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Sega’s Genesis Mini is just $45 today

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Following years of shoddy third-party consoles, Sega took matters into its own hands and produced a replica console worthy of the Genesis name. The Genesis Mini has everything we look for in a miniature: a faithful design, a great collection of games and solid performance.

It scored 89 in our review back in September, with praise for its large selection of titles, faithful emulation, high build quality and intelligent interface. The only negatives we found were the controllers (they’re fine, but we would’ve liked to see the six-button rather than the three-button controllers) and that some games don’t quite hit the mark.

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Techno-thriller ‘Mr. Robot’ ends on a mind-melting high

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The final season of Sam Esmail’s acclaimed techno-thriller crystalized what fans have long suspected: that the show is, and always was, about the link between hero Elliot Alderson and a bespectacled hacker wearing a frayed Mr. Robot patch on his jacket.

Mr. Robot

From the jump, it was obvious that Elliot was a complicated hero. The introverted New Yorker would often talk directly to the audience — calling them a “friend” — and explain his fractured relationships and Batman-esque vigilante work in long, brooding monologues. Dressed almost exclusively in black, he was a social outcast with the drive and technological ability to crush anyone, from coffee shop owners to conglomerate executive, hiding a criminal or simply immoral second life.

In the first season, the show revealed that Mr. Robot, the leader of a powerful hacker group called Fsociety, was actually part of Elliot’s psyche. A mysterious force that could talk with the hero privately or, more alarmingly, send him into a memory-blocking stupor and take control of his body. The puzzling entity looked like Edward Alderson, Elliot’s deceased father and the former owner of a computer store called Mr. Robot. In another shocking twist, Elliot discovered — or rather, remembered — that fellow Fsociety member Darlene was his sister.

These revelations proved that Elliot was an unreliable narrator. A flawed character that pushed forward by burying, compartmentalizing and occasionally rewriting some of his most painful and important memories.

Mr. Robot

The middle two seasons explored an internal power struggle and eventual truce between Elliot and Mr. Robot. Through it all, the audience was led to believe that Elliot — not Mr. Robot or anybody else — was the one ‘true’ personality that deserved full control, or at least the deciding vote, in everything his body did day-to-day.

Esmail kept some mind-melting revelations for the fourth and final season, though. Elliot, for instance, wasn’t pushed out of his bedroom window as a child. “He kept shoving me away,” Elliot told Mr. Robot in season one. “He shoved me so hard that I fell backwards out the window.” During an impromptu therapy session, though, Elliot recalled that he jumped to escape a father who had sexually molested him growing up. He then created Mr. Robot as an imaginary ‘protector’ against this abuse and other “intolerable situations” he faced after his death.

Whiterose, the villainous leader of the Dark Army hacker group, offered Elliot an alternate reality to escape to. For the last couple of seasons, the show has teased — worryingly, for many fans that didn’t want the story to veer into hard sci-fi — that Whiterose was on the verge of developing a time machine or some kind of portal between worlds. And for a moment, it looked like Esmail was following The Man in the High Castle‘s reality-hopping lead. Elliot, after all, seemingly died in Whiterose’s secret facility and awoke in a vastly superior dimension where his father was still alive — and more importantly, not a monster. He was also the CEO of a cybersecurity firm, sociable, and on the verge of marrying his best friend.

Mr. Robot

The world wasn’t perfect, though. For one, Darlene didn’t exist. And there were two Elliots — the one the audience knows, and the one currently living a seemingly idyllic life. After an earthquake rippled through New York, our Elliot decided to kill his alternate reality equivalent and step into his life, believing that it was the only shot he had at true happiness. But Mr. Robot appeared and finally revealed the truth to Elliot: he wasn’t in a parallel world, but a dream-like prison designed to contain Elliot Alderson’s long-hidden personality.

Yep, that’s right. The version of Elliot we’ve known since the start is actually a spin-off identity, just like Mr. Robot. In another dream sequence, Elliot’s therapist explained that he was the “Mastermind,” an angry and rage-filled personality that appeared just before the start of the show. He founded Fsociety and Elliot’s protector, Mr. Robot, presumably helped because he thought it would purge all the evil in the world and, therefore, keep his creator as safe as humanly possible.

“You loved him so much, you wanted to save the entire world so you could make it better for him no matter the cost,” the spiritual version of Krista said. “That’s why you hid him here and turned his harsh reality into a fantasy.”

It was an unexpected, but riveting twist that felt earned.

Mr. Robot

Throughout the show, Elliot saw two other figures — his mother and a childhood version of himself — occasionally re-enacting what appeared to be scenes from his childhood. The mother was a “persecutor” personality, the dream-like Krista explained, that haunted Elliot and blamed him for the abuse he received as a child. The younger version of Elliot, meanwhile, was meant to handle the abuse that he couldn’t tolerate alone. “And with that, [Elliot] had created his own family of sorts,” Krista explained in the finale.

During this sequence, the therapist also confirmed the existence of the audience — known simply as voyeurs — who watched Elliot from a distance.

Following this conversation, the Mastermind woke up in the real world and explained his true identity to Darlene. “I’m not him,” he said. “Darlene, I’m not Elliot. I’m only a part of him.” In response, Darlene admitted she had known he was a different personality since the early days of Fsociety. “I know you’re not him,” she said. “Not the Elliot I grew up with, at least.” The show ended with Elliot’s four hidden personalities — the Mastermind and Mr. Robot, as well as Elliot’s mother and younger self — standing in a room high above New York City. “We’ll always be a part of him, kiddo,” Mr. Robot says before everyone walks out of the room, down a corridor and into a small theater that represents Elliot’s subconsciousness.

Mr. Robot

The fourth season had some spectacular and imaginative hacking sequences that portrayed Elliot and Darlene as Robin Hood figures. But it was telling that you didn’t see a single line of code in the final episode. There was no ‘race against the clock’ to find a world-saving loophole or vulnerability. No final chase to steal someone’s phone or destroy a server cabinet. Instead, the show spent its final hours unpacking Elliot, his life, and the relationships he forged with, well, the various parts of himself.

It was a risky and unexpected finale that I’ll always be grateful for. Mr. Robot will always be remembered for its heroic hacks and technological authenticity, but the show deserves just as much praise, if not more, for its exploration of a troubled human mind.

Images: USA Network

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The Fujifilm X100F is on sale at $900

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The only thing that’s giving me pause, aside from the gentle weeps emanating from my credit card, is the X100V. That’s the rumored name of the the X100F’s successor, and it’s apparently going to be announced very soon. Months of reporting from Fuji Rumors has given us a fairly complete picture of the purported new model. As expected, it’s said to feature the latest version of Fujifilm’s X-Trans sensor (the 26.1-megapixel unit found in cameras like the X-T3), paired with an all-new 23mm lens. It’s likely to cost an awful lot more than $900, though, with Fujifilm Rumors recently suggesting it could debut at $1,500 this February.

I’ve been trapped in a perpetual loop of doubt for years now. Just before the X100F was announced I wanted to pull the trigger on the then-discounted X100T, but decided to wait. Now the X100F is discounted and I have the same problem again. If you’re more decisive than me, though, you can grab the X100F on Amazon now.

Buy Fujifilm X100F on Amazon – $900

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The best of Engadget's Big Picture in 2019

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I love doing The Big Picture series for Engadget, even though it can take a lot of hunting to find a striking photo with a tech angle. I believe in the idea that, by creating some emotion, dramatic images help us grasp heavy concepts in a way that wo…

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Personal computer CPU pioneer Chuck Peddle dies at 82

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The 6502 almost didn’t happen. Peddle wanted to design his more affordable chip at Motorola, which was struggling to sell its 6800 CPU design kits for a then-costly $300. When Motorola was unresponsive to the proposal (it saw the proposal as internal competition), Peddle and six team members jumped to MOS Technology. Even after the 6502 shipped, it was in danger — Motorola sued months later to try and halt sales, forcing MOS to settle in 1976. Commodore swooped in to buy MOS soon after, making Peddle its chief engineer and changing the computing landscape with the $495 PET.

Peddle left the MOS team in 1980 and worked on lower-key projects like Sirius Systems Technology’s Victor PC and removable hard drives that were precursors to external drives and USB sticks. By then, though, his legacy was well-established. He helped democratize computing by making home PCs affordable. And to some extent, he ushered in the notion of ubiquitous computing, where technology spread everywhere instead of sitting in monolithic servers. In that sense, smartphones and connected homes have roots in the ideas Peddle formulated 45 years ago.

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Tesla puts a music-making app in your EV

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Never mind kicking back with some TV shows while you’re waiting in your EV — if Tesla has its way, you’ll be creative during your downtime. YouTuber Oliver Ryan and others have discovered that Tesla’s recently released holiday update includes a Trax app for creating your own tunes. It’s not sophisticated, as you might imagine (it makes GarageBand look like a professional tool), but it does let you produce multi-track, keyboard-based compositions that include familiar instruments like Roland’s TR-808 drum machine.



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DJI patent imagines a drone that can’t fly

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Unlike Freefly, the DJI vehicle seems to include its own camera and stabilizer, much like the Mavic and other drones. At the same time, the suspension seems to have a lot of travel that would allow it to operate smoothly on relatively rough terrain. That would no doubt make it simple to operate and relatively lightweight. Mero’s Freefly, by contrast, is a whopping big vehicle that can support a heavy RED camera with a stabilizer.

Such camera platforms can capture pretty cool ground-level shots that a drone just can’t, so it would make sense for DJI to turn this into a product. However, take it all with some salt — while patents can be fun, they’re by no means a guarantee that a company will ever build the product shown.

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‘Dead Cells’ update lets you play old versions of the game

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“As we moved toward regular updates,” wrote Steve Filby, “we were bugged by the fact that we were drastically changing the experience that a lot of people had come to love.” After all, those who fell in love with Dead Cells as a beta played a drastically different game to the one that currently exists.

In order to play the older versions, you’ll need to right click the game on Steam, access Properties, and select the Betas. Inside this section will be the numerous editions of the title, waiting for you to download and enjoy over the holiday season.

Video game preservation is difficult, because the medium and the technology that underpins it is so ephemeral. The fact that most AAA games require hefty downloads on launch day to make them work, too, means that it’s hard to create versions that’ll stick around forever.

And for games that had lengthy beta periods, where people could experiment with them long before they were finished, preserving those early works is a big deal. That’s why moves like this are welcome, and we’d like to see plenty more studios do this in future.

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'Fallout 76' hackers wiped out players' inventories

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If you play Fallout 76 you might want to avoid public servers for a while. According to multiple posts on the game's Reddit forums — and confirmed by publisher Bethesda — hackers have attacked public servers and wiped out the inventories of more th…

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