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Updated 2024-11-24 07:15
Uncharted 4 – how stealth and exploration will shape Drake's final adventure
The Uncharted series has always boasted beautiful cinematic action, but now it’s looking to add greater combat depth and a more expansive worldNathan Drake spots them first. In the distance, among the craggy ruins of an old look-out post, there’s a group of armed mercenaries unloading equipment and patrolling the area. The sun beats down, the sky is cloudless, in the still air you can just make out their voices. It’s a classic Uncharted set piece.“How do we deal with this?” asks Sully. Continue reading...
Taliban app removed from Google Play Store
The app, Pashto Afghan News, was removed just days after it went liveAn app developed by the Taliban has been removed from the Google Play store, two days after the app’s launch was reported in English-language media.The app, which allowed users to access the group’s Pashto website, is part of a growing digital campaign by the Taliban to grow its audience. Taking cues from the recruitment efforts of IS, the Taliban’s website is now updated in five languages, including English and Arabic, while it also maintains a constant presence on Twitter and Facebook, despite attempts by the social networks to take down the accounts when these are discovered. Continue reading...
Quantum Break review – a costly and unrepeatable mistake
With this time-spanning opus, Remedy Entertainment hoped to unite narrative gaming and linear television for its Xbox One title. But neither comes out of the experiment wellThe problem for any writer of time travel fiction – at least, the kind that tries to fortify its premise with a spattering of science – is how to communicate the theory behind the time-hopping high jinks. In 1978’s Superman, we watch the hero fly around Earth, rewinding history like reeling back a spool of tape. In Back to the Future, by contrast, Doc Brown scribbles the word ‘Past’ on a chalkboard then draws a line toward the year 1985 to explain his invention. Quantum Break, a multimillion dollar video game turned TV series from Helsinki-based Remedy Entertainment, takes a more scholastic approach. There’s an early invitation for the player to – no joke – sit down and watch a short documentary outlining how the game’s swimming pool-sized time machine actually works.A failure to show rather than tell is just the first of this curious multimedia project’s problems, which ripple out far beyond the fiction and into the very structure of the whole enterprise. The idea is simple, if cumbersome: a five-act, action video game interspersed with four 20-minute long, luxuriously produced TV episodes. Your actions and choices in the game sections affect the plot in the live-action episodes – to some degree. Continue reading...
Hip tech startup Uber ditches hip tech startup Slack
Is Slack slacking? The chat app couldn’t handle Uber’s relatively small workforce. Is this a serious failing or just a bump in the road for the $3.8bn company?What happens when two darlings of the American tech scene meet in the workplace? It seems that magic emphatically does not happen – at least if the parting of ways between Slack and Uber is anything to go by.The New York Times reports that the fancy chat app (latest valuation: $3.8bn) didn’t play nicely with the fancy minicab app (latest valuation: $62.5bn): “Recently, the ride-hailing service Uber dropped Slack because the service could not handle the thousands of Uber employees trying to communicate simultaneously, according to people who work at both companies.” Continue reading...
FBI to help US law enforcement unlock iPhones, report says
Leaked FBI advisory tells state and local law enforcement that they are ‘in this together’ and federal agency will aid unlocking of iPhones where possibleThe FBI has told other US law enforcement agencies that it will help them to unlock the iPhones of suspected criminals.
Chatterbox: Monday
The place to talk about games and other things that matterIt’s Monday. We have heard reports that, due to the lateness of this box, some people have been forced to ‘do some work’. Obviously this is a scenario that we would prefer our users not to encounter and we apologise for any inconvenience or terror caused. Continue reading...
Tesla Motors receives $10bn in Model 3 pre-orders in just two days
Elon Musk’s company took $276m in deposits for the ‘affordable’ $35,000 car, which is primed for a 2017 launchTesla Motors took almost $10bn (£7bn) worth of pre-orders for its newest car, the Model 3, in just two days, according to the company’s chief executive Elon Musk.By the end of 2 April, 276,000 pre-orders had been placed for the car worldwide. Although the Model 3 is Tesla’s first attempt at an “affordable” electric car, it will still cost at least $35,000 when it ships in mid–2017, meaning the company has secured $9.7bn worth of sales for a car still over a year away from rolling off the production line. Continue reading...
Why the Apple of gaming went from World of Warcraft to iPhone games
Blizzard gained many fans with its seminal MMORPG – but it’s the virtual card game Hearthstone that’s making it a household nameOne of the striking things about Blizzard, the superstar developer behind some of gaming’s biggest hits, including World of Warcraft, Diablo and Starcraft, is how little it actually does.That’s not to say the company’s employees aren’t constantly at work, although the Kendo lessons taking place on the lawn outside its headquarters in Irvine, California, on the sunny spring day I visit could give that impression. Continue reading...
Apple’s at the top of the tree, but the winds of change can blow it down
The US giant, 40 years old and looking good, could soon go the dismal way of Sony and Microsoft unless it comes up with something better than the WatchDoes Apple have another 40 years ahead of it, now that it has 40 behind it? As the world’s most valuable public company hit its anniversary last week, it’s the obvious question, in a world where the pace of technological change, enabled by globalisation and the internet, is faster than ever. And the public pressures, from the row with the FBI over unlocking the San Bernardino killer’s iPhone to its tax avoidance through Ireland, aren’t shrinking either.Related: 40 years of Apple - in pictures Continue reading...
Who cares wins…
As video game makers turn their attention to social issues, design has never been more importantBut for a bed, a dresser, a mirror, a desk and a few scattershot piles of junk, the room is empty. The door is locked. Time is perilously short: you have 10 seconds till your abusive partner swaggers in, spoiling for another fight. Can you evade the seemingly inevitable? Now you’re a lonely parent, trying everything you can to quell the distraught cries of your terminally ill child. Now you’re an immigrant, fresh to America, hawking newspapers on the commuter trail. Sales are few and your rent is high. You arrive home to your forsaken flat to find a scrawled note from your landlord: lose the cat – your only companion – or face eviction.In the beginning, video game designers looked not to cinema but to sport for inspiration. Pong, Atari’s rudimentary game in which you bat a phosphorous ball across an onyx screen, is tennis redacted. Space Invaders is clay pigeon shooting on the day of Armageddon. Pac-Man is a game of famished hide-and-seek. These days, however, video game designers are searching closer to home for inspiration. 10 Seconds in Hell uses the medium to communicate the abject terror of the domestic abuse victim. That Dragon, Cancer is an unflinching document of a family’s experience of a child’s illness and death. Cart Life offers an affecting study of contemporary life in America for those working on the poverty line. Continue reading...
Yachts, jets and stacks of cash: super-rich discover risks of Instagram snaps
Flaunting assets on social media makes the world’s wealthy an easy target for fraudsters – and financial investigatorsFrom selfies on super-yachts to posing with private jets, the young heirs of the uber-wealthy have attracted worldwide envy and derision by flaunting their lavish lifestyles on social media.But these self-styled rich kids of Instagram are, often unwittingly, revealing their parents’ hidden assets and covert business dealings, providing evidence for investigators to freeze or seize assets worth tens of millions of pounds, and for criminals to defraud their families. Continue reading...
How fitness trackers are calling time on the watch
James Bond made timepieces stylish; but the under-40s want something much higher-techWhen film producer Cubby Broccoli made the first James Bond film, Dr No, in 1962, he was adamant that 007 should wear a Rolex watch, but the film’s budget didn’t stretch to buying one.Rolex, the story goes, refused to provide a free one. So Broccoli was forced to lend Sean Connery his own, with its black crocodile-skin strap – and a style image was born. Continue reading...
On the road: Citroën C4 Cactus Flair BlueHDi 100 car review – ‘These rubber panels are the car equivalent of a nappy’
The implication is that you can have little accidents with no harm doneI noticed the Citroën Cactus before I ever drove it, for its natty sides: rubber panels they call air bumps, which are replaceable. I’ve thought about this a lot. The implication is that you can have little accidents with no harm done, so the panels are the car equivalent of a nappy; yet, until all other cars have replaceable side panels, it is unclear to me what you’d be able to prang into. Trees, I guess: except it’s not four-wheel drive and it doesn’t look remotely like a car you’d want to take off road.Silliness, we call this – like wearing a flak jacket on Oxford Street. The panels also managed to react with the stereo, so that the sides seemed to vibrate even at pretty low volume. If you are trying to impress the laydeez, this may be part of the point; it didn’t impress anybody I drove past, thumping with Adele. Continue reading...
Meet the bughunters: the hackers in India protecting your data
Tech wizards from some of India’s poorest towns are earning millions by helping uncover security flaws in Facebook and Google sitesNobody thought Anand Prakash would end up a multi-millionaire.Raised in a small town of Bhadra in western India, Prakash preferred to spend his free time playing computer games in cybercafes rather than outdoors playing cricket with the other boys his age. Continue reading...
Google drops the mic ... when April Fools' Day pranks go wrong
Some users claim to have lost their jobs over Google’s Gmail April fool ... while we round up the best of the rest of the day’s gagsThe first of April is normally a day of frothy fun, where newspapers and brands compete to produce the best jokes and the worst puns to fool their readers.But this year some of the more complex pranks did not go quite to plan. Continue reading...
FBI facing demands to share its claimed technique to unlock iPhones
Local law enforcement officials want access to Apple phones to solve crimes but Apple might be able to patch security flaws if secret technique is widely sharedAny day now, Hillar Moore is expecting a call from the FBI.Moore, a district attorney in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, has publicly lamented that Apple’s iPhone encryption is keeping local police out of a victim’s phone in a recent murder. On Monday, Moore’s ears perked up when the FBI announced it would drop its court battle with Apple after it figured out a way to pull data from the iPhone of Syed Farook, the San Bernardino gunman. Continue reading...
Death by smartphone: the .38 calibre mobile that really sends a message | Peter Bradshaw
The firearm that resembles a mobile is ingenious, but surely its creator has missed a trick – a phone that actually is a gun. It’s going to happenUntil so recently the selfie-stick was the top gizmo of choice for gadgety-minded people everywhere. But in the United States, something else is now hogging the limelight: the Ideal Conceal, a .38 calibre handgun that folds up to look exactly like an iPhone-sized smartphone. Unfolded, it fires two shots before needing to be reloaded and costs $395 (£275).Advance orders are flooding in. Its inventor, Kirk Kjellberg of Minnesota, says the idea came to him when he was walking through a restaurant. Being in possession of a “concealed carry” permit, his weapon was just visible. A small child said: “Mommy, mommy, that man’s got a gun!” And Kjellberg says he thought to himself: “There’s got to be another way to carry without bothering other people.” Continue reading...
Apple pushes out update to fix iPhone broken-links bug
iOS 9.3.1 update should fix bug and make links on affected iPhone and iPads work again after disruption of Universal Links system by errant third-party appsApple has pushed out an update for iPhones and iPads to fix a bug that caused devices to lock up, batteries to drain and links to be completely inoperative.
Microsoft Tay, Bodger & Badger, the sun, a chicken tikka Yorkshire pud – we review anything
Every Friday we apply critical attention to things that don’t normally get it. This is an important function that might hold civilisation together. Or, more likely, not. Drop your suggestions for reviews in the comments or tweet them to @guideguardian Continue reading...
Food tech is just men rebranding what women have done for decades
From Soylent to a $700 juice box, men are being praised for releasing us from the prison of food. So why was it low-brow when women did that with SlimFast?I tried explaining Soylent, the protein shake meal replacement popular in Silicon Valley, to my mom and she tilted her head: “Oh, you mean SlimFast?” she said.I balked. No, Soylent is definitely tech, I explained, and it’s on my beat. It has a minimalist label and comes in iterative versions like software (we’re at Soylent 2.0). It has a young white male founder who philosophizes about it and connects it to broader themes of life efficiency and has raised $20m in venture capital funding on its promise of releasing us from the prison of food. Continue reading...
The nine most frustrating mistakes that all video game players make
From mistimed jumps to save game mishaps, here are the gaming errors we all make again and againThere are some mistakes that we make habitually. We can’t help ourselves. Even as we’re doing it, a part of our brain is screaming: “This is absolutely the wrong thing to do.” But somehow, before we know it, we’ve gone ahead done it; we’ve bought a ticket to see Batman v Superman.Sometimes those things happen in games too. It doesn’t matter how experienced you are at Call of Duty, there are moments you think you can take out several incoming players at once by charging at them with your pistol and two bullets in the clip. Even if you’ve been playing Tomb Raider games for 10 years you’ll still occasionally walk up to a gigantic chasm and think, I wonder if Lara can survive that fall? And then you discover that she can’t. And the last checkpoint was several miles back. Continue reading...
Hacker claims he helped Enrique Peña Nieto win Mexican presidential election
Andrés Sepúlveda said he and other hackers installed malware to monitor opponents during 2012 campaign as part of ‘black propaganda’ operationA digital dark arts campaign by mercenary hackers helped Enrique Peña Nieto win Mexico’s 2012 presidential election, according to an imprisoned Colombian hacker who says he was involved.Andrés Sepúlveda, an online campaign strategist, claimed he had also helped to manipulate elections in nine countries across Latin America by stealing data, installing malware and creating fake waves of enthusiasm and derision on social media.
Reddit removes 'warrant canary', signaling US sought its user data
For users, it offers a reminder that what they say and do on Reddit is just as likely to be targeted by investigators as Facebook posts and Gmail messages areUS national security authorities may now view Reddit as a way to spy on people.
Uber CEO must face price-fixing lawsuit from passengers, US court rules
Antitrust suit claims Travis Kalanick organized price fixing among drivers: ‘Today’s decision confirms that apps are not exempt from the antitrust laws’Travis Kalanick, the chief executive of Uber, has failed to win the dismissal of an antitrust lawsuit accusing him of scheming to drive up prices for passengers who use the popular ride-hailing service.District judge Jed Rakoff in Manhattan said on Thursday that Kalanick must face claims he conspired with drivers to ensure they charge prices set by an algorithm in the Uber smartphone app to hail rides, including “surge pricing” during periods of peak demand. Continue reading...
Bryan Cranston and Kevin Hart to star in The Intouchables remake
The Breaking Bad and Ride Along actors are to co-star in the Hollywood version of French hit comedy The IntouchablesBreaking Bad star Bryan Cranston will star opposite Ride Along’s Kevin Hart in a US remake of the French smash-hit comedy The Intouchables.
Father asks Apple head Tim Cook to unblock dead son's iPhone
Leonardo Fabbretti says firm thought to have helped FBI access San Bernardino gunman’s phone will help if Apple refusesA grieving father in Italy has written to Apple’s chief executive, Tim Cook, to beg him to unblock his dead son’s iPhone so he can retrieve the photographs stored on it.
Miitomo first look review – is Nintendo's mobile app any good?
Sorry folks, no Mario, Zelda or Animal Crossing yet: the company’s new app is a quirky social communications tool based around Mii avatarsThe first thing to know about Nintendo’s Miitomo is that it isn’t a game. Not really.The way the company is describing its long-awaited mobile release is “an app from Nintendo that brings out a side of you your friends have never seen before”. So Miitomo isn’t competing directly against Clash Royale, Game of War and Candy Crush Saga. Continue reading...
Nintendo denies Alison Rapp firing is linked to harassment campaign
Ousted marketing officer tweeted that she had been sacked due to outspoken views on feminism, which the company has deniedNintendo has denied that an internet harassment campaign targeting one of its staff was related to its decision to fire her.Alison Rapp, a marketing officer at Nintendo of America’s product development division, Treehouse, wrote a series of tweets on Wednesday evening, informing followers that she was no longer deemed “a good, safe representative of Nintendo”. Continue reading...
Chatterbox: Thursday
The place to talk about games and thatSorry, busy morning! Continue reading...
Why should I upgrade from Windows 7 to 10?
Microsoft is pushing its free upgrade at Windows 7 users and Tom wonders what the benefits are. The answer includes opt-out information for refuseniksYou haven’t answered the most obvious question of all: why should I upgrade from Windows 7 to 10? What are the benefits? Please give a straight answer, which can include technical stuff. TomIn the long term, I don’t think the question is “Why?”, it’s “When?” Eight months after launch, Windows 10 is running on 270m devices and it’s not going away. Some large organisations have already started to move, one of the most notable being the US Defense Department, which has started installing Windows 10 on 4m PCs. Continue reading...
Chinese funeral home 3D prints missing body parts for corpses
Undertakers in Shanghai provides service for incomplete bodies with face recreation costing up to £540A Chinese funeral home is using 3D printing to manufacture spare parts for dead bodies, state media has reported.The Longhua funeral home in Shanghai is thought to be the first in China to use 3D printing in this manner. Continue reading...
Going on holiday doesn’t mean taking a break from my smartphone | Kevin Rushby
According to a new survey, it takes the majority of hotel guests seven minutes to log on to the Wi-Fi after their arrival. So what’s the hold-up?What do you do first on arriving at a hotel? Check out the pool? Or the view from the balcony? No. Apparently most of us now demand the Wi-Fi code and logon, with a massive 65% admitting to tuning in within seven minutes of arrival, according to a new survey. All I can say, as a frequent traveller, is, what took you so long?Confession: I am an instinctive and habitual Wi-Fi user, the sort who mainlines Instagram and Twitter without much reflection on the implications for my own mental and physical health. Who cares? Continue reading...
Silicon Valley subcontracting makes income inequality worse, report finds
A new University of California study has found that subcontracted jobs have expanded rapidly, offering low wages to predominantly black and Latino workersSubcontracted jobs have grown at three times the rate of all private sector jobs in Silicon Valley over the past 24 years, exacerbating the region’s gaping income inequality, according to a new report from the University of California, Santa Cruz.The tech firms whose campuses dominate Silicon Valley are known to employ armies of subcontracted employees as janitors, cafeteria workers, gardeners, security guards and shuttle drivers. Researchers found that growth in subcontracted industries has outpaced overall job growth since 1990 – 54% compared with 18%. Continue reading...
Satnav users risk losing their natural navigational skills, expert warns
Relying on smart devices and GPS are eroding our map reading and way-finding skills, cautions former president of the Royal Institute of NavigationPeople who rely on satnav could be at risk of losing their ability to navigate, an expert has warned.Writing in the journal Nature, former president of the Royal Institute of Navigation Roger McKinlay argues that our reliance on GPS technology is misplaced and could be eroding our innate way-finding abilities. “If we do not cherish them, our natural navigation abilities will deteriorate as we rely ever more on smart devices,” he wrote.
How to get through to an smartphone addict – cartoon
As research suggests social media could be a mental-health timebomb, what’s a GP to do with app-addled patients? Continue reading...
Oculus Rift review roundup: VR wow factor despite high price
Facebook liked the VR headset so much it bought the company behind it for $2bn, and most reviewers of the first consumer version are impressedThe Oculus Rift isn’t the first of the new generation of virtual reality (VR) headsets to go on sale – that was Samsung’s Gear VR – and it will face stiff competition in 2016 from HTC’s Vive and Sony’s PlayStation VR among other devices.Still, the consumer launch of the Rift, with its parent company now a $2bn subsidiary of Facebook, is still a big moment for the latest rebirth of VR. Continue reading...
Apple declares victory in battle with FBI, but the war continues
After US government extracts data from San Bernardino iPhone, company says it is committed to increasing products’ securityApple has declared victory in its battle against the FBI, after the government announced it had found a way into the San Bernardino killer’s iPhone that did not require the manufacturer’s help.The company said in a statement: “From the beginning, we objected to the FBI’s demand that Apple build a backdoor into the iPhone because we believed it was wrong and would set a dangerous precedent. As a result of the government’s dismissal, neither of these occurred. This case should never have been brought.” Continue reading...
San Bernardino iPhone: US ends Apple case after accessing data without assistance
With the court filing, Silicon Valley and Washington are poised to return to a cold war over the balance between privacy and law enforcement in the age of appsThe US government dropped its court fight against Apple after the FBI successfully pulled data from the iPhone of San Bernardino gunman Syed Farook, according to court records.The development effectively ended a six-week legal battle poised to shape digital privacy for years to come. Instead, Silicon Valley and Washington are poised to return to a simmering cold war over the balance between privacy and law enforcement in the age of apps. Continue reading...
NTT Data agrees $3bn deal for Dell's IT service operations
The deal is intended to increase the Japanese company’s presence in North AmericaJapan’s NTT Data has agreed to buy Dell’s IT consulting division for more than $3bn (£2.1bn) to expand in North America and bolster its services business.Related: The mobile makers are coming for the PC market and it’s all Microsoft’s fault Continue reading...
Politicisation of NBN a 'tragedy' that has held back innovation, ABC's Q&A told
Innovations expert Sandy Plunkett joins panellists in criticising government’s controversial NBN model, but Wyatt Roy says it’s about separating ‘rhetoric and reality’Related: Australia's 'ideas boom' needs more help or it risks failure to launch | Lindsay DavidThe politicisation of the National Broadband Network is a “tragedy” which has held Australia back when it comes to innovation and technological advancement, ABC’s Q&A program has heard. Continue reading...
Fred Thomas obituary
My uncle, Fred Thomas, who has died aged 85, was a senior lecturer in civil and structural engineering who undertook groundbreaking research into subjects as diverse as the causes of aeroplane crashes and the structural properties of glass.Fred was born in Tenby, son of Hector, a carpenter, and his wife, Eva, and went to Greenhill grammar school. As a young boy, he would make wooden toys for his younger cousins in his father’s workshop. Fred did not go on to have any children, nor did he ever marry. However, he was incredibly close to his immediate and extended family. He was an integral part of family life for my parents, my brother and me for more than 40 years. Continue reading...
Portrait of world's oldest computer rediscovered in Manchester cafe
Painting of Witch computer had been missing for years and was the subject of a nationwide searchA long-lost portrait of a historic computer – built in 1951 and now the oldest working digital computer in the world – has resurfaced on a cafe bar wall in Manchester.The artist John Yeadon first saw the Witch (the Wolverhampton Instrument for Teaching Computation from Harwell) in 1982 in the Museum of Science and Industry in Birmingham. He was fascinated, even though it had become a sad ghost of its former glory at the cutting edge of computing technology. Continue reading...
Games reviews roundup: Hitman; Mega Man Legacy Collection; Ishi-Sengoku-Den: Sadame
Hitman’s bite-sized assassinations will keep you coming back for more, Mega Man cements his legacy with an unmissable collection, but Sadame spreads its action too thinly over feudal JapanPS4, Xbox One, PC, Square Enix, cert: 18
Trayser: bike review | Martin Love
A futuristic electric bicycle for which you can 3D print your own sparesIt looks like a cross between a Meccano set and an Ikea lampshade, but the Trayser is, in fact, the latest e-bike from New Zealand firm ETT. It is certainly eye-catching, but all the design flourishes also conceal a remarkably forward-thinking bike. The plastic wraparound shell hides a 42V lithium ion battery which gives a range of 60 miles at up to 15.5mph. It takes 300 minutes to fully charge. To ride, it’s wonderfully comfortable and the electric pedal boost is instant and responsive. But where the Trayser really steals a march on the oppo is that it is the first bike for which you can 3D-print replacement parts. Simply visit shapeways.com, and click and order. If you are feeling imaginative you can even 3D-print your own accessories and build your own unique creation (ettindustries.com).Price: £1,700
Bentley Continental GT Speed: car review | Martin Love
Where do you go to test a luxurious 206mph Bentley super car? To a drive-thru McDonald’s, of coursePrice: £156,700
Microsoft 'deeply sorry' for racist and sexist tweets by AI chatbot
Company finally apologises after ‘Tay’ quickly learned to produce offensive posts, forcing the tech giant to shut it down after just 16 hoursMicrosoft has said it is “deeply sorry” for the racist and sexist Twitter messages generated by the so-called chatbot it launched this week.
On the road: Nissan X-Trail car review – ‘I tried to race Ocado vans and lawnmowers’
It’s not what you’d call poky… I was frankly incredulous at the top speed (as advertised)However ugly your Nissan, you should always think, “It could be worse. I could be in a Cube.” In the X-Trail (which everyone at once called the En-Trail, due to the random splashes of reflective red across the back, which made it look as if its guts were on the outside) the excesses of the brand are toned down. No twiddly bits, just solid respectability, seven seats, six speakers, five-inch screen behind the wheel, seven-inch screen for the maddeningly slow satnav, leather everywhere, all the signs of being a grownup and as much safety as you can pad into a car without taking its wheels off.The Tekna is the range-topper, with a six-speed manual engine and 1.6 litres of petrolly promise that it didn’t live up to. I got used to the shape, and when it came to say goodbye, you could say I almost liked it, and not just because it is hard not to like orange things once you get to know them. But it’s heavy for its engine, and the acceleration is a bit pathetic. I caught the children making side eyes of embarrassment as I tried to race Ocado vans and lawnmowers off traffic lights. “There’s no point pretending you’re not with the car,” I explained, “when you’re in the car.” “It’s you we’re pretending not to be with,” they whispered. “It’s your aggressive driving style and age-inappropriate hand gestures.” So I sang Abba over the top and admired the power-opening panoramic roof. Continue reading...
UK cancer surgery to be live-streamed via virtual reality technology
Surgeon Shafi Ahmed will carry out procedure for viewers to watch using mobile phone and VR headsetAn operation on a British cancer patient is to be live-streamed around the world using virtual reality technology designed to make viewers feel as if they are in the operating theatre.It will be performed by Shafi Ahmed, a London surgeon who has been at the forefront of pioneering virtual reality technology in surgery, and who described next month’s operation as a gamechanger for healthcare innovation and education. Continue reading...
California lawmaker pushes for driver-free robot car testing on public roads
Mike Gatto, who has received thousands of dollars in donations from Google and Ford, proposed one of two bills that would relax state rules for automated carsA new bill in California’s legislature that aims to smooth the path for fully driverless vehicles on the state’s public roads is being proposed by an assembly member who has received thousands of dollars from Google.
Beyond email: could startup Slack change the way you work?
Two million people are already using Slack to chat, send emojis and encourage creativity at work. Nasa and Harvard are on board – will your company be next?Erica Baker likes poker. So did many of the engineers she spent 10 years working with at Google, in the California headquarters of one of the world’s most valuable technology companies. When she was eventually invited to a poker night with other engineers, the group of white, male colleagues fell silent as she walked into the room. “That did not feel good,” she says. “I get that it’s comfortable to be around people like you, but it’s also pretty important to be around people who are not like you – it helps one grow as a human being. That was the point where I started to get fed up with Google.”Around the same time, in late November 2014, Baker joined a local Black Lives Matter protest after the shooting of a black teenager by a white police officer. When she posted a photo to Twitter, Stewart Butterfield, the co-founder of Slack, a new chat tool for use at work, sent her a message: “Stay safe.” She says, “I just thought, ‘Holy crap – that’s a tech CEO!’ ” She left Google to join Slack as an engineer in May 2015. Continue reading...
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