News briefs for February 4, 2019.

ZaReason debuted its new Gamerbox 9400[1], "the ultimate Linux gaming PC". And, the Gamebox is just the beginning, ZDNet reports[2], quoting ZaReason CEO Cathy Malmrose: "Our current team is mostly gamers so, not surprisingly, that is the direction we are going. We have a full line of gaming machines in R&D." The Gamebox runs Ubuntu 18.04, with a 64-bit Pentium 3.8Ghz G5500 Coffee Lake processor and 8GB of DDR4 memory.

Google announces two new audio apps for Android[3] to help people who are deaf or hard of hearing: Live Transcribe and Sound Amplifier. Live Transcribe "takes real-world speech and turns it into real-time captions using just the phone's microphone". Starting today, Live Transcribe will rollout gradually as a limited beta via the Play Store and pre-installed on Pixel 3 devices. You can sign up here[4] to be notified when it's more widely available. Sound Amplifier makes "audio is more clear and easier to hear. You can use Sound Amplifier on your Android smartphone with wired headphones to filter, augment and amplify the sounds in your environment. It works by increasing quiet sounds, while not over-boosting loud sounds." Sound Amplifier is available now via the Play Store and supports Android 9 Pie or later and comes pre-installed on Pixel 3.

Microsoft is bringing Xbox Live to Android, macOS and Nintendo Switch. According to The Verge[5], "Some iOS and Android games already have Xbox Live Achievements, but they're only enabled in titles from Microsoft Studios and there's not many of them available right now. Microsoft describes this new push as much bigger. 'Xbox Live is expanding from 400 million gaming devices and a reach to over 68 million active players to over 2 billion devices with the release of our new cross-platform

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