Square Enix discounts Dragon Quest VIII, Secret of Mana and some Final Fantasy titles in the Play Store

If you’d like to download just about any Square Enix title from the Google Play Store, odds are you’ll have to shell out a few bucks. But if you’ve been waiting for the price to drop on a particular game from the developer, now is your chance to save. Right now in the Google Play Store, you can grab a number of great games for cheap, including some Final Fantasy titles, Secret of Mana and even Dragon Quest VIII.
These discounts aren’t anything groundbreaking, but each one will save you a few bucks. Here’s the full list of Square Enix titles on sale:
- Final Fantasy Tactics: War of the Lions – $9.70 (normally $13.99)
- Final Fantasy III – $7.99 (normally $15.99)
- Final Fantasy IV – $7.99 (normally $15.99)
- Final Fantasy V – $7.99 (normally $15.99)
- Final Fantasy VI – $7.99 (normally $15.99)
- Secret of Mana – $3.99 (normally $8.99)
- Dragon Quest VIII – $12.99 (normally $19.99)
We’ll let you know if Square Enix discounts any more games in the future, but we have to admit this is a pretty decent list so far. The majority of these games state that they’re on sale for a limited time, so you’ll need to head to the Play Store sometime soon in order to get the discount.
If you find any other Square Enix games on sale, be sure to let us know in the comments.
Apple Seeds Third OS X 10.10.5 Yosemite Beta to Developers
Apple today seeded the third beta of OS X 10.10.5 to developers, nearly one week after seeding the second 10.10.5 beta and more than a month after releasing OS X 10.10.4 to the public.
Today’s beta, build 14F25a, can be downloaded through the Software Update mechanism in the Mac App Store or through the Apple Developer Center.
The first OS X 10.10.5 beta did not appear to include any consumer-facing changes, so it’s likely that this update focuses on behind-the-scenes bug fixes and performance enhancements.
Because we’re just a couple of months away from the public release of OS X 10.11 El Capitan, OS X 10.10.5 will likely be one of the last updates to Yosemite, designed to prepare the operating system for its imminent retirement. It will, of course, continue to get bug fixes and minor repairs even after El Capitan’s release to patch security flaws and fix other issues.
Over the course of its lifespan, OS X Yosemite has received four updates. The first two brought bug fixes and security improvements, while OS X 10.10.3, the most significant update to Yosemite, introduced the new Photos app, Force Touch APIs, new emoji features, and more.
OS X 10.10.4, the current version of OS X Yosemite, introduced multiple bug fixes and under-the-hood performance improvements, including the removal of the problematic Discoveryd process.
Samsung kills Boxee’s secret tablet remote project, lays off staff
If you were hoping for Boxee’s glorious return as part of Samsung, brace yourself for crushing disappointment ahead. Samsung has reportedly cancelled the group’s next-generation remote project and laid off much of the Boxee team, according to Variety. The team’s project, dubbed internally as Perfect Experience, or “PX,” was apparently focused on developing a tablet-like remote that would sit on your coffee table and let anyone in your household search and control programming. It was supposed to include a guide that brought together both TV listings and content from streaming services. That’s something Boxee has been working towards over the course of its last two set-top boxes, the cube-like Boxee Box and the disastrous Boxee TV, whose main selling point was an (incredibly buggy) cloud DVR feature for over-the-air TV shows.
Samsung paid around $30 million for the Boxee team and its technology two years ago after the company ran out of money and the Boxee TV fell flat. Naturally, Samsung wouldn’t comment directly on the report, but a rep noted that “in order to continuously innovate, we constantly invest in areas of our business that enhance the Samsung experience for our consumers.”
As Variety tells it, Samsung initially gave the the Boxee team plenty of resources and helped them reach around 100 employees. But a combination of delays (it was supposed to debut at CES and be bundled with this year’s TVs), a lack of cooperation from content owners, who didn’t want to make their wares available directly within Samsung’s app, and general distrust from Samsung’s Korean home team led to the PX project falling apart. The idea of a tablet living room centerpiece actually makes sense today — I’ve ever warmed up to the Wii U’s gamepad — so hopefully Samsung finds some way to keep the spirit of this project alive.
Filed under:
Home Entertainment, HD, Samsung
Source:
Variety
Tags: Boxee, hdpostcross, PX, samsung
Here’s what our readers think of the Fitbit Surge
Even as other companies plow ahead with their plans to put a smartwatch on every wrist, Fitbit is staying focused on fitness tracking via simpler wearables like the Flex and the Charge/Charge HR. But that doesn’t mean the company is content with being outshone. With the Surge, Fitbit upped its game not just by including standard activity and sleep tracking, but also by packing in a GPS radio for more serious runners. However, despite those ambitions, we found it mildly cumbersome and lacking compared to more robust options from Polar, Garmin and TomTom. Indeed, we recommended it mostly for users “willing to sacrifice some style and comfort in the name of best-in-class step counting and sleep tracking.” But judging from the reviews on the Surge’s product page, it hasn’t quite mastered the latter either.
“Feels good to the touch and is very comfortable.” — metric152
Readers were pretty frank with their complaints about the Surge’s look and size, with andyaddict calling it “bulky and obtuse” while Yogibara found it downright ugly thanks to its wedge-shaped form factor. Still, despite describing it as “a big, fat watch,” falleninsea says it “looks good on the wrist,” while metric152 finds the strap is “the best Fitbit has to offer” and the body may be “quite a bit larger, but not uncomfortable.”
Of course, given the recall of the Fitbit Force early last year, the big elephant in the room is how well the Surge gets along with your skin. And although most users seem to have had no problem with it, Yogibara claims the Surge gave him “a terrible rash on my wrist,” even after he followed the company’s care instructions. Meanwhile, andyaddict had an entirely different sort of issue, complaining of a “funk” emanating from the three buttons on the face, thanks to water getting caught in them.
“I ran the same route every time and the Fitbit spat out different numbers every run.” — andyaddict
Get past its look and feel, though, and the Fitbit Surge has plenty to offer the casual fitness fan, with metric152 liking its “simple and straightforward” menus and battery life “ahead of Android Wear.” Falleninsea was happy with its four to five days of battery, which didn’t quite match that of the Fitbit One, but at least blew his Moto 360 out of the water. But more advanced users might find the Surge’s limitations a bit frustrating, with Yogibara noting its “GPS acquisition is slow” and ARbatman doesn’t even use the GPS because “it really sucks the battery.” Those who value accuracy are likely to be even more disappointed, with andyaddict noting the step and distance tracking didn’t match up to his treadmill, and metric152 finds it “isn’t as precise as the H7 Polar chest band” in a direct comparison. In fact, while using an elliptical, he noticed “the reading was 5-15 bpm off from the chest band,” although the calorie count was “not perfect, but very close” with only a 10-calorie difference between the two devices.
Overall, users seem to feel that the Surge isn’t the best Fitbit has to offer right now, with falleninsea recommending that users go with the Charge “if they are looking for a Fitbit with a display that you want on your wrist.” He doesn’t think the Surge is worth the $120 premium, and andyaddict ultimately finds it “has a lot of issues for something that runs $250.”
Was the $250 purchase worth it for you, or a dud? Let us know by writing a review here. Or let your feelings be known on other products like the Pebble Time or the LG Watch Urbane, and your user review may be featured in a future post.
Tags: Fitbit, Fitbit Charge, Fitbit Surge, fitness, GPS watch, reviewroundup, Surge, userreviewroundup, wearable
Reddit bans some of its most well-known racist communities
Former Reddit CEO Yishan Wong predicted that racist and sexist users who agitated to push Ellen Pao out the door were actually sealing their own fates, and it appears that has happened. Newly-returned leader Steve Huffman just announced that as a part of its new Content Policy, Reddit will do more than just quarantine some of the most vile content hubs its members have built — it will ban some of them. That includes r/Coontown and some of its spinoffs (but apparently leaves other gems to be shoved behind the curtain), which Huffman says are getting chopped because they “exist solely to annoy other redditors, prevent us from improving Reddit, and generally make Reddit worse for everyone else.”
Source:
Steve Huffman (Reddit)
Tags: ban, contentpolicy, coontown, quanrantine, racist, reddit, spez, SteveHuffman
Google Fiber is heading to San Antonio
Perhaps as soon as next year, more than 1.4 million people in San Antonio will have another option for internet and television service.
Today, Google announced plans to move forward with Google Fiber’s expansion into its largest city yet. The reason that Google chose San Antonio for expansion is due to the “thriving tech landscape” in the city. San Antonio’s Bexar BiblioTech is the first all-digital public library and plenty of startups are calling the city home. President Barack Obama’s Tech Hire and Connect Home initiatives also have ties to San Antonio; therefore, jobs and innovation are bound to lead to a burgeoning tech scene.
Google did not say when the service will actually be available. The company must first design the fiber network over the next several months to figure out where thousands of miles of fiber-optic cables will go. After that, the people of San Antonio can experience an internet connection of 1,000 megabits per second.
San Antonio is joined by Raleigh-Durham, Charlotte, Atlanta, Nashville, and Salt Lake City as the other cities that are in the process of receiving Google Fiber’s services. This will build upon the three cities — Kansas City, Austin, Provo — where Google Fiber is already available. Google is also exploring launches in Phoenix, San Jose, and Portland.
Source: Google
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