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Nintendo Locked Down the Switch 2's USB-C Port, Broke Third-Party Docking

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Two accessory manufacturers have told The Verge that Nintendo has intentionally locked down the Switch 2's USB-C port using a new encryption scheme, preventing compatibility with third-party docks and accessories. "I haven't yet found proof of that encryption chip myself -- but when I analyzed the USB-C PD traffic with a Power-Z tester, I could clearly see the new Nintendo Switch not behaving like a good USB citizen should," writes The Verge's Sean Hollister. From the report: If you've been wondering why there are basically no portable Switch 2 docks on the market, this is the reason. Even Jsaux, the company that built its reputation by beating the Steam Deck dock to market, tells us it's paused its plans to build a Switch 2 dock because of Nintendo's actions. It's not simply because the Switch 2 now requires more voltage, as was previously reported; it's that Nintendo has made things even more difficult this generation.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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InShaneee
6 hours ago
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Has Xbox Considered Laying One Person Off Instead Of Thousands

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None of the people being laid off were responsible for the decisions that have led to these layoffs

The post Has Xbox Considered Laying One Person Off Instead Of Thousands appeared first on Aftermath.



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InShaneee
9 hours ago
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Crunchyroll ran embarrassingly bad ChatGPT subtitles on its new anime series

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A screenshot from Necronomico and the Cosmic Horror Show depicting a blue-haired girl in a white varsity jacket while shielding her eyes from light.

The subtitles for one of Crunchyroll's newest anime series make it pretty clear that the company is going all in on ChatGPT.

This week as viewers logged on to Crunchyroll to check out Studio Gokumi's Necronomico and the Cosmic Horror Show, many were surprised to see that the series' subtitles were filled with typos, grammatical errors, and explicit references to ChatGPT. The subtitles seemed very much like text that had been generated with AI and slapped onto Necronomico and the Cosmic Horror Show without first being reviewed and edited for accuracy.

Errors in subtitles aren't unheard of, but sentences like "Is gameorver. if you fall, you …

Read the full story at The Verge.

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InShaneee
9 hours ago
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AMC Warns Moviegoers To Expect '25-30 Minutes' of Ads and Trailers

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AMC Theatres now warns customers that movies start 25-30 minutes after the listed showtime to account for ads and trailers, "making it easier for moviegoers to know the actual start time of their film screening," reports The Verge. From the report: Starting today, AMC will also show more ads than before, meaning its preshow lineup may have to be reconfigured to avoid exceeding the 30-minute mark. The company made an agreement with the National CineMedia ad network that includes as much as five minutes of commercials shown "after a movie's official start time," according to The Hollywood Reporter, and an additional 30-to-60-second "Platinum Spot" that plays before the last one or two trailers. AMC was the only major theater chain to reject the National CineMedia ad spot when it was pitched in 2019, telling Bloomberg at the time that it believed "US moviegoers would react quite negatively." Now struggling financially amid an overall decline in movie theater attendance and box-office grosses, AMC has reversed course, telling The Hollywood Reporter that its competitors "have fully participated for more than five years without any direct impact to their attendance."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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InShaneee
1 day ago
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Peacock disappears Murder, She Wrote

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It’s a mystery fit for Jessica Fletcher herself. All 12 seasons of Murder, She Wrote were removed from Peacock this week, despite the fact that the series is owned and distributed by fellow NBCUniversal studio Universal Television, Vulture reports. The Angela Lansbury-led crime drama, which began airing in 1985, has been housed on the platform since its launch five years ago, per the outlet. It did have a “leaving soon” tag as of a few weeks ago, with a rep confirming that the series had been offed on Monday. They didn’t offer a motive.

Vulture has a hunch the show was murdered because Universal thought it would be more profitable elsewhere. The show is popular enough that the company still regularly licenses it to air on channels it doesn’t own, like Hallmark Mystery. It also operates a MSW FAST channel, which airs random episodes 24/7 on Pluto TV and Roku.

The FAST channel, of course, inserts dozens of ads into Jessica’s process, which is really the key to unraveling this whole affair. Currently, the only place you can stream all 12 seasons of Murder, She Wrote (and its various direct-to-TV movies) is Tubi, which is free for all but also has a ton of ads. Vulture suspects that someone at NBCUniversal did a little math and realized it would be more profitable to license the show to the ad-supported streamer than to continue licensing it for ad-free streaming on Peacock. (Peacock still reportedly has to pay market value for the title, even though it’s owned by its parent company.) 

Of course, you can still go old school and buy seasons of Murder, She Wrote on DVD if you don’t want to see it broken up by promos for dog food and eczema cream, or you can purchase it digitally in the usual places. Once again, however, it seems like monetary interests have won over user experience. And that’s all she wrote. 



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InShaneee
1 day ago
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Read this: Pixar's self-censorship of Elio's queer themes may have doomed it

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Despite solid reviews and a cute star, Pixar’s Elio never stood a chance at the box office, where it cratered and gave Pixar its lowest opening weekend ever. The reviews got it right, though: The movie needed some seasoning. “In Turning Red and Luca, the characters’ youthful friendships feel specific and lived-in,” Jesse Hassenger wrote in his review for The A.V. Club. “Fun as it is, Elio just goes for the montage, eager to speak a universal language.” According to a new report from The Hollywood Reporter, that was by design. Pixar’s internal pearl-clutching over and self-censorship of the film’s queer-coded, fashion-forward, and environmentally friendly lead character resulted in a movie that lacked substance. After last year’s Win Or Lose debacle, it’s an easy story to believe.

Elio’s trouble began in 2023, when original director Adrian Molina (Coco) submitted a near-complete movie that alluded to Elio’s queer identity and focused heavily on his passion for environmentalism. Molina, who is openly gay, never intended the film to be a coming-out story, sources say, but rather a reflection of the artist who made the movie. (So that’s why they want to replace everything with AI!) The company line states that he was moved on to Coco 2. Others say it came after two screenings: one for test audiences, which revealed audiences liked the movie but wouldn’t pay to see it, and another for Pete Docter, which ended with a conversation that “hurt” Molina deeply. He left the project shortly after and was replaced by Madeline Sharafian and Domee Shi. Star America Ferrera also exited and was replaced by Zoe Saldaña. For her part, Ferrera purportedly left because “there was no longer Latinx representation in the leadership,” and also due to the need to frequently re-record dialogue for a movie that was supposed to be finished two years ago.

Those working on the movie were also dismayed by the project’s about-face. Speaking on the record, former Pixar assistant editor Sarah Ligatich told THR how “deeply saddened and aggrieved” she was by Pixar’s changes to Elio. Ligatich, who provided notes on the film as part of PixPRIDE, Pixar’s internal LGBTQ+ group, mentioned an “exodus of talent” that left the project after the movie was recut. Others were a little more blunt, saying that the version in theaters is “far worse” than Molina’s original.

Ultimately, it is a confluence of problems at Disney. First, the company has devalued its Pixar movies by releasing them through Disney+, which guarantees a swift streaming release. Going to the movies as a family is expensive, and expecting people to show up so soon after Lilo & Stitch, when Elio will be available on Disney+ soon anyway, seems like a big and expensive ask. The other thing is Docter’s emphasis on making the “most relatable films” possible, which has smoothed over any nuances or originality from recent Pixar movies. After Disney’s “Don’t Say Gay” fights and the homophobic outrage surrounding Lightyear, some presume that Pixar is erasing anything that could be construed as gay subtext from their movies before Disney even asks them to. Whether that’s a company edict or not, it appears to be bearing out on screen.

Read the full report at The Hollywood Reporter.



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1 day ago
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