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Mobile Syrup

Freedom Mobile promotion offers 15GB data for $40 for first 12 months

Freedom Mobile has a limited-time offer available for those looking to bring their phone to a new plan.

Freedom Mobile’s new Bring Your Own Phone plan offers unlimited 15GB data for $40 per month, including its $5 Digital Discount. This offer gets you the $10 discount for 12 months, and afterwards, your monthly cost will be $50 per month with the Digital Discount.

The carrier is also offering this deal with 18GB of data for $45 per month, which is regularly $55 per month with a digital discount.

If neither of those plans are to your liking, Freedom offers a 25GB for $50 BYOD plan and a 30GB for $65 BYOD plan.

Shaw, Freedom Mobile’s parent company, recently released its second-quarter results. Shaw’s overall revenue declined by two percent year-over-year to $1.36 billion for the quarter ending February 28th.

Source: Freedom Mobile

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Mobile Syrup

Shaw releases second quarter results

In what’s likely one of its last quarterly reports as an independent operator, Shaw Communications reports a mix of decreases in its second quarterly report of the year.

Shaw added 16,900 new wireless customers to its network, but post-paid net additions decreased.

The company attributes this to a number of factors, including increased competition during the holiday season, limited supplies, and adjustments to its plans.

Q2 2022 covers the quarter that ended on February 28th.

More to come.

Source: Shaw Communications 

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Mobile Syrup

Telus Health expanding MyCare virtual services to Québec

Telus has announced that it’s expanding its Telus Health MyCare virtual counselling service to Québec.  Those with a Telus Health MyCare account in need of mental health counselling can speak to provincially-licensed bilingual counsellors remotely.

As part of the announcement, Telus revealed a study that found that 20 percent of the Québec population (1 in 5 people), will experience a mental illness during their lifetime. The Institut national de santé Publique du Québec claims that less than half of the people who experience mental illness in their life consult a professional.

“Now, more than ever, people need accessible, convenient mental health support to live their healthiest, best lives. We offer simple, direct access to caring mental health professionals. From daily challenges to more severe conditions, we help you take control of your mental wellbeing,” said Chris Engst, managing director of consumer health, Telus Health.

Telus also shared that half of Canadians are waiting up to one month for counselling services since the pandemic began. This was pulled from data from Canadian Institute for Health Information, which also states 1 in 10 waited more than four months.

Québec residents can now download the Telus Health MyCare app from the App Store or Google Play Store. Once installed, a free account can be made. This enables users to book an appointment with doctors, counsellors, and dietitians via video consultations. In Québec, appointments are scheduled either in French or English, depending on preference.

Once an account is made, a session can be booked for $120 plus tax. Telus states that all MyCare sessions are held by experienced counsellors. Each session is 50 minutes in length and most are covered by extended healthcare plans.

Telus also recently announced a health care initiative in Calgary to help the homeless. 

Source: Telus

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Mobile Syrup

Spotify Greenroom renamed ‘Spotify Live,’ now available in main app

Following last month’s report from Bloomberg, Spotify Greenroom is now called Spotify Live and is available in the main app. Starting now, the live audio conferencing service is fully integrated into the music streaming service.

According to Spotify, select original programming will be available on the platform. Independent creators that want to go live can still do so in the separate Spotify Live app.

Additionally, Spotify says it will highligh its top audio creators through exclusive programming in addition to the full slate of original programming that Spotify has already introduced.

Starting now, the live edition of Off the Record with DJ Akademiks will be available. On April 15th, the company is hosting a live DJ set from Swedish House Mafia as part of the group’s release party.

There are more events set for April and May. You’ll be able to tune in to live programming via the host’s podcast or artist page, and if you want to participate in the chat or join the host, you’ll need to head over to the Spotify Live app.

Spotify’s Clubhouse rival, originally dubbed Greenroom, launched last June.

The Swedish audio and media company isn’t the only platform to copy Clubhouse’s social audio functionality. For example, Twitter launched Twitter Spaces, Meta has Live Audio Rooms via Facebook, and LinkedIn, Reddit, and Discord also offer a similar feature.

Clubhouse reached more than 10 million users within a year of its launch.

Source: Spotify

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Mobile Syrup

Telus and The Alex to provide healthcare to Calgary’s homeless

In partnership with the Alex Community Health Centre, Telus has announced the launch of its Health for Good mobile clinic to enhance the lives of the marginalized communities in Calgary.

The Alex Mobile Care Clinic is committed to ensuring that vulnerable Calgarians have access to immediate, high-quality, compassionate care.

The Alex Mobile Care Clinic is staffed with both a nurse practitioner and a peer support liaison, which deliver key services to marginalized communities.

Additionally, mobile addiction management allows easy access to addiction management and treatment services. The Mobile Clinic will serve as an expansion to The Alex’s existing Rapid Access Addictions Medicine Clinic and Mobile Addictions Outreach Initiative services. Other healthcare services include routine testing, contraception, womens’ health services, STI treatment, harm reduction services and mental health care and counselling.

“With decades of experience in mobile health care, The Alex knows that being in the right place at the right time is critical to meeting the needs of those who experience barriers to good health care. With a focus on addictions support, we are also able to utilize the skills and training of our medical teams, who understand the issues that contribute to addiction and are able to provide medically-assisted support along the continuum of recovery,” said Joy Bowen-Eyre the CEO of The Alex.

All Mobile Health Clinics offer space for consultations, assessments, and the equipment necessary to provide medical care and harm reduction and space for patient privacy.

Telus also recently announced a health initiative in Quebec to expand MyCare virtual services.

Source: Telus

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Mobile Syrup

Lego Star Wars: The Skywalker Saga ushers in the next generation of Lego games

Lego Star Wars: The Skywalker Saga is kind of like your mom’s meatloaf.

Sure, there are better, more intricately-crafted meals out there, but that doesn’t make Mom’s cooking any less delicious.

The journey of The Skywalker Saga has been a long one. After being first announced nearly three years ago, developer TT Games has been hard at work on their next foray into the galaxy far, far away. Collecting all nine mainline Star Wars films into one brick-based package, this game looks to usher in a new era for the franchise, after more than a decade and a half of Lego titles.

The Skywalker Saga is inarguably the biggest Lego game ever made. While past titles have sported many levels and hundreds of characters, this does all that while including open, explorable worlds, a reinvented combat system, and a new over-the-shoulder camera angle. Even though this was announced before the next generation of consoles got started, this very much feels like a next-gen Lego Star Wars.

But it’s also very much a game of give and take. While it does innovate in almost every aspect, nearly everything comes with a caveat. However, none of these flaws are big enough to detract from just how good this whole package is.

For gamers who have been with the Lego Star Wars franchise since 2006, the gameplay of The Skywalker Saga is the first big change they will notice. There are some familiar trappings like collecting Mini Kits and grabbing as many studs as possible, but pretty well everything else is different.

Gone is the fixed camera and fairly basic platformer gameplay, and in comes a new more modern approach to playing the game. The camera now follows your character over their shoulder, as it would in God of War or Uncharted. This change makes the game instantly feel like an upgrade from past Lego titles. Not to say the other games in the franchise have felt lesser, but this new camera does elevate the experience quite a bit.

Instead of going through fairly linear missions making up each movie of the franchise, these linear sections are now broken up by larger open-world hubs. While at first, I did question why they were there, after a few hours these explorable zones had me hooked.

While moving through each of the movie’s stories it became so easy to get lost in these open sections searching for collectibles. Sure, the upgrades these hidden relics grant you are, for the most part, fairly inconsequential; however, that did not stop me from wanting to collect every single one of them.

These small carrot-on-the-stick collectibles all come with their own set of challenges, offering some of the most fun creative thinking moments of the game. The solutions never hit the level of creativity of something like Super Mario Odyssey, but they are simple, yet fun diversions that had me straying off the beaten path more often than not.

When going through the linear missions, however, it does feel very much like a Lego game. You will build, traverse, and solve minor puzzles as you venture across the galaxy, and for the most part, it is a good time. It is a simple formula, but it works.

Some of the shake-ups found in these story missions are the best moments The Skywalker Saga has to offer, though. Taking a break from swinging a lightsaber to pilot a speeder on the Forest Moon of Endor has never felt better. Or how about the sudden surprise of puzzle-solving from two different perspectives in the droid factories of Geonosis? These little mix-ups keep the experience fresh in a title where you are doing a lot of the same thing over and over.

Like many of the systems in The Skywalker Saga, combat has been entirely reworked as well. The new combat system takes notes from the past games in the franchise but reinterprets them into something wholly new.

The team at TT Games are wearing their influences upon their sleeves most evidently here. There is a combo system one would find in a Devil May Cry game, and boss battles akin to those in the Dark Souls titles.

However, gamers looking to find something as complex as either of those games will not find that here. This is almost like a low-calorie diet version of either of those. Yes, there is a combo system in place, but it is quite simple and fairly easy to master. And yes, there is dodging, parrying, and a giant health bar in boss encounters, but most can easily be beaten by mashing the attack button.

Something that is a welcome addition is the third-person shooting. Similar to games like Gear of War, you can take up arms behind cover and pick off enemies that way. Again, this is nothing as complex or as pinpoint accurate as other games, but it does feel good to shoot a blaster.

The combat here may look and feel different than the Lego games of yore, but ultimately, The Skywalker Saga never makes it feel quite like the revolution that many had thought it could be before release.

Co-op is back as well! And while it can be fun to play through these epics with a friend, adding another play does take the already thin screen real estate and double the issues. This of course wouldn’t be a pressure point if you could jump in with a friend online; however, at launch co-op can only be done locally.

From a technical standpoint, The Skywalker Saga is, far and away, the best-looking Lego game ever made. The character models give off this authentic Lego sheen, making them look like they have come to life on your living room floor.

The way that light bounces off of these plastic characters is truly stunning. And the attention to detail on these figures is something to behold. You can see the seams along the side of minifig headpieces, or the dirt or snow collecting in their joints as you traverse various worlds. It’s these small touches that really make this feel like seeing your favourite Lego sets come to life.

The playable characters and set decorations are the highlights there, however, the game’s many environments can be a little hit or miss. While locales like Ahch-To or Bespin look great with pops of color and excellent lighting effects, others disappoint.

Planets like Tatooine, Crait, and Geonosis can look messy at times, with these mostly one-color environments becoming a bit of a brown, orange, or white mess when looking at them closely. This is especially the case when focusing on objects in the distance. With the lack of general palette variety on these planets, backgrounds can look splotchy and can take away from the immersive Star Wars experience found in other locations.

The sound design of The Skywalker Saga is a dream. The soundtrack is, of course, masterful, as it features nearly all of the series’ John Williams-composed work. Despite this being a Lego game, I found myself welling up at certain moments if only because of the masterful score (damn you, “Binary Sunset”).

The rest of the soundscape created here is impressive. Each locale has its own sonic flare, and the Lego of it all adds these nice familiar clicks and snaps to everything as the world is disassembled and rebuilt around you.

A couple of Lego Star Wars: The Skywalker Saga’s biggest misses come in its presentation. The two most notable of these are its voice acting and the HUD.

The voice acting here can be a bit of a mess. TT Games utilizes both actual dialogue from the Star Wars films as well as added lines read by voice actors. And while in practice it can be cool to hear Daisy Ridley or Mark Hamill every once in a while, it is a little jarring to hear these characters jump back and forth between the original actors and hired talent.

Most of the voice acting team do a serviceable job, usually chiming in with that signature Lego game humor, but there are some that are downright bad. Not to take anything away from the voice actors who lent their talent to The Skywalker Saga, but hearing Adam Driver and the actor brought in to play Kylo Ren back to back makes it sound like this character is two completely different people.

Also on the presentation front is the busy HUD. The act of playing this game can be messy at moments, with your health, a combo metre, stud counter, quick-time events, mission log, a map, and a boss’ life bar all on-screen at once.

This problem increases exponentially after unlocking upgrades to reveal the game’s many collectibles, creating little light blue halos all over the screen at any given time. These HUD elements can, for the most part, be turned on and off, but it is annoying that you have to go digging in the menus to make that happen.

In short, Lego Star Wars: The Skywalker Saga may not be the qualitatively best Star Wars game ever made, but it just might be my favorite. This really does feel like the beginning of the next generation for the franchise, and an evolution of what has come before.

Yes, it does have its missteps with messy environments, simple combat, and lackluster voice acting. But it’s the “just one more puzzle” nature of the open world, the stunning character models, and getting to relive some of my favorite moments in film history that kept me playing.

This is a love letter to Star Wars in nearly every way. While it stumbles in a few places, it puts fun at the forefront of the experience, and is that not what gaming is all about?

Image credit: Warner Bros./Lucasfilm

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Mobile Syrup

Autonomous car pulled over by police in San Francisco

Welcome to the future.

A video posted to Instagram earlier this month by user @b.rad916 reveals what happened when police attempted to stop an autonomous car in San Francisco, California.

In the video, the car operated by self-driving vehicle company Cruise is pulled over with a police vehicle behind it. The officer walks towards the driver’s side of the vehicle, only for it to zoom away, before crossing the intersection and pulling over yet again with its hazard lights on.

Cruise, a company owned by General Motors (GM), responded to the video on Twitter, stating that the autonomous car pulled over to the nearest “safe location for the traffic stop, as intended.” Cruise says that the officer contacted the company. It’s still unclear why the autonomous vehicle was pulled over.

Image credit: Screenshot @b.rad916

Source: @Cruise, @b.rad916

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NASA to use giant slingshot to send satellites to space

NASA has partnered with space tech company SpinLaunch to test a mass accelerator launch system for satellites.

Specifically, SpinLaunch has produced an enormous suborbital mass accelerator with a 300-foot diameter (about 91m) steel vacuum chamber. For reference, this is about one-sixth the height of 1800-foot Toronto’s CN Tower (about 550m). The device leverages its massive size to rotate its arm at speeds of up 5,000mph (about 8050 km/h) to launch a given item.

In this case, NASA aims to use the mass accelerator to send satellites into Low Earth Orbit (LEO). NASA says this method is more than 70 percent more fuel-efficient than a traditional rocket and will help meet demand for LEO satellite constellations to monitor disasters, weather, national security and more.

SpinLaunch will manifest and fly NASA’s first payload on a developmental test flight later this year, with the first actual orbital test launches planned for 2025.

Source: NASA/SpinLaunch

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Mobile Syrup

Crave to become the exclusive Canadian streaming home of Sesame Street

Bell has signed a deal with Sesame Workshop to make Crave the exclusive Canadian streaming home of the iconic children’s series.

This will come into effect starting April 15th with the premiere of the show’s 51st season, which will run for 35 episodes. On this date, the ‘Sesame Street: Classic Episodes Collection’ will also hit Crave to highlight “20 timeless episodes of the series.” These episodes will feature the likes of Mr. Rogers, Robin Williams, James Earl Jones and Canada’s own Ryan Reynolds.

Later in 2022, Crave will also get Sesame Street programming like Cookie Monster’s Foodie Truck and Elmo’s World (May), the upcoming new CGI-animated Sesame Street spin-off series and Sesame Street Season 52 (September); Sesame Street Mecha Builders (fall) and Once Upon a Sesame Street Christmas (fall/winter).

Crave costs $9.99/month for a mobile-only plan and $19.99/month for a ‘Total’ subscription that supports a variety of devices. a $5.99/month Starz add-on is also available.

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Mobile Syrup

Beats Studio Buds rumoured to launch in new colours on April 13

Last year, Apple unveiled the Beats Studio Buds, and now, it looks like there are more colour variants on the way.

According to well-known Bloomberg leaker Mark Gurman, the Beats Studio Buds will also come in pink, grey and blue and launch on April 13th.

Currently, the $179.95 CAD Beat Studio Buds are available in ‘Black,’ ‘White’ and ‘Beats Red.’

Source: Mark Gurman