শনিবার, ১৯ নভেম্বর, ২০১১

An Incredibly Short Week in Gaming Apps

An Incredibly Short Week in Gaming AppsWelcome to three days in gaming apps, our weekly look back at five days of the best and worst of mobile gaming, give or take two days. Hey look, is that Superman? Isn't he distracting?

Yeah, so we're a little short this week. It's not our fault. Well, not all of our faults. If I'm going to point fingers, I'll point them downward so you can check out what we did get around to doing over the past few days. You've got dragons, superheroes, and Russian astronauts. I'd say if we had two more entries it only would have cheapened things.

If you have a suggestion for an app for the iPhone, iPad, Android or Windows Phone 7 that you'd like to see highlighted, let us know.

An Incredibly Short Week in Gaming AppsSnappy Dragons Sets the Flick-Based Mobile Destruction Genre on Fire

Since the dawn of touchscreen mobile devices players have been gleefully flinging destruction from one side of the screen to the other in an effort to destroy group A in the name of group B. Is there room for innovation in the flinging stuff genre? Not really. So how is Snappy Dragons so entertaining? More ?


An Incredibly Short Week in Gaming AppsThe iPhone Rescues Superman From the Clutches of Bad Video Games

He flies. He has heat vision. He catches crashing airplanes. And he usually stars in bad video games. Not today. More ?


An Incredibly Short Week in Gaming AppsBetter Red than Dead in Cosmonauts

There was this old hippie at a newspaper I once worked for, a guy who took a great interest in any New York Times obituary of a prominent Russian. He was your basic-as-bread conspiracy theorist, convinced the Soviets put a human-well, a human body, anyway-on the dark side of the moon. "They couldn't accept not trying," he said, like a lunar landing was a football game. He would have loved Cosmonauts. More ?



Source: http://kotaku.com/5860861/an-incredibly-short-week-in-gaming-apps

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Piranhas bite toes off swimmers in Brazil

Thousands of flesh-eating piranhas have infested a river beach popular with tourists in western Brazil and have bitten at least 15 unwary swimmers, authorities said Wednesday.

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Officials in the city of Caceres in Mato Grosso state said this is the first time they have had a problem with piranhas at the Daveron beach on the Paraguay river, where the aggressive fish began schooling about two weeks ago.

"People have got to be very careful. If they're bitten, they've got to get out of the water rapidly and not allow the blood to spread," firefighter Raul Castro de Oliveira told Globo TV's G1 website.

Elson de Campos Pinto, 22, was bitten Sunday.

"I took a dip in the river and when I stood up, I felt pain in my foot," Pinto told G1. "I saw that I had lost the tip of my toe. I took off running out of the river, afraid that I would be further attacked because of the blood. I'm not going back in for a long time."

City officials said the beach will remain open because it's an important draw for tourists in Brazil's Pantanal region, known for its ecotourism.

Each September, Caceres hosts what local officials bill as Brazil's biggest fishing festival, a weeklong event that draws 200,000 people for fishing tournaments and concerts.

Gonzaga Junior, a spokesman for the city government, said he didn't think the piranha attacks would hurt that event since it is many months away.

He tried to put the best face on the problem.

"Everyone knows there are piranhas in the region and have always taken the necessary precautions," he said. "What is different this time is that they've appeared where they never appeared before."

The city has seen far fewer people than normal use the beach recently because of the piranha attacks. It was deserted Tuesday, a national holiday in Brazil, normally a heavy beach day.

Officials have put up large signs warning swimmers about the piranhas, reading in blood red letters: "Attention swimmers. Area at risk of piranha attacks. Danger!"

Local fisherman Hildegard Galeno Alves said that when he throws out a fishing net near the beach of late he catches numerous piranhas.

"I come here with my kids and I always see blood on the river banks," he told G1. "The worst is that the attacks are in shallow water, next to the bank."

Despite making his living off the river, Alves left no doubt about his feelings for the water.

"I would never even think of going in there," he said.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45328989/ns/world_news-americas/

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শুক্রবার, ১৮ নভেম্বর, ২০১১

HTC Hit With Cease And Desist Letter Over The ?Vivid? Name

htcvividWith the HTC Vivid garnering mixed reviews, it looks like the device?s name may be the most interesting thing about it. At least one company thinks so, anyway: the porn peddlers at Vivid Entertainment have filed a cease and desist notice against the company for use of the "Vivid" name. According to TMZ, Vivid's legal counsel filed the notice because they are afraid consumers will think the LTE-capable smartphone is somehow connected to Vivid's adult video empire. Yes, really. Just let that sink in for a moment.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/9LF7xL9zZ1c/

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Virtual rioters predict how crowds move

Sandrine Ceurstemont, editor, New Scientist TV
How did recent UK riots spread so quickly to a larger area? Although there are several phenomena at work, a new simulation, developed by geographer Paul Torrens from University of Maryland and his team, is helping to visualise how groups of people tend to move around. "Whereas many existing approaches use particle physics, my approach is sourced in theory and observation," says Torrens.

Based on how people interact with their environment, the model incorporates about 30 different behaviours, from processes like path planning and collision avoidance to group dynamics such as herding and following a leader. Concepts are translated into mathematical models by applying statistics or using methods like game theory. Different algorithms can be applied to each agent, or to the group as a whole, to see how they affect overall behaviour.
?
The video begins with a simulated riot where characters are static and where the emphasis is on social interaction, decision-making and the connection between geography and social agency.? But the crowd models that follow focus on how a group of people moves around. They can also be experienced as immersive graphical environments on a variety of platforms, such as Xbox or Kinect.

According to Torrens, the simulation is unlikely to help prevent riots due to their complexity. But it's a realistic representation of mass behaviour in terms of geographical factors. "We've tested it using data from real people moving around," he says. "The model does a good job at replicating human movement."

With some improvements, the system could be used to help with disaster relief. Torrens plans to refine the way people interact with each other and how they respond to changes in their environment. "We're building a dynamic environment where buildings collapse and agents plan their behaviour in response, for example by avoiding falling objects," he says. "We plan to develop an Xbox version of this system for use in emergency planning."?? ?

If you enjoyed this video, you might like to see 3D city models produced from crowd-sourced photos or check out a realistic virtual crowd.

Subscribe to New Scientist Magazine

Source: http://feeds.newscientist.com/c/749/f/10897/s/1a254e38/l/0L0Snewscientist0N0Cblogs0Cnstv0C20A110C110Cvirtual0Erioters0Epredict0Ehow0Ecrowds0Emove0Bhtml0DDCMP0FOTC0Erss0Gnsref0Fonline0Enews/story01.htm

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বৃহস্পতিবার, ১৭ নভেম্বর, ২০১১

Democrats, Republicans far apart on deficit deal (AP)

WASHINGTON ? The top Republican on a special deficit-cutting panel says GOP negotiators have "gone as far as we feel we can go" on tax hikes, a public signal that a debt bargain could be out of reach despite weeks of negotiations.

Texas Rep. Jeb Hensarling told CNBC Tuesday that the bipartisan debt supercommittee is "somewhat stymied for the moment" because panel Democrats are insisting on tax increases of up to $1 trillion in exchange for cost curbs on rapidly spiraling benefit programs such as Medicare and Social Security.

The top Democrat on the deficit supercommittee, Sen. Patty Murray of Washington, countered that it's up to Republicans to send a "credible offer with real revenue" to jump-start talks that seem to have mostly stalled since a swap of offers last week.

The deficit for the just-completed budget year was $1.3 trillion, requiring the government to borrow 36 cents for every dollar it spends. Even a successful negotiation that produces $1.2 trillion in cuts will still leave a deficit crisis that requires painful choices by policymakers on taxes and benefits programs, budget experts agree.

The backbiting has intensified since the exchange of offers. The Democrats' most recent plan called for $2.3 trillion in deficit cuts, including a $1 trillion tax increase over the coming decade. Republicans countered with almost $300 billion in new tax revenues as part of a $1.5 trillion debt plan, an offer that even a top Democrat, Majority Whip Dick Durbin of Illinois, called a breakthrough.

"The Democrats won't put a plan on the table to solve the problem, and anything they do that even remotely addresses health care, even superficially, they're insisting on" a $1 trillion tax increase, Hensarling said. "It's not going to happen."

The debt panel is charged with coming up with at least $1.2 trillion in deficit cuts over the coming decade as part of a bargain between President Barack Obama and House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, this summer. Failure would trigger across-the-board spending cuts that especially alarm defense hawks.

Boehner publicly blessed the GOP offer on taxes Tuesday, bucking opposition by some GOP presidential hopefuls and colleagues wary of violating a longstanding point of party orthodoxy.

The supercommittee has until a week from Wednesday to vote on any compromise, but several officials said that in reality, perhaps as little as 48 or 72 hours are available to the six Republicans and six Democrats.

While Boehner's voice is important, his endorsement does not mean all Republicans will follow him or a deal is in sight. Republicans have been unified for two decades in opposition to higher taxes, while Democrats on the supercommittee insist on additional revenue before they will agree to cuts in benefit programs as part of a compromise.

Boehner said the plan, outlined a week ago to Democrats on the committee, was "a fair offer." Adding an overhaul of the federal tax code would generate economic growth, he said.

The full committee hasn't met in several days, but various subgroups have been in near constant contact.

More than deficit reduction is at stake, one year into an era of divided government.

Democrats are hoping to add elements of President Barack Obama's jobs legislation to any deficit-cutting deal, including extensions of a Social Security payroll tax cut and unemployment benefits that are due to expire at the end of the year. But their proposal to use savings from shrinking war spending is opposed by some Republicans.

A comprehensive rewrite of farm programs may hang in the balance, too, and lawmakers also must pass legislation to ensure sufficient funds to reimburse doctors who treat Medicare patients.

The twin issues of taxes and benefit programs have long been stumbling blocks in budget negotiations.

In negotiations last summer, according to numerous officials, Obama and Boehner were considering sizable cuts to benefit programs as well as tax reform that would have raised as much as $800 billion in additional revenue. The talks ultimately failed.

Republican leaders still support the concept of swapping modest tax increases for a tax overhaul. And they say that's a good deal, especially since the Bush-era tax cuts expire at the end of next year.

"It's important for us to, in my opinion, reform the tax code," Boehner said. "And we've got the highest business tax rate in the world. We've got a personal tax system that's so complicated it costs Americans about $500 billion a year to comply with the current tax code," he said.

Republican officials say the GOP offer envisions an overhaul that would drop the top tax rate on personal income to 28 percent from the current 35 percent and shave or eliminate some itemized deductions that are commonly used. The top corporate rate would fall also.

Despite Boehner's comments, GOP presidential contenders Newt Gingrich and Rick Perry said they were prepared to oppose a plan along the lines of the one under consideration. Another candidate, Mitt Romney, brushed aside a question on the subject.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/uscongress/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111116/ap_on_go_co/us_debt_supercommittee

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মঙ্গলবার, ১৫ নভেম্বর, ২০১১

DreamWorks CEO envisions an internet with more animation, fewer words

Is the internet on the cusp of a post-text era? Dreamworks CEO Jeffrey Katzenberg certainly thinks so. Speaking at the Techonomy conference in Tucson yesterday, Katzenberg confirmed that his company is already working on expanding 3D animation to the realm of social media, as part of a collaboration with Intel. As Technology Review reports, the two companies have been working on the project for the better part of four years, developing 12-core chips and software capable of delivering real-time photographic animation. Katzenberg didn't offer many details beyond that, but seemed confident that his company's new technology could radically alter the way users share and engage with online content by transcending the boundaries of traditional text. "Text is a learned process but what we do [at Dreamworks] is intuitive and instinctual and you do it from the moment you are born," he said, "We're trying to see if we can move many of these things we can do today in text but moving up to video and audio... with sight and sound." The exec went on to cite Apple's Siri personal assistant as proof that this transition is already underway: "Whether we do it or somebody else does it, we will move from a text world into a audio visual one." Intriguing claims, to be sure, but we'll know more next year, when Dreamworks' new campaign gets underway.

DreamWorks CEO envisions an internet with more animation, fewer words originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 15 Nov 2011 15:46:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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