• WWW.IGN.COM
    AU Deals: Your Cheapest Copy of Oblivion Remastered, Doom Dark Ages, Metaphor, Mario, and More!
    There’s never been a better time to start building a big ol' pile of shame, my fellow patient gamer. Whether you’re keen to pick up a cult favourite or just want to marvel at how cheap Mass Effect is going for, today's best gaming deals are a tidy mix of crowd-pleasers and critical darlings. And now, without much more ado, here are my favourite deals on The Citadel.This Day in Gaming 🎂In retro news, I'm celebrating the 32nd birthday of the Sega Mega Drive II,blast processing technology), this bit of kit arrived on my birthday, with a copy of Streets of Rage from a MegaZone subscription deal, and basically made my year. I was to eat well with Sonics 1 through 3, Bonanza Bros., RoboCop vs. Terminator, Disney's Aladdin / Lion King, Streeties, MK, Golden Axe, Earthworm Jim, a bunch of Shinobis, and more. Absolute peak Sega era.32 years old and "Megsy" is still kicking out those pixels perfectly.Aussie bdays for notable games- Sega Mega Drive II launch, 1993. eBay- Don’t Starve (PC) 2013. Get- Dead Island: Riptide (PC,PS3,X360) 2013. Get- Mortal Kombat 11 (PC,PS4,XO) 2019. Get- MotoGP 20 (PS4) 2020. GetContentsNice Savings for Nintendo SwitchPreorders openNintendo Switch 2 ConsoleRequires a free to make / cancel First Membership that provides free shipping.Nintendo Switch players can snap up Mario + Rabbids Sparks of Hope for just A$19 and it's a steal for a tactical RPG that won many a strategy award. Fun fact: Mario’s blaster in this game was originally going to be a water gun until Ubisoft got official permission from Nintendo to arm him (sort of). Another highlight is Fire Emblem Warriors: Three Hopes at A$39, a musou-style alternate timeline to Three Houses that gives Edelgard even more dramatic flair.Expiring Recent DealsSwitch Lite Hyrule Ed. (-12%) - A$299Persona 4 Golden (-60%) - A$11God Eater 3 (-37%) - A$53Joy-Cons Green/Pink (-26%) - A$89MySims: Cozy Bundle (-35%) - A$39NBA 2K25 (-78%) - A$20Suikoden I&II HD (-14%) - A$69Or 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 XboxOver on Xbox, Mass Effect Legendary Edition is a no-brainer at just A$9. That’s three games, hundreds of hours, and at least five "Did Shepard just flirt with me?" moments per playthrough. Pair it with Disco Elysium – The Final Cut at A$17, a game where your tie might literally insult you. It’s a special kind of ride.Xbox OneExpiring Recent DealsDoom Eternal (-75%) - A$13Gears Tactics (-67%) - A$13Subnautica (-67%) - A$14Deathloop (-80%) - A$19Call of Duty: MW2 (-42%) - A$38Monster Hunter Rise (-75%) - A$14Dragon's Dogma: Dark Arisen (-85%) - A$4Or 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 PlayStationPlayStation 5 fans can scoop up Tales of Arise for A$32, a stunning action JRPG where a talking owl collects cute accessories. Meanwhile, RoboCop: Rogue City (A$14) surprisingly slaps. Mostly because it's voiced by Peter Weller himself and packed with ‘80s splatterpunk cool.PS4Batman: Return to Arkham (-51%) - A$34Moving Out (-80%) - A$6Persona 5 Strikers (-70%) - A$29XCOM 2 Col. (-90%) - 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 PCAnd for PC folks, A Plague Tale: Requiem (A$28) continues its beautiful, rat-infested tragedy with remarkable fidelity. I say pair it with Lords of the Fallen (A$27), which looks like it benched Soulsborne and got jacked. Not a FromSoftware original, but certainly not to be underestimated.Expiring 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 DealsExpiring 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 tellyKogan 65" QLED 4K (-50%) – A$699Kogan 55" QLED 4K (-45%) – A$549LG 55" UT80 4K (-28%) – A$866Back to top Adam Mathew is our Aussie deals wrangler. He plays practically everything, often on YouTube.
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  • WWW.DENOFGEEK.COM
    Star Wars Just Revealed the Origins of the Rebels’ Most Important Planet
    This article contains spoilers for the first three episodes of Andor season 2 Yavin 4, more commonly known simply as Yavin, is a jungle moon orbiting the gas giant Yavin Prime. In Star Wars canon, Yavin serves as the homebase for the Rebel Alliance during the Galactic Civil War. It’s such an important place in the Star Wars universe that the timeline is centered around the battle against the Empire that takes place here. Things either happen Before the Battle of Yavin (BBY) or After the Battle of Yavin (ABY).  Up until this point, we’ve only really seen Yavin on screen as a rebel base, not what it was like before the rebels chose to make it their home. But now thanks to Andor, we know that the moon was still pretty feral and wild before the rebels fully settled in. In the first two episodes of Andor season 2, Cassian (Diego Luna) lands on the moon with the stolen TIE Avenger, hoping to send the ship off with his contact Porko as planned. But Cassian quickly discovers that he’s not alone in the jungle and that his own ship has been seemingly torn apart. Stranded rebels from the Maya Pei Brigade confront Cassian, believing that he really is an Imperial Pilot, despite his arguments otherwise. He tries to convince them that they’re on the same side, and that Luthen has been helping to fund them. But they won’t hear it. Soon infighting among the Brigade begins as they’re all desperate to find a way off the planet. Just as they’re about to come to a potential truce, they’re all attacked by giant beasts that call the planet home. Cassian uses the chaos to escape in the TIE Avenger and we see the familiar pyramids of Yavin 4 as he heads off into space. Before this moment, we don’t know that all of this is taking place on Yavin, but it makes sense that the moon began as a waypoint for various rebels. Both Luthen and the May Pei Brigade seemed to believe that Yavin was abandoned enough to use without drawing Imperial attention. Though it clearly would have helped for them to communicate that fact with each other.  However, the Rebel Alliance is still very much in its infancy at this point. It’s a collection of small cells rather than the more organized armada we see in A New Hope and Rogue One. The less each cell knows about each other, the better. If one cell goes down, the others don’t have to worry about being ratted out to the Empire. It’s kind of cool that Andor has given us a peek at what Yavin was like before the Rebels turned the moon into their home. Just like much of the rest of the galaxy under the Empire’s rule, the moon is harsh and unforgiving in its own way. But that will inevitably work to the Rebels’ advantage whenever they decide to set up shop full time. It’s not like Yavin 4 is some kind of hot vacation destination. It doesn’t seem like anyone would go to Yavin 4 without a reason. Hopefully we get to see more of Yavin 4’s progression as Andor goes on. This moon is an important part of Star Wars history and it’s fun to see how Yavin got its start as a Rebel hideout.
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  • 9TO5MAC.COM
    Siri’s new boss is already making big internal changes, per report
    Apple recently gave Mike Rockwell leadership over Siri, a big shake-up that proved the status quo of Siri development had grown unacceptable to senior leaders. Now, per a new report, it seems Rockwell is wasting no time continuing to implement major changes internally with the teams responsible for Siri. Mike Rockwell revamping Siri team with various personnel and structural shifts Mark Gurman writes at Bloomberg: Apple Inc.’s new Siri engineering chief is overhauling the management team leading development of the beleaguered voice assistant, taking a step he assured employees would set the company up for success. Mike Rockwell, head of engineering for the assistant, is replacing much of Siri’s leadership with lieutenants from his Vision Pro software group, according to people with knowledge of the matter. He’s also restructuring teams related to speech, understanding, performance and user experience, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the changes are private. The full report goes into a lot more detail on the specific managerial and structural changes Siri’s teams are undergoing. Some of those changes include: “Ranjit Desai, a longtime top deputy from the development of the Vision Pro…will now be in charge of much of Siri’s engineering, including the underlying platform and systems groups” ”Olivier Gutknecht, a senior Vision Pro software executive, is taking over the team in charge of Siri’s user experience” ”Nate Begeman and Tom Duffy, veteran Apple software engineering managers, are also joining the Siri team to run underlying architecture” ”Stuart Bowers, who has led data, training and evaluation teams, will get an expanded role working on Siri’s ability to figure out how to respond to a user” ”David Winarsky, a longtime Siri leader, is taking over a new group responsible for all voice and speech-related components.” Gurman summarizes the changes: The moves show that Rockwell is either demoting or replacing the prior managers in charge of Siri engineering. At the same time, he is turning to the people behind the Vision Pro to fix the long-plagued voice assistant. 9to5Mac’s Take This isn’t the first we’ve heard of big changes happening under Siri’s new leadership. A recent report indicated the teams working on Siri features were being permitted to use third-party LLMs in features for the first time. Rockwell may very well have been behind that change too, though the report credited it to Federighi. One thing is clear: Siri’s new boss is taking decisive action to right the ship of Siri’s years of stagnation. And that sounds like very good news for users. What do you make of this new report on Siri changes? Let us know in the comments. Best iPhone accessories Add 9to5Mac to your Google News feed.  FTC: We use income earning auto affiliate links. More.You’re reading 9to5Mac — experts who break news about Apple and its surrounding ecosystem, day after day. Be sure to check out our homepage for all the latest news, and follow 9to5Mac on Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn to stay in the loop. Don’t know where to start? Check out our exclusive stories, reviews, how-tos, and subscribe to our YouTube channel
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  • 9TO5MAC.COM
    Netflix reveals how it recreated an Apple Store from scratch for new ‘iHostage’ thriller
    In February 2022, a hostage situation unfolded at an Apple Store location in Amsterdam when a gunman demanded a $227 million ransom in cryptocurrency. The hostage and other Apple Store visitors escaped the situation safely, while the gunman died from injuries sustained when he was hit by a police vehicle. Netflix subsequently announced its plans to create a thriller based on the situation, called iHostage, which debuted this week. As part of the production of iHostage, Netflix recreated the Amsterdam Apple Store from scratch – and has shared a behind-the-scenes video of what that process entailed. In a video posted to YouTube this week, iHostage director Bobby Boermans shared the process of creating the Apple Store for the film. The development consisted of recreating the Apple Store in front of a large screen, where they digitally recreated the entire world outside of the Apple Store. “Filming in an actual Apple Store wasn’t possible, so we recconstructured an authetic Apple Store to the actual scale. The floor space is the exact same size as the retail store. I don’t think this technique has been used on such a large scale in the Netherlands before, but it’s clearly the future. If we’ve done this right, the viewer won’t even notice.” Here’s Netflix’s description of the movie: iHostage is a gripping thriller inspired by the shocking 2022 hostage crisis at Amsterdam’s Apple Store. The film follows a Bulgarian man caught in a life-threatening ordeal as an armed assailant holds the building’s occupants hostage. Through the eyes of the attacker, the hostages, and the first responders, iHostage delivers a tense and emotional tale of courage, survival, and the lasting impact of terror. You can watch the behind-the-scenes video below and a trailer for iHostage. The film is available to watch on Netflix and has already hit the top of the charts. Add 9to5Mac to your Google News feed.  FTC: We use income earning auto affiliate links. More.You’re reading 9to5Mac — experts who break news about Apple and its surrounding ecosystem, day after day. Be sure to check out our homepage for all the latest news, and follow 9to5Mac on Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn to stay in the loop. Don’t know where to start? Check out our exclusive stories, reviews, how-tos, and subscribe to our YouTube channel
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  • WEWORKREMOTELY.COM
    Contra: Short Form Video Editor
    We’re looking for a skilled freelance video editor to create two short video edits that showcase our visual designs, marketing campaigns, and client logos. These videos will be used to elevate our brand presence across various platforms. The videos will be entirely visual, with no sound needed. All necessary assets and metrics will be provided. We only require the final MP4 file, no open project files. DeliverablesShort video edit (max. 10 seconds) in a loop that features visual designs and marketing campaigns as well as 6 client logos (16:9)Short video edit (max. 15 seconds) that focuses on featuring metrics and campaigns (9:16) Apply NowLet's start your dream job Apply now Meet JobCopilot: Your Personal AI Job HunterAutomatically Apply to Remote All Other Remote JobsJust set your preferences and Job Copilot will do the rest-finding, filtering, and applying while you focus on what matters. Activate JobCopilot Contra View company Jobs posted: 416 Tired of Applying to Jobs Manually?Let JobCopilot do it for you.No more spreadsheets. No more copy-pasting. Just set your preferences and let your Al copilot search, match, and apply to jobs while you sleep.Applies for jobs that actually match your skillsTailors your resume and cover letter automaticallyWorks 24/7-so you don't have to Activate JobCopilot
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  • WWW.TECHNOLOGYREVIEW.COM
    Building better cities
    Clara Brenner, MBA ’12, arrived in Cambridge on the lookout for a business partner. She wanted to start her own ­company—and never have to deal with a boss again. She would go it alone if she had to, but she hoped to find someone whose skills would complement her own. It’s a common MBA tale. Many people attend business school with hopes of finding the one. Building that relationship is so important to a company’s foundation that it’s been described in romantic terms: Networking is akin to dating around, and some view settling down with a business partner as a marriage of sorts. Brenner didn’t have to look for long. She met her match—Julie Lein, MBA ’12—soon after arriving at Sloan more than a decade ago. But their first encounter wasn’t exactly auspicious. In fact, their relationship began with an expletive. Lein was sitting at a card table in a hallway in E52, glumly selling tickets to a fashion show featuring work-­appropriate clothes for women—at that time, the marquee event for Sloan’s Women in Management Club, and one that both Lein and Brenner thought was patently absurd.  Lein had no interest in attending, but she wanted to support the club’s mission of boosting women in business. “She looked very miserable,” says Brenner. Lein asked if she wanted to buy a ticket, Brenner recalls, and “I think I said, ‘F*** no.’”  “We both bonded over the fact that this was such a stupid idea,” says Lein. (The fashion show has since been retired, in part thanks to Lein and Brenner’s lobbying.)                              Today, the two run the Urban Innovation Fund, a San Francisco–based venture capital firm that has raised $212 million since 2016 and invested in 64 startups addressing the most pressing problems facing cities. It has supported businesses like Electriphi, a provider of EV charging and fleet management software, which was acquired by one of the biggest names in the auto industry. And it funds companies focused on helping kids learn to code, providing virtual tutoring services, offering financing for affordable housing, and more. The companies in its portfolio have a total value of $5.3 billion, and at least eight have been acquired thus far.                              Though Brenner and Lein hit it off quickly, they weren’t an obvious fit as business partners. Brenner arrived at Sloan after weathering an early career in commercial real estate just after the 2008 financial crash. She hoped to start her own company in that industry. Lein, on the other hand, had worked in political polling and consulting. She initially planned to get an advanced policy degree, until a mentor suggested an MBA. She hoped to start her own political polling firm after graduation.  Ultimately, though, their instant kinship became more important than their subject matter expertise. Brenner, says Lein, is “methodical” and organized, while she “just goes and executes” without overthinking. Their relationship—in business, and still as close friends—is rooted in trust and a commitment to realizing the vision they’ve created together. “We were able to see that ... our skills and style were very complementary, and we just were able to do things better and faster together,” says Brenner.  In 2012, the two teamed up to run Sloan’s second Women in Management Conference, which they had helped found the year before. It was then, they say, that they knew they would work together after graduation.  Still, they had trouble agreeing on the type of venture that made the most sense. Their initial talks involved a tug-of-war over whose area of expertise would win—real estate or policy.  But in the summer of 2011, they’d both happened to land internships at companies focused on challenges in cities—companies that would now be called “urban-tech startups,” says Brenner, though that term was not used at the time. The overlap was fortuitous: When they compared notes, they agreed that it made sense to investigate the potential for companies in that emerging space. Lyft was just getting its start, as was Airbnb. After exploring the idea further, the two concluded there was some “there” there. “We felt like all these companies had a lot in common,” says Brenner. “They were solving very interesting community challenges in cities, but in a very scalable, nontraditional way.” They were also working in highly regulated areas that VC firms were often hesitant to touch, even though these companies were attracting significant attention.  To Brenner and Lein, some of that attention was the wrong kind; companies like Uber were making what they saw as obvious missteps that were landing in the news. “No one was helping [these companies] with, like, ‘You should hire a lobbyist’ or ‘You should have a policy team,’” says Brenner. The two saw an opportunity to fund businesses that could make a measurable positive impact on urban life—and to help them navigate regulatory and policy environments as they grew from startups to huge companies.  Upon graduating in 2012, they launched Tumml, an accelerator program for such startups. The name was drawn from the Yiddish word tummler, often used by Brenner’s grandmother to describe someone who inspires others to action.  At the time, Brenner says, “world-­positive investing” was “not cool at all” among funders because it was perceived as yielding lower returns, even though growing numbers of tech companies were touting their efforts to improve society. In another unusual move, the partners structured their startup accelerator as a nonprofit evergreen fund, allowing them to invest in companies continuously without setting a fixed end date. By the end of their third year, they were supporting 38 startups.  Tumml found success by offering money, mentorship, and guidance, but the pair realized that relying solely on fickle philanthropic funding meant the model had a ceiling. To expand their work, they retired Tumml and launched the Urban Innovation Fund in 2016 with $24.5 million in initial investments. While Tumml had offered relatively small checks and support to companies at the earliest stages, UIF would allow Brenner and Lein to supercharge their funding and involvement.  Their focus has remained on startups tackling urban problems in areas such as public health, education, and transportation. The types of companies they look for are those that drive economic vitality in cities, make urban areas more livable, or make cities more sustainable. As Tumml did, UIF provides not just funding but also consistent support in navigating regulatory challenges. “It’s a very, very small subset of companies that can both work on a problem that, at least in our minds, really matters and be an enormous business.” And, like Tumml, UIF has taken on industries or companies that other investors may see as risky. When it was raising its first fund, Lein remembers, they pitched a large institution on its vision, which includes investing in companies that work on climate and energy. The organization, burned by the money it lost when the first cleantech bubble burst, was extremely wary—it wasn’t interested in a fund that emphasized those areas. But Lein and Brenner pressed on. Today, climate tech remains one of the fund’s largest areas, accounting for more than a sixth of its portfolio of 64 companies (see “Urban innovation in action,” at right). In addition to Electriphi, they have invested in Public Grid, a company that gives households access to affordable clean energy, and Optiwatt, an app that helps EV drivers schedule charging at times of day when it is cheaper or cleaner.                              “They took risks in areas, [including] mobility and transportation, where other people might not play because of policy and regulation risk. And they were willing to think about the public-private partnerships and what might be needed,” says Rachel Sheinbein, MBA ’04, SM ’04, a Bay Area–based angel investor who has worked with the Urban Innovation Fund on investments. “They weren’t afraid to take that on.” Lein and Brenner have also invested in health companies like Cleancard, which is working to provide at-home testing for cancers, and startups creating workflow tools, like KarmaSuite, which has built software to help nonprofits track grants.  Meanwhile, they have cast a wide net and built a portfolio rich in companies that happen to be led by entrepreneurs from underrepresented groups: Three-quarters of the companies in UIF’s current portfolio were founded by women or people of color, and nearly 60% include an immigrant on their founding team.   When it comes to selecting companies, Brenner says, they make “very calculated decisions” based in part on regulatory factors that may affect profits. But they’re still looking for the huge returns that drive other investors.  “It’s a very, very small subset of companies that can both work on a problem that, at least in our minds, really matters and be an enormous business,” she says. “Those are really the companies that we’re looking for.” One of the most obvious examples of that winning combination is Electriphi. When Brenner and Lein invested in the company, in 2019, the Biden administration hadn’t mandated the electrification of federal auto fleets, and the Inflation Reduction Act, which included financial incentives for clean energy, hadn’t yet been drafted. And California had yet to announce its intention to completely phase out gas-powered cars. “It was not a hot space,” says Brenner. But after meeting with Electriphi’s team, both Brenner and Lein felt there was something there. The partners tracked the startup for months, saw it achieving its goals, and ended up offering it the largest investment, by several orders of magnitude, that their fund had ever made. Less than two years later, Ford acquired it for an undisclosed sum.  “When we were originally talking about Electriphi, a lot of people were like, ‘Eh, it’s going to take too long for fleets to transition, and we don’t want to make a bet at this time,’” Sheinbein recalls. But she says the partners at Urban Innovation Fund were willing to take on an investment that other people were “still a little bit hesitant” about. Sheinbein also invested in the startup.  GABRIELA HASBUN Impact investing has now taken root in the building where Lein and Brenner first met. What was once an often overlooked investing area, says Bill Aulet, SM ’94, managing director of the Martin Trust Center for MIT Entrepreneurship, is now a core element of how Sloan teaches entrepreneurship. Aulet sees Urban Innovation Fund’s social-enterprise investing strategy as very viable in the current market. “Will it outperform cryptocurrency? Not right now,” he says, but he adds that many people want to put their money toward companies with the potential to improve the world.  Lein, who worked as Aulet’s teaching assistant at Sloan for a class now known as Entrepreneurship 101, helped establish the mold at Sloan for a social-impact entrepreneur—that is, someone who sees doing good as a critical objective, not just a marketing strategy. “Entrepreneurs don’t just have to found startups,” says Aulet. “You can also be what we call an entrepreneurship amplifier,” which he defines as “someone who helps entrepreneurship thrive.” When they make investments, VCs tend to prioritize such things as the need for a company’s products and the size of its potential market. Brenner and Lein say they pay the most attention to the team when deciding whether to make a bet: Do they work together well? Are they obsessive about accomplishing their goals? Those who have watched UIF grow say Brenner and Lein’s partnership fits that profile itself.  “I can just tell when a team really respects each other and [each] sees the value in the other one’s brain,” says Sheinbein. For Lein and Brenner, she says, their “mutual respect and admiration for each other” is obvious.  “We went to Sloan, we spent a bunch of money, but we found each other,” says Lein.  “We couldn’t agree on a new urban-tech startup to start,” she adds, so instead, they built an ecosystem of them—all in the name of improving cities for the people who live there. 
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  • WWW.CNET.COM
    Xfinity Mobile Adds Premium Unlimited Plan With Twice-Yearly Device Upgrades
    If you're already an Xfinity internet customer, Xfinity Mobile is sweetening its top-level wireless plan.
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  • WWW.CNET.COM
    US Wants Judge to Break Up Google, Force Sale of Chrome: What to Know
    A three-week hearing is under way to address the company's internet search monopoly.
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  • WWW.NINTENDOLIFE.COM
    Switch Onimusha 1+2 Bundle Pack Launching Alongside Sequel Remaster
    Capcom also brings 'Hell Mode' to Onimusha 1.Capcom is gearing up for the remaster of Onimusha 2 next month, and as part of this, it's now announced a special digital bundle. If you haven't played the first or second game, you'll also have the option to pick up the "Onimusha 1+2 Pack".This will be arriving on the same day as Onimusha 2 Samurai's Destiny on 23rd May 2025. This pack cannot be pre-ordered but early purchasers will still receive an album selection pack as a bonus, which is the same bonus as the one included with Onimusha 2. The price for this pack hasn't been revealed just yet, and there's no mention of a physical version of this pack.Read the full article on nintendolife.com
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  • WWW.NINTENDOLIFE.COM
    Switch 2 'Welcome Tour' Estimated File Size Revealed By Nintendo
    A paid experience revealing Switch 2's secrets.Nintendo has already revealed the estimated file sizes of a handful of titles for Switch 2 and now we've got another one to add to this list. This time it's for the Switch 2 museum-like experience Welcome Tour, which Nintendo has confirmed will be a paid title.Here's the estimated file size, according to the page listing on Nintendo's official Japanese website. Keep in mind file sizes are subject to change between now and release, and games could also receive updates post-launch.Read the full article on nintendolife.com
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