Tag Archives: comparison

Cyberpunk 2.0 Ray Reconstruction Comparison, DLSS 3.5, & Benchmarks – Gamers Nexus

  1. Cyberpunk 2.0 Ray Reconstruction Comparison, DLSS 3.5, & Benchmarks Gamers Nexus
  2. Nvidia Says Native Resolution Gaming is Out, DLSS is Here to Stay Tom’s Hardware
  3. I’ve tested Nvidia’s latest ray tracing magic in Cyberpunk 2077 and it’s a no-brainer: at worst it’s just better-looking, at best it’s that and a whole lot more performance PC Gamer
  4. Amazon deal drops price of DLSS 3.5 ready GPU ahead of Cyberpunk DLC launch WePC – PC Tech & PC Gaming News
  5. Cyberpunk 2077 gets huge performance boost with DLSS 3.5 thanks to Nvidia driver update Dexerto
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Danielle Jonas opens up on comparison trap of feeling ‘less than sometimes’ – GMA

  1. Danielle Jonas opens up on comparison trap of feeling ‘less than sometimes’ GMA
  2. Danielle Jonas Feels ‘Less Than’ Sisters-in-Law Priyanka and Sophie Entertainment Tonight
  3. Kevin Jonas’ Wife Danielle Made a Heartbreaking Confession About Comparing Herself to Her Famous Sisters-In-Law SheKnows
  4. Danielle Jonas Opened Up About Feeling “Less Than” Her Famous Sister-In-Laws Priyanka Chopra And Sophie Turner, And Said She’d Like To Have “Something Else” To Her Name BuzzFeed News
  5. Danielle Jonas Says She Sometimes Feels ‘Less Than’ Her Famous Sisters-In-Law HuffPost
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Notes from the Field: Comparison of COVID-19 Mortality … – CDC

  1. Notes from the Field: Comparison of COVID-19 Mortality … CDC
  2. Discovery and characterization of potent pan-variant SARS-CoV-2 neutralizing antibodies from individuals with Omicron breakthrough infection Nature.com
  3. Number needed to vaccinate with a COVID-19 booster to prevent a COVID-19-associated hospitalization during SARS-CoV-2 Omicron BA.1 variant predominance, December 2021–February 2022, VISION Network: a retrospective cohort study The Lancet
  4. Genomic Surveillance for SARS-CoV-2 Variants: Circulation of Omicron Lineages — United States, January 2022–May 2023 | MMWR CDC
  5. Wavelength dependence of ultraviolet light inactivation for SARS-CoV-2 omicron variants | Scientific Reports Nature.com
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Manchester City 2-1 Manchester United: Analysing FA Cup final’s Gundogan opener, treble talk, ‘keeper comparison – The Athletic

  1. Manchester City 2-1 Manchester United: Analysing FA Cup final’s Gundogan opener, treble talk, ‘keeper comparison The Athletic
  2. TREBLE LOADING?! Manchester City vs. Manchester United | FA Cup Highlights | ESPN FC ESPN FC
  3. Pep Guardiola lauds ‘incredible’ Man City star and admits they can ‘now talk about the treble’ Yahoo Singapore News
  4. David De Gea has had some ‘sorry moments’ creep in – Craig Burley | ESPN FC ESPN UK
  5. Pundits FUME at the award of Man United’s controversial penalty Daily Mail
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Star Wars Jedi: Survivor Patch 4 Doesn’t Address Traversal Stuttering On PC, Comparison Videos Highlight – Wccftech

  1. Star Wars Jedi: Survivor Patch 4 Doesn’t Address Traversal Stuttering On PC, Comparison Videos Highlight Wccftech
  2. ‘Star Wars Jedi: Survivor’ Update: Full ‘Patch 4’ Patch Notes On PC, PS5 And Xbox Series X Forbes
  3. Star Wars Jedi: Survivor STILL has traversal & shader compilation stutters DSOGaming
  4. Star Wars Jedi: Survivor Patch 4 Is Now Live On PC; Size Revealed Wccftech
  5. ‘Star War Jedi: Survivor’ Performing ‘Very Strongly’ Against EA Expectations And ‘Fallen Order’ Forbes
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Comparison of seven popular structured dietary programmes and risk of mortality and major cardiovascular events in patients at increased cardiovascular risk: systematic review and network meta-analysis – The BMJ

  1. Comparison of seven popular structured dietary programmes and risk of mortality and major cardiovascular events in patients at increased cardiovascular risk: systematic review and network meta-analysis The BMJ
  2. Mediterranean diet ‘can reduce heart attacks in people at higher risk’ The Guardian
  3. Mediterranean and low-fat diets reduce the odds of mortality, heart attack in people at increased cardiovascular risk News-Medical.Net
  4. The best diets for cutting heart attacks and stroke risks listed in new study Daily Record
  5. The best diets for lowering heart disease and strokes RANKED in major analysis Daily Mail
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Caleb Williams on Patrick Mahomes comparison: “I don’t think there’s anything I can’t do that he’s doing”

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Quarterback guru Tom House recently has dubbed USC quarterback Caleb Williams the second coming of Patrick Mahomes. Williams does not disagree with that assessment.

“It’s pretty cool, I’d say, just because everybody watches Patrick and sees all the cool things he can do,” Williams said, via Zach Gelb of CBS Sports Radio. “I always said even in high school that I don’t think there’s anything — obviously, he’s special, but I don’t think there’s anything that I can’t do that he’s doing out there.”

Williams will be eligible to enter the NFL draft in 2024. He could be one of the most soft-after players in league history.

Former (and future) NFL coach Sean Payton recently dubbed Williams a “generational player,” adding that Williams could be the player who helps spark a draft lottery. He also could be the next player to do what John Elway and Eli Manning did. But that will be the subject of another post.



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Apple’s iPhone 14 Pro Dynamic Island pales in comparison to Google’s Pixel 7 Pro Dynamic Island: Let’s talk marketing

As always, it’s been an exciting year in the world of mobile tech, and before you know it – here we are in Techtober! Apple has released its new iPhone 14 Plus just now, following the rest of the iPhone 14 series, and like clockwork, Google recently unveiled the competition – its new Pixel 7 series.We’ll be talking about the Pro models today, namely the iPhone 14 Pro and Pixel 7 Pro… And particularly about how each of the two giant brands marketed them. So we won’t be delving into complicated specs, just selling points, and their actual value.

Now, the way Apple tried to sell users on the new iPhone 14 Pro (and iPhone 14 Pro Max) was, in part, by introducing something called the “Dynamic Island.” It’s a horizontal pill-shaped cutout in their displays, which succeeds the good ol’ notch.

Those cutouts hold the phones’ Face ID sensors, and with some software trickery, they can seem like they’re alive and moving! Extra functional, even – they’re like the place where notifications and quick toggles live! Pretty cool!

However, Google’s own recently-announced Pixel 7 Pro has a different kind of pill-shaped cutout… on the back. Yes, we’re talking about the cameras.

How are those two “Dynamic Islands” related? Well, aside from their shape, they’re related in being major selling points for their respective phones.

Instead of banking on what’s essentially a redesigned notch, which now takes even more screen real estate (if we consider the new, unusable row of pixels above it) like Apple did, Google knew what matters the most for the majority of smartphone users – the camera, and privacy.

Let’s start with the first one, and talk about why Google’s “Dynamic Island” and its new phone in general are way more exciting than what Apple tried to sell as a major feature on its “Pro” iPhone. And, how the Pixel 7 Pro beats the iPhone 14 Pro not only in terms of marketing, but as a general upgrade over its predecessor…

Let’s face it – face unlocking is a thing on both phones now

Let’s take a quick look at the most important “spec” – the price. The base 128GB Google Pixel 7 Pro is $100 cheaper than the base 128GB iPhone 14 Pro, which is $999. Let’s be real though, and round things up – it’s a $1000 phone against a $900 one.Both phones have face unlock now, as Google announced that its Tensor 2 processor can, and will use “advanced machine learning models” to utilize the Pixel 7 series’ single front camera for that.

So even though we can’t expect Google’s face unlock to rival Apple’s Face ID in terms of accuracy and reliability, we do know from experience that Google is capable of making more with less, so let’s not lower our expectations too much.

Stay tuned for our Google Pixel 7 Pro review where we’ll really test it, but at least on paper – it’s official – both the iPhone 14 Pro and Google Pixel 7 Pro have face unlock now.

Except, the iPhone has this huge pill-shaped “Dynamic Island” taking up a good chunk of the screen, while the Pixel 7 Pro just has a small selfie camera cutout. Plus there’s a bonus on the Pixel – a fingerprint sensor! Which, of course, the iPhone lacks.

And just like that, the Pixel 7 Pro one-upped the iPhone, as it not only offers more ways for secure unlocking, but its face unlock doesn’t require a large horizontal cutout in the display, taking up valuable screen space.

But let’s “face” away from the face unlocking situation on these phones, and look at them as the annual upgrades that they are.

Was the new iPhone 14 Pro the bigger upgrade, or did the Pixel 7 Pro take the larger leap forward from its predecessor? Well, it’s like this…

The Pixel 7 Pro is what a real upgrade should look like (take notes, iPhone 14 Pro)

Like we said in our iPhone 14 Pro vs iPhone 13 Pro comparison – the visual differences between the two are almost indistinguishable. We’re talking a slightly different size for the newer model, very slightly smaller bezels, and of course – the notch becomes a Dynamic Island (a pill-shaped cutout).

In terms of software features, always-on display coming with the 14 Pro is a big one, and as for hardware – it gets a faster A16 Bionic chip and a higher-res 48MP main camera.

Just the incremental updates we expect, with no huge surprises. Well, aside from, again, the Dynamic Island, if we want to make it as big of a deal as Apple does.

As for the Google Pixel 7 Pro vs Google Pixel 6 Pro – in the design department they’re quite similar too, but things get interesting when we look at the new features the 7 Pro got.

Yes, it has the same obligatory upgrades as any new flagship – better cameras, slightly better performance… But, we also get face unlock now, a 25% brighter screen, higher camera zoom (5x, SuperRes Zoom at up to 30x), a new Macro Focus feature, a new Photo Unblur feature.

But perhaps best of all, yet likely to be most underrated – the Pixel 7 Pro comes with a built-in VPN powered by Google One! To be fair, Apple does offer a Private Relay feature, which although not a VPN, does protect your internet privacy by masking your IP address, but it only works when browsing the web in Safari. So the rest of your internet traffic remains as unprotected as per usual.

On the flip side, Google’s free VPN that comes with the Pixel 7 series basically hides all of your online activity from prying eyes, making it harder for all apps to collect data about you, and sell it to third parties.

With all of Apple’s talk about user privacy being its main priority, this move by Google is definitely a bold way to say – “Google cares about our phone users’ privacy too, and we’re willing to prove it in a big way.”

Which brand sold you on its “Pro” phone better? Which phone would you buy and why?

So in the end, with all of that marketing about Dynamic Islands and what not, which phone are you really sold on?

Or at the very least, which phone do you believe deserves the bigger hype, and which of its features do you feel is most underrated?

In addition, do you think Apple’s marketing relies a bit too much on hype, significantly masking the true value of the iPhone features it introduces? Or do you love how exciting it is, and wish Google too tried to match it?

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Game Pass Vs. The New PS Plus, The Comparison We Had To Make

Image: Sony / Microsoft / Kotaku

Two months ago, Sony reimagined PS Plus, its longtime membership program for PlayStation owners. Now, it looks a whole lot like Microsoft’s Game Pass: For roughly the same amount of money, both offer access to a Netflix-style games-on-demand library. Obviously, we had to stack the two services up against each other.


Price

Game Pass is available as a subscription for console, PC, or both. The two separated tiers cost $10 a month. Xbox Live Ultimate, which joins the two and provides access to the EA Play Library (a similar games-on-demand service) and Xbox Live Gold, costs $15 a month. There is no way to pay for multiple months or a year up front at a tiered markdown (at least officially).

PS Plus is also available for a subscription, but it gets very complicated very fast. There are two new tiers. The Extra is $15 a month, or $100 for the year, and offers free monthly games, online play, and a catalog of on-demand games including some of Ubisoft’s library. Premium is $18 a month, or $120 a year, and adds access to classic games, game trials, and cloud streaming for most of the games in the library. That’s a huge price difference, and while PS Plus Premium is more expensive month-to-month, it’s actually almost 50 percent cheaper if you commit to the whole year.

Winner: PS Plus


Streaming

Game Pass allows for cloud-streaming, provided you pay for the pricier Ultimate tier. The streaming functionality is technically still “in beta,” but it is for all intents and purposes up and running. Microsoft recommends internet speeds of at least 10mbps for mobile devices and 20mbps for consoles and PCs. Based on Kotaku’s testing, it’s…fine? Despite cloud gaming’s huge advancements recently, streaming still can’t compete with downloaded games. The latency, however minor, is unignorable. As such, cloud gaming is best used for puzzlers, chill RPGs, light platformers, and other games that don’t demand split-second reflexes.

Microsoft says “more than 100” games are currently streamable via cloud gaming on Xbox Game Pass, but more games are added every few weeks. Right now, the Game Pass library currently lists 381 games as capable of streaming.

Stray.
Screenshot: Annapurna / Kotaku

To unlock streaming on PS Plus you need to buy the $18 a month tier. And even then, the streaming quality is nothing to write home about. At best, it’s as good as Xbox Cloud Gaming. Sometimes it’s worse. Roughly 320 games from the Premium library can be streamed on console or PC, and a good chunk of those are PS3 games and classics rather than the full PlayStation 4 library. For example, Marvel’s Avengers and Stray are available on console but not in the streaming library.

Most notably, you can’t stream PS Plus games to your phone. For now, the service relies on Remote Play, meaning you need a console to play on mobile and you must be on the same WiFi network.

Winner: Game Pass


Game Library

Of course, a games-on-demand service is only as good as the one thing it’s supposed to provide: games.

Right now, the Xbox Game Pass library has about 475 games, but that tally comprises the library across both tiers, including the 92 games currently part of EA Play. The main draw, of course, is that Microsoft puts its entire first-party portfolio on the platform. That also includes the major tent poles—like Halo Infinite and Forza Horizon 5, alongside forthcoming blockbusters like Starfield and Redfall—which become available the day they came out. Third-party games tend to stick around for a year at most, though some, like Rockstar’s open-world Hold ‘Em simulator Red Dead Redemption 2, become unavailable after a matter of months. It’s unpredictable.

Halo Infinite.
Screenshot: 343 Industries

The library also regularly cycles in third-party games and often serves as a launch pad for indie gems. This year alone, the twee Zelda-like Tunic, the snowboarding sim Shredders, and the puzzler-cum-dungeon-crawler Loot River all launched on Game Pass. (Here’s Kotaku’s list of the best under-the-radar games currently available.) Developers have acknowledged to Kotaku that debuting on Game Pass cuts into initial sales but is ultimately worth it for the tradeoff in publicity.

PS Plus Extra currently includes around 430 PS4 and PS5 games, while Premium adds another 395 from PS1, PS2, PS3 (streaming only), and PSP. While the classics are a nice bonus, the biggest draw by far are the PlayStation exclusives like Horizon Zero Dawn, God of War, Spider-Man: Miles Morales, and Bloodborne. Unlike Microsoft, Sony has committed to not putting its newest releases on the service day-and-date, and if Returnal arriving a year after release is any indication, it seems like a good bet that players will have to wait at least a year to 18 months before newer stuff appears.

There are plenty of strong contenders in the third-party department though. Games like Final Fantasy VII Remake, Prey, Control, Doom, and Tetris Effect are all present, as are indies like Celeste, Outer Wilds, Dead Cells, and Virginia. The library has plenty of diversity and was bolstered most recently from the same-day addition of Stray, which is already a 2022 GOTY contender. The Ubisoft component, led by Assassin’s Creed Valhalla is also a strong compliment. At the same time, Sony hasn’t yet demonstrated it is, or will be, as aggressive as Microsoft in courting a steady stream of third party day-and-date additions. There’s also no PC-exclusive portion of the library.

Winner: PS Plus


Ari: Going into this exercise, I totally imagined it’d paint a clear picture of Game Pass superiority, but these two services seem fundamentally identical to me—right down to the UI—with Sony’s new version of PS Plus marginally better in the few aspects that matter. The prices are mostly the same, but the option to pay for a year of PS Plus at a “discount” edges out Game Pass in that regard. Sure, Game Pass’ big draw is that it puts Microsoft’s first-party games on the service at launch, but…Microsoft barely has any first-party games out this year! Right now, that perk seems like little more than a marketing line.

Ethan: I also thought Game Pass would be the clear winner coming out of this, but now I’m conflicted as well. Not everyone can afford to pay for a full year up front, but it really changes the calculus in this matchup. There are some other key differences as well, and while I don’t think they make one a clear winner over the other, I do think it makes it easier to decide which you want to pay for. Want immediate access to a meaty back catalog of some of the biggest and best games from the last generation? PS Plus wins. Want to stay current on some of the best new games coming out every month and play them at any time on your phone? Then it’s Game Pass all the way.

 

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Video: Digital Foundry’s Smash Bros. Ultimate VS MultiVersus Comparison

There have been a lot of brawlers ‘inspired’ by Super Smash Bros. Ultimate, and the latest one to arrive on the scene is the Warner Bros. title MultiVersus – featuring iconic heroes and cartoon characters like Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, Bugs Bunny and Tom & Jerry.

The tech experts over at Digital Foundry couldn’t resist and have decided to do a video comparison to see how this new game holds up against Masahiro Sakurai’s masterpiece. It’s already got a tremendous uphill battle on its hands considering how much Smash Bros. has been fine-tuned over the years, but can it actually compete?

Digital Foundry notes how the combat naturally borrows a lot of ideas from the Smash Bros. moveset, but the mechanics and flow of combat aren’t “quite as tight” as Smash Bros. It’s also apparently missing the on-screen visual cues and sounds that have been perhaps overlooked. Across the board – the game runs at 60 fps matching Super Smash Bros. Ultimate’s performance.

There are plenty more comparisons throughout – with DF getting into a more detailed breakdown around the 10 minute mark, so feel free to take a look if you have been wondering how this Smash Bros. contender holds up. You can learn more over on our sister site Push Square:

And if you’re wondering, this free-to-play title is seemingly skipping a Switch release. There are plenty of alternatives to Super Smash Bros. on the Switch though like Brawlhalla and Nickelodeon All-Star Brawl.

What do you think of this latest Smash rival? Have you tried it out? Are you still playing Smash Bros. on Switch? Leave your thoughts down below.



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