Paramount+ anniversary sale drops plans to $1 for new subscribers

Paramount+ is turning a year old, and the service is marking the occasion by offering some steep discounts to new subscribers. Sign up between now and March 7th with the code BIRTHDAY and you can try the ad-supported Essential plan at $1 per month for three months, or the ad-free Premium plan (with local CBS news) for $2 per month over the same period. Just remember that you’ll jump to the normal $5 Essential or $10 Premium rates after the three months are over.

Subscribe to Paramount+ starting at $1 per month

The timing is more than a little convenient. The Halo TV series reaches Paramount+ on March 24th, and Star Trek: Picard season two debuts March 3rd. There’s a good chance you can watch at least some of these shows before you have to decide on a full-price subscription. Paramount+ is clearly hoping you’ll stick around for future seasons, other shows and live sports, but the promo might be worthwhile even if you use it as an extended trial.

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Republicans Block Bill Banning Racist Hair Discrimination

Rep. Bonnie Watson Coleman vowed to bring the Crown Act back up for a vote in the coming weeks, saying Black people have “the right to live as their authentic selves.”

Xbox Game Pass Kicks Off March 2022 With A Surprising Headliner

It’s the first day of a new month and that means Microsoft has revealed a new batch of games headed to Xbox Game Pass. Here’s what players can expect.

The Burning Cargo Ship With Millions In Stranded Luxury Cars Just Sank

The Felicity Ace cargo ship was burning for a week before it finally sank to the bottom of the sea, at around 220nm off the Azores, Portugal.

Nintendo Switch Online Gets My Nintendo Missions And Rewards

Nintendo Switch adds a program in which gamers can “earn” My Nintendo Platinum Points they can then exchange for perks, digital items, and physical products.

'Monument Valley 2' and 'Alto's Adventure' are coming to Apple Arcade

Apple Arcade is adding a couple more mobile gaming classics to the lineup this month. On March 11th, the beautiful puzzle game Monument Valley 2 joins its predecessor on the service. This edition, which is called Monument Valley 2+, includes a chapter Ustwo Games added four years after the game debuted to promote forest conservation.

Meanwhile, on March 25th, a new version of Alto’s Adventure will land on Apple Arcade. The stylish snowboarding endless runner, which debuted in 2015, has been remastered. Alto’s Adventure: The Spirit of the Mountain includes a new, exclusive character with their own attributes and special abilities. There are more than 15 new goals to complete as well. The sequel, Alto’s Odyssey, also included bonus content when it arrived on Apple Arcade last year.

Before those two all-timers hit Apple Arcade, another notable App Store title is joining the service. Starting on March 4th, subscribers can play action platformer Shadow Blade without at no extra cost.

Arturia Efx Fragments makes granular approachable

Arturia has been on a bit of a roll over these last few years. The company has always made top notch MIDI controllers and soft synths. But in 2020 it announced the KeyStep Pro and PolyBrute — delivering the MIDI controller than many had been clamoring for and an analog polysynth that hasbowledpeopleover. (Maybe one day I’ll be lucky enough to get my hands on one.) Then in 2021 it gave the MicroFreak and Pigments, two hugefree updates, upgraded its FX Collection with seven new plugins, and launched the SQ80 V virtual synth, which I fell instantly in love with. Now the company is launching Efx Fragments, a granular processor that that brings an experimental edge to its current effects lineup. 

Granular is pretty trendy right now, check out the Microcosm and Lemondrop for instance. But, it’s also can be difficult to tame. Arturia has been putting a lot of effort into making its software more user friendly, though, and that’s clearly on display with Fragments. Simply put, it might be the most immediate and musical granular processor I’ve ever used and gives the Microcosm a run for its money as a cheat code to creating beautiful ambient music. But, it is capable of much more than just epic drones.

The core of Efx Fragments is a granular engine with three distinctly different modes and a 16 second buffer. Depending on which mode you select, the way it chops up and plays back incoming audio varies. There’s “classic mode” which is pretty much what everyone thinks of when they hear the phrase “granular synthesis”. It’s versatile and unique and very unapologetically digital. Texture mode softens the harsh edges a bit and leans into granular’s more ethereal side. While Rhythmic mode goes in the opposite direction, strengthening the stuttering and glitchy side. 

That’s not to say you can’t make drones in Rhythmic mode, or create driving rhythms in Texture mode, you’ll just have to work a little harder at it. 

In addition to the core granular processing, there’s two effects slots for adding filtering, reverb, delay and other tone shapers; a bit crushing section with five different modes; a powerful panner and spatializer; two assignable macros; three function generators for modulation; and a modulation sequencer. Not to mention all the various tools available for manipulating the grains directly, like size, shape and pitch. 

Arturia Efx Fragments
Arturai

If that sounds like an overwhelming array of options don’t worry, there’s a handy tutorial that helps you get familiar with the interface. And the UI is impressively clean and intuitively laid out. I wouldn’t hesitate to recommend Fragments to someone that was new to granular effects. Two things help keep it approachable (beyond the excellent tutorial). For one, the more intimidating controls are stashed away in the advanced tab as is the case with many Arturia products. And, two, the 60 presets are excellent.

The presets cover everything from subtle background pads, to chaotic jitters, to dense other-worldly drones, and rhythmically complex pitch-shifted delays. There would be absolutely nothing wrong with simply sticking to the presets here. But they’re also useful as a jumping off point if you’re still getting familiar with the world of granular processing (or if you’re like me and just lazy). 

One super fun trick is to use Fragments as a time stretching effect. When paired with the bit crusher it can make melodies feel like they’re being run through digital molasses or drums sound like they’re coming from another dimension. 

My only complaint interface-wise, is that all of the modulation options are hidden in the advanced tab. But at least there are randomization controls around each virtual knob that allows you to create some movement. So, while it’s easy to get beautiful results with the aid of the presets, to do even moderate sound design you’ll have to venture into the advanced tab. But you really should venture into the advanced tab. If for no other reason than to see the super fun visualizer that brings me back to the days of Windows 3.1.

Honestly though, the controls in the advanced mode aren’t terribly hard to wrap your head around. You can basically draw whatever shape you want in the function generators then click assign and hover over the parameter you want to control until you see blue numbers pop up next to it. Then just click and drag up or down to set the modulation depth. This is basically how all of Arturia’s instruments work. It’s simple and effective way to make deep sound design tools feel more approachable.

One other thing to know, is that granular processing can be pretty resource intensive. I encountered stuttering and artifacts with the density turned up high even under ideal circumstances: a simple audio loop and no other plugins running in Ableton Live 11, with no other programs running on my 2019 MacBook Pro with a 2.8GHz i7 and 16GB RAM. So, be prepared to freeze or resample anything you’re running through Fragments.

Efx Fragments is available now at an introductory price of $99, though if you already own other Arturia products there’s probably a steep discount waiting for you. You can also get it bundled for free with FX Collection 2 which is currently on sale for $299, which isn’t a bad deal at all. 

CDC Estimates More Than 140 Million Americans Have Had COVID So Far

Nearly 60% of children in the U.S. have likely had the disease.

Crunchyroll begins adding Funimation content to anime library

Effectively putting a bookend to Sony’s $1.175 billion deal to buy the platform in 2020, Crunchyroll has added more than 50 series that were previously either exclusive to Funimation or weren’t available to watch dubbed. Some of the more notable additions joining the platform’s library today include Megalobox 2: Nomad, Wonder Egg Priority and Kyoto Animation’sHyouka. Additionally, some shows that were at one point available on Crunchyroll but that the platform later pulled after Sony acquired Funimation in 2017 have returned. That includes Cowboy Bebop.

“This move makes good on the promise to fans that the merger of Funimation and Crunchyroll would bring together the previously separate services into a single subscription,” Crunchyroll said.

Starting April 1st (the beginning of the spring anime season), new series will debut exclusively on Crunchyroll. For the time being, Funimation will continue to add new episodes of existing shows, but the FAQ Crunchyroll posted suggests Sony will sunset the Funimation brand. To that point, the company is handing out free 60-day trials for Crunchyroll to current Funimation, Wakanim, and VRV subscribers, though it said it would work migrating things like watch histories to the platform.

Naya Rivera’s Family Settles Wrongful Death Lawsuit Nearly 2 Years After Her Drowning

The family of the late “Glee” star argued that her death was “utterly preventable.”