Refresh your living space with versatile swiveling accent chairs while you spend all this time at home.
“We need to stiffen our spines and lean into keeping people safe and healthy.”
Alleged Pizza Roll Pooper Apprehended After Oklahoma Grocery Store Incident
Posted in: Today's Chili“I grabbed the bag, I felt something smushy on the bag, so I turned it over and there it was.”
This week the folks at Microsoft are rolling out the updates to Windows 11 hard and fast. Right this minute we’re looking at the Windows 11 Insider Preview Build 22000.194 in the Beta Channel. This same release appear for commercial PCs in the Release Preview Channel, if you did not already notice. If you didn’t know about the issues still … Continue reading
NASA has two interactive tools that enable the public to follow its Mars Perseverance rover as it makes its way around the Red Planet. One of the tools is designed to follow the rover “as though you were standing on the surface of Mars,” according to the space agency, while the other tool shows Perseverance and Ingenuity’s current location and … Continue reading
2021 Hyundai Venue Review
Posted in: Today's ChiliThe 2021 Hyundai Venue isn’t just considerably cheaper than the average new vehicle sold in the US, it’s actually cheaper than the average used car price right now. At $18,750 (plus $1,185 destination) the diminutive crossover is a member of the shrinking list of sub-$20k new cars, and you’d be forgiven for assuming – as I did – that along the … Continue reading
The full IKEA x ASUS Republic of Gamers (ROG) gaming product line is finally ready for a release date in October of 2021. This collection of accessories, lighting, and furniture was partially revealed earlier this year with a February preview, including everything from desks to LED strips to mouse USB bungee and a wooden hand to hold your headphones. Products … Continue reading
As a dog ages, it may develop arthritis — and, depending on the breed, it may experience particularly severe issues with its hip joints, potentially requiring a resurfacing implant. In the future, this process may be far less invasive while offering better results than conventional treatments. Key to the newly detailed process are stem cells. The new research comes from … Continue reading
Former Bungie composer Marty O’Donnell owes his old employer tens of thousands of dollars in legal fees following a court case related to his 2014 exit from the studio. According to legal documents obtained by Eurogamer, a court found O’Donnell in contempt of a previous ruling on July 12th of this year.
The broad strokes of the case involve the lawsuit the composer won against Bungie in 2015. A court ordered the studio to compensate O’Donnell financially but said he couldn’t publish any music from Destiny without Bungie’s blessing. Additionally, he had to return all materials related to his work on the first-person shooter back to the developer.
All of that brings us to 2019 when O’Donnel began uploading to YouTube and Bandcamp demos connected to Music of the Spheres, the eight-movement symphony he co-wrote with Paul McCartney that formed the early musical identity of Destiny. In a court motion reviewed by Eurogamer, Bungie alleged O’Donnell’s “very possession of such materials proves he did not comply with the order to return ‘all material’ to Bungie.”
Judge Regina Cahan sided with the studio and imposed new sanctions on O’Donnell. Some of the more notable ones include the fact he has to hand over his electronics to a third-party firm that will conduct a forensic examination to ensure any assets related to Destiny or Music of the Spheres have been deleted. He also has to pay Bungie all the money he earned from selling tracks tied to the symphony on Bandcamp, in addition to compensating it for expenses it accrued during the contempt proceeding. That includes lawyer fees.
Please consider purchasing this soundtrack. The money will help with my huge legal bills. Thank you. https://t.co/YeEejHKCWy
— Marty O’Donnell (@MartyTheElder) June 4, 2021
In all, Bungie is reportedly demanding nearly $100,000 from the composer, an amount his lawyers say is unreasonable. O’Donnell took to Twitter to lament the case several times in early June. “I’m thinking about retiring from the games industry for good,” he said in a deleted message dated to the 3rd. In one tweet that’s still up, O’Donnell asks fans to buy the soundtrack to Golem, the 2019 PlayStation VR game he worked on with Highwire Games. “The money will help with my huge legal bills,” he said. “Thank you.”
OpenSea isn’t wasting much time after its head of product was accused of exploiting insider information to turn a profit on non-fungible tokens. The marketplace has asked for and accepted Nate Chastain’s resignation following claims he used secret Ethereum wallets to buy front-page NFT releases before they were available to the public. Chastain’s reported actions broke a promise to foster the NFT market “responsibly and diligently,” OpenSea said.
The company also tapped an unnamed third party to review its approach to unethical behavior and recommend changes. OpenSea promised to “quickly” implement any recommendations. It had already launched policies barring both the use of confidential info for NFT trading and for buying or selling from promoted creators and collections.
Chastain might not face further repercussions. As the law firm McMillan noted in a recent analysis, there aren’t any laws in North America regulating NFT sales. This incident and the response do set expectations for other NFT marketplaces, though, and they might invite more regulation from governments that otherwise left NFTs untouched.