Tag Archives: Jeff

Sanders criticizes Jeff Bezos for trying to stop Amazon union

  • Bezos declined Sanders’ invitation to testify at a hearing, but the senator had harsh words for him.
  • Sanders criticized Amazon’s countering of a union drive in Alabama despite the CEO’s record wealth.
  • The hearing included testimony from a pro-union worker at Amazon’s Bessemer warehouse.
  • See more stories on Insider’s business page.

At a hearing on Wednesday morning, Sen. Bernie Sanders spoke critically about Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos, who declined Sanders’ invitation to testify, and Elon Musk, the two wealthiest men.

“Bezos and Musk now own more wealth than the bottom 40%. Meanwhile, we’re looking at more hunger in America than at any time in decades,” Sanders said in his opening remarks at the Senate Budget Committee hearing, which was titled The Income and Wealth Inequality Crisis in America.

“If he was with us this morning, I would ask him the following question … Mr. Bezos, you are worth $182 billion — that’s a B,” Sanders said. “One hundred eighty-two billion dollars, you’re the wealthiest person in the world. Why are you doing everything in your power to stop your workers in Bessemer, Alabama, from joining a union?”

The unionization push being voted on at Amazon’s Bessemer fulfillment center has been the focal point of a high-profile labor dispute between the behemoth “everything store” and the Retail, Wholesale, and Department Store Union. Amazon has aggressively pushed its workers to vote against unionization, launching a campaign called “Do It Without Dues” to encourage workers to stick to the status quo.

Sanders pointed out the disparity between Bezos’ wealth growth during the pandemic and the struggles of rank-and-file workers. 

“Jeff Bezos has become $77 billion richer during this horrific pandemic, while denying hundreds of thousands of workers who work at Amazon paid sick leave,” he said.

Jennifer Bates, an employee at the Bessemer warehouse who testified at Wednesday’s hearing, said the unionization efforts were an attempt to “have a level playing field.” Bates cited tough working conditions, long hours, and a lack of job security as major drivers of the unionization efforts.

“Amazon brags it pays workers above the minimum wage,” she said. “What they don’t tell you is what those jobs are really like. And they certainly don’t tell you what they can afford.”

When asked what having a union would mean to her and her coworkers, Bates said it would result in their voices being “amplified” and a “sense of empowerment, “and not just at the Amazon in Bessemer but all over the country.”

“We take employee feedback seriously, including Ms. Bates’s, but we don’t believe her comments represent the more than 90% of her fulfillment center colleagues who say they’d recommend Amazon as a great place to work to friends and family,” an Amazon spokesperson told Insider. “We encourage people to speak with the hundreds of thousands of Amazon employees who love their jobs, earn at least $15 an hour, receive comprehensive healthcare and paid leave benefits, prefer direct dialogue with their managers, and voted Amazon #2 on the Forbes best employers list in 2020.”

While much of the hearing was devoted to the Amazon unionization fight, which will be decided at the end of March, Sanders said “Amazon and Jeff Bezos are not alone” and decried the “corporate greed” that drives income inequality.

Others who testified at the hearing included former Labor Secretary Robert Reich, who said unions were important and cited the steep decline in union membership since the labor heyday of the mid-1900s. 

Sanders has been a vocal critic of Amazon, while President Joe Biden has taken a softer approach in referencing the union drive. In a statement earlier in March, Biden condemned “anti-union propaganda” from large companies but stopped short of naming Amazon.

Read original article here

Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin and NASA plan to create moon-like gravity inside the New Shepard rocket

Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin and NASA plan to create moon-like gravity inside the New Shepard rocket by spinning it 11 times per minute during flight to test payloads set for the Artemis mission

  • NASA and Blue Origin are working to recreate gravity that is found on the moon
  • The team plans to modify Blue Origin’s New Shepard rocket for the project
  • The craft will act like a large  centrifuge to create the artificial gravity in space
  •  It will 11 rotations per minute during the free-fall phase of the flight

Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin is transforming its New Shepard rocket into a moon simulator for NASA to test innovations in lunar gravity.

The team plans to update the spacecraft to use the capsule like a large centrifuge, a device that uses a rotating force to separate specific components from liquids, to create artificial gravity for payloads inside.

The capsule’s reaction control thrusters would generate a spin amounting to 11 rotations per minute during the free-fall phase of the flight, which NASA says would produce a centripetal force equivalent to the moon’s gravity.

Blue Origin’s new lunar gravity testing capabilities are set to be available in late 2022 and will be a key player in experimenting with payloads that are set to accompany the Artemis mission that is sending the first woman and next man to the moon in the mid-2020s.

Scroll down for video 

Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin is transforming its New Shepard rocket into a moon simulator for NASA to test innovations in lunar gravity. The team plans to update the spacecraft to use the capsule like a large centrifuge

Although sending humans to outer space is a challenge, the real obstacle will be when space fairing heroes step foot on the lunar surface – the gravity is one-sixth that of Earth’s.

Christopher Baker, program executive for NASA’s Flight Opportunities program, said in a statement: ‘One of the constant challenges with living and working in space is reduced gravity.’

‘Many systems designed for use on Earth simply do not work the same elsewhere.’

Astronauts have training in artificial gravity here on Earth, which mostly takes place while they are submerged in water.

The capsule’s reaction control thrusters would generate a spin amounting to 11 rotations per minute during the free-fall phase of the flight, which NASA says would produce a centripetal force equivalent to the moon’s gravity

 Blue Origin’s new lunar gravity testing capabilities are set to be available in late 2022 and will be a key player in experimenting with payloads that are set to accompany the Artemis mission that is sending the first woman and next man to the moon in the mid-2020s

But Blue Origin and NASA’s partnership could simulate the same type of gravity crew will experience while exploring the moon

When upgraded, New Shepard will use its reaction control system (RCS) to activate a rotation of the capsule.

The RCS uses the rockets thrusters for altitude control and steering, and is capable of providing small amounts of thrust to move the craft in a desired direction or combination of direction.

Blue Origin’s first flight of this capability will target 11 rotations per minute to provide more than two minutes of continuous lunar gravity, exposing the technologies to this challenging but difficult-to-test condition.

NASA announced Wednesday that it passed a key assembly milestone with the Space Launch System (SLS) ‘megarocket’ that brings it closer to launch the Artemis crew to the moon.

The US space agency said the ten segments that make up the two booster rockets were vertically stacked over several weeks at the Kennedy Space Center.

When launched, the $18.6 billion SLS will be the most powerful rocket ever made and capable of taking cargo and astronauts to the moon in a single trip.

NASA announced Wednesday that it passed a key assembly milestone with the Space Launch System (SLS) ‘megarocket’ (pictured) .The US space agency said the ten segments that make up the two booster rockets were vertically stacked over several weeks at the Kennedy Space Center.

Getting the rocket off the ground for Artemis I in 2021 is critical to meet the 2024 target of landing the first woman and next man on the moon with Artemis III.

Bruce Tilleer, SLS booster manager at the Marshall Space Flight Center, said: ‘Seeing the Space Launch System solid rocket boosters stacked completely on the Mobile Launcher for the first time makes me proud of the entire team.’

‘This team has created the tallest, most powerful boosters ever built for flight, boosters that will help launch the Artemis I mission to the Moon.’

This 2023 launch will be reminiscent of Apollo 10 and is intended to act as a crewed dress rehearsal for the 2024 mission.

NASA will land the first woman and next man on the Moon in 2024 as part of the Artemis mission

Artemis was the twin sister of Apollo and goddess of the Moon in Greek mythology. 

NASA has chosen her to personify its path back to the Moon, which will see astronauts return to the lunar surface by 2024 –  including the first woman and the next man.

Artemis 1, formerly Exploration Mission-1, is the first in a series of increasingly complex missions that will enable human exploration to the Moon and Mars. 

Artemis 1 will be the first integrated flight test of NASA’s deep space exploration system: the Orion spacecraft, Space Launch System (SLS) rocket and the ground systems at Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida.  

Artemis 1 will be an uncrewed flight that will provide a foundation for human deep space exploration, and demonstrate our commitment and capability to extend human existence to the Moon and beyond. 

During this flight, the spacecraft will launch on the most powerful rocket in the world and fly farther than any spacecraft built for humans has ever flown.

It will travel 280,000 miles (450,600 km) from Earth, thousands of miles beyond the Moon over the course of about a three-week mission. 

Artemis 1, formerly Exploration Mission-1, is the first in a series of increasingly complex missions that will enable human exploration to the Moon and Mars. This graphic explains the various stages of the mission

Orion will stay in space longer than any ship for astronauts has done without docking to a space station and return home faster and hotter than ever before. 

With this first exploration mission, NASA is leading the next steps of human exploration into deep space where astronauts will build and begin testing the systems near the Moon needed for lunar surface missions and exploration to other destinations farther from Earth, including Mars. 

The will take crew on a different trajectory and test Orion’s critical systems with humans aboard.

The SLS rocket will from an initial configuration capable of sending more than 26 metric tons to the Moon, to a final configuration that can send at least 45 metric tons. 

Together, Orion, SLS and the ground systems at Kennedy will be able to meet the most challenging crew and cargo mission needs in deep space.

Eventually NASA seeks to establish a sustainable human presence on the Moon by 2028 as a result of the Artemis mission.

The space agency hopes this colony will uncover new scientific discoveries, demonstrate new technological advancements and lay the foundation for private companies to build a lunar economy. 

Read original article here

Philanthropist MacKenzie Scott, Ex-Wife of Jeff Bezos, Marries Seattle School Teacher

MacKenzie Scott, the philanthropist formerly married to

Jeff Bezos,

has married again following her 2019 divorce from the

Amazon.com Inc.

founder, according to a person familiar with the matter.

Ms. Scott, one of the world’s wealthiest women, has married Dan Jewett, a science teacher at a Seattle private school, according to the person.

Ms. Scott has devoted much of her time recently to philanthropic efforts benefiting women-led charities, food banks and Black colleges, among other institutions. Since her divorce, Ms. Scott has given away more than $4 billion of her fortune, according to a post she wrote on Medium in December.

In a post dated Saturday on Ms. Scott’s page on the Giving Pledge website, for billionaires who have promised to donate most of their fortune to philanthropic efforts, Mr. Jewett signed on to her commitment.

“It is strange to be writing a letter indicating I plan to give away the majority of my wealth during my lifetime, as I have never sought to gather the kind of wealth required to feel like saying such a thing would have particular meaning,” Mr. Jewett’s post says.

“Dan is such a great guy, and I am happy and excited for the both of them,” said Mr. Bezos in a statement provided by an Amazon spokesman.

Ms. Scott and Mr. Jewett couldn’t immediately be reached for comment on Sunday.

Ms. Scott and Mr. Bezos, both Princeton University graduates, met while working at a hedge fund in New York. She helped him start Amazon in 1994, and is the author of two novels. Her Amazon author page now says that she “lives in Seattle with her four children and her husband, Dan.”

At the time of their 2019 divorce, after 25 years of marriage, Mr. Bezos was the wealthiest person in the world, with his stake of more than 16% of Amazon. Ms. Scott received 4% of Amazon’s shares as part of their divorce settlement, though Mr. Bezos kept voting rights for those shares.

Ms. Scott joined the Giving Pledge in May 2019, shortly after terms of her divorce with Mr. Bezos were finalized. The pledge was started by Bill and

Melinda Gates

and

Warren Buffett

in 2010. Mr. Bezos hasn’t joined the pledge.

Amazon’s business has been a major beneficiary of the pandemic, driving up its stock price. Mr. Bezos, after jostling for a time with

Elon Musk

for the title, again ranks as the world’s richest person, with a net worth of around $177 billion, according to wealth rankings by Forbes and Bloomberg. Ms. Scott ranks the 22nd richest person, at around $53 billion.

Mr. Jewett is a teacher at Lakeside School, according to the school’s website.

“In a stroke of happy coincidence, I am married to one of the most generous and kind people I know—and joining her in a commitment to pass on an enormous financial wealth to serve others,” Mr. Jewett said in his Giving Pledge letter.

Write to Dana Mattioli at dana.mattioli@wsj.com

Copyright ©2020 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

Read original article here

Overwatch 2 at Blizzcon 2021: The Big Jeff Kaplan Interview

Despite today’s Overwatch 2 Behind-the-Scenes panel revealing a glut of new details about the game, there’s still a lot to discuss about Blizzard’s shooter sequel. Thankfully, we managed to speak to exactly the right person about that – game director Jeff Kaplan.

We discussed the game’s lack of a release date, how connected it will be to the original Overwatch, the frustration of being seen not to be making a “real” sequel, the possibility of cross-play, and dived into lots of the panel’s stranger new details – among many more topics.

The interview below has been edited for length and clarity.

IGN: I really enjoyed the presentation – there’s a lot more new detail about the game in there than I went in expecting. A lot to dig into.

Jeff Kaplan: I’m glad to hear that. We’re really hoping the players just see a lot of stuff – and I think there’s a lot of Easter egg stuff in there too. Not even deliberate, just stuff we overlooked and, well, we probably revealed something by mistake because there’s a lot of content in there.

IGN: I’m going to start with the very obvious question that I feel we should just get out of the way. Obviously we didn’t get a release date in the presentation – is the idea with Overwatch 2 at the moment that it’s a “ready when it’s done” situation? You talk a lot about unfinished experiments – because of those, is there just no point in putting a timescale on it?

Jeff Kaplan: Yeah. I think in general, that’s how we usually operate at Blizzard. Not always – there have been cases where we’ve announced a date and then had to push it – but generally we don’t want people getting too excited about a date unless we feel really confident. And the number one thing that we care about is the quality of the game. It’s one of the Blizzard values. Have you been out to the Blizzard campus?

IGN: I haven’t actually.

Jeff Kaplan: Well, I haven’t been there in a year, I don’t even know if it’s still there [laughs]. But we used to have a statue with the Orc and the company values around it. And one of those values is, ‘Commit to Quality’. Making sure the game is right is the most important thing to us at this time. So that’s what we’re really focused on: delivering on the expectations of what a sequel are. I think that’s core to us.

Overwatch 2: Rome and New York Maps Screenshots

IGN: I’m sure this comes without a timescale as well, but is there a plan – as with the original Overwatch – to have an open or closed beta phase before we get to the eventual Overwatch 2? Or is this more of an “it’s going to be ready when it’s ready” situation?

Jeff Kaplan: No, I think at this point, we’re not going to be able to pull an Apex Legends on the world and just announce its release [laughs]. I think this is the exact opposite strategy, for whatever it’s worth – announce it super-early. We’ll be pretty transparent. We’ve already been having internal milestones, those have been extended play tests that have involved people outside of just our team playing the game. Then we’ll probably move into some sort of alpha internally for a while. That’ll probably be more under wraps, there won’t be a lot publicly being talked about.

And then it’s very likely we will move into a closed beta that will be more in the public eye at that point. And it’s still not been determined if we are actually doing an open beta or not – I have a hard time imagining in the era that we live in, there not being some sort of open beta happening at some point, but nothing’s committed to yet.

IGN: One thing I would love to talk about is just the sheer scale of this presentation. You cover so many different areas – is this turning into more of a sequel than you expected it to be going in?

Jeff Kaplan: No, I think it’s kind of the opposite. I think in a lot of ways we didn’t communicate it at BlizzCon 2019 accurately. We tried to. We tried to tell people this is a true sequel. This isn’t DLC, this isn’t just something that should be a patch. But obviously we didn’t do that correctly because people just sort of created their own dialogue around what the game was. This was always the vision of the game. This has always been what we’ve had our eyes set on.

I’m somebody, if you look back on my career personally, I’ve made expansions, I’ve made patch updates. I have a very clear picture in my mind of what the difference between an expansion and a patch is versus a sequel. And our goal was always to make a sequel.

IGN: I guess that perception comes down partly to the fact that there is a connection with the original Overwatch here. It wasn’t mentioned too much in this panel, but I assume that connection is still the plan for PvP – Overwatch and Overwatch 2 will still be connected?

Jeff Kaplan: We feel like it’s super important to keep the community together. That’s one of our biggest goals. It’s so odd to me because if we were to rewind to BlizzCon 2019 and I were to just say, “Hey, we’re making Overwatch 2, it’s a sequel. It’s going to have all of this amazing PvE content, story missions, hero missions, all-new PvP maps. We’re going to add new heroes. We’re going to change how a bunch of PvP works. See you later, Overwatch 1 people, hope you buy Overwatch 2!” The weirdest part is everybody would just go, “Oh, they’re making a sequel.”

But the second you go, “Let’s try to be a little bit cooler about what we do with the community,” we actually get destroyed by that very community. It’s something I hope in some ways influences people to think about how they want to be treated as a community. Maybe there are some ways that we can do things that are better, cooler, both from the game company standpoint, but also from the community standpoint. Because the reaction we got was very much like, “No, treat us like we’ve always been treated before.” And it’s like, well, that’s what this behavior is going to lead to if we’re not careful.

The second you go, “Let’s try to be a little bit cooler about what we do with the community,” we actually get destroyed by that very community.

IGN: With that in mind then, are you able to give a sense of what the impact of the changes that you’re showing – particularly to PvP in Overwatch 2 – will be on Overwatch 1? Because I think that’s where people have a disconnect. When you’re talking about things like the weapon sound pass or animation changes, where does the buck stop for where Overwatch 1 can improve versus where Overwatch 2 will?

Jeff Kaplan: I think there are two types of changes to think about. One are purely technical changes, advancements in technology – if we update the system specs, the updated engine, those types of things will enable us to do [things] that we can’t do currently. That’s one set of things. The second set of things is from a purely psychological standpoint: a community’s ability to accept and adapt to changes. What can we get away with in a patch in Overwatch 1? When does the community accept a massive change that can only come with a sequel? Both of those things are in consideration. Our general thought and philosophy is we shouldn’t just arbitrarily hold things for Overwatch 2 that would benefit Overwatch. We should try to get those out to our community as soon as possible.

And you see that in content balance changes we’re doing or just general changes to the game. Recently we added Priority Pass to improve queue times. It’d be easy to make an argument like, “Oh, we should just hold on to that. And bolster the perception of value in Overwatch 2 for stuff like that.” But we feel like, “No, this is something that, there’s no reason for it to wait. Let’s just get it to our community as soon as possible.”

So there are certain things that are tied to Overwatch 2 either thematically, psychologically because of player change, technically because of engine improvements. And then there are other things that we just think we should get to the Overwatch 1 community. And we really take all of them on a case-by-case basis. It’s a constant discussion of what should go in what branch and let’s make sure that we’re serving the players as much as possible.

IGN: Obviously there are changes that are coming to Overwatch 1 that will be a part of Overwatch 2. Is the plan still for those those PvP audiences to be able to play with each other, despite the fact that there may be differences between those two games?

Jeff Kaplan: Yes. The plan is to really have the two PvP audiences converge, or I guess a better way to say it is that there would be one PvP audience – they’re just enjoying the PVP experience.

IGN: But will those still be within single console families, or is there any plan for cross-platform play? Could an Overwatch 2 PvP player on PS5 play with an Xbox One Overwatch 1 PvP player? Is there any movement on that?

Jeff Kaplan: We are extremely supportive and excited about the concept of cross play. We love it in other games. In general, our thought is any system the game can adequately run on, and any way that people can play with their friends – even just for reasons of improving the matchmaking experience – we’re very excited about those ideas. We don’t have anything officially to announce or talk in detail about today, but in general the team stance is that cross play is exciting. We are interested in exploring it and if we can overcome the hurdles, we would love to bring a feature like that to our players someday.

Overwatch 2: Campaign Screenshots

IGN: In terms of the stuff that’s just going to be an Overwatch 2, I don’t think I’d quite grasped how expansive you’re aiming to make the Hero Missions mode. I think it’s [assistant game director] Aaron Keller in the video that says he wants there to be hundreds of missions, and for people to come back night after night to play them. Are you approaching this with a Daily Challenge approach? Is that how you’re going to deliver those variations?

Jeff Kaplan: So here’s an interesting way to think about it. As we know, PvP is highly replayable. We have a huge audience today – we’re sitting in 2021 for a game we launched in 2016 with millions of people playing it, which is awesome. So we know the replayability is high there. We want to make the story missions, like the campaign, have an element of replayability to those – but we’re not under the illusion that a linear campaign is going to be highly replayable. And that’s what we showed at BlizzCon 2019 – that Rio mission – and a lot of people are like, “Oh, I don’t see how I’m going to play that for thousands of hours.” And we’re like, “Yeah, I don’t think you are going to play that for thousands…” That’s not the goal.

But we are building Hero Missions on the PvE side of the game, specifically targeted at replayability. And we’re hoping to achieve that through four main axes. The first is, unlike in the story missions, in the Hero Missions you can play whatever heroes you want. In a story mission it doesn’t make sense that Widowmaker and Tracer are together because they’re enemies and they shouldn’t be fighting side-by-side… unless we constructed some bizarre story where that happens. Which might happen now [laughs]. But you can play whatever heroes you want. So as you know from PvP, the hero comps changing really changes the dynamic nature of the game and adds replayability.

The second factor is that you’re going to be fighting different enemy types in Hero Missions. So sometimes it’s going to be against Null Sector, sometimes it’s going to be against Talon, and then there might be other new enemy types that we haven’t announced yet that you would be fighting against as well. So adding variety to the enemies and having them fight and be challenges in different ways is exciting to us.

The third axis is the locations. The plan is, at this point, we have a really robust map catalog from Overwatch 1, and we have maps from Overwatch 2. That’s just talking about the PvP maps, but we’ll also have all of the PvE experiences we’re creating. So you’re going to have this variety of locations to fight in, which is going to add a dynamic nature.

And then the fourth axis is the different objective types – and you see some of these in the BlizzConline video. Sometimes you’re doing things more defensive in nature – protect the satellite uplink dish, for example. Sometimes you’re doing things more aggressive in nature. You know, “There’s a poison gas cloud coming our way. We’ve got to get out, get to extraction.” We’re hoping to come up with as many objectives as possible.

And then we’re hoping these four things all combined together are then fueled by the progression system. That’s going to have things like leveling heroes up – just changing their base stats alone is interesting. Unlocking those talent points. And then there are other elements of the progression system that we haven’t even announced yet or talked about yet. It’s something we have a lot of experience with at Blizzard. If you think about a game like Diablo or World of Warcraft, in some ways, those games are almost driven mostly by the progression systems in the game, even more than just the core combat. What’s exciting about Overwatch is it has really dynamic, fun, core combat. Now being fueled by this hero mission system and the progression system, we think it’s going to be pretty deep and rich by the time we’re done with it.

The beautiful part is Null Sector and Talon, don’t go to Reddit and complain when Mercy has five-man res.

IGN: That really was the bit that sparked my imagination as I watched – that tinkering element is super-exciting to me. We see a kind of a variety of different of effects that we can add, including seeing Mercy being able to do an area of effect resurrection [an ability removed from the original game in 2017] – are we going to see a lot of original or lost abilities coming back in the PvE progression system?

Jeff Kaplan: Absolutely. And the way that I like to think about it is there are some things that are just horribly broken in PvP, and feel terrible in PvP. Like, when you were on the enemy team and Mercy resurrected all five players after you had killed them all, it felt really terrible and that’s why we had to change it. But the beautiful part is Null Sector and Talon, don’t go to Reddit and complain when Mercy has five-man res [laughs]. So we can put it in PvE and have it feel pretty good.

There’s other things like crowd control abilities – crowd control abilities when you’re the one doing them, feel fantastic. It feels powerful, it feels game-changing. When it’s being used against you, it feels terrible. So in PvP, you’ve noticed over the past year, we’ve been toning crowd control down in Overwatch 1 just to make the game feel better. But we can do things- like, it’s shown in the BlizzCon video, “Hey, do you want to change Reinhardt’s Firestrike into Froststrike?” And now it’s freezing enemies. One of Reinhardt’s other new talents is he can pin more than one enemy. And again, that’s something that would feel terrible on an enemy team in PvP but it feels great and PvE.

So we can suddenly get away from with things, you know? I don’t know if we have any that are specifically this, but I use it as an example with our team all the time, like, “We can do a ten-second stun in PvE if we want. The robots, aren’t going to complain that we do that.” So it’s been so much fun. I think Geoff Goodman – he’s our lead hero designer – he has some quote, that we get to play Frankenstein and mad scientist. Basically all the things that we always wanted to do. So the creativity has just been through the ceiling.

IGN: It feels that it sort of unlocks a whole different, for want of a better term, it kind of unlocks a different talent tree for the developers as well, you know? There’s a whole set of other things to work through there.

Jeff Kaplan: Absolutely. Absolutely.

IGN: Do you have any favourite PvE builds? We see one in the video where Soldier: 76 is able to walk with his area of effect healing, that also boops people–

Jeff Kaplan: We already nerfed that [laughs]. We already got rid of that. What’s funny is people are like, “Should we show that? Because we got rid of that. That turned out to be really terrible.” And we’re like, “Yeah, we should just show work-in-progress.”

Builds that I love? I have many – I am not normally a Junkrat player but we were doing a Junkrat playtest where we were testing some of our progression systems, and I was asked to check out the Junkrat trees. In one of his trees, the end talent in the tree is that you can dual-wield grenade launchers. And I’m like, “How can that even be balanced and not be super-broken?” And I remember I actually ended up Shadowplaying a bunch of the gameplay because I was laughing so hard, and my team was laughing so hard, and having so much fun. To the hero designers’ credit – it was Geoff Goodman and a gentleman by the name of Brandon Brennan who made that talent – it was balanced, it was fun, it was super cool.

The Reinhardt builds are fascinating. We keep doing these Reinhardt playtests because – not that you have to go to these extremes, but I think a lot of us end up going to these extremes – there’s what I’ll just call the Reinhardt wrecking ball build, where you basically say to your team, “I hope you never want to see the shield again because you’re not going to see it when I’m playing this build.” And it’s all about aggression, and the hammer, and moving forward. And then on the exact opposite side of that, there’s the Reinhardt build where basically the shield is all of the power. Up to and including you can make the shield bigger. It’s just awesome. And so there’s these two different builds. One is like, “You’re never going to see the shield.” And the other is, “Expect to see nothing but the shield.” It really lets player creativity and player playstyle preference dictate how they want to play the hero, which is pretty fun in my opinion.

Overwatch 2: Hero Progression Screenshots

IGN: Obviously Reinhardt is a fairly major point made throughout the video, right down to you tinkering with the existing PvP version of Reinhardt. Has that expanded creativity from the design team built into those experiments in some way? Have you unshackled yourself from how you were forced to think about PvP before?

Jeff Kaplan: We have a lot more tools in our toolkit, which is cool. Some of that is on the creativity ideation side, but a lot of it is also on the technical and art side as well. It’s easier to pivot on these heroes when you have a bunch of animations, visual effects, great gameplay code that enables you to make these abilities. We’re unlocked a little bit.

The Reinhardt PvP changes, those were coming from more of a place of just watching and listening to player feedback and also watching what people like and don’t like about the tank role. One of the things that’s on the table – I don’t know if we’ll actually do this or not – but we’ve even thought about just renaming the role in Overwatch 2 to ‘Brawler’ instead of ‘Tank’, and just reset expectations. Not only of you as the tank player, but also of your team for what you want out of this guy.

Right now, it’s not uncommon in a game of Overwatch 1 to log in and have somebody just say like, “We need a shield, you have to play a shield. Don’t take the shield down.” And you’re like, “Well, I didn’t feel like just holding, left trigger or right mouse button down all night. That wasn’t my idea of how I wanted to play Overwatch tonight but I’m being forced to.”

So we’re trying to rethink maybe the way the game is played a little bit and redefine what PvP needs – go, “Hey, we’re not in Overwatch 1 anymore. We’re in Overwatch 2 now. It’s okay for it to be different. In fact, how many years are we going to play the same game before it’s time to move on and experience something different and allow us to evolve?” Which I think is good.

IGN: One thing I’d love to know, with a kind of connection to both PvP and PvE – you’ve got custom game modes and arcade modes that are a bit more casual. Is it even possible, or is there any thought, about bringing those talent tree versions of PvE characters into PvP in a less competitive setting?

Jeff Kaplan: I think it would have to be a completely not competitive setting. We haven’t done anything officially yet but we’ve definitely talked about – we know that players are going to want to play with these talents in PvP. Just straight up, I think it’s horribly broken to play with these talents in PvP but I also am very open to allowing the players to try it and find the fun, if they can find the fun in that.

So it’s an idea that we’ve definitely entertained and we would be excited. There are some slight performance issues, like the game tuned and balanced to run on all systems in PvP versus PvE. There are different considerations but I’m sure we could work through those. And a lot of times when we enable stuff in the workshop, people just know you’re not going to get a good frame rate doing that [laughs]. They kind of accept it like, “Oh, is that a pyramid of Torbjörn that I’m seeing? I wonder why I’m only getting 30 frames a second right now.”

IGN: To move to a different part of the game, I’d love to touch on story mode. We know very vaguely what the story is about in Overwatch 2, but is that a campaign mode in which we will only play a selection of characters from the reformed Overwatch? Are there only “good” characters available in story missions, or will we be able to play all the characters along the way?

Jeff Kaplan: In the story missions, currently the plan is that some of the story missions are a mandated set of four characters. That was like our Rio demo at BlizzCon 2019, where you had to play Tracer, Mei, Reinhardt, or Lucio. Other missions are much more open and allow for some hero choice, but only heroes that make sense contextually for that story.

It is unlikely that we will have a cohesive campaign that contextually incorporates all 32 of the existing known heroes. And there are some real edge cases like Hanzo or Wrecking Ball, how do they fit in? Why would it make sense for them to be on a mission with Overwatch? But we are hoping to incorporate as many heroes as possible into the story missions. That’s been one of our goals but whether we get to all 32, plus the new Overwatch 2 heroes, it’s unlikely that we’ll hit a hundred percent completion on that.

We’re working on the friendly AI, I don’t know if it will get to a point where it’s good enough that we think you would have a great experience playing just by yourself but we’re definitely open to it.

IGN: And will we be able to play story missions solo or offline? Or is this still definitively an online team game in that regard?

Jeff Kaplan: I’ll give you a weird answer: it’s kind of both. It is definitively an online cooperative story experience. That’s what we think is cool and unique and innovative about it. You don’t traditionally play story or campaign games with other people, and we think that’s going to make it feel very distinctly Overwatch or Overwatch 2. With that said, we are working on friendly AI and, if we can get it to a point that we’re satisfied with, we’re okay with the AI existing in some cases. An easy example is if somebody goes linkdead or something, we don’t want to ruin the experience for the other three players.

Perhaps we just let you play [with AI], but that’s not officially decided yet, and there are a lot of technical hurdles for us to get over. So we’re working on the friendly AI, I don’t know if it will get to a point where it’s good enough that we think you would have a great experience playing just by yourself but we’re definitely open to it, and that’s something we’re going to push on throughout the development of the game.

IGN: Obviously the timeline is off the table at the moment, but is there a sense of when people might hear more about Overwatch 2 after this?

Jeff Kaplan: Yeah. Our plan is very different now. When we announced Overwatch 2, we were very explicit with the audience. I don’t know if everybody remembered this but we literally said we’re going dark, and we said we’re going to talk about this at the next BlizzCon. I think part of what happened was the pandemic situation, the fact that there wasn’t a BlizzCon in November 2020, and things got kind of pushed off until February – but we were very explicit. Like, “Hey, we’re not talking after this BlizzCon we just need to focus on the game.”

Our strategy for after BlizzConline in February is to be more communicative. I don’t know if I can officially commit to monthly updates on Overwatch 2, but we definitely want to be more communicative. And our plan is not to go dark for an extended period of time. In fact, we were discussing as recently as yesterday the opportunity of there maybe being some cool stuff we could talk about in March or April to keep people updated and to keep people going. So it’s very front-and-center in our mind to communicate more.

We also want to be careful. I think there’s a right time to get the audience hyped and build to launch. And there’s also a time where it’s like, “Hey, that was kind of not cool of you because it was too early and we’re not ready to have this yet.” So I think we want to be very transparent with people. I’m really glad that the discussion happened of, “Hey, don’t expect Overwatch 2 or Diablo 4 this year,” because I think that helps set people’s expectations. So if we do say something in March or April, they’re not like, “Oh my God, that means we’re beta in May and then release in June.” It’s like, “No, it’s out there that that’s not happening. So let’s all get our expectations aligned.” But we definitely want to be more communicative and more transparent with the development of Overwatch 2 as we get into the closing out of the game.

Joe Skrebels is IGN’s Executive Editor of News. Follow him on Twitter. Have a tip for us? Want to discuss a possible story? Please send an email to newstips@ign.com.



Read original article here

Jeff Bezos reclaims spot as world’s richest person from Elon Musk

Saul Loeb | AFP | Getty Images

Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos reclaimed his title as the world’s richest person after he leapfrogged Tesla CEO Elon Musk, according to real-time data from Forbes.

Musk saw his net worth slide by $3.9 billion on Tuesday as Tesla shares closed at $796.22, down more than 2.4%. The 49-year-old entrepreneur surpassed Bezos in January to become the richest person in the world, on the back of Tesla’s surging share price and his generous pay package.

Musk gave back the title of world’s richest person to Bezos just as quickly as he rose in the rankings. Until last month, Bezos had been the richest man since 2017.

The Amazon founder’s personal wealth, which is mostly in Amazon stock, has skyrocketed in recent years along with the company’s share price. Bezos has continued to notch new wealth milestones. Last August, he became the first person to see their net worth surge above $200 billion and in 2018 he became the world’s richest man in recent history when his personal wealth climbed above $150 billion.

Bezos once again became the world’s richest person as he prepares to leave his post later this year. Earlier this month, Bezos announced he would turn the helm over to Amazon’s top cloud boss Andy Jassy. Bezos is expected to still keep an eye on the company he founded, but he will have more time to focus on other projects, including his Blue Origin rocket company and The Washington Post, as well as philanthropic ventures the Bezos Earth Fund and the Amazon Day 1 Fund.

Read original article here

‘This fever will break’: Republican Jeff Flake on the slow fade of Trumpism | Republicans

By now, Jeff Flake thought this would all be over.

Flake, the former Arizona Republican senator and outspoken critic of Donald Trump, concedes that he expected the ripple effects in the Republican party Trump’s loss of the White House to have been bigger by now.

Instead, Flake has had to watch as Trump departed office but Trumpism refused to fade around the country. That includes in Flake’s home state, where the Republican party recently censured him alongside the two other most prominent Republicans – Cindy McCain, the widow of the late senator John McCain, and Doug Ducey, the Arizona governor.

“I do think this fever will break, but it’s been slow,” Flake said in an interview with the Guardian. “It’s been really slow.”

For much of the Trump administration Flake was something of a solitary voice within his party, opposing him first as a rare anti-Trump statewide elected official and then as a member of the club of Republicans who stood up to the 45th president only to face blowback.

Throughout all of that Flake hoped Trump would leave office one way or another, other Republicans would see the same light he did, and the opposition to the 45th president would grow. Flake calls it a “migration” of Republicans away from their fealty to Trump.

“This migration will start,” Flake said chuckling. “It’s just slow to get going.”

These days the outlook for anti-Trump Republicans can feel both bright and dark. Trump is out of office and there are elected Republican officials actively working to move on from Trump under the specter of blowback from activists within the GOP.

Congressman Adam Kinzinger of Illinois has set up a political action committee to fight against the QAnon movement saturating the Republican party. The House Republican conference chairwoman, Liz Cheney, and almost a dozen other Republicans voted to move forward with impeaching Trump again.

Other Republicans stood up to Trump as he was peddling unfounded claims about voter fraud after Joe Biden won the presidential election but before he took office.

Former Arizona senator Jeff Flake and his wife, Cheryl, after the inauguration of Joe Biden as the 46th president. Photograph: Tom Brenner/Reuters

But those forces are more a small rebellion or insurgency and less an army involved in an inter-party civil war. The anti-Trumpists are growing but very slowly, Flake concedes. Flake thinks successfully convicting Trump in his upcoming impeachment trial would help speed things along.

“I think if there’s enough elected officials who say ‘we’re done’ then that is the threshold, we cross that rubicon that we need to cross, and then Trump fades quickly,” Flake said.

It wasn’t supposed to be like this for Flake, a libertarian leaning conservative with soap opera-star good looks. He served in the House of Representatives for over a decade before winning the Senate seat once held by conservative icon Barry Goldwater in then-reliably red state Arizona. But as Trump’s unlikely presidential bid took off, Flake refused to go along with most of his Republican colleagues and fall in line. In October 2017 he delivered a speech in which he said he wouldn’t seek another term.

“I didn’t want to leave the Senate. I wanted to do another term at least,” Flake said. “But the thought of standing on a campaign stage with Donald Trump and laughing at his jokes and staring at my feet while he ridiculed my colleagues – I just could not do it. There’s nothing worth that. But I look and think going off and leaving the party or starting a third party that just doesn’t – we need two strong parties in this country. I think that we’ll be back, I hope that we will. I want to be part of that.”

Since then Flake hasn’t shied away from speaking out against Trump and he plans to continue to do so, in addition to some teaching work he’s doing at Arizona State University. Flake is also a familiar face on cable news and in political reporting.

Flake is optimistic as well. He predicted in his interview with the Guardian on Tuesday that extremist congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, a QAnon conspiracy theory supporter, would be stripped of her committee assignments, an effective legislative neutering for any member of Congress. She was – though it was Democrats, not Republicans who did it.

He also doesn’t think Cheney is doomed to lose re-election as Trumpists seek her ouster. On Wednesday, House minority leader Kevin McCarthy opted to support Cheney in the face of an uproar over her move to help impeach Trump.

“You’re having some defining moments here soon with Marjorie Taylor Greene and what they’re going to have to do with her and that will – maybe expedite this departure, I guess,” Flake said. “I wouldn’t count Liz Cheney out here. She has some benefits and ties that’s just so high profile now that she might be able to survive it. Maybe Adam Kinzinger too. I’m sure hoping and praying so.”

Asked if he’s been in touch with either Cheney or Kinzinger, Flake said he hadn’t but he said he’s talking with some similarly minded Republicans.

“Trumpism requires a certain amount of swagger that you lose when you lose. And he lost,” Flake said. “In Georgia he couldn’t pull those two senators across the finish line. So yeah, I very much believe that would be the case and that would come a lot faster if more elected officials would say ‘yeah, we gotta move on.’ I think they’ll get to that point but boy it’s been slow.”

He also has seen shoots of promise at home. His neighbors in the Pheonix suburbs where he lives once ran up Trump flags on their properties. Not anymore.

“There were actually two neighbors, one on either side, had Trump flags, they’re both down,” Flake said, cautioning that elsewhere in his neighborhood Trump fans are still flying their support.

Recently Flake and his wife took a long leisurely bike ride through his neighborhood and counted the Trump signs still up. They cringed when they saw signs at houses they knew. They then went by one house with three cars in his driveway. As they passed he yelled ‘thanks for doing what you did. We gotta get past this.’”

That surprised Flake, he recalled. He didn’t know the man and he assumed of all the houses he passed this would be home of a Trump fan.

“We engaged in a very enlightened conversation about the future of the party and how he wanted to stay but it was difficult,” Flake said.

Read original article here

Sundar Pichai’s Tweet After Jeff Bezos Says He’ll Step Down As Amazon CEO

Sundar Pichai also sent his best wishes for two of the passion projects of Jeff Bezos. (FILE)

New Delhi:

Google CEO Sundar Pichai on Wednesday congratulated Jeff Bezos and his successor Andy Jassy on their new roles after the Amazon founder announced his decision to stand aside later this year as chief executive of the company.

Mr Bezos said he will transition to the role of executive chair in the third quarter, handing over the CEO role to Andy Jassy, who heads Amazon Web Services.

The Indian-American top executive also sent his best wishes for two of the passion projects of the outgoing Amazon CEO – the Day 1 Fund and the Bezos Earth Fund.

Mr Bezos, in a letter to Amazon employees, said he would “stay engaged in important Amazon initiatives” but would pivot towards philanthropic initiatives, including his Day One Fund and Bezos Earth Fund, and other business ventures in space exploration and journalism.

Top executives and prominent figures at other major companies around the world have been sending their congratulations to Bezos and Jassy via Twitter.

Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella, noting Mr Jassy’s accomplishments, said, “a well-deserved recognition of what you have accomplished”.

Marc Benioff, CEO of Salesforce, also took to Twitter to say Amazon “could not be in better hands.”

Mr Bezos, 57, founded Amazon in his garage in 1994 and went on to grow it into a colossus that dominates online retail, with operations in streaming music and television, groceries, cloud computing, robotics, artificial intelligence and more.

Mr Jassy joined Amazon as a marketing manager in 1997 and in 2003 founded AWS, the cloud services division of the company which has been one of the most profitable but least-known units of the tech giant.



Read original article here

Jeff Bezos to step down as Amazon CEO, Andy Jassy to take over in Q3

Rep. Ken Buck, R-Colo., a member of the House Judiciary Committee, said on Twitter shortly after the announcement that he has questions for Jassy, hinting at an early hurdle when Jassy is installed.

Bezos said he will stay engaged in important Amazon projects but will also have more time to focus on the Bezos Earth Fund, his Blue Origin spaceship company, The Washington Post and the Amazon Day 1 Fund.

“As much as I still tap dance into the office, I’m excited about this transition,” Bezos said in his internal announcement. “Millions of customers depend on us for our services, and more than a million employees depend on us for their livelihoods. Being the CEO of Amazon is a deep responsibility, and it’s consuming. When you have a responsibility like that, it’s hard to put attention on anything else.”

Industry CEOs and Amazon competitors congratulated Bezos and Jassy on the coming transition, with Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella calling Jassy’s promotion “well-deserved.”

Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai offered Bezos “best wishes” on his other projects.

Fellow Amazonians:

I’m excited to announce that this Q3 I’ll transition to Executive Chair of the Amazon Board and Andy Jassy will become CEO. In the Exec Chair role, I intend to focus my energies and attention on new products and early initiatives. Andy is well known inside the company and has been at Amazon almost as long as I have. He will be an outstanding leader, and he has my full confidence.

This journey began some 27 years ago. Amazon was only an idea, and it had no name. The question I was asked most frequently at that time was, “What’s the internet?” Blessedly, I haven’t had to explain that in a long while.

Today, we employ 1.3 million talented, dedicated people, serve hundreds of millions of customers and businesses, and are widely recognized as one of the most successful companies in the world.

How did that happen? Invention. Invention is the root of our success. We’ve done crazy things together, and then made them normal. We pioneered customer reviews, 1-Click, personalized recommendations, Prime’s insanely-fast shipping, Just Walk Out shopping, the Climate Pledge, Kindle, Alexa, marketplace, infrastructure cloud computing, Career Choice, and much more. If you get it right, a few years after a surprising invention, the new thing has become normal. People yawn. And that yawn is the greatest compliment an inventor can receive.

I don’t know of another company with an invention track record as good as Amazon’s, and I believe we are at our most inventive right now. I hope you are as proud of our inventiveness as I am. I think you should be.

As Amazon became large, we decided to use our scale and scope to lead on important social issues. Two high-impact examples: our $15 minimum wage and the Climate Pledge. In both cases, we staked out leadership positions and then asked others to come along with us. In both cases, it’s working. Other large companies are coming our way. I hope you’re proud of that as well.

I find my work meaningful and fun. I get to work with the smartest, most talented, most ingenious teammates. When times have been good, you’ve been humble. When times have been tough, you’ve been strong and supportive, and we’ve made each other laugh. It is a joy to work on this team.

As much as I still tap dance into the office, I’m excited about this transition. Millions of customers depend on us for our services, and more than a million employees depend on us for their livelihoods. Being the CEO of Amazon is a deep responsibility, and it’s consuming. When you have a responsibility like that, it’s hard to put attention on anything else. As Exec Chair I will stay engaged in important Amazon initiatives but also have the time and energy I need to focus on the Day 1 Fund, the Bezos Earth Fund, Blue Origin, The Washington Post, and my other passions. I’ve never had more energy, and this isn’t about retiring. I’m super passionate about the impact I think these organizations can have.

Amazon couldn’t be better positioned for the future. We are firing on all cylinders, just as the world needs us to. We have things in the pipeline that will continue to astonish. We serve individuals and enterprises, and we’ve pioneered two complete industries and a whole new class of devices. We are leaders in areas as varied as machine learning and logistics, and if an Amazonian’s idea requires yet another new institutional skill, we’re flexible enough and patient enough to learn it.

Keep inventing, and don’t despair when at first the idea looks crazy. Remember to wander. Let curiosity be your compass. It remains Day 1.

Jeff



Read original article here

Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos, World’s Richest, Shade Each Other Over…

The statement followed a tweet from Musk, the richest person according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

The world’s two richest men are duking it out before U.S. regulators over celestial real estate for their satellite fleets.

Elon Musk’s SpaceX has asked the Federal Communications Commission for permission to operate Starlink communications satellites at a lower orbit than first planned.

Jeff Bezos’s Amazon.com Inc. says the move would risk interference and collisions with its planned Kuiper satellites, which like Starlink are designed to beam internet service from space.

A dispute that would normally be confined to regulatory filings is spilling into public view, in a spat that showcases the large personalities involved as billionaires chase dreams in the sky.

“It is SpaceX’s proposed changes that would hamstring competition among satellite systems,” Amazon tweeted Tuesday from its official news account. “It is clearly in SpaceX’s interest to smother competition in the cradle if they can, but it is certainly not in the public’s interest.”

Jeff Bezos’s Amazon.com Inc. says the move would risk interference and collisions with its planned Kuiper satellites, which like Starlink are designed to beam internet service from space.

The statement followed a tweet from Musk, the richest person according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

“It does not serve the public to hamstring Starlink today for an Amazon satellite system that is at best several years away from operation,” Musk said in a tweeted reply to coverage by CNBC journalist Michael Sheetz.

Musk’s Space Exploration Technologies Corp. has launched more than 1,000 satellites for its Starlink internet service and is signing up early customers in the U.S., U.K. and Canada. Amazon last year won FCC permission for a fleet of 3,236 satellites and has yet to launch any.

Amazon earlier urged the FCC to reject SpaceX’s request for lower orbits. It said the change would put SpaceX satellites in the midst of the Kuiper System orbits, according to filings at the agency.

SpaceX pushed back in calls to the FCC, saying its plans wouldn’t increase interference for what it termed Amazon’s “still nascent plans.”

A lower orbit allows quicker internet service because the signal doesn’t travel as far. SpaceX told the FCC that having the satellites closer to Earth lessens the risk of space debris because they would fall out of orbit more quickly than higher spacecraft.

SpaceX eventually plans to operate some 12,000 satellites and has won FCC authorization for about 4,400 birds, including 1,584 at 550 kilometers — where its satellites currently orbit. The company is seeking permission to stage another 2,824 satellites at the same approximate altitude, rather than twice as high as originally proposed.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

Read original article here

49ers Re-Sign RB Jeff Wilson Jr. 

The San Francisco 49ers announced on Tuesday that the team has re-signed restricted free agent RB Jeff Wilson Jr. to a one-year deal.

Wilson Jr. (6-0, 213) originally signed with the 49ers as an undrafted rookie free agent on May 1, 2018. Throughout his three seasons with the 49ers (2018-20), he has appeared in 28 games (five starts) and registered 219 carries for 974 yards (4.4 average) and 11 touchdowns on the ground to go along with 28 receptions for 265 yards and four touchdowns through the air. He has also appeared in one postseason contest and registered one reception for 20 yards.

In 2020, Wilson Jr. led the team with 126 carries for 600 yards and seven touchdowns, all single-season career highs. He also tallied career highs in receptions (13), receiving yards (133) and receiving touchdowns (three).

A 25-year-old native of Elkhart, TX, Wilson Jr. attended the University of North Texas where he appeared in 41 games (29 starts) during his four-year career with the Mean Green. He rushed for 3,205 yards and 32 touchdowns on 562 carries, while adding 70 receptions for 527 yards and two touchdowns. Wilson Jr. finished his career ranked third in school history in rushing touchdowns (32) and fourth in rushing yards (3,205). As a senior, he started all 11 games in which he appeared and notched 188 carries for 1,215 yards and 16 touchdowns to go along with 24 receptions for 168 yards.

Read original article here