Did a single typo screw up the AI in 'Aliens: Colonial Marines'?

In case you need help selecting an old game to spend the weekend with, it might be a good time to revisit 2013’s Aliens: Colonial Marines. In a one-star review written when it was released, Xav de Matos called out the game’s AI as a problem and said:…

Source: Engadget – Did a single typo screw up the AI in ‘Aliens: Colonial Marines’?

HHS Plans To Delete 20 Years of Critical Medical Guidelines Next Week

An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Daily Beast: The Trump Administration is planning to eliminate a vast trove of medical guidelines that for nearly 20 years has been a critical resource for doctors, researchers and others in the medical community. Maintained by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality [AHRQ], part of the Department of Health and Human Services, the database is known as the National Guideline Clearinghouse [NGC], and it’s scheduled to “go dark,” in the words of an official there, on July 16. “Guideline.gov was our go-to source, and there is nothing else like it in the world,” King said, referring to the URL at which the database is hosted, which the agency says receives about 200,000 visitors per month. “It is a singular resource,” Valerie King, a professor in the Department of Family Medicine and Director of Research at the Center for Evidence-based Policy at Oregon Health & Science University, added. [She] said the NGC is perhaps the most important repository of evidence-based research available.

Medical guidelines are best thought of as cheatsheets for the medical field, compiling the latest research in an easy-to use format. When doctors want to know when they should start insulin treatments, or how best to manage an HIV patient in unstable housing — even something as mundane as when to start an older patient on a vitamin D supplement — they look for the relevant guidelines. The documents are published by a myriad of professional and other organizations, and NGC has long been considered among the most comprehensive and reliable repositories in the world. AHRQ said it’s looking for a partner that can carry on the work of NGC, but that effort hasn’t panned out yet. Not even an archived version of the site will remain, according to an official at AHRQ.

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Source: Slashdot – HHS Plans To Delete 20 Years of Critical Medical Guidelines Next Week

Looks Like Facebook is Getting Serious About Making Its Own Chips

It’s been rumored for months that Facebook might be interested in building its own, in-house processing chips. Now it appears the social network company is really going for it. Bloomberg reported Friday that Facebook managed to snag one of Google’s top silicon engineering directors to head up its own efforts in the…

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Source: Gizmodo – Looks Like Facebook is Getting Serious About Making Its Own Chips

A years-old, one-letter typo led to Aliens: Colonial Marines‘ weird AI

Enlarge / Want Aliens: Colonial Marines to better resemble this ‘shopped image? Just remove one letter! (credit: Gearbox / Sega)

History may never be kind to Aliens: Colonial Marines, but the present tense isn’t looking so good for the lawsuit– and complaint-ridden Gearbox game, either. This week brought to our attention one of the weirdest coding typos we’ve ever seen in a game—which has apparently been hidden inside of A:CM‘s PC version since its 2013 launch.

The first-person shooter returned to gaming’s zeitgeist this week thanks to a 90-percent discount at gaming site Fanatical, which brings its asking price down to $3. (Buying the PC version outright from Steam currently costs the full $30 price.) This sale led one fan to plead with members of the popular gaming forum ResetERA to consider the game as a decent cheap-fun option, especially due to a 712MB fan-made patch at moddb.com that addresses many of the game’s graphical and gameplay glitches.

Tether vs. teather

Upon researching this patch, ResetERA readers noticed something in the moddb.com notes that somehow escaped the gaming community at large in October 2017: the discovery of a one-letter typo in A:CM‘s INI files. As moddb.com user jamesdickinson963 pointed out last year, the game’s “PecanEngine.ini” file references a “tether” system in assigning AI commands to the series’ infamous monsters (which I’ll call “xenomorphs” for brevity’s sake, even though that term isn’t necessarily the right one). However, one of its two mentions of the term “tether” is misspelled as “teather.”

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Source: Ars Technica – A years-old, one-letter typo led to Aliens: Colonial Marines‘ weird AI

Apple’s 2018 MacBook Pro Keyboards Include Dust Blocking Membrane To Prevent Failures

Apple’s 2018 MacBook Pro Keyboards Include Dust Blocking Membrane To Prevent Failures
Apple has taken more than a few hits to the chin over the keyboards used on recent MacBook and MacBook Pro notebooks. Besides the fact that the keys have less travel than the keyboards that preceded them and can be annoyingly loud when typing, they are prone to malfunctions or failing completely when dust or crumbs make their way into the

Source: Hot Hardware – Apple’s 2018 MacBook Pro Keyboards Include Dust Blocking Membrane To Prevent Failures

Some Senators Want to Know if Smart TVs are Spying on Us

Two US senators have some suspicions about smart TVs, and they’re asking the Federal Trade Commission to look into the data collection practices employed by TV manufacturers to see if the internet-connected devices are quietly sucking up information from unwitting consumers.

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Source: Gizmodo – Some Senators Want to Know if Smart TVs are Spying on Us

Facebook Chooses To Demote Fake News Instead of Remove It

Facebook says it will not remove fake news from its platform because it does not violate its community standards. According to the BBC, Facebook said publishers often had “very different points of view” and removing fabricated posts would be “contrary to the basic principles of free speech.” Instead, it is choosing to demote posts in the news feed that it deems to be fake news. From the report: Facebook has been scrutinized for its role in spreading fake news after evidence emerged that Russia tried to influence U.S. voters using the social network. On Wednesday, the company held an event in New York where it sought to convince journalists it was tackling the problem. The company said it would not remove fake news that did not break its rules but would down-rank content that had been marked as false. “We allow people to post it as a form of expression, but we’re not going to show it at the top of News Feed,” a spokeswoman told CNN.

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Source: Slashdot – Facebook Chooses To Demote Fake News Instead of Remove It

China busts World Cup gambling ring pulling $1.5 billion in crypto bets

Officials in China have busted a World Cup gambling ring that took in over 10 billion yuan (nearly $1.5 billion) in cryptocurrency bets, reports the South China Morning Post. Six individuals allegedly connected to a dark web-based crime syndicate hav…

Source: Engadget – China busts World Cup gambling ring pulling .5 billion in crypto bets

Silicon Battery Technology Breakthrough to Dramatically Increase Electric Vehicle Range

Researchers at Kjeller Institute in Norway have discovered a breakthrough in silicon battery development that could increase capacity by up to five times. Pure silicon battery technology has had issues with longevity over the years, but researchers have discovered that mixing silicon with an unstated material fixes the longevity problems. The new mix called SiliconX shows the potential to increase EV range to 621 miles and cellphone battery life to several days before a charge is necessary.



For several years, researchers have investigated the possibilities of using silicon in batteries, instead of graphite used today. In theory, pure silicon has ten times higher capacity than graphite, but also loses capacity faster. Now, however, scientists have come up with a silicon mixture that keeps the capacity stable over time, even though the capacity becomes somewhat lower than with pure silicon. However, batteries with the new silicon mixture will have three to five times higher capacity than today’s batteries, according to researchers.

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Source: [H]ardOCP – Silicon Battery Technology Breakthrough to Dramatically Increase Electric Vehicle Range

Only 39 Percent of Viewers Choose Live TV As Their Default Option, Says Study

According to a new study by Hub Entertainment Research, viewers are increasingly defaulting to on-demand sources like Netflix, Amazon Prime Video, and Hulu instead of live TV. The study found that only 39% of viewers tune into live programming from a traditional pay-TV provider, down from 47% last year. On-demand sources, collectively, were the first choice for 48% of viewers. Deadline reports: For viewers aged 18-34, the pattern is more stark — only about a quarter (26%) of the demo lists live TV as a default, compared with 35% a year ago. One clear influence on consumer behavior is the increase in TV sources — the average person has 4.5 distinct sources to choose from (including linear TV, DVR, VOD, Netflix, etc.). That number is up from 3.7 in 2014. Among viewers 18-34, the number is higher, at 5.1 sources — plus, Hub found that fully 50% of 18-34-year-olds subscribe to at least two of the “big three” SVOD services, Netflix, Amazon or Hulu. Even older generations accustomed to the “clicker” have turned away from live TV as a default. About 56% of viewers 55 and older listed live as their first choice, but that’s down from 66% a year ago.

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Source: Slashdot – Only 39 Percent of Viewers Choose Live TV As Their Default Option, Says Study

Deadpool's Looking for a New Crew in This Charming Musical Parody

I’m a sucker for musicals—put something into song and I’m sold. For instance, you can damn well bet I’m gonna see the Mamma Mia! sequel, even though I know it’ll be terrible. But in the meantime, here’s a musical sequel that actually is worth a watch: A Deadpool musical crossover extravaganza.

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Source: Gizmodo – Deadpool’s Looking for a New Crew in This Charming Musical Parody

Universal Soldier Is a Cautionary Tale About Reckless Resurrection

Two American soldiers fight to the death in Vietnam. That’s the start of Universal Soldier, which imagines the pair being brought back to life and given superstrength so they can (inevitably) fight each other again. The movie is stupidly entertaining—but like the UniSol program itself, there are some serious glitches.

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Source: Gizmodo – Universal Soldier Is a Cautionary Tale About Reckless Resurrection

Why A Tiny Fish Is Stalling The New Toyota-Mazda Factory In Alabama

A small, Alabama-native fish species that rarely grows longer than an inch had a big impact on the 2,400-acre site of the planned $1.6-billion plant for Toyota and Mazda. A lawsuit about the fish’s potential for extinction with development in the area was filed in June, and the automakers announced that work to build…

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Source: Gizmodo – Why A Tiny Fish Is Stalling The New Toyota-Mazda Factory In Alabama

Joss Whedon will return to sci-fi TV with HBO’s The Nevers

Enlarge / Joss Whedon, courtesy of HBO. (credit: HBO)

Joss Whedon, the creator of acclaimed TV series Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Firefly, has been announced as showrunner for a new HBO series titled The Nevers.

The Friday announcement confirms Whedon as “executive producer, showrunner, writer, and director” for his first-ever non-network TV series, following his RECENT executive producer and co-creator duties on the ongoing series Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. HBO describes the show as “an epic science-fiction drama about a gang of Victorian women who find themselves with unusual abilities,” and its statement makes no bones about Whedon’s legacy by claiming it “follows in the footsteps of Buffy.”

HBO did not announce a release window, actors, or other principal members of the cast and crew.

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Source: Ars Technica – Joss Whedon will return to sci-fi TV with HBO’s The Nevers

Apple Announces $300 Million China Clean Energy Fund

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Bloomberg: The iPhone maker said it’s creating the fund to boost the use of renewable energy in its supply chain, which is primarily spread across regions in China. The company and 10 of its key suppliers and manufacturing partners, including Corning Inc., Pegatron Corp., Wistron Corp. and Luxshare Precision Industry Co., will contribute to the fund over the next four years, the Cupertino, California-based company said Thursday in a statement. The money will go toward developing projects totaling a gigawatt of renewable energy in China, Apple said. In 2015, Apple committed to using clean energy in its supply chain and has said it hopes to create 4 gigawatts of renewable energy globally by 2020, an increase from a goal of 3 gigawatts announced earlier this year.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Apple Announces 0 Million China Clean Energy Fund