14 Windows 10 Command Line Tricks that Give You More Control Over Your PC
The line between online gaming and gambling is fading
Join gaming leaders, alongside GamesBeat and Facebook Gaming, for their 2nd Annual GamesBeat & Facebook Gaming Summit | GamesBeat: Into the Metaverse 2 this upcoming January 25-27, 2022. Learn more about the event. GUEST: Historically, gaming and gambling were considered completely separate activities. Gaming was a mostly free, skill-based act…Read More
Blockchain Game Alliance: NFT games generated $2.32B in Q3
NFTgames generated $2.32 billion in revenue in the third quarter, according to the Blockchain Game Alliance.Read More
Republic launches Fig Portfolio Shares for video game investment
Fig on Republic revealed that it’s launching Fig Portfolio Shares, offering anyone an investment opportunity in video games.Read More
Unbabel acquires Lingo24 to bolster AI-driven translations for enterprises
Unbabel, a startup delivering AI-driven translations, today announced the decision to acquire Lingo24, a UK-based language service provider.Read More
How Scarf helps developers measure and commercialize open source software
Scarf helps open source developers understand and measure how users are interacting with their projects — it’s Google Analytics for OSS.Read More
Comcast rings video doorbell for Xfinity Home customers
Comcast is ringing in the holidays with a video doorbell for Xfinity Home customers. It is powered by Xfinity Internet.Read More
Final Fantasy VII Remake on PC: A gorgeous start, but where are the toggles?
Enlarge / Cloud Strife is finally on PC again, and this image is taken directly from real-time rendering in the new PC port. (credit: Square Enix)
Final Fantasy VII Remake‘s exclusivity on consoles ends today. Nineteen months after its launch on PS4 and seven months after its PS5 update, Square Enix’s ambitious return to Midgar breaks out of Sony’s console family to land on PCs.
If you’re the type of Final Fantasy fan who wants little more than a way to play this game on your computer, you can expect a beautiful and mostly solid port that delivers the perks of the PS5 version to many more people. I went into my testing of FFVIIR on PC with higher hopes, however. For gamers like me, the news isn’t nearly as good, and that makes its unusually high PC price of $70 even harder to swallow.
A graphics menu brick wall
My first stop before starting any FFVIIR PC gameplay was the options screen, where I slammed into the brick wall that is the above “graphics” menu.
Rigetti announces 80 qubit processor, experiments with “qutrits”
Enlarge / The Aspen-M 40-qubit chip and its housing. (credit: Rigetti)
On Wednesday, quantum computing startup Rigetti announced a number of interesting hardware developments. To begin with, its users now have access to its next-generation chip, called Aspen-11, which provides 40 qubits and improved performance. While that’s well below the qubit count achieved by IBM, the company has hinted at a way it can stay competitive: private testers will now have access to an 80 qubit version achieved by linking two of these chips together.
Separately, the company says that it is now experimenting with allowing testers to access a third energy state in its superconducting hardware, converting its qubits into “qutrits.” If these qutrits show consistent behavior, they will allow for the manipulation of significantly more data in existing hardware.
New and improved
For traditional processors, advances are typically measured in clock speed, core count, and energy use. For quantum computers, one of the most critical measures is error rate, since the qubits lose track of their state in a way that digital hardware doesn’t. With Aspen-11, Rigetti is claiming that a specific type of error—the readout of the state of the qubit—has been cut in half.


