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WWW.WIRED.COMDaily Harvest Review: Good Meals for Single Vegans Who Don’t Mind MushThese vegan, gluten-free delivery meals take the work out of meal prep, although the food can be a little boring (and mushy).0 Kommentare 0 Anteile 77 Ansichten
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APPLEINSIDER.COM'What the Clash', 'Lego Friends Heartlake Rush+' and more come to Apple Arcade this MayApple Arcade is set to see five new games roll out this May, including a new entry into the "What the" series and a new Lego endless racer.Five new games to hit Apple Arcade in MayMay will see a handful of new games release to Apple Arcade, including some entries into series we've seen before. All five of the new games are geared toward younger players — perfect for elementary aged gamers. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums0 Kommentare 0 Anteile 80 Ansichten
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ARCHINECT.COMGet Lectured: Thomas Jefferson University, Spring '25Get Lectured is continuing today with a stop by the College of Architecture and the Built Environment at Thomas Jefferson University to see what’s in store for the Philadelphia campus over the remaining Spring semester. Already some luminaries have graced the list of guest speakers, including Floridan Idenburg, Jorge Otero-Pailos, and Yale historian Eeva-Liisa Pelkonen. Events continued this week with a visit from Steven Holl Architects’ ace partner Noah Yaffe on April 7. Germane Barnes will conclude the semester when he speaks on April 14. Want to share your school's lecture series? Send us your poster and details to connect@archinect.com.0 Kommentare 0 Anteile 95 Ansichten
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GAMINGBOLT.COMSonic Rumble is Releasing on May 8Sega announced Sonic Rumble less than a year ago, and said at the time that the multiplayer title, developed by Angry Birds studio Rovio, would release sometime during the winter. That didn’t end up happening, but we do know when the game is coming now, and it’s not too far away. Sega has announced that Sonic Rumble is going to launch worldwide a month from now, on May 8. Each match in the title will pit 32 players against each other, and players will compete through platforming courses inspired by Sonic titles in a battle royale experience similar to Fall Guys. The game’s launch will also see the addition of progression mechanics (in the form of skills and skill slots) and a crews system to allow players to band together and play together. Check out the game’s release date announcement trailer below to get more glimpses of gameplay footage. At launch, Sonic Rumble will be available for PC (via Steam), iOS, and Android.0 Kommentare 0 Anteile 82 Ansichten
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VENTUREBEAT.COMOwlchemy Labs rolls out Hexas update for Dimensional Double ShiftOwlchemy Labs has launched a Lone Star-inspired update for Dimensional Double Shift, the first of many new Dimension Packs.Read More0 Kommentare 0 Anteile 83 Ansichten
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WWW.THEVERGE.COMArduboy creator says his tiny Game Boy won’t survive Trump’s tariffsKevin Bates managed to quit his day job and move to China after his game-playing business card, the Arduboy, went viral in 2014. But a decade later, Trump’s staggering and inexplicable new US tariffs are driving him out of business.Just as he was about to turn a profit for the first time, just before he was about to bring a new product to retail, he tells The Verge that his company can no longer survive as-is. He says that despite lifetime Arduboy sales of over $1 million, much of it from recent growth in 2023 and 2024, Trump’s new 104 percent China tariffs will be the beginning of the end.“I just like making circuit boards and helping people learn to code games. This is all too much,” he says.Even if he wanted to — Bates admits he’s been looking to sunset Arduboy for a while — he says he wouldn’t be able to satisfy Trump’s stated goal of restarting manufacturing in the US.“There are no manufacturers in the USA who would even answer an email to produce Arduboy, much less give a good price. I could build them myself and end up making about $10 an hour, still paying a crazy amount for components.”Instead, he says, his options are to dramatically raise prices, find a way around the tariffs, or simply kill off Arduboy for good.“The fact Arduboy could exist at all was kind of a miracle of global trade. An individual person, producing and distributing an international product with margins that would never work at a larger company. I didn’t need 80 percent markup to survive,” he says, adding that his actual margins ranged from 30 to 50 percent.Trump’s US tariffs would entirely wipe out those margins, and he says China’s retaliatory tariffs would hurt too, as they would impose a 34 percent tariff on the Arduboy’s US-made processor, which Bates says is the most expensive component in the system.While he’s hopeful that some larger organization might buy Arduboy and take up the torch, he admits that’s not terribly realistic in this economic climate, and he’s already declaring Arduboy “dead” on his LinkedIn and in the Arduboy forums. He’s already looking for a new day job once again.RelatedBut he says Arduboy isn’t quite dead yet. He wants to launch one last Kickstarter for a USB-C version of the Arduboy with “more features like real time clock, IR blaster, and link cable support,” assuming he can figure out how to ship them at a price people will pay. He says he already saw $99 Arduboy FX Special Edition as overpriced for what it is, and he isn’t looking forward to charging $200 for a new version or saddling buyers with customs fees should he choose to drop-ship them.“The only realistic solution is to warehouse the inventory somewhere that doesn’t have Chinese import taxes, and drop ship everything. I visited my factory last year to talk about this, and they said all their customers are in the same situation so they said they would have a solution. But one has not materialized yet,” he says.Speaking of drop-shipping and customs fees, that is probably what you should expect if you buy the new banana-shaped Arduboy or the last few remaining units of the Arduboy FX Special Edition. “I am planning to fulfill the orders but they may be drop shipped, so U.S. customers should be aware that import taxes may now apply,” he tells The Verge. But he also may just turn off Banana-Bit preorders, as he says he’s only sold about a dozen so far.He also warns these packages could get held up at US customs for a time, because Trump has also gotten rid of the de minimis exemption that let low-value packages enter the US duty-free. “That’s going to impact everything from Shein to Temu to AliExpress, and honestly, it’s going to be chaos. U.S. customs isn’t ready for that volume,” he says.Bates says Trump’s trade war is “an absolute unmitigated disaster for anyone without the ability to dramatically restructure.”“I guess that’s the point,” he adds.See More:0 Kommentare 0 Anteile 87 Ansichten
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WWW.MARKTECHPOST.COMHuawei Noah’s Ark Lab Released Dream 7B: A Powerful Open Diffusion Reasoning Model with Advanced Planning and Flexible Inference CapabilitiesLLMs have revolutionized artificial intelligence, transforming various applications across industries. Autoregressive (AR) models dominate current text generation, with leading systems like GPT-4, DeepSeek, and Claude all using sequential left-to-right architectures. Despite impressive capabilities, fundamental questions about next-generation architectural paradigms have emerged as AR models exhibit limitations at scale. These challenges include complex reasoning difficulties, inadequate long-term planning, and struggles maintaining coherence across extended contexts. These are problematic for emerging applications in embodied AI, autonomous agents, and long-horizon decision-making systems where sustained reasoning and contextual understanding are essential for success. Discrete diffusion models (DMs) are a promising alternative to autoregressive approaches for sequence generation. Unlike AR models that generate tokens sequentially, DMs refine all sequences in parallel from a fully noised state. This difference provides significant advantages: bidirectional contextual modeling enhances global coherence, flexible controllable generation occurs naturally through iterative refinement, and potential exists for fundamental sampling acceleration through efficient noise-to-data mapping. Recent advancements show diffusion’s growing potential in language tasks, with models like DiffuLLaMA and LLaDA scaling to 7B parameters, while Mercury Coder shows impressive inference efficiency in code generation. Researchers from the University of Hong Kong and Huawei Noah’s Ark Lab released Dream 7B (Diffusion reasoning model), the most powerful open diffusion large language model to date. The model matches or exceeds similarly-sized AR models on general tasks, mathematics, and coding benchmarks. Dream 7B shows exceptional zero-shot planning capabilities and inference flexibility, outperforming larger models like DeepSeek V3 (671B) on structured tasks. Trained on 580B tokens from diverse datasets, including Dolma and OpenCoder, the model employs mask-based diffusion with autoregressive weight initialization from Qwen2.5 7B. Its architecture enables powerful bidirectional context processing, arbitrary-order generation, infilling capabilities, and adjustable quality-speed tradeoffs during inference. Dream 7B builds upon previous work in diffusion language modeling, utilizing RDM’s theoretical foundation and DiffuLLaMA’s adaptation strategy. It implements a mask diffusion paradigm with architecture designed for diverse applications. Training data uses text, mathematics, and code from sources, including Dolma v1.7, OpenCoder, and DCLM-Baseline. Pretraining utilized 580 billion tokens, executed on 96 NVIDIA H800 GPUs over 256 hours without unrecoverable loss spikes. Extensive design experimentation at the 1B parameter level identified critical components, including weight initialization from autoregressive models like Qwen2.5 and LLaMA3, along with context-adaptive token-level noise rescheduling that proved essential for Dream 7B training. The proposed method is evaluated on Countdown and Sudoku tasks with adjustable planning difficulty, comparing against LLaDA 8B, Qwen2.5 7B, LLaMA3 8B, and DeepSeek V3 671B. It outperforms similarly-sized baseline models, with both diffusion models surpassing autoregressive alternatives. These diffusion models occasionally exceed DeepSeek V3 despite its vastly larger parameter count, showing diffusion models’ effectiveness for multi-constraint problem-solving and specific-objective tasks. The method underwent supervised fine-tuning post-training using 1.8M instruction pairs from Tulu 3 and SmolLM2 datasets over three epochs. Results indicate Dream’s capability to match autoregressive model performance: In conclusion, researchers introduced Dream 7B, which represents a breakthrough family of diffusion language models characterized by efficiency, scalability, and flexibility through carefully developed training methodologies. These models perform comparably with leading autoregressive models of similar size across general tasks, mathematics, and coding applications. Dream’s most distinctive strengths emerge in advanced planning scenarios and flexible inference capabilities, where its diffusion-based architecture provides significant advantages over traditional autoregressive approaches. This achievement shows the viability of diffusion models as a compelling alternative path forward in language model development. Check out the Dream-org/Dream-v0-Instruct-7B and Dream-org/Dream-v0-Base-7B. All credit for this research goes to the researchers of this project. Also, feel free to follow us on Twitter and don’t forget to join our 85k+ ML SubReddit. Sajjad AnsariSajjad Ansari is a final year undergraduate from IIT Kharagpur. As a Tech enthusiast, he delves into the practical applications of AI with a focus on understanding the impact of AI technologies and their real-world implications. He aims to articulate complex AI concepts in a clear and accessible manner.Sajjad Ansarihttps://www.marktechpost.com/author/sajjadansari/Sensor-Invariant Tactile Representation for Zero-Shot Transfer Across Vision-Based Tactile SensorsSajjad Ansarihttps://www.marktechpost.com/author/sajjadansari/University of Michigan Researchers Introduce OceanSim: A High-Performance GPU-Accelerated Underwater Simulator for Advanced Marine RoboticsSajjad Ansarihttps://www.marktechpost.com/author/sajjadansari/This AI Paper from ByteDance Introduces a Hybrid Reward System Combining Reasoning Task Verifiers (RTV) and a Generative Reward Model (GenRM) to Mitigate Reward HackingSajjad Ansarihttps://www.marktechpost.com/author/sajjadansari/VideoMind: A Role-Based Agent for Temporal-Grounded Video Understanding0 Kommentare 0 Anteile 103 Ansichten
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WWW.IGN.COMAU Deals: Big Bites Off Monster Hunters, Metaphor, Sonics, Resi, Elden Ring, and More!Get ready to equip your wallet to your main hand for mad discounts. Some absolute ripper deals are going cheap today across all platforms. Whether you're into slaying monsters, unravelling cosmic conspiracies, or trading blows in post-apocalyptic Tokyo, I’ve got a little something for every gamer who only wants the stuff worth stockpiling.This Day in Gaming 🎂In retro news, I'm celebrating the 27th birthday of StarCraft, the venerable RTS GOAT. It needs little introduction, so I'll not zerg rush you with the fondest memories of the hundreds of hours I spent on it. Instead, let's use this space to reminisce on how nuts 1998 was for Oz game launches. Half-Life, Ocarina of Time, Resident Evil 2, Metal Gear Solid, Final Fantasy VII, Tekken 3, Banjo-Kazooie, Baldur's Gate, Pokémon Red and Blue—madness! It's like the devs of the day heard "98" and mistook it for the review score to hit.Pictured: The Remastered Edition.Aussie bdays for notable games- StarCraft (PC) 1998. eBay- Castlevania: The Dracula X Chronicles (PSP) 2008. eBay- Valkyrie Profile: CotP (DS) 2009. eBayContentsNice Savings for Nintendo SwitchKicking off on the Nintendo Switch, Monster Hunter Rise is down to just A$15, a fitting price for a game that saved Capcom’s bacon in 2021 by smashing expectations with its vertical gameplay and iconic Wirebug mechanic. Meanwhile, Ni No Kuni II: Revenant Kingdom (A$13) offers Studio Ghibli-esque visuals and world-building, thanks in part to the actual involvement of Ghibli alumni Yoshiyuki Momose.Preorders openNintendo Switch 2 ConsoleRequires a free to make / cancel First Membership that provides free shipping.Pictured: Monster Hunter Ride.Monster Hunter Rise (-75%) - A$15Ni No Kuni II: P.E. (-84%) - A$13The Escapists: Complete (-90%) - A$2Kingdom Hearts Melody of Memory (-44%) - A$50Expeditions: A MudRunner (-42%) - A$49Star Wars Heritage Pack (-32%) - A$77Expiring Recent DealsSwitch Lite Console Hyrule Ed. (-12%) - A$299FC 25 (-62%) - A$35Mortal Kombat 1 (-60%) - A$24Goat Simulator 3 (-24%) - A$35Mysims: Cozy Bundle (-35%) - A$40Darkest Dungeon Ii (-20%) - A$48Bluey: The Videogame (-35%) - A$40GTA Trilogy Def. (-60%) - A$32Or gift a Nintendo eShop Card.Switch Console PricesHow much to Switch it up?Switch OLED + Mario Wonder: $̶5̶3̶9̶ $499 | Switch Original: $̶4̶9̶9̶ $448 | Switch OLED Black: $̶5̶3̶9̶ $448 | Switch OLED White: $̶5̶3̶9̶ $445 ♥ | Switch Lite: $̶3̶2̶9̶ $294 | Switch Lite Hyrule: $̶3̶3̶9̶ $335See itBack to topExciting Bargains for XboxXbox Series X fans can snag Shin Megami Tensei V for A$34 and it’s a series that actually predates Persona and helped define the "demon negotiation" mechanic long before it became trendy. Or grab Resident Evil 4 Remake (A$43), where Capcom added charming touches like Leon’s updated one-liners and a sidekick who’s way more useful than before.Shin Megami Tensei V (-62%) - A$34Resident Evil 4 (-28%) - A$43Gotham Knights (-86%) - A$15Tekken 8 (-42%) - A$49Xbox OneWolfenstein: The Old Blood (-62%) - A$16Hot Wheels Unleashed (-28%) - A$40Borderlands: Handsome Col. (-53%) - A$34Expiring Recent DealsMonster Hunter Wilds (-14%) - A$100Hogwarts Legacy (-57%) - A$48Witcher 3: Complete Ed. (-46%) - A$44Remnant Ii (-75%) - A$20Wild Hearts (-83%) - A$20Ace Combat 7 (-65%) - A$35Wolfenstein: The Old Blood (-62%) - A$16Carrion (-75%) - A$8Scribblenauts Mega Pack (-90%) - A$5No Man's Sky (-60%) - A$36Or just invest in an Xbox Card.Xbox Console PricesHow many bucks for a 'Box? Series X: $̶7̶9̶9̶ $749 👑| Series S Black: $̶5̶4̶9̶ $545 | Series S White:$̶4̶9̶9̶ $498 | Series S Starter: N/ASee itBack to topPure Scores for PlayStationLastly, PS5 owners shouldn’t miss Elden Ring (A$59), the FromSoftware epic that features a pot warrior named Iron Fist Alexander (and yes, us fans love him). Or there’s TopSpin 2K25 (A$19), the long-awaited return of a tennis sim where sweat physics somehow became a cooed about feature. Play it on a smell-o-vision for the absolute best results, I guess.Sonic X Shadow Gen. (-35%) - A$49Metaphor: ReFantazio (-33%) - A$77Elden Ring (-41%) - A$59Granblue Fantasy: Relink (-58%) - A$36TopSpin 2K25 (-81%) - A$19Dave the Diver (-35%) - A$20PS4Trine: Ult. Col. (-80%) - A$16Bayonetta (-75%) - A$10Diablo III: Eternal Col. (-67%) - A$33Sonic Mania (-60%) - A$12Expiring Recent DealsPS+ Monthly FreebiesYours to keep from Apr 1 with this subscriptionRoboCop: Rogue City | PS5The Texas Chain Saw Massacre | PS4/5Digimon Story: Cyber Sleuth HM | PS4Or purchase a PS Store Card.What you'll pay to 'Station.PS5 + Astro Bot:$̶7̶9̶9̶ $679👑 | PS5 Slim Disc:$̶7̶9̶9̶ $798 | PS5 Slim Digital:6̶7̶9̶ $678 | PS5 Pro $1,199 | PS VR2: $649.95 | PS VR2 + Horizon: $1,099 | PS Portal: $329See itBack to topPurchase Cheap for PCOver on PC, Control: Ultimate Edition is a steal at A$9. Remedy’s mind-bending thriller is not just stylish; it’s secretly connected to Alan Wake and part of Remedy’s ever-growing shared universe. Fancy a survival twist? Sons of the Forest (A$18) drops you in a mutant-infested island sequel that lets you befriend a three-armed companion named Virginia. No joke, she’ll dance when she’s happy.Metaphor: ReFantazio (-30%) - A$81Control: Ult. Ed. (-85%) - A$9SteamWorld Heist (-90%) - A$3Sons of the Forest (-60%) - A$18Red Dead 2 (-75%) - A$23Expiring Recent DealsOr just get a Steam Wallet CardPC Hardware PricesSlay your pile of shame.Official launch in NovSteam Deck 256GB LCD: $649 | Steam Deck 512GB OLED: $899 | Steam Deck 1TB OLED: $1,049See it at SteamLaptop DealsApple 2024 MacBook Air 15-inch (-12%) – A$2,197Lenovo ThinkPad E14 Gen 5 (-36%) - A$879Lenovo ThinkBook 16 Gen7 (-27%) - A$1,018Desktop DealsHP OMEN 35L Gaming (-10%) – A$2,799Lenovo ThinkCentre neo Ultra (-25%) - A$2,249Lenovo ThinkCentre neo 50q (-35%) – A$629Monitor DealsLG 24MR400-B, 24" (-30%) - A$97Z-Edge 27" 240Hz (-15%) - A$279Samsung 57" Odyssey Neo Curved (-22%) – A$2,499Component DealsStorage DealsBack to topLegit LEGO DealsTechnic Ducati Panigale (-40%) - A$179Fire Rescue Motorcycle (-36%) - A$103in1 Medieval Dragon (-34%) - A$59Harry Potter: Hippogriff (-34%) - A$59Expiring Recent DealsBack to topHot Headphones DealsAudiophilia for lessSamsung Galaxy Buds2 Pro (-49%) – A$179Sony WH-CH520 Wireless (-27%) - A$73SoundPEATS Space (-25%) - A$56.99Technics Premium (-36%) - A$349Back to topTerrific TV DealsDo right by your console, upgrade your tellySamsung S95D 77" OLED 4K (-19%) - A$6,499LG 43" UT80 4K (-23%) - A$693Kogan 65" QLED (-50%) – A$699Back to top Adam Mathew is our Aussie deals wrangler. He plays practically everything, often on YouTube.0 Kommentare 0 Anteile 85 Ansichten
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THENEXTWEB.COMEuropean startup founders are working longer hours than you might thinkDespite recent claims that European startups aren’t working hard enough, new research shows the continent’s founders are putting in serious shifts to turn their ideas into successful businesses. A survey of 128 founders by early-stage VC firm Antler found that three-quarters of them work more than 60 hours weekly, with 19% exceeding 80 hours. German founders emerged as Europe’s hardest workers, with 94% working more than 60 hours weekly and 38% exceeding 80 hours. Daria Stepanova, co-founder of German startup AIRMO, said she’s sacrificed “time, stability, and relationships” to grow her company. However, she sees a certain level of obsession is a good thing. Otherwise, “what you’re building probably isn’t worth building.” Register here Swedish entrepreneurs followed closely behind. While UK founders were still working long hours, they were least likely to cross the 80-hour threshold, with only 10% doing so. Over 70% describe building their company as “easily the hardest thing they have ever done.” Yet nearly all (98%) remain passionate about their career choice. That’s despite feeling underappreciated for their hard work. Nearly three-quarters (73%) of European founders feel their dedication goes unacknowledged. “In Europe, you are more likely to be an Olympic medalist than the founder of a unicorn company,” said Alan Poensgen, a partner at Antler. “Whilst both require similar levels of ambition, resilience, and endurance, founders don’t get the same level of recognition.” What’s motivating founders? The survey paints a picture of founders driven more by impact than income. Only 4% cited financial reward as their primary motivation, with the majority instead pointing to creating innovation (27%), positive global impact (22%), and proving they can tackle difficult challenges (19%). This commitment comes at a cost. Founders identified their biggest sacrifices as work-life balance (61%) and salary reduction (36%). Family concerns add another layer of pressure, with 62% reporting that relatives expressed confusion about their decision to leave stable careers. What keeps these ambitious entrepreneurs awake at night? Execution speed (40%), customer acquisition (24%), and runway concerns (18%) top the list of worries — reflecting the intense pressure to deliver results with limited resources and time. The findings come amid a growing debate in European tech over whether workplace culture is holding the region back compared to the US or China. In a podcast interview last month, Revolut boss Nik Storonsky criticised European startup entrepreneurs, saying they weren’t working hard enough and valued work-life balance too highly. Those comments followed a lively social media debate earlier this year about whether French founders lacked the “grindset” to succeed. However, Antler’s findings challenge the notion that European founders prioritise balance over hustle — suggesting that behind the continent’s startup scene is a culture of quiet, often overlooked, hard work. “People often see the headlines but not the sleepless nights or personal risks behind them,” said Danyal Oezdeuzenciler, co-founder of London-based Capsa AI. “Founders pour so much into an idea — financially, emotionally, mentally — and the resilience it takes is pretty extraordinary.” Startup founders from all over Europe are heading to Amsterdam for TNW Conference, which takes place on June 19-20. Tickets for the event are now on sale. Use the code TNWXMEDIA2025 at the check-out to get 30% off the price tag. Story by Siôn Geschwindt Siôn is a climate and energy reporter at TNW. From nuclear fusion to escooters, he covers the length and breadth of Europe's clean tech ecos (show all) Siôn is a climate and energy reporter at TNW. From nuclear fusion to escooters, he covers the length and breadth of Europe's clean tech ecosystem. He's happiest sourcing a scoop, investigating the impact of emerging technologies, and even putting them to the test. Siôn has five years journalism experience and holds a dual degree in media and environmental science from the University of Cape Town, South Africa. Get the TNW newsletter Get the most important tech news in your inbox each week. Also tagged with0 Kommentare 0 Anteile 105 Ansichten