Sony‘s camera department has had an unusually quiet year. For the entirety of 2024, we’ve seen just one new Sony mirrorless camera. And, as impressive as the Sony ZV-E10 II is with its 26MP APS-C sensor and 4K video features, the sub $1,000 beginner video camera – that’s an iterative update – isn’t much for Sony fans to get excited about.
As TechRadar’s Cameras Editor, I can’t remember Sony ever being so quiet, In fact, I had started to pen a piece about Sony’s inactivity – surely it couldn’t just be related to reported global supply chain issues, could it? Turns out, I may have to stand down, at least if the latest rumors are true.
According to Sony Alpha Rumors, Sony will announce its first full-frame camera of the year, as soon as the end of November. That wouldn’t be long to wait, but which camera could it be and how plausible is this rumor?
Sony Alpha Rumors listed the most likely candidates for what it says will be a November launch, speculating that there could be two new cameras and an exciting new lens in the next six months or so. It has also poured cold water over other potential camera updates from Sony’s existing line up. I should make it clear that rumors from this source have been circulating for a little while and potential launch dates for certain would-be cameras have come and passed. This time the focus is on two cameras and a lens, all of which would be super exciting for Sony fans if they come to pass.
The first and most likely camera is a successor to the Sony Alpha A1 (pictured above), Sony’s flagship mirrorless camera, which would like be called the Sony A1 II. Another potential is the so-called Sony A7 V, which would upgrade the Sony A7 IV, which topped our list of best mirrorless cameras for quite some time, but recently lost its spot to the new Nikon Z6 III.
The A1 was launched in March 2021 and the A7 IV in December 2021, and so both of those cameras are due an update. However, Sony is more innovative than most, and it’s not unknown to quietly discontinue a series of cameras to explore new avenues. Neither successor is guaranteed.
For example, Sony’s last full-frame camera was the Sony A9 III (above), a bold and truly innovative camera that surpassed the A1 as Sony’s fastest camera for pro photographers working in sports and wildlife. I’m struggling to see how an A1 II, if it was to materialize, could improve on the A1 and be distinguished from the A9 III, without exceeding the A9 III in every way and rendering it surplus. Can Sony realistically keep the A1 and A9 series going?
On the other hand, a potential A7V would be a win. It would continue Sony’s original and popular all-rounder series of full-frame mirrorless cameras. Its A7 IV was the best all-rounder for a couple of years, but now the Nikon Z6 III and Canon EOS R6 Mark II have bettered it in most regards. Sony needs to strike back, and I’d expect great things from a A7V because Sony is a true innovator. That’s the model that I think most Sony fans are hoping for.
There’s also word of Sony FE 24-70mm F2 GM pro lens. That would be some serious glass, a world-first 24-70mm lens with constant F2 aperture. Canon has the beastly RF 28-70mm F2L USM lens, but Sony would be going one better than Canon with that wider perspective.
There’s a chance that both cameras and the lens will materialize. But which of the two cameras could come in November? Sony Alpha Rumors thinks the A1 II. If that’s true, I’m eager to see what upgrades there are, and how it fits alongside the A9 III.Sony’s likely candidates
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Technology
NYT Connections: hints and answers for Sunday, October 20
Connections is the latest puzzle game from the New York Times. The game tasks you with categorizing a pool of 16 words into four secret (for now) groups by figuring out how the words relate to each other. The puzzle resets every night at midnight and each new puzzle has a varying degree of difficulty. Just like Wordle, you can keep track of your winning streak and compare your scores with friends.
Some days are trickier than others. If you’re having a little trouble solving today’s Connections puzzle, check out our tips and hints below. And if you still can’t get it, we’ll tell you today’s answers at the very end.
How to play Connections
In Connections, you’ll be shown a grid containing 16 words — your objective is to organize these words into four sets of four by identifying the connections that link them. These sets could encompass concepts like titles of video game franchises, book series sequels, shades of red, names of chain restaurants, etc.
There are generally words that seem like they could fit multiple themes, but there’s only one 100% correct answer. You’re able to shuffle the grid of words and rearrange them to help better see the potential connections.
Each group is color-coded. The yellow group is the easiest to figure out, followed by the green, blue, and purple groups.
Pick four words and hit Submit. If you’re correct, the four words will be removed from the grid and the theme connecting them will be revealed. Guess incorrectly and it’ll count as a mistake. You only have four mistakes available until the game ends.
Hints for today’s Connections
We can help you solve today’s Connection by telling you the four themes. If you need more assistance, we’ll also give you one word from each group below.
Today’s themes
- BIT OF NEWSPAPER WRITING
- NOISY DISTURBANCE
- TABLE TENNIS NEEDS
- HOMOPHONES OF COORDINATING CONJUNCTIONS
One-answer reveals
- BIT OF NEWSPAPER WRITING – ARTICLE
- NOISY DISTURBANCE – CLATTER
- TABLE TENNIS NEEDS – BALL
- HOMOPHONES OF COORDINATING CONJUNCTIONS – BUTT
Today’s Connections answers
Still no luck? That’s OK. This puzzle is designed to be difficult. If you just want to see today’s Connections answer, we’ve got you covered below:
Connections grids vary widely and change every day. If you couldn’t solve today’s puzzle, be sure to check back in tomorrow.
Technology
Sony tipped to finally launch first new full-frame camera of 2024 soon – here’s what it could be
Technology
Creature Commandos trailer introduces James Gunn’s DC Universe
A new DC Universe is on its way, and comic book fans have finally gotten their first substantial look at it. The multimedia franchise isn’t set to kick things off with one of its flagship heroes like Batman, Superman, or Wonder Woman, either. Instead, the DCU’s first official entry belongs to an oddball mix of monsters known as the Creature Commandos. Created and written by James Gunn, Creature Commandos promises to bridge the gap between 2021’s The Suicide Squad, 2022’s Peacemaker, and the DCU’s future.
Now, over a year after Gunn announced Creature Commandos, the animated series’ first official trailer has debuted online. The teaser, which runs over two minutes long, efficiently introduces several of Creature Commandos‘ core characters, including The Bride (Indira Varma), Nina Mazursky (Zoë Chao), G.I. Robot (Sean Gunn), Weasel (also Sean Gunn), and Doctor Phosphorus (Alan Tudyk).
It offers fans a glimpse of the show’s zany tone and hyper-violent, gory edge as well, and even boasts a blink-and-you’ll-miss-it appearance from one fan-favorite Batman villain. You can check out the full trailer for yourself below.
In addition to its crew of wacky monsters, Creature Commandos will prominently feature a returning, now-animated Amanda Waller (Viola Davis) and Rick Flag Sr. (Frank Grillo), the grizzled leader of the show’s titular team and the father of Rick Flag Jr. (Joel Kinnaman), who is tragically killed in The Suicide Squad. It is Rick Flag Sr. who can be seen at the trailer’s 1:50 mark engaging in a fight with none other than Clayface, too.
The Batman villain’s inclusion in Creature Commandos comes as a major surprise, and it offers some further insight into just how established Batman and his rogue gallery may already be in the DCU by the time the animated series begins. The show will reportedly pick up after the events of Peacemaker season 1 and will follow Davis’ Amanda Waller as she’s forced to put together a new team of non-humans to take on her various secret missions.
As part of their non-negotiable commitment to Waller, it looks like the Creature Commandos are going to run into some pretty noteworthy DC villains. Fans will, however, have to wait for Creature Commandos‘ December premiere to learn more about not only Clayface’s role in the series, but also what its eponymous team’s missions ultimately entail.
Creature Commandos premieres December 5 on Max.
Technology
iPhone 17 Pro models may get notable zoom camera improvement
While the iPhone 16 series has just hit the market, the industry is not stopping, and the next generation of iPhones is already in the works. The iPhone 17 series is still in the early stages of development, so there are still decisions to be made. However, some key specs have already been set. According to a reputable analyst, the iPhone 17 Pro models will get a notable camera upgrade.
New front and telephoto cameras for the iPhone 17 Pro models
Next year, Apple is expected to restructure its smartphone launch strategy. The company will replace the iPhone 17 Plus with a super-slim “iPhone 17 Air” (tentative name). Market research has revealed a declining trend in popularity for the iPhone Plus models, leading Apple to discontinue them. Now, according to Jeff Pu, both the iPhone 17 Pro and Pro Max will receive new 48 MP ultra-wide and 24 MP front-facing cameras.
Most of Jeff Pu’s tips have come true, so he’s a highly credible source. The analyst revealed the information about the new cameras in a research note with investment bank Haitong International. Pu also claimed that the iPhone 17 Pro and Pro Max will have 12GB of RAM. For comparison, the current iPhone 16 Pro and Pro Max feature 12MP telephoto and front cameras, along with 8GB of RAM. The new sensors could enable better-quality for selfies and photos with optical zoom.
Thinner Dynamic Island on iPhone 17 Pro Max
The next-generation iPhone 17 Pro Max could bring a noticeable improvement in terms of design. The analyst claims that Apple is working on a “much narrowed Dynamic Island” thanks to the implementation of smaller “metalens” for the Face ID biometric system. Apple debuted the Dynamic Island on the iPhone 14 series and has kept the size the same ever since. However, it seems that the iPhone 17 Pro devices will finally bring a bit more usable screen space.
Pu expects the iPhone 17 Pro and Pro Max to maintain the same screen sizes as the current generation. That is, 6.3 inches and 6.9 inches, respectively. Both models will be powered by the Bionic A19 Pro chip manufactured on TSMC’s 3 nm process.
More iPhone 17 Air details
The report includes information related to the iPhone 17 Air that could arrive next year. Pu backs up previous leaks that claimed the device would have only a 48MP rear camera, adding that it will receive the new 24MP front camera too. The phone would feature a 6.6-inch display, 8GB of RAM, and the Dynamic Island. The iPhone 17 Air could use the 3 nm Bionic A19 chip that will also be present in the vanilla iPhone 17. Additionally, it would introduce Apple’s first 5G modem.
Taking into account Apple’s background, the iPhone 17 series should arrive in September 2025. With so much time remaining, some details could still change. However, these leaked specs are likely to mostly match what we’ll see in the final products.
Technology
Super Nintendo World Orlando opens next May
The Super Nintendo World theme park in Orlando is nearly ready for visitors. Universal Orlando Resort just announced that the Mario-friendly attraction will open its doors on May 22, 2025. That gives you over six months to find the perfect Goomba costume to wear on opening day.
This is the third Nintendo theme park throughout the world, as the Orlando location joins pre-existing parks in Los Angeles and Japan. If the layout looks anything like the other two parks, you should expect a large interactive area to explore, special themed rides and, of course, all kinds of Nintendo-adjacent dining and shopping. The original Japanese park just got a nifty Donkey Kong Country area, and Nintendo confirmed earlier this year that it would come to Orlando as well.
This is part of a larger expansion of Universal Resort Orlando, called Universal Epic Universe. This includes five areas to explore. There’s the aforementioned Super Nintendo World, but this expansion will also host the pre-existing Harry Potter attraction.
The area will be home to a theme park based on the How to Train Your Dragon franchise and another based on the Dark Universe franchise. That last one is pretty odd to me, being as how the Dark Universe franchise peaked with a few middling horror films in the 2010s. Most of the planned films in this shared cinematic universe were scrapped after 2017’s The Mummy crashed and burned.
Finally, there’s Celestial Park. This looks to be a standard amusement park with a slight sci-fi bent. There are space-themed roller coasters and the like.
Correction, October 18 2024, 8:45AM ET: This story originally stated that it wasn’t clear if the Donkey Kong Country attraction was coming to Orlando. Nintendo had announced that it would be in the Orlando park earlier this year.
Science & Environment
Scientists say they’ve made a breakthrough in efforts to bring back the extinct Tasmanian tiger
It’s been decades since Australia’s thylacine, known as the Tasmanian tiger, was declared extinct and scientists say they’ve made a breakthrough as they research ways to bring back the carnivore.
Colossal Biosciences in a Thursday press release said its reconstructed thylacine genome is about 99.9% complete, with 45 gaps that they’ll work to close through additional sequencing in the coming months. The company also isolated long RNA molecules from a 110-year-old preserved head, which was skinned and kept in ethanol.
“The thylacine samples used for our new reference genome are among the best preserved ancient specimens my team has worked with,” said Beth Shapiro, Colossal’s chief science officer and the director of the UCSC Paleogenomics Lab, where the samples were processed. “It’s rare to have a sample that allows you to push the envelope in ancient DNA methods to such an extent.”
Efforts to bring back the Tasmanian tiger
The preservation of a complete Tasmanian tiger head meant that scientists could study RNA samples from several important tissue areas, including the tongue, nasal cavity, brain and eye. It will allow researchers to determine what a thylacine could taste and smell, along with what type of vision it had and how its brain worked, according to Andrew Park, a member of Colossal’s Scientific Advisory Board and a researcher at the University of Melbourne’s TIGRR Lab.
“We’re getting closer every day to being able to place the thylacine back into the ecosystem – which of course is a major conservation benefit as well,” Pask said.
Pask, speaking with 60 Minutes earlier this year, said researchers were working with the closest living relative of the Tasmanian tiger — a small marsupial called the fat-tailed dunnart — as a way to bring the animal back.
“But that little dunnart is a ferocious carnivore, even though it’s very, very small,” Pask said. “And it’s a very good surrogate for us to be able to do all of this editing in.”
Scientists have been comparing the DNA of the dunnart and the thylacine, Pask told 60 Minutes. From there, it’s a matter of going in and editing the DNA to turn a fat-tailed dunnart cell into a thylacine cell.
Colossal Biosciences on Thursday said it had edited more than 300 unique genetic changes into a dunnart cell, making it “the most edited animal cell to date.”
“We are really pushing forward the frontier of de-extinction technologies,” Pask said, “from innovative ways of finding the regions of the genome driving evolution to novel methods to determine gene function. We are in the best place ever to rebuild this species using the most thorough genome resources and the best informed experiments to determine function.”
Efforts aiding the revival of the Tasmanian tiger are not confined to Australia. Last year, scientists recovered and sequenced RNA from a 130-year-old Tasmanian tiger specimen preserved at room temperature in Sweden’s Museum of Natural History.
How the Tasmanian tiger died off
Thylacines roamed Tasmania for thousands of years. Despite the Tasmanian tiger moniker, the carnivores were marsupials, like kangaroos, koalas and Tasmanian devils.
The local government in the late 1800s paid out bounties to hunters presenting carcasses of Tasmanian tigers because the animals had been eating farmers’ sheep, 60 Minutes previously reported. By the mid-1930s, the Tasmanian tiger population had dwindled to a single thylacine at the Beaumaris Zoo in Hobart, Tasmania’s capital. It died there in 1936.
Australia has similarly allowed the culling of Kangaroos, approving the deaths of thousands of kangaroos over the years. Officials have said the kangaroo population was eating through grassy habitats of endangered species. Officials have also warned in the past that there isn’t enough food available to sustain large kangaroo populations.
Technology
Apple’s macOS Sequoia lets you snap windows into position — here’s how
For many a year, Windows users have been dragging their program windows over to the borders of the screen to snap them into position, splitting the screen up evenly into halves or quarters. Now, with the rollout of macOS Sequoia, Mac users can do the same. You can get a Spotify playlist up alongside your email inbox, for example, or a report you’re writing up alongside the online articles you’re reporting on. It means less switching between windows and more information on the screen.
Once you’ve got macOS Sequoia installed on your Mac, you can take advantage of what Apple calls window tiling. There are several methods you can use.
Alternatively, you can click and drag an open window into position to tile it.
The third method for window tiling is via the Window drop-down menu in whatever app you’re using.
If you want to keep your fingers on the keyboard, keyboard shortcuts are supported as well. (Note: unfortunately, there aren’t any specific keyboard shortcuts for moving windows into the quarter sections of the screen.)
Here’s the list for controlling individual windows:
There are also shortcuts for moving the active window and arranging other windows to match:
You can customize a few aspects of window tiling using System Settings on the Apple menu. Choose Desktop & Dock to find them. You can turn drag-to-tile and the Option key shortcut on or off and choose whether tiled windows have margins between them.
Several third-party tools have previously filled the feature gap when it comes to window tiling, and generally speaking, they give you more options and more control than macOS Sequoia does, at least for now — they’re not completely Sherlocked yet.
I can only speak firsthand about two that I’ve personally used. One is Magnet, which will set you back $9.99 but is very much worth it, especially if you use a larger display. You can divide the screen up by thirds and sixths as well as halves and quarters and set up trigger areas for dragging and custom keyboard shortcuts.
The other is Rectangle; the basic version is free, but if you pay $9.99 for the Pro version, you can customize snap areas and keyboard shortcuts, set up specific layouts for specific apps, and pin certain program windows into position. It’s packed with every feature you could possibly want, though I think Magnet is a little more intuitive to use.
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