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Metal Gear Solid Delta: Snake Eater Review - A true classic sheds its skin with a bold new look
Game Updates

Metal Gear Solid Delta: Snake Eater Review – A true classic sheds its skin with a bold new look

by admin August 22, 2025


How crisp and 4K-ified a nostalgic menu looks on a big TV is the silliest thing I’ve ever been excited about, but Metal Gear Solid Delta: Snake Eater is a shot-for-shot remake which luxuriates in the little things.

What makes Metal Gear Solid 3 one of the best games of all time isn’t necessarily its sneaking or its plot, but its inventiveness and reactivity. If you whip the camera around Snake in the medical screen too quickly he falls to his knees and blows chunks when you return to the game, if you quickly snipe a boss after a cutscene hours before his scheduled fight, he’ll be dead when you’re supposed to face him, and rabbit might taste pretty good, but instant ramen noodles are still the greatest food known to man.

It’s full of bespoke, purpose-built mechanics which had never been used before or since, all of which were so exciting in their nerdy but approachable simulation. Whether it’s digging out bullets with a combat knife and bandaging the wound or burning off a fat leech with an equally stubby cuban cigar in the Cure screen, or snaring vampire bats, rats and reticulated pythons to recover your stamina, each moving part is so simply implemented, but with an accessibility that made them iconic.

Metal Gear Solid Delta translates the original’s quirkiness beautifully to a new generation with MGS5-esque controls and modern Unreal 5 engine textures and lighting which don’t so much reinvent the classic, but leverage the soft-focus of memory. Delta looks like you remember MGS3 looking, rather than the sharp, polygonal reality of a 20 year old PS2 game.

The visual improvements are, by-and-large, fantastic, going above and beyond the stretched and muddy environments of a typical HD remaster to deliver lush jungles, dusty mountain trails and austere laboratories which feel dense with granular detail and distinctly different from one another.

Image credit: Konami

You might spot a rough clothing texture here-and-there, but given MGS’s proclivity for crawling through the undergrowth and more portrait close ups than school picture day, everything and everyone looks good.

This gives a new lease of life to one of the more underrated aspects of Kojima games, the kinetic cutscene camera work and shot selection. Once you notice how dynamically and playfully the remade cutscenes are presented, and how much that contrasts with the legendarily (infamously) verbose codec scenes, it drives home even more clearly how perfect Metal Gear Solid is for this visual overhaul.

However, within the remake realm, Metal Gear Solid Delta occupies an interesting spot. While there’s now been a plethora of remakes, remasters and reimaginings from all sorts of studios and genres, it’s obvious that Konami was most inspired (both judging by this and their recent Silent Hill 2 remake) by the Resident Evil remakes.

All of the Resident Evil remakes are great but they make such an interesting contrast with Metal Gear. In Resident Evil 4 Remake, which I expected to be a lot more similar to the dogged, reiterative style of Delta, the development team, comprised of many of the people work had worked on the PS2 version, took the opportunity to “fix” fan-favourite flubs and memes which they obviously felt undermined the vision they were going for but, I feel, lost some of the magic in doing so.

Resident Evil 2 Remake on the other hand was absolutely triumphant in its reimagining of the original game. It felt like a modern game designed with the spirit of the classic that gained a truly innovative impetus from the new technologies and mechanics developed for Resident Evil 7 that it added, creating something which didn’t just reanimate the bones of the old game, but augmented them into something tangibly exciting.

Metal Gear Solid Delta, for all its strengths, doesn’t do that. All of the fun stuff that you remember is still here, ready and waiting for you like a gavial under the waterline. But outside of the new shooting controls, which are a vast improvement even if you try and argue that the original was a more tactile and realistic simulation of the complexity of actually firing a weapon, Delta feels relatively untouched creatively and mechanically.

Image credit: Konami

I’m not saying I wanted Ocelot to suddenly start to hunt you through the jungle like Mr X in Resident Evil 2, but within the wider context of what’s clearly inspired Delta, it doesn’t quite reach the heights of something you’ve never seen before – which is ironic given the greatness of MGS3 lies in its originality.

However, that’s not to say that Delta is low effort in any sense. Its painstaking recreation, which brings back one of gaming’s greatest ever Easter Eggs that was missing in the MGS HD Collection, is saved from tautology both by its completeness and commitment to not providing the path of least resistance.

To give more examples, it would’ve been very easy to forgo the Snake vs Monkey Ape Escape mode as a license not worth the effort, or to brighten up the cave complex after The Pain lest modern players think their HDR is broken, rather than letting Snake’s eyes naturally adjust to the gloom.

So, while there are no less than five other versions of Metal Gear Solid 3, Metal Gear Solid Delta: Snake Eater is now the definitive place to play a bonafide classic in a way that feels both accessibly modern, but still authentic to the original experience.



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August 22, 2025 0 comments
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Two Years After Maui Burned, Researchers Reveal the Wildfire’s True Death Toll
Gaming Gear

Two Years After Maui Burned, Researchers Reveal the Wildfire’s True Death Toll

by admin August 22, 2025


In August 2023, downed power lines on Maui, Hawaii, sparked a wildfire that quickly exploded into multiple, fast-moving blazes fanned by high winds. Over several days, the fires reduced much of the town of Lāhainā to ashes, displacing thousands and killing more than 100 people.

New research published Thursday, August 22, in the journal Frontiers in Climate suggests this disaster also caused a population-wide increase in mortality beyond what the official death count captured. By calculating the all-cause excess fatality rate—how many more deaths took place over a given period than expected—scientists found a 67% increase in the local mortality rate for August 2023. During the deadliest week of the blaze, the local death rate was 367% higher than expected. These findings underscore a need for improved disaster preparedness that incorporates Native Hawaiian ecological knowledge, the researchers concluded.

What excess death rate reveals

Looking at the excess death rate offered a fuller picture of the fire’s impact, co-first author Michelle Nakatsuka, a medical student and researcher at New York University’s Grossman School of Medicine, told Gizmodo in an email. “The official numbers mostly count direct causes, like burns or smoke inhalation, but excess deaths capture [the] true toll better by telling us how many more people died than would have otherwise been expected in the month of the Lāhainā fires,” she explained.

Disasters like wildfires often cause deaths in indirect ways that affect communities over time. When clinics shut down and roads are blocked off, people can’t refill their prescriptions or get dialysis treatments, Nakatsuka explained. Stress and displacement can worsen chronic conditions, and power or communication failures can delay emergency responses. “These impacts are amplified in under-resourced settings and [are] disproportionately suffered by vulnerable groups, like the elderly or people of color,” she said.

The tragic toll of the Maui fires

Even with this knowledge, Nakatsuka and her colleagues were surprised by the increase in excess mortality during the month of August 2023. Their analysis included all causes of death except covid-19. “While we anticipated an increase in excess deaths, seeing more than 80 additional deaths in the month of the Lāhainā fires was striking,” Nakatsuka said. “It was also surprising to see that the proportion of those deaths occurring outside of medical settings was larger than expected,” she added.

Indeed, the number of deaths that didn’t take place in a medical context—such as the emergency room—rose from 68% in previous months to 80% in August 2023. These people died in homes or public locations, suggesting that many were unable to reach medical care because of the fires.

A path to resilience

While all-cause excess mortality is useful for correlating increased fatalities with natural disasters, it offers little insight into the details of these deaths, Nakatsuka clarified. “The main limitation here is that we can’t say exactly which deaths were caused by the fires or look into Lāhainā-specific excess mortality; we can only measure the overall increase in deaths,” she said, adding that future research should analyze death records alongside medical and toxicology reports to identify causes of death.

Still, these findings reveal a need to improve Maui’s disaster preparedness and invest in wildfire mitigation strategies rooted in Indigenous knowledge, Nakatsuka said. “Native Hawaiian practices center around caring for the land (mālama ʻāina) in ways that naturally reduce fire risk, like restoring native plants, maintaining diverse ecosystems, and managing water resources,” she said. “Bringing Indigenous knowledge together with modern climate prediction tools will minimize risk of future climate crises and center the community’s voice at the heart of disaster prevention and recovery efforts.”



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August 22, 2025 0 comments
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In 2010 Hal Finney made a prediction on BTC. It come true?
NFT Gaming

In 2010 Hal Finney made a prediction on BTC. It come true?

by admin June 25, 2025



In a 2010 Bitcointalk forum post, Hal Finney, a cypherpunk involved in Bitcoin from day one, described the way he sees the emergence of Bitcoin banks in the future. He believed that peer-to-peer Bitcoin transactions would be rare. Instead, people will use better-scaled digital cash issued by Bitcoin-backed banks. 

How was Hal Finney, and what did he write about Bitcoin banks?

Finney was a cypherpunk community veteran, working on various solutions that would help maintain online privacy. For years, Finney worked at PGP Corporation. He is the creator of the first reusable proof-of-work system, and he was the first person to receive a BTC transaction from none other than Satoshi Nakamoto. No wonder he was an influential figure in the Bitcoin community. He died in 2014 at the age of 58.

In December 2010, the Bitcointalk user with the wobber handle initiated the discussion about how Bitcoin banks could work. While some people suggested that such banks could safely store clients’ bitcoins, charging them some fees or giving loans against Bitcoin, others were skeptical, viewing the idea as worthless. One of the users even mentioned Ripple as an already existing example.  

Hal Finney joined the discussion. He wrote that Bitcoin-backed banks have a good reason to exist. He saw Bitcoin banks as organizations issuing Bitcoin-redeemable digital cash for settling transactions. Finney noted that Bitcoin is not an efficient means of exchange, so the secondary layer payment system will solve this problem. 

In another post, he explained that large purchases in Bitcoin need more time so that the parties involved will see several confirmations. Finney saw Bitcoin-backed digital currencies issued by banks as the way to avoid this inconvenience.

According to Finney, Bitcoin will be used by banks to settle net transfers between each other, while individuals will use other digital money for regular transactions. Finney said that banks can have different policies, currencies, interest rates, etc. He mentioned George Selgin’s findings on free banking as the reference for Bitcoin banks and stated that these banks could be self-regulating, stable, and inflation-resistant. 

Was he talking about Bitcoin treasuries?

On June 22, 2025, a Bitcoin Strategy CEO at Semler, Joe Burnett, published a screenshot of Finney’s post, stating, “Hal Finney foresaw the rise of bitcoin treasury companies.”

George Selgin, whose work was mentioned in Finney’s post about Bitcoin banks, noted that Burnett is wrong that Finney was talking about something similar to Bitcoin treasuries. He wrote:

“Mr. Burnett doesn’t seem to know the difference between a bank and a treasury company, two entirely different things. What Finney envisioned was a competitive system of Bitcoin-based banks, the IOUs of which would serve as second-layer payments media.”

It’s fair to say that Finney’s vision is way different from Bitcoin treasury companies, as they don’t issue Bitcoin-backed digital cash that would have exchange properties. Treasuries issue stocks that are influenced by Bitcoin but not backed by it. More than that, these stocks are not used to buy anything. Treasuries (e.g., Strategy) often issue debt to purchase more bitcoins, hoping that Bitcoin’s long-term price appreciation will pay off the debt or at least propel stock prices higher. 

Free banking, mentioned by Finney, supposes the existence of private currencies issued by banks. Such banks existed in the 19th century in several countries; however, by the 1950s, they were gone. 

Do Bitcoin banks exist today?

The banks described by Hal Finney don’t exist today. However, he wasn’t completely wrong about Bitcoin-backed banks. Some banks have elements of Bitcoin banks, while the crypto community embraced stablecoins, which serve as a convenient means of payment and savings. 

For instance, some banks create treasuries to accumulate Bitcoin. They do it to hedge against fiat money debasement and believe Bitcoin reserves can boost their holdings. One of the banks that recently started to accumulate Bitcoin is Solar Bank. 

The idea of a second-layer digital payment system and multiple digital currencies is fully realized in the form of the altcoin market. Many cryptocurrencies are cheap and quick to transact, so in this regard, Finney was close to what we know today. However, only a few of them are issued by the banks; mostly, it is stablecoins. Central banks of several countries are working on CBDCs, which are not Bitcoin-backed.

The DeFi platforms may provide some of the banking services in a decentralized manner; for instance, you may lend or borrow crypto there or keep it in exchange for yield. However, one cannot redeem these cryptocurrencies for a fixed Bitcoin price. Such a phenomenon as neobanks is a type of platforms that provide bank-like services and allow operations with crypto. 

Indeed, until Bitcoin becomes much more widely used as a means of payment, there is no reason for Bitcoin banks to emerge, for there won’t be any profit in supplying substitutes for a relatively upopular means of exchange.

— George Selgin (@GeorgeSelgin) June 23, 2025

Selgin claimed that he doesn’t think Bitcoin banks will emerge soon, as there will not be profit “in supplying substitutes for a relatively unpopular means of exchange.” However, Selgin is not dismissing the possible emergence of Bitcoin banks in the future.





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June 25, 2025 0 comments
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Viltrox AF 50mm F2 Air lens in the hand
Product Reviews

Viltrox AF 50mm F2 Air review: a true nifty fifty for mirrorless cameras

by admin June 20, 2025



Why you can trust TechRadar


We spend hours testing every product or service we review, so you can be sure you’re buying the best. Find out more about how we test.

Viltrox AF 50mm F2 Air: one-minute review

This isn’t my first Viltrox lens review, and nor it will it be my last, because the Chinese lens maker is on a roll, producing a string of excellent optics for users of all skill levels and budgets. Coming in at the opposite end of a recent cinema lens that could cost up to $200,000, the 50mm f/2 Air costs less than $200 / £200 / AU$320, and offers excellent value for money.

It’s a tiny and lightweight prime that’s available for Sony E and Nikon Z mounts – I had the latter for this review – with a decent maximum f/2 aperture for defocusing backgrounds. You don’t get the sharpest detail or creamiest bokeh I’ve ever seen – for those you’ll want to check out the excellent Viltrox 135mm f/1.8 LAB – but the Viltrox 50mm f/2 is an excellent casual lens for enthusiasts, especially for portrait photography, and an ideal foil to a standard zoom.

I’d have preferred the lens’s minimum focus distance to be a little closer, which would bolster its everyday photography credentials, while a couple of external controls to speed up changing settings, such as an AF / MF switch, would be welcome. However, the Viltrox AF 50mm F2 Air delivers performance and image quality that belie its price – and the fact it squeezes proprietary camera-brand alternatives with its aggressive pricing is the cherry on the cake.


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Today’s best Viltrox AF 50mm f/2 Air deals

(Image credit: Tim Coleman)

Viltrox AF 50mm F2 Air specs

Swipe to scroll horizontallyViltrox AF 50mm F2 Air specs

Type:

Standard prime

Mount:

Nikon Z-mount / Sony E-mount

Sensor:

Full-frame

Focal length:

50mm

Max aperture:

f/2

Minimum focus:

1.67ft / 0.51m

Filter size:

58mm

Dimensions:

Φ68 x 58.6mm

Weight:

7.8oz / 220g

Viltrox AF 50mm f/2 Air: Price and availability

  • Available for Sony E and Nikon Z mounts
  • $199 / £229 / AU$319 list price, but it usually can be found for less

Hovering around the $200 / £200 / AU$320 mark and often available for a little less, the Viltrox AF 50mm f/2 Air is an excellent value prime lens, especially when you considering its build quality and optical performance.

Price-wise, it reminds me of the old Canon EF and Nikon F-mount cheap nifty fifties for DSLRs, being an affordable first prime for enthusiasts. There’s bad news for some though – Viltrox’s lens is only available for Sony E and Nikon Z lens mounts.

Viltrox AF 50mm f/2 Air: Design

  • Weighs just 7.8oz / 220g
  • No external buttons or controls
  • Available for Sony E and Nikon Z mounts

The 50mm f/2 Air lens is, as the name suggests, designed with an emphasis on light weight over absolute performance – it’s positively featherweight, especially compared to alternatives such as Nikon’s own Z 50mm f/1.4.

It’s a small lens, too. I paired the 50mm f/2 Air with a Nikon Z6 II, and I could barely feel the lens. It’s not often that I’d describe a camera / lens pairing as rear-heavy, but that’s the case here.

This is also excellent value, with a sale price often dipping under $200 / £200 /AU$319, and the list price only a little more. For context, the Nikon-own f/1.4 lens is double the price (and double the weight), while Nikon’s Z 50mm f/1.8 is four times the price.

Image 1 of 4

(Image credit: Tim Coleman)(Image credit: Tim Coleman)(Image credit: Tim Coleman)(Image credit: Tim Coleman)

Viltrox’s lens well made too – a rugged metal barrel and rear mount instil confidence, even though there’s no proper weather-sealing to speak of (such are the compromises with such a low-cost lens).

There’s a generously sized focus ring with smooth and easy rotation, and that’s it for controls. No AF / MF switch, no optical stabilization, no focus distance limiter – this is a simple bit of gear.

The lack of controls could, depending on which camera you pair the lens with, make changes to camera settings a little fussy. My camera doesn’t have an AF / MF switch, and because the lens doesn’t either I need to dive into a menu to switch between the two focusing methods, which can be frustrating.

Otherwise, there’s little to talk about regarding design – this is a simple and lightweight optic that accepts 58mm threaded filters and comes supplied with a decent lens hood.

(Image credit: Tim Coleman)

Viltrox AF 50mm f/2 Air: Performance

  • Bright maximum f/2 aperture ideal for portraiture
  • Fairly limited close-focusing capabilities
  • Snappy autofocus speed

This is no pro-quality lens, but for beginners and enthusiasts the optical quality and performance of the Viltrox 50mm f/2 Air are perfectly sufficient.

The bright, zoom lens-beating maximum f/2 aperture ensures plenty of light intake and makes this lens great for low-light photography, as well as for defocusing backgrounds for dreamy portraits. Bokeh is smooth enough – I didn’t really spot the ugly ‘onion ring’ effect that can be evident in cheap optics.

(Image credit: Tim Coleman)

Optical clarity is perfectly acceptable, even if this isn’t the sharpest 50mm lens I’ve used. With a little extra sharpening in post, most users should be perfectly happy with the results.

I shot all images in JPEG and uncompressed raw, and with lens corrections switched off there are slight signs of chromatic aberration, but the Viltrox has a reasonable handle on such distortions.

Image 1 of 3

Note the minor lens flare in the bottom middle of the frame when shooting straight towards sunlight(Image credit: Tim Coleman)For head and should portraits, bokeh is generally big, smooth and round, with a little cat’s eye shaping the corners(Image credit: Tim Coleman)There’s little sign of bokeh fringing either (technically known as longitudinal chromatic aberration)(Image credit: Tim Coleman)

I found the 1.67ft / 0.51m minimum focus distance a little limiting for close-up shots – the maximum magnification is a modest 0.11x. This isn’t really a macro lens in any way, and perhaps even less of an everyday lens, with portraiture being its strongest suit.

With such a small and lightweight collection of ashperical (ASPH), ED and IF lens elements, the 50mm f/2’s STM autofocus motor has an easy job – those lens elements are moved with ease for quick and precise autofocus. Not once did I perceive sluggish autofocus on account of the lens rather than the camera.

Image 1 of 4

Shot using the maximum f/2 aperture, vignetting is evident in this bright scene(Image credit: Tim Coleman)I stopped the aperture down to f/5 at which point vignetting is pretty much gone(Image credit: Tim Coleman)Using the f/2 aperture helped to isolate the tree in the foreground. Chromatic aberration is well controlled, but vignetted means the corners are a little dark. (Image credit: Tim Coleman)Stopped down to f/5, brightness is more consistent throughout the frame. (Image credit: Tim Coleman)

Overall, the Viltrox AF 50mm F2 Air is a capable performer, especially when you consider its compact size, low price and bright maximum aperture. For users on a budget who are looking to step up from a standard-zoom kit lens, this is an ideal choice.

Viltrox AF 50mm F2 Air sample gallery

Image 1 of 6

(Image credit: Tim Coleman)(Image credit: Tim Coleman)(Image credit: Tim Coleman)(Image credit: Tim Coleman)(Image credit: Tim Coleman)(Image credit: Tim Coleman)

Should you buy the Viltrox AF 50mm F2 Air?

Buy it if…

Don’t buy it if…

(Image credit: Tim Coleman)

How I tested the Viltrox AF 50mm F2 Air

  • I’ve used it over a loan period of several months
  • I paired the lens with a Nikon Z6 II
  • I’ve used it in a range of scenarios, generally in fair weather, and checked image quality at the various aperture settings

I paired a Z-mount version of the Viltrox AF 50mm F2 Air with a Nikon Z6 II for several months, during which time it has seen moderate use, generally in fair weather. Size-wise, the camera and lens are perfectly balanced, with no hint of wrist strain due to front-heaviness.

To test optical quality I’ve snapped portraits with the aperture wide open at f/2, and also taken series of images at each aperture setting to compare sharpness and check for lens distortions.

Viltrox AF 50mm f/2 Air: Price Comparison



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June 20, 2025 0 comments
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OKB price breaks above $54 after 13% surge: relief rally or true trend reversal?
NFT Gaming

relief rally or true trend reversal?

by admin June 20, 2025



Price action in OKB turned ballistic, blasting through the $54 level with volume to match. Behind the move? Whale wallets, OKX’s expansion, and a technical breakout that shattered weeks of stagnation. Traders are now eyeing the next pivot: pullback or liftoff?

OKB (OKB), the utility token of the OKX exchange, surged during the Asian trading session on June 19, climbing from a daily low of $47.61 to a high of $54.66 before easing to around $52.64 at press time.

The 13% rally came with a 406% spike in 24-hour trading volume, signaling more than just fleeting retail interest. While Bitcoin (BTC), Ethereum (ETH), Ripple (XRP), and other major altcoins posted modest gains, OKB’s vertical move stood out in an otherwise flat market.

Why is OKB price pumping?

The rally followed OKX’s announcement of its U.S. expansion, which increased exposure for OKB in a jurisdiction now seen as more welcoming to crypto. Broader access could translate into deeper liquidity and greater institutional interest.

Meanwhile, onchain data showed large holders had been accumulating OKB in the days leading up to the breakout. On June 12, Santiment flagged OKB as one of the top 10 tokens by growth in whale transactions, pointing to positioning by institutional or high-net-worth players.

OKX’s token burn mechanism may have also contributed to the momentum. The exchange removes OKB from circulation quarterly using a share of trading fees. The next burn is expected in July, following the 27th burn event in March, which eliminated 31,158,862 OKB from circulation. To date, OKX has burned over 171 million OKB tokens since the program began in 2019.

Technically, the move above $54 broke a multi-week resistance level, with volume confirming the breakout. The 406% surge in volume was one of the largest single-day spikes this year, signaling strong conviction from buyers.

Despite the breakout, OKB remains susceptible to broader crypto sentiment. If Bitcoin falters, recent gains could retrace. For now, the combination of whale accumulation, exchange growth, and volume-backed momentum suggests the rally may have further room to run, but confirmation is key in the sessions ahead.



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June 20, 2025 0 comments
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iPadOS 26 finally made the iPad a true multitasking machine
Product Reviews

iPadOS 26 finally made the iPad a true multitasking machine

by admin June 10, 2025


I genuinely never expected to say this: it appears Apple finally figured out multitasking on the iPad. With iPadOS 26, the company hasn’t completely taken off the guardrails for how you can use and place apps on your tablet, but it came awfully close. With a couple of clever iPad-specific tricks, and better support for a mouse or trackpad, the whole system just makes sense in a way it never has before. I’ve been running the very first developer beta for less than a day on an 11-inch iPad Air, and I can already sense a change in how I use my tablet.

The new multitasking system is mostly pretty easy to understand. You unlock the iPad and you’re dropped onto the homescreen full of app icons, same as always. When you open an app, it opens full-screen by default; at WWDC, Apple executives were careful to note that if you don’t want to encounter the new multitasking system, you never have to, and I think that’s true. (You can even turn the whole windowing system off in settings, if you want to.) But as soon as you tap and drag the little icon in the bottom right corner of the window, the app starts to shrink. You can make the app any size you want — any size the developer supports, at least, which does vary pretty widely — and put it anywhere on the screen. If you grab the top bar of an app and sort of toss it off to one side, it’ll automatically fill half the screen. Tap the new stoplight menu, and you can either close the app or make it full screen again.

Once you’ve resized an app, that is now the size and placement of that app. If you close and re-open it, it’ll open in the same size and place until you move it or resize it again. I’ve come to think of this space on my iPad as kind of an “app screen,” next to my homescreen, organized and laid out however I like. And unlike Stage Manager, everything is always how I left it. You can put as many apps on this screen as you want – I’ve had a dozen on there at a time, which is way more than makes any logical sense and certainly more than you can see at once.

Exposé is the best way to see everything you have open, all at once. Image: David Pierce / The Verge

At least in this early beta, there are a couple of quirks to the system. For one thing, I absolutely cannot figure out what the yellow “minimize” button does. You tap it, and the app closes, just like an app normally closes, and re-opens in place just like an app you’ve closed. I suspect this is a new app state developers will have to take advantage of, particularly as the iPad’s new background processing comes to fruition, but so far it doesn’t seem to do anything new.

You can only have one app active at a time, but you can scroll up and down in an app in the background — if you’re using a mouse or trackpad. If you’re touching the screen, you have to tap the app to bring it to the foreground before you can do anything with it at all. I’ve been using the CMD-Tab app switcher much more to quickly jump between things on the app screen, but it doesn’t always show every app I have open. The only way to get to everything is through the Exposé feature, which works well but is just a slightly slower way to move around.

By and large, though, it all just works. You can combine multitasking with Stage Manager, to turn your one organized app screen into a handful of them. You can run a bunch of windows on your iPad and a bunch more on an external monitor, or at least you can in theory — there’s a bug in the first beta that makes the whole system crash every time I open a second app on an external display. (I’m not super concerned about the functionality in the long run, but as always, install beta software at your own peril.)

The menu bar goes a long way toward making the iPad more Mac-ish. Image: David Pierce / The Verge

There are a few other Mac-style things about iPadOS 26 that help make multitasking work. First is that stoplight menu, which shows up at the top left corner of every app and makes it easier to close or maximize windows. There’s also the new pointer, which appears when you connect a Magic Keyboard or other mouse or trackpad. I think I underestimated how much better it would feel to have a small, more exact arrow pointer rather than the old circle. And there’s the new menu bar, which appears at the top of the screen and offers all the settings and options for whatever app you’re currently using.

In just a few hours with iPadOS 26, I’ve noticed a couple of big changes to how I use my tablet. I’m spending much less time on the homescreen, which almost doesn’t need to exist anymore — I’m launching apps with Spotlight, resizing them on my app screen, and getting back to them with CMD-Tab or Exposé. I’ve been using the dock more, too, as a quick way to get to the apps I use most when they’re not already front and center. It’s all a lot like the way I use my Mac, and it’s amazing how quickly that muscle memory kicked in.

Can I interest you in a completely unusable number of apps on your screen at once? Yes! Image: David Pierce / The Verge

Whenever I’ve tried to use multiple apps on the iPad, I’ve always felt like I was fighting the system. It would let you look at multiple things at a time, but it wanted you to see everything full screen. Now, and especially once developers update for even more fluid window sizes, multitasking feels like a first-class tablet citizen. It feels like a Mac in the sense that it feels like everything is happening in the same place, on the same screen, rather than constantly bouncing you between different full-screen experiences. Is it busier and occasionally more chaotic than the traditionally focused iPad vibe? You betcha! But I love it so far.

Ultimately, the answer to “can your iPad replace your laptop” still depends largely on your use case, and even more on the state of iPad apps. Until the iPad can run truly desktop-class browsers, I’m reluctant to say it can be your primary device. But now, maybe for the first time ever, the operating system itself doesn’t feel like it’s the problem. This is the most flexible version of Apple’s most flexible device. It can be a quiet, simple, single-tasking tablet or it can be a mess of windows put together just about any way you’d like. I’ve been waiting years for Apple to truly unleash the iPad, and I think it may have just done so.





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June 10, 2025 0 comments
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Rog Xbox Ally handheld
Esports

Xbox’s new handheld UI is a true competitor to SteamOS

by admin June 9, 2025



Microsoft’s new Xbox-first user interface on the ROG Xbox Ally handhelds is exactly what Windows has needed to take on the Steam Deck.

Ever since the release of the Steam Deck, the handheld PC market has continued to grow with Windows devices like the ROG Ally X and Lenovo Legion Go S, but they all suffer from one major problem: Windows 11 on a handheld isn’t exactly easy to navigate with just a joystick.

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Being that you have to go through the regular Windows desktop to access apps like Steam, Epic Game Store, and Xbox, it becomes quite a chore to use any device running the OS, but the new ROG Xbox Ally changes that.

Xbox takes on SteamOS with new software

With the ROG Xbox Ally, Microsoft and Asus have partnered together to create a new software experience that should have been done from the start.

Instead of booting into Windows 11, the new handheld boots you directly into a full-screen version of the Xbox app. You know, the same way SteamOS sends you directly into Steam. Unlike Valve’s operating system, however, the new experience will allow you to access games from other stores as well, combining your entire PC library into one seamless app for the first time

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Xbox

Microsoft told The Verge that there is a “whole bunch” of processes that don’t automatically load when you boot up the Xbox Ally X as well, including the wallpaper, taskbar, and a “bunch of processes that are really designed around productivity scenarios for Windows.”

You’ll still be able to access the regular desktop if you need to, though, but those just looking to quickly play a game should see a massive improvement in performance and overall user experience with the new full-screen Xbox setup.

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The new Xbox-focused operating system isn’t the only way Microsoft is coming for Valve, either, as they’re also working on a program that helps players easily identify which games have been optimized for handhelds. This is similar to SteamOS’ Deck Verified system which lets Steam Deck owners know whether or not a game will run well on their device.

It will only be available on the ROG Xbox Ally at launch, and there are plans to bring it to Asus’ non-Xbox Ally variants soon after. Other Windows-based devices will receive the update sometime in 2026 or later, but we can only hope it comes sooner than that.

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A new experience without as much of the bloat and a better UI is exactly what handhelds have needed since the market began to skyrocket in growth, and we’re happy to see that it’s finally happening.

The new user interface may not put Windows and the ROG Xbox Ally ahead of the Steam Deck in overall popularity, but at least the new Xbox handhelds will finally be as easy to use as Valve’s device.

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June 9, 2025 0 comments
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Travis Scott accepting an award, Stockton Rush inside an OceanGate Titan submersible, and image of David Sconce in The Mortician
Esports

True crime fans have one complaint about new JCS doc Amber’s Afternoon

by admin June 5, 2025



JCS, aka Jim Can’t Swim, really is spoiling us, with two new videos within the space of just over two months. However, followers of the true crime YouTuber have raised a familiar complaint with their latest mini-doc, Amber’s Afternoon. 

While streaming services drop a wide range of new true crime documentaries each and every month, YouTube has become a go-to source for fans of the genre. 

That Chapter, Rotten Mango, Explore With Us, and Law & Crime Network are just a few of the big names dropping mini-docs on the platform, benefiting from the lack of restrictions compared to mainstream networks. 

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But JCS is on another level. Considered the pioneer of YouTube’s modern true crime style, their videos rack up millions of views, yet the creator remains notoriously elusive, rarely posting more than once or twice a year – until now. 

JCS faces AI backlash for Amber’s Afternoon

On June 4, 2025 – two months after his Husband Tries To Act doc – JCS has released Amber’s Afternoon. However, fans of their content have accused the creator of using artificial intelligence (AI). 

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This is hardly the first time JCS has faced these allegations. In December 2024, the account added the mini-doc Newlyweds Tell On Each Other, but it was later removed after viewers accused them of replacing narrator, YouTuber Kizzume, with AI. 

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Due to the long gaps between posts, the change in tone, and JCS’ flip-flopping between YouTube and Patreon, there were also rumors about burnout, legal issues, and that the channel had been sold or abandoned.

In April, the YouTuber shared an apology alongside Husband Tries To Act, writing, “Sorry for letting you guys down… The channel wasn’t sold, and we haven’t quit. We just been dealing with some outside YouTube-related stuff.”

They went on to say they’ll make it up to the fans by sharing “consistent content, if you’re willing to give us a second chance.” 

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It appears they’ve made good on this promise with the fast turnaround of Amber’s Afternoon, which centers on the interrogation of attempted murderer Amber Rose Rizwan, contextualizing it with a series of other cases. 

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YouTube: JCS

But while it’s another success story for the channel, earning nearly 900k views in 15 hours, the new documentary is facing fresh allegations regarding AI and quality. 

Taking to Reddit, one wrote, “Couldn’t sit through this one and closed it after 20 minutes. It’s another JCS video where it’s mostly just interrogation footage with little to no commentary, meaningful or otherwise. 

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“Even worse, they bring in unrelated cases, again with little to no commentary, just to pad the runtime. Previously, they’d play some relevant footage, explain what interrogation techniques the investigators are using, point out the suspect’s subtle shifts in behavior, and wrap up the video neatly.

“It’s nice they got rid of the AI slop, but whoever’s making the script has lost the sauce on what made the original videos good.”

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However, another replied, “I’m not convinced AI is completely out of the picture. The way this is written feels like someone fed a script through it, then tried what they could to redeem it but just gave up part way through and slapped the video together.”

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Elsewhere, one commented, “Is it just me, or is the interrogation video edited/saturated? Maybe the last few videos have left an uneasy taste in my mouth. I loved JCS content, but I’m exactly one minute in, and I’m not feeling optimistic?

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“Just off the bat, I’m automatically feeling like AI was involved. Edit to add: I’m 20 minutes in, this feels disjointed and the narrative is sloppy. Does anyone feel differently, is this just not clicking with me? 

“I get not every video will have the editing, commentary, style etc of Dalia Dippolito or the Jon Koppenhaver case, but this feels… ?”

Another agreed, “Honestly, I was feeling the same way. I’m not finished with the video just yet. So it may all come together. But so far, everything just feels… disjointed. We’re jumping around so much for seemingly no purpose (so far).”

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What Kizzume said about AI

YouTube: Kizzume

For the most part, viewers are just happy to be receiving more JCS content, with one writing, “It’s certainly an interesting video. It’s a montage of how different people react to the same type of situation. 

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“Each of the reactions is unique and memorable. I hope we get more content in the future. The only negative is that I wish they had more commentary on WHY each of them had that type of response. 

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“I feel that was something more common in the earlier videos. Still, far better than no new content, well worth a watch.”

Although JCS hasn’t publicly comment on the use of AI in the new video, narrator Kizzume did clear up any confusion earlier this year.

“Look, there are people saying things that are just incorrect about JCS and myself. JCS got my permission first to use AI regarding my voice, and I am also being compensated word for word like I normally would,” he wrote.  

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“They’re simply not screwing me over. And their future uploads should have my actual narration on them.”

Kizzume went on to say, “The AI was used to save time. They’ve been gone for two years due to personal struggles and wanted to get the videos out quick. But it is understood now that it was a mistake and they will take more time to create videos with my authentic voice.”

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For more true crime, check out the creepiest YouTube mini-docs to watch right now, the most shocking docs on Netflix, and the most underrated true crime podcasts.

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June 5, 2025 0 comments
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