Assassin’s Creed Origins review: A living, breathing ancient world

Enlarge / A world so nice, you won’t even mind the mundane quests.

Glistening sands and teaming life stretch far away. I stand at the head of a gilded Pyramid, looking away to the bustling lives and vibrant oases around me. Dust curls up along the horizon, eager to embrace a nearby village. Hippos lumber around the beaches, warding off wary intruders with their girth. This is ancient Egypt not as we imagine it—a popularized image of endlessly mythologized figures—but closer to Egypt as it really might have been. It’s lush and vibrant, harsh and unforgiving; a land of scoped mystery, steeped in blood.

Ubisoft has plenty of experience replicating realistic (or at least realistic-esque) worlds like these throughout the Assassin’s Creed series. The mega-developer’s latest tentpole, Assassin’s Creed: Origins, continues the tradition. The attention to detail is exceptional, and here that’s no mere quip about superficial beauty. Like a digital museum, great care has been spent curating the fineries and looks and culture of its disparate corners. Indeed, Ubisoft has already announced a “Discovery Mode” update, coming next year, that literally turns the game into a digital museum, allowing visitors to rifle through relics and records, pyramids and obelisks to learn about the mores and traditions of the people who lived there.

Trope-laden, crushing variety

For now, though, Origins is more of a known quantity, a rough assemblage of the cornucopia of ideas that have settled into the popular consciousness of what games need to be (side missions, gathering, crafting, stealth sections, and so forth). As such, Origins has a sort of crushing variety, for better and worse.

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Source: Ars Technica – Assassin’s Creed Origins review: A living, breathing ancient world

Review: This War of Mine, the board game

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Source: Ars Technica – Review: This War of Mine, the board game

Amazon Echo Has Come a Long Way Baby

The original Amazon Echo was an ugly black tube—a speaker meant to be set back in the corner, hidden from view. It was a cheap imitation of the computer from Star Trek. The new Amazon Echo is a much prettier device. It’s not suddenly faster or smarter, and your old Echo will do the exact same thing as before, but this…

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Source: Gizmodo – Amazon Echo Has Come a Long Way Baby

Samsung Made a Bitcoin Mining Rig Out of 40 Old Galaxy S5s

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Motherboard: Samsung is starting a new “Upcycling” initiative that is designed to turn old smartphones and turn them into something brand new. Behold, for example, this bitcoin mining rig, made out of 40 old Galaxy S5 devices, which runs on a new operating system Samsung has developed for its upcycling initiative. Samsung premiered this rig, and a bunch of other cool uses for old phones, at its recent developer’s conference in San Francisco. Upcycling involves repurposing old devices instead of breaking them down for parts of reselling them. The people at Samsung’s C-Lab — an engineering team dedicated to creative projects — showed off old Galaxy phones and assorted tablets stripped of Android software and repurposed into a variety of different objects. The team hooked 40 old Galaxy S5’s together to make a bitcoin mining rig, repurposed an old Galaxy tablet into a ubuntu-powered laptop, used a Galaxy S3 to monitor a fishtank, and programed an old phone with facial recognition software to guard the entrance of a house in the form of an owl. Samsung declined to answer specific questions about the bitcoin mining rig, but an information sheet at the developer’s conference noted that eight galaxy S5 devices can mine at a greater power efficiency than a standard desktop computer (not that too many people are mining bitcoin on their desktops these days).

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Samsung Made a Bitcoin Mining Rig Out of 40 Old Galaxy S5s

Carry Away This Portable Crock-Pot for $32

With a locking lid, this 6-quart Crock-Pot is ultra-portable and can serve up to 7 people, all for $32. You can even program it start cooking while you’re away at work so you can come home to a warm meal. It’s part of Amazon’s Gold Box deals today which means, although it’s a slow cooker, this deal will go fast.

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Source: LifeHacker – Carry Away This Portable Crock-Pot for

Emissions, eschmissions: How to (simply) reduce your carbon footprint in 2017

Winter is coming—and not in that Game of Thrones sense. Many people are starting to button up across the US, but while you might have to turn the heater up too, there’s reason to stop and think before blasting the warm air. Like so many of the best aspects of modern living, heaters aren’t necessarily great for the environment. In fact, your heating habit may be bloating your carbon footprint dramatically.

With the Trump administration ditching the Paris Climate Agreement, of course, there may be no federal mandate for individuals and organizations to shrink their carbon footprint. But many people—for reasons ranging from the financial to the environmental—still want to find out how to shrink their impact on the Earth. While it’s hard, there is a way.

Carbon footprints are essentially a convenient way for scientists and environmental advocates to provide you with a number—typically in tons—of the C02 emissions you produce each year. Calculated based on a number of factors including where you live, what you eat, and how you get around, the size of each person’s C02 footprint varies widely. Things are especially different between city slickers and suburbanites, as urban living lowers carbon emissions by 20 percent. Still, the average American clocks in at 16.4 metric tons, or some 36,00 pounds, of carbon dioxide and its greenhouse gas equivalents each year, according to the World Bank. That made for a shared national footprint of about 5,300 million metric tons in 2015, which continues to contribute to the acceleration of global climate change.

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Source: Ars Technica – Emissions, eschmissions: How to (simply) reduce your carbon footprint in 2017

Comcast And Big Telecom Spend $200K To Block Small Colorado Town From Exploring Municipal Broadband

Comcast And Big Telecom Spend $200K To Block Small Colorado Town From Exploring Municipal Broadband
Monopolies and wild animals are similar in that when you corner them, they will attack. While a bear will eat you, the big telecom monopolies that exist in many states will attack with money spent trying to block anything that might mean more competition for their services. In many areas of Colorado, Comcast is the only option for broadband

Source: Hot Hardware – Comcast And Big Telecom Spend 0K To Block Small Colorado Town From Exploring Municipal Broadband

Amazon Granted Wholesale Pharmacy Licenses Fueling RX Drug Domination Rumors

Amazon Granted Wholesale Pharmacy Licenses Fueling RX Drug Domination Rumors
Amazon has been a massively disruptive force in the retail industry and has changed the way that people shop online. Prime members get free video streaming and free two-day shipping on many items making Amazon one of the top shopping destination online. It seems that soon Amazon could be expanding its offerings with pharmacy items, as it has

Source: Hot Hardware – Amazon Granted Wholesale Pharmacy Licenses Fueling RX Drug Domination Rumors

Here are humanity’s best ideas on how to store energy

Historically, the vast majority of the world’s power has been consumed as quickly as it is made, or it’s wasted. But climate change has made governments interested in renewable energy, and renewable energy is variable—it can’t be dispatched on demand. Or can it? As research into utility-sized batteries receives more attention, the economics of adding storage to a grid or wind farm are starting to make more sense.

But grid-tied energy storage is not new; it has just always been limited to whatever resources a local power producer had at the time. Much like electricity production itself, storage schemes differ regionally. Power companies will invest in batteries that make sense on a local level, whether it is pumped storage, compressed air, or lithium-ion cells.

Looking at the kinds of storage that already exist is instructive in helping us see where storage is going to go, too. Lots of the latest battery projects merely build on engineering that has been in service for decades. To better see our way forward, we collected a number of images and diagrams of the world’s biggest energy storage schemes.

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Source: Ars Technica – Here are humanity’s best ideas on how to store energy

Leaked Kohl's Black Friday Ad Highlights Killer Deals On PS4 And Xbox One S

Leaked Kohl's Black Friday Ad Highlights Killer Deals On PS4 And Xbox One S
The biggest shopping day of the year is nearly upon us. We are of course talking about Black Friday, the annual shopping bonanza where stores lure hordes of eager customers with deep discounts. Surprisingly enough, some of the best deals in tech might be found at Kohl’s. A leaked flyer outlining so-called doorbuster deals has found its way

Source: Hot Hardware – Leaked Kohl’s Black Friday Ad Highlights Killer Deals On PS4 And Xbox One S

Gigabyte’s Armor-Plated X399 DESIGNARE EX Ryzen Threadripper Motherboard Now Available

Gigabyte’s Armor-Plated X399 DESIGNARE EX Ryzen Threadripper Motherboard Now Available
If you’re planning to go the Ryzen Threadripper route with your new build, but haven’t yet settled on a motherboard choice, Gigabyte has thrown yet another option onto the pile. While most Threadripper motherboards released up to this point are noteworthy in their own right, the new X399 DESIGNARE EX does manage to stand apart from the crowd.

First,

Source: Hot Hardware – Gigabyte’s Armor-Plated X399 DESIGNARE EX Ryzen Threadripper Motherboard Now Available

NotPetya Outbreak Left Merck Short of HPV Vaccine Gardasil

chicksdaddy shares a report from The Security Ledger: The NotPetya malware infection shut down pharmaceutical giant Merck’s production of the pediatric vaccine GARDASIL last June, forcing the company to borrow the drug from a stockpile maintained by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to meet demand, The Security Ledger reports. The anecdote was contained in a quarterly filing by Merck with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on Friday. That filing also showed that the company continues to suffer financial fallout from the outbreak of the NotPetya malware in June, reducing both sales and revenue for the quarter by hundreds of millions of dollars. In its quarterly 8-k filing, Merck said that revenue for the quarter was “unfavorably impacted” by around $135 million due to “lost sales in certain markets related to the cyber-attack.” Sales in the third quarter of 2017 were also reduced by around $240 million, which Merck chalked up to production shutdowns resulting from NotPetya. In a chilling insight into the extent of the disruption the malware caused to Merck’s operations, the company disclosed that part of its quarterly losses were linked to the interruption of its production of GARDASIL, a vaccine used to prevent Human Papillomavirus (HPV) which is linked to certain cancers and other diseases. To make up for what it described as “overall higher demand than originally planned,” Merck was forced to borrow the vaccine from a stockpile maintained by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control (CDC), the company said.

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Source: Slashdot – NotPetya Outbreak Left Merck Short of HPV Vaccine Gardasil

Google plans software update to fix another Pixel 2 audio issue

Google just announced software updates are incoming to deal with issues Pixel 2 and Pixel 2 XL owners are reporting with their screens and speakers, and now there’s another one on the list. Its audio recordings seem to have an issue that makes them s…

Source: Engadget – Google plans software update to fix another Pixel 2 audio issue