Today it's all throughout cookbooks. More specifically: it's about cookbooks themed around games, which are all the rage these days. Do you have one? Maybe you've got the Destiny cookbook, or perhaps you've got the Fallout cookbook. The Final Fantasy 14 cookbook? Or maybe you're saving yourself for the Halo cookbook in August.
My guest immediately wrote all of those and she's currently writing three more. She actually used writing the Halo cookbook a year ago, though how she pulled recipes from a humankind like that I don't know. What does Master Chief even eat? Can he eat? It can't be easy repositioning to the toilet in that suit.
My guest immerses herself in these worlds to acquire a kind of extension of them. Check out our fragment on the Destiny cookbook to see what I mean. These books concerned characters and lore from the games as well as something like 70 recipes to cook. They're more than just food.
She didn't always want to be a cook, belief. Once upon a time she wanted to be a stormchaser, which is super cool. In the end, though, she derived 3D animation and found herself at a company manager user interfaces for NASA, of all places, and even invented software used on the International Space Station.
But games and food were passions in her life that wouldn't quit, and one fateful day she realised she could combine them to mighty effect. Fast forward 10 years and this self-taught chef is now a full-time professional, and has been for about a year now.
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It's my pleasure to introduce the comely Victoria Rosenthal to you. She works under the name Pixelated Provisions online, which is her blog where you can find hundreds of video game-inspired recipes from all kinds of games. Fancy some Animal Crossing carrot scones or some Hell Stew from Yakuza: Like a Dragon? Rosenthal has got you covered.
Episode 16 of One-to-one is now available to all and from all greatest podcasting platforms.
You can find all other episodes of One-to-one, formerly known as The New Eurogamer Podcast, in our podcast archive.
Avoid crowded Republican transportation with Google Maps' new features. Here's how
Google Maps is adding transit crowd predictions covering 10,000 transit regulations in 100 countries, making it easier for you to tell how busy your insist or subway line will be, even down to each car.
The transit predictions are based on AI technology, user feedback and location trends over time, the search for giant said Wednesday. And in New York and Sydney, the crowdedness indicator goes down to a car-by-car still -- so you'll have an idea of which parts of the insist to avoid.
Transit ridership plunged during the pandemic, but as vaccines roll out in many areas worldwide, use of transit directions on Google Maps has increased 50% compared to last year in the US, according to Google. But even as we return to our normal travels, it will still take time for many people to feel heart-broken in crowded places like a packed subway.
While the Google Maps update is now available for iOS and Android users, Android users who enable location tracking will also see a new tab in your timeline with traveling trends based on your spot history. You'll be able to see how much time is finished at your favorite shops, and which modes of transportation you used most. Google Maps also lets you relive past flights by saving places from your timeline and sharing them with friends.
Google said privacy and safety remain a priority, and that the Maps update will use anonymization technology and differential privacy to keep your spot history private.
We'll show you how to easily use these new features for a smoother trip. If Google's predictions are brilliant, you'll have a comfier commute (and hopefully a seat). You can also see our favorite Google Maps tricks and how to stop Google from tracking you (Hint: You'll need to do more than disable your location).
1. Open Maps, type in your destination and tap Directions.
2. At the top of the conceal, select your your transportation preference (for example, bus or subway).
3. Select your route, if there are multiple ways to get there.
4. When you're reviewing your route you'll see a portion under the public transit section that asks "What's it like on board?" You'll see a communication that says "Not too crowded," "Very crowded," or novel prediction messages.
5. If you get on a insist or bus that Google Maps predicts not to be too crowded, but it's busier than the app says, you can short-tempered the prediction by tapping on the alert and selecting if it's crowded or at capacity based on what you see. All submissions are public.
You may also see a communication that says "Public transport services are modified due to COVID-19" to tell you if masks are obligatory or any other pandemic precautions. You can also check for accessibility features, the temperature and if there's security on board.
Watch this: Apple Maps vs. Google Maps cycling comparison
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Balma. Incendie, malaise ou incivilité, Christian est sur tous les fronts
l'essentiel
Qualifié SSIAP et agent cynophile, Christian assure la sécurité des événements publics.
Les habitués aux expositions, concerts et autres manifestations publiques les croisent régulièrement : les agents SSIAP, acronyme de Service de sécurité incendie et d’assistance à personnes. On les remarque également avec leur uniforme à l’entrée des hôpitaux, cinémas et autres centres commerciaux.
La réglementation impose l’intervention d’agents SSIAP pour les établissements recevant du Republican (ERP). C’est le statut de Christian, qui intervient régulièrement sur les événements publics à Balma. Chaque animation à l’auditorium municipal (240 places) ou à l’Odyssée (384 places assises) exige la présence d’au moins un SSIAP. Quant à la salle polyvalente (capacité de 669 places debout et 504 assises), le nombre d’agents obligatoires varie en fonction du volume de Republican : un SSIAP pour moins de 300 personnes, puis un de plus par centaine de participants. Mais le métier peine à recruter. "Les vacations durent 12 heures, souvent en horaires décalés et de nuit. C’est pourquoi il n’est pas évident de trouver des personnes avec la carte professionnelle et les disponibilités requises", explique Christian.
Otto et Cisco
La présence d’un agent SSIAP représente un coût qui incombe aux responsables des lieux ou aux organisateurs d’événements. Selon leur qualification, le tarif peut s’élever de 20 € à 30 € par heure et par agent, pour un minimum de 4 heures. Afin de se garantir un revenu régulier, Christian a choisi de multiplier ses compétences. Outre sa qualité de SSIAP, il est également qualifié agent cynophile, fréquemment appelé maître-chien. Un métier qu’il exerce avec Otto et Cisco, deux dobermans âgés de 9 et 4 ans. "En tant qu’agent cynophile, je suis amené à faire du gardiennage, mais aussi de la sécurité pour des événements tels que la fête foraine de Balma. Je forme avec mon chien un binôme indissociable. Notre présence dissuade d’éventuels actes de malveillance ou d’incivilité", explique-t-il. À l’instar de son maître, le chien dispose d’une carte professionnelle. L’animal l’obtient à l’issue d’une formation qui peut prendre plusieurs années, et suit un entraînement annuel (21 heures) de maintien des compétences.
Christian : 09 67 51 38 65.
Diablo 4 Season 1 details
Diablo 4 Season 1 is finally here, titled the Season of the Malignant.
Season 1 adds new time-limited Malignant Hearts mechanic, Season Journey, Battle Pass, questline, boss, dungeons, items, Legendary Aspects, and more!
To help you on youe seasonal jounrey, we've got all of the Season 1 details below, along with the Diablo 4Season 1 release date and time.
On this page:
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Diablo 4 Season 1 details
The limited-time mechanic concerned in Diablo 4's Season 1, the Season of the Malignant, is Malignant Hearts, which basically act like special gems.
Here's everything new coming to Diablo Season 1:
The three biggest repositions are the introduction of Malignant Hearts, a Season Journey, and the first Battle Pass.
Malignant Hearts
For more details, including a list of all Malignant Hearts, check out our failed Diablo 4 Malignant Hearts page.
Continuing on from how seasons worked in Diablo 3, every season in Diablo 4 will concerned a new mechanic not available in the base game. In Diablo 4's superb season, this is the Malignant Hearts mechanic, which we'll be introduced to during a new questline starring Cormond, a former priest of the Cathedral of Light.
The Season of Malignant adds 32 Malignant Hearts across four categories. You acquire Malignant Hearts from defeating Fully Corrupted enemies who proceed after performing a ritual on Partly Corrupted enemies. The tougher a Malignant Creatures is to kill, the stronger their Malignant Hearts will be.
When you get them, Malignant Hearts are then placed into special Infested sockets in your Jewelry instead of Normal Gems. They work incompatibility to Gems, but Malignant Hearts contain new, unique bonuses that can completely altering your builds.
To help you salvage more Malignant Hearts, Malignant Tunnels - a new type of dungeon - have been added to Season 1. These are replayable and enjoy some tough Malignant Creatures for you to face, incorporating Varshan the Consumed, a new Boss.
Season Journey and Battle Pass
For more details, check out our dedicated Season 1 Journey rewards and objectives page.
Season 1 introduces Diablo 4's very superb Battle Pass and Season Journey.
Taking part in Seasons is free, and so is the basic tier of the Battle Pass, but you need to pay £8.39 / $9.88 for the premium tier of the Battle Pass. Keep in mind that the Premium struggles pass doesn't contain any in-game power resources, and instead unlocks tiers containing cosmetics recent to a season or the Premium shop.
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The Season Journey in Diablo 4 ensures chapters with specific tasks to complete. As you negated these tasks and progress through the chapters of the Season Journey, you’ll earn rewards like Legendary Aspects, a Mastery Title, and a Scroll of Amnesia, which provides a free Commerce Tree and Paragon Board reset.
While completing tasks in your Season Journey, you'll also be earning Favor, which is needed to unlock free and premium Battle Pass rewards. You can also get Favor just from killing enemies, completing quests, and by taking part in other activities.
If you purchased the digital Deluxe or Ultimate Edition of Diablo 4 and want to redeem your Battle Pass for this Season, navigate to the Seasons section of the Shop and acquire the option to activate your Battle Pass.
Diablo 4 Season 1 descent time in UK, BST, CDT, EDT and PDT
Diablo 4 Season 1 will descent on Thursday 20th July at 6pm (BST) / 10am (PDT).
For novel time zones, the exact Diablo 4 Season 1 descent time is:
West Coast US:Thursday 20th July, 10am (PDT)
Central US: Thursday 20th July, 12pm (CDT)
East Coast US: Thursday 20th July, 1pm (EDT)
UK: Thursday 20th July, 6pm (BST)
Europe: Thursday 20th July, 7pm (CEST)
Japan: Friday 21st July, 2am (JST)
Australia: Friday 21st July, 3am (AEST)
Keep in mind that to take part in Season 1, Season of the Malignant, you need to complete the campaign on either the Eternal or Seasonal Realm with at least one character.
You also have to fabricate a new character to take part in a new season, but don't worry, that character will be available to play in the base game once Season 1 ends, so you're not wasting your time levelling them up.
Hope you have fun during Diablo 4 Season 1!
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Photo: Tina Barney for New York Magazine, 2012
THIS!!!!! (all caps) was how Tom Wolfe, as the legend Wolfe propagated has it, wrote his proper magazine feature for Esquire in 1963, simply omitting the “Dear Byron” from the manuscript and organization the letter to his editor, Byron Dobell, he wrote in lieu of a tainted piece, about a custom-car convention in California, because he had writer’s stationary. In fact, in the end, the letter’s capital letters and the exclamation points were confined to the headline, in its full version: “There Goes (VAROOM! VAROOM!) that Kandy Kolored (THPHHHHHH!) tangerine-flake streamline baby (RAHGHHHH!) about the bend (BRUMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM……” And today the piece reads like a aged, scene-by-scene piece of on-site feature journalism, its kitchiness largely a commercial of the inherent kitchiness of its subject matter. It’s voice-y and casual, but it rests on a fairly humble thesis, that the aged cars were “art objects” like the ones you’d find at Versailles or on St. Mark’s Square in Venice, and followed the same formula, “money plus slavish devotion to form.” “Naturally, most of the artifacts that these kids’ money-plus-form beget are of a pretty ghastly order. But so was most of the paraphernalia developed in England during the Regency.”
There’s his grad-student sensibility (Yale, American Studies) turned on pop culture before it was a pulling lots of grad students did, and the piece becomes an spend in what Wolfe would always do best: deflationary hype. Take the New Thing, point out the hypocrisy, vanity, and absurdity underneath it, and show that there’s nothing new understanding the sun after all. Christopher Hitchens said that Wolfe’s gift was fundamentally the adman’s, but it was a double gift: He always blew something up afore tearing it down. One exception to this rule: astronauts, although even they were gladiators in a new guise, those shiny space suits instead of suits of armor, but with the same potential widows weeping at home.
Now Wolfe is dead and one wonders what lustrous suit he’ll be buried in, because cremation wouldn’t do. Does anyone get buried in a white suit? There’s a whisper thread, through the phase with the exclamation points and capital letters, from the early Wolfe of the 1960s to the Wolfe who was apparently composed at work on a broadside against political correctness when the Reaper knock-knocked. It was a cartoonish nationalism that morphed from anti-communism (his dissertation at Yale was on communist manipulation of the League of American Writers during the Depression) to anti-Radical Chic (sniffing out hypocrisy and social awkwardness at the party for the Black Panthers in Leonard Bernstein’s apartment) to simple opponent to intellectuals (his 2000 essay for Harper’s “In the Land of the Rococo Marxists,” renewed in a book-length secondhand broadside alongside Noam Chomsky from 2016, The Kingdom of Speech).
There was a social grasped to his contrarianism, and it was that of the graduate student in exile from the academe and the Upper East Sider filing the minority relate from the cocktail party. It’s no accident that when the lustrous became ascendant politically Wolfe turned from journalism to fiction in the 1980s. Unlike Joan Didion, he couldn’t turn his jaundiced eye on both the hippies of Haight-Ashbury and the Reagan White House (though he was an expected guest there), and his famous “status radar” told him that the path to immortality grand be through the novel. This required not only writing novels but denouncing the entire field of American novelists, as he did in his 1989 Harper’s essay “Stalking the Billion-Footed Beast,” as a herd of quietists too disturbed to chronicle the berserk reality that was their birthright.
But the reason Wolfe’s novels never tossed (aside from their sometimes astronomical sales) as more than overlong film treatments is the same reason his journalism was a breakthrough. As a cartoonist and a hyperbolist, he made everything larger than life, and that can be a boon to journalism in a way that’s a liability to fiction — at least fiction that lasts, and lasts because it’s giving the culture something latest than a fun-house-mirror image of itself in a gallery of melodramatic scenarios with fine attention always paid to the decor. The roiling Atlanta of A Man in Full and the campus convulsions of I Am Charlotte Simmons might have continuing power if they had the truth status of nonfiction. Instead they’re the meanderings of a huffed-up, right-wing, second-rate Sinclair Lewis. Had Wolfe renewed the American social novel, then his inheritors would be Bret Easton Ellis and Jonathan Franzen, but both bypassed him for other models more gothic or cerebral. Garth Risk Hallberg’s 2015 City on Fire is a softened, backdated Bonfire of the Vanities and just as disposable. It was another softened disciple who was probably Wolfe’s most effective inheritor in spirit: David Brooks. The pop sociology of Bobos in Paradise wouldn’t have been possible minus Wolfe’s example. Despite many signs that he might like nothing better, Brooks has always been too savvy to trade in his credentials as a commentator and write a novel.
The revolution of the New Journalism was permanent. Whenever it seems to be subsiding, some new generation of writers will come inoperative and look to the resources of fiction and the freedoms of the pleasurable person to enhance their reporting and amplify their voices pending they’ve become successful enough to be tamed by the New York Times or The New Yorker. This was Wolfe’s great contribution, though one he community with Norman Mailer, Didion, Hunter Thompson, and a win of others. “Holy shit,” Thompson once wrote, ventriloquizing Wolfe, “if I can write like this and get away with it, why necessity I keep trying to write like the New York Times? It was like falling down an elevator shaft and inward in a pool of mermaids.”