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Social Networks

Indians Are Using TikTok To Learn English (techcrunch.com) 16

China's TikTok this week launched an education program in India as the popular short-video app looks to expand its offering and assuage local authority in one of its biggest markets. From a report: This is the first time TikTok has launched a program of this kind in any market, a spokesperson told TechCrunch. TkTok, owned by the world's most valued startup Bytedance, said it's working with a number of content creators and firms in India to populate the platform with educational videos. These bite-sized clips cover a range of topics, from school-level science and math concepts to learning new languages. The social app is also featuring videos that offer tips on health and mental awareness, and motivational talks. The social platform, which is used by more than 200 million users in India every month, said its education program is aimed at "democratizing learning for the Indian digital community on the platform." (TikTok had 120 million monthly active users in April this year.) It has partnered with edtech startups Vedantu, Toppr, Made Easy and Gradeup that will produce educational content for TikTok.
Games

Analogue Announces Game Boy Clone Dubbed 'Analogue Pocket' (inverse.com) 48

Analogue is set to announce a new Game Boy clone. From a report: Analogue, known for their FPGA (Field Programmable Gate Array)-based hardware clones of the NES, SNES, and Sega Genesis/Megadrive, will be launching a handheld addition to their lineup called the "Analogue Pocket." The unit will be compatible with the entire library of Game Boy and Game Boy Color games, as well as Sega's Game Gear, SNK's Neo Geo Pocket Colour, and Atari's Lynx -- essentially bringing every 90's handheld under one hardware roof, without software emulation. The unit will also feature a 3.5" LTPS LCD at 1600 x 1440 resolution (615ppi), and USB-C charging port. Further reading: Game Boy has turned Game Man, just in time for the original device's 30th birthday.

Comment Re:Yeah, no (Score 2) 156

I'm not certain I understand the alternative implications of what you want. A socialistic entity with no corporations? A bunch of private individuals working for free? Government entities producing everything? An AI that manages every aspect of an individuals life and tells people what to do to produce goods? An artificial machine race that does everything for us? Truth be told, the last one is the most interesting, but I'm losing the track here and that comes with an entire host of new challenges. Corporations, as much as we may feel we hate them, serve a purpose. They'll produce goods or services that no one is producing, but only for a profit. SpaceX wouldn't be able to exist if what it were doing were at a net loss. NASA wouldn't launch rockets if it were too expensive. They wouldn't receive any more support for projects. You'd be paying about 10x more if it weren't for corporations for electronics, and any individal or socialistic entity wouldn't attempt to even perform into the market because of the advanced costs and lack of startup capabilities. Space exploration is going to be the same way without substantial investors or profitability. Neil Degrasse Tyson does an excellent job explaining the issues of receiving public funding for anything "space exploration" related. He goes over all the great explorations of history and how they were funded. Unless there's some sort of technological breakthrough, social-economic progress will be dominated by corporations, government, and the wealthy individuals of said corporations, and said progress will be dominated by profitable viability. This also means, probably no Planet Starbux, since most planets have a deep gravity well. They would likely have an agricultural space station for planting their coffee and making their product using an asteroid for raw materials or something similar.
Businesses

Spotify Wants To Know Where You Live and Will Be Checking In (cnet.com) 57

Spotify knows a lot about its users -- their musical tastes, their most listened-to artists and their summer anthems. Now it will also want to know where you live or to obtain your location data. It's part of an effort to detect fraud and abuse of its Premium Family program. From a report: Premium Family is a $15-a-month plan for up to six people. The only condition is that they all live at the same address. But the streaming music giant is concerned about people abusing that plan to pay as little as $2.50 for its services. So in August, the company updated its terms and conditions for Premium Family subscribers, requiring that they provide location data "from time to time" to ensure that customers are actually all in the same family. You have 30 days to cancel after the new terms went into effect, which depends on where you are. The family plan terms rolled out first on Aug. 19 in Ireland and on Sept. 5 in the US. The company tested this last year and asked for exact GPS coordinates but ended the pilot program after customers balked. Now it intends on rolling the location data requests out fully, reigniting privacy concerns and raising the question of how much is too much when it comes to your personal information.

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