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U of T finds toxic levels of PFAS in paper-based food packaging

The use of paper-based food packaging in the fast-food industry has long been considered a more environmentally-friendly alternative to single-use plastics. However, a recent study led by Miriam L. Diamond, a professor at the University of Toronto’s department of Earth sciences and School of the Environment, revealed that these paper-based containers may not be as safe as previously thought.

Diamond, along with her team, examined 42 paper-based wrappers and bowls, trying to find potentially toxic human-made perfluoroalkyl and poly-fluoroalkyl substances (PFAS).

The team found samples of toxic 6:2 FTOH, or 6:2 fluorotelomer alcohol in abundance. “Another finding: fibre-based moulded bowls that are marketed as “compostable” had PFAS levels three to 10 times higher than paper doughnut and pastry bags,” reads U of T’s report.

“As Canada restricts single-use plastics in food-service ware, our research shows that what we like to think of as the better alternatives are not so safe and green after all,” Diamond says. “In fact, they may harm our health and the environment by providing a direct route to PFAS exposure — first by contaminating the food we eat, and after they’re thrown away, polluting our air and drinking water.”

The use of PFAS in food packaging is a “regrettable substitution of trading one harmful option – single-use plastics – for another.” Diamond added that PFAS eventually end up in our bodies and the environment, where they stay. PFAS have been linked to adverse health effects, including increased cancer risk, thyroid disease, cholesterol levels and decreased immune response and fertility.

Diamond has been studying PFAS exposure and management for several years, and her research has already helped shape policy, such as California’s ban on PFAS in fabrics and cosmetics by 2025.

Check out the full report on PFAs in paper takeout containers here.

Image credit: University of Toronto, Shutterstock

Source: University of Toronto

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Mobile Syrup

Here’s what’s coming to Amazon Luna in April 2023

In case you missed it, Amazon finally launched its game streaming service, Luna, in Canada on March 22nd.

Therefore, going forward, we’ll start rounding up the new titles that join the subscription platform’s catalogue every month.

Note: this list applies to Luna’s base membership, the $12.99/month Luna+, which offers unlimited access to dozens of games for the monthly fee. With all of that out of the way, here’s what’s coming to Luna+ in April:

  • Batman: Arkham Knight
  • Batora: Lost Haven
  • Endzone: A World Apart
  • Kingdoms of Amalur: Re-Reckoning
  • Lego DC Super-Villains

Meanwhile, Prime members can play a small rotating list of games at no additional cost, and currently, that includes:

  • The Adventure Pals
  • Horizon Chase Turbo
  • The Jackbox Games Party Pack 3
  • Yakuza Kiwami 2

It’s worth noting that Luna has two other subscription options:

  • Ubisoft+ Mulit-Access ($22.99/month) — dozens of games from Ubisoft’s catalogue, including Far Cry 6, Assassin’s Creed Valhalla, Beyond Good & Evil and Watch Dogs: Legion
  • Jackbox Games ($6.49/month) — includes every Jackbox party game (Quiplash, Trivia Murder Party, Drawful and more)

Image credit: Warner Bros. Interactive

Source: Amazon

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Mobile Syrup

Here’s what’s coming to Crave, Netflix, Prime Video, Disney+ and Paramount+ in April

Each month MobileSyrup publishes several individual rundowns of the new content coming to streaming services. We also offer a curated guide of the hottest shows and movies hitting streaming services weekly.

However, if you don’t want to go through all of our links, here’s your TV guide-like round-up of everything coming to Crave, Prime Video, Paramount+ and Disney+ this month.

A Disney+ subscription costs $11.99/month or $119.99/year in Canada, while a Paramount Plus subscription costs $9.99/month.

Crave subscriptions start at $19.99/month and includes HBO content access. A $5.99 Starz add-on is also available. In this round-up, I don’t separate Starz from other Crave content, so it’s worth noting some of the titles cost an extra $5.99.

A Prime Video subscription costs $9.99 per month, and, lastly, Netflix is still on this list for those who continue to subscribe. Netflix starts at $5.99, but plans increase depending on whether you want multiple viewers, ad-free streaming or 4K content.

Coming Soon

  • Ex-Addicts Club — Netflix 
  • Welcome to Eden: Season 2 — Netflix 

April 1st

  • 10,000 B.C. — Netflix 
  • Catwoman — Netflix 
  • Click — Netflix 
  • Crash — Netflix 
  • Dr. Seuss’ The Lorax — Netflix 
  • Girls Trip — Netflix 
  • How to Train Your Dragon 2 — Netflix 
  • Jurassic Park — Netflix 
  • Laurence Anyways — Netflix 
  • Lego Ninjago: Season 4 Crystallized – Part 2 — Netflix 
  • Louis Cyr, l’homme le plus fort du monde — Netflix 
  • The Many Saints of Newark — Netflix 
  • Miracles from Heaven — Netflix 
  • Mission: Impossible – Fallout — Netflix 
  • Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol — Netflix 
  • Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation — Netflix 
  • New York Minute — Netflix 
  • Shark Tale — Netflix 
  • Something’s Gotta Give — Netflix 
  • Superbad — Netflix 
  • Wild Wild West — Netflix 
  • You Got Served — Netflix 
  • Zathura: A Space Adventure — Netflix 
  • Weather — Netflix 
  • Jurassic World: Dominion — Crave
  • Master Liar: Episodes 1-3 — Crave
  • Risky Business — Crave
  • Monster High (new episodes) — Paramount Plus

April 2nd

  • War Sailor: Limited Series — Netflix 

April 3rd

  • American Dad (Season 19) — Disney+

April 4th

  • My Name is Mo’Nique — Netflix 
  • The Signing — Netflix 
  • A Night at the Roxbury (movie) — Paramount Plus
  • Amazing Grace (documentary) — Paramount Plus
  • Bossy Bear (New episodes) — Paramount Plus
  • Mission: Impossible — Fallout (movie) — Paramount Plus
  • SpongeBob SquarePants (new episodes) — Paramount Plus
  • The Big Short (movie) — Paramount Plus
  • The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie (movie) — Paramount Plus

April 5th

  • Lewis Capaldi: How I’m Feeling Now — Netflix 
  • Area21 — Live on Planet Earth (Special)  — Disney+
  • The Crossover — Disney+
  • The Good Mothers — Disney+
  • The Pope Answers — Disney+
  • Predator: Bloodlines (Season 1) — Disney+
  • Susah Sinyal (Bad Signal) The Series (Season 1) — Disney+
  • The Challenge: Argentina (Season 1) — Paramount Plus
  • Perder Es Ganar Un Poco (Amazon Original) — Prime Video
  • Nadie Sabe Para Quien Trabja — Prime Video

April 6th

  • Beef — Netflix 
  • Reminiscence — Netflix 
  • Only You: An Animated Shorts Collection: Season 1 — Crave
  • Grease: Rise of the Pink Ladies (Season 1) — Paramount Plus
  • Lizzy Hoo: Hoo Cares? — Prime Video

April 7th

  • Chupa — Netflix 
  • Into the Storm — Netflix 
  • Kings of Mulberry Street: Let Love Reign — Netflix 
  • Oh Belinda — Netflix 
  • Thicker Than Water — Netflix 
  • Transatlantic — Netflix 
  • Tiny Beautiful Things — Disney+
  • Mary Makes It Easy: Season 2B — Crave
  • Bring It On: Cheer Or Die — Crave
  • Marry F**k Kill — Crave
  • Monster Family 2 — Crave
  • The Black Phone — Crave
  • Music Box: Jason Isbell: Running With Our Eyes Closed @ 8pm ET — Crave
  • Lamborghini: The Man Behind The Legend — Crave
  • Parenthood — Crave
  • Crazy, Stupid, Love — Crave
  • Curly Sue — Crave
  • Catching Lightning (documentary) — Paramount Plus
  • Operation Fortune: Ruse De Guerre (Amazon Original) — Prime Video
  • On a Wing and a Prayer (Amazon Original) — Prime Video
  • Gangs of Lagos (Amazon Original) — Prime Video
  • De Viaje Con Los Derbez: Season 3 (Amazon Original) — Prime Video
  • El Internado: Las Cumbres: Season 3 (Exclusive Content) — Prime Video
  • Murilo Couto Comedy Special (Exclusive Content) — Prime Video
  • Code Name Banshee — Prime Video
  • Praise This — Prime Video
  • Sniper’s Eve: Fortress — Prime Video
  • Abandoned — Prime Video

April 8th

  • Hunger — Netflix 
  • Spiral: From the Book of Saw — Netflix 

April 10th

  • CoComelon: Season 8 — Netflix 

April 11th

  • Leanne Morgan: I’m Every Woman — Netflix 
  • Yonder (Season 1) — Paramount Plus
  • Buddy Games (movie) — Paramount Plus
  • Get Rich or Die Tryin’ — Paramount Plus
  • Missing Link (movie) — Paramount Plus
  • Primal (movie) — Paramount Plus
  • Save Me (all seasons) — Paramount Plus
  • Voice (Season 1-2) — Paramount Plus
  • Signal (Season 1) — Paramount Plus
  • Transformers: The Last Knight (movie) — Paramount Plus

April 12th

  • American Manhunt: The Boston Marathon Bombing — Netflix 
  • Celeste Barber Fine, thanks — Netflix 
  • Operation: Nation — Netflix 
  • Smother-in-Law: Season 2 — Netflix 
  • Atomu No Ko (Season 1) — Disney+
  • Cesar Milan: Better Human Better Dog — Disney+
  • The First Responders (Season 1) — Disney+
  • Justified (Seasons 1-6)  — Disney+
  • Little Mosque on the Prairie (Seasons 1-6)  — Disney+
  • Pandora: Beneath the Paradise (Season 1) — Disney+
  • Rennervations — Disney+
  • Tá Tudo Certo — Disney+
  • Duran Duran: A Hollywood High (Documentary) — Paramount Plus
  • True to Love (Exclusive Content) — Prime Video

April 13th

  • The Boss Baby: Back in the Crib: Season 2 — Netflix 
  • Florida Man — Netflix 
  • Obsession — Netflix 
  • Soltos: Season 3 (Amazon Original) — Prime Video

April 14th

  • Phenomena — Netflix 
  • Queenmaker — Netflix 
  • Queens on the Run — Netflix 
  • Seven Kings Must Die — Netflix 
  • Oswald the Lucky Rabbit (short) — Crave
  • Ozur Dilerim — Crave
  • Just for Laughs 2022: The Gala Specials — Jo Koy — Crave
  • Law & Order: Seasons 11 &12 — Crave
  • Black Lady Sketch Show: Season 4, Episode 1 @11pm ET — Crave
  • The Exhibit: Finding the Next Great Artist: Season 1 — Crave
  • Blade of the 47 Ronin — Crave
  • None — Crave
  • Blindspotting: Season 2, Episodes 1-2 — Crave
  • 21 Jump Street — Crave
  • 22 Jump Street — Crave
  • Boyz N’ The Hood — Crave
  • Casper — Crave
  • Pumping Iron — Crave
  • Raw  Deal– Crave
  • Something Borrowed — Crave
  • Waco: The Aftermath (limited series premiere) — Paramount Plus
  • Personality Crisis: One Night Only (Movie) — Paramount Plus
  • Rugrats (New season) — Paramount Plus
  • The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel: Season 5 (Amazon Original) — Prime Video
  • Salade Grecque (Amazon Original) — Prime Video
  • Caravana Das Drags (Amazon Original) — Prime Video
  • Pearl — Prime Video

April 15th

  • Bolduc, La — Netflix 
  • Doctor Cha — Netflix 
  • Le mirage — Netflix 

April 16th

  • The Nutty Boy Part 2 — Netflix 
  • Barry: Season 4, episodes 1-2 @10pm/10:30pm ET — Crave
  • The 100 Foot Wave: Season 2, Episode 1 @8pm ET — Crave

April 17th

  • Oggy Oggy: Season 2 — Netflix 
  • 752 Is Not A Number — Crave
  • Till — Prime Video

April 18th

  • Better Call Saul: Season 6 — Netflix 
  • How to Get Rich — Netflix 
  • Longest Third Date — Netflix 
  • Bossy Bear (new episode block) — Paramount Plus
  • Cirque Du Soleil Worlds Away (movie) — Paramount Plus
  • Corozonada (The Lottery) (movie) — Paramount Plus
  • Dickie Roberts: Former Child Star (movie) — Paramount Plus
  • Strangers: Prey at Night (movie) — Paramount Plus
  • The Italian Job (movie) — Paramount Plus
  • Alex Borstein: Corsets & Clown Suits (Amazon Original) — Prime Video
  • Neeyat — Prime Video

April 19th

  • Chimp Empire — Netflix 
  • Mighty Morphin Power Rangers: Once & Always — Netflix 
  • Alone (Season 6) — Disney+
  • Doctor Lawyer (Season 1) — Disney+
  • The Owl House (Season 3, all episodes) — Disney+
  • My Family: S1 (New Episode) — Disney+
  • Mascara Contra Caballero (Season 1) — Disney+
  • Mr. Mercedes (Seasons 1-3) [Star] — Disney+
  • Yang Hilang Dalam Cinta/What We Lose to Love (Season 1) — Disney+

April 20th

  • 42 — Netflix 
  • The Diplomat — Netflix 
  • Tooth Pari: When Love Bites — Netflix 
  • Quasi — Disney+
  • Mrs. Davis: Season 1, episodes 1-4 — Crave
  • Fired on Mars: Season 1, episodes 1-2 — Crave
  • Mike Judge’s Beavis & Butt-Head (Season 2) — Paramount Plus
  • Bromates (movie) — Paramount Plus

April 21st

  • 8 Mile — Netflix 
  • A Tourist’s Guide to Love — Netflix 
  • Chokehold — Netflix 
  • Erin Brockovich — Netflix 
  • Indian Matchmaking: Season 3 — Netflix 
  • One More Time — Netflix 
  • Rough Diamonds — Netflix 
  • The Ark: Season 1 — Crave
  • Astro Boy — Crave
  • Jerry Maguire — Crave
  • One Year Off– Crave
  • The Angry Birds Movie — Crave
  • The Craft — Crave
  • The Banshees of Inisherin — Crave
  • Summer with Hope — Crave
  • 1-800-Hot-Nite (movie) — Paramount Plus
  • Dead Ringers (Amazon Original) — Prime Video
  • Judy Blume Forever (Amazon Original) — Prime Video
  • LOL: Chi Ride È Fuori: Season 3 (Amazon Original) — Prime Video
  • Wild Isles: Season 1 (Exclusive Content) — Prime Video
  • Fabio Rabin Comedy Special (Exclusive Content) — Prime Video
  • Vendetta — Prime Video
  • Con Los Años Que Nos Quedan — Prime Video

April 22nd

  • Ada Twist, Scientist: Season 4 — Netflix 
  • Stowaway — Netflix 
  • Dian Fossey: Secrets in the Mist (Season 1) — Disney+
  • Wild Australia (Season 1) — Disney+
  • Nasha (Exclusive Content) — Prime Video
  • ONEFC: One Fight Night 9 — Prime Video

April 23rd

  • Somebody Somewhere: Season 2 @10:30pm ET — Crave
  • From (Season 2) — Paramount Plus

April 24th

  • Gunda — Crave
  • Crank — Prime Video

April 25th

  • John Mulaney: Baby J — Netflix 
  • Matildas: The World at Our Feet
  • Saint X — Disney+
  • Sam: Ein Sachse/Sam: A Saxon (Season 1)  — Disney+
  • The 1619 Project — Disney+
  • Star Wars: Young Jedi Adventures (Season 1, shorts) — Disney+
  • Backtrace (movie) — Paramount Plus
  • Blaze and the Moster Machines (new episode block) — Paramount Plus

April 26th

  • The Good Bad Mother — Netflix 
  • Kiss, Kiss — Netflix 
  • Love After Music — Netflix 
  • Malignant — Crave
  • Anything for Fame (documentary) — Paramount Plus

April 27th

  • Firefly Lane: Season 2 Part 2 — Netflix 
  • The Matchmaker — Netflix 
  • The Nurse — Netflix 
  • Sharkdog: Season 3 — Netflix 
  • Sweet Tooth: Season 2 — Netflix 
  • Love & Death — Crave

April 28th

  • AKA — Netflix 
  • InuYasha: Season 6 — Netflix 
  • King of Collectibles: The Goldin Touch — Netflix 
  • Peter Pan & Wendy — Disney+
  • Call Jane — Crave
  • MVP — Crave
  • The Iron Giant — Crave
  • MTV’s EX on the Beach: Couples: Season 6 — Crave
  • Heavy Rescue 401: Season 7 — Crave
  • Fifty Shades Darker — Crave
  • Split — Crave
  • Anything for Fame (documentary) — Paramount Plus
  • Citadel (Amazon Original) — Prime Video
  • LOL: The Last One Laughing (De): Season 4 (Amazon) — Prime Video

April 30th

  • Clock [Star] — Disney+
  • Fatal Attraction (series premiere) — Paramount Plus
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Mobile Syrup

Toronto mayoral candidate Ana Bailão pledges TTC phone service if elected

Toronto mayoral candidate Ana Bailão has promised to bring cell phone service to the TTC if elected.

“We need cell service on the TTC and we needed it yesterday,” tweeted Bailão on Thursday. “TTC riders shouldn’t have to hold their breath and wait for their train to go above ground to use TTC safety apps and text-a-tip lines.”

She’s referring to a recently launched TTC number, 647-496-1940, through which travellers can report safety concerns via text, as well as the Safe TTC mobile app, which offers similar functionality.

As it stands, though, underground phone service is almost completely unavailable in the TTC despite the required infrastructure being in place since 2015. While all 75 TTC stations are capable of supporting talk, text and data technology, Freedom Mobile is the only carrier that has signed a licensing agreement to enable service.

In recent months, calls have increased for Bell, Rogers and Telus — the so-called carrier “Big 3” — to follow Freedom’s suit amid a rise in violence on the TTC. According to the transit agency’s own data, violence on its vehicles rose by 46 percent in 2022 from the year prior. The city is also reeling from the March 25th murder of 16-year-old Gabriel Magalhaes, who was fatally stabbed at Keele Station in what police are calling an “unprovoked” attack.

While city officials debate what responses should be taken to address the violence, some, including Bailão, are pushing for phone service. It should be noted, however, that Bailão arguably raises her own safety concerns. In 2013, she admitted to drunk driving the year prior, although she only ended up receiving a 12-month licence suspension and fine.

For now, though, the TTC service issue is clearly larger than Bailão. BAI Communications, Inc., the company that installed the infrastructure in the TTC system, has been calling on the Big 3 to sign an agreement to open up their networks to underground transit use. On social media, Deputy Mayor Jennifer McKelvie also shared that City Council “call on all cellphone providers to help our efforts to keep the Toronto Transit Commission safe and ensure cell service for all cellphones is available across our subway system as soon as possible.”

It remains to be seen if and when they might come around, with or without mayoral involvement.

Image credit: Shutterstock

Via: CityNews

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Netflix rumoured to soon let you control games on your TV with your iPhone

Netflix is reportedly working on a feature that will let you use your iPhone to control games on your TV, according to a report from Bloomberg and MacRumors

Steve Moser, a contributing writer at MacRumors, recently shared Netflix app code regarding the upcoming feature (see above). According to Mosser, buried within the iOS Netflix app’s code is the phrase, “A game on your TV needs a controller to play. Do you want to use this phone as a game controller?”

It’s unclear how this would work, but it could hint that Netflix plans to expand to release games designed to be played on a television. It also might be related to its plans to release a cloud gaming streaming service at some point in the future.

Netflix opened its first video game studio last September. The streaming platform first launched its game service in late 2021 and has released 55 games so far, including notable titles like Spiritfarer, Arcanium, Valiant Hearts: Coming Home and more.

Source: MacRumors, Bloomberg

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E3 2023 has officially been cancelled

E3 2023 has officially been cancelled.

IGN first reported the news before the Entertainment Software Association (ESA), the lobbying group that organizes the event, confirmed it. Short for Electronics Entertainment Expo, E3 has been a major trade show for the gaming industry since 1995, bringing together the industry to make key announcements related to games and hardware.

In a statement on social media, the ESA noted that will not be going forward either with the traditional Los Angeles-based physical event or any digital alternative this year. However, it didn’t mention plans for 2024 or beyond, and IGN notes that internal emails the group sent to publishers were similarly unclear about the future. Instead, the ESA simply says it’s looking towards “future E3 events.”

Ultimately, news of E3’s cancellation isn’t exactly surprising, given that the writing had been on the wall for some time. Last year, the ESA revealed plans to return to a physical show in 2023 after skipping 2020 and 2022 entirely and doing a poorly received digital event in between in 2021.

As part of that, ESA had partnered with ReedPop, an experienced organizer behind such big conventions as New York Comic Con and Star Wars Celebration. The two had teased a reimagining for the show, but in the months since, not a single publisher had confirmed attendance. Instead, we had only heard that companies like PlayStation, Nintendo, Xbox, Ubisoft and Sega would not be at the show. The ESA says it intends to continue working with ReedPop in the future.

This all comes after questions surrounding E3’s relevance had been raised over the past several years. Even in 2019, the last pre-pandemic event, PlayStation had already withdrawn from the show, while companies like Xbox and EA did their own events in the surrounding Los Angeles area. In the day and age of digital distribution, many companies have taken to video presentations like Nintendo Direct that can be streamed via YouTube and Twitch. Naturally, this is far cheaper and easier to plan than renting out physical booth space at a convention centre, and it still allows companies to directly reach fans at home. The past few years of the pandemic have only made such digital formats more popular.

One of the biggest examples is Summer Game Fest, a new show from Canada’s Geoff Keighley, the creator of The Game Awards. Keighley used to work with the ESA, but pivoted instead towards creating his own shows, like Summer Game Fest and Gamescom’s Opening Night Live.

“Four years ago, I realized that E3 wasn’t evolving as it needed to compete in a global, digital world. So we started building what’s next,” Keighley tweeted in response to E3’s cancellation. He then plugged this year’s Summer Game Fest, which will take place on June 8th. Also confirmed for that month are the next Xbox & Bethesda Showcase (June 11th) and Ubisoft Forward (June 12th).

It remains to be seen if the ESA will manage to bring back E3 in 2024, but given the general lack of industry interest in recent years, it doesn’t seem likely.

Image credit: ESA

Source: ESA

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Scott Pilgrim to return in anime voiced by original cast

Scott Pilgrim is coming back in the form of one of my favourite mediums — anime.

Not only is this anime helmed by Netflix, the same actors from the 2010 film will also take part in the anime. This includes Brampton, Ontario’s Michael Cera as Scott Pilgrim, Chris Evans, Kieran Culkin, Brandon Routh, Johnny Simmons, Anna Kendrick, Brie Larson, Aubrey Plaza, Mae Whitman and more.

The animation studio Science Saru is behind the project. Some of the studio’s past work includes Star Wars Visions (it created two episodes, Akakiri and T0-B1), Devilman Crybaby, Inu-Oh and more. Personally, I prefer other animation studios like MAPPA, Studio Trigger, and Eight Bit, but hopefully, Science Saru will do Scott Pilgrim justice.

What’s cool about Scott Pilgrim vs. The World is that filming locations include Casa Loma, Lee’s Palace, Sonic Boom and more.

Image credit: Universal Pictures

Source: Netflix

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Google denies using ChatGPT data for Bard training

Google has reportedly launched a new initiative called Gemini, which aims to improve its artificial intelligence (AI) chatbots after the lacklustre debut of its latest offering, Bard.

According to The Information, the tech giant is enlisting the help of its DeepMind division to beat rival OpenAI, but the report also claimed that Google may have trained Bard using data from OpenAI’s ChatGPT, taken from a website called ShareGPT.

A former Google AI researcher, Jacob Devlin, allegedly warned against using the data, claiming it would violate OpenAI’s terms of service and produce answers that looked too similar.

Despite the allegations, Google has denied using the ChatGPT data to train Bard. A spokesperson for the company, Chris Pappas, stated that “Bard is not trained on any data from ShareGPT or ChatGPT,” in a statement given to The Verge. “Unfortunately, all I can share is our statement from yesterday,” he said.

The move to involve DeepMind in Gemini is seen as a significant step, as the AI division has been striving to become more independent from Google for years. However, the collaboration could also signal a renewed effort by Google to improve its AI chatbots and compete with OpenAI.

Source: The Information Via: The Verge

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Apple’s mixed reality headset might not be shown off at WWDC afterall

It looks like the launch of Apple’s often-rumoured augmented reality/virtual reality headset (AR/VR) might be pushed back once again.

According to reliable analyst Ming-Chi Kuo, the reveal of Apple’s anticipated foray into the world of mixed reality might be pushed back beyond this year’s WWDC in June. He goes on to say that he “isn’t very optimistic” that the headset will create an “iPhone moment,” resulting in the company delaying its mass production to the end of the third quarter of 2023.

Shipment forecasts for 2023 also come in lower than previous estimates at just 200,000 to 300,000. In the past, Kuo has said that Apple expected to ship roughly 500,000 mixed reality (MR) headsets in its first year on the market.

The negative news surrounding Apple’s VR/AR headset is starting to add up. For example, a report earlier this week from the New York Times stated that many Apple employees aren’t sold on the mixed reality headset, causing some to leave the project. There are also reports that it’s heavy, not enough apps are ready for the device and that it lacks a “killer app” to really sell the headset.

Apple’s MR headset is expected to feature a ski goggle-like design, a Digital Crown-like dial that allows you to move in and out of VR, and swappable battery packs. The price will likely fall in the $3,000 USD (approximately $4,000 CAD) range.

Apple recently confirmed that WWDC will run from Jun 5th to 9th.

Source: @mingchikuo Via: MacRumors

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T2 wants to let you keep your legacy Twitter status

A new Twitter alternative wants to allow legacy verified Twitter users to keep their checkmarks.

T2 is a “straightforward copy” of Twitter, according to co-founder Gabor Cselle, a former Twitter employee.

The invite-only service is currently offering a feature that will essentially allow users who earned a blue checkmark on Twitter before Elon Musk took over the keep the verification status on T2.

As Engadget reports, T2’s goal is to recreate the “public square” that folded once Musk became CEO.

“We believe in the basics: offering simple tools and creating space for human conversation,” the company states on its website. “From day one, our platform has been built on the belief that trust and safety must be integral, and that a positive user experience is paramount.”

Given only those invited can currently use T2, Engadget reports the verification feature will work for those on T2’s waitlist. Anyone planning on making the move should do so quickly, as Musk said he’d pull legacy verifications on April 1st. 

Image credit: T2

Source: T2 Via: Engadget