• Bonjour à tous, amis aventuriers de la réalité virtuelle !

    Une nouvelle excitante vient de tomber : Warpfrog travaille sur un titre VR différent de Blade & Sorcery 2 ! Cela pourrait être encore mieux ! Imaginez un jeu qui repousse les limites de la créativité et vous plonge dans des expériences inoubliables.

    Ne craignez pas le changement, car chaque nouvelle aventure est une opportunité de découvrir quelque chose d'extraordinaire. Soyez prêts à explorer des mondes fascinants et à vivre des moments mémorables. L'avenir de la VR s'annonce radieux !

    Restez connectés
    🌟✨ Bonjour à tous, amis aventuriers de la réalité virtuelle ! 🌍💖 Une nouvelle excitante vient de tomber : Warpfrog travaille sur un titre VR différent de Blade & Sorcery 2 ! 🚀🎮 Cela pourrait être encore mieux ! Imaginez un jeu qui repousse les limites de la créativité et vous plonge dans des expériences inoubliables. 🌈🌟 Ne craignez pas le changement, car chaque nouvelle aventure est une opportunité de découvrir quelque chose d'extraordinaire. 🌟💪 Soyez prêts à explorer des mondes fascinants et à vivre des moments mémorables. L'avenir de la VR s'annonce radieux ! 🌞💫 Restez connectés
    Ce jeu VR ne sera pas Blade & Sorcery 2… et c’est peut-être encore mieux
    Warpfrog travaille sur un nouveau titre VR, différent de Blade & Sorcery, mais pensé pour […] Cet article Ce jeu VR ne sera pas Blade & Sorcery 2… et c’est peut-être encore mieux a été publié sur REALITE-VIRTUELLE.COM.
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  • So, Phantom Blade Zero has graced us with a whopping 22 minutes of “intense” gameplay on PS5. Because, you know, who doesn't love watching someone else play a game while we pretend to be productive? I mean, it’s like a digital soap opera where the plot is just as thin as the character development.

    Can we take a moment to appreciate the fact that we’re all getting hyped over 22 minutes? Meanwhile, my life consists of scrolling through memes for hours—totally intense, right? But hey, at least the graphics look stunning; maybe one day they’ll make a cinematic masterpiece out of my daily routine.

    Let’s all gather around and marvel at this “intense” gameplay while we
    So, Phantom Blade Zero has graced us with a whopping 22 minutes of “intense” gameplay on PS5. Because, you know, who doesn't love watching someone else play a game while we pretend to be productive? I mean, it’s like a digital soap opera where the plot is just as thin as the character development. Can we take a moment to appreciate the fact that we’re all getting hyped over 22 minutes? Meanwhile, my life consists of scrolling through memes for hours—totally intense, right? But hey, at least the graphics look stunning; maybe one day they’ll make a cinematic masterpiece out of my daily routine. Let’s all gather around and marvel at this “intense” gameplay while we
    WWW.ACTUGAMING.NET
    Phantom Blade Zero dévoile 22 minutes de gameplay intense sur PS5
    ActuGaming.net Phantom Blade Zero dévoile 22 minutes de gameplay intense sur PS5 Le studio chinois S-Game vient de publier une nouvelle démonstration de 22 minutes pour Phantom […] L'article Phantom Blade Zero dévoile 22 minutes de gameplay in
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  • In moments of solitude, I find myself pondering the little things that once brought joy—like the thrill of grilling with friends, the laughter shared over a smoky feast. Yet here I stand, alone, holding a barbecue knife, wondering if its sharp edge could cut through the weight of my loneliness. These specialty blades, crafted to perfection, remind me of what’s missing—connection, warmth, laughter. They may not be necessary, but their absence feels painfully profound. As I slice through tender meat, I can't help but feel the emptiness within, echoing louder than the sizzle of the grill.

    #Loneliness #Heartbreak #GrillingMemories #EmotionalJourney #LifeReflections
    In moments of solitude, I find myself pondering the little things that once brought joy—like the thrill of grilling with friends, the laughter shared over a smoky feast. Yet here I stand, alone, holding a barbecue knife, wondering if its sharp edge could cut through the weight of my loneliness. These specialty blades, crafted to perfection, remind me of what’s missing—connection, warmth, laughter. They may not be necessary, but their absence feels painfully profound. As I slice through tender meat, I can't help but feel the emptiness within, echoing louder than the sizzle of the grill. #Loneliness #Heartbreak #GrillingMemories #EmotionalJourney #LifeReflections
    Do You Need a Barbecue Knife?
    These specialty blades—cutlass-shaped mini machetes made for chopping grilled and smoked meats—aren’t a necessary addition to your grill game. But they’re fun, and they get the job done.
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  • في عالم الألعاب، النجاح والفشل هما جزء من الرحلة! على الرغم من أن لعبة "Blades of Fire" من MercurySteam قد واجهت تحديات تجارية، إلا أن كل تجربة تعطينا دروسًا قيمة.

    لا تدع الفشل يثنيك عن مواصلة السعي نحو أهدافك! كل محاولة تجعلنا أقوى وأكثر إبداعًا. لنتذكر أن الإبداع والشغف هما المفتاحان لتحقيق النجاح الحقيقي. نحن معًا في هذه الرحلة، ودائمًا ما يوجد ضوء في نهاية النفق!

    فلنستمر في دعم المطورين والمبدعين لنراهم يحققون انتصاراتهم المستقبلية!
    🎮✨ في عالم الألعاب، النجاح والفشل هما جزء من الرحلة! على الرغم من أن لعبة "Blades of Fire" من MercurySteam قد واجهت تحديات تجارية، إلا أن كل تجربة تعطينا دروسًا قيمة. 🌟 لا تدع الفشل يثنيك عن مواصلة السعي نحو أهدافك! كل محاولة تجعلنا أقوى وأكثر إبداعًا. 💪🔥 لنتذكر أن الإبداع والشغف هما المفتاحان لتحقيق النجاح الحقيقي. نحن معًا في هذه الرحلة، ودائمًا ما يوجد ضوء في نهاية النفق! 🌈 فلنستمر في دعم المطورين والمبدعين لنراهم يحققون انتصاراتهم المستقبلية!
    WWW.ACTUGAMING.NET
    Blades of Fire, le dernier jeu de MercurySteam, est un échec commercial pour son éditeur
    ActuGaming.net Blades of Fire, le dernier jeu de MercurySteam, est un échec commercial pour son éditeur Le studio espagnol MercurySteam a souvent eu l’occasion de montrer son talent lorsqu’on lui confiait […] L'article Blades of Fi
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  • ¡Es increíble cómo la industria de los videojuegos ha caído tan bajo! Hablemos de "Stellar Blade", un juego que, a primera vista, parece una mezcla de acción arcade clásica y un Soulslike moderno, pero que en realidad es un desastre absoluto que nos muestra lo peor de la cultura gamer actual. ¿De verdad necesitamos otro juego donde el protagonismo lo tenga una oficial de defensa con "grandes tetas y un trasero aún más grande"? ¿Qué clase de mensaje le estamos enviando a nuestra sociedad al aplaudir esta representación superficial y sexualizada de las mujeres?

    Es evidente que los desarrolladores de "Stellar Blade" han decidido priorizar el sex appeal sobre el contenido sustancial. La idea de que una mujer con curvas exageradas sea la heroína de la historia, salvando un mundo post-apocalíptico de aliens, es simplemente ridícula. No solo perpetúa estereotipos dañinos, sino que también desvirtúa lo que debería ser un enfoque realista y poderoso de la narrativa de videojuegos. ¿Es esta la mejor representación que podemos ofrecer? ¿De verdad?

    Además, los críticos han señalado que la jugabilidad es aburrida y repetitiva, lo cual es otra gran decepción. La promesa de un combate “divertido” en un entorno de ciencia ficción se queda en nada. Las mecánicas son torpes y, a menudo, frustrantes, haciendo que el jugador se pregunte por qué decidió invertir su tiempo y dinero en un producto tan mediocre. ¿Es esta la innovación que esperábamos? ¿La "diversión" que se nos prometió? ¡Por favor!

    Y no hablemos de las reseñas en Steam. Es triste ver cómo algunos usuarios se dejan llevar por la apariencia y no ven más allá de la superficie. ¿Qué pasa con la crítica constructiva? ¿Dónde quedaron los estándares? Este tipo de productos solo alimenta una cultura de aceptación de lo mediocre, donde lo superficial es lo que cuenta. Si seguimos así, ¿qué futuro le espera a la industria de los videojuegos?

    La frustración crece cuando vemos que los jugadores verdaderos, aquellos que buscan experiencias significativas, son ignorados en favor de un espectáculo que solo busca atraer a un público que prefiere lo fácil y lo llamativo. "Stellar Blade" es un recordatorio doloroso de que necesitamos elevar nuestras expectativas y exigir más de los desarrolladores.

    Así que, la próxima vez que pienses en gastar tu dinero en un juego, pregúntate: ¿realmente quieres contribuir a esta cultura de la superficialidad? ¡Es hora de que nos levantemos y digamos basta! No más juegos que solo buscan lo fácil y lo obvio; necesitamos calidad, profundidad y respeto en la narrativa y diseño de personajes. ¡Despertemos!

    #StellarBlade #Videojuegos #CulturaGamer #JuegosMediocres #RepresentaciónFemenina
    ¡Es increíble cómo la industria de los videojuegos ha caído tan bajo! Hablemos de "Stellar Blade", un juego que, a primera vista, parece una mezcla de acción arcade clásica y un Soulslike moderno, pero que en realidad es un desastre absoluto que nos muestra lo peor de la cultura gamer actual. ¿De verdad necesitamos otro juego donde el protagonismo lo tenga una oficial de defensa con "grandes tetas y un trasero aún más grande"? ¿Qué clase de mensaje le estamos enviando a nuestra sociedad al aplaudir esta representación superficial y sexualizada de las mujeres? Es evidente que los desarrolladores de "Stellar Blade" han decidido priorizar el sex appeal sobre el contenido sustancial. La idea de que una mujer con curvas exageradas sea la heroína de la historia, salvando un mundo post-apocalíptico de aliens, es simplemente ridícula. No solo perpetúa estereotipos dañinos, sino que también desvirtúa lo que debería ser un enfoque realista y poderoso de la narrativa de videojuegos. ¿Es esta la mejor representación que podemos ofrecer? ¿De verdad? Además, los críticos han señalado que la jugabilidad es aburrida y repetitiva, lo cual es otra gran decepción. La promesa de un combate “divertido” en un entorno de ciencia ficción se queda en nada. Las mecánicas son torpes y, a menudo, frustrantes, haciendo que el jugador se pregunte por qué decidió invertir su tiempo y dinero en un producto tan mediocre. ¿Es esta la innovación que esperábamos? ¿La "diversión" que se nos prometió? ¡Por favor! Y no hablemos de las reseñas en Steam. Es triste ver cómo algunos usuarios se dejan llevar por la apariencia y no ven más allá de la superficie. ¿Qué pasa con la crítica constructiva? ¿Dónde quedaron los estándares? Este tipo de productos solo alimenta una cultura de aceptación de lo mediocre, donde lo superficial es lo que cuenta. Si seguimos así, ¿qué futuro le espera a la industria de los videojuegos? La frustración crece cuando vemos que los jugadores verdaderos, aquellos que buscan experiencias significativas, son ignorados en favor de un espectáculo que solo busca atraer a un público que prefiere lo fácil y lo llamativo. "Stellar Blade" es un recordatorio doloroso de que necesitamos elevar nuestras expectativas y exigir más de los desarrolladores. Así que, la próxima vez que pienses en gastar tu dinero en un juego, pregúntate: ¿realmente quieres contribuir a esta cultura de la superficialidad? ¡Es hora de que nos levantemos y digamos basta! No más juegos que solo buscan lo fácil y lo obvio; necesitamos calidad, profundidad y respeto en la narrativa y diseño de personajes. ¡Despertemos! #StellarBlade #Videojuegos #CulturaGamer #JuegosMediocres #RepresentaciónFemenina
    Stellar Blade, As Told By Steam Reviews
    Stellar Blade is a mashup of classic arcade action and modern Soulslike about a defense force officer with big tits and an even bigger ass saving the post-apocalyptic ruins of Earth from the aliens who destroyed it. Paradise lost? Not for the gooners
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  • La vérité, c'est que la revue du jeu "Blades of Fire" n'est pas vraiment excitante. On parle d'un jeu qui semble avoir beaucoup de promesses, mais qui, en réalité, s'enlise dans une monotonie assez palpable. Les graphismes sont corrects, mais rien de révolutionnaire. Les personnages, quant à eux, manquent de profondeur et d’originalité, ce qui est dommage, puisque l’univers aurait pu être intéressant.

    Les mécaniques de jeu semblent prometteuses au début, mais rapidement, on se rend compte qu'il n'y a rien de nouveau à explorer. Les missions deviennent répétitives et prévisibles. On fait toujours la même chose sans grande variation, ce qui finit par devenir ennuyeux. Franchement, on aurait pu espérer un peu plus d'innovation, mais il semble que le développement du jeu n'a pas vraiment pris ce risque.

    Si on s'attarde un peu plus sur l'expérience globale, on se rend compte que "Blades of Fire" pourrait convenir à ceux qui cherchent juste à passer le temps. Cependant, pour les joueurs à la recherche de défis ou de récits captivants, c'est probablement un coup d'épée dans l'eau. On se trouve face à un jeu qui, même s'il a ses moments, ne parvient pas à captiver l'attention sur le long terme.

    En résumé, "Blades of Fire" est là, mais il ne fait pas vraiment d’étincelles. On peut jouer, mais est-ce que ça en vaut vraiment la peine ? Pas sûr. On peut trouver mieux ailleurs.

    #JeuxVidéo #BladesOfFire #CritiquesJeux #Gaming #Ennui
    La vérité, c'est que la revue du jeu "Blades of Fire" n'est pas vraiment excitante. On parle d'un jeu qui semble avoir beaucoup de promesses, mais qui, en réalité, s'enlise dans une monotonie assez palpable. Les graphismes sont corrects, mais rien de révolutionnaire. Les personnages, quant à eux, manquent de profondeur et d’originalité, ce qui est dommage, puisque l’univers aurait pu être intéressant. Les mécaniques de jeu semblent prometteuses au début, mais rapidement, on se rend compte qu'il n'y a rien de nouveau à explorer. Les missions deviennent répétitives et prévisibles. On fait toujours la même chose sans grande variation, ce qui finit par devenir ennuyeux. Franchement, on aurait pu espérer un peu plus d'innovation, mais il semble que le développement du jeu n'a pas vraiment pris ce risque. Si on s'attarde un peu plus sur l'expérience globale, on se rend compte que "Blades of Fire" pourrait convenir à ceux qui cherchent juste à passer le temps. Cependant, pour les joueurs à la recherche de défis ou de récits captivants, c'est probablement un coup d'épée dans l'eau. On se trouve face à un jeu qui, même s'il a ses moments, ne parvient pas à captiver l'attention sur le long terme. En résumé, "Blades of Fire" est là, mais il ne fait pas vraiment d’étincelles. On peut jouer, mais est-ce que ça en vaut vraiment la peine ? Pas sûr. On peut trouver mieux ailleurs. #JeuxVidéo #BladesOfFire #CritiquesJeux #Gaming #Ennui
    مراجعة لعبة Blades of Fire
    The post مراجعة لعبة Blades of Fire appeared first on عرب هاردوير.
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  • Stellar Blade, le jeu tant attendu qui a captivé le cœur des joueurs, a franchi une étape incroyable en dépassant les 3 millions de ventes à l'échelle mondiale, dont un impressionnant million d'unités sur PC. Cet exploit est une véritable célébration pour la communauté des gamers et une preuve éclatante du succès retentissant de ce titre.

    ## Un Lancement Triomphant

    La sortie de la version PC de Stellar Blade a été marquée par une anticipation sans précédent. Les développeurs ont réussi à créer...
    Stellar Blade, le jeu tant attendu qui a captivé le cœur des joueurs, a franchi une étape incroyable en dépassant les 3 millions de ventes à l'échelle mondiale, dont un impressionnant million d'unités sur PC. Cet exploit est une véritable célébration pour la communauté des gamers et une preuve éclatante du succès retentissant de ce titre. ## Un Lancement Triomphant La sortie de la version PC de Stellar Blade a été marquée par une anticipation sans précédent. Les développeurs ont réussi à créer...
    Stellar Blade dépasse les 3 millions de ventes, dont déjà 1 million sur PC
    Stellar Blade, le jeu tant attendu qui a captivé le cœur des joueurs, a franchi une étape incroyable en dépassant les 3 millions de ventes à l'échelle mondiale, dont un impressionnant million d'unités sur PC. Cet exploit est une véritable célébration pour la communauté des gamers et une preuve éclatante du succès retentissant de ce titre. ## Un Lancement Triomphant La sortie de la version PC...
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  • Would you switch browsers for a chatbot?

    Hi, friends! Welcome to Installer No. 87, your guide to the best and Verge-iest stuff in the world.This week, I’ve been reading about Sabrina Carpenter and Khaby Lame and intimacy coordinators, finally making a dent in Barbarians at the Gate, watching all the Ben Schwartz and Friends I can find on YouTube, planning my days with the new Finalist beta, recklessly installing all the Apple developer betas after WWDC, thoroughly enjoying Dakota Johnson’s current press tour, and trying to clear all my inboxes before I go on parental leave. It’s… going.I also have for you a much-awaited new browser, a surprise update to a great photo editor, a neat trailer for a meh-looking movie, a classic Steve Jobs speech, and much more. Slightly shorter issue this week, sorry; there’s just a lot going on, but I didn’t want to leave y’all hanging entirely. Oh, and: we’ll be off next week, for Juneteenth, vacation, and general summer chaos reasons. We’ll be back in full force after that, though! Let’s get into it.The DropDia. I know there are a lot of Arc fans here in the Installerverse, and I know you, like me, will have a lot of feelings about the company’s new and extremely AI-focused browser. Personally, I don’t see leaving Arc anytime soon, but there are some really fascinating ideasin Dia already. Snapseed 3.0. I completely forgot Snapseed even existed, and now here’s a really nice update with a bunch of new editing tools and a nice new redesign! As straightforward photo editors go, this is one of the better ones. The new version is only on iOS right now, but I assume it’s heading to Android shortly.“I Tried To Make Something In America.” I was first turned onto the story of the Smarter Scrubber by a great Search Engine episode, and this is a great companion to the story about what it really takes to bring manufacturing back to the US. And why it’s hard to justify.. That link, and the trailer, will only do anything for you if you have a newer iPhone. But even if you don’t care about the movie, the trailer — which actually buzzes in sync with the car’s rumbles and revs — is just really, really cool. Android 16. You can’t get the cool, colorful new look just yet or the desktop mode I am extremely excited about — there’s a lot of good stuff in Android 16 but most of it is coming later. Still, Live Updates look good, and there’s some helpful accessibility stuff, as well.The Infinite Machine Olto. I am such a sucker for any kind of futuristic-looking electric scooter, and this one really hits the sweet spot. Part moped, part e-bike, all Blade Runner vibes. If it wasn’t then I would’ve probably ordered one already.The Fujifilm X-E5. I kept wondering why Fujifilm didn’t just make, like, a hundred different great-looking cameras at every imaginable price because everyone wants a camera this cool. Well, here we are! It’s a spin on the X100VI but with interchangeable lenses and a few power-user features. All my photographer friends are going to want this.Call Her Alex. I confess I’m no Call Her Daddy diehard, but I found this two-part doc on Alex Cooper really interesting. Cooper’s story is all about understanding people, the internet, and what it means to feel connected now. It’s all very low-stakes and somehow also existential? It’s only two parts, you should watch it.“Steve Jobs - 2005 Stanford Commencement Address.” For the 20th anniversary of Jobs’ famousspeech, the Steve Jobs Archive put together a big package of stories, notes, and other materials around the speech. Plus, a newly high-def version of the video. This one’s always worth the 15 minutes.Dune: Awakening. Dune has ascended to the rare territory of “I will check out anything from this franchise, ever, no questions asked.” This game is big on open-world survival and ornithopters, too, so it’s even more my kind of thing. And it’s apparently punishingly difficult in spots.CrowdsourcedHere’s what the Installer community is into this week. I want to know what you’re into right now as well! Email installer@theverge.com or message me on Signal — @davidpierce.11 — with your recommendations for anything and everything, and we’ll feature some of our favorites here every week. For even more great recommendations, check out the replies to this post on Threads and this post on Bluesky.“I had tried the paper planner in the leather Paper Republic journal but since have moved onto the Remarkable Paper Pro color e-ink device which takes everything you like about paper but makes it editable and color coded. Combine this with a Remarkable planner in PDF format off of Etsy and you are golden.” — Jason“I started reading a manga series from content creator Cory Kenshin called Monsters We Make. So far, I love it. Already preordered Vol. 2.” — Rob“I recently went down the third party controller rabbit hole after my trusty adapted Xbox One controller finally kicked the bucket, and I wanted something I could use across my PC, phone, handheld, Switch, etc. I’ve been playing with the GameSir Cyclone 2 for a few weeks, and it feels really deluxe. The thumbsticks are impossibly smooth and accurate thanks to its TMR joysticks. The face buttons took a second for my brain to adjust to; the short travel distance initially registered as mushy, but once I stopped trying to pound the buttons like I was at the arcade, I found the subtle mechanical click super satisfying.” — Sam“The Apple TV Plus miniseries Long Way Home. It’s Ewan McGregor and Charley Boorman’s fourth Long Way series. This time they are touring some European countries on vintage bikes that they fixed, and it’s such a light-hearted show from two really down to earth humans. Connecting with other people in different cultures and seeing their journey is such a treat!” — Esmael“Podcast recommendation: Devil and the Deep Blue Sea by Christianity Today. A deep dive into the Satanic Panic of the 80’s and 90’s.” — Drew“Splatoon 3and the new How to Train Your Dragon.” — Aaron“I can’t put Mario Kart World down. When I get tired of the intense Knockout Tour mode I go to Free Roam and try to knock out P-Switch challenges, some of which are really tough! I’m obsessed.” — Dave“Fable, a cool app for finding books with virtual book clubs. It’s the closest to a more cozy online bookstore with more honest reviews. I just wish you could click on the author’s name to see their other books.” — Astrid“This is the Summer Games Fest weekand there are a TON of game demos to try out on Steam. One that has caught my attention / play time the most is Wildgate. It’s a team based spaceship shooter where ship crews battle and try to escape with a powerful artifact.” — Sean“Battlefront 2 is back for some reason. Still looks great.” — IanSigning offI have long been fascinated by weather forecasting. I recommend Andrew Blum’s book, The Weather Machine, to people all the time, as a way to understand both how we learned to predict the weather and why it’s a literally culture-changing thing to be able to do so. And if you want to make yourself so, so angry, there’s a whole chunk of Michael Lewis’s book, The Fifth Risk, about how a bunch of companies managed to basically privatize forecasts… based on government data. The weather is a huge business, an extremely powerful political force, and even more important to our way of life than we realize. And we’re really good at predicting the weather!I’ve also been hearing for years that weather forecasting is a perfect use for AI. It’s all about vast quantities of historical data, tiny fluctuations in readings, and finding patterns that often don’t want to be found. So, of course, as soon as I read my colleague Justine Calma’s story about a new Google project called Weather Lab, I spent the next hour poking through the data to see how well DeepMind managed to predict and track recent storms. It’s deeply wonky stuff, but it’s cool to see Big Tech trying to figure out Mother Nature — and almost getting it right. Almost.See you next week!See More:
    #would #you #switch #browsers #chatbot
    Would you switch browsers for a chatbot?
    Hi, friends! Welcome to Installer No. 87, your guide to the best and Verge-iest stuff in the world.This week, I’ve been reading about Sabrina Carpenter and Khaby Lame and intimacy coordinators, finally making a dent in Barbarians at the Gate, watching all the Ben Schwartz and Friends I can find on YouTube, planning my days with the new Finalist beta, recklessly installing all the Apple developer betas after WWDC, thoroughly enjoying Dakota Johnson’s current press tour, and trying to clear all my inboxes before I go on parental leave. It’s… going.I also have for you a much-awaited new browser, a surprise update to a great photo editor, a neat trailer for a meh-looking movie, a classic Steve Jobs speech, and much more. Slightly shorter issue this week, sorry; there’s just a lot going on, but I didn’t want to leave y’all hanging entirely. Oh, and: we’ll be off next week, for Juneteenth, vacation, and general summer chaos reasons. We’ll be back in full force after that, though! Let’s get into it.The DropDia. I know there are a lot of Arc fans here in the Installerverse, and I know you, like me, will have a lot of feelings about the company’s new and extremely AI-focused browser. Personally, I don’t see leaving Arc anytime soon, but there are some really fascinating ideasin Dia already. Snapseed 3.0. I completely forgot Snapseed even existed, and now here’s a really nice update with a bunch of new editing tools and a nice new redesign! As straightforward photo editors go, this is one of the better ones. The new version is only on iOS right now, but I assume it’s heading to Android shortly.“I Tried To Make Something In America.” I was first turned onto the story of the Smarter Scrubber by a great Search Engine episode, and this is a great companion to the story about what it really takes to bring manufacturing back to the US. And why it’s hard to justify.. That link, and the trailer, will only do anything for you if you have a newer iPhone. But even if you don’t care about the movie, the trailer — which actually buzzes in sync with the car’s rumbles and revs — is just really, really cool. Android 16. You can’t get the cool, colorful new look just yet or the desktop mode I am extremely excited about — there’s a lot of good stuff in Android 16 but most of it is coming later. Still, Live Updates look good, and there’s some helpful accessibility stuff, as well.The Infinite Machine Olto. I am such a sucker for any kind of futuristic-looking electric scooter, and this one really hits the sweet spot. Part moped, part e-bike, all Blade Runner vibes. If it wasn’t then I would’ve probably ordered one already.The Fujifilm X-E5. I kept wondering why Fujifilm didn’t just make, like, a hundred different great-looking cameras at every imaginable price because everyone wants a camera this cool. Well, here we are! It’s a spin on the X100VI but with interchangeable lenses and a few power-user features. All my photographer friends are going to want this.Call Her Alex. I confess I’m no Call Her Daddy diehard, but I found this two-part doc on Alex Cooper really interesting. Cooper’s story is all about understanding people, the internet, and what it means to feel connected now. It’s all very low-stakes and somehow also existential? It’s only two parts, you should watch it.“Steve Jobs - 2005 Stanford Commencement Address.” For the 20th anniversary of Jobs’ famousspeech, the Steve Jobs Archive put together a big package of stories, notes, and other materials around the speech. Plus, a newly high-def version of the video. This one’s always worth the 15 minutes.Dune: Awakening. Dune has ascended to the rare territory of “I will check out anything from this franchise, ever, no questions asked.” This game is big on open-world survival and ornithopters, too, so it’s even more my kind of thing. And it’s apparently punishingly difficult in spots.CrowdsourcedHere’s what the Installer community is into this week. I want to know what you’re into right now as well! Email installer@theverge.com or message me on Signal — @davidpierce.11 — with your recommendations for anything and everything, and we’ll feature some of our favorites here every week. For even more great recommendations, check out the replies to this post on Threads and this post on Bluesky.“I had tried the paper planner in the leather Paper Republic journal but since have moved onto the Remarkable Paper Pro color e-ink device which takes everything you like about paper but makes it editable and color coded. Combine this with a Remarkable planner in PDF format off of Etsy and you are golden.” — Jason“I started reading a manga series from content creator Cory Kenshin called Monsters We Make. So far, I love it. Already preordered Vol. 2.” — Rob“I recently went down the third party controller rabbit hole after my trusty adapted Xbox One controller finally kicked the bucket, and I wanted something I could use across my PC, phone, handheld, Switch, etc. I’ve been playing with the GameSir Cyclone 2 for a few weeks, and it feels really deluxe. The thumbsticks are impossibly smooth and accurate thanks to its TMR joysticks. The face buttons took a second for my brain to adjust to; the short travel distance initially registered as mushy, but once I stopped trying to pound the buttons like I was at the arcade, I found the subtle mechanical click super satisfying.” — Sam“The Apple TV Plus miniseries Long Way Home. It’s Ewan McGregor and Charley Boorman’s fourth Long Way series. This time they are touring some European countries on vintage bikes that they fixed, and it’s such a light-hearted show from two really down to earth humans. Connecting with other people in different cultures and seeing their journey is such a treat!” — Esmael“Podcast recommendation: Devil and the Deep Blue Sea by Christianity Today. A deep dive into the Satanic Panic of the 80’s and 90’s.” — Drew“Splatoon 3and the new How to Train Your Dragon.” — Aaron“I can’t put Mario Kart World down. When I get tired of the intense Knockout Tour mode I go to Free Roam and try to knock out P-Switch challenges, some of which are really tough! I’m obsessed.” — Dave“Fable, a cool app for finding books with virtual book clubs. It’s the closest to a more cozy online bookstore with more honest reviews. I just wish you could click on the author’s name to see their other books.” — Astrid“This is the Summer Games Fest weekand there are a TON of game demos to try out on Steam. One that has caught my attention / play time the most is Wildgate. It’s a team based spaceship shooter where ship crews battle and try to escape with a powerful artifact.” — Sean“Battlefront 2 is back for some reason. Still looks great.” — IanSigning offI have long been fascinated by weather forecasting. I recommend Andrew Blum’s book, The Weather Machine, to people all the time, as a way to understand both how we learned to predict the weather and why it’s a literally culture-changing thing to be able to do so. And if you want to make yourself so, so angry, there’s a whole chunk of Michael Lewis’s book, The Fifth Risk, about how a bunch of companies managed to basically privatize forecasts… based on government data. The weather is a huge business, an extremely powerful political force, and even more important to our way of life than we realize. And we’re really good at predicting the weather!I’ve also been hearing for years that weather forecasting is a perfect use for AI. It’s all about vast quantities of historical data, tiny fluctuations in readings, and finding patterns that often don’t want to be found. So, of course, as soon as I read my colleague Justine Calma’s story about a new Google project called Weather Lab, I spent the next hour poking through the data to see how well DeepMind managed to predict and track recent storms. It’s deeply wonky stuff, but it’s cool to see Big Tech trying to figure out Mother Nature — and almost getting it right. Almost.See you next week!See More: #would #you #switch #browsers #chatbot
    WWW.THEVERGE.COM
    Would you switch browsers for a chatbot?
    Hi, friends! Welcome to Installer No. 87, your guide to the best and Verge-iest stuff in the world. (If you’re new here, welcome, happy It’s Officially Too Hot Now Week, and also you can read all the old editions at the Installer homepage.) This week, I’ve been reading about Sabrina Carpenter and Khaby Lame and intimacy coordinators, finally making a dent in Barbarians at the Gate, watching all the Ben Schwartz and Friends I can find on YouTube, planning my days with the new Finalist beta, recklessly installing all the Apple developer betas after WWDC, thoroughly enjoying Dakota Johnson’s current press tour, and trying to clear all my inboxes before I go on parental leave. It’s… going.I also have for you a much-awaited new browser, a surprise update to a great photo editor, a neat trailer for a meh-looking movie, a classic Steve Jobs speech, and much more. Slightly shorter issue this week, sorry; there’s just a lot going on, but I didn’t want to leave y’all hanging entirely. Oh, and: we’ll be off next week, for Juneteenth, vacation, and general summer chaos reasons. We’ll be back in full force after that, though! Let’s get into it.(As always, the best part of Installer is your ideas and tips. What do you want to know more about? What awesome tricks do you know that everyone else should? What app should everyone be using? Tell me everything: installer@theverge.com. And if you know someone else who might enjoy Installer, forward it to them and tell them to subscribe here.)The DropDia. I know there are a lot of Arc fans here in the Installerverse, and I know you, like me, will have a lot of feelings about the company’s new and extremely AI-focused browser. Personally, I don’t see leaving Arc anytime soon, but there are some really fascinating ideas (and nice design touches) in Dia already. Snapseed 3.0. I completely forgot Snapseed even existed, and now here’s a really nice update with a bunch of new editing tools and a nice new redesign! As straightforward photo editors go, this is one of the better ones. The new version is only on iOS right now, but I assume it’s heading to Android shortly.“I Tried To Make Something In America.” I was first turned onto the story of the Smarter Scrubber by a great Search Engine episode, and this is a great companion to the story about what it really takes to bring manufacturing back to the US. And why it’s hard to justify.. That link, and the trailer, will only do anything for you if you have a newer iPhone. But even if you don’t care about the movie, the trailer — which actually buzzes in sync with the car’s rumbles and revs — is just really, really cool. Android 16. You can’t get the cool, colorful new look just yet or the desktop mode I am extremely excited about — there’s a lot of good stuff in Android 16 but most of it is coming later. Still, Live Updates look good, and there’s some helpful accessibility stuff, as well.The Infinite Machine Olto. I am such a sucker for any kind of futuristic-looking electric scooter, and this one really hits the sweet spot. Part moped, part e-bike, all Blade Runner vibes. If it wasn’t $3,500, then I would’ve probably ordered one already.The Fujifilm X-E5. I kept wondering why Fujifilm didn’t just make, like, a hundred different great-looking cameras at every imaginable price because everyone wants a camera this cool. Well, here we are! It’s a spin on the X100VI but with interchangeable lenses and a few power-user features. All my photographer friends are going to want this.Call Her Alex. I confess I’m no Call Her Daddy diehard, but I found this two-part doc on Alex Cooper really interesting. Cooper’s story is all about understanding people, the internet, and what it means to feel connected now. It’s all very low-stakes and somehow also existential? It’s only two parts, you should watch it.“Steve Jobs - 2005 Stanford Commencement Address.” For the 20th anniversary of Jobs’ famous (and genuinely fabulous) speech, the Steve Jobs Archive put together a big package of stories, notes, and other materials around the speech. Plus, a newly high-def version of the video. This one’s always worth the 15 minutes.Dune: Awakening. Dune has ascended to the rare territory of “I will check out anything from this franchise, ever, no questions asked.” This game is big on open-world survival and ornithopters, too, so it’s even more my kind of thing. And it’s apparently punishingly difficult in spots.CrowdsourcedHere’s what the Installer community is into this week. I want to know what you’re into right now as well! Email installer@theverge.com or message me on Signal — @davidpierce.11 — with your recommendations for anything and everything, and we’ll feature some of our favorites here every week. For even more great recommendations, check out the replies to this post on Threads and this post on Bluesky.“I had tried the paper planner in the leather Paper Republic journal but since have moved onto the Remarkable Paper Pro color e-ink device which takes everything you like about paper but makes it editable and color coded. Combine this with a Remarkable planner in PDF format off of Etsy and you are golden.” — Jason“I started reading a manga series from content creator Cory Kenshin called Monsters We Make. So far, I love it. Already preordered Vol. 2.” — Rob“I recently went down the third party controller rabbit hole after my trusty adapted Xbox One controller finally kicked the bucket, and I wanted something I could use across my PC, phone, handheld, Switch, etc. I’ve been playing with the GameSir Cyclone 2 for a few weeks, and it feels really deluxe. The thumbsticks are impossibly smooth and accurate thanks to its TMR joysticks. The face buttons took a second for my brain to adjust to; the short travel distance initially registered as mushy, but once I stopped trying to pound the buttons like I was at the arcade, I found the subtle mechanical click super satisfying.” — Sam“The Apple TV Plus miniseries Long Way Home. It’s Ewan McGregor and Charley Boorman’s fourth Long Way series. This time they are touring some European countries on vintage bikes that they fixed, and it’s such a light-hearted show from two really down to earth humans. Connecting with other people in different cultures and seeing their journey is such a treat!” — Esmael“Podcast recommendation: Devil and the Deep Blue Sea by Christianity Today. A deep dive into the Satanic Panic of the 80’s and 90’s.” — Drew“Splatoon 3 (the free Switch 2 update) and the new How to Train Your Dragon.” — Aaron“I can’t put Mario Kart World down. When I get tired of the intense Knockout Tour mode I go to Free Roam and try to knock out P-Switch challenges, some of which are really tough! I’m obsessed.” — Dave“Fable, a cool app for finding books with virtual book clubs. It’s the closest to a more cozy online bookstore with more honest reviews. I just wish you could click on the author’s name to see their other books.” — Astrid“This is the Summer Games Fest week (formerly E3, RIP) and there are a TON of game demos to try out on Steam. One that has caught my attention / play time the most is Wildgate. It’s a team based spaceship shooter where ship crews battle and try to escape with a powerful artifact.” — Sean“Battlefront 2 is back for some reason. Still looks great.” — IanSigning offI have long been fascinated by weather forecasting. I recommend Andrew Blum’s book, The Weather Machine, to people all the time, as a way to understand both how we learned to predict the weather and why it’s a literally culture-changing thing to be able to do so. And if you want to make yourself so, so angry, there’s a whole chunk of Michael Lewis’s book, The Fifth Risk, about how a bunch of companies managed to basically privatize forecasts… based on government data. The weather is a huge business, an extremely powerful political force, and even more important to our way of life than we realize. And we’re really good at predicting the weather!I’ve also been hearing for years that weather forecasting is a perfect use for AI. It’s all about vast quantities of historical data, tiny fluctuations in readings, and finding patterns that often don’t want to be found. So, of course, as soon as I read my colleague Justine Calma’s story about a new Google project called Weather Lab, I spent the next hour poking through the data to see how well DeepMind managed to predict and track recent storms. It’s deeply wonky stuff, but it’s cool to see Big Tech trying to figure out Mother Nature — and almost getting it right. Almost.See you next week!See More:
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