Tag: pricing’
How much does Midjourney cost? Plans, pricing, and alternatives
Asus ROG Ally to take on Steam Deck June 13: pricing, specs, game library options, more revealed
Asus has revealed the specs, pricing, and launch date for its ROG Ally handheld gaming system.
Unlike its competitor, Steam Deck, the Windows 11 system comes in two options instead of three different skus .
The more powerful of the two features an AMD Ryzen Z1 Extreme Processor with an 8-core Zen4 CPU with 16-threads, 24 MB total cache, and up to 5.10 GHz boost. It also features an AMD Radeon Graphics GPU (AMD RDNA 3) with 12 CUs, up to 2.7 GHz, and 8.6 Teraflops. It will run you $699.99 and ships on June 13..
Diablo 4 battle pass pricing, rewards, and more
What’s included with the Diablo 4 battle pass? A Diablo 4 battle pass is coming with the game’s launch in just a few weeks, giving people many reasons to play this awesome-looking, long-awaited sequel. On a recent livestream, a team of developers shared what players could expect when the battle pass comes to the game after its launch. Fans of the series have been deeply curious about developer Blizzard Entertainment’s plans for monetisation.
Here’s everything we learned about the forthcoming Diablo 4 battle pass, including its various tiers, costs, cosmetics info, opportunities for paid progression, and more in Blizzard’s action RPG.
MORE FROM PCGAMESN: Diablo 4 release date, Diablo 4 system requirements, Diablo 4 classes
Diablo 4 Battle Pass Pricing and Season Details Revealed
Leaked $700 pricing for the Extreme ROG Ally could kill the Steam Deck for me
Google Fi gets a new name, tweaked pricing, and a new focus on family plans
What is Spotify? Music, pricing, and features explained
YouTube TV reveals NFL Sunday Ticket pricing
The NFL season just ended two months ago. My beloved Kansas City Chiefs are champions once again. And it’s time for all of us cord-cutters to figure out how the heck we’re going to watch football in 2023.
Fortunately, the answer is easy, if a bit pricey. Starting in the 2023 season, YouTube TV will be the exclusive home of NFL Sunday Ticket, a streaming subscription that allows you to watch every out-of-market NFL game live on Sundays. With YouTube TV and Sunday Ticket, you can see every NFL game you could possibly want to see.
And you might want to pony up the cash now instead of waiting for September. Here’s why.
NFL Sunday Ticket on YouTube TV: How it works, price, and early-bird special
If you’re not familiar with NFL Sunday Ticket, the main thing you need to know is that it used to belong to DirecTV and now it belongs to YouTube TV. In practical terms, that means you can now access it without a satellite subscription and, thus, without dealing with all the ridiculous hidden fees that come with a satellite subscription.
But you’re still going to have to pay, and pay quite a bit to get Sunday Ticket. The regular price for Sunday Ticket if you subscribe to YouTube TV will be $349, on top of the $73/mo you already pay for the base service. That doesn’t get you Sunday Ticket forever; you just get it for one season. There’s also a $389 option that bundles Sunday Ticket and RedZone, a special channel that whips through all the NFL action on a Sunday, going from game to game when the action starts getting exciting.
Credit: Screenshot: Google
Sidenote: RedZone is 100 percent worth it if you really care about football. It’s seven straight hours of commercial-free football and you only see the fun parts. It’s intoxicating. You can add either of those options to your YouTube TV plan by going to your Google account and clicking on “Payments and Subscriptions.”
That’s not all, though. Google is also offering Sunday Ticket and RedZone through its PrimeTime Channels service. Put simply, this is a way to get all of the NFL action without paying for YouTube TV on top of it. Unfortunately, there’s a big price hike if you decide to go down this road. Via Primetime Channels, NFL Sunday Ticket will cost $449, and the RedZone bundle costs $489.
And that’s still not all. If you subscribe to any of those options before June 6, you’ll get a $100 discount. Suddenly, for YouTube TV subscribers, Sunday Ticket plus RedZone for $289 doesn’t seem like such a bad deal. It definitely beats the price of going to a bar every week, and it’s less risky than watching football through, erm, other, less reliable means.
Whether you choose to patronize Google or keep watching football your own way, at least now you know there’s a way to get everything for less than a month’s rent.
Twitter announces new API pricing, including a limited free tier for bots
Twitter has finally confirmed some of the details and pricing for the new version of its API. The company had previously delayed the changes after confirming that it was banning third-party clients as part of a larger shakeup of its developer features.
As expected, the company is maintaining a free tier with limited functionality, though it offers far less than its predecessor. Under the new free tier, which is aimed at bots and other “testing” purposes, accounts can post up to 1,500 tweets a month, but won’t be able to access any other featuires. That may offer a lifeline to some of Twitter’s famed bot accounts, but at about 50 tweets a day, may prove to be too limited for those that post more frequently.
At $100 a month, the new “basic” tier offers a bit more: developers can post up to 3,000 tweets a month at the user level and up to 50,000 a month at the app level. It also offers a read limit of 10,000 tweets a month, which, again, is far less than what was previously offered.
Meanwhile, an enterprise tier is meant for businesses that need a higher level of access, though details for that tier are still murky. According to Twitter’s developer website, the enterprise tier will include “commercial-level access that meets your and your customer’s specific needs” and other features. Businesses can apply for enterprise access, but the only pricing information Twitter has disclosed is that there will be “monthly subscription tiers.”
It’s also unclear what will happen to researchers and academics who currently rely on Twitter’s API for their work. In a series of tweets, the company said it was “looking at new ways to continue serving this community” but didn’t elaborate. Wired previously reported the company had told some organizations API access could run as much as $42,000 a month, but that plan doesn’t seem to have materialized, at least not yet.
The new details also mean that a lot of services using Twitter’s older APIs could soon stop working altogether. The company confirmed that its existing APIs, used by a vast number of developers, researchers and other services, would be deprecated within the next 30 days. “We recommend that you migrate to the new tiers as soon as possible for a smooth transition,” the company said. Though it’s unclear just how many developers will be willing to pay for stripped down versions of the APIs.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/twitter-announces-new-api-pricing-including-a-limited-free-tier-for-bots-005251253.html?src=rss