Sunday, June 9, 2019

Fallout 76 is getting a 52-player battle royale mode

Tonight’s Bethesda E3 press conference was all about free additions. In fact, the company actually took to the stage to apologize for Fallout 76’s rocky launch. The publisher quickly added that it’s continued to improve on the title since late last year, listening to player feedback and adding all sorts of additional content.

That includes the arrival of a bunch of NPCs, and, more importantly, the launch of Nuclear Winter, a 52-player battle Royale mode that is arriving as an update tomorrow. The mode will be free to play on all platforms for the week of June 10 to 17.

Asked last year whether a battle royale mode was in the works for the post-apocalyptic title, SVP Pete Hines noted that the company doesn’t like to follow trends set out by other companies, stating, “just because battle royale is popular doesn’t mean it’s a good fit for us.” He did leave open the possibility — though seemingly unenthusiastically — and now here we are.

Of course, the mode has become tremendously popular in recent years, thanks to the likes of Fortnite and PUBG. Bethesda’s embrace of the mode has been met with…mixed reaction on Twitter, though the audience at tonight’s presser was appropriately enthusiastic.

Xbox at E3: Halo Infinite leads massive first-party deluge of Xbox, PC games

Flipkart moves major manufacturing and sourcing to India from China and Malaysia

Flipkart’s private brands include MarQ, Perfect Homes, Billion and SmartBuy, which contribute about 8% to the company’s overall sales http://bit.ly/2KEaB2L https://ift.tt/eA8V8J

Report sheds light on the various ways hackers make money from stolen medical data, from forging a doctor's identity to selling fake prescriptions and labels (Charlie Osborne/ZDNet)

Charlie Osborne / ZDNet:
Report sheds light on the various ways hackers make money from stolen medical data, from forging a doctor's identity to selling fake prescriptions and labels  —  Stolen medical information can sell for up to six times as much as PII, and there are reasons for that.



Three to launch 5G in August

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Three to launch 5G in August

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Researchers find that only 4,183 security flaws from a total of 76K vulnerabilities discovered between 2009 and 2018 had been exploited in the wild (Catalin Cimpanu/ZDNet)

Catalin Cimpanu / ZDNet:
Researchers find that only 4,183 security flaws from a total of 76K vulnerabilities discovered between 2009 and 2018 had been exploited in the wild  —  Most vulnerabilities that are exploited in the wild have a CVSS severity score of 9 or 10.  —  New research published this week has shed …



Week-in-Review: Google makes a losing bet, Bezos plots his space take-over

Hey, weekend readers. This is Week-in-Review where I get hopped up on caffeine and give a heavy amount of analysis on one story while scouring the rest of the hundreds of stories that emerged on TechCrunch this week to surface my favorites for your reading pleasure.

Last week, I talked about the Apple device that was putting a kink in the company’s new pricing strategy. Of course, this week we saw that strategy reach new heights with the Mac Pro, but more on that in a bit.


I’m a couple hours away from flying down to Los Angeles to check out the E3 gaming expo, but one of the biggest gaming announcements of the month already happened this past week when Google shared some more details on its Stadia cloud gaming platform.

Stadia’s approach is far from unprecedented, but Google’s solution might be one of the more thoughtful efforts we’ve seen. We got some more details this week, here’s my story, and here are the top-level details:

  • U.S. pricing for the pro-tier is $9.99 per month for unlimited 4K 60fps streaming and access to a library of titles, though you’ll still have to pay for most new games.
  • You’ll need a 35 mpbs connection to stream Stadia Pro when it launches in November.
  • There’s a 1080p free tier, launching later, that will allow gamers to play titles they buy from the Stadia store.

This is a pretty aggressive showing for Google.

Given the infrastructure costs, $9.99 is pretty cheap and adding a free tier is a bold call. Google’s strategy might be as formidable as they could make it, but that doesn’t mean that they’re going to win the cloud gaming market…

The first thing to acknowledge is that because of the incredibly stiff infrastructure/network demands of these plays, the only companies that can likely take on Google here are Amazon and Microsoft.

The AWS giant is already renting out some very expensive cloud GPUs but they haven’t made any indication of a foray into a gaming-focused subscription, though it may not be long if this market finds legs. Microsoft on the other hand is probably hours away from making its announcement. At 1pm PT Sunday, the company’s Xbox head is expected to share the company’s cloud-gaming plans, I’ll be there reporting on the news.

Google is acting plenty aggressive but Microsoft still has a huge upper hand. Becoming a gaming company is about far more than infrastructure and Google doesn’t have much history on its side when it comes to high-end gaming or… the games.

YouTube Gaming is probably Stadia’s best asset and integrations there can leverage that platform’s reach to encourage experimenting with the platform, but I still don’t trust the company to follow through with the resources to get enough developers to bring their titles to Stadia. The initial market that Stadia is grabbing for just feels so niche and Google hasn’t exactly been known to follow-through on consumer efforts that take longer than a few rounds of internal performance reviews to take off.

The Stadia team has already shown off a few games, but there are tens of millions of Xbox Ones out there filled with purchased titles and Google might just be probably overestimating the appeal of their cross-platform approach.

Google’s understated claim is that this is a limitless platform that can bring your desktop games to phones, tablets, laptops and TVs, but how many places do consumers really want desktop-class games? Can it truly claim to be a mobile-friendly platform when it only supports a few of its own phones at launch? More so, do people want to connect a game controller to their phone? It all seems like a fairly niche grab.

Google’s Stadia marketing seems to be looking to convert console users to ChromeCast users but given that YouTube Gaming is the company’s best discovery method, what’s likely going to end up happening is that Stadia drags in a very niche subset of aspiring PC gamers who don’t want to pay for high-end rigs. This will probably bring in some free Stadia Base 1080p users, but it’s going to be the latency — no matter how minimal Google can claim it to be — that shuts out a lot of PC die-hards from signing onto the Stadia Pro plan.

For single-player experiences, Stadia won’t have issues, but a lot of the top game publishers are focusing their full efforts on multi-player.

Google didn’t even touch on the topic of multi-player at it’s event, the fact is if developers enable cross-platform play with Stadia, those users are just going to be at a tactical disadvantage plain-and-simple. For a platform like Xbox One, Microsoft has enough existing reach that they can probably cordon off those streaming users into their own servers and keep the odds even, but Google may have some issues here fresh-out-the-gate.

There is still quite a bit we don’t know about Stadia, and I’m very anxious to see what Microsoft has up its sleeve, but Google just doesn’t feel like the right kind of company to pull this off… Let me know what your thoughts are though.

Send me feedback
on Twitter @lucasmtny or email
lucas@techcrunch.com

On to the rest of the week’s news.

Trends of the week

Here are a few big news items from big companies, with green links to all the sweet, sweet added context.

  • Apple’s hardware finally goes Pro
    You might have a MacBook Pro or an iPad Pro but chances are most of you aren’t much in the way of a professional. If you thought blowing $899 on a tablet made you a deep spender, try blowing $999 on the stand for your monitor. At its WWDC keynote this week, Apple went back to basics design-wise on its Mac Pro, but it cranked the pricing up to 11 with a $5,999 starting price for the tower and a $4,999 starting price for its 6K display. This falls in line with Apple’s latest trend towards pushing hardware prices higher, but, Jesus, this took things to a new level for Pros. Here’s our hands-on with the monster.
  • Looker catches Google’s eye
    $2.6 billion is a fair amount of cash but it’s pocket change in the war for the cloud. Google announced Thursday that it was acquiring analytics startup Looker to strengthen its Google Cloud offering in the face of competition from AWS and Azure. More here.
  • ZuckCoin
    Facebook is getting ready to show off its own cryptocurrency later this month. The coin, codenamed Libra, will be getting its own white paper on June 18th and will reportedly be pegged to a batch of current coins and will be managed by an external entity. Read more here.
  • Bezos takes over space
    Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos talked about his plans to create the infrastructure network for space startups at the company’s re:Mars conference. “You cannot start an interesting space company today from your dorm room. The price of admission is too high and the reason for that is that the infrastructure doesn’t exist,” Bezos noted. “So my mission with Blue Origin  is to help build that infrastructure, that heavy lifting infrastructure that future generations will be able to stand on top of the same way I stood on top of the U.S. Postal Service and so on.” Check our more of what he had to say in our story.

GAFA Gaffes

How did the top tech companies screw up this week? This clearly needs its own section, in order of awfulness:

  1. GAFA getting eyed by some three-letter agencies:
    [Apple, Alphabet, Amazon and Facebook are in the crosshairs of the FTC and DOJ ]
  2. YouTube pisses off gay creators:
    [YouTube says homophobic taunts don’t violate its policies]
  3. Google Play Store gets its antitrust moment-in-the-sun:
    [Aptoide, a Play Store rival, cries antitrust foul over Google hiding its app]
  4. Apple pricing gets egregious, earns keynote groans:
    [Meet Apple’s secret weapon for keeping Wall Street happy]

Extra Crunch

Our premium subscription service had another week of interesting deep dives. TechCrunch’s Frederic Lardinois wrote about the interesting rise of Kubernetes and chatted with some of the key players involved in its ascension.

How Kubernetes came to rule the world

“…To talk about how Kubernetes came to be, I sat down with Craig McLuckie, one of the co-founders of Kubernetes at Google (who then went on to his own startup, Heptio, which he sold to VMware);  Tim Hockin, another Googler who was an early member on the project and was also on Google’s  Borg team; and Gabe Monroy, who co-founded Deis, one of the first successful Kubernetes startups, and then sold it to Microsoft, where he is now the lead PM for Azure Container Compute (and often the public face of Microsoft’s  efforts in this area)..”

Here are some of our other top reads this week for premium subscribers. This week TechCrunch writers talked a bit about ROI, and how security startups are capturing M&A attention…

Want more TechCrunch newsletters? Sign up here.

Researchers have developed an algorithm that allows video editors to modify human speech in "talking head" videos by altering text in transcripts (Andrew Myers/Stanford News)

Andrew Myers / Stanford News:
Researchers have developed an algorithm that allows video editors to modify human speech in “talking head” videos by altering text in transcripts  —  A new algorithm allows video editors to modify talking head videos as if they were editing text - copying, pasting, or adding and deleting words.



How to Watch ICC Cricket World Cup 2019 Live Online Around the World

India vs Australia sees two undefeated teams go head to head in arguably the most-anticipated ICC Cricket World Cup 2019 match till date. How to watch live stream and track score. http://bit.ly/2IwpBg6

OnePlus 7 in India, WWDC 2019, Jio GigaFiber, and More Tech News This Week

OnePlus 7 India release, cheaper Jio GigaFiber availability, Poco F1 and Redmi Note 6 Pro price in India drop were some of the biggest happenings in the world of tech this week. http://bit.ly/2QVwb3R

Social media brings 'paradigm shift' to governance in India

With rapid smartphone penetration and half a billion people in the country now using Internet, millennials now feel that the much needed "digital revolution" is on the right track. http://bit.ly/2ZioCXT https://ift.tt/eA8V8J

Saturday, June 8, 2019

OnePlus 7 Pro Almond colour launching in India on June 14 at Rs 52,999

The OnePlus 7 Pro will soon get a new Almond Colour variant. The flagship smartphone is currently available in India in Mirror Grey and Nebula Blue colour variants, but starting June 14, customers will also be able to buy the phone in the new Almond colour avataar. The new OnePlus 7 Pro Almond variant will come in a single 8GB RAM + 256GB storage configuration priced at Rs 52,999.

The device and its price are already listed on OnePlus’ India website and it will go on sale through Amazon, as well as OnePlus’ own online portal on June 14. It will also be made available through offline retail channels.

The OnePlus 7 Pro features a metal build, with both front and rear protected by Gorilla Glass. It is equipped with a 6.67-inch fluid AMOLED display with a QHD+ resolution. The display is HDR10+ certified and has a 90 Hz refresh rate. It is powered by the flagship Qualcomm Snapdragon 855 chipset and gets a 4,000 mAh battery.

On the camera front, the OnePlus 7 Pro sports a triple rear camera setup that is said to cover the focal range of 17mm to 78mm. The 48MP Sony IMX 586 sensor rests on the back and it’s paired with an f/1.6 aperture lens with a custom-made 7-element plastic lens. This main sensor supports OIS and EIS, and is supplemented by an 8MP telephoto lens that offers 3X zoom and also a 16MP ultra-wide lens. The 8MP sensor is paired with an f/2.4 aperture lens and gets OIS while the 16MP ultra-wide lens is coupled with an f/2.2 aperture lens with a 117-degree field of view. Read our camera review and comparison of the smartphone here.

http://bit.ly/2EXST6o

Amazon Fab Phones Fest from June 10 to June 13: OnePlus 6T, iPhone X at lowest prices and other deals to watch

Amazon India will be hosting the Fab Phones Fest in India from June 10 to June 13, where smartphones like the OnePlus 6T, iPhone X, Redmi 6A, Redmi Y2 and others will be made available at discounted prices. The Redmi Y3, Galaxy M20, and Galaxy M30 will also go on open sale during the Fab Phones Fest.

Additionally, Amazon will offer 35% off on select models of Samsung phones, 30% off on select models of Apple, 50% off on select models of Honor, 40% off on select models of Oppo, and 30% off on select models of Vivo phones.

The most notable deal from the Fab Phones Fest disclosed by Amazon so far is that on the OnePlus 6T. The 8GB RAM and 128GB storage version of the OnePlus 6T will be made available at its lowest price ever of Rs 27,999. Currently, the phone sells for Rs 32,999 on Amazon. Amazon is also teasing the lowest price ever for the iPhone X during the sale event.

Moreover, the four-day sale will include exchange offers of up to Rs 12,000, No-Cost EMIs on select smartphones. The sale will begin at midnight on June 10 and those interested in buying discounted smartphones can click here to check out all the offers.

http://bit.ly/2ZiiqiK

E3 2019: EA shows off Star Wars: Jedi Fallen Order, Apex Legends, The Sims 4, Battlefield 5 and more

EA took the stage last night to show off games that the publisher is working on. Kicking the event off was a 15-minute unedited gameplay video of Star Wars: Jedi Fallen Order. We know that the game is releasing on November 15 2019. Star Wars: Jedi Fallen Order is a third person action adventure game with a focus on lightsaber action, platforming and traversing. Since this is an action adventure game, we presume there will be puzzles to solve as well. The story of the game takes place between Star Wars: Episode 3 and Rogue One. 

Moving on to other games, we got to see what's coming to Apex Legends Season 2. The game will get new characters, new guns new challenges and more. In the game, there is a new weapon called the L-STAR. The new character is called Wattson. 

Next up, in Battlefield 5, players will get to experience new maps - Al Sondan and Marita. Al Sondan is a large map for those that like large open spaces. For those that like tightly closed spaces, there is a new map called Operation Underground. According to CNET, “Chapter V of Battlefield V was also a big focus. The team are attempting to recreate the conflict of Iwo Jima. With that comes a new set of weapons and vehicles specific to that theatre of war”.

The Sims 4 got a release date of July 16 for consoles and July 21for the PC. For those of you that missed it can watch the complete EA presentation below.

http://bit.ly/2EWgR1R

Russian cryptocurrency payment network A7 expands to Africa, as Moscow builds an alternative payments system amid western sanctions after its Ukraine invasion (Financial Times)

Financial Times : Russian cryptocurrency payment network A7 expands to Africa, as Moscow builds an alternative payments system amid weste...