A more accessible Xbox controller could show up at E3 2018A more accessible Xbox controller could show up at E3 2018

We might have gotten our first major hardware leak of E3 2018 if this picture of an Xbox Accessibility Controller turns out to be legitimate. 

The controller was spotted in promotional materials by a Twitter user going by the name @h0x0d and picked up by Windows Central

It’s speculated that the controller will provide gamers with accessibility

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The HP Envy 13 is now thinner than ever

HP announced a boatload of new premium Envy laptops both in convertible and standard clamshell flavors.

Out of both series, though, the HP Envy 13 and Envy 17 have seen the most refinement. Featuring smaller and thinner chassis, these notebooks prove you don’t have to live the dongle life as they integrate an ingenious drop down USB-A port on top o

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Wheelie goodWheelie good
Image copyrightAlex BorwickImage caption Bike-sharing is set to revolutionise transport across the world, as it already has done in Shanghai

Cycling around cities may have been pioneered by the Dutch, but a new high-tech way of hiring bicycles is bidding to bringing a pedal power revolution to cities around the

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Can AI pick the perfect fantasy football teamCan AI pick the perfect fantasy football team
Can AI pick the perfect fantasy football team - TheIndianSubcontinent News ]]> ]]>

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Why your social media is covered in gammonWhy your social media is covered in gammon
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Social media is an often-overwhelming swirl of opposing opinions and arguments.

However, certain phrases periodically cut through the noise and enter into the online vocabulary.

Perhaps surprisingly, "gammon" has become a popular term on social media to describe the rosy complexion of outraged middle-aged people in the

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Face recognition police tools 'staggeringly inaccurate'Face recognition police tools 'staggeringly inaccurate'
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The accuracy of police facial recognition systems has been criticised by a UK privacy group.

Two forces have been testing facial recognition cameras at public events in an effort to catch wanted criminals.

Big Brother Watch said its investigation showed the technology was "dangerous and inaccurate" as it had wrongly

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