"I think Miami has the sexiness and the luxury," she notes. If Jason does come through, though, Maya has her fingers crossed for a spin-off: Selling South Beach. In season 3, Maya brings up the idea of a Miami-based outpost of the Oppenheim Group, but no moves have been made on that. Maya's co-stars say they would be sad to see her go, as she is one of the "OGs" of not only the show but of the brokerage. "I'm trying to just stay put in Miami, that's the goal." "My goal is to stay in Miami unless I have a client that's worth me to fly for a day or two to do showings and stuff like that," she shares. While she previously split time between the coasts, she tells ET she’s now pretty much a permanent resident of Florida, which likely means she won't return to Selling Sunset, at least not as a full-time cast member. It seems a fourth season could turn into a battle of the brokerages.Īnother agent considering leaving the O Group is Maya Vander, who relocated to Miami full time amid the coronavirus pandemic. While most of the show’s realtors say the Oppenheim Group is their home, Davina admits she’s toying with the idea of leaving, either starting her own brokerage or joining Brett’s new one. Yes, Brett - one half of the Oppenheim twins - has started his own brokerage, the similarly named Oppenheim Real Estate, leaving just his brother, Jason, in charge of the flagship agency. I mean, there's a lot of chess pieces waiting to be moved across the board, so I think it's going to be the most interesting season we ever will have, if it happens." You know Davina is a broker, Brett has left the brokerage and started his own firm. And also the dynamics are going to be changing. So going into season 4, I think it's going to be really interesting. So, I feel like this year will be good because it's giving everyone a chance to cool off and, like, heal the wounds that have been going on since season 3. ![]() "I hear that production is pushing everything until late December, if not next year. Update February 27th, 11:30am: Added additional information as to how OneCast works."I think it's going to be really interesting, because if we do shoot, it's not going to be until next year," Christine teases ET. That said, OneCast claims that since its app uses the same game streaming protocol as the official Windows app, the company is confident that Microsoft wouldn’t be able to simply block the service, but it’s still something to consider before hitting the purchase button. The fact that the app isn’t free only adds to the possibility that Microsoft could shut down the service. I would add a note of caution here, though: OneCast isn’t an official Microsoft app, and whatever workaround the company is doing to mimic the real Xbox service could potentially be blocked at any time. After, it’ll cost users $9.99 for a license, discounted from the full price of $20. ![]() OneCast offers a free 14-day trial, so you can give the service a shot and see how it works yourself. (I did experience the app crashing at one point.) I don’t know if I’d recommend it for high-paced shooters where reaction times are critical - a match of Overwatch was less successful - but it seemed more or less on par with the kind of latency that Microsoft’s official app offers. At one point, my connection froze for a crucial few seconds, but even in the hectic multiplayer space battles of Battlefront II, things just worked. Performance was pretty good, but resolution would occasionally glitch out. OneCast actually works, which is surprising in its own right Setup was as simple as installing a driver for the Xbox One controller and logging in with my Microsoft account, and I was up and running with a game of Battlefront II. OneCast says that the company performed a “clean room reverse engineering” of the Xbox One game streaming system and that the app uses the same protocol used by the official Windows client to work. I have no idea how it’s managing to work, but it seems to be using the same built-in streaming system that Microsoft users have for the official Xbox streaming on PC. ![]() I briefly tried out OneCast, and it works like it says on the box. Now, a new app called OneCast claims to solve that issue and enable Mac users to stream games from their Xbox One just like their Windows 10 counterparts, via 9to5Mac. Windows 10 users have been able to stream Xbox One games to their computers since 2015, but Mac owners have been sadly left out of the fun unless they go through extensive workarounds with apps like Parallels or install a Windows partition on Boot Camp.
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