A Young Warrior Tests Her Strength in This Exclusive Excerpt from Willow's Black Shield Maiden

Two young women—one an African warrior, one a Viking princess—become important allies in Black Shield Maiden, a new medieval fantasy that’s the first in a new series from musician turned debut author WILLOW, co-written with Jess Hendel. io9 is excited to share a vivid first excerpt from the book today.

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Leica Now Makes $14,000 Watches, Too

For more than 150 years, Leica has made a name for itself producing binoculars, microscopes, rangefinders, cameras, and other devices with high-quality optical lenses, but for the first time ever, the German-based company is expanding into high-end timepieces. Unfortunately, the new L1 and L2 watches somehow make…

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Rapping FinanceTok Influencer and Husband Accused of Conspiracy to Launder $4.5 Billion in Crypto

Federal authorities have arrested a DeFi investor and his finance influencer wife for allegedly having laundered billions of dollars in cryptocurrency stolen from a crypto exchange.

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Apple activates iPhone Tap to Pay for simple contactless payments

<img width="1201" height="800" src="https://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/6b9afce5807ece85b44e4e787a2f8d7a-1201×800.jpg" class="webfeedsFeaturedVisual wp-post-image" alt="Apple Tap to Pay" loading="lazy" style="margin: auto;margin-bottom: 5px;max-width: 100%" data-attachment-id="711038" data-permalink="https://www.slashgear.com/apple-activates-iphone-tap-to-pay-for-simple-contactless-payments-08711035/6b9afce5807ece85b44e4e787a2f8d7a/" data-orig-file="https://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/6b9afce5807ece85b44e4e787a2f8d7a.jpg" data-orig-size="1440,959" data-comments-opened="0" data-image-meta="{"aperture":"0","credit":"","camera":"","caption":"","created_timestamp":"0","copyright":"","focal_length":"0","iso":"0","shutter_speed":"0","title":"","orientation":"0"}" data-image-title="6b9afce5807ece85b44e4e787a2f8d7a" data-image-description="" data-image-caption="

Apple

” data-medium-file=”https://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/6b9afce5807ece85b44e4e787a2f8d7a-1081×720.jpg” data-large-file=”https://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/6b9afce5807ece85b44e4e787a2f8d7a-1201×800.jpg” />Apple has just announced that Tap to Pay is coming to the iPhone. This means that soon enough, you’ll be able to pay for your groceries by simply tapping your iPhone against the merchant’s phone. The company plans to make this feature accessible all throughout the U.S., including both small businesses and large retailers, and will not require additional hardware … Continue reading

Douglas Trumbull, VFX whiz for ‘Blade Runner’, ‘2001’ and others, dies at 79

Douglas Trumbull, the visual effects mastermind behind Blade Runner, Close Encounter of the Third Kind, 2001: A Space Odyssey and numerous others, died on Monday at age 79. His daughter Amy Trumbull announced the news on Facebook, writing that her father’s death followed a “two-year battle” with cancer, a brain tumor and stroke.

Trumbull was born on April 8, 1942 in Los Angeles, the son of a mechanical engineer and artist. His father worked on the special effects for films including The Wizard of Oz and Star Wars: A New Hope. The younger Trumbull worked as an illustrator and airbrush artist in Hollywood for many years. His career really took off after he cold-called Stanley Kubrick, a conversation which led to a job working on 2001: A Space Odyssey.

One of his most significant contributions to 2001 was creating the film’s Star Gate, a ground-breaking scene where astronaut Dave Bowman hurtles through an illuminated tunnel transcending space and time. In order to meet Kubrick’s high aesthetic standards for the shot, Trumbull essentially designed a way to turn the film camera inside-out. Trumbull’s ad hoc technique “was completely breaking the concept of what a camera is supposed to do,” he said during a lecture at TIFF.

Trumbull earned visual effects Oscar nominations for his work on Close Encounters, Star Trek: The Motion Picture and Blade Runner. He also received the President’s Award from the American Society of Cinematographers in 1996.

Later in his career, Trumbull voiced distaste over the impact of computers on visual effects, decrying the cheapening and flattening impact of the new era of CGI. “Today, the motion picture visual effects industry has almost entirely given way to computer graphics. We’re able to do things that were absolutely inconceivable in the old days like water effects, fire, explosions, smoke. But, almost everything in the visual effects industry today is created on computers. There’s a certain commoditization that has resulted that I’m not comfortable with myself. I like miniatures and physical effects and what I call organic effects,” said Trumbull in a 2018 interview for The Hollywood Reporter.

He spent the last years of his life working on a new super-immersive film format he dubbed MAGI, which he believed would improve the experience of watching a film in theaters. But Trumbull struggled to draw the interest of today’s film industry. “What interests me is being able to create profound personal experiences for audiences,” Trumbull toldMIT Technology Review in 2016. “Whatever it is, I want you to feel like what’s happening on the screen is actually happening in real-time, to you, in this theater.”

Doug Emhoff Rushed Out Of D.C. School After Bomb Threat

Secret Service whisked the second gentleman out of an event at Dunbar High School, with teachers and reporters evacuating as well.

The Book of Boba Fett Can't Stop Treating Boba Like a Chump

He’s among the most popular Star Wars characters of all time. He was a fan-favorite years before he appeared on screen in The Empire Strikes Back. He was so popular he was retroactively inserted into A New Hope and then introduced in the prequels, where he’s treated with so much narrative reverence he effectively…

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NVIDIA calls off Arm acquisition as Arm appoints new CEO

<img width="1200" height="800" src="https://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/ss-1831646146-1200×800.jpg" class="webfeedsFeaturedVisual wp-post-image" alt="Mediatek processor using Arm architecture" loading="lazy" style="margin: auto;margin-bottom: 5px;max-width: 100%" data-attachment-id="711051" data-permalink="https://www.slashgear.com/nvidia-calls-off-arm-acquisition-as-arm-appoints-new-ceo-08711047/ss-1831646146/" data-orig-file="https://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/ss-1831646146.jpg" data-orig-size="1440,960" data-comments-opened="0" data-image-meta="{"aperture":"0","credit":"","camera":"","caption":"","created_timestamp":"0","copyright":"","focal_length":"0","iso":"0","shutter_speed":"0","title":"","orientation":"0"}" data-image-title="ss-1831646146" data-image-description="" data-image-caption="

MZinchenko/Shutterstock

” data-medium-file=”https://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/ss-1831646146-1080×720.jpg” data-large-file=”https://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/ss-1831646146-1200×800.jpg” />The acquisition of Arm, a CPU architecture company, by NVIDIA has been called off, with the two companies citing regulatory challenges as a significant factor in the decision. The acquisition was originally announced in 2020, however the two companies have seen a lot of push back since then, with some even calling it a national security risk. In the wake … Continue reading

Google says default 2FA cut account breaches in half

Google’s decision to enable two-factor authentication by default appears to have borne fruit. The search firm has revealed that account breaches dropped by 50 percent among those users where 2FA (two-step verification in Google-speak) was auto-enabled. The plunge was proof the extra factor is “effective” in safeguarding your data, Google said, although it didn’t disclose the exact number of compromised accounts.

The company didn’t say how rapidly it expected 2FA to spread, but promised to continue the rollout through 2022. More than 150 million people have been auto-enrolled so far, including more than 2 million YouTube creators.

The company also promised more security upgrades to help mark Safer Internet Day. As of March, Google will let you opt-in to an account-level safe browsing option that keeps you from visiting known harmful sites. Google is also expanding Assistant’s privacy-minded Guest Mode to nine new languages in the months ahead, and has promised to ramp up safeguards for politicians ahead of the US midterm elections.

The reduced volume of account breaches isn’t a shock — requiring more effort to crack an account is bound to deter some would-be intruders. It hasn’t always been easy to show the tangible impact of 2FA on security, though, and the sheer scale of Google’s user base gives it a representative sample others can’t easily match.

Wisconsin GOP Pushes For Texas-Style Abortion Ban

The proposed bill would prohibit anyone from performing or attempting to perform an abortion if a fetal heartbeat is present unless the pregnant woman’s life is in danger.