• APPLEINSIDER.COM
    Isaac by PreEvnt uses an iPhone app to track blood clucose with breath analysis
    Unveiled at CES 2025, a new non-invasive blood glucose monitoring device, Isaac by PreEvnt, aims to revolutionize diabetes management with real-time alerts via breath analysis.Isaac by PreEvntAt CES 2025, PreEvnt, a subsidiary of Scosche Industries, unveiled Isaac, an innovative device designed to monitor blood glucose levels without finger pricks. The small device, clip-on or lanyard-friendly, combines advanced sensors with a user-friendly app for convenient and less invasive diabetes management. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
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  • APPLEINSIDER.COM
    Scosche's new iPhone chargers provide power & practicality with style
    At CES 2025, Scosche Industries showed off accessories crafted to streamline iPhone charging and enhance daily use with attractive and stylish designs.CES 2025 includes Scosche IndustriesAt CES 2025, Scosche Industries unveiled a comprehensive product line designed to address the evolving needs of tech-savvy consumers. This range includes MagSafe-compatible phone mounts, eco-friendly chargers, compact vacuums, and smart location trackers.Scosche's accessories cater to diverse needs, from efficient desk organization for professionals to reliable charging solutions for frequent travelers. Prioritizing convenience, sustainability, and aesthetics, these products ensure a seamless user experience. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
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  • APPLEINSIDER.COM
    Customize your iPhone video studio with ShiftCam's SnapSeries SSD & lights
    ShiftCam has introduced Planck at CES 2025, the smallest SSD ever made, designed to offer fast, portable storage for iPhone videographers.ShiftCam has introduced PlanckDesigned with durability in mind, Planck is drop-proof and IP65 water-resistant, making it perfect for professionals working in dynamic environments. Its ultra-compact form factor and USB-C compatibility guarantee seamless integration with smartphones, laptops, and gaming consoles.Planck, with its 1TB and 2TB capacities, enhances data-intensive projects by combining practicality, speed, and resilience, making it an ideal choice for creatives. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
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  • ARCHINECT.COM
    Five unique New York City projects by MBB Architects: Your Next Employer?
    Following our previous visit toObra Architects, we are using the first 2025 edition of ourMeet Your Next Employer seriesto explore the work of MBB Architects.A women-owned architecture firm based in New York City, the studios 25-strong team includes architects, planners, sustainability specialists, and interior designers. The firm describes its mission as to design beautiful, responsive,e and meaningful environments to enrich peoples lives and shape a sustainable future."Over on Archinect Jobs, the firm iscurrently hiringfor several positions to join their New York City team. For candidates interested in applying for a position or anybody interested in learning more about the firms output, we have rounded up five unique projects in the city by MBB Architects that exemplify the firms ethos.Trinity Church Wall Street. Image credit: Colin WinterbottomTrinity Church Wall Street, New York, NYTrinity Church Wall Street underwent a six-year transformation led by MBB, reactiva...
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  • GAMINGBOLT.COM
    Bayonetta 15th Anniversary Year Celebration Revealed, PlatinumGames Teases Announcements
    PlatinumGames Bayonetta franchise turns fifteen this year, with the first game launching worldwide in January 2010. To celebrate the occasion, the developer has announced the Bayonetta 15th Anniversary Year a year-long celebration of the franchise.Alongside freebies like phone wallpapers monthly, theres a limited edition music box produced by Wayo Records. The latter plays the theme Mysterious Destiny by Masami Ueda and retails for 220.00. However, PlatinumGames tweet revealed that it has a few things in store to celebrate this milestone, with the official blog also teasing various planned announcements.Whether there are any game-related announcements remains to be seen, so stay tuned for updates. The last title in the franchise was Bayonetta 3 in October 2022 for the Nintendo Switch. It features a new antagonist, Singularity, whom Bayonetta traverses multiple universes to fight. A new character, Viola, joins the fray with her own unique moves and abilities.Check out our review of Bayonetta 3 here. We gave it an eight out of ten, praising the gameplay and spectacle while criticizing the technical issues and late story developments.Its Bayonettas 15th Anniversary Year!Bayonetta released internationally in January 2010 so were making 2025 into a year of celebrationWe have a few things in store to celebrate this milestone so keep your eyes peeledhttps://t.co/MNkIPRKgxB#BAYONETTA15th PlatinumGames Inc. (@platinumgames) January 6, 2025
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  • GAMINGBOLT.COM
    Star Citizen Developer Shakes Up Upper Management Team
    Cloud Imperium Games, the studio behind in-development sci-fi titles Star Citizen and Squadron 42, has allegedly seen lay-offs in its upper management. According to a report by Insider Gaming, top-level executives in the studio have been let go, leading to a big shake-up in how the company is now being managed.As part of this, executives who werent laid off have instead been assigned to different roles in the studio. The studio has also laid off employees from other departments, including QA. The new direction for the company was reportedly announced internally by studio boss Chris Roberts through an internal memo.Roberts reportedly stated the desire to meet the release schedules for both games under development as a reason for the management changes.To achieve this laser focus [of meeting the release of SQ42 and Star Citizen 1.0], it is more important than ever to ensure we have high-performing and efficient teams working throughout the company, said Roberts. In order to achieve this, I have had to make changes to the structure of our teams from the very top of the company and downwards to ensure we have the right people in the right roles, working in person as much as possible from our most critical year yet.Changes to the Cloud Imperium Games website also indicate that one of the members of upper management, Chief Strategy Officer Carl Jones, was laid off from the company after having worked there for more than a decade.Star Citizen has been in development for quite some time, being one of the most ambitious games out there. Since its announcement, the game has raised more than $750 million in funding through various methods of crowdfunding. The 1.0 release for the game is reportedly coming soon, but Cloud Imperium Games has yet to announce an official release date.Squadron 42 is a single-player action title where players control ships in smaller-scale battles. The game is set to be a companion to Star Citizen, and will also feature actor Mark Hamill as one of its characters. The game is slated to be released in 2026.
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  • GAMINGBOLT.COM
    PS5 Users That Prefer Shutting Down Console Were Primary Driving Factor for Welcome Hub
    Sony has shed some light on how it designs the UI for the PS5 regarding how players use the console. In an interview with Game Files Stephen Totilo, vice president of Product, Game and Player Experiences at Sony Interactive Entertainment, Cory Gasaway, elaborated on how one key feature of the PS5 UI is designed: the Welcome hub.For those not in the know, the Welcome hub is often the first thing one encounters when switching on their PS5, giving players a summary of various aspects of their console and account. It includes a rundown of Trophy progress across games, the battery indicator for controllers, the latest deals on the PlayStation Store, or even simply a trailer for a newly announced title.The Welcome hub is customizable, allowing players to pick the widgets they would like to display information that they would find relevant.Gasaway talks about how the design behind the Welcome hub was based on how often PS5 users completely switched off their console, rather than simply putting it into Rest mode. He notes the PS5 user base is split roughly equally between two camps. Players that shut down their console would see the Explore screen, while players outside the US would see details on their last-played game.We gained a lot of insights about how players interact with their PS5 system between play sessions, explained Gasaway. A small example is we had an internal hypothesis that far more people would put their console into rest mode than fully shut it down each time between their play sessions. As it turned out, it was actually about 50/50 between the two options for all our players. So, what that meant was for about 50% of our users, when they booted up, if they were in the US, they were landing on our Explore page. Those outside the US would land on the page for the last game that they have played.Gasaway goes on to discuss the development of the Welcome hub, and how the new space allows players who had previously shut the console down to get a brief rundown on the system and their account before hopping into the game. Players using Rest mode, however, will still jump back into their still-running game.This was the primary driving factor that caused us to look at building out the Welcome hub experience that has now launched globally, he said. The Welcome hub is a dedicated space where players can customize with widgets, allowing them to see information at a glance before they begin their gaming sessions. For players who use rest mode, if they leave their console while in a game, they will still go straight back into that game and play once they return to their console. But now, players who shut down their console and boot it back up are taken to the Welcome hub to see their customized page that includes game opportunities for them to play, message friends, or do what is important to them at that time.The Welcome hub is a relatively new feature, having come out with a PS5 firmware update released back in September 2024.
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  • WWW.CANADIANARCHITECT.COM
    Op-ed: Reimagining Continuing Education
    The formal method of verifying the currency of licensed architects through continuing education requirements has been in place in most provincial associations since the turn of the millennium. The introduction of these requirements parallels the revision of educational requirements for licensure, from professionally focussed five-year undergraduate university programs to diverse graduate programs. The task of determining what is germane to professional competence is a notable regulatory challenge, but the fact that all our professional associations have resorted to finesin excess of registration feesto leverage compliance with continuing education requirements suggests that something is amiss, and worthy of rigorous and objective review.The original intent of continuing education as a non-profit, low-cost-to-architects way to keep practitioners up to date is not immediately obvious. The AIBC states the purpose of required continuing education as a response to the publics increasing expectation that architects remain current with contemporary technology, business practices, methods, and materials. But in other cases, there has been noticeable mission-creep. The OAA describes the intent of continuing education as part of the organizations dedication to promoting and increasing the knowledge, skill, and proficiency of its members, and administering the Architects Act to serve and protect the public interest. One large association thus defines their mission as keeping members up to date. The other offers a broader and more open-ended mission statement that extends well beyond the issue of currency. This reflects two quite different paths.Regulating educational requirements is a tough challenge, certainly, for any organization. The broader the range of issues to be accommodated, the greater the difficulty to regulate is a familiar axiom. In our profession, regulating education should be premised on the fact that architects process information and come to understand their craft in unique ways. Visual literacy, for instance, is core to an architects formal education and professional skill set. The accreditation process for evaluating architecture university programs in Canada, as one example, requires an exhibition of ideas and concepts as a principal component. This is how we communicate, learn, and grow as architects. Yet, ironically, attendance at such an exhibition would be ruled invalid as counting towards provincial continuing education requirements, because its inherent value cannot be readily quantified.A sizable amount of regulation focusing on professional development is also premised on the notion that one can somehow quantify reading, and accurately corroborate the time taken to research a topic, author a book, or publish an article. In contrast, travelwhich for most architects is acknowledged as an important way of coming to understand architectureis only deemed valid by regulators if it can be corroborated by a tour guide receipt. A mode of regulation that would more accurately reflect lived experience would not be driven by administrative expediency, and would assign value beyond that which can be easily quantified.Activities cited in the unstructured learning categoryaside from association meetings and committee workare, on the whole, largely impossible to regulate with specificity, and in most cases, fail to credibly validate either currency or knowledge. Elimination of these activities would be a positive first step, and serve to focus attention on legitimate profession-specific requirements. A compelling argument can be made that compliance with unstructured continuing education requirements achieves nothing but increased workloads for regulators, ill will of individual members, and no credible validation of whether the individual in question is up-to-date or not.Structured professional development, on the other hand, can and should be monitored in a comprehensive and straightforward manner. The profession of architecture, while complex and ubiquitous in comparison to other professions, is not so complicated when it comes down to what we actually do. All North American schools of architecture seeking accreditation, for instance, are presently required to meet student and program performance criteria that are specific, quantifiable, and accepted by 185 post-secondary institutions with widely differing missions and geographic settings. Consensus on this kind of complex and diverse subject matter has thus proven to be possible. The professionally specific Internship Architecture Program (IAP) provides another example of how the scope of professional activity can be defined in 15 rationally weighted categories that all associations agree on. The referencing of continuing education activity to any of these 15 categories could serve to ameliorate concerns of whether subject matter is profession-specific.The question arises of whether verifying compliance with continuing education requirements is fair to all associations. Smaller provincial associations with limited resources, in particular, are not well positioned to credibly monitor professional development activity, or to deal with clarification and interpretation of regulations. Most associations rely entirely on computerized transcripts to record and tally up activity hours in each category, and restrict entries beyond the deadline of each cycle. The few unfortunate individuals targeted for audit rely on local interpretation, which can vary significantly from jurisdiction to jurisdiction.The concept of a national organization such as the RAIC as a central repository for course material and records has obvious merit. The RAIC already offers mostly online courses. Professionally qualified staff could efficiently manage queries on regulatory requirements. Local jurisdictions could then, as most already do, focus on continuing education related to regional issues, such as changes to legislation, building codes, construction documents, and bidding and contract negotiation.Updating continuing education requirements first requires acknowledgement that the existing system appears to be falling short of its intended mission. A quarter century of experience should provide hard evidence that we are failing to reach the desired results. The autonomy of provincial associations should be prepared to yield to a greater need for consistency, fairness, and objectivity across jurisdictional boundaries. Well-crafted and intelligent regulation canand shouldeliminate any question of competence and currency from public concern.Robert Ian Macdonald, FRAIC, is Professor Emeritus at the Faculty of Architecture of the University of Manitoba.The post Op-ed: Reimagining Continuing Education appeared first on Canadian Architect.
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  • VENTUREBEAT.COM
    ElliQ maker Intuition Robotics launches AI system to support caregivers who help older adults
    Intuition Robotics, creators of the award-winning ElliQ AI companion robot, announced a new ElliQ solution to help caregivers.Read More
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  • WWW.GAMESINDUSTRY.BIZ
    Resident Evil 4 Remake sells 9m copies | News-in-brief
    Resident Evil 4 Remake sells 9m copies | News-in-briefCapcom's 2023 survival horror surpassed 8 million copies last OctoberImage credit: Capcom News by Sophie McEvoy Staff Writer Published on Jan. 6, 2025 This is a News-in-brief article, our short format linking to an official source for more information. Read more about this story by following the link below:Resident Evil 4 Remake sells 9m copies
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