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ARSTECHNICA.COMHBO’s The Last of Us reaches “The Moment” game fans have been dreadingNew episodes of season 2 of The Last of Us are premiering on HBO every Sunday night, and Ars' Kyle Orland (who's played the games) and Andrew Cunningham (who hasn't) will be talking about them here every Monday morning. While these recaps don't delve into every single plot point of the episode, there are obviously heavy spoilers contained within, so go watch the episode first if you want to go in fresh. Kyle: I'd like to personally welcome Andrew and everyone else who didn't play The Last of Us Part 2 to the summer of 2020, when the gaming world was rocked by the most shocking video game character permadeath this side of Final Fantasy VII. Before we get into how they changed Joel's pivotal death scene for the TV show, and why I think it doesn't work quite as well here, I'd love to hear more about what was going through your head both as it was happening and after. Andrew: This should, if nothing else, reinforce my bona fides as someone who has not the faintest idea what is coming. My main reaction is "Boy, Kyle just let me say a whole bunch of things last week even though clearly he knew this was what was going to happen!" I thought we were watching the opening to a second season of a TV show in the first episode, the establishment of a new status quo that we would then explore over the course of the next few episodes. But we were, instead, playing the tutorial level of a second video game, right before everything blows up. I was pretty astonished by what the show did to Joel. Not just because I didn't see it coming! But because it leaves the show without one of the two nuanced and well-developed characters we spent all of last season building up. I don't, uh, love it, as a storytelling decision. Probably the beginning of a beautiful friendship. Credit: HBO Probably the beginning of a beautiful friendship. Credit: HBO Kyle: I will say it was hard not even alluding to what was coming last week, but it was also kind of fun just letting you have your last "Sweet Summer Child" moments in the sun. I also felt that Joel's sudden absence hurt the remainder of the game, though based on the storytelling beats we've seen and/or missed so far, I wouldn't be shocked if we have some flashbacks... Back in 2020, I actually had the shocking moment spoiled by some pretty major leaks that I ended up covering as a journalist weeks before I was able to review the game myself. Aside from that, though, the show kind of dampens the impact of "The Moment" by making Abby's motivations crystal clear for 1.5 episodes leading up to it. In the game, you actually play as a mostly blank-slate Abby for a few brief scenes before being rescued by Joel. After that, the shocking turnaround plays out as a quick gut punch during a cutscene that has a lot less Abby-monologuing than the show did. The game doesn't fill in the details about the "why" of it all for the audience until much later, which makes the whole thing that much more impactful. But maybe the showrunners figured that since the game already exists, it would be hard to keep the audience off balance like that for weeks when they could just look up what was going on... Andrew: The monologuing was off-putting, honestly, and gets to the heart of what I'm concerned about. I'll refrain from speculating a ton about a game whose plot it would take me about 30 seconds to look up and read, but I'm not particularly excited to watch Ellie chase down this generically angst-ridden fresh-faced former Firefly? Does the show now need to be carried by a bunch of the Jackson Hole characters we just met? None of these possibilities are as interesting to me as watching Joel and an adult Ellie deal with their issues. Ellie will probably be just fine after all this, right? Credit: HBO Ellie will probably be just fine after all this, right? Credit: HBO Kyle: Yeah, I don't think it's spoiling much to say that Joel and Ellie's relationship carried the first game, and now it's obvious that Ellie's hunt for revenge is going to attempt to carry the second. It's a rough shift that I don't think did the second game any favors, personally. The game goes to a lot of trouble to literally put you in Abby's shoes and eventually tries to try to make her own revenge saga feel a little more earned. Here, I feel like the show is being a bit more blunt about selling you her backstory at the front end and attempting to "justify" her brutal turn toward Joel somewhat in advance. I wondered if you found yourself sympathizing at all with her character at this point. Andrew: Obviously what Joel did to the Fireflies is awful, maybe unforgiveable. Beyond the lie to Ellie, there's a strong possibility that he deprived humanity of a cure for the disease causing the very-much-ongoing apocalypse. But, like, no! I don't sympathize with Abby! Not only is she driven solely by this bland Inigo Montoya thing, but she sadistically tortures someone who just saved her stupid life, brutalizing Joel so much that it drives her also-supposedly-revenge-driven Firefly friends to tears. If I'm supposed to sympathize with her, the show did pretty much everything possible to make sure I don't. On paper, what Joel did is probably way worse, but we've also been primed by a whole season of TV (and by the charm of Pedro Pascal) to try and understand why he did what he did. None of this is really happening with Abby. Kyle: Yeah, "supposed to sympathize with her" is a bit too strong, perhaps, especially at this point in the narrative. But I do think the show is trying to make her actions at least feel partially justified or understandable? It will be interesting to see how the show handles turning her into a more fleshed out character, because at this point, her revenge quest feels a bit mustache-twirling to me. Backing up a bit, this episode also featured a huge set-piece zombie horde battle that ruins the brief calm we enjoyed in Jackson Hole. The scene played out so much like a video game mission that I had to go back and make sure I hadn't forgotten about some major Jackson Hole firefight in the game. But no, this is a pure creation of the show. I think the whole thing worked pretty well both as a reminder of the precarity of the vestiges of human civilization and an excuse for some flashy special effects. I also thought for a second that they were actually going to kill off Tommy so the show had its own totally unexpected death, even for people who had played the game. That couple of minutes with the flamethrower was actually tense for me! Mmmmm... roasted mushrooms... Credit: HBO Mmmmm... roasted mushrooms... Credit: HBO Andrew: Maybe Abby will become more fleshed-out, and maybe she won't. But she's started by making the exact same mistake as Joel: leaving witnesses. I did enjoy the zombie battle a lot. The liquid churn of the snow as a million guys burst out from under it: creepy! Good on the show and HBO for figuring out a way to do a snowy zombie horde fight without making it feel too reminiscent of Game of Thrones. I will, again, refrain from speculating overmuch about where the Jackson Hole storyline goes since I'm not even sure at this point how much time will be spent on the aftermath and rebuilding (if there is rebuilding rather than further societal collapse). I did find myself wondering during the flamethrower scene whether roasted mushroom guy smelled appetizing or whether people in this world can even bring themselves to enjoy mushrooms on a pizza or in an omelette. Kyle: I bet eating a normal mushroom in The Last of Us universe is akin to eating a hallucinogenic mushroom in the real world. A little bit of a dangerous taboo for iconoclastic rulebreakers to show they're open-minded. Andrew: We've established that I have no idea what is going to happen next, but we do have dangling threads here to deal with next week. How do the residents of Jackson Hole deal with the fungus in their pipes? How many people try to talk Ellie out of her revenge tour before she goes off and does it anyway? How are the Smart Zombies we met last week going to come back and cause problems? How many more Abby flashbacks will I need to sit through? But above all, I'm really curious to know what the show is going to do to keep game-players like yourself on your toes. Kyle: Last season we got the surprising "Nick Offerman's life of love among the zombies" story as the third episode, and I wouldn't mind a similar out of nowhere left turn to wash out Joel's death this time around. I'm not saying that has to take the form of what would be a stunning, unexpected, and completely illogical return of Offerman's Bill character. But if that is what the show decides to do, I would not complain.0 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 13 Views
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WWW.TECHNOLOGYREVIEW.COMGenerative AI is reshaping South Korea’s webcomics industry“My mind is still sharp and my hands work just fine, so I have no interest in getting help from AI to draw or write stories,” says Lee Hyun-se, a legendary South Korean cartoonist best known for his seminal series A Daunting Team, a 1983 manhwa about the coming-of-age of heroic underdog baseball players. “Still, I’ve joined hands with AI to immortalize my characters Kkachi, Umji, and Ma Dong-tak.” By embracing generative AI, Lee is charting a new creative frontier in South Korea’s web comics industry. Since comics magazines faded at the turn of the century, web comics—serialized comics that read from top to bottom on digital platforms—have gone from niche subculture to global entertainment powerhouse, drawing in hundreds of millions of readers around the world. Lee has long been at its forefront, pushing the boundaries of his craft. Lee drew inspiration for his renegade baseball avengers from the Sammi Superstars, one of South Korea’s first professional baseball teams, whose journey of perseverance captivated a country stifled by military dictatorship. The series gained a cult following among readers seeking a creative escape from political repression, mesmerized by his bold brushstrokes and cinematic compositions that defied the conventions of cartoons. Kkachi, the rebellious protagonist in A Daunting Team, is an alter ego of Lee himself. A scrappy outcast with untamed, spiky hair, he is a fan favorite who challenges the world with unrelenting passion and a brave conscience. He has reappeared throughout Lee’s signature works, painted with a new layer of pathos each time—a supernatural warrior who saves Earth from an alien attack in Armageddon and a rogue police officer battling a powerful criminal syndicate in Karon’s Dawn. Over decades, Kkachi has become a cultural icon in South Korea. But Lee worries about Kkachi’s future. “In South Korea, when an author dies, his characters also get buried in his grave,” he says, drawing contrasts with enduring American comic characters like Superman and Spider-Man. Lee craves artistic immortality. He wants his characters to stay alive not just in the memories of readers, but also on their web comic platforms. “Even after I die, I want my worldviews and characters to communicate and resonate with the people of a new era,” he says. “That’s the kind of immortality I want.” Lee believes that AI can help him realize his vision. In partnership with Jaedam Media, a web comics production company based in Seoul, he developed the “Lee Hyun-se AI model” by fine-tuning the open-source AI art generator Stable Diffusion, created by the UK-based startup Stability AI. Using a data set of 5,000 volumes of comics that he has published over 46 years, the resulting model generates comics in his signature style. This year, Lee is preparing to publish his first AI-assisted web comic, a remake of his 1994 manhwa Karon’s Dawn. Writers at Jaedam Media are adapting the story into a modernized crime drama starring Kkachi as a police officer in present-day Seoul and his love interest Umji as a daring prosecutor. Students at Sejong University, where Lee teaches comics, are creating the artwork using his AI model. The creative process unfolds in several stages. First, Lee’s AI model generates illustrations based on text prompts and reference images, like 3D anatomy models and hand-drawn sketches that provide cues for different movements and gestures. Lee’s students then curate and edit the illustrations, adjusting the characters’ poses, tailoring their facial expressions, and integrating them into cartoonish compositions that AI can’t engineer. After many rounds of refinement and regeneration, Lee steps in to orchestrate the final product, adding his distinct artistic edge. AI companies envision that artists could automate the grunt work of drawing and channel their creative energy into storytelling and art direction. “Under my direction, a character might glare with sad eyes even when they’re angry or ferocious eyes when they’re happy,” he says. “It’s a subversive expression, a nuance that AI struggles to capture. Those delicate details I need to direct myself.” Ultimately, Lee wants to build an AI system that embodies his meticulous approach to human expressions. The grand vision of his experimental AI project is to create a “Lee Hyun-se simulation agent”—an advanced generation of his AI model that replicates his creative mind. The model would be trained on digital archives of Lee’s essays, interviews, and texts from his comics—the subject of an exhibit at the National Library of Korea last year—to encode his philosophy, personality, and values. “It’s going to take a long time for AI to learn my myriad worldviews because I’ve published so much work,” he says. The digital clone of Lee would generate new comics with his artistic intuition, perceiving its environment and making creative choices as he would—perhaps even publishing a series far in the future starring Kkachi as a post-human protagonist. “Fifty years from now, what kinds of comics would Lee Hyun-se create if he saw the world then?” Lee asks. “The question fascinates me.” Lee’s quest for a lasting artistic legacy is part of a broader creative evolution driven by technology. In the decades since their emergence, web comics have transformed the art of storytelling, offering an infinite digital canvas that integrates music, animation, and interactive visuals with the effects of new tools like automated coloring programs. The addition of AI is spurring the next wave of innovation. But even as it unlocks new creative possibilities, it is fueling anxieties over artistic agency and authorship. Last year the South Korean startup Onoma AI, named after the Greek word for “name” (a signal of its ambition to redefine creative storytelling), launched an AI-powered web comic generator called TooToon. The software allows users to create synopses, characters, and storyboards with simple text prompts and convert rough sketches into polished illustrations that reflect their personal artistic style. TooToon claims to streamline the labor-intensive creative process by cutting down the production time between concept development and line art from six months to just two weeks. Companies like Onoma AI champion the idea that AI can help anyone be an artist—even if you can’t draw or afford to hire an army of assistants to keep up with the industry’s insane production demands. In their vision, artists would emerge as directors of their own AI-powered solo studios, automating the grunt work of drawing and channeling their creative energy into storytelling and art direction. The productivity breakthrough, they say, would help artists brainstorm more experimental ideas, take on big-scale productions, and disrupt the studio monopolies that dominate the market. Oh Hye-seong is the protagonist of “Karon’s Dawn,” an AI-assisted web comic series by the South Korean cartoonist Lee Hyun-se, which will be released later this year.COURTESY OF THE PUBLISHER “AI would expand the web comic ecosystem,” says Song Min, the founder and CEO of Onoma AI. Song describes the industry in South Korea as a “pyramid”—powerhouse platforms like Naver Webtoon and Kakao Webtoon at the top, followed by big-shot studios, where artists collaborate to mass-produce web comics. “The rest of the artists, those outside the studio system, can’t create alone,” he explains. “AI would empower more artists to emerge as independent artists.” Last year, Onoma AI partnered with a group of young web comic artists to create Tarot: A Tale of Seven Pages, a mystery thriller unraveling the twisted fates of strangers cursed by a hand of tarot cards. Through these collaborations, Song uses the artists’ feedback to refine TooToon. Still, even as a champion of AI-generated art, he questions whether it’s “a good thing for AI to be perfect.” Just as engineers need to keep coding to hone their skills, he wonders if AI should leave room for artists to keep drawing to nurture their craft. “AI is an inevitable tour de force, but for now, the big hurdles lie in artists’ perception and copyright,” he says. Onoma AI built Illustrious, the large language model powering TooToon, by fine-tuning Stable Diffusion on the Danbooru2023 data set, a public image bank of anime-style illustrations. But Stable Diffusion, along with other popular image generators built on the model, has come under fire for indiscriminately scraping images from the internet, sparking a barrage of lawsuits over copyright infringement. In turn, web comic generators are facing intense backlash from artists who fear that the programs are being trained on their art without their consent. "Can you create without a soul? Who knows?” As companies silo their training data, artists and readers have launched a digital campaign to boycott AI-generated web comics. In May 2023, readers bombarded The Knight King Returns with the Gods on Naver Webtoon with blazingly low ratings after discovering that AI had been used to refine portions of the artwork. The following month, artists flooded the platform with anonymous posts protesting “AI web comics created from theft,” sharply criticizing Naver’s contract policy requiring artists who publish on the platform to consent to having their works used as AI training data. To settle the standoff, the Korea Copyright Commission issued a set of guidelines in December 2023, urging AI developers to obtain permission from copyright holders before using their works as training data; articulate the purpose, scope, and duration of use; and provide fair compensation. A year later, amid growing calls from AI companies for access to more data, the South Korean government proposed carving out an exemption to copyright laws that would allow AI models to be trained on copyrighted works under the doctrine of fair use. But no legislation or regulation has yet established a clear legal framework, leaving artists in limbo. While seasoned artists like Lee embrace the technology as a tool to expand their legacy, wholeheartedly licensing their intellectual property to AI, younger artists see it as a threat. They fear that AI will steal their artwork and, more important, their identity as artists. “Drawing is the most difficult and the most fun part of making comics,” says Park So-won, a young web comic artist based in Seoul. Park grew up dreaming of becoming a cartoonist, watching her mother, an animator, bring characters to life. After years of juggling gigs as an artist assistant at a web comics studio, interrupted by a brief creative hiatus, she made her breakthrough on the platform Lezhin Comics with Legs That Won’t Walk, a queer romance noir about a boxer who falls in love with a loan shark chasing after him over his alcoholic father’s debt. As an independent artist, Park is constantly at work. She publishes a new episode every 10 days, often pulling all-nighters to produce up to 80 cuts of drawing, even with the help of assistants handling background art and coloring. Occasionally she finds herself in a flow state, working 30 hours straight without a break. Still, Park can’t imagine outsourcing her drawings, which she sees as the heart of her comics, to AI. “The crux of a comic, however important the story, is the drawing. If the story were written in words, people wouldn’t have read it, would they? The story is just a thought—the execution is the drawing,” she says. “The grammar of comics is the drawing.” Handing over her drawing would mean surrendering her artistic agency. A strip from ”A Daunting Team,” a 1983 baseball manhwa made by Lee Hyun-se.COURTESY OF THE PUBLISHER Park thinks algorithmic art lacks soul—like “objects that exist in a void”—and isn’t worried about whether AI can draw better than she does. Her drawings have evolved over the years, shaped by her shifting outlook on the world and breaking new creative ground over time—an artistic progression that she thinks an algorithm trained to emulate existing works could never make. “I’ll keep charting new territory as an artist, while AI will stay the same,” she says. To Park, art is supreme indulgence: “I’ve come this far because I love to draw. If AI takes away my favorite thing to do in the world, what would I do?” But other comic artists, whose strengths lie in storytelling, welcome the innovation. Bae Jin-soo was an aspiring screenwriter before debuting as an artist on Naver Webtoon’s amateur comics page in 2010. To turn his screenplay into a comic, Bae taught himself to draw by photographing different compositions and tracing them on paper. “I can’t draw, so I’ll bet on my writing,” he thought. After his debut seriesFriday: Forbidden Tales took off, Bae rose to stardom with his three-part series Money Game, Pie Game, and Funny Game—brainy psychological thrillers packed with plot twists and witty, thought-provoking narratives about a group of contestants playing eccentric games to win a cash prize. They have even inspired a popular Netflix adaptation, The 8 Show. “I still have so many more stories I want to tell,” Bae says. A prolific writer, he keeps a running list of new ideas in a pocket notepad, the genre-bending plots spanning horror, politics, and black comedy. But with his mind racing ahead of his hand, breathing life into all his ideas would require commissioning a studio to execute the illustrations. For Bae, an AI-powered web comic generator could be a game changer. “If AI could handle my artwork, I would create an endless stream of new comics,” he says. Bae is also eager to explore AI as a “backup battery for story ideas,” like a writer’s assistant. Even so, to hold his ground as an artist, he plans to dig deeper into his imagination to generate original and experimental ideas that could be found nowhere else. “That’s the domain of [human] creators,” he says. Still, Bae wonders if his own creative edge would slowly erode through extensive collaboration with AI: “Would my own colors start to fade?” Meanwhile, comics students at Sejong University in Seoul are learning to integrate AI into their tool kits. The budding artists are being trained as “creative coders,” turning strips of comics into data sets by meticulously annotating their content, and as prompt engineers who can guide AI to produce characters that align with their aesthetic sensibilities. “Creativity takes time—to reflect and contemplate on your work,” says Han Chang-wan, a professor of comics and animation at Sejong University, who teaches a class on AI-generated web comics. Han says that’s what AI will buy for his students: the time to “create more diverse characters, more kaleidoscopic plots, and more eclectic genres” that challenge the formulaic comics mass-produced by studios. Ultimately, he hopes, they’ll “tap into an entirely new readership.” As artists navigate this uncharted future, generative AI is raising profound questions about what powers creativity. “AI could be a technical assistant to artists,” says Shin Il-sook, the president of the Korea Cartoonist Association and the renowned cartoonist behind the historical fantasy romance The Four Daughters of Armian, which follows a brave-hearted princess exiled from a matriarchal kingdom as she embarks on a journey of survival and self-discovery through war, love, and political power battles. Still, she wonders if AI can really be a creative companion. “Creativity is about making something never seen before, driven by a desire to share it with other people,” Shin says. “It’s deeply intertwined with the human experience and its afflictions. That’s why an artist who has walked through life’s suffering and honed their craft produces remarkable art,” she says. “Can you create without a soul? Who knows?” Michelle Kim is a freelance journalist and lawyer based in Seoul.0 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 16 Views
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WWW.SKYNEWSARABIA.COM"إنستغرام".. آلية جديدة لكشف "كذب الصغار"وقالت شركة "ميتا" المالكة لـ"إنستغرام"، الإثنين، إنها تستخدم الذكاء الاصطناعي لتحديد أعمار المستخدمين منذ فترة، لكن تطبيق مشاركة الصور والفيديوهات سيبدأ في البحث "بشكل استباقي" عن الحسابات التي يشتبه بأنها تخص مراهقين، حتى إذا كانوا قد أدخلوا تواريخ ميلاد غير دقيقة عند التسجيل. وأضافت الشركة أنه "إذا تبين أن أحد المستخدمين يقدم معلومات خاطئة بشأن عمره، فسيتم تحويل حسابه تلقائيا إلى حساب مراهق، وهو حساب يفرض قيودا أكثر مقارنة بحسابات البالغين". وتكون حسابات المراهقين خاصة تلقائيا، حيث يتم تقييد الرسائل الخاصة بحيث لا يمكن لهم تلقيها إلا من أشخاص يتابعونهم أو لديهم اتصال مسبق معهم. وقالت شركة "ميتا" إنه سيتم تقييد "المحتوى الحساس"، مثل مقاطع الفيديو لأشخاص يتشاجرون أو التي تروج لمواد تجميلية.0 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 30 Views
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WWW.BUSINESSINSIDER.COMPrices for used Teslas are cratering as Elon Musk's woes deepenTesla resale values are cratering as owners sell up amid an escalating backlash over Elon Musk's involvement with DOGE.The average price of a used Tesla fell more than 10% in March compared to the same period last year, according to data from used car listing website iSeeCars.This was the largest drop of any car brand in iSeeCars' data.Prices for pre-owned Model S and Model Y vehicles collapsed 17.2% and 13.1% year-over-year, with the average price of a Model 3 now just over $26,000.That is despite the average price of used cars overall rising slightly in March for the first time in two and a half years, per iSeeCars' data.It comes as a growing number of Tesla owners sell their vehicles as global protests against Tesla CEO Musk gather momentum.Used car site Autotrader saw a record number of Tesla listings in March, according to its parent organization, Cox Automotive, while data from Edmunds reported by Reuters suggested that Tesla trade-ins hit a record high last month.Musk's work cutting federal spending under the Trump administration has turned Tesla vehicles and showrooms into a target for protests and vandalism, and alienated some of the company's traditionally liberal customer base.Several former Tesla owners previously told Business Insider they had sold their cars in response to Musk gutting the federal workforce, with some saying the spate of vandalism against Tesla vehicles played a part in pushing them to sell.Used Tesla values have been dropping steadily over the past few years as the automaker has slashed the prices of its new vehicles.While that's good news for buyers who want to pick up a pre-owned EV at a discount, it's less positive for long-time Tesla owners looking to sell their cars.Tesla investor Ross Gerber told BI last year he was struggling to flip his old Tesla because he couldn't get a fair price for it, and owners who decide to sell today may have to take a serious haircut.The collapse in used values comes as Tesla's new car sales also struggle.The company announced underwhelming first-quarter deliveries earlier this month, with sales cratering in Europe and China as Tesla faces a "brand crisis tornado" over Musk's political interventions and surging competition from EV rivals.0 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 14 Views
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WWW.VOX.COMThe domestic fallout from Trump’s tariffs, in 3 chartsIt’s not just the stock market.In the few weeks since President Donald Trump announced sweeping tariffs, a series of indicators from across the economy suggest anxiety — or even outright panic — is in the economic driver’s seat.Consumer confidence is at a near-record low. People are panic-buying products that are likely to see major price hikes soon, from cars to consumer electronics. Businesses are also already predicting a slowdown in production, suggesting that Trump’s tariffs are actually working against his stated — and likely impossible — goal of reviving American manufacturing. This has a real impact on the health of the US economy. Confident consumers spend and support confident businesses, which fuel economic growth and hire workers. Trump can’t achieve his goals of onshoring manufacturing and ushering in a golden era of American prosperity when both consumers and businesses are spooked. It might be too early to tell whether Trump’s tariffs will lead to a recession, but it’s clear that they are already shifting economic activity in the US. Here’s what the data show.The leading metric of consumer confidence is the University of Michigan’s consumer confidence index, which measures how favorable Americans feel about the economy based on their responses to a series of survey questions.That index plunged immediately after Trump’s tariffs, down to 50.9 — lower than during the Great Recession and close to the historic low in the period following the Covid-19 pandemic.This suggests that Trump’s tariffs are not just sending shockwaves through the stock market, but also the pocketbooks of everyday Americans, who were already struggling with the aftermath of high inflation.Economists expect that consumers will eventually pull back on spending as a result. But in the short term, they appear to be stocking up. But economists say the spike in certain spending is neither sustainable nor evidence of a healthy economy.“When you announce you’re doing tariffs in two weeks, that’s going to lead to a big decline in spending in two weeks, but it may lead to a really big increase in spending in the short term,” said Michael Madowitz, principal economist at the Roosevelt Institute, a progressive economic think tank. “I bought a bunch of parts to fix my really old car.”He’s not the only one: In March, motor vehicle and parts dealers saw a 5.3 percent increase in sales from the previous month and an 8.8 percent rise from the same month last year. Trump had, at that point, announced 25 percent tariffs on fully assembled automobiles, scheduled to take effect by May 3.In March, electronics and appliance stores also saw a 0.8 percent increase from February and a 1.8 percent increase from the same month last year. China is one of the world’s largest producers of consumer electronics, and Trump had been talking about hitting it with tariffs for months at that point. Trump has since offered a limited exception for consumer electronics from his baseline 145 percent tariff on Chinese imports, but it’s not clear how much that will insulate those products from price hikes. Trump has also said that consumer electronics could face additional, yet-to-be-announced tariffs on products that contain semiconductors.American manufacturing is in troubleTrump has promised that “jobs and factories will come roaring back into our country” as a result of his tariffs. His hope is that, in making it more expensive to import foreign goods, companies will seek to invest in bringing their production to the US, therefore bringing prices down for American consumers in the long run. He also claims that the tariffs will stop other countries from “cheating” America with trade imbalances.However, economists were skeptical of those claims from the outset. The Economist called the tariffs the “most profound, harmful and unnecessary economic error in the modern era,” based on an “utterly deluded” understanding of economics and history.Now, the data shows that Trump’s tariffs are having the opposite of their intended effect: US manufacturing has slowed in the weeks since he made the announcement, and economists expect that trend to continue. Surveys of American manufacturers conducted by the Federal Reserve Banks of New York and Philadelphia revealed a pessimistic outlook. Both expectations for general business activity and for new product orders declined sharply in April.The New York Fed’s future general business conditions index dropped from 12.7 in March to 7.4 this month, its second-lowest reading in more than two decades. The Philadelphia Fed’s new order index dropped from 8.7 in March to -34.2 this month, its lowest reading since April 2020, just after the pandemic began. That’s bad news for the businesses that Trump said would benefit from his tariff policies, but are now struggling to plan for the months and years ahead in an environment of such uncertainty. In an effort to convince him to abandon the tariffs, some American manufacturers have avoided criticizing them directly and instead sought to promote how much they are already investing heavily in their US factories. But it’s not clear that even overtures from American manufacturing leaders and panic among consumers will persuade Trump to give up his decades-long obsession with tariffs as a solution to what he perceives as foreign trade barriers. See More:0 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 14 Views
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WWW.DAILYSTAR.CO.UKNintendo boss hints at huge Switch 2 Mario game but admits to 'long list' issueIf there's one thing missing from Switch 2, it's a new 3D Mario title from Nintendo — and it seems Nintendo is aware that a new platforming adventure is missing from the lineupTech10:51, 22 Apr 2025It's high time we got another 3D Mario titleThe Nintendo Switch 2 has just about everything fans could want. Mouse-like new control options, more power, a bigger screen, and a whole host of great launch window games make it an easy console for us to recommend having played it.If we had one minor complaint, however, it's that a certain platforming icon isn't, well, platforming yet. It wouldn't be a Nintendo console without Mario, but the former plumber is only found (at least for now) in Mario Kart World (which, admittedly, looks incredible).With Donkey Kong: Bananza taking the spot for a 3D platformer in Nintendo's lineup for the console's first months, those of us pining for a Super Mario Odyssey sequel can't help but feel a teeny bit disappointed — but Nintendo is seemingly aware of that.We've got everything crossed for another Odyssey-like game(Image: NINTENDO )Speaking to CNN, President of Nintendo of America Doug Bowser (possibly the best name in gaming) didn't confirm a 3D Mario title was on the way, but did leave the door open.Article continues below“Stay tuned,” he responded when asked.“You know, we have a long, long catalog, and a long list of (intellectual property) that I’m sure will make its way to the platform.”Back in 2017, when the Nintendo Switch launched, it was also missing a Mario title as Nintendo focused on The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild as its marquee launch game.Mario Kart World is Nintendo's big Switch 2 launch title(Image: Nintendo)It would be a few months after the console's launch that Super Mario Odyssey would be released, and it was only officially revealed at Nintendo's E3 2017 showcase in June.Given Switch 2 launches in June, and the company is almost certainly going to hold another showcase shortly after the console launches, it seems Bowser (the man, not the giant turtle) could be teeing up a similar release timeline for a new 3D Mario.Before the Switch 2's full reveal, a 3D Mario felt nailed-on for the console. While Odyssey launched in late 2017, Super Mario 3D World was a Wii U port that came to Switch in 2021 with Bowser's Fury (the giant turtle, not the man in this instance) bundled in.The new content, which plays more like an open world 3D Mario platformer, was seemingly a proof of concept for another adventure for the iconic character — but we're still waiting to see what comes next.For more on Nintendo Switch 2, check out our dream ports for the system — including Monster Hunter, Death Stranding, and even Halo.Article continues belowFor the latest breaking news and stories from across the globe from the Daily Star, sign up for our newsletters.0 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 22 Views
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METRO.CO.UKMichael Bay to turn Sega 80s classic into a movie: amazing soundtrack guaranteedMichael Bay to turn Sega 80s classic into a movie: amazing soundtrack guaranteed GameCentral Published April 22, 2025 11:23am Updated April 22, 2025 11:23am Starring Sydney Sweeneyas “Nagging Girlfriend” (Sega) Hollywood’s new love for video game movies has somehow convinced Sydney Sweeney to sign up for an adaptation of Sega arcade classic OutRun. If film companies had any hesitation about going all in on video game movies, after the success of The Super Mario Bros. Movie, that will have entirely evaporated after the equally lucrative A Minecraft Movie. We’ve already had a Tetris movie (which was actually quite good) so we can’t make that joke any more, but the latest Sega adaptation seems almost equally nonsensical: a film based on 1986 arcade hit OutRun. OutRun is a racing game with no story or characters and hasn’t had a new entry in 17 years… so of course it’s the natural follow-up to Minecraft and Mario. It is apparently happening though, with no less than Michael Bay and Sydney Sweeney set to be involved. After the success of the Sonic The Hedgehog movies, which is arguably what kickstarted the current golden age (in terms of success, if not quality) of video game movies, Sega has been trying to push through adaptations of many of its older titles, including such unlikely seeming ideas as Streets Of Rage, The House Of The Dead, Space Channel 5, Shinobi, Comix Zone, and Eternal Champions. OutRun has never been mentioned before, although original creator Yu Suzuki did state, in 2019, that he wanted to make a new game. More recently, Sega renewed the trademark for the series, but other than that it’s essentially a dead franchise. It also has literally no story elements or characters. You played as a male driver with a blonde female passenger, in a red Ferrari. The woman would berate the driver if you crashed, or when you win and get kissed by a different girl handing out a trophy – which is as close as it ever got to having a narrative. In the original game you were vaguely implied to be driving from the west coast of the US to the east but there was no explanation of why. Immediate sequel Turbo OutRun introduced the idea of a computer-controlled rival in a silver Porsche 959, but the lone driver was never a character. Some of the more obscure spin-offs, such as the British-made Out Run Europa, had faint story elements, such as chasing thieves that stole your car, but to all intents and purposes the series is a blank slate for the filmmakers to do whatever they want. More Trending Deadline reports that Michael Bay (Bad Boys, Transformers) will both direct and produce, alongside Sydney Sweeney (Euphoria, Anyone But You) – although there’s no indication of what role she’ll play. The scriptwriter is Jayson Rothwell, who has only a handful of credits for a bunch of poorly reviewed low budget movies that we’ve never heard of. So that’s encouraging. Rather than storytelling, what the game is actually renowned for is its pioneering 3D graphics, that used 2D sprite-scaling rather than polygons; its famous hydraulic arcade cabinet, and its classic video game soundtrack that has been a huge influence on modern synthwave. The three tracks Passing Breeze, Splash Wave, and Magical Sound Shower, together with the iconography of the red Ferrari and Sega blue skies, are iconic but it still seems hard to imagine the movie being successful enough to justify such big names being attached to it. The hydraulic arcade cabinet is legendary (Credits: Tiia Monto) Email gamecentral@metro.co.uk, leave a comment below, follow us on Twitter, and sign-up to our newsletter. To submit Inbox letters and Reader’s Features more easily, without the need to send an email, just use our Submit Stuff page here. For more stories like this, check our Gaming page. GameCentral Sign up for exclusive analysis, latest releases, and bonus community content. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply. Your information will be used in line with our Privacy Policy0 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 16 Views
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GIZMODO.COMNASA’s Lucy Captures Stunning Views of Peanut-Shaped Asteroid in Latest FlybyBy Isaac Schultz Published April 21, 2025 | Comments (0) | Animated video showing Lucy's encounter with asteroid Donaldjohanson. Gif: NASA/Goddard/SwRI/Johns Hopkins APL/Gizmodo NASA’s Lucy spacecraft just pulled off its second asteroid flyby and imaged a frankly tasty-looking rock: a peanut-shaped asteroid named Donaldjohanson. The oblong asteroid is a fragment of a long-destroyed space rock that formed roughly 150 million years ago, and Lucy swooped within 600 miles (960 kilometers) of it on April 20, 2025, capturing some seriously wild close-ups. “These early images of Donaldjohanson are again showing the tremendous capabilities of the Lucy spacecraft as an engine of discovery,” said Tom Statler, NASA program scientist for the Lucy mission, in an agency release. “The potential to really open a new window into the history of our solar system when Lucy gets to the Trojan asteroids is immense.” Donaldjohanson—named for the anthropologist who discovered the fossilized hominid Lucy back in 1974, which gives the spacecraft its name—is relatively small, at roughly 5 miles (8 km) across. But that’s larger than earlier estimates; just a few months ago, when Lucy was farther away, researchers estimated that Donaldjohanson was about 3 miles (4 km) across. Below you can see the asteroid as it appeared 45 million miles (70 million kilometers) from the spacecraft. Suffice to say, the new images give us a better view of the ancient rock. Lucy’s first view of asteroid Donaldjohanson (shown in the square). Donaldjohanson is what scientists call a contact binary, which occurs when smaller bodies collide and fuse—hence its distinctive peanut-like shape. Lucy got a sneak peek of the main belt asteroid back in February, as the spacecraft prepares to explore the Trojan asteroids as far out as Jupiter. Donaldjohanson isn’t a Trojan asteroid, but it was conveniently positioned for NASA’s Lucy spacecraft to swing by on a scenic detour en route to its main destination. Donaldjohanson as seen by L’LORRI on April 20, from about 660 miles (1,100 km) away. Image: NASA/Goddard/SwRI/Johns Hopkins APL/NOIRLab The flyby gave NASA researchers an opportunity to test Lucy’s color image, infrared spectrometer, and thermal infrared spectrometer, as well as the L’LORRI imager that snapped the images at top. Those devices will be put to task when Lucy arrives at the Trojan asteroid Eurybates in August 2027. Lucy is still very early in its mission, but it’s already catching glimpses of our solar system’s ancient past. Daily Newsletter You May Also Like By Passant Rabie Published April 21, 2025 By Passant Rabie Published April 19, 2025 By Isaac Schultz Published April 18, 2025 By Passant Rabie Published April 18, 2025 By Passant Rabie Published April 17, 2025 By Isaac Schultz Published April 16, 20250 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 28 Views