CDや配信作品で使われる「EP」ってなに? 音楽業界関係者でも実は知らない人が多い「EP」の定義を調査してみました 2022年4月23日 12:00 177 突然ですが、「EP」をご存知でしょうか? もともとはアナログレコードの形態の1つで、文字通り片面に1曲ずつ収録されたシングル盤よりも曲数が多いものがEP盤と呼ばれていました…
Instagram tests user-created Templates feature for Reels videos
Instagram is experimenting with a new Templates feature for Reels that will let users copy video formats from other Reels videos, reportedBusiness Insider. Templates are already an incredibly popular feature we’ve seen on TikTok, and are often the basi…
Paradox outlines a revenue-sharing plan for Vampire: The Masquerade fan games
Many publishers and developers are very protective of their intellectual property (what’s up, Nintendo?). But Paradox Interactive and World of Darkness are taking things in a slightly different direction. As part of the Unbound project, they’ll let anyone make a Vampire: The Masquerade fan game as long as they abide by certain rules.
Developers need to get their games approved by Paradox and can only offer them through the Itch.io storefront. They can charge for their creations if they want, but they’ll need to give Paradox a 33 percent cut of revenue.
The developers will own all game assets that don’t use World of Darkness intellectual property and can sell them in art books, soundtracks and so on. They can’t run crowdfunding campaigns for their project, however, and aren’t able to use science fiction, steampunk or cyberpunk settings. Beyond those (and a few other restrictions), developers can let their imaginations run wild.
The Unbound program stems from a successful game jam that took place in 2021. “Following the Vampire Jam last year, we realized how passionate our community is about creating Vampire: The Masquerade games,” World of Darkness community developer Martyna Zych said in a statement. “While we could only award one grand prize to Heartless Lullaby, we knew we had to create a platform that empowered our community to work on the projects they love while giving them the support they need to be successful.”
Developers created more than 80 games during Vampire Jam and six of those are available through Unbound at the outset. They include survival horror game Descent, puzzle project The Chantry Trials and strategic card title The Game of Elders. There’s a first-person shooter called The Autumn People. You can also check out point-and-click adventure Prodigal as well as 4x strategy and roleplaying game Praxis. All are free to download.
It’s neat to see a publisher and transmedia brand approve fan-made games. The fact that all of those six titles are in different genres is fascinating as well, since it shows the breadth of what developers can do when they have the freedom to be creative with a notable IP.
As it happens, these titles might be the only way for fans to play a new Vampire: The Masquerade game for a while. Last year, Paradox parted ways with Vampire: The Masquerade – Bloodlines 2 studio Hardsuit Labs and delayed the game indefinitely. The publisher said in November it was happy with the progress made by the game’s new, unnamed developer, but the release window remains unknown.
Twitter is experimenting with a status update feature
Twitter might soon take a page from Instagram’s defunct Threads app — not to mention other messaging apps you used in the past two decades. As The Vergereports, code sleuth Jane Manchun Wong has discovered that Twitter is developing a “Vibe” feature that would let you set status updates akin to Threads and the many, many IM clients at the turn of the century. You could set status at the profile level, but you could also attach them to specific tweets to indicate what you were doing at a specific moment.
Wong’s examples only showed generic presets like eating, listening to music and shopping. It’s not clear if you have the option of writing your own updates, or if third-party apps could hook into the feature (say, for music and videos).
The concept of a Twitter status update isn’t completely new, either. The social network was testing another form of status update back in 2018, although it didn’t work the same way and never reached everyday users.
We’ve asked Twitter for comment. There are no guarantees Vibe will reach the broader public or even enter testing. We wouldn’t be surprised if it does, however. Twitter has long had messaging features that could benefit from status updates (such as letting others know you’re busy), and it’s increasingly relying on live features like Spaces audio sessions where you might want to share what you’re doing.
Twitter is working on “Set a status” in Tweet Composer, codenamed “Vibe”
You can think of it as something similar to Instagram Threads app’s Status pic.twitter.com/TGXH4uVe8Z
— Jane Manchun Wong (@wongmjane) April 22, 2022
The Morning After: CNN+ is shutting down
CNN+, the streaming service launched by the Cable News Network just three weeks ago, is shutting down on April 30th. The closure comes after reports that the high-profile project had reached just 10,000 daily users. It didn’t help that WarnerMedia is merging with Discovery with the explicit aim of consolidating their streaming services into one cohesive whole.
The service, which reportedly cost around $100 million to launch, will have survived for just 32 days, stealing Quibi’s title for most notorious and swift closure. CNN said at-risk employees will receive 90 days salary and benefits and get opportunities to move elsewhere within the Warner Bros. Discovery empire.
On one hand, it always seemed like a stretch to ask people to pay Netflix-level prices for even premium cable news. With the exception of blue-chip brands like NYT and WSJ, or the mega billionaire-backed Washington Post, paid-for journalism has been totally undermined. On the other hand, it’s a shame to see something bold and potentially paradigm-shifting “do a Quibi” so quickly.
— Dan Cooper
The biggest stories you might have missed
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Razer’s new soundbar is aimed at making your desk a home theater
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Lego launches an Ultimate version of Luke Skywalker’s Landspeeder
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Teenage Engineering’s tiny handheld TX-6 mixer offers an instrument tuner
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MIT’s newest computer vision algorithm identifies images down to the pixel
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Godzilla and King Kong are coming to ‘Call of Duty: Warzone’
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Pixar’s new ‘Lightyear’ trailer portrays Buzz as a victim of relativity
Buy with Prime’ lets third-party retailers use Amazon’s shipping service
Amazon will share its logistics power with others, for a price.
Amazon has launched Buy with Prime, a service that enables rival online retailers to leverage Prime’s speedy shipping. It means any e-commerce platform can add a Prime button to its page and make items available for next-or two-day delivery. The program will begin with sellers that already use Amazon’s fulfillment service before rolling out to merchants who have no presence on Amazon whatsoever. This is another neat way Amazon can both fold its competitors under its own umbrella but, given the SEC is investigating how Amazon uses the data it collects about third-party sellers, one that may deserve extra scrutiny.
Elon Musk says he has the financial backing for his proposed Twitter takeover
The Boring Company also received fresh funding.
What’s Elon been up to over the last 24 hours, you ask?
Well, in a fresh SEC filing, the billionaire has said he’s received backing to make his hostile-ish bid for Twitter. That includes $13 billion in debt financing from lenders like Morgan Stanley and a further $12.5 billion in loans leveraged against Musk’s Tesla shareholding. It’s thought the remainder of the cash will come from Musk himself, although we wouldn’t bet that even someone who loves posting as much as ol’ Elon would spend north of $21 billion to do so.
The Boring Company, meanwhile, has raised fresh funding to the tune of $675 million, valuing the company at $5.7 billion. That cash will go toward hiring more engineers who can build more of the company’s signature taxis-in-a-tunnel Loop projects. At the same time, the company said its second-generation tunnel boring machine can carve out up to a mile of tunnel a week. It also made the unbelievable claim that its third-generation hardware will be able to crunch up to seven miles of bedrock per day.
FAA revokes YouTuber’s pilot license, saying he deliberately crashed his plane
Was it that much of a surprise given the video was titled I Crashed My Plane.
Trevor Jacob is a former Olympic snowboarder-turned-YouTuber who, in December 2021, published a well-shot video titled I Crashed My Plane. The beautifully shot clip, with multiple cameras set up on the pilot side wing and tail, sees the plane apparently stall out in mid air. Jacob then climbs out of the cabin and parachutes to the ground. Unfortunately for him, the FAA accused Jacob of intentionally crashing the plane for online clout and revoked his pilot’s license. If Jacob doesn’t hand it back to officials, he’ll be liable for a daily fine of up to $1,644.
FAA blamed after parachute show leads to Congress evacuation
Whoops.
The FAA was also in the news yesterday for accidentally causing an emergency evacuation of Congress. FAA officials reportedly failed to notify the Capitol police and security services about a planned parachute demonstration by the US Army Golden Knights over Nationals Stadium. Nobody was hurt, and the Golden Knights followed proper procedure, avoiding restricted airspace and communicating with air traffic control at all times. But that didn’t stop House Speaker Nancy Pelosi from saying the FAA’s failure to communicate was “outrageous and inexcusable.”
A new ‘Tales from the Borderlands’ game is coming this year
2022 is shaping up to be an exciting year for Borderlands fans. Gearbox CEO Randy Pitchford has announced at PAX East that the developer will be releasing a new entry in the Tales from the Borderlands series this year. While it’s technically a sequel to the first Tales game, it will feature all new characters in a brand new story and adventure.
New adventure, new characters, new tales.
An all NEW Tales from the Borderlands is coming in 2022 from Gearbox and 2K.#GearboxAtPAX#Borderlandspic.twitter.com/mhBicROKqX
— GearboxOfficial (@GearboxOfficial) April 21, 2022
According to Kotaku, the game will be created “in-house” by Gearbox, unlike the first title that was developed by the now-defunct Telltale Games. It will also be published by 2K, which is the same publisher behind the main Borderlands titles. Pitchford’s announcement kept details about the game to a minimum, so we’ve yet to know what kind of adventure we can expect.
The first title was an interactive graphic adventure game with five episodes released over the course of a year. In it, players can make choices that significantly impact the story. It centers around Hyperion employee Rhys and a con-artist named Fiona who worked together to accomplish a common goal, but the new game having all new characters means we may not be seeing more of them.
Gearbox released the Borderlands spin-off Tiny Tina’s Wonderlands, a first-person shooter, in March. The Borderlands movie, which finished filming in 2021 and features a star-studded cast that includes Cate Blanchett and Jack Black, is also expected to hit theatres this year. Gearbox doesn’t have an exact release date for the new Tales from the Borderlands game yet, but it promises to make a full announcement for it this summer.
金曜ロードショーで「ローマの休日」18年ぶりオンエア、吹替は早見沙織、浪川大輔(コメントあり)
同作は、ある国の王女・アンが主人公の物語。彼女はローマ滞在の夜にこっそり街へ飛び出し、偶然通りかかったアメリカ人の新聞記者ジョーと出会う。そしてともに名所を巡る2人の間に、恋心が芽生え始めるさまが描かれる。ウィリアム・ワイラーが監督を務め、アンをオードリー・ヘプバーン、ジョーをグレゴリー・ペックが…
Twitter will recommend third-party apps for preventing harassment
Twitter is turning to outside developers for help in preventing harassment on its platform. Under a new experiment, the company will recommend third-party moderation apps as an additional measure users can take on top of the app’s built-in tools,With t…
Pixar’s new ‘Lightyear’ trailer portrays Buzz as a victim of relativity
Pixar has shared a second trailer for Lightyear, and the new clip sheds considerably more light on Buzz’s origin story. As it turns out, the explorer turned action figure is the victim of Einstein’s theory of relativity. When Lightyear conducts a “hyperspeed” test, he comes back 62 years later — many of the people and places he knows have changed. Naturally, it’s up to him to set things right.
While the trailer shows considerably more of the story, it still leaves some mysteries unanswered. It doesn’t show how Buzz becomes immortalized as a figurine in the Toy Story movies, or shed much light on other personas like Emperor Zurg.
The movie premieres in theaters on June 17th, with Chris Evans replacing Tim Allen as the voice of Buzz Lightyear. Sorry, folks, there won’t be a prompt Disney+ launch this time. If there’s anything that might coax people back into the real world, though, a spinoff of Pixar’s best-known franchise might do the trick.
Godzilla and King Kong are coming to ‘Call of Duty: Warzone’
Crossovers between gaming and other areas of entertainment are becoming more and more common. On the same day it emerged Wu-Tang Clan is coming to Fortnite(?), Activision Blizzard confirmed a long-rumored crossover for Call of Duty: Warzone. Godzilla and King Kong will arrive in the battle royale on May 11th.
The event is called Operation Monarch and it isn’t entirely clear just how exactly these movie monsters will fit into Warzone. However, a blog post notes that the event will introduce a new four-player Quads mode “based on several classic experiences with a titan-sized twist.”
Despite their militaristic vibes and settings, Warzone and the Call of Duty series at large aren’t exactly known for hyper-realism. They’ve long had zombie modes. Still, this seems like an odd crossover, especially given that the Godzilla vs. Kong movie came out over a year ago.