Tag Archives: compete

I’ve got one of the best gaming desktops you can buy — but it can’t compete with this amazing Black Friday PC deal – Tom’s Guide

  1. I’ve got one of the best gaming desktops you can buy — but it can’t compete with this amazing Black Friday PC deal Tom’s Guide
  2. Alienware’s Black Friday RTX 4090 laptop deal barely costs more than the card by itself Tom’s Hardware
  3. Alienware’s RTX 4090 monster gaming PC with 64GB of RAM and a 4TB SSD has been slashed by $1100 for Black Friday PC Gamer
  4. The Best Dell Black Friday Deals: Top Sales on Alienware Gaming PCs and Laptops IGN
  5. $610 off this stupidly-fast Alienware competitive gaming laptop this Black Friday PC Guide – For The Latest PC Hardware & Tech News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Microsoft Considered Investing Billions in Apple to Compete With Google Search – Yahoo Finance

  1. Microsoft Considered Investing Billions in Apple to Compete With Google Search Yahoo Finance
  2. Google deal may have kept Apple from building search engine, exec says Ars Technica
  3. Microsoft weighed taking massive loss on Apple deal to compete with Google search, exec says New York Post
  4. Business Highlights: Late-night TV announces return from strike; New UAW strike plans to come Friday The Washington Post
  5. Apple used Microsoft as a ‘bargaining chip’ to make Google pony up billions for the search bar, exec testifies Fortune
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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OpenAI CEO Sam Altman is privately reassuring developers using the company’s tech that it won’t compete with them beyond ChatGPT – Yahoo Finance

  1. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman is privately reassuring developers using the company’s tech that it won’t compete with them beyond ChatGPT Yahoo Finance
  2. OpenAI won’t build any more consumer products other than ChatGPT Business Insider
  3. Sam Altman says OpenAI won’t go public now because he may have to make ‘a very strange decision’ that investors will disagree with Fortune
  4. Questions for OpenAI’s Sam Altman The Economic Times
  5. OpenAI CEO suggests international agency like UN’s nuclear watchdog could oversee AI The Associated Press
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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2023 NFL season: Day 3 rookies who could compete for starter snaps in Year 1 – NFL.com

  1. 2023 NFL season: Day 3 rookies who could compete for starter snaps in Year 1 NFL.com
  2. NFL Power Rankings 2023: 32-team poll after the NFL draft – ESPN ESPN
  3. 2023 NFL Draft: AFC West Rookie Projections – Visit NFL Draft on Sports Illustrated, the latest news coverage, with rankings for NFL Draft prospects, College Football, Dynasty and Devy Fantasy Football. Sports Illustrated
  4. 2 Giants picks ranked among 100 best from 2023 NFL draft Giants Wire
  5. 2023 NFL All-Draft Team, Part I: 3 Steelers draft picks make the team Behind The Steel Curtain
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Supreme Court rules West Virginia transgender athletes can compete on female sports teams – The Hill

  1. Supreme Court rules West Virginia transgender athletes can compete on female sports teams The Hill
  2. Supreme Court denies West Virginia’s request to enforce anti-trans sports ban against cross-country and track athlete CNN
  3. Supreme Court refuses to reinstate West Virginia’s transgender athlete ban The Washington Post
  4. Supreme Court allows 12-year-old transgender girl to run girls’ track in West Virginia Fox News
  5. Supreme Court Rejects West Virginia’s Emergency Request to Ban Transgender Girl From Girls’ Track Team The Wall Street Journal
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Spring Training Miscellany: Taillon’s New Sweeper, Fulmer Arrives, Davis Wants to Compete, More – bleachernation.com

  1. Spring Training Miscellany: Taillon’s New Sweeper, Fulmer Arrives, Davis Wants to Compete, More bleachernation.com
  2. Cubs Spring Training Notebook: A new signing, a new pitch and a new position for Marcus Stroman? Marquee Sports Network
  3. Commentary: Cubs offseason was a very strong one CubsHQ
  4. Spring Training Miscellany: Live Batting Practice Begins, Steele, Hoerner, Madrigal, Swanson, Bellinger, Alcántara, More bleachernation.com
  5. Chicago Cubs Spring Training: Brennen Davis finding best version of self Cubbies Crib
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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RIP Google Hangouts, Google’s last, best chance to compete with iMessage

Today, November 1, 2022, Google Hangouts is scheduled for death. The phone app has been individually booting people off the service since July, but the last vestiges of Hangouts, the web app, will be shut down today. Hangouts was—for a brief period—Google’s best, most ambitious, most popular messaging effort, but 5 billion downloads later, Google is moving on. Hangout’s next of kin, Google Chat, should have all of your messages and contacts automatically imported by now, but the new service is a faint shadow of the original plan for Hangouts.

The closing of Hangouts is the latest chapter in the mess that is Google’s messaging history. Google Talk launched 17 years ago, and Google still doesn’t have a competitive message platform. Part of the reason we’re on Google’s 10 millionth messaging app is that there is a solid, stable home for messaging inside Google. The 2022 messaging lineup is a great example. You’ve got the Google Workspace team making Google Chat—that’s Google’s business team making a Slack competitor—and then there’s Google Messages—a carrier-centric sort-of-competitor to Apple’s iMessage—which seemingly grew out of the Android team. Is the team that makes Android more or less important than the team that makes Gmail and the rest of the Google apps? Both have their understandable reasons for chasing messaging, but splitting the Google user base across two incompatible products makes it tough for either project to gain any traction. Besides those two big projects, there’s also still Google Voice, and a bunch of siloed messaging services in apps like Google Photos and Google Pay.

Once upon a time, Google tried to fix this. Messaging was supposed to have a real home at Google, and that home was supposed to be (cue dramatic thunderclap) Google+. Back in 2011, Google’s then-CEO Larry Page decided social was the future and spun up the Google+ project across the company. The head of G+ got the title “Senior Vice President” making him one of the eight-ish people that reported directly to Page, enshrining Google+ as one of the main pillars of Google. This division was supposed to take full ownership of messaging, and it launched its messaging project—Google+ Hangouts—two years later.

Hangouts, which was codenamed “Project Babel,” was charged with the task of—get this—unifying Google messaging portfolio. Google had four messaging apps at the time, Google+ Messenger, Google Talk, Android’s SMS app, and Google Voice. Hangouts launched in 2013, and by the end of the year integrated SMS messages. By 2014, the app was fully operational, and featured Hangouts Messages, SMS, and Google Voice all in one app, all available from your phone or anywhere on the Internet. With the release of Android 4.4 in 2013, there was no standalone Android SMS app. Hangouts was the only default SMS option.

Google had built its iMessage clone, and it was an incredible service. All your communication was available from a single messaging app in one, easy-to-use interface. Google also had tangible advantages over iMessage, thanks to wide cross-platform compatibility. Hangouts was on Android, iOS, the web, and inside Gmail. That meant the service natively worked on phones, watches, cars, tablets, web browsers, and even Google Glass at one point. Google would probably have a decent footing in messaging today if it just kept updating and investing in Hangouts.

Hangout’s home was already falling apart in 2014, though. Amid complaints that Google+ was a “ghost town,” the knives came out for the service. Google+ SVP and driving force behind the project, Vic Gundotra, left Google, and that same day reports came out that Google+ resources would be drastically cut, and the forced, Google-wide integration of G+ would end. Hangouts was stuck in a dying division, and while some projects like Google+ Photos managed to spin out into a stable landing spot, Hangouts did not, and by 2015 you would regularly see complaints from customers that the project was underfunded.

The other “problem” with Hangouts is that it was a strike against cell carriers. Combining SMS and an over-the-top messaging service into one app was something the carriers didn’t like. They wanted something focused on SMS and only SMS, so users wouldn’t dare be tempted to not use a carrier product. Google caved and introduced the standalone Google Messages in the next Android release. With Google’s lack of organization and fortitude, Hangouts’ reign as Google’s top, all-in-one messaging service only lasted about a year. Hangouts has kept on trucking as the abandoned, zombie product that was still better than the plethora of new messaging services Google would release afterward, and today, it’s finally being put down.

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Kroger-Albertsons merger raises fears of store closures; here’s where the chains compete in Oregon

The 2002 closure of the Fred Meyer grocery store serving Rockwood was a blow to the Gresham neighborhood, leaving a hole in its center and one less option for groceries.

The next hit came in 2015, when a merger between the Albertsons and Safeway brands resulted in the closure of a Safeway store nearby. That left an Albertsons store as the last chain supermarket in the area.

Now, a proposal from Kroger Co. to buy Albertsons has residents wondering if that store could end up shuttered, too. If Albertsons were to close in Rockwood as a result of the merger, it would “put a dent in the community,” said Catherine Nicewood, president of the neighborhood association, though it’s one of the most expensive options remaining.

“Rockwood is considered a food desert, and we’ve been trying to bring in places where people could easily access healthier food options at an affordable price,” Nicewood said. Losing the Albertsons would be one more setback.

The $24.6 billion sale would put Albertsons, Safeway, Fred Meyer and QFC under one corporate umbrella, and leave the chains with dozens of Oregon stores that could now be considered redundant.

The Oregonian/OregonLive identified roughly 33 Kroger and Albertsons-owned stores across the state that sit within a mile of one another, including 20 in the Portland metro area. More than 100 are less than two miles apart.

Many are within line-of-sight of a neighboring store. In Oregon City, for example, a Fred Meyer, Safeway and Albertsons are within blocks of one another.

Albertsons and Kroger in Oregon

Dozens of Oregon grocery stores owned by Kroger Co. (Fred Meyer and QFC) and Albertsons Cos. (Albertsons and Safeway) are located near other stores and could be considered redundant if the chains merge. Here, stores are shown with a 1-mile buffer.

Kroger and Albertsons are two of the state’s biggest grocery chains, with 171 stores altogether.

Kroger and Albertsons would likely have to divest hundreds of stores nationally to ease anticompetitive concerns from regulators including the Federal Trade Commission, according to retail analysts and consumer advocates.

Anticipating this, Kroger and Albertsons said in an announcement last week that they’re willing to divest between 100 and 375 locations by spinning them off into a separate company — called SpinCo in the filing — that would be controlled by Albertsons shareholders.

In Oregon, Kroger and Albertsons are two of the biggest grocery chains, with a combined market share that’s even bigger than Walmart.

Kroger didn’t address potential store closings in its filing with the Securities Exchange Commission, but it’s common to shutter stores during a large retail merger, according to retail analysts. Spinning off the redundant stores isn’t a surefire solution, either.

Following the 2015 merger of Albertsons and Safeway, regulators required the chains to find a buyer for about 20 stores in Oregon in a bid to keep the market competitive.

Haggen, a small Washington state grocery chain, agreed to purchase and rebrand 146 West Coast Safeway and Albertsons locations following the merger with Safeway. But within months, the overextended Haggen filed for bankruptcy and sold several of those stores back to Albertsons for a much cheaper price. Others closed for good.

Executives at Kroger and Albertsons expect the deal to go through in early 2024 and, at that point, the two companies will start making choices on which stores will stay or go and under which banner they’ll operate.

Kevin Coupe, retail analyst and author of the grocery blog Morning News Beat, thinks that the companies’ proposal to divest up to 375 stores might not satisfy regulators.

“I think they’re going to have to divest closer to a thousand stores,” Coupe said. “This is a much tougher FTC than maybe they’re used to dealing with, and we’re at a time of rising consumer prices.”

The proposed combined company would have an annual revenue of $209 billion and operate 4,996 stores nationwide, according to Kroger. It would come close to rivaling Walmart, falling only $10 billion in annual revenue short to the retail behemoth.

A Safeway-Albertsons delivery center off Beaverton Hillsdale Highway in Southwest Portland.

Meanwhile, the deal is facing pushback from consumer advocates, labor unions and politicians as the companies look to consolidate stores amid skyrocketing food prices.

Jagjit Nagra, executive director of the nonprofit Oregon Consumer Justice, said the proposed deal would be bad for consumers as less competition could spell grocery prices going unchecked. He said the potential merger could also result in more food deserts that’s likely around areas with lower incomes.

“They’re not going to close down their biggest brightest stars within their quiver,” he said. “They’re going to be probably going out to lower performers, performing stores, maybe stores that are adjacent to, say, rougher neighborhoods, or in areas that have more crime, or maybe areas that are just more rural.”

Kelley Fuller, a resident of Depoe Bay on the central Oregon coast, said the closest Fred Meyer and Safeway in Newport are across the street from one another.

“If Kroger and Albertson are allowed to merge, we’d almost certainly lose that Safeway,” Fuller said, “which would mean not only losing a grocery store, but also the pharmacy inside it.”

She said Lincoln City already lost a pharmacy when Bi-Mart pulled out of the pharmacy business, and that competing pharmacies got noticeably more “crowded and chaotic” afterward.

And she said having two supermarkets was important as the pandemic wreaked havoc on the supply chain.

“When Fred Meyer was out of basics, Safeway sometimes still had them,” she said. “It would have been worse for the local communities if we had not also had Safeway to shop at.”

Nagra, with a state consumer advocacy group, said the Kroger-Albertsons merger leave areas that are already food deserts with even fewer choices.

“Not only would they take away from people’s ability to choose, now they’d actually directly impact people’s health,” he said. “Because if you don’t have access to good quality food, I think it’s fair to assume that your health outcomes may not be as strong.”

He said the deal could “cause greater harm and kind of squeeze consumers who are already struggling to afford food.”

But Kroger leaders said in a statement it will reinvest $500 million to “reduce prices for customers” and $1 billion to raise employee wages and benefits.

Earlier this week, U.S. Sens. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota and Mike Lee of Utah said in a statement that the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Competition Policy, Antitrust and Consumer Rights will “hold a hearing focused on this proposed merger and the consequences consumers may face if this deal moves forward.”

The committee has “serious concerns” about the merger and wants a grocery market that “remains competitive so that American families can afford to put food on the table,” Klobuchar and Lee said.

–Kristine de Leon, kdeleon@oregonian.com, 503-221-8506

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Intel shares 48 benchmarks to show its Arc A750 can compete with an RTX 3060

Intel has released 48 benchmarks that show its upcoming Arc A750 GPU should be able to trade blows with Nvidia’s RTX 3060 running modern games. While Intel set its expectations low for its Arc GPUs last month, the company has now tested its A750 directly against the RTX 3060 across 42 DirectX 12 titles and six Vulkan games.

The results look promising for what will likely be Intel’s mainstream GPU later this year. Intel has tested the A750 against popular games like Fortnite, Control, and Call of Duty: Warzone, instead of the cherry picked handful of benchmarks the company released last month.

“These are all titles that we picked because they’re popular,” explains Intel fellow Tom Petersen, in Intel’s benchmark video. “Either reviewers are using them or they’re high on the Steam survey, or new and exciting. These are not cherry picked titles.”

Intel’s Arc A750 vs. Nvidia’s RTX 3060 at 1080p.
Image: Intel

We’ll have to wait for independent benchmarks, but based on Intel’s testing, the A750 looks like it will compete comfortably with Nvidia’s RTX 3060. “You’ll see we’re kinda trading blows with the RTX 3060,” says Petersen. “Sometimes we win, sometimes we lose.” Intel’s performance is, on average, 3 to 5 percent better than Nvidia’s when it wins on titles running at 1080p.

Over on the 1440p side, it looks like Intel wins on more of the benchmarks. On average it’s a win of about 5 percent across the 42 games. Intel has also tested six Vulkan titles, where it seems be trading blows with the RTX 3060 once again.

“We’re mostly winning at 1080p, and mostly winning at 1440p with Vulkan,” claims Petersen. “On average I’d say this is more like a 3 to 5 percent, maybe a little bit more towards the 5 percent win on Vulkan.”

Intel’s Arc A750 vs. Nvidia’s RTX 3060 at 1440p.
Image: Intel

Intel has only focused on modern APIs here, and not older DirectX 11 games. Early testing of Intel’s Arc A770 GPU — a step above the A750 in the Arc lineup — showed a big performance gap between DirectX 11 and DirectX 12 games. Intel is still working on its Arc GPU drivers, and it could be some time before the company is able to improve DirectX 11 performance.

Intel performed these latest benchmarks on identical systems running its Core i9 12900K CPU and 32GB of DDR5 memory. Intel used its own engineering driver and Nvidia’s 516.59 driver for the comparisons. Arc GPUs will require 10th Gen or newer Intel processors, or AMD Ryzen 3000 and above CPUs, all with motherboards that support Resizable BAR (or, as AMD brands it, Smart Access Memory). Resizable BAR is a key requirement for performance on Arc GPUs.

We’re still waiting for Intel to release its Arc A750 GPU later this year, but these latest benchmarks do show it could be ready to compete for the all-important mainstream. Intel hasn’t announced official specifications or pricing for its Arc A750 yet, but leaked slides put it in between $299 and $399.

Intel will need to reach a price point that can compete with Nvidia’s $329 pricing for the RTX 3060, particularly now that GPU stock has greatly improved and there is the option of AMD’s Radeon RX 6600 XT at $379.

All eyes will now be on Nvidia’s plans for its RTX 40-series of GPUs. Nvidia recently slashed the prices of its high-end RTX 30 series GPUs, and the discounts could indicate an RTX 40-series launch is due in the coming months. Rumors had suggested the RTX 4090 could launch last month, but July came and went without any new GPUs.

If Nvidia’s latest preliminary earnings are anything to go by (a $1 billion-plus drop in gaming revenue), it’s unlikely that the RTX 40-series will be priced low when they eventually launch. Nvidia still likely has plenty of RTX 30-series cards after a drop in crypto demand, so Intel could be well placed to compete later this year if it can get its drivers and pricing in check.

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Andrew Benintendi joins New York Yankees, ready to compete for former rival

NEW YORK — Hours after flying cross-country on the Kansas City Royals’ charter and checking into their hotel Wednesday night, outfielder Andrew Benintendi was summoned by his now-former manager, Mike Matheny.

Benintendi was being traded. But, Matheny told him, he wouldn’t have to leave his hotel room. New York was about to be his home.

A day after being swapped out of Kansas City for a trio of New York Yankees prospects, Benintendi spoke to reporters at Yankee Stadium on Thursday. After walking into the ballpark’s home clubhouse for the first time, Benintendi took part in a 10-minute news conference. The former Royals and Boston Red Sox standout reiterated his excitement for putting on pinstripes and playing for a team he once considered a rival.

“Playing in Boston has prepared me for this atmosphere and obviously I’ve played a lot of games here,” Benintendi said. “So I’m looking forward to getting back out there and playing on the other side.”

Benintendi was already in the Yankees’ lineup Thursday and led off against the team that traded him.

“Definitely it’s a weird situation,” Benintendi said. “I’m obviously going to stay in contact with those guys still, as I did with my Red Sox teammates from the past.”

Rumors regarding a potential trade-deadline move for Benintendi had swirled around the major leagues for weeks. At one point, the Yankees were thought to be a non-contender in the sweepstakes for the 28-year-old because of his stance on the COVID-19 vaccine.

Benintendi had previously said he was against receiving the vaccine, and he remains unvaccinated.

Each season, the Yankees have regular trips to division-rival Toronto, where a vaccine mandate remains in place. Canada requires all people traveling into the country to be fully vaccinated against the virus.

On Thursday, Benintendi said he was “open-minded” about receiving the vaccine. The Yankees have one more trip to Toronto this season, Sept. 26-28.

“I’m not against it, but time will tell as we get closer,” Benintendi said. “But for now I’m just focused on getting comfortable with the other guys and winning baseball.”

Yankees manager Aaron Boone said the front office has not yet had a conversation with Benintendi about getting vaccinated, adding that the team will “cross that bridge if and when we have to.”

During his five seasons in Boston, Benintendi reached the postseason three times. In 2018, the Red Sox won the World Series, beating the Los Angeles Dodgers. He hit .333 (6-for-18) in that series and was a catalyst for Boston’s offense.

“I think it matters,” Boone said. “He’s been there and done that. He’s now kind of a veteran player so I’m looking forward to him being part of that room. He’s really into the game, really into baseball, and looking forward to him being able to get in the mix and share his experiences.

“The guy that we can look to and have a lot of confidence in whatever kind of situation we’re in. We feel like he’ll be equipped to handle that.”

Boone believes Benintendi’s presence can make the entire team more versatile. The speedy lefty can hit at the top of the order, or appear deeper in the lineup. He also gives the Yankees an additional option in the outfield, where injuries and inconsistent play have forced the team to shuffle its depth chart recently.

With Benintendi expected to spend the bulk of his time in left field, New York can shuffle Aaron Hicks — who has been mostly playing the position in recent weeks — back to center field on occasion, and move Aaron Judge back into a more regular right-field role.

“Honestly, it’ll be a fun game to play once we get everyone back, hopefully,” Boone said of crafting his lineup.

The power-hitting Giancarlo Stanton is currently on the 10-day injured list with left Achilles tendinitis.

After Benintendi learned from Matheny late Wednesday that he was being traded, the outfielder stayed in his Royals hotel room and played cards with some of his teammates from the past one and a half seasons.

He has yet to clear out of the hotel, but is working through his future lodging arrangements. When his old Kansas City teammates boarded buses to head to Yankee Stadium on Thursday afternoon, Benintendi had to find alternate transportation to the Bronx.

“It’s definitely a weird situation but it is what it is,” Benintendi said. “In the end you’ve got a job to do and I’m excited to get started.”

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