• TSMC's US chip fabrication facilities lag five years behind Taiwan
    appleinsider.com
    TSMC's U.S. chip production efforts won't be making the latest chips for Apple products for the foreseeable future, with factories that haven't broken ground lagging roughly five years behind Taiwan.Dies on wafers - Image Credit: TSMCApple chip partner TSMC has invested billions into its facilities in the United States, including its active Arizona chip foundry and a second facility due in 2028. While a third is also expected to be on the way, it could be the case that the factories won't be greatly useful for producing Apple's future A-series and M-series chips for quite some time.According to a Wednesday report from Nikkei, TSMC is preparing to start operations at its second Arizona plant by 2028, which will be used to produce 3-nanometer chips. However, a third one is being planned in Arizona for 2-nanometer chip production. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
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  • AIA begins search for new EVP/CEO after Woods departure
    archinect.com
    The American Institute of Architects has launched a search for its next EVP/Chief Executive Officer. The search will be conducted by a committee chaired by AIAs 2024 President Kimberly Dowdell, which will also include representatives from the AIAs Strategic Council, National Associates Committee (NAC), Council of Architectural Component Executives (CACE), AIA International, and the American Institute of Architecture Students (AIAS).The search comes after the AIAs previous EVP/CEO Lakisha Ann Woods stepped down in February. Late last year, Woods was cleared of wrongdoing by an independent investigation following a misconduct scandal. After Woods was cleared, the AIA Board of Directors filed anethics complaint against her accusersin September.Since Woods departure, the position has been held on an interim basis by Stephen Ayers. Earlier this week, Ayers penned an open letter to the General Services Administration on behalf of the AIA, expressing a strong caution against man...
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  • Frank Gehrys Binoculars Building is up for sale in Venice Beach
    archinect.com
    The Frank Gehry-designed Binoculars Building in Venice Beach has been listed for sale. As reported by The Real Deal, CBRE has listed the 78,000-square-foot office building for real estate investment trust W.P. Carey, though without an asking price.W.P. Carey purchased the building 30 years ago for approximately $18 million. Google has occupied the premises since 2011, and its current lease on the building does not expire until October 2030.Image credit: Wikimedia user Bobak Ha'Eri licensed under CC BY 3.0Designed by Frank Gehry in collaboration with artists Claes Oldenburg and Coosje van Bruggen, The Binoculars Building was completed in 1991. The building is immediately recognizable for the 44-foot-tall binoculars, spanning three stories, positioned at the entrance. The binoculars are not just decorative, and also function as a vehicular entrance.While known for its binocular-style entrance, the building is a fusion of three distinct shapes. The sculptural binoculars sit at the...
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  • Dragon Quest 1 and 2 HD-2D Remake Receives First Gorgeous Trailer
    gamingbolt.com
    Square Enix kicked off the recent Nintendo Direct by revealing the first gameplay trailer for Dragon Quest 1 and 2 HD-2D Remake. As remakes of the first two games in the series, they chronologically occur after Dragon Quest 3 as part of the Erdrick trilogy. Check it out below.Though further information on new features wasnt revealed, both titles look exceptionally stunning in the HD-2D art style. While characters retain their 2D sprite-like appearance and animations, environments are in full 3D with sleek lighting and shadows. For those who played Dragon Quest 3 HD-2D Remake, there will be some surprises to look forward to.Nintendos Shinya Takahashi teased a character appearing at the end, though further details are unknown. Dragon Quest 1 and 2 HD-2D Remake is coming to PS5, Xbox Series X/S, PC, and Nintendo Switch later this year. Stay tuned for more details and gameplay in the coming months. You can also read our review for Dragon Quest 3 HD-2D Remake.
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  • Astro Bots Early Iteration Ended With the Main Character Being Decapitated Director
    gamingbolt.com
    While Astro Bot has been incredibly successful both in terms of sales figures as well as critical reception, the road to making the game was more challenging. Speaking at GDC 2025 (as caught by GamesRadar), game director Nicolas Doucet said that Team Asobi went through 23 different iterations of the game that would eventually go on to become Astro Bot.The original pitch for Astro Bot was written in May, 2021, so, a few months after we began prototyping the game, said Doucet. We went through 23 iterations before it was shown to the top management.While there were quite a few ideas thrown around with plenty of experimentation, according to Doucet, the final game ended up being close to what the studio had originally pitched to Sony. Doucet said, generally speaking, we delivered the game quite close to the original pitch.Among the various prototypes for Astro Bot, Doucet also spoke about how terms like happy gameplay, techno magic, and overflowing charm, were used to present Astro Bot to PlayStations executives. However, the original pitch would end up giving Astro Bot a darker ending than what we ultimately got.So, at the end of the game, Astro sacrificed himself for the team, and as the credits roll, we wanted to make a very grieving moment of rebuilding Astro, Doucet continued, which would require the idea of a completely dismembered Astro, so you gained the torso without the head.Executives seemingly didnt enjoy the more grim ending to the game. According to Doucet, some people [were] really upset in the team, for good reasons.Ultimately, however, the game went with a lighter approach with humour, where the player will replace all the parts, and it still conveys the right emotions. The head is always on Astros body.In a previous talk during GDC 2025, Doucet has also spoken about how its okay for studios to make smaller-scaled games. Not only would this be great for the developers, since the scope becomes more manageable, it also ends up being great for players that already have too many games in their backlogs.From the start, we were in the mindset that its OK to make a compact game its OK to make a small game, said Doucet. So for us, it means that were making something of such scale that we can control it fully. Thats from a development standpoint. But not only that. For the players, we all know that players today have a backlog of games and cannot complete their games, so the prospect of a game you can actually complete is a really persuasive argument.More recently, Sony unveiled an Astro Bot bundle for the PS5. While not featuring any fancy themes or skins, the bundles includes a copy of Astro Bot alongside the PS5 console. The bundle was unveiled earlier this month.In the meantime, you can check out more details about Astro Bot through our review of the PS5-exclusive platformer. Also check out the details about its most recent update from back in February.
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  • A good boss wants you to convince them to do things differently
    blog.medium.com
    A good boss wants you to convince them to do things differently20 years of fashion photography + stoop coffee (Issue #297)Published inThe Medium BlogSent as aNewsletter3 min readJust now--Most workplaces are (at least somewhat) hierarchical. Even flat org structures usually give rise to unspoken hierarchies, and prevailing wisdom for getting promoted tends to go something like this: Try your best and (generally) follow your bosss directions.On Medium, Julie Zhuo (former VP of product design at Facebook, co-founder of Sundial) adds useful nuance to this advice. Managers tend to have a different idea of what makes a valuable employee: Every great manager I know, Zhuo writes, tells me that the reports they find most valuable are the ones who convince them to do things differently. This flies in the face of how most individual contributors think of their jobs. They believe they must (by and large) follow orders to get promoted.Zhuo explains this paradox via the following breakdown:The worst employees do what they want in a way that hinders their teams success.Average employees simply please their bosses.Excellent employees do what they want in ways that accelerate their teams success.This hierarchy reminds me of Venkatesh Raos six-part blog post, The Gervais Principle, an anthropological investigation into employee motivations mapped to (yes) characters in the legendary British mockumentary The Office. (It went super viral a decade ago.) Raos taxonomy is slightly different (and far more cynical) than Zhuos, but the same basic principles hold true: high-performers and low-performers act in their own interests, yet in different ways. The middle tier is made of people who either genuinely believe that following orders will lead to a promotion (which may be true in some workplaces) or theyre optimizing for comfort/ease.The basic lesson? If you want to excel, find a job where you can do what you genuinely desire and those desires align with your teams goals. As Zhuo concludes, if you want to be a leader or among the most valued folks at your company, youre probably not going to get there by yes-bossing (unless your workplace is one of those super-hierarchical types). Youll get there via intelligent, well-informed pushback that moves you (and your team) forward.And, if your boss doesnt value this type of feedback, it may be a sign of a larger workplace culture issue (but thats a topic for a different newsletter). Harris Sockel From the archiveIf you (like me) enjoy falling down weird rabbitholes on the internet, I recommend the archival Medium publication Timeline. There, youll find the stories of lesser-known people, places, and events, like a 20-year experiment in which Dutch photographer Hans Eijkelboom snapped photos of pedestrians on the exact same street corner for two hours at a time over several years to demonstrate that were all sheeple in the consumer matrix. Essentially, everyone at any given time and place wears more or less the same thing, though we believe were making individual choices.via Hans Eijkelboom; photos taken in the span of a single hour on a street corner in Amsterdam, April 2005 Your daily dose of practical wisdomIf you live in a city or suburb and enjoy drinking coffee, try taking it out to the sidewalk, rooftop, or stoop on a weekend morning and watch your neighbors follow suit.
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  • www.unrealengine.com
    As the title prepares for launch, we chat with Sandfall Interactive to learn how Unreal Engine 5 enabled a small team to realize its unique vision for the highly-anticipated turn-based RPG.
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  • See the Spectacular Winners of Smithsonian Magazine's 22nd Annual Photography Contest
    www.smithsonianmag.com
    Tracy Scott ForsonSenior EditorIf you didnt know better, you might think that photographer Takuya Ishiguro was in imminent danger as he snapped his shot of one seemingly gigantic creature decapitating another. Its like a horror scene out of some crazy science fiction movie, says Quentin Nardi, Smithsonian magazines chief photography editor and a judge of this years contest. In reality, Ishiguro spotted these regular-size praying mantises along a roadside in his Japanese hometownalbeit in a macabre embrace. He credits the low angle of the shot and the grounds rough texture with supersizing the drama. It adds dimension, making the subject seem more real and tangible, he says.The Grand Prize-winning image, one of nearly 30,000 entries submitted from more than 150 countries, was one of several category winners to play on our sense of scale and perspective: the grandeur of Utahs Monument Valley contained inside a room. A bicyclist appearing to ride from our dimension toward another. A desert landscape dissolving into abstraction, all swirling lines and color. Each photograph, Nardi says, reframes the familiar: An everyday occurrence meets an otherworldly treatment.(You can view all 60 finalists from the competition here.)Subscribe to Smithsonian magazine now for just $19.99This article is a selection from the April/May 2025 issue of Smithsonian magazineGrand PrizeTakuya IshiguroTakuya IshiguroOsaki, JapanPhotographed: October 2021Ishiguro, 44, who works as a production engineer, was in his car on the lookout for praying mantises to photograph. I was driving slowly, he recalls. He pulled over and approached the insects on foot, only to realize hed happened upon one of the insect worlds most taboo occurrences, at least from a human perspectivea praying mantis snacking on another. That this image was caught in such an urban settingnot in a tree, or a bush, or on any type of plant, but on the ground, on what looks like asphalt, says Maria Keehan, Smithsonian magazines creative director and a contest judge. Amazing.ArtisticAnna WackerAnna WackerBerlinPhotographed: April 2022A fan of architecture, Wacker was drawn to the Marie-Elisabeth-Lders-Haus, a government building opened in 2003. She repeatedly circled the iconic structure with her Nikon digital camera in hand, searching for the perfect angle. When a cyclist dressed in black rode by, perfectly aligning with the large circular backdrop of the building, I knew I had captured something special, she says. A self-taught photographer who picked up the hobby in 2012, Wacker blended two still imagesone a straight-on view of the cyclist in front of the circular opening of the geometric facade, the other obliquely angled to capture the facade and its upward-sweeping triangular overhangand converted the resulting image to black and white. The architectural form of the building and the wheels of the bicycle both embody cycles, says Wacker, a business administrator in the tourism industry. The image invites the viewer to contemplate the loops we find ourselves in both physically and metaphorically.American ExperienceKaustav SarkarKaustav SarkarMonument Valley NavajoTribal Park, UtahPhotographed: September 2024On a family vacation to tour Utahs iconic parks, New Jersey resident Sarkar, 24, a professional real estate photographer, grew tired of the standard gift shop farekeychains, mugs, magnets and T-shirts. But at the Monument Valley visitor center, he stumbled on something distinct: a corner stuffed with handcrafts by the people from the place, he remembershandmade pottery, textiles, boots and figurines made by local peoples who have lived near the valleys giant buttes. It spoke a lot about the character and the history of the place. Sarkar took out his Google Pixel camera and positioned himself with his back to the checkout counter, snapping a photograph of the famous Mittens and Merrick Butte, each framed by a giant picture window. He says the image combines natural and human history in one shot. The outside and the inside, the people and the place, all came together.TravelMichelle LauMichelle LauSydney, AustraliaPhotographed: April 2022Since taking up photography 12 years ago, Lau has visited more than 30 countries, usually by herself. Traveling alone allowed me to deeply understand local cultures and discover their unique beauty. It broadened my horizons, redirecting my life toward independent photography, says the former graphic designer, whose photography has led to collaborations with Vogue and other internationally renowned brands. While visiting Sydney, Lau, 35, who lives in Hong Kong, spent time at Bondi Beach. Perched three stories above crystal blue waters, she found a stellar view of the legendary Bondi Icebergs Club pools, leading out to the Pacific Ocean. Lau spent two hours taking about 20 photographs of the waters. I preferred to take photos rather than swim, she says.AerialMarek BiegalskiMarek BiegalskiHanksville, UtahPhotographed: October 2024While visiting the mineral-rich Bentonite Hills, formed from Jurassic-era volcanic clay, Biegalski mounted his Canon onto an aerial drone to capture this colorful geological formation from nearly 290 feet above it. The self-taught photographer took multiple exposures at different settings, he says, later blending them together to achieve the perfect balance of light, detail and depth. A marketing professional back home in Ireland, Biegalski, 52, cherishes photographing natures wonders. My goal is to capture the raw, untouched beauty of the natural world, he says, allowing its pure essence to shine through.Natural WorldThorben DankeThorben DankeBesigheim, GermanyPhotographed: March 2022Some photographers travel far and wide for the perfect subject. Danke, 42, an industrial electronics engineer, had the star of this close-up presented to him at home. Thats where his children found a brown marmorated stink bug lifeless on a windowsill. Danke attached a microscope lens at 20 times magnification to a Sony digital camera to zoom in on the insects compound eye, at the left of the photo. The distinctive metallic-colored patches belie the bugs brown moniker. If you look closely, you will find all the colors of the rainbow. PeopleMichael AcheampongMichael AcheampongAtlantaPhotographed: June 2024Their attire may suggest that theyre focused on what separates themthe various countries from which the parents of these first-generation Americans emigrated to the United States. But their intent is to present One Africa, as Acheampong titled this photograph. Acheampong, 30, a Savannah College of Art and Design graduate student whose parents are from Ghana, wanted to create an image that represented unity among those of African heritage in his community. Even though we may have differences, were alike more than we think, he says. Staging the photograph at an Atlanta farmers market, Acheampong says the locations ambiguity was intentional. We wanted it to have the feel of Africa.Readers' ChoiceErhan CoralErhan CoralMekong Delta, VietnamPhotographed: October 1, 2024Believe it or not, professional photographer Erhan Coral is not standing waist-deep in Vietnamese waters alongside the women who are hard at work gathering lilies in his winning image. I was actually shooting from a small hilltop next to the water, overlooking the scene, he says. When he immortalized this moment, Coral, 58, who started taking photographs in his teens, was in the Mekong Delta on assignment, capturing the daily lives of people and the cultural richness of the country. That includes the vibrant red, pink and purple waterlilies that draw visitors from around the world, especially from August to November when the flowers are most abundant. Coral, who lives in Turkey, took several dozen shots of the farmers, experimenting with his drone and camera from different angles. For this image, Coral says, the lighting was entirely natural. Early morning sunlight provided a warm glow that enhanced the colors and textures, he says. I aimed to create an image that felt immersive, as if the viewer were floating alongside the women.Get the latest Travel & Culture stories in your inbox.
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  • Backbone One: Xbox Edition mobile game controller launches today
    venturebeat.com
    Backbone is expanding its partnership with Xbox to officially launch the Backbone One: Xbox Edition mobile game controller ($110) on March 27.Read More
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