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23
Sep

‘League of Legends’ owners open up revenue streams to pro teams


“We recognize that the current ecosystem isn’t consistently profitable yet for team owners or for the league.”

That’s how Riot Games’ directors of eSports Jarred “Bradmore” Kennedy and Whalen “Magus” Rozelle laid out the studio’s plans to funnel more money to professional League of Legends teams in 2017. The changes come after four years of explosive growth across the eSports industry, with League of Legends leading the charge, but it also follows a public spat between coaches and founders about the game’s booming economy.

First, the changes: In a blog post today, Bradmore and Magus detailed plans to share revenue with players and teams, starting with changes to the in-game economy. Beginning with this year’s World Championship tournament in October, Riot will share 25 percent of the revenue it earns from selling Championship skins with the winning players, team and league. (Championship skins are in-game outfits and animations inspired by the winning team, after all). The revenue share will be valid for one year. Riot will also retroactively share revenue with previously victorious players, teams and leagues.

In 2017, teams will be able to receive more revenue from sales of in-game goods, including branded items and eSports promotions. However, to address the immediate need for more money across all 13 leagues, each league will set aside a guaranteed minimum for each of its teams in 2017.

“For example, the EU LCS will have a minimum revenue amount of €100,000 per team for the full season, of which 50 percent will go to players as supplemental income on top of their existing salaries,” the post says.

Starting now, 25 percent of the revenue from all sales of Championship skins and wards will go directly to the Worlds prize pool. The 2016 World Championship Finals’ prize pool starts at a standard $2 million, with $1 million provided to the winning team.

“For context, had this been applied last year, it would have more than doubled the prize pool,” the blog post reads. Additionally, 25 percent of Challenger skin sales will be added to the prize pool at MSI, a high-profile mid-season tournament.

These changes follow a public argument over Riot’s financial acumen and its regular release of major, game-altering updates. Andy “Reginald” Dinh, the owner of North American League of Legends team TSM, recently said in an interview with theScore esports that Riot’s habit of constantly changing the game led to player burnout and made it nearly impossible to properly train. He also noted that it was difficult to secure revenue and investors with such a chaotic foundation. Riot Games co-founder Mark “Tryndamere” Merrill answered these claims in a Reddit post that accused Reginald of mishandling his own finances, to put it lightly.

Source: League of Legends

23
Sep

Samsung already exchanged half of recalled Galaxy Note 7s


A lot of Note 7 owners don’t have to sleep with one eye open anymore, according to Samsung’s latest press release. The company says it has already exchanged half of the Galaxy Note 7s sold in the US that had been turned in through its voluntary recall program. Further, 90 percent of the people who went in for the recall apparently asked for replacement Note 7s, which were released on September 21st, instead of getting another model. Samsung made sure those replacement devices are safe, but if you want to know if you really got one that won’t blow up, check its battery indicator. The safe Note 7s have green battery indicators, though you might have to download a software update to change its hue.
Unfortunately, Samsung didn’t reveal the state of the recall program for other countries. While the device’s battery issue only affects a small number of phones, the recall program will have to deal with 2.5 million phones overall. It doesn’t want to hear about more cases of devices overheating and setting skin and things on fire, after all. If you haven’t exchanged your device yet, get in touch with Samsung or your carrier ASAP wherever you are in the world.

Source: Samsung

23
Sep

How to find out if you’re at risk in Yahoo hack – CNET


The Yahoo hack is the biggest publicly disclosed data breach of all time.

Getty Images

Yahoo on Thursday revealed a hack that compromised 500 million user accounts, and yours might be among them. It’s the largest-ever publicly disclosed data breach, and it could affect a lot more than your email account or Yahoo Fantasy Football group.

Here’s how you can tell if hackers swiped your account information.

Log into your Yahoo account

This might sound obvious, but if you’re like a lot of people, you might not use Yahoo Mail as your primary email account. Yahoo has 1 billion monthly active users on its services overall and just 225 million monthly active users for its Yahoo Mail service, according to figures the company gave CNET in June.

So check the email affiliated with your Yahoo account if you haven’t already. Yahoo has started sending out notifications to users, and you should be receiving one at that account if you were affected by the data breach.

Change your password

Yahoo is recommending that people who haven’t changed their password since 2014 do so now. The company says the passwords that hackers stole were encrypted — scrambled up with a tool called bcrypt. This kind of encryption can potentially be broken with enough persistence, said Brett McDowell, executive director of the FIDO Alliance, a nonprofit group that vets login systems.

Related story
  • Yahoo hit in worst hack ever, 500 million accounts swiped

That’s especially true “when the attacker can make relatively accurate guesses at what the password might be,” McDowell said. “Yahoo users with relatively weak or obvious passwords should take the recommended precautions.”

I’m looking at you, “passw0rd.”

Ask yourself, ‘Did I use this password somewhere else?’

It’s a common habit. Use the same password for lots of different accounts. If this breach has anything to teach you, it’s that this is a terrible idea.

If you recycled your Yahoo password on a different account, go change your password on that account too. The hackers who have your password could easily try it on a whole bunch of different websites — think bank websites or health insurance websites — to try to access information beyond your Yahoo account.

Don’t let them.

Delete old accounts you don’t use

While you’re thinking about all the accounts you have out there, ask yourself why you even have them. Are you still using that wedding planning website, five years after your nuptials? No, I didn’t think so. Delete that account! Have you fallen out of the habit of posting Harry Potter fanfic on that one goofy website you loved 10 years ago? Delete that account too!

That way, when random websites are compromised, you don’t have to ask yourself whether you’re at risk.

23
Sep

Nintendo Pokemon Go Plus review – CNET


You want to be the very best, like no one ever was. But you don’t want to be nose-deep in your phone instead of interacting with the world.

That’s why Nintendo devised another way to play the uber-popular Pokemon Go: a $35, £35 or AU$50 wearable gadget that can quietly alert you to nearby Pokemon.

The Pokemon Go Plus released on September 16, and so far, it’s exactly what we thought: a dead-simple way of catching Pokemon.

You wear it like a wristband, or pin it to your pocket, purse, lapel or sleeve. It easily pairs with your compatible iPhone or Android phone over a Bluetooth Low Energy connection, and connects to the Pokemon Go app.

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The Pokemon Go Plus.

Nintendo

Then, instead of constantly pulling out your phone to scan for Pokemon, you just walk around town like a normal human being. Whenever you’d normally stumble across a Pokemon, the Go Plus lights up and vibrates instead.

Press that green light-up button, and — without needing to pull out your phone — the game will automatically throw a Pokeball to try to catch it for you. (Just so long as you’ve caught a Pokemon of that type before.) Nice, strong, distinct patterns of vibrations let you know whether you’ve caught or missed the Pokemon, even if you’re keeping the Go Plus in a pocket.

Pokemon Go Plus keeps you catching them all…
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It works for PokeStops, too: if you walk past one, the device lights up blue. Press it, and you can harvest the same items (balls, potions, berries) that would have been waiting for you if you’d activated it from within the game.

The Plus should also keep track of your steps (which count towards hatching eggs), though we haven’t tested that yet.

You can even use the Pokemon Go Plus as a memory aid: if you walk out of range of your smartphone (roughly 30 feet, or 10 meters), it’ll vibrate and light up red to let you know you left your phone behind. Nintendo says the included button battery (a standard CR2032 cell) should last about 100 days on average.

Sound good? Just know that you may have some trouble actually finding one.

Even though Nintendo pushed back the device’s release to September — it was originally supposed to ship in July — there still doesn’t seem to be enough of the devices to satisfy demand. In the United States, Amazon and GameStop sold out of the devices within a few hours of them going on sale on September 16 — though you might still try try your local GameStop to be sure.

A closer look at Nintendo’s Pokemon Go Plus
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It’s not like you need a Pokemon Go Plus to play the game, though.

Especially when later this year, there’ll be an even more convenient way to catch Pokemon: with an Apple Watch. The developers say a version of Pokemon Go for Android Wear watches is pretty likely as well.

We’ll bring you our full, rated review of the Pokemon Go Plus in the days to come.

Why Pokemon Go is so popular

Why do we love the Pikachu-catching, ball-chucking, Pokedex-filling phenomenon? It’s all down to how little guidance the game gives you, argues CNET’s Luke Westaway.

by Luke Westaway

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23
Sep

Google opens Daydream VR platform to developers


From its debut at Google I/O, Daydream seemed like a much more ambitious smartphone-based VR software platform than the earlier Cardboard system. The countdown clock for the former’s public release began after a Bloomberg article back in August hinted at its imminent launch. While we’re still waiting for the first Daydream phones to come out in fall, Google’s VR SDK version 1.0 supporting it has officially left beta and is available to download on their developer site.

If you want to get your app out on launch day, you’ll want to apply for the Daydream Access Program: It seems Google is carefully controlling what will be available when the platform goes live. The VR SDK supports both the Cardboard API and the more complex Daydream one, which includes the platform’s proprietary controller. Google partnered with Unity and Unreal to get native integration, with all the binaries and plugins available through their developer blog post.

But how, you ask, will prospective programmers be able to tinker with their apps before “Daydream-ready” phones are released in the next few months? The only one approved to handle the SDK is the Nexus 6P, but it’s not a perfect fix. Expect the device to run very hot and “thermally throttle CPU and GPU performance after a short period of use, depending on workload,” according to Google’s developer kit setup.

Source: Google VR developers blog

23
Sep

Japan’s LED basketball court looks like a Skrillex fever dream


Japan and high-tech go hand in hand, so it shouldn’t be a surprise that its newest basketball court follows that theme to a tee. The hardwood LED court surface is the world’s first to be used in professional league play, according to Japanese publication 47 News (Japanese). That makes it a bit different from Nike’s similar practice court in Shanghai from a few years back. As you can see from the tweets embedded below — spotted by Kotaku — the production is pretty nuts. Going all out for the halftime show might be expected, but even the pre-game run is crazy, with pyro, strobe lights and more. Good game, Yoyogi National Gymnasium.

コートがLEDになっとる! pic.twitter.com/j9k6W06oga

— 井手康博(ニューワールド) (@yasuide) September 22, 2016

超満員のBリーグ開幕戦、演出とLEDコートがとにかくすごい。
こんな環境でバスケの試合が行われてるのを観れて嬉しい🙌#Bリーグ #開幕戦 pic.twitter.com/uFuT26bYtW

— Kento (@kentobento77) September 22, 2016

LEDビジョンコートやばすぎww pic.twitter.com/OvuHwLh0FL

— しゅう (@baskeone1) September 22, 2016

Via: Kotaku

Source: 47News (Japanese)

23
Sep

Drone surfing is here! This drone is so powerful it tows people on water


Drone surfing is a thing now.

What’s that even mean? Well, watch the video below to see a person riding the waves while tethered to a high-powered drone from Washington-based drone manufacturer Freefly Studios. It has made an $18,000 drone that can tow people across an ocean. The company claimed its new ALTA 8 model is capable of doing up to four tows per battery pack, and each tow lasts about 30 seconds.

Freefly, which has a decade of experience in the professional cinematography industry, recently started developing innovative aerial products to meet the needs of cinema professionals, and the ALTA 8 is its latest offering. During development, the drone went through a tonne of component and system-level tests designed to make sure it passed strict quality control levels.

The ALTA 8 is water-resistant, Freefly said, as it features a lightweight molded-plastic enclosure that covers and protects the flight control and power distribution board from outdoor elements. And with impressive 18-inch props and an optimised propulsion system, the drone’s lightweight carbon fiber frame is sturdy enough to carry heavy payloads (see the chart below).

Freefly’s site has more details on the drone. If you have plenty of cash to spare, like to dabble in drone videography, and consider yourself a skilled surfer or water skier, then this is the machine for you.

23
Sep

New version of Minecraft that’s just for learning will launch 1 November


Minecraft isn’t just a block-based game. It’s also a learning tool.

Seriously. Educators have been using a version of Minecraft for the classroom, called MinecraftEdu, since 2011 in more than 40 countries to help teach all types of subjects, from math and physics to history and language arts. Students who use it are able to develop skills in collaboration, problem solving, communication, digital citizenship, and more.

Well, when Microsoft bought developer Mojang and Minecraft for $2.5 billion in 2014, it also acquired MinecraftEdu. The company has been retooling and rebranding MinecraftEdu and plans to officially launch it as a new title on 1 November. Called Minecraft: Education Edition, it will feature enhanced maps with a coordinate system to help teachers and students navigate together.

“We’re announcing Minecraft: Education Edition. Of course, every Minecraft player learns essential life-skills like tree-punching and good Creeper-defence but, when used in the right way, Minecraft can help people around the world to learn lots more,” explained Mojang in a blog post from earlier this year, when it first announced the title would launch in beta this summer.

After a summer of test runs, the full version of Minecraft: Education Edition is almost ready to go live. When it does, the service will cost $5 a membership per user. The beta, called Early Access edition, is still free until November. The MinecraftEdu team said over 35,000 students and teachers around the world have been testing the service sin beta since the beginning of the summer.

The official consumer release will require OS X El Capitan or Windows 10, plus a free Office 365 account to use. You can see a list of standout features from the Minecraft Education site. Also, that site offers starter worlds, tutorials, and free lesson plans in subjects.

Watch the trailer video below to see what else makes this classroom-geared version of Minecraft unique and ideal for learning. Oh, and Microsoft said all existing MinecraftEdu customers will get the first year of free of charge.

23
Sep

The Complete NES Bluetooth Controller Kit gives your mobile gaming a retro edge (16 per cent off)


It’s been decades since their release, and gaming on the NES is still going strong. While true gamers never outgrow the classics, Bluetooth technology has made wires obsolete.

Now, you can finally make your retro gaming wireless thanks to The Complete NES Bluetooth Controller Kit, now on sale for just £37.79 ($49.99 USD).

Here’s one big feature: use the included Xtander to connect your controller to your smartphone, and play all your mobile games with retro style. You can also plug in the included Retro Receiver into your NES console, and you’re ready to start gaming wirelessly.

On top of that, the Retro Receiver is compatible with PS3, PS4, Wiimote, and Wii U Pro, so you can utilize your controller on your favorite consoles. With wires finally out of the picture, you won’t have to waste precious time untangling your controllers from one another.

And the controller’s generous Bluetooth range, you can game without having to set your console up in front of the couch. Finally, you have a way to play through Super Mario Kart and Contra without accidentally yanking out your controller. And the controller comes with a built-in CPU and FLASH memory chip for upgradeable firmware.

The SNE/NES Bluetooth Controller & Retro Receiver Set normally retails for £44.60, but Pocket-lint readers can get it for a special discount. For a limited time, the SNE/NES Bluetooth Controller & Retro Receiver Set is on sale for only £37.79.

23
Sep

The CompTIA Core Certification Bundle can boost your job-hunting prospects (95 per cent off)


While experience helps, moving up in the tech world sometimes requires having a certification or two under your belt. Of course, not all certifications are created equal, and few carry as much weight as one from CompTIA.

Whether you’re looking to break into network administration or land a role in cybersecurity, the CompTIA Core Certification Bundle can get you there. On sale for only £37.02 ($49 USD), this course bundle will prepare you to ace several CompTIA certification exams in hardware, network security, and administration.

Here are some course highlights:

  • CompTIA A+ Certification Prep: The A+ is a comprehensive and vendor-neutral certification that covers the most popular hardware and software used in business as well as IT infrastructures. This course will teach you how to install, maintain, and troubleshoot each of these components.
  • CompTIA Security+ Study Guide: A Security+ certification demonstrates an individual’s expertise with infrastructure security, cryptography, and other elements essential to safeguarding networks from attack. If you’re looking to pursue a career in network security, this is the certification you need.
  • CompTIA Network+ Study Guide: This course covers CompTIA’s Network+ N10-006 certification, an industry-leader for network administration and support. With this course, you’ll master the hardware and software critical to keeping networks up and running.

Regardless of your experience level, the CompTIA Core Certification Bundle is a solid pick for anyone looking to climb the tech career ladder. Retailing £782, this course bundle is on sale to Pocket-lint readers for only £37.02, taking over 90 per cent off its retail price.