t Blink’s dizzying final act when the full picture of its mysterious puzzle comes into focus.

Image: Carlos Somonte

To the film’s credit, it’s an exercise in horror storytelling that’s actually trying to articulate several very specific things about gender and sexual violence rather than just coasting on unsettling vibes. As Don’t Blink peels back the layers of its central mystery, it becomes exceedingly clear that Kravitz means for it to hit many of the same nerves as Emerald Fennell’s Promising Young Woman and Jordan Peele’s Get Out. But whereas those films’ messages about power and trauma were more carefully woven into their narratives on a technical level, Blink Twice hamfistedly spits its ideas out with a bravado that isn’t entirely earned.
With a bit more polish and time spent making its players feel like actual people, Blink Twice’s attempts to shock you with a heavily telegraphed pivot into metaphorical horror might work much more effectively. Instead, the film lands somewhere closer to Olivia Wilde’s Don’t Worry Darling, which is to say stylish but somewhat lacking in its ability to unpack its central themes.
Blink Twice works fairly well on a surface level as a glitzy popcorn thriller that will make your skin crawl. But Kravitz is also clearly striving for more here — and the film never quite hits that deeper level of meaning that would turn it into something truly special.
Blink Twice also stars Liz Caribel, Trew Mullen, Kyle MacLachlan, Cris Costa, and María Elena Olivares. The film is in theaters now.

Image: Amazon MGM Studios

Zoë Kravitz’s directorial debut has Get Out aspirations, but it lands somewhere closer to Don’t Worry Darling.

Zoë Kravitz’s passion for making movies is written all over Blink Twice, Amazon MGM’s new psychological thriller starring Naomi Ackie and Channing Tatum. You can see it in the feature’s meticulously crafted shots and hear it in every carefully placed needle drop. Blink Twice is a promising directorial debut from Kravitz — especially when the film is focused on enchanting you with its glamorous depiction of celebrity. But an impressive eye for the aesthetic can only do so much to carry a story that’s as thorny and difficult as Blink Twice’s. And while many of the movie’s core ideas about sex and power are potent, Blink Twice struggles to explore them in a way that feels substantive or original.

Aside from the fact that she has an unusually good memory for faces, there doesn’t seem to be that much out of the ordinary about cater waiter Frida (Naomi Ackie) as Blink Twice opens the night before she and her roommate Jess (Alia Shawkawt) are meant to be working at a big gala. Under any other circumstance, spending an evening waiting hand and foot on boozed-up, uber-wealthy elites might sound like a nightmare to Frida, who dreams of being able to quit and pursue her passion for nail art. But with the big party being a celebration for embattled billionaire Slater King (Channing Tatum), Frida — one of many people smitten with the famous tech bro — can’t help but get excited at the possibility of seeing him. And when their paths do eventually cross, it isn’t long before he invites both women to his private island for a vacation getaway.

Though there’s a frenzied, rushed quality to Blink Twice’s opening act, Kravitz and cinematographer Adam Newport-Berra cleverly use that energy to establish the film as one that’s trying to channel the disorienting experience of being pulled into a superstar’s orbit. Everything about the champagne-soaked world of excess that King and his elite friends / employees (Simon Rex, Geena Davis, Haley Joel Osment, Christian Slater, Levon Hawke) exist in is strange to Frida and Jess. But the undeniable beauty of it all — the private jet, the island, the elaborate multicourse dinners chased with premium drugs — is enough to convince Don’t Blink’s heroines that King has welcomed them to a wonderland.

Kravitz, who cowrote Don’t Blink’s script with High Fidelity’s E.T. Feigenbaum, wants you to feel the fantasy, too, as Frida’s days on the island start blending together into a dreamlike blur of lazy afternoons by the pool and drunken nights running under the stars. Because Don’t Blink takes so many cues from recent horrors like The Menu and Ready or Not, though, it’s hard not to see the film’s dark twists coming from a distance.

Part of the problem is that few of Don’t Blink’s characters have all that much texture to them aside from Tatum’s King and Sarah (Adria Arjona), a former contestant on a Survivor-like show who also shows up on the island looking to party. Aside from one important monologue that falls rather flat, Tatum does a serviceable job of embodying King as an eccentric, yet charming recluse laying low to rehabilitate his image after a very public scandal. And Arjona’s Sarah — a professional celebrity famous for her ability to survive in stressful situations — is a surprise delight whose performance brings some much-needed levity to the film as things start to turn sinister.

But there is so little substance to Frida’s personality outside of her infatuation with King that the character often feels two-dimensional save for a handful of moments when the movie abruptly shifts gears just long enough for her to point out (more for the audience’s benefit) how weird being on the island feels. Those fleeting scenes give Ackie a chance to show off her range, and you can almost feel how much more unnerving Don’t Blink might be if the film showed us more of its heroine’s complexity before she loses it to the island’s strange magic. But for narrative reasons, Kravitz saves Frida’s interiority for Don’t Blink’s dizzying final act when the full picture of its mysterious puzzle comes into focus.

Image: Carlos Somonte

To the film’s credit, it’s an exercise in horror storytelling that’s actually trying to articulate several very specific things about gender and sexual violence rather than just coasting on unsettling vibes. As Don’t Blink peels back the layers of its central mystery, it becomes exceedingly clear that Kravitz means for it to hit many of the same nerves as Emerald Fennell’s Promising Young Woman and Jordan Peele’s Get Out. But whereas those films’ messages about power and trauma were more carefully woven into their narratives on a technical level, Blink Twice hamfistedly spits its ideas out with a bravado that isn’t entirely earned.

With a bit more polish and time spent making its players feel like actual people, Blink Twice’s attempts to shock you with a heavily telegraphed pivot into metaphorical horror might work much more effectively. Instead, the film lands somewhere closer to Olivia Wilde’s Don’t Worry Darling, which is to say stylish but somewhat lacking in its ability to unpack its central themes.

Blink Twice works fairly well on a surface level as a glitzy popcorn thriller that will make your skin crawl. But Kravitz is also clearly striving for more here — and the film never quite hits that deeper level of meaning that would turn it into something truly special.

Blink Twice also stars Liz Caribel, Trew Mullen, Kyle MacLachlan, Cris Costa, and María Elena Olivares. The film is in theaters now.

Read More 

iPhone Users in Europe Will Soon Get To Choose Their Default Calling and Messaging Apps

The tech titan says the ability to delete and change default apps will roll out before the end of this year.

The tech titan says the ability to delete and change default apps will roll out before the end of this year.

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The DOJ files an antitrust lawsuit against a software company for allegedly manipulating rent prices

The Department of Justice and eight states’ attorney generals filed an antitrust lawsuit against rental software company RealPage on Friday, accusing it of using algorithms to drive up rent prices nationwide. The suit alleges RealPage’s software, YieldStar, gathers sensitive information from landlords and rental companies, which it feeds into algorithms that recommend prices and practices that limit competition and force renters to pay more.
“Americans should not have to pay more in rent because a company has found a new way to scheme with landlords to break the law,” Attorney General Merrick Garland wrote in a DOJ press release.
RealPage’s software reportedly manages more than 24 million rental units globally. The DOJ’s complaint accuses the company of contracting with competing landlords who agree to share “nonpublic, competitively sensitive information” about rental rates and other lease terms. RealPage then trains YieldStar’s algorithms, which generate pricing and other competitive recommendations “based on their and their rivals’ competitively sensitive information,” according to the DOJ.
The DOJ was joined in its suit by the attorney generals of North Carolina, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Minnesota, Oregon, Tennessee and Washington. It filed the lawsuit in the US District Court for the Middle District of North Carolina, accusing the company of violating Sections 1 and 2 of the Sherman Act. The 1890 law is considered the bedrock of US antitrust actions.
In addition, the lawsuit accuses RealPage of monopolizing the rental market in a feedback loop that “strengthens RealPage’s grip on the market,” making it harder for “honest businesses to compete on the merits.”
Developing…This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/big-tech/the-doj-files-an-antitrust-lawsuit-against-a-software-company-for-allegedly-manipulating-rent-prices-154230054.html?src=rss

The Department of Justice and eight states’ attorney generals filed an antitrust lawsuit against rental software company RealPage on Friday, accusing it of using algorithms to drive up rent prices nationwide. The suit alleges RealPage’s software, YieldStar, gathers sensitive information from landlords and rental companies, which it feeds into algorithms that recommend prices and practices that limit competition and force renters to pay more.

“Americans should not have to pay more in rent because a company has found a new way to scheme with landlords to break the law,” Attorney General Merrick Garland wrote in a DOJ press release.

RealPage’s software reportedly manages more than 24 million rental units globally. The DOJ’s complaint accuses the company of contracting with competing landlords who agree to share “nonpublic, competitively sensitive information” about rental rates and other lease terms. RealPage then trains YieldStar’s algorithms, which generate pricing and other competitive recommendations “based on their and their rivals’ competitively sensitive information,” according to the DOJ.

The DOJ was joined in its suit by the attorney generals of North Carolina, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Minnesota, Oregon, Tennessee and Washington. It filed the lawsuit in the US District Court for the Middle District of North Carolina, accusing the company of violating Sections 1 and 2 of the Sherman Act. The 1890 law is considered the bedrock of US antitrust actions.

In addition, the lawsuit accuses RealPage of monopolizing the rental market in a feedback loop that “strengthens RealPage’s grip on the market,” making it harder for “honest businesses to compete on the merits.”

Developing…

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/big-tech/the-doj-files-an-antitrust-lawsuit-against-a-software-company-for-allegedly-manipulating-rent-prices-154230054.html?src=rss

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Elon Musk says X staff can get their stock — if they prove they deserve it

Image: Cath Virginia / The Verge | Photo by STR / NurPhoto, Getty Images

Elon Musk sent an email to X staff overnight about their much anticipated stock grants — but there’s a catch.
In an email to staff viewed by The Verge, the company is planning to award stock options based on the anticipated future impact of employees. That means staff have to submit a one-page summary telling leadership their contributions to the company.
These anticipated stock grants add to the tensions between X leadership and staff after the promotions process was recently delayed without explanation, we previously reported. Given how the company formerly called Twitter has continued to struggle under Elon Musk’s ownership, employees have been bracing for more layoffs.
What’s more, a source at X told The Verge that the company still owes staff their annual equity refresher, which was supposed to be doled out in April.
Developing…

Image: Cath Virginia / The Verge | Photo by STR / NurPhoto, Getty Images

Elon Musk sent an email to X staff overnight about their much anticipated stock grants — but there’s a catch.

In an email to staff viewed by The Verge, the company is planning to award stock options based on the anticipated future impact of employees. That means staff have to submit a one-page summary telling leadership their contributions to the company.

These anticipated stock grants add to the tensions between X leadership and staff after the promotions process was recently delayed without explanation, we previously reported. Given how the company formerly called Twitter has continued to struggle under Elon Musk’s ownership, employees have been bracing for more layoffs.

What’s more, a source at X told The Verge that the company still owes staff their annual equity refresher, which was supposed to be doled out in April.

Developing…

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The Sonos Labor Day sale discounts speakers and bundles by up to 20 percent

Sonos is holding a massive Labor Day sale that starts today, with discounts on speakers and bundles by up to 20 percent. The most notable deal is for the Era 100 smart speaker, which is on sale for $200 instead of $250.
The Era 100 made our list of the best smart speakers, and for good reason. This is a speaker designed, first and foremost, for audio quality. It includes two tweeters, where most smart speakers have one, and an extra-large woofer. The end result? The Era 100 offers impressive bass, huge volume and great high-end clarity.

It’s also, of course, a smart speaker. The built-in microphones help to optimize the output based on where the speaker has been placed. It works with many smart assistants for voice control, including Alexa or the company’s proprietary assistant. It doesn’t work with Google Assistant, which could be a dealbreaker for some.
There’s a USB-C line-in and Bluetooth for multi-speaker setups. As a matter of fact, you can hodgepodge a decent surround sound home theater system by pairing two of these together with a soundbar.
This is a sitewide sale, so the Era 100 is far from the only available deal. The Move 2 portable speaker has been discounted to $360 from $450 and the Beam 2 soundbar is on sale for $400 instead of $500. The company’s impressive Ace headphones have also been discounted to $400 from $450. 
The sale even applies to bundles, for those looking for a complete setup. A combo featuring both the Era 100 and the Move 2 is available for $578, which is a savings of $120. 
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/deals/the-sonos-labor-day-sale-discounts-speakers-and-bundles-by-up-to-20-percent-153814792.html?src=rss

Sonos is holding a massive Labor Day sale that starts today, with discounts on speakers and bundles by up to 20 percent. The most notable deal is for the Era 100 smart speaker, which is on sale for $200 instead of $250.

The Era 100 made our list of the best smart speakers, and for good reason. This is a speaker designed, first and foremost, for audio quality. It includes two tweeters, where most smart speakers have one, and an extra-large woofer. The end result? The Era 100 offers impressive bass, huge volume and great high-end clarity.

It’s also, of course, a smart speaker. The built-in microphones help to optimize the output based on where the speaker has been placed. It works with many smart assistants for voice control, including Alexa or the company’s proprietary assistant. It doesn’t work with Google Assistant, which could be a dealbreaker for some.

There’s a USB-C line-in and Bluetooth for multi-speaker setups. As a matter of fact, you can hodgepodge a decent surround sound home theater system by pairing two of these together with a soundbar.

This is a sitewide sale, so the Era 100 is far from the only available deal. The Move 2 portable speaker has been discounted to $360 from $450 and the Beam 2 soundbar is on sale for $400 instead of $500. The company’s impressive Ace headphones have also been discounted to $400 from $450

The sale even applies to bundles, for those looking for a complete setup. A combo featuring both the Era 100 and the Move 2 is available for $578, which is a savings of $120. 

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/deals/the-sonos-labor-day-sale-discounts-speakers-and-bundles-by-up-to-20-percent-153814792.html?src=rss

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