This is my personal blog being used as a news portal for another web site. News I find interesting will be posted here and then picked up via the RSS feed to use on another site. Please contact me with any questions.

Thursday, May 28, 2009

Hulu launches desktop app for watching web video

Hulu Desktop

Online video site Hulu has launched a desktop application for Windows and OS X that allows you to find and watch Hulu videos without firing up a web browser.

Hulu has been fighting a battle with media center application Boxee for months. Boxee is a desktop application that lets people interact with media on their hard drives or the web using a big screen interface that makes a good case for sticking your computer next to your TV. But Hulu's content partners like Fox and NBC make a lot more money when you watch TV shows through old fashioned TV broadcasts instead of on the internet, so I wasn't surprised to see Hulu disable Boxee support. But I was rather surprised to see Hulu launch its own desktop client today.

Hulu Desktop beta is designed to let you navigate Hulu from your couch, and it works either with a mouse and keyboard or a Windows Media Center or Apple remote control. You can use the desktop client to search for videos or browse through media by category. Videos can be viewed in full screen mode, and when you use the navigation tools to find additional programming the video will continue playing in a small window.

If you link Hulu Desktop to your Hulu account you can access your personal information including your Hulu queue from the desktop client.

Hulu launches desktop app for watching web video

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Microsoft Announces Zune HD with 3.3" OLED Screen, HD Radio

image Microsoft's Zune HD steps into the limelight

It appears that all the rumors and pictures from the last month regarding the Zune HD were right. Microsoft last night announced its next generation Zune and it appears that the boys from Redmond are finally ready to start taking the fight to Apple's iPod touch.

The angular device packs a 3.3" 16:9 OLED display with a resolution of just 480 x 272. Thankfully, the touchscreen includes multi-touch which currently resides on such devices as the Apple iPhone, iPod touch, and Palm Pre. The Zune HD also brings with it HD radio and is capable of 720p video-out via HDMI with a docking station.

The only other hardware detail that Microsoft announced was the inclusion of Wi-Fi which has always been a Zune staple. In this case, however, a full-screen multi-touch web browser will also be included (and hopefully an email client and various other internet-based utilities).

Microsoft didn't divulge any information on storage capacities for the new Zune HD, but earlier reports pegged the devices launching in 16GB and 32GB capacities. Hopefully, this isn't the case as Apple is near certain to release its next generation iPod touch early this fall in capacities of up to 64GB which would leave the Zune HD trailing behind.

"The Zune music player is an integral part of the overall Zune experience, and we're proud to be growing and extending our offering beyond the device," said Enrique Rodriguez, corporate vice president of the Microsoft TV, Video and Music Business Group. "Delivering on Microsoft's connected entertainment vision, this news marks a turning point for Zune as it brings cross-platform experiences and premium video content to living rooms around the world."

Microsoft's first and second attempts at taking on Apple with its Zune range didn't do much to challenge the iPod's dominance of the marketplace. However, Microsoft appears to have a real chance of scoring some major points with consumers with the Zune HD -- that is if they can manage to keep storage capacities at a lofty level.

The Zune HD will launch this fall.

DailyTech - Microsoft Announces Zune HD with 3.3" OLED Screen, HD Radio

Skype 4.1 beta for Windows adds screen sharing

Skype 4.1 beta for Windows

Skype 4.1 beta for Windows is out today, and it adds a few new features. Probably the biggest change is the addition of screen sharing technology. While Skype typically rolls out new features for its Windows client before adding them to Skype's other platforms, this feature has been available in Skype 2.8 beta for Mac for a while now.

When you're chatting with a Skype contact, you can now click a Share button in order stream your entire desktop or just a portion of your screen with your contact.

Skype 4.1 beta for Windows also allows you to import contacts from other services including Gmail, Windows Live, Yahoo!, AOL, and LinkedIn. You can also send contacts to other Skype users and there's a birthday reminder feature.

The update also brings some bug fixes and audio and video improvements.

Skype 4.1 beta for Windows adds screen sharing

Scientists Call Hubble a 'Whole New Telescope' After Repairs

The Hubble Space Telescope appears better than new as NASA puts the 19-year-old observatory through a battery of tests after its final facelift by an astronaut repair crew.

Ed Weiler, NASA's science missions chief, said Hubble is in the midst of meticulous systems and calibration checks following the

successful upgrades and repairs by Atlantis shuttle astronauts.

"All of those have gone beautifully," Weiler told reporters after Atlantis' smooth California landing on Sunday.  "Everything is going well, as far as I can tell."

The calibrations and electronics tests should run their course by the end of summer, with a new and improved Hubble once more ready for science observations in late August, Weiler said.

Atlantis and its crew of seven astronauts touched down at Edwards Air Force Base in Southern California at 11:39 a.m. EDT (1549 GMT) on Sunday, though it was early morning at their desert runway. The astronauts returned triumphant after a 13-day Hubble service call.

"Now and only now can we declare this mission completely a success," said Weiler, who served as Hubble's chief scientist between 1979 and 1998. "The astronauts are safely on the ground."

Commanded by veteran spaceflyer Scott Altman, the Atlantis astronauts launched toward Hubble on May 11 and performed a five-spacewalk marathon that left the iconic space observatory more powerful than ever before.

A whole new telescope

Atlantis' mission was NASA's fifth and last-ever shuttle flight to overhaul Hubble. NASA plans to retire its three aging space shuttles fleet next year and their replacement, the capsule-based Orion, is designed to ferry astronauts to the International Space Station and, ultimately, the moon.

During their five back-to-back spacewalks, Atlantis astronauts installed two new instruments in Hubble - a powerful wide-field camera and a super-sensitive spectrograph.

They swapped out old gyroscopes and batteries with new ones, performed two intricate repairs to revive two instruments - Hubble's main Advanced Camera for Surveys and a versatile imaging spectrograph - that were never designed to be fixed in space.

The enhancements, he added, should be the focus, and not the fact humans will never visit the space telescope again.

"We just repaired the Hubble Space Telescope," an emphatic Weiler said. "We've got a whole new telescope. We've got four new instruments. Two of them dead, now alive.

"These are truly the best of times," Weiler said. "Not the worst of times."

The upgrades by the Atlantis crew should extend the space telescope's life through at least 2014 if not longer, which would overlap with NASA's next great observatory - the infrared-scanning James Webb Space Telescope slated to launch in 2013.

Atlantis spacewalkers also attached a docking ring to Hubble so that, sometime after 2020, a robotic spacecraft can latch onto the telescope and discard it in the Pacific Ocean at its mission's end.

Hubble see saw

Weiler said the success at Hubble is even more poignant since the mission almost never happened.

In 2004, just a year after the tragic loss of the shuttle Columbia and its crew, NASA canceled the mission because of its risk. Hubble-bound astronauts would not be able to reach the safety of the International Space Station because of the telescope's higher altitude and completely different orbit.

Weiler and Hubble scientists were crushed, especially since Hubble was designed to be visited by astronauts every two or three years for vital maintenance.

It was an astronaut crew that fixed Hubble's blurry vision during a 1993 service call, just three years after the space telescope launched into space with a flawed mirror. That mission transformed Hubble from a national joke into "a great American comeback story," Weiler said.

By 2004 - two years after its most recent upgrade - the telescope was again in need of repairs. Instead, the mission was cancelled on Jan. 16, 2004, the day after Weiler's birthday.

"If you would have told me on that day that I would be sitting her five years later, with a totally successful five-[spacewalk] mission, with a brand new Hubble once again that will probably operate into a third decade, I wouldn't have bet you a penny," Weiler said. "This mission is a great success."

NASA resurrected the Hubble-bound mission in 2006 after resuming shuttle flights and successfully demonstrating heat shield repair techniques and tools.

It was heat shield damage to Columbia's left wing that doomed that shuttle and it's astronauts during re-entry. During the Hubble flight, NASA kept the shuttle Endeavour on standby to fly an unprecedented a rescue mission in case Atlantis suffered similar damage. No rescue was needed.

NASA plans to launch up to eight more shuttle flights by 2010 to complete the space station's construction. The orbiting lab is expected to reach its full six-person crew size later this week when three new spaceflyers join the station's current three-man crew.

The next shuttle to launch will be Endeavour, which will move from its current perch atop Launch Pad 39B to the nearby Pad 39A early on May 30 for a planned June 13 launch toward the space station.

Pad 39A is NASA's prime shuttle launch site. Pad 39B will be turned over to the shuttle's replacement booster – the Ares I rocket. The first test flight, Ares I-X, is slated to launch no earlier than Aug. 30.

The Atlantis astronauts are the last humans ever to touch or see Hubble up close. When they left the telescope last Tuesday, they recorded the departure from Hubble and later beamed it back to Earth.

"All of us had, I wouldn't say wet eyes," said Weiler. "But it was an emotional moment because we knew that was probably the last time humans would see Hubble."

SPACE.com -- Scientists Call Hubble a 'Whole New Telescope' After Repairs

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Notepad++ 5.4

Notepad++ is a free source code editor which supports several programming languages running under the MS Windows environment. Notepad++ supports the following languages: C, C++ , Java , C#, XML, HTML, PHP, javascript , RC resource file, makefile, ASCII art file, doxygen, ini file, batch file, ASP , VB/VBS source files , SQL , Objective-C , CSS, Pascal, Perl, Python and Lua.

What's new:

  • Add theme selector to switch styles.xml on the fly, change styles.xml on one click.
  • Add google chrome drag and derop tab feature : drag out tab to create a new instance, transfer documents among several instances by drag and drop.
  • Add Mark all extension : user can mark any occurrence with 5 different colours.
  • Add new feature : column selection allows to insertion a string by typing characters in sequence (w/o column mode editor).
  • Detect UTF16 encoding (BE and LE) w/o BOM.
  • Fix crash bug : Double click a file associated with an older version of Notepad++ while a newer version of Notepad++ instance is running.
  • lmprove main menu structure (more compact). Language Menu can be compacted as well (optional, in Preference dialog).
  • Fine numbers margin width is changed dynamically according to the needed space (but keeping at least 3 digits).
  • File history list (under the File menu) is limited to 100 characters per item. Longer file names are fitted to 100 characters by replacing path components with ellipses.
  • Update Scintilla from v1.75 to v1.77.
  • Indent guideline can be shown w/o whitespace or tab symbol.
  • Fixed two bugs when calculating the width of the TaskList (document list when pressing ctrl+tab or right-click + mouse wheel.
  • Add an (hidden) option to make the "Filters" and "Directory" fields follow the current opened document in "Find in files" dialog. The new parameters are located in config.xml and are called: "fifFilterFollowsDoc" and "fifFolderFollowsDoc" (set to "yes"/"no")
  • Add new command parameters : -c (column) -x et -y (startup position).
  • Remove change line marker which does not work correctly. Include ChangeMarkers plugin instead.
  • Fix bug "Switch to found results window" command now switches back to the current edit view if the focus is already on the found results.
  • Fix the search result inaccurate colorization bug.
  • Fix the Mark all in selection bug (while Find Replace Dialog loosing the focus).
  • Add 2 plugins messages : NPPN_FILEBEFORELOAD and NPPN_FILELOADFAILED.
  • Fix New document not be switched while double clicking in Find in files result panel.
  • Fix conversion min to Maj and Maj to min (or vice et versa) in column selection bug.
  • Fix bug when the find dialog was closed the translucaent shadow remained in Windows 7.
  • Fix crash bug of find in files feature.
  • Add "follow current doc" checkbox in Find in file dialog.
  • Add the ability of tag match feature to not highlight comment zone in html/xml.
  • Fix TCL language highlighting bug.

News source: Official website
Download: Notepad++ 5.4

Notepad++ 5.4

Microsoft Releases Windows Vista SP2, Server 2008 SP2 to Public

Standalone installer hits public, Microsoft details workaround for install problem

Microsoft's Windows Vista has officially entered its Service Pack 2 (SP2) phase, with the release of the second service pack for the operating system to the public.  Windows Vista SP2 -- beta and release candidate versions have been tested over past months -- brings many security and bug fixes, as well as some performance improvements.  Among the most significant performance improvements are the inclusion of Bluetooth v2.1 and Blu-ray recording.

Accompanying the Vista pack is a Server 2008 SP2 release.  The two SP2 updates are available together in a standalone installer.  The installer is available in 32-bit and 64-bit varieties.

Some looking to install the new service pack may encounter an unpleasant issue.  The tool vLite, used to create leaner installs of Windows Vista, inadvertently removed files need for the SP2 install.  For vLite users, Microsoft has posted a workaround to help them get the service pack up and running.

Windows Vista SP2 and Server 2008 SP2 should be posted on Windows Update within a couple weeks.  The new service packs are good news for late adopters, like the U.S. Army, as they should help to bring the security and improved functionality of an established release, much like Windows XP's service packs did.

DailyTech - Microsoft Releases Windows Vista SP2, Server 2008 SP2 to Public

Shuttle Atlantis Lands Safely After Hubble Success

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - Space shuttle Atlantis landed safely in California on Sunday, bringing home seven triumphant astronauts after their successful service call on the beloved Hubble Space Telescope.

After two days of delay due to storms, the third time was the charm for Atlantis as it touched down on the dry lakebed runway at Edwards Air Force Base at 11:40 a.m. EDT (1540 GMT) to end a 13-day mission to the

19-year-old Hubble. Rainy weather thwarted the shuttle's attempts to land in Florida earlier today and on Friday and Saturday.

"Welcome home, Atlantis!" radioed Mission Control. "Congratulations on a very successful mission giving Hubble a new set of eyes that will continue to expand our knowledge of the universe."

"Thank you, Houston, it was a thrill from start to finish," Atlantis commander Scott Altman replied. "We've had a great ride. It took a whole team across the country to pull it off, our hats off to you all."

Returning to Earth with Altman were pilot Greg C. Johnson and mission specialists Michael Good, Megan McArthur, John Grunsfeld, Michael Massimino and Andrew Feustel.

"We're not leaving an aging telescope, we're leaving a newly refurbished telescope," Altman said during a Senate subcommittee hearing Thursday, when - in a first - his crew testified from orbit. "A telescope that is now at the apex of its capabilities, and will be for a long time to come."

A pressure glitch in one of Atlantis' auxiliary power units set off an alarm during landing, but was never an issue, mission managers said.

Fixing Hubble

Altman and his crew spent just under a week linked with Hubble, where spacewalking astronauts installed two new instruments, replaced aging batteries and gyroscopes, and revived two long-dead instruments that were never designed to be opened, let alone repaired, in space.

The result: A rejuvenated Hubble more powerful than ever before, one that is capable of peering back to when the universe, now 13.7 billion years old, was just a nascent 500 million years of age. The space telescope's new instruments and repaired tools should continue its work to probe the structure of the universe, black holes and the existence of dark energy.

"This is a 110 percent successful mission," said Dave Leckrone, Hubble's senior project scientist, before landing.

"I hope Hubble does well and has a long life ahead of it, and lots of interesting science," said Grunsfeld, a self-described "Hubble hugger" and astrophysicist who made his third trip to Hubble - and fifth career spaceflight - during the mission.

Grunsfeld said that humans and Hubble have a storied history together brought to light by flights like this one and the 1993 flight that fixed the telescope's blurry vision due to its flawed mirror. The camera and corrective optics that cleared Hubble's view returned home aboard Atlantis and are destined for the Smithsonian Institute.

Atlantis' last mission cost about $1.1 billion to fix Hubble, though nearly $10 billion has been invested in the telescope since its inception and 1990 launch. NASA will have to pay an extra $1.8 million to ferry Atlantis back to its hangar here at the Kennedy Space Center, a process which should take a week and depends on good weather.

The shuttle orbited Earth 197 times and flew 5.3 million miles during the trek, which marked NASA's 126th shuttle flight and the 30th mission for Atlantis. NASA plans to fly up to eight more shuttle missions to complete construction of the International Space Station.

Space telescope success

Atlantis astronauts were hailed this week by the Senate and U.S. President Barack Obama, who personally called the shuttle Wednesday to congratulate the crew on the success at Hubble.

Their work was all the more poignant, since it was the fifth - and last - flight to repair and upgrade Hubble before NASA retires its shuttle fleet next year. The shuttle carried an IMAX 3-D camera to record the flight.

"When we talk about the Hubble, and giving it essentially a new life, and a new way of going and seeing the universe, you've touched our hearts and you've also made history," Sen. Barbara Mikulski (D-Md.), who chairs the science appropriations subcommittee, told the astronauts Thursday. She wished them a happy and safe landing.

Working in two-man teams, Atlantis' four-man Hubble repair crew persevered through five daunting spacewalks, at times struggling through stuck bolts and other snags which threatened to thwart their attempted fixes.

"Every single [spacewalk] to me was a nail-biter," Johnson said. "You should have seen the action out the back window ... I was on the edge of my seat."

During their spacewalks, Atlantis astronauts installed a powerful new wide-field camera and a super-sensitive spectrograph for studying cosmic structure. They also repaired Hubble's main imager – the Advanced Camera for Surveys – and a versatile spectrograph, which failed in 2007 and 2004, respectively.

The astronauts also attached a docking collar on Hubble that will allow a future robotic vehicle to latch on sometime after 2020 and send it plunging into the Pacific Ocean once its mission ends.

Nearly never was

Atlantis' final flight to help Hubble launched on May 11, but almost never was. NASA initially canceled the flight in 2004 in the wake of the Columbia shuttle disaster that killed seven astronauts because of its risk. The mission was resurrected in 2006, but by then NASA had a plan.

Unlike missions to the International Space Station, where astronauts can take refuge if their shuttle is damaged, Atlantis had no such safety net. Hubble flies higher and in a different orbit, putting the safe haven of the station beyond reach of Atlantis' crew. Hubble also flies 350 miles (563 km) above Earth, where the levels of space junk and chances of serious damage are higher than at the 220-mile (354-km) high space station.

NASA's solution: a second space shuttle - Endeavour - which stood ready atop a launch pad throughout the mission, primed to launch a rescue flight if needed. The precaution was never needed and NASA released Endeavour from its rescue ship status on Thursday.

Atlantis astronauts said there was never a question; fixing Hubble was worth the risk.

"Hubble really has struck a fundamental cord in human hearts around the world," Grunsfeld said. "It's probably the most significant science instrument of all time in terms of its productivity. Astronomers try to use Hubble to answer fundamental questions that we've had since the beginning of human history."

Those astronomers, Hubble managers said, are chomping at the bit to use the telescope's new instruments. The telescope is expected to resume science observations in late summer after a rigorous checkout period.

"This mission was filled with a lot of mixed emotions ranging from significant worry and anguish to absolute elation," Leckrone said. "So I think I'm going to need a significant recovery or cooling off period. I'll carry this away with me for the rest of my life."

SPACE.com -- Shuttle Atlantis Lands Safely After Hubble Success

YouTube Tests Pre-roll Video Ads

Ads will run 15 to 30 seconds long before a video begins to play

YouTube is by far the most visited online video site in the world with Hulu coming in second in America, according to recent studies. The problem for YouTube is that the vast majority of the videos on its site are made by individual users and the unpredictable quality and content makes it difficult for advertisers to advertise on the videos.

To help increase the available video space for advertising, YouTube is trying to woo TV and film studios to put their professionally made content on the website and thereby give advertisers a predictable place to run ads on the video site.

Neowin
reports that YouTube is set to start a trial deployment of pre-roll video ads on select videos from providers like BBC Worldwide, ITN, Discovery, National Geographic, and Channel 4. The ads are reportedly sold at a flat rate per 1,000 views.

YouTube is said to recommend a length of 15 seconds max for the video ads, but offers the advertisers up to 30 seconds to run ads before the requested video begins to play. Among the advertisers taking part in the trial run of the pre-roll ads are Activision, Renault, Match.com, Nissan, and Warner Brothers.

The first of the ads set to debut will be for the new Warner Brothers film "The Hangover." Neowin quotes the head of YouTube UK saying, "Since we launched YouTube we have been trying to balance the demands of users looking for free, entertaining, professional content on the web, premium content owners looking for ways to monetize their content and advertisers looking for more premium content for them to showcase their TV creative against."

If the new ads work, the increased revenue opportunity may help YouTube seal more content deals for professionally made films and TV. YouTube was working on a content deal with Sony in April 2009.

DailyTech - YouTube Tests Pre-roll Video Ads

Friday, May 22, 2009

Team Fortress 2 Spy vs. Sniper Update Released, Brings New Way to Earn Unlockable Weapons, Hats

Update: Valve's Robin Walker has confirmed to us that there is now a new way to earn unlockable weapons in the game.

 

"Items now drop randomly, in addition to the old (pre Spy/Sniper unlockables) achievement tied weapons," said Walker. "We're going to release info on the new system on the blog tomorrow."

Walker also confirmed that a series of head-slot hat items (see above) can now be earned in the same fashion.

Original story: The largest Team Fortress 2 update to date has finally been released by developer Valve, kick-starting a four-day free trial for the game. Valve also notes that the title will be 50% off its regular price on Steam for the duration of the trial, knocking it down to $10.

The update includes two new Arena mode maps, a new Payload Race game mode, and unlockable weapons and achievements for the Spy and Sniper classes.

The patch notes reveal several other interesting changes, including a new community map (Hoodoo), significant improvements to the spy class, and other tweaks to the game at large.

The full patch notes follow:

Updates to Team Fortress 2 have been released. The specific changes include: Maps

  • Added new map, Pipeline. Pipeline is the first map in a new game mode named payload race, which uses two carts in each map instead of only one like traditional payload maps
  • Added new arena map Sawmill
  • Added new arena map Nucleus
  • Added new community payload map Hoodoo

Sniper Changes

  • Added new sniper rifle replacement, The Huntsman. Instead of a sniper rifle, you have a bow that allows you to move around faster while firing, and fire more quickly than the sniper rifle. Works better at medium range than the standard rifle
  • Added new SMG replacement, Jarate. If thrown on an enemy they will take more damage for short period of time. Also extinguishes flames on yourself or allies
  • Added new SMG replacement, The Razorback. Will protect you against a single spy backstab, and stun the spy for a short period of time. Comes with a 15% move speed penalty for the wearer
  • Standard sniper rifle now shoots through friendly players
  • Added 54 new Sniper voice lines
  • Added 35 new Sniper achievements

Spy

  • Added new revolver replacement, The Ambassador. First shot is very accurate and will cause a critical hit if it hits an enemy's head. Accuracy is poor for a period after that
  • Added new watch replacement, the Dead Ringer. When armed, you will appear in all ways to die to the first damage you take from an enemy. You'll be cloaked for 8 second after taking this damage. Upon de-cloaking you'll make a loud, distinct sound
  • Added new watch replacement, the Cloak and Dagger. Your cloak meter is only depleted when you move, so you can stay invisible indefinitely if you're standing still
  • Spy name tags now show up properly when disguised as their own team
  • Fixed a bug that would cause spectators to see disguise weapons incorrectly
  • Fixed a bug where enemy spies disguised as friendly spies would have cigarettes that didn't burn
  • Fixed a bug where overhealing disguised spies would show the wrong overhealing amount to the medic
  • Made it more obvious on first person view model when your motion cloak is out of juice and you are partially visible
  • Also made it more obvious on first person view model when you're bumped while cloaked
  • Improved the way your disguise weapon is determined to make it clearer and fix a couple of rare issues
  • Spies disguised as enemy spies now get a random mask to help complete the disguise, and their target id will be set appropriately
  • Spies disguised as medics now have an Ubercharge: line in their disguise target info
  • Spies outward facing "disguise health" now matches their disguise target when they first apply the disguise
  • Spies can now pick up health kits for their "disguise health", even when uninjured
  • Disguise UI doesn't show up in minimum UI mode (hud_minmode)
  • Spies that disguise as a player using an unlockable now show that unlockable in hand
  • Spies can now use enemy teleporters
  • Added 70 new Spy voice lines
  • Added 34 new Spy achievements

Scoreboard changes

  • Dominations no longer get wiped when teams switch sides
  • Dead players draw slightly darker in scoreboard
  • Converted class labels to class icons
  • All players now display the total number of people they are dominating

General

  • Fixed a bug that would cause the scout's ball to regenerate at inappropriate times
  • Demomen can now detonate their stickies while taunting
  • Flamethrower's air burst now extinguishes fire on friendly targets
  • Grenades and rockets deflected by a pyro under the effects of Kritzkrieg will now be criticals
  • The Heavy and Sniper now have new custom death animations
  • Fixed payload HUD not updating properly if you join in the middle of a match and the cart isn't moving
  • Engineer's dispensers now give 20%, 30%, or 40% of player's max_ammo (for each ammo type) on each use, based on the level of the dispenser
  • Added -sillygibs commandline parameter which will allow the non-violent gibs to be enabled
  • Added a new taunt for the Kritzkrieg, which also heals for 10 points
  • Improved the deathcam camera handling used when a player plays a custom death animation

Team Fortress 2 Spy vs. Sniper Update Released, Brings New Way to Earn Unlockable Weapons, Hats - Shacknews

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

ATI Catalyst 9.5

AMD released version 9.5 of their ATI video card driver package.

These drivers include the following:

  • ATI Catalyst™ 9.5 – Unified Microsoft WHQL certified graphics driver for Windows 7 and Windows Vista
  • ATI Stream™

View: Release notes
Download: ATI Catalyst 9.5 driver

ATI Catalyst 9.5

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Astronauts Say Farewell to Hubble Telescope

HOUSTON - Atlantis astronauts bid a fond farewell to the Hubble Space Telescope Tuesday and released it back into orbit after the last-ever service call on the beloved observatory.

With smooth precision, astronaut Megan McArthur hauled the

refurbished space telescope out of Atlantis' cargo bay and gingerly placed it back in orbit. The shuttle's thrusters fired and it slowly pulled away from the 19-year-old Hubble after nearly a week of work to extend the telescope's life through the next five to 10 years.

"Houston, Hubble has been released," Atlantis commander Scott Altman radioed Mission Control. "It's safely back on its journey of exploration as we begin the steps to conclude ours."

Altman and his crew are due to return home on Friday to land at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

Farewell to Hubble

Atlantis' 11-day trip to Hubble is NASA's fifth and last, ever, to overhaul the space telescope before the agency retires its aging shuttle fleet next year. The astronauts staged an intense five back-to-back spacewalks to install $220 million worth of new science instruments and perform vital maintenance work and unprecedented repairs.

The astronauts were the only ones to actually see Hubble float away as their shuttle passed out of video range with Mission Control. But people on Earth watched telemetry instead.

Video from Hubble's mission operations center at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., showed flight controllers clapping and smiling as the telescope was released.

"Now Hubble can continue on its own, exploring the cosmos and bringing them home to us as we head for home in a few days," Altman said.

The mission cost about $1.1 billion to extend Hubble's life through at least 2014. Overall, about $10 billion has been invested to launch and refurbish Hubble over the years.

With the telescope released, Atlantis is leaving Hubble's high 350-mile (563-km) orbit to avoid potential damage from the region's higher levels of space junk. The astronauts plan to scan their heat shield for dings later today in a now-standard late inspection.

NASA once canceled Atlantis' mission following the Columbia disaster because of its added risk, since the shuttle cannot ferry its crew to the International Space Station if it suffers irreparable damage. The station flies lower than Hubble, about 220 miles (354 km) above Earth, and in a very different orbit.

NASA later reinstated the mission after resuming shuttle flights with the caveat of having a rescue ship ready to fly. That rescue ship, Endeavour, has maintained a silent vigil atop a launch pad in Florida since Atlantis launched on May 11.

A better than new Hubble

Altogether, the astronauts installed a brand new wide-field camera for deep-space observations, a super-sensitive spectrograph to detect faint light from distant quasars, as well as new gyroscopes, batteries, a fine guidance sensor for pointing accuracy and insulation. They attached a docking ring that will allow a future robotic craft to link up with Hubble and send it plunging into the Pacific Ocean when its mission ends in the 2020s.

Spacewalkers also resurrected Hubble's advanced camera and a versatile spectrograph that can double as an imager. Those damaged devices were never built to be fixed in space. The work should leave Hubble more capable than ever to take its trademark cosmic images and peer back to about 500 million years after the birth of the universe.

Now, all of Hubble's instrument bays are full, something the telescope hasn't seen since 1993 when astronauts removed one to install corrective mirrors to fix the then-ailing observatory's blurry vision during its first service call.

Three other visits by astronauts in 1997, 1999 and 2002 have been flown to steadily upgrade the telescope. A total of 16 astronauts have visited Hubble to upgrade its systems. They performed 23 spacewalks over about 166 hours and six minutes - the equivalent of an entire month of average workdays when strung together, NASA said.

Hubble program manager Preston Burch said late Monday that the mission's success felt like winning the Super Bowl. With its new instruments and repairs, Hubble is almost a completely new telescope, he added.

Jon Morse, chief of NASA's astrophysics division, said the scientists are already lining up to use the revamped Hubble's instruments.

"We have literally thousands of astronomers out there around the world waiting to use these new capabilities," Morse said. "And they are chomping at the bit to get their data."

SPACE.com -- Astronauts Say Farewell to Hubble Telescope

Duke Nukem Forever decides it's better to litigate out than fade away

Duke Nukem Forever decides it\'s better to litigate out than fade away

Developers close up shop all the time. We know the story. Lots of money changes hands, differences between the developer and the publisher come and go, stockholders get nervous, people quit, funding dries up, the studio closes, the game goes away, fans variously gloat and wail. In the annals of common stories, it's right up there with boy meets girl.

But it's not quite going to play out that way in the case of Duke Nukem Forever, which looked like it was just going to go away when 3D Realms supposedly closed up shop recently. According to an official announcement, Duke developer 3D Realms is still in business.

3D Realms (3DR) has not closed and is not closing. 3DR retains ownership of the Duke Nukem franchise. Due to lack of funding, however, we are saddened to confirm that we let the Duke Nukem Forever (DNF) development team go on May 6th, while we regroup as a company. While 3DR is a much smaller studio now, we will continue to operate as a company and continue to license and co-create games based upon the Duke Nukem franchise.

It's almost endearing how the announcement starts out as a press release, complete with a dateline, and then quickly devolves into a blog post and then a rant. Also cute are the three-letter abbreviations where you normally put the stock ticker symbols for a publicly traded company. Instead, 3D Realms (3DR) is just helpfully alerting you to the fact that they're going to reference themselves and their game in short-hand later on in the press release.

The bottom line is that no one's going to see a Duke Nukem game anytime soon. For all intents and purposes, Duke Nukem Forever has left the hands of game developers and is now in the hands of lawyers. In a sad way, it's a very American fate.

Duke Nukem Forever decides it's better to litigate out than fade away | Fidgit

Team Fortress 2: The Spy's New Achievements, Valve's Self Awarded 'Fail' Achievement

Gearing up for this Thursday's release of the Sniper-Spy combo update, Valve has released a list of the 35 Spy-specific achievements coming to Team Fortress 2.

 

In light of the accidental release of its "Meet the Spy" video last weekend, Valve also awarded itself a "corporate achievement."

"Welcome to the internets: Fail to understand what 'Private' means on YouTube," reads the description, with a note: "It's the only way we'll learn."

  1. A Cut Above
  2. Agent Provocateur
  3. Burn Notice
  4. Come in From the Cold
  5. Constructus Interruptus
  6. Counter Espionage
  7. Deep Undercover
  8. Die Another Way
  9. Diplomacy
  10. Dr. Nooooo
  11. For Your Eyes Only
  12. FYI I am a Spy
  13. High Value Target
  14. Identity Theft
  15. Insurance Fraud
  16. Is It Safe?
  17. Joint Operation
  18. May I Cut In?
  19. On Her Majesty's Secret Surface
  20. Point Breaker
  21. Sap Auteur
  22. Sapsucker
  23. Skullpluggery
  24. Slash and Burn
  25. Sleeper Agent
  26. Spies Like Us
  27. Spymaster
  28. The Man from P.U.N.C.T.U.R.E.
  29. The Man with the Broken Guns
  30. The Melbourne Supremacy
  31. Triplecrossed
  32. Wetwork
  33. Who's Your Daddy?
  34. You Only Shiv Thrice

Team Fortress 2: The Spy's New Achievements, Valve's Self Awarded 'Fail' Achievement - Shacknews

Monday, May 18, 2009

Valve Surprise: Team Fortress 2 Sniper Update Will Include Spy Unlockables, Too (Updated)

Update: Valve's Doug Lombardi has confirmed to us that the update will include both the Spy and Sniper unlockables.

Original story: The upcoming Sniper update for Team Fortress 2 will also include new weapons for the Spy class, developer Valve announced today.

The Spy announcement fittingly uncloaked during the week set aside for the Sniper revelations, the spook himself using a classic feign ability (below left) to steal the spotlight from the unwitting Aussie.

 

Two unlockables for the Spy have been divulged by way of a faux order form (above right). The "Dead Ringer" spy watch will leave a dead corpse of the Spy on the ground while the "real" Spy is cloaked for eight seconds. The "Cloak and Dagger" spy watch will grant a cloak regeneration ability, allowing spies to remain hidden indefinitely while immobile.

The free update will now encompass the Sniper and Spy unlockable weapons, the Payload Race game mode, two new Arena maps, and cosmetic head-slot items for all classes. According to the TF2 blog, the whole package will be released on May 21, or next Thursday.

Valve Surprise: Team Fortress 2 Sniper Update Will Include Spy Unlockables, Too (Updated) - Shacknews

Friday, May 15, 2009

Call of Duty: World at War Half-off on Steam This Weekend

Treyarch's World War II shooter Call of Duty: World at War has been reduced in price by 50% on Steam this weekend, bringing the final price to $25.

The PC package throws in the first free map pack, which includes the popular zombie defense mode "Verruck."

 

Shack PSA: Call of Duty: World at War Half-off on Steam This Weekend - Shacknews

Thursday, May 14, 2009

Team Fortress 2 Sniper Update Bringing New 'Payload Race' Mode, Arena Maps

 
In addition to the class unlocks, head-slot items and other inclusions expected in the upcoming Team Fortress 2 Sniper update, Valve announced today that it is also throwing in a new game mode called "Payload Race."

The mode, described as "gladiatorial cart combat," will operate like the previous payload mode--but rather than one team attempting to push a mine cart to a finish line, both will be tasked with doing so simultaneously.

 

The first map for Payload Race appears to be titled "Pipeline." A document written by Valve (above, right) notes that if players stop pushing the cart "for a sec," it will roll down to the bottom of the ramp.

Valve has also revealed that the update will bring two new Arena maps: Sawmill and Nucleus.

Of Sawmill, Valve writes: "Set in a stormy mountain sawmill, this arena map has its cap point in a large structure atop a hill in the center of the map; beneath which lies a hidden underground spytech base; and above which, pouring down on everything we just mentioned, is rain--the first weather effect to appear in a TF map."

Nucleus will feature a "diabolical doomsday device" set in the foundation of a circular map. The arena features "long sightlines and a bottomless radioactive pit underneath most of the game area."

The update will hit in a matter of days, according to Valve.

Team Fortress 2 Sniper Update Bringing New 'Payload Race' Mode, Arena Maps - Shacknews

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Google rolls out search filter options

Google Search Options

Google has rolled out a new "search options" feature that lets you filter search results. When you conduct a search on Google, all you have to do is click the link near the top of the page that says "Show options" to bring up a list of filters on the left hand side of the screen. You can filter results by type (videos, forums, reviews), time (past 24 hours, past week, past year, or adjust the search results to display a few images or additional text.

You can also change the view to include a timeline plotting pages based on dates contained in the web pages, or by including related search terms at the top of the page. There's also a "Wonder Wheel" option which presents you with links to related web pages in a sort of brainstorming/mindmapping format where each link leads to a new set of links.

You can find a video demo of the new search options after the break. At a Searchology event yesterday, Google also demonstrated several other upcoming features including the ability to synchronize desktop and mobile searches, and plot data from search results in charts. For example, searching for "small dogs" would return a chart showing dog breeds, sizes, and so on.

Google rolls out search filter options

Monday, May 11, 2009

Space Shuttle Launches to Save Hubble Telescope

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - The space shuttle Atlantis blasted off into a Florida sky Monday to kick off a long-awaited mission to save the Hubble Space Telescope.

Atlantis thundered into space at 2:01 p.m. (1801 GMT) from a seaside launch pad here at NASA's Kennedy Space Center and began its risky mission to overhaul the

19-year-old Hubble for the last time.

It is the first time in seven years that astronauts are returning to Hubble. The mission, NASA's last flight to the iconic space telescope, has been delayed since a part broke on the telescope last year and the servicing and upgrade plan had to be revised.

"At last our launch has come along, it's been a long time coming," Atlantis commander Scott Altman said just before liftoff. "Everyone has pulled together. We're taking a little piece of all of us into space."

"Enjoy the ride, pal," NASA launch director Mike Leinbach radioed back.

Atlantis is due to arrive at Hubble Wednesday. The shuttle experienced two minor glitches - a circuit breaker problem and a flaky sensor that sounded spurious alarms during liftoff - but neither had an impact on launch. If all goes well, Atlantis astronauts will upgrade Hubble to be more powerful and capable than ever before.

Headed to Hubble with Altman are shuttle pilot Gregory C. Johnson and mission specialists Megan McArthur, Michael Good, John Grunsfeld, Michael Massimino and Andrew Feustel. Altman, Grunsfeld and Massimino have flown to Hubble before. The rest are making their first spaceflight.

High stakes at Hubble

Atlantis' flight to Hubble is NASA's fifth and final service call on the space telescope since its 1990 launch. NASA expected 30,000 people at its spaceport to watch today's high-profile blast off. Thousands more were expected to watch elsewhere near the Cape.

No other mission has been more planned or more complicated, Hubble managers said.

"There's not much margin for error," said Preston Burch, NASA's Hubble program manager at the Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. "We'll need flawless execution from our astronaut team."

The mission costs about $1.1 billion, and nearly $10 billion has been invested in Hubble since its conception.

The telescope was launched with a flawed mirror that gave Hubble blurry vision and led many to consider it "a national joke," said Ed Weiler, NASA's chief of science missions. Astronauts added corrective mirrors - essentially glasses - to fix Hubble in 1993 in what Weiler calls the "miracle in space mission."  Atlantis' mission is expected to extend Hubble's life through at least 2014, if not beyond, he added.

But there's added risk for the spaceflight.

A second space shuttle - the Endeavour orbiter - is on standby to fly a rescue mission if Atlantis is damaged beyond repair and strands its crew in orbit. Atlantis astronauts will not be able to reach the safe haven of the International Space Station if their shuttle is critically damaged because Hubble's position 350 miles (553 km) above Earth is higher and in a very different orbit than the 220-mile (354-km) high station.

That risk prompted NASA to cancel the Hubble flight in 2004 in the wake of the tragic Columbia accident that killed seven astronauts a year earlier. The mission was resurrected in 2006 after NASA resumed shuttle flights and successfully tested orbiter inspection and repair techniques.

Atlantis also has a slightly increased risk of damage from micrometeorites or space junk, while attached to Hubble, primarily due to a crash between two satellites above Earth earlier this year. The shuttle has a 1-in-229 chance of suffering a mortal blow from space debris, the space agency figures, but officials say the risk does not exceed NASA safety requirements.

The ultimate upgrade

Hubble can see galaxies and other objects that formed about 700 million years after the birth of the universe, but this mission would push that boundary back to about 500 million years after the theoretical Big Bang. The universe is 13.7 billion years old.

"I like to think of everything we've done up to now as prologue," said David Leckrone, the Hubble program's senior scientist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md.

The astronauts will run a five-spacewalk marathon to tune up Hubble. They'll replace the telescope's batteries and gyroscopes, as well as install two new cameras. Spacewalkers will also attempt to repair two others that are broken, but were never designed to be fixed in space.

Hubble scientists are hopeful, but there's no guarantee the fixes will work.

"I think this is going to be a nail-biter all the way up until we actually do the repair," said Grunsfeld, the mission's lead spacewalker.

Grunsfeld, an astrophysicist-turned-astronaut and self professed "Hubble hugger," is making his fifth spaceflight and third trip to Hubble.

"I really feel like Hubble is kind of a friend," Grunsfeld said before launch. "And I'm going to visit an old friend that I haven't seen in a long time."

Atlantis is also carrying an IMAX 3D camera to document the Hubble servicing mission for a documentary slated for release in Spring 2010.

Monday's launch marked the 30th flight for Atlantis and NASA's 126th shuttle mission. It is NASA's last mission to Hubble and the final flight not bound for the International Space Station. The space agency plans to launch at least seven more shuttle missions to complete station construction before NASA retires its three-orbiter fleet in 2010.

Atlantis and its crew will spend about a week attached to Hubble and are due to land on May 22.

SPACE.com -- Space Shuttle Launches to Save Hubble Telescope

Duke Nukem Forever Gameplay Footage Leaked

Following the shut down of 3D Realms last week and subsequent asset leaks, an extended look at some Duke Nukem Forever gameplay footage has surfaced via Duke4.net and the demo reel of former 3D Realms artist Brian Brewer.

Being Duke, some of the footage is obviously not wholesome family viewing.

Video: http://www.shackvideo.com/?id=14287

The reel was not meant for public consumption, as Brewer's

website reads "As much as I would like to show everyone I can't. This is for game developers only." Duke fans should be familiar with Brewer, as he helped animate the 2007 teaser trailer.

Developer 3D Realms, which retains the rights to Duke Nukem Forever and the Duke IP, has not issued any comment as to its plans, while publisher Take-Two has reiterated that it owns the publishing rights to the title. Meanwhile, Apogee Software LLC--publisher of the upcoming handheld Duke Nukem Trilogy--is teasing a Duke Nukem-related announcement for next week via its Twitter.

Duke Nukem Forever Gameplay Footage Leaked - Shacknews

NVIDIA ForceWare 185 WHQL

NVIDIA ForceWare software unleashes the full power and features in NVIDIA's desktop, gaming, platform, workstation, laptop, multimedia, and mobile products. Delivering a proven record of compatibility, reliability, and stability with the widest range of games and applications, ForceWare software ensures the best experience with your NVIDIA hardware.

New in Release 185:

  • Adds support for the new GeForce GTX 275 GPU.
  • Adds support for Ambient Occlusion - the newest NVIDIA Control Panel feature to offer enhanced 3D gaming realism exclusively to GeForce GPUs.
  • Adds support for CUDA 2.2 for improved performance in GPU Computing applications. See CUDA for more details.
  • Expands GPU hardware acceleration for the NVIDIA Video Encoding library to GPUs with less than 32 cores. Applications using this library include CyberLink PowerDirector 7, Nero Move it 1.5, Loilo SuperLoiloScope MARS, and CyberLink MediaShow Espresso.
  • Accelerates performance in several 3D applications. The following are examples of improvements measured with Release 185 drivers vs. Release 181 drivers (results will vary depending on your GPU, system configuration, and game settings):
    • Up to 25% performance increase in The Chronicles of Riddick: Assault on Dark Athena
    • Up to 22% performance increase in Crysis: Warhead with antialiasing enabled
    • Up to 11% performance increase in Fallout 3 with antialiasing enabled
    • Up to 14% performance increase in Far Cry 2
    • Up to 30% performance increase in Half-Life 2 engine games with 3-way and 4-way SLI
    • Up to 45% performance increase in Mirror's Edge with antialiasing enabled
  • Automatically installs the new PhysX System Software version 9.09.0408.
  • Supports GeForce Plus Power Pack #3. Download these FREE PhysX and CUDA applications now!
  • Numerous bug fixes. Refer to the release documentation notes.
  • Users without US English operating systems can select their language and download the International driver here.
Existing Support:
  • Supports single GPU and NVIDIA SLI technology on DirectX 9, DirectX 10, and OpenGL, including 3-way SLI, Quad SLI, and SLI support on SLI-certified Intel X58-based motherboards.
  • Includes full support for OpenGL 3.0.
  • Supports NVIDIA PhysX acceleration on a dedicated GeForce graphics card. Use one card for graphics and dedicate a different card for PhysX processing for game-changing physical effects. Learn more here. Note: GPU PhysX is supported on all GeForce 8-series, 9-series and 200-series GPUs with a minimum of 256MB dedicated graphics memory.
  • Supports GPU overclocking and temperature monitoring by installing NVIDIA System Tools software.
Download: NVIDIA Forceware 185 WHQL

NVIDIA ForceWare 185 WHQL

Friday, May 8, 2009

Weather Looks Good for Monday Space Shuttle Launch

Final preparations are under way for NASA's planned launch next week of the space shuttle Atlantis to upgrade the Hubble Space Telescope.

The weather looks promising for the shuttle's

planned liftoff May 11 at 2:01 p.m. EDT (1802 GMT) from the Kennedy Space Center (KSC) in Cape Canaveral, Fla.

Shuttle weather officer Kathy Winters predicted an 80 percent chance of favorable weather that day, with a small risk of clouds or showers that could prevent a launch. If the shuttle is unable to lift off Monday, NASA can try again May 12 and May 13, though there is only a 60 percent chance of favorable weather those days.

"Overall for launch weather here at KSC, it looks best on the first day and then the weather starts to deteriorate," Winters said today during a briefing.

Atlantis is standing ready at Launch Pad 39A, where ground crews are making final checks and preparations of its payload — a cache of new and replacement hardware and instruments to install on Hubble.

"Currently we're just in the final stages of payload closeouts in final preparation for payload bay door closure this afternoon," said shuttle payload manager Debbie Hahn. "Basically we're in great posture for this launch attempt."

The 19-year-old Hubble Space Telescope is losing steam. Though it is still in use by scientists, it only has one working instrument remaining onboard. The new equipment set to be installed should give it a much needed boost in longevity and ability to collect data.

The shuttle's seven-astronaut crew plans to arrive at Cape Canaveral this afternoon aboard NASA jets flown in from Houston's Johnson Space Center.

Veteran spaceflyer Scott Altman will command the 11-day mission, which is set to include five spacewalks to overhaul the orbiting observatory. The astronauts plan to install a new camera and other new instruments, as well as replace broken gyroscopes and old batteries. This last planned upgrade should extend Hubble's life by at least five years.

In case anything should go seriously wrong during the mission, a second space shuttle — Endeavour — is ready to lift off from Launch Pad 39B to rescue the crew if needed. This backup plan is unusual, because most shuttle missions are headed to the International Space Station, where astronauts can take shelter if there is trouble with their own spacecraft.

SPACE.com -- Weather Looks Good for Monday Space Shuttle Launch

Windows Vista Service Pack 2 Available on MSDN, Public Release Set for June

Microsoft hopes to entice customers who are waiting for Windows 7 instead

The big news this week is that Microsoft has released its first Release Candidate of its new Windows 7 operating system. However, what most enthusiasts are looking forward to is the Release-To-Manufacturing version, which is the final version that will be mass produced on DVDs for retail and OEM channels. When the RTM version is produced, the project is stated to have reached Gold status, i.e. “gone gold”.

Since Windows 7 won't be available for retail sales until October, Microsoft has been working on Service Pack 2 for Windows Vista to boost sales until Windows 7 hits the market. Microsoft has made the RTM version of Vista SP2 downloadable to the members-only MSDN (Microsoft Developer Network) and Microsoft TechNet. Vista SP2 torrents have already started to appear.

Vista SP2 contains all Vista updates released by Microsoft since Service Pack 1. Since Vista and Windows Server 2008 share the same codebase, SP2 for Vista includes the same updates for Server 2008. SP2 isn't cumulative, so a fresh Vista installation will require SP1 for SP2 to be slipstreamed. Although the security and convenience of installing all updates at the same time is important, there are a few new features that come with SP2.

One of the most anticipated is the ability to natively record in Blu-ray format for the first time.  Other major new features include Bluetooth 2.1 connectivity, faster Wi-Fi resume after hibernation, and the ability to configure the maximum number of TCP connections.

Wi-Fi configuration is also simplified with Windows Connect Now. It sends network configuration settings to the access point, and is based on the Wi-Fi Protected Setup standard. Microsoft also claims SP2’s new and improved power management policy “is up to 10% more efficient than the original in some configurations”.

The "Release-To-Web" date for Vista Service Pack 2 is currently expected to be in early June, when it will be made publicly available through Microsoft's website and Windows Update.

DailyTech - Windows Vista Service Pack 2 Available on MSDN, Public Release Set for June

Font Squirrel offers 300+ quality, free, commercial-friendly fonts

Finding free fonts on the net isn't really all that hard - the list of sites offering gratis typefaces is a pretty one. Good quality fonts? That's a slightly shorter list.

Good quality free fonts that can be used commercially? That list is even smaller.

Thankfully, the good folks behind Font Squirrel have worked their tails off putting together a large collection (currently 338) hand-selected typefaces that may be used in all your projects, both personal and professional.

Fonts are broken down into the usual families like hand-drawn, grunge, serif, and typewriter. There's a search box as well, helpful for quickly checking whether or not the Squirrel has a specific font.
I was pleased to find Mirisch, one of my favorite Ren and Stimpy-esque fonts.

Font Squirrel offers 300+ quality, free, commercial-friendly fonts

Thursday, May 7, 2009

Saturn Probe Beams Home Stunning Views

The Saturn probe Cassini has snapped a new set of haunting photographs of the ringed gas giant as it circles the planet from some 846,000 miles out.

Now a year into its first extended mission, Cassini has spent the last few months beaming home the most detailed images of Saturn, its moons and the outer solar system ever seen.

Composites of

images taken through a wide angle lens with blue, green and red filters depict the planet's rings and surface in natural color. The rings cast parallel shadows on the planet's surface that bisect the hemispheres, captured in the latest colored image that NASA released on April 24. The C and B rings dominate the foreground as gently curved and striated bands of cream and earth tones. Below, the planet's horizon darkens, fading from a ghostly yellow shimmer to the black of space. The photographs were shot on February 28 at a distance of roughly 621,000 miles (1 million kilometers) from the surface.

Another image reveals the sun-basking planet suspended amid a segment of its rings. The rings are backlit and arch gracefully into space. They were brightened to enhance visibility. These color-filtered images were captured on February 24 at a distance of 538,000 miles (866,000 kilometers) from the surface.

The probe began its 111th revolution around Saturn on May 2 at 846,000 miles (1.36 million kilometers) from the planet, its highest orbit to date. It will train its cameras on star clusters to aid in calibration, then it will study Saturn's poles and the larger rocky denizens of its rings.

The nuclear-powered spacecraft launched in 1997 as a joint United States and European mission. It traveled for seven years to reach Saturn where it has orbited since June 2004. The mission was slated to end in 2008, but it was extended until next year. Cassini is hardy, and its instruments have weathered well, so it may be rewarded with new funding that would once again extend its mission, this time through 2017.

SPACE.com -- Saturn Probe Beams Home Stunning Views

Duke Nukem Developer 3D Realms Shuts Down (Update 3)

Update 3: 3D Realms webmaster Joe Siegler has commented on the shut down, stating: "It's not a marketing thing. It's true. I have nothing further to say at this time."

Siegler's post also reflects the unexpected nature of the situation, as he was unaware of the impending shut down during an interview conducted yesterday afternoon.

Update 2: Duke Nukem Forever publisher Take-Two has confirmed to Shacknews that it was not funding ongoing development of the 3D Realms project.

"We can confirm that our relationship with 3D Realms for Duke Nukem Forever was a publishing arrangement, which did not include ongoing funds for development of the title," said Take-Two VP of communications Alan Lewis in a prepared statement.

"In addition, Take-Two continues to retain the publishing rights to Duke Nukem Forever," he added.

 
Duke Nukem Forever

Update: Apogee Software and Deep Silver have issued a statement to Shacknews, confirming that the situation at 3D Realms has not affected the development of Frontline Games' upcoming handheld Duke Nukem Trilogy.

"Deep Silver and Apogee Software are not affected by the situation at 3D Realms," a representative for the companies told us. "Development on the Duke Nukem Trilogy is continuing as planned."

Original story: A very reliable source close to Duke Nukem Forever developer 3D Realms today confirmed to Shacknews that the development studio has shut down.

The closure came about as a result of funding issues, our source explained, with the shut down said to affect both 3D Realms and the recently resurrected Apogee. Employees of both entities have already been let go.

 
Duke Nukem 3D

Phone calls and e-mails to various 3D Realms veterans have thus far gone unanswered, with 3D Realms publishing partner Take-Two and Apogee partner Deep Silver likewise unavailable for comment. One 3D Realms spokesperson declined to comment when reached.

3D Realms was founded in 1987 by Scott Miller and George Broussard, and was best known for its Duke Nukem series of shooters starring the titular, bubblegum-lacking hero. The studio had infamously been working on Duke Nukem Forever, the next flagship franchise entry, for over 12 years.

A final push to release Duke Nukem Forever began in 2007, marked by a short teaser starring the in-game hero that was released late that year.

As recent as January 2009, company steward George Broussard wrote on his Twitter feed that he was visiting Take-Two to show off the title.

Duke Nukem Developer 3D Realms Shuts Down (Update 3) - Shacknews

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Crysis engine used to render astonishingly faithful movie scenes

Crysis engine used to render astonishingly faithful movie scenes

A site called Game Artist just announced the winners from their "Scene from a Movie" real-time environment competition. Participants used the Crysis engine to recreate a moment from a movie. The results are nothing short of impressive. The winner was a scene from Blade Runner, which has the added advantage of being a really flashy movie. That's going to be a tough one to beat when you're doing a basement from X-Men 2 (the fourth place winner). Still, you can't argue with the amazing amount of work that obviously went into recreating Blade Runner's dystopian Los Angeles. Click on the image below for a better look.

The runners up were, in order, scenes from Hook, X-Men 2, I Am Legend (pictured), and Aliens. You can see them all here.

Crysis engine used to render astonishingly faithful movie scenes | Fidgit

Self-healing concrete promises cities that never will fall

Self-healing concrete promises cities that never will fall

A little known fact among most is that Japan is one of the epicenters of world concrete production, and thanks to one of their latest innovations our future cities will have the ability to heal. Building on the research of Japan's concrete engineers, University of Michigan in Ann Arbor researchers Victor Li and Yingzi Yang have developed a kind of self-healing concrete.

According to their results, tiny cracks in specially formulated concrete can self-heal after being exposed to rainwater and carbon dioxide in the air, a process that produces a calcium carbonate similar to that found in strong yet malleable seashells. The material is being considered as an expensive, yet safer alternative for a wide array of stress bearing structures as well as earthquake prone areas.

Self-healing concrete promises cities that never will fall | DVICE

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