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Turtle Beach creates gaming headsets for consoles such as the Xbox One, PlayStation 4, Nintendo Switch, PC, mobile, and tablet devices. [1] It is considered one of the leading gaming audio brands. [2] Gaming headsets have been Turtle Beach's primary product offering since around 2005. [1]
Turtle Beach also released the Stream Mic for users who broadcast from their consoles and PC. [33] In 2017, it released the first headsets (the Stealth 600 and 700) that could connect directly to the Xbox One console wirelessly. [34] The Stealth 600 went on to be the best-selling Xbox One gaming headset for 2018. [35]
Looking for gifting inspiration? Amazon is tracking the year's top 100 gifts, from cozy weighted blankets to chic mini blenders. Here are our favorites.
"Maschinenmensch" from the 1927 film Metropolis. Statue in Babelsberg, Germany. This list of fictional robots and androids is chronological, and categorised by medium. It includes all depictions of robots, androids and gynoids in literature, television, and cinema; however, robots that have appeared in more than one form of media are not necessarily listed in each of those media.
Elizabeth Holmes was born on February 3, 1984, in Washington, D.C. [12] Her father, Christian Rasmus Holmes IV, was a vice president at Enron, an energy company that later went bankrupt after an accounting fraud scandal.
Steal Your Face is a live double album by the Grateful Dead, released in June 1976.It is the band's fifth live album and thirteenth overall. The album was recorded October 17–20, 1974, at San Francisco's Winterland Ballroom, during a "farewell run" that preceded a then-indefinite hiatus.
NOVA explores the mysterious ecosystem of the desert: a snowstorm; a lashing summer monsoon; and the emergence—in a pool created only minutes before—of a pair of adult spadefoot toads. Toads who had been waiting beneath the sand for a year for this brief and fortuitous moment to procreate the next generation. Narrated by Robert Dryden.
Across southern Asia from Turkey and Cyprus east to western China and northwestern India; in the Indian subcontinent only at low altitudes, below 600 m (cf. C. c. tibetanus, over 2,500 m). [18] Birds in eastern Greece in southeast Europe are also included in this subspecies by some authors, [ 12 ] but others include them in nominate C. c. corax .