Tag Archives: plays

Portable PS2 Looks Great, Plays Grand Theft Auto 3

The PlayStation 2 is a great console, but does have one annoying flaw: It’s not portable. So one YouTuber, GingerOfOz, decided to fix this glaring design deficit and in the process created a sweet-looking handheld console he named the PS2 Eclipse.

Yesterday, Ginger uploaded a video showcasing all the work that went into making a portable PS2. As he points out numerous times, he’s far from the first person to “portablize” a PS2. In fact, some of the ideas used to make the Eclipse come straight from folks like GmanModz.

For example, to build the smallest portable possible, Ginger needed to cut up the PS2 motherboard so it could fit in a smaller, 3D-printed case. And back in 2017, GmanModz figured out the best way to dice up a PS2 motherboard without breaking it.

Using this smaller motherboard and some extra custom parts connected to it, Ginger was able to hook it all up inside a surprisingly clean-looking handheld package. The PS2 Eclipse almost looks like a nicely made knock-off of an official product I’d buy from Sony. (Also Sony: Make a portable PS2 please.)

Because it contains real PS2 hardware, the Eclipse isn’t emulating games. As a result, games run at full speed like they would on a real PS2 console. (That said, some games don’t work with this particular setup due to an issue with the controller parts inside the unit.)

Read More: What Is Your Favorite Portable Gaming Console?

The only major downside of this homebrew console is its use of USB for loading games. To keep the console small, Ginger, like most other console modders, decided to go with solid-state USB storage instead of keeping the PS2’s typical DVD drive. An optical drive would’ve consumed a lot of space and battery power, resulting in a bulky, battery-guzzling monster. But relying on USB brings issues too, as the PS2 only supports the slow, outdated USB 1.1. standard. So some games, like Grand Theft Auto III, take nearly a minute to load, and cutscenes can get choppy.

For those wondering, the Eclipse can run for about two and a half hours on a single charge. Not incredible, but not bad for something put together by a person at home using hacked-together old parts and homebrew technology.

Sadly, you can’t buy this thing, as Ginger decided to stop taking on portable commissions after the process started leaving him tired and exhausted. It’s not surprising to hear he wants a break, as he’s made exactly 50 different portable console mods over the last two years. But if you want to try to make one yourself, Ginger provides various links to just the information you’d need. Good luck.

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Dusty Hill dead – ZZ Top plays first concert since bassist’s death as ‘Dusty wanted band to continue’

DUCK DYNASTY STAR REMEMBERS DUSTY HILL

Duck Dynasty’s Willie Robertson told Fox News on Thursday about how Dusty Hill’s passing has led him to recount the past.

Thinking about their last encounter, Robertson said: “Our beards bowed down when we got in their presence because they had been running that look way longer than we had, that’s for sure.

“When I was with them a couple of years ago, they were heading off to Europe to play for like two months or something, it was crazy.

“And I was thinking at the time, not a lot of people have their 70th birthday and then take off to Europe to keep working and keep doing what they love to do.

“And it’s just a tribute to him and their lives, their passion and what they had. They had something good and they kept it together, kept the look, kept everything.”



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Cramer’s lightning round: Cybersecurity plays

FireEye: “We want CrowdStrike, we want Zscaler or we want Palo Alto Networks. Those are our plays, and then when Deep Instinct comes we will recommend that too. I do like Sentinel, but I haven’t done enough work on it.”

OncoCyte: “I like diagnostics, I like anti-cancer, I’m going to bless it as a speculation.”

Monday.Com: “That’s a hard stock. MNDY is a very hard stock … I’ve got to do more work.”

High Tide: “Too many of them. I like GrowGeneration.”

DermTech: “Anything that can have early detection of skin cancer is worth speculating on.”

3D Systems: “We’re going with something much more conservative with that. New investor, we’re going to actually hit on UnitedHealth.”

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LaKeith Stanfield plays Black samurai Yasuke in Netflix anime trailer

Netflix has just added another entry in its ever-expanding slate of ambitious anime projects, releasing a trailer today for Yasuke, the (semi-) historical tale of an African man who became a prominent warrior in feudal Japan. That part’s all real, to be clear; it’s just that Yasuke’s story is closely intertwined with that of ancient warlord Oda Nobunaga, and there’s nothing video game makers and anime artists love more than shoving a bunch of demons and magical shit into the life of the famed and feared Nobunaga.

Hence, presumably, some of the wilder stuff in the above trailer, which sees the ever-capable LaKeith Stanfield voicing Yasuke, who reportedly came to Japan in the late 1500s in the company of Jesuit missionaries, before catching Nobunaga’s attention. He was eventually named Nobunaga’s weapon bearer, a role that carried great privilege during the era, and generally gets Yasuke described as the first Black samurai. When Nobunaga was killed, Yasuke fought for a time against his killer, then disappeared from the eye of history—possibly because he became a demon-fighting boatman subject to some sort of badass prophecy, if the new anime is to believed.

Animation duties on Yasuke are being handled by MAPAA, which recently handled the final season of Attack On Titan. The series is slated for an April 29 release.

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Grimes posts heart-melting video of X AE A-XII, 10 months, laughing as he plays on a synthesizer

Grimes posts heart-melting video of baby X AE A-XII, 10 months, laughing as he plays on a synthesizer

Grimes posted a heart-melting Insta Stories video Wednesday of her 10-month-old son X AE A-XII playing on a little baby synthesizer.

The 33-year-old singer shares her child with her beau, 49-year-old tech heartthrob Elon Musk who is CEO of SpaceX and Tesla.

In her charming new video the baby could be seen making techno music come out of the machine and then laughing.

So sweet: Grimes posted a heart-melting Insta Stories video Wednesday of her 10-month-old son X AE A-XII playing on a little baby synthesizer

Grimes, aka Claire Elise Boucher, could be heard giggling off-camera and cooing at her son: ‘You’re so smart!’ as he played with the synthesizer. 

A couple of months ago Elon passed up Jeff Bezos to become the world’s richest man but at the moment Jeff is back at the top spot according to Forbes. 

When Grimes first gave birth to his baby last May it was initially announced that they had named their child X Æ A-12.  

Family matters: The 33-year-old singer shares her child with her beau, 49-year-old tech heartthrob Elon Musk who is CEO of SpaceX and Tesla

Baby mine: In her charming new video the baby could be seen making techno music come out of the machine and then laughing

However they then discovered that the California constitution only allows legal names to contain characters from the English alphabet.

As a result they eventually changed the name to X Æ A-XII, replacing the Hindu-Arabic numerals ’12’ with Roman numerals signifying the same number.

Elon – who shares five sons with his first wife Justine Wilson and was married twice to his second wife Talulah Riley – has explained how to pronounce X Æ A-XII.

Proud mama: Grimes herself could be heard giggling off-camera and cooing at her son: ‘You’re so smart!’ as he played with the synthesizer

Origin story: When Grimes first gave birth to his baby last May it was initially announced that they had named their child X Æ A-12

Details: Shortly after the baby was born he went on The Joe Rogan Experience and shared that his newest son’s name is verbally said: ‘X Ash A Twelve’

Shortly after the baby was born he went on The Joe Rogan Experience and shared that his newest son’s name is verbally said: ‘X Ash A Twelve.’

He dished that Grimes ‘came up with the name’ except for ‘A-12’ which was ‘my contribution’ and was inspired by Lockheed’s aircraft ‘Archangel-12, the precursor to the SR-71, coolest plane ever. It’s true.’ 

Elon confided: ‘It’s actually, I think it’s better being older and having a kid. I appreciate it more. Yeah, ’cause babies are awesome.’

Side by side: Grimes whose real name is Claire Elise Boucher is pictured with her sizzling beau at the Catholic-themed Met Gala in 2018

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Basketball Preview: Ohio State Plays Top-Seeded Michigan With Big Ten Title Berth On Line

Not an hour had passed and Duane Washington Jr. saw the future.

“We’ll definitely see them again,” he said.

His Buckeyes had just suffered a 92-87 loss to Michigan, their second in a 12-game stretch during which they rose to become the No. 4 team in the nation. In the aftermath of the shootout, he had an inkling they’d meet again. Or, at the very least, he sure hoped that would be the case.

Who Where When TV
Michigan (20-3, 14-3) Indianapolis, Indiana (Lucas Oil Stadium) 1 p.m. CBS

This weekend, he’ll get his wish.

Fifth-seeded Ohio State eked out an 87-78 overtime win, avoiding an utterly catastrophic loss to fourth-seeded Purdue on Friday, moving on to the semifinals of the Big Ten tournament where it’ll face top-seeded Michigan on Saturday. The Wolverines, now pitted against the Buckeyes once again, topped Maryland in the Lucas Oil Stadium quarterfinals to get to this point.

“I told you guys previously in another interview that we were going to see them again, and here it is,” Washington said on Friday. “So we’re super excited. About to get off this interview with you guys, go recover, and tip-off’s at 1 tomorrow. Just going over game-plan stuff, staying locked in, doing what we need to do to come out with the dub and survive and advance. The guys are locked and loaded.”

So far, Ohio State has narrowly come out on top twice. It won’t get any easier in the next game.

Michigan, the nation’s No. 4-ranked team, has proven itself one of college basketball’s premier teams, taking down the likes of Iowa, Wisconsin and Purdue, along with the Buckeyes. It possesses a top-five offense and a top-five defense, has an enviable blend of experience and youth and laid 92 points on Ohio State the first time they got a shot at Saturday’s opponent.

Once more, the Buckeyes will need a little bit of magic from E.J. Liddell, Duane Washington Jr. and company.

“I think they’re still coming down a little bit from this one,” head coach Chris Holtmann said after Friday’s win. “They do understand we’re playing a terrific Michigan team and well-coached and really, really good. We’ve got to defend a lot better than what we did in Game 1. We’ve got to defend a lot better. But we’ve got to somehow get our legs under us and be able to respond quickly to a team that is a really complete team offensively and defensively. I think those are the big challenges in front of us right now is we’ve got to get rest and respond.”

Three Things To Watch

Can The Wolverines Be Contained Offensively?

No team has lit the Buckeyes up this season quite like the Wolverines.

They set opponent single-game highs in points, points per possession, 3-point percentage, effective field-goal percentage and adjusted offensive efficiency. In short, they did whatever they wanted. Seven-foot freshman center Hunter Dickinson dropped 22 points with nine boards, Eli Brooks (17 points) and Chaundee Brown (15 points) each hit a trio of 3s, Isaiah Livers had 12 points and Mike Smith recorded 11 points and seven assists. Franz Wagner, a potential NBA draft lottery selection in a few months, only had nine points, yet that didn’t much affect his team’s productivity.

Given Ohio State’s persistent defensive woes, it’s tough to figure out exactly how Holtmann can make things tougher on the Wolverines. But one way or another, as the head coach said, it has to figure out some way to make that happen.

It all starts with how the Buckeyes address Dickinson. Do they let their big men take him one-on-one with limited help? Do they double-team him or run guys at him? They tried both, and in the first half he hit open teammates for 3-pointers, then in the second half he got his buckets in the post. Ohio State will want big days out of E.J. Liddell and Zed Key if it has any shot of getting Michigan’s offense out of rhythm. Kyle Young’s status is unclear given the fact he was evaluated for a concussion after the game.

Outside of the Dickinson issue, Ohio State will look to Washington, Justice Sueing, Justin Ahrens and CJ Walker for improved defense on guards and wings. It’s no secret that Michigan has an array of ways to hurt teams from those positions.

Ridiculous Shot-Making Again Required

Michigan’s going to put up points aplenty. That might as well be an assumption, and if it doesn’t happen, Ohio State can feel good about it. But Saturday’s game is almost certainly going to call for the Buckeyes to go blow-for-blow in a high-scoring affair.

It worked out all right last time – until Sueing’s late behind-the-back turnover put his team in a two-possession hole. Washington managed a career-high 30 points on 12-of-18 shooting, and Liddell pulled off a double-double with 23 points and 10 boards. Walker (15 points) was the only other Buckeye with more than six points.

Ohio State needs a couple simple things to happen.

Washington and Liddell again have to make difficult shots, smart decisions and score loads of points. They’re the two best offensive players, have proven to be tough matchups for the Wolverines and continue to play well with more consistency than ever before.

The other guys have to produce more. It doesn’t matter if it’s Walker, Ahrens, Sueing, Key, Musa Jallow, Young, Gene Brown or Meechie Johnson. They have to play within their roles, make plays and hit shots when called upon.

These Buckeyes hit a ton of tough shots and made a stout Michigan defense look pedestrian a few weeks ago. Can they do so again? We’re about to find out.

The Same Question We Keep Asking

You tired of it yet? Me too.

But until Ohio State can put an end to the questions of its ability to finish games, it’ll continue to get asked.

The Buckeyes fumbled away an 18-point halftime lead on Friday, only beating Purdue once the game went to overtime. They watched a 12-point lead on Minnesota with 1:38 remaining turn into a one-point edge with 15 seconds left the day prior.

Somehow, they avoided losses despite those second-half errors. If those issues pop up once more on Saturday, however, they could spell the end of the run in this tournament.


Prediction: Michigan 89, Ohio State 83

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Meghan and Harry on being snubbed by Queen Elizabeth, how race plays a role in royal family in new Oprah clips

Oprah Winfrey is sharing more of her groundbreaking interview with Prince Harry and Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, after the two-hour program aired on CBS Sunday night.

In the previously unaired clips, the couple discuss why they believe race played a difference in how Meghan was treated by Buckingham Palace and British tabloids. They also open up about a visit to see Queen Elizabeth that was suddenly called off after the couple’s decision to step back from royal duties in early 2020.

The Sunday special saw the Duchess of Sussex break with previous media narratives, telling Winfrey that Kate Middleton, Duchess of Cambridge, had made her cry days before her wedding. Previous reporting had stated that Meghan made Kate cry over arrangements for the ceremony. 

The Duchess of Sussex also revealed their second child, due this summer, would be a girl. They also claimed there were concerns expressed within Buckingham Palace before their first son, Archie, was born, about how dark his skin color might be. Winfrey, who joined “CBS This Morning” the day after the interview aired, said Prince Harry wanted to make it clear that the remarks were not made by Queen Elizabeth or Prince Phillip.

“CBS This Morning” co-host Gayle King said Winfrey called the “best interview” of her career. 


Oprah on explosive Harry and Meghan interview…

05:38

“Did you leave the country because of racism?” Winfrey asked the couple in the first previously unaired clip.

Prince Harry said “it was a large part of it,” recalling one event in particular.

“I remember the Sentebale fundraiser,” he said. “And one of the people at that dinner said to me, ‘Please don’t do this with the media. They will destroy your life.’ This person is friends with a lot of editors and like that.”

Harry continued, “I said, ‘Sorry, elaborate what do you mean by that?’ So I knew. He said, ‘Please understand the U.K. is very bigoted.’ And I stopped and said, ‘The U.K. is not bigoted. The U.K. press is bigoted, specifically the tabloids. Is that what you mean?’ 

“He goes, ‘No, the U.K. is bigoted.’ And I said, ‘I completely disagree.’ But unfortunately, if the source of information is inherently corrupt or racist or biased, then that filters out to the rest of society.”


Harry and Meghan on Queen Elizabeth

02:19

 In the second clip, the Duke of Sussex spoke to Winfrey about how a trip to see Queen Elizabeth II was suddenly called off following a letter to Buckingham Palace in early 2020 in which they told the royal family they would be stepping back from their formal duties.

“That announcement that we put out on the 8th of January in 2020, that was — the content of that was put in a letter to the institution, to my father, which was then shared at the end of December while we were in Canada,” Prince Harry said. “And to then get back on the 6th after my grandmother had said ‘The moment you land, come up.'”

Meghan said she and Harry had asked if they could go see the monarch.

According to Harry, the queen said, “Yeah, come up to Sandringham. Love to have a chat. Come for tea. Why don’t you stay for dinner? It’s going to be a long drive and you’re going to be exhausted.”

“She wanted us to stay the night,” Meghan added.

The prince said they would have “loved that,” until he received a message from his private secretary “the moment we landed in the U.K.”

“Private secretary is sort of a CEO role within the institution,” Meghan said.

Harry said his then private secretary Fiona was “cutting and pasting a message from the Queen’s private secretary, basically.”

“Please pass along to the Duke and Duchess of Sussex that he cannot come to Norfolk. The queen is busy. She’s busy all week,” he said the letter read. 

He went on, “She’d just invited me. The queen’s busy. She’s busy all week. Do not come up here.”

Harry said he called his grandmother from Frogmore Cottage that night, where the couple had lived before Archie was born. He asked her if be could come anyway, but he heard she was busy.

“And she said, ‘Yes, I have something in my diary that I didn’t know that I had.’ And I said, ‘Well, what about the rest of the week?’ She goes, ‘Well that’s busy now as well.”

He said he did not want to push, “because I kind of knew what was going on.”

“Doesn’t the queen get to do what the queen wants to do?” Winfrey asked. 

Harry said no.

“When you’re head of the firm, there is people around you that give you advice,” he said. “And what has also made me really sad is some of that advice has been really bad.”


Harry and Meghan on racism in U.K. press

08:32

In the two-hour special interview, Meghan and Harry discussed feeling alienated from the rest of the royal family, with Harry classifying his relationship with older brother William, Duke of Cambridge, as needing “space.”

The third clip Winfrey shows on “CBS This Morning” features the couple describing the environment in which Harry was raised, and how the royal family compared Meghan’s tabloid coverage with that of Kate, Duchess of Cambridge 

“You’ve had these conversations with your family members. They know why you left,” Winfrey said. “So has anybody said, ‘I’m sorry you had to make that move,’ or, ‘I’m sorry you felt that you had to do that because you felt we were not supporting you’?”

Harry said nobody had.

“The feeling is that this was our decision, therefore the consequences are on us. And despite three years of asking for help and seeing, or visualizing how this might end — it was, I don’t know, just — look, its been really hard. Because I’m trying. I’m part of the system with them. I always have been.”

The prince said he was aware his older brother, second in line for the throne, could not leave the system like he had. 

Asked if Prince William did want to leave the system, Harry said “I don’t know. I can’t speak for him.”

“But with that relationship and that control and the fear by the U.K. tabloids, it’s a really — it’s a toxic environment. But I will always be there for him. I will always be there for my family. And as I said, I’ve tried to help them to see what has happened,” Prince Harry said.

Winfrey asked him if his family — his father Charles, for example — agreed the environment was toxic.

“No, I think he’s had to make peace with it,” Harry said.

Meghan said she could not make peace with it herself because the situation was different.

“I think what they — and this is why I would say, and I can’t speak for them either — if they’re not able to see that this was different, then what happened to Kate when she was, you know,” Meghan said.

Winfrey asked if race was the difference.

“And social media,” Meghan answered. “That didn’t exist. And so it was like the wild, wild west. It was spread like wildfire. Plus my being American, it translated in a different way across the pond. So you had a noise level that was very different. But they can’t see that it’s different.”

“So you felt bullied on an international level?” Winfrey asked.

Meghan said, “I think the volume of what was coming in and the interest was greater because of social media, because of the fact that I was not just British, and that unfortunately, if members of his family say, ‘Well, this is what’s happened to all of us’ — if they can compare what the experience that I went through was similar to what has been shared with us.”

She used a nickname given to her sister-in-law before she married William as an example. 

“Kate was called ‘Waity Katie,’ waiting to marry William, while I imagine that was really hard, and I do. I can’t picture what that felt like. This is not the same,” Meghan said.

She continued, “And if a member of his family will comfortably say we’ve all had to deal with things that are rude, rude and racist are not the same.”

The Duchess of Sussex claimed the press team that would defend the royal family “when they know something’s not true” failed to come to their defense. 

Winfrey asked Prince Harry if he hoped his family would ever acknowledge that the differences in treatment were over race. 

“It would make a huge difference,” he said. “Like I said, there’s a lot of people that have seen it for what it was… like it’s talked about across the world.”

The people who do not want to see it, Harry claimed, “choose not to see it.”

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