Tag: minimum
One of the first commercial Unreal Engine 5 games, Immortals of Aveum, requires an RTX 2080 Super at minimum
Hackers want a ‘minimum 8 figures’ in ransom payment for data they stole from Western Digital last month
Apple Pay Promo Offers Free McNuggets With Minimum $1 Purchase
The offer can be redeemed via the “Deals” section of the McDonald’s app, and opting into MyMcDonald’s Rewards is required.
The full terms of the offer:
Offer valid through April 11, 2023, or while supplies last at participating U.S. McDonald’s. Must select offer from ‘Deals’ section of mobile app. Limit one per customer. Excludes tax. Must opt into MyMcDonald’s Rewards.
Apple Pay promos like this one are periodically emailed to some iPhone users in the U.S., offering various perks and discounts from popular brands.
This article, “Apple Pay Promo Offers Free McNuggets With Minimum $1 Purchase” first appeared on MacRumors.com
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: Walt Disney World workers to get $18 minimum wage under tentative deal
Diablo 4 Open Beta Minimum PC Requirements Revealed
Diablo IV’s open beta minimum and recommended PC specifications have been revealed by Blizzard as part of a beta-focused livestream. Note that these are the beta system requirements and not for the finished game, so some of these specifications could change when the full version of game launches.
Blizzard notes that Diablo IV will “attempt to run on hardware below minimum specifications, including HDDs, dual-core CPUS, and integrated GPUs. However, the game experience may be significantly diminished.”
Diablo IV Open Beta PC Minimum System Requirements
- Operating System: 64-bit Windows 10
- Graphics: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 660 or AMD Radeon R9 280
- Processor: Intel Core i5-2500L or AMD FX-8100
- Memory: 8 GB RAM
- DirectX: Version 12
- Storage: SSD with 45 GB available space
- Internet: Broadband connection
Diablo IV Open Beta PC Recommended System Requirements
- Operating System: 64-bit Windows 10
- Graphics: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 970 or AMD Radeon RX 370
- Processor: Intel Core i5-4670K or AMD R3-1300X
- Memory: 16 GB RAM
- DirectX: Version 12
- Storage: SSD With 45 GB available space
- Internet: Broadband connection
The open beta will kick off on March 17 with an early access period available to those who have preordered the upcoming ARPG either on console or PC. A fully public open beta will go live on March 24 and run through March 26. The beta will consist of the game’s prologue and the entirety of Act 1, allowing players to explore the Fractured Peaks zone up to a max character level of 25. There will be exclusive rewards that will carry over to the full game for players who reach certain milestones in the open beta, including titles and a backpack that houses an adorable snoozing puppy.
Minimum marriage age rises to 18 in England and Wales
Amazon Fresh will soon require a minimum order of over $150 for free delivery
At the moment, Amazon Prime customers can enjoy free grocery delivery via the company’s Fresh service for checkouts worth $35 and above. It’s a reasonable and pretty affordable minimum purchase requirement, even for those live alone. But starting on February 28th, people would have to add a lot more items to their cart if they don’t want to pay extra to get their order delivered to their doorstep. As The Verge has noticed, the e-commerce giant has updated its Fresh grocery page to note that only orders worth above $150 will be delivered for free within a two-hour window by the end of next month.
Amazon will deliver orders between $100 and $150 for $4, while orders between $50 and $100 will incur a $7 service charge. If a customer’s items come up to less than $50, they’ll have to pay a whopping $10. Since the Fresh service is only available to subscribers already paying for Amazon Prime, which raised its annual fee to $139 from $119 last year, it will become a much pricier option by the time March arrives.
A company spokesperson told The Verge that it’s “introducing a service fee on some Amazon Fresh delivery orders to help keep prices low in [its] online and physical grocery stores as [it] better cover[s] grocery delivery costs and continue to enable offering a consistent, fast, and high-quality delivery experience.” The spokesperson continued: “We will continue to offer convenient two-hour delivery windows for all orders, and customers in some areas will be able to select a longer delivery window for a reduced fee.”
Based on that statement, Amazon could jack up grocery prices if it doesn’t charge delivery fees. But as it is, customers will end up paying more anyway — a lot of people can’t afford its $150 minimum requirement these days, and those who can may not be able to consume everything they bought before they go bad or are no longer, well, fresh. Amazon has started notifying customers via email about the new service fees, and some social media users are pointing out how outrageous the price jump is to get free delivery.
Customers have come to rely on Amazon Fresh for grocery deliveries when the pandemic started, including folks on the government’s Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) program. People who have SNAP Electronic Benefits Transfer (EBT) debit cards can order via Fresh even without a Prime subscription, making it a good (and in some cases, the only) option for people with disabilities. But now they’d have to pay extra on top of their purchase. According to Amazon’s website, they can’t even use their EBT cards to pay for the shipping fee and will have to provide another form of payment.
“Customers with an EBT card will continue to receive free grocery delivery on orders more than $150.”
Uh, the average benefit a single person gets is only $197 *FOR THE ENTIRE MONTH*. This price-hike for delivery fees is going to hurt low-income disabled folks horribly.
— Megan E. Doherty, PhD (@MeganEDoherty) January 27, 2023
Massachusetts Bills Would Set a Minimum Wage For Rideshare Drivers
In a statement, the Service Employees International Union (a bill proponent) says the bill “rewrites the rules” and gives condition drivers have sought for over a decade. The Massachusetts Coalition for Independent Work, an industry-run organization that opposes the legislation, previously claimed that measures granting employee status don’t reflect a “vast majority” of drivers that want to remain contractors. The coalition prefers bills that would bring the anti-employee ballot proposal to the legislature as well as create portable benefit accounts.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.