Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
Software

Preserving Virtual Worlds 122

The Opposable Thumbs blog has an interview with Jerome McDonough of the University of Illinois, who is involved with the Preserving Virtual Worlds project. The goal of the project is to recognize video games as cultural artifacts and to make sure they're accessible by future generations. Here McDonough talks about some of the technical difficulties in doing so: "Take, for example, Star Raiders on the Atari 2600. If you're going to preserve this, you've got a couple of problems. The first is that it is on a cartridge that is designed to work on a particular system that is no longer manufactured. And as long as you've got a hardware dependency there, you're really not going to be able to preserve this material very long. What we have been looking at is how feasible is it for things that fundamentally all have some level of hardware dependency there — even Doom has dependencies on DLLs with an operating system, and on particular chipsets and architectures for playing. How do you take that and turn it into something that isn't as dependent on a particular physical piece of hardware. And to do that, you need information about that platform. You need technical specifications that allow you to basically reproduce a virtualization that may enable you to run the software in its original form in the future. So what we're trying to do is preserve not only the games, but preserve the knowledge that you would need to create a virtualization platform to play the game."
Intel

The Big Technical Mistakes of History 244

An anonymous reader tips a PC Authority review of some of the biggest technical goofs of all time. "As any computer programmer will tell you, some of the most confusing and complex issues can stem from the simplest of errors. This article looking back at history's big technical mistakes includes some interesting trivia, such as NASA's failure to convert measurements to metric, resulting in the Mars Climate Orbiter being torn apart by the Martian atmosphere. Then there is the infamous Intel Pentium floating point fiasco, which cost the company $450m in direct costs, a battering on the world's stock exchanges, and a huge black mark on its reputation. Also on the list is Iridium, the global satellite phone network that promised to make phones work anywhere on the planet, but required 77 satellites to be launched into space."

Comment I put on my tinfoil hat amd robe... (Score 1) 311

Not trying to get too suspicious or too paranoid, but there's a small part of me that thinks the Govt. is slowly and purposefully getting people "used" to the idea and concept of alien lifeforms.

Is it just me or have we seen a gradual increase in the amount of movies and T.V. shows about alien lifeforms and interaction with humans.

District 9, Star Trek, Independence Day, Stargate, Voyager, etc, etc and countless other shows and movies that have come out in the last 30 yrs seem to suggest humans and aliens can somehow learn to communicate and co-habitate together.

Could it all be a grand, elaborate scheme to indoctrinate earthlings to accept the idea and concept of other-world beings? Imagine how society would have freaked out 50yrs ago if we were presented with an actual alien life form? Now imagine how that same event, while as shocking as it would still be, would affect people today? I dare think mush less mass-hysteria and more wider acceptance among today's youth who have grown up with all these Sci-Fi films and TV shows bombarding them with the concept of alien life being a distinct possibility, albeit even normal...

Slashdot Top Deals

Maternity pay? Now every Tom, Dick and Harry will get pregnant. -- Malcolm Smith

Working...