• Rene Zellweger and Hugh Grant reunited for the 'Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy' premiere. Photos show their red-carpet looks.
    www.businessinsider.com
    2025-01-28T16:26:01Z Read in app The cast and crew of "Bridget Jones: Mad About The Boy." Dominique Charriau/WireImage/Getty Images This story is available exclusively to Business Insider subscribers. Become an Insider and start reading now.Have an account? The cast of "Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy" reunited for its French premiere on Monday night.This is the fourth and final installment in the "Bridget Jones" franchise.Here's how the cast looked at the premiere, 23 years after the first film.Upon its release nearly 24 years ago, "Bridget Jones's Diary" became, against all odds, a phenomenon, making over $334 million at the box office and spawning an entire franchise.Somehow, this distinctly British character was performed perfectly by a Texan actor named Rene Zellweger, then best known for playing the love interest in "Jerry Maguire." Her performance was lauded by fans around the world and even earned her an Academy Award nomination for best actress in 2002.Two decades later, almost the entire cast of the original film has reunited for a fourth movie, "Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy." This time, audiences see Bridget as a newly widowed single mother who decides to get back into the dating game, even though it's changed so much since the last time she was single.Here's what the cast looked like at the film's premiere in Paris on Monday. Rene ZellwegerRene Zellweger attended the French premiere of "Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy." Stephane Cardinale - Corbis/Corbis/Getty Images Zellweger, 55, returns for the fourth time to play every millennial's favorite hot mess, Bridget Jones.For the premiere, Zellweger wore a lacy black one-shouldered gown designed by Saint Laurent.Hugh GrantHugh Grant attended the "Bridget Jones: Mad About The Boy" premiere. Dominique Charriau/WireImage/Getty Images After skipping "Bridget Jones's Baby" in 2016, Grant, 64, returns for "Mad About the Boy" to play Bridget's former boss (and former boyfriend), Daniel Cleaver.Last we heard of him, Daniel had been found alive after being presumed dead in a plane crash, so we're sure his reappearance in Bridget's life was a (somewhat) welcome surprise.Grant kept it simple at the premiere with a black suit and white shirt it's almost identical to what he wore at the premiere of the first film in 2001, per Entertainment Weekly.Chiwetel EjioforChiwetel Ejiofor plays a love interest in "Bridget Jones: Mad About The Boy." Dominique Charriau/WireImage/Getty Images Ejiofor, 47, joins the "Bridget Jones" universe in this film as Roxster, one of Bridget's new love interests after the death of her soulmate Mark Darcy (Colin Firth).At the Paris premiere, Ejiofor, an Oscar-nominated actor, wore a black double-breasted suit over a white shirt.Leo WoodallLeo Woodall also attended the "Bridget Jones: Mad About The Boy" premiere. Stephane Cardinale - Corbis/Corbis/Getty Images Woodall is playing another one of Bridget's love interests, Mr. Wallaker, a teacher at her kids' school.The 28-year-old is best known for his roles in the second season of "The White Lotus" and the Netflix series "One Day."He kept it casual on the pink carpet with a brown leather jacket, black sweater, and brown trousers.Helen FieldingHelen Fielding wrote the original "Bridget Jones" column and books. Dominique Charriau/WireImage/Getty Images Fielding is the brain behind Bridget Jones. She wrote the original "Bridget Jones" columns in The Independent in 1995 and then three subsequent novels based on her columns.Fielding, 66, also wrote the screenplays for all four "Bridget Jones" films.For the premiere, Fielding wore a long-sleeved black gown with a daring slit and a keyhole cutout on top.Michael Morris and Mary McCormackDirector Michael Morris and his wife, actor Mary McCormack, attended the premiere. Stephane Cardinale - Corbis/Corbis/Getty Images "Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy" was directed by Michael Morris, who made his directorial debut in 2023 with the film "To Leslie."He attended the premiere with his wife, Mary McCormack, who is best known for her roles in "The West Wing," "Deep Impact," and "In Plain Sight."The two matched on the pink carpet, as Morris wore a simple black suit and McCormack wore a menswear-inspired outfit with a black blazer, white button-up, and long black skirt.
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  • Trump's threat of Taiwan chip tariffs could give Nvidia a fresh headache after DeepSeek
    www.businessinsider.com
    President Donald Trump is threatening to impose tariffs on Taiwanese-made chips of up to 100%.That could be bad news for Nvidia, which relies on Taiwan's TSMC for its chip supply. On Monday Nvidia saw 17% wiped from its value in a market rout triggered by China's DeepSeek.President Donald Trump's pledge to impose tariffs on Taiwan-made semiconductors could deal a fresh blow to Nvidia after its shares dropped by 17% in a DeepSeek-induced sell-off. Tech firms like Nvidia have long relied on Taiwan's TSMC, the world's largest contract semiconductor manufacturer, to make the specialist AI chips they design in the US. That relationship was threatened on Monday as the president delivered a speech to Republicans in which he said tariffs on Taiwan would be aimed at returning the production of chips to the US."They left us and went to Taiwan," said Trump, seemingly in a swipe at US firms who source processors from TSMC.Trump said companies would not want to pay a "25%, 50%, or even a 100% tax." US tariffs on Taiwan's semiconductors could result in a steep increase in costs to Nvidia and other significant customers, such as Apple and AMD. Chip manufacturing efforts in the US are currently less developed and more expensive than those in Taiwan.The threat of tariffs risks a double blow for Nvidia, one of TSMC's largest customers. Nvidia has been left reeling after the release of an AI model from Chinese startup DeepSeek caused it to lose $589 billion in market value on Monday.Investors reacted with panic amid fears that Nvidia's chips may face a decline in demand becauseDeepSeek's new model claims to have achieved performance levels similar to a frontier model created by OpenAI but with fewer and less advanced chips than those used by the ChatGPT maker.An Nvidia spokesperson declined to comment. Jensen Huang's Nvidia faces risks from potential Taiwan tariffs. Getty Images It is unclear if Trump will proceed with tariffs on Taiwan, but US leaders have increasingly exercised caution about dependence on the Far East nation for chips.China has long overshadowed the independently governed island with the prospect of invasion, and a war could hugely disrupt the US economy, endangering the supply of the chips vital to swaths of the US tech sector.The COVID-19 pandemic also exposed the vulnerability of global supply chains.President Joe Biden, as part of his CHIPS Act, sought to encourage more semiconductor firms to set up business in the US by offering incentives such as tax breaks. TSMC has moved some of its operations to the US, opening chip manufacturing plants in Arizona as part of a $65 billion initiative.While Trump has veered toward imposing tariffs to bolster US chip production, the US-based chip manufacturing sector could take years to develop the same capacity as Taiwan's. That could mean higher prices for hardware that relies on chips from Taiwan, such as Apple's iPhones, Nvidia's GPUs, and AMD's processors. "If the argument is that this is the way to force it to move here, TSMC is already moving here," William Reinsch, a senior adviser with the Center for Strategic and International Studies, told Yahoo Finance last year after Trump floated imposing tariffs on a podcast."They're already building a fab plant in Arizona," he added. "That's all already underway and the tariffs aren't going to make that move any faster. If anything, they might complicate the effort."Taiwan responded to Trump's tariff pledge by pointing to the "complementary" relationship between the Taiwan and US economies."Taiwan and the U.S. semiconductor and other technology industries are highly complementary to each other, especially the U.S.-designed, Taiwan-foundry model, which creates a win-win business model for Taiwan and U.S. industries," Taiwan's economy ministry said in a statement, reported Reuters.AI is among the sectors where the US and China are in an intensifying battle for global technological dominance. On January 21, Trump announceda $500 billion initiativeto boost AI infrastructure in the US alongside OpenAI, SoftBank, and Oracle.TSMC did not immediately respond to a Business Insider request for comment.
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  • This obscure budget procedure could be Trumps biggest weapon
    www.vox.com
    Presidents have a lot of Constitutional powers: the power to wage war; the power to veto laws; the power to pardon criminals; the power to appoint Supreme Court members and other judges. But President Donald Trump and his inner circle appear to be acting to add a new power to the repertoire, one which would constitute one of the largest expansions of presidential power in modern history: impoundment.Their theory is that the president has a constitutional authority to withhold, or impound, spending from projects after that spending has already been authorized by Congress. Advocates cite examples of past presidents impounding various programs until Congress shut down the practice with 1974s Impoundment Control Act, which Trump allies view as an unconstitutional law and a congressional power grab. Trump himself attempted to use impoundment and related powers several times during his first term, most famously to delay paying aid to Ukraine in an attempt to force a prosecution of Joe Bidens family in that country; this act directly led to Trumps first impeachment.Trumps second term, though, could see a much more extensive use of the power. His nominee to run the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), Russ Vought, was on the front lines fighting for broad impoundment power in the first term, and has sought sweeping cuts to programs like Medicaid and food stamps.Now in the first days of his new term, Trump is signaling that he intends to push the boundaries on impoundment. On Monday afternoon, news broke that the Trump administration is apparently freezing nearly all federal grants and loans, both domestic and international. That essentially seems to pause what could amount to hundreds of billions of dollars in money appropriated by Congress for specific purposes.According to a memo released by Matthew Vaeth, acting director at OMB, the temporary pause will come into effect today at 5 pm. By February 10, agencies are required to submit to OMB detailed information on any program or policy affected by the pause. Its unclear if the money will again begin flowing after that deadline, though if nothing else, it seems the Trump administration is claiming it has the unilateral power to at least temporarily impound billions of dollars.What happens next on both this temporary pause and any future attempts to impound spending isnt clear. If, as is likely, Congress tries to resist some of these cuts, Trump and Vought, as well as their flashy spending-cut consultant Elon Musk, could attempt to use impoundment power anyway, sending the fight into courts. There are multiple Supreme Court decisions suggesting such an attempt would be illegal and unconstitutional but today we have a court where Trump himself appointed a third of the members, and which recently granted him sweeping immunity from prosecution. If the Court sides with Trump in such a fight, it could set the precedent that presidents can effectively cut spending without Congress, which could have vast, far-reaching implications for everything from health care to defense to science.Here is what impoundment power is, how it has historically worked, how Trumps team wants it to work, and why Trumps view of the power could set the stage for a massive executive power grab, altering fundamentally the relationship between Congress and the president.Impoundment, explainedThe official definition of impoundment, per the Government Accountability Office (GAO) that oversees the practice, is any action or inaction by an officer or employee of the federal government that precludes obligation or expenditure of budget authority. In other words: any time someone in the federal government doesnt spend money that Congress has ordered it to spend.This takes two forms: rescission, and deferral. In rescission, the spending is simply canceled, while in deferral it is withheld temporarily, in theory to be spent in the future. Under the Impoundment Control Act, passed in 1974, both rescissions and deferrals can be passed by Congress at any time, and they can also be requested by the president. But any presidential requests have to be approved by Congress to take effect, and that has happened quite rarely.From fiscal year 1974, when these provisions took effect, and 2018, the last year when a president invoked this provision, presidents have proposed $92 billion in rescissions, of which only $25 billion were approved by Congress. To put that in context, combined federal spending from 1974 to 2018 was about $83.6 trillion, and approved presidentially suggested rescissions amount to 0.07 percent of that. No Impoundment Control Act rescission has been approved since 2000, and George W. Bush and Barack Obama did not so much as propose any. The act is just not a very important part of the budget process, typically. The GAO has also recognized a practice called programmatic delay, which it views as not technically impoundment but which is closely related. Programmatic delays occur when the government is trying to spend money Congress has instructed it to spend, but factors outside their control preclude this. The GAO has offered as an example a program in which the government is supposed to provide a certain amount of money in loans, but where there are few applicants so the program simply cannot lend out the total amount Congress has set aside for this purpose.Another more recent example was Bidens executive order upon taking office instructing a pause in the construction of border walls and fences with Mexico. While Congress had appropriated money specifically for border barriers, the GAO ruled that the Biden administration was merely programmatically delaying the project, because the delays were chalked up to environmental reviews and other hurdles that it was legally required to clear before continuing construction.Programmatic delay does offer the executive branch some flexibility in spending, but only a bit. Otherwise, the Impoundment Control Act is very clear: The president cannot refuse to spend money that Congress has told him to spend. The GAO is empowered to challenge the president if it sees this limitation being contradicted, as it did when Trump withheld funds from Ukraine in 2019. In that case, the funds were eventually released and the incident led to Trumps impeachment.The history of impoundment and impoundment controlIf you read enough about impoundment, youre going to hear about the gunboats. In 1803, Congress had appropriated $50,000 (about $1.4 million in todays dollars) for some gunboats on the Mississippi River, provoked by Frances refusal to offer the US access to the Port of New Orleans at the end of 1802. President Thomas Jefferson declined to purchase the gunboats, however, because he had enlisted Secretary of State James Madison to negotiate with Napoleon in secret with another goal in mind: simply buying all of Frances North American territories. In July 1803, the Louisiana Purchase was announced, rendering the gunboats unnecessary. All in all, it was a much better deal.In October, Jefferson explained the decision in his State of the Union message to Congress, telling representatives that, The favorable and peaceable turn of affairs on the Mississippi rendered an immediate execution of that law unnecessary. The historian Allan Damon notes that this was technically a deferral, not an impoundment, because Jefferson wound up buying the gunboats in 1804, as part of his more general efforts to build out the embryonic Navy.To advocates of impoundment most notably Mark Paoletta, who served as general counsel for the Office of Management and Budget in Trumps first term and has written extensively in defense of a broad impoundment power this kind of history proves that impoundment is as American as apple pie. In a detailed report with co-authors Daniel Shapiro and Brandon Stras, Paoletta observes, The Jeffersonians recognized that Congresss power of the purse was a power to set a ceiling on appropriations. The power of the purse did nothing to encroach the Executives inherent discretion to spend less than the amount appropriated.Critics with a more mainstream view of the issue think this wildly misunderstands the history. Zachary Price, a professor at UC Law San Francisco, notes that the underlying statute appropriating the $50,000 for the gunboats authorized expenditure without requiring it. The text of the law authorized and empowered Jefferson to order the construction of a number not exceeding fifteen gun boats with a sum not exceeding fifty thousand dollars. Through that wording, Congress was giving the president the discretion to spend as much as $50,000 on the boats, but also the discretion to decline.More to the point, Congress and the president for most of the 19th and 20th centuries operated with a shared understanding that spending bills offered this kind of flexibility. Both Congress and the executive branch seem to have followed a default understanding that appropriations statutes conferred implicit authority to forego spending when it proved unnecessary or when statutory goals could be accomplished with a smaller expenditure, Price writes.Most historical impoundments, according to Georgetown law professor Eloise Pasachoff, were also for efficiency rather than policy reasons: if Congress, say, instructed the government to build a bridge for $100 million, and the bridge wound up only costing $90 million, the president might decline to spend $10 million because he could accomplish the same goal at a lower cost. If you look at these examples that theyre bringing out, they mostly fall in the category of Congress has appropriated money for something but it turns out we dont need the full extent of that money, Pasachoff told Vox.So you can certainly find examples from Jefferson to LBJ of presidents declining to spend money that had been authorized. Paoletta sees this as evidence that the president has a broad power to impound funds. Price and Pasachoff see it as evidence that Congress intended this flexibility: Impoundment was a power that Congress granted to the president in specific, limited contexts, but not an inherent power of the president.This governing order, of Congress allowing impoundments on the understanding that the president would use the power responsibly, broke down in the 1970s under the Nixon administration. Both the Senate and House were solidly Democratic for Richard Nixons entire presidency, and he sought to use impoundment as a means of influencing spending without needing their approval. His attempts were far more sweeping than previous presidents, including gambits like an effort to outright eliminate the Office of Economic Opportunity, a key agency of LBJs war on poverty, and simply refusing to spend money on anti-water pollution efforts even after Congress had appropriated money for the effort over his veto. He declared that this was an absolute Constitutional power of the presidency.He was more or less alone in that. In 1969, Assistant Attorney General William Rehnquist (who two years later would be appointed to the Supreme Court and 15 years after that become chief justice) wrote a memo concluding that there is no constitutional right to impoundment. This was a very conservative Nixon official, one who Nixon would himself promote to the highest court in the land a few years later, concluding that the constitutional argument was bunk. In 1975, after Nixon had already resigned in disgrace, the water pollution case made its way to the Supreme Court, which ruled unanimously that Nixons Environmental Protection Agency had illegally withheld the funds.In 1974, Congress sought to clarify matters by passing the Impoundment Control Act as part of a legislative package that also set up the modern budget process and created the Congressional Budget Office. The law did not so much make impoundment illegal as it clarified that impoundment, when not explicitly authorized by Congress in spending laws, was always illegal, and set up a process through which presidents could seek to roll back spending in an orderly way, but only with Congresss participation. Its not like the Impoundment Control Act took away the legal ability of the president to do that, Philip Joyce, a professor of public policy at the University of Maryland and an expert on the budget process, told me. The courts had already found there was no legal authority for the president to impound funds.Can Trump actually do this?Trump, in his first term, sought to bring back impoundment power to a degree not seen since Nixon. In 2018, he sought $15.2 billion in rescissions, the bulk coming from the Childrens Health Insurance Program, which supports state programs to insure children, usually through Medicaid. The House first shaved half a billion off the cuts before narrowly passing them, then two Senate Republicans (Richard Burr and Susan Collins) voted against the package, enough to doom it given the Republicans narrow majority in the Senate. Despite that setback, his team kept repeatedly considering rescission packages, especially against foreign aid, only to back down under pressure from Congress.The most infamous invocation of this power came in 2019, when the OMB sought unilaterally to delay aid to Ukraine, without asking Congress. The GAO eventually ruled that while the non-military aid delay was legal (it was a programmatic delay necessitated by circumstances), withholding $214 million in military assistance was not. Later in 2019, the public learned that Trump had, in a phone call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, stated, I would like you to do us a favor in exchange for the aid; specifically, investigating the Biden family for corruption as well as a conspiracy theory that a Ukrainian, not Russia, hacked Democrats in 2016. The revelation that the aid was withheld specifically in a move to leverage a foreign nation into attacking a political opponent led to Trumps first impeachment.But while Trumps rescissions became a background detail to a broader scandal, his team continued to insist upon the power. As Trump was leaving office, OMB director Russ Vought and his general counsel Mark Paoletta wrote a letter to the House Budget Committee arguing that the Impoundment Control Act should be significantly reformed or repealed. They sent a final rescission package to Congress in January 2021, despite knowing it was dead in the water, underlining their seriousness about the procedure. Vought and Paoletta have since gone further and now argue that the Impoundment Control Act and its limits on impoundment powers are not just unwise, but unconstitutional.The least dramatic way that Trump could use impoundment is by submitting rescission packages to Congress and watching them be approved, by a simple majority vote of each house. Rescission packages cannot be filibustered, so in principle the narrow Republican majority in the House and Senate could simply rubber-stamp the measures.The power becomes truly interesting, however, if Trump insists upon cuts that Congress will not approve. One could imagine a repeat of the 2017 fight to repeal Obamacare, except, when enough Republicans defect to doom the effort in Congress, Trump and Vought opt to simply impound funds for the Medicaid expansion and Affordable Care Act premium subsidies unilaterally. This would inevitably provoke a legal challenge that could make its way to the Supreme Court.Its a fools errand to predict what the Court would say on the matter, but we know a few things. Court precedent is solidly against a presidential impoundment power. In 1838, the Court ruled in Kendall v. United States ex Rel. Stokes that the executive branch could not fail to pay a debt that Congress had instructed it to pay, writing, that the obligation imposed on the President to see the laws faithfully executed, implies a power to forbid their execution, is a novel construction of the constitution, and entirely inadmissible. Paoletta and co-authors argue that because this was not technically an impoundment, its not a binding precedent.But the 1975 Supreme Court case on the Nixon EPA dispute, Train v. City of New York, did directly speak to impoundments, and reached the same conclusion. Paoletta counters that the opinion in that case was written narrowly and based on the reading of the statute authorizing the EPAs spending; it does not address the Presidents constitutional impoundment power. That feels somewhat unconvincing though; as Bowdoin College political scientist Andrew Rudalevige has noted, presumably, if the president had inherent impoundment authority grounded in the Constitution, statutory language could not have set it aside.All that said, the current court famously set aside a 49-year-old precedent when it overruled Roe v. Wade, and a 40-year-old precedent when it overruled Chevron v. NRDC. It could surely overturn Train and Kendall too, should it so desire; it could also assert a presidential impoundment power and massage its ruling such that it does not have to technically overrule those precedents, perhaps by parsing the decisions narrowly the way that Paoletta does.If the Court were to agree with the Paoletta argument, wed be in a whole new world in terms of federal spending. Presidents would suddenly have a significant power to make spending cuts without congressional buy-in. Importantly, the power would be asymmetrical, tilted toward slashing programs versus building them. President Bernie Sanders could not use this power to set up a Medicare-for-all program, but a Republican president could use it to end Medicare outright.Such a world feels so fantastical from the standpoint of the last half-century of budget battles that to imagine it almost feels like playing Dungeons & Dragons. But Trump has assembled a team dedicated to bringing us into such a world, and it may encroach upon our reality sooner than we expect.Update, January 28, 2025, 10:50 am: This story, originally published January 2, has been updated to reflect the Trump administrations move to temporarily pause many federal grants and payments. 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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  • Split Fiction's latest trailer shows co-op hit It Takes Two was no fluke
    www.dailystar.co.uk
    Split Fiction might be one of the most exciting games in the first half of 2025, and a new trailer has shown just how much it has to offer co-op playersTech15:55, 28 Jan 2025Split Fiction gets better the more we see of itIf you played Hazelight Studios' Game of the Year winning co-op adventure It Takes Two, there's a good chance it's one of your favourite gaming experiences of the last few years.Its mix of platforming, action, and constantly shifting mechanics was a favourite in our household, and there's a sort of unspoken bond in some friendship circles where those who beat it constantly refer back to their favourite levels.Josef Fares and his team are looking to go even further with the spiritual successor, Split Fiction, which was revealed at The Game Awards, and a new trailer has revealed just how ambitious it is.In case you're not up to speed, whereas It Takes Two had two separated parents working together to return themselves to their normal size after being shrunk down into dolls, Split Fiction puts players in the shoes of Mio and Zoe.Both are authors transported into the world of their creations, with one writing sci-fi and the other fantasy, via a machine from a nefarious publisher.That gives Hazelight plenty of opportunity to experiment with surprising new game mechanics, like shapeshifting, motorcycle chases and much more.Split Fiction will have sci-fi and fantasy levelsNew Side Stories will transport both Mio and Zoe to new modes separate from the main game and are accessed via a portal in a way that sounds similar to Astro Bot on PS5's 'lost' levels."Side Stories are anomalies that occur as a consequence of Mio and Zoe being stuck in the same simulation," Hazelight explains in a new blog post."These portals are attempts by the simulation to steal unfinished stories and ideas that Mio and Zoe wrote when they were younger, leading to some truly weird, wonderful, and chaotic situations."Article continues below"As these stories have been deeply influenced by our authors' pasts, they will experience long since forgotten ideas and secrets about themselves. Once a Side Story has been completed, our characters return back through the portal to the main level where they first entered the encounter, filled with even greater determination to escape from Raders machine with their memories and stories intact so, going back to our original question, are you up to the challenge?"As with It Takes Two, players will be able to use a "Friend's Pass" to share a copy of Split Fiction to play with a friend when the game launches on March 6.For the latest breaking news and stories from across the globe from the Daily Star, sign up for our newsletters.
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  • GTA 6 $100 price fear dubbed 'ridiculous' as gaming expert rages why it makes 'no sense'
    www.dailystar.co.uk
    After one analyst suggested GTA 6 could be priced at $100 to help 'save' the video game industry, another has called the suggestion 'ridiculous and 'a bridge too far'Tech13:15, 28 Jan 2025When will we get our next glimpse at GTA 6?(Image: Still)While some GTA fans are convinced we're getting another GTA 6 trailer this week, we're still a little 'up in the air' about how much Rockstar's next mega-hit is going to cost us.We reported previously that one analyst had suggested Rockstar Games could 'save' the video game industry by pricing the game higher than the standard $60-$70, potentially reaching as high as $100, thereby giving other developers and publishers confidence to do the same.Now, another analyst has rubbished the idea, saying the idea of Rockstar charging $100 for the base game of GTA 6 would be "ridiculous".Posting on Bluesky, longtime industry analyst Mat Piscatella from Circana (formerly NPD) said "This is getting so much run but it's ridiculous.""There's no need to make the base price of any game $100. Special editions, collector's editions, gold/silver editions, etc etc do the same thing, and a high % of day 1 buyers jump on those at their elevated price points.""There's just no need," he added, before following up to say "You want to make the funnel as wide as possible, while also optimizing launch $.""You don't do this be [sic] making the base price of a game so high that the funnel narrows.""It just makes no sense. At all."Thankfully, we won't have long to wait to find out how Rockstar plans to price GTA 6, or whether it'll hit 2025 or slip to 2026.Article continues belowThe studio's parent company, Take-Two Interactive, has an earnings call on the horizon that's likely to reveal more about the most anticipated game in history.As we covered recently, there's also a very cheeky parody game you can play sooner called Grand Taking Ages, which might help you pass the time while we wait for more news on Rockstar's crime epic.For the latest breaking news and stories from across the globe from the Daily Star, sign up for our newsletters.
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  • Nintendo Switch 2 Donkey Kong redesign seems permanent as new merch revealed
    metro.co.uk
    Love it or hate it, this new DK design is here to stay (Nintendo)The new Mario Kart wont be the only game to feature Donkey Kongs new look, if a line-up of updated merchandise is anything to go by.In the run-up to the release of The Super Mario Bros. Movie, Donkey Kong creator Shigeru Miyamoto revealed the great apes new design and implied that it would be used for future games as well as just the movie.That didnt appear to go anywhere since all of DKs subsequent appearances, be it in games or the Super Nintendo World theme park, stuck with the look hes had since Rares redesign in the 90s.So, its no wonder fans were caught by surprise by DKs new design showing up in the Nintendo Switch 2 reveal. And if you thought that might just be a one-time thing, for the next Mario Kart, new evidence has emerged to suggest otherwise.The Japanese Nintendo store has recently added some new Donkey Kong themed merchandise; all of which shows DK in his movie appearance, as indicated by the gentler looking eyes (which is ironic considering he was a pretty mean character at first in the movie).Theres a perfect comparison of the two designs over on Reddit since one of the new Donkey Kong bookmarks features a piece of artwork of DK and Diddy Kong thats practically identical to a previous one.Looking at the two side by side, the new design really is mostly in the eyes, although DKs face somehow seems slightly rounder than before. Diddy meanwhile is completely unchanged, so dont expect him to look too different should he appear in Mario Kart 9 or a new Donkey Kong game.In fact, all this adds to rumours that Nintendos planning to release a new Donkey Kong for the Switch 2, beyond just Mario Kart 9.More TrendingThere were rumours and speculation of this back in 2021, ahead of Donkey Kongs 40th anniversary, including talk of a new 3D game from the Super Mario Odyssey team, but thanks to the pandemic the anniversary came and went with zero fanfare.Even so, those rumours still have some credence, considering DKs prominence in the movie and the Donkey Kong Country theme park expansion. Not to mention last years Mario Vs. Donkey Kong remake and the recent re-release of Donkey Kong Country Returns.At this rate, it wouldnt be surprising if the Switch 2 showcase for April, which will highlight the first line-up of games, includes a new Donkey Kong title.A common theory is that there will be a new 3D Mario platformer for Switch 2 this year, but it and the Donkey Kong game being one and the same would be a neat surprise. Donkey Kong as he appears in the Switch 2 Mario Kart footage (YouTube) This is what Donkey Kong originally looked like, when Shigeru Miyamoto first designed him (Nintendo)Emailgamecentral@metro.co.uk, leave a comment below,follow us on Twitter, andsign-up to our newsletter.To submit Inbox letters and Readers Features more easily, without the need to send an email, just use ourSubmit Stuff page here.For more stories like this,check our Gaming page.ArrowMORE: Whats new in Mario Kart 9 for Nintendo Switch 2?GameCentralSign up for exclusive analysis, latest releases, and bonus community content.This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply. Your information will be used in line with our Privacy Policy
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  • Remember When Nanotech Was the Next Big Thing?
    gizmodo.com
    By Matthew Gault Published January 28, 2025 | Comments (0) | Japan's chemical giant Toray unveils the new plastic made bloodtest chip, which enables to diagnosis various diseases with a drop of blood, almost hundredfold sensitivity of current glass made chip at the nano technology exhibition in Tokyo, 23 February 2005. Photo by -/AFP via Getty Images Tell me if any of this sounds familiar. In the early 2000s, after the collapse of the dotcom bubble, a new technology was set to change humanity and line inventors pockets. Venture capitalists invested billions in the tech. This field will provide the biggest and most important breakthrough of the current century. It will cause real economic changes, said John Wolff of the VC firm Lux Capital. The technology, the VC money and the companies said, would change the way we all lived and worked. It would elevate humanity. Multiple U.S. presidents got on the hype train and created agencies and initiatives to back the tech and steward its development. Conferences popped up all over the planet named after the technology, aimed at fostering it and discussing the ethics around it. This was how people used to talk about nanotechnology. At DFJ, we believe that nanotech is the next great technology wave, the next phase of Moores Law, and the nexus of scientific innovation that revolutionizes most industries and indirectly affects the fabric of society. Historians will look back on the upcoming epoch with no less portent than the Industrial Revolution, Steve Jurvetson, then the managing director of VC firm Draper Fisher Jurvetson said in the mid-2000s. It sounds a lot like how people talk about AI now.I thought about nanotechnology yesterday as the stock market tumbled following the revelation that an AI company in China had developed a competitor to ChatGPT at a fraction of the cost. The week isnt over, but NVIDIAwhich manufactures the GPUs critical to the development of AI systemslost $600 billion in value. Thats the single biggest loss in the history of the market. In the 1990s, as the internet emerged as a major market force, Wall Street rushed to get in on the action. Any company with dot com or e in its name would receive millions of dollars of investment. Pets.com mania gripped the nation. Its mascot, manifested seemingly out of nowhere, was part of the Macys Thanksgiving Day Parade. It was all over by 2000. People realized that many of these websites didnt make money, or much of anything, and Pets.com lost its investors millions.But all that VC capital and hype had to go somewhere. For a while, it went into nanotechnology. Scientists had been plugging away at doing stuff with very small materials for decades, but no one had paid much attention. After the dot-com crash, nanotechnology became a buzzword and billions of dollars flowed in. Nano became a marketing hype word like dot-com before it, like AI would be in the future. Researchers were delighted as the money flowed in. Investors promised that nanotechnology would usher in a new golden age of plenty. Naysayers sounded the alarm of self-replicating nanotech robots that would eat all biomatter on the planet and render it into grey goo. Michael Crichton, author of Jurassic Park, even wrote a book about it. President Bill Clinton gave a speech about nanotechnology at CalTech in 2000. He established the National Nanotechnology Initiative, an ambitious 20-year project aimed at shepherding the tech. President George W. Bush signed the Nanotechnology Research and Development Act in 2003. It gave more federal cash for research into the technology.The promised revolution did not manifest and VC hype died away. The market adjusted. Nanotechnology didnt go anywhere. Advances in making stuff with very small molecules are happening all the time and wildly improving our lives. Nanotechnology is used today in semiconductor manufacturing, food production, and medicine. Whats different is the level of VC hype. Artificial intelligence is in a similar space that nanotechnology was in the early 2000s, but the numbers are far different. There are tens of thousands of AI startups compared to nanotechs 1,200. Nanotech received billions in VC funding, AI has received hundreds of billions. Nanotechnology was popular and has changed the world but it didnt change the economics around an ailing nuclear energy market.Whats happening to the stock market this week is weird. I wont call it a bubble bursting, but it is a vibe shift. An upstart Chinese company dethroned the worlds most popular chatbot at the top of Apples App store. In a normal market that shouldnt send shares of the hardware company responsible for training both AIs tumbling. Its a sign that, like nanotechnology before it, AI is promising the moon. But, also like nanotechnology before it, I think AI is here to stay. Both werent new when they captured the market. AI creates a lot of terrible slop, but it can also be used for good. We used spellcheck every day without thinking of it as an AI system. But the original spellcheck is a product of the Stanford Artificial Intelligence Laboratory. It came out in 1971. What we must do is beware of false prophets. Its not hard to do. Theyre not very creative and from nanotechnology to AI, they use a lot of the same language. Think back to Jurvetsons little speech I cited at the beginning of this article and take a look at the writing of OpenAI CEO Sam Altman.Altman once wrote a long blog he called Moore Laws for Everything. The banner at the top was a sea of dollar bills. Like Jurveston before him, he said that AI would usher in a new phase of Moores Law. Like Jurveston before him, he promised that AI is part of a new phase shift in humanity on par with the Industrial Revolution. Like Jurveston before him, hes trying to sell you something. And its not a dream of the future, not really. Its just an App he wants you to pay him to use. And hell, China is giving it away for free.Daily NewsletterYou May Also Like By Thomas Maxwell Published January 27, 2025 By Matthew Gault Published January 27, 2025 By Lucas Ropek Published January 24, 2025 By AJ Dellinger Published January 24, 2025 By Thomas Maxwell Published January 24, 2025 By Kyle Barr Published January 24, 2025
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  • Amazons Best-Selling Portable Monitor Finally Returns at Its Lowest Price for a Limited Time
    gizmodo.com
    Looking for a way to boost your productivity or enhance your entertainment setup on the go? A portable monitor can be a game-changer, and the Kyy 15.6-inch display is currently available at a price that makes dual-screen capability more accessible than ever.See at AmazonRight now, you can grab this versatile monitor for just $70, down from its regular price of $130 thats a hefty 46% discount that puts $60 back in your pocket. While portable monitors typically command premium prices, this deal makes multi-screen functionality surprisingly affordable.A portable monitor you can count onThe Kyy monitor packs impressive specs into its ultra-slim frame. The 15.6-inch IPS panel delivers Full HD resolution with wide 178 viewing angles, ensuring your content looks crisp and clear from any position. HDR technology brings your visuals to life with vibrant colors and improved contrast, whether youre working on documents or streaming your favorite shows. And you dont have to be doing anything to benefit from it, really. You could decide to do some online shopping and this monitor would still be insane useful.At just 0.3 inches thick and weighing a mere 1.7 pounds, this monitor slides easily into your laptop bag or backpack. The included smart cover pulls double duty as a stand, letting you adjust the viewing angle to your preference while protecting the screen during transport. Connectivity is thoroughly modern, with dual USB-C ports and Mini HDMI making it compatible with laptops, smartphones, tablets, and gaming consoles. That means you can use it for just about any purpose anywhere you need it. Thats a ringing endorsement.Built-in stereo speakers and a 3.5mm audio jack round out the package, eliminating the need to carry separate speakers for your mobile setup. Whether youre a remote worker needing extra screen real estate, a digital nomad looking to maintain productivity on the road, or a casual user wanting to enhance their entertainment options, this monitor offers solid value at its current price point, nearly 50% off.Its a great option for just about anyone who has to get work done while traveling. But its also a good idea for anyone to use who wants something to use that can replace a full additional monitor, because those things can take up so much space. They can also be priced quite prohibitively, so if youre one of those people who needs more space but cant swing it in terms of money or space, youve found exactly what you need right here.See at Amazon
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  • Hameau du Latz Houses / MSR ARCHITECTURE
    www.archdaily.com
    Hameau du Latz Houses / MSR ARCHITECTURESave this picture! Franois DantartArchitects: MSR ARCHITECTUREAreaArea of this architecture projectArea:335 mYearCompletion year of this architecture project Year: 2024 PhotographsPhotographs:Franois Dantart Lead Architects: Marie-Sophie Rollet More SpecsLess SpecsSave this picture!Text description provided by the architects. It all started with an attraction to an exceptional site, where tall pine trees stand among old stone walls, near a river. During their first visit, the future owners were drawn to the beauty of the place, its views, tranquility and authentic charm. This site is the former farmhouse of Chteau du Latz, a historic estate that includes stone farmhouses, a chicken coop, an orchard and stone walls scattered throughout the landscape. In the 1970s and 1990s, two neo-Breton houses were built, but they seem disconnected from the natural surroundings, as though they were placed there without consideration for the surrounding harmony.Save this picture!Save this picture!Save this picture!The project proposes a "stitching" approach to connect these buildings, integrate them into the landscape, and reconnect them with the unique history of the place. The existing structures include a large T-shaped house dominating the plot, a smaller, more recent, and discreet house in the background, and a park planted with pine trees and stone walls. The idea of creating a hamlet emerged as the ideal solution: a family home that brings people together while offering spaces for privacy. We reorganized the volumes for architectural coherence and harmony between the buildings.Save this picture!Save this picture!Save this picture!Stone, the founding material of the site, becomes the common thread of the project. Already weathered by time and reclaimed from surrounding construction sites, it anchors the architecture to the regional heritage. It is used in semi-dry granite rubble for the facades and large slabs of Luserna stone for the flooring, thus blurring the boundaries between interior and exterior. Corten steel was chosen for its unique texture, symbolizing the passage of time. It creates a dialogue with the stone while introducing a contemporary element. This material highlights the generous windows and framing views of the surrounding landscape.Save this picture!The volumes of the houses have been reinterpreted and sculpted to offer a sober and contemporary design, meeting the comfort desired by the occupants. Inside, the old solid wood parquet floors warm the spaces where concrete blends into furniture elements, such as the staircase, kitchen island, and bench-seats. The railing, rods, and wardrobe doors are custom-made in collaboration with craftsmen. The slate roofs, true to Breton tradition, have been modernized with subtle details, such as recessed gutters and refined lines.Save this picture!The whole is structured around a central space enlivened by a swimming pool, designed as a village square where this large family can gather and enjoy long summer evenings. The landscape has also been completely redesigned to interact with this reinvented architecture, highlighting the beauty of the original site. This project is a respectful tribute to the authenticity of this historically rich place while projecting it toward a contemporary and sustainable future.Save this picture!Project gallerySee allShow lessAbout this officeMSR ARCHITECTUREOfficeMaterialStoneMaterials and TagsPublished on January 28, 2025Cite: "Hameau du Latz Houses / MSR ARCHITECTURE" 28 Jan 2025. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/1026171/hameau-du-latz-houses-msr-architecture&gt ISSN 0719-8884Save!ArchDaily?You've started following your first account!Did you know?You'll now receive updates based on what you follow! Personalize your stream and start following your favorite authors, offices and users.Go to my stream
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  • Navigation and Markers - Unreal Engine 5.5
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    My Systems & Assets on FAB Marketplace:https://www.fab.com/sellers/CGDealers Support this channel and get access to all my files:https://www.patreon.com/CGDealers Youtube Membership: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCyXWTdwLotz55o1oOkU0-4g/join FREE VIDEO - How To Create The Landscape Auto Material:https://youtu.be/rw8qDmFGsRo Full Free Video on how to add RVT Auto Landscape Material:https://youtu.be/NzqFHdBhl8k MY SOCIAL MEDIA:Telegram: https://t.me/YTcgdealersArtstation: https://www.artstation.com/coldwave Twitter/X: https://twitter.com/CGDealers Leartes Entire Store 210+ Assets on 30% Discount: https://gumroad.com/a/39658451 30% Discount Coupon Code: CG30 GET MY UNREAL 5 - BLUEPRINTS MASTERCLASS COURSE:Udemy: https://bit.ly/3WqNQSL GET ONE MONTH FREE SKILLSHARE SUBSCRIPTION:https://skl.sh/3CwwFH2 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------#unrealengine5 #blueprints #ue5tutorial #openworld #openworldgames #gamedevtutorial #gamedevelopment #unrealengine #unrealenginetutorial #unrealengine #gamedesign #rvt #runtimevirtualtexture #realtimerendering #ai #aianimation #animation #pcg #unrealpcg #unrealenginetutorial #blender #gamedevelopment #unrealenginetutorial -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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