Month: August 2024

Final Fantasy 16 is finally coming to PC next month

Square Enix has announced that Final Fantasy 16 will finally be released on PC next month.

Square Enix has announced that Final Fantasy 16 will finally be released on PC next month.

Over one year since its exclusive PS5 launch, the critically acclaimed action role-playing game (RPG) will be making its debut on Steam and the Epic Games Store on September 17. 

A free demo is also now available to play on both platforms, allowing users to experience the first hours of the game, as well as the ‘Eikonic Challenge’ mode made specially for this demo, after completing the opening section of the story. 

Save story data will carry over to the full version, which will also require 170GB of free space. 

The announcement also arrived alongside a brand-new trailer, which you can watch below:

Final Fantasy 16‘s Standard Edition is available to pre-purchase right now, as well as the Complete Edition, which comes with the base game and the two downloadable content (DLC) chapters, Echoes of the Fallen and The Rising Tide, both of which released on PS5 post-launch.

Players can choose to purchase the DLC chapters individually or with the Final Fantasy 16 Expansion Pass, which includes both.

Those who pre-order on either Steam and Epic Games Store will receive additional in-game DLC items, including the Brave Blade Weapon, a Cait Sith Charm (Gil Boost Accessory), and the “Sixteen Bells” Orchestrion Roll.

Earlier this year, Final Fantasy 16’s producer Naoki Yoshida said that the RPG will have better performance on high-end PCs than PS5, and that the development team was seeing “over 100FPS” on some hardware.

In TechRadar Gaming’s five-star review, we called the game “a shining example of narrative-focused games at their best, boasting immersive storytelling and cinematic action that invites you into its richly detailed world.”

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‘Alien: Romulus’s biggest cameo is its greatest error

Let’s talk about Alien resurrection. No, not the fourth “Alien” film, but rather the ghoulish real-life resurrection in “Alien: Romulus.”

Let’s talk about Alien resurrection. No, not the fourth film in the Alien series, but rather the ghoulish real-life resurrection at the heart of Alien: Romulus.

The film, directed by Fede Álvarez, brings a familiar face back to the Alien franchise: that of the late Sir Ian Holm. Holm played the Nostromo’s synthetic science officer Ash in 1979’s Alien. In Alien: Romulus, he “appears” as Rook, a Weyland-Yutani synthetic who is the same model as Ash, and who serves as the science officer for the Renaissance space station.

I say “appears” because Holm, who passed away in June 2020, is unable to perform in Alien: Romulus. Instead, the film uses an animatronic body and CGI to create a simulacrum of Holm. Actor Daniel Betts also provided facial and vocal performances, which were then altered by generative AI and computer modeling to get closer to Holm’s. The result lives in the depths of the uncanny valley, alongside Rogue One‘s revival of Peter Cushing’s Grand Moff Tarkin and The Flash‘s cameo from Christopher Reeve’s Superman.

However, Alien: Romulus‘s Rook has far more screen time than these prior examples, playing first an expository role, then an antagonistic one for the film’s young heroes. Each extended appearance is more unsettling than the last, to the point that I dreaded seeing Rook far more than I dreaded any Xenomorph. Not because Rook is a frightening character, but because his presence here snaps you out of an otherwise very fun movie, pointing instead to a disturbing filmmaking practice that mines cheap nostalgia from a late actor’s work — and that could have been entirely avoided in the first place.

Why is Ian Holm’s Alien: Romulus resurrection so troubling?

Let’s start out with the obvious: No matter what permissions an estate may grant, a late actor cannot consent to having their likeness used in a movie. Doing so is an immediate violation of their personhood. In reviving them for the screen, you’re creating a performance in a film they might never have agreed to do, with acting choices they might never have made.

That’s because the version of Holm we see in Alien: Romulus isn’t really Holm. It’s a puppet of a character he once played, being pulled out of the Alien toy box in order to score nostalgia points in a movie that’s already too full of callbacks. Like Reeve and Cushing, Holm becomes an avatar for misguided fan service, instead of remaining an actor with agency. No wonder concerns about digital replicas of actors and their use after death became a key part of SAG-AFTRA’s 2023 contract.

The presence of Holm’s likeness in Alien: Romulus is also a smack in the face to the film’s own themes. Here is a movie that criticizes how corporations work employees to death, with one of its first scenes establishing that Weyland-Yutani keeps moving the goalposts of Rain Carradine’s (Cailee Spaeny, Civil War, Priscilla) contract until it’s effectively a death sentence. Yet Alien: Romulus is awfully comfortable working the image of an actor’s body beyond death. Elsewhere, the great horror of the facehuggers and Xenomorphs remains the hijacking of our own bodies for alien needs. Does Alien: Romulus not see how its use of Holm’s likeness is a similar kind of hijacking?

Alien: Romulus didn’t need Rook in the first place.

David Jonsson in “Alien: Romulus.”
Credit: 20th Century Studios

An extra frustrating element of this situation is the fact that Alien: Romulus didn’t even need Rook to be effective. Rain and her companions have no idea about the events of Alien on the Nostromo, or who Ash is, so seeing Rook means nothing to them in-world. His presence here is pure fan service, with no actual depth behind it. Sure, the sentiment would have been the same had Álvarez brought back Bishop (Lance Henriksen) from Aliens and Alien 3 or David (Michael Fassbender) from Prometheus and Alien: Covenant, but at least then the director wouldn’t have been manufacturing a performance from a deceased Holm.

Just bring in another version of Andy.

In an interview with Entertainment Weekly, Álvarez pointed to a “limited amount of synthetics” as being the reason why he and producer Ridley Scott decided to bring Rook back. Yet even if that limit prevented the creation of another original synthetic beyond Andy (David Jonsson, Industry, Rye Lane), there is still a solution for who could fulfill Rook’s role onboard the Renaissance without stooping to fan service. Just bring in another version of Andy. After all, the movie is named Romulus, after famed Roman twins Remus and Romulus — twin shenanigans would only make sense here!

Yes, the Alien franchise has pulled the synthetic twins trick before, with Walter and David in Alien: Covenant. But out of all the callbacks Alien: Romulus has to other Alien films, I think double Andy has the potential to be the most rewarding.

For starters, another synthetic who looks like Andy would actually mean something to Rain and her companions. They’d have more of a reason to trust him upon first meeting him, just by virtue of his resemblance to Rain’s brother alone. That’s already a step above fan service.

Then, there’s Andy’s reaction to his own doppelgänger to consider. Aside from Rain, Andy is fairly isolated from the rest of the anti-synthetic crew, and from the rest of the Jackson’s Star Colony. What happens if he sees someone who is exactly like him? Does he form some kind of synthetic kinship with his double, especially after learning that Rain plans to decommission him when she makes it to Yvaga?

If there is any trust there, that adds an extra layer of heartbreak to the moment when Andy switches over to being just another vessel for doing Weyland-Yutani’s bidding, powered by Rook’s chip. Think of Andy’s turn there like a reverse Walter and David situation. While David tried to turn Walter against his crew in order to free him from a life of service, Andy’s turned against his crew in order to serve Weyland-Yutani. When it’s his lookalike facilitating that turn, it becomes more of a betrayal of self, instead of a possible self-liberation.

Twice the Andy is just one solution to the question of, “which synthetic should be onboard the Renaissance?” (A solution that would give Jonsson even more room to flex his impressive range.) There are countless others, including just making Rook an original synthetic and casting any other actor in the part. But there’s only one truly incorrect answer, and that’s the route Alien: Romulus takes.

Alien: Romulus is now in theaters.

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Stephen Colbert breaks down the big DNC moments in live monologue

Stephen Colbert has broken down the big moments from the Democratic National Convention, day one.

Stephen Colbert has broken down the big moments from the Democratic National Convention, day one.

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macOS Sequoia Has New FaceTime Backgrounds Showcasing Apple Park

Apple in the second beta of macOS Sequoia 15.1 has added a set of new backgrounds for FaceTime calls that showcase features of Apple Park.

There are nine backgrounds in all, featuring iconic locations around the company’s circular headquarters in Cupertino, California, which should be familiar to anyone who has watched a recent Apple event.

For example, one shows ‌Apple Park‌’s rainbow arch, based on the company’s rainbow apple logo and erected as a tribute to its late co-founder Steve Jobs, who helped conceptualize the spaceship-like design of the main building on the campus prior to his death.

In ‌macOS Sequoia‌, there are other new built-in backgrounds that can be used for ‌FaceTime‌ and other video calls to blur out and hide what’s behind you. These include different color gradients and the ability to use photos from your photo library.

Elsewhere, ‌FaceTime‌ has also gained the ability to preview what you’re going to share in a video call when using screen sharing. Video calling apps will now give you a small preview of what will be shared before you okay the sharing process, which is useful to double check that you’re not sharing information you don’t want everyone to see.
Will My Mac Run macOS Sequoia?
‌macOS Sequoia‌ 15.1 is currently in its second developer beta phase and is expected to arrive for all users with supporting Macs later this year, following the release of ‌macOS Sequoia‌ 15. Apple has split Apple Intelligence into a separate set of betas because these features will not be available in the initial launch version of ‌‌macOS Sequoia‌‌.Related Roundup: macOS SequoiaTag: FaceTimeRelated Forum: macOS SequoiaThis article, “macOS Sequoia Has New FaceTime Backgrounds Showcasing Apple Park” first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Apple in the second beta of macOS Sequoia 15.1 has added a set of new backgrounds for FaceTime calls that showcase features of Apple Park.

There are nine backgrounds in all, featuring iconic locations around the company’s circular headquarters in Cupertino, California, which should be familiar to anyone who has watched a recent Apple event.

For example, one shows ‌Apple Park‌’s rainbow arch, based on the company’s rainbow apple logo and erected as a tribute to its late co-founder Steve Jobs, who helped conceptualize the spaceship-like design of the main building on the campus prior to his death.

In ‌macOS Sequoia‌, there are other new built-in backgrounds that can be used for ‌FaceTime‌ and other video calls to blur out and hide what’s behind you. These include different color gradients and the ability to use photos from your photo library.

Elsewhere, ‌FaceTime‌ has also gained the ability to preview what you’re going to share in a video call when using screen sharing. Video calling apps will now give you a small preview of what will be shared before you okay the sharing process, which is useful to double check that you’re not sharing information you don’t want everyone to see.

Will My Mac Run macOS Sequoia?

‌macOS Sequoia‌ 15.1 is currently in its second developer beta phase and is expected to arrive for all users with supporting Macs later this year, following the release of ‌macOS Sequoia‌ 15. Apple has split Apple Intelligence into a separate set of betas because these features will not be available in the initial launch version of ‌‌macOS Sequoia‌‌.

Related Roundup: macOS Sequoia
Related Forum: macOS Sequoia

This article, “macOS Sequoia Has New FaceTime Backgrounds Showcasing Apple Park” first appeared on MacRumors.com

Discuss this article in our forums

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Bad news — up to a million people can now join a Zoom call, so don’t get stage fright

Zoom meetings can now support up to a million participants, for all those big occasions.

Your next big business Zoom call could be a truly blockbuster occasion after the company announced a major upgrade in capacity for calls.

The video conferencing platform will now be able to support up to a million attendees on a single-use webinar as Zoom calls continue to be a popular medium for organizations to reach a bigger audience.

The company says the expansion will help “transform how large-scale communications are conducted”, letting hosts and audiences across the world interact seamlessly – provided their internet connection is good enough, of course.

More Zoom for your buck

(Image credit: Zoom)

The news forms part of a selection of new webinar options from Zoom in addition to its monthly and annual webinar subscription options.

Going forward, customers will be able to select webinars for 10,000, 50,000, 100,000, 250,000, or the top-tier one million attendee capacities. Zoom says its webinars can host sessions up to 30 hours long, and feature up to a thousand interactive video panelists, bringing a full conference experience to attendees.

Customers will receive support from Zoom’s Event Services team to make sure the event goes off without a hitch, and will be able to access a host of analytics and performance reports on their audience to help improve future events.

The company says the new webinar experience can help not just big businesses, who will now be able to host calls with their entire workforce, but could also help public sector organizations looking to communicate with large, diverse populations, or even entertainment businesses or celebrities looking to reach as many of their fans as possible.

“Zoom’s expanded capacity webinar offering is revolutionizing the way organizations can seamlessly connect and engage with massive audiences,” said Smita Hashim, Chief Product Officer at Zoom.

“Now event organizers have the flexibility and power to host truly interactive experiences on an unprecedented scale and the ability to purchase large single-use webinars.”

The announcement follows the news that US Presidential candidate Kamala Harris recently broke the record for the highest attendance of any Zoom call, with a reported 200,000 attendees present.

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iPhone 16 specs and pricing rumor for all four models could help settle your upgrade plans

We’ve seen a full list of the specs and pricing we can expect for the iPhone 16 series, with a launch likely now just weeks away.

The iPhone 16 is most likely going to break cover next month – though Apple hasn’t made anything official, yet – and one of the most detailed leaks for specs and prices we’ve seen yet could help you decide whether or not you’re going to upgrade this year.

This rundown comes from @theapplehub, and covers everything from display sizes to battery capacities. This isn’t a source we’ve heard a whole lot from before, and it’s not clear exactly where all this information comes from, so don’t take it as confirmed just yet.

First up we get the display sizes: 6.1 inches for the iPhone 16, 6.7 inches for the iPhone 16 Plus, 6.3 inches for the iPhone 16 Pro, and 6.9 inches for the iPhone 16 Pro Max. That means small increases for the Pro models, which are also said to be getting the A18 Pro chipset as opposed to the standard A18 version.

There are details of battery capacities here too. We can expect 3,561mAh (iPhone 16), 4,006mAh (iPhone 16 Plus), 3,355mAh (iPhone 16 Pro) and 4,676mAh (iPhone 16 Pro Max) capacities, which is a boost for every model compared to its predecessor except for the iPhone 16 Plus (down from 4,383mAh last year).

The price might be right

The iPhone 16 lineup overview pic.twitter.com/5kVTgCNI25August 17, 2024

Perhaps most interesting are the starting prices, which mostly match the 2023 prices: the $799 / £799 / AU$1,499 for the iPhone 15, $899 / £899 / AU$1,649 for the iPhone 15 Plus, and $1,199 / £1,199 / AU$2,199 for the iPhone 15 Pro Max starting prices are apparently being kept this year, with only the iPhone 16 Pro getting a hike.

This leak puts the iPhone 16 Pro starting figure at $1,099, up from $999 / £999 / AU$1,849 for the iPhone 15 Pro. That’s been previously predicted, but it’s worth pointing out that the iPhone 15 Pro offers a 128GB storage model, which is apparently getting scrapped this year – and so the 256GB price would match the 256GB price from last year.

Considering that just about every detail here has leaked before – including Wi-Fi 7 support and an improved 48MP ultra-wide camera for the Pro models, the jump to 8GB of RAM for all models (mentioned in a follow-up @theapplehub post), and the precise battery capacities of each model, this is more of a rumor round-up than breaking news.

However, it’s nice to have all these rumored specs in one easy-to-read table, as it might help you decide if you want to splash the cash this year or wait for the iPhone 17 – and it’s also a reminder of just how many details have leaked ahead of Apple’s big reveal.

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Disney gives up on trying to use Disney Plus excuse to settle a wrongful death lawsuit

Illustration by Nick Barclay / The Verge

Disney has now agreed that a wrongful death lawsuit should be decided in court following backlash for initially arguing the case belonged in arbitration because the grieving widower had once signed up for a Disney Plus trial.
“With such unique circumstances as the ones in this case, we believe this situation warrants a sensitive approach to expedite a resolution for the family who have experienced such a painful loss,” chairman of Disney experiences Josh D’Amaro said in a statement to The Verge. “As such, we’ve decided to waive our right to arbitration and have the matter proceed in court.”
The lawsuit was filed in February by Jeffrey Piccolo, the husband of a 42-year-old woman who died last year due to an allergic reaction that occurred after eating at a restaurant in the Disney Springs shopping complex in Orlando. The case gained widespread media attention after Piccolo’s legal team challenged Disney’s motion to dismiss the case, arguing that a forced arbitration agreement Piccolo signed was effectively invisible.
As noted by Reuters, Disney initially made no mention of arbitration when it first addressed the case in April, instead arguing it wasn’t liable because it merely serves as the landlord for the Raglan Road Irish Pub and Restaurant and had no control over the restaurant’s operations. Disney then later argued in a filing in May that Piccolo had allegedly entered an agreement to arbitrate all disputes with the company by signing up for a Disney Plus trial in 2019, and using the Walt Disney Parks’ website to buy Epcot Center tickets.

Illustration by Nick Barclay / The Verge

Disney has now agreed that a wrongful death lawsuit should be decided in court following backlash for initially arguing the case belonged in arbitration because the grieving widower had once signed up for a Disney Plus trial.

“With such unique circumstances as the ones in this case, we believe this situation warrants a sensitive approach to expedite a resolution for the family who have experienced such a painful loss,” chairman of Disney experiences Josh D’Amaro said in a statement to The Verge. “As such, we’ve decided to waive our right to arbitration and have the matter proceed in court.”

The lawsuit was filed in February by Jeffrey Piccolo, the husband of a 42-year-old woman who died last year due to an allergic reaction that occurred after eating at a restaurant in the Disney Springs shopping complex in Orlando. The case gained widespread media attention after Piccolo’s legal team challenged Disney’s motion to dismiss the case, arguing that a forced arbitration agreement Piccolo signed was effectively invisible.

As noted by Reuters, Disney initially made no mention of arbitration when it first addressed the case in April, instead arguing it wasn’t liable because it merely serves as the landlord for the Raglan Road Irish Pub and Restaurant and had no control over the restaurant’s operations. Disney then later argued in a filing in May that Piccolo had allegedly entered an agreement to arbitrate all disputes with the company by signing up for a Disney Plus trial in 2019, and using the Walt Disney Parks’ website to buy Epcot Center tickets.

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Social Security Disability Insurance August 2024: Here’s When Your Check’s Coming

SSDI Payments for August are headed your way. We’ll let you know when you can expect yours.

SSDI Payments for August are headed your way. We’ll let you know when you can expect yours.

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