Shared posts

24 Jul 04:14

How to Create and Install Custom Minecraft Textures

by Christian Bonilla
create-minecraft-textures

Minecraft never ceases to amaze me. The game entertains millions of users daily with its simple interface and cubic graphics. This is due, in large part, to its active modding community. Minecraft’s modding community has given the original game a world of new possibilities. For instance, did you know you can change the look of every character, block, and item in the game? You don’t even have to rely on the packs available online! Say goodbye to vanilla Minecraft with this guide to adding and customizing textures. Minecraft for PC/Mac [Online Game Code] Build, create, and explore in Minecraft for...

Read the full article: How to Create and Install Custom Minecraft Textures

08 Jul 04:14

Video about a cool gravity-fed marble "computer" game that beats human players

by Mark Frauenfelder
jimko

clever

Screen Shot 2016-06-30 at 11.59.25 AM

Matt Parker is a "standup mathematician." In this entertaining video, he demonstrates a 1960s plastic toy that plays the game of Nim against a human opponent. Interestingly, Dr. Nim is an ingenious mechanism that uses plastic levers to control the number of marbles it chooses to drop. If you go first, Dr. Nim will always win. In the video, Matt shows you how to play and win Nim every time, including a cheat that lets you win even if you go first.

07 Jul 02:46

Watch this mesmerizing and magical zoetrope

by David Pescovitz
jimko

3d printed plastic filament rotating through a slit of light.

zoetrope-2

Akinori Goto designed and 3D printed this magnificent zoetrope where it won awards at the recent Spiral Independent Creators Festival in Tokyo.

zoetrope-1

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Uun1liGAN6Q

zoetrope-2

(via This Is Colossal)

29 Jun 00:58

Nerdy fidget rings for tabletop RPG players

by Cory Doctorow

iuov_d20_spinner_ring

Thinkgeek has posted a pair of spinning fidget rings for gamers: a $20 D20 ring you flick to get a value between 1-20, and a $25 "counter ring" that clicks from values between 0-99, useful for tracking hit points. (more…)

27 Jun 00:58

Meet SpotMini, a wee dancing robot from Boston Dynamics that also does the dishes

by Rob Beschizza
spotmini

It's described as "nightmare fuel" by Digital Trends but I think it's adorable.

24 Jun 23:14

Tips For The Steam Summer Sale

by Nathan Grayson on Steamed, shared by Alan Henry to Lifehacker

The Steam Summer Sale is in full swing , which means deals out the proverbial wazoo. Here are some things to keep in mind if you want to come away with plenty of games and a not entirely empty wallet.

Read more...

24 Jun 23:12

Make Teaching Complex Board Games Easier by Setting Up Examples Beforehand

by Patrick Allan

When you’re trying to get someone into a complicated board game you like, going over the rules and making them stick is the most difficult part. A little preparation can save you some time and a headache.

Read more...

20 Jun 01:18

Nine Simple Tips for Improving Your Table Manners at Fancy Restaurants

by Patrick Allan

Whether you’re dining out at a nice restaurant, enjoying a wedding reception, or trying to look your best at a work event, proper etiquette is important. These tips are easy to remember and will keep you looking classy.

Read more...

14 Jun 04:24

How to Flirt With Finesse

by Patrick Allan

You might dress well, have a cool job, and be blessed with beauty, but flirting is where the real magic of attraction is, especially when it comes to first impressions. In fact, good flirting is often more effective than good looks, and it’s something anybody can learn how to do.

Read more...

09 Jun 03:08

What everyone earns working on a $200m blockbuster

by Rob Beschizza
jimko

What everybody in the film credits earns as a share of the film's budget.

Houses-of-Parliament-Explosion

Vanity Fair breaks down the individual incomes of people who work on a major Hollywood blockbuster. Assuming a budget of $200m, the breakdown is approximate but based upon average union rates and published figures. [YouTube]

03 Jun 02:59

Highlighting Isn't That Effective For Studying, And Other Tips to Study Better

by Stephanie Lee
jimko

short video, good tips

Everyone has their methods for cramm—I mean, studying for tests. I barely scraped by with mine (energy drinks, late nights, and panic attacks,) but AsapSCIENCE’s science-backed study tips may help you when it’s time to hit the books again. For instance, you’ll absorb better by creating flashcards than highlighting the text you’re reading.

Read more...

03 Jun 01:29

Start Your Raspberry Pi 3 Adventure With This Discounted Starter Kit

by Shep McAllister on Deals, shared by Shep McAllister to Lifehacker

Here’s one of the first deals we’ve seen on the brand new Raspberry Pi 3, now with built-in Wi-Fi and Bluetooth, and a much faster processor. The kit comes with everything you need to get started, and will only set you back $70 with promo code 7XA8X43P.

Read more...

02 Jun 04:07

How to electrify your skateboard with a power drill

by David Pescovitz
jimko

Not sure why he replaced all the bearings, and I think you can buy drill mandrils without wire brush. Like removing the almonds from a hershey bar instead of buying one without almonds.

DIY boosted board made with a power drill, brass wire wheel brush, extension bit holder, right angle drill attachment, flexible bit holder, and of course a skateboard and wheels.

screenshot

02 Jun 03:56

Watch BB-8 Wreak Havoc in the Upcoming Lego Star Wars: The Force Awakens Game

by Chris Kohler
Watch BB-8 Wreak Havoc in the Upcoming Lego Star Wars: The Force Awakens Game
You know you only want to play as BB-8 in the new Force Awakens-themed Lego videogame. The post Watch BB-8 Wreak Havoc in the Upcoming Lego Star Wars: The Force Awakens Game appeared first on WIRED.
24 May 01:38

Dungeons and Donald: if Trump were a dungeon master

by Cory Doctorow

Ci1X8W8UUAAHiiO

The @DungeonsDonald parody Twitter account combines shooping, RPGs and politics to make D&D great again. (more…)

22 May 18:28

The Golden Age of x86 Gaming

by Jeff Atwood
jimko

This guy thinks the future of consoles (xbox etc) is a pc with external video card. His original htpc article was the inspiration for our original Myth box.

I've been happy with my 2016 HTPC, but the situation has changed, largely because of something I mentioned in passing back in November:

The Xbox One and PS4 are effectively plain old PCs, built on:

  • Intel Atom class (aka slow) AMD 8-core x86 CPU
  • 8 GB RAM
  • AMD Radeon 77xx / 78xx GPUs
  • cheap commodity 512GB or 1TB hard drives (not SSDs)

The golden age of x86 gaming is well upon us. That's why the future of PC gaming is looking brighter every day. We can see it coming true in the solid GPU and idle power improvements in Skylake, riding the inevitable wave of x86 becoming the dominant kind of (non mobile, anyway) gaming for the forseeable future.

And then, the bombshell. It is all but announced that Sony will be upgrading the PS4 this year, no more than three years after it was first introduced … just like you would upgrade a PC.

Sony may be tight-lipped for now, but it's looking increasingly likely that the company will release an updated version of the PlayStation 4 later this year. So far, the rumoured console has gone under the moniker PS4K or PS4.5, but a new report from gaming site GiantBomb suggests that the codename for the console is "NEO," and it even provides hardware specs for the PlayStation 4's improved CPU, GPU, and higher bandwidth memory.

  • CPU: 1.6 → 2.1 Ghz CPU
  • GPU: 18 CUs @ 800Mhz → 36 CUs @ 911Mhz
  • RAM: 8GB DDR5 176 GB/s → 218 GB/s

In PC enthusiast parlance, you might say Sony just slotted in a new video card, a faster CPU, and slightly higher speed RAM.

This is old hat for PCs, but to release a new, faster model that is perfectly backwards compatible is almost unprecedented in the console world. I have to wonder if this is partially due to the intense performance pressure of VR, but whatever the reason, I applaud Sony for taking this step. It's a giant leap towards consoles being more like PCs, and another sign that the golden age of x86 is really and truly here.

I hate to break this to PS4 enthusiasts, but as big of an upgrade as that is – and it really is – it's still nowhere near enough power to drive modern games at 4k. Nvidia's latest and greatest 1080 GTX can only sometimes manage 30fps at 4k. The increase in required GPU power when going from 1080p to 4k is so vast that even the PC "cost is no object" folks who will happily pay $600 for a video card and $1000 for the rest of their box have some difficulty getting there today. Stuffing all that into a $299 box for the masses is going to take quite a few more years.

Still, I like the idea of the PS4 Neo so much that I'm considering buying it myself. I strongly support this sea change in console upgradeability, even though I swore I'd stick with the Xbox One this generation. To be honest, my Xbox One has been a disappointment to me. I bought the "Elite" edition because it had a hybrid 1TB drive, and then added a 512GB USB 3.0 SSD to the thing and painstakingly moved all my games over to that, and it is still appallingly slow to boot, to log in, to page through the UI, to load games. It's also noisy under load and sounds like a broken down air conditioner even when in low power, background mode. The Xbox One experience is way too often drudgery and random errors instead of the gaming fun it's supposed to be. Although I do unabashedly love the new controller, I feel like the Xbox One is, overall, a worse gaming experience than the Xbox 360 was. And that's sad.

Or maybe I'm just spoiled by PC performance, and the relatively crippled flavor of PC you get in these $399 console boxes. If all evidence points to the golden age of x86 being upon us, why not double down on x86 in the living room? Heck, while I'm at it … why not triple down?

This, my friends, is what tripling down on x86 in the living room looks like.

It's Intel's latest Skull Canyon NUC. What does that acronym stand for? Too embarrassing to explain. Let's just pretend it means "tiny awesome x86 PC". What's significant about this box is it contains the first on-die GPU Intel has ever shipped that can legitimately be considered console class.

It's not cheap at $579, but this tiny box bristles with cutting edge x86 tech:

  • Quad-core i7-6770HQ CPU (2.6 Ghz / 3.5 Ghz)
  • Iris Pro Graphics 580 GPU with 128MB eDRAM
  • Up to 32GB DDR4-2666 RAM
  • Dual M.2 PCI x4 SSD slots
  • 802.11ac WiFi / Bluetooth / Gigabit Ethernet
  • Thunderbolt 3 / USB 3.1 gen 2 Type-C port
  • Four USB 3.0 ports
  • HDMI 2.0, mini-DP 1.2 video out
  • SDXC (UHS-I) card reader
  • Infrared sensor
  • 3.5mm combo digital / optical out port
  • 3.5mm headphone jack

All impressive, but the most remarkable items are the GPU and the Thunderbolt 3 port. Putting together a HTPC that can kick an Xbox One's butt as a gaming box is now as simple as adding these three items together:

  1. Intel NUC kit NUC6i7KYK $579
  2. 16GB DDR4-2400 $75
  3. Samsung 950 Pro NVMe M.2 (512GB) $317

Ok, fine, it's a cool $970 plus tax compared to $399 for one of those console x86 boxes. But did I mention it has skulls on it? Skulls!

The CPU and disk performance on offer here are hilariously far beyond what's available on current consoles:

  • Disk performance of the two internal PCIe 3.0 4x M.2 slots, assuming you choose a proper NVMe drive as you should, is measured in not megabytes per second but gigabytes per second. Meanwhile consoles lumber on with, at best, hybrid drives.

  • The Jaguar class AMD x86 cores in the Xbox One and PS4 are about the same as the AMD A4-5000 reviewed here; those benchmarks indicate a modern Core i7 will be about four times faster.

But most importantly, its GPU performance is on par with current consoles. NUC blog measured 41fps average in Battlefield 4 at 1080p and medium settings. Digging through old benchmarks I find plenty of pages where a Radeon 78xx or 77xx series video card, the closest analog to what's in the XBox One and PS4, achieves a similar result in Battlefield 4:

I personally benchmarked GRID 2 at 720p (high detail) on all three of the last HTPC models I owned:

Max Min Avg
i3-4130T, HD 4400 32 21 27
i3-6100T, HD 530 50 32 39
i7-6770HQ, Iris Pro 580 96 59 78

When I up the resolution to 1080p, I get 59fps average, 38 min, 71 max. Checking with Notebookcheck's exhaustive benchmark database, that is closest to the AMD R7 250, a rebranded Radeon 7770.

What we have here is legitimately the first on-die GPU that can compete with a low-end discrete video card from AMD or Nvidia. Granted, an older one, one you could buy for about $80 today, but one that is certainly equivalent to what's in the Xbox One and PS4 right now. This is a real first for Intel, and it probably won't be the last time, considering that on-die GPU performance increases have massively outpaced CPU performance increases for the last 5 years.

As for power usage, I was pleasantly surprised to measure that this box idles at 15w at the Windows Desktop doing nothing, and drops to 13w when the display sleeps. Considering the best idle numbers I've measured are from the Scooter Computer at 7w and my previous HTPC build at 10w, that's not bad at all! Under full game load, it's more like 70 to 80 watts, and in typical light use, 20 to 30 watts. It's the idle number that matters the most, as that represents the typical state of the box. And compared to the 75 watts a console uses even when idling at the dashboard, it's no contest.

Of course, 4k video playback is no problem, though 10-bit 4K video may be a stretch. If that's not enough — if you dream bigger than medium detail 1080p gameplay — the presence of a Thunderbolt 3 port on this little box means you can, at considerable expense, use any external GPU of your choice.

That's the Razer Core external graphics dock, and it's $499 all by itself, but it opens up an entire world of upgrading your GPU to whatever the heck you want, as long as your x86 computer has a Thunderbolt 3 port. And it really works! In fact, here's a video of it working live with this exact configuration:

Zero games are meaningfully CPU limited today; the disk and CPU performance of this Skull Canyon NUC is already so vastly far ahead of current x86 consoles, even the PS4 Neo that's about to be introduced. So being able to replace the one piece that needs to be the most replaceable is huge. Down the road you can add the latest, greatest GPU model whenever you want, just by plugging it in!

The only downside of using such a small box as my HTPC is that my two 2.5" 2TB media drives become external USB 3.0 enclosures, and I am limited by the 4 USB ports. So it's a little … cable-y in there. But I've come to terms with that, and its tiny size is an acceptable tradeoff for all the cable and dongle overhead.

I still remember how shocked I was when Apple switched to x86 back in 2005. I was also surprised to discover just how thoroughly both the PS4 and Xbox One embraced x86 in 2013. Add in the current furor over VR, plus the PS4 Neo opening new console upgrade paths, and the future of x86 as a gaming platform is rapidly approaching supernova.

If you want to experience what console gaming will be like in 10 years, invest in a Skull Canyon NUC and an external Thunderbolt 3 graphics dock today. If we are in a golden age of x86 gaming, this configuration is its logical endpoint.

[advertisement] Find a better job the Stack Overflow way - what you need when you need it, no spam, and no scams.
19 May 00:25

Junkyard Battle Racers Bring Video Game Boosts to Go-Kart Racing

by Lisa Martin
jimko

Great idea, but the video is a little dull

Screen Shot 2016-05-16 at 9.50.25 AMA team of 4 CSU students created a real life Mario Kart experience with boosts and power ups to help you win!

Read more on MAKE

The post Junkyard Battle Racers Bring Video Game Boosts to Go-Kart Racing appeared first on Make: DIY Projects and Ideas for Makers.

19 May 00:13

This might be the best online resume ever made

by Mark Frauenfelder
jimko

Nice

Screen Shot 2016-05-18 at 9.54.19 AM

Robby Leonardi is a designer and animator, and his interactive resume showcases his impressive skills.

16 May 23:28

How to use sand to hold up a car

by Mark Frauenfelder
jimko

7 min video. Pretty amazing

Screen Shot 2016-05-16 at 9.49.54 AM

https://youtu.be/0olpSN6_TCc

This well-made video from Practical Engineering explains why soil is not a good building material, and then shows how to mechanically stabilize it so it can bear weight.

Dirt is probably the cheapest and simplest construction material out there, but it's not very strong compared to other choices. Luckily geotechnical engineers have developed a way to strengthen earthen materials with almost no additional effort - Mechanically Stabilized Earth (aka MSE or Reinforced Soil). If you look closely, you'll see MSE walls are everywhere. Thanks for watching, and let me know what you think!

05 May 00:55

How We Epically Obliterated an $800 Lego Star Destroyer

by Angela Watercutter
jimko

At 1:52, you can see Darth Vader fly out of the wreckage.

How We Epically Obliterated an $800 Lego Star Destroyer
Here's how we crushed a Lego Star Destroyer and captured the whole thing at 1,000 frames-per-second. Happy Star Wars Day! The post How We Epically Obliterated an $800 Lego Star Destroyer appeared first on WIRED.
27 Apr 03:02

Prolific and talented D&D map-drawer

by Cory Doctorow

james-rejected-headquarters-grid (1)

Dyson Logos's G+ account is an endlessly scrolling inventory of hand-drawn D&D maps, each one cooler than the last. (more…)

19 Apr 01:59

Working Lego Particle Accelerator

by Gareth Branwyn
jimko

Spinning wheel to power soccer ball particle. Video is kinda funny

tumblr_nf1mi67N121qzicj3o3_500Playtime just got a lot more physical and experimental with this Lego "Large Brick Collider."

Read more on MAKE

The post Working Lego Particle Accelerator appeared first on Make: DIY Projects and Ideas for Makers.

16 Apr 04:08

From beyond the grave, Terry Pratchett orders Neil Gaiman to adapt Good Omens for TV

by Cory Doctorow

tumblr_o5nibsFAWq1r3rsfmo2_1280

After several false starts, including one that involved Terry Gilliam and a groat, Neil Gaiman has announced that he will personally adapt he and Terry Pratchett's oustanding, comedic apocalypse novel Good Omens as a six-part TV series. (more…)

13 Apr 05:29

The Physics of That Crazy Ricochet Hole in One at the Masters

by Rhett Allain
jimko

Odds are 1 in total-number-of-golf-balls-ever-hit-so-far-and-from-now-on.

The Physics of That Crazy Ricochet Hole in One at the Masters
During the 2016 US Masters Oosthuizen had a shot that deflected off another ball to result in a hole in one on a par 3. Here is a look at the physics of this event. The post The Physics of That Crazy Ricochet Hole in One at the Masters appeared first on WIRED.









07 Apr 00:58

Watch: Magician dexterously floats credit-cards around Tokyo

by Cory Doctorow
animation (3)

Zach Muller, a card mechanic (previously, previously) got a commercial gig for JAL that has him wandering the streets of Tokyo, dazzling people with amazing credit-card tricks. (Thanks, Magicpeacelove!)

27 Mar 01:59

XKCD is coming to America's science textbooks

by Cory Doctorow

056c026d-1c66-4d42-9fae-a8e96df290c5-1020x993

Textbook giant Houghton Mifflin Harcourt publishes Randall Munroe's amazing Thing Explainer, and a lucky accident happened when someone in the textbook division noticed Munroe's amazing explanatory graphics, annotated with simple language (the book restricts itself to the thousand most common English words) and decided to include some of them in the next editions of its high-school chemistry, biology and physics textbooks. (more…)

27 Mar 01:32

The Brickin’ Lego Batman Movie Trailer Is Here!

by Brian Raftery
The Brickin’ Lego Batman Movie Trailer Is Here!
Ever wonder what the Dark Knight does in his downtime? The post The Brickin' Lego Batman Movie Trailer Is Here! appeared first on WIRED.









26 Mar 15:33

Top 10 Tech Security Basics Every Person Should Follow

by Melanie Pinola
jimko

read at least the headlines

We talk a lot about computer security and data security here at Lifehacker, but you can never have too many reminders of the basics. Here, in a nutshell, are the security tips and habits every computer user should know. Consider it a quick way to audit your own security or help others you care about get the essentials down.

Read more...











23 Mar 01:37

Timing is everything in Minecraft's new combat system

by Rob Beschizza

minecraftcombat2

Minecraft's combat system always reflected its simplicity, and basically amounted to clicking things until they died. It's just been overhauled with a game update centered entirely on combat. Ideas that seem simple become more challenging when you have to account for lag. (more…)
10 Mar 23:24

How to Make X-Wing Origami

by Gareth Branwyn

xWingOrigamiWant to try your hand at some challenging origami? Try this Star Wars X-Wing fold.

Read more on MAKE

The post How to Make X-Wing Origami appeared first on Make: DIY Projects and Ideas for Makers.