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Games

Dead Space Wants To Scare You 195

Kotaku recently ran a story questioning whether the survival-horror genre still exists, and how Dead Space may or may not fit into it. With reviews for the game starting to come in, Ars Technica reports that the game is, indeed, both scary and good. Gamespy wrote up a Dead Space survival guide, and Gamasutra has a lengthy interview with the game's senior producer. In the production of the game, the developers studied things like car wrecks and war scenes to increase the level of realism. They also want the game's sounds to terrify players, including appropriately timed silence. The launch trailer is also available, though it does contain spoilers.
Science

CERN Releases Analysis of LHC Incident 149

sash writes "From the fresh press release: 'Investigations at CERN following a large helium leak into sector 3-4 of the Large Hadron Collider tunnel have confirmed that cause of the incident was a faulty electrical connection between two of the accelerator's magnets. This resulted in mechanical damage and release of helium from the magnet cold mass into the tunnel. Proper safety procedures were in force, the safety systems performed as expected, and no one was put at risk. Sufficient spare components are in hand to ensure that the LHC is able to restart in 2009, and measures to prevent a similar incident in the future are being put in place.'"
Games

Defining Progression Within Games 55

GameSetWatch is running a piece discussing some of the ways in which gameplay can progress from simple to complex. The author talks about how acquiring items, new abilities, or just increasing the player's overall effectiveness can make it difficult for game designers to keep their content balanced and interesting. Quoting: "What do I mean by progression? There are at least two distinct types of progression in computer games, which I'll label player progression, and character progression (narrative progression is arguably a third). Player progression is the increasing aptitude of the player in mastering the game: whether through learning and understanding the technical rules of the game (surface play) or the implications of those rules (deep play). ... Character progression is the unlocking of additional rules of play, or altering the existing rules, by choices or actions within the game."
Sci-Fi

Paul Krugman Awarded Nobel Prize For Economics 425

zogger writes in his journal, "The guy who put together the concept of geographical location combined with cheap transportation leading to 'like trades with like' and the rise of superindustrial trading blocs has won the Nobel economics science prize. He's a bigtime critic of a lot of this administration's policies, and is unabashedly an FDR-economy styled fella. Here is his blog at the NYTimes." Reader yoyoq adds that Krugman's career choice was inspired by reading Asimov's Foundation series at a young age.
The Internet

Submission + - Major problems withSprintlink backbone in chicago

An anonymous reader writes: It seems that sprint's backbone in Chicago has been causing havoc for ISPs all over the region today, with packet loss currently at 50%-80% and average ping times at 1700ms. We noticed a problem with this backbone last week, for a short time with pings taking over 2000ms. We awoke this morning to an internet connection that was able to open Google and CNN but little else. A quick trace route and call to our ISP confirmed our thoughts that sprint's Chicago backone was having major issues. The problems seemed to be correcting themselves this afternoon, as packet loss what down and ping times were closer to noral. However again this evening packet loss has sky rocketed and service over the backbone is again degraded. Below is an portion of the output from mtr for anyone in doubt of where the issue lies.

3. sl-gw18-chi-6-1-0.sprintlink.net 0.0% 11.2 11.5 10.6 13.7 1.0
4. sl-bb22-chi-1-0.sprintlink.net 66.7% 1761. 1692. 1624. 1761. 96.9
5. sl-st21-chi-13-0.sprintlink.net 66.7% 2705. 2592. 2478. 2705. 160.5
6. ggr3-p330.cgcil.ip.att.net 83.3% 2752. 2752. 2752. 2752. 0.0
Emulation (Games)

Submission + - State of the Homebrew Scene 2007

Croakyvoice writes: DCEmu have posted an article detailing the Homebrew scenes of all the consoles released at this time, it discusses the future of each console and what should be expected once consoles like the Wii, Xbox 360 and PS3 are fully open to amateur coders.
Software

Submission + - How FairPlay Works: Apple's iTunes DRM Dilemma

An anonymous reader writes: Understanding how Apple's FairPlay DRM works helps to answer a lot of questions: why it hasn't been replaced with an open, interoperable DRM that anyone can use, why Apple isn't broadly licensing FairPlay, and why the company hasn't jumped to add DRM-free content from indie artists to iTunes.
Wii

Submission + - The 12 Awesomest Games of 2010

ipsofacto writes: Get in line now! These games will be flying off the shelves in just a few years. Wii games, PS3, Xbox 360, and PC games that you have to see to believe.
Linux Business

Submission + - Dell takes small steps toward Linux

daria42 writes: Dell has acknowledged that 83,000 users have urged it to sell PCs with Linux pre-installed, but it has fallen short of accepting their suggestion. The requests were made through a new user forum, Dell IdeaStorm, which was launched by Dell 10 days ago, shortly after Michael Dell regained the chief executive's seat. Dell IdeaStorm gives users the chance to tell the PC vendor what kind of systems it should offer.
Math

Submission + - UW scientists unlock major number theory puzzle

Jake's Mom writes: "From the University of Wisconsin — UW scientists unlock major number theory puzzle.

"Mathematicians have finally laid to rest the legendary mystery surrounding an elusive group of numerical expressions known as the "mock theta functions."

Number theorists have struggled to understand the functions ever since the great Indian mathematician Srinivasa Ramanujan first alluded to them in a letter written on his deathbed, in 1920.

Now, using mathematical techniques that emerged well after Ramanujan's death, two number theorists at the University of Wisconsin-Madison have pieced together an explanatory framework that for the first time illustrates what mock theta functions are, and exactly how to derive them."

For more, read the full article."
The Courts

Bloggers Immune From Suits Against Commenters 142

An anonymous reader writes "Suppose a commenter posts a libelous comment here at Slashdot. Can Slashdot and its owners be sued for defamation? A federal appeals court just held that no, they cannot. The court noted that a federal law was designed to ensure that 'within broad limits, message board operators would not be held responsible for the postings made by others on that board,' adding that, were the law otherwise, it would have an 'obvious chilling effect' on blogger speech."
Biotech

Submission + - Are Vision Implants Part of Our Future?

Amazing HDR writes: Trey Ratcliff a programmer/CEO/photographer acclaimed for his HDR photos talks about the future of vision, "The color spectrum we see the world in is extremely limited, but that will change in the next 10 to 15 years as people evolve to get eye implants that both improve vision and can see (and record) new wavelengths beyond the current visible spectrum. There are already a few mutant tetrachromatics currently alive today that see four colors, one order of magnitude beyond the exiting three-axis RGB scale."
Upgrades

Submission + - Why Does Apple Have All the Sexy?

il1019 writes: I hate Apple. I hate people that use Apples. How they proclaim their "superior" product. And yet I always find myself drooling over Apple products. HP, IBM/Levono, Dell, even higher end machines from Alienware or VoodooPCs don't have the same sexy that Apple does. The iMac, MacBook, and MPB are all gorgeous machines. Simple, elegant, and they just look great. No other computers coming out look as good as Apples do. The real question is: why does Apple have all they sexy? Can't any Windows PC makers take a hint that the public (myself included) would like to have something that doesn't look like a grey brick?

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