el Black Ops 6 devs still looking into unfair spawning - "yes, we saw ourselves in a Killcam before selecting a Loadout too" By www.rockpapershotgun.com Published On :: Tue, 05 Nov 2024 11:14:43 +0000 Early reactions to Call Of Duty: Black Ops 6 multiplayer range from frothing dislike through omnimovement hype to our own Ed Thorn's dead-eyed appraisal that it's "a good one, I think. Not a bad one. If you like Call Of Duty, you will like this. If you don't like Call Of Duty, you will not like this." I feel like we need to emergency-deploy a supply crate of smelling salts, because the sheer OK-ness of Black Ops 6 appears to have tumbled Ed into a stupor. Perhaps it would be a different story if he'd encountered some of the spawning issues and glitches people are talking about, with players joining games and materialising right into a hail of fire. The players in question include Black Ops 6's developers, who comically note in the latest Black Ops 6 patch notes that "Yes, we saw ourselves in a Killcam before selecting a Loadout too." The latest patch seeks to address this, naturally. As regards the campaign side of things, it also resets your safehouse currency to 5000, if you've had your single player funds stolen (or multiplied) by technical gremlins. Read more Full Article First person Activision Single Player Raven Software PS5 Multiplayer Cooperative Multiplayer Competitive PC Shooter Treyarch Xbox Series X/S Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 Xbox One PS4
el Factorio: Space Age review: a stellar expansion produces a masterful final form By www.rockpapershotgun.com Published On :: Tue, 05 Nov 2024 15:00:00 +0000 To say that Factorio: Space Age throws out the rulebook is an understatement. It'd be more fitting to say it's somehow automated the whole process: an inserter plucked out the rulebook from my brain and deposited it in hot magma, while a new rulebook was churned out in a nearby machine and plopped into my brain from the other side - only for that to be immediately plucked out and incinerated as well. With each new planet and each new phase, Space Age reinvents itself. I'm battling hyperbole here, but ah hell, I admit defeat. Factorio: Space Age is a masterpiece, the final form of perhaps the most well-crafted building game I'll ever play. Read more Full Article Strategy Indie Wube Software Simulation Multiplayer Competitive Multiplayer Cooperative PC Bird view / Isometric Single Player Factorio
el Deus Ex was always sh....wait no comments are back sorry sorry I'm trying to delete it By www.rockpapershotgun.com Published On :: Wed, 06 Nov 2024 14:32:05 +0000 Full Article First person PS2 Eidos Interactive Eidos PC Aspyr RPG Shooter Single Player Deus Ex
el Metal Gear Solid Delta: Snake Eater will have new dialogue, and EVA’s actor reveals why she chose a pseudonym based on her pet dog By www.rockpapershotgun.com Published On :: Thu, 07 Nov 2024 09:14:28 +0000 Putting aside my natural annoyance at Metal Gear Solid Delta: Snake Eater for almost beating out the Twarhammer series in the headline real estate wars, I am more than a little excited to play. Some days, you simply must feast on a tree frog, and while we still don’t have a solid release date, that day doesn’t feel too far away. Good news for stealth fans, and perhaps gooder news for a dozen strapline writers sweating profusely, soiling themselves in anticipation of using “kept you waiting, huh?”. Until then, I at least have a steady drip feed of new information to keep me sated, the latest of which is the substantial hint that there'll be some new dialogue in the game, as per the video below. Alongside that, the previously pseudonymous Suzetta Miñet - who was credited with voicing EVA in MGS3 and Peace Walker - has revealed herself to be Jodi Benson, the voice of Ariel in Disney’s The Little Mermaid. Cheers for the spot, Automaton West. Read more Full Article Single Player Konami Third person PS5 PC Stealth Shooter Xbox Series X/S Action Adventure Metal Gear Solid Delta: Snake Eater
el Helldivers 2 boss would "love to do a take" on Star Wars, Predator and Warhammer 40,000 By www.rockpapershotgun.com Published On :: Thu, 07 Nov 2024 10:31:49 +0000 The dominion of hated Super Earth threatens to expand afresh as Arrowhead CEO Johan Pilestedt toys openly with the prospect of Helldivers 2 cross-over games, beginning with tabletop wargame Trench Crusade and extending to, well, take your pick. Arrowhead's appetite for other licenses appears insatiable. It's the kind of sheer expansionism you'd expect from Earth's loathsome regime, whose "managed democracy" propaganda continues to enthrall thousands of hapless disposable imperialists. Pilestedt even wants to make a Fifth Element game! Milla Jovovich is spinning in her grave. Milla Jovovich isn't dead, you say? Well, that's good news at least. Read more Full Article Single Player Third person PS5 Multiplayer Competitive Multiplayer Cooperative PC Comedy Shooter Science Fiction Helldivers 2 Arrowhead Game Studios
el Take-Two are selling Private Division and closing Roll7 and Intercept, because they're in "the business of making great big hits" By www.rockpapershotgun.com Published On :: Thu, 07 Nov 2024 12:20:03 +0000 Take-Two Interactive have sold their publishing label Private Division to an unnamed party, along with five of Private Division's "live and unreleased titles". The GTA 6 publisher have also finally confirmed that they have shut down OlliOlli World and Rollerdrome devs Roll7 together with Kerbal Space Program 2 creators Intercept Games, months after performing mass layoffs at both studios. Read more Full Article
el GTA 6 release date won't slip to 2026, Take Two assure - they're "highly confident" about fall 2025 By www.rockpapershotgun.com Published On :: Thu, 07 Nov 2024 14:39:20 +0000 A few months ago, the rumour took root that GTA 6's release date would slip back from 2025 to 2026. An anonymous insider averred that studio heads were "worried" about the new open world game's progress - hence, perhaps, Rockstar's decision to mandate a full return to in-office work. Pshaw, say publishers Take-Two CEO. They announced a fall 2025 launch in March and have just doubled down on it in their latest financial briefing, with CEO Strauss Zelnick subsequently going on the tellybox to say that Take-Two are "highly confident in the timing", though he still has nothing to share about GTA 6 on PC. Read more Full Article Shooter: Third Person Grand Theft Auto 6 Rockstar Games Third person Modern Day PS5 Full product Shooter Xbox Series X/S Open World Action Adventure Single Player
el Offensively good-looking Sims challenger Inzoi hits early access in March 2025 By www.rockpapershotgun.com Published On :: Thu, 07 Nov 2024 17:05:24 +0000 Life simulation game Inzoi will launch on PC via Steam early access on 28th March 2025, publishers Krafton have announced. Billed as a potential Sims 4 usurper, and equipped with syrupy Unreal Engine 5 visuals, it was originally slated for launch this year. Read more Full Article Life Simulation inZOI Krafton PC
el Sega are delisting over 60 'classic' games from Steam, including Crazy Taxi and Streets Of Rage By www.rockpapershotgun.com Published On :: Thu, 07 Nov 2024 19:55:29 +0000 Sega are delisting several bundles of 'classic' games from digital stores, along with "select individual" games. On Steam specifically, this adds up to over 60 games in total, including several actual classics including the original Streets Of Rage trilogy, Crazy Taxi, and Jet Set Radio. The games will be removed on December 6th but will remain playable to those who already own them. Read more Full Article Nintendo GBA Third person Crazy Taxi Streets Of Rage 2 Single Player Arcade Acclaim Games Racing SEGA Corporation Android PS2 PS3 Empire Interactive Platformer Xbox 360 Multiplayer Competitive Multiplayer Cooperative PC Side view iOS Sega BlitWorks Hitmaker SEGA of America Atari Jet Set Radio Hack & Slash
el Sega sell off studio behind Endless Legend and Humankind as part of "restructuring" - but it goes to the original owners By www.rockpapershotgun.com Published On :: Fri, 08 Nov 2024 11:31:01 +0000 Amplitude Studios, developers of many a game with "Endless" in the name, have split with publisher Sega to become independent again, with ownership of the studio reverting to its original founders and "other members of the team". The developers say everyone is parting "on good terms" and that the last eight years of getting published under Sega has been "amazing". But there are other businessy reasons, of course. Namely, Sega have been trying to trim down their European studios for the past year, and Amplitude is just the latest bunch of devs affected by that. Read more Full Article Indie Single Player Strategy: Grand Strategy/4X Humankind SEGA Corporation Simulation Endless Space 2 Endless Dungeon Strategy Multiplayer Competitive Multiplayer Cooperative PC Bird view / Isometric Iceberg Interactive Endless Legend Shooter: Third Person Strategy: Turn-Based Strategy Sega AMPLITUDE Studios RPG
el What's on your bookshelf?: Liminal biscuit filling edition By www.rockpapershotgun.com Published On :: Sun, 10 Nov 2024 16:00:00 +0000 My brain is still thawing for the comment freeze, and thus there is sadly no cool industry person to talk to us about books this week. I'm currently reading Tony Tulathimutte’s Rejection. Jia Tolentino wrote about it for the New Yorker. Jia Tolentino also writes very good books. But enough about books, tell me about books! One's you've read, preferably, but I will also accept books you've formed opinions on based on their covers, as is good and proper. Book for now! Read more Full Article Booked For The Week Blockbuster
el King’s Field with a bird RPG Dungeons of Blood and Dream is out in 1.0 now By www.rockpapershotgun.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 09:15:25 +0000 Sin enjoyed the roguelike stylings of Dungeons of Blood and Dream when she played it in early access back in July, calling it a “baffling, bizarre thing that lives on the border of janky, retro, and punk”. As of yesterday, it’s now out for realsies, promising psychedelic dungeon crawling, the stabbing of assorted gribblies, and lots of little details that make you go “ooo, that’s nice. I’m glad they put that in there.” Read more Full Article Roguelike Dungeons Of Blood And Dream PC Indiescovery Action Adventure Lori Vornoy
el The Rise Of The Golden Idol review: fiendish but fair detective puzzling whose mystery you’ll want to unravel By www.rockpapershotgun.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 09:26:21 +0000 Here’s a Steam quote for you: ‘The Rise Of The Golden Idol is the best game I’ve ever played where I spent most of my time staring at the screen going “well what chuffing well is it, then?!” Fiendish but fair, this detective puzzler demands a heady mix of observation, deduction, and logic, but rewards you with a progressively engaging story, and steadily more infuriatingly brilliant puzzles. Despite teaching you everything you need to know in the tutorial, it still manages to introduce new wrinkles and twists on the formula with each fresh chapter. My verdict? Imagine me lying my floor, massaging my temple with one hand and giving a fat thumbs up with the other. Read more Full Article Puzzle Single Player The Rise Of The Golden Idol Indie Wot I Think Reviews Playstack Point and Click Color Gray Games
el Puerto Ricans still don’t have reliable drinking water, and fears of contamination are rising By www.pbs.org Published On :: Tue, 17 Oct 2017 22:35:56 +0000 Watch Video | Listen to the AudioJUDY WOODRUFF: It’s been almost a month since Hurricane Maria destroyed much of Puerto Rico and killed at least 48 people. The island and its residents are still coming to grips with the scale of the devastation. William Brangham brings us the latest. WILLIAM BRANGHAM: Many Puerto Ricans are still in the dark, without electrical power. Hundreds of thousands still have no access to running water, and the rebuilding of the countless damaged homes, roads and facilities is just beginning. The Associated Press reported yesterday that almost half the sewage treatment plants on the island are still out of service, increasing the risk of contamination and disease. I’m joined now by David Begnaud. He’s a correspondent from CBS News who’s been doing some very strong reporting there from since when the storm hit, and is just back from his latest trip to the island. David, welcome to the NewsHour. I wonder. We saw many of your reports and others of people still three weeks out from the storm who are still drinking from streams and creeks. You heard — I mentioned this AP report about fears of contamination. Can you just tell us what is going on there? How are people getting water now? DAVID BEGNAUD, CBS News: Well, let me tell you this. The governor of Puerto Rico said this morning that he’s aware of those reports and that they’re looking into it. What’s concerning, William, is that three weeks after the storm and at least a week after the allegations first surfaced that people might be trying to drink from toxic wells at what’s known as Superfund sites, the governor of Puerto Rico is still saying, we’re looking into it and telling people to stay out of rivers where sewage may be spilling into the river. And, he said, we want them to stay away from the coastal areas. How are people doing? They’re still desperate to get water. No one seems to be able to figure out how to get enough water to every single person on that island who needs it. And as long as people need water, it’s still an emergency phase. Nearly four weeks later, no one seems to be able to move from the emergency to the recovery. WILLIAM BRANGHAM: So, people who are — we see them drinking out of these PVC pipes that they have kind of rigged and sort of poked into the side of a creek. People are just drinking that water straight, without purification, without boiling it; is that right? DAVID BEGNAUD: Absolutely. Look, they have got the PVC pipes tapped into the mountains so that it’s coming out of the stream that way. And they literally are — I saw a woman walk up to a potable water tank that the military had brought in, and she had a Clorox bottle. And I said, “Ma’am, you’re putting drinkable water in a Clorox bottle?” And she said, “It’s all I have got.” Now, that was a good scenario. The other scenarios are people right now who are drinking from streams and creeks and rivers who have no water filters, who have nothing, right? They’re just taking this water. Now, listen, the government got a million water-purifying tablets within the last week. It took almost three weeks to get those. Now there’s a large push to bring in water filters. I have got to tell you, most of the water filters I’m seeing brought in are coming from the private sector, and civilian samaritans who are getting 1,000 or more from the mainland and flying them over to Puerto Rico and personally hand-delivering them. WILLIAM BRANGHAM: That’s really incredible. Medical facilities were another big — just a huge devastation on the island. I know you have been doing a lot of reporting on the USS Comfort. DAVID BEGNAUD: Yes. WILLIAM BRANGHAM: This is the huge Naval hospital that is now just offshore Puerto Rico. But I understand it hasn’t been fully utilized. Can you tell us what your reporting has found there? DAVID BEGNAUD: The two men running the ship told us that nearly 87 percent of the ship is empty. Sounds alarming, right? They have 200 beds, and 87 percent are empty. Now, here’s what they said: We stand ready for whatever the government wants to do. We are waiting to be told by the government. So, I went to the governor, and said exactly what’s happening. And he said: “Look, I’m not satisfied with what the protocol was from the beginning.” He said, initially, they were prioritizing only the most critically ill patients go to the Comfort. And he said there was a layered process that was complicating things. So, the governor, Ricardo Rossello, said: “I started to take out some of those layers, and I, said, listen, take people on the ship who may not be critically ill, but need good medical care and can’t get it at the hospital, where the lights are flickering and the A.C. is not running.” That’s what the governor said. Within a matter of hours, I got a tweet from a third-year medical student who said: “Let me tell you what a nightmare it has been to reach the Comfort.” He said: “We have got a pediatric patient who desperately needs to get off this island, either to a hospital on the mainland or to the Comfort.” And he said: “I went through Google and the local newspaper to find the number. I couldn’t find it.” Now, here is how things work. Within about 30 minutes of that tweet going out and that medical student’s story being posted, the governor’s spokesperson responded with numbers that should be able to help. The bottom line here, William, is that asking relentless questions and the good work of journalism is what’s making a difference there. It’s no one person. There’s no heroic work that’s being done by any journalist, other than people who are going back to the same officials and asking some of the same questions, relentlessly seeking the right answer that will make a difference. WILLIAM BRANGHAM: One of the other pieces of reporting that you did that was very early in the story was this backlog of supplies trapped in container ships on the ports in Puerto Rico. I understand some of that — some of those supplies are now moving. Can you tell us, are they getting to where they need to be throughout the island? DAVID BEGNAUD: So, the shipping containers you’re talking about, about 3,000 sitting in the Port of San Juan, have been moved out, not all of them, but a majority of them. And they were intended for grocery stores around the island. Right? So, those were private companies that had brought in these shipping containers, paid for the supplies, but couldn’t move them because their truck drivers were either at home, because the home had been destroyed, or the road was impassable. More and more supplies are getting out. But let me tell you, the grocery stores around the island, they have a lot of nonperishables, Pringles, candy, cookies, all on the shelf. But when you go to the meat section, it’s nearly 75 percent empty at the stores we have been to, the produce section 90 percent empty. And finding bottled water there is almost like playing a game. WILLIAM BRANGHAM: David Begnaud, CBS News, thank you so much for your reporting. Thanks for your time. DAVID BEGNAUD: You bet. The post Puerto Ricans still don’t have reliable drinking water, and fears of contamination are rising appeared first on PBS NewsHour. Full Article David Begnaud Hurricane Maria Puerto Rico
el News Wrap: Trump’s latest travel ban blocked by federal judge By www.pbs.org Published On :: Tue, 17 Oct 2017 22:45:01 +0000 Watch Video | Listen to the AudioJUDY WOODRUFF: And in the day’s other news: A federal judge in Hawaii struck down the Trump administration’s latest travel ban. That temporarily blocks enforcement of the order nationwide, but the Justice Department says it will appeal. The ban extended to six mostly Muslim nations, plus North Korea and Venezuela. Pennsylvania Congressman Tom Marino withdrew today from consideration to be President Trump’s drug czar. That followed an investigation by The Washington Post and CBS News. They found Marino was key in passing a 2016 law that limits the Drug Enforcement Administration’s ability to rein in opioid distribution. A new verbal battle has broken out between the president and Republican Senator John McCain. It began last night in Philadelphia, when the Arizona senator and former Vietnam POW appeared to criticize Mr. Trump and his followers. He cited a list of failings. SEN. JOHN MCCAIN, R-Ariz.: To fear the world we have organized and led for three-quarters-of-a-century, to abandon the ideals we have advanced around the globe for the sake of some half-baked, spurious nationalism cooked up by people who would rather find scapegoats than solve problems. (CHEERING AND APPLAUSE) JUDY WOODRUFF: The president answered by saying, “At some point, I fight back, and it won’t be pretty.” In turn, McCain said, “I have faced tougher adversaries.” In Afghanistan, Taliban bombings and shootings left at least 74 people dead today. The worst was Paktika province in the east, where two car bombs killed dozens, including the provincial police chief, and wounded more than 100 others. Taliban militants also staged attacks in the south and west of the country. In Syria, militia forces backed by the U.S. say they have retaken the Islamic State group’s de facto capital. The city of Raqqa had been under ISIS control since 2014. The battle to recapture it began in June. Today, Kurdish-led fighters celebrated as they moved into the city center. The U.S. military said 90 percent of Raqqa has been taken, with pockets of militants remaining. There’s word that U.S. airstrikes in Yemen killed dozens of Islamic State fighters on Monday. The strikes were apparently carried out by drones. The Pentagon says the targets were training camps for recruits. In Northern Iraq, Kurdish forces withdrew from more territory today, as Iraqi government troops advanced. It came on the heels of the Kurds’ vote for independence. Federal forces and allied militia had already forced the Kurds to leave the area in and around Kirkuk and its oil fields. Iraq’s prime minister said that paves the way for talks. HAIDER AL-ABADI, Prime Minister, Iraq (through interpreter): I call for dialogue on the basis of partnership in one country and under the Constitution. The referendum is finished and has become a thing from the past. We hoped that they would cancel it, but we have finished it on the ground. JUDY WOODRUFF: Meanwhile, the president of Iraqi Kurdistan, Massoud Barzani, insisted that the referendum will not be in vain. Another 10,000 to 15,000 Rohingya Muslims fled Buddhist Myanmar for Bangladesh over the weekend. Drone video showed snaking lines of refugees making the trek to already crowded camps. Many told of villages torched by mobs and soldiers. Others said they were starved out of their homes. Back in this country, a new fire broke out in the San Francisco Bay Area, just as crews had made major progress against other fires in Northern California. Thick smoke billowed from the new site early today, as it burned through forests in the Santa Cruz Mountains. Weary fire crews said they’re calling in more help. ROB SHERMAN, Division Chief, Cal Fire: So, the idea is to hit it pretty hard with aircraft and then go ahead and hit it with the ground resources at the same time. We have had north winds, a lot of drying, and everything’s really, really dry. So it’s challenging. JUDY WOODRUFF: In Southern California, yet another fire spread on Mount Wilson, about 25 miles north of downtown Los Angeles. It threatened a historic observatory and communications towers. President Trump’s overall wealth has taken a hit, as his New York real estate loses some of its luster. Forbes ranks him 248 this year on its list of the 400 wealthiest Americans. That’s down nearly 100 points from last year. His estimated worth is $3.1 billion. Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates again tops the list. He’s worth nearly $90 billion. And on Wall Street, the Dow Jones industrial average traded above 23,000 for the first time. In the end, it gained 40 points to close at 22997. The Nasdaq fell a fraction, and the S&P 500 added one point. The post News Wrap: Trump’s latest travel ban blocked by federal judge appeared first on PBS NewsHour. Full Article Hawaii Tom Marino travel ban
el Thousands of ‘overlooked’ Brits urged to claim new £150 energy payment - check eligibility By www.express.co.uk Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 15:25:00 +0000 The energy bill support has been described as a "crucial lifeline" for certain individuals who are often "overlooked". Full Article Personal Finance
el Welcome to the New Scientist Book Club By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Mon, 05 Aug 2024 12:22:22 +0100 Find out what we're currently reading in the New Scientist Book Club - and catch up on all the great books we've already explored Full Article
el Could Mars become habitable with the help of glitter-like iron rods? By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Wed, 07 Aug 2024 20:00:53 +0100 If we want to terraform the Red Planet to make it better able to host microbial life, tiny rods of iron and aluminium may be the answer Full Article
el Banana-shaped galaxies are helping unpeel the mysteries of dark matter By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Mon, 05 Aug 2024 16:00:42 +0100 Astronomers have been spotting strange banana-shaped galaxies and the evidence seems to indicate that filaments of dark matter make them take this shape Full Article
el Hellish conditions have warped an Earth-like planet into an egg By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Thu, 15 Aug 2024 21:00:04 +0100 Planets that orbit close to their parent stars are blasted with radiation and contorted by gravity – and the exoplanet TOI-6255b might be the most extreme example yet Full Article
el Interstellar to Doctor Who: Sci-fi dramas getting science mostly right By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Fri, 16 Aug 2024 15:52:23 +0100 Space exploration has long been a staple of sci-fi films and TV, yet most play fast and loose with the laws of physics, and scientific fact often couldn't be further from the truth Full Article
el Lightning can make energy waves that travel shockingly far into space By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Fri, 16 Aug 2024 20:00:52 +0100 Lightning strikes near Earth give rise to electromagnetic waves called “whistlers” that can carry energy high enough above our planet to pose a risk to satellites and astronauts Full Article
el Why we need to save the Chandra space telescope By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Wed, 21 Aug 2024 19:00:00 +0100 After 25 years in orbit, the Chandra X-ray Observatory is under threat. We need to protect this monument to human ingenuity, argues Chanda Prescod-Weinstein Full Article
el Sam Howell: ‘One day we might look for life directly on Europa’ By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Wed, 21 Aug 2024 19:00:33 +0100 Sam Howell tells New Scientist why NASA is so keen to visit Jupiter’s fourth-largest moon, Europa, and how the mission could help us figure out the likelihood of life elsewhere in the cosmos Full Article
el Starlink tests show how to save radio astronomy from satellites By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Fri, 23 Aug 2024 16:00:46 +0100 Radio astronomers teamed up with SpaceX to find a promising solution for helping expensive telescopes avoid interference from thousands of Starlink satellites Full Article
el Falling satellite will give clues to how objects burn up on re-entry By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Fri, 30 Aug 2024 13:00:35 +0100 A chance to observe the high-speed re-entry of a falling satellite will give researchers important insights on how debris burns up in our atmosphere Full Article
el Astronomers worried by launch of five new super-bright satellites By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Tue, 10 Sep 2024 13:42:39 +0100 Five satellites due to launch this week could be brighter than most stars, and astronomers fear the growth of such constellations could have a catastrophic impact Full Article
el Complex chemicals found on Enceladus improve prospects for life By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Fri, 13 Sep 2024 15:00:12 +0100 The Cassini mission’s samples from Saturn’s moon Enceladus have signs of various organic molecules that could be among the ingredients needed for life to get started Full Article
el Stellar views of some of the most spectacular sights in the universe By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Wed, 25 Sep 2024 19:00:00 +0100 These dazzling images taken by NASA's Hubble Space Telescope are from the upcoming book Cosmos: Explore the wonders of the universe, which has a foreword by astrophysicist Becky Smethurst Full Article
el Freeze-thaw cycle helps asteroids ferry molecules of life to planets By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Tue, 01 Oct 2024 17:00:59 +0100 Cracks running through samples of asteroid Ryugu were probably formed by the repeated thawing and freezing of water inside it, which could have helped asteroids like this carry the building blocks of life to early Earth Full Article
el The astrophysicist unravelling the origins of supermassive black holes By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Mon, 30 Sep 2024 17:00:00 +0100 How did the supermassive black holes we’re now seeing in the early universe get so big so fast? Astrophysicist Sophie Koudmani is using sophisticated galaxy simulations to figure it out Full Article
el New Scientist recommends HowTheLightGetsIn festival in London By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Wed, 09 Oct 2024 19:00:00 +0100 The books, TV, games and more that New Scientist staff have enjoyed this week Full Article
el First breathtaking images from Euclid telescope's map of the universe By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Tue, 15 Oct 2024 20:59:06 +0100 The Euclid space telescope's massive “cosmic atlas” promises to shed light on fundamental questions in physics and cosmology Full Article
el NASA is developing a Mars helicopter that could land itself from orbit By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Fri, 25 Oct 2024 18:00:48 +0100 The largest and most ambitious Martian drone yet could carry kilograms of scientific equipment over great distances and set itself down on the Red Planet unassisted Full Article
el 10 stunning James Webb Space Telescope images show the beauty of space By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Tue, 22 Oct 2024 22:52:48 +0100 Maggie Aderin-Pocock, who has worked on the JWST, catalogues the science behind its most stunning images in her new book, Webb's Universe. Here's her pick of the telescope’s best shots Full Article
el Chinese nuclear reactor is completely meltdown-proof By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Fri, 19 Jul 2024 17:56:39 +0100 The first ever full-scale demonstration of a nuclear reactor designed to passively cool itself in an emergency was a success, showing that it should be possible to build nuclear plants without the risk of dangerous meltdown Full Article
el Watch a robot peel a squash with human-like dexterity By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Fri, 26 Jul 2024 11:00:26 +0100 A robot can hold a squash, pumpkin or melon in one hand, while it is peeled by the other Full Article
el Will implants that meld minds with machines enhance human abilities? By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Tue, 30 Jul 2024 17:00:00 +0100 Devices that let people with paralysis walk and talk are rapidly improving. Some see a future in which we alter memories and download skills – but major challenges remain Full Article
el Robo-tuna reveals how foldable fins help the speedy fish manoeuvre By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Mon, 05 Aug 2024 16:47:00 +0100 A robot mimics the clever fin-folding mechanism used by tuna fish, which increased the bot's turning velocity by almost 33 per cent Full Article
el Can AI chatbots be reined in by a legal duty to tell the truth? By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Wed, 07 Aug 2024 01:01:32 +0100 To address the problem of AIs generating inaccurate information, a team of ethicists says there should be legal obligations for companies to reduce the risk of errors, but there are doubts about whether it would work Full Article
el AI could help shrinking pool of coders keep outdated programs working By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Tue, 20 Aug 2024 16:00:28 +0100 Computer code dating back to the 1960s is still vital to banks, airlines and governments, but programmers familiar with the language are in short supply. Now AI models are being trained to fill the skills gap Full Article
el AI models can't learn as they go along like humans do By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Wed, 21 Aug 2024 17:00:08 +0100 After their initial training phase, AI algorithms can’t update and learn from new data, meaning tech companies have to keep training new models from scratch Full Article
el A glob of jelly can play Pong thanks to a basic kind of memory By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Thu, 22 Aug 2024 17:00:37 +0100 Researchers trained a polymer gel to play the computer game Pong by passing electric current through it and measuring the concentration of ions Full Article
el A riveting exploration of how AI models like ChatGPT changed the world By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Wed, 11 Sep 2024 19:00:00 +0100 Supremacy, a new book from tech journalist Parmy Olson, takes us inside the rise of machine learning and AI, and examines the people behind it Full Article
el Electric vehicles race combustion cars in 'battle of technologies' By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Thu, 12 Sep 2024 09:00:23 +0100 ‘Battle of Technologies’ sees electric vehicles and combustion cars compete at the highest level. Who will win? Full Article
el The deepfakes of Trump and Biden that you are most likely to fall for By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Thu, 12 Sep 2024 23:00:58 +0100 Experiments show that viewers can usually identify video deepfakes of famous politicians – but fake audio and text are harder to detect Full Article
el Documentary tells the fascinating story of a man wired to hear colour By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Wed, 11 Sep 2024 19:00:00 +0100 Cyborg: A documentary tells the intriguing story of Neil Harbisson, who wears an antenna to “hear” colour, but it is lacking in depth and should have probed its subject more, says Simon Ings Full Article
el Cold war spy satellites and AI detect ancient underground aqueducts By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Mon, 16 Sep 2024 22:27:42 +0100 Archaeologists are using AI and US spy satellite imagery from the cold war to find ancient underground aqueducts that helped humans survive in the desert Full Article
el Quantum computers teleport and store energy harvested from empty space By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Tue, 17 Sep 2024 23:18:48 +0100 A quantum computing protocol makes it possible to extract energy from seemingly empty space, teleport it to a new location, then store it for later use Full Article
el The AI expert who says artificial general intelligence is nonsense By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Mon, 16 Sep 2024 17:00:00 +0100 Artificial intelligence has more in common with ants than humans, says Neil Lawrence. Only by taking a more nuanced view of intelligence can we see how machines will truly transform society Full Article