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13 votes
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Can Windows make the jump to ARM like Apple did?
I'm seeing a lot of news in my feed about Qualcomm chips approaching laptop performance, such as...
I'm seeing a lot of news in my feed about Qualcomm chips approaching laptop performance, such as
https://www.theregister.com/2023/10/24/qualcomm_x_elite/
Will this turn out any better than the last few times Microsoft tried to break away from Intel? Would you want such a laptop? Will it wake Intel out of its complacency?
33 votes -
Xbox's new policy — say goodbye to unofficial accessories from November thanks to error '0x82d60002'
42 votes -
The surprisingly subtle ways Microsoft Word has changed the way we use language
38 votes -
Minecraft Live 2023: New mob, Trial Chambers, and auto crafting!
23 votes -
Microsoft closes deal to buy Call of Duty maker Activision Blizzard
53 votes -
Microsoft might want to be making Windows 12 a subscription OS, suggests leak
74 votes -
Forza Motorsport
The new Forza Motorsport has released to the masses as of today, and has been available to those who paid extra for premium upgrades and the like for about a week. I got it via Xbox Gamepass and...
The new Forza Motorsport has released to the masses as of today, and has been available to those who paid extra for premium upgrades and the like for about a week. I got it via Xbox Gamepass and played about an hour of it this morning, and so far it feels like a nice return to form for the series, which hasn't seen a new non-Horizon edition since Forza Motorsport 7 in 2017.
That game had some baggage with the card system/gambling mechanics, and I'm glad to see none of that thus far in the new Forza Motorsport - which, you may have noticed, has dropped the number. There's a feeling that Microsoft/Turn 10 may be aiming to make this something of a long-term platform play rather than just another game in the series.
I'm enjoying it so far, and after playing Forza Horizon 4 and 5 a lot since FM7 came out, I'm glad to have the return to more traditional circuit racing, and absolutely do not miss the supremely annoying voiced characters from those games.
The thing I most immediately noticed upon playing the game (besides the graphics, which are a real showcase for the Xbox Series X or a sufficiently beefy PC) is the new upgrade/tuning system, which requires you to actually spend time driving a specific car in order to unlock the various upgrade parts for it. You earn car points for doing things like clean racing and fast lap times, which you can then spend on upgrade parts between races. The game keeps calling those CP, which makes me think that nobody at Turn 10 has spent any time on the internet. An unfortunate acronym...
I'm curious to know what everyone's opinion on this game is. I know a lot of the audience is turned off by the more sim-like/boring nature of the Forza Motorsport games versus the arcade fantasy for the Horizon games, but I'm very much on the FM side of that divide.
14 votes -
The making of the Burger King games
19 votes -
EU warns Elon Musk after Twitter found to have highest rate of disinformation followed by Facebook
34 votes -
Microsoft Nintendo acquisition hopes revealed by leaked Xbox exec email
45 votes -
Microsoft Cloud hiring to "implement global small modular reactor and microreactor" strategy to power data centers
18 votes -
Microsoft leaked its own Xbox documents, court says
21 votes -
This is Microsoft’s new disc-less Xbox Series X design with a new controller
22 votes -
Microsoft documents leak new Bethesda games, including an Oblivion remaster
26 votes -
MS Paint adds support for layers and PNG transparency
63 votes -
Today I learned this weird Windows keyboard shortcut opens LinkedIn
43 votes -
38TB of data accidentally exposed by Microsoft AI researchers
14 votes -
Microsoft announces new Copilot Copyright Commitment for customers
19 votes -
EU ‘gatekeeper’ list has five American and no European companies
43 votes -
Microsoft patents AI powered backpack, bristling with sensors
7 votes -
Windows 11 has made the “clean Windows install” an oxymoron
98 votes -
Ugly numbers from Microsoft and ChatGPT reveal that AI demand is already shrinking
91 votes -
Python in Excel: Combining the power of Python and the flexibility of Excel
34 votes -
Microsoft to sell off Activision cloud gaming rights to Ubisoft in bid for UK approval
25 votes -
Windows Secure Time Seeding sometimes resets clocks months or years off the correct time
19 votes -
Windows could become cloud based in the future
16 votes -
Introducing TypeChat
19 votes -
PS5 and Xbox Series closing in on three years of use
Curious to hear what the people of tildes think. As we close in on 3 years of use with these newer consoles, what are every one’s thoughts? Has “next gen” been what you thought it’d really be or...
Curious to hear what the people of tildes think.
As we close in on 3 years of use with these newer consoles, what are every one’s thoughts? Has “next gen” been what you thought it’d really be or are you kinda just feeling whelmed?
I have a PS5 and I use it every now and then for pretty much the first party games. PC is my main platform but as I think back, I’ve been pretty happy with my PS5 and the games to come so far. I also really enjoy the UI (although custom backgrounds would be great).
I don’t know how the Xbox side is so I’d love to hear your thoughts to!
Thanks for taking the time to read.
28 votes -
Apple tests ‘Apple GPT,’ develops generative AI tools to catch OpenAI
17 votes -
Microsoft lost its keys, and the US government got hacked
25 votes -
Xbox Live Gold is becoming Xbox Game Pass Core starting September 14
14 votes -
A quick look into Microsoft Offices's new default font
40 votes -
Meet Microsoft Office’s new default font: Aptos
43 votes -
US FTC appeals its loss to Microsoft in Activision Blizzard case
23 votes -
Microsoft wins US FTC fight to buy Activision Blizzard
76 votes -
Microsoft’s Activision deal could face ‘new merger investigation,’ UK regulator warns
20 votes -
Developers restore “retail” Xbox emulators after Microsoft crackdown
15 votes -
How Microsoft's ruthless employee evaluation system annihilated team collaboration
66 votes -
Minecraft's devs exit its seven million-strong subreddit after Reddit's ham-fisted crackdown on protest
85 votes -
Antitrust case - Will the US Microsoft Activision merger go through?
12 votes -
Sony’s confidential PlayStation secrets just spilled because of a Sharpie
49 votes -
Microsoft wants to move Windows fully to the cloud
72 votes -
Help with converting PDF to Excel and back to PDF?
I may be asking a dumb question or going about this wrong but I'm not sure what to do here. So right now, I receive an estimation from one company in a PDF. It has a bunch of fields such as...
I may be asking a dumb question or going about this wrong but I'm not sure what to do here.
So right now, I receive an estimation from one company in a PDF. It has a bunch of fields such as customer name, product, address, etc. Then I type that data and put it into Excel, where I add additional data that I have. From there I have a second PDF which has form fields that I fill with the data of the Excel spreadsheet.
My problem is with the first PDF that I get from this other company, unless I am doing something wrong I am unable to get that first PDF to show the data as fields. If I convert the first PDF into an Excel then the table data is very messy.
The amount of typing or copy and paste that it's not hard but it is time consuming. What is the best way for me to go about doing this? I've been Googling things but I'm not sure the right words of action I'm looking for.
I hope this all makes sense, but if not please ask questions and I'll do my best to try and clarify further.
12 votes -
Metal Gear Solid: Master Collection Vol. 1 | Releases October 24 (PS5, Xbox Series, Switch, and PC)
27 votes -
Solving chemistry problems through AI
7 votes -
EVE Online: Add-in for Excel
13 votes -
FTC: Xbox-exclusive Starfield is “powerful evidence” against Activision deal
52 votes -
Windows 98 icons are great
17 votes -
Microsoft to raise Xbox Game Pass and Xbox Series X prices
19 votes