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  • Bird flu may be adapting to become more infectious to humans
    www.newscientist.com
    Bird flu has been spreading in wild animals for years but it is now adapting to humansVuk Valcic//SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty ImagesThe threat of the deadly H5N1 bird flu virus adapting to humans has been inching closer towards becoming a reality all year, and we may be nearing an inflection point. Three H5N1 cases in humans have happened in the very scenarios that public health officials are concerned could lead to a pandemic in people.There is no clear evidence yet of human-to-human transmission, but I
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  • Ocean acidification is reaching deeper waters
    www.newscientist.com
    Deep-sea coral reefs are at risk from acidificationHoward Chew / Alamy Stock PhotoOcean acidification is sinking into marine regions as deep as 1500 metres, posing new threats to organisms like sea butterflies, sea snails and cold-water corals.The ocean is the largest natural sink of carbon dioxide, absorbing about a quarter of our annual emissions. That uptake of CO2 makes the oceans surface more acidic, with consequences for sensitive ecosystems like coral reefs. But until now, researchers did not know the extent to which acidification was reaching deeper waters. AdvertisementJens Daniel Mller at the Federal Institute of Technology Zurich in Switzerland and his colleagues developed a 3D reconstruction of how CO2 moves through the ocean, based on global measurements of currents and other circulation patterns. They used this model to estimate how the carbon dioxide the oceans have absorbed since 1800, around the start of the industrial revolution, has affected deep-water acidity.They found a clear acidification signal down to 1000 metres in most of the ocean. Some areas, such as the North Atlantic where the powerful Atlantic meridional overturning current (AMOC) carries carbon from the surface to deeper waters saw acidification down to 1500 metres. Some pockets of deeper water that are naturally more acidic saw even more acidification than the surface. Their higher original acidity reduces their capacity to absorb any added CO2, says Mller.This is more or less what researchers expected would happen as the ocean takes up more CO2, says Hongjie Wang at the University of Rhode Island. But its a different thing to really see the data coming in to affirm this. Receive a weekly dose of discovery in your inbox.Sign up to newsletterNotably, about half of all the acidification since 1800 occurred after 1994, as our emissions of CO2 have risen exponentially. We see this rather rapid progression, says Mller.The magnitude of the acidification is enough to threaten the survival of organisms in large areas of the ocean. Pteropods like sea snails and sea butterflies are at particular risk because they build their shells out of calcium, which dissolves if the water gets too acidic. The rise in acidification has also doubled the areas where cold-water corals will have trouble surviving.And ocean acidification is set to continue as the water absorbs more CO2. Even if we were able to stop CO2 emissions immediately, we would still for a couple of hundred of years or so see a process of ocean acidification in the interior, says Mller.Journal reference:Science Advances DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.ado3103Topics:
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  • www.technologyreview.com
    IP Address Test
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  • The Download: the secret lives of AI characters, and commercializing space
    www.technologyreview.com
    This is today's edition ofThe Download,our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what's going on in the world of technology. These AI Minecraft characters did weirdly human stuff all on their own Left to their own devices, an army of AI characters didnt just survive they thrived. They developed in-game jobs, shared memes, voted on tax reforms and even spread a religion. The experiment played out on the open-world gaming platform Minecraft, where up to 1000 software agents at a time used large language models to interact with one another. Given just a nudge through text prompting, they developed a remarkable range of personality traits, preferences and specialist roles, with no further inputs from their human creators. The work, from AI startup Altera, is part of a broader field that wants to use simulated agents to model how human groups would react to new economic policies or other interventions. And its creators see it as an early step towards large-scale AI civilizations that can coexist and work alongside us in digital spaces. Read the full story.Niall Firth To learn more about the intersection of AI and gaming, why not check out: + How generative AI could reinvent what it means to play. AI-powered NPCs that dont need a script could make gamesand other worldsdeeply immersive. Read the full story. + What impact will AI have on video game development? It could make working conditions more bearableor it could just put people out of work. Read the full story.+ What happened when MIT Technology Reviews staff turned our colleague Niall into an AI-powered nonplayer characterand why he hated his digital incarnation so much. MIT Technology Review Narrated: The great commercial takeover of low Earth orbit Did you know that NASA intends to destroy the International Space Station by around 2030? Once it's gone, private companies will likely swoop in with their own replacements. Get ready for the great commercial takeover of low Earth orbit. This is our latest story to be turned into a MIT Technology Review Narrated podcast, whichwere publishing each week on Spotify and Apple Podcasts. Just navigate to MIT Technology Review Narrated on either platform, and follow us to get all our new content as its released. The must-reads Ive combed the internet to find you todays most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology. 1 OpenAI has suspended access to its Sora video tool After a group of artists leaked access to it in protest. (TechCrunch)+ OpenAI responded to say they were under no obligation to use its tool. (WP $)+ Four ways to protect your art from AI. (MIT Technology Review)2 A researcher created a database of one million public Bluesky posts Even though Bluesky itself doesnt use AI trained on its user content. (404 Media)+ A new public database lists all the ways AI could go wrong. (MIT Technology Review)3 China is on a Silicon Valley hiring offensive Chinese firms are prepared to triple engineers salaries to lure them in. (WSJ $) 4 What happens when autonomous weapons make life-or-death decisionsThe notion of algorithms making decisions over who lives or dies is chilling. (Undark Magazine) + Inside the messy ethics of making war with machines. (MIT Technology Review)5 How Elon Musk is trying to make xAI a bona fide OpenAI competitor It's up against some pretty stiff competition. (WSJ $)+ The firm is likely to double its current valuation to the tune of $50 billion. (FT $)+ How OpenAI stress-tests its large language models. (MIT Technology Review)6 These treatments can bring patients back from the brink of deathSo when should they be deployedand who should get them? (New Scientist $) + Inside the billion-dollar meeting for the mega-rich who want to live forever. (MIT Technology Review)7 How this gigantic laser achieved a nuclear fusion milestoneThe team behind it already has a new goal in its sights, too. (Nature) + When the race for fusion ground to a halt. (MIT Technology Review)8 These two influencers are locked in a legal battleBut can you really legally protect an aesthetic thats everywhere? (The Verge) 9 LinkedIns viral posts are mostly written by AI That explains a lot. (Wired $)10 This lollipop device allows you to taste nine virtual flavors Willy Wonka eat your heart out. (Ars Technica) Quote of the day We are not your free bug testers, PR puppets, training data, validation tokens. A group of artists decry OpenAIs treatment of creators in an open letter accompanying a leaked version of the company Sora generative AI video tool, Variety reports. The big story Why we can no longer afford to ignore the case for climate adaptation August 2022 Back in the 1990s, anyone suggesting that wed need to adapt to climate change while also cutting emissions was met with suspicion. Most climate change researchers felt adaptation studies would distract from the vital work of keeping pollution out of the atmosphere to begin with. Despite this hostile environment, a handful of experts were already sowing the seeds for a new field of research called climate change adaptation: study and policy on how the world could prepare for and adapt to the new disasters and dangers brought forth on a warming planet. Today, their research is more important than ever. Read the full story. Madeline Ostrander We can still have nice things A place for comfort, fun and distraction to brighten up your day. (Got any ideas? Drop me a line or tweet 'em at me.) + Japanese leaf art is truly an impressive feat (thanks Stephen!)+ Can our Los Angeles readers let me know if this Cyberpunk exhibition at the Academy Museum is as amazing as it looks?+ The years best music books serve as great Christmas present inspiration.+ If you hate how Sam Altman takes notes, heres how to do it the right way.
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  • Mark Zuckerberg reportedly met with Trump at Mar-a-Lago
    www.businessinsider.com
    Mark Zuckerberg met with President-elect Donald Trump at Mar-a-Lago in Florida, the NYT reported.Trump and Zuckerberg, who did not endorse a candidate for president, have had a rocky relationship.Trump previously threatened to jail Zuckerberg if he was elected.Mark Zuckerberg became the latest tech CEO to meet with President-elect Donald Trump.The New York Times reported the Meta CEO met with Trump at the latter's Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida on Wednesday, citing two sources briefed on the meeting.Details about the meeting were not immediately clear. Meta and representatives for Trump did not respond to requests for comment from Business Insider.Zuckerberg did not endorse a candidate for president in the 2024 election.He has had a contentious relationship with Trump, who earlier this year threatened to jail the billionaire if he were elected.Zuckerberg praised how Trump responded to the assassination attempt in July."On a personal note, seeing Donald Trump get up after getting shot in the face and pump his fist in the air with the American flag is one of the most badass things I've ever seen in my life," Zuckerberg said.After Trump won the election, Zuckerberg was among the many tech and business leaders who congratulated him."Congratulations to President Trump on a decisive victory. We have great opportunities ahead of us as a country," he wrote in a Threads post the day after the election. "Looking forward to working with you and your administration."Trump and Zuckerberg met at least twice during the president-elect's first term, including in an unannounced White House meeting and at a secret dinner with billionaire Peter Thiel in October 2019, according to several reports.In 2021, Trump suggested he should have banned Facebook while he was in office, but said, "Zuckerberg kept calling me and coming to the White House for dinner telling me how great I was."Facebook suspended the former president's account on the platform after the January 6, 2021, Capitol insurrection. Meta reinstated Trump's accounts in 2023.Zuckerberg isn't the only tech CEO to visit Mar-a-Lago in the wake of Trump's win.Billionaire Elon Musk, who played a major role in Trump's campaign, spent election night with Trump at the Florida resort and has spent time there since.
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  • My solo trip to Greece helped me reset, but there are 5 things that would've made it even better
    www.businessinsider.com
    In September, Katka Lapelosova took a solo trip to Greece.While she enjoyed the six days in Zakynthos, it wasn't the stress-free vacation she'd hoped for.If she could do it over, she'd travel there with friends and rent a car.Now that I live in Europe, I love how easy it is to visit different countries. Since leaving New York City in 2020, I aim to travel at least once a month.In September, I decided it was time for a solo trip to a Greek island to live out my "Mamma Mia" dreams. My friends recommended Santorini and Mykonos, but those islands were expensive, and I was nervous about them being overcrowded.I researched a few alternatives, like Corfu, Zakynthos, and Rhodes, and settled on Zakynthos, partly due to photos of a shipwreck I'd seen on Instagram.I wanted to see if the water was really the color of Colgate toothpaste, but more than that, I just needed a seaside break to relax and help me reset. My beach vacation in Greece was very much what I needed, but there are some things I would change if I had the chance for a vacation redo. The author came across a lot of gap year travelers during her trip to Zakynthos. Katka Lapelosova 1. Spend time in AthensI had an overnight layover in Athens, so I spent one night in the city center before heading to Zakynthos. Friends had told me I only needed a day in the city, saying that there wasn't much to see or do. The city took me by surprise, though, and I wish I'd had more time there.Outside the incredible historic Greek archaeology, I didn't have enough time for the art museums or festivals. While the residential architecture wasn't as charming as what I saw on the island, the mix of classical designs, modern restaurants, and cocktail bars all looked worthy of a visit.2. Avoid the party zonesOnce I got to Zakynthos, the energy level changed. I was greeted by the chaos of gap year travelers living out the last days of summer. I had read that the island was a hot spot for college-aged travelers, but I figured it was big enough that we could keep our distance. But despite my accommodation being just outside the main party zone of Laganas, I shared a floor with a group of eight rowdy college kids. I was thankful that I'd packed earplugs.In hindsight, I should have done more research on other parts of the island. While some locals told me Zakynthos has parties wherever you go, others said that renting a villa can be a good alternative for finding a bit of peace and quiet. They said that visitors who stay more inland can rent a car and drive to the beach, as most coastlines can be reached in a few minutes.3. Rent a car to explore more of the islandRenting a car would have been a great idea overall, but my plan had been to take buses. In true island fashion, these ran on their own scheduleOne day in Zakynthos, I waited over an hour for a bus that never came. Taxis proved to be just as unreliable, with many canceling or not showing up when I tried to book them by phone.While I was able to make the most of Laganas, the island's village and beach resort, I feel like there was more I could have explored. I was limited to the nearby beaches, which were not super crowded but not very serene or peaceful either.I also didn't realize that it was much easier to get to the shipwreck by car. Only one tour company offered to drive people there, so I had to work around their schedule to see it. Friends partying together on a boat in Zakynthos. Katka Lapelosova 4. Travel with friends instead of going soloNormally, I opt for solo travel. I find it to be the least stressful. But I often felt lonely on Zakynthos because I saw big groups of people everywhere I went not just college kids either, but multi-generational families and honeymooning couples, all having fun in the sun around me.I watched a lot of them enjoying the outdoor and water activities that Greece has to offer. Small boats can be rented to sail around the island, take tours of water caves and go diving or snorkeling, grab a few mopeds or four-wheelers and drive around, party on a booze cruise, or enjoy inflatable water playgrounds along the beach.While I could have done some of those things on my own, I knew they'd be more fun with a big group of friends to share the excitement. Hotels and restaurants in Zakynthos range between "beachfront," "beach access," or "private beach." Katka Lapelosova 5. Understand the difference between beachfront and beach accessOne of the biggest things I'd change about my Greek island trip is booking a hotel that had beach access. "Beachfront" doesn't necessarily mean you can just walk right out to the beach from your hotel, or at least not on Zakynthos.While my accommodation was next to the beach, if I wanted to spend time lounging in the sun, I had to pay for a crummy cappuccino or an overpriced bottle of water for the privilege.I didn't realize this before I booked my trip, but locals told me it's common. Many cafs, restaurants, and bars own beach access, and while most just ask that you purchase some food or drinks, some require you to rent a beach chair and umbrella or even buy a day pass.Next time, I'll read more reviews or even contact the property and ask if they have a beach for their guests. I only saw "beachfront" on my booking website and realized after spending a few days there that what I needed was "beach access" or "private beach."
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  • Wicked, explained
    www.vox.com
    Wicked, the highly anticipated adaptation of the popular Broadway musical, is just about everywhere. The first half of the saga, released on November 22, made $114 million in its opening weekend domestically, and it has already generated some early Oscars buzz. Wicked: Part Two is set to premiere in November 2025. Directed by Jon M. Chu, who also directed Crazy Rich Asians, the movies plot dives into the true story of Elphaba, the Wicked Witch of the West, and Glinda the Good Witch, reimagined from the classic book series and film The Wizard of Oz. It stars Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande as Elphaba and Glinda, respectively, along with Jonathan Bailey, Michelle Yeoh, and Jeff Goldblum as other residents of the Land of Oz.From its backstory to its politics to understanding why fans are holding space for it, follow along here for everything you need to know about the film.
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  • Why Wickeds politics feel so bizarrely timely
    www.vox.com
    Wicked, the movie musical based on the beloved Broadway show of the same name, is one of the biggest hits of the year, opening at No. 1 in North America over the weekend and already generating some early Oscars buzz. Audiences came in prepared to love Wickeds famous power ballads and girl power core, but one aspect of the story seems to have caught people by surprise: its somewhat clunky yet remarkably durable political allegory.I noticed that Elphaba is like Kamala Harris and the Wizard is like Donald Trump, one fan posted on Reddit. A charismatic leader who gaslights a community that this woman is wicked just because shes standing up for a marginalized group of people in the society, how could that be [political]? director John M. Chu joked.For a silly, spectacular show about friendship and talking animals, Wicked actually does invite political interpretations. Its allegory can both elicit eye rolls and still feel eerily prescient more than 20 years after its stage debut. Wicked the musical is based on a 1995 novel of the same title by Gregory Maguire, an anti-fascist treatise in which the Wizard becomes a Hitler-like despot. The musical wouldnt go quite so far when it debuted on Broadway in 2003, but it did get in a number of hits at the George W. Bush administration, which had ordered the invasion of Iraq only months earlier. In Wicked, the Wizard is revealed to be disenfranchising the talking animals of Oz, on the grounds that to unify the rest of the country, he has to give them a common enemy. Yet the Wizards persecution of animals and, later, of Elphaba is rooted in a lie, in the same way that Bush falsely claimed that Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction before invading. Some of the references are glaringly obvious: When Dorothys house falls on the Wicked Witch of the East, Glinda echoes the Bush administrations favorite Iraq War euphemism in describing it as a regime change. Is one a crusader or ruthless invader? sings the Wizard, referencing Bushs infamous description of the invasion of Iraq as a crusade. Its all in which label is able to persist! Critics responses were mixed. As a parable of fascism and freedom, Wicked so overplays its hand that it seriously dilutes its power to disturb, Ben Brantley declared in 2003 at the New York Times, adding that the show wears its political heart as if it were a slogan button.Meanwhile, author Daniel Handler, though taken aback by such a dark interpretation of sunny and magical Oz, found himself drawn to the idea. It is hard not to wonder if the witch, a difficult figure transformed by difficult times, isnt precisely what our stage needs, Handler also wrote in the New York Times that same year. And perhaps, the show suggests, wicked is what the W stands for in George W. Bush.Singing the same lyrics today, the Wizard suggests not Bush but Trump: a leader consolidating his power by scapegoating marginalized groups and slowly but surely denying them their rights. Meanwhile, the difference in strategy between rabble-rousing progressive Elphaba and conciliatory liberal Glinda might hit home particularly hard for Democrats in the midst of their post-election recrimination. Both Elphaba and Glinda idolize the Wizard and dream of working at his right hand. When Elphaba learns of the plight of Ozs animals, she heads straight to the Emerald City to seek his help, certain that if he learns that the animals are being targeted, hell rush to their aid. The Wizard suggests he might do so if Elphaba uses her magic as part of his administration, but when she learns that its the Wizard behind the attacks, she disowns him, much to the dismay of practical-minded Glinda.Wicked was born to be an allegory of American politics. It cant quite be anything else.I hope youre happy how youve hurt your cause forever, Glinda sings. Elphaba, after all, is alienating a potential powerful ally. I hope youre proud, how you would grovel in submission to feed your own ambition, replies Elphaba, who has decided she will not work with anyone who is using his power to hurt Ozs talking animal citizens. Could you read this moment as an allegory over how Democrats should handle trans issues going forward? Sure, it sounds like a stretch, but its not as far-fetched as you might imagine. In a way its odd to think that Wickeds political messaging feels so prescient, since most Wicked fans would agree that the political subplot is the weakest part of the musical. Wicked lives and breathes by the fraught friendship between its two leads, not by its duelling visions of activism.Still, in another sense, Wicked was born to be an allegory of American politics. It cant quite be anything else. Thats what Oz stories are for.Most of the most childrens fantasy classics of the Anglophone world are English: think of Peter Pan, Narnia, The Sword in the Stone, and Harry Potter. They tend to think about what it means to be a good king, about wild magical beasts lurking in the forest, about being an island nation.The Wizard of Oz, though, is an American fantasy. A map of Oz, which is shaped like a rectangle with its long side horizontal, is a simplified map of America, as though drawn by a child: unimaginably vast, spanning the inhabitable entirety of a continent from east to west. (Oz is bordered by poisonous deserts rather than oceans.) It is a country where farmers cultivate fields of corn and wheat and orchards of apples; where industrialists build vast, glittering cities; where the west is full of rough and unsettled land. And it is a country governed by a con man who is lying to the people he rules.A map of Oz as it first appeared in L. Frank Baums 2014 novel Tik-Tok of Oz. Baum accidentally put Munchkinland on the West of Oz, causing endless trouble for future Oz cartographers.When L. Frank Baum wrote The Wonderful Wizard of Oz in 1900, he imagined the Wizard of Oz as someone who was well-meaning if ineffectual and a touch dishonest. Im a very good man just a bad wizard, the Wizard explains to Dorothy in the 1939 film. Still, the Wizard can work as a remarkably cynical metaphor for all the broken promises of the American dream. The Wizard is a man who will promise you everything but give you nothing, and then he will tell you the answer was inside of yourself all along. Its this metaphor that gives The Wiz, the all-Black reimagining of The Wizard of Oz from the 1970s, its surprisingly sharp bite. In The Wiz, Dorothy and her friends are Black people who are promised certain fundamental rights by a government that never plans to pay up. (Wicked gestures at a similar critique by casting the Black actress Cynthia Erivo as the racially othered green-skinned Elphaba.)Public office is the last refuge of the incompetent, the Scarecrow scoffs in The Wiz, after learning that the Wizard is a washed-up politician from Atlantic City. Incompetent! the Wiz crows. Thats me! Wicked, meanwhile, is not a reimagining of The Wizard of Oz so much as it is a revisionist history. As such, it is fundamentally skeptical of figures in authority much more so than Baum, who eventually replaced the Wizard with the virtuous and nearly infallible fairy queen Ozma. The premise of any story that tells you that the villains of your childhood are misunderstood is that the storytellers were lying to you. In Wicked, the Wizard isnt just a very bad wizard, but a very bad man, too. He lies maliciously and with strategic purpose. The Wizard can work as a remarkably cynical metaphor for all the broken promises of the American dream.Elphaba and Glinda, here, become just two more dreamers who travel to the Emerald City like Dorothy and her friends, because they want the Wizard to give them their hearts desire: protection for the talking animals of Oz as they become steadily more persecuted. Yet the Wizard they encounter is not only incapable of granting them such a request, but in fact plans to pervert it, using their innocent wishes to enact more violence. He plans to take Elphaba under his wing and have her do magic on his behalf so he can more thoroughly persecute the sentient animals he plans to round up and more efficiently spy on the rest of his citizens. In the end, the Wizard names Elphaba the Wicked Witch of the West and Glinda the Good Witch of the North because he can trust Glinda to maintain friendly relations with his administration, while Elphaba refuses. He is America governed not by a con man but by a strong man an authoritarian dictator.This is the kind of metaphor a revisionist history can offer you, and part of why Wicked feels so bizarrely urgent at this moment. In a subversion of a childhood classic, no authority figure can be trusted which is what makes these stories so attractive when people you dont trust have found their way into positions of power. Youve read 1 article in the last monthHere at Vox, we're unwavering in our commitment to covering the issues that matter most to you threats to democracy, immigration, reproductive rights, the environment, and the rising polarization across this country.Our mission is to provide clear, accessible journalism that empowers you to stay informed and engaged in shaping our world. By becoming a Vox Member, you directly strengthen our ability to deliver in-depth, independent reporting that drives meaningful change.We rely on readers like you join us.Swati SharmaVox Editor-in-ChiefSee More:
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  • How Sony could reclaim handheld gaming from Nintendo and the smartphone
    www.theguardian.com
    A report from Bloomberg this week suggests that Sony is working on a new portable PlayStation device. As someone who still has a PlayStation Vita languishing in my desk drawer because I cant quite bear to put it in the attic, this is an exciting prospect. It has been almost 13 years since Sony released the Vita, its last portable console, and its such a wonder of a thing, with its big crisp screen and dinky little sticks. I wish more people had made games for it paper-craft adventure Tearaway and topsy-turvy platform-puzzler Gravity Rush remain underrated.Actually, apart from the lovely and extremely niche Playdate, nobody has bothered to release a dedicated handheld games console in over a decade. Both the Nintendo Switch and Valves Steam Deck are hybrids that can be played handheld and connected to a big screen.Theres a reason for this: firstly, smartphones have snapped up almost the entire market for portable games, offering endless free or cheap games on a device that everybody already has. And secondly: having handheld and home consoles on the market once would split development resources. Only Nintendo was successful enough at selling handhelds to weather several generations of splitting its talent between creating games for the DS and the Wii, or the 3DS and Wii U, which has led to the Switch being a contender for the cleverest business decision of its history.Sony, meanwhile, always struggled to make enough games for the PlayStation Portable (PSP) or Vita alongside its home PlayStations to make those handhelds an irresistible buy. The 75m-selling PSP was a profitable console despite competing directly with the 150m-selling Nintendo DS (partly thanks to Capcoms Monster Hunter series, which sold more than 12m copies on the PSP before making the jump to rival platforms). But when the Vita launched in 2011, it was very much into a smartphone world, and it only sold an estimated 15m.Underrated . platform puzzler Gravity Rush. Photograph: SonyThe difference this time is that the machine Sony is working on would reportedly play existing PlayStation 5 games. It seems the idea would be to have portable and home versions of the same console, which can play the same games. Bloomberg suggests that Microsoft has also been working on portable console prototypes, though none of these things may ever make it to market.Another difference now is that cloud gaming is a thing. I know a lot of people who chiefly used the Vita as a not-very-legal emulator for reams of retro games, because the console was tragically easy to crack. But now, with PlayStation Plus subscriptions offering perfectly legal access to Sonys treasure trove of a back catalogue, how many people would happily pay for a handheld console that could play most of PlayStation history without having to buy the games? I bet its a lot.Sony has done some handheld hardware experimentation since the Vita was discontinued. At the end of last year it released a strange little device called the PlayStation Portal essentially a screen spliced into the middle of a PlayStation 5 controller, which lets you stream games from your PS5 to play in your hands. This is of limited utility but its a neat thing, and I loveAs the Steam Deck has proven, though, handhelds can be a gamechanger for busy people even if they have no exclusive games, because they simply give you more time and opportunity to play. For instance, the only way I managed to finish Persona 4 was by playing it on my vita on the train. With the next portable PlayStation, maybe I might finally manage those last 10 hours of Persona 5.What to playMemories LocoRoco.Thinking about the old portable PlayStation history has brought several games to mind. Theres LocoRoco, a game about singing blobs, which was revived for a bonus level in this years Astro Bot. And I spent more than 100 hours with my index finger curled weirdly over the PSPs directional buttons, my hand forming a shape that has become known as the Monster Hunter claw.And theres Tearaway, Media Molecules intimate and brilliant Vita platformer set in a world made of paper. This is the easiest one to try, as theres a slightly less brilliant PS4 version called Tearway Unfolded available from the PlayStation Store. Its included with PlayStation Plus, and Ive just downloaded it to play with the kids this afternoon.Available on: PS4/5 Estimated playtime: What to readA new one on the way? Bloodborne: The Old Hunters. Photograph: PRSticking with Sony news, its the PlayStations 30th anniversary next month. To celebrate, Sony has released a bunch of game soundtracks, a timeline, a quiz and, of course, some stuff you can buy.Shuhei Yoshida, the former head of PlayStation Studios and current head of the companys indie developer initiative, is leaving the company in January after 31 years. I most recently interviewed him last year he remains one of the friendliest faces in the entire games industry, and one of its most accomplished advocates.And Sony apparently intends to buy Kadokawa, the parent company of FromSoftware, makers of Elden Ring, Dark Souls and Armored Core. Is this how well finally get a new Bloodborne?Microsofts new iteration of Flight Simulator has launched in a bit of a state. If youve been considering picking it up, it might be best to give it a few months.skip past newsletter promotionSign up to Pushing ButtonsFree weekly newsletterKeza MacDonald's weekly look at the world of gamingPrivacy Notice: Newsletters may contain info about charities, online ads, and content funded by outside parties. For more information see our Privacy Policy. We use Google reCaptcha to protect our website and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.after newsletter promotionWhat to clickQuestion BlockIn contention. Elden Ring: Shadow of the Erdtree. Photograph: undefined/Bandai Namco EuropeReader Benjamin asks this weeks question:In your latest Pushing Buttons you mention your money is on Shadow of the Erdtree for the game of the year award, but Im curious to hear your thoughts on its inclusion in the first place, being a downloadable expansion and not actually a game unto itself. Does it not set an odd precedent if something that cannot be played standalone can be the best game of the year?Gaming award categories have trouble keeping up with how fast video games evolve, whether its the Baftas, the Game Awards or the Golden Joysticks. A few years ago, most of them introduced some version of an ongoing game category to account for the likes of Fortnite and No Mans Sky and Minecraft games that run for years and change frequently. But now thats become difficult in itself: how muchdid change and improve massively after release? What about remasters? Should downloadable expansions count? And where should games that could fit into two or more genres sit? Every year, there are plenty of releases that challenge the definitions of the categories.You could spend forever nitpicking over this stuff. My feeling is that anything released in a given year should be eligible for an award if its good enough, whether its an add-on or expansion to a previous game or not. Shadow of the Erdtree is 30+ hours long and could easily have been a standalone sequel its 10 times as long as some of the indie games nominated in other categories. I would personally find it hard to justify disqualifying it on a technicality, though obviously I would judge it on its own merits rather than those of the base game.If youve got a question for Question Block or anything else to say about the newsletter hit reply or email us on pushingbuttons@theguardian.com.
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