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New PUBG Game Announced




Another PUBG Game Confirmed, But It's Not A Sequel

Another Playerunknown's Battlegrounds game is in development, the game's publisher has announced. The as-yet-untitled game is helmed by a new studio called Striking Distance, which has appointed ex-Call of Duty and Dead Space developer Glen Schofield as its CEO.
The project is seemingly in its infancy, so little is known about the game at present. PUBG Corp.'s press release states the game is an "original narrative experience within the PUBG universe," while Schofield hints the game might not be a battle royale title. He said: "As a creative, the freedom to explore the PUBG universe has me excited about the possibilities, which I view as beyond the battle royale genre." Schofield went on to tweet that the new game is not a sequel to PUBG.
PUBG began life as an Arma 2 mod, before being spun off into its own battle royale title--in early access on PC--in early 2017. It later came to both Xbox One and PS4.
PUBG has also been one of the most influential games of the 21st century. It remains a huge game in its own right, but it has also inspired and influenced what is possibly the industry's biggest trend right now in the battle royale genre, including successful titles like Fortnite and Call of Duty: Black Ops 4.
References: gamespot

Jony lve'e next chapter after Apple



If one man has changed the way we see the gadgets we use every day it is Jony Ive. Now he is leaving Apple and on this week's Tech Tent we assess his contribution to the look and feel of consumer technology.
The man behind the design of the iPhone, the iPod and countless other i-products was just another young designer at Apple's Cupertino headquarters when Steve Jobs returned to the company in 1997.
  • Stream the latest Tech Tent podcast on BBC Sounds
Back then Apple's computers stood out because of their software. They were the only serious alternative to the ubiquitous Windows PCs - but their hardware was just as dull.
Together, Ive and Jobs came up with their first big hit - the iMac, a computer that was both colourful and cute.
Prof Jeremy Myerson from the Royal College of Art says Jony Ive is to industrial design and computing what David Hockney is to painting and Christian Dior to fashion.
"Before Johnny Ive, computers were made of beige or grey plastic, they were cheaply made," he recalls.
"The wonder was in what they could do functionally, not how they felt emotionally or what they looked like. And Jony Ive changed all that dramatically."
What Ive and Jobs shared was an obsession with detail - they even wanted the inside of a product, invisible to the user, to be consistent with Apple's design aesthetic.
You can see that philosophy in the often-parodied product videos where Ive describes the Apple Watch as "the most personal product we've ever made" or raves about the contrast between the iPhone 4's "textured back and its highly-polished chamfered edge".
  • Five Jony Ive designs you probably don't know
  • Who is Jony Ive?
  • Sir Jony Ive to leave Apple
His quiet, almost soporific voiceovers may have been much mocked, but Prof Myerson says every other firm has rushed to imitate Apple's approach to technology.
"What he's done, he's made it personal, he's made it cool, he's made it attractive, and other companies have had no choice but to jump into that game."
With many products, it was design not technology that made them winners. Apple was not the first company to bring out a touchscreen phone or Bluetooth earbuds,
But the iPhone and the AirPods immediately convinced millions of people that this was how they wanted a gadget to look and work.
In recent years, however, it has sometimes seemed that Apple's obsession with the cleanest of lines in every product has come at the expense of usability.
Buyers of the MacBook, which has just one USB-C port, have been forced to buy a clutch of adapters to plug in devices. Problems with the laptop's keyboard have also been linked to what one pundit described as "Ive's obsession with device thinness and minimalism".
Sir Jonathan - he was knighted in 2012 - is stressing that he will continue to be involved in projects at Apple. As one wag tweeted: "Jony Ive will still work with Apple but it will require a special adapter."
Still, if he never designs another breakthrough Apple product he will go down in history as the genius behind the most profitable product in history, the iPhone.
Not bad for someone who started his career at a small UK consultancy designing toilets and toothbrushes.
Also on this week's programme:
In an extraordinarily frank interview Nokia's chief technology officer Marcus Weldon attacks its rival Huawei over what he describes as "sloppy" security.
The interview was too frank for Nokia - after reading an account of what Mr Wheldon had said, the company issued a statement saying his comments "did not reflect the official position of Nokia".
And as a report says machines will replace 20 million manufacturing jobs by 2030, we visit an event where robots that can do everything from walk upstairs to perform complex surgery are on display.
References:  BBC

US dan China Agree To Restart Trande Talks

G20 summit: Trump and Xi agree to restart US-China trade talks

The US and China have agreed to resume trade talks, easing a long row that has contributed to a global economic slowdown.
US President Donald Trump and China's President Xi Jinping reached agreement at the G20 summit in Japan.
Mr Trump also said he would allow US companies to continue to sell to the Chinese tech giant Huawei, in a move seen as a significant concession.
Mr Trump had threatened additional trade sanctions on China.
However after the meeting on the sidelines of the main G20 summit in Osaka, he confirmed that the US would not be adding tariffs on $300bn (£236bn) worth of Chinese imports.
He also said he would continue to negotiate with Beijing "for the time being".
And at a subsequent press conference, the US president declared that US technology companies could again sell to China's Huawei - effectively reversing a ban imposed last month by the US commerce department.
The ban prevented US tech firms from selling to Huawei, crippling the Chinese firm's ability to get critical American technology to help it make its products.
  • A quick guide to the US-China trade war
  • Who loses out in the US-China trade war?
  • G20 summit: UK calls for global climate action
President Trump has positioned his trade talks with Xi Jinping as a win for the US - but he may have also given Beijing exactly what it wants on Huawei.
It is still not clear whether what Mr Trump has announced is a complete reversal - but if it is, it would be a significant concession by the US on a company that Washington has said is a threat to national security.
The resumption of talks and pressing the pause button on more tariffs will be seen in the short term as positive for markets and American businesses.
Those have already complained about the cost of further tariffs saying that if they had gone ahead - American consumers would have ended up paying something like $12bn more in higher prices
Chinese businesses have been suffering too - the trade war has hit investment plans, business confidence, and exports in the world's second largest economy
But pressing pause doesn't mean the trade war is over. Tariffs on hundreds of billions of dollars worth of goods are still in place. And the two sides still have much to agree on.
Washington wants Beijing to fundamentally change the way China's economy has grown over the last four decades - get rid of subsidies to state owned companies, open up the domestic market and most importantly, hold China to account if it fails to deliver on any of these commitments.
But Beijing has already publicly said that it won't budge on issues of principle or bow to US pressure.
How the two sides close that gap will be the real test of any trade truce. For now - it is a positive thing that they're talking again. But talking can only take you so far.

How has the US-China trade dispute escalated?

US and China - the world's two largest economies - have been fighting a damaging trade war over the past year.
Mr Trump accused China of stealing intellectual property and forcing US firms to share trade secrets in order to do business in China.
China, in turn, said the US's demands for business reform were unreasonable.
The feud escalated in the months leading up to the summit, after talks between the two countries collapsed in May.

How will the current breakthrough change the situation?

The truce signals a pause in hostilities between the world's largest economies, rather than a resolution of the year-long dispute which has caused market turbulence and dragged on global growth.
Speaking after his meeting with Mr Xi at the summit, the US president said negotiations were "back on track".
"We had a very good meeting with President Xi of China, excellent, I would say excellent, as good as it was going to be," Mr Trump told reporters. "We discussed a lot of things and we're right back on track and we'll see what happens."
In a statement, China's foreign ministry said negotiators from both sides would discuss the specific details, but did not elaborate.
China's official state news agency Xinhua also quoted Mr Xi as saying: "China and the US have highly integrated interests and extensive co-operation areas and they should not fall into so-called traps of conflict and confrontation."

Has the Huawei dispute been resolved?

The clampdown on dealing with Huawei has been a high profile part of the wider trade conflict between the US and China.
Mr Trump's decision to allow US companies to continue to sell to the Chinese technology firm is being seen as a substantial concession to the Chinese.
The US president is reversing a US ban imposed last month on Huawei buying US goods without a licence - including from Google, which is crucial to many of the Chinese firm's products.
  • How damaging is the Huawei row?
  • US Huawei supplier resumes some shipments
The ban had been expected to cost the firm $30bn (£24bn) in revenue this year, and sparked fears of a "technology cold war" between the two nations.
But American companies have also been stopped from buying from Huawei, because Washington says its technology poses a national security risk.
So the latest US move does not bring a complete end to the dispute. Mr Trump said the Huawei situation would be dealt with "at the very end" of trade talks between the US and China.
References:  BBC

Kim Kardashian Responds to #KimOhNo Backlash

Kim Kardashian Responds to Concern Over the Name of Her New Shapewear Line Kimono

When Kim Kardashian announced her new shapewear line called Kimono (as a play on her first name) on June 25, some expressed concern over use of the term for the traditional Japanese garment, even spawning the hashtag #KimOhNo on Twitter. And now Kardashian has responded.

On June 27, the businesswoman addressed these critiques in a statement to the New York Times, which reads: “I understand and have deep respect for the significance of the kimono in Japanese culture and have no plans to design or release any garments that would in any way resemble or dishonor the traditional garment. I made the decision to name my company Kimono, not to disassociate the word from its Japanese roots but as a nod to the beauty and detail that goes into a garment. Filing a trademark is a source identifier that will allow me to use the word for my shapewear and intimates line but does not preclude or restrict anyone, in this instance, from making kimonos or using the word kimono in reference to the traditional garment. My solutionwear brand is built with inclusivity and diversity at its core and I’m incredibly proud of what’s to come.”

This comes in response to fan comments questioning the use of the word on her original social media announcement. For example, user @takano_meg commented on Twitter, “For Japanese, Kimono is really important culture and we are proud of having this culture. Even now, I often wear Kimono not only special events but also normal days. I hope everyone know Kimono as a Japanese traditional and beautiful clothes…”

Still others praised the mogul’s attention to inclusiveness (the line includes nine colors to match various skin tones and sizes ranging from XXS to 4XL).

References: usmagazine

AC Milan Excluded From Europa League

AC Milan excluded from 2019/20 Europa League over FFP breach

AC Milan have been excluded from the 2019/20 Europa League for a breach of Financial Fair Play regulations, the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) has ruled.
The Serie A club have been banned from participating in any of UEFA's European club competitions next season for failing to comply to UEFA spending regulations in the period between 2015 and 2018.
Milan finished fifth in Serie A last season and will be replaced by sixth-placed Roma, who will go directly into the group stages of the Europa League.
Seventh-placed Torino will receive a spot in the final round of Europa League qualifying.
A statement from CAS said: "AC Milan is excluded from participating in the UEFA Club Competitions of the sporting season 2019/2020 as a consequence of the breach of its FFP break-even obligations during the 2015/2016/2017 and the 2016/2017/2018 monitoring periods".
UEFA initially gave AC Milan a two-year FFP ban last summer, but the club successfully appealed against that sanction at CAS, only for the seven-time European champions to be referred to UEFA's financial watchdog again in April.
Under UEFA's rules, clubs are not allowed to make losses of more than £27m over three seasons, a cap UEFA believed AC Milan breached between 2015 and 2017 when they spent £200m on transfers.
But AC Milan managed to persuade sport's highest court that their finances would improve under the ownership of American hedge fund Elliott Management Corporation, which assumed control of the club last summer when former owner Li Yonghong missed a repayment on the loan he had taken to buy the club in 2017.
That CAS decision gave them until June 2021 to balance their books or receive an automatic one-year ban from European club football.
But April's referral for a second FFP breach could have seen the club banned from Europe for two years, which clearly forced AC Milan back to the negotiating table - where they have agreed to serve a one-year ban now - while they tidy up their finances under the direction of former Arsenal chief executive Ivan Gazidis.
References: skysports

Epic Games Boss Defends PC Exclusive Strategy

Epic Games Boss Defends PC Exclusive Strategy

One of the biggest storylines in the gaming industry over the past year is how Epic is going after Steam with its own store and paying for exclusives. Now, Epic founder Tim Sweeney has offered some insight into why the company is pushing so hard.
In a Twitter thread, Sweeney spoke about how Epic believes pursuing exclusives is the "only strategy" to change the current 70/30 revenue split between publishers and storefronts. The 70/30 model is considered to be the industry standard, with 70 percent of revenue going to developers/publishers and 30 percent to the storefront.
However, Epic's new Epic Games Store only takes 12 percent, giving 88 percent to publishers/developers. This makes the story theoretically more attractive, and on top of that, Epic is paying some studios to release their games as timed-exclusives.
"We believe exclusives are the only strategy that will change the 70/30 status quo at a large enough scale to permanently affect the whole game industry," Sweeney said.
Sweeney went on to say that other independent games retailers have done "great work" in recent years, but none of them have been able to even hit 5 percent of Steam's scale (outside of the stores run by huge gaming publishers). While Epic's pursuit of exclusives might make the company unpopular with some subset of Steam users, the strategy of pursuing exclusives does work, Sweeney maintains.
Sweeney went on to say that the 30 percent "store tax" can erase any profits a developer might see, which creates a "disastrous situation." If the Epic Games Store can become No. 2 behind Steam, or if it can spur change on Steam with regards to its revenue split, the result would be a "major wave of reinvestment in game development and a lowering of costs," he said.
Ultimately, pursuing exclusives as Epic has done is a benefit to gamers in the long-run, according to Sweeney. It may not be easy to get to a new, better place, however. "There are LOTS of challenges along the way," Sweeney admitted.
You can read Sweeney's full comments on exclusivity below.
One of the latest Epic Games Store exclusives is Shenmue III, and like with other titles that took Epic's money, people are not happy about it.

Tim Sweeney Statement On Epic Games Store Exclusives

"We believe exclusives are the only strategy that will change the 70/30 status quo at a large enough scale to permanently affect the whole game industry.
For example, after years of great work by independent stores (excluding big publishers like EA-Activision-Ubi), none seem to have reached 5% of Steam’s scale. Nearly all have more features than Epic; and the ability to discount games is limited by various external pressures.
This leads to the strategy of exclusives which, though unpopular with dedicated Steam gamers, do work, as established by the major publisher storefronts and by the key Epic Games store releases compared to their former Steam revenue projections and their actual console sales.
In judging whether a disruptive move like this is reasonable in gaming, I suggest considering two questions: Is the solution proportionate to the problem it addresses, and are gamers likely benefit from the end goal if it’s ultimately achieved?
The 30% store tax usually exceeds the entire profits of the developer who built the game that’s sold. This is a disastrous situation for developers and publishers alike, so I believe the strategy of exclusives is proportionate to the problem.
If the Epic strategy either succeeds in building a second major storefront for PC games with an 88/12 revenue split, or even just leads other stores to significantly improve their terms, the result will be a major wave of reinvestment in game development and a lowering of costs.
Will the resulting 18% increase in developer and publisher revenue benefit gamers? Such gains are generally split among (1) reinvestment, (2) profit, and (3) price reduction. The more games are competing with each other, the more likely the proceeds are to go to (1) and (3).
So I believe this approach passes the test of ultimately benefitting gamers after game storefronts have rebalanced and developers have reinvested more of their fruits of their labor into creation rather than taxation.
Of course, there are LOTS of challenges along the way, and Epic is fully committed to solving all problems that arise for gamers are for our partners as the Epic Games store grows."
References: gamespot

Missing Youtuber Etika's Body Found

Missing Youtuber Etika's Body Found

Police investigating the disappearance of YouTuber Etika have confirmed that they have found his body.
The gamer, 29, whose real name is Desmond Amofah, was reported missing six days ago.
His belongings were found on Manhattan Bridge on Monday. He had uploaded an eight-minute YouTube video in which he talked about suicide.
Etika was popular for playing and discussing Nintendo games on YouTube and the streaming platform Twitch.
His Twitch account has been deleted but other social media platforms, including Twitter and Instagram, remain visible.
He has 321,000 followers on Twitter and 252,000 on Instagram.

Who was Etika?

Etika joined YouTube in 2012.
He was best known for his reaction videos, where he responded to new releases and products, mainly from games giant Nintendo.
The 29-year-old had worried his followers with his behaviour on social media in the past, with the police called to his home following a suicide threat.
Uploaded at midnight on the evening of the 19 June (19:00 BST), his latest YouTube video, titled I'm sorry, featured Etika walking the streets of New York.
In the film, he apologised for pushing people away and confirmed he suffered from mental illness.
He also talked about social media, advising "caution" around using it too much.
"It can give you an image of what you want your life to be and get blown completely out of proportion," he says.
"It consumed me."
The original video was removed but copies have been uploaded by other YouTube users.

Online tributes

Etika's friends and fans - including other YouTubers - have been paying tribute to him on social media.
Keem described him as "a great entertainer".
"One of the best streamers in the game. He lost a channel of over 800,000 [subscribers] and made a new one and was right back pulling thousands of viewers. Wherever he's laid to rest I'll be there," he wrote.
Cbass re-tweeted the police's confirmation of Etika's death and added: "mental illness is not a joke".
"Sad to know a bright light faded today," wrote professional gamer Zinoto.

References:  BBC

China Suspends Some Canadian Pork Imports

China Suspends Some Canadian Pork Imports

China has suspended some pork imports from Canada, adding to tensions between the two countries.
The move comes after Chinese authorities found a banned feed additive in a batch of pork products exported from Canada to China.
An investigation found that up to 188 health certificates attached to pork exports to China had been forged.
China urged Canada to take "effective measures" to ensure the safety of food sold to the Asian country.
China had "immediately suspended the import of pork products from the relevant enterprises" after finding "ractopamine residues" in a batch of goods sent from Canada, a statement from the Chinese embassy in Ottawa said.
"In order to protect the safety of Chinese consumers, China has taken urgent preventive measures and requested the Canadian government to suspend the issuance of certificates for meat exported to China since 25 June," the statement said.
"We hope the Canadian side would attach great importance to this incident... and take effective measures to ensure the safety of food exported to China in a more responsible manner."

Soured relations

The move comes as political tensions between China and Canada have grown in recent months following the arrest of Huawei executive Meng Wanzhou in Vancouver.
Ms Meng is the Chinese firm's chief financial officer and its founder's daughter.
  • Huawei's Meng Wanzhou sues Canada
  • Trump offers to help Canada in rift with China
  • How damaging is the Huawei row for the US and China?
Diplomatic relations between the two countries deteriorated after Ms Meng was arrested in December for allegedly breaking US sanctions on Iran. She faces extradition to the US.
Two Canadian citizens are thought to have been detained in China in retaliation for the arrest.
Ms Meng meanwhile has filed a civil claim against Canada's government,border agency and police for "serious breaches" of her civil rights.
The suspension of pork imports also comes as China struggles to contain African swine fever, an incurable pig virus, which has spread rapidly since last year.

References:  BBC

Alves Announces PSG Depature

Dani Alves to leave Paris Saint-Germain after two seasons


Dani Alves has announced his departure from Paris Saint-Germain after two seasons with the French champions.
The 36-year-old full-back revealed his future plans hours after captaining and scoring in Brazil's 5-0 victory over Peru at the Copa America.
Alves, who previously played for Sevilla, Barcelona and Juventus before moving to France, becomes a free agent and has been linked with a possible switch to the Premier League.
"Today I close another cycle in my life, a cycle of victory, learning and experiences," Alves wrote on Instagram
"I would like to thank the PSG family for the opportunity to together build a page in the history of this club.
"I would like to thank all the staff for their affection, respect and complicity from day one. You make this club a little more special.
"It was two years of resilience and continuous reinventing to fulfil my mission, but in life everything has a beginning, a middle and an end and now the time has come to put that final point here."
Alves, who has been capped 107 times by Brazil, joined PSG in 2017 and won two Ligue 1 titles and one French Cup during his time at the club.
References: skysports