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Posts tagged ‘News’

5
Dec

Survival smash ‘The Flame in the Flood’ comes to PS4 in January


The Flame in the Flood’s distinctive approach to wilderness survival gaming was well-received when it reached PCs and the Xbox One earlier this year, so it’s only natural that the game come to PlayStation gamers, right? Right. The Molasses Flood and Curve Digital have revealed that the game will reach the PS4 sometime in January. The dystopic title will arrive with a director’s commentary offering a peek into the creative process, a “host of gameplay enhancements” and PS4-specific perks like avatars and a dynamic theme. More info about the updated mechanics should come soon.

The game drew initial attention due to the pedigree behind it: The Molasses Flood was founded by a key member of the BioShock Infinite team (Forrest Dowling), and other members are responsible for classics like Guitar Hero, Halo and Rock Band. However, the setting and gameplay are noteworthy in themselves. It’s set in a post-calamity version of the American South with the audiovisual atmosphere to match (alt-country singer Chuck Ragan wrote the soundtrack), and its version of survival emphasizes a nomadic life instead of Don’t Starve-like base camps. In short: while industry veterans are behind The Flame, it’s not a me-too clone in an already crowded genre.

Source: Curve Digital (YouTube)

5
Dec

‘MechWarrior 5: Mercenaries’ revives a classic series in 2018


It’s been a long, long time since there was a single-player game in the MechWarrior series — 2002’s MechWarrior 4: Mercenaries has been your only option if you didn’t want to play online. Thankfully, a new wave of gamers is about to see what all the fuss was about years ago. Piranha Games (which runs MechWarrior Online) has unveiled MechWarrior 5: Mercenaries, a single-player focused title that has you pursuing a career as a private robot pilot serving on behalf of the houses of the Inner Sphere.

The game isn’t due until 2018, so there isn’t much to say about the exact game mechanics or storyline. However, there’s promises of a choice-driven campaign where buying and maintaining BattleMechs hinges on your combat performance. Will the invading Clans make an appearance, we wonder?

The teaser video certainly points to improved immersion, including when you’re outside of your war machine — there’s a sequence where you have to board your mech Star Citizen-style. The Unreal Engine visuals also look to be an upgrade over existing robotic shooters, including those outside of the BattleTech universe. Although it’s far, far too soon to declare this game a success, what’s present suggests that Piranha might breathe life into a genre that many had written off.

Via: Polygon

Source: MechWarrior 5 Mercenaries

5
Dec

Netflix gives ‘Luke Cage’ a second season


Marvel must be feeling glad that it bet on a slew of internet-only superhero shows — Netflix has confirmed that it’s renewing Luke Cage for a second season. There’s no mention of a date for the new episodes (the teaser’s “always forward” is a nod to Pop’s motto), but the mere mention of more Cage is likely enough for now.

It’s surprising that the news didn’t come sooner, if we’re honest. The gritty series has been well-received by both critics and fans, and there was even a temptation to pin an outage on the show’s debut (though it wasn’t likely the cause). The big question: will Iron Fist, The Punisher and The Defenders carry the torch as well as Luke Cage, Daredevil and Jessica Jones have so far? The track record suggests yes, but there will always be concerns that the hot streak might end due to either a flop or viewers tired of non-stop Marvel programming.

Always forward. #LukeCage pic.twitter.com/4pnu52KFKr

— Luke Cage (@LukeCage) December 4, 2016

Source: Luke Cage (Twitter)

5
Dec

Brains can recover some ‘lost’ memories


For the longest while, researchers believed that you could only preserve a memory in your brain if the relevant neurons were active. However, it now looks like this isn’t always the case — and that could be a tremendous help to anyone suffering from short-term memory loss. Scientists have discovered that small jolts of electricity to the brain (specifically, a pulse of transcranial magnetic stimulation) can revive recent memories. Your mind can slow near-term memories down to a dormant state where they’re in the background, but remain ready to come back when necessary.

You can’t apply this method to long-term memories (you likely need different techniques for that), so don’t expect to revisit your childhood with a zap to your head. However, the findings should improve our understanding of how the brain works — it’s already clear that memory is more complex than we thought. And in the long run, there’s a chance this could lead to treatments for Alzheimer’s and other conditions where regaining short-term memories could greatly improve a patient’s quality of life.

Via: Motherboard

Source: Science

5
Dec

Virgin Galactic’s new spaceship completes its first glide flight


Virgin Galactic just came much closer to resuming its dreams of private spaceflight in the wake of its tragic crash from 2014. The company has successfully conducted the first glide test flight for VSS Unity, better known as the new SpaceShipTwo. The vehicle was only flying free for 10 minutes and never traveled faster than Mach 0.6, but that was enough to get a healthy amount of data illustrating how Unity behaves in real life.

There are more such tests ahead, and you won’t see rocket-powered flights until sometime in 2017. The schedule will likely depend on how quickly Virgin gets the information it needs. Still, it’s a start — and given that the first test went “extremely well” (if you ask Virgin), honest-to-goodness spaceflight may happen sooner than you think.

Today, VSS Unity flew free for the first time. Here’s a glimpse into our successful test flight this morning #SpaceShipTwo pic.twitter.com/m05UGYy7nq

— Virgin Galactic (@virgingalactic) December 3, 2016

Source: Virgin Galactic, Twitter

5
Dec

Android Central 317: All Day I Dream About Daydream


This week, Daniel, Jerry and Alex are joined by special guest Russell Holly to talk about Daydream and emerging trends in mobile VR!

Podcast MP3 URL: http://traffic.libsyn.com/androidcentral/androidcentral317.mp3

5
Dec

Sean Parker team-up will use algorithms for cancer prevention


Napster co-founder Sean Parker’s Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy isn’t wasting much time putting technology to work in treating disease. It’s partnering with the Cancer Research Institute on predictive algorithms that can spot cancer neoantigens (substances in tumors that will produce an immune response) in DNA to use them as preventative treatments. Scientists from six organizations (including the Broad Institute and Caltech) will receive both cancerous and healthy gene sequences in the hopes that they’ll identify those sequences recognizable by immune system T-cells.

As the neoantigens only exist in tumors and are unique to each person, they’re ideal for immunotherapy. You don’t have to worry that you’ll accidentally attack healthy cells, and you can personalize treatments instead of hoping that a one-size-fits-all approach will work.

While there’s talk of developing a cancer vaccine, there’s no guarantee that you’ll get this Holy Grail. The Parker Institute’s Ramy Ibrahim bills this as “an important first step” rather than a solution. If algorithms prove successful, though, they’ll show that software can be useful for fighting cancer before it’s a problem, not just after it takes hold.

Source: TechCrunch

4
Dec

From the Editor’s Desk: Smartwatches, the zombie product category


andrew-editors-desk-tropical.jpg?itok=xl

Taking a quick break from vacation to get back up to speed with the mobile world.

I’ve used my fair share of smartwatches over the past few years, starting with Pebbles, then picking up with Android Wear and watching Samsung figure out its wearable strategy with the each iteration of the Gear line. In that time I’ve also spent plenty of time with fitness bands on my wrist, which in the past year have turned into mini smartwatches in their own right. Smartwatches have evolved quite a bit, but one thing has remained the same: sales are low, and no company seems to be able to consistently ship them in considerable numbers.

Samsung finally stuck with an idea for two generations of Gear.

I just spent a week with the Gear S3, which marks the first time Samsung released consecutive Gears with a consistent vision and feature set. The Gear S2 was easily the best smartwatch the company had ever made, and the Gear S3 is basically a bigger, better, more feature-packed version of it. The problem is it’s huge — too big for most people’s wrists, and it’s big because it has so many features … a majority of which most people don’t care about and will never touch. Again this is Samsung’s best smartwatch yet, but with some critical (and seemingly basic) flaws like its massive size, I’m not sure how Samsung can sell enough to matter. Particularly on the scale that a company like Samsung expects to sell products.

In the world of Android Wear, things are amazingly stagnant. ASUS finally rolled out its ZenWatch 3 last month to what seemed like little excitment, of course partially due to its launch without the new Android Wear 2.0 update that itself was pushed back by Google. Other manufacturers seem to be in a holding pattern, delaying (or shelving) products for that release of the new software in the first few months of 2017. Google, for its part, keeps on selling a somewhat-diverse set of rather expensive smartwatches on the Google Store. Moto, which has arguably made the most interesting mass-market Android Wear watches, has effectively called it quits with smartwatches this week, saying there just isn’t enough demand for a brand new smartwatch year after year.

Smartwatches are the walking dead … but at least fitness wearables are showing some progress.

It was fitting, then, to see this week that Fitbit seems poised to buy Pebble for some $40 million, a sliver of the price tag it reportedly commanded just a year ago. Pebble is of course a company that has smartwatches as its sole product, not supported by other lines like the likes of Samsung and Moto, and is selling fewer than half a million watches a year. The Pebble story contains many ups and downs, but even those of us who jumped right on the bandwagon with the first Pebble had given up on the idea of a small, independent smartwatch maker keeping its head above water … to say nothing of actually being profitable in the long term.

So where the heck are smartwatches going? Right now it doesn’t seem like they’re going much of anywhere. The big companies like Samsung (hey, and Apple) can afford to keep making them purely from an ecosystem point of view, but we have enough data at this point to show that nobody can really make any money selling smartwatches right now. For me, the growth seems to be coming from the lower end of the “smart wearable” spectrum: think fitness bands and activity trackers. Devices like the Samsung Gear Fit 2 and Fitbit Blaze are great because they’re small, comfortable and inexpensive when compared to “full” smartwatches, yet they have lots of the same functionality. That makes sense for a lot of people who don’t want to commit to a full smartwatch.

A few more weekend thoughts to wrap things up:

  • I put together a list of my favorite tech of 2016, which kind of functions as a holiday gift guide of sorts. If I haven’t used it personally, it didn’t make it on the list — I think there are a ton of great picks in there, though.
  • I’m using Samsung’s Nougat beta on the Galaxy S7, and aside from a few performance bugs it seems like a nice update.
  • This is very much still Samsung’s software with Android 7.0 features underneath, though: don’t expect your Galaxy S7 to look like a Pixel when it gets the update.
  • Now the question is, how long do we all have to wait for various regions and carriers to get the update out? As the Galaxy S7 and S7 edge get on in age a bit, it’d be great to get this update out.
  • I’m spending a week in Costa Rica, and it’s my first time being any further south than northern Mexico. It’s a beautiful country, and I can already recommend that people consider visiting.
  • I left my OnePlus 3 at home this week while I travel, but I’m excited to get back home and see how the Nougat update looks. Alex seems to like it already.

That’s it for now; I’ll be back in the U.S. and back at things on AC late next week.

4
Dec

GoPro sells the Karma’s stabilizer grip by itself for $300


No, you still can’t buy GoPro’s Karma drone in the wake of the recall, but you can get a taste of the technology that came in the box. GoPro has started selling the Karma Grip, the stabilization wand that takes the jitters out of your Hero5 Black or (with a $30 harness) Hero4 Black/Silver camera footage. Spend $300 and you can capture a bike ride or snowboarding adventure without making your friends motion sick. There’s a mounting ring to attach it to wearable accessories, too, so you don’t have to give up one of your hands while you use it.

The accessory is available now, but be prepared to wait if you have a Hero5 Session. Its harness won’t arrive until sometime in spring 2017, so you’ll have to make do when documenting your winter expeditions. Just remember that you’re not locked into the GoPro ecosystem if you want handheld stabilization, especially if you’re willing to use someone else’s cameras.

Source: GoPro

4
Dec

After Math: Weird science


It’s been a strange week for the scientific arts. The speed of light might not be as stable as we thought, carbon nanotubes have been used to freeze boiling water, a bunch of schoolkids recreated a $750 compound for $25 and the House Committee on Science, Space and Technology has decided that it doesn’t believe in climate change. Numbers, because how else will we know how fast the Earth is warming?