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I tried Bing Chat and AI in Edge: Here’s what happened

The AI wars ramped up this week after Google showed off its ChatGPT competitor Bard AI, and Microsoft announced the integration of ChatGPT-powered AI tools into Bing search and the Edge browser.

While Microsoft’s announcement certainly seemed impressive, most people weren’t able to try it out right away and instead joined a waitlist. However, the company has been granting some members of the press access to the new tools — including myself.

If you want to know how to get access to AI features in Bing or Edge, check out this guide. For those who want to know what it’s like using these features, read on.

Up-to-date information is a strength

To start, using Bing’s AI features — dubbed Bing Chat — will feel remarkably familiar to anyone who’s played with OpenAI’s ChatGPT. That’s because, in many ways, it is ChatGPT, though Bing Chat uses the ‘Prometheus Mode’ with updated, up-to-date information.

Along with being the main differentiator between ChatGPT and Bing Chat, it’s also Bing’s core strength. ChatGPT, while interesting, never felt that useful to me because it doesn’t know current events. For example, when I tried asking ChatGPT to write a review of the iPhone 14, it told me the iPhone 14 didn’t exist.

Asking Bing Chat to write an iPhone 14 review, on the other hand, generated four paragraphs that include an overview of the specs and some basic pros and cons. While it did better than ChatGPT here, I still don’t think Bing Chat will be taking my job anytime soon.

Another test I tried that shows a significant difference between Bing Chat and ChatGPT was trying to get Bing Chat to reproduce a copyrighted work. I had some success making ChatGPT produce the first few paragraphs of The Hobbit, but a similar prompt to Bing Chat resulted in the AI telling me it couldn’t do it because “that would violate the author’s rights.” Bing Chat went on to summarize it instead.

Beyond that, the integration of search and conversational AI was actually very pleasant to use, though not always perfect. I asked Bing Chat to suggest food ideas for a Super Bowl party and it listed off several options along with brief descriptions. There was plenty of variety, with some chicken wing options, chili, fried pickles and more. However, almost all of the options linked out to listicles of top Super Bowl foods and not recipes.

In another test, I asked for board game suggestions that would be good for six players and Bing Chat offered up five options which, as requested, all worked for six players.

Of course, Bing Chat wasn’t perfect. I had some issues asking follow-up questions — for example, when I asked which of the suggested board games was best for a competitive group, it gave me a whole new list of games instead. In fact, follow-up questions often seemed hit or miss — sometimes Bing Chat would nail it and other times, it would generate entirely new answers.

In another test where I asked Bing Chat for information about MobileSyrup, it gave me incorrect information about who founded the website. Bing Chat also generally felt slower to me than ChatGPT did, though I think part of that is related to Bing Chat taking the time to parse information before generating its answers.

Although I haven’t spent a ton of time with Bing Chat so far, my early impressions are that it’s really useful when used in the right ways. I’ll get into this more as I go, but generally, I found Bing Chat to be helpful for gathering and digesting large amounts of information, whereas more specific, targeted queries weren’t as helpful, and I’m not alone in this.

Bing Chat isn’t a gamer

The conversational approach to Bing Chat was particularly nice and enabled interesting spin-off conversations related to my queries. These weren’t always helpful, but it was neat to see Bing Chat riff on whatever I was talking about.

For example, I asked it whether the PlayStation 5 or Xbox Series X was the best console, in part to see if it would show some bias towards Microsoft. Instead, Bing Chat compared the specs and sales numbers of the consoles, then suggested the best option depending on my personal preferences, budget and gaming needs.

In a further attempt to catch Bing Chat with a gotcha, I asked which console it preferred — it told me it didn’t have a preference since “I’m not a gamer myself.”

That spiralled into a conversation about games, where I asked it what games it would want to play if it could game. After some back-and-forth, Bing Chat flipped the question back on me, asking what games I liked to play — I answered with Destiny 2. Bing Chat proceeded to ask me a bunch of questions about Destiny 2, starting with wider questions about why I like the game and narrowing down until we were chatting about classes, builds and other niche topics. It was both neat and a little creepy.

In another attempt to trip up Bing Chat, I asked it about Microsoft’s attempt to acquire Activision. It responded with a summary of the U.K’s Competition and Markets Authority’s (CMA) thoughts on the deal, such as the risk of higher prices and fewer choices for gamers. As an aside, that information came out a couple of days before I asked Bing Chat about it, which goes to show just how up-to-date Bing Chat really is.

Bing Chat in Edge

Finally, let’s take a quick look at Bing Chat in Microsoft’s Edge browser. I won’t spend a ton of time here since, in my testing, the integration was effectively just a sidebar with Bing Chat in it with minimal difference compared to going to Bing’s website and accessing Chat there.

While functionally the same, the Bing Chat sidebar was useful thanks to its proximity to what I was doing. I had it open while writing this piece, which proved helpful when I wanted to quickly pull up some information.

In time, I think this integration might prove incredibly useful. It’s one thing to be able to call up Bing Chat in a new tab, and something entirely different to have it right next to my work.

Unfortunately, I also encountered some bugs using Bing Chat in the sidebar, most notably an issue where it added a ton of blank space in between my queries and the generated responses, resulting in lots of unnecessary scrolling around.

Another unique capability in Edge is the ‘Compose’ tab, which lets users quickly generate text with some parameters. You punch in what you want the text to be about and then pick the tone, format and length. It then generates the text, and you can copy it or even click an ‘Add to site’ button to put it right into what you’re working on.

I tried a few prompts in this but nothing it generated really blew me away. Still, I could see this being a useful tool — for example, as a way to generate some inspiration if I’m having trouble getting started.

To wrap up this section, it’s worth noting that Microsoft really seems to be pushing for people to use Edge to get Bing Chat. Aside from some annoying stuff about climbing the waitlist by installing Microsoft defaults, Microsoft appears to be limiting how you can use Bing Chat in other web browsers.

Ultimately, it’ll be interesting to see how Bing Chat and the Edge integration grow and improve going forward. At the same time, we’re still early days in the AI wars, and it’s worth keeping in mind the various problems and concerns related to AI, such as the impact on privacy and people.

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Mobile Syrup

The Last of Us star says shooting in Alberta was ‘maybe my favourite experience filming’

Note: This interview is a spoiler-free discussion of the February 10th episode of The Last of Us.

Part of the appeal of HBO’s The Last of Us series is how it adds to the story of the original PlayStation game upon which it’s based.

In one case, this meant dramatically expanding the love story between Bill (Nick Offerman) and Frank (Murray Bartlett) in the standout third episode, which was only hinted at in the original game. Elsewhere, this might lead to introducing new characters.

Nowhere has the latter been more apparent than in Episodes 4 and 5 of the show, in which creators and showrunners Craig Mazin (Chernobyl) and Neil Druckmann (the original The Last of Us game) introduce not one, but two new figures. Enter Kansas City revolutionary leader Kathleen (Yellowjackets‘ Melanie Lynskey) and her right-hand man Perry (Bosch‘s Jeffrey Pierce).

The Last of Us Jeffrey Pierce as Perry

Jeffrey Pierce as Perry.

But for fans of both 2013’s The Last of Us and its 2020 sequel, Pierce is perhaps most recognizable for another role: Tommy, the younger brother of protagonist Joel. With Gabriel Luna (Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.) portraying Tommy in the series, Pierce has been given the chance to play a completely new character. It wasn’t always going to be that way, though.

“They actually had me read for a different part, and they had me read for it three times,” Pierce reveals to MobileSyrup in a roundtable interview. While he coyly declined to reveal what that part might be, he says Mazin and Druckmann soon presented him with the character of Perry.

“Ultimately, they came back and said, ‘Look, we’re never gonna believe you as a victim, which is a very gratifying thing to hear.’ And a week later, they called and said, ‘Hey, we got this guy that we think you’d be perfect for.’ So it was sort of a roundabout way back to the kind of casting that is really in my wheelhouse.”

Indeed, Perry is tough and resolved like Tommy, but with a unique wrinkle that sets him apart thanks to his relationship with Kathleen. Where Tommy leaves Joel (Pedro Pascal) to go off on his own, Perry follows Kathleen, who’s taken over as revolutionary leader from her brother, and serves as both muscle and advisor.

“I enjoyed Tommy for a lot of reasons, but Perry is the sort of iconic Ronin samurai who’s found his purpose, and what more could I ask for?” says Pierce.

Melanie Lysnkey The Last of Us

Melanie Lynskey as Kathleen.

For Pierce, the HBO series also presented a new way to experience a world he’s acted in for well over 10 years. In the games, he’d record in a studio with no resemblance to The Last of Us‘ post-apocalyptic world, surrounded by fellow actors in offbeat motion-capture outfits.

While he says the challenge of imagining everything through motion capture “takes you back to the roots of why you fell in love with acting,” he was still in awe of the experience of actually filming in real Alberta locations. With an estimated budget of over $100 million USD (about $133.7 million CAD), The Last of Us is believed to be the most expensive TV production in Canadian history, and it shows.

“Walking onto the sets that they built, especially for Episode 5’s climactic exchange — they built that entire neighbourhood. That was a parking lot, and they built it from the ground up,” he says, referring to the big battle between Kathleen’s forces and infected creatures that Joel, Ellie (Bella Ramsey), Henry (Toronto’s Lamar Johnson) and Sam (Keivonn Woodard) get dragged into.

“And if there’s any CG, it’s just the sky. Everything else is practical. And that was unbelievable. I mean, it’s got to be 15 to 20 houses that they built the skeletons of, and then the actual façades of, and then they’ve got one that’s burned down, and the only thing left was a chimney. And they did every single piece of detail in there. So to get to come to play on something that was given that much love and sweat and blood to build —  you felt that you had to honour what they had done with your work. And that made it a really, really special experience.”

Also adding to his time on the show: Calgary.

“With COVID, I was kept pretty contained [in] downtown Calgary, which was still great. I’ve shot all over Canada, and the thing that I enjoy, regardless of where I’ve been, is the people. They’re just such a lovely bunch. And that crew in Calgary was amazing. This is another first experience, and I think there were probably 250, 300 people on the crew. And more than two-thirds of them took that job because they were fans of the game; [it] impacted their lives in such a way that maybe that’s why they got into production, maybe that’s why they got into TV and film. But they took that job specifically because it was The Last of Us.”

For Pierce, this all brought his long-running journey with The Last of Us full circle.

“Walking onto set the first day was like walking into my own living room because everyone knew me as Tommy from the game and were just so warm and welcoming and kind and generous. I think it was maybe my favourite experience filming because of that.”


The Last of Us is now streaming exclusively on Crave in Canada.

For more on the show, check out our interview with Pascal, Ramsey, Mazin and Druckmann, in which they also praise the Alberta crew.

Image credit: HBO


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Crave accidentally runs old episode of The Last of Us instead of new one

Crave users took to Twitter on Friday night to express frustration with the Bell-owned service after it started showing last week’s episode of The Last of Us.

As previously confirmed, the fifth episode, “Endure and Survive,” was to premiere on Friday, February 10th instead of Sunday, February 12th to avoid the Super Bowl. However, Crave users quickly noticed that the February 5th episode, “Please Hold to My Hand,” was showing up instead.

It’s unclear why this issue has occurred, although Crave app users report the episode being available as a VOD. For some reason, it isn’t showing up under “live.” However, this workaround doesn’t help those who tune in via DVR or TV. Crave didn’t address that on social media, although it’s been directing people to this link to watch the episode. Those asking about other means of watching, like through Optik TV, are being asked to DM the official Crave Help account.

Beyond this streaming snafu, “Endure and Survive” is notable for a few reasons. To start, it features Toronto’s own Lamar Johnson in the key role of Henry, a man looking to escape Kansas City with his little brother, Sam. It also features two original characters: Melanie Lynskey as revolutionary leader Kathleen and Jeffrey Pierce (who played Tommy in the video games) as her right-hand man, Perry.

For more on “Endure and Survive,” read our interview with Pierce, in which he talks about what it was like to shoot in Calgary.

Image credit: HBO

Via: Matthew Rondina (@Dapper_Tux)

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Samsung discounts phones for its Valentine’s Gifting Guide

Samsung’s Valentine’s Gifting Guide offers a variety of the company’s devices at a discounted rate, including the Galaxy Z Flip 3, Z Flip 4, Watch 5 and more.

Below are all of the deals:

These promotions are available until February 16th. The company is also offering quite a few bundles on certain handsets.

  • Samsung Galaxy S23 Lime, 256GB: now $1,099, was $1,179.99
  • Galaxy Watch 5 LTE: now $319, was $369.99
  • Galaxy Buds 2: now $49.99, was $189.99

Bundle 2: now $1,674.98, was $2,329.98

  • Samsung Galaxy S23, 256GB: now $1,099, was $1,179.99
  • The Freestyle Smart FHD Portable LED Projector: now $575, was $1,149.99

Bundle 3: now $3,099.98, was $3,679.98

  • Samsung Galaxy S23 Lime, 256GB: now $1,099, was $1,179.99
  • Galaxy Book 3 Pro 360 (16-inch, i7, 16GB, Intel Xe Graphics): now $1999.99, was $2,199.99

You can head to Samsung’s site for more deals.

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Telus donated $125 million in 2022

Telus makes annual donations to various organizations, but it says its 2022 donations supporting youth and communities are the highest it’s given in one year.

The telecom company donated $125 million and 1.44 million volunteer hours in 2022, according to a recent press release. The financial amount represents five percent of its pre-tax profits.

“Our Telus team is deeply committed to driving positive social change in the global communities where we operate and making the future friendly for people around the world,” Darren Entwistle, the company’s CEO, said.

As part of its donations in the last year, the company contributed $6.6 million in humanitarian and emergency relief worldwide, addressing the conflict in Ukraine, flooding in Pakistan, and Hurricane Fiona, among other issues.

Image credit: Shutterstock

Source: Telus

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Hogwarts Legacy: Finally, I’m a wizard

Hogwarts Legacy is a third-person action-adventure role-playing game with several faults, but the most notable exists outside the title itself. Because of Harry Potter author J.K. Rowling’s stance on trans people, many are justifiably backing away from the Wizarding World, including this game.

My love of the Wizarding World started later than many. I didn’t get into the franchise until my teens, as my parents forbade anything related to witchcraft. However, as a teenager, I decided I was old enough to venture into the fantastical books and movies without asking my parents’ permission.

Many of my peers were right — the story was pretty good, and my love grew for the Harry Potter series as I read each book and watched every movie. Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix was my favourite of the titles. But even beyond Harry and his friends, I loved the world, the dragons, the spells, the potions, and, most importantly, I wanted my own acceptance letter to Hogwarts.

Clearly, I was too old to be accepted (not to mention the fact that Hogwarts doesn’t actually exist), but I still dreamed of exploring the school’s halls, going to the magical classes, and even taking the fifth-year O.W.L. exams.

I’m almost 30 years old now, but Avalanche Software finally delivered my invitation to Hogwarts through Hogwarts Legacy, and I loved every minute of it.

Hogwarts

Hogwarts Castle is beautiful. As I’m nearing my 20th hour in the game, I still haven’t found all transportable locations in the school, and I’ve solved even fewer of its secrets. The school and its surrounding grounds are more magical than I could have ever imagined.

The castle features moving portraits, ghosts, and a massive staircase that magically moves into position when you ascend. It also has frogs that swallow you whole and spit you out in another location, books that flap their pages like wings, and bronze moths attracted to your Lumos spell. Exploring the castle was one of the most appealing parts of the game; I’ve spent hours traversing the castle’s secrets and trying to figure out its various puzzles.

Story-wise, the game takes you through unexpected twists and turns before you reach the castle, but once you do, you’re directed to head straight to the Great Hall, where you arrive at the end of the Sorting Hat ceremony. After the hat asks a couple of questions, it sorts you into either Ravenclaw, Gryffindor, Hufflepuff or Slytherin. You can pick your desired house if you’re not a fan of the Hogwarts Legacy’s suggestion.

The hat suggested Slytherin for me, and I was escorted to the house’s common room, which revealed itself after a bronze snake slithered through the floor onto the wall, forming the room door. We learn the most about the Gryffindor common room in the films and books, so seeing Slytherin’s hall in Hogwarts Legacy is very cool. Aside from the staircase, the entire Slytherin dorm is underwater, with windows that look out into the Black Lake beside Hogwarts. Here, in the dorm, you meet a few of the key characters that you’ll interact with frequently throughout the game.

While discovering the secrets of the school, you’ll also meet professors and take classes that appear in your quest log as side missions. After each lesson, you learn something new, like a spell or how to ride a broom, create potions, and make the most of mandrakes. Interestingly, some main quests required specific spells that you can only learn by completing sidequests. However, if it’s not a spell required for the main mission or a side quest, you can skip learning it. I still haven’t finished the requirements to go to my second Herbology class, as I hate using magical plants (a condition to take the class), and I could care less about the Flipendo spell.

Beyond Hogwarts, which I could spend hours talking about, you can explore Hogsmeade’s several shops, including Ollivanders, where you get your own wand, and the Three Broomsticks, a rustic tavern where the characters drink Butterbeer in the novels and movies. You can also explore the rest of the world, including various towns in the countryside, the Forbidden Forest, caves in the nearby mountains and more.

There are a couple of forms of transportation, including broomstick and Hippogriff, that make traversing the world easy and fun. I elected to fly across the fields on my Hippogriff, called Caligo, instead of transporting to different points on the map. And seeing how the world changes from season to season, I was impressed by how different and beautiful the world looked during the fall and winter months. Like in the movies, Christmas was just as magical.

Wingardium Levios

Hogwarts Legacy ensures its gameplay is exciting by using spells for everything; if a cave is too dark, the ‘Lumos’ spell can light your way. If you need to move a box to get to higher ground, you use ‘Accio’ to pull it and ‘Levioso’ to make it rise. If you see a lock, instead of a lockpick, you use ‘Alohomora’ to unlock it, and if you want to burn some shrubbery in your way, you cast ‘Incendio’ or ‘Confringo.’

The spells are easy to access, and you can efficiently utilize up to 16. Of course, there are more than 16 spells, but even if you don’t have the right one in your slots, you can easily add it in less than 20 seconds. Unfortunately, messing with your spell slots is so easy that I’ve accidentally moved some during combat, leading me to cast the wrong one when fighting a mountain troll.

Combat flowed smoothly, and I felt like a true wizard. You can pull an enemy in with ‘Accio,’ make them crash to the ground with ‘Descendo,’ and then throw them away with ‘Depulso.’ Or, you can freeze an enemy with ‘Glacio,’ then blow them up with ‘Confringo’ to deal extra damage. Spells thrown at you can be quickly blocked with a ‘Protego’ shield and followed up with ‘Stupify’ to stun them.

Ultimately, Hogwarts Legacy made me feel like a wizard. Of course, there are several issues. For example, while some fights go well, if you’re off your rhythm or have a spell slotted into the wrong spot, it can throw off the course of the battle.

Either way, Hogwarts Legacy’s combat is thrilling, and I purposefully fight any enemy I come across because stringing spell combos together is incredibly fun. You also have Ancient Magic available, which adds cool-looking finishers. Some burn enemies to dust, while another calls down lightning and blows them up. My favourite is a specific finisher for fighting spiders that makes them smaller in order to squash them.

Ancient magic

My least favourite part of the game is the main story. In Hogwarts Legacy, your goal is to stop a Goblin rebellion. The leader of the uprising, Ranrok, uses some form of evil ancient magic and a wand, which Goblins are forbidden from casting in the Wizarding World. Your character, a student in their fifth year who’s just learning magic (for an unexplained reason), encounters this evil Goblin after a surprise teleportation to Gringotts.

To defeat Ranrok, you have to unravel the secrets of this ancient magic by solving puzzles, defeat statued knights, speak to past professors through magical talking portraits and look into Pensieves to learn more about the past (a Pensieve is a unique instrument that allows you to view the memories of other wizards).

While trying to solve ancient mysteries, you’ll also need to slow down Ranrok and dark wizards before they uncover a mysterious ultimate evil power. I won’t say much more about the storyline, but you’ll forge friendships with your classmates in both primary and sidequests, and eventually start working together to take down these foes.

It feels like you’re watching a Harry Potter movie, so the tone and events in the game are on point and, like other aspects of the franchise, bring you into the Wizarding World.

However overall, I didn’t find the story very compelling, but at the same time, it’s the type of tale I probably would have enjoyed when I was younger. 10-year-old Dean would have dreamed of participating in this story and fighting against leagues of villainous wizards.

Polyjuice Potion

You get to create your own character at the start of the game, and as a Black person, I’m impressed by the character customization options. There are a variety of skin tones and hairstyles — about five different hairstyles typically seen on Black men, which is more than many of the games I’ve played in the past.

While you can adjust aspects of your face or skin tone with a slider, several other settings allow you to customize your character, including a face option featuring varying sizes of ears, noses, lips and more. You can also select your voice and decide if you’re a witch or a wizard, whether you choose feminine or masculine features. I think it’s important to mention that choosing between a witch and a wizard is too limiting because there are a variety of genders in the world.

In terms of Hogwarts Legacy’s characters, however, there is a lot of diversity.

Teachers are of varying skin tones, and so are classmates — even though most of my Slytherin classmates are white. The bartender of the Three Broomsticks is also trans and reportedly voiced by a trans voice actor, though some argue this character was only added to Hogwarts Legacy to fight against the Rowling backlash.

I tried to make my character look just like me, but unfortunately, I couldn’t get my wizard exactly how I wanted. There also aren’t options for how slender or large you can make your character. However, oddly, my hair can be recreated precisely — blonde hair with a fade, and you can see my roots almost perfectly.

Aside from my actual appearance, players can also decide what they want to wear. You’ll find different gear, scarves, robes, uniforms, hats and more throughout the game. Each piece of equipment has defence and offence stats and traits or trait slots that offer a bit of an edge in battle, like a more powerful ‘Crucio’ curse. You can create new traits to slot into gear if it has the required slots. You can also change the appearance of any outfit, which is a nice touch. This means that if one robe has higher stats than the stylish robe you were rocking, you can easily adjust its appearance, so the higher stats match the one you grew fond of.

In Hogwarts, you can also access a fully customizable Room of Requirement. You can add decorations like paintings, mirrors, statues and more. You can also change the room’s appearance, the style of the floors and walls, grow plants for Herbology, make potions and tame beasts.

The forests around Hogwarts are also filled with poachers, so part of the story has the player saving beasts like griffins, Thestrals, Kneazles, unicorns and more. Once you’ve saved several creatures, you can store them in your vivariums, and play, feed, groom and breed them. For me, catching and taming these beasts is one of the most fun parts of Hogwarts Legacy, and they give you access to magical items you can use to create traits that attach to your gear. I loved the struggle of catching a unicorn, breading them and then raising and caring for a baby unicorn.

Sorting Hat

Hogwarts Legacy’s user interface is far from perfect. The menu isn’t the best and can be confusing at times, but it’s easy enough to navigate once you get the hang of it. Further, levelling up is a bit different than other role-playing games. Every time you level up, you’re awarded ‘Talent Points,’ which you use to get new perks, including being more difficult to discover when using the Disillusionment charm or giving your ‘Bombarda’ incantation a larger blast radius. There are core talents that increase the benefit of health potions and the range of the ‘Revelio’ spell.

I’ve been playing the game with increased fidelity and ray tracing, and it looks stunning on PS5. Of course, there are prettier titles — Demon’s Souls and Ratchet and Clank, for example — but Hogwarts Legacy isn’t a current-gen exclusive title, so it’s expected not to look as good as titles built from the ground up for Sony’s latest console. The game can run at 4K or 60fps, depending on which graphics mode you select.

It’s worth noting that I had a few issues with an NPC cutting through an elevator and another situation where I got stuck swimming; with the latter glitch, I had to quit the game. You’ll notice bugs occasionally, but for the most part, they aren’t game-breaking.

Avada Kavadra

Hogwarts Legacy is slow to start, but once it starts ramping up, it becomes stellar.

The game isn’t as narrative-heavy as titles like God of War, but it reminds me of Insomniac’s Spider-Man. To be clear, I’m not saying that these two games have a lot in common, but they both feature great exploration, an easy way to get around their large maps, enemies to fight, and sidequests that have you looking everywhere.

I wish the game featured little things like Quidditch or romance options — of course, no snogging, as they’re children. However, there could have been a cute dance like in The Goblet of Fire. I would also like a morality system for when I cast the ‘Crucio’ Unforgivable Curse on enemies, as well as a way to use the beasts you catch in combat, like some sort of magical Pokémon game.

Hogwarts Legacy is a fantastic title that has, unfortunately, been muddled by very justified controversy — Rowling definitely ruined a video game that could have been great for many. I loved being a wizard soaring through the air on my broomstick, casting spells, and taming beasts, and I smile every time I pick up the controller to play more.

Hogwarts Legacy is available on PC, Xbox Series X and PlayStation 5.

Harry Potter author J.K. Rowling has repeatedly stated her anti-trans position. Dean Daley and MobileSyrup do not endorse Rowling’s anti-trans stance. This story includes several resources explaining how trans and LGBTQ2S+ people feel about Rowling and why many have opted not to play Hogwarts Legacy. MobileSyrup hopes to use this review as an opportunity to educate those who are not familiar with these important issues.

Image credit: Warner Bros. Games

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Here are Best Buy’s Top Deals of the week

We’re here with another week of fantastic deals and savings options from Best Buy Canada. Heading into the weekend, we’ve compiled a list of great discounts on some of the latest smart TVs, headphones, and smart home accessories.

The following deals are now available at Best Buy Canada and will run through until February 16th.

Samsung QN55Q80 55-inch 4K HDR QLED SMT TV for $999.99 (save $200)

Google Pixel Buds Pro Carbon Grey for $219 (save $40)

Sony XG300 Waterproof Bluetooth Wireless Speaker – Grey for $299.99 (save $150)

Dyson V15 Detect Complete+ for $1,024.99 (save $125)

Samsung Galaxy SmartTag Black for $19.99 (save $20)

Microsoft Surface Pro 9 13-inch 256GB Windows 11 Tablet for $1,299.99 (save $100)

Sony WH-1000XM5 Over-Ear Noise Cancelling Bluetooth Headphones – Silver for $449 (save $50)

Fitbit Inspire 2 Fitness Tracker with 24/7 Heart Rate – Black for $79.99 (save $20)

Ring Spotlight Wired Outdoor 1080p IP Camera – Black for $157.99 (save $91)

Arlo Essential Spotlight Wire-Free Indoor/Outdoor 1080p Security Camera -Black -3 Pack for $297 (save $82)

Amazon Echo Show 8 (2nd Gen) Smart Display with Alexa – Glacier White for $134.99 (save $35)

Google Nest Wi-Fi Smart Learning Thermostat (3rd Generation) – White for $268 (save $60)

Garmin Forerunner 45 42mm GPS Watch with Heart Rate Monitor – Large – Black for $179.99 (save $100)

Google Pixel Watch (GPS) 40mm Matte Black Stainless Steel Case with Obsidian Active Band for $399.99 (save $50)

Logitech G Pro Backlit Mechanical GX Blue Clicky Gaming Keyboard – for $129.99 (save $40)

Lenovo Legion Gaming PC -Raven Black for $1,899.99 (save $400)

Check out all the Top Deals for the week here.

Image credit: Best Buy Canada

MobileSyrup utilizes affiliate partnerships and publishes sponsored posts. These partnerships do not influence our editorial content, though MobileSyrup may earn a commission on purchases made via these links.

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Elon Musk fired a Twitter engineer after his engagement fell

The latest peak at the internal workings of Twitter is bleak, to say the least.

According to a detailed report from Zoe Schiffer and Casey Newton in the Platformer newsletter (as republished by The Verge), it’s chaos inside Twitter under Elon Musk and employees are worried.

First, the report opens with a quintessential Musk event — Twitter’s owner and CEO reportedly gathered a group of the company’s engineers and advisors and asked them why his engagement numbers were tanking.

“This is ridiculous. I have more than 100 million followers, and I’m only getting tens of thousands of impressions,” Musk said, multiple sources with direct knowledge of the meeting told Platformer.

One of Twitter’s two remaining principal engineers suggested to Musk that interest in his antics was wearing out, and employees reportedly showed him a Google Trends chart depicting Musk’s declining popularity in search rankings. Musk fired the engineer.

Beyond that, the Platformer reported on several other problems within Twitter based on interviews with current employees. Employees spoke about a lack of a long-term vision for Twitter, with some telling Platformer they “mostly move from dumpster fire to dumpster fire.”

They also said they spent time chasing down outlier issues at the request of Musk based on replies he gets from users who claim to have issues.

Moreover, employees report the Twitter officers have a melancholy feel, with people asking each other where they’re interviewing. The eighth floor reportedly is stocked with beds that employees must reserve in advance to use — they’re fully booked most weeknights.

Perks that used to make Twitter an attractive place to work have been removed or destroyed. For example, employees talked about how the food at the office sucks now, and worse, employees need to pay for it.

Finally, Platformer highlighted employee concerns about regulators. Twitter previously commmitted to following steps like creating project proposals and conducting security and privacy reviews before making changes, part of an agreement with the U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC). Platformer reports an FTC audit is coming this quarter and employees doubt the company has the necessary documentation in place to pass inspection.

If you want to learn more about how bleak Twitter is from the people who still work there, check out the full Platformer report here.

Source: Platformer Via: The Verge

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Mobile Syrup

Watch the Galaxy S23 Ultra being put through its paces in durability test

The Galaxy S23 Ultra is a solid upgrade over the S22 Ultra, with an added S-Pen slot, a more durable Corning Gorilla Glass Victus 2 screen, enhanced night-time photography, and an upgraded 200-megapixel primary sensor.

In addition to solid new features, the new flagship’s body is reportedly as durable, if not more durable, than its predecessor.

In a durability test by JerryRigEverything, the S23 begins to show faint scratches at Mohs level 6, with deeper grooves formed by scratches at level 7. This happens to be the same as the S22 Ulta’s display durability, which means the upgrade from Corning Gorilla Glass Victus to Corning Gorilla Glass Victus 2 doesn’t offer much of an upgrade when it comes to scratch resistance.

After scratching off all the sides of the device with a sharp tool, slightly bending the S-Pen splits it in half, before proceeding to scratch up the rear camera, including the main 200-megapixel sensor, with the same tool. It’s a harrowing experience just sitting through, hearing the tool rub off the new flagship device.

As part of the durability test, the S23 Ultra’s display was also put in direct contact with a flame from a lighter for 60 seconds, but that failed to damage the display in any manner. Bending the phone from the front and the back results in no flex, alluding that the device is “rigid as a rock,” which might help buyers feel okay for shelling out $1,649.99 for the new flagship device. 

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Image credit: JerryRigEverything

Source: JerryRigEverything

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Mobile Syrup

Reddit phishing attack compromised employee information

A “sophisticated and highly-targeted phishing attack” led hackers to access some of Reddit’s internal workings, including documents and code.

The company first became aware of the attack in the evening hours (PST) of February 5th, a post from Reddit CTO Christopher Slowe, under username KeyserSosa, reads. The hacker sent employees prompts to a website that copied the intranet gateway to steal credentials, obtaining one employee’s authorization details.

“We show no indications of breach of our primary production systems (the parts of our stack that run Reddit and store the majority of our data),” Slowe said.

However, the hacker did gain access to some contacts related to company, employees, and advertiser information. An investigation found no evidence hackers accessed non-public user data or that the stolen information was shared online.

Slowe said users should set up two-factor authentication to add an extra security layer. Users can also change their password every couple of months and use a password manager for additional security.

This isn’t the first time Reddit has faced a cybersecurity incident. A 2018 incident lead hackers to obtain some customer information. But Slowe said lessons learned from that incident “have continued to be useful” in the present attack.

Source: Reddit