Archive for the ‘entertainment’ category: Page 116
Feb 25, 2016
Beam Me Up, Scotty? Turns Out Your Brain Is Ready for Teleportation
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: entertainment, neuroscience
People who play video games are geared (at least their brain is) for teleporting.
UC Davis researchers found that when people experienced virtual teleportation, their brains still managed to keep them on course.
Feb 25, 2016
The Video Game that Made Elon Musk Question Whether Our Reality is a Simulation
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: Elon Musk, entertainment, physics, robotics/AI, space
In June, a team of programmers will release a ground-breaking new video game called No Man’s Sky, which uses artificial intelligence and procedural generation to self-create an entire cosmos full of planets. Running off 600,000 lines of code, the game creates an artificial galaxy populated by 18,446,744,073,709,551,616 unique planets that you can travel to and explore.
Though this artificial universe is realistic down to the dimensions of a blade of grass, faster than light-speed travel is available in order for players to bridge the unfathomable distances between stars.
Chief architect Sean Murray says No Man’s Sky is different than most games because the landscapes and distances aren’t faked. While most space-based games utilize a skybox that simply rotates between different modalities, No Man’s Sky is virtually limitless and employs real physics.
Continue reading “The Video Game that Made Elon Musk Question Whether Our Reality is a Simulation” »
Feb 22, 2016
This Room-Size VR Game Makes You Into an Actual Action Hero
Posted by Sean Brazell in categories: entertainment, virtual reality
Thanks to “room-scale” VR, full-body gaming is coming. WIRED’s Peter Rubin tries out “Raw Data,” a first-person shooter that turns players into jumping, shooting, crouching, katana-slicing action heroes. Your living room will never be the same again.
Feb 21, 2016
Lady Gaga’s robotic keyboard had some help from NASA
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: entertainment, robotics/AI
Gaga has gone gaga over robotic arms for her keyboard.
“You have to institute and build a robotic system that would be ready to perform in six minutes in front of millions of people on national television.”
Feb 21, 2016
PlayStation VR Will Launch In Fall 2016, Says GameStop CEO During Live TV Interview
Posted by Sean Brazell in categories: entertainment, virtual reality
It’s looking like 2016 will be the year virtual reality hits the mainstream now that Oculus Rift is on the brink of shipping and Google Cardboard is into the millions of units sold. Now, we finally know when Sony is releasing its new VR headset too. GameStop CEO Paul Raines revealed the PlayStation VR will launch in the third quarter of this year during a live television interview.
“We will launch the Sony product this fall,” said Raines, “and we’re in discussions with the other two players.” Shortly after blurting out the PlayStation VR release date, Raines redirected the conversation to GameStop’s dominance in gaming hardware sales. To watch the flub, jump to the 2:40 mark in the clip below:
Feb 20, 2016
Is Your COUCH Smart Enough? Enter the Immersit
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: entertainment, habitats, mobile phones
Smartphone meet the Smartcouch.
http://www.broadwayworld.com/bwwgeeks/article/Is-Your-COUCH-…-20160220#
I’m reporting this news now from my couch and I must admit that after months of immersion in the Smart Home world, I’ve never once considered if my sofa was on the list of home products needing to be upgraded. Until, I suppose…today. Welcome to the Immersit, the new device which might have you never looking at your La-Z-Boy the same way again. Or, if you’re like me … wondering if the product will work, destroy your sofa, or frighten the heck out of your pet.
Continue reading “Is Your COUCH Smart Enough? Enter the Immersit” »
Feb 20, 2016
A Scientist Fulfills a Promise To His Dead Wife In Short Film Goldilocks
Posted by Sean Brazell in categories: entertainment, space
In this intriguing short film, Goldilocks, Earth has been devastated by solar storms, prompting a search for another home planet for humanity. In orbit, a scientist named Kharon is working hard to adapt plants to a new world, fulfilling a promise to his long-dead wife.
There’s some hints of 2001: A Space Odyssey here, and this is an interesting short film with some striking visuals. There’s some stretches of the imagination here, starting with the very notion of a space station being a bit more secure for research in orbit than on Earth (you know, with a magnetic field to protect you), but we’ll let it slide.
Feb 20, 2016
Gaming Chip Is Helping Raise Your Computer’s IQ
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: computing, entertainment, mobile phones, robotics/AI
Using gaming chips to read people’s images, etc. definitely makes sense especially as we move more and more in the AI connected experience.
Facebook, Google and Microsoft are tapping the power of a vintage computer gaming chip to raise your smartphone’s IQ with artificially intelligent programs that recognize faces and voices, translate conversations on the fly and make searches faster and more accurate.
Feb 19, 2016
Google’s Upcoming Virtual Reality Headset Will Be Wireless, No Need For Smartphone Or PC
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: entertainment, mobile phones, virtual reality
Google’s forthcoming wireless virtual reality headset is purportedly in the works. With this new VR headset, users will no longer need a smartphone, PC or gaming console for it to provide a VR experience. (Photo : Justin Sullivan | Getty Images)
Google is reportedly developing a wireless virtual reality headset. The more advanced form of the company’s cardboard viewer will soon not rely on a smartphone, PC or gaming console to make it work – this makes it the first of its kind in the VR field.
The Wall Street Journal, citing its unnamed sources familiar with this matter, says that the company is currently working on an all-in-one VR headset which could likely come out before the year ends.