• Chris Wallace Is Moving on From His CNN Job and His Longtime D.C. Home
    www.architecturaldigest.com
    Just a few days after announcing his departure from CNN, broadcaster Chris Wallace is listing his Washington, D.C. home of 27 years for $6.4 million, the Wall Street Journal reports. The anchor and his wife bought the Georgian Revival residence for $1.1 million in 1997, around the time they got married.The dwelling sports a stately brick faade, a columned entrance, and slate roof tiles. It is located in the capital citys tony Kalorama neighborhood, which has drawn the likes of Jeff Bezos, the Obamas, and Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner in recent years. Former presidents Woodrow Wilson, William Howard Taft, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Warren Harding, and Herbert Hoover have all been residents of Kalorama.The abode, which dates to 1929, has four bedrooms and five bathrooms across nearly 5,000 square feet of living space. The main level features formal areas with arched doorways, hardwood floors, and elegant crown molding. A cozy wood-paneled study and a living room complete with an 18th-century marble fireplace are among the pads most welcoming spaces. The couple made a number of small remodels to the house over the years, the most notable of which being the homes updated all-white kitchen; the space is where Wallaces wife, Lorraine, tested recipes for her cookbooks, including Mr. Sundays Saturday Night Chicken. Wallace told WSJ that the late senator Ted Kennedy, late Supreme Court justice Antonin Scalia, and George Clooney (with a bottle of red wine in tow, no less) were among the guests he and Lorraine entertained during their tenure at the residence.Register TodayAD PRO's 2025 Interior Design Forecast is almost hereArrowWallace also told the WSJ that this next era of his career will involve making the move from cable to podcasts and streaming. He shared that he and Lorraine will downsize to a smaller abode in D.C. and spend most of their time in Annapolis, Maryland, where she owns a small business selling produce to local restaurants.
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  • Blender Management Desktop App
    www.blendernation.com
    BlenderManager is a lightweight, open-source tool designed to simplify the management of Blender projects. Built with Python, it helps users organize their project files and streamline workflows.It provides a clean interface for tracking your Blender projects and keeping everything structured, especially useful for larger projects.verlorengest writes:Made a Desktop App About Managing Blender Versions & Plugins, Projects etc.Ive built Blender Manager to help you manage multiple Blender versions, addons, projects, and rendersall from one sleek interface!Top Features: Install & Switch Between Any Version in a single click. Auto Update for both Blender and the manager appnever miss a new feature! Organize Projects & Renders with previews, time tracking, and notes. Addon Manager: Easily add, remove, and check compatibility. Customizable UI with themes and font options. Quick Project Setup: Import reference images, select a base mesh, and configure your sceneall before launching Blender! Check it out and let me know your thoughts!Link Github: BlenderManager
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  • Best of Blender Artists: 2024-46
    www.blendernation.com
    Every week, hundreds of artists share their work on the Blender Artists forum. I'm putting some of the best work in the spotlight in a weekly post here on BlenderNation.Source
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  • The Great Migration to Bluesky Gives Me Hope for the Future of the Internet
    www.404media.co
    There were periods over the weekend where I was getting more than 1,000 new Bluesky followers every hour. This was very exciting not just because I was enjoying the dopamine of seeing a number go up, but because it was happening to many other people on Bluesky, too. Over the last week, more than a million people have joined Bluesky and, more importantly, people who already had accounts there started actively using it again, to the point where it felt like the most energetic move away from Twitter since Elon Musk took over. Bluesky is different and, in my opinion, better than X and Threads because it is operated as a public benefit corporation and not owned by an oligarch. It is also decentralized and is federated, meaning it is moving toward a future where users own their audiences and can port them elsewhere (you can, and many do, argue about the details here, and about the differences between ActivityPub, which Mastodon uses, and the AT Protocol, which Bluesky uses).The active migration away from social media networks that are owned, controlled by, and distorted by the richest men and most powerful companies in the world to a decentralized platform that is not owned and controlled by billionaires is one of the more hopeful things to happen in what has largely been a bleak year for the human internet as AI slop infects everything and billionaires put their thumbs on the scale of what we see on social media. The Bluesky migration is good news, and I hope it continues.Bluesky feels more vibrant and more filled with real humans than any other social media network on the internet has felt in a very long time. It has surpassed Threads as the current most popular app on the App Store, and now has more than 15 million users overall.If you're on Bluesky, you can follow all of us here.(We talk much more about Bluesky in the second half of this episode of the podcast)Close followers of 404 Media may remember an article I did a year ago called Mastodon Is the Good One, in which I put my eggs in the Mastodon basket. I am now taking most of those eggs (my attention and effort) and putting them in the Bluesky basket for a few different reasons, most notably the fact that Bluesky feels incredibly vibrant across a wide variety of topics. There are journalists and academics and scientists and Swifties and all the Brazilians who left X when Brazil temporarily banned it. Lots of people from Black Twitter are there. There are main characters on Bluesky and they are getting dunked on sometimes, and that's something I like. Importantly for me, many of my favorite baseball writers and accounts have made their way over to Bluesky and are actively posting there. It has, as they say, the juice.I still think Mastodon is important and I will continue to use it, but a year after my article, I have complicated feelings about it. I still think that federation and decentralization, where publications and users own their followings and can port them across a variety of different services is the future of the internet if we want to have any hope of taking back any control from billionaires. I do not find Mastodon itself to be that difficult to use, and I find the people there to be very nice. I believe in decentralization and federation broadly speaking, and 404 Media will continue to support and hopefully be involved in attempts to disseminate our content more widely across the fediverse (it should be noted that Mastodon is not the only part of the fediverse, and that there are an increasing number of services that use ActivityPub). My Mastodon feed still has many interesting people talking, but Ive found it difficult to make a diverse and active feed that has a lot of posts about things that arent technology, cybersecurity, open source, etc.But something happened to many of the larger Mastodon servers over the last few months. I have a theory about this: Threads happened to it. Threads announced that it would become a part of the fediverse, and that it would allow people to share their Threads posts using ActivityPub.The website Mastodon-Analytics, which tracks active users on Mastodon instances shows that the number of active users has steadily dropped over the last year, from 1.6 million in November, 2023 to a little less than 900,000 at the end of October. This cannot be fully blamed on Threads federating, but, anecdotally, Threadss uneven entry into the Fediverse feels like it has made my personal feeds deader. My theory and fear is that Threads has allowed people to perform the act of federating by having their Threads posts go to the fediverse, but it does not allow people on Threads to respond to people on Mastodon. This gives people a permission structure to abandon their Mastodon accounts, use Threads, and sort of passively invest in the future of decentralized social media while actually just giving more power to Mark Zuckerbergs side project.This makes for what is at the moment a really bad dynamic, where youre broadcasting your Threads posts to the fediverse, and people on Mastodon can respond to them, but you cant respond to those people.I talked about this on the Dot Social podcast with Flipboards CEO Mike McCue and ProPublicas Ben Werdmuller, both of whom are extremely bullish on the future of the decentralized web, and they both told me that they think in the long run having a big fish like Threads investing in the fediverse will be good. Part of the whole point of the fediverse and decentralized social media is that it will ultimately not matter what server youre posting from.But we are not quite at that point yet, in my opinion, because it still feels very difficult for me to build a feed on Mastodon where I feel like that is the only social media platform I can visit and where I am getting everything I need from that one place. Mastodon and ActivityPub still heavily overindexes on people talking about tech and nerdy internet topics (said lovingly), and its hard to find active discussion about, say, sports, pop culture, celebrities, etc. In the short term, I think that Threads cannonballing in a partial way into the fediverse has cannibalized some of the energy that Mastodon has had over the last year, whereas Bluesky has been allowed to grow its own voice and userbase kind of on its own, without Zuckerberg jumping into the pool.This article is nominally about Bluesky, but Threads and Mastodon are as much a part of the Twitter-replacement story as X and Bluesky itself are. (You should check out the episode of Dot Social where McCue interviews Blueskys primary owner and CEO Jay Graber, by the way.)Threads has also become more vibrant over the last few months, with Meta forcing people onto the platform by injecting Thread posts onto Instagram. This has led Threads to apparently add a million users a day, but it is not clear to me how real that userbase is, and how many of them are simply downloading Threads because they saw something on Instagram and are not regularly using the app or are just interacting with it when they see something on Instagram. Threads still feels to me like a gas leak social media network with a busted algorithm that over indexes on extremely annoying middle managers in Silicon Valley who dogpile on anyone who thinks that maybe social media network that suppresses links and political content, has horrible and uneven content moderation, and is owned by the same company that is paying an army of posters in developing nations to spam their flagship platform with busted AI is maybe not the platform to bet on. It is alsosorryfull of people who think Threads is perfectly fine and do not want to do even the tiniest bit of work to take a microscopic bit of power away from a company that has dominated global social media to disastrous outcomes for 20 years, and who cannot be bothered to do the bare minimum amount of introspection or reading to understand why a viable platform not owned by Mark Zuckerberg or Elon Musk might be something worth building toward. So, anyway. Bluesky. I am not going to pretend to be an expert on Blueskys AT protocol, how it differs from ActivityPub (which Mastodon uses), and its future plans for interoperability. I know enough to know that if I attempt to explain it here, I will get something wrong and people will be mad at me. But I have been impressed with the tools that the open source development community is building to bridge the gap between the AT protocol and ActivityPub, and Im hopeful that some mixture of Bluesky and Mastodon will eventually serve most of my needs as a social media user and, hopefully, as someone who co-owns a website.I do not know if this current enthusiasm will last. 404 Medias Sam Cole has endlessly made fun of my willingness to embrace new social media platforms and declare them to suddenly be where we should all focus our energy, and perhaps I will look back on this post and realize that I was naive or stupid.Cory Doctorow, who is perceptive about such things, worries about Bluesky enshittifying, and its model of decentralization is not as robust at the moment as Mastodon's, which is certainly a concern. But I do know that the energy on Bluesky is exciting, that the app and website are very usable, and that, as a journalist, I appreciate a platform that does not and says it will not punish links in any algorithm and which mostly operates in reverse chronological order. I think that the Starter Packs that let you follow tons of people at once according to your interests have made the onboarding process really easy. Whats happening on Bluesky right now feels organic and it feels real in a way no other Twitter replacement has felt so far, and it feels better than X.com has been ever since Elon Musk took over. If the masses are going to move off Twitter, we can do much better than Threads. And we could do much worse than Bluesky.Jason is a cofounder of 404 Media. He was previously the editor-in-chief of Motherboard. He loves the Freedom of Information Act and surfing.More from Jason Koebler
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  • The Art of Rostyslav Zagornov
    www.iamag.co
    Discover the art ofRostyslav Zagornov , a Ukrainian artist working as a Concept Artist for Games & Movies. Rostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostislav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav ZagornovRostyslav Zagornov
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  • World of Warcraft player housing is the "most ambitious feature in a WoW expansion ever" according to game director
    www.vg247.com
    New home!World of Warcraft player housing is the "most ambitious feature in a WoW expansion ever" according to game directorIn a press roundtable, Ion Hazzikostas peeled back the curtain a little on player housing.Image credit: Activision Blizzard Article by Connor Makar Staff Writer Published on Nov. 15, 2024 In a press roundtable following the Warcraft 30th anniversary direct, World of Warcraft game director Ion Hazzikostas stated that player housing is the "most ambitious feature in a WoW expansion ever".In a response to a question from the press, Hazzikostas stated, "Dare I say it's our most ambitious feature in a WoW expansion ever. Part of why it's taken such a long time to present it is that we knew we couldn't really phone it in and put out a barebones foundation, even if we were to build on it in the future. I think everything we do needs to be great, but especially something with so much expectation and so much history across the MMO genre. We know it needs to be excellent, and it'll be a foundation for years and years of further development and growth upon those foundations to follow."To see this content please enable targeting cookies. Ahead of this question, we asked why the development team shifted from the prior stance against implementing player housing, to the new embrace of the feature. Hazzikostas's response revealed more about why the feature is being revealed now."Player housing is something that the team has thought about and discussed for a long, long time. It's something the community has been asking for and wondering about for a long time, and that's not lost on us. When you say it wasn't embraced in the past, there wasn't anything philosophical that was standing in the way, in that we didn't have a feeling it wasn't a good idea or thought it wouldn't be an improvement to the social ecosystem of the MMO.""I think frankly we were looking at what it would take to make it real, and make it at the quality level our players expect and deserve. That includes our resources, customisation options, the underlying tech required to have it really feel integrated into the world. In the past, many of those pieces just weren't there, in that we had to choose between doing housing or everything else in an expansion, and everything else just won out."It's something we've been working on in the background for a few years at this point. It's something we knew would take more than one expansion development cycle to create, and we're really excited to finally bring it to players with Midnight. We'll have a lot more details to share on exactly it'll work, what it is, what it isn't, where it's going in the year ahead. But really, we wanted to pull back the curtain a little bit and give players a peak of what' coming on the horizon. "Maybe a bit selfishly, to kick of discussion among the community about housing, on what they want it to be and what they want it to not be. That way, we can check our instincts and make sure we're on the right track with our development."More updates can be expected, according to Hazzikostas, over 2025 through blog posts and similar official Blizzard platforms. So we'll have to sit back and wait for more news!
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  • Don't worry, Helldivers 2 folks, Arrowhead's working on the Democracy Space Station's team-killing tendencies, and it's already introduced a temporary tweak to help
    www.vg247.com
    Helldivers 2's Democracy Space Station might be a bit of a problem right now, due to the fact its orbital barrages keep blowing up just as many helldivers as they do bots and bugs, but there's good news. Arrowhead says it's on the case, and has just enacted a temporaray measure to help out while it works on a proper solution.The DSS has had pretty high expectations to live up to as a big Galactic War thing. So, hopefully this means the wave of bad reviews for it from exploded divers that's followed a wave of initial positivity will result in the DSS going back to being a good thing.To see this content please enable targeting cookies. As part of its efforts to bring about that change, Arrowhead's just announced a "Temporary DSS Augmentation" via tweet. "High Command has authorized augmentations to Helldiver loadouts while the Planetary Bombardment Tactical Action is active," it writes, "in order to ameliorate an unexpectedly steep increase in heroic sacrifices."This is a temporary change, while a full assessment of the optimal number of sacrifices is underway. Consult the DSS Interface on your Galactic Map for more details." To see this content please enable targeting cookies.Shortly before this temporary measure was revealed, Arrowhead community manager Twinbeard had acknowledged on Helldivers 2's Discord server in response to player queries that the studio was aware of the issue and looking into what action it should take about the DSS."There was testing, and I don't believe the pressure was too steep either," they wrote in one response, "Better to simply own up to the fact that the first incarnation of the DSS didn't pan out as well as we'd wanted it to and work hard to rework and improve it. We'll learn from this and grow I'm sure. There are a lot of discussions ongoing at the moment. This is not the end of the DSS, we'll tweak and evolve." Image credit: VG247What do you think Arrowhead should do in terms of tweaks or fixes for the DSS, in order to get it working as the asset to Super Earth it was designed to be? Let us know below!
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  • Anniversary: 20 Years On, Metroid Prime 2 Represents The Franchise At Its Experimental Best
    www.nintendolife.com
    Crossing worlds.Following up on Metroid Prime was never going to be easy. Although many (this writer included) were sceptical of Retro Studios abilities to move Metroid into the 3D, first-person realm, the team not only managed to put its own spin on an established Nintendo franchise successfully, but it also created one of the greatest games of all time.How the heck are you supposed to top that? Well, Metroid Prime 2: Echoes doesnt quite reach the same heights as its predecessor, and its often regarded as the lesser entry in an eventual trilogy (though to be honest, even the worst Prime game is better than the majority of games out there). That said, it will always remain one of my personal favourites in the franchise thanks to its bold experimentation with parallel worlds.Read the full article on nintendolife.com
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  • Splinter Cell Movie Is Reportedly Dead, Producer Admits Team "Just Couldn't Get It Right"
    www.nintendolife.com
    Image: UbisoftIt has been a long time since we heard any news about Ubisoft's Splinter Cell movie so long, in fact, that it may come as no surprise to hear that the entire project has reportedly been cancelled (thanks for the heads up, Eurogamer).That is according to one of the producers formally attached to the project, Basil Iwanyk, who, in an interview with The Direct, described the adaptation as "one of the ones that got away".While discussing the 10th anniversary of the John Wick franchise (on which he is also a producer), Iwanyk said that the Splinter Cell movie was "going to be great", but the team "just couldn't get it right, script-wise, budget-wise".You'll find his full answer below:That movie would have been awesome... Just couldn't get it right, script-wise, budget-wise. But it was going to be great. We had a million different versions of it, but it was going to be hardcore and awesome. That's one of the ones that got away, which is really sad.The Splinter Cell movie was announced over a decade ago, with Tom Hardy set to take on the starring role and Doug Liman (Edge of Tomorrow, The Bourne Identity, Road House) set to direct. It's a pretty solid pairing and one that we could see working in an action-heavy adaptation. But the lack of any official word in recent years means that today's news isn't all that surprising.Of course, this isn't the end of all Splinter Cell adaptations. Netflix's animated take on the series, Splinter Cell: Deathwatch, got its first teaser last month, giving us our first peek at Liev Schreiber's Sam Fisher.Subscribe to Nintendo Life on YouTube785kWhat do you make of this cancellation? Were you still looking forward to a Splinter Cell movie? Let us know in the comments.
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