Feb 20 2009

LittleBigPlanet sweeps gaming awards – TechRadar UK


TechRadar UK

LittleBigPlanet sweeps gaming awards
TechRadar UK
It was a big, big night for LittleBigPlanet last night, as the DIY platform game swept the board at the 12th Annual Interactive Achievement Awards in Las Vegas, one of the many ceremonies vying to be the Oscars for video games.
Little Big Planet' leads video game awards in Las Vegas The Canadian Press
DICE 2009: God of War: Chains of Olympus Rocks IGN
Gamasutra – ElectricPig.tv – TAXI Design Network – USA Today
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Feb 20 2009

DICE Predicts The Future of Gaming – GameFocus


Crispy Gamer

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Feb 20 2009

What’s that Snow Leopard doing on Microsoft’s Live Search?

Sure it could be a silly coincidence or some friendly taunting. But what if it were a harbinger of some sort of deal.

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Feb 20 2009

Introducing Ubuntu 9.10: Karmic Koala

Mark Shuttleworth : “When you are looking for inspiration beyond the looming Jaunty feature freeze, I hope you’ll think of the Koala, our official mascot for Ubuntu 9.10. And if you’ll bear with me for a minute I’ll set the scene for what we hope to achieve in that time.”

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Feb 20 2009

Digg Finally Admits the Auto-Bury Exists

It has long been debated and rumored that Digg has an auto-bury feature that would automatically bury specific user’s submissions. They have for a long time

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Feb 20 2009

MIT students develop pedal-powered washing machine

Recently we saw a team of students at MIT develop an energy harnessing shock absorber system that could provide electricity for your next-gen electric cars, and today we have another green design from the same institute.

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Feb 20 2009

New bill would force ISPs to retain user data for two years

A pair of Republican legislators have introduced legislation that would require ISPs to retain user data for two years as a means of helping law enforcement fight child porn; is this latest effort narrow enough to finally pass?

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Feb 20 2009

New Conficker Variant Increases Its Flexibility

CWmike writes “Criminals behind the widespread Conficker worm have released a new version that could signal a major shift in the way the malware operates. The new variant, dubbed Conficker B++, was spotted three days ago by SRI International researchers, who published details of the new code on Thursday. To the untrained eye, the new variant looks almost identical to the previous version of the worm, Conficker B. But the B++ variant uses new techniques to download software, giving its creators more flexibility in what they can do with infected machines.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Feb 20 2009

DARPA Creates Remote Controlled Insects

EmagGeek writes “Attempts by the US Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) to create cybernetic insects (hybrids of biological and electronic ‘bugs’) have yielded ultra-low power radios to control the bugs’ flight and a method of powering those circuits by harvesting energy, according to research that will be reported this week at the IEEE International Solid-State Circuits Conference. ‘Electrodes and a control chip are inserted into a moth during its pupal stage. When the moth emerges the electrodes stimulate its muscles to control its flight. I expect a run on bug zappers any day.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Feb 20 2009

Bands Bypass iTunes With iPhone Apps

iminplaya writes to tell us that the band “The Presidents of the United States of America” (yes, the peaches guys), are trying to expand their engagement with fans by selling their music via Apple’s App store, something others have experimented with but never dealt with on this level. “The app, called ‘The Presidents’ Music — PUSA,’ sells for .99 on the App Store (iTunes link) offers users access to four full albums, including the band’s early “lost” recordings. This includes the previously-unavailable FroggyStyle — ‘unless you have one of the 500 cassettes the band sold in 1994, you’ve never heard this before,’ reads the app description. The app also features a number of extras and exclusives that the band says are updated regularly, and fans can read the band’s blog directly from the app on their iPhones or iPod touches. The music, however, is not actually contained within the application itself; instead, it is streamed to the app from a server, requiring the user to be connected to a network of some kind (iPhone users on the cell or WiFi network, iPod touch users on WiFi) in order to access the media.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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