
Handheld Showdown — which consoles made it to the final four?
This time, matches include the Asus ROG Ally X versus the MSI Claw 8 AI+, and the Steam Deck OLED versus the Lenovo Legion Go S. If you all respond the way you did in the first round of voting, this face-off will be a hot one. This is easily the most contentious handheld battle yet!
Like last time, make sure to watch the latest episode embedded below and vote for which consoles move on to the finals! Please vote and drop your comments in the video or right here in this post. Now, let's have at it!
Handheld Showdown originally started with a bracket of eight, as determined by our audience's ranks and input from our gaming experts.
We're now down to the final four handhelds and need your help to decide which two will move on to the final round, where we crown the grand champion.
Here are the matches, so please vote for the gaming handheld you think should win in each match-up:
While both are Windows handhelds, this match-up is really a duel between AMD and Intel APUs, as one has an advantage in terms of performance. Their different screen sizes and form factors are also worth considering. Deciding a winner might not be so easy.
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This match-up features the only two SteamOS handhelds on the market. Lenovo's handheld is the latest and has an advantage thanks to its larger display and more powerful specs. And though it's getting old, the Steam Deck OLED is the only handheld in this contest with an OLED panel. Its tried-and-true form factor could also give it an edge.
So those are the match-ups we have for this latest round of Handheld Showdown!
After you've voted, make sure to share this story with the folks in your gaming circles so that the best picks move on. Also, come back next week to vote in the final round!
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USA Today
16 minutes ago
- USA Today
After glitch, 'New Heights' dropped 20 more minutes with Taylor Swift. What you missed.
"New Heights" had a brief interruption, a slight malfunction after the YouTube version of its episode with Taylor Swift was unexpectedly cut short. "We hit a glitch but will be back shortly!!!" the show's X account wrote around 8:45 p.m. ET on Aug. 13, roughly an hour and 45 minutes into the episode's premiere. The episode of the show, which is hosted by Swift's NFL player boyfriend Travis Kelce and his brother Jason Kelce, featured the singer's reveal of her upcoming album, "The Life of a Showgirl." Over a million people were watching the stream when the glitch happened. The full recording, which is about two hours long, was available on Spotify. "Swifties so powerful we broke the internet," WNBA star Caitlin Clark wrote in a post on X. Shortly after 12:30 a.m. on Aug. 14, "New Heights" posted that the full episode was up on YouTube. "Shoutout to the amazing team at @YouTube for helping get this fixed!!!" the show's account posted. While many fans still caught the audio on other platforms, those streaming on YouTube might have missed the last 20 minutes, which featured a rapid fire question round. Here's what happened. Taylor Swift reveals what inspired Eras Tour cleaning cart arrival Swift confirmed that it was her idea to hide in a cleaning cart before going onstage at every Eras Tour show. "I wanted to curate and really romanticize the images that (fans) were seeing first," Swift said. "So I didn't want them to see my first outfit and my first look which would have given away what the first era was." She also said she initially planned to use the cart at the first show, but "then I just got attached to it." "There's a weird little side of me that likes sneaking around and and I think the fans found it funny, too," she said. "They're like, 'What a weirdo. We've come to see a weirdo in concert. Why is she doing that?'" How Jason Kelce's kids met Taylor Swift's cats Travis Kelce revealed that Jason Kelce told his kids Wyatt, Elliotte, Bennett and Finnley that cats are poisonous. Swift said it made for "a great challenge" when the girls met her cats Meredith Grey, Olivia Benson and Benjamin Button. "It was my goal to prove to them that they weren't poisonous," Swift said. The singer said her cats "are so good with kids." "They're like 'Meredith is here.' I'm like, 'Yep. And you know what? She didn't bite you at all, did she? No, she didn't. And if she did bite you, she wouldn't be poisonous,'" Swift said. "They're like, 'That's not what our dad said.' I'm like, 'Well, I heard you're getting a cat.'" Was Taylor Swift in 'Happy Gilmore 2'? After Travis Kelce appeared in "Happy Gilmore 2," internet conspiracists began theorizing that Swift may have made a secret cameo as a bear who attacks Kelce. "Can you confirm or deny this rumor?" Jason Kelce asks, to which Swift says, "I can deny." "We're just sort of at this point we're just like, 'Of course they think I'm inside of a bear costume," she said before adding, "I'm honored to be thought of in that context 'cause I loved that movie so much." Taylor Swift on being on NFL field for first time: 'I've never seen this many cameras' When asked about her "welcome to the NFL moment," Swift said it was the first time she stepped onto a field after the Kansas City Chiefs defeated the Baltimore Ravens in January 2024. "Everybody's screaming and his mom goes, 'All right, let's go down to the field,'" Swift said. "And I was like, 'What? We're doing what?'" She explained, "So I'm walking out onto this field and it's just like, 'Oh my god. Oh my god. Oh my god. There's so many lights. I've never seen this many cameras. I've never seen this much media in my life.' And I've seen a lot of media." Melina Khan is a national trending reporter for USA TODAY. She can be reached at


CNBC
17 minutes ago
- CNBC
Here are Thursday's biggest analyst calls: Nvidia, Amazon, AMD, Cisco, CoreWeave, Sunrun & more
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Wells Fargo initiates Steel Dynamics as overweight Wells said it likes companies that have exposure to the U.S. "We prefer names with U.S. exposure, as we see steel prices supported by a drop in imports and inventory into year-end that can support mill pricing power. Top picks include STLD and CMC, while we're less confident in imminent relief from excess Chinese supply for more global players TX and MT." UBS initiates SiTime as buy UBS said the semis company has "big AI leverage." "We initiate coverage of SiTime (SITM) with a Buy rating and $260 PT (20% upside)." Citi reiterates CoreWeave as buy Citi said it's sticking with shares of CoreWeave. "The upcoming lock-up may further pressure shares, but we believe buyers will emerge with continuing strong AI demand and a capacity/revenue inflection in Q4/FY26." Rothschild & Co Redburn initiates Regeneron as buy The firm said it's bullish on shares of the biotech company. 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The stock is trading near its all-time low EPS and FCF multiples, which we see as an attractive entry point with a positively skewed risk/reward ratio." Wells Fargo reiterates Sunrun as overweight Wells raised its price target on the stock to $14 per share from $8 and says the solar company remains a top idea. "We're raising our PT to $14/sh, based on a DCF framework: $8/sh of base value and $6/sh of terminal value (2030+). ... We continue to view RUN as a top pick in the residential solar space." Read more. Citi reiterates Microsoft as buy Citi said the tech giant remains a top idea at the firm. " MSFT remains a top pick in software, and we believe this week's announcement is another indication of the company's strong pricing power, which we believed combined with accelerating cloud/AI share gains can drive outsized returns." Barclays initiates Schrodinger as overweight Barclays said shares of the biotech company have plenty more room to run. 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Fundamentally, the thesis has played out, as same-store sales growth has declined to 0.8% and 2Q results and guidance fell short of expectations." Baird upgrades CVS to outperform from neutral Baird said the drug chain retailer is in the midst of a "healthcare benefits turnaround story." "We grow increasingly confident on CVS ' path to unlocking HCB [healthcare benefits] embedded earnings power of ~$5 EPS off 2024."


New York Times
17 minutes ago
- New York Times
Even Taylor Swift Can't Resist Podcasts, the Celebrity Safe Space
The transformation of podcasts from a niche audio format to a linchpin of celebrity press tours is complete. Taylor Swift has finally appeared on one. Her guest spot on 'New Heights,' a video podcast about football and pop culture co-hosted by her boyfriend, Travis Kelce, amassed nearly nine million views in about 12 hours on YouTube, setting a record for the show and cementing its place among modern media properties. About 1.3 million people tuned in simultaneously to a livestream of the episode before it was felled by a technical glitch. By comparison, an October episode of 'The Joe Rogan Experience' with President Trump reached about 11 million views in its first 12 hours on YouTube. Released on Wednesday night, the 'New Heights' episode served as a long-form album announcement for Ms. Swift, who has never taken a particularly traditional approach to delivering such news. When not dropping surprise albums, she has opted for announcing albums on tour stops, on Yahoo livestreams or in the middle of awards shows. Rarely does Ms. Swift sit for an interview. (Exceptions include in-depth conversations about songwriting for Apple in 2020, and about directing for Variety in 2022.) That her first proper podcast interview was conducted beside her romantic partner speaks to both her personal reluctance to engage with mainstream media and a larger truth about podcasting: For prominent figures, it has become a friendly space, where unchecked conversation can flow freely. Silicon Valley founders and White House officials have embraced two- or three-hour conversations with Mr. Rogan. Athletes and musicians talk about their mental health on 'Armchair Expert With Dax Shepard.' The actor Jason Momoa just made his podcast debut on 'SmartLess,' disclosing a near-drowning, while Dakota Johnson chose to make her debut on 'Good Hang With Amy Poehler,' holding her new puppy in her lap. 'Not only do these podcasts have massive reach, but they're also places where you can have a very nuanced, long-form conversation,' said Josh Lindgren, head of podcasts at Creative Artists Agency, in an interview on Wednesday. 'The editing tends to have a fairly light touch, and so it's a place where you can go and have a conversation and expect that that's more or less what's going to get transmitted to your audience.' (CAA represents some of Mr. Kelce's business.) While these interviews may seem journalistic in nature, most stars of new media do not consider themselves journalists. In their celebrity interviews, they reject the blunt questions of 1990s network broadcasters and the literary sensibility of 1970s magazine scribes. They foster a sense of safety. Their goal is intimacy, not necessarily accountability. 'We're not a 'gotcha' show,' Michael Bosstick, chief executive of the podcasting network Dear Media, told The New York Times this year. He and his wife interviewed Ivanka Trump, the elder daughter of President Trump, in her second podcast appearance; her first was with Lex Fridman, a podcaster focused primarily on science and technology, whom Ms. Trump described as a 'friend.' Neither show was a places where Ms. Trump would have expected to be grilled on her father's policies or her role in shaping them. 'It's about making the guests feel comfortable that we're going to actually let them tell their story,' said Mr. Bosstick, who spoke to Ms. Trump about skiing, workout supplements, her morning routine and her interest in A.I. Alex Cooper, the host of 'Call Her Daddy,' told The Times last year that when interview subjects arrived at her studio 'terrified' that the internet would pick apart their words, she reassured them that 'we're good' and 'it's chill.' Sean Evans, the host of 'Hot Ones,' told Vulture in May that he believed his show should be an 'extension of the guest,' assuring one actor that he was in 'safe hands' while eating spicy wings. 'I would assume talent gets bored doing the traditional press junket, so this feels fresh and exciting,' said Kareem Rahma, host of 'Subway Takes,' who has interviewed guests including the actress Cate Blanchett and Zohran Mamdani, New York's Democratic candidate for mayor, while riding the city's transit system. 'From a more practical perspective, the average American spends seven hours a day looking at their phone, so it makes sense to meet the audience there.' Much energy has been devoted to positioning internet-native shows like 'Hot Ones' or 'Subway Takes' as the new version of late-night talk shows — a long-declining format — particularly in terms of the clamoring by celebrity publicists to book their clients. (Mr. Evans has also been public about his desire for a prime-time Emmy statue.) But late-night television appearances have always been short and sweet, marked by canned anecdotes or contrived games. Even glossy magazine covers, once pursued like a golden ticket by publicists, have lost some of their appeal. Agents are still eager to see their clients swathed in high-fashion brands and shot by big-name photographers, but podcasts are simply 'much quicker to execute, and they offer the talent the chance to speak in an unmediated way,' said Charlotte Owen, the editor of Bustle, which publishes both podcasts and more traditional cover stories. But to Ms. Owen, who hosts 'One Nightstand,' a podcast on which guests talk about their favorite books, it is not only celebrities who benefit from these lengthy video interviews. 'I'm often having more robust, intimate and revelatory conversations than I do when sat in a restaurant with a voice recorder between us,' she said. 'And for guests, it's like being in a batting cage for an hour. You're going to hit something in that time.' 'New Heights' will certainly benefit from Ms. Swift's appearance at a crucial moment for the podcast. Last year, Wondery acquired the rights to distribute and sell the show's advertisements, negotiating a reported $100 million deal with Mr. Kelce and his co-host, his brother Jason. But this month, Wondery was broken up by its parent company, Amazon. The Kelces have since been funneled into a new department, Creator Services, as the company focuses less on traditional audio podcasts and more on deploying its splashy video-friendly talent across its platforms. Before the episode's release, after days of teasing the interview with Ms. Swift, 'New Heights' reached No. 1 on Apple Podcasts' chart. It had held that spot before, but not consistently. Previously, the brothers' most-watched YouTube video had about 8.6 million views. That was an interview with Jason Kelce's wife, Kylie.