Friday
Feb092018

Square Enix officially launches ‘Final Fantasy XV: Pocket Edition’ on mobile

If you want to play the reimagined Final Fantasy XV game released in late 2016 on mobile, you now get that chance. The Final Fantasy XV: Pocket Edition just officially launched on both Android and iOS. It takes an episodic approach to the Japanese role-playing game with chapters released throughout the year. The first chapter is free but the future chapters will cost you. You can buy all chapters as a bundle for $27.99 or you can get Chapters 2 to 4 for $1.39 and Chapters 5-10 for $5.49 each.

The story follows Noctis and his three companions (Prompto, Ignis, and Gladiolus) on a road trip-style, open-world adventure going across Eos. You get more or less the same experience but on a more portable scale. Plus, the art style switched over to this more cutesy, chibi approach.

Source: Android Authority

Friday
Feb092018

Uber and Waymo abruptly settles lawsuit

In a surprising turn of events, Uber and Waymo have agreed to settle a self-driving trade secrets lawsuit on the fifth day of the case going to trial. Uber agreed to pay out 0.3 percent of its equity, which with the company’s US$72 billion valuation, puts that at over $245 million in stock. The company has also promised to work with Waymo’s parent company Alphabet to make sure none of Google’s confidential data will be used for Uber’s self-driving program (both in the hardware and software side).

The case began over a year ago when Waymo filed a suit against Uber accusing one of its former engineers, Anthony Levandowski, of downloading around 9.7GB of data or around 14,000 files before abruptly resigning from the company and later creating his own company called Ottomotto, which was acquired by Uber a few months later.

Source: Ars Technica

Friday
Feb092018

TurboTax SmartLook gives consumers the edge when filing taxes on their own

Intuit's TurboTax is introducing a new self-assist feature for customers wanting to file their taxes electronically. Turbo Tax SmartLook, a new tech advancement that makes it even easier for consumers to file on their own without worrying about leaving money on the table. A recent survey conducted by TurboTax found that nearly half (41 per cent) of Canadians feel unsure when it comes to filing on their own, often for fear they’ll miss something a professional wouldn’t.This is particularly for self-employed Canadians who need to factor in a range of costs and expenses.

This year, TurboTax has decided to set those worries to rest with a tool that gives Canadians access to an expert gut check throughout the tax return process. TurboTax SmartLook enables customers to connect via one-way video to a TurboTax Specialist or TurboTax Expert, so they can file with confidence and get their taxes done efficiently and painlessly.

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Thursday
Feb082018

Netflix acquires another sci-fi thriller its original studio didn’t plan on releasing

 

Netflix pulls another Cloverfield Paradox and purchases another sci-fi film that’s been dropped by its original studio’s release schedule. The streaming service just bought from Universal the Michal Peña and Lizzy Caplan-led movie called Extinction. It follows the two as a married couple who are trying to protect their family from some sort of alien invasion. The film was written by Brad Kane (Black Sails and Fringe) and Spenser Cohen (who as The Verge points out has the 2013 TV movie Macklemore’s Big Surprise as his biggest credit). It’s directed by Ben Young, whose credits include Hounds of Love and some prank shows.

Buying rights to movies that studios no longer want helps defray the cost for the streaming service when it comes to the development and production process. It also helps the studios out to at the very least meet production cost and won’t have them spending too much on marketing. But as this story from AV Club states viewers do suffer from getting mediocre content and some of Netflix’s own big productions get sidelined for the next big flashy marketing campaign.